Physics, the cosmos, and perception

Physics, the cosmos, and perception

by Jon Rappoport

May 20, 2016

(To read about Jon’s mega-collection, Exit From The Matrix, click here.)

Whenever physicists and spin-off commentators start talking about Quantum Theory, they always come back to the question about perception:

How much of what we perceive with our eyes, our minds, our instruments is really there, and how much depends on how we are looking at it, or the fact that we are looking at it?

This question fascinates people. It should. It’s a doorway into something far greater.

Perception itself is shaped by imagination.

Perception is one of an infinite number of possible roads along which imagination can move.

In case you hadn’t noticed, more and more scientific emphasis is being placed on genetics, DNA, the workings of the brain, as a way of explaining the “function” of the human being at every level.

However, most levels aren’t even touched by this exploration.

A person whose imagination is asleep wouldn’t know that.

If you want to use the world “evolution,” then say that the next stage of evolution involves the human being living by and through imagination.

When I make this point, I’m sometimes asked, “But what would we imagine?” That’s like an acting student telling his coach, “You want me to improvise this role? What should I spontaneously improvise?”

People are heavily invested in What Is. They are so heavily invested they don’t want to take their eye off that ball. They want to stay with What Is all the way into the grave. They have taught themselves to believe this is what they’re supposed to do. This is life. This is what it means. Which is like saying, “I’m blind to 99.9 percent of What Could Be, because I’ve sold out to What Is.”

If the universe could talk, it would say, “I’m playing a massive joke on you. I’m sitting here with all my titanic mass and energy and I’m convincing you that What Is is your best play. I’m giving you the very best reason to stay with What Is. But I’m just one work of art out of a possible infinite number of works of art. And here’s the kicker. You can create your own. You can create your own works of art.”

Some people are inspired by that idea, and some people don’t want to hear it.


exit from the matrix


For most people, let’s face it, the devotion to What Is is a religion. It sums up their lives and concerns and actions and thoughts.

Here is a note I made in preparation for my first collection, The Matrix Revealed:

“Mind control is focused on planting false realities. But that program would have no chance of succeeding unless people were already married to the notion that there is a single and final reality. That’s the underlying foundation of mind control. That’s the key. If you break through and understand that delusion, you enter a whole different territory. You go from thinking you’re in a museum that has only one painting to realizing the museum has a thousand paintings—and then you wake up even more, and you see that you could be a painter.”

What Is appears to be a far easier question than: what do you want to imagine? This comparison explains why civilizations decline.

Imagination is a path. Walking on that path long enough, you find answers to all the questions you’ve ever asked. You also find power that people dream of.

Exit From The Matrix is the realization of those clues, fleshed out, clarified, and embedded in techniques and exercises anyone can do on a daily basis.

Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free NoMoreFakeNews emails here or his free OutsideTheRealityMachine emails here.

7 comments on “Physics, the cosmos, and perception

  1. henry says:

    You have created a model of reality in your mind. You use this model to make sense of new stimuli. This model is a conceptual structure. When new concepts are encountered, your model determines if they should be incorporated into the structure. The incorporation process is called learning. Imagination is combining disparate conceptual sub structures. Sometimes the outcome of such experiments are interesting and sometimes they are not. This is how new ideas are generated.

    The goals of the control freaks is to domesticate us. They see themselves as farmers and we are animals. The milk us, shear us, and make us pull the cart. When we are no longer useful to them, they will consume us by giving us a disease then collect all the money we saved to give us a little more life. The possibility of one of their animals escaping to do as they want is disturbing to them. So, they try to prevent this by propagandizing dis-empowering thoughts.

  2. Oliver K. Manuel says:

    Post-modern physics and cosmology became nonsense after 24 Oct 1945 . . .

    when frightened world leaders united nations and national academies of sciences “to save themselves and society” from nuclear annihilation by hiding from the public the source of energy in atomic bombs . . .

    […]

    because the same source of energy made our elements, birthed the solar system five billion years (5Ga) ago, sustained the origin and evolution of life on Earth after ~3.8 Ga ago, sustains every atom. life and planet in the solar system today, and now powers a super-solar flare every ~1,000 years that resets the stage of human civilization:

    http://sciencenordic.com/sun-can-emit-superflares-every-1000-years

  3. artemisix says:

    Dear Mr Rappoport, thank you, thank you, thank you for this and all you write. For a creative such as myself , it is a breath of fresh sanity. You are an Inspiration. I just read your book “the secrets of secret societies” and it was so helpful and insightful. One question though, Burning Man?

  4. John lukach says:

    Just read ‘seth speaks’ by Jane Roberts then the ‘law of one’ by Carla Ruckert. It’s all any mind needs to be free. And in his own unique way Jon has discovered much of the information within.

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