Consciousness Is Everything! Pt. 1
Consciousness is a very difficult thing to write about or study, we know it exists, but we don’t know why or how it works, so it is even very hard to define. We can’t prove consciousness exists any more than we can prove that love, truth, beauty, goodness or the animating principle of life exits.
We can’t reduce life to a bag of amino acids, carbon, nitrogen and iron elements, lipids, carbs, and proteins. We would have the physical constituents of life, but we wouldn’t have life itself. Analogously, we can’t reduce consciousness to the grey matter of the brain, neurons firing, and electrochemical impulses. These are physical correlates, but they aren’t consciousness itself. It’s time we moved beyond this absurd material reductionism!
The abstract noun “consciousness” is not frequently used by itself in contemporary literature, but is originally derived from the Latin con (with) and scire (to know).
I am writing about consciousness in the most fundamental way, which is to say that consciousness represents the substratum of reality as we know it, or can know it.
This is akin to physics’ quest for a theory of everything, which integrates the 4 fundamental forces in the universe (strong, weak, electromagnetic, and gravity). I contend that consciousness is the glue that holds reality, and the Source from which everything manifests.
I believe all our human projections/creations, i.e. myths, metaphors and models of God, Heaven, Hell, reincarnation, and anything remotely related to religion and spirituality, is our attempt to formulate and understand the phenomenon of consciousness. Our science has also been forced to consider the realm of consciousness as in Artificial Intelligence, Neuroscience, and Quantum Physics.
The Human Experiment
“One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.”
C.G. Jung
Consciousness evolves in very strange and unpredictable ways. For example, evolution itself is an amazing phenomenon of consciousness, and again, we can’t see evolution, we can only see the results of it.
A good example of evolution is an elephant’s trunk. This is the most complex and evolved limb that we know of in nature. The elephant’s trunk acts as an arm, a hand, and a nose.
“An elephant's trunk is extremely flexible and muscular, containing about 40,000 muscles. Compared to a human's 639 muscles, this is astounding. An elephant's trunk has 6 major muscle groups which are divided into over 100,000 muscle units. It contains no bones. These trunks can weigh 400 pounds and can grow to be 7 feet long. An average elephant can lift 4.5% of its own weight using its trunk!”
A baby elephant is not born knowing how to use its trunk, it must observe and learn what it is capable of from adults, and it must become conscious of how to use it. A lion is not born knowing how to hunt, they must observe and learn, only half of the cubs born will survive. This is the relentless pressure evolution puts on the consciousness of how to survive.
Human beings have also evolved a very unique appendage that has placed us at the top of the food chain, teetering on self-destruction, this is known as the cerebral cortex. Human beings are uniquely related to consciousness, in that we are the only animals that we know of, that are capable of extraordinary degrees of self-consciousness, the human brain is the most complex, interconnected ‘thing’ we know of. We are the only organism that can and does intentionally work on self-knowledge and self-evolution in the most conscious way possible.
Granted, most people most the time have no interest what-so-ever in consciously knowing or evolving themselves, but there always have been a small percentage of beings that have taken their evolution seriously, and have achieved levels we can only call sublime.
Think of people like Leonardo De Vinci, Jung, Jesus, Gandhi, Buddha, Einstein, Steve Curry, or the Beatles. These beings are held up as Supra Conscious, self-aware, and transformative beings that truly made a big mark on the world that is positive and enduring.
So we have role models and examples of what we are capable of in the ways of consciousness, and all our writings, art, science, documents of freedom and rights, etc. are evidence of the potential of human consciousness. Of course we have many examples of how low we can go in unconsciousness, and the evils to which being unconscious can manifest, such as Nazi Germany, or ISIS.
Jung’s quote is a beacon of truth about the process of becoming conscious, and the mistake in thinking that all we have to do is go to church, or focus on the bright light, in order to reach enlightenment. We all must face our own shadows, both individually and collectively, otherwise we project our darkness onto others.
Namaste Mother Fucker!
The beautiful Indian practice of bowing and saying Namaste is a wonderful ritual of the re-cognition of consciousness, and that everything and everyone is part of that consciousness.
Namaste roughly translates as “I recognize the divinity in you that is also in me.” This is a very descriptive part of consciousness, in that one feature of consciousness is its pervasive unity, even in the midst of so much seeming diversity, there is a unity that we can recognize if we pay attention and are open.
Other characteristics of evolved human consciousness include; harmony, balance, integrative wholeness, wisdom, intelligence, spontaneity, creativity, humor, compassion, bliss, and transcendence or non-attachment. These characteristics are gleaned from humanities’ history of paying attention to what evolved consciousness looks like in a human form. Consciousness, like everything else, is a spectrum of vibration and frequency, just like the electromagnetic spectrum. It goes from subtle to dense and back again as it ebbs and flows in its evolutionary trajectory.
On the gross/dense level we have a bulldozer or a sledge hammer, on the subtle level we have highly focused and amplified beams of light in a laser, or the splitting of an atom that releases pure energy. The subtle realms are infinitely more powerful, and so they are in the realm of consciousness. We have an inherent sense of the subtle and dense when we use the term; “He’s so dense, or thick…” This is denoting a lower level of consciousness, as in Donald Trump!
Clare Graves, and his student Don Beck, developed a spectral model of human consciousness.
“Graves had published his theory of human development in 1974, a "bio-psycho-social systems" framework of value systems as applied to human sociocultural evolution which posits that the psychology of the mature human being transitions from a current level of cultural existence based on current life conditions to a more complex level in response to (or cope with) changes in existential reality. Graves's model demonstrates the dual nature human social emergence with change states between communal/collective value systems (sacrifice self) and individualistic (express self) value systems.”
The Indian system of Chakras can be seen as a model of the spectrum of consciousness going from the dense/gross/material level to the emotional/relational, to the mental/perceptual/causal, to the most subtle/spiritual/supra causal level.
The ways that we’ve studied consciousness in all its myriad forms, shows up in all our human endeavors, institutions, models, and philosophical creeds such as the arts, politics, science, religion, psychology, technology, etc.
But the overarching characteristic I want to emphasize here is unity. The idea that there is ONLY ONE is a hallmark of enlightenment. The ritual of bowing and saying Namaste is an enactment and recognition that, even though it sure seems like there’s two of us, in reality, there is ONLY ONE. This is something that has been substantiated by quantum physics, which is the underlying unitive nature of reality.
What The Hell Is Consciousness?!
As I mentioned previously, consciousness is very difficult to define, we can really only point to it. It’s like subatomic particles, we can’t actually see them, we just see the effects of their interactions. Like geometry, where a point is defined as having no dimensions, or in physics, particles that have no mass; the two known mass-less particles are the photon (carrier of electromagnetism) and the gluon (carrier of the strong force). These concepts are axiomatic, we have to just accept them in order for the models to work, same thing with the Big Bang Theory.
Thomas Nagel described a conscious mental state as a “what it is like” sense. When I am in a conscious mental state, there is something it is like for me to be in that state from the subjective or first-person point of view.
For example, I eat chocolate ice cream and I have a conscious, subjective experience of what it’s like for me to do this. To understand this type of conscious experience, we have the realm of neuro science, which attempts the explanation of how the mind integrates information, focuses attention, and allows us to report on mental states.
From this standpoint, in the Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience departments, the brain and consciousness is simply viewed as a computer. The ‘standard model’ - is that consciousness emerges from complex computation among brain neurons, computation whose currency is seen as neuronal firings (‘spikes’) and synaptic transmissions, equated with binary ‘bits’ in digital computing. Consciousness is presumed to ‘emerge’ from complex neuronal computation, and to have arisen during biological evolution as an adaptation of living systems, extrinsic to the makeup of the universe.
In the realm of consciousness studies, these are known as the “easy problems” because solving them only requires that we determine the mechanisms that explain behaviors, same with Skinnerian Behavioral psychology. We can geographically locate in the brain the areas in which certain types of conscious experience happens, but that by no means explains anything about consciousness itself!
Easy problems are physical in nature, falling within the empirical domains of psychology, cognitive science and neuroscience.
The hard problem is determining why or how consciousness occurs given the right arrangement of brain matter, or even beyond brain matter, why is consciousness happening at all?
What makes it hard, is that we cannot just point to some physical mechanism to solve it, for that would be the solution to the easy problem. To stick with a materialistic model, is like saying that life is merely the physical components that make up a living organism, so we get a bunch of amino acids, lipids, proteins, carbs, put them in a bag, and presto, we have life!
Instead, our goal is to explain why certain physical mechanisms gives rise to consciousness instead of something else or nothing at all.
Consider an analogy from physics: knowing every equation predicting how mass and gravity interact, does not tell us why they interact in the way they do. To understand why mass and gravity interact, we must appeal to highly esoteric explanations involving relativity, quantum mechanics or string theory. The big/hard problem in physics is to unite quantum mechanics with relativity. I believe this solution will involve consciousness itself.
I believe consciousness is equivalent to Gnosis, intuition, instinct, telepathy, and mystical states that are attained in deep meditation or hallucinogenic experience.
Plato was an early pioneer of consciousness in his theory of forms or ideas, which held that consciousness (my term not his) moves from form, to content, to manifestation, to imitations or symbols.
So we first we have the form/consciousness/idea/concept of appleness, catness, carness, and ice creaminess, and then we see, eat, hear, pet, apples, cats, cars, and ice cream. Philosophers make a really big deal out of this, but it’s not rocket science!
Then we have C.G. Jung’s collective unconscious, which refers to; “structures of the unconscious mind which are shared among beings of the same species. According to Jung, the human collective unconscious is populated by instincts and by archetypes: universal symbols such as the Great Mother, the Wise Old Man, the Shadow, the Tower, Water, the Tree of Life, and many more.”
And even though the Hundredth Monkey effect was discredited specific to that study, it was popularized by Ken Keyes, Jr. with his book The Hundredth Monkey. Keyes's book was about the devastating effects of nuclear war on the planet. Keyes presented the hundredth monkey effect story as an inspirational parable, applying it to human society and the effecting of positive change. Parables, myths, poetry, metaphor, music, and math are excellent ways to express consciousness.
In biology we have morphogenetic fields, which is how a particular embryologic cell “knows” to become part of a limb, or an eye. It is not known exactly how a cell “knows,” just as it’s not clear how biological organisms know to regenerate, such as a lizard grows another tail, a starfish grows another arm, and every cell of our body is regenerated every 7 years! Ecosystems are also regenerative, and will come back after a fire or natural disturbance. Speaking of regeneration, a hydra is a small fresh water animal that appears to not age and so is considered biologically immortal!
Rupert Sheldrake is a bio-chemist that has proposed a theory of consciousness in nature that is about ‘habit.’
“Morphic resonance” is Sheldrake’s hypothesis that posits that "memory is inherent in nature" and that "natural systems, such as termite colonies, or pigeons, or orchid plants, or insulin molecules, inherit a collective memory from all previous things of their kind".
Sheldrake proposes that morphic resonance is also responsible for "telepathy-type interconnections between organisms". His advocacy of the idea encompasses paranormal subjects such as precognition, telepathy, and the psychic staring effect (knowing when someone is staring at you), as well as unconventional explanations of standard subjects in biology such as development, inheritance, and memory.
These types of experiences are knowing without knowing how we know, it is a kind of sensing and making contact with certain fields of information that are always available, such as the archetypal realm or what Jung called the collective unconscious.
These are bands of frequencies that are carried like radio signals in the electromagnetic spectrum. If one has the understanding, skill, and ‘equipment’ to receive these signals, they are available and easily received. We can see this in savants who are able to accomplish amazing feats in one area (say music, or math), yet are very disabled when it comes to other areas of life.
We can also see very specific states of consciousness that belies a spectrum phenomenon every night when we sleep. We experience an altered state right before we fall asleep, which is in between wakefulness and sleep. While we are sleeping every night, we experience REM (rapid eye movement), which is when dreaming consciousness occurs, then we experience the most restful part of our sleep which is in the Delta band of brain frequency, and is our dreamless sleep.
Dr. Antonio Damacio, a neuroscientist from the University of Southern California, who has studied the neurological basis of consciousness for years, talks about being conscious as a "special quality of mind" that permits us to know; both that we exist, and that the things around us exist. He differentiates this from the way the mind is able to portray reality to itself merely by encoding sensory information. Rather, consciousness implies subjectivity—a sense of having a self that observes one’s own organism as separate from the world around that organism.
This sense of separateness is the knower/perceiver/experiencer, and the objects of what is known, perceived and experienced. This is the dualistic notion of consciousness, but beyond this, is the non-dual realm.