FULL OF LIGHT – ‘Ausstellungsbrücke’ with Rosa Bordeaux and Brigitte Kos
Landhausplatz 1a, 3109 St. Pölten
June 22 to August 27, 2023
FULL OF LIGHT
We cannot manifest a different kind of life through our thinking than the kind we realize within ourselves. Author James Allen puts it this way: We become what we think. The only things we can attract are those things that vibrate harmoniously with us.
We humans consist of a geometric collection of harmonious waveforms of light, controlled by intelligence.
When we look at a body or any other matter with the eyes of a physicist, we see nothing but a vast void in which there are a few scattered globules called atoms, which in turn consist of a nucleus (protons and neutrons) around which electrons revolve. Most of an atom is empty space between subatomic particles. Like the universe, 99.9999 percent of all matter consists of empty space. The remaining 0.0001 percent forms the smallest building blocks of matter, which are called quarks and initially appeared to be solid matter, but also consist almost entirely of empty space. If we could completely remove the empty space from the Earth, it would shrink to the size of a small ball that would be as heavy as the Earth.
At the beginning of the 20th century, physicists discovered the quantum world. The laws that apply in this microscopic world of particles and atoms turned out to be fundamentally different than in the macroscopic world we know. The building blocks of matter – i.e. atoms and their components: protons, neutrons, and electrons and light particles – show a completely different behavior than we know from our everyday world. In contrast to macroscopic objects, quantum particles have wave properties in addition to their particle properties. Unless you look, you can’t say exactly where an atom or electron is. Not because we don’t know, but because the quantum particle appears to be in different places at the same time. This wave function includes all possible locations or states of a quantum particle and allows statements to be made about how likely the different states are. Only through a measurement does the wave-like superposition of all possible states end, and the quantum system randomly settles on a clear value. Observation, therefore, changes the quantum system.
If we humans are made up of a geometric collection of harmonious light waves directed by intelligence, shouldn’t we ask ourselves what we focus our attention on every day and what life we manifest through it?
Elisabeth Sula
June 2023