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HARSH REALM
The
serial "Harsh Realm" is based on the story of a war game simulation developed
by the Pentagon, a secret project for testing new developments in training
military personnel. People to be part of this system are under the control
of the army and kept with their heads and bodies wired up, in a designated
area.
This Harsh Realm "game's" most stunning feature is that it recreates
a totally realistic virtual environment where soldiers, enemies, weapons,
social lives and all other details are indistinguishable from their counterparts
in the real world. In this game, there are two types of people: the artificial
or virtual characters, and the real players who can enter the game. Like
their virtual environment, the virtual characters are indistinguishable
from the real thing.
Another character in this TV serial is Omar Santiago, a deserter from
the army who secretly manages to hack into the system and gains superiority
in this virtual world. But because no one knows how he breaks into the
system or where he is, they can't take action against him. Tom Hobbes,
the hero, is told to eliminate Santiago and to prevent his evil plans
for the world.
A colonel briefs Hobbes about Harsh Realm, informing him that this system
was designed to teach war strategies on a virtual-reality war game platform
and that his job is to defeat Santiago. In order to persuade the reluctant
Hobbes, the colonel gives him a headset and has him watch an introductory
video on the Harsh Realm simulator. This video explains that the Harsh
Realm project relied on satellite maps, the 1990 census, and some other
classified data to create the game's environment, imitating people's real
lives. The introductory video is terminated suddenly, and Hobbes realizes
that while watching this tape, he was integrated into the game.
Hobbes, now in the virtual world called Harsh Realm, meets a soldier
by the name of Pinocchio, who, like himself, was inducted by the army.
This virtual world is so realistic that, Tom is fooled throughout the
film, to the extent that he ends up even endangering his own life helping
and pursuing the game's virtual characters.
As we'll shortly explore in more detail, the quality and details of the
images that take place in people's fantasies can fool them into believing
these events are real.
Everyone is Interacting with the Images Shown on his
Own Personal Screen or, in Other Words, His Own Soul
3-D films are made by projecting images shot by two cameras, from two
different angles, onto one screen. In reality, the viewer is not regarding
a 3-D image, but an effect created by a special technique. The viewer
wears color filtered or polarized glasses. Each lens of the glasses captures
one of the two images, and the viewer's brain recombines the two, creating
a 3-D image.
The
same is true in our real lives. All the images we see with our eyes are
really two-dimensional, having only height and width. Because we have
two eyes, similar to the two images we see when watching a 3-D film, we
perceive the images as three-dimensional. This phenomenon explains why
we're misled that the images on our personal "screens" are real. The depth,
color, shadow and light of our three-dimensional visual images formed
in our brain seem perfectly realistic. Their endless detail and continuous
quality give us the impression of living a real life. However, our perceiving
a three-dimensional picture does not prove that it has any counterpart
in the external world.
The virtual world depicted in the serial "Harsh Realm," no matter how
life-like it may be, is "seen" by players whose wired-up bodies are lying
on their beds. All their realistic experiences are induced by artificial
electrical impulses received by their brains. In each episode, the introductory
scene recaps the subject of the series in this way:
A world exists exactly like ours. You live in this world, your family
and your friends. No, you may not know it. I was sent to save you. It's
just a game.
In his first few days of his adventure in the virtual world, Tom can't
stop himself from thinking that the environment around him is not real,
even though he knows it's not.
Tom Hobbes : Now, I know none of it is real and it is only a virtual
world I'm in. I'm living day to day . . . trying to make sense of all
this, trying to stay strong trying my best just to stay alive.
Repeatedly, our hero remarks on his virtual environment's stunning resemblance
to reality itself. The world he's now part of gives him such a strong
sense of reality that he begins to pray that his experience is part of
a game.
Tom
Hobbes :We're on the run from Omar Santiago, a renegade soldier who hijacked
the computer program that runs this world. It was Santiago the military
sent me here to kill. Their fear of him is real and great, though I've
yet to understand why all this is imaginary… They say this is a recreation
of the real world down to every man, woman and child. Each of us is with
a double here who can live or die in the virtual reality of the Harsh
Realm… But only those plugged into the program know this and have any
consciousness of the truth: that it's only a game. I pray that's all it
is.
The scenes from this serial apply to our own lives, because we are watching
the images projected onto our souls and interact only with them. Even
if a real world existed outside ourselves, we'll never reach it, never
meet it. This situation can be summed up in the following passage from
our book Evolution Deceit:
- Since matter is a perception, it is something "artificial." If this
perception must have been caused by another power, it must have been
created. Moreover, if this creation were not continuous and consistent,
then what we call matter would vanish and be lost. This may be compared
to a television that displays a picture as long as the signal keeps
being broadcast.
So, Who makes the stars, the Earth, plants, people, our bodies and all
else that our soul sees?
It is very evident that a supreme Creator has created the entire material
universe-the sum of perceptions-and He endlessly continues His creation.
Since He displays such a magnificent creation, surely He has eternal power
and might. This Creator introduces Himself to us. He has sent down the
Qur'an, in which He introduces to us the universe, Himself, and the reason
for our existence. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, p.228)
The Human Body is Also an Interpretation of Perceptions
One reason for our difficulty in realizing matter's true nature is our
mistaken belief about our own bodies. We look down, see ourselves, touch
everything around it, and get the misinterpreted impression that we live
in an "outside world."
In reality, our bodies are copies-images, like all our other perceptions
of the external world. Therefore the body we interact with is not the
original on the outside but its imagination forming inside our brain by
the interpretation of our perceptions.
Below
is one of the dialogues from the serial:
Tom Hobbes : I had orders to win the game.
Major Watters : It's no game, no getting out, no
going home. I've got the same mission.
Tom Hobbes : Why don't they take Santiago out of
the real world?
Pinocchio : They don't know where he is, where
he comes in and out. He has hijacked the whole program . . . If they kill
you here, it's not any virtual character, but you. Your brain, your consciousness,
your head and your mind will slide back into the real world.
Those playing the Harsh Realm game interact with virtual appearances,
as in a computer game. Their real bodies are located somewhere else, and
computers transmit the game's images to their brains.
The following page shows Inga Fossa, a member of the armed forces, being
transferred to this virtual environment. She is stretched out on an armchair
in a high-tech room, putting a special device on her head. Once her body
is scanned in, she is then transferred into the simulation Subsequent
photos show her inside the government building in the Harsh Realm game's
city of Santiago.
The
pictures below depict Pinocchio, one of the lead characters of the film,
with facial injuries and his body tied up with cables. But inside the
Harsh Realm game he has no such wounds. This example shows that by means
of artificial signals, someone can perceive his appearance much differently
from what it actually is.
On this subject, here are some excerpts from our books:
One
reason why people don't realize that seen images are actually sensed
in the brain, is that they see their body within the image. They wrongly
conclude that, "I'm in this room, and not the other way around-the room
doesn't exist in my brain." They make the mistake of forgetting that
their body is an image too. Just as everything we see around us is an
image in the brain, so is our body as well. While sitting on an armchair,
you can see the rest of your body below the neck, but this image too
is produced by the same perceptual system. Put your hand on your thigh,
and you'll sense a kinesthetic feeling-in the brain. This means that
you see your body, and feel yourself touching your body, in the brain.
If your body is an image in the brain, is the room inside you, or are
you in the room? The obvious answer is, the room's inside you. You see
the image of your body inside the room which, in turn, is in the brain.
(Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.58)
- A person may dream that he is in the middle of a war. He might feel
tension and panic as if the war were taking place in the real world.
Yet at that time, he is sleeping comfortably at home. The realistic
noises and visions of his dream occur in his mind. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.62)
- While you read these lines, you are not truly inside the room you
assume you're in. On the contrary, the room's inside you. Seeing your
body, you think that you are inside it. However, you must remember that
your body, too, is an image formed inside your brain. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, p.223)
Those are Wrong Who Believe that the Images in Our Minds
Represent an Outside Reality
When someone sees a tree and thinks it is real, he is deluding himself.
It's impossible for us to leave our brains, impossible to reach the real
tree. As stated throughout this book, the person is interacting with a
tree formed by the interpretation of electrical signals in his brain.
Someone sleeping silently can see himself,
in a dream, in the midst of a war, with bombs exploding all around.
He can even experience all the tension, and panic of war, as if
it were real.
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We can compare the assumption that we deal with physical reality itself,
to our interaction with the visible images on a computer screen. Touch
the keys on the keyboard, and you believe you are moving the cursor on
the screen. In reality, the computer sends a data stream to the CPU (central
processing unit). This data stream calculates the cursor's new location
and refreshes the image on the screen accordingly. In older computers,
there was a noticeable delay between typing a command and seeing it appear
on the screen. Since then, computers have become much faster and can recalculate
image changes in a fraction of a second. Now when you hit a key, the effect
on the screen is almost simultaneous. We get the feeling that we are,
indeed, moving the cursor.
Our everyday experiences are comparable. When we want to kick a stone,
the will to move our foot is transmitted to the relevant muscles, and
our shoe is moved to connect with the stone. The brain receives feedback
from the body-in this instance, the hardness of the stone's impact and
pain in the foot-and updates the perception. In reality there is a delay
in our experiences, just as in the computer example. It takes approximately
one fifth of a second for the brain to interpret the data sent by our
senses but, not being aware of this delay, we assume that we are interacting
directly with the physical reality.
If all we can ever know is limited to images forming in our minds, then
how can we be sure that a physical reality lies behind our perceptions?
Isn't this just an assumption? Yes, and proving it so is impossible, because
for those who believe in the existence of a physical world, their only
evidence is the visions in their minds.
To say that we are interacting with matter itself is just as untenable
as claiming that our experiences in virtual reality environment are authentic.
Throughout the serial, Pinocchio points out to Hobbs that it's not logical
to act as if their environment were real. In one episode, Tom encounters
his fiancée's virtual counterpart and risks his life trying to protect
her, even though she has no physical reality. Likewise, a virtual copy
of his real-life dog is present in the game, and he endangers himself
to keep the dog from harm.
In
another scene from the film, he encounters a small child in an area designated-in
the game-for warfare training. Feeling concern for the child, he tells
him that it is very dangerous to be there, but the soldier with Tom tells
him that the child is only a part of the computer game:
Tom Hobbes : (to the boy) What are you doing here?
Go on home.
Eric Sommers : Don't get too fond of him.
Tom Hobbes : Why not?
Eric Sommers : Look, I've seen this played 100
times. That kid does not pass Day 28 once.
Tom Hobbes : He is here.
Eric Sommers : He's just a game piece. He is not
like you and me. The sim (simulation) resets them so that they can come
and die all over again.
Knowing he is in a virtual world, Tom is repeatedly reminded that the
virtual characters he interacts with are part of the simulation. Yet he
reacts to them, fooled by the environment's realism. When the war escalates,
for instance, and they are seeking cover, he sees a child walking towards
the enemy positions. He cannot contain himself and risks his life to save
the child.
Pinocchio : What are you doing?
Eric Sommers : It's just a kid
Pinocchio : You heard what Sommers said about this
place. You can't change anything.
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… I have only been ordered to worship God
and not to associate anything with Him. I summon to Him, and to
Him I will return. (Qur'an 13: 36)
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Tom Hobbes : I don't believe that.
In another scene, they are withdrawing from the enemy, when he sees the
child coming under fire. He reaches out to the child, but its body disappears.
As he had been warned, the child is shot dead as part of the game and
won't be reintroduced to it until the game starts over anew.
These examples from the film are illustrative of people who can't accept
that the world they're dealing with is a simulation in the brain. Obviously,
the world we live in isn't comparable to a film, because it cannot be
explained by computer games or technological developments. God created
this world and everything it contains, animate or inanimate, and revealed
the purpose for our creation in the Qur'an:
[I only created] man to worship Me. (Qur'an, 51: 56)
For this reason, we have an obligation to obey God's commandments and
to worship Him.
Many fool themselves by telling themselves, "I see with my eyes, I hear
with my ears. Therefore, the world I'm in is real." In actuality, they're
thinking those words in the silence of their brains. These technical realities
are obvious truths that can be learned in high-school biology textbooks
or in any book on human anatomy. All branches of medicine teach in great
detail how vision and sensations originate in the brain.
Advancements in quantum physics, psychology, neurology, biology and medicine
have shed much light on the technical aspects of this physical reality.
At present, therefore, science accepts that we cannot reach the reality
of matter. Anyone who claims to be interacting with the real world is
ignoring these scientific facts. We have to accept them and live in awareness
of our responsibilities to God in our lives, even though we live those
lives only in our minds. Following are some passages from our books on
this subject:
- The fact of the physical world being formed in our perceptions does
not eliminate the secret of the test that God puts us through during
our lives in this world. Whether matter exists as a perception or lies
outside our minds, what God has said to be forbidden, is forbidden;
and what is lawful is lawful. Since God has forbidden the eating of
pork, to say, "Pork is only an image in my mind" and then going on to
eat it is hypocritical and evidently unintelligent. Alternatively, saying,
"Other people are only mental images in my mind, so what does it matter
if I lie to them?" is not something that anyone who fears God could
ever do. This applies to all the limits, commands and prohibitions that
God has imposed. The truth of what we're discussing doesn't do away
with giving alms, for instance. The fact that alms exist in the minds
of the people to whom we give them doesn't mean we needn't perform this
obligation. God has created the whole world as a totality of perceptions,
but within these perceptions, we are still charged with abiding by what
the Qur'an has revealed.
... Anyone who honestly considers the situation will see that, for the
purposes of the test which God gives us, it is not necessary for matter
to exist. God has created this test within the world of images. Matter
does not need to exist for someone to pray, or to distinguish what is
lawful from the unlawful. Furthermore, the important thing is the soul,
which will be punished or rewarded with blessings in the hereafter. For
that reason, if matter is a perception in our minds, that does not prevent
us doing what is lawful and avoiding what is unlawful or carrying out
our religious obligations. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.207)
- In the past, some have grasped the truth about the essence of matter.
Yet because their faith in God and their understanding of the Qur'an
were weak, they have produced deviant ideas. Some have said, "Everything
is an illusion, so there is no point in worship." Such ideas are twisted
and ignorant. True, everything is an image God presents to us. But it
is also true that God charges us to abide by the Qur'an. We have to
carefully abide by His commands and prohibitions. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.214)
- Even though God causes us to live in this world of perceptions, He
also links the world to all its many causes and effects. When we are
hungry, for instance, we eat something. We do not say, "It is all an
illusion, so it does not matter," for if we fail to eat, we grow weak
and eventually die.
God can remove these causes and effects whenever He wishes, for whoever
He wishes, by whatever means He wishes. We can never know when or why
He may do this. However, the most important truth is that God charges
us with abiding by the whole of the Qur'an, and we continue to live in
the world of causality in order to abide by its divine commandments.
. . . In conclusion, everyone must do all he can to carry out the responsibilities
laid on his shoulders in the Qur'an. Knowing the true nature of matter-and
adopting a view of the world in accord with that nature-further strengthens
all our efforts to gain God's good pleasure, and increases our determination
many times over. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, pp.220-221)
Watching a Film, Knowing its Beginning and its End
Inan
earlier chapter, we pointed out that time is relative, not fixed, dependent
on the viewer's perception. Knowing this is very important in comprehending
the question of destiny, which represents God's creation of everything-past
or future-in one moment. This means that everything in the presence of
God, from the creation of the universe to the Judgment Day, has been lived
and is already finished.
A great many people cannot comprehend how God can know things that have
not yet happened and how it can be that in God's presence, everything
past and future has already occurred. They also fail to understand the
reality of destiny. In reality, past events are the past only from our
perspective, because we live within the boundaries of time that God has
created, and cannot know anything unless it is introduced to our memory.
God, on the other hand, is unbounded by time and space because, after
all, it is He Who has created them from nothing. For this reason, past,
present, and future are all the same to God.
The fact is, everything, past or future, has already been created in
the presence of God and preserved. The very important truth is that every
human being has surrendered unconditionally to his destiny. Just as no
one can change his past, he cannot change his future, because both his
past and future have already been lived. All his future is fixed: where,
when and what he will eat; what he will talk about and with whom; how
much money he will earn, what illnesses he will endure; and finally, the
circumstances of his death- all these events are fixed. He cannot change
any of it, because this has all been lived in God's presence, with His
knowledge. Except the knowledge thereof has not been granted to the memory
of the person himself.
Therefore, those who are saddened by what they encounter, grow angry,
shout and scream, worry about the future, or become overly ambitious,
do so in vain. The future they worry about has already been lived. Whatever
they may do, they have no means of changing it.
One episode of "Harsh Realm" can help us understand this. In this episode,
set in the Second World War, the leading characters walk in the woods
but, because of fault in the computer program, suddenly find themselves
in a constantly recurring war game simulation.
Tom Hobbes : What the hell is that? Software glitch?
In this part of the game, the Ardennes offensive
of World War II is simulated. German and American advance units are dug
in either side of a bridge and are engaged in month long battle between
them.
Tom Hobbes : That bridge out there. I've seen the
battle review of the Ardennes campaign, Second World War. There is a siege
in Hotten, Belgium between two small advance units, the German and the
American armies, lasted over a month. I swear, this is the same bridge.
Pinocchio
: It's a combat sim.
Tom Hobbes : What?
Pinocchio : Virtual combat simulation. When they
started beta testing in Harsh Realm, they downloaded battle scenarios:
Pork Chop Hill, Picket's Charge.
Tom Hobbes : So, it's another game.
Pinocchio : It's a battlefield trainer, what Harsh
Realm was originally designed for.
Tom Hobbes : What is it still doing here?
Pinocchio : Who knows? Probably oversight. Some
pencil neck in the real world probably forgot to "delete."
The serial's heroes find themselves in a different time. Just as they
are about to be shot by a German soldier, a unit of American soldiers
rescues them. But being from a different era, their speech makes the American
soldiers suspect them to be spies and take them as prisoners of war.
In the opening scenes, a soldier named Eric Sommers-who also exists in
the real world-draws attention by his cool stance despite the explosions
all around him. Because this is a repeating war training simulation, everything
occurs as programmed. Aware of this, he lies on the ground and begins
a countdown. When he gets to three, a hand grenade lands next to him.
He picks it up, throws it back out again, then continues to drink his
tea. In short, everything develops as part of the program. Because it
repeats itself, with everything occurring in the same way time after time,
Eric keeps his cool even under fire.
Eric Sommers :Three… two...one. (He throws the
grenade outside, then takes a glass of tea) Grenade.

It is predetermined and destined where which
leaf will fall in autumn and what flower will blossom in spring.
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Like Hobbes and Pinocchio, Eric Sommers was made part of the game in
the real world when he was connected to the computer. Therefore, the soldier
also knows that the time and place they live in has no reality. But he
was unable to find a way out of this part of the game. He tells Tom and
Pinocchio that in this battle field of four square kilometers, everything
always occurs as it is programmed to. For example, the siege always lasts
34 days, the counterattack 28 days; and how and when the brigade's soldiers
die is also known.
These parts of the serial constitute an analogy that can help explain
fate. If we compare our life to a video tape, we are watching it, but
without the means of fast-forwarding or rewinding it. No matter how often
we watch this tape, we cannot change even its smallest detail. The parts
that appear to be changed by us are in reality also predetermined parts
of the film.
It is God Who has determined this film in every detail, creating and
sustaining it with the feel of reality. He sees and knows the entire filmstrip
in the same instant. Just as we can see the beginning, middle, and end
of a ruler as a single whole, God has encompassed the time we are subjected
to, from the beginning to the end, as one moment. People, on the other
hand, live out only what they are meant to when the time has come and
witness the destiny God has created for them. This is so for the destinies
of all of the people on Earth.
- God has made us perceive events in a definite series, as if time
were moving from past to future. He does not inform us of our future
or provide this information to our memories. The future does not lie
in our memories, but all human pasts and futures are in God's guardianship
(hifz). This, again, is like observing a human life as if it were in
a film, already wholly depicted and complete. One cannot advance the
film and sees his life as the frames pass, one by one. He is mistaken
in thinking that the frames he has not yet seen constitute the future.
(Matter: The Other Name
for Illusion, p.144)
- … Anyone who believes in destiny won't be troubled by or despair
about things that happen to him. On the contrary, he will have the utmost
trust and confidence in his submission to God…God determines the difficulties
that human beings experience, together with their wealth and success.
All these things are part of the destiny predetermined by our Lord to
test not only human beings, but also all things animate and inanimate.
The Sun, the Moon, mountains and trees have their destiny determined
by God. (Matter: The
Other Name for Illusion, p.150)
- … It is pointless to be fearful and worry about a life whose every
moment has been lived, experienced and is still present in the awareness
of God. … Actually, everyone is already in submission to God, created
in subservience to Him. No matter whether he likes it or not, he lives
subservient to the destiny God created for him… For a person who submits
himself to God, knowing that there is nothing better for him than the
destiny God created for him, there is nothing to fear or be anxious
about. This person will make every effort, but knows that no matter
what he does, he won't be able to change what is written in his destiny.
A believer will submit himself to the destiny God created. In the face
of what happens to him, he will do his best to understand the purpose
of these happenings, take precautions, and make an effort to change things
for the better. But he will take comfort in his knowledge that all things
come to be according to destiny, and that God had determined the most
beneficial things in advance. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, pp.152-153)
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It is predetermined that the gardener
waters a rose, that its first flower blossoms, that the owner picks
it and places it in a basket-even before it is even planted. All
this is known and lived already in the presence of God.
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Aches and Pains, Too, Are the Interpretation of Perceptions
in Your Brain
The guards of a concentration camp capture Tom Hobbes. He is imprisoned
there and made to work in the timber yard. In the virtual environment,
he meets his mother's copy. Finding out that she suffers from terminal
cancer, he forgets that what he sees here is a virtual reality and tries
to help her.
The camp guards have wounded his friend Pinocchio. When Tom tells him
his plans, the following conversation takes place:
Tom Hobbes : How are you feeling?
Pinocchio : If it ain't real, how come it hurt
so much?
Tom Hobbes : We have to get out of here… It's more
complicated than that.
Pinocchio : How's that?
Tom Hobbes : I found my mother. She's here.
Pinocchio : Your mother? Hobbes, I've met people
here. People I know in the real world.
Tom Hobbes : It's her.
Pinocchio : No. It just looks like her. Everybody
in the world has a copy here. That's how the whole thing is set up. But
it is VC (virtual character) files not people.
Tom Hobbes : She recognized me. She knows who I
am.
Pinocchio : She doesn't know. She is part of some
game. She doesn't know what's happened to you. She thinks this is all
real.
Tom Hobbes : She's in pain. How different is that
from what you feel?
At a later point in the series, the heroes find themselves wounded and
in pain, even though in reality they are lying on beds. They think their
pains are real, though actually they have been artificially induced.
Our books also explain that people believe they are interacting with
real matter because of their feeling fierce pain, aches, fear, and the
like. In truth, this is a mistake. Human beings are never interacting
with real matter:
- When someone cuts her hand, the pain and wetness all form in the
brain. Dreaming that she has cut her hand, that same person might experience
the same sensations. Yet in her dream, she is simply seeing an illusion,
and there is no real knife or bleeding wound. That being the case, our
feelings of pain do not alter the fact that we see all our lives as
images within our brains. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.184)
- All sensations-touch, pressure, hardness, pain, heat, cold, and wetness-
also form in the human brain, in precisely the same way that visual
images are formed. For instance, someone who gets off a bus and feels
the cold metal of the door actually "feels" the cold metal in his brain.
. . As we have already seen, the sense of touch occurs in a particular
section of the brain, through nerve signals. For instance, it is not
your fingers that do the feeling.
People accept this because it has been demonstrated scientifically. But
when it comes to the bus hitting someone-in other words, when the sensation
of touch is violent and more painful-they think that somehow, this fact
no longer applies. However, pain or heavy blows are also perceived only
in the brain. Someone hit by a bus feels all the violent pain of the event
in his brain.
A person may dream of being hit by a bus, of opening his eyes in the
hospital, being taken for an operation, the doctors talking, his family's
anxious arrival at the hospital; and later, that his being crippled or
suffering terrible pain. In his dream, he perceives all the images, sounds,
feelings, and other aspects of the incident, very clearly and distinctly-all
as natural and believable as in real life. At that moment, if the person
were told it was only a dream, he wouldn't believe it. Yet all that he
is seeing in his dream is only an illusion, and the bus, hospital and
even his own body have no physical counterparts in the real world. Still,
he feels as if his real body has been hit by a real bus. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.178)
- A sharp blow, violent slap, or the pain from a dog's bite are not
evidence that you are dealing with matter. As we have seen, you can
experience the same things in dreams, with no corresponding physical
counterparts. Furthermore, the violence of any sensation does not alter
the clearly proven scientific fact that the sensation in question occurs
in the brain. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.180)
- Events that produce difficulties, worries and fear are illusions
occurring in the brain. A person who sees these illusions for what they
really are doesn't feel anxious because he finds himself in difficulties,
nor does he complain about them. Even if he were confronted by an aggressive
and dangerous enemy, he'd know that he is facing illusions in his brain
and would not be overcome by fear or hopelessness. He knows that each
one of these things is an apparition God formed, which He created for
a purpose. No matter what he encounters, he is at peace in his trust
and submission to God. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.119)
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Someone who falls asleep while
fishing at the beach could, in his dream, see himself on a sinking
ship and experience quite realistic fear and panic. While he was
seated on his beach chair, his dream could make him believe, mistakenly,
that he's in a material world.
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