Science and Spirituality as Complements -- Author's Three Books Tell How Physics Can Unlock Keys to Reaching God


ALEXANDRIA, Va., Nov. 17, 2004 (PRIMEZONE) -- Physicist and author Vitalij Garber connects two bodies of knowledge that have clashed in modern culture. The three books in "The Triad" series, Communion with the Absolute, The Spirit-Body Communication and The Spirit Force (now available through AuthorHouse), join the findings of recent physics research with spiritual, Christian ideas about experiencing God.

Garber discusses how spirituality and science are not opposing forces. New discoveries in physics indicate the need for a "spirit force," he writes. Garber mixes these discoveries with the instructions of early Christian saints who reached a mystical level of connecting personally with God. He begins with Communion with the Absolute, in which he writes about the spiritual practice of communion within a physics context. Christ's own commandments hide secret messages for communicating with the divine, and the earliest Christian writings explicitly state the ways to reach God through prayer, meditation and other methods, Garber writes.

In the second book, The Spirit-Body Communication, he discusses the science that suggests each human cell is equipped with an "antenna" that makes it possible to be in tune with God. Aspects of physics, biology and neurophysiology touch on this finding, and the author explains how these amazing physical structures seem made to "couple" to a new spiritual "field" dimension.

Garber's original research makes up the third part of "The Triad" series. In The Spirit Force, he explains how one needs to augment today's laws of physics, which he claims are only theoretical models for the operations of the universe, to account for spirituality. His groundbreaking ideas highlight a new phase of understanding in spiritual and physical phenomena.

Packed with insight and creativity, Garber's "The Triad" series combines mysticism, spirituality and proven science to present a fascinating theory about the human mind and contact with the absolute.

Garber is an internationally known authority in science and technology. He served as the technical director of the Energy Research and Development Administration and oversaw research in major U.S. labs, such as Los Alamos National Laboratory and Brookhaven National Laboratory. He was the deputy undersecretary of defense for technological matters and the director of interoperability and systems integration at the Pentagon. He also conducted research under Nobel Prize winner Julian Schwinger, a winner of the Nobel prize, while he was on a postdoctoral fellowship award at Harvard University.

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