Our Future

 
 
What is our future and destiny? Where is our civilization heading towards? 
Will we be following the footsteps of our ancient ancestors? Science tries to 
address these most fundamental questions of our life.
 
 
Where are we heading towards? While it could still be uncertain, science 
is showing us a glimpse of our future that would take us 
to the Moon, Mars, and even beyond. 

Somewhere Out There

May 28, 2021

 

Our future is somewhere out there, a place that can be reached within ourselves only.

Nikola Tesla once said that he has not yet penetrated into the core of the universe, but knows that it exists. Because being finite, we can only know and understand 5% percent of it, the remaining 95% still being unexplored.

And, as Albert Einstein and Carl Sagan assured us, there's something out there that awaits us that could make us bigger and more powerful. And no religious beliefs can stop us from this search for ultimate knowledge.

Nikola Tesla noted that: "My brain is only a receiver, in the Universe there is a core from which we obtain knowledge, strength and inspiration. I have not penetrated into the secrets of this core, but I know that it exists.”

Albert Einstein expressed a similar view: "Nature shows us only the tail of the lion. But I have no doubt that the lion belongs with it even if he cannot reveal himself all at once because of his huge dimension."

Carl Sagan added that: "Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known."

Our future is somewhere out there, a place that can be reached within ourselves only

Paul J. Dejillas, Ph.D. – July 28, 2021

 

Nikola Tesla once said that he has not yet penetrated into the core of the universe, but knows that it exists. Because being finite, we can only know and understand 5% percent of it, the remaining 95% still being unexplored.

And, as Albert Einstein and Carl Sagan assured us, there's something out there that awaits us that could make us bigger and more powerful. And no religious beliefs can stop us from this search for ultimate knowledge.

In my research, I discovered that the world is not only physical, mental, psychical, but also spiritual. Call this spirit world by any labels you want. I call this Consciousness, which is our true Self. It's mystical and divine. This is my proposed four-dimensional Cosmos which go beyond the Theory of Everything, Grand Unified Theory, and the M Theory of quantum physics.

I named this the Cosmic Energy Field Theory which incorporates the classical Newtonian, Relativistic, Quantum Mechanics , and Unified Field theories of contemporary science.

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(1)

Nikola Tesla noted that: "My brain is only a receiver, in the Universe there is a core from which we obtain knowledge, strength and inspiration. I have not penetrated into the secrets of this core, but I know that it exists.”

Albert Einstein expressed a similar view: "Nature shows us only the tail of the lion. But I have no doubt that the lion belongs with it even if he cannot reveal himself all at once because of his huge dimension."

Carl Sagan added that: "Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known."

(2)

From our time perspective, there's no end in our search for the truth. But I am not joining in a race and the path I'm treading on is not a racetrack. A race suggests competition, it suggests winning a price, it implies a destination. I cannot imagine myself working just to win a Nobel laureate.

Like an ordinary farmer, I no longer expect the fruits of my labor, leaving it entirely to the elements of Nature to finish the job and bear the fruits for me.

I have done my part of tilling it, freeing it from impending pest attacks, fertilizing it, selecting the best and most robust seeds, even putting up scarecrows to protect my crops. Now, I can do nothing anymore.

(3)

I'm not troubled by what St. Paul means when he said: "I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith" (2 Timothy 4:7). He must have some underlying motivations in mind, which do not resonate with my views. This is understandable because time and conditions have greatly changed today.

In the meantime, I'm just enjoying my moments. This makes life for me simple. I don't complain and hold grudges with Nature if my field is inundated with water, ravaged by fire, swarmed with pests, and bombarded with toxic elements.

(4)

This point of view has become the guide of my life and lifestyle. Each of us has our own guide in life but many of us, I suppose, have not expressed it clearly yet in words. As the New Testament suggests, this invisible guide must be spoken in words and languages in order to realize it in our thoughts, in our feelings, in our dealings with each other, and in our surroundings.

I'm always inspired knowing the norms and experiences of others' life who are alive today, more than those of our ancient elders because their time and conditions were different. Here lies the importance of telling our stories. In the New Testament, when the word was spoken, the Light emerged to dispel the dark paths trodden by others.

Let our light shine upon men and women. For not doing so means we are in darkness, we are darkness, the dark energy and matter (95%) that quantum physics is talking about. We could be the dark and evil forces that prevent the light from shining bright.

In the end, I suspect that our journey into the still unknown part of the Cosmos may reveal more about ourselves, about our dark and hidden secrets, than what we will eventually discover out there.

Travel We Must!

Paul J. Dejillas, Ph.D. – August 7, 2021

 

Speaking of local travel ... Local travel gives us the opportunity to know more about our culture, tradition, customs, indigenous beliefs, and about ourselves. We will know how far or close we are to our people and the extent to which we are influenced by foreign culture and behavior.

You will be surprised how diverse is our way of thinking, feeling, and behaving. Many times, this diversity created conflicts and dysfunctions in the past. As a result, we often experienced tensions and imbalances that distorted our image and identity of who we really are.

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Let's try to be always conscious of ourselves. Which is dominant in us? The local or foreign elements? The East or the West? The South or the North?

If our thoughts, feelings, and behaviour are already harmonized and balanced, then, we're blessed. But what I know is that only saints, mystics, yogis, sufis have this state of life and existence. They worked for it hard and relentlessly.

(2)

For neophytes like us, we still have to undergo a long and tedious trial-and-error process until we learn our lessons and be able to balance our thoughts and behavior.

One way of doing this is to immerse ourselves more often into the life of our people, if we feel we're too Westernized or Easternized. Talk and listen to them. Live with them, if only for a few hours. Observe and discover their ways of thinking, feeling, and acting.

(3)

Let their ways, beliefs, and customs seep into our ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving. Let's give space to our people's lifestyle inside our little world, because they are who we really are.

Know that local travel is not only for pleasure, comfort, and enjoyment. From a holistic point of view, it's also intended to know and learn from our people. The incumbrances, pain, and suffering we encounter as a result of our immersion into their lives and lifestyle as well as their ways of thinking and behaving ought to be an essential part of the learning process.

(4)

Both pleasure and pain we encounter along the way can give us inspiring lessons to learn. They are an essential part of travel. The experience can also be humbling. But there's no use for grumbling and complaining. We can learn and enjoy from this demeaning experience just the same.

Don't underestimate the beauty and benefits of local travel. It's as enjoyable as traveling abroad. In fact, it could be an advantage to know yourself first by learning your own culture and tradition so you will learn to compare yourself with other weird and strange people abroad.

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Get out of your little world whenever possible. Enjoy knowing your people. Visit them. Chronicle and publish the lessons you learned from them in the social media. They can serve as eye-openers and inspiration to others.

Speaking of local travel, look who went out of his way, in spite of the MGCQ heightened plus alert (whatever this means), looking for me for days just to buy my 4 cosmic books. Thank you, Sir Nick Castillo (Ph.D. cand.). Wish you all the best of luck.