How there are not straight lines in light or life with Michael R Evans.
It was in the early 70’s that I began what was to become my life’s work, the study of the structure of light. I became aware of the work that was coming out of the Bauhaus at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Buckminster Fuller was teaching there and one of his students, Robert Auerbach, turned me on to spherical negative and positive space. One of the things that Fuller would tell his class was to find the “universal intersection.”
It was this search for the universal intersection and the space between the balloons that, for me, bridged the gap between the second and third dimensions. It was no longer abstract. It no longer had to be translated. It was experiential. Language played no part in the explanation of universal concepts—it was all in the doing.
It became apparent that religion and science are but an analogy of each other, that each is but an explanation of the same concept—the search for the one indisputable, indivisible, immutable law that governs the workings of the universe.
Michael R Evans
Magazine
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