Mysteries and Secrets of Time Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Mysteries and Secrets of Time Mysteries and Secrets of Time by Lionel Fanthorpe
21 ratings, 3.67 average rating, 2 reviews
Open Preview
Mysteries and Secrets of Time Quotes Showing 1-15 of 15
“The term déjà vu comes from the French “already seen”; it is also referred to in psychology as paramnesia.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“Whether we favour the theory of terminal time, everlasting time, cyclic time, bifurcated time, or integrated time is less important than our conscious awareness that different philosophies of time exist, and that one of them may be influencing our lifestyle.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“If time ends, and death and oblivion are the only future for the universe and its inhabitants, what’s the point of being part of it? The answer must surely be that there are things which transcend time and which have an intrinsic value out of all proportion to their duration. These include sentient thoughts, feelings, and relationships. We would say that to have loved and to have been loved — and to know it unquestionably at the deepest possible level — possesses that kind of transcendence. Lovers know instinctively that what they feel for each other is infinitely precious and independent of duration. In an ideal universe, it lasts forever. In the hazardous universe we live in, the fragility of human life can tragically interrupt it. Yet lovers who enjoy relationships in which the life of their beloved is far more important to them than their own have touched something so exquisitely powerful that its effect is permanent. Its mark on them is indelible. By experiencing that intensity of love, they have — in a very real sense — escaped from the limitations of time into eternity.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“If the human observer is envisaged as one of the spherical spaceships, and time is seen as the other, then the same possible explanations still apply. The observer could be stationary while time flows past. Time could be stationary while the observer and his experiential concatenation of observed events flow past. Or both time and the observer could be progressing at different velocities along the same track. The nature, velocity, and direction of time-flow ought to be susceptible to scientific analysis in due course — even if it can’t be done definitively at our present level of scientific knowledge and technological skill.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“How did it get there?”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“Ancient Rabbinical ideas about Melchizedek associate him with Adam, and credit him with passing on Adam’s robes to Abraham. He is also seen as the prototype of another form and order of priesthood, differing from the Aaronic priesthood. The basis of the Melchizedekian Order of priests is eternal life, and Christ himself is referred to in the Epistle to the Hebrews 5:10 as being “a Priest after the Order of Melchizedek.” Whether”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“The authors would argue strongly that faith, self-confidence, determination, and an absolute refusal to admit defeat or accept failure under any circumstances are the maps and compasses that need to be used during the quest for those elusive keys to mind-power. Paracelsus”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“the whole array of psi powers: telepathy, teleportation, telekinesis, levitation, and the ability to glide through solid matter as if he were a ghost.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“Proverbs 9:9: “Give instruction to a wise man and he will be yet wiser.” There”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“wise old Pierre had no difficulty in persuading his intelligent and perceptive grandson that it was prudent to keep a low profile and walk on eggshells.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“If it is suggested that they are seeing a future that is as rigidly fixed as the past, then the horrendous implication is that we have no choice over our lives. There is no room for ambition, for ethics, or for morality. None of us can be held responsible for what we do, or for the choices we make. Good and evil as philosophical abstractions may still exist, but good and evil people do not.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“The widely accepted understanding of déjà vu is that it is the feeling that the observer in a new situation has actually been there before or seen it before. The phrase was coined by Émile Boirac (1851–1917), a French researcher into the anomalous. His book was entitled L’Avenir des Sciences Psychiques (“The Future of Psychic Sciences”). As Boirac explained, this sense of déjà vu is characteristically accompanied by a feeling that something strange, weird, and eerie is happening to the witness. D”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“psychometry.”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“One of the subtle distinctions between the different types of knowledge is what we might call knowing-that (for example, knowing that 7 + 3 = 10) and knowing-how (for example, knowing how to add 7 units to 3 units and end up with 10 units).”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time
“If the human observer is envisaged as one of the spherical spaceships, and time is seen as the other, then the same possible explanations still apply. The observer could be stationary while time flows past. Time could be stationary while the observer and his experiential concatenation of observed events flow past. Or both time and the observer could be progressing at different velocities along the same track. The nature, velocity, and direction of time-flow ought to be susceptible to scientific analysis in due course”
Lionel Fanthorpe, Mysteries and Secrets of Time