Standuble wrote:I enjoy the mystery and mysticism of the 2012 doomsday theory, not just for its connections with the forgotten and perhaps forbidden history of the Mayans but a break away from established understanding into potentially unimaginable areas (which is great for the imagination.) How would (within the confines of our understanding of our universe) stellar alignment cause the end of all existence? That is unless something really out there happens, e.g. a particle accelerator or Hadron collider somehow opens a portal to another universe and they begin to merge together.
If the Mayans are right and the world does end, should we consider it in the traditional context of an all-encompassing annihilation or merely the destruction of a single planet orbiting a single star in a single galaxy amongst many in an immense universe? I suspect the latter is all a correct Mayan prediction would amount to.
My view, which I understand most people disagree with, is that reality is consciousness; that nothing actually exists in an absolute sense until consciousness discovers it. I'm still thinking about and reading about this stuff, so my views are provisional, I hasten to add.
One thing worth mentioning in this context is the apparent increase in mystical and paranormal phenomena in times of collective stress. I understand that weird visions and premonitions were pretty common among soldiers in the First World War trenches.
I'm not going to argue that I have proof for any of these ideas because I don't. I'm just saying that I think what we perceive is merely a shadow of what's really "there", and that at this stage I don't rule anything out regarding what the nature of any "transformation of consciousness" might be.
As I've said before, my views are largely derived from my own experience, and I wouldn't particularly expect anyone whose experience is different to accept them.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."