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Consciousness and the Paranormal — Part 7

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Please read this paper forthcoming in Synthese. ...

This next paper is interesting for those who wish to understand the history of ideas regarding the brain/mind relationship antecedent to contemporary interpretations of psychophysical approaches to consciousness, first expressed by James and Fechner:

http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2011.00068/full

Extracts

". . . What James recognized, more than anything, was the powerful force of ideation, both socially and epistemologically. Moreover, when it came to the study of human consciousness, he underscored the impossibility of overcoming first-person narration. No matter how carefully one attempts to purge figurative speech and metaphor from scientific discourse, a human agent (with all its attendant messiness and subjectivity) is at the center of it. Furthermore, the translation and interpretation of observed or experienced facts into scientifically meaningful “events” – particularly in the case of the mind sciences – necessarily reduces complex inner states to static principles and formulae that describe physiological functions, while providing little account of how or why complex mental states come into being (James, 1981). The problem for James, as it was for Fechner, in his philosophy and in his psychophysical formula, was how to connect the subjective experience of inner psychological states with the so-called “external” facts of perception and sensory experience. This is where an understanding of James’s interest in physics allows us to pick up the lost thread of the more technical and scientific aspects of his philosophical thought . . . .

. . . While James turned to physics for insights regarding the “force” of the human mind, he turned to philosophy for explanations. The kinds of questions James pursued in his physiological study of the brain led him to philosophy and metaphysics for answers. James’s multidisciplinary approach to the study of mind combined his knowledge of natural history, psychology of religious experience and abnormal mental states to affirm a non-reductive materialism, a “softer” positivism, similar to that of Fechner. Radical empiricism, furthermore, marked James’s attempt to refute the positivism of his skeptical peers with a philosophical framework that would justify the scientific investigation of dissociative trance, abnormal and ordinary subjective mental states, associated with volition. James’s radical empiricism was ahead of its time in suggesting that what we think of as “mind” is a consequence of many interpenetrating systems, a result of the brain’s interactions with the environment, but not reduced to brain physiology or external stimuli alone. Though James had the philosophical framework in place, he lacked the technical scientific background to make it useful to the scientific study of consciousness. Therefore he turned to Fechner for the means of substantiating his theory of transmission and co-consciousness. . . .

". . . While James’s use of terms culled from physics was more poetical than technical, his ideas anticipate more recent understandings on the part of contemporary neuroscientists that mind is an emergent property of the nervous system’s engagement with its environment. James would have agreed with the recent consensus that identifying the neuronal correlates to consciousness alone will not address the “hard problems” concerning the how and why of subjective experience. The mind theorists whose ideas most resonate with those of James – from the Australian philosopher David Chalmers, to science historian and Buddhist practitioner B. Alan Wallace, phenomenologist Evan Thompson, and biomedical engineer Paul Nuñez – each postulate an interdependency of consciousness on the structure of reality itself. They approach the hard problem of consciousness by focusing on the “explanatory gap” between consciousness and the natural world. To understand the manifold attributes of consciousness, in relation to, but not reducible to neuronal networks, they argue, requires taking a closer look at the structure of reality. In recognition that consciousness and reality are co-constitutive, researchers are turning to dynamic systems, or complexity, theory to synthesize the efforts of neurobiology, phenomenology, and psychology in order to arrive at a better understanding of consciousness as a constituent component of reality itself. . . ."

". . . In developing his “transmission theory,” James had refined Myers’s theory of the Subliminal Self by being the first to explicitly link “notions of transmission and filtering with the brain” (through the metaphor of the “prism” through which light passes), only to come out on “the other side filtered, reduced, focused, redirected, or otherwise altered in some systematic fashion” (Kelly et al., 2007, p. 606). On the face of it, James’s “transmission theory” with its metaphors of a prismatic dome and pipe organ may sound like outlandish metaphysical claptrap, but, in fact, these metaphors suggest models that resemble more recent conceptions of mind–brain dynamics. James’s model of the brain as a “filter,” or, in contemporary terms, a “nested hierarchy” (Nuñez, 2010, p. 11), for processing information from the environment posits the mind and environment as co-dynamic, mutually constitutive entities. In a different context, James would describe this “permissive” or “transmissive” function of the brain as a kind of “Marconi station” (James, 1986, p. 359). Making no reference to James’s transmission theory, biomedical engineer Paul Nuñez then goes on to posit “a highly speculative” account of consciousness that is nonetheless dramatically similar to that of James when he describes how “whole brains or special parts of brains might behave like antenna systems sensitive to an unknown physical field or other entity that, for want of a better name, may be called Mind” (Nuñez, 2010, p. 274). In this way, James’s account of the brain’s “transmissive” properties resembles more contemporary accounts assigning the mind–brain specific temporal–spatial dimensions and a hierarchical structure. . . ."

". . . My present field of consciousness is a centre surrounded by a fringe that shades insensibly into a subconscious more… The centre works in one way while the margins work in another, and presently overpower the centre and are central themselves. What we conceptually identify ourselves with and say we are thinking of at any time is the centre; but our full self is the whole field, with all those indefinitely radiating subconscious possibilities of increase that we can only feel without conceiving, and can hardly begin to analyze (1977, p. 130).

In writing this, James was thinking expressly of Fechner’s psychophysical threshold, now known as the Weber–Fechner law, postulating that “consciousness” is the threshold at which subjective perception and subjective sensation coincide. James was less interested in the mathematical formulation for this law than he was in the assigning of temporal–spatial movement to consciousness. These “movements,” as James would write in his introduction to the English translation of Fechner’s Little Book of Life and Death, “can be superimposed and compounded, the smaller on the greater, as wavelets upon waves. This is as true in the mental as in the physical sphere. Speaking psychologically, we may say that a general wave of consciousness rises out of a subconscious background, and that certain portions of it catch the emphasis, as wavelets catch the light… On the physical side we say that the brain-processes that corresponded to it altered permanently the future mode of action of the brain” (1904, p. xv). What James was arguing – drawing upon Fechner’s model of the threshold of consciousness as a sinusoidal wave – is richly suggestive of dynamical systems. James’s point of view similarly accords with that of phenomenologist Evan Thompson, who collaborated with the late Francisco Varela to write Mind in Life (2007). In this phenomenological account of neurophysiological processes, Thompson understands “dynamical systems” as “a collection of related entities or processes that stands out from a background as a single whole, as some observer sees and conceptualizes things” (Thompson, 2007, p. 39). The solar system is one such example, but James’s transmission theory offers the example of the social environment, in which one consciousness coexists among many others. In a very real sense, the compounding of consciousness suggests the co-penetration of individual consciousnesses within ever larger and interpenetrating systems.

This idea that consciousnesses themselves co-penetrate is made explicit in an even earlier passage, from the first lecture in A Pluralistic Universe. In distinguishing monism from his philosophical pluralism, James writes: “My thoughts animate and actuate this very body which you see and hear, and thereby influence your thoughts. The dynamic current somehow does get from me to you, however numerous the intermediary conductors may have to be. Distinctions may be insulators in logic as much as they like, but in life distinct things can and do commune together every moment” (James, 1977, pp. 115–116). The world of a Pluralistic Universe, is just such a dynamical system comprised of a world of interconnecting relations, of “complexity-in-unity” enveloped by a surrounding “earth-consciousness” (James, 1977, p. 73; James, 1909, 1910). And here we finally arrive at the panpsychic view James adopted later in life and attributed to Fechner. What exactly panpsychism means, particularly for James has been the source of much misunderstanding in James scholarship.

Just what is this “panpsychic view” and how does it correspond to contemporary neuroscientific debates about consciousness? James scholar David Lamberth distinguishes James’s “moderate” panpsychism from the “strong” or “idealistic” versions held by his contemporaries. The basic tenet of panpsychism is that nature is animate. More rigid versions are dualistic, positing an essential correspondence between the psyche and nature. The “pluralistic panpsychism” that James embraced allowed him to develop “a pluralistic metaphysics of pure experience and a correspondingly pluralistic notion of causality” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 250). This philosophical position of James’s strongly accords with the contemporary neuroscientific theory of “dynamic co-emergence,” held by Thompson and Varela, in which living and mental processes are understood as “unities or structured wholes rather than simply as multiplicities of events external to each other, bound together by efficient causal relations” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 67). In phenomenological terms, this means revising our understanding nature as “not pure exteriority,” but rather as possessing “its own interiority.” Thompson is careful to distinguish this perspective from “metaphysical idealism,” the argument for a “preexistent consciousness.” Instead, it implies a “transcendental orientation” by which we understand that “the world is never given to us as a brute fact detachable from our conceptual frameworks. Rather, it shows up in all the describable ways it does thanks to the structure of our subjectivity and our intentional activities” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 82). James would understand this in terms of an inherent intimacy of relations between the self and the world with which the self engages. Consciousness itself is “transcendent,” in Thompson’s terms, in part because, as he says, it “is always already presupposed as an invariant condition of possibility for the disclosure of any object[;] there is no way to step outside, as it were, of experiencing subjectivity, so as to effect a one-to-one mapping of it onto an external reality purged of any and all subjectivity” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 87). Consciousness seems defined then by some variable movement or change in time that is perceived differently in relation to one’s location in time and space, and that also depends upon one’s particular role and orientation toward the experiment, that is, whether one is experiencing mental phenomena as a subject in an experiment or as the witnessing and recording observer. In light of Thompson’s phenomenological orientation toward the mind–brain conundrum, it is this intersubjective dimension that becomes most salient to the future of contemporary mind–brain research.

James’s metaphors of “stream,” “halo,” and “penumbra” to describe what has been termed a “fringe” consciousness describe a structure for consciousness that is, in my words, a “distributed” one. To explain what I envision by the term “distributed,” I will use a familiar metaphor from the natural world. Imagine a tree in winter: a single trunk gives rise to smaller branches, forming the essential architecture of the tree; from these branches, smaller ones grow, giving rise to even smaller, finer branches as the tree extends upward and outward. Imagine, if you will, a whole forest of such trees, whose branches co-penetrate to a greater or lesser extent, depending on their proximity to one another, or upon other natural forces in the environment: a gust of wind, birds alighting, rain or snow falling on the branches. It would not be hard to imagine this “system” of co-penetrating branches in still other naturalistic forms: a flock of birds, a school of fish, a moving crowd, or bundles of neurons within a human brain, as each individual within the larger system imperceptibly shifts in relation to the subtle movements communicated at a subconscious level. These images are not hierarchical and they are not necessarily linear, for, at any point within the system a single movement, or a random complex of movements among disparate individual parts could produce something like the perception, to an observer, of cooperative “decision” within the system as a whole. But the observer is also part of the system, and we now arrive at a problem that links physics indelibly to consciousness as part of the “measurement problem” in quantum physics.

The observer’s volitional role of visually arresting an object in space in the act of perception is deeply problematized by the phenomenon known as the “collapse of [the] wave function” in quantum physics. As B. Alan Wallace explains, “quantum measurement entails the ‘collapse of a wave function,”’ in which measurement itself involves selecting one alternative from “a range of probabilities.” This selection thus forces a “reduction” in which “all the alternatives vanish.” This “reduction postulate” attempts to “describe what is actually observed in the measurements of quantum systems using classical methods” (Wallace, 2007, p. 81). Building on Michael Mensky’s “many-worlds interpretation,” Wallace argues for an abandonment of classical methods and a recognition that “Consciousness does not mechanically cause the wave function to collapse or influence physical particles. Rather, the observer’s brain and the observed system are synchronously entangled” (Wallace, 2007, p. 82). The measurement problem has brought increased attention to the role that the observer’s “cognitive frame of reference” plays in studies of consciousness, particularly in acquiring the first-person accounts necessary for an empirical study of subjectivity. As a Buddhist adept, Wallace maintains that scientific observers should integrate “contemplative methods of inquiry” into the study of mind; only by acquiring heightened powers of mental concentration, will scientists develop more reliable first-person accounts of subjectivity (Wallace, 2007, p. 105). Thompson, whose phenomenological approach to the mind–brain problem we have just seen, similarly argues for the need for observers to “suspend or refrain from judgment,” and “to develop more explicitly the pragmatics” of such practice “as a first-person method for investigating consciousness” (Thompson, 2007, p. 20). James’s concluding remarks in his Pluralistic Universe, anticipates the words of both Wallace and Thompson, when he urges his listeners to “discriminate ‘theoretic’ or scientific knowledge from the deeper ‘speculative’ knowledge aspired to by most philosophers, and concede that theoretic knowledge, which is knowledge about things, as distinguished from living contemplation or sympathetic acquaintance with them, touches only the outer surface of reality” (James, 2007, p. 111). This more philosophic attitude of receptivity, delineated by Thompson, is one that James pioneered in his radical empiricist philosophy and in his life-long willingness to attend to the less clear-cut aspects of individual psychological experience. . . ."

Note: these extracts are not sufficient to substitute for a reading of the full paper.
 
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For anyone tempted to forego reading the whole paper, I want to copy here the concluding paragraphs:

Conclusion: Radical Phenomenalism

Contemporary neuroscientists attempt to resolve the “explanatory gap” between mind and nature. James attempted this linguistically by adopting metaphors for the structure of consciousness that served to reconcile Darwinian evolutionary theory with discoveries in the physics of his day. Both models helped him explore intractable, yet fundamental, epistemological, and ontological questions: Was the universe self-unifying and ordered according to absolute metaphysical or mechanical causes, or was it inherently discontinuous with human perception? Correspondingly, he asked, What is the nature of human consciousness itself, and how do we account for our awareness of our thoughts or of the sensation of possessing a unified “Self?” To put the matter as succinctly as possible, as a philosopher and as a psychologist James was interested in understanding the relationship between the one and the many, the “each form,” as he termed it, and the “universal,” or “all form” (1977, p. 20). His writings emphasize Darwinian “variety,” and “struggle,” while invoking invisible particles and forces resonant with Faraday, Maxwell, and Hertz’s representation of physical reality as interpenetrating, continuous fields. A passage from his 1890 Principles of Psychology, illustrates this fusion of scientific world views that pervades James’s thought:

'The mind… works on the data it receives very much as a sculptor works on his block of stone. In a sense the statue stood there from eternity. But there were a thousand different ones beside it, and the sculptor alone is to thank for having extricated this one from the rest. Just so the world of each of us, howsoever different from our several views of it may be, all lay embedded in the primordial chaos of sensations, which gave the mere matter to the thought of all of us indifferently. We may, if we like, by our reasonings unwind things back to that black and jointless continuity of space and moving clouds of swarming atoms which science calls the only real world. But all the while the world we feel and live in will be that which our ancestors and we, by slowly cumulative strokes of choice, have extricated out of this, like sculptors, by simply rejecting certain portions of the given stuff. Other sculptors, other statues from the same stone! Other minds, other worlds from the same monotonous and inexpressive chaos! My world is but one in a million alike embedded, alike real to those who may abstract them. How different must be the worlds in the consciousness of ant, cuttlefish, or crab!' (James, 1981, pp. 277–278).

In this extended metaphor for consciousness, the mind, playing the role of “sculptor,” participates in natural selection. It emerges randomly from the “primordial chaos of sensations,” and evolves “by slowly cumulative strokes of choice.” Yet each organism, from cuttlefish to crab, represents a variety of sentient forms evolving from the same primordial chaos. Born in a Darwinist age to a father who was a Swedenborgian mystic and close friend of the transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson, James himself embodied the deeply rooted conflict so many of his generation felt between the indisputable facts of evolutionary biology and, as James later wrote in an address delivered to the Harvard Young Men’s Christian Association in 1895, “the craving of the heart to believe that behind nature there is a spirit whose expression nature is” (James, 2000, p. 225). If scientifically proving the existence of a transcendent aspect of organic life was the longed-for “invisible reality” of James’s era, identifying a phenomenal link between consciousness, experience, and the natural world seems to be that of ours.

For his own part, Fechner’s “day view” speculations attempted to bridge these realms by hypothesizing that organic life is interconnected by a “divine consciousness,” which represents the “inner side” of the natural world. Fechner’s panpsychism was attractive to James because it allowed him to develop a coherent philosophy for the science of psychology, a science that in his view would blend the personal and humanistic attributes of individual experience with biological principles common to the human species. James belonged to an era that needed a more optimistic philosophy than was found in the period’s social Darwinism and scientific positivism; his radical empiricism provided an ethics grounded in understanding reality as a complex of interconnected systems, founded on individual responsibility to larger communities, whether in the natural world or a global community. Like Fechner, he sought a naturalistic understanding of consciousness that could account for the spontaneity and novelty of individual minds – their flashes of insight and bursts of genius – the very expressions of individual creativity that appear to distinguish human forms of cognition from that of other species. According to Heidelberger, although Fechner’s metaphysics is often dismissed as “antimodern” and “backward” from the perspective of mechanistic materialists, he “sketches a new sort of epistemology, explaining the reality of the mental and the organic, bridging the cleft that separates nature and consciousness, reality and perceptual appearance, and combining science with direct human experience” (Heidelberger, 2004, p. 65). Both Marshall and Heidelberger point out that Fechner and James were philosopher–scientists who felt morally and ethically bound to “to understand science in a way that reunites science with the real world of people, with all the ethical and esthetic implications involved, instead of excluding them from it, as mechanistic materialism does” (Heidelberger, 2004, p. 65). Fechner’s “day view,” like James’s radical empiricism, sought a social role for his psychophysics; both carried out a phenomenological investigation of knowledge perception and construction, believing it was essential to ethical scientific inquiry, for the advancement of all the sciences, and for the mind sciences in particular.

Like James in his own cultural moment, recent contemporary discussions of the mind–brain problem similarly try to bridge divergent biological, psychological, and philosophical approaches. I like to call these “combinatory approaches,” that aim for some “middle ground” between the mind–brain as productive and the mind–brain as transmissive. Each new theory requires a correspondingly new definition of reality, one that makes consciousness, or experience, or information, awareness, or criticality, an emergent quality of the universe, and which all living things to a greater or lesser extent seem to possess. What today’s mind theorists invested in tackling the “hard” problem of consciousness share with James is his pluralistic conception of mind as an entity composed of, but not limited by, physical reality. A “disseminated, distributed, or incompletely unified appearance,” writes James, “is the only form that reality may yet have achieved” (1977, p. 25). Underlying their concept is a conviction that reality – invisible or otherwise – may be discovered to have a subtler structure consonant with that of consciousness itself.

Science historians have aptly described James as a “serial transgressor” of orthodox and unorthodox intellectual and disciplinary boundaries (Cotkin, 1990; Bordogna, 2008). I would suggest, however, that James did not so much make a deliberate program of transgressing boundaries, as he sought knowledge from a constellation of disciplines that he felt would best address his intellectual concerns. In so doing, he also recognized the possibility for fruitful interdisciplinary collaboration on resolving challenging problems in the mind sciences. Though the methodologies of philosophy and experimental psychology in the era of James and Fechner were sometimes antagonistic, more often than not, they facilitated rather than hindered each other’s pursuits. Although Fechner endorsed the liberation of natural science from philosophy, he nonetheless believed his own philosophical interests to be compatible with his scientific ones. Intellectually, James collaborated with an international cohort of scientist–philosophers – psychologists, physicists, and physiologists – who not only rejected the growing disciplinary divide between philosophy and the natural sciences, but who also disputed the opposition between science and metaphysics. Not all practitioners of experimental psychology in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries agreed that science could so easily be divorced from speculative philosophy. Neither an empiricist nor a philosophical approach need be absolutist to James’s way of thinking. The same could be said for all the scientist–philosophers with whom James enjoyed a rich correspondence: in England, figures like Frederick Meyers; in France, Pierre Janet and Theodore Flournoy; in Germany, psychologist Carl Stumpf, and physicist Ernst Mach – to name only a few. James’s affinity for both Fechner and the French philosopher Henri Bergson derived from his sense that Bergson was a philosopher who respected science and that Fechner was a scientist who valued the ways in which speculative philosophy could supply a theoretical framework for the hard facts and formulas later discovered by science. In this regard, James and Fechner alike were figures who not only thought deeply about how volitional and subjective aspects of consciousness influence scientific hypotheses, but who also believed that science should not lose sight of the larger human issues: the reverence for mystery and meaning in individual lives."
 
The reasoning for the study of consciousness should be considered by all human beings interested in the study itself, as to why a human who impose a condition upon another human when they themselves exist as that human "in want" condition.

In modern society if any of you cared to consider, the latest "brotherhood" associative condition is one where through paranormal conditions, they now study us as if we are a paranormal concept.....yet they know and so do I that paranormal is a study, and not a process.

Paranormal, uses its valued statement, a statement that a male gave the concept.....para and normal, meaning existing in the condition of being along side "of".

As we know, Nature is natural, a natural body of spiritual presences all interacting with the conditions we interact with. Nature is the only body alongside of our own......paranormal is beyond and is only a researched condition of wanting to own power.

1. the basic support is the stone of Earth, the atmosphere, being an atmosphere as a complete body of its own natural state, interacts with all bodies that it encompasses...stone and also Nature.

The condition of our life, natural, we eat, drink and take shelter. We also procreate our own species, and the species by its own Nature supports the conditions of its own aging and also youth. The support system is natural.

Therefore the real review of consciousness is an imposed condition and hence if you asked who is imposing this evaluation of our natural state.....is to be informed that the brotherhood of occultists are imposing conditions upon us, as they always have.

If you ask why in modern times, occult scientists, as occultism regards natural consciousness and its perceptions to apply occult conditions (conversion of the natural state) are once again studying us as a condition, because they want by circumstance 2 conditions to be involved in natural consciousness as a reviewed status.

1. is the Creator concept that they originally imposed upon our natural state, and invented science themselves....yet the Creator in this concept is the human thinker/inventor.
2. the ability to copy the natural cellular state of interacting with energy, holding energy, using energy and storing energy and replacing energy. This is to impose an artificial model of the natural condition they impose is natural...DNA.

Yet DNA is a single minded review of data, and we do not exist as data, we exist naturally. This is why the concept of consciousness was argued about the conditions which owned the state....spirit or data.

This is the only reason why consciousness as a concept is involved in the paranormal review considerations because of cause and effect considerations of phenomena, whereas the real human review is a naturally supported condition that was altered by and because of occultists.

Phenomena or "para" states increased due to scientific conversions, which espouse that they take a natural condition and alter it from its ownership of a higher condition and force it to convert by transformation and also destruction into a lower condition.

Hence, as ancient occultists looked at the condition of self awareness and implied themselves all knowing, they then attacked their own natural state by an increased condition, and this condition is a known state....conversion...SION, all conditions considered as a science, conversion, transmission etc., because they used a single minded review, and we do not exist as a single mind......we exist in a whole and complete state.

This is why the brotherhood consideration is a human effect of considering information by single minded status ignoring the natural state and then causation effects to the natural state as is happening in today's unnatural phenomena review.

As the atmosphere can record and then multiple record, it has given the impression of "spirit", yet the only spirit existing by natural circumstance considering the information and effects is a human being and human mind.

As the humans who exist in the natural state with a healthy body and a healthy mind attack those of us in the same condition and then espouse that we have a mental condition.....they are the humans who have imposed this mental condition via unnatural means.

If you consider occultist information they imposed that the paranormal or mental condition was a lower state or an evil spiritual presence, which the information status informs is a true and correct consideration, yet if you reviewed why they themselves as the same data are not affected by the condition, is to only realize that at this moment your own DNA has not been irradiated to the condition of the affect.

Occultists in their belief of the evil spirit, which occultist espouse in their own documentation relative to reviewing consciousness as a condition are and have been sadly mistaken in believing that our consciousness existed in a previous state as a human aware status.....being given to their own evil considerations of the human mind and the phenomena outcome of their unnatural sciences.

The total condition of why any human being considers the aspects of consciousness only has ever belonged to the consideration of wanting to own the consciousness, which they already do.

If you ask why a modern day occultist wants to own the aspect of consciousness, is to consider their own motivated reasoning.

1. is to have total ownership of what they consider is consciousness and to want to own consciousness is to consider its interactive interplay with the atmosphere.

2. why would a human want ownership of consciousness unless they want to manipulate that consciousness and its deciSION making processes.

3. the status of ownership and control belongs to the conditions of invention and resourcing....and as natural resourcing took their reasoning from using nuclear products to the natural crop product, they have now proceeded to look as the cellular relationship with natural life as the next product.

This is the only reasoning to the conditions of quoting information about consciousness to the paranormal as a question and answer condition relative to human reasoning.
 

Thanks for that link, @Soupie. From there I followed the link to this slightly fuller expression of Witten's position, which includes a link to a video presentation by Witten:

The Curious Wavefunction: Physicist Ed Witten on consciousness: "I tend to believe that it will remain a mystery"

As I see it, the major accomplishment of the recent 20 years of interdisciplinary consciousness studies is obvious in the broader recognition that consciousness (including its evolution in protoconsciousness) is as mysterious as the 'Big Bang' -- and that an adequate scientific 'theory of everything' will have to include an adequate interdisciplinary understanding of what consciousness is. Physics alone will never be able to account for consciousness.
 
I continue to see phenomenological philosophy and Varela-Thompson's development of neurophenomenology as providing the missing link that can enable increasing insight into what consciousness is -- and to recognition of its being the sine qua non for any hypothesis concerning nature as experientially conceived in and through actual human experience. Here is a link I posted a few months ago to an insightful paper, one among many by David Morris, that supports this position (continuing the contributions of phenomenology developed over the last century).

Morris, David (2013) From the Nature of Meaning to a Phenomenological Refiguring of Nature. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement, 72 . pp. 317-341.

From the Nature of Meaning to a Phenomenological Refiguring of Nature - Spectrum: Concordia University Research Repository

Abstract: "I argue that reconciling nature with human experience requires a new ontology in which nature is refigured as being in and of itself meaningful, thus reconfiguring traditional dualisms and the ‘hard problem of consciousness’. But this refiguring of nature entails a method in which nature itself can exhibit its conceptual reconfiguration—otherwise we get caught in various conceptual and methodological problems that surreptitiously reduplicate the problem we are seeking to resolve. I first introduce phenomenology as a methodology fit to this task, then show how life manifests a field in which nature in and of itself exhibits meaningfulness, such that this field can serve as a starting point for this phenomenological project. Finally, I take immunogenesis as an example in which living phenomena can guide insights into the ontology in virtue of which meaning arises in nature."
 
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Very helpful concerning 'groundedness' and perception in phenomenology:

David Morris, "Casey’s Subliminal Phenomenology: On Edging Things Back into Place"

https://www.academia.edu/6998968/Casey_s_Subliminal_Phenomenology_On_Edging_Things_Back_into_Place

Extract:

“External perception is a constant pretension to accomplish something that, by its very nature, it is not in a position to accomplish.” Husserl, Analyses Concerning Passive and Active Syntheses HUA XI 3.5

“The perceived world is the always presupposed foundation of all rationality, all value and all existence. This thesis does not destroy either rationality or the absolute. It only tries to bring them down to earth.” Merleau-Ponty, “The Primacy of Perception and its Philosophical Consequences”, 13

"In this chapter I suggest how Casey opens some radical implications for phenomenology. Casey does this by showing that place is what first of all grants room for the appearance of things—but only in virtue of a non-givenness. That is, place undergirds determinate things only in being something “less” than fully delimited or determinate, something less than space would be as an already given dimension. Place is thus kin to Bergson’s durée as openly generative becoming, in contrast to time as already fixed dimension. In showing us how determinate phenomena are conditioned by place as less than given, and in complementary work on “periphenomena” (see, e.g., WG 438-448), such as glances and edges, Casey reveals what I call a subliminal dimension of phenomena: a way in which periphenomena and thence phenomena appear as delimited only by edging into what is less than delimitable. This subliminal dimension is phenomenologically paradoxical. It cannot appear as such, precisely because it is less than delimitable, vagrant with respect to classical conditions of appearance. Yet this vagrant “less than” precisely appears as subliminal within and to delimited appearances, versus being something ideal or behind appearances. Casey thus makes a twofold contribution to phenomenology: bringing phenomena down to earth, as having a determinacy ‘grounded’ in this-here earth-place; and showing how this determinate delimitation involves something subliminal, something non-delimitable and non-given that is nonetheless given within places. Casey’s contribution is obviously complementary to themes of non-givenness in other phenomenologists, and to Heidegger’s turn from temporality to place and Abgrund (abyss, lack of ground). But Casey is innovative in his approach and way of displacing non-givenness from temporality into place. To wit, if Bergson shows that we have to wait for the sugar to dissolve, Casey shows that we have to unendingly get back with things into place for them to show themselves. If it is the narrator’s inner effort in Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu that exemplifies a Bergsonian waiting for things, then it is Finnegans Wake, with its endless outer circulation through the Dublin landscape/dreamscape that exemplifies Casey’s effort of getting things back into place—and also a kind of vagabond spirit in Casey that runs pell-mell in their wake, to glimpse them edgewise in their “plurabilities.” (Finnegans Wake is a touchstone of WG.) By putting himself in the wake of things and of place as less than already delimited, Casey suggests what I call a subliminal phenomenology, that, as discussed below, permutes phenomenology’s method and topic. What I offer here is my own synthesis of things learnt from Casey, through sketches that gradually lay out the phenomenological and methodological stakes, and then work into the nexus of things, places and periphenomena to build my case. My synthesis stems in particular from study of Casey’s place work; chapters 3 and 4 in WG, as distinguishing the glance and the gaze and correlative differences in the determinacy of their object (see esp. 139-147); and the discussion of the “logic of the lesser” in WG’s concluding thoughts but also in draft chapters of the forthcoming WE .*

Before I begin, two quick clarifications. First, when I talk about the non-givenness of place, I do not mean that place is not given at all. Far from it, place is most evidently given—but it is given as place precisely by not being fully given as to its determinacy. Place thus contrasts with space, which is precisely and in principle constituted as a fully determinate network of locations already capable of locating things in advance. To give an analogy, we readily grasp the mistake in speaking of time as if it is, in the sense of being a thing that could already be fully given. Time, or better, durée, is precisely in the making, time is never fully now. Similarly, Casey shows that place is never fully here. Place is what grants there being a determinate here or there, but place ... does so in being given on the go, in inherently leading itself out in what I call procession. Place thus manifests a determinate here precisely in being “less than” fully here— something that Casey teaches us, particularly in his “logic of the lesser.” Second, because points about non-givenness are inherently difficult, yet a bit more familiar to us as they erupt in durée, I often work with the above analogy between durée and place. But this is not meant to give durée either parity with or priority over place. Casey is displacing temporality from its privileged position in traditional philosophy by showing us the priority of place. (Indeed, without place we could not notice movement or time.) Nonetheless, the analogy helps.

1) Getting Back With the Things Themselves—In Place.

Phenomenology famously calls on philosophy to go back to the things themselves. Yet Husserl’s own effort to do so eventually reveals things as at once exceeding us yet being less than we took them to be.

Consider perceiving something quite mundane, this lemon sitting on the counter. It looks to be given right over there. But, as Merleau-Ponty would put it, to perceive a lemon is to attend upon a thing present only in inexhaustibly turning up new aspects. A lemon shows up as truly being a lemon only insofar as its showings could possibly reveal, say, a fake, foam lemon; it is there only in the temporal incompleteness of ongoingly showing up as not otherwise than a lemon. Or consider Hollis Frampton’s film Lemon, in which a lemon shows up in slowly rotating in and out of an eclipsing shadow that its surface casts over itself when lit. Lemon helps us notice a place-based (vs. temporal) incompletion of things, namely how the very skin through which things show up inherently obscures or edges out their showing up all at once in place. A thing’s givenness as determinately this or that thus rests on: what is otherwise (its turning up as not fake, etc., in temporality); and otherwhere (its turning up through other aspects now eclipsed, in place). Thus Husserl’s point that by its very nature “[e]xternal perception is a constant pretension to accomplish something that … it is not in a position to accomplish.” Perception claims to get things in the flesh, to grasp their pith and marrow. Yet in perception the delimited, determinate givenness of objects arises only out of what, as otherwise and otherwhere, is not fully delimited or determinate.

This is one of phenomenology’s great discoveries. Even greater is phenomenology’s insight that this is not a defect in things but a transcendental, that is, inherently unsurpassable, condition of their appearance. This upends Descartes’s argument that since appearance is inherently and unendingly incomplete, the real identity of something such as a candle could only be given in an idea, which alone can fully comprehend a thing’s determinacy once and for all. It also marks a turning point in a certain history of philosophy, from a claim that what is truly real must rest in something more than what is now given (e.g., in Platonist or Cartesian ideas that exceed appearances), to the discovery that what gives our sense of reality is something less than and in what now appears given.

Indeed, phenomenology radically reconfigures classic philosophical problems of appearance and reality. For the Cartesian, the real conditions of something cannot appear, since appearance cannot bear the full blown determinacy and certainty that Cartesian truth demands. The phenomenologist, on the contrary, has the radically empirical project of finding the real conditions of things in appearance, and finds that these conditions do appear. But these conditions appear only by being something peculiarly less than the full determinacy or certainty that philosophy had previously sought. The paradoxical and difficult point here is that the condition of appearance is not a given thing, substance, essence, idea, etc, but a kind of non-givenness given right within the given. In phenomenology, this non-givenness classically turns out to be temporality. But Casey shows us how the determinate appearance of things turns on place as a generative non-givenness. If Bergson’s first move is to rise above the turn of experience, to get out of the lock-step of clock time and into the durée of things, Casey’s first move is to get back into the place in which we first encounter things. And for Casey this means getting out of our lock on things as being determinately all over there, a point we’ll come back to and that comes to the fore for Casey in periphenomena. Altogether, Casey’s way of getting back with the things in place has ontological and methodological consequences, since it subverts the givenness of things, by leading into what I called the subliminal dimension. . . .”
 
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Reading David Morris, above, on Edward S. Casey's insights inspires the desire to read
Casey himself. Here is the first page of links brought up in a search for Casey's work at philpapers.org. The link to the entirety of the search results follows at the bottom.

Edward S. Casey, Remembering: A Phenomenological ... - PhilPapers
Edward S. Casey provides a thorough description of the varieties of human
memory, including recognizing and reminding, reminiscing and commemorating,
...

Edward S. Casey, Remembering: A Phenomenological Study - PhilPapers - 60k - Cached - Similar Pages

 
A post I offered today in a 2009 thread concerning the concept of 'parallel universes' [referring to a current thread concerning the concept of 'multiple interacting universes] is relevant to our thread concerning 'consciousness and the paranormal', so I'm linking it here:

parallel universes
 
A post I offered today in a 2009 thread concerning the concept of 'parallel universes' [referring to a current thread concerning the concept of 'multiple interacting universes] is relevant to our thread concerning 'consciousness and the paranormal', so I'm linking it here:

parallel universes

Photonic irradiation by mass.

As the atmosphere records both sound and image and transmits information, the amount of photonic interaction recording our lives, is also destroying our lives.

This is due to the fact that Nature has its own interactions and so does the stone of Earth.

As information is recorded in its own status, it allowed the human mind to receive information artificial to the conditions of natural imagery and sound....along with the unnatural condition of being irradiated and cell changes.

The conscious aware status of being changed happens as an informed status, which is why many victims worldwide have been writing to the public forums to demonstrate the interaction is occurring, along with the cell attacks and artificial conversions caused.

The human mind, in a condition of being artificially altered, gains perception of unrealistic imagery and information that is not natural, and hence we know that we are being attacked as a life form, that Nature is being attacked and that the condition of the cell attack demonstrates a condition for unnatural conversion.

As the science and status of the science states conversion is the use of wavelengths of nuclear sounds to allow a natural nuclear fused product, supported by the atmosphere to remain fused.....it is the reason why such statements as parallel universes was given to the human mind as a thought function, whereas it demonstrates that it is an artificial reasoning.

When you realize that the brotherhood of occultists, the human reasoners regarding consciousness, spirit and communications decide to abuse us, then the evidence speaks for itself, as humanity is aware.

This brotherhood considers that their lifestyle is worth losing the life of spirit....the life we always considered was kept safe by holy conditions....the holiness of the stone of Earth, the holiness of the atmosphere and the holiness of Nature. And yet before us we now see and witness its attacks and destruction.

This mind state considered the information of uranium to gain nuclear fuel, and using conscious awareness in the condition of being atmospherically informed by ancient fall out recording/interactions in the atmosphere and photonic recordings of matter/atmosphere changes decided to do science by receiving this awareness. The science of spiritual awareness stated that it was not safe to do conversions due to past atmospheric/stone destruction, and the information whilst naturally perused by the male mind, notated it was dangerous and yet wanted by condition of lifestyle to continue and gain the powers for positions of trade and power mongering for their self.

He stated to us all that our spiritual life and consciousness was safe, by the building structure of the power plants.....yet the Nature of the stone is not inside the building and it exists naturally, being unnaturally converted in Nature, whilst he uses his building to state his all knowing statement....which is fake/artificial as a personal consideration.

His consciousness has always been wrong, and his own spiritual awareness lived as a choice has always fought his considerations of the human spirit and also its destruction...by acts of occultist practices as being considerable and reasonable, just because he says so.

So human kind state to our occultist brother studying our spiritual mind and consciousness, that we are aware that he is wrong, and it is about time that he stops proposing that our consciousness exists in some form of burnt light signal...as a pre existing form of awareness, when recording of the nature of the interaction exists as its own model....a recording.

Since when is a modem of recording considered to be intelligence or consciousness?

If you asked the artificial conscious reasoning how did it come to understand information regarding collisions.......it will advise that the information came from the photonic information recording the reactions in the nuclear power plants....and his new information is in fact destroyed information, not past information at all.

His own artificial reasoning is given to his own artificial conscious state that he has inherited, due to using his personal conscious awareness as a natural spiritual life and considering information that did not belong to his natural life, spirit or his life continuance.

This is to inform his own person about science, science that exists as a pre stated interaction long before any natural life or cell condition existed.

This is why the natural life is being attacked as a status of conscious awareness.

Our brother's artificial reasoning of using his consciousness was gained by the artificial matter that he previously converted....the nuclear dust of Earth that had previously existed in a higher form of crystal matter. This matter was unnaturally converted into the product of an artificial fusion, which is why it produces artificial state.

The stone of Earth supporting our natural evolution allows the human mind to be aware of this status, for it held its origin form.

As the building exists at the very same moment that the space body exists, the suns, the planets, earth, the atmosphere, nature and his own life, he somehow uses all of this separate information and informs his own awareness that it is separate, when it is whole, supporting a whole condition......life.

He uses his own conscious considerations inaccurately because he is in an artificial condition of a larger amount of photonic atmospheric recordings feed back. This is only due to the fact that his own mind reasoned science and then his own mind was irradiated as a return of this science, unnatural to his natural life and consciousness.

His information about the nuclear state relates by his considerations to dimen SION, because his ancient wisdom of conver SION relates to all conditions of sciences that he called SION.....why his personal life as a spiritual review was attacked and attacked by the evil manifested artificial constants he held, that he named himself as evil spirit.

He proposes as he lives his life using the machines, controlling the machines converting the matter, that the matter is being converted in a dimension that is not harming his natural life, for it is happening in a dimension or a parallel state......yet it is happening right now as he lives, which is why his natural life and consciousness is being attacked.

This is how unreasonable his consciousness exists as in a consideration of his evil minded nature, which should be considered by us all as he tries to consider our spiritual conscious Nature.
 
Bringing Phenomenology Down to Earth: Passivity, Development,
and Merleau-Ponty’s Transformation of Philosophy

David Morris, Department of Philosophy, Concordia University

Submitted version. Forthcoming in Chiasmi International: Trilingual Studies Concerning Merleau-Ponty’s Thought 16.


Abstract: I suggest how Merleau-Pontian sense hinges on an ontology in which passivity and what I call “development” are fundamental. This means, though, that the possibility of philosophy cannot be guaranteed in advance: philosophy is a joint operation of philosophers and being, and is radically contingent on a pre-philosophical field. Merleau-Ponty thus transforms philosophy, revealing a philosophy of tomorrow: a new way of doing philosophy that, because it is grounded in pre-reflective contingency, has to wait to describe its beginnings, and so has to keep studying its beginnings tomorrow. This does not destroy Husserl’s project of a transcendental philosophy, it just accepts that the transcendental conditions of philosophy cannot be constituted or even revealed via wholly active or
autonomous reflection. Merleau-Ponty thus brings phenomenology down to earth by expanding it into a phenomenology of life and earth that describes the concrete beginnings of phenomena and phenomenology.

“The perceived world is the always presupposed foundation of all rationality, all value
and all existence. This sort of thesis does not destroy either rationality or the absolute. It

only seeks to bring them down to earth.” — “The Primacy of Perception and Its Philosophical Consequences”1

“We cannot have truth without risks. If we begin our search for truth with an eye for
conclusions, there is no more philosophy. The philosopher does not seek shortcuts; he

goes all the way.” — “Bergson in the Making”2


"From the Structure of Behaviour onward, sense—meaning as engendered within being,
and one of Merleau-Ponty’s greatest discoveries3—is key to Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy.
Indeed, for Merleau-Ponty, sense is the transcendental condition of philosophy. In this
paper I suggest how sense hinges on an ontology in which passivity and what I call
'development' are fundamental. This means, though, that the possibility of philosophy
cannot be guaranteed in advance: philosophy is a joint operation of philosophers and
being, and is radically contingent on a pre-philosophical field that enables philosophy in
the first place. Merleau-Ponty thus transforms philosophy, revealing a philosophy of
tomorrow: a new way of doing philosophy that, because it is grounded in pre-reflective
contingency, has to wait to describe its beginnings, and so has to keep studying its
beginnings tomorrow. This does not destroy Husserl’s project of a transcendental
philosophy grounded in unsurpassable conditions that are autonomous from and
irreducible to the terms of any discipline prior to philosophy (e.g., the natural sciences). It
just accepts that these conditions cannot be constituted or even revealed via wholly active
or autonomous reflection. Merleau-Ponty thus brings phenomenology down to earth:
phenomenology must expand into a phenomenology of life and earth that describes the
concrete beginnings of phenomena and phenomenology.

I first contextualize my overall point by showing how it springs from Merleau-Ponty’s continual reflection on philosophical beginnings. I then study sense, to show how the phenomenon of sense entails my points about ontology, passivity and development. Finally I suggest how this transforms philosophy. My aim is programmatic: there is not enough room for an exhaustive textual exposition, so, for this issue on “Merleau-Ponty Tomorrow,” I synthesize themes of his philosophy to offer something new.

1) The Radical Contingency of Philosophical Beginnings

Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy, as with other enduring philosophical work, is notable not just for its results, but for its continual engagement with the question of what philosophy is in the first place. This question is explicit in many of Merleau-Ponty’s works, from his Éloge de la philosophie, to “The Philosopher and His Shadow,” to Husserl at the Limits of Phenomenology. But the question also fundamentally informs his major works, The
Structure of Behaviour (SB, 1942), Phenomenology of Perception (PhP, 1945), and The Visible and the Invisible (VI, 1964), which first of all seek to grasp how we, as reflecting philosophers, relate to the things that we perceive, cognize and conceptualize. For Merleau-Ponty this entails re-envisioning philosophy itself as beginning from within its concrete place amidst things, versus leaping to or springing from a beginning in a readymade “view from above.” Hence his ongoing quest for radically empirical methods that embed philosophical beginnings in being itself: Structure’s critique of behaviour; Phenomenology’s radical reflection; hyper-reflection in The Visible and the Invisible.

This radically empirical commitment to finding both questions and answers beginning within being—to the primacy of perception and “perceptual faith”—entails sense. If there were no meaning, if nothing mattered, then there would be no philosophy, there would be nothing definite to ask questions about—there would not even be the possibility of Cartesian doubt. But if this meaning did not arise within being itself, then our questions and answers could be split from being—there might only be Cartesian doubt. (For Merleau-Ponty, such a self-contained doubt, which would confront being from the outside, is absurd and self-contradictory: since it admits no outside standard, it has no real thing to doubt and admits no real answer.) This tension between “not even doubt” and “only doubt,” between being not mattering, and doubt not really mattering, is perhaps the ultimate matrix of all of Merleau-Ponty’s other dialectical moves (between empiricism and intellectualism, passivity and activity, and so on).

The transcendental condition of philosophy, then, is sense: being itself mattering in determinate ways that can both motivate and answer our philosophical questions. For philosophy, then, being has to matter—but if being only mattered according to what we already think about it, it would not matter in a way that enabled real doubt and its real resolution. Philosophy is radically contingent on being and nature (visible being) already
mattering their own way. This radical contingency is the ultimate topic and topos of philosophy. If we follow Merleau-Ponty all the way to the beginnings of philosophy, we find there is no shortcut even to that beginning. (Descartes’s fundamental error is seeking such a shortcut.) Each effort of beginning philosophy reveals philosophy as responsible to and risking a kind of irreducible contingency. This is why phenomenology must
expand into a phenomenology of life, earth and a phenomenology of phenomenology, an empirical study of how phenomenology comes to be. As Merleau-Ponty puts it,

“Precisely in order to accomplish its will for radicalism, [philosophy] would have to take as its theme the umbilical bond that binds it always to Being, the inalienable horizon with which it is already and henceforth circumvented, the primary initiation which it tries in vain to go back on.” (VI 144)4

Grasping why this is so requires further study of sense as the transcendental condition of philosophy, starting with a brief review and illustration of sense.


2) Sense as Meaning Immanent in Being . . .


http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/980254/1/Bringing%20Phenomenology%20Down%20to%20Earth%20for%20Chiasmi%20Submission%20for%20spectrum.pdf




 
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Another major figure in the ongoing development of phenomenology is Renaud Barbaras. His two books available in English are The Being of the Phenomenon and Desire and Distance (descriptions and comments available at amazon). His papers are linked at philpapers.org. I want to call attention to this one and its abstract:

Life, Movement, and Desire, Research in Phenomenology 38 (1):3-17 (2008)

Abstract

In French, the verb "to live" designates both being alive and the experience of something. This ambiguity has a philosophical meaning. The task of a phenomenology of life is to describe an originary sense of living from which the very distinction between life in the intransitive sense and life in the transitive, or intentional, sense proceeds. Hans Jonas is one of those rare authors who has tried to give an account of the specificity of life instead of reducing life to categories that are foreign to it. However, the concept of metabolism, by which Jonas characterizes vital activity, attests to a presupposition as to life: life is conceived as self-preservation, that is, as negation of death, in such a way that life is, in the end, not thought on the basis of itself. The aim of this article is to show that life as such must be understood as movement in a radicalized sense, in which the living being is no more the subject than the product. All living beings are in effect characterized by a movement, which nothing can cause to cease, a movement that largely exceeds what is required by the satisfaction of needs and that, because of this, bears witness to an essential incompleteness. This incompleteness reveals that life is originarily bound to a world. Because the world to which the living being relates is essentially non-totalizable and unpresentable, living movement can not essentially complete itself. Thus, in the final analysis, life must be defined as desire, and in virtue of this view, life does not tend toward self-preservation, as we have almost always thought, but toward the manifestation of the world.

http://philpapers.org/rec/BARLMA

Unfortunately I've found no online copy of the paper. For anyone besides me who is interested in reading this paper, here is the information needed to acquire an offprint through Interlibrary Loan:

Author: Renaud Barbaras, Life, Movement, and Desire
Source: Research in Phenomenology, Volume 38, Issue 1, pages 3 – 17 Publication Year : 2008
DOI: 10.1163/156916408X258924
ISSN: 0085-5553 E-ISSN: 1569-1640
 
If you want to review the true condition of consciousness/spiritual realization about concepts, is to review historical spiritual life, as the only owner of life on Planet Earth.

Occultism/conversion/shamanism all belong to choices and then applications and conditions applied to the natural life by making choices. These choices were taken by a consideration of "I Want". The ancient spiritual advice states I WANT destroyed our life, for it took the natural support of life, natural fusion and altered the natural fusion to allow our brains/cells/mind to alter their natural condition by the cause of fall out...atmospheric loss and irradiation.

We therefore caused our lived experience to change as a mind condition.

First of all you should consider the fact that each of us is born/created by a sexual act of our parents. Our cells and brain/mind form in the condition of how the atmosphere interacts with our forming cells. Once we were natural, now our brain/mind/cell is mutated......and only some of us are lucky enough to be reasonably healthy.

As the photon interacts with the cell body in a natural condition, the unnatural and artificial condition caused by science taking the atmosphere away from its natural atmosphere to earth stone fusion interaction, our minds got changed.

The single minded spiritual presence then became a single minded spiritual presence who could "hear" and "gained" the feedback of the larger body of natural recordings. Hence the aspect of the spiritual or conscious nature and mind changed through the alteration of the atmospheric condition.

When a nasty human being states to the same body/mind condition that they own about the inherited mental condition as if they themselves are somehow greater in presence, can only relate to the interactive spiritual aware state itself......of course your healthy presence is in a healthier status, and yet instead of being grateful for your own life/mind, you only ridicule the harmed....who held no choice in the sexual act of their parents, or the personal physical gain of their nature.

When a human states to this mind condition "oh you can hear voices....you nutter", then hope that your own family in the future does not also become "those nutters".

The atmosphere does record, does multiply the feedback of the natural recordings, is affected as a natural condition of single ownership and the irradiation of the human cell/mind gives an inherited life to the brain/mind where it can actually HEAR VOICES, without the human control, or want of the condition.

How about having some compassion for your fellow man and woman instead of attacking a condition that they did not deserve to have.

Therefore the rest of humanity living a higher healthier life condition also began to be mind/brain changed in the condition of extra irradiation and also began to HEAR VOICES, yet most of these humans were not considered nutters until the occultists, who understand the conditions of the phenomena and paranormal began to realize that a greater part of humanity were now being affected by mind/brain chemical fake/artificial wavelengths....and should stop being so nasty, for very soon the same condition could be unnaturally inherited by the healthy mind, without it being a inherited life circumstance.

The review therefore states to those who make statements of consciousness as if it belongs to an agenda, it certainly does not. Your own minds, hearing the greater communication of many voices causes your natural thinking ability to consider information that the single minded owner of life never previously thought, considered or even bothered considering.
 
Bringing Phenomenology Down to Earth: Passivity, Development,
and Merleau-Ponty’s Transformation of Philosophy

David Morris, Department of Philosophy, Concordia University

Submitted version. Forthcoming in Chiasmi International: Trilingual Studies Concerning Merleau-Ponty’s Thought 16.


Abstract: I suggest how Merleau-Pontian sense hinges on an ontology in which passivity and what I call “development” are fundamental. This means, though, that the possibility of philosophy cannot be guaranteed in advance: philosophy is a joint operation of philosophers and being, and is radically contingent on a pre-philosophical field. Merleau-Ponty thus transforms philosophy, revealing a philosophy of tomorrow: a new way of doing philosophy that, because it is grounded in pre-reflective contingency, has to wait to describe its beginnings, and so has to keep studying its beginnings tomorrow. This does not destroy Husserl’s project of a transcendental philosophy, it just accepts that the transcendental conditions of philosophy cannot be constituted or even revealed via wholly active or
autonomous reflection. Merleau-Ponty thus brings phenomenology down to earth by expanding it into a phenomenology of life and earth that describes the concrete beginnings of phenomena and phenomenology.

“The perceived world is the always presupposed foundation of all rationality, all value
and all existence. This sort of thesis does not destroy either rationality or the absolute. It

only seeks to bring them down to earth.” — “The Primacy of Perception and Its Philosophical Consequences”1

“We cannot have truth without risks. If we begin our search for truth with an eye for
conclusions, there is no more philosophy. The philosopher does not seek shortcuts; he

goes all the way.” — “Bergson in the Making”2


"From the Structure of Behaviour onward, sense—meaning as engendered within being,
and one of Merleau-Ponty’s greatest discoveries3—is key to Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy.
Indeed, for Merleau-Ponty, sense is the transcendental condition of philosophy. In this
paper I suggest how sense hinges on an ontology in which passivity and what I call
'development' are fundamental. This means, though, that the possibility of philosophy
cannot be guaranteed in advance: philosophy is a joint operation of philosophers and
being, and is radically contingent on a pre-philosophical field that enables philosophy in
the first place. Merleau-Ponty thus transforms philosophy, revealing a philosophy of
tomorrow: a new way of doing philosophy that, because it is grounded in pre-reflective
contingency, has to wait to describe its beginnings, and so has to keep studying its
beginnings tomorrow. This does not destroy Husserl’s project of a transcendental
philosophy grounded in unsurpassable conditions that are autonomous from and
irreducible to the terms of any discipline prior to philosophy (e.g., the natural sciences). It
just accepts that these conditions cannot be constituted or even revealed via wholly active
or autonomous reflection. Merleau-Ponty thus brings phenomenology down to earth:
phenomenology must expand into a phenomenology of life and earth that describes the
concrete beginnings of phenomena and phenomenology.

I first contextualize my overall point by showing how it springs from Merleau-Ponty’s continual reflection on philosophical beginnings. I then study sense, to show how the phenomenon of sense entails my points about ontology, passivity and development. Finally I suggest how this transforms philosophy. My aim is programmatic: there is not enough room for an exhaustive textual exposition, so, for this issue on “Merleau-Ponty Tomorrow,” I synthesize themes of his philosophy to offer something new.

1) The Radical Contingency of Philosophical Beginnings

Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy, as with other enduring philosophical work, is notable not just for its results, but for its continual engagement with the question of what philosophy is in the first place. This question is explicit in many of Merleau-Ponty’s works, from his Éloge de la philosophie, to “The Philosopher and His Shadow,” to Husserl at the Limits of Phenomenology. But the question also fundamentally informs his major works, The
Structure of Behaviour (SB, 1942), Phenomenology of Perception (PhP, 1945), and The Visible and the Invisible (VI, 1964), which first of all seek to grasp how we, as reflecting philosophers, relate to the things that we perceive, cognize and conceptualize. For Merleau-Ponty this entails re-envisioning philosophy itself as beginning from within its concrete place amidst things, versus leaping to or springing from a beginning in a readymade “view from above.” Hence his ongoing quest for radically empirical methods that embed philosophical beginnings in being itself: Structure’s critique of behaviour; Phenomenology’s radical reflection; hyper-reflection in The Visible and the Invisible.

This radically empirical commitment to finding both questions and answers beginning within being—to the primacy of perception and “perceptual faith”—entails sense. If there were no meaning, if nothing mattered, then there would be no philosophy, there would be nothing definite to ask questions about—there would not even be the possibility of Cartesian doubt. But if this meaning did not arise within being itself, then our questions and answers could be split from being—there might only be Cartesian doubt. (For Merleau-Ponty, such a self-contained doubt, which would confront being from the outside, is absurd and self-contradictory: since it admits no outside standard, it has no real thing to doubt and admits no real answer.) This tension between “not even doubt” and “only doubt,” between being not mattering, and doubt not really mattering, is perhaps the ultimate matrix of all of Merleau-Ponty’s other dialectical moves (between empiricism and intellectualism, passivity and activity, and so on).

The transcendental condition of philosophy, then, is sense: being itself mattering in determinate ways that can both motivate and answer our philosophical questions. For philosophy, then, being has to matter—but if being only mattered according to what we already think about it, it would not matter in a way that enabled real doubt and its real resolution. Philosophy is radically contingent on being and nature (visible being) already
mattering their own way. This radical contingency is the ultimate topic and topos of philosophy. If we follow Merleau-Ponty all the way to the beginnings of philosophy, we find there is no shortcut even to that beginning. (Descartes’s fundamental error is seeking such a shortcut.) Each effort of beginning philosophy reveals philosophy as responsible to and risking a kind of irreducible contingency. This is why phenomenology must
expand into a phenomenology of life, earth and a phenomenology of phenomenology, an empirical study of how phenomenology comes to be. As Merleau-Ponty puts it,

“Precisely in order to accomplish its will for radicalism, [philosophy] would have to take as its theme the umbilical bond that binds it always to Being, the inalienable horizon with which it is already and henceforth circumvented, the primary initiation which it tries in vain to go back on.” (VI 144)4

Grasping why this is so requires further study of sense as the transcendental condition of philosophy, starting with a brief review and illustration of sense.


2) Sense as Meaning Immanent in Being . . .


http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/980254/1/Bringing%20Phenomenology%20Down%20to%20Earth%20for%20Chiasmi%20Submission%20for%20spectrum.pdf




If you study philosophy it also contends with the self realization that you do so for a purpose, and every human should ask themselves what that purpose meant as a philosophy review in relationship to the conditions of living a life.

The purpose of philosophy was to use the presence of self (a human male) and then impose values upon all of his queries and reviews, whilst maintaining a personal status that he gave his own presence....a creator/inventor. For his motivation to philosophize was to invent.

After his inventions, which philosophy espouses was the Philosophy of the stone, converting the consideration of values of SION, such as conversion, transmission etc., and gaining the attack of his own mind/cell state, he then used philosophical evaluation for his consideration of assisting his families mental well being, after he realized that he had harmed the natural psyche or conscious condition of humanity.

So he pondered information as a status so that he could then apply some form of medical advice to assist his family that he harmed.

We have now come to a time in our evolution, where this information is now being bantered in the community by occultists who regard consciousness as a concept of God and Christ, and how they can personally own the realization of these concepts as a mind/physical presence. Philosophy as a human realization gave detail by mind consideration to great powers, and using those powers, which became the philosophy of modern day sciences. This is why they began to research the philosophy of the consciousness and mind, and then ask the community to interact with their questioning from all forms of differing spiritually aware owned life experiences.

We therefore own a condition of our own choice as to how we use feed back communal awareness as a concept of the awareness. The awareness that the philosophy of consciousness has always known is the ability to "hear voice", which no human in modern times can quibble about, for the ancient philosophical awareness was written in this context of "hearing voices" as a spiritual concept.

As the atmospheric body is known by self evidence to "record and transmit" both voice and personal imagery and also sound as a communication interaction, and the ancient philosophical review states that conscious awareness belongs to the spirit condition, then is it any wonder that the condition of the atmosphere as an ancient term/reference was called a "spirit", denoting "ethereal presence" by the gaseous body it represented.

Due to the fact that all Nature interacts with its own photon interaction, then all bodies that exist in Nature get recorded as both sound and image all day long.

This condition would allow the human mind to be given its first interactive feedback realization as a natural being, conscious only of their natural spiritual state, to a new state of awareness....the conditions of the atmospheric presence as another state besides their own personal physical ownership as a spirit condition, not a physical condition.

If any of us question the paranormal belonging to the condition of conscious awareness, then the condition, natural to life is not a consideration of evil, until the concept of evil is introduced.

Hence the paranormal was introduced due to the awareness of the photon interaction and when applied as a scientific model of stone occultism, the increase of the photon and fallout, altered the condition of the atmospheric recordings and its feedback......not only altering the chemical nature of the human mind/cell and conscious awareness, but also altering the Nature and how it also interacts as human mind awareness feedback.

When we consider ancient Shamanistic practice, their personal beliefs considered that their spirits were the spirits of animals, yet if you alter the atmospheric feedback, of course the feedback would include communication of the human mind with animals as an atmospheric transmitted status, with nature and then also with the condition of imagery belonging to the nuclear conversions that ancient sciences once used. This is due to the fact that conversion was a human introduced concept to life, and by all of its evidences demonstrates that it affects the conditions of the atmosphere and how the atmosphere interacts with the natural human mind/awareness and also cell health.

The same modern day belief of animal life connected by information as a physical state was also gained by the human male scientists who studied consciousness, evolution. In the belief that life was connected, yet the connection only proves to be a mind condition, and not a physical condition.

As an animal can only sexually procreate their species, they live and die as an animal. If they stopped procreating we would have no species to communicate to our minds with via the atmospheric aware status due to the scientific introduced atmospheric conditions affecting our natural consciousness and mind.

The same condition belongs to the human species. If we all decided to stop procreation, we would age and die and no human would be considering what consciousness actually is, as a consideration of wanting to own what it once previously owned. If you consider the occultist considerations in modern review it is to own the state of perfection of spirit/self....yet not one life on earth is lived or experienced in this state for we are all mutated.

When we review why we consider value, first of all is to consider the self, as a state of awareness. Why do you value, if not for a self reason, and then we advised our own person was the self reason for spiritual purposes as a community of "selves" or for occult purposes as the consideration of the destruction of the community of "selves"?

The occultist consideration is that he wants to own the power of the stars, and has tried to convince our minds that the stars are the reason that we think....yet the presence of our organic person experiencing the life is why we think. When we ask an occultist to consider our consciousness and its health, he never has, for he considers the loss of our consciousness and spiritual presence is the reason why he can control us and manipulate us. Hence he wrote an occultist document that inferred that our life and consciousness came from the stars.

Yet if you ask his person why did you want to come from the stars....his answer would be because he wants to own the power of the stars.

Yet the star information states as a conscious awareness that the creation of the star happened when no organic life existed, or organic Nature/atmospheric body...and certainly no machine existed when a star was first formed.

His mind considers information of all other presences and he then states to us all that consciousness is the presence of all living things and pre-existing powers.....yet our consciousness only exists in the presence of our organic life.

So we all should ask him, why does he want to destroy our consciousness and life on Earth by living a condition where his own mind awareness is not spiritual and instead is an occultist ideal? Only Planet Earth exists in the space body where stars are created, and this body is a stone body without any other life present.

His past occultist mind consideration relative to conscious awareness tried to impose the condition of the stone as a machine, as the pyramids and temples depict, and he already learnt about spiritual awareness, human consciousness and occultist consideration...... as if it replicated the Earth stone as a condition of existing in space.....for life and the human mind was irradiated, gained an act of destruction through transformation and we converted into a lower conscious awareness.

Therefore when we study human evolution and conscious awareness, we demonstrate that our ability to once communicate in different symbolic mind references and also languages was lost, and we had to develop new consciousness and new languages.....having gained an inability to reference old conscious awareness as a status. This was only due to the acts of conscious awareness and then the applications to alter the awareness by applying nuclear conversions in a naturally evolved atmosphere.

Developing consciousness therefore demonstrates to us all that it relies on the atmospheric condition of mass - ethereal spirit to have conscious awareness as a self review.
 
This next paper is interesting for those who wish to understand the history of ideas regarding the brain/mind relationship antecedent to contemporary interpretations of psychophysical approaches to consciousness, first expressed by James and Fechner:

http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2011.00068/full

Extracts

". . . What James recognized, more than anything, was the powerful force of ideation, both socially and epistemologically. Moreover, when it came to the study of human consciousness, he underscored the impossibility of overcoming first-person narration. No matter how carefully one attempts to purge figurative speech and metaphor from scientific discourse, a human agent (with all its attendant messiness and subjectivity) is at the center of it. Furthermore, the translation and interpretation of observed or experienced facts into scientifically meaningful “events” – particularly in the case of the mind sciences – necessarily reduces complex inner states to static principles and formulae that describe physiological functions, while providing little account of how or why complex mental states come into being (James, 1981). The problem for James, as it was for Fechner, in his philosophy and in his psychophysical formula, was how to connect the subjective experience of inner psychological states with the so-called “external” facts of perception and sensory experience. This is where an understanding of James’s interest in physics allows us to pick up the lost thread of the more technical and scientific aspects of his philosophical thought . . . .

. . . While James turned to physics for insights regarding the “force” of the human mind, he turned to philosophy for explanations. The kinds of questions James pursued in his physiological study of the brain led him to philosophy and metaphysics for answers. James’s multidisciplinary approach to the study of mind combined his knowledge of natural history, psychology of religious experience and abnormal mental states to affirm a non-reductive materialism, a “softer” positivism, similar to that of Fechner. Radical empiricism, furthermore, marked James’s attempt to refute the positivism of his skeptical peers with a philosophical framework that would justify the scientific investigation of dissociative trance, abnormal and ordinary subjective mental states, associated with volition. James’s radical empiricism was ahead of its time in suggesting that what we think of as “mind” is a consequence of many interpenetrating systems, a result of the brain’s interactions with the environment, but not reduced to brain physiology or external stimuli alone. Though James had the philosophical framework in place, he lacked the technical scientific background to make it useful to the scientific study of consciousness. Therefore he turned to Fechner for the means of substantiating his theory of transmission and co-consciousness. . . .

". . . While James’s use of terms culled from physics was more poetical than technical, his ideas anticipate more recent understandings on the part of contemporary neuroscientists that mind is an emergent property of the nervous system’s engagement with its environment. James would have agreed with the recent consensus that identifying the neuronal correlates to consciousness alone will not address the “hard problems” concerning the how and why of subjective experience. The mind theorists whose ideas most resonate with those of James – from the Australian philosopher David Chalmers, to science historian and Buddhist practitioner B. Alan Wallace, phenomenologist Evan Thompson, and biomedical engineer Paul Nuñez – each postulate an interdependency of consciousness on the structure of reality itself. They approach the hard problem of consciousness by focusing on the “explanatory gap” between consciousness and the natural world. To understand the manifold attributes of consciousness, in relation to, but not reducible to neuronal networks, they argue, requires taking a closer look at the structure of reality. In recognition that consciousness and reality are co-constitutive, researchers are turning to dynamic systems, or complexity, theory to synthesize the efforts of neurobiology, phenomenology, and psychology in order to arrive at a better understanding of consciousness as a constituent component of reality itself. . . ."

". . . In developing his “transmission theory,” James had refined Myers’s theory of the Subliminal Self by being the first to explicitly link “notions of transmission and filtering with the brain” (through the metaphor of the “prism” through which light passes), only to come out on “the other side filtered, reduced, focused, redirected, or otherwise altered in some systematic fashion” (Kelly et al., 2007, p. 606). On the face of it, James’s “transmission theory” with its metaphors of a prismatic dome and pipe organ may sound like outlandish metaphysical claptrap, but, in fact, these metaphors suggest models that resemble more recent conceptions of mind–brain dynamics. James’s model of the brain as a “filter,” or, in contemporary terms, a “nested hierarchy” (Nuñez, 2010, p. 11), for processing information from the environment posits the mind and environment as co-dynamic, mutually constitutive entities. In a different context, James would describe this “permissive” or “transmissive” function of the brain as a kind of “Marconi station” (James, 1986, p. 359). Making no reference to James’s transmission theory, biomedical engineer Paul Nuñez then goes on to posit “a highly speculative” account of consciousness that is nonetheless dramatically similar to that of James when he describes how “whole brains or special parts of brains might behave like antenna systems sensitive to an unknown physical field or other entity that, for want of a better name, may be called Mind” (Nuñez, 2010, p. 274). In this way, James’s account of the brain’s “transmissive” properties resembles more contemporary accounts assigning the mind–brain specific temporal–spatial dimensions and a hierarchical structure. . . ."

". . . My present field of consciousness is a centre surrounded by a fringe that shades insensibly into a subconscious more… The centre works in one way while the margins work in another, and presently overpower the centre and are central themselves. What we conceptually identify ourselves with and say we are thinking of at any time is the centre; but our full self is the whole field, with all those indefinitely radiating subconscious possibilities of increase that we can only feel without conceiving, and can hardly begin to analyze (1977, p. 130).

In writing this, James was thinking expressly of Fechner’s psychophysical threshold, now known as the Weber–Fechner law, postulating that “consciousness” is the threshold at which subjective perception and subjective sensation coincide. James was less interested in the mathematical formulation for this law than he was in the assigning of temporal–spatial movement to consciousness. These “movements,” as James would write in his introduction to the English translation of Fechner’s Little Book of Life and Death, “can be superimposed and compounded, the smaller on the greater, as wavelets upon waves. This is as true in the mental as in the physical sphere. Speaking psychologically, we may say that a general wave of consciousness rises out of a subconscious background, and that certain portions of it catch the emphasis, as wavelets catch the light… On the physical side we say that the brain-processes that corresponded to it altered permanently the future mode of action of the brain” (1904, p. xv). What James was arguing – drawing upon Fechner’s model of the threshold of consciousness as a sinusoidal wave – is richly suggestive of dynamical systems. James’s point of view similarly accords with that of phenomenologist Evan Thompson, who collaborated with the late Francisco Varela to write Mind in Life (2007). In this phenomenological account of neurophysiological processes, Thompson understands “dynamical systems” as “a collection of related entities or processes that stands out from a background as a single whole, as some observer sees and conceptualizes things” (Thompson, 2007, p. 39). The solar system is one such example, but James’s transmission theory offers the example of the social environment, in which one consciousness coexists among many others. In a very real sense, the compounding of consciousness suggests the co-penetration of individual consciousnesses within ever larger and interpenetrating systems.

This idea that consciousnesses themselves co-penetrate is made explicit in an even earlier passage, from the first lecture in A Pluralistic Universe. In distinguishing monism from his philosophical pluralism, James writes: “My thoughts animate and actuate this very body which you see and hear, and thereby influence your thoughts. The dynamic current somehow does get from me to you, however numerous the intermediary conductors may have to be. Distinctions may be insulators in logic as much as they like, but in life distinct things can and do commune together every moment” (James, 1977, pp. 115–116). The world of a Pluralistic Universe, is just such a dynamical system comprised of a world of interconnecting relations, of “complexity-in-unity” enveloped by a surrounding “earth-consciousness” (James, 1977, p. 73; James, 1909, 1910). And here we finally arrive at the panpsychic view James adopted later in life and attributed to Fechner. What exactly panpsychism means, particularly for James has been the source of much misunderstanding in James scholarship.

Just what is this “panpsychic view” and how does it correspond to contemporary neuroscientific debates about consciousness? James scholar David Lamberth distinguishes James’s “moderate” panpsychism from the “strong” or “idealistic” versions held by his contemporaries. The basic tenet of panpsychism is that nature is animate. More rigid versions are dualistic, positing an essential correspondence between the psyche and nature. The “pluralistic panpsychism” that James embraced allowed him to develop “a pluralistic metaphysics of pure experience and a correspondingly pluralistic notion of causality” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 250). This philosophical position of James’s strongly accords with the contemporary neuroscientific theory of “dynamic co-emergence,” held by Thompson and Varela, in which living and mental processes are understood as “unities or structured wholes rather than simply as multiplicities of events external to each other, bound together by efficient causal relations” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 67). In phenomenological terms, this means revising our understanding nature as “not pure exteriority,” but rather as possessing “its own interiority.” Thompson is careful to distinguish this perspective from “metaphysical idealism,” the argument for a “preexistent consciousness.” Instead, it implies a “transcendental orientation” by which we understand that “the world is never given to us as a brute fact detachable from our conceptual frameworks. Rather, it shows up in all the describable ways it does thanks to the structure of our subjectivity and our intentional activities” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 82). James would understand this in terms of an inherent intimacy of relations between the self and the world with which the self engages. Consciousness itself is “transcendent,” in Thompson’s terms, in part because, as he says, it “is always already presupposed as an invariant condition of possibility for the disclosure of any object[;] there is no way to step outside, as it were, of experiencing subjectivity, so as to effect a one-to-one mapping of it onto an external reality purged of any and all subjectivity” (Lamberth, 1997, p. 87). Consciousness seems defined then by some variable movement or change in time that is perceived differently in relation to one’s location in time and space, and that also depends upon one’s particular role and orientation toward the experiment, that is, whether one is experiencing mental phenomena as a subject in an experiment or as the witnessing and recording observer. In light of Thompson’s phenomenological orientation toward the mind–brain conundrum, it is this intersubjective dimension that becomes most salient to the future of contemporary mind–brain research.

James’s metaphors of “stream,” “halo,” and “penumbra” to describe what has been termed a “fringe” consciousness describe a structure for consciousness that is, in my words, a “distributed” one. To explain what I envision by the term “distributed,” I will use a familiar metaphor from the natural world. Imagine a tree in winter: a single trunk gives rise to smaller branches, forming the essential architecture of the tree; from these branches, smaller ones grow, giving rise to even smaller, finer branches as the tree extends upward and outward. Imagine, if you will, a whole forest of such trees, whose branches co-penetrate to a greater or lesser extent, depending on their proximity to one another, or upon other natural forces in the environment: a gust of wind, birds alighting, rain or snow falling on the branches. It would not be hard to imagine this “system” of co-penetrating branches in still other naturalistic forms: a flock of birds, a school of fish, a moving crowd, or bundles of neurons within a human brain, as each individual within the larger system imperceptibly shifts in relation to the subtle movements communicated at a subconscious level. These images are not hierarchical and they are not necessarily linear, for, at any point within the system a single movement, or a random complex of movements among disparate individual parts could produce something like the perception, to an observer, of cooperative “decision” within the system as a whole. But the observer is also part of the system, and we now arrive at a problem that links physics indelibly to consciousness as part of the “measurement problem” in quantum physics.

The observer’s volitional role of visually arresting an object in space in the act of perception is deeply problematized by the phenomenon known as the “collapse of [the] wave function” in quantum physics. As B. Alan Wallace explains, “quantum measurement entails the ‘collapse of a wave function,”’ in which measurement itself involves selecting one alternative from “a range of probabilities.” This selection thus forces a “reduction” in which “all the alternatives vanish.” This “reduction postulate” attempts to “describe what is actually observed in the measurements of quantum systems using classical methods” (Wallace, 2007, p. 81). Building on Michael Mensky’s “many-worlds interpretation,” Wallace argues for an abandonment of classical methods and a recognition that “Consciousness does not mechanically cause the wave function to collapse or influence physical particles. Rather, the observer’s brain and the observed system are synchronously entangled” (Wallace, 2007, p. 82). The measurement problem has brought increased attention to the role that the observer’s “cognitive frame of reference” plays in studies of consciousness, particularly in acquiring the first-person accounts necessary for an empirical study of subjectivity. As a Buddhist adept, Wallace maintains that scientific observers should integrate “contemplative methods of inquiry” into the study of mind; only by acquiring heightened powers of mental concentration, will scientists develop more reliable first-person accounts of subjectivity (Wallace, 2007, p. 105). Thompson, whose phenomenological approach to the mind–brain problem we have just seen, similarly argues for the need for observers to “suspend or refrain from judgment,” and “to develop more explicitly the pragmatics” of such practice “as a first-person method for investigating consciousness” (Thompson, 2007, p. 20). James’s concluding remarks in his Pluralistic Universe, anticipates the words of both Wallace and Thompson, when he urges his listeners to “discriminate ‘theoretic’ or scientific knowledge from the deeper ‘speculative’ knowledge aspired to by most philosophers, and concede that theoretic knowledge, which is knowledge about things, as distinguished from living contemplation or sympathetic acquaintance with them, touches only the outer surface of reality” (James, 2007, p. 111). This more philosophic attitude of receptivity, delineated by Thompson, is one that James pioneered in his radical empiricist philosophy and in his life-long willingness to attend to the less clear-cut aspects of individual psychological experience. . . ."

Note: these extracts are not sufficient to substitute for a reading of the full paper.


The human mind has also been caused to believe in the latest feed back unrealistic conscious review......the mind does not represent the physical state or consciousness, it is involved in an interactive condition.

The ancient concepts of God and Christ as the consciousness of humanity relate to the idea that consciousness was the Heavenly body or atmosphere, and the occultist or philosophical dispute related to the experience of the human witness in their considerations of consciousness and spirit.

The experience of spiritual consciousness also related to the physical or bodily experience of the conscious awareness, which did not simply involve "thinking".

The spirit aware consciousness knew about manifestation or the revisiting of spirit by deceased relative presence and also animals.

The spiritually aware know by not being the origin minds who considered occultism (who received a higher amount of radiated feedback/false conscious changed language gained by the recorded voice/image the atmosphere photon interaction caused).......that the atmosphere is reviewed by its interactive gases as a status of evolution. The occultist believes that our human organic spirit is a creation of the atmospheric presence. Yet if this condition were real, then the atmosphere would be 1 giant organic presence as the status for reviewing an evolution of a created body.

The argument about consciousness itself is where did it come from...and the occultist does not believe in origin light or androgyny, even though he gave the ideal or realized condition these stated values as a spiritual or mind consideration. As the occultist wants consciousness to be the atmosphere so that he can resource God, the atmosphere is only recorded feedback of changed sound/voice/imagery as a recording.
 
If any of you also consider the observed reality of thinking, being the evaluation of conditions that a human does not personally own.......such as another human's life presence, nature, the atmosphere (spirit/ethereal body), the stone. The value conditions of observations not personally owned by the presence of self, expressed or considered by the ownership condition itself nor personally thought or valued in the status of ownership.

We gave ourselves as a human aware state the evaluated review of being considered by value in this status....as an egotistical act, for who made your life and presence the "all knowing being", which is how this type of human consciousness considers, and why other human beings retaliated by their considerations. The reason we retaliated with this retort is because we have always been harmed by this form of conscious status.

The spiritual aware consciousness, evolved from and because of the conditions of being changed and de-evolved in the conditions of historical evidence, atmospheric conversion and life on Earth as historical evidence. That previously on Planet Earth, ancient human males applied scientific conversion of the nuclear of stone. And from this historical review, the stone gives the evidence that the life of human kind as conscious awareness was destroyed. As human objects and also UFO (artificial metal objects materialized by artificial nuclear orbital conditions) were found embedded in Earth and also deep inside of Earth, it gives a realistic review that huge holes opened in Earth and civilization fell into the caverns. It also gives us the historical review as to why consciousness and the human cell state de-evolved.

As our minds evolved from the status of DNA as a de-evolution review, the atmospheric recording condition of photon voice/sound/image allowed the feedback of this history to be known to the redevelopment of conscious awareness, of our past recorded lived history consciously. This is only due to the individual inherited life condition. The ability to be self aware as a personally owned state, interacting naturally with the changing atmospheric conditions.

Therefore the human spiritually aware knows that the mind of our occult brother does not "think rationally" as a human concept, which his what his own spiritual self previously warned him about in historical reasoning or philosophy. The actual conditions of altering/converting the natural heavenly body and what form of evil concepts then attacks the human conscious aware status.....the physical changes, mental changes and also natural changes is real, because we are reliving the same experiences. This is how consciousness is related to the realization of the paranormal.

Our brother, the occult mind or consciousness was given his conscious awareness by his personal de-evolved to evolved inheritance as a mind condition that already interacted with the atmospheric feedback as single minded observations. These single minded observations he had already previously thought, and then they recorded as his life/mind was irradiated in his own physical and mind attack. He was attacked because his observations about conversion are incorrect, and he learnt that the spiritual life was to consider stone and the atmosphere holy as a spiritual realization. This ideal stated "do not affect nor change the conditions".

He then uses and has interacted with the single minded observations in the atmospheric body feedback as statements previously recorded by his mind and then makes another single minded consideration of all the single values existing artificially as reasoning and then poses theory on such.

The modern day theory of occult conscious consideration is the old consideration that also proved to be fake/false values....that God is the Creator and that Christ is the consciousness. This review of the Heavenly body is a fake and a false consideration of consciousness, for when you review his personal conscious considerations of his own person, just like Putin examples.....the feedback of occult realization is fake information, even though you own occult studies as concepts yet still express occult concepts irrationally.

After Putin was brain/mind irradiated his conscious mind had changed by being irradiated, and the same situation has occurred before, as evidence states. The Popes in conditions such as meteor irradiation/observation made huge feedback statements about the hearing of atmospheric voices, as the total recording interactions of a destroyed atmosphere and also natural life, being irradiated in the conditions of self advice........ which is how and why he then valued his own person in such statements as "being immaculately conceived" and came from a "holy bloodline". This situation demonstrates to us all how a rational mind can then become irrational from the atmospheric feedback due to nuclear irradiation.

The real conscious review of a non irradiated spiritual observation would have stated.....survived the irradiation, your life is only created by a sexual act.....the reality of human life is that realistically there are only 2 spirit presences on Earth as a cellular body, a male and a female. The amount of irradiation destroyed most of the human body by cellular ownership of around 100 years each of cell replacement and that most of the human cell DNA condition now mutated. This would be a human consideration that they have nearly destroyed the living health of all of humanity, for realistically the information of our life only belongs to 1 male condition and 1 female condition experiencing life enmasse (due to sexual procreation) in differing magnetic fields.

The conscious aware feedback would have stated that the "dragon lines" or "ley lines" had dropped their energy flow into the newly formed sink holes, and earthquakes (carpenter) were activated along with volcanic eruptions. The only holy blood that was left living due to the ground changes of energy flow was the holy blood of the human body who realized that they had been saved and survived a huge loss and murder/destruction to the spiritual life on Earth. The consciousness would state by self presence and its own losses that its blood still lived, hence was holy and that its own spirit lived/survived whilst the rest of the human spirit had been attacked/destroyed.

As consciousness cannot give you a status of its attack from the death of its own spirit, it can only consciously realize that the atmospheric body that was once holy supported its life, that it gave the atmospheric personal interaction to its sciences/occultist practice....that the practice took the atmospheric interaction from his own person and gave it to the unnatural and artificially aware state...that of the formation of evil images as his own person was being harmed/destroyed in the irradiation attack. He therefore had taken the holiness of his own atmospheric cell interaction away from his own person and consciously by mind communication saw as his atmospheric life he once owned was being destroyed and given to the occult practices of conversion....needing the cooling interaction.

In the same conditions of being attacked his conscious awareness made another consideration, the Nature and its animals also were also being harmed, and also formed fake and artificial spirit images. The aware review of Nature gave him another unrealistic conscious consideration that animals were being created and transported 2 x 2.

This is because animals already existed and his 2 x 2 consideration what the nuclear fall out condition of the atmosphere that he caused by his PHI 2 x 2 applications or PHI squaring was forming a new animal...an artificial beast. The spirit of the animal in imagery were moving away from their living spirit in images that then formed alien looking animalistic/insect imagery as they merged together in nuclear light sound destruction of the atmosphere. By consideration of the paranormal were being transported in a negated life condition as an act of destruction beneath the waves of the falling atmospheric body due to the use and application of the Ark of the Covenant or nuclear conversions.

In the same condition that all natural life owns, the light/sound changed by nuclear de-evolution/heating that enabled the human aware consciousness to understand/and be aware of the paranormal condition that they had caused to their own person.

The consideration of Creator being consciousness, when it is not, is that natural bodies of light sound evolved from a pre-existing cold state of first energy into a heated state that then cooled, the status of evolution as a naturally owned condition of the light O.

Cooling of the atmosphere also demonstrates that evolution of consciousness is the status of cooling, for the snap freeze on Earth allowed DNA to re-evolve from a mutated condition that life previously owned. That stone was once origin energy as an occult consideration that cooled into stone by evolution.

The modern occult consideration fake/feedback relating to his conscious consideration is that the cooling effect is instantaneous as a cold fusion state. Yet the only instant cooling belonging to an energy reaction is the reaction of water/freeze as an instantaneous result.

As our conscious awareness relates to the holiness of water as a consideration of being aware in an interactive atmospheric body, the results of the awareness states the obvious. Our brother as an occultist, and an egotist is incorrect from his single minded reviews.....a status he already previously advised his philosophical studies about as a personal consideration of his own conscious statement and consideration.

When we consider what consciousness is as a spiritual status, the argument has been an age old argument. If we all consider evolution and want to support that consciousness evolved from animals, and that monkeys somehow procreated and formed human life.....then there is no harm in this belief. The harm of our life only comes about when an occultist wants to consider that our consciousness is still linked to other Nature as if consciousness is a thread of information that connects everything together without using the consideration of each spirit's death or how it continues by procreation.

Our life is not connected to any other presence other than ourselves....a human who procreates, has human babies that grow into adults, who live/age and then die.

Consciousness only belongs to each spiritual presence living and existing in their own presence, owning their own organic formation and also chemical body.

If the other organic bodies were not present, the occultist would not believe in a connection that they can own, as if they are the Creator of all existence. The problem with the occultist conscious concept, is that their own mind consideration of owning "spiritual consciousness" is a self aware status that they only own an occult consciousness and personally want the spirit consciousness themselves. Instead this consideration of self as an aware status has somehow become involved in occult practice as a status that natural organic life does not belong to.....the gain of energy as new resourcing.

Humanity should be allowed to be aware that we all exist as an equal conscious being on Earth and it is no fault of any human to the changes of our life/cell conscious presence that we have all endured/inherited due to the sexual act and also the occult practices of our ancient past and modern times.

The truth about our consciousness is a real status, some of us are spiritually aware and others are by occult consideration possessed by their own occultist recordings, of the fake/artificial atmospheric feedback.

The truth of the forum activity on the internet relates to the occult condition of our modern occult brother wanting to own what he considers is the concept of the Creator, yet when he reviews ownership consideration of occultist conversions he only ever used his own mind, his own physical presence and considered that he would become an Inventor. He was only considering information through the precepts of his own person.....and as he definitely is not a Creator for his inventions have only ever involved converting, then it is about time he considers his own conscious ownership.

This is the only reason why our modern evolved mind/brain and conscious status began to dispute his considerations of our consciousness and the paranormal condition that he gave us......presuming the atmosphere as a status of consciousness, for we all began and have physically demonstrated to his person to be harmed by his practices of conversion as a status of conscious un-awareness.
 
Victimized,

Have you ever been diagnosed as schitzophrenic, whether you agreed with that evaluation or not?

The more I read your posts, the more it seems you were diagnosed with something, but you disagree with that evaluation, because people used to consider the idea of "hearing voices" a spiritual one (per your understanding of history).

Instead, you seem to assert that hearing voices is natural, but that the ancient leaders of humanity, starting with the philosophers of antiquity, destroyed their own minds (on some level) through the unnatural study of the natural. Through this study, they crated the concepts of "SION" -- apparently the abstract concept behind any word ending in the suffix -sion -- which they then used to alter their environment unnaturally, while simultaneously convincing their "lessers" that the pre existing understanding of nature was incorrect.

Ultimately, one of the consequences of this "unnatural thinking" was the harnessing of nuclear energy. If I'm understanding correctly, the introduction of nuclear energy further destroyed the minds of humanity, pushing them further from some original, natural truth or understanding.

In addition to radiation, another byproduct of "unnatural thinking" was the invention of religion. I'm not yet sure how that comes into play in your lore narrative, or what it has to do with irradiated brains.

Frankly, I infer from most of your stuff that you have been diagnosed with a psychological affliction, much to your disapproval, and believe that said diagnoses is an extension, or byproduct, of a millennia old conspiracy having to do with the development of the sciences and the understanding of the human mind. You instead believe that your mental state is/was natural, thus fine, but that on some level -- either through the direct application of medical process or the indirect exposure to what you believe to be radiation in the atmosphere -- your mind was altered or affected by radioactivity.

Edit: Or, are you saying you hear voices because you were irradiated, whether intentionally or indirectly, and the same method was used on people throughout history to make them hear voices so the people doing the irradiating could influence/control them into establishing the religions of the world, which were hand crafted by the people doing the irradiating?

In any event, I really like the lore you've created for yourself, regardless of whether or not it's the output of a schitzophrenic brain.
 
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Steve, I'm copying here your post #659 from Part 4 of this thread so that we can use it as a springboard for further discussion:

"Soupie said:
Yes, Thompson is discussing this now in MIL—pre-reflective self consciousness. Im still really struggling with it.

He says elsewhere:

Moderate transparency of awareness: we are not ususally aware of (intrinsic mental features of) our experience, but only of the objects and properties presented by that experience.

He says he is going to argue that this is true. I dont disagree.

What i struggle with, though, is how this accomodates a pre-reflective self consciousness.

My own experience—as ive said—mirrors the moderate transparency outlined above; for me, that means that my sense of self is typically "missing" when im experiencing the world. Im not sure how a self consciousness fits into this...

In the very next paragraph, he begins to explain by saying (paraphrase):

"When i see a wine bottle on the table in front of me, I experience (am visually aware of) the wine bottle. But I also experience my seeing."

pp 284-285

This second part is difficult for me. It doesnt seem to jive with what he says above about moderate transparency of awareness...

Sometimes I "experience my seeing," but mostly I do not. Is it possible that as a philosopher, as a phenomenologist, he is more attuned to his own self than a brute like me?

Its really the only concept presented so far that I cant grok; and it appears to be an important one. This idea that all consciousness is intrinsically self consciousness, an[d] pre-reflective to boot."



Steve wrote:

"'Sometimes I "experience my seeing," but mostly I do not. Is it possible that as a philosopher, as a phenomenologist, he is more attuned to his own self than a brute like me?'"

lol ... it's hard to think of you as a "brute" ... I bet if you start paying attention to it, it can become your way of experiencing it too ... plasticity ... where brain scans show the brain changes in response to practice and intention ... when I was diagnosed with OCD I did exercises that purportedly changed by brain's physiology - there is a circuit that runs hot in OCD saying "danger! danger!" - you simply relabel "it's not me, it's my OCD" and divert - doing something else for about fifteen minutes and endure the resulting anxiety, gradually training and rewiring the brain ... the circuit actually, literally cools off in time - so if you could change your basic way of thinking by paying attention to "experiencing my seeing" what does this mean for phenomenology and possible phenomenologies? Was it always there and you just pay attention to it - or do you develop it by building up your attention to it ... to what extent then can phenomenology claim this as "the way that it is?" - could we begin to see things that we never new were there? there don't appear to be any hard limits to conscious control of the body, some yogis have demonstrated the ability to reverse peristalsis - sitting on a puddle of water and absorbing it ... yes ... so what can we do with the brain? those faint, faint senses and intuitions can be developed and we call that "genius" because we don't have access to it - or could we look out into the dark and begin to discern things, using light we've never perceived before?

Another way to put this is:

would a brain scan show where Heidegger and Husserl differ? But if you think for a second, you see that empiricism, in looking outward for consensus ... has the exact same problem, so their is no refuge there. Again, it's how comfortable you are with untruncated thought.

Technology counts for its survival and development on our basic anxiety and desire for comfort to result in our limiting our thoughts.

I struggle with this aspect of phenomenology and of eastern philosophy ... if we begin with the subjective, how do we come to consensus? How do we verify statements like: all consciousness is intrinsically self consciousness? Where are we standing that we can say this? Can we afford to reject the otherwise experience? If Eastern philosophy is based on meditation, it seems the results of that meditation depend not only on the kind of meditation (how you breathe, where you put your attention, what you visualize) but also on the instructions you are given, the tradition of interpreting that experience ... that said, there does seem to be something that unfolds when you simply focus on the breath ... something that many people can agree on, regardless of tradition. Now how that's interpreted ... leads right back in to the same problem.

New age philosophy does make one point that I think shouldn't be lost, which is our creative contribution to reality.

Eastern philosophies start with the subjective too and come to take a different view(s) ... as the paper I just commented on demonstrates.

We can choose between schools of thought or we can try to synthesize (west: subjugate east: accomodate ??)

< --... the world exists for the sake of consciousness exists for the sake of the world exists ... -->

Like the tetralemma, these thoughts are alien, but that should put us on notice, shouldn't it? ... what are we to make broadly of an eastern/western split in thinking? Is it historically arbitrary? What if conditions existed for a third kind of thought practices?

Similarly the split in analytic and continental philosophy ... do these represent different hemispheres (McGilchrist's argument) or different kinds of minds entirely?

Philosophy as geography and biography.

Eastern: accomodating, based on experience in meditation and observation (analytic approach to inner experience tied to traditional interpretations) - many schools of course, like in martial arts some are hard and some are soft, water over rock, engineering in accordance with nature and a deep view into cycles, patterns of nature, man not apart from this

Western: Continental/Analytic - subjugating over all, man drives destiny, decision and intention at the root, long history of challenging the gods - engineering is in spite of nature, man is alienated from nature ...

analytic derives force from (western) logic and empiricism

continental systematic view into experience (but assumptions of experience based on the Western tradition) - uses logic and analytical tools but also language ... derives its force similarly to the eastern tradition - analytic approach to inner experience tied to interpretation ... force also from schools of thought, like all other branches ... consensus

My concern with all these thought traditions then is something like what happened with religion when pluralism became unavoidable (... I think this is what maybe drove Heidegger to "dasein" and his peasants? ... and also what is behind the perennial appeal of the perennial philosophy and things like shamanism and animism ... ?) ... but the concern is that you start with some assumptions, in the case of continental philosophy, some of these are in reaction to the major tradition ... and you begin to build a scaffolding, a structure of thought ... phenomenology and eastern thinking can come back to their various methods of grounding, of course, but nonethelesss things get elaborated ... in Western analytics the problem seems to be, on the contrary, forgetting that these assumptions aren't the way things "actually" are ... and to just keep building and building ... because the methods to keep coming back to ground aren't there as in eastern/continental approaches ... and that's the main gripe with science now ... but look at the metaphor ... science is on the way UP - progress is UP and the stars are UP so we shouldn't be surprised, wheras such concerns aren't a part of the other traditions."

Consciousness and the Paranormal — Part 4"]Consciousness and the Paranormal — Part 4
 
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