Author Topic: Deja Vu and Earth Resetting theory.  (Read 5216 times)

Tell me how much more this makes sense here, than religion.

They say in theory the earth resets itself every gazillion+ years, right? So time resets and everything else resets like in that futurama big bang episode.

Now when you die you can't picture yourself not existing you just can't do it. People claim there is reincarnation but how can that be. You don't remember anything of your past life. It just doesn't happen.


Now what if Deja Vu is linked up to all of this? What if every time you experience Deja Vu it just means your mind/conscious has synced up to the many past previous resets. It's a small anomaly through space and time that allows you to become fully aware of these Deja Vu flashbacks.

First I have to explain to some what Deja Vu is. No, Deja Vu is not you repeating a same action like when you wake up, eat, go to work. That's not Deja Vu. Deja Vu is when your mind flashes before your eyes of an exact moment in space and time of you doing something, literally the exact same thing (not a repeated action). However it feels like years or months went by when in reality it has only been 2 seconds.

Now from what people have said when they died and were revived is that there was nothing, just blackness. Well they didn't fully die. 1 second of being dead can feel like 1,000 years or more. There are claims of out of body experiences but it's possible their eyes were open and were still processing images.

But what if, what IF when you permanently die and 1 second of blackness is actually like 100 gazillion+ real years. Then you wake up as your baby self again but this time, all knowledge you learned is gone. Everything has reset and you are just left with your occasional Deja Vu flashbacks syncing up with your current time.



Now there are an incredibly few people who said they experienced being sent back in time for a week. Remember when I said Deja Vu flashbacks seem like months, years, etc have passed but you were doing the exact same thing in that moment of time? What if that's exactly like Deja Vu except you are so FULLY AWARE of said flashback that you are actually able to perceive being sent back into that time. These people have backed up these claims when they were able to predict outcomes of the future. So there is a very, incredibly small anomaly chance of us humans able to break a reset cycle, if only for a week or a day or even maybe a month.

This makes just as much sense as religion, actually.

Also this can't be compared to religion either. It's a theory about a certain aspect of our life that is obviously not fully understood, while religion is an entire practice of existence and ideology

You really view religion as some kind of object, don't you?
« Last Edit: February 24, 2016, 04:23:46 PM by Path »

A scientific breakthrough!

is this how you predicted fallout 4s premise

is this how you predicted fallout 4s premise
oh my god he's a wizard

Deja Vu is a very strange phenomenon, yet it's cause is (in theory) very real. I'm not really familiar with the full explanation so forgive me if I get any info wrong, but the reason we usually experience Deja Vu is because of how we perceive reality around us and how we store memories.

From what I recall, sometimes you will process what you're seeing after you've stored the memory of it rather than before, so your brain thinks "Wait, hasn't this very exact situation happened before?" and you feel Deja Vu.

Another theory is that since long term memories are incomplete pieces of information, if a specific situation fits all the key details of a previous memory, you may be tricked into thinking you've experienced the exact situation previously.

dumb pseudo science gone mad

Deja Vu is a very strange phenomenon, yet it's cause is (in theory) very real. I'm not really familiar with the full explanation so forgive me if I get any info wrong, but the reason we usually experience Deja Vu is because of how we perceive reality around us and how we store memories.

From what I recall, sometimes you will process what you're seeing after you've stored the memory of it rather than before, so your brain thinks "Wait, hasn't this very exact situation happened before?" and you feel Deja Vu.

Another theory is that since long term memories are incomplete pieces of information, if a specific situation fits all the key details of a previous memory, you may be tricked into thinking you've experienced the exact situation previously.

What about people who experience being sent back maybe like a day, week, etc in time?

Similar to the Groundhog Day movie.

I've daydreamed, snapped out of it, and then had exactly what I was daydreaming about happen 5 minutes later
it was weird as hell

What about people who experience being sent maybe like a day, week, etc in time?

Similar to the Groundhog Day movie.

People who experience Deja Vu more often than normal are thought to be suffering from a rare form of epilepsy if I remember correctly. Usually when you feel Deja Vu often enough for it to be worrying, however.

What about people who experience being sent maybe like a day, week, etc in time?

Similar to the Groundhog Day movie.
cite these people

keep going with this

it makes about as much sense as scientology, and the head of the scientologist church has a net worth of $50 million

What about people who experience being sent back maybe like a day, week, etc in time?

Similar to the Groundhog Day movie.

Misunderstood your point. It's very possible for somebody to not be able to perceive the passage of time properly. I think this disorder is called "Dyschronometria". If you feel you may have this, I'd get a checkup done because it's apparently associated with a brain disease

this reminds me of this ridiculous stuff I stumbled upon a while ago
the "mandela effect" is this thing where you distinctly remember one historical event going one way, but it actually went another way
and you know, whatever, that's not a big deal. but there's apparently quite a lot of people who think this is proof of alternate universes (and not just imperfect memories)
but even THAT is reasonable compared to the less common but still noteworthy number of people who think you can move between these alternate universes by frickin looking in a mirror
https://www.reddit.com/r/DimensionalJumping/comments/2aq7q0/how_to_jump_between_dimensions/

Misunderstood your point. It's very possible for somebody to not be able to perceive the passage of time properly. I think this disorder is called "Dyschronometria". If you feel you may have this, I'd get a checkup done because it's apparently associated with a brain disease

people with Dyschronometria can't predict what's about to happen within the next 5 seconds.

People with Dyschronometria basically have the memory of a gold fish, incredibly different.