Similarity of Neuron and Galaxy Networks
By James Donahue
Italian researchers Franco Vazza and Alberto Feletti have supported a thesis we have been proposing, that the Creator exists in all things and that we, as living creatures on this planet, are but a minute particle of the energy that is the Living God.
In a paper recently published in Nautilus, Vazza, an astrophysicist at Radio Astronomy Institute, Bologna, and Feletti, a neuroscientist at NOCSAE Hospital, Universitaria di Modena, noted the “strange similarity” between Neurons and the Galaxy.
They wrote that they have joined forces “to quantitatively compare the complexity of galaxy networks and neuronal networks.” They said they were truly surprised at what they found. “Not only are the complexities of the brain and cosmic web actually similar, but so are their structures. The universe may be self-similar across scales that differ in size by a factor of a billion billion billion.”
With the help of computer technology and powerful telescopes and microscopes, that allowed these specialists to look deep within and far out into our universe, Vazza and Feletti found that “the total number of neutrons in the human brain falls in the same ballpark as the number of galaxies in the observable universe.”
Indeed, over the years we have drawn our data from more simplified observations, and came to the same conclusion. Just by using high powered microscopes to study the tiny atom, with a nucleus in the center and neutrons and protons constantly circling, we noticed the similarity to the appearance of our solar system, with planets and moons circling a hot sun in the center.
We noticed that all atomic structures of everything on our planet . . . even in the stones . . . look much the same. And everything, everywhere is in constant motion. We see this motion not only in our solar system, but in the galaxy we share, and billions and billions of galaxies that we observe with our high powered telescopes beyond that. Nothing is stagnant.
So where does all of this power come from? How can all things, down to the complex makeup of the human brain and the amazing networks of the galaxies, follow the same pattern? Can anyone dare to suggest this happened by accident?
Thus this is the reason we have determined that the God we all seek (and fight over the way in which we seek it) virtually surrounds us. This God is a gigantic energy and we are all a tiny speck within it.
Because of our new understanding we find it questionable that such a power bothers to hear personal prayers or bother itself with the minute affairs of the beings on this planet. The workings of this amazing Universe will continue unchecked with or without our existence.
The mystery in all of this is the human soul. This seems to be a spark within us all that seems to connect us to the mind of the Creator. This, indeed, is a riddle that may remain unsolved until the day we die. There is no assurance that we will discover its secrets even then. The best we can do at this point is enjoy the ride we have and look forward to whatever lies ahead after its over.
By James Donahue
Italian researchers Franco Vazza and Alberto Feletti have supported a thesis we have been proposing, that the Creator exists in all things and that we, as living creatures on this planet, are but a minute particle of the energy that is the Living God.
In a paper recently published in Nautilus, Vazza, an astrophysicist at Radio Astronomy Institute, Bologna, and Feletti, a neuroscientist at NOCSAE Hospital, Universitaria di Modena, noted the “strange similarity” between Neurons and the Galaxy.
They wrote that they have joined forces “to quantitatively compare the complexity of galaxy networks and neuronal networks.” They said they were truly surprised at what they found. “Not only are the complexities of the brain and cosmic web actually similar, but so are their structures. The universe may be self-similar across scales that differ in size by a factor of a billion billion billion.”
With the help of computer technology and powerful telescopes and microscopes, that allowed these specialists to look deep within and far out into our universe, Vazza and Feletti found that “the total number of neutrons in the human brain falls in the same ballpark as the number of galaxies in the observable universe.”
Indeed, over the years we have drawn our data from more simplified observations, and came to the same conclusion. Just by using high powered microscopes to study the tiny atom, with a nucleus in the center and neutrons and protons constantly circling, we noticed the similarity to the appearance of our solar system, with planets and moons circling a hot sun in the center.
We noticed that all atomic structures of everything on our planet . . . even in the stones . . . look much the same. And everything, everywhere is in constant motion. We see this motion not only in our solar system, but in the galaxy we share, and billions and billions of galaxies that we observe with our high powered telescopes beyond that. Nothing is stagnant.
So where does all of this power come from? How can all things, down to the complex makeup of the human brain and the amazing networks of the galaxies, follow the same pattern? Can anyone dare to suggest this happened by accident?
Thus this is the reason we have determined that the God we all seek (and fight over the way in which we seek it) virtually surrounds us. This God is a gigantic energy and we are all a tiny speck within it.
Because of our new understanding we find it questionable that such a power bothers to hear personal prayers or bother itself with the minute affairs of the beings on this planet. The workings of this amazing Universe will continue unchecked with or without our existence.
The mystery in all of this is the human soul. This seems to be a spark within us all that seems to connect us to the mind of the Creator. This, indeed, is a riddle that may remain unsolved until the day we die. There is no assurance that we will discover its secrets even then. The best we can do at this point is enjoy the ride we have and look forward to whatever lies ahead after its over.