Our Bodies are "Probable Constructs" & We are "Significance-Making Creatures"
Description
In this session a number of complex ideas are presented, hopefully made understandable by Seth's examples. Briefly, probable events continually interact, and by choosing to bring one probability into our existence, and ignoring all the others, we make one seemingly stable, constant reality the one we experience. EE units, however, and atoms, molecules and cells, are aware of these other ignored probabilities, and our bodies exist as they do only because they (atoms, cells, etc.) are appearing at a certain point of probabilities. At other levels our bodies exist differently. The integrity of our bodies therefore comes from outside our system into it, based on which of these probabilities we choose to focus on. As individuals and cultures, we choose to bring into significance certain probabilities and ignore others. Scientific discoveries are the recognition of a new kind of significance previously ignored but already existing. Our time structure is also tied into our method of significance-making, so we experience events according to time, though they all exist "at once." The reality we experience is based on focus, not cause and effect.