Friday, May 25, 2012

We live in a hologram

The earth and all that is in it is a hologram just like the holograms projected onto the Opera House.  On Earth we are a microcosm of the macrocosm.  We are everything that the universe is made up of.  We are only tiny and the universe is without number at this point but we are one and the same.
I wonder if the same principal of achieving a holographic image is how we got here on Earth?

I do believe that we are beings of light.  We are slowed down to a solid by magnetism and gravity.  If we were not subject to these influences we would appear as very different beings.

Holographic
laser light shows can split a single Solid State (DPSS) laser beam by passing the beam through a passive diffract holographic optical element, which in turn passes through a circular periodicity electromechanical spinning wheel. This spinning disk splits the laser beam into over 1 million individual beams. Diffract holographic optical elements work by breaking up the incoming wave of light which recombine to form numerous new light waves.
 Sydney Vivid Festival 2011.Sydney Vivid Festival 2011. (Photo credit: jemasmith)

Sydney's annual Vivid Festival has opened with a series of spectacular light displays on many of the city's iconic buildings.

English: Sydney Opera House Luminous @ Vivid f...English: Sydney Opera House Luminous @ Vivid festival (Photo credit: Wikipedia)Now in its fourth year, the event features over 50 light installations, including a display on the 'sails' of the Sydney Opera House.
The opera house stands on Bennelong Point in Sydney on the edge of the where the city now stands.  This was once a great place for lunch if you were an aboriginal person from the surrounding clans of the area.
In the period from 1818 to 1821, the tidal area between Bennelong Island and the mainland was filled with rocks excavated from the Bennelong Point peninsula. The entire area was leveled to create a low platform and to provide suitable stone for the construction of Fort Macquarie. While the fort was being built, a large portion of the rocky escarpment at Bennelong Point was also cut away to allow a road to be built around the point from Sydney Cove to Farm Cove. This was known as Tarpeian Way.
The existence of the original tidal island and its rubble fill were largely forgotten until the late 1950s when both were rediscovered during the excavations related to the construction of the Sydney Opera House. Prior to the Opera House's construction, Bennelong Point had housed Fort Macquarie Tram Depot.
Images all from Zemanta this time.
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