CONSCIOUSNESS, BIOPHOTONS, AND MULTIVERSES https://gizadeathstar.com/2019/01/consciousness-biophotons-and-multiverses/
Every
now and then I get one of "those" articles that's so stunning in its
implications that I have to blog about it, if simply for the sheer fun
of crawling out to the end of the High Octane Speculation twig, and
launching myself into thin air and just let the speculations run where
they will. Well, this article that was spotted and shared by Mr. V.T. is
definitely one of "those" articles:
What grabbed me here was this:
Scientists found that neurons in mammalian brains were capable of producing photons of light, or “Biophotons”!The photons, strangely enough, appear within the visible spectrum. They range from near-infrared through violet, or between 200 and 1,300 nanometers.Scientists have an exciting suspicion that our brain’s neurons might be able to communicate through light. They suspect that our brain might have optical communication channels, but they have no idea what could be communicated.
And that led the author or authors of the article to ask an obvious question:
This raises the question, could it be possible that the more light one can produce and communicate between neurons, the more conscious they are?
In other words, in contrast to the "older"
model of consciousness being a kind of "either/or" question, with
humans obviously "conscious" and rocks obviously not, and animals in
some frustrating philosophical no-man's land in between ("dumb
animals"), might it be more of a spectrum or continuum? Well, maybe.
Personally, I've always been more comfortable with the latter view than
the former, and I suspect that anyone who has owned a pet is too; they
certainly don't behave or act as simply "dumb biomechanical machines."
However, there's a catch in the article,
and it's revealed by that very "continuum of consciousness" idea: do
more biophotons and neurons not indicate a materialist view of the mind,
i.e., that mind and consciousness arise solely from materialistic
causes? It may seem that way, but the author/s of the article are quick
to catch the implications of the finding, which, when one thinks about
it a bit, flips the whole argument of emergent consciousness from
material causes on its head:
Just think for a moment. Many texts and religions dating way back, since the dawn of human civilization have reported of saints, ascended beings and enlightened individuals having shining circles around their heads.From Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome, to teachings of Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam and Christianity, among many other religions, sacred individuals were depicted with a shining circle in the form of a circular glow around their heads.
In other words, that famous verse from
Genesis that many of us learned in Sunday school - "Let there be light" -
might be a kind of biophysical euphemism for "Let there be conscious
existence." But they don't stop there:
But one of the most exciting implications the discovery that our brains can produce light gives, is that maybe our consciousness and spirit are not contained within our bodies. This implication is completely overlooked by scientists.Quantum entanglement says that 2 entangled photons react if one of the photons is affected no matter where the other photon is in The Universe without any delay.
In other words, the patterns of biophotonic activity, if they do give rise to consciousness, means precisely that that a specific pattern could be entangled somewhere else in the universe, and hence, that specific consciousness is not localized within "this particular brain" but could, in fact, be localized in several
brains. That really captured my imagination, for it seems to square
with many other hypotheses, from Dr. Rupter Sheldrake's "morphogenetic
field" to the idea - voiced by Bearden and some other authors - that
each species has its own unique "electromagnetic signature", which
signature again is a non-local phenomenon; even the idea of epigenetics
seems to be implied by the idea, i.e., that there is some mechanism
influencing evolution that is beyond the sum total of material "bits of
information" (the genome itself), influencing development.
It's that possibility of the entanglement
of biophotons that could also impact on something else: the multi-verse
theory of Everett and Wheeler, who first posited that interpretation of
quantum mechanics. The idea is, that for every set of possible
observations, there must be a "timeline" or "universe" actualizing that
potential (to put it crudely). They were, it should be noted, very
uncomfortable with their own idea, because it seemed to make no sense.
Plus, it gave rise to all sorts of thorny problems: if there were
a multitude of universes, was it possible for one to "bleed through"
into the other? Conventional wisdom would say no. But if those
multiverses are a reflection of "entangled biophotons," something very
different would seem to result, for the first result is: the template of
an individual consciousness itself might be non-local, but it is found
present simultaneously in a multitude of "universes" (or if one prefer,
timelines), and it's that which might account for "bleed through" or
"overlap" of one into the other. If all this high octane speculation be
true, then a great deal will have to be re-thought, from reincarnation
to multiverses, for it would appear that this idea of an entangled,
non-local template of consciousness would be, more or less, a common
surface uniting them all.
No comments:
Post a Comment