Charles Thrasher’s Lifestream

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The universe as process: David Bohm's implicate order

I've just finished reading Infinite Potential, J. David Peat's biography of David Bohm. Bohm was a protégé of Einstein, a colleague of Oppenheimer on the Manhattan Project, a man hounded from his native land by McCarthyism, an advisor to the Dali Lama, and the most creative theoretical physicist of the 20th Century. Yet his revolutionary theories about the nature of the universe remain largely ignored by the scientific community.
 
What impressed me most was Bohm's vulnerability, his ability to produce work of stunning genius despite the pain that wracked his personal life. He was emotionally isolated, almost autistic in his isolation, but capable of a singular focus upon a problem. He lived not entirely in this world. His ambition was to understand the very roots of reality, what lies beneath even quantum reality. His vision stitches back together the fragmentary world view resulting from our incomplete understanding of relativity and quantum mechanics. It will take me years to understand the significance of Bohm's contribution; it's a worthwhile ambition.
 
I suspect Bohm's concept of the implicate universe, the folding and unfolding of meaning, holds the potential to undo the feeling of alienation that haunts Western culture. Perhaps it can even save us from ourselves. It's certain we need saving and I doubt anything less fundamentally religious than our understanding of reality will suffice.

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