| 
			  
			
 
 
  by Iona Miller
 
			1993 
			from
			
			TheSynergeticQabala Website 
			  
			  
			  
				
					
						| 
						Amit 
						Goswami PhD, 
						has proposed a theory of consciousness, 
						rather than atoms, as the fundamental reality o the 
						material world. Based in the philosophy of monistic 
						idealism, he claims to obtain a consistent paradox-free 
						interpretation of the new physics. 
						 
						He suggests a quantum 
						mechanical, as well as classical nature for mind, which 
						accounts for nonlocal psychic phenomena. |  
			
 
			
			
 
			MONISTIC IDEALISM 
			In searching for the fundamental basis of physical reality and the 
			nature of the mind, Goswami (1993) has defined consciousness 
			as,
 
				
				"the agency that affects quantum objects to make their behavior 
			sensible."  
			In choosing this criterion he hopes to show how mind can 
			effect matter non-energetically because they share the same essence. 
			By making the leap from a universe based on bits of matter, to one 
			based in consciousness, he hopes to logically and coherently resolve 
			some of the major paradoxes of physics.
 
			  
			He suggests that instead of 
			everything being made of atoms, everything is made of 
			
			consciousness. 
			 
			  
			If quantum objects are waves that spread in existence at more than 
			one place, as QM has shown, then consciousness may be the agency 
			that focuses the waves so we can observe them at one place. 
			Goswami labels this philosophy,
 
				
				"monistic as opposed to dualistic, 
				and it is idealism because ideas (not to be confused with 
				ideals) and the consciousness of them are considered to be the 
				basic elements of reality; matter is considered to be 
				secondary."  
			Mental phenomena such as 
			self-consciousness, free will, creativity, and ESP are explained 
			anew in this reformulation of the mind-body in a fresh context. 
			As in both the mystical view and holographic universe (such as that 
			described by Bohm), there is only the dynamic play of one great 
			webwork of existence (Bohm's
			holomovement). This unified movement, a dance of creation and 
			annihilation, has intentionality.
 
			  
			However, Goswami does not propose 
			that consciousness is mind; they are different concepts. 
			In monistic idealism, the consciousness of the subject in a 
			subject-object experience is the same consciousness that is the 
			ground of all being. Therefore, consciousness is unitive. The domain 
			of potentia also exists in consciousness.
 
			  
			Nothing is outside 
			consciousness...! 
			Buddha tells us that,
 
				
				"There is an Unborn, Unoriginated, 
				Uncreated, Unformed.  
				  
				If there were not this Unborn, this Unoriginated, this Uncreated, this Unformed, escape from the 
				world of the born, the originated, the created, the formed would 
				not be possible."  
			But there is this essential ground, and 
			it is possible to "escape" space-time, according to Buddha. 
			If the brain-mind is itself an object in a non-local consciousness 
			that encompasses all reality, then what we call objective empirical 
			reality is within this consciousness. The one becomes many through 
			self-reference, fragmentation into tangled hierarchies of 
			self-iterating information.
 
			The trick is to distinguish between consciousness and awareness.
 
			  
			In 
			processes of which we are aware classical models prevail. When we 
			consciously see, consciousness collapses the quantum state of the 
			brain-mind. Unconscious processing does not effect collapse of the 
			quantum wave-function, pinning down quantum entities to one reality. 
			 
			  
			Thus, unconscious processing permits the expression of non-local 
			phenomena. 
			The situation in the brain-mind, with consciousness collapsing the 
			wave function may only happen when awareness is present. There is a 
			tangled hierarchy within the immanent self-reference of a system 
			observing itself.
 
			  
			An operation by a self-referential 
			system is where the von Neumann chain stops. 
			  
			  
			  
			THAT DARN CAT
 
			Erwin Schrodinger reminded us that,
 
				
				"Observations are to be regarded as 
				discrete, discontinuous events. Between there are gaps which we 
				cannot fill in."  
			He illustrated his famous metaphor of 
			the uncertainty principle with the conundrum of
			
			Schrodinger's Cat.  
			  
			All physics 
			students eventually get tired of hearing about this stupid cat, over 
			and over, pondering whether it will be alive or dead.  
			  
			Goswami has tried to "put it to 
			bed," with his "nine lives of..." version: 
				
					
					
					In the first life, the cat is 
					treated statistically, as part of an ensemble. The cat is 
					offended (because its singularity is denied in this ensemble 
					interpretation) but not wounded.
					
					In the second life, the cat is 
					viewed as an example of the quantum/classical dichotomy by 
					the divisive philosophers of macrorealism. The cat refuses 
					to trade its life/death dichotomy for another dichotomy.
					
					In the third life, the cat is 
					confronted with irreversibility and randomness, but the cat 
					says, Prove it.
					
					In the fourth life, the cat 
					confronts the hidden variables and what happens is still 
					hidden.
					
					In the fifth life, the neo-Copenhagenists 
					try to do away with the cat using the philosophy of logical 
					positivism. By most judgments, the cat escapes unscathed.
					
					In the sixth life, the cat 
					encounters many worlds. Who knows, it may have perished in 
					some universe, but as far as we can tell, not in this one.
					
					In the seventh life, the cat 
					meets Bohr and his complementarity, but the question What 
					constitutes a measurement? saves it.
					
					In the eighth life, the cat 
					meets consciousness (of a dualistic vintage) face-to-face, 
					but Wigner's friend saves it.
					
					Finally, in the ninth life, the 
					cat finds salvation in the idealist interpretation. 
			Only three of these models are not 
			flawed:  
				
			 
			  
			  
			PHILOSOPHY OF 
			CHOICE
 
			The idealist resolution of the paradox of the cat's existence 
			demands that the consciousness of the observing subject choose one 
			facet from the multifaceted dead-and-alive coherent superposition of 
			the cat and thus seal its fate.
 
			  
			The subject is the chooser, and choice 
			is fundamental to existence:  
				
				"I choose, therefore I am." 
			Free choice means the possibility of 
			jumping out of an old context into a new one at a higher level. The 
			capacity for choice, even recognizing choice, makes us conscious of 
			the experiences we choose. From the myriad alternative 
			possibilities, we recognize the course of our becoming, and define 
			our self. The primary question of self-consciousness is to choose or 
			not to choose. 
			More accurate than the old notion of the unconscious is that our 
			conscious self is unconscious of most things most of the time and of 
			everything in dreamless sleep.
 
			  
			Paradoxically, the unconscious is 
			holistically, non-locally conscious of all things all of the time. 
			It never sleeps.  
				
				OUR CONSCIOUS SELF IS UNCONSCIOUS OF OUR 
			UNCONSCIOUS, AND THE UNCONSCIOUS IS ACTUALLY MORE CONSCIOUS than 
			normal awareness. 
			Unconscious thoughts and feelings affect our conscious thoughts. 
			 
			  
			During unconscious perception, an unconscious feeling can produce an 
			unexplainable conscious feeling. According to Goswami, choice 
			is a concomitant of conscious experience, but not of unconscious 
			perception. Our subject-consciousness arises when there is a choice 
			made.  
			  
			When we do not choose, we do not own up to our perceptions. 
			Before choice, the state of the brain-mind is an ambiguous state - 
			like that of Schrodinger's cat. In quantum theory, the subject that 
			chooses is a single, universal subject, not our personal ego "I." 
			Thus, this universal choosing consciousness is also nonlocal.
 
			Even if you introduce hidden variables to find a causal 
			interpretation of QM (quantum mechanics), as 
			
			David Bohm does, those hidden 
			variables have to be non-local. In Bohm's theory, the light that 
			projects the image of reality is not the light of creative 
			consciousness, but causal hidden variables - which current research 
			suggests may be deterministically chaotic, rather than 
			probabilistic.
 
			According to the idealist interpretation, violation to the EPR 
			Paradox signifies non-local correlation between photons. Hidden 
			variables are not needed as an explanation.
 
			  
			Of course, to collapse 
			the wave function of non-locally correlated photons, consciousness 
			must act non-locally. 
			Therefore, simultaneously occurring events in our space-time world 
			can be related meaningfully to a common cause that resides in a 
			non-local realm outside space and time. This common cause is the act 
			of non-local collapse by consciousness.
 
			  
			Thus it is not a message 
			transfer (from a sender through a channel to a receiver) but a 
			communication in consciousness. This has important repercussions for 
			information theory, based in causality. 
			Non-local consciousness might seem like a "hidden variable", but it 
			doesn't constitute causal parameters. It is simply us! Non-local 
			consciousness operates not with causal continuity, but with 
			non-linear creative discontinuity from moment to moment, event to 
			event.
 
			This discontinuity, the quantum jump out of the system, is the 
			essential component of creativity needed for consciousness to see 
			itself, as in self-reference.
 
			  
			It means we can exercise the freedom 
			to be open to a new context. 
			  
			  
			  
			VIRTUAL 
			DOMAINS OR FORMLESS POTENTIAL
 
			According to the idealist interpretation, coherent superpositions 
			exist in a transcendent domain as formless archetypes of matter.
 
			  
			Suppose that the parallel universes of the many-worlds theory are 
			not material but archetypal in content - universes of the mind. 
			Then, each observation makes a causal pathway in the fabric of 
			possibilities in the transcendent domain of reality.  
			  
			Once the choice 
			is made, all except one of the pathways are excluded from the world 
			of manifestation. 
			Goswami proposes that,
 
				
				"the universe exists as formless 
				potential in myriad possible branches in the transcendent domain 
				and becomes manifest only when observed by conscious beings."
				 
			These self-referential observations plot 
			the universe's causal history, rejecting the myriad parallel 
			alternatives that never manifest. 
			The universe bifurcates in every event in the transcendent domain, 
			becoming many branches, until in one of the branches there is a 
			sentient being that can look with awareness and complete a quantum 
			measurement, according to Goswami.
 
			  
			The causal pathway leading to 
			that sentient being collapses into space-time reality. 
			Meaning arises in the universe when sentient beings observe it, 
			choosing causal pathways from among the myriad transcendent 
			possibilities. This anthropocentric view is also reflected in 
			cosmology as the Anthropic Principle, where the cosmos is 
			created for our sake.
 
			  
			Amazingly, this is apparently compatible 
			with quantum physics. 
			  
			  
			  
			THE QUANTUM 
			BRAIN
 
			The conviction has been growing among many physicists that 
			the brain 
			is an interactive system with a quantum mechanical macrostructure as 
			an important complement to the classical neuronal assembly.
 
			The classical and quantum components of the brain-mind interact 
			within a basic idealist framework in which consciousness is primary. 
			The classical/quantum distinction is purely functional. Its essence 
			is one.
 
			  
			Experienced mental states arise from the interaction of both 
			classical and quantum states. 
			The quantum component of the brain-mind is regenerative and its 
			states are multifaceted. It is the vehicle for conscious choice and 
			for creativity. In contrast, because it has a long regeneration 
			time, the classical component of brain-mind can form memory and thus 
			can act as a reference point for experience.
 
			The archetypal component of the thought is revealed by its inherent 
			uncertainty: If we concentrate on the content of thought, we lose 
			sight of the direction in which the thought is heading.
 
			  
			If we 
			concentrate on the direction of a thought, we lose sharpness in its 
			content. Its features (instantaneous content) equate with the 
			position of physical objects; association (movement of thought in 
			awareness) is like momentum in objects. 
			Between manifestations thought exists as transcendent archetypes - 
			as does the quantum object with its transcendent coherent 
			superposition (wave) and manifest one-faceted (particle) aspects.
 
			Research shows spatial coherence of brain waves during meditation 
			proportional to the degree of pure awareness that the meditator 
			reports.
 
			  
			Studies of remote viewing, mutual hypnosis, and group 
			meditation have shown coherence of brain waves of participants 
			sharing consciousness states. 
			As in therapeutic rapport or co-consciousness,
 
				
				"two subjects interact for a period 
				until they feel that a direct (nonlocal) connection has been 
				established. The subjects then maintain their direct contact 
				from within individual Faraday cages at a distance.  
				  
				When the 
				brain of one of the subjects responds to an external stimulus 
				with an evoked potential, the other subject's brain shows a 
				transfer potential similar in form and strength to the evoked 
				potential." 
			Before the supervention of 
			consciousness, the brain-mind exists as formless potentia 
			(like any other object) in the transcendent domain of consciousness. 
			 
			  
			When nonlocal consciousness collapses the brain-mind's wave 
			function, it does so by choice and recognition, not by any energetic 
			process. Thus, "conservation of energy" is not violated in the 
			mind/matter interface. 
			Goswami postulates the need for an EPR-correlated quantum 
			network, stating "It has to be there."
 
			  
			Perhaps this is 
			Buckminster Fuller's vector equilibrium matrix, and 
			
			Thomas Bearden's zero vector 
			summation, which describe how matter "jitterbugs" into and out 
			of existence in quantum "creationism." 
			According to this idealist interpretation, consciousness chooses the 
			results of a single quantum measurement - that is, nonlocal unitive 
			consciousness. The intervention of the nonlocal consciousness 
			collapses the probability cloud of a quantum system.
 
			In the manifest world, the selection process involved in the 
			collapse appears to be random, while in the transcendent realm the 
			selection process is seen as choice.
 
			  
			Our consciousness chooses the 
			outcome of the collapse of the quantum state of our brain-mind. 
			Since this outcome is a conscious experience, we choose our 
			conscious experiences - yet remain unconscious of the underlying 
			process. 
			It is this unconsciousness that leads to the illusory separateness - 
			the identity with the separate "I" of self-reference (rather than 
			the "we" of unitive consciousness).
 
			  
			The illusory separateness takes 
			place in two stages, but the basic mechanism involved is called 
			tangled hierarchy, which is a way of achieving self-reference. The 
			self arises because of a veil of discontinuity, an infinite 
			oscillation. Out of discontinuity comes the veil and self-reference.
			 
			  
			Mystics call it the Veil of Isis 
			or The Abyss... 
			The self of our self-reference is due to a tangled hierarchy, but 
			our consciousness is the consciousness of the Being that is beyond 
			the subject-object split. There is no other source of consciousness 
			in the universe.
 
			  
			The self of self-reference and the 
			consciousness of the original consciousness, together, make what we 
			call self-consciousness. 
			  
			  
			  
			EGO AND THE 
			QUANTUM SELF
 
			Before collapse, the subject is not differentiated from the 
			archetypes of objects of experience - physical or mental.
 
			  
			Collapse 
			brings about the subject-object division, and that leads to the 
			primary awareness of I-am-ness called the "quantum self." Awareness 
			of the quantum self also brings about collapse. 
			In Goswami's conceptualization, "the brain-mind is a dual quantum 
			system/ measuring apparatus," through which the universe becomes 
			self-aware. The universe cuts itself in two - subject/object - 
			terminating the von Neumann chain.
 
			  
			We resolve the von Neumann chain 
			by recognizing that consciousness collapses the wave function by 
			acting self-referentially, not dualistically. 
			The old mechanistic concept was non-regenerative.
 
			  
			Repeated 
			measurement interaction leads to a fundamental change in the 
			brain-mind's quantum system. Each previously experienced, learned 
			response reinforces the probability of the same response over again. 
			Learning (or prior experience) biases the brain-mind.
 
			Before the response to a particular stimulus becomes conditioned, 
			the probability pool from which consciousness chooses our response 
			spans the mental states common to all people at all places at all 
			time. 
			In conditioned behavior, the dual quantum system/measuring apparatus 
			becomes virtually classical. In the limit of a new experience, the 
			brain mind's response is creative. Experiences such as near-death 
			can instantly release much repressed unconscious conditioning, as 
			does therapeutic ego death. The psycho-social contexts of living are 
			no longer absolute to the truly fluid identity.
 
			When the creative potency of the quantum component is not engaged, 
			the tangled hierarchy of the interacting components of the 
			brain-mind, in effect, becomes a simple hierarchy of the learned, 
			classical programs. The ego is an emergent property of our classical 
			self.
 
			  
			The quantum mode is equivalent to the "still point" within. 
			Thus, ego emerges out of the introspective interaction of our 
			learned programs that result from our experience in the world, but 
			there is a twist. The separate self has no free will apart from that 
			of the quantum self, and ultimately, that of the unitive 
			consciousness. Consciousness always leaves some room for 
			unconditioned novelty, making possible what we know as free will.
 
			This process can be viewed from a "top-down" epistemology or from a 
			bottom-up theory that subject-object consciousness arises as "order 
			within chaos."
 
 
			How or why does consciousness split itself?  
			  
			The states of the 
			brain-mind are considered to be quantum states, which are 
			probability-weighted, multifaceted, possibility structures. 
			 
			  
			Consciousness collapses the multifaceted structure (a coherent 
			superposition) choosing one facet but only in the presence of 
			brain-mind awareness, the mind-field in which objects of experience 
			arise). 
			Which comes first: awareness or choice?
 
			  
			This is a tangled hierarchy 
			which gives rise to self-reference, and subject/object split. 
			Secondary-awareness processes lead to intentionality - the tendency 
			to identify with an object. 
			The "I" of reflective awareness also arises out of these 
			secondary-awareness processes. Primary and secondary processes 
			normally remain preconscious, obscuring the tangled hierarchy of the 
			primary process.
 
			  
			At this primary-process level there is no 
			conditioning which means unrestricted freedom of choice.
 
			Benjamin Libet has shown that 
			even before a person experiences awareness of their actions (which 
			is necessary to free will), there is an evoked potential that 
			signals an objective observer that the person is going to will to 
			raise his or her arm.  
			  
			Interestingly, as we all know, we retain our 
			free will to say no to raising an arm, even after the evoked 
			potential signals otherwise. 
			  
			  
			  
			AH-HA! THE 
			CREATIVE EXPERIENCE
 
			In psychological terms, nature refers to unconscious instincts that 
			drive us - libido; nurture refers to environmental conditioning, 
			much of which is also unconscious.
 
			  
			A third leg is creativity, which 
			in this context is a drive from the collective unconscious. 
			Creativity is the creation of something new in an entirely new 
			context. Newness of the context is the key. We have access to the 
			vast archetypal content of the quantum states of mind (the pure 
			mental states) that extend far beyond the local experiences within 
			our lifetime. Creativity is fundamentally a nonlocal mode of 
			cognition.
 
			The creative act is the fruit of the encounter of the self's 
			classical and quantum modalities, according to Goswami.
 
			  
			There are 
			stages in its development, but they are all tangled-hierarchical 
			encounters of these two modalities; the hierarchy is a tangled one 
			because the quantum modality remains preconscious in us.
 
			The classical modality of the self, like the classical computer, 
			deals with information, but the self's quantum modality deals with 
			communication.  
			  
			Thus the first stage of the play of creativity is the 
			tangled play of information (development of expertise) and 
			communication (development of openness). It is tangled because you 
			cannot tell when information ends and communication begins; there is 
			a discontinuity in the "cosmic message." 
			Here the ego acts as the research assistant of the quantum modality 
			- and it takes a strong ego (or fluid ego) to handle the 
			de-structuring of the old that makes room for the new.
 
			In the second stage of creative illumination, the encounter is 
			between the perspiration of the classical modality and the 
			inspiration of the quantum modality.
 
			  
			When the brain's quantum state 
			develops as a pool of potentialities in response to a situation of 
			creative confrontation, the pool includes not only conditioned 
			states but also new, never-before-manifested states of possibility. 
			Since our personal pool is statistically weighted by our memories we 
			can minimize the mind's conditioning by keeping an open mind to 
			reduce the probability of (unconscious) conditioned responses, as in 
			creativity.
 
			  
			We can increase the odds of manifesting a 
			low-probability creative idea by being persistent.  
			  
			Persistence 
			increases the number of collapses of the mind's quantum state 
			relative to the same question, increasing the chance to realize a 
			new potential. 
			Creativity is enhanced if we confront ourselves with unlearned 
			stimuli. Unlearned stimuli that seem ambiguous - as in a 
			surrealistic painting - are especially useful for opening our minds 
			to new contexts.
 
			  
			Since conscious observation collapses the coherent 
			superposition, there is a certain advantage in unconscious 
			processing.  
			  
			Uncollapsed coherent superpositions can act upon others, 
			creating many more possibilities for the eventual collapse. 
			The classical modality performs an equally essential function: It 
			ensures the persistence of the will (the perspiration). Hence, the 
			traditional importance in Magick of subordinating the 
			personal will to True Will.
 
			  
			The creative individual's ego has 
			to be strong-willed to be persistent and has to be able to handle 
			the anxiety associated with unknowing - the quantum jump into the 
			new. 
			A creative experience is one of the few times when we directly 
			experience the quantum modality with little or no time lag. It is 
			this encounter with primary process experience that produces the 
			elation, the ah-ha, the creative act of self-realization. It can 
			lead directly to personal transformation of one's own context of 
			living.
 
			In outer creativity, quantum jumps enable us to view an external 
			problem in a new context. In inner creativity, the quantum jump 
			allows us to break from established patterns of behavior, which 
			together make up what is known as character. Inner creativity means 
			transpersonal experience, the uncertainty of being beyond the ego, 
			which tends toward death-like stasis.
 
			So, for inner creativity, one develops and practices awareness of 
			one's conditioning, becoming aware of inner-growth potential. 
			Transformation is an ongoing process, always defining an 
			ever-more-compassionate context for our being.
 
			  
			Recognition begins 
			the shift of identity to the quantum-atman, comprehending a new 
			self-identity. 
			Creative quandaries, like the Zen koan, intensify a 
			double-bind which dissolves the ego and facilitates a third state of 
			unbiased emptiness, wherein the probability pool of choice is 
			extended to the creative dimension. The quantum wave of our mind 
			expands and is ready to embrace new responses.
 
			There is, however, no self-nature, no independent existence, in 
			either subject or object:
 
				
				Only consciousness is reality, but how do 
			we comprehend it?    
				What is before collapse?  
			The tangled hierarchy - 
			the infinite chaotic oscillation of yes-no answers.  
			  
			The joy of 
			meditative experiences is the original joy of consciousness in its 
			pure form. 
			  
			  
			  
			REFERENCES
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