This is a worthy essay that tackles the matter the present state of acceptance of physic phenomena and its history. what is startling is just how persuasive personal experience happens to be. Folks are experiencing the confounding and it is just not me. I had begun to reach similar conclusions because i have simply been asking and it appears everyone has a decent story to tell including direct communication and useful data. The actual numbers reported here are still the exact opposite of my expectation to the point i think everyone experiences something but a few choose not to listen.
So if you got this far, and have never thought along these lines, read up and test yourself out to see if useful knowledge flows through. At the same time become conscious of evil thoughts and understand them for what they are and put them aside. Evaluate rationally all such input.
With that caution i can see why spiritual calling becomes more persistent as a person ages.
.
The Question of Consciousness
Brendan D. Murphy, Guest
http://www.wakingtimes.com/2015/04/22/the-question-of-consciousness/
With so many people (many indeed being iconic historical figures)
experiencing what they are supposedly not meant to, the reasonable
individual might be forgiven for wondering if there is something more to
consciousness than our materialistic paradigms would have us believe.
Can we go further than questioning the assumed legitimacy of orthodox
materialistic theories which reduce consciousness to a mere
epiphenomenon (by-product) of physical matter (the brain) and
even—heaven forbid—suggest that they are not merely incomplete, but
actually types of superstitions in themselves?
Note: The following passage is excerpted from Chapter 1 of The Grand Illusion: A Synthesis of Science and Spirituality by Brendan D. Murphy.
Etymologically, the word consciousness derives from the words scire (to know) and cum or con(with). Consciousness is “to know with.” So if you, the persona, cognize (to know or be aware of), who are you cognizing with? Is there more to consciousness than the Freudian ego and unconscious?
Mathematical physicist Roger Penrose has written:
A scientific world-view which does not profoundly come to terms with the problem of conscious minds can have no serious pretensions of [sic] completeness…I would maintain that there is yet no physical, biological, or computational theory that comes very close to explaining our consciousness or intelligence.[i]
Indeed, in the past (and even today?) some scientists had taken the
absurd position that consciousness is an illusion. This, while providing
a nonsensical reason to ignore the problem of consciousness, obviously
fails to sate the curious inquirer’s queries regarding how we got here
and what we are doing here as conscious beings. Materialistic philosophy
as we know it—derived from the mechanistic worldview—had, more or less
since the dawning of the Age of Reason in the 1700s, steadfastly
maintained that what we call experience arises solely as a by-product of
the brain’s internal workings. No brain, no consciousness. But is it
really that simple? What about functions of consciousness that appear to
transcend the cranial boundaries of our heads? The Age of Reason said
that these forces had only ever existed in man’s imagination; only
reason could show man the truth about the universe. “The trouble was,”
according to Colin Wilson, “that man became a thinking pygmy, and the
world of the rationalists was a daylight place in which boredom,
triviality and ordinariness were ultimate truths.”[ii]
The Age of Reason glorified the rationalist, who, enamoured of his
endless linear cogitations, was blinded to faculties of consciousness
that actually transcended them: faculties that would have allowed him
not to merely philosophize about deeper levels of reality, but actually
access them. “This is the great tragedy of modern man,” wrote occultist,
philosopher, and composer Dane Rudhyar. “His much acclaimed scientific
spirit frees him of the compulsions of subrational and subconscious
states of mind, only to bind him to an empty rationalism and a
quantitative analytical intellect, both of which actually entomb him in a
sarcophagus filled with only the mimicry of life. This sarcophagus is
the ‘megalopolis’—the monstrous city.”[iii]
But something stirs in the bowels of the concrete jungle. An
international online survey of paranormal experiences had met with an
overwhelming response, according to Australian researchers in 2006. The
survey, on phenomena that cannot be explained using the current “laws”
of science, is by researchers at Monash University in Melbourne. A
recent (for the time) Gallup poll revealed that 75% of Americans hold at
least one paranormal belief, and a UK newspaper poll showed that 60% of
Britons accept the existence of the paranormal, say the researchers.
According to the researchers, the survey is not about beliefs or whether
parapsychological phenomena exist, rather it is about what people have
experienced and the impact it has had on their lives.
Some 2,000 people had made contact via the internet within six weeks
of the survey beginning. A whopping 96% of respondents claim to have had
at least one brush with the paranormal. The exercise seeks to gauge the
frequency, effect, and age of onset of unexplained phenomena such as
premonitions, out-of-body and near-death episodes, telepathy, and
apparitions. Results as of 2006 showed that 70% of respondents believe
an unexplained event changed their lives, mostly in a positive way. Some
70% also claim to have seen, heard, or been touched by an animal or
person that wasn’t there, 80% report having had a premonition, and
almost 50% recalled a previous life.[iv] In May 2000, the New York Times Sunday Magazine published results of a poll conducted by Blum & Weprin Associates; a huge 81% said they believed in life after death.[v]
Virtually
all of these beliefs hint at (and require in order to be true) the
existence of other realms—other realms in which consciousness can
operate. A 2005 poll taken by the Scottish paranormal society showed
that more people are likely to believe in ghosts and the paranormal than
have faith in any organized religion. A Gallup survey taken in 2005
showed that about three in four Americans profess at least one
paranormal belief.[vi]
This is a massive amount of “paranormal” experience and belief—all of
it depending on the existence of other levels of reality, without which
such experience can only be labeled as delusion and fantasy. While the
fanatical skeptic would find such convenience irresistible, convenience
and expedience are not our goals here.
Did you know that the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) has now been amended so that genuinely psychic people are no longer considered “disordered”?[vii]
Intuition and Creativity
Srinivasa Ramanujan (born in India, 1887–1920) has been called the
strangest man in all of mathematics, probably in the entire history of
science. Working in isolation from his peers, this genius was
single-handedly able to re-derive a hundred years’ worth of Western
mathematics. As Michio Kaku reports in Hyperspace, the tragedy
of his life is that much of his work was wasted rediscovering known
mathematics.[viii] Most interesting to us, Ramanujan said that the
goddess Namakkal inspired him in his dreams; in other words, the source
of his creative genius was this other realm within his sleep, rather
than ordinary waking consciousness.
Is there a link between this other realm of sleep and paranormal
phenomena? At a glance, such a presumption appears to be a stretch, but
the reservation of judgment is highly recommended at this point. Carl
Jung (below, left) once said: “The images and ideas that dreams contain
cannot possibly be explained solely in terms of memory. They express new
thoughts that have never yet reached the threshold of
consciousness.”[ix]
Ramanujan
appears to provide an excellent example of the type of non-ordinary
information access that the Russian paranormal researchers might call hypercommunication,
and he isn’t alone among specialists, pioneers, giants of science, and
so-called regular people. In fact, pioneer psychiatrist and
consciousness researcher Stanislav Grof found that during LSD
experiences his own patients were capable of accessing the “collective
unconscious,” obtaining very specific, accurate, and detailed knowledge.
In the LSD training program for scientists, relevant insights occurred
in fields as diverse as cosmogenesis, the nature of space and time,
subatomic physics, ethology, animal psychology, history, anthropology,
sociology, politics, comparative religion, philosophy, genetics,
obstetrics, psychosomatic medicine, psychology, psychopathology, and
thanatology.[x]
Ramanujan, assuming he really did receive detailed formulas in his
dreams via the subconscious, provides perhaps some indication of just
how accurate and detailed this knowledge can be. As we will see, these
insights that defy the Freudian and Newtonian-Cartesian (reductionist)
worldview/s abound in the literature. In 1862 the chemist Friedrich
August von Kekule famously arrived at the solution for the chemical
formula for benzene in a dream wherein he saw the benzene ring in the
form of a snake biting its tail—an archetypal symbol in itself—the
Ouroburos. In a supreme historical irony, Descartes’ principles of what
ultimately became the mechanist philosophy originated from a dream on
the eve of St. Martin’s day of 1619 in which the “Angel of Truth”
explained to him that mathematics was the key to unlocking the secrets
of Nature![xi] Similarly,
Nikola Tesla constructed the electric generator…after the complete
design of it appeared to him in great detail in a vision. The design for
the experiment leading to the Nobel Prize–winning discovery of the
chemical transmission of nerve impulses occurred to the physiologist
Otto Leowi while he was asleep. Albert Einstein discovered the basic
principles of his special theory of relativity in an unusual state of
mind; according to his description, most of the insights came to him in
the form of kinaesthetic sensations.[xii]
Einstein had said: “The supreme task of the physicist is to arrive at
those universal elementary laws from which the cosmos can be built up
by pure deduction. There is no logical path to these laws; only
intuition, resting on sympathetic understanding of experience, can reach
them.”[xiii]
Many of the great scientists have said very similar things. From out
of nowhere a revelatory vision or understanding hits them, as if
suddenly downloaded into their minds from some esoteric conceptual
repository. It is interesting that many people find in lucid dreams that
they can learn skills that translate directly into real waking life or
they can solve problems in the conscious dream state that in the
physical world had stumped them, and moreover, these solutions actually work.[xiv]
Francis Crick was under the influence of LSD in 1953 at the moment when
he perceived the double helix shape and unraveled the structure of DNA.[xv]The
chemist D. I. Mendeleyev saw his entire periodic table of elements one
night in a dream. And of course, many of history’s greatest and most
successful musical artists came up with their best material under the
influence of one drug or another.
Oprah Winfrey says, “My business skills have come from being guided by my inner self—my intuition.”[xvi]
She’s not alone among the financially abundant. Researchers have tested
CEOs of successful corporations for their ability to see the future,
such as by predicting a string of numbers they would be shown later.
They found that the CEOs who are good at this are usually those who are
also highly successful in running their corporations, while CEOs who did
not have this ability tend to have mediocre success rates in their
corporations. “In one study,” says Dr. Larry Dossey, “experimenters were
able to predict in advance the most successful corporate balance sheets
by how well the CEOs did on tests that measured their ability to
predict the future, such as a string of numbers they’d be shown later.”[xvii]
In 1982 the St. Louis Business Journal tested how a psychic
would fare against professional stockbrokers over a six-month period,
and reported that the psychic, who had no formal training in stockmarket
trading or analysis, outperformed 18 of 19 professional stockbrokers.
During the testing period, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 8% but
the psychic’s stocks went up an average of 17.2%, while the sole broker
who beat her achieved 17.4%.[xviii]Physicist
and psi researcher Russel Targ’s research group Delphi Associates
succeeded in psychically forecasting for nine consecutive weeks the
fluctuations in the silver commodity futures markets, earning them a
tidy $120,000.[xix] Psi* techniques are playing an increasingly important role on Wall Street, according to Dean Radin’s sources.[xx]
In 1987 Richard S. Broughton, scientist and former president of the
Parapsychological Association, pointed to the need-serving nature of psi
and the competitive advantage it often provides in the struggle for
survival—Darwinists rejoice.[xxi]
Many scientists have had profound interests in fields beyond the
reach of the science of their day. For instance, Isaac Newton was an
obsessive alchemist[xxii]
and Freemason in search of the way to transform consciousness, Thomas
Edison built machines to try to facilitate communication with the dead,
and Marie Curie attended séances. The list of such eminent scientists
with keen interests in the paranormal goes on and on. Is it a credible
suggestion that they all were merely deluded into pursuing these areas
by cunning charlatans or irrational, wishful thinking? We are about to
see that there is clearly more to it than this. Even Freud, whose
attitude towards the occult was originally negative, changed his tune as
he matured and learned more about it, suggesting, in a 1949 paper
called Psychoanalysis and Telepathy, a union between
psychoanalysts and occultists: “[O]ne might expect a mutual sympathy
between the two…[A]n alliance of, and collaboration between,
psychoanalysis and occultists would seem to be both plausible and
promising.”[xxiii]
What about those modern-day scientists and professionals who have
experiences in the “paranormal” realm? Brian Weiss, psychiatrist,
hypnotherapist, and author, wrote:
The respected chairman of a major clinical department at my hospital is a man who is admired internationally for his expertise. He talks to his deceased father, who has several times protected him from serious danger. Another professor has dreams that provide the missing steps or solutions to his complex research experiments. The dreams are invariably correct. Another well-known doctor usually knows who is calling him on the phone before he answers it…[xxiv]
If these insights come from only one man, imagine what else we might be missing out on.
No Sacred Cows
With so many people (many indeed being iconic historical figures)
experiencing what they are supposedly not meant to, the reasonable
individual might be forgiven for wondering if there is something more to
consciousness than our materialistic paradigms would have us believe.
Can we go further than questioning the assumed legitimacy of orthodox
materialistic theories which reduce consciousness to a mere
epiphenomenon (by-product) of physical matter (the brain) and
even—heaven forbid—suggest that they are not merely incomplete, but
actually types of superstitions in themselves? W. Heitler, a theoretical physicist at the University of Zurich, thinks so and says in his book Man and Science:
Belief in a mechanistic universe is a modern superstition…based on a more or less extensive series of correct facts, facts which are subsequently generalized without warrant, and finally so distorted that they become grotesque…The “witch superstition” cost innumerable innocent women their lives, in the cruelest fashion. The mechanistic superstition is more dangerous…When once we have got to the stage of seeing in man merely a complex machine, what does it matter if we destroy him?[xxv]
The process of generalizing without warrant, as Heitler puts it, is
essentially the process of inductive logic that is theoretical science’s
proverbial bread and butter, starting with particular data or concepts
and then extrapolating out or deriving broader generalizations (that may
or may not be accurate). As we shall see with the mechano-materialistic
outlook, many of these broad generalizations are inaccurate. An
example: scientists discover that brainwave states and neurochemical
processes affect and alter states of consciousness and perception. From
this, the materialistic scientist draws the conclusion (interprets) that
consciousness is therefore entirely a brain-based phenomenon. Inductive
logic is a great way to go drastically wrong while remaining entirely
logical within a given framework.
Deductive logic works the other way: you start with broader
conclusions/premises and try to draw more detailed facts. This too
obviously has its limitations. You could make the complete opposite
mistake; for example, someone has an “out-of-body experience” and
concludes that, since they could still perceive while completely
separate from brain and body, therefore the brain has nothing
to do with human consciousness. This is a silly example, but may
illustrate the point. Incidentally, the Tibetan word for body is lü, which means something you leave behind, like baggage.[xxvi] Could the Tibetans know something we sophisticated Westerners don’t?
I shall state confidently from the outset that consciousness does not arise from the brain; however, once anchored
by the brain, the brain mediates conscious experience (unless
consciousness is completely separated from the brain as in the
“near-death experience” in particular, which we will deal with later).
“Yes! says the quantum theorist, because changing the measurement
apparatus does certainly change what can be measured, and therefore
changes the event.”[xxvii]
Canadian
brain researcher and specialist Dr. Michael Persinger, who discovered
connections between electromagnetic (EM) fields and changes to the
brain’s temporal lobe, established that exposure to weak magnetic fields
can induce altered states of awareness reminiscent of psychic and
mystical experiences, the sensing of a “presence,” experiences of “God,”
and other physical effects. The temporal lobe has been linked to
out-of-body and mystical experiences, as well as to feelings of
dissociation and hallucinations, by neuroscientist Peter Brugger.[xxviii] Such
studies in the nascent field of neurotheology do indeed show the
mediation of conscious experience by the brain, but to infer from these
facts that the brain actually generates consciousness where previously
there was none is an unjustifiable and counterproductive leap of faith.
The brain acts, as authors such as Grof have put it, as a “reducing
valve” for consciousness, tuning and altering it, acting as a conduit
rather than the generator. Case in point: studies in near-death
experiences (dealt with here but in even greater depth in TGI 2) reveal
that transcendent states of awareness can be experienced by people who
are clinically dead, with no brain function or signs of life at all.
Offering validity to their claims, many have returned with true
information gleaned while they were dead (sometimes from distant
locations) that they—according to the brain-as-generator theory—should
not have had awareness of, let alone access to. Similarly, respected
computer engineer and author Bernardo Kastrup points out that, contrary
to accepted wisdom, psychedelics produce “hallucinations” not by
stimulating brain activity, but by reducing it. “Reduction of
brain activity impairs the filter/localization mechanism, allowing one
to temporarily and partially escape its entrapment and come closer to
perceiving reality as it truly is.”[xxix]
According to the eloquent metaphysicist and co-founder of theosophy
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky, Professor George T. Ladd, a psychologist and
philosopher, observed in the late 1800s that the “assumption that the
mind is a real being, which can be acted upon by the brain, and which
can act on the body through the brain, is the only one compatible with
all the facts of experience.”[xxx]
Nothing has changed since then. More recently, physicist Amit Goswami’s
revelation was that he had vainly been seeking a description of
consciousness within science, when “instead, what I and others have to
look for is a description of science within consciousness.”[xxxi]
It was (and is) in fact the former approach that had gotten so much
in the way of progressing our understanding of consciousness. Fellow
physicist the late Evan Walker was more specific, commenting that “an
understanding of psi phenomena and of consciousness must provide the
basis of an improved understanding of [quantum mechanics].”[xxxii]
* Psi (pronounced “sigh”) is a term for parapsychological (occult) phenomena derived from the Greek, psi, twenty‐third letter of the Greek alphabet; from the Greek psyche,
“mind, soul.” First used in a parapsychological context by biologist
B.P. Wiesner, it was first used in print by British psychologist Robert
Thouless in 1942.
Article Endnotes (as per TGI):
[i] See Penrose, Shadows of the Mind.
[ii] Colin Wilson, The Occult, Introduction.
[iii] Rudhyar, Culture, Crisis and Creativity, 27.
[v] Grosso, Experiencing the Next World Now, xv–xvi.
[vi] Jones, PSIence, 24.
[vii] Atwater, The Big Book of Near-Death Experiences, 141.
[viii] See Kaku, Hyperspace.
[ix] Jung, Man and His Symbols.
[x] Grof, LSD Psychotherapy, 261.
[xi] Sheldrake, The Presence of the Past, 25.
[xii] Grof, LSD Psychotherapy, 261. See also R.A. Wilson, Cosmic Trigger, Part 1, for some fascinating background on Tesla and his insights.
[xiii] Einstein, Principles of Research, 1918. <www.cs.ucla.edu/~slu/on_research/einstein_essay2.html>
[xiv] See LaBerge & Rheingold, Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming, 8, 9.
[xv] Hancock, Supernatural, 281–3.
[xvi] Larry Dossey interview in New Dawn, Special Issue No. 9.
[xvii] Ibid.
[xviii] Mishlove, The Roots of Consciousness, 249–50. Ebook.
[xix] Targ, Why I Believe in ESP & Why You Should Too, New Dawn Special Issue 6(4), 2012.
[xx] Radin, The Conscious Universe, 223.
[xxi] Jones, 205.
[xxii] See White, Isaac Newton.
[xxiii] Ancient and Modern Science: Psychology: Part VII. Theosophy, 83(11), 1995. .
[xxiv] Weiss, Many Lives, Many Masters, 128–9.
[xxv] Quoting from Man and Science
by W. Heitler.
.
Taken to its extreme, Darwinian theory was the state-sanctioned science
adopted and promoted by Nazi Germany’s “Aryan” ruling class. (Lipton
& Bhaerman, 117.)
[xxvi] Sogyal Rinpoche, The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, 20.
[xxvii] Goswami, The Self-Aware Universe, 170.
[xxviii] Jones, 76.
[xxix] See Kastrup.
[xxx] Blavatsky, Studies in Occultism. >
.
[xxxi] See Goswami, The Self-Aware Universe.
[xxxii] Schoch & Yonavjak, The Parapsychology Revolution, 114–15.
About the Author
Brendan D. Murphy – Co-founder of Global Freedom Movement and host of GFM Radio,BrendanD. Murphy is a leading Australian author, researcher, activist, and musician. His acclaimed non-fiction epic The Grand Illusion: A Synthesis of Science & Spirituality – Book 1 is out now! Come and get your mind blown at www.brendandmurphy.net
“What a wonderful job of collating and integrating you have done! Every
person in the field of ‘paranormal’ psychology or related topics should
have this book as a major reference.” – Dr. Buryl Payne
“A masterpiece…The Grand Illusion is mind-blowing.” – Sol Luckman, author of Potentiate Your DNA.
“You’ve written the best synthesis of modern science and esoteric
science that I’ve seen in 40 years of study in that area. Brilliant!” –
Michael K. Wade
Please visit – www.globalfreedommovement.org
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