The Mind’s Connection to the Universe, with Bernard Carr.
Bernard Carr has kept a synchronicity diary for 30 years, knowing that if he did not write them down, they would be forgotten. As a cosmologist, he is interested in time and describes his own experiences with precognition. He also describes mind-matter interactions, like how clocks sometimes stop when people die.
On this week’s Connecting with Coincidence podcast, our discussion includes the anthropic principle, how our universe is fine-tuned to create the potential for our existence. Bernard suggests it is our arrogance that makes us believe this is the only universe, that the multiverse is real. There is a greater Mind trying to know itself as we each learn to know ourselves.
Meet Bernard now on the Connecting with Coincidence podcast:
Bernard Carr is Emeritus Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at Queen Mary University of London. For his PhD, he studied the first second of the universe with Stephen Hawking at Cambridge University and Caltech. He then held Research Fellowships at Trinity College and the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge before moving to Queen Mary.
His professional area of research is cosmology and includes such topics as the early universe, black holes, dark matter and the anthropic principle. He is also interested in the role of consciousness, regarding this as a fundamental rather than incidental feature of the Universe. He is President of the Scientific and Medical Network and a former President of the Society for Psychical Research.
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Photo by Dino Reichmuth on Unsplash
Good afternoon, I'm Mario from Tuscany, observing personal and very effective sincronicities in my life. Effective in the sense that I've shared with others such incredible events immediately during their time lapse. So they seem not to be personal impressions but real events, taking place in a particular period of my life. Despite they seem not to appear since 2018, they had such an impact on me that I've written every single one accurately, with dates and details. They refer always to the same mechanism: walking in the town I wrongly believe I'm seeing a friend of mine, approaching and welcoming her/him, but at a few steps away from her/him I understand that one was not the person I believed.…