In Part I, I delineated how the body is affected by the external environment because of underlying connectivity and overall consciousness that begin at subatomic particles. Now, I will go into more depth about how all this works.
The continuous contact of the body with the entire environment creates a continuous whole. In this setting the actions of the body, whether in conscious or unconscious awareness, still take place in overall consciousness.
Genes function within our body cells as carriers of information from the environment then act as processors of this information for epigenetic expression. All of these actions take place in unconscious awareness. The interaction between the body and what is external can be then seen as a system-wide event: the body and its actions are never really separate from each other or the whole.
Consciousness, whether in conscious or unconscious awareness, still creates outcomes that consist of the cumulative states of subatomic particles. These cumulative states result either in form, or the precursors of form, such as thought and emotion. These express as electromagnetic energy within the body.
The interaction between what is within and outside the body defines the overall bodily experience. This should be viewed as an exchange and integration of information that then translates into experience for a person.
Consciousness of the body essentially views a set of probabilities about potential experiences in “probability space”, called “imagination space” as it relates to the body.
These probabilities then condense into actual experience for a person, which we then perceive as reality.
We should see then that the body truly is a quantum mechanical machine, capable of generating experiences in perceived “real-space,” from the probabilities perceived in the “imagination-space” of thought.
Experiences in perceived “real-space” can be resonated at either a Level Zero understanding, a Level One understanding or Level Two understanding of connectivity. Depending on the level, there are different interactions with the “environment” or the portion external to the body. In this way, the same person can have very different experiences from the same set-up events.

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