What is Peripheral Vision?
Defined, peripheral vision is that which is seen outside the central fix of the eye; without peripheral vision, one would suffer a malady known as tunnel vision. Humans have weaker peripheral vision, compared to animals, because the receptor cells are stronger in the center of the retina than on the outer edges. But is that all there is to it?
Quantum physics theory lends credence to the possibility of a multiverse, an infinite number of universes stacked in, around and on top of each other. It so, how are these universes separated? What keeps them from intruding on neighboring universes?
Quantum physics, unlike the standard physics that most of us grew up with, says that energy is wavelike… not particles of matter. Imagine, then, a wave of energy that separates these multiverses from each other. It’s flexible, it’s invisible and it’s impenetrable; or is it?
We’ve all experienced that fleeting movement, seen from the corner of the eye. Something moved, something flashed, something fluttered, but when we turn in order to see better… there’s nothing there. What if the flexible, invisible and impenetrable wall of energy had a hiccup? For the briefest of moments, we were allowed to see beyond the wall; what if we could freeze frame the scene?
Never forget that the science fiction of yesteryear has become today’s reality. Quantum physics theories will be proven and perhaps, one day soon, we will be able to not only see an adjoining universe; we’ll be able to go there!
Quantum physics theory lends credence to the possibility of a multiverse, an infinite number of universes stacked in, around and on top of each other. It so, how are these universes separated? What keeps them from intruding on neighboring universes?
Quantum physics, unlike the standard physics that most of us grew up with, says that energy is wavelike… not particles of matter. Imagine, then, a wave of energy that separates these multiverses from each other. It’s flexible, it’s invisible and it’s impenetrable; or is it?
We’ve all experienced that fleeting movement, seen from the corner of the eye. Something moved, something flashed, something fluttered, but when we turn in order to see better… there’s nothing there. What if the flexible, invisible and impenetrable wall of energy had a hiccup? For the briefest of moments, we were allowed to see beyond the wall; what if we could freeze frame the scene?
Never forget that the science fiction of yesteryear has become today’s reality. Quantum physics theories will be proven and perhaps, one day soon, we will be able to not only see an adjoining universe; we’ll be able to go there!
Published on July 11, 2013 09:18
•
Tags:
paranormal, science-fiction
No comments have been added yet.