An Image Proves the Existence of God

Every image requires an observer. And, given the way eye movement scans the world in front of us, requiring both space and time, an image and spacetime are inseparably bound! It is therefore beginning to look as though spacetime must also depend upon a transcendent observer and therefore God. Indeed, an analysis of the way eye movement and image perception are connected, we can conclude that space-time is an image.

The logic goes deeper as we note that there is an attraction between all objects — similar to the way qualia in one’s visual field compete for attention in creating a stalemate that we perceive as an image. Similarly, every object in the cosmos is competing with every other object in establishing its place in the Universe. This means that gravitational attraction in the cosmos parallels neurological events. And, truth be known, gravity may be the best evidence that a transcendent God has an analogous visual field — validating the biblical claim that God is the one “in whom we live and move and have our being.”[1]

For a further discussion of this and related topics, see my book, Consciousness Finally Explained: A Perfect Synthesis of God and Brain. This book is available by clicking on the “Home” tab at the top of this page. 

 

 

1.  Acts 7:28

About Glenn Dudley

GLENN DUDLEY became interested in the mind-body problem as a Pre-Med student at the University of Colorado where he emphasized studies in physics, philosophy, and Judeo-Christian theology. He received his M.D. degree from the University of Colorado in 1969. After a mixed Psychiatry/Medicine internship, he worked for two years at MIT's Neurosciences Research Program -- a think tank whose objective was that of understanding how the hard-wiring of the nervous system mediates thought and emotion. Then, he spent a year in the Department of Psychiatry at Tufts Medical School in Boston reviewing the world's literature on psychological and emotional predispositions to cancer. From 1975 to his retirement in 1998 he practiced primary care medicine.
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