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“The Miracle Underlying the World”: Holographic Discourse
The article is devoted to the consideration of the theme of the miracle in the holographic discourse. At the beginning of the article, the characteristic of holographic (holonomic) discourse is given as a marginal research direction that is not recognized
by official science, but puts forward interesting ideas related to the holographic structure of reality – the vision of it as such an integrity, where each fragment reproduces the whole. In this case, the basis of the world is seen as a kind of conscious principle that permeates everything that exists. In connection with this approach, the theme of a miracle – a unique, amazing and joyful event – is interpreted differently than from the point of view of two ideological antipodes: a religious-idealistic and a scientific-materialistic approach. Religion (Christianity) sees a miracle as the work of God, materialism considers a miracle to be quackery. According to the holographic approach associated with physics and psychology, but rooted in spiritualistic views, what we call a miracle is a deep characteristic of the world itself, the inner plan of which is the spiritual Absolute (S. Grof) or the implicative order (D. Bohm, K. Pribram). From this follows the possibility of explaining many paradoxical phenomena that qualify as a miracle.
by official science, but puts forward interesting ideas related to the holographic structure of reality – the vision of it as such an integrity, where each fragment reproduces the whole. In this case, the basis of the world is seen as a kind of conscious principle that permeates everything that exists. In connection with this approach, the theme of a miracle – a unique, amazing and joyful event – is interpreted differently than from the point of view of two ideological antipodes: a religious-idealistic and a scientific-materialistic approach. Religion (Christianity) sees a miracle as the work of God, materialism considers a miracle to be quackery. According to the holographic approach associated with physics and psychology, but rooted in spiritualistic views, what we call a miracle is a deep characteristic of the world itself, the inner plan of which is the spiritual Absolute (S. Grof) or the implicative order (D. Bohm, K. Pribram). From this follows the possibility of explaining many paradoxical phenomena that qualify as a miracle.
miracle, miracles, discourse, holographic paradigm, holonomic view, transpersonalism, materialism, idealism