Now I realize the following may hurt your brain,
but the pain will eventually be worth it!
but the pain will eventually be worth it!
Scientific Proof of the Soul’s workings
and Transcendent
ability
Ervin Laszlo, New Dawn
Waking Times
Intuition: Delusion or Perception?
Toward a Scientific Explanation of the Akashic Experience!
Toward a Scientific Explanation of the Akashic Experience!
The intuitions reported by mystics, poets, artists, ordinary
people, even scientists, often go beyond the range of sensory perception. In
the reductionist culture inspired by classical science, they are dismissed as
mere delusion – classical empiricism claims that there is nothing in the mind
that was not first in the eye. However, the classical tenet is not universally
upheld. It is exceptional in the annals of history, and even in the context of
contemporary cultures. In history intuitions were embedded in the conceptual
framework through which a given culture interpreted the nature of reality. In
indigenous societies shamans and medicine-men (and women) tuned themselves to
spontaneous apprehension through rigorous initiation and training; they derived
their mystical vision from them. In mythically oriented societies the world was
seen as a cosmic realm of spirits, and in classical cultures it was believed to
be governed by a panoply of unseen gods. The Abrahamic monotheistic religions
recognized the intuitions of their prophets as conveying fundamental truths
about God and the nature of His creation. Eastern cultures have always held
that reality extends far beyond the domain of the senses.
On the other hand Western culture takes as real only that
which is manifest – literally “to hand.” Because what people see is constrained
by what they believe they can see, everything that is not conveyed to
consciousness by eye and ear is dismissed from the modern view of the world.
But are the intuitions that occasionally surface in consciousness mere
delusion? Or can there be intuitions that are as real and fundamental as
sensory perception? This question calls for a deeper look at the possibility
that spontaneous insights and apprehensions may have a physical basis. There
are findings at the cutting-edge of scientific research that affirm this
possibility.
The Brain as a “Macroscopic Quantum System”
The crucial finding is the discovery that the brain is not
merely a classical biochemical system; in some respects it is a “macroscopic
quantum system.” Certain cerebral functions involve processes previously
thought to be limited to the domain of the quantum. The pertinent functions
concern the reception and transmission of information at the cellular and
subcellular level: intercellular communication involves quantum-effects and
processes. Neurons and neuronal and sub neuronal networks form synchronized
oscillators that receive and send information through quantum resonance. This
information propagates quasi-instantly throughout the organism and does not
require classical channels of signal transmission. The various forms and
characteristics of information transmitted through quantum resonance are not
fully understood, but their physical basis is clear. It is non- locality, the
process Einstein first said is “spooky” and then Erwin Schrödinger termed
“entanglement.” Entanglement means that the states and functions of the entangled
entities are correlated beyond the ordinary bounds of space and time. As a
result the entities are intrinsically and fundamentally coherent. Such
coherence obtains in the domain of the quantum: in pristine states quanta are
coherent and mutually entangled. Only interaction in some form (measurement,
and possibly certain acts of observation) renders them de-coherent.
Macro-scale objects were said to be in a permanently
de-coherent state, yet certain objects also exhibit forms of quantum coherence.
There is experimental evidence that the state of entire atoms can be entangled,
and in recent years quantum-coherence has been discovered at the scale of
living organisms. The divide between the micro-world of the quantum and the
world of macro-scale objects has been breached. The heat of living organisms –
even of warm-bodied species – does not necessarily destroy the coherence that
is the precondition of entanglement. While classical quantum theory maintained
that at ordinary temperatures Brownian movement made quanta, so-called
“qubits,” de-coherent and thus incapable of entanglement, recent research
(inter alia by Kitaev, Pitkanen, and Frecska and Luna) indicates that the
problem of “heat-de-coherence” is not insuperable.1
There appear to be networks of quanta where the particles are
“woven” or “braided” in a way that is sufficiently robust to maintain coherence
at body temperatures. Whereas at such temperatures classically organized qubits
become de-coherent, networks of woven or braided qubits conserve coherence. As
Parsons put it, “braiding is robust: just as a passing gust of wind may ruffle
your shoelaces but won’t untie them, data stored on a quantum braid can survive
all kinds of disturbance.”2 Quantum coherence in the brain and throughout the
organism is not just theoretical speculation; it is entirely fundamental for
coordinating the processes that make life possible. The staggering number of
physical and chemical reactions taking place in the living organism is not
likely to be coordinated by limited and relatively slow biochemical
signal-transmission alone.
Only the “entanglement” of the organism’s cellular and
subcellular components can ensure a sufficiently rapid flow of multidimensional
information to maintain the organism in its physically improbable state far
from thermal and chemical equilibrium.
Cytoskeletal Structures
Roger Penrose and Stuart Hameroff suggest that cytoskeletal
structures in the brain are responsible for the reception, computation, and
transmission of multidimensional quantum-resonance-based information.
Throughout the organism cytoskeletal proteins are organized into a network of
microtubules, and the elements of these networks are connected to each other
structurally by protein-links and functionally by gap junctions. However, the
network of microtubules may be too coarse-grained to produce quantum-effects in
the brain. The “infoplasm,” the basic substrate of living matter, may be the
microtrabecular lattice, a web of microfilaments 7 to 9 nanometer in diameter.
The periodic lattice of microtubules forms a network within the network of
neurons, and the microtrabecular lattice is a network embedded in the network
of microtubules. According to Ede Frecska, it is this lattice that is likely to
be the structure responsible for quantum-effects in the brain. It appears
physically possible that the quantum-scale components of the cytoskeletal
lattice convey information from the world to the brain. The question is, what
information? How does information originate in the world at large?
The Akashic Field
Until recently, asserting that information is objectively
present in nature and not only in the human realm was considered metaphysical.
This is no longer the case. It is now recognized that information is present in
all things; as John Wheeler remarked, in some respects it the most fundamental
feature of the universe.
Experiments designed to test the Einstein-Podolski-Rosen
hypothesis indicate that already quanta behave in an informed manner: they
appear to make choices of their own, and respond to choices by other quanta.
Either they have a form of consciousness (a thesis entertained by some
physicists), or they are embedded in a complex informational environment. The
latter is the minimally speculative assumption. It suggests that even in the
absence of matter space is neither empty nor passive. As this writer among
others has suggested, cosmic space is not a vacuum, but a plenum. In
recognition of the prophetic insight of ancient Sanskrit and Hindu cosmology –
where Akasha is the most fundamental of the five elements, the one from which
the others arise – this writer calls the field that fills cosmic space the
“Akashic Field.”3
The idea that space is active and filled with physically
significant events is not unique to Sanskrit and Hindu cosmology; it has
noteworthy antecedents also in the history of science. In the nineteenth
century, mathematician William Clifford suggested that small portions of space
are analogous to little hills on a surface that is flat on average; the
geometry of the landscape does not hold for them. The property of space to be
curved or distorted, he said, is continually being passed on from one portion
of space to another after the manner of a wave. In the physical world there is
nothing else but this wavelike variation.4
In a 1930 paper, “The concept of space,” Albert Einstein
noted, “We have now come to the conclusion that space is the primary thing and
matter only secondary; we may say that space, in revenge for its former
inferior position, is now eating up matter.”5 A few years later Erwin
Schrödinger restated the same thought: “What we observe as material bodies and
forces are nothing but shapes and variations in the structure of space.”6 In
physical cosmology cosmic space is seen as a ceaselessly fluctuating sea of
emerging and vanishing virtual particles. In grand-unified and super-grand
unified theories all the universal fields and forces of nature are traced to
origins in the quantum vacuum, a fundamental hyperspace often viewed as a
unified field. This fundamental field carries also zero-point energies –
energies that remain present when at the absolute zero of temperature
conventional forms of energy vanish. The concept of a complex unified field,
effectively the Akashic Field, offers a basis for identifying the origins of
the information that quantum processes transfer to the brain. It is known that
as a consequence of their motion atoms, molecules and all material entities
(i.e. structures composed of massive particles) produce electromagnetic waves
that radiate into surrounding space. Space, however, is not empty and passive,
and it is more than Maxwell’s extended electromagnetic field. It is the locus
of the Akashic Field. The waves emitted by moving objects excite and modulate
this field, creating wave-fronts that propagate in the field and, upon meeting,
interfere with each other. The interference patterns that result carry
information at their nodes on the objects that created the waves. Because the
Akashic Field is a seamless medium that extends throughout space, the
information carried by the interference patterns produced by moving objects
extends throughout space. This information corresponds to the physical
properties of the objects.7
The process is similar to that which occurs in holography.
The holograms created by interfering beams of light conserve information on the
surface of the things and events that modulated the light beams. But the
interference patterns responsible for quantum coherence are created by waves in
the Akashic Field, and not by photons in the electromagnetic field. Thus they
are not ordinary, but quantum holograms. Walter Schempp has shown that quantum
holograms are coherent, mutually entangled, and carry nonlocal information on
the things and events that produced the constituent waves. He has also shown
that the brain’s object imagery is phase conjugate. Lending support to Karl
Pribram’s “holonomic brain theory,” Schempp affirmed that “the conditions which
make quantum holography possible are ideally suited to the hypothesis that the
brain works… by quantum holography.”8
The answer to the question regarding the origin and nature of
the information transferred by quantum-resonance to the brain can now be
essayed. When the phase and frequency of a cerebral lattice corresponds to the
phase and frequency of a quantum hologram, brain and hologram enter into
phase-conjugate resonance. This allows the information conserved at the nodes
of Akashic Field quantum holograms to be transferred to the cerebral receptors.
Thus some of the intuitions that reach consciousness are not merely delusion:
they are transmitted by phase-conjugate resonance from the Akashic Field to the
cytoskeletal structures of the brain. Just which intuitions have this physical
origin cannot be ascertained at this time merely by examining the pertinent
cerebral processes. We need to resort to circumstantial evidence, examining the
correspondence of the content of the intuitions with things and events known to
exist in the real world through ordinary sensory perception. But we can affirm
in good conscience that it is entirely plausible some intuitions have a bona
fide physical basis. And that, in itself, goes a long way toward legitimating
belief in the veridical nature of at least some of our intuitions.
A Concluding Note
Although widely reported and often meaningful, intuition is
seldom the subject of sustained scientific research. The classical empirical
tenet of mainstream science discourages attempts to investigate the phenomenon:
it is physically implausible if not categorically impossible. Yet sustained
research on intuition would be potentially fruitful and extremely important. In
the positive case it would show that the human brain and nervous systems can
access information in a spontaneous mode. While some varieties of experience
viewed as intuition could well be delusion, there could also be spontaneous
apprehension for which we can find an acceptable scientific explanation. This
would lend support to the frequently voiced belief that human beings – and by
implication all living things – are connected with each other and with nature
in ways that are more subtle than those that stimulate the senses. This in turn
would reinforce and legitimate empathy and solidarity among people and a closer
sense of rapport with nature – vitally important attributes in our critical
times when we face problems we can only resolve in cooperation with each other
and harmony with our environment.
This article is based on the author’s latest book The Akashic
Experience: Science and the Cosmic Memory Field (Inner Traditions, Rochester,
USA).
The above article appeared in New Dawn No. 114 (May-June
2009).
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