What is a spiritual experience?

6 months ago
8

A "spiritual experience" is a view of realms that cannot be experienced with the 5 senses and thus can only be experienced via our "6th sense". Science now knows at least 95% of what exists is ‘dark energy’ - dark as far as our 5 senses are concerned. Some dark energy is unordered, but that which is ordered is called Spirit. And spiritual experience is the only means by which we will ever know the nature of this energy. To put this another way, if we just rely on our senses, we will have only ever experienced 5% of what exists. Our "sixth sense", on the other hand, gives us access to the 95% which has never been explored by science - up till now. In fact by ignoring all the observations collected by religions, science has ignored all the data which might have enabled it to explore 95% of what is, as opposed to just the 5%. Even theoretical physicists recognise that to understand quantum physics requires a study of "Dark matter and Dark energy" - spirit. Thus "spiritual experience" is actually key to science.
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CREDITS

SCULPTURES
All the sculptures in this video are by Dame Barbara Hepworth. Barbara was an English artist and sculptor, born on 10 January 1903 in Wakefield, Yorkshire. She died on 20 May 1975.
Hepworth had an influence on art of which few are aware. In 1933 she and her artist husband Ben Nicholson spent time in Paris with other abstract artists who were also showing an interest in transcendental matters. Brancusi and Braque were exploring Zen Buddhism, Mondrian and Arp Theosophy, while Naum Gabo was engrossed with Einstein’s investigations that ‘destroyed the borderlines between Matter and Energy, between Space and Time’.

In 1937 she said:
"Vision is not sight- it is the perception of the mind. It is the discernment of the reality of life, a piercing of the superficial surfaces of material existence that gives a work of art its significant power".
But not until 2015, when an exhibition of her work entitled, "Barbara Hepworth: Sculpture for a Modern World." and an article by Dr Lucy Kent entitled "‘An Act of Praise’: Religion and the Work of Barbara Hepworth", was it acknowledged that a deep vein of spirituality guided her work.
In an article by Sue Hubbard entitled Barbara Hepworth - In praise of the Divine, Hubbard states
"what is clear from her archives is that spiritual concerns were central both to her life and work". And in an interview in 1965 , Hepworth asserted that:
“A sculpture should be an act of praise, an enduring expression of the divine spirit".

VIDEO EFFECTS AND FOOTAGE

Free Green Screen - Shooting Star
https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=25XPyoVjlXg

Modern Art Museum Footage pack slow motion FREE
Bogdan Kosmin
https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=eO8V5rzGK3c

The Ceramic Presence in Modern Art
Yale University Art Gallery
https://www.youtube.com/ results?search_query=contemporary+art+free+footage

MUSIC

00:00 Outlaw's Farewell (part I) - Reed Mathis
01:21 Sweetly My Heart - Asher Fulero
04:12 Far Behind - Silent Partner
05:33 Dragón Rojo - Mini Vandals
07:23 Pastorale - Joel Cummins
08:47 Outlaw's Farewell (part I) - Reed Mathis

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