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This collection of articles began with the realization that my childhood dream of following Einstein's path toward knowing God's thoughts had led me to a crossroads. His road to truth reached an impasse beyond which very small things become "unreal." The other road, paradoxically, travels back to the mists of history, and to the frontiers of science. It converges on the question of whether ancient mystics possessed lost knowledge about the brain's capacity for suprasensory perceptions of transcendent realities beyond physics' impasse. Specifically, do Yoga's description of subtle channels…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This collection of articles began with the realization that my childhood dream of following Einstein's path toward knowing God's thoughts had led me to a crossroads. His road to truth reached an impasse beyond which very small things become "unreal." The other road, paradoxically, travels back to the mists of history, and to the frontiers of science. It converges on the question of whether ancient mystics possessed lost knowledge about the brain's capacity for suprasensory perceptions of transcendent realities beyond physics' impasse. Specifically, do Yoga's description of subtle channels along the central axis of the central nervous system correspond to actual neuroanatomical structures? For nearly two years, I investigated the fluid filled, central passageways and chambers of the brain and spinal cord. But I did not find what I was looking for. Then, as I was about to abandon my quixotic quest, a serendipitous encounter with an article about an enigmatic threadlike structure that travels through the center of the central nervous system called Reissner's fiber ignited my imagination. These articles are snapshots of my journey along the strange loops of Reissner's fiber.
This collection of articles began with the realization that my childhood dream of following Einstein's path toward knowing God's thoughts had led me to a crossroads. His road to truth reached an impasse beyond which very small things become "unreal." The other road, paradoxically, travels back to the mists of history, and to the frontiers of science. It converges on the question of whether ancient mystics possessed lost knowledge about the brain's capacity for suprasensory perceptions of transcendent realities beyond physics' impasse. Specifically, do Yoga's description of subtle channels along the central axis of the central nervous system correspond to actual neuroanatomical structures? For nearly two years, I investigated the fluid filled, central passageways and chambers of the brain and spinal cord. But I did not find what I was looking for. Then, as I was about to abandon my quixotic quest, a serendipitous encounter with an article about an enigmatic threadlike structure that travels through the center of the central nervous system called Reissner's fiber ignited my imagination. These articles are snapshots of my journey along the strange loops of Reissner's fiber.
Autorenporträt
Lawrence Wile se licenció en física en el Union College (1971), se doctoró en la Facultad de Medicina de la Universidad de Connecticut (1976), obtuvo la certificación en la especialidad de psiquiatría por la Junta Americana de Psiquiatría y Neurología (1982) y un máster en filosofía por la Universidad de Massachusetts (1991). Es autor de El legado de Jaynes.