by Paul Lenda
July 11,
2019
from
Shift Website
Paul
Lenda is the founder & director of SHIFT>, a conscious
evolution guide, author of The Creation of a
Consciousness Shift, intentional evolutionary &
celebrator of life working to provide an integral role
in the positive social transformation of humanity. |
In 2014, a group of internationally known scientists, from a variety
of scientific fields,
biology,
neuroscience, psychology, medicine, psychiatry,
...participated in an
international summit on post-materialist science, spirituality, and
society.
Its purpose was to discuss the impact of the materialist ideology on
science and the emergence of a post-materialist paradigm for
science, spirituality, and society.
In something which should
have gotten way more press than it did at the time, this manifesto
is the bridge between science and spirituality… a bridge that
started showing fissures in the 1700s in order to stop the
Catholic church from killing people
who discovered things about the nature of reality that contradicted
official dogma.
The reductionism that
sprang out of that divergence is still seen today in mainstream
sciences, which is a problem because we, as a species, will never be
able to uncover the true nature of reality if we turn a blind eye to
the metaphysical aspects
of Reality.
In light of this, prominent open-minded scientists have come to the
following conclusions:
-
The modern
scientific worldview is predominantly predicated on
assumptions that are closely associated with classical
physics.
Materialism - the
idea that matter is the 'only reality' - is one of these
assumptions.
A related
assumption is reductionism, the notion that complex things
can be understood by reducing them to the interactions of
their parts, or to simpler or more fundamental things such
as tiny material particles.
-
During the 19th
century, these assumptions narrowed, turned into dogmas, and
coalesced into an ideological belief system that came to be
known as "scientific materialism."
This belief
system implies that the mind is nothing but the physical
activity of the brain, and that our thoughts cannot have
any effect upon our brains and bodies, our actions, and the
physical world.
-
The ideology of
scientific materialism became dominant in academia during
the 20th century.
So dominant that
a majority of scientists started to believe that it was
based on established empirical evidence, and represented the
only rational view of the world.
-
Scientific
methods based upon materialistic philosophy have been highly
successful in not only increasing our understanding of
nature but also in bringing greater control and freedom
through advances in technology.
-
However, the
nearly absolute dominance of materialism in the academic
world has seriously constricted the sciences and hampered
the development of the scientific study of mind and
spirituality.
Faith in
this ideology, as an exclusive explanatory framework for
reality, has compelled scientists to neglect the subjective
dimension of human experience.
This has led to a
severely distorted and impoverished understanding of
ourselves and our place in nature.
-
Science is first
and foremost a non-dogmatic, open-minded method of acquiring
knowledge about nature through the observation, experimental
investigation, and theoretical explanation of phenomena.
Its methodology
is not synonymous with materialism and should not be
committed to any particular beliefs, dogmas, or ideologies.
-
At the end of the
nineteenth century, physicists discovered empirical
phenomena that could not be explained by classical physics.
This led to the
development, during the 1920s and early 1930s, of a
revolutionary new branch of physics called
quantum mechanics (QM).
QM has questioned
the material foundations of the world by showing that atoms
and subatomic particles are not really solid objects - they
do not exist with certainty at definite spatial locations
and definite times.
Most importantly,
QM explicitly introduced the mind into its basic conceptual
structure since it was found that particles being observed
and the observer - the physicist and the method used for
observation - are linked.
According to one
interpretation of QM, this phenomenon implies that the
consciousness of the observer is vital to the
existence of the physical events being observed, and
that mental events can affect the physical world.
The results of
recent experiments support this interpretation.
These results
suggest that the physical world is no longer
the primary or sole component of reality, and that it cannot
be fully understood without making reference to the mind.
-
Psychological
studies have shown that conscious mental activity can
causally influence behavior, and that the explanatory and
predictive value of agentic factors (e.g. beliefs,
goals, desires and expectations) is very high.
Moreover,
research in psycho-neuro-immunology indicates that our
thoughts and emotions can markedly affect the activity of
the physiological systems (e.g., immune, endocrine,
cardiovascular) connected to the brain.
In other
respects, neuro-imaging studies of emotional
self-regulation, psychotherapy, and the placebo effect
demonstrate that mental events significantly influence the
activity of the brain.
-
Studies of the
so-called "psi
phenomena" indicate that we can sometimes receive
meaningful information without the use of ordinary senses,
and in ways that transcend the habitual space and time
constraints.
Furthermore, psi
research demonstrates that we can mentally influence - at a
distance - physical devices and living organisms (including
other human beings).
Psi research also
shows that distant minds may behave in ways that are
nonlocally correlated, i.e.
the correlations between distant minds are hypothesized to
be,
-
unmediated (they are not linked to any known
energetic signal)
-
unmitigated (they do not degrade with increasing
distance)
-
immediate
(they appear to be simultaneous)
These events are
so common that they cannot be viewed as anomalous nor as
exceptions to natural laws, but as indications of the need
for a broader explanatory framework that cannot be
predicated exclusively on materialism.
-
Conscious mental
activity can be experienced in clinical death during a
cardiac arrest (this is what has been called a "near-death
experience" -
NDE).
Some near-death
experiencers (NDErs) have reported veridical out-of-body
perceptions (i.e. perceptions that can be proven to coincide
with reality) that occurred during cardiac arrest. NDErs
also report profound spiritual experiences during NDEs
triggered by cardiac arrest.
It is noteworthy
that the electrical activity of the brain ceases within a
few seconds following a cardiac arrest.
-
Controlled
laboratory experiments have documented that skilled research
mediums (people who claim that they can communicate with the
minds of people who have physically died) can sometimes
obtain highly accurate information about deceased
individuals.
This further
supports the conclusion that mind can exist separate
from the brain.
-
Some
materialistically inclined scientists and philosophers
refuse to acknowledge these phenomena because they are not
consistent with their exclusive conception of the world.
Rejection of
post-materialist investigation of nature or refusal to
publish strong science findings supporting a
post-materialist framework are antithetical to the true
spirit of scientific inquiry, which is that empirical data
must always be adequately dealt with.
Data which do not
fit favored theories and beliefs cannot be dismissed a
priori. Such dismissal is the realm of ideology, not
science.
-
It is important
to realize that psi phenomena, NDEs in cardiac arrest, and
replicable evidence from credible research mediums, appear
anomalous only when seen through the lens of materialism.
-
Moreover,
materialist theories fail to elucidate how brain could
generate the mind, and they are unable to account for the
empirical evidence alluded to in this manifesto.
This failure
tells us that it is now time to free ourselves from the
shackles and blinders of the old materialist ideology, to
enlarge our concept of the natural world, and to embrace a
post-materialist paradigm.
-
According to the
post-materialist paradigm:
-
Mind
represents an aspect of reality as primordial as the
physical world. Mind is fundamental in the universe,
i.e. it cannot be derived from matter and reduced to
anything more basic.
-
There is
a deep interconnectedness between mind and the
physical world.
-
Mind
(will/intention) can influence the state of the
physical world, and operate in a nonlocal (or
extended) fashion, i.e. it is not confined to
specific points in space, such as brains and bodies,
nor to specific points in time, such as the present.
Since the mind may nonlocally influence the physical
world, the intentions, emotions, and desires of an
experimenter may not be completely isolated from
experimental outcomes, even in controlled and
blinded experimental designs.
-
Minds are
apparently unbounded, and may unite in ways
suggesting a unitary, One Mind that includes all
individual, single minds.
-
NDEs in
cardiac arrest suggest that the brain acts as a
transceiver of mental activity, i.e. the mind can
work through the brain, but is not produced by it.
NDEs occurring in cardiac arrest, coupled with
evidence from research mediums, further suggest the
survival of consciousness, following
bodily death, and
the existence of other levels of reality that are
non-physical.
-
Scientists should not be afraid to investigate
spirituality and spiritual experiences since they
represent a central aspect of human existence.
-
Post-materialist
science does not reject the empirical observations and great
value of scientific achievements realized up until now.
It seeks to
expand the human capacity to better understand the wonders
of nature, and in the process rediscover the importance of
mind and spirit as being part of the core fabric of the
universe.
Post-materialism
is inclusive of matter, which is seen as a basic constituent
of the universe.
-
The
post-materialist paradigm has far-reaching implications.
It fundamentally
alters the vision we have of ourselves, giving us back our
dignity and power, as humans and as scientists. This
paradigm fosters positive values such as compassion,
respect, and peace.
By emphasizing a
deep connection between ourselves and nature at large, the
post-materialist paradigm also promotes environmental
awareness and the preservation of our biosphere.
In addition, it
is not new, but only forgotten for four hundred years, that
a lived transmaterial understanding may be the cornerstone
of health and wellness, as it has been held and preserved in
ancient mind-body-spirit practices, religious traditions,
and contemplative approaches.
-
The shift from
materialist science to post-materialist science may be of
vital importance to the evolution of the human civilization.
It may be even
more pivotal than the transition from
geocentrism to
heliocentrism.
References
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