Today I want to address a topic of immense importance for all researchers and individuals interested in discovering knowledge about – and from – cosmic civilizations.
People who have developed extrasensory perception abilities and thereby the capacity to communicate with representatives of cosmic civilizations sometimes receive extraordinary revelations from extraterrestrial and interdimensional beings: about our place on Earth, the role of Humanity in the universe, the histories of various civilizations, and the situation on a cosmic scale.
We often build from this an image of reality which many people tend to take for granted, provided they trust a given transmission source and it aligns with their emotions about the reality they already know.
And yet, when acquiring information through various paths of extrasensory perception – whether through Remote Viewing, OOBE, or especially through Channeling – we should account for the fact that information flowing from given beings, despite their apparent sincerity or the suspicion that they act from certain convictions, may not be objectively true.
What Does This Mean?
Belief – which often takes on a religious character – is in itself a phenomenon in its own right. Even outside religion. A situation where someone believes something that has not been objectively confirmed is probably a far more common phenomenon than we might think.
Wherever there is no absolute knowledge – no so-called omniscience – wherever a given being or group of beings does not possess direct empirical knowledge of absolutely everything that exists and occurs – there arises space for belief.
Whenever a being – whether human or any other kind – has gaps in its knowledge and simultaneously has desires, fears, or preferences, those gaps often begin to be filled with belief. Belief is conviction, not necessarily supported by facts.
Belief has the quality that, under the right circumstances, it becomes a conviction so “naturally acquired” that it is never questioned – and what a given individual or group believes is treated as self-evident, with full conviction that this is what objective truth looks like. Human beings have repeatedly succumbed to this illusion throughout history: both groups and individuals have lived in complete conviction of the correctness of their beliefs that did not necessarily have a basis in fact.
As long as such beliefs are not confronted with a verifying reality, they can be propagated and maintained for almost any number of generations and individuals. This is how religious faith works – it thrives because it is constructed in such a way that ultimate verification of religious convictions never occurs within a lifetime.
Cosmic and Interdimensional Civilizations Believe Too
Therefore we should also guard against what often flows from our own unfounded beliefs – the belief in the infallibility and complete truthfulness of cosmic and interdimensional civilizations – even when their intentions appear to be the very best.
This means that even if a given being or civilization rightly inspires our sympathy and we have reasons to trust its intentions and desire to be truthful – the information we receive should still be evaluated through the lens of whether it might be simply that being’s belief about the state of things.
Cosmic civilizations may also have their own sets of beliefs, naturally based on their perception of reality and the gaps in the knowledge they possess. For even if they may possess knowledge incomparably greater than ours, the significance of their knowledge gaps may analogously be enormous – producing in them strong beliefs and sets of convictions that allow them, like any rational being, to make sense of reality in their minds without having all the data.
When speaking of the significance of cosmic civilizations’ knowledge gaps, the scale must be considered. If their knowledge is, for example, ten times greater than ours, the gap in knowledge patched with belief will carry proportionally greater weight for us. One should never assume anyone’s omniscience, even regarding very intelligent beings.
And since when we believe something we are not always aware that it is merely our conviction and not an objective fact – and even when we do know this, how often do people sharing information fail to mention that they are sharing a belief rather than an objective fact – we should assume an analogous situation with respect to other beings in the universe.
Healthy Skepticism as the Path to Genuine Knowledge
It is therefore healthy to question, challenge, and seek to verify all transmitted information – especially that which appears to be “revealed truth.” It is worth not arguing with those who transmit it, since if a given piece of information stems from belief, the reaction may be similar to those we know on Earth.
Many levels of reality contain beings utterly convinced that they possess the best, most accurate, most objective and wisest views of reality – and treat them as facts that others should also accept. That is why not only humans on Earth share their beliefs with interlocutors they encounter.
How many people practicing Channeling, or listening to Channeling transmissions, treat those transmissions as facts – deluding themselves that if a transmission comes from an advanced civilization, it must be credible? Yet it may be merely the expression of a subjective conviction – a belief about what reality looks like. Similarly, in all other extrasensory perception techniques, including OOBE and Remote Viewing – without exception – we must always remember to subject the information received to appropriate analysis. Upon encountering an informational transmission, we should not treat it as objective truth from the outset, but initially simply as content that a given party has decided to present to us.
The reasons for this reservation are ones we should discover and investigate – including determining whether a given entity has empirical information supporting the knowledge it conveys as fact, or whether it is their set of convictions.
Belief is ubiquitous, not only in the form of religion but in the form of interpreting information and arriving at various conclusions from those interpretations. Belief often arises from differences in the language we use, which can lead to different interpretations of the same subjects. Belief is present in politics and economics – everywhere that different points of view and perspectives exist.
We can and should strive toward objective truth. But in the process of getting to know various fascinating pieces of information, we should also always remember that even if something strongly agrees with our own beliefs – our own faith – we are not necessarily dealing with information about a fact. It may merely be another belief in something that fits our own.
In this way people often reinforce their convictions further, and yet this has nothing to do with knowing objective reality and facts. So if we care about facts – about ensuring that the information we come to know from all kinds of spiritual and other insights is truly valuable – we should always consider what causes a given being to say what it says, and why we receive it the way we do. Is someone truly conveying what they know, or merely what they believe – because it is convenient for them and subjectively explains their place in the universe, just as various religious beliefs do for many people?
With the knowledge that everyone believes in something, we can live more consciously – because we will automatically have open eyes to the psychology of the beings we encounter. To what our interlocutors are like internally – because belief says much about a being and its fears and needs that it is trying to satisfy.
The beliefs of cosmic civilizations may be equally cosmically spectacular – but we always have an advantage when we understand what is belief and what is knowledge.
Jakub Qba Niegowski – Extrasensory Awareness Development Specialist
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