Microvita

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Microvita
Short description Fundamental building blocks of life
Location in Sarkarverse
SVmap NonliteraryWorks.png

The theory of Microvita was introduced by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar on 1986 December 31 and amplified in numerous subsequent discourses and demonstrations.[nb 1] The discourses given up to 1989 were compiled in the book Microvitum in a Nutshell.

Definition and introduction

The term "Microvita" is plural for "Micro-vitum" and literally means "micro-life". According to this intuitional theory microvita are entities which come within the realms both of physicality and of psychic expression. They are smaller and subtler than physical atoms and subatomic particles, and in the psychic realm they may be subtler than mind–stuff, and contribute to "pure consciousness".[1] The author predicts that they will soon be recognized by conventional science.[2]

According to the Dutch microvita researcher Henk de Weijer "microvita are tiny little creative catalysing agents. They build atoms of matter, biology and mind, while cooperating with the characteristics of subatomic particles and pure energy".[3]

Starting from the basic concept expressed by Sarkar in his discourses,[2] the scholar Richard Gautier (aka Ratnesh) highlighted the key involvement of microvita in the structural organization of energy for the creation and maintenance of structures. He wrote: "...without microvita, no physical structure can exist. This because without microvita, energy or prana cannot be organized to become vital energy and create or maintain the existence of a structure."[4]

In connection with Quantum Field Theory, another researcher from the Netherlands, Frank van den Bovenkamp, suggests that the scalar field not only gives mass to elementary particles, but on top of that produces subtle vibrations which appear to possess certain characteristics of microvita. This inner, simultaneous state of the all-pervading scalar field is reminiscent of P.R. Sarkar's philosophical concept of "Trigunatmika" (also referred to as Causal Matrix, and in Hinduism as Parameshashakti, "[that] which has no reality in the absolute sense but is superior to its effects and inferred by them").[5]

Notes

  1. ^ Between 1955 and 1990 the author wrote in English, Bengali and Hindi. He wrote in the name "Shrii Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar" when treating sociology, economics, philology and various other subjects, and in the name "Shrii Shrii Ánandamúrti" when focusing on spiritual topics. Many of his books he gave as dictations; others were compiled from his discourses, some of them in small pocket-books.

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