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THINKING

What is thinking? Everyone does it. How does it happen? It is beneficial in this respect to reflect on the definition of quantum frequency – quantum frequency is information. Packages of quantum frequencies are clusters of information. They form words, or concepts. Words convey our thoughts. A group of words are made into sentences and people use sentences to exchange information. Sentences can be true or false.

How can we envisage our thought processes? Clusters of information in the form of quantum frequency packages interact with one another by resonance. A thought process is a sequence of resonance stages of various information packages, i.e. of various words. If the frequencies of the information packages match each other well, the resonance is good. And if the resulting words match, they are perceived as true. The better words match together as part of a statement, the more likely they are to be perceived as true. A high degree of resonance between many clusters of information is perceived as harmonious.

There are statements with information that more or less fits well together. Depending on the degree of resonance between the information’s frequencies, the result is a more or less true statement. How can we assess the quality of a statement? In mathematics, numbers enable verifiable assessments. Logical mathematical statements are true statements.

Often, false information is deliberately passed on by words and much of this information is virtually impossible to verify. What’s more, most words consist of a mixture of different meanings, whose degree of resonance can vary greatly in a given statement. This is related to the fact that words are made from an extremely large number of quantum frequencies, which in turn are bundled into many different information packages. Therefore evaluating the quality of a statement is difficult – even if it were possible to determine the resonance values of all information packages involved. However, the resonance values cannot be measured. Depending on the value you attribute to the result of your thought process, you make do with a corresponding estimation about whether the statement is true. Statements can only be verified in the world of mathematics. In other fields, truth of a statement is not absolute, but a function of probability and varies according to the respective culture and stage of development.

To determine a statement’s validity, you must first identify which criteria to use for your evaluation. Every person has their own criteria that they consider important. Statements are true if they fulfill certain criteria. Tolerant people accept statements according to various criteria, if the statements fulfill a series of shared basic criteria.

Thinking is a process that requires energy. If a person does not have enough energy, this will be reflected in the results of their thought processes – particularly if those results are not subsequently examined. In order to have enough energy to think, it is advisable to meditate. Harmonious information is generated by meditation.