Where is God?

E = mc2 directly expresses how physical matter cannot be separated from light, perhaps more easily seen if the equation is rearranged as m = E/c2 – which is what a careful analysis of the brain confirms. Next, consider that one’s awareness field or “bubble” is meaningless apart from some illuminating source or light. Even a totally blind person whose visual input from the outside world is zero experiences his or her self-illumination – that which we more conventionally call “consciousness” or what I like to call the “light of self.” Although this light is not identical to the light induced by the retinal bombardment of photons, there is reason to believe that in a God-centered universe one’s bubble of awareness is the inner aspect of objective light and that our consciousness is in some still unfathomable way an extension of God. For if this were not so, our consciousness would have to be explained apart from the immanence of God. It follows that from a human perspective, God is light. Consciousness may, when all is said and done, actually be the God in whom we live and move. And while God is light we cannot rule out that what physicists refer to as “dark matter” may further describe his nature. For “dark” really only means that we don’t see it – though we know “it” must be there because of its accelerating effects on the expansion of the Universe.

The cortico-limbic design of the brain offers the only logical perspective by which consciousness, matter, energy, and light can be conceptually unified logically and with mathematical precision. This mechanism is quantified by the equation E = mc2 which describes the relationship between mass, energy and light – defining the way the brain sustains the body mass by converting energy into the expectable specificity of structure (and movement) by means of an image. The stunning anatomical details can be found in either the eBook or paperback version of my new book: Consciousness Finally Explained: A Perfect Synthesis of God and Brain.

And for those who might want a more in-depth analysis of cortico-limbic anatomy, my earlier, much longer book (778 page) is still available: Journey to the Center of the Brain: Explaining Mind in a Universe of Matter.

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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