Footnotes:
11 Penfield. Wilder. The Mystery of the Mind: A Critical Study of Consciousness and the Human Brain (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University) 1975 after Talbot, Michael. The Holographic Universe, 1992 p.12.
2 Talbot, Michael ibid p.13.
3 ibid p.13.
4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.
6 Goleman, Daniel. Holographic Memory: Karl Pribram Interviewed by Daniel Goleman. Psychology Today 12 no. 9 Feb. 1979.
7 John von Neumann once calculated that over the course of a lifetime, the brain stores in order of 2.8 bits of information.
8 Ibid p.72.
9 The theories for the holograph were formulated by Dennis Gabor (1900-1979) who won the Nobel Prize for Physics 1971.
10 “The word “holography” is derived from the Greek roots meaning “complete writing”. The idea is that every part of “the writing” contains information about the whole. A hologram (the material manifestation of a holograph) is a photographic emulsion in which information about a scene is recorded in a very special way. When a hologram is illuminated, you see a realistic, three dimensional representation of the scene. If you cut the holographic plate up into small pieces, the whole image can still be extracted from any of them (although with some loss of clarity). Pribram uses the term “holonomy” to refer to a dynamic (or changing) hologram.” Prideaux, Jeff. Comparison between Karl Pribram’s “Holographic Brain Theory” and more conventional models of neural computation. 2014. jprideaux@gems.vcu.edu Virginia Commonwealth University.
11 Talbot, Michael, ibid p 14.
12 Goleman, Daniel. Ibid p 73.
13 As an aside, further proof of Pribram’s holonomic model came from Paul Pietsch who set out to disprove the hypothesis. He reasoned that a salamander’s feeding behaviour should, according to Pribram, not be found in any particular part of the brain. He literally sliced, diced, inverted and pureed the brains before re-inserting them, but to no avail. The response remained making a believer of Pietsch. Pietsch, Paul. “Shufflebrain”, Harpers Magazine 244 (May 1972)p. 66.
14 ibid
15 Fourier transform:
“a function derived from a given non-periodic function and representing it as a series or sinusoidal (sine wave) functions.” Concise Oxford Dictionary 11th Ed., Revised. Edited by Soames, Catherine and Angus Stevenson.
16 Goleman, Daniel. Ibid p.76.
17 Ibid p. 77.
18 DeValois, Karen K. , Russell L. DeValois and W.W.Yund, Responses of Striate Cortex Cells to Grating And Checkerboard Patterns, Journal of Physiology, vol. 291 (1979), pp. 483 – 505.
19 Ibid p. 78.
20 Talbot, Michael ibid p.16.
21 Ibid p. 38.
22 Ibid p. 36. The “finding that sub-atomic processes result in a creation of a pair of particles with identical or closely related properties […] According to quantum physics no matter how far apart the [particles – in this case “photons”] travel, when they are measured they will always be found to have identical angles of polarisation.”. This would transgress the speed of light boundary, hence Einstein’s scepticism.
23 Ibid p.38.
24 Ibid pp.38 – 39.
25 Ibid p. 41.
26 Ibid Bohm expands on Bohr’s assertion [that sub-atomic parts] “[…] are part of an indivisible system [and] are not independent ‘things’, but [further suggests] that wholeness was in some way the more primary reality.”[emphasis added]
27 Goleman, Daniel. Ibid p.75 after Michael Talbot ibid p 41.
28 Collier, J., C.B. Burckhardt, and L.H. Lin. Optical Holography. (New York: Academic Press, 1970) after Michael Talbot ibid p 41.
29 Ibid pp.42-43.
30 Ibid pp.43-44.
31 After Talbot, Michael ibid pp.44-46.
32 Pollen, Danial A. and Michael C Trattenberg. “Alpha Rhythm and Eye Movements in Eidetic Imagery.” Nature 237 (May 12th, 1972) p. 109 after Michael Talbot ibid p. 45.
33 Talbot, Michael ibid p.46.
34 Ibid p.46.
35 Ibid p.46.
36 Ibid.
37 Ibid.
38 Ibid. p.47.
39 Ibid. pp.47-48.
40 Ibid p. 54.
41 Ibid.
42 Ibid. p.48.
43 Ibid. p.49.
44 Sutherland, William Garner. Teachings in Science Osteopathy. Trauma, pp.145-149. Sutherland Cranial Teaching Foundation, Inc.!990.
45 Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © 2012.
46 Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary, 3rd ed. © Elsevier, Inc.
47 McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine © 2002, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
48 He [man] is not the physical body, the emotions or the mind: these are merely instruments that enable him to function in the physical, emotional or mental realms, and it behoves us to study and understand the anatomy and physiology of these instruments if we are to treat man as a totality.” V.M.Frymann D.O., 1985, Scott Memorial Lecture 1972. The law of mind, matter and motion. In Scott Memorial Lectures.AAO, 63. After Liem, Torsten 2009, Cranial Osteopathy A Practical Textbook pp.1.Eastland Press, Inc. Seattle.
49 The late John Upledger, D.O., O.M.M. wrote of “injury”:…[E]nergy of injury penetrates the body tissues to the appropriate depth at which the body must determine what to do with […] parcels of unwanted energy. As far as the body is concerned, this externally derived energy is disorganised and chaotic. It does not fit into the bodily organisation of the intrinsic energy systems. The unwanted energy may lodge in such organs such as the brain, intestines or heart. Once there, it can disrupt visceral functions, bones or joints, causing pain as well as dysfunction. Wherever it lodges it will disrupt efficient function.” in SomatoEmotional Release Deciphering the Language of Life. 2002, North Atlantic Books, California.
50 Encycloædia Brittanica on line Cerebrospinal Fluid, 2014.
51 The “unexpected” force is often far more injurious and traumatic. For example boxers sustain continuous and violent forces but to all intents and purposes they bear them well simply because they expect to get hit. Were they to sustain such a punch in an unexpected situation e.g. a “sucker punch” in a bar brawl, the consequences could be dire. Also, we have seen many hockey players (and the like) who have sustained profound concussions through a lesser force that was unseen and/or unexpected.
52 “The CSF protects the brain and spinal cord from direct and indirect impact […] [D]uring direct impact, the skull is transformed by compression in the direction of the impact and widening in the perpendicular direction. The CSF is pushed primarily toward the subarachnoid cisternae at the base of the brain […] During trauma, the CSF is primarily pushed backward. The fourth ventricle suddenly receives most of the CSF from the lateral ventricles. When the impact is violent [emphasis added], distention of the fourth ventricle causes inhibition of cerebral and bulbar function, with results ranging from simple syncope to potential fatal cardiorespiratory arrest. If cardiorespiratory functions are affected, a cerebral concussion may occur.” Baral, Jean-Pierre & Alain Crobier. Trauma An Osteopathic Approach. English Language Edition Eastland Press, Inc. 1999.
53 Encyclpædia Brittanica ibid.
54 For a good exposé on this, an excellent resource is Liem, Torsten, Cranial Osteopathy A Practical Textbook. Eastland Press 2009 p. 292.
55 An example of this type of research is: Tillier, William A., Walter E. Dibble, Jr., and Michael J. Kohane. Conscious Acts of Creation The Emergence of a New Physics.Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication, 2001.
56 Some particular examples of this: “Simple Long Time EM Frequency Storage in Water: Smith.C.W. has demonstrated that electromagnetically sensitive individuals, known to respond to specific EM frequencies, similarly when the same frequencies are transferred to a sealed vial of water that has been exposed to the EM field from a solenoid coil for less than 1 minute…It was shown that a specific frequency could be imprinted (or potentised) into the water…” ibid p.65.There are many other examples of this including Benveniste, J, B.Armoux and L. Hadji who showed that specific EM molecular information transferred to pure water in experiments concerning “the effect of very dilute solutions on both in vitro cells and whole organs.” Ibid pp67-68.