Using principles recognized only recently in quantum physics, Braden demonstrates how Isaiah's nonreligious, nondenominational form of prayer transcends time and distance to bring healing to our bodies and peace to the nations of our modern world. He suggests that Isaiah, the first Old Testament prophet, left precise instructions to the people of the future describing an unconventional mode of prayer. Weaving state-of-the-art research with his extensive knowledge of the ancient Essenes (the creators of the scroll texts), Braden invites us on a journey where science and miracles are merged into a new wisdom - and lead to a startling conclusion. He considers the year 2012, not as the end of a world.
Exploring Fractal Time is a three-part audio discussion of Braden’s concept of time as a series of repeating patterns or fractals. Greg Braden is a New York Times bestselling author whose books include The Isaiah Effect, The God Code, and The Divine Matrix.
In The Isaiah Effect, scientist and visionary Gregg Braden offers a radical departure from traditional interpretations of Isaiah's text. Exploring Fractal Time, by Gregg Braden Sounds True, B077F99H9J, 3 tracks, 2017.
The completeness of the Isaiah Scroll offers unprecedented insight into the power of an ancient mystery - a lost mode of prayer - that modern science is just beginning to understand. The Isaiah Effect: Decoding the Lost Science of Prayer and Prophecy by Gregg Braden Stay in Touch Sign up. Nearly one thousand years older than existing copies of the Old Testament's Book of Isaiah, the twenty-two-foot-long parchment was still rolled and sealed in its original earthen vase when it was discovered in 1946. Dn the Isaiah Effect, Gregg Braden, the author of Zero Point Awakening and Walking Between Worlds, combines research done in quantum physics with the works. Find album reviews, songs, credits and award information for The Isaiah Effect: Decoding the Lost Science of Prayer by Gregg Braden on AllMusic - 2006. Only one document was discovered completely intact among the 25,000 fragments of papyrus, parchment, and hammered copper known as the Dead Sea Scrolls the Great Isaiah Scroll.