Quantum brain, spirituality, and the mind of God

by Ervin Laszlo on March 24, 2010

When our brain, (“a quantum computer” as I said in my previous posts),  connects us to the world, that experience of connection is the same source where artists and even scientists find inspiration and creativity. The quantum connection of our brain can serve us as a subtle but trustworthy compass—one known to traditional peoples and cultures, but largely ignored in the modern world.

The experience of connection is also a source of spirituality. The great teachers entered a deeply altered state, had a spiritual experience, and when they returned to their waking state, endeavored to capture it in words. Their words became the scriptures venerated by their followers.

The spiritual/religious experience has been basically the same in all epochs and cultures. It has always been an experience of oneness and belonging. William James described it as the sense of entering into union with something deeper and larger than oneself. The experience of people in all epochs and walks of life confirms that James was right: we are like islands on the sea, separate on the surface but connected in the deep.

Although the basic substance of the spiritual experience has always been the same, teachers expressed it in different ways because they were only able to approximate their experience through the words and symbols of their time and place. In each time, and each place, these symbols and expressions were unique and different.

Over the centuries these differences intensified. Groups and communities of followers, intent on maintaining their identity and ensuring their coherence, froze the original pronouncements into sacred doctrines, and made the doctrines into holy dogmas, sometimes further honed to serve their followers’ social and political aims and ambitions.

In the final count the differences between the doctrines, religions, and the insights of spiritual traditions are not differences in the substance of the experience that inspired them. They are only the differences in the way that substance has been expressed and communicated.

But how does the spiritual experience itself come about? Today we have a better answer to this question than we ever had before. A spiritual/religious experience can happen any time and any place, but it usually occurs in an altered state of consciousness. In that state, as psychiatrist Stanislav Grof notes, we can apprehend anything that exists in the universe. We can even apprehend universal archetypes and mythical beings.

The altered states that give rise to the spiritual experience can be purposefully induced. As traditional cultures have known and practiced for millennia, the experience can be triggered by dancing, drumming, rhythmic breathing, and also by the use of psychedelic substances (although these can be dangerous to health). Prayer and meditation is the royal road, and their depth and efficacy can be enhanced when practiced on altered-state-conducive “sacred” sites.

Churches, temples, mosques and synagogues were built to facilitate the spiritual experience of the faithful. Traditional people have often gone further: they had sought spiritual transformation even through “temple sleep.” This meant spending a night in a venerated location, trying to incubate dreams for initiation, divination, or healing. Dynastic Egypt had special temples for suppliants who would fast and recite prayers immediately before going to sleep, and Jewish seers would spend the night in an agrave or sepulchral vault, hoping that the spirit of the deceased would appear in their dream and offer guidance. In Greece over 300 dream temples were dedicated to Aesculapius, the god of healing, and in China the temples where state officials sought guidance were active until the 16th century.

The spiritual experience usually comes about in altered states, but what does the recurring substance of the experience signify? What is that “something deeper and larger than ourselves” to which the experience seems to connect us?

An answer to this question is given by every religion, and today it can also be given by science, if only hypothetically. Science suggests that the spiritual experience opens the brain with which our consciousness is associated to an extended range of information. This information is real, but it’s not always really received. Here by “information” I don’t mean the information we produce when we talk, write, or act. I mean the kind of information that scientists now discover underlies everything in the universe.

Information is entirely basic in the universe. In the latest conception the universe doesn’t consist of matter and space; it consists of energy and information. Energy exists in the form of wave-patterns and wave-propagations in the quantum vacuum that fills space; in its various forms, energy is the “hardware” of the universe. The “software” is information. The universe is not an assemblage of bits of inert matter moving passively in empty space: it’s a dynamic and coherent whole. The energy that constitutes its hardware is always and everywhere “in-formed.” It’s in-formed by what David Bohm called the implicate order, and physicists now regard as the quantum vacuum or zero-point field (also called physical spacetime, universal field, or nuether). This is the “in-formation” that structures the physical world, the information we grasp as the laws of nature. Without information the energy-waves and patterns of the universe would be as random and unstructured as the behavior of a computer without its software. But the universe is not random and unstructured; it’s precisely “in-formed.” Would it be any the less precisely informed, complex systems could not have emerged in it, and we would not be here to ask how this on first sight highly improbably development could have come about.

Science’s answer to the “what” question refers to an entangled, holographic, nonlocally connecting in-formation field in the cosmos. In my books, in greatest detail in Science and the Akashic Field, I discuss the evidence for this field, and note that the Hindu seers referred to it as Akasha, the fundamental element of the cosmos. In recognition of this feat of insight I am now calling the information field of the universe the Akashic Field.

But how does science’s answer to the question regarding the fundamental significance of the spiritual experience relate to the answer given by religion?

For the world’s religions the larger and deeper reality to which the spiritual experience connects us is a numinous, divine reality. It’s either a spirit or consciousness that infuses the natural world (the “immanentist” view), or a spirit and consciousness that’s above and beyond it (the “transcendentalist” claim). Traditional polytheistic religions were leaning to the former, while the Abrahamic monotheistic religions (with some exceptions) embraced the latter.

The difference between a divine intelligence immanent in the world and one that transcends it is not negligible; but it is still only a difference in interpretation. The “raw data” for both positions is the same: it’s the spiritual experience, a quantum communion with universal oneness. In the Western religious perspective this is communion with the spirit that infuses the cosmos, identified as God. Deepak Chopra writes, “spirituality is the experience of that domain of awareness where we experience our universality. This domain of awareness is a core consciousness that is beyond our mind, intellect, and ego. In religious traditions this core consciousness is referred to as the soul which is part of a collective soul or collective consciousness, which in turn is part of a more universal domain of consciousness referred to in religions as God.”

Our experience of the core consciousness of the world is ultimately an experience of the universal domain of consciousness Western religions call God. The experience itself, if not it’s interpretation, is the same in all religions, and in all religions it inspires a sense of oneness and belonging. Michael Beckwith affirms that “when you strip away the culture, history, and dogma of every religion, the teachers of those religions were teaching very similar principles and practices that led to a sense of oneness, that ended a sense of separation from the Whole.”

Science’s answer to the question as to what the spiritual experience connects us is immanentist. The information that underlies the universe, the Akashic Field, is part of the universe. This doesn’t mean that the immanentist position necessarily states the ultimate truth; it only means that science can only take an immanentist a position. Scientists are limited to speaking about the natural world; they must leave speculation about transcendent realities to poets, philosophers, and spiritual masters.

It’s time to conclude. If the substance of the spiritual experience is always and everywhere the same, differences in its expression and interpretation are secondary, and not a valid cause for conflict and intolerance. The world to which our quantum brain connects us is fundamentally one, whether its oneness is due to an information field within the natural world or the work of a divine transcendent intelligence. To enter into communion with this oneness has been the quest of all the great teachers and spiritual masters. And to understand the nature of this oneness has been, and is, the ultimate quest of all great scientists. Still today, physicists seek the one equation that would anchor their famous “Theory of Everything,” the theory that would account for all the laws of nature and explain everything that ever happened in our integrally whole universe. Of this equation Einstein said that knowing it would be reading the mind of God….

Published at Huffington Post

Share

{ 14 comments… read them below or add one }

Matyas Mero March 24, 2010 at 2:16 pm

Dear Professor Laszlo,

I felt privileged to be present at the discussion last night at the Pallas Lodge. I very much enjoyed the glimpses of your ideas, which, however much some people in the audience and especially your ‘discussion’ partner tried to drown, still shone through.

I still had a strange feeling of missing something. Much of the seemingly ezoteric phenomena of the brain and quantum physics seems to click in, at least according to my very limited understanding, if we consider the existence of a Supreme Being, whose localised aspect is present in every atom, thus, in the body of every living being. This concept is the Supersoul, or Paramatma, as described in detail in the Bhagavad Gita, being one of the three aspects described there (the impersonal Brahman or effulgence of God, the Supersoul or Paramatma, and Bhagavan or the personal aspect of the Supreme).
If we accept the existence of such a Supreme Being, the source of everything there is (and I know, most scientists these days reject the idea), and we accept that everything material is but the manifestation of His energies, then the seemingly inexplicable synchronisations, connections between seemingly disparate events and many fancy paradox riddles of quantum physics become understandable.

Such an acceptance would have momentous consequences, not only on the philosophical level, but also in our every day lives, giving directions as to how to manage, if this is the right word, the looming climatic, ecological and economic, catastrophe of our planet.

Reply

jim cranford March 24, 2010 at 3:45 pm

Interesting that an old hippie like me comes to almost identical conclusions following a much different path. I am weeks away from publishing, my book, LifeOS: exploring the system that executes DNA. Sort of a “A Lay Person’s Guide to Nature’s Holographic Communications Network”. In this book i just outline the info processing model as i see it. In my next book i intend to tell how a arrived at these conclusions.

From a young age i have experimented with navigation by intuition. Seems to me that this is the best way to prove that a paranormal process exists. One of the functions of this quantum/holographic network is to manage resources within the system, like a modern manufacturing ontime supply system. Like the commo system that keeps the flow of oxygen to the cells in the body, or the one that manages the flow of nutrients in an ecosystem. It seemed to me that the same system provided agents with guidance in finding food, prospective mates and avoiding danger. I have tested this theory extensively with amazing results. I can tell hundreds of stories, and i will, but they only prove it to me and the other folks involved. However, it is plain to me that this approach works. So, i would suggest that some controlled maze experiments would yield some high percentage of positive hits. I used the deserts of southwest usa as my maze and often connected with moving targets from hundreds of miles away. Intent was my only rudder.

Anyway, thanks for speaking to we laypeople. =-)

cheers,
jim

Reply

Barbara Smith Stoff March 24, 2010 at 7:38 pm

For me, poetry opens a door into that holographic universe..from which we make metaphors…in our efforts to…in our efforts…

DRAGONS FROM THE DEEP LOCH

Up from the deep waters
The deep unconscious
The unreflected upon waters of the oceans
Which hold together this striving planet
Up and out in the open
From these deep waters
The old patriot rejection of old world parentals…
Are we afraid of old European ideologies which suckled
Throughout centuries…and aeons…? even learning all the while
to winnow out some poisons..
…An old-new idea
Is born and in Boston the tea boxes go into the sea
That sea of consciousness
(they sometimes call the marrow in our bones the sea of consciousness)
…that sea of consciousness which ultimately touches all shores on this planet.

“And what is the ocean doing?”

And like the unclean knives buried for centuries on the ocean floor,
The creations in the deep loch come up to walk our modern streets
And populate our screens…for better or worse…we must decide.
The old subterranean dragons in the edens of our ideas…
How to integrate them into our dimly dreamed benevolent humanity?

The patriot’s cry…”from my cold dead hands”…pry this weapon.
And the nation which says it’s “Christian” forgets that the man Jesus
Urged the giving up of weapons…even suggested they be made into
Plows for growing fields of food to feed the hungry.
So we have the rebirth of the tea party…
Rather than leaning shoulders to wheel to actually build
That more perfect union, that more perfect government
Which ultimately leads to the laying down of the weapon
Before we have to deal with that “cold dead hand”…
Jesus said those who live by the sword will die by the sword.

Fear? Well, bombs, swords…
Those who make them tend to reject
The idea of benevolent evolution for humankind.

Do not let us be that ever adolescent culture
Continually rebelling against motherfather countries
In order to discover the “new” identity within….
Let us put down the weapon
Before we are that cold dead hand…
That hand that signed a declaration of the benevolent
Future for humankind…that promised to be example…
A living walking example…into being.
We must not become that cold dead hand.
We create ourselves each day
According to our idea of ourselves.
Let us welcome the future with warm hands.

–Barbara Smith Stoff
March 24, 2010

Reply

Admin March 26, 2010 at 1:27 am

Barbara, more brilliance from you. Thanks for your continued lucidity and depth of vision.

Reply

Peter March 25, 2010 at 12:34 am

Hello Barbara,

the Fibonacci sequence was first well known in the ancient India, where it was applied to the metrical sciences (prosody). Prosody or poetry, a form of literary art, reflects this number sequence in it basic rhythmic structure.

We should never underestimate Art as something that is only “beautiful” or a “hobby”. Indeed beauty aligns to a mathematical sequence, the Golden Ratio. And if all universe, the space, time and mater is based on consciousness then scientist should reevaluate the importance of Art.

Peter

Reply

Barbara Smith Stoff March 25, 2010 at 2:42 am

Peter…thank you so much for your response here…after listening to the evening news here in the U.S….I am especially comforted by your informative statement, which feels so very much grounded in rational science…while so completely understanding the ‘poetic’…that poem was nagging at me for a couple of days…I finally sat down and wrote it this morning, but not until I watched the news commentary did I fully understand what was working intuitively (under the surface) with me. Your response is a benediction. Do you have a website? I do try to read as much science as a ‘lay person’ can comprehend…always have….since my very young years even.

Reply

Barbara Smith Stoff March 25, 2010 at 7:49 pm

…wrote the poem quickly…just flowed with some force from ‘subterranean’ waters…this morning, with my daughter Lisa’s help, I have made some changes in the poem…which I think will clarify and make it better. Below is the new version:
:+))

DRAGONS FROM THE DEEP LOCH
Up from the deep waters
The deep unconscious
The unreflected upon waters of the oceans
Which hold together this striving planet
Up and out in the open
From these deep waters
The old patriot rejection of old world parentals…
Are we afraid of old European ideologies which suckled
Throughout centuries…and aeons…? even learning all the while
to winnow out some poisons..
…An old-new idea
Is born and in Boston the tea boxes go into the sea
That sea of consciousness
(they sometimes call the marrow in our bones the sea of consciousness)
…that sea of consciousness which ultimately touches all shores on this planet.

“And what is the ocean doing?”

And like the unclean knives buried for centuries on the ocean floor,
The creations in the deep loch come up to walk our modern streets
And populate our screens…for better or worse…we must decide.
The old subterranean dragons in the edens of our ideas…
How to integrate them into our dimly dreamed benevolent humanity?

The patriot’s cry…”from my cold dead hands”…pry this weapon.
And the nation which says it’s “Christian” forgets that the man Jesus
Urged the giving up of weapons…even suggested they be made into
Plows for growing fields of food to feed the hungry.
So we have the rebirth of the tea party…
Rather than leaning shoulders to wheel to actually build
That more perfect union, that more perfect government
Which ultimately leads to the laying down of the weapon
Before we have to deal with that “cold dead hand”…

Fear? Well, bombs, swords…
Those who make them tend to reject
The idea of benevolent evolution for humankind.
Jesus said those who live by the sword will die by the sword.

Do not let us be that ever adolescent culture
Continually rebelling against motherfather countries
In order to discover the “new” identity within….
Let us put down the weapon
Before we are that cold dead hand…

Rather be the hand that signed a declaration of the benevolent
Future for humankind…that promised to be example…
A living walking example…into being.
We must not become that cold dead hand.
We create ourselves each day
According to our idea of ourselves.
Let us welcome the future with warm hands.

–Barbara Smith Stoff
March 24, 2010

Reply

Barbara Smith Stoff March 26, 2010 at 5:17 am

“the Fibonacci sequence was first well known in the ancient India, where it was applied to the metrical sciences (prosody). Prosody or poetry, a form of literary art, reflects this number sequence in it basic rhythmic structure.”

Peter,
Be sure that I am doing some studying!
–bss

Reply

Andreas Ahlen March 26, 2010 at 5:03 pm

Dear Prof. Laszlo,

I am a worker-student studying Communication Science and I have read the book Quantum Brains by Jeffrey Satinover. I do not know if you agree with Mr. Satinover, but my personal opinion is that everything in our world on various layers (physical, metaphysical, ecc.) is interconnected and acts together. Niklas Luhmann, a Sociological Prof. (almost dead) at Bielefeld University formed a theory of autopoiethic systems acting in a relation system-environment. The particular issue og his theory is that systems (like a human or an organ in the human body) can act with its environment (brain (system) – human body (environment) but to process input data it can change into a state of “close for inner processing” where the data will be processed by the system itself and then “released” the the environment (human body). This causes a redundant effect on the system acting continously with the environment where the processed data is always part of new input to be further processed.

Reply

Ervin Laszlo April 6, 2010 at 10:19 am

Dear Andreas Ahlen,

I am forwarding a thank-you for your comment from Prof Laszlo. We appreciate your view and participation.
Best regards,

Mrs Gyorgyi Byworth MA
Assistant to Prof Laszlo

Reply

Stan April 25, 2010 at 7:01 am

We are all a product of thought,a wave form,in its simplicity consciousness is infinate abstractness.The beginning has an ending, as the ending has a beginning.The true meaning of spirituality is in the intuition and not in the knowing,interpretation of the Akashic field cannot be fully understood for it is the inadequacies of the spoken word as with scientific models.Words cannot describe,art comes close,you either get it or you dont.

Reply

Billy Howell-Sinnard January 24, 2011 at 10:47 pm

This is beautiful. Everything you’ve written I learned from the Baha’i Faith: progressive revelation, relativity of religion, the harmony of science and religion, the oneness deposited at the heart of all creation, that there are not two trees, a tree of good and a tree of evil, but one Tree and we are all a part of it, that a new race of humans is on the verge of happening, that only through the spiritual education of humankind can this gem in humankind be mined and brought to fruition, that science will go hand in hand with religion.

“Put all your beliefs into harmony with science; there can be no opposition, for truth is one. When religion, shorn of its superstitions,traditions,and unintelligent dogmas, shows its conformity with science, then will there be a great unifying, cleansing force in the world which will sweep before it all wars, disagreements, discords and struggles–and then will mankind be united in the power of the Love of God.”
–’Abdu’l-Bahá

Reply

Billy Howell-Sinnard January 24, 2011 at 11:00 pm

In commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr., I submit this poem I wrote 13 years ago and was chosen to read at the University of Indiana at Fort Wayne commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. I feel it speaks to the same issues as Barbara’s beautiful poem:

Beloved Community*

Oh, sisters! Oh, brothers!
Do you see it?
Do you see what Martin saw?
He wanted so badly for us to see,
to abandon the narrow ravines
of ourselves
& look from the mountaintop.

His vision was clear.
The road was straight
& led upward.
The Beloved was near.
Community, yes, that is the longing
of our hearts, that is the balm,
the wide, curved space
of welcoming arms
drawing us
despite our wariness & reluctance.

Why should we settle for less,
for the prison
of our individual barbed wire
cells of brooding
pessimism & nullity,
for the self-imposed exile
from the interplay & profundity
of the unavoidable
& irresistable human need
to communicate,
to tap the love ache
crying for deliverance?

What is that hate
searing our minds,
but the love ache of racism
crying for deliverance.

What is that vacant
cold of our souls,
but the love ache of ignorance
crying for deliverance.

What is that fear
walling us in,
but the love ache of prejudice
crying for deliverance.

Oh, sisters! Oh, brothers!
Martin knew the true desire
of our red, red hearts.
He dreamed a dream
while most of us
awaken dreamless,
thrashing fearfully
against the morning light.

Where is that content
of character
by which we may know
& be known?

“Without vision
the people perish, ”
says the Old Testament.
Are we the dead
burying the dead?

Martin saw black & white children
hand-in-hand. Anything else
is missing the mark.
Anything else is continued injustice.
Anything else is a dying light.

Vision scales the mountain
of love ache, of human despair
& ugliness, discovers
the divine possibilities all around.
Where else can we go
but the promised land?
What else can unify
this divided world?

To be alive
is to be in motion,
to cast our nets
in hope of finding ourselves
& life.

Where are we going?
Do we have a vision
that takes us beyond race,
nationality, gender, politics,
economics, religion?
These are the narrow ravines
in which we lie dying.
These are the crumbling walls
of Jericho that must fall
before the vision of community.

Oh, sisters! Oh, brothers!
Martin is calling us.
Can you hear the sweet,
clear voice of peace
calling us to the mountaintop?
Can you see the community
of humankind
shining in all its glory,
resplendent in its divine diversity?

All else is vain imaginings,
for we are the content of our character
& the unfolding vision of our souls.

Oh, sisters! Oh, brothers!
Let us arise to our highest aspirations,
to that for which we were created,
& meet Martin in the Beloved Community
of the Spirit.

*The title is from a sermon by MLK: ‘The Birth of a New Nation, ‘ Sermon at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, April 7,1957

Reply

Papadodo September 27, 2011 at 9:44 pm

Yes…. and so… what now?
Which intension puts me on the right track and into high gear?
Which (practical?) state of mind should I strive for?
Love?
Unconditional love?
Unconditional love with the intention to bestow somebody else?
Unconditional love to bestow somebody else so I can mimic the feeling of the creator?
He created the world to bestow us and he enjoyed it very much.
So I better copy his behaviour and reach this feeling of happiness and fulfilment.
This seems like a simple approach …. this should be easy!
“When the solution is simple, God is answering” (Albert Einstein)
I better start immediately!
B.R.
Papadodo

Reply

Leave a Comment

{ 2 trackbacks }

Previous post:

Next post: