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SS Part One: Chapter 3: Session 519, March 23, 1970 4/48 (8%) computer illusion environment intrude assumptions
– Seth Speaks: The Eternal Validity of the Soul
– © 2012 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Part One
– Chapter 3: My Work and Those Dimensions of Reality Into Which It Takes Me
– Session 519, March 23, 1970, 9:10 P.M. Monday

[... 6 paragraphs ...]

You may think of your soul or entity — though only briefly and for the sake of this analogy — as some conscious and living, divinely inspired computer who programs its own existences and lifetimes. But this computer is so highly endowed with creativity that each of the various personalities it programs spring into consciousness and song, and in turn create realities that may have been undreamed of by the computer itself.

(9:25.) Each such personality, however, comes with a built-in idea of the reality in which it will operate, and its mental equipment is highly tailored to meet very specialized environments. It has full freedom, but it must operate within the context of existence to which it has been programmed. Within the personality, however, in the most secret recesses, is the condensed knowledge that resides in the computer as a whole. I must emphasize that I am not saying that the soul or entity is a computer, but only asking you to look at the matter in this light in order to make several points clear.

[... 4 paragraphs ...]

Your planetary systems exist at once, simultaneously, both in time and in space. The universe that you seem to perceive, either visually or through instruments, appears to be composed of galaxies, stars, and planets, at various distances from you. Basically, however, this is an illusion. Your senses and your very existence as physical creatures program you to perceive the universe in such a way. The universe as you know it is your interpretation of events as they intrude upon your three-dimensional reality. The events are mental. This does not mean that you cannot travel to other planets, for example, within that physical universe, any more than it means that you cannot use tables to hold books, glasses, and oranges (as our coffee table did at that moment), although the table has no solid qualities of its own.

[... 4 paragraphs ...]

(9:52. Jane was out of trance almost immediately. “I feel like someone on that TV show,” she said, referring to a popular science fiction program we’d seen earlier this evening. She tried to describe an image she’d had just before Seth began speaking, while saying it couldn’t really be put into words: “I saw… a field of something like stars. An idea would be projected out there by us against this field so that it seemed to explode. Yet really the idea’s right here,” she said, nodding toward her cupped hands, which she held just below her chin.

[... 29 paragraphs ...]

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