Page 217 - Global Freemasonry
P. 217

Harun Yahya (Adnan Oktar)

            ever, were the sound level in your brain measured by a precise device at
            that moment, complete silence would be found to be prevailing there.
                 As is the case with imagery, decades of effort have been spent in try-
            ing to generate and reproduce sound that is faithful to the original. The
            results of these efforts are sound recorders, high-fidelity systems, and sys-
            tems for sensing sound. Despite all of this technology and the thousands of
            engineers and experts who have been working on this endeavor, no sound
            has yet been obtained that has the same sharpness and clarity as the sound
            perceived by the ear. Think of the highest-quality hi-fi systems produced
            by the largest company in the music industry. Even in these devices, when
            sound is recorded some of it is lost; or when you turn on a hi-fi you always
            hear a hissing sound before the music starts. However, the sounds that are
            the products of the human body's technology are extremely sharp and
            clear. A human ear never perceives a sound accompanied by a hissing

            sound or with atmospherics as does a hi-fi; rather, it perceives sound
            exactly as it is, sharp and clear. This is the way it has been since the Cre-
            ation of man.
                 So far, no man-made visual or recording apparatus has been as sensi-
            tive and successful in perceiving sensory data as are the eye and the ear.
            However, as far as seeing and hearing are concerned, a far greater truth
            lies beyond all this.



                 To Whom Does the Consciousness that Sees
                 and Hears within the Brain Belong?
                 Who watches an alluring world in the brain, listens to symphonies
            and the twittering of birds, and smells the rose?
                 The stimulations coming from a person's eyes, ears, and nose travel to
            the brain as electro-chemical nerve impulses. In biology, physiology, and
            biochemistry books, you can find many details about how this image
            forms in the brain. However, you will never come across the most impor-
            tant fact: Who perceives these electro-chemical nerve impulses as images,
            sounds, odors, and sensory events in the brain? There is a consciousness
            in the brain that perceives all this without feeling any need for an eye,


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