Quantum Consciousness — our evolution, our salvation

by Ervin Laszlo on April 3, 2010

In the first post of this series I promised to explore the wider implications of our having a quantum computer in our head. What does this revolutionary understanding of the capacities of the human brain mean for our life and our future?

Here I call “quantum consciousness” the consciousness we access when we use the potentials of our quantum-computer brain. Our brain is a macroscopic quantum system, yet we use it as if it were exclusively a classical biochemical system. With its quantum-system functions, our brain can receive information not only from our eyes and ears, but directly from the wider world with which we are “entangled”—nonlocally connected. Insightful people throughout history, whether shamans or scientists, poets or prophets, have extensively used this capacity, innate to all human beings. Today it is widely neglected. This impoverishes our world picture, and causes a nagging sense that we are separate from the world around us.

I believe that quantum consciousness could be the next stage in the evolution of our consciousness—and that this evolution could be our salvation. Let me explain.

The first thing I ask you to note is that human consciousness is not static, fixed once and for all. It’s the product of a long evolutionary development, and is capable of further development. In the thirty- or fifty-thousand-year history of the species we proudly call homo sapiens the human body didn’t change significantly, but human consciousness did. And it can change again.

In a variety of “alternative cultures” a new consciousness is already emerging. The members of these cultures—the green movement, the peace movement, the sustainable living movement, the movement of cultural creatives, and others—share similar social values and are open and interactive with the larger society; they don’t seek isolation or indulge in promiscuous sex. They aim to rethink accepted beliefs and values, and adopt a more responsible style of living. They shift from matter- and energy-wasteful ostentation toward voluntary simplicity and the search for sustainability and harmony with nature.

A new consciousness is now struggling to be born. Does this mean that the consciousness of humanity itself is evolving? Some famous thinkers have said so. The Indian sage Sri Aurobindo spoke of the emergence of superconsciousness in ever more people, and this, he said, is the harbinger of the next evolution of human consciousness. In a similar vein the Swiss philosopher Jean Gebser spoke of the coming of four-dimensional integral consciousness, rising from the prior stages of archaic, magical, and mythical consciousness. The American mystic Richard Bucke called the new consciousness “cosmic,” and in the colorful spiral dynamics developed by Chris Cowan and Don Beck it’s the turquoise stage of collective individualism, cosmic spirituality, and Earth changes. For philosopher Ken Wilber these developments signify an evolutionary transition from the mental consciousness characteristic of both animals and humans, to subtle consciousness, which is archetypal, transindividual, and intuitive, to causal consciousness, and then ultimately to “consciousness as such.” Psychiatrist Stanislav Grof summed up the characteristics of the emerging consciousness as “transpersonal.”

There is remarkable agreement among these visionary concepts.  Superconsciousness, integral consciousness, cosmic consciousness, turquoise-stage consciousness, and consciousness as such are all forms of consciousness that transcend the divide between you and me, the individual and the world, the human being and nature. If these thinkers are right, this kind of consciousness will be the next stage in the evolution of the consciousness of our species.

Quantum consciousness—QC—could perhaps be the next stage in the evolution of the mind of humanity, but why would it be our salvation?

The answer is simple commonsense: because QC is a consciousness of directly intuited, felt connection to the world. It inspires empathy with people and with nature; it brings an experience of oneness and belonging. Quantum consciousness makes us realize that, being one with others and with nature, what we do to them we do to ourselves.

Not only will QC make us behave more responsibly toward other people and the planet, it will also encourage us to join together to cope with the problems we face.

Most of us cooperate with members of our own family and community. But cooperation has now become vitally necessary on the global level: it’s in all our best interest to cooperate with our fellows in the global community. Without such cooperation we’ll be hard put to overcome the global threats and problems that face us. Without cooperation we risk joining the countless species that became extinct because they couldn’t adjust to changed circumstances.

With dedicated and purposeful cooperation we can meet the challenges of human survival: we can have seven billion or more people living peacefully and sustainably on the planet. We have the technologies, the skills, and the necessary financial and human resources. Abject forms of poverty can be eliminated, energy- and resource-efficient technologies can be made widely available, water can be recycled and seawater desalinized, and sustainable forms of agriculture adopted. We can be more efficient and effective in harvesting the vast stream of energy that flows from the sun to our planet. And to finance these projects we would only need a small part of the enormous sums of money that we now commit to speculative, self-serving, or downright destructive ends.

Cooperation on the global level is a new requirement in the history of our civilization, and we are not prepared for it. Our institutions and organizations were designed to protect their own interests in competition with others; the need for them to join together in the shared interest has been limited to territorial aspirations and defense, and to economic gain in selected domains. The will to cooperate in globally cooperative projects that subordinate immediate self-interest to the vital interests of a wider community is still lacking in the political as well as in the economic domains.

When all is said and done, the fundamental need of our time, the precondition of creating a peaceful and sustainable world, is the spread of a new and more evolutionarily adaptive consciousness—the quantum consciousness of oneness and belonging.

Forms and intimations of the new consciousness are already emerging in the world, but they haven’t yet reached the mainstream. When QC becomes mainstream, humanity will have reached a higher stage of maturity. It will have become a species that has not only the technologies and the skills, but also the wisdom and the will, to survive in the world it has itself created.

Published at Huffington Post

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{ 9 comments… read them below or add one }

Francisco Di Biase April 13, 2010 at 12:05 am

Dear Dr Laszlo

I am sending my last paper about the foundations of quantum consciousness in our brains that is published in Neuroquantology with the title Quantum- Holographic Informational Consciousness.

NeuroQuantology | December 2009 | Vol 7 | Issue 4 | Page 657-664
Di Biase, Quantum-holographic informational consciousness

see http://www.neuroquantology.com

Francisco Di Biase autor of World Futures’ article: Information Self-Organization and Consciousness, 1999, vol.53, pp.309-327

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Ervin Laszlo April 14, 2010 at 3:01 pm

Dear Dr Di Biase,

I read your paper and found it both relevant and fascinating.

Best regards,

Ervin Laszlo

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Johannes May 3, 2010 at 11:29 am

The way towards this highly harmonic state is lined with experiences which may be perceived in (individually changing intensity) from a simple ‘let go’ to dying or death – revealing in the very moment as a simple experience itself. Same time, each moment of such highly conscious “non local, transpersonal…” experience opens a gate and may be perceived as encouraging or well guiding energy in any other moment/quality of the field – by any’one’ who takes the challenge.

Dear Mr Di Biase and Dear Mr Laszlo,
I highly appreciate the ‘objective’ view of such science, helping to understand. It’s pretty easy to feel uneducated in the light of so many scientific terms – but enjoyable to follow ;-) . The moment(um) of shift is free of any terms anyway, I would say – and yet, the sound of true understanding is essential as much as soundless. Truth is beyond the paradox, ulitimate love has no contradiction. The way to towards this…

Thank you
Johannes

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Linda Onita Hardin-Atkins June 7, 2010 at 8:55 pm

ISBN: 978-1-60911-248-6
Press Release: April 19,2010

Title: Thoughts are Things with Sterling Wings

I discovered so much about myself, mysticism and metaphysics through
meditation, yoga and asking fundemental questions about the true
nature of life and death.

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anon traveler January 10, 2011 at 9:58 pm

With all due respect Mr. Laszlo, cooperation (compassion and selflessness) have been around a long long time. Many civilizations of the past used to revere such values and shun or ban greed and selfishness. Many civilizations of the past were much more intuitive and “cosmic” than we are today. But those civilizations were wiped out by humans who developed and nurtured greed and selfishness (materialism). As you may know, evolutions of species are based on mutations and not all evolutions prove to be “successful” in the long run. Many argue, including myself, that we are discovering how our species is failing and how we must change in order to survive. That may mean the need to drop greed and selfishness once again and revisit nurturing cooperation or it may mean the need for something else entirely. We shall see.

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Dr Ben-Zion Weiss February 24, 2011 at 7:35 am

Dear Dr Laszlo,

I’ve been a great admirer of your work for some time and was particularly moved by your book ‘Science and the Re-enchantment of the Cosmos’, when I stumbled across it in a bookshop in rural NSW some years ago. I later discovered that Sue Sharpe of Phoenix Rising, a Sydney bookshop was involved in the Club of Budapest, and I’ve read many more of your books through her shop.

As a one time chemical engineer, who has passed through the fields of theatre, drama education, music, peace education, applied linguistics and finally ended up in social ecology, I resonate with your thinking in this article.

My own doctoral research, in social ecology was in the application of drama education for anti-racism, especially with youth and youth workers. It developed the idea of an ecology of culture that I related to the work of Jean Gebser and his version of integral consciousness. In particular I wanted to show how the wisdom of indigenous people like our Australian Aboriginal people could illuminate our understanding of ecology and help us reconnect with the natural world. These indigenous ways of being can also teach us much about co-operation and community, something our individualistic culture has lost contact with.

In this way the mental consciousness, which has dominated my early life has been able to expand to include the more mythic consciousness of theatre and drama education and the more magical consciousness of indigenous cultures as well as connecting with the archaic consciousness of the natural world through social and deep ecology.

I would suggest that such a journey could be of value to encourage positive changes in our troubled world,

In peace, Ben

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John Galt May 23, 2011 at 11:41 pm

Reality is an objective absolute.

Millions will die so that you can pretend that reality is subject to your whims.

Man is a volitional being. Thought is volitional. You preach death.

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Omar S. July 25, 2011 at 9:19 pm

Although I completely agree with the fact that mankind is continually undergoing an evolution of consciousness, I feel that this piece is mistaking change in consciousness for change in culture. Of course these two concepts are inextricably intertwined, however, culture, defined as our practices, beliefs, world views and etc. is measurable; we can see our cultures, subcultures and “counter cultures” change by the year; we see clothing styles, religious beliefs, languages, art, food dishes and consumption habits change all the time, because culture is measurable. By measurable I mean exactly that: there is some sort of meaningful, witness-able change that can be seen, or measured. There is no real way to see a change in human consciousness, or for the observer to observe him or herself. In this way, our perception of consciousness is relative to itself and, therefore, would seem unchanged. Say that humans’ perception of reality is continually changing (which, don’t get me wrong; I think it is), would you know it? Of course not, you’d feel exactly the same, because reality, to us, is exactly that, whether our perception of it is changing or not.

So to speak of consciousness as “becoming mainstream” or as something that can be adopted or subject to our willful change is, at best, misguided. In the simplest terms, it is a misuse of the word “consciousness.”

Although I completely agree that human consciousness is ever changing, the collective and individual, speculation about what human consciousness “was,” the stages it has gone through, or the what the collective conscience will be are simply that, speculation. The observable traits discussed by the author–such as our sense of connection to the earth and the impact we have on it–are not at all traits of our consciousness but traits of our cultures. Any observation made about a change in consciousness is really an observation of cultural change. Saying that we need an evolution of consciousness for “our salvation,” is grandiose and lends power to those that profit from there not being a green movement, by making the issue overly complex. As you say Mr. Laszlo, mankind, throughout history, has “extensively used this capacity [the macroscopic quantum system], innate to all human beings. Today it is widely neglected.” If quantum consciousness comes naturally, then all you are calling for is a cultural change. If that’s the case, I agree.

A greater appreciation for our planet and those around us will not come from some abstract transcendence to a higher plane of thinking and perception; it is our consumerist culture, capitalistic brainwashing and selfishness that truly need to change. In the West, we know these things our wrong, our writings, religions and philosophies reflect that, so our minds need no changing, only our priorities and the way we act.

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Jennifer Shadwick February 13, 2012 at 11:10 pm

This is true that our systems do not support the rising of quantum consciousness. That is why they are not necessary and are quickley breaking down from within. The grass roots; the ground up is where quantum consciousness is coming from. Sitting in the living room with your friends and family chating about possabilities! That is where the action is! That is the frontier of our new civilization! Don’t worry about the broken systems! They will change or go on their own way! They can see the writing on the wall!

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