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What if quantum physics opened the door to the soul?
What if the world is not truly made of separate things at all?
What if the fragmented reality we see-matter, mind, objects, observers, events-is only the surface of a deeper hidden order?
In Bohm and the Implicate Order, Clayton Louis Turnage explores the life, thought, and enduring significance of David Bohm, the brilliant physicist who challenged the orthodox view of quantum mechanics and went on to propose one of the most profound ideas in modern thought:
The visible world may be only the unfolded surface of a deeper, enfolded whole.
Bohm was not just a major figure in quantum theory. He was a thinker of hidden order, nonlocality, wholeness, consciousness, and the possibility that fragmentation itself is one of the great illusions of modernity.
This book takes readers deep into Bohm's scientific and philosophical journey, from his elite training in theoretical physics and his revolutionary work in Bohmian mechanics, to his later vision of the implicate order, the holomovement, and the deep connection between observer, thought, and reality.
Inside this book, you will discover:
This is not just the story of a physicist.
It is the story of a thinker who believed that beneath the broken surface of reality lies a deeper order of wholeness-and that quantum theory may have revealed far more than modern science was prepared to admit.
If you are fascinated by quantum physics, consciousness, nonlocality, hidden variables, Bohmian mechanics, philosophy of science, metaphysics, spirituality, or the hidden structure of reality, this book offers a compelling guide to one of the most visionary minds of the twentieth century.
Bohm believed the fragmented world we see is not the deepest truth of reality.
We may be discovering that beneath matter, mind, and appearance there is an order more whole than modern thought dared to imagine.