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Archaea
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Here's a quote given by Seth from the last page of chapter 7 of the individual and the nature of mass events by Jane Roberts, regarding the questions that Seth says scientists really should be asking in order to understand the universe:
It is not to say that you cannot understand the nature of the universe to some extent, but the answers lie in the natures of your own minds, in the process of individual creativity, in studies that ask questions like: "Where did this thought come from? Where does it go? What effect does it have upon myself or others? How do I know how to dream, when I have never been taught to do so? How do I speak without understanding the mechanisms? Why do I feel that I have an eternal reality, when it is obvious that I was physically born and will physically die?"
Unscientific questions? I tell you that these are the most scientific of all. To some extent the attempt on the part of science to consider such material may possibly bring about those qualities of true scientific intuition that will help science bridge the gap between such divergent views as its own and ours.