Kyle’s Reviews > Wholeness and the Implicate Order > Status Update
Kyle
is on page 33 of 284
While difficult at times to pick out the fragments of this opening chapter and understand their relation to the implicit whole, there are moments of clarity, such as the measurable and immeasurable being two ways of seeing the same thing, or the current political climate of several countries (that often have United in their nation’s name) attempting to group together people who must not be split from our whole world.
— Feb 05, 2019 10:18PM
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Kyle’s Previous Updates
Kyle
is on page 271 of 284
One gets the sense that Bohm would have gazed, for hours and hours, on the glass cylinders that pulled apart and brought back the ink droplets in viscous gelatine to formulate his holomovement, perhaps inspired by Pribram (also Piaget and Freud!). Being able to sense through this repeated experiment that the entire universe is a projection of a grounded reality out there and within neurons of the mind is pure genius.
— Mar 05, 2019 07:08PM
Kyle
is on page 217 of 284
Attempting a grab-bag of academic proof that a holomovement is the result of a new quantum order, I am surprised but not alarmed to see Jean Piaget mentioned in the construction of mind. Other arguments in this chapter range from linguistic to algebraic, hopeful for an audience of like-minded implic-atives who understand where is varied ideas are going. Trusting in the wholeness of this book so far, I think I get it.
— Feb 25, 2019 08:25AM
Kyle
is on page 176 of 284
In proposing his new order based upon quantum theories, with a multitude of paradoxical similar difference opening up before him, Bohm lays out a geometric example of order as part of our fragmentary nature. The ratios and world tubes involved add to the complexity of his argument, which at this point have to be accepted as possible views of one wholeness although I am at a loss to come up with any counter arguments.
— Feb 21, 2019 08:19AM
Kyle
is on page 140 of 284
Bohm takes on the theories and equations of Heisenberg, Bohr, Einstein, Rosen and Podolsky by scattering a bunch of Greek letters (π, δ, ψ, etc.) throughout this chapter, indicating that there are hidden variables these physicists left out that give him a better understanding of reality. In most cases, Bohm seems able to measure simultaneously expanded atomic processes while getting at the subquantum-level structure.
— Feb 18, 2019 04:14PM
Kyle
is on page 82 of 284
More wordplay, getting down to the etymological root of all thoughts and processes, with the big revelation that at the heart of the near and dear term reality is the verb form reri that means “to think” and thus everything that fits into our reality is the platonic form dancing in our mind like the pollen-discovering honeybee. And yet thought and non-thought have an equal meaning, so unreal things are real?
— Feb 13, 2019 04:39PM
Kyle
is on page 60 of 284
Taking a very etymological approach to demonstrate how language sets up our fragmented outlook on the universe, Bohm takes the reader step by step through relevance to reconstation, revealing some unique qualities of words planted by our mostly Latin ancestors: fact comes from to make, division from either to see or set apart, etc. Yet there must be more than seeing how many concepts are reversed and made irrelevant.
— Feb 12, 2019 04:01PM

