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Originally Posted by Dolazy I could be wrong, but doesn't the subjective reality theory say that there is no such thing as a physical objective reality? |
My point was that you have to fully believe subjective reality. You have lived X number of years in an objective reality, it's possible that while you consciously want to believe in a subjective reality and operate at a high level of conscious you have doubts in the back of your mind from past beliefs.
I guess my point is that it would be hard to let go everything you "know" from the past and immediately immerse yourself in this subjective reality. Steve certainly went through a long, well-thought out and well-tested journey to achieve this state.
I have not reached a point where I can fully embrace a subjective reality (yet). I am still testing and challenging my own beliefs and refining myself as I go along. It is an eventual goal of mine to reach a point where I can begin testing/experiencing a subjective reality but it is a journey for me; not an instantaneous epiphany where all my beliefs suddenly change.
A way to picture
my interpretation of it is to visualize a vertical gradient with objective reality on one end and subjective reality on the other. In order to break some hard physical laws that exist in the objective reality you need to be all the way in the dark part of the gradient on the subjective reality end of the spectrum, with no shades of your beliefs from your objective reality left over.
I hope that helps explain my point better.