Consciousness and matter
From DeMarco, Frank. Rita's World Vol 2: A View from the Non-Physical (Kindle Location 534). Rainbow Ridge Books. Kindle Edition
(Q) [Dorothy's question: "This puts me in mind of the current effort in certain consciousness studies to eliminate 'vitalism' from their thought. By this I take it they mean a type of Cartesian dualism in which a non-material spark of life or spirit is thought to animate inert matter. If this effort isn't interpreted in a sense of pure material reductionism, I think it can be harmonious with Rita's formulation of 3D and non-3D as inhering in the same non-dual whole. But I'm having trouble conceptualizing the interweaving of 3D and non-3D. Some scientific-minded types want to find a specific interface between living cells and the quantum fields where they suppose consciousness to reside, perhaps via ion channels or microtubules or whatever. I suspect that this idea fallaciously collapses a whole lot of levels, but I still wonder whether it's broadly (or even narrowly) on the right track. I also see that this might be one of those 'questions which lead not to edification' as the Buddha put it - intellectual curiosity that doesn't really help one live right. But still I wonder ..."]
(A) I am particularly pleased by the sentence recognizing that not all curiosity is a productive use of time. However, no one should attempt to judge what is a waste of time for another, I don't mean that; but it is worthwhile to ask oneself.
The difficulty with this attempt, as I think our questioner recognizes, is that it silently assumes that matter is inert, or dead, or unconscious.
(Q) Yes. Colin Wilson's whole career was based on an idea he had gotten from Bernard Shaw and others, this idea that life was attempting to insert itself into dead matter. I took it to be an attempt to return to a spiritual sense of things without God or religion. When I was very young, I thought it a hopeful approach, because I was comparing it to a very dead materialism. Now I see that it is rooted in materialism.
(A) I was a scientist myself. I don't have your suspicion of the scientific method or even of scientific sociology, let's call it - the social taboos and implicit agreements that science as a profession engenders. But of course, I saw the limitations of prevailing beliefs, even among those psychologists who were farthest toward the ...
The point is, I left that orientation when my Gateway [in 1979] showed me an entirely new and surprising approach. But even the world Bob [Monroe] introduced us to remained very solid, very material. There was nothing airy-fairy about the life we all led on the old Roberts farm! Bob would have said, nothing is simply what it appears to be - but at the same time, when he would set George [Durrette, his all-purpose workman] to work building something, he didn't treat the physical world as if it were animated in the way you tend to think [of it]. He didn't look at a piece of board and envision it as being entirely alive, always.
(Q) And yet it is.
(A) Well, that's my point, here, and I had to go about it in a little bit of a roundabout way, to get you to hear it. Life is exactlywhat it appears; it is nothing likewhat it appears. It all depends on the eyes seeing it.
(Q) I take it you are not saying, "It's anything you want it to be, or anything you can imagine it to be."
(A) No, I'm saying it is always going to be a mystery, because lower consciousness cannot comprehend higher levels of consciousness any more than a box can contain a larger volume than its own interior. That is only an analogy, but perhaps an important and productive one. Thus, my answer to Dorothy's question is not, "There's no way to tell you", nor, "no way to know", but more, "no way to make any definitive statement". At every level of consciousness (and "level" is itself an analogy, remember), what is functionally real changes, because as she intuits, our ideas at different levels involve a collapse of different unexperienced levels of reality.
(Q) Collapse as in, we experience the higher dimensions not distinctly but collapsed into something we experience as aspects of passing time.
(A) And perhaps "collapse" isn't the right word. Perhaps "slurred" or "deformed" or something would have fewer misleading connotations, but actually, I doubt it. The difficulty for you is to remember that descriptions are, necessarily, analogy, and cannot convey unvarnished reality. You don't get a sense of reality throughwords, but betweenthem.
(Q) It would be good if scientists could remember that, as well.
(A) Don't forget that your idea of what scientists are or how they think or, really, anythingabout them as a group are descriptions not of an external reality but of your own orientation toward (vis a vis) an idea in your head. Just because you have strong feelings about an abstraction does not mean the abstraction even exists as you conceive it.
(Q) So, don't fall into Psychic's Disease, confusing strength of feeling with demonstration of accuracy.
(A) Exactly. So, to circle back, as you like to say, the short answer to Dorothy is that everything is conscious and the result of consciousness. How one perceives this depends upon one's own mental world, partly self-constructed, partly constructed with the assistance of the "outside world", or so it is perceived. To try to conceive of 3D and non-3D "interweaving" is to implicitly see a frontier where none exists, so of course the resulting picture is going to be hazy and ever-changing, and unsatisfactory.
(Q) Is this the fish at the bottom of the sea trying to imagine the man at the top of the hill, watching television?
(A) Let us put it this way. Understanding that water may be seen as H2O does deepen your understanding of the nature of water in a way; and yet, seen another way, all that does is fit water into a scheme of explanation that doesn't really explain, but merely relates, or describes a relationship. It doesn't help you understand what is behind the scheme; it helps you manipulate "matter", not really understand it. The whole idea of quantum fields, like any other scientific idea, attempts to make sense of the world, and of course, nothing is wrong with that. But it attempts to make sense by harmonizing with the existing [mentally constructed] scheme of things and although it may not be immediately obvious, the harmonizing very much includes what are called scientific revolutions, no matter how disruptive. Einstein, Planck, all those physicists who explored what matter and energy reallyare, were looking to correct errors in existing understandings; they would not have described their work as starting anew.
(Q) And this brings us - where?
(A) To the next question, via a reminder that lesser consciousness never comprehends the greater. The way to understand more is to grow into it. More explanation cannot do it for you; at best, it can encourage the continuing effort.
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