Imagining the World

Published: June 25, 2018, 4 a.m.

b'Each of us is free to interpret the physical world however we want.\\xa0 At some point, experience and reason show one interpretation to be better than another.\\xa0 (This may be called the scientific method.)\\xa0 Then, that interpretation gains adherents, builds support, and dominates.\\xa0 But few play the long game, or wait for the disfavored interpretation to work itself through modern culture.

This week\'s guest, Kate Jegede, author of the mind-opening new book, Infinite Possibility, is one of them.\\xa0 To Kate, God is the human imagination and we can therefore create our world, change our lives, and even affect the past.\\xa0 Where books like The Secret suggest a connection between intention and the physical world, Infinite Possibility makes this connection a scientific truth. She writes: "God is not man.\\xa0 God actually became man, so that man can reawaken as God."\\xa0 This possibly radical position may seem familiar, for it is echoed in Eastern philosophy and underlies much of what we call the "new age."\\xa0 So listen in as Philip and Kate discuss this new interpretation which is in fact an old interpretation that we have somehow forgotten.'