The spiritual path is 
when you are willing 
to look at things 
which don’t fit into 
that preconceived notion 
of what is.
Welcome, 
beloved viewers, to 
Science and Spirituality 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
Today’s program is 
part one of a three-part series 
featuring an interview 
with a popular 
quantum physicist, 
author and lecturer 
from the United States, 
Dr. Fred Alan Wolf. 
Dr. Wolf earned a Ph.D. 
in theoretical physics 
from the University 
of California – 
Los Angeles, USA 
in 1963.  
He has lectured 
across the world, conducted 
extensive research 
in his field, written
many award-winning 
books such as 
“Taking 
the Quantum Leap” and 
“The Spiritual Universe,” 
and served as 
the resident physicist on 
the Discovery Channel 
program “The Know Zone.” 
Dr. Wolf has appeared 
in popular films such as 
“What The Bleep 
Do We Know” 
and “The Secret.”  
He is known for
explaining the complex
laws of quantum physics
in an engaging way
so that non-scientists
can better understand
them and see
how they relate to 
spiritual principles. 
His fascinating work 
has sparked the interest 
of many to deeply inquire 
into the very nature of 
existence and the mind.
Let us now meet 
the esteemed Dr. Wolf.
Dr. Wolf, welcome 
to Toronto (Canada)!
Thank you, 
it’s a pleasure to be here.
Tell us about 
your background. 
I have worked 
in many different places. 
I have worked 
for the government. 
I have taught at many 
different universities: 
University of Paris 
(France), University 
of London (UK), 
the Hahn Meitner Institute 
of Nuclear Research 
in Berlin (Germany), 
the Hebrew University 
in Jerusalem (Israel) 
as well as San Diego 
State University 
in California (USA) and 
many other institutions 
as well.
So what motivated you 
to study the connection 
between spirituality 
and quantum physics?
Mainly because my interest
is in the nature of magic. 
It may seem strange 
but as a child I developed 
a severe speech impediment 
and I stammered 
very, very badly. 
And one of 
the two techniques 
I learned to improve 
my speaking ability: 
one was to practice deep 
breathing and meditation. 
This was before I knew 
what meditation was. 
I was only 
nine or 10 years old 
but my speech therapist, 
that was one of the tools 
that she used to get me to 
concentrate on my breath 
and change my rhythm, 
so to speak, 
which of course
is a meditation technique.
And I also practiced 
doing what 
I would call “magic” 
in front of a mirror. 
When you do magic tricks 
where you are 
actually performing, 
it is a performance. 
A magician is 
like one stage show 
and one being because 
you are not only 
telling a story, but you 
are also demonstrating 
or visualizing or you are 
showing people an effect 
as a result of the story 
and this means 
you have to talk. 
So these two things 
in concert got me 
out of stammering 
and also got me 
interested in this process 
of what I call magic. 
So when I began 
to study more deeply, 
or in a deeper way, 
the nature of the world 
I was living in, I became 
intrigued with light, 
the light that we see. 
And I said, 
“What the heck is this? 
How does it work? 
What is light?” 
And that led me into 
“What is anything?” 
That got me 
into studying physics 
and that’s what led me 
into theoretical physics 
because 
I am always interested in 
how we understand 
what’s happening. 
That naturally led me 
into quantum physics, 
which is the major physics 
of today and 
that’s what got me started.
The Buddhist sacred text 
the Flower Ornament 
Sutra says, 
“Our perception 
of the Three Realms 
arise from the mind,” 
as well as, “The mind is 
like a master painter 
experienced at painting 
all sorts of things.”  
In terms of our perception 
of the outer world, 
Dr. Wolf sees similarities 
between the principles 
of quantum physics 
and spirituality, 
particularly regarding 
the role of the mind 
in shaping what we see.
As a physicist, what is 
your view of the soul?
Well, it’s an interesting 
concept and, of course, 
it has gone through 
a lot of change based upon 
which culture 
you deal with. 
In ancient culture, I think 
the soul was connected 
with the breath. 
So you said “I am” or 
“ahkman” “I breathe.” 
There was a connection 
with ‘ah’ -- soul/breath, 
so there was 
a connection there. 
As long as 
a person was breathing 
he was “souling.” 
The soul was present. 
It was interacting 
so there was a connection 
with that. 
And since it was like breath, 
invisible to the eye, 
the soul was some kind of 
invisible presence. 
And so the natural tendency 
was as we became more 
and more enlightened, 
to some extent, 
was to associate the soul 
as something 
more than just the breath; 
it was inhabiting the body 
like an apartment dweller 
inhabits an apartment. 
So these are the concepts. 
From a physics point 
of view, it became curious 
in a certain kind of 
funny way because 
in quantum physics 
we learn something 
about reality as not being 
out there by itself. 
There had to be a process 
by which something 
recognizes reality out there. 
And by recognizing 
or cognating 
or becoming aware of 
reality out there – 
well “out there” 
can mean anything 
from the tip of your nose 
to the planet in the sky 
to the person 
across the street 
to almost anything at all 
– that this process 
of noticing, the processing 
of becoming aware, 
involved a recognition, 
a consciousness, a mind. 
And that if the mind 
altered the way it went 
about this process of 
recognizing, cognating, 
looking at the “out there,” 
the experience would 
change “in here.”
In quantum physics 
we learned that 
as you began to delve 
deeply into that question 
of how what you bring 
to bear to observe, 
interacts, affects 
is in relation to the thing 
which you are observing 
we began to realize 
that the thing 
which we are observing 
is not just something 
that is itself physically there 
but is something 
that has been constructed 
in our mind, 
in our memory, as having 
a certain form, shape, 
size, material substance: 
all the various attributes 
we call physical reality. 
And that without these 
memorized concepts 
of these things 
that we say are out there 
we would not be able to 
even construct a picture 
or a semblance 
of understanding 
of what’s out there. 
In other words, there is 
no “out there” out there 
without an “in here” 
in here acting. 
Quantum physics 
is highly complicated and 
deals with things which 
are not perceivable in our 
physical surroundings, 
rather we must 
rely on models 
created by the mind 
to grasp them. 
Much about spirituality 
is also about 
the non-physical 
and invisible and 
Dr. Wolf sees this fact as 
an area of commonality 
between the two fields. 
As you delve even deeper 
into things 
that are subatomic 
or sub microscopic, 
things which we can’t see 
with our naked eye, 
we find that the very things 
we are looking at 
are fuzzy. 
They are not rigid. 
Things of macroscopic 
which are large-scale size 
that we can see 
with our naked eye, 
they are not so fuzzy. 
They are pretty solid 
and that’s how we come 
to agreement about 
what’s this and what’s that. 
We say 
“Ah, that’s a ball”
and “That’s a chain;” 
“That’s a ball” and 
“That’s a person’s hair.” 
They are not the same thing. 
We have a way 
of describing that 
because we can see it. 
But when you are talking 
about atoms and 
subatomic matter, 
we can draw only pictures 
in our mind 
because we cannot really 
see these things. 
In fact, 
what we bring to bear 
to look at these things 
alters them. 
So the current thinking 
right now is 
there really is no
actual thing “out there.” 
If we are talking about 
subatomic matter – atoms 
– things which make up 
the nucleus of the atom, 
the so-called quarks and 
the things we call bosons 
– which are little particles 
which mediate 
the relationship 
between the quarks which 
hold the nucleus together, 
called gluons, 
we begin to look at 
these various pictures, 
which are theoretical 
in our mind. 
We have never seen 
any of these things. 
We do them to give us 
some structure so that 
when we do experiments 
and look at the results 
of the experiments, 
the model will help us 
explain why the results 
look the way they look. 
So that’s what we do 
in quantum physics. 
We make up a model 
in our mind that 
we never really ever see 
that we then say 
is happening at that level. 
We have to see them 
only as the experience 
we have of being conscious. 
And so this is 
where the two, I think, 
come into alignment 
with each other. 
The quantum physical view 
that it is only when 
you bring your mind 
into the picture that 
you begin to make pictures 
of what’s going on 
at the subatomic level 
is very similar to when 
you bring your mind into 
the spiritual presence. 
You make a picture of what 
that spiritual presence is 
and so there is a similar 
process I think going on.
So if I understand you, 
what you are saying 
is that there is a link 
between quantum physics 
and spirituality?
Well, I don’t know 
if I would call it a link 
in the sense 
that there is a chain 
holding those two together. 
I would say there is 
a similar process 
of investigation 
which has to go on. 
And the thing 
which is very important 
to realizing 
both of these fields is that 
what you bring to bear 
affects what you perceive 
as reality of whatever it is 
you are looking at. 
What I bring to bear 
to look at an atom, 
if I bring to bear 
a certain way of looking, 
it seems wavy, 
almost unsubstantial.  
If I bring to bear 
a particle way 
of looking at things – 
where I want to find out 
where things are 
or when they are – 
things look like 
little balls, little marbles 
or little pieces of things. 
So how I look 
changes what I perceive. 
So I can’t say what 
an atom really is per se. 
I can only say 
what it’s like 
when I perceive it 
a certain way; 
the same thing 
with spirituality. 
Thank you 
Dr. Fred Alan Wolf 
for providing 
your deep insights 
into quantum physics 
and how this science 
is related to spirituality. 
Your enthusiasm and love 
of knowledge 
have certainly
inspired many people 
to take a closer look 
into the nature of reality.
For more details 
on Dr. Fred A. Wolf, 
please visit
Books, CDs, and DVDs 
by Dr. Wolf 
are available 
at the same website
Enlightened viewers, 
please join us 
next Monday on 
Science and Spirituality 
for part two of our program 
featuring more 
from our interview 
with Dr. Wolf. 
Thank you 
for your company 
on today’s program. 
Coming up next is 
Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May all lives be blessed 
with peace, happiness 
and God's loving grace. 
This leads naturally into 
the simple recognition of 
the great spiritual wisdom. 
There is only one mind 
because mind separated 
into separate parcels 
of space and time 
makes no sense 
from the point of view 
of quantum physics. 
And the theory 
of entanglement 
is one of the indications 
of the truth 
of that statement.
Welcome, 
thoughtful viewers, to 
Science and Spirituality 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
This program is part two
of a three-part series 
featuring an interview 
with a popular 
quantum physicist, 
author and lecturer 
from the United States, 
Dr. Fred Alan Wolf. 
Dr. Wolf earned a Ph.D. 
in theoretical physics 
from the University 
of California – 
Los Angeles, USA 
in 1963.  
He has lectured 
across the world, conducted 
extensive research 
in his field, written
many award-winning 
books such as 
“Taking 
the Quantum Leap” and 
“The Spiritual Universe,” 
and served as 
the resident physicist on 
the Discovery Channel 
program “The Know Zone.” 
Dr. Wolf has appeared 
in popular films such as 
“What The Bleep 
Do We Know” 
and “The Secret.”  
He is known for
explaining the complex
laws of quantum physics
in an engaging way
so that non-scientists can
better understand them
and see
how they relate to 
spiritual principles. 
His fascinating work 
has sparked the interest 
of many to deeply inquire 
into the very nature of 
existence and the mind.
Last week Dr. Wolf 
explained what led him 
to become interested in 
the relationship 
between quantum physics 
and spirituality. 
Today he provides 
his perspective 
on fascinating subjects 
ranging from 
the nature of reality, 
to the quantum 
entanglement theory to 
how quantum computers 
could possibly develop 
their own consciousness 
in the future.
A good question is 
what is reality? 
And what does it mean 
to talk about reality 
in any significant way? 
Clearly there seems to be 
some boundaries between 
what we call “what’s real.” 
You have your reality, 
I have my reality. 
That seems to be the case. 
However when you begin 
to look deeply 
into this question 
of quantum physics, and 
how mind enters into it, 
we cannot find a boundary 
from one mind to the next. 
We cannot find anything 
which distinguishes 
your mind from my mind. 
We have the experience 
of such a distinguishing 
going on. 
But if you really look at it, 
and I look at you, 
and I say to myself, 
“That’s a human being,” 
but I don’t have 
any experience of you 
other than
what I am experiencing 
from my natural senses, 
I’m not inside your head 
looking out your eyeballs, 
so I don’t know 
what you’re seeing, 
I don’t know what you’re 
smelling or tasting. 
I can imagine 
what those things are, 
but I don’t have 
an experience of that. 
So that’s a tendency to say 
that well since we seem 
to have separate bodies, 
we must have 
separate minds.  
But according to what 
we understand about mind, 
it doesn’t have any place 
where you can make 
the compartmentalization 
take place. 
In fact Erwin Schrödinger 
one of the founders 
of quantum physics, 
actually came up with 
a proof that there wasn’t 
any separation 
between various minds 
even though it appears 
that there are.   
That would bring us 
into the quantum 
entanglement theory. 
Can you explain that?
Well, in quantum 
entanglement it can 
involve mind, of course, 
but what it involves is 
what happens 
after what is called 
an interaction. 
When things interact 
we usually have a picture 
of an interaction 
as something 
coming together 
and flying apart, 
bindle-bangle, 
that’s an interaction. 
And the question 
then becomes 
if I know what’s going on 
before the interaction 
can I say what’s going on 
after the interaction? 
Now if these were billiard 
balls, classical snooker, 
or some game like that 
and you hit a ball 
and bounce it 
against another ball, 
the snooker players and 
billiard ball players know 
how to control that. 
So they can say given 
that I push the white ball 
with a certain amount 
of momentum 
and hit it a certain way, 
it’s going to hit the red ball 
and it’s going to 
fall over this way and 
everything is correlated – 
co-related – correlated; 
(it’s the) same word. 
In other words, 
I have control 
the initial conditions 
which are the ball 
I am trying to hit 
which is at rest 
on the green maze table 
and the little white ball 
I am hitting with my cue. 
I have control over the 
position and the momenta 
of both objects 
so I could predict what 
the position and momenta 
of the two objects are 
after they hit and fly apart. 
Momenta being 
mass times velocity or 
the movement of the object 
as it goes flying off 
in a given direction – 
that’s called momentum. 
Anyway that’s fine 
but in quantum physics 
we have no such control. 
We don’t know exactly 
the position and momenta 
of each object 
to begin with; 
but once they interact 
they become 
what is called entangled. 
They become a correlation 
which means 
since we don’t know 
exactly where they are 
the question arises: 
What do we know 
of these objects? 
And the question then is 
answered with this answer. 
We do know that if 
you measure the position 
of the object on the left 
after the interaction you 
can predict the position 
of the object on the right 
after the interaction. 
But if you decide to 
measure the momentum 
of the object on the left 
after the interaction 
you could predict 
the momentum 
of the object on the right 
after the interaction. 
But you cannot predict 
both the position 
and the momenta 
of either object 
after the interaction. 
Even if you measure both 
at the same time 
you cannot determine 
what the other object 
is going to have. 
Entanglement tells us 
that they are 
correlated provided 
you ask one question 
but not both. 
It’s a kind of a funny 
kind of 20 questions 
thing that you can’t ask 
all the questions at once. 
So you can’t determine 
the answers to all of them.
There seems to be a buzz 
going around about 
quantum computing. (Yes) 
What’s going on 
in this field?
Well, let me explain 
as basically as I can about 
the difference between 
a quantum computation 
and a normal computation. 
Computers are 
very simple basic tools 
that are very complicated 
because the very basic tool 
is multiplied by 
a zillion times. 
The basic tool is simply 
up or down, on or off, 
zero or one: that’s the tool. 
In other words, 
it’s a switch. 
All computers are 
a bunch of switches. 
Think of a switch 
as something 
which you can throw 
as going down or up, 
up/down, two switch 
positions and that is 
an ordinary computer, 
a whole bunch of these 
things, billions of them. 
And that’s how it works. 
Basically, change the 
positions of the switches; 
there are two possible 
positions here, there is 
another one over here, 
two more – that’s 
four possible positions. 
They can be both up; 
they can be both this way; 
they can be like this; 
or they can be like this. 
Now put three of them in, 
that means two 
(possible positions) 
times three (switches)
which is eight 
(possible positions)
and so forth … 
so two to the power of 
how many different 
switches there are is 
the power of the computer. 
It could be very large. 
Two to the power of ten 
is already more than 
a thousand so you can see 
that you could get a lot of 
different possibilities. 
Now we come to 
a quantum computer. 
It’s also made of switches 
but all these positions 
in between are allowed 
and can be computed 
in combination 
with the other ones. 
So there is an infinite 
variety in each switch 
of possible positions. 
So you have as many as 
different possible positions 
this has multiplied by 
as many switches 
as there are and you have 
a quantum computer. 
Of course, because 
they are so flimsy in a way, 
they are not very robust; 
you have to 
really isolate them 
to make sure that you 
don’t make them snap. 
Now the thing which makes 
quantum computation 
of interest is that 
even though there are 
all these different 
positions possible when 
you make computations, 
when you don’t actually 
observe what’s going on 
(very important, 
you don’t look). 
When you actually observe 
any one of these switches 
what you instantly get is 
this (up) or that (down), 
but never anything 
in-between.
Is that because of 
the observing effect?
That’s exactly it.
Okay.
So what a quantum 
computer does: 
it has way of observing, 
or bringing in the observer 
and the question is 
whether the machine 
can observe its own state 
or not.
It’s still an open question. 
I will lend a little bit of 
speculation here. 
If it’s possible 
that we can build 
a self-observing 
quantum computer 
it would be as conscious 
as a self-observing 
human being. 
It will also think about God 
and questions like that. 
A thinking, 
really conscious being 
in a computer – 
a being essentially able 
to do what we can do, 
which is to make things 
snap one way or the other. 
But it’s the possibilities 
which all these different 
possible positions 
can add up 
because what we have 
in quantum physics 
is something called 
“superposition 
possibilities.” 
If one switch is like this 
and the one next to it 
is like that, 
then the two add together 
like making vectors – 
you have one like this, 
one like that, 
and you can add them up 
and you get a whole bunch 
of different vectors going 
in all different directions 
and you get many, 
infinitely many 
different possibilities. 
Whereas with only 
this kind of computer 
(up or down, on or off), 
it’s either 
this adds with this one 
makes that one, 
or it goes down. 
You don’t get 
any in-betweens and 
therefore you don’t get 
any states associated with 
any of the in-betweens; 
whereas 
in quantum computers 
you can actually get 
something associated with 
the in-betweens provided 
you don’t look at what’s 
going on in-between.
It’s a very fascinating field. 
It’s one of the biggest 
fields in thinking today 
in quantum physics. 
Almost all the papers 
appearing right now 
have different aspects 
of quantum computation 
because it affects everything. 
We would like to again 
thank Dr. Fred Alan Wolf 
for explaining complex 
quantum physics concepts 
in a highly engaging 
manner and 
offering his insights on 
science, consciousness 
and spirituality. 
Bright viewers, please 
join us next Monday on 
Science and Spirituality 
for the conclusion of 
our three part interview 
with Dr. Wolf. 
For more details 
on Dr. Fred A. Wolf, 
please visit 
Books, CDs, and DVDs 
by Dr. Wolf 
are available 
at the same website
Thank you 
for your company today 
on our show. 
Coming up next is 
Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May the wonders 
of the universe 
forever inspire us all. 
Welcome, forward-thinking
 viewers, to 
Science and Spirituality 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
This program is 
the conclusion
of a three-part series 
featuring an interview 
with a popular 
quantum physicist, 
author and lecturer 
from the United States, 
Dr. Fred Alan Wolf. 
Dr. Wolf earned a Ph.D. 
in theoretical physics 
from the University 
of California – 
Los Angeles, USA 
in 1963.  
He has lectured 
across the world, conducted 
extensive research 
in his field, written
many award-winning 
books such as 
“Taking 
the Quantum Leap” and 
“The Spiritual Universe,” 
and served as 
the resident physicist on 
the Discovery Channel 
program “The Know Zone.” 
Dr. Wolf has appeared 
in popular films such as 
“What The Bleep 
Do We Know” 
and “The Secret.”  
He is known for
explaining the complex
laws of quantum physics
in an engaging way
so that non-scientists can
better understand them
and see
how they relate to 
spiritual principles. 
His fascinating work 
has sparked the interest 
of many to deeply inquire 
into the nature of 
existence and the mind.
Today Dr. Wolf 
delves into the past 
and speaks about 
some of the most famous 
physicists in history. 
Returning to the present, 
he will discuss 
current theories 
regarding the nature 
of parallel universes. 
Finally he will close with 
a thoughtful message 
about spirituality.
Let us now re-join 
our intriguing interview 
with Dr. Fred Alan Wolf.
You speak a lot 
about Plato.
What was his role 
in quantum physics?
Well, that’s a good question. 
Actually not only 
do I have a certain respect 
for platonic thinking 
and for Plato  
but also Roger Penrose 
who is a noted physicist 
who has also written about 
platonic ideals as well. 
The basic notion 
is the debate between 
Plato and Aristotle. 
Aristotle was a student 
of Plato, as I understand it, 
2,500 years or so ago. 
Basically the idea there 
was that Plato believed 
there was an ideal world, 
a nonmaterial ideal world 
and from this ideal world 
the practical world 
got built.
For example, 
there is an ideal table 
in Plato’s world 
and the table 
that any carpenter makes 
is going to be inferior 
to the ideal. 
It’s always going to have 
some pragmatic difficulty. 
One leg is going to be 
a little shorter 
than the other, 
wider than the other; 
the table may not 
be perfectly flat, etc. 
In other words, 
it’ll function as a table 
for all practical purposes 
unless we really want to 
measure things 
in a very refined way but 
it’s still not the ideal table. 
And as far as 
Plato was concerned 
the ideal world is where 
real things “come from.” 
So therefore, the notion 
of quantum physics seems 
to be more platonic 
because the things 
we work with in 
the quantum physical world 
theoretically are ideals 
rather than actualities. 
One of the 
most celebrated scientists 
was Albert Einstein. 
Was he a detractor 
of quantum physics?
Not at all. 
He was one of 
the founders of it. 
He became what appeared 
to be a detractor 
when he debated 
with Niels Bohr, 
the famous Bohr-Einstein 
debates that 
took place in the 1920s 
and even continued 
after the initial debates, 
which were in the 1920s, 
into even the day 
that Bohr died. 
He was still 
debating Einstein 
even though Einstein had 
died eight or nine years 
before him. 
So the whole notion was, 
is quantum physical 
reality complete? 
Is it a complete 
explanation of reality? 
Basically, Einstein said no. 
He didn’t think 
“God played dice 
with the universe” 
whereas Bohr said 
“Stop telling God 
what to do,” and that was 
how the debate went. 
And it went into all kinds 
of different possible things 
but so far Einstein 
has never won anything 
in that debate.
Okay. 
Why do you think that is?
Because Einstein’s picture 
was basically 
one of what is called 
“classical physics” and 
Einstein was basically 
disturbed by this thing 
I just talked about earlier, 
about the notion 
of entanglement. 
Entanglement 
was not according to 
Einstein’s kosher way 
of looking at things 
because it indicated 
some kind of action 
at a distance – 
faster than light. 
And Einstein came up 
with the theory of relativity 
which says that basically 
no information can travel 
faster than light. 
Do you have any insights 
into the theory 
of many universes?
Well, I’ve had a few of them. 
I wrote a book called 
“Parallel Universes” 
and by the way, 
I should tell you I have 
many books out there, 
almost 17 of them 
right now and 
my latest book is called 
“Time Loops and 
Space Twists: How God 
Created the Universe.” 
This should be appearing 
in the early spring of 2011. 
But I wrote a book called 
“Parallel Universes” 
back in the 1980s. 
I tried to explain how 
the concept originated, 
where it came from. 
It actually comes from 
quantum physics and 
it actually comes from 
general relativity. 
There are two fields 
in which it developed 
without any connection 
between the two. 
Nobody thought 
there was anything 
between the two, 
yet they both developed 
a notion of something 
called many universes 
or parallel universes. 
Let me talk about it from 
a quantum physics point 
of view first. 
When you observe 
something it instantly goes 
into a particular state at 
the moment of observation. 
When you are not
observing something 
then it’s possible 
for that thing, the system 
or whatever it is that 
you are looking at to be 
in many different states 
at the same time. 
Atoms exist in the same way 
with different states 
of energy and they are
linear combinations 
of all possible states 
that they could be in 
and so forth. 
So we have 
what we call many states. 
It then became of interest 
to ask what would happen 
if an observer 
observes these states. 
In other words, 
the observer becomes 
split into all the different 
possibilities as well as 
the different possibilities 
that are there. 
Now if that’s the case, 
then we have 
multiple universes 
and multiple observers 
so that one observer 
is not what happens.
What everybody does 
when they observe 
is they split themselves 
into multiple observers, 
each one observing 
a different state 
in a different universe. 
Since the two don’t ever 
talk to each other 
because observers 
are so complicated, 
you don’t know 
the splits occurred and 
as far as you are concerned 
you are still 
in the same universe. 
It sounds silly; 
it sounds a bit crazy 
but that’s how 
people were trying to 
model the effective mind 
by splitting the observer 
as if the observer were 
an object like the thing 
being observed. 
That’s where the idea 
originated from 
and at first people 
didn’t believe it at all, then 
they began to believe it 
even more so; and now 
they have the notion that 
well, yes, it’s true but. 
And they add 
a little bit of “but” 
and they call it the 
“theory of decoherence” 
which means that when 
we split the relationship 
of one observer 
in his universe to himself 
in another universe 
is decoherent; 
you can’t bring them 
back together again ever. 
That’s the kind of idea there; 
it’s an added thought. 
So that’s 
where many universes 
come into being there. 
The idea has caught on 
and it has led people into 
all kinds of speculation 
about can I go to 
a parallel universe? 
And people write me, 
“Well how can I get to 
a parallel universe?”
and that sort of thing, 
and I try to explain to them 
that it doesn’t quite work 
that way but nevertheless 
I still get those comments.
That’s a question 
I would have. (sure) 
I would like to test and see 
if this universe is better 
for me 
or some other universe.
Yes, I totally agree. 
If we could figure out a way 
to make a model of you, 
we can make a test.  
And if we can model 
what it is about you 
that makes observations, 
then of course 
such a test like that 
could be carried out. 
And indeed could take 
a photograph of you in 
a parallel universe. (Okay) 
But, there has to be a way 
to model you, 
and so far we don’t know 
how to model how your 
consciousness works. 
So we don’t know 
how to do that. 
In concluding our 
interview with Dr. Wolf, 
we asked him 
to give a message 
to those who may only 
have faith in science 
and do not believe that 
there is a spiritual side 
to our existence.
Think about 
these questions: 
If in asking yourself 
“Where was I 
before I was born?” 
“Where will I be 
after I die?” 
“Who am I?” 
If in asking those questions 
something gets ignited 
inside of you, 
some flame of inquiry, 
some igniting 
of consideration, 
that there is something 
going on here 
that is really mysterious.
If you are excited 
by such things as 
what I have just mentioned, 
these kinds of questions, 
then you are becoming 
spiritually awakened. 
And now the question is 
how much awakening 
are you willing 
to sustain in your life? 
Are you willing to walk 
in a completely awakened 
state all the time? 
Do you think 
that’s possible? 
If you do or if you wish to, 
then you are now 
taking steps 
on the spiritual path. 
The spiritual path 
is actually the path 
you have always been on. 
You may not remember it 
but it was the path 
you chose 
before you were born 
and will be the path 
you will be on 
after you pass from 
this physical existence. 
The spiritual path is 
when you are willing to 
look at things 
which don’t fit into 
that preconceived notion 
of what is and 
you begin to really realize 
that there is something 
going on here, 
which is igniting, burning 
inside of you, opening up 
like a flower growing, 
like a seed 
that has been planted. 
And the spiritual master 
is going to be there 
constantly nudging you 
to awaken to that; 
constantly trying to get you 
to water that seed. 
Professor Fred Alan Wolf, 
we thank you so much. 
It has been a pleasure.
Thank you!
Once again 
our sincere appreciation 
Dr. Fred Alan Wolf 
for sharing 
your sage thinking on 
the connections between 
the spiritual world 
and the realm 
of quantum physics. 
Through the work 
of scientists like you, 
may we forge 
a greater understanding 
of the universe 
so that humanity 
quickly progresses 
toward a higher level 
of enlightenment.
For more details 
on Dr. Wolf, 
please visit
Books, CDs, and DVDs
by Dr. Wolf 
are available 
at the same website
Splendid viewers, 
thank you 
for your company 
on this week’s edition of 
Science and Spiritualty. 
Coming up next is 
Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May your life be blessed 
with peace, happiness 
and God's loving grace.