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Your Brain Is A Quantum Time Machine (ft. Eric Wargo)

2024-11-13 Science & Technology
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Jesse Michels
Jesse Michels
635.0k subscribers

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Description

On today's episode of American Alchemy, we welcome Eric Wargo, a science writer and author known for exploring the mysteries of time, precognition, and the human mind. Eric's works, including Time Loops and Precognitive Dreamwork and the Long Self, delve into the profound connections between consciousness and the nature of time itself. Get ready for an upcoming, raw, long-form interview with Eric Wargo soon! Links Mentioned: - The Physics of UFOs: Eric Weinstein + Hal Puthoff: https://tinyurl.com/PhysicsofUFOs | Sponsors | Go to https://buyraycon.com/JESSEMICHELS for 30% off sitewide! Brought to you by Raycon -------------------------- JOIN OUR WHOP (Early Drops/Ad Free) ➤ https://whop.com/jessemichels Patreon (Early Drops/Ad Free) ➤ https://www.patreon.com/c/JesseMichels Discord ➤https://discord.gg/crHc44m3kF Instagram ➤ https://www.instagram.com/jessemichelsofficial TikTok ➤ https://www.tiktok.com/@itsjessemichels X ➤ https://twitter.com/AlchemyAmerican Spotify ➤ https://tinyurl.com/jessemichelsspotify Clips Channel ➤ https://www.youtube.com/@JesseMichelsClips Website ➤ https://www.jesse-michels.com/ Media Inquiries ➤ [email protected] Original music: https://open.spotify.com/artist/6LlLRudDi60Uy4jcmOSEs1 #quantumphysics #timetravel #consciousness #science #podcast #technology

Top Comments (10)

@nagilum 2024-11-13

I had a premonition that Jesse would be my lover in five years. And I’m not even gay.

313 54 replies
@silentvoiceinthedark5665 2024-11-13

When I was in med school I was studying on a Sunday afternoon for neurology exam. I went out for a walk to to clear my mind after 6 hours at my desk. Low and behold I come face to face with my neurology professor and I explained to him that I knew in my mind I was going to run into him randomly on that afternoon and ask him a few questions about the text book I was using to prepare for his exam the next day. One year later I ran into him again at the same place and time on a Sunday afternoon and another student in his class who was studying for the same exam I had been studying for a year earlier. That other student was asking him the same exact questions I was a year earlier from the same text book. I later asked the professor if he had ever been asked those questions before by any other student and he said only twice and they were the exact same questions right down to the wording of the questions. I told him how I thought it was so odd and he said most people would not understand how vast and fascinating our brain is. Here is the kicker, that other student was living in the same apartment I had lived in a year earlier and had followed the same exact schedule of reading for 6 hours at his desk and he had a premonition that he too would meet the professor if he went out for a walk.

124 13 replies
@ElijahNdukwe-br4ox 2024-11-14

Bro this is like the best content in YouTube history

119 3 replies
@middleagedbaldguy6774 2024-11-14

I survived a code in 2011. Complications from bacterial meningitis. Down for ten minutes before they got me kicked over and running smoothly again. Among some other really wild stuff, I had a conversation during the code with a cute brunette who had a foul mouth , a bob cut and a nice figure. I met my wife 18 months later and not only was she the woman I spoke with she remembered dreaming about a sick guy talking to her and telling her he wanted to meet. As best she can recall it was around the time I clocked out for a break when I coded. I teach physics for a living so I consider myself fairly grounded and not a "wooh wooh" hand waver but it just defies mundane explanations. Its worth mentioning that I was in Texas when I was sick and she was living in Kansas.

85 6 replies
@eugenethomas4647 2024-11-13

One night, I had a strange dream about a really powerful telescope. It was a long, detailed dream with the telescope being the main focus. Literally, the next day, my younger brother texted me and told me he had just bought a really expensive telescope. I mean, it was nothing earth-shattering but still pretty damn weird.

85 2 replies
@kcopara1 2024-11-14

The complete disregard of the heart which has 40,000 specialized neurons and which generates 100 times more electrical energy and 5,000 times more magnetic energy than the brain is egregious. The heart has been shown in studies, to consistently predict the future approximately 15 seconds or more before an event.

72 7 replies
@kapparey 2024-11-14

I have spent my entire adult life rejecting the topics you cover in favor of hardheaded skepticism. However, your videos are taking me on a journey of fascinating possibilities, and it's incredibly fun, if nothing else.

50 2 replies
@kevink1575 2024-11-14

I had a dream my younger 26 year old brother died. He was face down and not breathing. He was wearing a black shirt and blue jeans. He died a month later, and I found him face down in his room. He was wearing a black shirt and blue jeans.

23 3 replies
@JesseMichels 2024-11-13

Go to https://buyraycon.com/JESSEMICHELS for 30% off sitewide! Brought to you by Raycon

22 28 replies
@DimiOana 2024-11-15

Precognition is the most commonly used explanation for Remote Viewing, suggesting that future feedback is presented at a later moment, enabling a connection. In essence, the viewer is accessing data from their own mind at a relatively future point in time. However, I can challenge this explanation with an example from a session conducted by Pat Price. In this session, he described the target with remarkable accuracy but also included a water tower at the site. This detail was considered a miss at the time, and the researchers moved on. Later, Pat Price passed away (his death remains a mystery), and someone conducting thorough research into his work—and the work of other remote viewers—discovered something intriguing. The location Price had viewed, where he described a structure that wasn’t present at the time, now had the water tower built there long after his death. I call this the white crow argument against precognition. My perspective is that everything ties together like a blanket, embedding all that is, was, or will be. It also resembles a spider web, where every part is touched or triggered by everything else.

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