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The Physics of Collective Consciousness
by Attila Grandpierre
Attila Grandpierre, Ph.D. Konkoly Observatory of the Hungarian Academy
of Sciences
H-1525 Budapest P. O. Box 67., Hungary
February 6, 1996
Contents
Abstract 2
Introduction 3
The Evolution of Consciousness 3
Collective Biological Fields 6
Physical Conditions of Consciousness 7
The Levels of the Mind 8
Quantum-Vacuum Interactions in the Brain 10
Applications to Human and Cellular Brains 12
Coupling Between Global and Local Brains 13
Frequencies of Interaction Between Different Brains 14
Quantum Energy Transfer Between the Brain and the Material Carriers
of Thought 14
Quantum-Vacuum Interaction in the Universe 15
Spontaneous Targeting 17
Global Organisation and Action-in-Distance 18
The Fundamental Problem of Electromagnetism and Quantum Physics 19
The Source of the EM Field 21
Collective EM Field of the Biosphere 21
Collective EM Field of Human Subjects 23
The Physics of the Evolution of Consciousness 25
Origin of Consciousness and its Relation to Emotional States 26
The Common Field of Consciousness 27
On the Destination of the Universe 30
The Deformation of Consciousness in the Western Civilisation 31
Super-Organisms and Planetary Consciousness 31
Healing of the Collective Consciousness Field of Mankind 32
References 35
The Physics of Collective Consciousness
Attila Grandpierre
Konkoly Observatory, H-1525 Budapest, P. O. Box 67, HUNGARY, E-mail:
grandp@ ogyalla.konkoly.hu
ABSTRACT: It is pointed out that the organisation of an organism necessarily
involves fields which are the only means to make an approximately simultaneous
tuning of the different subsystems of the organism-as-a-whole. Nature uses
the olfactory fields, the acoustic fields, the electromagnetic fields and
quantum-vacuum fields. Fields with their ability to comprehend the whole
organism are the natural basis of a global interaction between organisms
and of collective consciousness. Evidences are presented that electromagnetic
potential fields mediate the collective field of consciousness. This result
offers for the first time experimental access to the study of collective
consciousness by measuring the field-related information-carrying potentials
and their derivatives, the electric and magnetic fields between different
individuals. The electrodynamic interaction of different brains/minds generates
induction and in this way excitement, enhancement in the baseline of the
interacting brains’ activity. A list of empirical evidences is presented
here proving the existence of this ‘interactive excitement’ effect in the
known phenomenon of collective consciousness. The fundamental phenomenon
of the collective consciousness is known as ‘social facilitation’ or ‘group
effect’. The character and completion of consciousness are outlined in
the frame of this picture, and the role of the ‘group effect’ or ‘social
facilitation’ as a primary factor in developing consciousness is described.
A quantum-physical model of a multi-layered consciousness is presented,
where the layering is expressed by the subsequent subtlety of the masses
of the material carriers of information. I show that as the mental levels
get deeper and more sensitive the couplings are on more and more global
scales of their environment. I point out that direct, immediate action
in distance actually exists in the electromagnetic field, which is the
coupling, mediator field between waves and particles. I show how the environmental,
natural and cosmic fields are determinative sources of our consciousness.
The results presented point out that the Collective Field of Consciousness
is a significant physical factor of the biosphere. I show that the morphogenetic
field has an electromagnetic (EM) nature. EM fields are vacuum fields.
Different basic forms of vacuum fields exist, and all kinds of fields,
including the particle-mediated fields as well, when overlapping each other,
seem to be in a direct resonant coupling, and form a complex, merged biofield.
The vacuum model of consciousness presented here points to the inductive
generation of consciousness, and to its self-initiating nature. Individual
and collective methods, as well as the experimental possibilities of a
global healing and improving the consciousness field of mankind are suggested.
Keywords: olfactory, acoustic, electromagnetic, vacuum fields, generation
of consciousness, evolution of collective consciousness, social evolution,
completion of consciousness, healing
1. Introduction
It is generally accepted that consciousness evolved parallel to the
biological and social complexity of the living systems. This observation
suggests that the basic nature of consciousness is related to collective
influences, and therefore consciousness is ‘per se’ a collective phenomenon.
Endre K. Grandpierre (1996) in his essay “Cosmic Systems of Consciousness,
Their Development, Two Principal Branches and Evolution from the Golden
Age until the Present” has shown that consciousness is the manifestation
of interactions. Ervin Laszlo (1995) has shown that a holographic information
field is responsible for the physical, biological and paranormal phenomena.
This holographic field is actually a non-linear vacuum field. The information
field in biology is termed as biological or morphogenetic field and it
appears in society as a collective field. Unfortunately, the presence and
nature of social fields have not been explored yet to a degree when it
is clear how they are related to the biological fields. If the nature of
consciousness is based on elementary interactions, as suggested by Endre
K. Grandpierre (1996), then we have to explore whether the interactions
of known physical fields may serve as mediators of consciousness and may
produce the fundamental phenomena of consciousness, the ‘group effect’.
2. The Evolution of Consciousness
It is widely believed, that the way evolution manifest is from parts
to the whole, from the inorganic matter through the unicellular organism
towards the multicellular ones until the appearance of consciousness. This
process is accompanied by a growing degree of complexity. This direction
of the evolution of consciousness is naturally extrapolated towards the
appearance of collective consciousness and the Consciousness Field of Mankind
(Grandpierre, A., 1995). But why complexity is a necessary condition of
a higher form of consciousness? I suggest a plausible answer: because the
sensitivity to any stimulus may be increased through the interconnectedness
of the constituents of the organism. The increased degree of sensitivity
in groups is available through the interactive creation of collective states
having energetic states with smaller net energy differences between each
other than within the constituents themselves. Therefore they may interact
with more subtle stimuli. According to my theory, this basic phenomenon
works effectively when the energetic states of the constituents are close
to each other. The maximal sensitivity of a system consisting of a fixed
number of elements may be reached when the system builds up from almost
identical constituents. Examples of this ‘collective effect’ are multicellular
organisms, societies of insects, animals, and humans, and celestial bodies.
The Earth, the Sun, the stars, and the galaxies are also systems consisting
of similar components. Their organic nature has not been revealed in a
scientific context, but now the new research shows that planets and stars
do show fundamental life-phenomena and signs of sensitive interconnectedness
(Grandpierre, A. 1996a, b, c, d). Regarding the large number of their constituents,
the degree of attainable consciousness of these cosmic systems has to be
enormously larger than that of humans. As Endre K. Grandpierre (1996a,
b) showed, the evolution of the consciousness of cosmic systems divides
into a cosmic and a biological branch.
This chain of thought places collective phenomena into the centre of
evolution and the generation of consciousness. Our argumentation is substantiated
by wide-range observations, e.g. that of L. Thomas (1974): “ A solitary
ant, afield, cannot be considered to have much of anything on his mind;
indeed, with only a few neurones strung together by fibres, he can’t be
imagined to have a mind at all, much less a thought. He is more like a
ganglion on legs. Four ants together, or ten, encircling a dead moth on
a path, begin to look more like an idea. They fumble and shove, gradually
moving the food toward the Hill, but as though by blind chance. It is only
when you watch the dense mass of thousands of ants, crowded together around
the Hill, blackening the ground, that you begin to see the whole beast,
and now you observe it thinking., planning, calculating. It is an intelligence,
a kind of live computer, with crawling bits for its wits.” On the other
hand, the ‘group effect’, a phenomenon of psychology which I suggest has
a fundamental significance, arises in the same circumstances. Ants work
three times more effectively if nearby co-working ants are present (Chen,
1937). Not only the presence of co-working partners, but also, the mere
presence of passive ‘observers’ facilitates their activity (Dashiell, 1930).
‘Social facilitation’ is a general phenomenon accompanied by an enhanced
level of brain activity appearing in the whole range of social animals,
including humans as well (Triplett, 1898; see a review of the phenomenon
in Atkinson et al., 1993).
To establish the proper context and assess the significance of the phenomenon,
I gathered here a whole list of collective consciousness effects. Allport
(1961) noted, that among developing children, the sense of other humans
develops much earlier than the sense of self-identity. I suggest that this
‘social primacy’ is related to the frequently observed “emotional fertilisation”
in kindergartens. Children cry and laugh even if they do not have any motive
except that in their close environment somebody else acts in the same way.
The phenomenon of “noise-ecstasy” usually appears among adolescent people,
in classrooms. “In the age of adolescence whole classrooms become involved
in the ‘mass state’, which is a state which developing through mutual emotional
infection. On these occasions the whole classroom become crazy, they make
incredible noises, dance wild dances, rhythmically move, or simply produce
a wild chaos. Every pupil participates in the orgy of the upheaval, even
those ones, who are not inclined to behave that way within normal conditions
and who immediately after the event regret having acted so” (Clauss, Hiebsch,
1964 ). Kurt Tepperwein notes that hypnosis becomes more effective if it
is applied in groups, as a consequence of “spiritual infection” and imitation
of the others (Tepperwein, 1977). The increase in the number of already
hypnotised people facilitates the hypnosis of the next one. This phenomenon
suggests the existence of a collective field. Large number of people (tens
of thousands of people) were involved in epidemics of psychoses on several
occasions and for long times (years) (Farkaslaki, 1939) in the medieval
age. Similar occasions took place in the modern era, such as tarantism,
demonopathy, dancing mania, mass hysteria (Smelser, 1962), mental epidemics,
‘mass psychogenic illnesses’ (see the recent review of Bartholomew, 1994).
The transference of the anomalous behaviour was described as when the number
of people showing the anomalous behaviour reached a certain threshold,
the behaviour spread much more easily (Turner and Killian, 1972; Miller,
1985). The “Reutler-effect” shows that the contraction of the muscles of
a person may enhance the contraction of the muscles of another person from
a distance (Reutler, 1928). Stefán Figar (1959) showed that bodily
changes related to special mental activities may easily be transferred
to other people independently of their knowledge about each others’ actions.
I have to point out, that all of these phenomena may be interpreted
by an electromagnetic field model of consciousness, including the phenomenon
of hypnosis. If consciousness is organised with the help of the EM field,
this EM field may be able to transcend the borders of the organism emitting
the waves (see the evidences later on), and interact with the consciousness
field of another person nearby. This possibility is allowed by the measurements
of Ravitz (1962), who showed that EEG changing during hypnosis presents
a waking state pattern. Collective consciousness fields are suggested to
act in the ancient Japanese no-theatre and in the truly cathartic theatre
performances (Vekerdy, 1974). As Vekerdy formulates, the artist may exert
an effect on the audience in three ways: using words, through hearing,
by movements, through seeing, and using intense emotions, which exert their
effects through telepathy, extra sensory perception. In an experiment conducted
by Charles Tart, two graduate students were mutually hypnotising each other.
He had Anne hypnotise Bill and after he was hypnotised, he had Bill hypnotise
her in return. Anne and Bill in this state experienced the same fantastic,
hallucinated reality (Tart, 1969). Richardson (1995) experienced that an
imaginary playmate, observed independently and consequently by nine children,
was also observed by one adolescent male and also perceived by herself,
the teacher personally, as a real 4-year old person. Richardson writes
‘In my own case, during the contact, I was not aware of suspecting that
she was an apparition until I had the thought “She does not belong in our
yard and she is not even dressed right for this century.” At that moment
we made eye contact and she vanished, dropping the baseball cap.’ We may
observe that consciousness is fundamentally related to (external and internal)
collective, or social interactions, and is elicited through enhanced emotional
levels. The collective consciousness field effect is especially amplified
when a large number of participants are involved. Therefore, the collective
consciousness field of mankind may not only be influenced by nature but
also by a modification of social origin, e.g. when significant amount of
people are involved in mutual hypnosis. Psychological researches have shown
that creativity is triggered in intense emotional states. The hypothesis
that the determining factor of consciousness is related to emotional states
is developed, considered and evidenced later on.
3. Collective Biological Fields
Experiments show that collective biological fields may dominate the
individual field (Popp, 1994). The nature of the biological fields has
not been understood, although it is clear that they are related to electromagnetic
fields (Bauer, E., 1920; Gurwitsch, who worked at E. Bauer’s institute,
1922; again an assistant of E. Bauer, Koltsov, 1936; Spemann, 1938; Weiss,
P., 1939; Burr, 1956; Ravitz, 1962; Sheldrake, 1981, 1988; Popp et al.,
1989; Bischof, 1995). Recently, H. Oldfield’s life-long work substantiated
that the biological field is mostly of electromagnetic nature, and postulated
the hypothesis of a purely electromagnetic (in the followings EM) morphogenetic
radiation (Oldfield, Coghill, 1988). Two other basic books on bioelectromagnetism
are the ones by Becker and Selden (1985) and Smith and Best (1989).
I have to point to a yet unnoticed circumstance regarding the nature
of the morphogenetic fields. If constituents of a group interact through
electromagnetic fields, they have to be able to detect EM information coming
from their environment, and also to be able to emit EM signs carrying information
about their internal states. In that case they have to be EM antennas,
receiving and broadcasting EM waves. But we know, that antennas are specially
designed to be sensitive to a certain wavelength of EM radiation, and that
the characteristics of the EM spectrum, as well as their receptive characteristics,
depend on their sizes, and in general, on their geometrical forms. Interactive
elements of a group, when using EM waves, are sensitive to each other’s
geometry, i.e. forms. It is easy to see that organic EM antennas regulated
by the interchanged EM signs may be described as influenced by their ‘morpho-genetic’
field, i.e. any EM field acts as a morphogenetic field. This theory seems
to be able to interpret e.g. the fact that the shape of the smelled molecule
determines its information content (Thomas, 1974). If atoms are arranged
in precisely the same configuration, by whatever chemical name, the compound
molecule might smell as sweet.
What is the function of the biological fields? In every cells hundreds
of thousands of reactions set up every second. Most of the reactions of
the cells have a substantial life-function, therefore they cannot happen
by chance, but need specific guidance, timing and regulation, as they fulfil
a function for the cell as a whole. Their regulation need a much quicker
regulative system than the time scale of their reactions, since it requires
an overview of the actual states and possibilities and the basic needs,
and the co-ordination of the different factors. The regulative mechanism
of the cell therefore has to work with subtle energies. The regulative
system has to proceed the relevant informations in due time. Therefore,
it has to work with the most effective information carriers, i.e. waves.
The regulative mechanism of the organisms has to apply ultrafast interaction
in order to be able to inform and co-ordinate the different reactions of
the organism approximately simultaneously.
4. Physical Conditions of Consciousness
The physical means of information exchange between an organism and its
environment is determined by the physical conditions, the size of the organism,
and the biological time-scales. The regulation of the reactions with biological
functions require processes faster and subtler than the reactions themselves.
Acoustic waves propagate with a velocity of v = 1.4 km/s in the human body.
Taking a characteristic size of the human body l = 2 metres, we can calculate
a value for the characteristic acoustic frequency of the human body:
fac,human body = v/l = 103 Hz, (1)
therefore the characteristic time scale of these acoustic waves is
tac, human body = 10-3 s. (2)
Using electromagnetic waves, the human organism has another characteristic
frequency and time-scale, with l = 2m,
fEM,human body = 108 Hz = 100 MHz, (3)
tEM, human body = 10 -8 s. (4)
Larger frequencies belong to smaller wavelengths, therefore to inner
signs, smaller frequencies mediate information from the environment. EM
waves originate from the body, as well. Brains emit EEG waves between 1-40
Hz, in the range of the EM waves of the Earth, the Schumann waves (Schumann
and König, 1954). The frequencies of the Earth’s EM waves can be calculated
using L = 40 000 km, as
fEM, Earth = 300 000km/s /40 000 km = 7.5 Hz. (5)
The researches of Ludwig (1984) showed that Schumann waves are necessary
as biotropic stimuli for the living organisms. Tsuvayev (see Merkulov,
1978) showed that the growth and development of mushrooms and water-plants
ceases when isolated from environmental magnetic field. It is interesting
that the acoustic resonant frequency of the human body falls into the range
of 7-8 Hz. The human body is extremely sensitive to signs at this acoustic
frequency. Noises with this frequency, if they are intense enough, may
sensitively alter bodily functions. It seems to be strange that the resonant
frequency is not the one determined on the basis of purely acoustic conditions.
The coincidence of the acoustic resonant frequency with the EM frequency
of the Earth and the EEG alpha-waves may suggest the close resonant coupling
of these fields of different nature. It is another interesting coincidence,
that the surface of the Earth also appears to have mechanical (acoustic)
vibrations within the 10 Hz bands.
Schumann waves penetrate through the body to approx. 94 %, and are absorbed
in approx. 6% at the specific frequencies the organism can resonate (Ludwig,
1984). It means that the source of the brain’s activity may be triggered
from outside the body. One part of the EM spectrum (f <100 MHz) is the
outer, natural and cosmic source of our consciousness, the other part,
with f >100 MHz, is the inner source of our consciousness. Regarding the
fact that the smaller frequencies, i.e. larger wavelengths are related
to EM quanta of smaller, subtler energies, we obtain a result that the
more subtle levels of the organisms’ regulation belong to a hierarchy of
global consciousness, to natural and cosmic sources of consciousness. In
this context, it is interesting that the frequencies and time-development
of the Schumann and EEG waves are similar (König, Angermüller,
1960).
The more subtle level behind the EM one is the level of quantum-vacuum
interactions (QVI). Laszlo (1995) proposed that QVI may offer the solutions
for the present problems of cosmology, biology, psychology and parapsychology.
I worked out a quantitative model which shows the relationship between
the different levels of our environment and the progressively deeper mental
levels existing within us (Grandpierre, 1995a, b).
It is pointed out that the deeper mental levels (Grandpierre, 1995a),
on which the ‘aware consciousness’ builds up, have larger capacity, are
faster, therefore they require more subtle material carriers beyond the
molecular and neural units, reaching the quantum range. Assuming a finite
energy exchange between the vacuum field and the brain within the bounds
of the uncertainty principle, a relation is found between the physical
size of the brain and its relevant time scales. Using the time scales for
information processing within the brain as a whole and within its cells,
the characteristic frequencies of the electromagnetic and vacuum waves
are obtained in the visible and the ultraviolet spectral ranges. It is
pointed out that the formula derived for the couplings between the different
mind levels gives values for the frequencies between the Universe and Man
which are physically possible and actually plausible.
5. The Levels of the Mind
The 4* 1010 neurones of the brain, having 103 synapses, respectively,
each of which has 102 levels of "strength", would give us a mental "universe"
consisting of maximum 1015 elements. This number is too small even if we
consider the classic von Neumann estimate of 1020 bits as conscious information
obtained during a lifetime. Taking into account that the amount of information
reaching us from our environment through our external senses is estimated
to be around 109 - 1010 bits/sec (see later on), this neuronal model becomes
insufficient within 106 sec, i.e. within 10 days, even if we count only
the information coming from the environment. We can use a finite state
model of the brain, but we definitely need much more states than the neural
model can provide. The phenomenon of creativity gives an even more stringent
constraint on the number of states of the brain (Grandpierre, 1995a).
The simple, exclusively neural model of consciousness is also counter-indicated
by some basic observations, e.g. the spontaneous excitation of neurones,
when their activity potential develops spontaneously, i.e. not from the
sensorial input. It means that an underlying mechanism exists on which
the brain activity is organised. Already Szent-Györgyi drew attention
to the need of sub-molecular biology and the role of spontaneous electron
transfer in the cell's life activity (Szent-Györgyi, 1968). He pointed
out that cell division may be regulated by donor-acceptor interactions,
processes in which electrons go spontaneously from one molecule to another.
Evidences were given that the electrons are moved by the energy of light
from one molecule to another (Szent-Györgyi, 1968). He remarked, that
electrons are necessary also in regulating the organism as a whole, and
as a physical carrier of thinking since there is a basic need for a fast
enough process, much faster than the biomolecules can be (Szent-Györgyi,
1974). This essay here was inspired by his lecture, trying to apply and
extend it. Recently Ladik defended Szent-Györgyi's views on the proteins
as good electrical conductors by numerical quantum-chemical calculations.
Free electrons are present within proteins and they are substantial in
DNA-protein interaction, therefore in the genetic regulation, in rapid
signal transfer within biopolymers, and they play an important role in
the self-regulation of the cell (Ladik, 1987, and more references therein).
A new branch of science grew from the ideas of Szent-Györgyi, bioelectromagnetism.
There is a tremendous literature studying the ultraweak electromagnetic
radiation from cells, the biophotons (Popp, Li and Gu, 1992; Bischof, 1995)
and bioelectromagnetism (Adey, 1981; Becker, Selden, 1985; Oldfield, Coghill,
1988; Popp et al., 1989; Smith and Best, 1989, Smith, 1995).
David Bohm expressed a view that in human consciousness, what actually
happens in its ground level - beyond neural states representing results
of only activity related to aware consciousness- may be very fast and related
to pre-space, the implicate order behind space-time, to a creative factor,
from which the whole phenomena and the space-time structure enfolds. These
fast mental processes have characteristics common to microphysical processes
(Bohm, 1986). Ultimately, thinking is related to the unconscious until
its deepest ranges.
The problem of creativity is present in every field of science (Laszlo,
1995). He suggested that quantum-vacuum interactions play a significant
role in the fields of cosmology, physics, biology and consciousness.
There are thoughts, which are related to the execution of some functions
of the organism (Libet's experiments). These are related to some kind of
action potentials above a certain specific threshold or amplitude. Non-executive
thoughts, which do not trigger bodily changes, do not necessarily develop
well defined action potentials. I have developed the idea that the conscious
mind works with information processed by deeper mind levels, which are
not embodied in activation potentials, but by more subtle changes in the
brain. It is well known that the speed of information processing of the
conscious mind in average conditions is estimated to be around C1=100 bit/s,
while the information processed by deep mind may be estimated to be larger
than the information reaching the organism from the external world through
the outer senses, which is around C2=109 bit/s (see e. g. Elsasser, 1958,
Griffith, 1970, Drischel, 1972, Woody, 1982, Silbernagl, Despopoulos, 1991,
Scheffer, 1994). To have a feeling of these numbers, the often cited examples
are the reading speed, estimated to be 50 bit/s if one needs 20 seconds
to read a page of 1000 bits (one letter is around 4.5 bit, but there is
a considerable redundancy in a page). One may assume that speed reading
is an attempt to use the eye and conscious mind at full speed. An extreme
speed reading champion reads less than 100 words per second, i.e. approximately
500 bit/s, because in an ordinary text you have less than 5 bits per word
(Shannon, 1951). On the other hand, a TV screen mediates 106-7 bit/s, estimated
by the number of pixels and their information content (Scheffer, 1994).
The deep mind processes information from the outside world coming into
the organism through external senses, and, parallel with it, the input
data coming from the deeper mind levels. Our behaviour expresses around
107 bit/s through speaking, mimics and bodily movements. The ability to
express information through speaking, being definitively slower than reading,
is estimated to be around only 10 bit/s, if we take a time of 100 sec to
read a page. The all-or-nothing picture of the neurones representing 1
bit information expressed by their ability for activation (firing) or inhibition
cannot store and process such a gigantic flow of information.
6. Quantum-Vacuum Interactions in the Brain
Eccles (1986, 1994) built up his model of thought-process based on the
probabilistic change of the quantum mechanical wave function, assumed to
occur without energy supply. Actually, the reduction of the quantum wave
function needs energy, as it is pointed out by Károlyházi
(1966), recently by Albert and Vaidman (1989) and Pearle and Squires (1994).
I assume that the energy is taken from the zero-point-fluctuation of the
vacuum field, as described by quantum electrodynamics (QED) or stochastic
electrodynamics (SED; Boyer, 1975). This assumption is inspired and substantiated
by the quantum-vacuum interaction (QVI) theory of Ervin Laszlo (1995).
I assume that the collapses are associated with the sizes of the relevant
thinking units (‘brains’). This assumption seems to be plausible if we
regard the experimental results of synchronisation processes of neurones
in diverse part of brains (Crick, 1994). These assumptions, if they turn
to be correct later on, give the strength of the main arguments below.
Here we first calculate the size of a brain working with a kind of material
carrier. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle tells us that quantum measurements
cannot be arbitrarily precise regarding both energy and time:
D E*D t ~ h/ 4p (6)
The above law limits the time-span of the total energy E of virtual
particles to D t. Virtual particles are created and annihilated with energy
E for time D t in accordance with
E*D t ~ h/4p (7)
Gu and Rauch (1994) noted that the coherency threshold (2) is the one
at which the rate of uncertainty for the real particles is minimal and
so is the critical value when the signal-to-noise ratio is at a maximum.
Similarly, the relationship between the position and momentum of virtual
particles in the quantum vacuum is
D p*D x ~ h/4p (8)
Equations (7) and (8) describe constraints on the physical properties
of virtual particles.
I assume that the quantum wave function of a real particle collapses
as it interacts with the energy carried by a vacuum wave:
E(vacuum wave) ~ D E(quanta) (9)
Here for a real particle we note p =mv and E = p2/2m. For simplicity
we adopt a co-ordinate system in which po = 0, Eo = 0. Then we can express
position and energy together with momentum. Using m, a quantal carrier
of mass as the basis of information, we obtain the following relationship
between the overall size of a natural ‘brain’ and the time-scale of the
information processing within it, using (9), (8) and (7):
D x ~ (hD t/8p m)1/ 2 (10)
Here D x stands for the width of the quantum wave function of the real
particle which carries the thought process in the actual brain. A collapsed
wave function, a particle is in a quantum state which is best approximated
by a wave packet. The spread in momentum (i. e. in the velocity) values
implies that the wave packet will spread in time. The more localised a
particle is, the more quickly it spreads. The same formula (10) is derived
by Károlyházi (1974, formula 4. 1. 1), without applications
in biology. Therefore, D t has a meaning of a coherency length, t , the
time of the spread for doubling the width of the wave function.
7. Applications to Human and Cellular Brains
First of all, it is interesting to calculate the material carrier of
global human brain. It is possible to calculate the mass of this carrier
with formula (10) if we use values of the parameters characteristic to
the human brain. Using for D x=10 cm and for D t the time necessary for
the development of an activation potential in a neurone is t = 10-3 s (S.
Rose, 1973). Formula (10) then gives an exciting result of m@ 10-33 g.
This result suggests that the human brain interacts with the vacuum waves
through the electromagnetic field quanta.
Now let us use formula (10) the other way around, looking for brains
with electrons as material carriers of thought, with mass me ~ 9
* 10-28 g. With the help of these given values, we can estimate the size
of the macroscopic brain thinking with electrons:
L (natural electronic brain, t =10-3 s ~ 10-2 cm ......(11)
This limit is close to the size of cells, namely 10-3 cm - 10-2 cm.
This result means that if we want to construct a brain processing information
through interaction of its electrons with vacuum waves, the brain has to
have a size characteristic of the cells, if its biological characteristic
time scale is t = 10-3 s. The consistency of this result may indicate that
cells process information through electron-vacuum wave interactions. Nevertheless,
if cells absorb energy from the vacuum, it should be possible that they
give back this amount of energy to the vacuum, otherwise the interaction
may decelerate quickly. We know that cells are able to give back the energy
from their free energy reservoir, a general characteristics of all living
system (Bauer, 1920).
At the same time, the cells may simultaneously use a faster, lighter
material carrier of information processing, because their environment is
much smaller and therefore changes much more quickly. In the estimation
of this time scale one can use the fact that the human organism processes
109 - 1010 bit/s information unconsciously, while at the same time the
conscious mind is only able to cope with 102 bit/s ( refs. cited above).
If the time scale of the cells’ information processing is proportional
to the rate of the conscious information processing and that of the deep
mind, which seems to be a reasonable assumption, then the time-scale of
this more subtle cellular information processing is t = 10-9 s. This value
is substantiated by the reaction rates in the interior of cells, known
to be around 108-1012 s-1 (Ruth, 1989). Moreover, the lifetime of a hydrogen
bound within a living cell is again 6* 10-9 s. A typical lifetime of the
electronic excitations in normal metabolism is 10-8 s (Bauer, Borsdyko,
1936). Formula (10) with D x @ 10-2 cm with t @ 10-9 s then gives a value
of 10-32 g for the mass of this material carrier, which can be appropriate
for the mass-energy of a photon (E @ 10 eV). This result points, interestingly
enough, to the presence of electromagnetic waves in the cell regulation.
Independently from the ambiguity of the time scales accepted here, if the
trend of acceleration of thought processes towards deeper mental levels
is real, than we are supplied with an insight by formula (10) that electromagnetic
processes dominate in a certain mental depth. I have to point out, that
bioelectromagnetism is based on the fact that cells are regulated by electromagnetic
processes.
Now let us look for the time scale of the human brain, in connection
with the electron-vacuum quantal interaction! We use m@ 10-27 g for the
electron mass, and D x@ 10 cm, the time scale D t@ 400 s. A longer time
is needed for the brain to extract information and energy from the vacuum
field through electrons than through photons. Regarding the fact that the
large molecular tracks are built up by a long series of electronic events,
we may get a physical picture of the time scale of long-term memory.
8. Coupling Between Global and Local Brains
Formula (10) suggests that the thinking process takes place in different
time and space scales. Nevertheless, any organisation should act as an
integrated unit, a system regulated globally, with all the necessary information
gained. This fact points to a need to couple the different scale processes,
transferring their information content to the level of decision making.
We can study the nature of these couplings if we consider formula (10)
from that point of view.
Let us assume, that the (necessary, but not sufficient) condition of
any coupling between the different level (global or local) processes is
the identical time scales, as any direct interaction may occur only between
two simultaneous processes. Now we can start to look at what happens if
the neural (local) and global brain phenomena are coupled. Using the neural
time scale of t =10-3 s, with the electrons extended to the brain as a
whole (D x=10 cm with formula (10)), a material carrier may contact in
a neural time scale in a whole range of space localisation. As we take
smaller scales, the mass of the carrier grows if we fix the time scale,
in accordance with formula (10). At each selected size two masses should
be followed: one that arise from (10), growing as D x decreases, and another
which is actually present in the selected size of volume in the human brain,
m@r* (D x)3 , decreasing as D x decreases. The two masses are equal when
D x@ 10-6 cm. The corresponding mass is 10-13 g, a value just at the upper
limit of the quantal range of the microscopic world as given by Károlyházi
(1966). One can visualise the coupling now as the electron, subtracting
information from the vacuum, present in a free state, interacts with a
part of a neurone. The size and mass of that part of the neurone, which
may be coupled to the global brain on the neural time scale, is close to
the microtubules. It is interesting to note here that recent measurements
of electromagnetic emission from living matter at CERN show that the time-dependent
pattern of the emitted biophoton radiation shows a self-similar structure
through ten orders of magnitude (Popp, 1994). This fractal structure of
the emitted radiation enhances the empirical basis of the global-local
coupling.
9. Frequencies of Interaction Between Different Brains
Now we are ready to estimate the wavelength of the information-carrier
substances. The energy of wave quanta is E(wave) = hf, where f is the frequency
of the wave with a wavelength of l= v/f. At first, we can work with a quanta
of waves having a mass-energy m=E/c2 in (10). In this way we can obtain
the result by the following formulas:
m=(ht )/(pl2) (12)
The relation between the wavelength of the informative wave and the
brain's space-time dimensions is
l @ 8p (D x)2/(ct )* (v/c) @ 2h/(mc)* (v/c) (13)
For the human brain we take Dx = 10 cm, t = 10-3 s, and v @ c. This
results in l@ 8* 10-5 cm = 800 nm, or f @ 3* 1014 Hz which is at the blue
edge of the visible spectral range. For cellular information processing
D x =10-2-3 cm, t = 10-10 s , and the wavelength l@ 3* 10-6 cm = 300
nm,
f @ 1015 Hz, which is within the ultraviolet spectral range. Remarkably,
these two wavelengths are close to the value of lcrit . The frequency is
1015 Hz which is just the value belonging to the activation energy of the
cells' enzymatic reactions. What is more, the spectral range belonging
to the mitogenetic radiation is just in the same one. The mitogenetic radiation
is observed to be emitted by dividing cells at and shortly before cell
division. The history and the present state of the experimental investigations
on ultraweak photon emission/mitogenetic radiation is presented by Ruth
(1989, and F. A. Popp, K. H. Li. And Q. Gu, 1992). Notably, the above calculated
wavelength is the same one at which the energy surplus of living protein
is radiated away in the process of dying (Bauer, 1935, this phenomenon
is known as the "degradation radiation", see also Ruth, 1989). Ervin Bauer,
the greatest forgotten biologist of the century, developed a quantitative
mathematical description of the most basic biological processes: growing,
metabolism, dying, replication and sensitivity. He showed that in a living
organism the molecules are in a deformed, elongated and electrically polarised
state containing surplus, free energy, i.e. the free energy is EM energy.
10. Quantum Energy Transfer Between the Brain and the Material Carriers
of Thought
Let us estimate now the amount of energy transfer between vacuum and
quanta. The uncertainty principle (7) gives us a tool to estimate the energies
relevant to the individual time scales. When using t@ 10-3 s, we have for
E @ 5* 10-25 ergs, while for t@ 10-9 s, E @ 5* 10-19 ergs. The energy change
of the electron localised to a human brain is estimated to be
E = p2/2m @ h2/(32p2(D x)2m) (14)
i. e. 10-30 ergs with D x= 10cm for electrons.
On the physical basis presented here one can construct the following
chain of events for an interaction between the mind and the brain.
In the first step the information is contained and mediated by the vacuum
field. These vacuum waves may interact with electromagnetic waves in giving
them their information in the second step. The electromagnetic waves then
may interact with the biomolecules of the brain, like sunshine interacts
with chlorophyll molecules transferring the energy of the sunlight into
chemical free energy. From this available chemical energy the activation
potentials of the neural networks are built up. Nevertheless, all four
steps could be simultaneously influenced by the vacuum waves.
The frequencies of the vacuum waves obtained here are remarkably close
to the observed frequencies at cell divisions. This circumstance suggests
that the way vacuum waves interact with material waves can be a resonant
phenomenon. The vacuum waves may transfer their energies and information
content to material waves at the same frequencies. The real energy transfer
could be necessary only at the onset of some material processes in an upper
level of the mind. Here, I suggest a picture in which the different levels
of our minds may work with progressively more subtle material carriers,
while the deepest one works with vacuum waves without any net energy transfer
taking place in the end, because the energy taken out from the vacuum may
be put back by the brain itself when reading important information from
the psi-field. It could be the reason why only living organisms with a
significant free energy content are able to react on the basis of the information
read out.
11. Quantum-Vacuum Interaction in the Universe
The sizes of a brain thinking with electromagnetic waves are within
the range of
L(EM brain) @ 10-8 cm - 1.6* 109 cm @ R(atom) - R(Earth) (15)
being the limiting values. The atomic size arises from formula (10)
working with t = 10-14 s as the lifetime of the van der Waals bonds choosing
for "m" the mass of the most energetic electromagnetic waves m(gamma rays)
@ 10-27 g. The upper limit arises from the time-scale of the global brain,
t @ 103 sec and the lower limit from the mass-energy of the least energetic
electromagnetic waves m(radio waves) @ 10-43 g. It is interesting to note
here, that the frequency belonging to the largest electromagnetic brain
is around 1 - 100 Hz, in the range of the brain and Schumann terrestrial
EM waves.
One can calculate the wavelength belonging to a thought process occurring
in a cosmic dimension with the size of the Universe. Using for D x ~ R(Universe)
in (10) we get for l (Universe)
l (Universe) @ 2p (ct ) (v/c) (16)
Taking for t ~ the age of the Universe , ct ~ R(Universe) because the
Universe is expanding with a velocity close to the speed of light. It means
that the size belonging to a thought process occurring in a duration with
the age of the Universe has just the same order of magnitude as the size
of the Universe.
Using different values for t belonging to a certain system in (16) we
get different values for l which belongs to a vacuum wave of different
wavelength. Equation (16) offers the description of the coupling between
the thought processes of the Universe and its organic elements, another
global-local coupling. Namely, using the time-scale of the human consciousness,
t ~ 10-3 s, we get the resonant wavelength of the Universe to Man as l
~ 2* 108 cm when using a value of v ~ c. This magnitude is again close
to the size of the Earth, and with v > c it is possible to get even larger
sizes. The size of a brain thinking with vacuum waves can be
L(vacuum waves) ~ L(human brain), R(Earth), R(Sun), R(Universe).
The different vacuum waves couple us in a different scale to the cosmos
and to our bodies and brains, while the electromagnetic and electron waves
present couplings between our environment, our brains and local neural
processes. These couplings to the different scales of the outer world represent
couplings between our different mind levels, simultaneously. In this context
it is important to note, that these outer sources of informations - the
Earth, the Sun, the stars, and the Universe as a whole - do show a whole
range of generalised organic processes (Grandpierre, A., 1995a, 1996a,b,c,d).
In my essay (Grandpierre, A., 1995a) I argued that every element of
the Universe is a kind of a double-pyramid consisting of hierarchical levels
i.e. conscious mind, deep-mind, genetic-mind, cosmic mind (inner world
pyramid of a human being), Earth, Solar System, Galaxy, Universe (outer
world-pyramid of a human being). The difference between the organisms of
the Universe is only what is outer and what is inner for them, but the
levels in their pyramids are similar, consisting of the same constituents.
In this context it is interesting to note, that our calculations show that
the different organisms interact with the same range of universal fields,
but their sizes determine, what is ‘outer’ and what is ‘inner’ for them,
and which are the long and short wavelengths compared to their physical
sizes.
12. Spontaneous Targeting
The fundamental difference between the inanimate, inorganic systems
and organic, self-organising systems is the appearance of such life phenomena
within the latter ones as metabolism, sensitivity, growth, multiplication
and homeostasis. It is clear that an inorganic ‘object’ is one which lacks
free energy and mobile ‘tentacles’, mobile external sensors and executive
instruments. We observe in nature that all ‘objects’ with free energy and
movable surfaces spontaneously organise themselves into ‘systems’, e.g.
atoms, molecules and crystals. ‘Systems’ are objects which are mobile enough
to organise themselves into a hierarchical order, generating a level where
they can act freely and so can organise their activity in their environment.
This spontaneous organisation is ‘automatic’, it is a universal characteristics
of material ‘objects’, therefore we usually ignore it. Nevertheless, spontaneity
is a remarkable property of the system formation from its elements. The
formula H2 + O --> H2O expresses, that by mixing the components water molecules
form automatically, spontaneously if the mix is supplied with the necessary
amount of energy to trigger the process. But the question arises: how do
the molecules of hydrogen and oxygen find each other? If they follow a
heat motion, a brownian random motion, only a minute part of the molecules
with proper impact factors (distance and velocity) could collide in the
manner necessary to form the compound molecules during the short time interval
given by the trigger heat and the explosion. This observation makes it
clear that a yet unnoticed ‘spontaneity’ acts as an organising factor even
in the sphere of inanimate systems. A new and independent evidence appeared
and this underlies the above argument. A recent result substantiates the
spontaneous targeting phenomenon in H2 + O --> H2O ( Hemley, 1995 ). This
reaction between hydrogen and oxygen is surely one of the best studied
chemical reactions, but details of the reaction kinetics have always been
enigmatic. Loubeyre and LeToullec (1995) found that the normally explosive
reaction is shut down by pressure and a new compound is formed. It means
that the factors organising the reactions are sensitive to pressure and
temperature.
The organisation of the biologically active configurations of proteins
from an unfolded polypeptide chain presents another enigma known as the
Levinthal-paradox. C. Anfinsen showed in the early 1970s that a protein
having been unfolded by chemical denaturants could refold spontaneously
when the denaturing conditions were reversed. Levinthal pointed out in
the late 1960s that the number of possible states of an unfolded protein
is larger than 1060. Assuming that the protein “ hunts” for the biologically
active configuration in a random process at a rate set by vibration frequencies
(about 1013 searches per second), for a single protein molecule to arrive
at the folded state would take longer (1030 times) than the age of the
Universe. But proteins can fold completely within hours - sometimes within
milliseconds - and early steps occur on time-scales far shorter than milliseconds.
It is shown, that interactions between secondary structures - i.e. long-range
intramolecular interactions between a-helices and b-sheets - are important
in the folding process, which is sensitive to temperature and electromagnetic
fields (Callender et al., 1994). Remarkably, new and independent results
substantiate our arguments on the phenomena of spontaneous organisation.
Hess and Mikhailov (1995) pointed out, that in living cells the enzymatic
subsystem within normal conditions represents a coherent molecular network,
the entire population of the network is in continuous communication and
undergoes collective evolution. These molecular networks are in close analogy
to neural networks and insect societies. Mikhailov and Ness (1995) showed
that when a new protein molecule is produced at a membrane, it is loaded
into a budding vesicle which then moves through the cell until it reaches
its target at another membrane location. They presented evidences for their
assumption that vesicles detect the direction leading to their targets
and can actively move towards them. Thus, the behaviour of vesicles resembles
that of entire cells in chemotaxis and in the phenomenon of cell-to-cell
communication. The intrinsic reference frame needed for detection of the
motion direction by vesicles could be provided by the intracellular chemical
gradients and/or by the electrical fields present inside a living cell.
The same problem of the existence of a targeting mechanism seems to
work in the olfactory field, as well. How could the odorant molecules find
automatically their receptors? Lewis Thomas (1974) noted that eels have
been taught to smell two or three molecules of phenylethyl alcohol. An
average man can detect just a few molecules of butyl mercaptan. How the
olfactory cells are fired by an odorant is not known. The substance may
become bound to the cells possessing specific receptors for it and then
may just sit there, somehow displaying its signal from a distance.
I suggest the term “ spontaneous targeting” for this general phenomenon
present in the inanimate and animate worlds as well. Spontaneous targeting
is just a sub-phenomenon of the more general spontaneous organisation pervading
the whole Cosmos (Endre K. Grandpierre, 1996a, and also in this volume).
This spontaneous organisation factor is the one which organises any system
with the proper conditions (free energy, movable perceiving surfaces, etc.)
into biological organisms. Of course, a totally inanimate object will never
‘resurrect’ to an organised system, therefore the mere presence of life
anywhere in the Universe indicates the universal presence of an organising
factor.
13. Global Organisation and Action-in-Distance
If a system is able to develop a level of phenomenon which is independent
from mere physical and environmental determinations, it develops its own
laws on this level. In order to be able to follow these laws, it has to
find a way to handle the energy and information which reached the system
from a global perspective, transporting the energy and information easily
to the place where they serve the global project. This ‘global organisation’
assumes the existence of an ‘action-in-distance’, first of all, because
the global organising centre has to contact - within the shortest time
of the reaction time scales - not only the state of affairs in the whole
system, but also it has to process the information and reach the proper
decision. The system has to be ‘transparent’ for the information needed.
On the other hand, the system also has to be filled with free energy stores
in order to make the energy easily available when the decisions reach local
parts of the system. This informational transparency requires an informational
action-in-distance. If there an informational transparency exists within
the system, it may also be used to gain access to interact with other systems
in the informational level. This intersubjective informational transparency
is the first form of perception that nature applied, in generating always
the global system first and the subsystems subsequently, e.g. the Metagalaxy
first and the Galaxy afterwards, the species first, the individual later.
Therefore, informational transparency is as basic for the individuals of
a species as for the cells within the body of the organism. Actually, this
informational ‘action in distance’ is based on a co-operation of similarly
tuned units of organisation, at cells, organisms, groups, in and between
different species, until the biosphere as a whole and the Universe as a
whole. This primal perception is the way how cosmic tuning (Grandpierre,
A., 1992), and an anthropic, life-containing Universe (Barrow, Tipler,
1986) are produced. The transparent exchange of information is a kind of
perception which was necessarily developed upon the origin of Metagalaxy,
and divided afterwards into its subsystems, all of which kept some primal
patterns of its antedescent organism in order to be able to organise itself
as a whole. This informational perception turns out to be a primal, cosmic
perception which developed before the origin of external senses. The primal
perception is a direct unfolding and exchange of all basic information
present in the Cosmos. This primal perception is the first - still unnoticed-
life phenomenon developed in the Universe. The primal perception still
preserved some of its characteristics in the phenomena of group effect.
14. The Fundamental Problem of Electromagnetism and Quantum Physics
Electromagnetic fields are known to mediate information extremely effectively
through e.g. light waves. The wave-particle duality has been known since
the two-slit experiment of Young in 1801. This duality describes a spherical
spread and a parallel guidance, as expressed in a local sudden collapse
into a ‘particle’, photon at the site of interaction. The nature of this
duality is still not well understood (Newton, Wigner, 1949). I suggest
that the solution of this fundamental problem of the field theories of
physics, in electromagnetism as well as in quantum field theories, lies
in the fact that an immediate mediator field exists which mediates information
or structural patterns from the wavefronts immediately into the place of
interaction, e.g. the site of observation. In my interpretation besides
the wavefronts of the electromagnetic waves an ultrafast or immediate ‘mediator’
field exists which is able to transform the wavefront in a glance into
a photon particle. This mediator field acts faster than the speed of light,
immediately, and gives a clear picture on the nature of electromagnetic
wave propagation. This ultrafast mediator field is able to interpret the
fundamental variational principles of physics. This EM mediator field exchanges
energy and information between the extended magnetic field of the current
and the circuit itself. The existence of this fundamental field is the
only solution to the still unrecognised fundamental problem of electromagnetism
i.e. the energy of the EM field seems to be present in its whole amount
in the circuit and, at the same time, in the EM field. If it means an actual
simultaneity, it would lead to a doubling of the energy, which is absurd.
Therefore the only solution is the one I suggest here, and that is an EM
field which is able to ‘act in distance’.
As early as 1892 Maxwell recognised that the EM energy is present in
the circuit and the EM field simultaneously. He understood that the current
is able to perform electrolysis locally, to develop Joule-heat locally,
and the ability to do work locally involves local energy. At the same time,
the energy is also present in the form of field energy. Maxwell suggested
that a part of the EM energy is present locally and the remaining part
is present globally (1892, Vol. II, p. 212). Nevertheless, the calculations
lead to equal amounts of energy, and when one form of EM energy changes,
the other form changes simultaneously. Feynman, the founder of quantum
electrodynamics, expressed a view that the energy is present in the field
globally- but he is silent about the local EM energy (Feynman et al., 1963).
The presence of this primary EM field offers for the first time the actual,
immediate ‘action in distance’, which has a significance of overall importance,
in the understanding the nature of the field of consciousness, as well.
It is interesting, that Maxwell himself, in the last chapter “Theories
of action at a distance” of his book recognized the instantaneous character
of some EM effects: “An electric particle sends forth a potential, the
value of which ee’/r, depends not only on e, the emitting particle, but
on e’, the receiving particle, and on distance r between the particles
at the instant of emission” (Maxwell, 1892). This primary EM field may
serve as a physical basis for the ‘spontaneous targeting’ introduced above,
the ‘spontaneous collapse’ of the waves to the site of interaction or observation,
thus solving the central measurement problem of the present day quantum
theory, and the ‘primary perception’, which is a yet unnoticed effect,
but discovered independently and simultaneously by the present author and
Endre K. Grandpierre (this volume). This primary EM field may help in maintaining
the ‘global organization’ and ‘informational transparency’ described above.
15. The Source of the EM Field
The presence of the immediate mediator EM field is clear from the followings,
as well. Let us imagine the sudden appearance of an electric charge at
a certain point. We know that the law of conservation is valid for the
electric charges but the thought experiment also works with a sudden separation
of a new-born electron-positron pair. Regarding the fact that the EM waves
spread with the speed of light, and thinking that they start from the appearance
of the charge - or the separation of the dipole - , we have to think that
the electromagnetic field of the charge propagates with the speed of light.
If the energy of the charge is in the field then with the spreading of
the EM wavefront the energy in the field grows. But the electric charge
conserves, therefore its energy and charge do not change. Following this
line of thought we can think that the conservation law of energy is violated.
Thinking the same thought experiment with a suddenly separated dipole,
the sudden appearance of the dipole leads again to a continuous propagation
of the EM field, even if we stop the separation at a certain moment. This
means that the field is able to rearrange itself from one form into another
form, and the expanding EM field is able to draw energy from its previous,
latent form. The three forms of EM fields- wavefront, photon, and coupling
mediator field, are able to exchange energy and information within each
other immediately, as if they were one unique existent, or living in a
complete symbioses. They may be regarded as being in a resonant coupling.
I suggest, that the collective consciousness field extends this symbiosis
to the overlapping particle mediated fields, like the acoustic or the olfactory
field, as well as to other forms of vacuum fields besides the EM forms,
the quantum-vacuum holographic fields (Laszlo, 1993, 1995). Their symbiosis,
the inclusion of all of them into resonant coupling, is the key generative
factor of the flexible, ultrasensitive organisation phenomena observed
in the Universe, biosphere and societies. I suggest that the spell of the
music may be understood by the coupling of the acoustic field of the body
to EM vibration fields.
16. Collective EM field of the Biosphere
The EM field, as a part of the consciousness field, is shown to be able
to directly trigger electric activity in the neuronal cells. On the other
hand, the EM field emitted by the brain’s activity is a measurable field.
This result makes available a physical means for measuring consciousness
field from point-to-point, for measuring the guidance of the consciousness
field (or psi-field) between two people. Human brain works with a power
of 20 Watts. We know that large amount of this power becomes waste heat
and cools the brain. Nevertheless, all the energy produced by the organism
in the course of metabolism goes through a significant step, the free energy,
which is in direct relevance to EM energy. Since all the energy of metabolism
goes through the EM phase, all the energy has to be present simultaneously
in the EM field energy, a significant part of which leaves the body. We
may think that if later on this EM energy is transformed into other forms
of energy by mechanical work or heat, this is irrelevant in our estimation
of the environmental EM field of the organism. Nevertheless, this view
is not correct, if, as we have shown, all the EM energy of the organism
is simultaneously present in the environment.
Mankind’s brain activity involves a work of 1011 Watts, comparable to
the electromagnetic power entering the earthly magnetosphere from the solar
wind. The biomass of the Earth is a substantial factor of the source of
the EM fields at the surface of the Earth. Scott (1962) measured the electric
field of a bean root in the surrounding solution of the root. The measured
total power dissipated electrically to the environment by the root is 10-9
W. Remarkably, the electric field shows a spontaneous and truly endogenous
rhythm with a 5-minute period which coincides with the periods of the acoustic
modes of the Sun. It is interesting to note here the remark of Cox and
Giuli (1968) on the close value of the specific energy production rate
of the solar core and of the specific energy liberation rate of the human
metabolism, both of which are around 100 ergs/g/s. The so-called dry-matter
content of the biomass is 846 g/m2, i.e. 4.3 1017 g, which, taking a factor
of ten for the water content, would give a value of 1014 W (as we know
that 80% of the mass of the living matter is water). The plants of the
biosphere transform half of the energy of the incoming solar radiation
to its plant matter, i.e. 1.72 1017W. One percent of this energy is transformed
to energy contained in form of food. The original living form of solar
energy as it was firstly bound in plants when reaching the food-eater predators,
suffers a ten-thousandfold loss, to 1013 W (after Odum, 1971). The produced
biological free energy, as calculated from the dry-matter content, is 20
810 Kcal/m2/year of the plants, 3 368 Kcal/m2/year of the herbivorous animals,
and 21 Kcal/m2/year of the large predators (Fábián et al.,
1975). These numbers give a biological energy of the plants around 1.43
1015W. If only ten-thousand part of this biological free energy was expressively
radiated out to the environment, this value still would be significant
enough to be comparable to the geophysical factors. We have to realise,
that plants, and EM fields of animal and human origin may be a substantial
part of our EM environment. The EM field of human origin is of a smaller
amplitude, but this relative difference may be balanced by the relative
ease with which we can tune to human frequencies. If we are able to tune
ourselves to the plants’ field, we can feel their overwhelming, galvanising
EM fields.
17. Collective EM field of Human Subjects
Burr (1935) formulated a concept that EM fields organise the living
processes. “The pattern of organization of any biological system is established
by a complex electrodynamic field which is, in part, determined by its
atomic physiochemical components and which, in part, determines the behavior
and orientation of those components. More than establishing pattern, it
must maintain pattern in the midst of a physiochemical flux. Therefore,
it must regulate and control living things, it must be the mechanism, the
outcome of whose activity is ‘wholeness’, organization, and continuity.”
Burr (1956) measured the relatively steady-state standing potential
of a tree for more than a decade. The potential shows diurnal, monthly,
and seasonal variations of considerable interest and, over the years, and
suggested a correlation with sunspot activity. It has been adequately demonstrated
that a living organism, a tree, is an electric system, exhibiting all the
properties of an electric field. It is remarkable that in its most fundamental
electromagnetic regulation the cosmic effects appeared so pronouncedly.
Ravitz (1962) was able to show, by working out 50 000 field determination
on some 500 human subjects at Yale, Duke, and University of Pennsylvania
Schools of Medicine, that “the variations of the EM fields of the human
subjects provide an objective profile of similar variations in the feeling
and behaviour states, and open the door to both long- and short-range predictions
in time. Electrocyclic phenomena seem to be governed both by exogenous
and endogenous factors. Primacy of the exogenous component is suggested,
however, not only by plotting similar field excursions on diverse representatives
of the plant and animal kingdoms within the same intervals, but also by
demonstrating parallelisms between simultaneously recorded atmospheric,
earth, and tree potential differences.”
Biological organisms show extreme sensitivity for external EM signs,
as the new branch of science, bioelectromagnetism has discovered (see the
references above, Sect. V.). Recently, Kuznetsov (1982) reviewed the results
of laboratory experiments with synchronous yeast cells Candida Utilis.
“ The presence of external rhythms’ influence on the yeast cells growth
in a batch cultivation system was established. The results of statistical
processing of the experimental data showed the statistically significant
presence of 160.009± 0.006-minute oscillations in the variability
of the specific growth rate of the yeast population. The fact testifies
in favour of the 160.01-minute global solar oscillations influence on the
Candida Utilis growth rate.” These oscillations were independently discovered
in 1976 by two solar research groups in Crimea and Birmingham. Their results
pointed out that the solar surface shows oscillations with a 160-minute
period. Arguments proving the existence of this period in solar oscillations
are given by Kotov (1995). The amplitude of this oscillation is low, only
1 m/s, changing permanently. The origin of this oscillation, contrary to
the 5-minute oscillations, is not known, and inexplicable by the standard
solar model (Kotov, 1985).
It is well known, that the ionosphere and the surface of the Earth form
a cavity for the electromagnetic waves, therefore every electromagnetic
disturbance in its attenuation may be transformed into a standing wave
determined by the size of cavity (Schumann and König, 1954). The standing
terrestrial electromagnetic waves, termed as Schumann waves, have a characteristic
frequency of 7.5 Hz, coinciding with the range of the most creative brain
EEG frequencies, a -waves, which are produced also in the REM phase of
sleep. Moreover, the time characteristics of Schumann oscillations and
the EEG a -rhythm, as well as storm-related fluctuations of electric field
and the EEG d -rhythm show a noticeable similarity in their temporal variations
(König, 1989). These circumstances may substantiate a hypothesis that
human brains/minds are able to interact with the information field of the
terrestrial organic self-maintaining system.
Human consciousness fields primarily interact at the a-level in frequencies
around 7.5 Hz, therefore the creative state of mind is the same one as
the most influential source of the collective consciousness field. Moreover,
the human a-field interacts with the earthly a-field, with the Schumann
waves. The b-field, the field of awake consciousness, in the present societies
seems to be largely inactivated and, in contrary to the alpha-field, does
not form an effective collective consciousness field. The reason for this
anomaly is that the awake state is not in a continuous resonance with the
a-field, as a result of the schism of breaking our mind into two antagonistic
parts (see Grandpierre, E. K., this volume). This psychic anomaly is the
factor behind the sporadic and low-level ESP abilities of the Homo sapiens
sapiens. Inactivated information fields can only be actualised if consciousness
turns against its deeper generating levels. The b-field of individuals
is generally in an extraordinarily low-intensity state because most part
of its energy is consumed in the repression of the deep-mind. Nevertheless,
the way in which we can reach healthier consciousness fields is the development
of the high-intensity b-field, which is filled with the powers of the deeper
mind levels in a natural resonance. The d-and J -fields are related to
cosmic electromagnetic wave fields (Grandpierre, A., 1996d). The natural
sources of collective consciousness fields are the plants, animals, (non-manipulated)
humans, the Earth, and, through the cosmic interface of the Earth, the
magnetosphere, the Moon and the Sun, and, through the heliosphere, the
whole Galaxy and Universe. Exploring and understanding the working of consciousness
may help in tuning to its natural, more powerful sources, regaining a harmony
between its main constituents, and opening a perspective to the experimental
exploration of collective consciousness fields.
18. The Physics of the Evolution of Consciousness
The evolution of consciousness - as the evolution of the Universe shows
us - actually is in contrast to the presently accepted evolutionary theories,
which want to build up the whole from the parts. In reality, evolution
started from the whole and progressively differentiated into parts, from
the timeless-spaceless form (e.g. the ‘implicit order’, or ‘pre-space’
of D. Bohm and J. A. Wheeler), through galaxies, through the development
of the Solar System and the Earth, the appearance of the biosphere and
mankind, until the development of smaller and smaller subsystems of consciousness,
until the human individual. ‘Cosmologies of wholeness’ are emerging (see
Laszlo, E., 1993; Harris, 1988). All of the cosmic evolution formed sub-systems
within systems. Evolution begins with ‘systems’, ‘elements’ develop only
later on. Every system originates as a subsystem of a larger, inclusive
system. The organisation of the sub-system is made by the creator system,
and the organisational factor acts from within, as well. This fact assumes
that the creator system is in a certain way transformed into the to-be-created
subsystem, the ‘whole’ is transformed to the ‘part’. This global-local
transformation is a necessary condition of the generation of the new system.
Therefore the Universe acted continuously as an agent with organisation
ability, and is progressively transformed from the largest of its subsystems
into the smallest ones. The trend of evolution is simultaneously going
towards a higher complexity and this way towards more and more complex
subsystems, and in this way the real evolution is also accompanied by the
state of becoming more and more complex and towards higher and higher forms
of consciousness. Ervin Laszlo remarked: “ Evolution acts on species and
populations and not only - or even mainly - on individual reproducers.
Individual variations do not contribute significantly to the emergence
of new species.” This trend, the primacy of ‘global’ over ‘local’ appears
in the history of mankind (Grandpierre, E. K. this volume), starting with
cosmic consciousness in the Golden Age of mankind. Later a break set up
in the trend of human evolution, attempting to cut down the ‘whole’ from
the ‘part’, the Cosmos from the living beings. The complex subsystem of
human collectives preferred only one side of this cosmic trend, the more
and more divided and separate complexity, the specification to individual
human being, at the expense of general context and cosmic laws, drawing
away and retiring from the growing collective order, loosing the connections
to the larger, embracing levels of existence. As Andras Angyal expresses
it the autonomous, self-maintaining tendency dominates over its dual brother,
the homonymous, self-completing tendency (1941), the basic need for direct,
sensual, artistic life-experiences. According to my research, the three
inevitable motivating, life-long motivational instincts in our lives are
the life-instinct, sustaining our individual life, the species-instinct,
sustaining the life of our species, and the world-instinct, sustaining
the life-functions of the Universe. The world-instinct is the basis of
the other two, and it involves the imagination, intuition, curiosity, the
desire for a meaningful life, to form healthy, alive communities, to correspond
to larger units, to the Nature and the Universe (Grandpierre, A., 1991),
therefore it is the world of the primary perception.
If we do not want to leave the road of cosmic evolution for ever, we
may find again the path how to reveal our natural completion, the already
hidden powers which the all-embracing cosmic evolution generated in our
genes and basic constitution. Unfortunately, it has not been explored until
now, how far we reached from our first-handed, natural drives, and what
is the meaning that the Universe mediates to us. In order to form again
a human, collective society, in which every individual sees the meaning
of her/his activity and life, a meaning which is able to give an ultimate,
lifelong satisfaction, we should recover the destination of mankind, and,
besides it, the destination of the Universe. There is not any other task,
which may be able to give a common perspective to all of us, than to explore
and regain our destiny, to regain the harmony with the Nature and the Universe.
Only this elevating and touching task may give back our harmony with ourselves.
To do this, first we have to explore the nature of the Universe and understand
the super-organism called biosphere - an organism with a collective consciousness.
19. Origin of Consciousness and its Relation to Emotional States
Psychological researches teach that consciousness is vital when it is
filled with emotional drives. Positive emotions enhance the dominating
role of the neocortex in the brain activity ( Völgyesi, 1962). Our
research (see Endre K. Grandpierre, this and a later volume) shows, that
the basic and first step of any conscious activity is an interaction. If
consciousness works through EM fields, its activity in every step involves
changes in its EM field and the interaction of its EM field with another
EM field - outer or of an inner subsystem. It means that EM induction results,
which generates naturally a higher level of electromagnetic activity besides
the overlapping and superposition of the two interactive EM fields. Consequently,
the interactive EM fields when they are active, generate a subsidiary EM
field, a ‘daughter’ field. This induction effect is suggested to be the
physical basis of the ‘group effect’, the enhancement of the basic activity
level when entering into interaction with another human being, consciously
or without being aware of it. Therefore, the consciousness can not be regarded
developed and healthy, if its ‘exploration drives’ and ‘general activity
drives’, emotional motivations and desires are passive, and are hindered
by the aware consciousness. Consciousness develops through the phenomenon
of ‘emotional infection’, widespread among children, and also present in
rituals and when masses of people form a community. In new-born children,
the movements originate from spontaneous emotional reactions, their sources
are within the emotional system (Wallon, H., 1946). “ At the origin of
evolution, in contrast with the traditional conception, an undivided state
existed in which the outer and the inner were not separated.” The propensity
to interact originates from the nature of emotions, of their mutuality
(Endre K. Grandpierre, this volume) and field-nature, which is the basis
of the well-known phenomenon of ‘transference’ , the easy transfer of emotions
in the trance-state from one person to another. This is the basis of the
transference of emotions, its epidemic character, as well as the wide range
phenomena of mass psychosis and collective impulses, when the individual
consciousnesses merge into one single common consciousness (Wallon, ibid.).
20. The Common Field of Consciousness
Emile Durkheim (1899) showed the existence of collective psychical fields.
He showed that the reality of the collective psychical fields is of the
same degree as that of the physical fields, since it is measurable (through
social indexes), and its relations and consequences show the same rate
of stability. The collective psychical field generates a remarkably stable
rate of suicides in a given nation. Individuals forming the society change
from year to year, but the rate of suicides remains stable. This rate is
different in different nations, and seems to be determined by moral factors.
Moral life is per se a collective phenomenon, and the collective psychical
field is an expression of the background moral fields of individuals. Our
moral convictions are a certain kind of concerted brain activities, formed
from our common characteristics. This is expressed also in the changes
of the social indexes of e.g. suicide. Durkheim observed, that the activity
of the society follows a seasonal rhythm, its intensity grows from January
to July, and then decreases. Durkheim pointed out, that the suicidal index
of the people living in marriage shows the same ratio to that of people
of the same social class being widows, indifferently from the selected
class. The simple reason for this is that the judgement of the society
is of a general character, independent of the actual group of the society,
although the social conditions of life sensitively change from group to
group, therefore becoming widow would show a larger relative loss in the
lower classes. Moral judgements are closely related to emotions, therefore
we are led to the inference that common field of consciousness consists
of emotions.
The rate of suicides is observed to grow with the age, and shows a tenfold
increase from the young to old age. Accepting the plausible view that the
social environment of the people does not show necessarily a more and more
hostile face as they grow older, but remains more-or-less the same during
a lifetime, we observe the existence of an effect independent from the
immediate social environment. This effect is probably mostly of subjective
character indicating the growing sensitivity of the people to the accumulating
social influences. This effect lays an emphasis on the ‘tuning’ of individuals
to the different influences, to the weakening of their ‘psychic immune
system’ because of manipulation.
The ‘everyday consciousness’ of the people is the expression of useful
informations, beliefs, habits and traditions. The basic behaviour, the
modus vivendi and the actual activity is mostly determined also by the
world-view of the person, which directs her/his system of values and conscious
decisions. Determining factors of the world-view are the religious faith
and the cohesion to the nation. Analysing these factors, we may observe
that beliefs, habits, religions, traditions are related to the prehistory
of the nation and mankind. The fundamental influence of the world-view
to our activity is certainly explained by the still surviving factors of
Nature and Cosmos within our psychic life. In this way, the everyday consciousness
seems to be determined by the Universe, Mankind and nation - therefore,
by the common fields of consciousness.
I know that emotions are a certain kind of taboo in the western civilisation.
Emotions and thoughts should be separated forever - a principle almost
generally accepted, in scientific circles as well. Nevertheless, thoughts
are closely related to emotions, they may be regarded as the expression
of them, as two stages of the same process. Our brain is made up as a community
of 4* 1010 neurones. From this enormous number of neurones, only ten-fifteen
million is waiting for stimuli. The time-period of the building up and
decay of the activation potential is around 10-3 s. It means that our brain
activates 1010 neurones in a second. This data is consequent with the data
given above (Sect. V.) for the information processing speed of the whole
brain in forms of neurones, 1010 bits/s. Only a millionth or less is the
speed of the conscious information processing, less than 103 bits/s. The
process in which the ‘unconscious’ becomes ‘conscious’, is based on a certain
selectivity, which may be paralleled with the process of the development
of a conscious thought from an unconscious emotion. Blocking the emotions
involves blocking the basis of consciousness, while keeping emotions does
not lead necessarily to uncritical decision, since it is the normal way
of the brain’s activity to select the information by their content and
choose which should be involved in aware consciousness. The large territories
of unused neurones sign that our emotional world is poor as compared to
its original capacity in a rate of 1/4 000. There is not any other part
of the body which would work with such a low efficiency. The electric work
made by the heart, e.g., is 40-60 times of that of the brain’s as a whole
(Rein, G., 1995, personal communication), although it also participates
in the general atrophy of the organism. It is important to note here, that
the decrease of the basic level of the EM activity of the brain decrease
of health of the whole organism (Oldfield, Coghill, 1988). The organ which
is not used, dies. It is known in medicine that a whole range of illnesses
is related to the anomalously low activity of brain, between cerebral innoculation
and subsequent cellular malfunction of the body (Oldfield, Coghill, 1988).
Psychosis, neurosis seems also to be related to undervitality of the brain.
The brain’s activity is largely parallel to the emotional intensity, when
we feel that something important is happening to us. The brain may conquer
back its lost territories, long-forgotten vast fields of untouched neurones,
at a rate of 4 000 times, and million times of that value, when the activity
of the brain is at full speed. Compared to that state, our present use
of the brain is something when we see through a small tube which shows
one-millionth of the field of vision without the tube. Since the under-utilisation
of the brain leads to the self-destruction of the organism, psychic and
somatic illnesses, emotions can not be exiled from the centre of the brain
to its highly controlled peripheries. Elevation of the consciousness of
mankind is unimaginable without the elevation of its basic level of activity,
without a significant role of emotions.
After coining the term ‘primary perception’, I became aware of the same
term already introduced into science. The phenomenon of ‘primary perception’
is known in child psychology (Pearce, 1977) denoting the extrasensory perception
of children. Eloise Shields presents an evidence that telepathic ability
peaks at age four, at which time their parents may begin to be aware of
such activity (Peterson, 1974). The term ‘primary perception’ surfaces
in electromagnetic context, as well, denoting the perceptions of plants
through EM fields (Backster, 1968). Primary extrasensory perception was
known in ancient cultures, such as ‘seeing’ (látás) in the
magic world-experience of ancient Hungarians (Vekerdy, 1974).
The ‘merged consciousness’ within proper conditions, by the help of
a careful attention, represents a higher expression of human existence,
as in cases of entering a new era of mankind, like the origin of natural
sciences at the Greeks or the renaissance, or at the formation and enlargement
of collectives or groups. If we to develop a more evolved form of consciousness,
we have to live with emotionally driven states of consciousness. The more
the consciousness will be filled up with human, natural and cosmic motives,
love, eagerness to act and desire to fulfil our destination, the more it
will open up, and the more it will be active, powerful and intense. Consciousness
when finding its natural field of action, its natural roots and natural
harmony, is able to regain its cosmic power again.
It is important to point out that the suggested inductive model for
the generation of consciousness offers a way for the ‘freedom of thought’.
The laws of the complete, original electromagnetism of Maxwell (1892) are
richer and more correct than their simplified forms presented by Heaviside
and Gibbs, known as Maxwell-equations, valid only within special conditions.
Recently, Cornille (1995) pointed out that “ the presence of the Ampere-force
in the complete EM implies that a charged capacitor can accelerate its
centre of mass without external help if it has an absolute motion with
respect to ether.” One can expect that spontaneous effects may be induced
by the Lorentz force. I suggest that this spontaneity may be related to
the observed spontaneous phenomena in the inorganic and organic world,
especially in the collective fields of consciousness, where spontaneous
induction may regularly occur.
21. On the Destination of the Universe
There are experiences for reaching the completion of our personal lives,
for recognising our special talents and working on their developments.
Nevertheless, when we reach a special emotional state, filled with galvanising
powers, sometimes we experience a one-to-one correspondence to the genuine,
original content of our personal life, when whole worlds being born inside
us and getting flame with the lights of Eternity. Cosmic pathways open
up in us only when our motivations are alive in a rate behind a certain
threshold, and when a natural force develops them into a higher form of
existence. Emotions are at the core of the existence, and behind their
accepted role of colouring the fixed forms of reality, they have the power
to shoot up the reality into a much more complete, fresh, nascent, creative
and natural state. Emotions are creative, and creative imagination is the
basic principle which forms and drives our lives, as well as the Universe
as a whole (Pet?cz, 1838; Froschammer, 1878). Emotions, like a field, have
a nature to be shared by others, to extend to landscapes and enter into
other consciousness. When emotions are alive and vital, they driving us
to share them with the others. The material universe is only a skin of
a much more alive, filled Universe, the body of which is constituted of
emotions which are much more real than the known forms of reality. This
reality is an intense, free, sparkling river of natural forces of emotions.
We can conceive that the known material Universe is only a far side-descendant
of the core Reality, of the real Universe, of which the fundamental nature
is emotional, therefore much more free, inductive, self-fulfilling and
human. Losing this real Universe generates a schism and an emotional emptiness,
and the void is filled - as history teaches us - with brutality, hate,
power and destruction.
To illustrate the occasions of free emotional inspirations, I present
here an example.
“ Shortly before her 17th birthday, Rosalyn Tureck was playing the Bach
fugue in A minor from Book 1 of the Well-Tempered Clavier when she lost
all awareness of her own existence. As she came to, she recalls, she saw
Bach’s music revealed in a completely new light, with a new structure that
required the development of a novel piano technique. Over the next two
days she worked out this technique on four lines of the fugue and then
played it at her lesson. Her teacher told her it was marvellous, but impossible,
that it couldn’t be done.
“ All I knew” , says Tureck, “ was that I had gone through a small door
into an immense living, green universe, and the impossibility for me lay
in returning through that door to the world I had known.”
Tureck went on to become a renowned concert artist, the first women
invited to conduct the New York Philharmonic Orchestra and author of several
books, including one in the works that links the structure of Bach’s music
to two physical theories.” (S. Weisburg, 1987).
The experience of the deeper, alive Universe still survives on the rare
occasions of the sparks of inspirations. Regarding the fact that social
influences have a propensity to accumulate and amplify each other, high
forms of states of consciousness, if widespread, could serve as a basis
of a more human reality. If we have a realistic picture of the present,
it helps in maintaining this reality, but the exploration of a deeper,
more real reality is easily able to surface and resurrect when more and
more people and collective shares the proper experiences and attitudes.
When awakening the alive green universes within us, mankind may reach a
stage in its evolution when above a critical threshold, these alive green
universes become interactive, and begin to form a basis of a new type of
reality, a much more human and much more conscious one.
22. The Deformation of Consciousness in the Western Civilisation
The well-known historian, Collingwood (1938) remarks, that “the art
is the treatment of the community to the most horrible illness of the mind,
the degeneration of consciousness”. Tamas Vekerdy (1974) makes an attempt
to solve the schism of our mind: “Consciousness, when turning against its
roots, becomes an idol destructing and degenerating every life; but, when
connected with the unconscious, becomes a vital factor. Intensifying consciousness
may liberate almost the whole range of the unconscious”. As Allport (1961)
observed, “the self of the western people sticks out (from its inner world)
as a thumb put up.” The roots of this rectangular dysfunction go back to
the absolutization of the self from the selves of the others, from the
environment, Nature and the Universe. None can count as ‘normal adult’,
or ‘full-right warrior’, if he/she does not accept the dogma of perfect
alienation of men from each other.
Western culture, in aiming to domesticate consciousness, assumes the
a priori degeneration of the human mind, which if undomesticated, shows
an evil, rotten, natural born killer face. This way western culture degraded
consciousness with a terror to a largely inert, practical, narrow-minded
slave, full of fear (Endre K. Grandpierre, this volume). This is why consciousness
compensates itself also with his own terror and domination over every other
factor of life, including the ‘unconscious mind’ and the other fellow people,
generating hostility, criminality and down-to-hell thinking.
23. Super-Organisms and Planetary Consciousness
The evolution of consciousness is related to the social co-operation,
to the collective consciousness. Collective consciousness itself may reach
its completion through a co-operation supra-social. In this context, it
is important to consider that the existence of super-colonies in Nature
has been studied recently (Higashi, Yamauchi, 1979). They observed super-colonies
of red Japanese ants Formica yessensis. Their super-colonies consists of
45 000 colonies occupying 270 hectares, with 300 millions of workers and
1.1 million queens. These colonies are interconnected with a web of 100
km long paths. There is a permanent exchange of workers and queens between
the groups. There is no aggression between the members of the super-colonies.
According to my theory outlined above, larger aggregates of individual
units, when forming a group, with a global organisation background, may
turn to be more sensitive to subtle outer, natural and cosmic influences.
This result is consistent with the view of Goldberg, who points out that
nations are not products of a lately evolution, but are primary facts of
life. It is a universal, spiritual form of life to form a community (Hamvas,
1943). Interactions between the members of a healthy, well-organised society
involve the possibility to easily reach information from all the members
of the society. In optimal case, when the organisational activity of the
society is well developed, all the information is processed and exchanged,
shared and ‘sacred’ by sharing, therefore forming a Common Field of Consciousness
of the society. Perceiving the nature of the Common Field of Consciousness
of the society is a substantial part of a healthy society, as being a condition
of the individual participation in the life functions of the society as
a whole. Perceiving the natural and cosmic informations is again a substantial
function, which is a condition of the harmonious relation of the society
to its immediate and cosmic environment. The physical conditions to this
refined sensing are given just by the cohered tuning and co-operation of
individuals, acting as a larger whole, sensitive to radiation with larger
wavelengths. Planetary consciousness may be approached when global-scale
activity is in development. The presence of Schumann waves, and their direct
interaction with the individual’s brain activity give an additional, natural
basis for the development of consciousness of mankind into a planetary
consciousness.
24. Healing of the Collective Consciousness Field of Mankind
The formation of a group is not automatic at humans. Spontaneous targeting
- e.g. when finding the proper members of a group to form - seems to be
sporadic. The ‘group’ as a higher level entity is the envelop which keeps
together the individuals. Until this envelope is not formed, one can find
the peoples to be an aggregate and not in a group. But what is the nature
of this ‘envelop’? As Didier Anzieu expresses, the most important factors
are the network of implicit and explicit rules, the established habits,
the rites, the facts and actions with accepted values, which contribute
to the formation of an inner space and a proper timeliness (Anzieu, 1984).
I have to add as a substantial characteristic of any group a similar sensitivity,
sharing some basic elevating or interest-expressing ideas, conceptions
and motives to act, and propensity to similar emotional states and emotional
drives. Being in a faceless mass, in an atomised society, in the absence
of communities, without emotions to be shared, sooner or later will generate
stress, anxiousness and tension, deforming the natural states of consciousness,
degenerating our mind, which may enhance aggression and destruction. The
formation of a real community, giving the frame to a meaningful life, is
the task of the present societies.
To do this, it would be helpful to explore the physical conditions and
physical forms of consciousness, and determine the proper conditions of
the natural states of consciousness fields, therefore being able to create
physical conditions which may generate favourable conditions to regain
our physical and mental health. Learning that consciousness is basically
an EM field (which is resonantly coupled to the vacuum field), and its
sources are the cosmic systems of Sun, Earth and the Moon (Grandpierre,
1996d), together with the natural sources of the biosphere, especially
the natural fields into which we can tune most easily, the physical field
emitted by the human organisms, we may be able to measure and broadcast
wave fields which heal the stress, intensify, galvanise, correcting the
distortions of the natural fields, like stress and alienation, and then
to broadcast fields which induce in us urge to participate in the collective
forms of consciousness. Measuring the healing spectra of special sites
like water-springs, nascent forests, solar and lunar oscillations of the
earthly magnetosphere, we may be able to sample them and re-radiate them
in forms of Schumann-waves.
Searching the conditions of the tuning of the individuals to the natural
healing EM fields has the same importance as the possible explorations
of changes in our EM environment, which do have a healing effect. Psychological
research shows that the efficiency of tuning in between different people
is determined largely by emotional connections, i.e. transpersonal connections
are the most effective between lovers, parents and children, friends tuned
to each other. This result suggests that mankind may heal itself if we
are able to tune us more effectively to the natural sources of consciousness,
to the natural powers living in us, revealing the natural beings behind
the manipulated masks which are developed by an unnatural society’s norms,
and when our emotional bounds are strengthened towards the wider ranges
of our personal existence, towards Nature and the Universe.
It is suggested that new types of mental techniques may be developed
to explore the subjective effects of mental intensification (Grandpierre,
1995c). If Vekerdy (1974) is right and the cathartic effect of the theatre
is based on the extrasensory transference of the emotions generated in
the actors, we can imagine a theatre in which everybody participates simultaneously.
The idea of the ‘telepathic theatre’ suggests a play in total darkness
and silence. The actors play the real drama on stage, intensifying their
emotions and consciousness, and the participants are measured simultaneously
through EM detectors positioned in the performance hall. The facilitation
effect of the large number of harmoniously tuned participants could be
detected directly.
Moreover, in recognising the hidden social drives of human beings, we
could mobilise these immense inner natural forces, and as a new form of
art, we may invent socio-mental group therapy, when people meet and form
a community to inspire each other not with de-intensifying meditation,
but strengthening the opposite tendency, the vitality, flexibility, mental
intensity and freshness. Certainly, the whole society could got a vital
lightning by becoming aware of its real, socio-natural-cosmical nature.
Neural mind is connected to executive functions of bodily changes, an
already fixed form of the mental processes. Consciousness, as understood
by mainstream science, is an extremely small part of this executive neural
mind. Our calculations and arguments strongly suggest, that consciousness
may be and, by nature, has to be of a much wider range. Beside the quantitative
intensification of the neural mind, we can develop and improve the quality
of our brains’ activity, spontaneity, tuning in to the much faster and
subtler electronic, EM and quantum-vacuum minds. Consciousness may regain
its natural functions only when finding a partnership with his parental,
subtler minds, with human communities, with Nature and the Universe.
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