PMS, Thought can be influenced by quantum realm, but that realm must ultimately yield to the concrete reality you describe, if persuasion doesn't work.
The glial cells of the brain, long thought to be kind of "brain filler" not particularly consequential, may in the future provide some insight into the mind and it's relationship with other minds. It now looks like the glial cells, though not as 'exciting' as neurons, may perform osmotic quantum functions that we recieve as flashes of intuition. The mind, long regarded as a product of the brain, itself an extension of the macro world that you describe, and housed within the fortress of the skull, may be much more ephemeral than we think.
The practised or talented mind can exert an effect on other minds quite easily, through suggestion. This is facilitated by this quantum realm, as well. Minds working together, for example, cannot stop a nuclear bomb dropped from a plane, but likely can influence the mind of the pilot, remotely, prior to releasing it, or the key govt players who have initiated this action.
But PMS, there is definitely a limit to what the mental realm can accomplish. I can surround myself with all the white light I can summon and walk across an eight lane highway, and still get hit. Why would or how should the quantum realm facilitate pure fantasy, arrogance, and narcissism? We are born here, I "feel" to learn our limits, while maximizing our human potential.
You might find this interesting---mentions Lynn Margulis and has some interesting things to say about the masculinity of traditional science. Of course, along with the emancipation of women, comes a certain emanicaption of thought.
NURTURING: Just as nurturing has been devalued by society, it has also been dismissed in science - even at the cellular level - as uninteresting. For example, the function of glial cells in the brain has largely been ignored, since these "helper" cells were thought just to feed nerve cells and clean up afterwards - playing the "little lady role". Although glial cells are ten times more numerous in the brain than neurons, they have been neglected in favour of studying more active, exciting nerve cells.
This disdain of neuroscientists to study cells that play a mere nutritious role forestalled findings that glial cells participate in communication between the brain and the rest of the body. By moving back and forth between the brain and the body (where they become a type of white blood cell of the immune system), glial cells destroy the myth of the blood-brain barrier - a physiological reflection of the Western belief in the separation of mind and body. Interestingly, the number of glial cells per neuron increases as mammals ascend the phylogenetic scale from mice to humans.
Perhaps an intriguing study of Einstein's brain will nourish interest in glial cells: Marian Diamond, a neuroanatomist at the University of California at Berkeley compared Einstein's brain with eleven other male brains. The only difference she found was that Einstein's had the largest number of glial cells per neuron. The difference was particularly significant in the area associated with the conceptual powers of imagery and complex thinking.
http://www.resurgence.org/resurgence/ar ... epherd.htm
I would go further than many modern researchers and propose that glial cells do more than breach the blood brain barrier.
BTW, I didn't see that movie, just heard about it. Sounds like science twisted to conform to some self flattering, fantastic notions, that have just enough basis in truth to make them dangerous. Perhaps I should withhold judgement until I see it.
Raphel--Hi. You're back. Good to see you back on the board!