PHC-34 31 Dec 53 EMOTIONS IN MEST
5312C31
[This is only the first part of the lecture. The remainder of our copy was blank.]
And this is the seventh hour of the fourth
day of the Phoenix Congress, and the first thing we're going to touch on here
is the problem of the remote viewpoint.
Space is a viewpoint of dimension.
That one you can put down and write in letters of fire or something
because there is, they in the field of physics have no definition for space and
the Encyclopedia Britannica tells you as early as 1910 very clearly, and I think
an earlier edition, that space is a problem in the mind, that energy is a
problem in the field of the mind, actually, and that time is a problem of the
mind, and it's a problem in the field of physics, and the physicist has taken
no responsibility for these problems. Alright.
Space is a viewpoint of dimension. That's as good in physics as it is in the
field of the mind and human soul. It
doesn't matter where he is lookin' at, that's space. And you find most of the people around that are having a rough
time, they are too short on space. Well,
they ought to be long on havingness and long on space between ... . Well now, that's so ... ... is invalid,
although with these processes, it gets valid.
But space is a viewpoint of dimension.
Alright. Now that is a
viewpoint. In other words, in order to
be a ..., you might say. Alright. When you, when you get into the problem of
viewpoint, there are two kinds of viewpoints.
One is the viewpoint where you are.
You're just looking from where you are at something. Now, anything you look at gives you, then, a
dimension of distances. It thereby
gives you space. Alright.
There's a second part of the problem and
almost anybody has resorted to this other viewpoint. We call this the reverse viewpoint. You throw out a little disc, actually it's a gold disc, an inch
in diameter ordinarily here in the MEST universe, and we can put it out almost
anywhere and see a thing. Now, I'll
give you an example of that. Right now,
put a little viewpoint, a remote viewpoint outside this building. Now look at the outside of the
building. OK. Did you get a look at the outside of the building? Alright.
... ... ... ... ... ... ... But
the point is that we have that power of the remote viewpoint. Very well.
Looking is really a matter of receiving
and so is perception a matter of receiving.
And a person who is unwilling to receive is therefore unwilling to
perceive, so that's what a person who would see ... ... is having a very
difficult time seeing because he believes that the things he's liable to see
will sit on him or jump on him, or knock his eyes out or knock him out of the
firmament or something. So therefore,
he sees rather dodgily. You know? He, he sees that way. So he uses a remote viewpoint. And you have one of these hung on each one
of your MEST eyes if you're seeing at all.
And then, then you wear glasses.
That's very silly.
As a matter of fact, I was working one
case one time and this person was hanging onto the glasses and hanging onto
glasses. The reason he was hanging onto
glasses is because the glasses were an invisible barrier. You could see through them and yet you go
effect to them. And the problem of the
invisible barrier, of course, is a something/nothing thing. You could look through this nothingness but
there is something there, like glass ... ...
and it's very handy if someone shot a, a B-B gun at you, hardly anything
larger, why, it would at least stop at the glasses instead of going on through
and hitting you. Well, alright.
I had this person take the viewpoints off
the front of his eyes, his eyeballs, and put them over in front of the
glasses. He did and ... promptly - but you can manufacture these things by
the billions by the way - but he promptly ... was seeing without the correction
of the glasses because he's aberrated the viewpoints so that they could fit the
glasses. And then he put them back of the
glasses and, of course, he adjusted them a little bit while they were out in
front of the glasses, you know, he put them out in front of his glasses and
then he'd adjusted them so he could see a little bit better out there. Then he put them back here back of the
glasses, then, of course, he had to change them around so he ... the
glasses. But unfortunately he was not a
well PC and he didn't know this was different.
So it just kept getting more and more blurred and the [our copy ends in
middle of lecture]