|


“It is science, not religion, that is saying look — look — no matter what you think you are going to create, particles are going to be whatever you create. Who are light photons — electrons, packets of quanta — behaving to? The Observer of the scientist.”
— Ramtha
February 1998
|
|
Ramtha’s Teachings and a New Scientific Experiment on Quantum Entanglement
“If we have particles that are in relationship to one another, the one that is affected at any one extremity will affect the other one at the other extremity simultaneously. There is no traveling; it just happens.”
“If we have a gun that shoots out a light photon and we split it where one goes in this direction and another goes way out there in another direction, the moment we collapse one, the other one collapses no matter where it is. Who created that? This is the wacky world of quantum mechanics. It is wacky. No matter what theories the scientists come up to, the quanta always behave according to their theories.”
 |
Ten years later, a scientific experiment demonstrates what Ramtha has been teaching for decades.
Entanglement Demonstrated:
“Spooky Physics: Signals Seem to Travel Faster Than Light”
“One consequence of [the] murky realm of quantum physics is that objects can get linked together, such that what happens to one instantaneously has an effect on the other, a phenomenon dubbed ‘quantum entanglement.’ This holds true no matter how far apart these objects are from each other.”
“To investigate this possibility, scientists at Geneva in Switzerland began with entangled pairs of photons, or packets of light. These pairs were then split up and sent over fiber optic cables provided by Swisscom to stations at two Swiss villages some 11 miles (18 kilometers) apart from each other. The stations confirmed that each pair of photons had remained entangled — by analyzing one, scientists could predict aspects of its partner.
“In a sense, these instantaneous events ‘seem to happen from outside space-time, in that it’s not a story you can tell within space-time,’ ” researcher Nicolas Gisin, a physicist at the University of Geneva, reported to LiveScience. Charles Q. Choi, LiveScience, August 13, 2008.
Read Full Story

Quantum Entanglement Experiment in Switzerland
|