Buddha and the Quantum, Samuel Avery
Buddha and the Quantum, Samuel Avery
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Buddha and the Quantum
Hearing the Voice of Every Cell

Author: Samuel Avery

Narrator: Samuel Avery

Unabridged: 3 hr 59 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Wetware Media

Published: 05/31/2011


Synopsis

Buddha and the Quantum is about the connection between meditation and physics. Many books show parallels between consciousness and physics; a few of these attempt to explain consciousness in terms of the physics of everyday experience. This is the only book on the market that explains physics and the everyday world in terms of consciousness alone. Space and time – and the physical world they define – are a structure of consciousness. We can only understand the motion of the planets by putting the sun at their center; similarly, we can only understand modern physics if we put space and time within consciousness.

Buddha and the Quantum is also unique in that it shows why we think there is a world independent of consciousness. The concept of material substance is explained in terms of the same structure of consciousness that explains quantum mechanics and relativity theory.

Kalapa is a Buddhist term for a subtle sensation: a point of consciousness in the body. Barely noticeable most of the time, it fills awareness during meditation. It is the voice of a cell. This book shows that it is also the quantum. Quanta arranged in space-time – photons – are visual consciousness: the experience of cells in the retina. This explains why modern physics has had so much difficulty understanding light. Light is not in space; space is in light.

Buddha and the Quantum describes how experience in the physical world is built not from objective reality, but from experience within. Avery’s brilliant model of consciousness makes difficult and subtle ideas understandable, with surprising implications.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Samuel on May 03, 2012

The author admits to being neither a Buddhist nor a physicist and it shows. There are a few useful bits but overall it feels at best like an undergraduate philosophy major's thesis project and at worst a new age mish-mash.......more

Goodreads review by Guada on December 22, 2018

Spirituality and Science, one more time demonstrated, not so different. It is just a matter of knowledge and imagination to enable exploration of what we call the unnatural. What the Buddha considers as the fundamental unit of consciousness is the same thing that Max Planck considers the unit of ener......more

Goodreads review by Dona on July 18, 2012

I liked some of the fundamental concepts of this book, which I believe I understand in at least an elemental way--such as "Detatchment from time and space reveals dimensions as fundamental structures of consciousness." and observation often effects what is. I can also follow the idea what we perceiv......more

Goodreads review by Daoist56 on August 04, 2013

This book blew my mind. Well, the parts that I could understand did. Though Avery states up front that he's not a Buddhist nor is he a quantum physicist, there's a little too much "pseudo-science" in here. Okay, that's not fair - it's not pseudo science, but there are places where he posits ideas wi......more

Goodreads review by Gi on July 13, 2015

Samuel Avery prefaces by stating he is neither a Buddhist or a Quantum Physicist. As an extremely curious student of both these things, I was still interested to see someone take on the connection between such even if they weren't naturally entranced in either. In short, I wanted to enjoy this. I RE......more