1 result for (book:ur2 AND session:720 AND stemmed:concept)
[... 30 paragraphs ...]
(Long pause at 11:32.) In physical reality there is a time lag that exists between the conception of an idea, say, and its materialization. Beside that, other conditions operate that can slow down an idea’s physical actualization, or even impede it altogether. If not physically expressed, the thought will be actualized in another reality. An idea must have certain characteristics, for example, that agree with physical assumptions before it turns into a recognizable event. It must appear within your time context.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(Twice today Jane had tuned in to very similar concepts while going about her daily business. “I’m sure I got that from Seth,” she told me after the first such instance had taken place this afternoon. “Not only about your reincarnational stuff; but your thing as the old man [as described in Note 4 for the 719th session]. And the history of the species is written in the mass psyche in just the same way….”
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
2. Seth’s creative use of “hallucinations” here is certainly at variance with the concepts ordinarily associated with the word. In a dictionary, for instance, hallucinations may be described as sights and sounds apparently perceived. Hallucinations are tied in with some mental disorders; with objects not actually present. Logically enough, then, in the dictionary one of the synonyms for hallucination will be a word like “delusion”: a belief not true, a persistent opinion without corresponding physical evidence.