In the introduction, I discussed the
evolution of organized matter from the photon through particles, atoms and
molecules to living cells which begin to differentiate in structure and
function forming a wide variety of tissues and organs that play a specialized
function in the human body. It is reasonable to assume all these levels of
organization including the whole human being play a role in shaping
consciousness. Particularly important are the nervous system, comprising brain
and spinal cord, and the endocrine system, comprising a number of ductless
glands that secrete hormones into the bloodstream. Many biological scientists
today implicitly believe that these structures not only shape consciousness,
but are actually the source of conscious awareness. This view is known as the
biological identity theory.
The Nervous System
Neuron cells are the
principle units of the nervous system. Their function is to conduct nerve
impulses transmitting information. The twelve billion neurons in our bodies
vary greatly in size and shape; however they all have two general parts: a
cell body and fibers. The cell body contains structures that keep the neuron
alive and properly functioning. The neural fibers are of two classes:
dendrites stimulated by neighboring neurons or physical stimuli; and axons,
which transmit impulses to other neurons or to an effector, such as a muscle
or gland.
The process by which pulses transmit
across the neural membrane is electrochemical. The pulses are caused by rapid
and reversible changes in the permeability of the membrane to certain ions.
The resulting flows of ions across the membrane give rise to electrical
impulses, which can be detected and recorded with various instruments. The
size of the nerve impulses and the speed with which they travel are unique to
each particular neuron and do not relate to the strength of the stimuli that
initiated them. Firing thresholds will vary with time from neuron to neuron
depending on many factors; however once the threshold is reached, the
electrochemical changes that cause the impulse proceed to completion.
Therefore, information about any stimulus is carried by (1) the frequency of
nerve firing and (2) by the number of particular fibers carrying impulses, and
not by the strength of any single impulse. This, incidentally, is the same
on-off principle by which information is coded in a digital computer. Some
nerves transmit as many as 1000 impulses each second.
Multi-Polar Neuron
Bipolar Neurons
Neurons are stimulated to fire by
either sensory receptors or other neurons. Nerve impulses are transmitted from
one neuron to another or from a neuron to a muscle or gland across an
important gap known as a synapse. The whole region including the bouton on the
end of the axon on one neuron, the gap, and the post-synaptic membrane of the
adjoining cell, can be called the synaptic region (the circled area in the
multi-polar neuron photograph). Information is transmitted across the synaptic
gap by enzymes delicately released from little spheres in the bouton called
vesicles. The information is received at the postsynaptic membrane, which is
generally either excited or inhibited by these chemicals depending again on
many factors, such as the particular combination of enzymes transmitted across
the synapse or the interaction with the electro-magnetic environment around
the body.
If the post-synaptic membrane is
stimulated by an inhibiting neurotransmitter its firing threshold will become
higher. An excitatory neurotransmitter will lower the firing threshold of a
given neuron, causing it to fire more often. The actual firing threshold of a
neuron is variable and is often determined by the combined influence of
hundreds of synapses.
Neuron cell body with
synapses from other neurons
Thus the synaptic aspect of neural
transmission is not an all or none affair, and may be thought of as the analog
or continuous aspect of the human bio-computer. Some nerves actually loop back
upon themselves to form reverbrating circuits which may be the neural basis
for memory storage.
The nervous system itself is quite
complex and may be divided into several different structures.
The peripheral nervous system
comprises those neurons or parts of neurons that lie outside the bony case
formed by the skull and the spine. The somatic nerves of this system mediate
the sensory inputs and muscle movements that we are consciously aware of
during waking hours.
The autonomic part of the peripheral
system regulates many functions--such as the heart rate, blood pressure,
endocrine and digestive processes of which we are not normally conscious, but
which can be brought under conscious control through bio-feedback and yoga
techniques. The sympathetic aspect of the autonomic system generally comes
into play when we experience strong emotions, while the parasympathetic system
tends to be active when we are calm and relaxed. The cell bodies of the
autonomic nervous system, as well as of the sensory nerves of the somatic
system, gather together in ganglia alongside the spinal column, and at other
points in the body. The cell bodies of somatic motor-nerve fibers, however,
are located inside the central nervous system.
The central nervous system is
organized into two principle parts, the spinal cord and the brain. The spinal
cord serves as a conduction path to and from the brain and also as an organ
for effecting reflex action. The brain seems to play an important role in all
the complex activities constituting consciousness -- thinking, perception,
learning, memory, etc. The three main structures of the brain are known as the
hindbrain, the midbrain, and the forebrain.
Cross-section of the human
brain
Within the hindbrain lie the
cerebellum, the pons, and medulla. These neural centers regulate breathing,
heartbeat, motor coordination, posture, and balance. They are also involved in
mediating nerve impulses from the body to the higher brain centers.
The midbrain contains numerous nerve
fiber tracts and neural centers regulating body changes in response to visual
and auditory stimulation.
The forebrain has reached its
greatest development in humans and other highly evolved animals, such as
porpoises. It comprises the cerebrum, which is covered by the cerebral cortex,
the thalamus, and a group of closely related structures forming the limbic
system. These parts of the brain mediate our inner mental and emotional
processes.
The sensations in your mind are
mapped out on the cerebral cortex of your brain, which mediates your conscious
sensory and motor functions, as well as complex perceptual processes.
Sensory-motor mapping on the
human cortex
One method of researching cerebral
functioning has been to electrically stimulate the exposed cortex of human
subjects, under local anesthesia, who could then report on their experiences.
By stimulating certain areas various types of sensations, movements and
thought patterns can be evoked. Another method of research is to observe the
functioning of individuals who have had portions of their brain removed or
damaged. Especially in the case of young children, removing a portion of the
brain does not seem to impair the functioning ofthe mind.
One important line of research has
indicated the two hemispheres of the cerebral cortex function differently. The
speech areas of the human cortex are almost always located on the left
hemisphere, regardless of whether the person is right or left handed. Several
researchers have suggested that the mind's logical and linear functions are
associated with the left hemisphere; while the more kinesthetic, pre-verbal,
intuitive properties of consciousness derive from the right hemisphere. The
particular functions each hemisphere assumes may vary with different
individuals. However, the capacity for two uniquely different modes of
consciousness within each individual seems well-established. Important
differences also seem to exist between the intellectual cortex and other
deeper, emotional layers of the forebrain.
Those parts of the brain most attuned
to the body's needs and emotional states are the limbic system and the
hypothalamus. The hypothalamus is a bundle of nerve bodies, about the size of
a peanut, located just above the roof of the mouth. It contains several
centers that mediate the excitement and inhibition of the hunger, thirst, and
sexual drives, as well as emotional arousal. The activity of these centers is
in turn regulated by such factors as hormones in the blood and signals from
other parts of the brain, including the cortex. Certain areas in the
hypothalamus and limbic system, when stimulated, can be a source of enormous
pleasure for the body.
In conjunction with the reticular
activating system, the hypothalamus is also involved in the mediation of sleep
and arousal states.
By attaching electrodes to the skin
of the head, psychologists are able to measure the electrical activity of the
brain as a whole. Brain waves thus measured can generally be correlated with
different states of consciousness ranging trom the alert waking state, to
drowsiness, hypnagogic imagery, meditation, sleep, and dreaming. Individuals
can learn to control their brain waves, and also their internal states of
consciousness through techniques providing them with immediate feedback on
their physiological state. Researchers suggest there may be no biological
functions that cannot be brought under conscious control in this fashion. Many
individuals are able to develop this control through simple techniques of
yoga, hypnosis, and meditation.
The Endocrine
System
Location of the major
endocrine glands in the body
The endocrine system, which comprises
glands secreting powerful hormones into the bloodstream, is one of the most
interesting areas of autonomic functioning. Our personality and character is
profoundly effected by our hormone balance. The major endocrine glands are the
pituitary and pineal glands in the brain, the thyroid and parathyroids in the
throat, the thymus gland located near the heart, the adrenal glands, and the
sexual glands. To a lesser degree, other parts of the body, including neurons,
also secrete hormones into the bloodstream. The endocrine system is
self-regulating in that hormone secretion from any gland is activated in part
by other hormones in the bloodstream. The hypothalamus also plays an important
role in stimulating certain hormone secretions from the pituitary gland.
The pituitary is often called the
"master gland" because it secretes a number of hormones that stimulate or
inhibit secretion in the other glands of the body. It also produces hormones
that regulate the growth rate of children and awaken the sexual glands at
puberty.
The pineal gland produces several
substances including a hormone known as 5-hydroxytryptamine or serotonin.
Serotonin
Serotonin is of the same chemical
series of indole alkaloids that includes psychedelic drugs such as LSD-25,
psilocybin, D.M.T. and bufotenine.
Psilocybin
The exact mechanism by which
serotonin might effect consciousness or behavior is not well understood by
scientists today. Research findings are paradoxical as serotonin is known to
affect different parts of the body and brain in different ways, depending on
the proportions and combinations of other hormones and enzymes present during
the interaction. Generally speaking serotonin is recognized as a neural
inhibitor in the brain. The stores of serotonin in the brain are depleted by
reserpine, a tranquilizer, and augmented by iproniazid, a mood elevator. Large
amounts are present in the limbic system and the hypothalamus. Smaller
concentrations occur in the cortex and the cerebellum. Ablation of the nerve
network in the brain called the raphe system, which contains considerable
amounts of serotonin, is known to produce permanent insomnia. The ingestion of
serotonin is unlikely to effect the central nervous system as it does not
cross the blood-brain barrier. If it did, its main result would be to put one
to sleep. Most of the serotonin in the brain is in the reticular activating
system where it plays an important role in the sleep-wake cycle. When
serotonin levels in the r.a.s. rise, the brain goes into deep sleep. Other
studies have shown greatly increased amounts of serotonin in the brains of
psychotic patients. According to biologist John Bleibtrau, "Bananas and plums
abound in serotonin; so do figs, and among species of figs none is richer in
serotonin than the ficus religiosa, known in India as the Bo tree, under which
the Buddha reportedly sat when he became enlightened." Thus the hormone
produced by the pineal gland makes possible emotions, perception, sleep and
wakefulness, and orientation to conventional reality.
The thyroid gland produces a hormone
known as thyroxin, which controls the metabolic rate at which the body
produces energy. Whether a person is slow and sluggish or extremely active is
influenced by this hormone. (Occult systems often associate this gland with
the throat chakra).
The hormones produced in the thymus
gland regulate the process by which the body learns to differentiate its own
proteins from foreign substances which may be harmful to it. By this process
antibodies are manufactured that react only against invading antigens and not
to the myriad similar substances necessary to the body. One could think of the
thymus gland as being closely related to the body's sense of organic
identity.
The adrenal glands, located in the
back of the body above the kidneys, secrete the hormones epinephrine and
norepinephrine, which are related to states of strong emotion. The sympathetic
nervous system can stimulate the adrenal glands and the action of the adrenal
hormones produced generally intensifies the actions of the sympathetic system
throughout the body. It helps mobilize sugar into the blood and makes more
energy available to the brain and muscles. It stimulates the heart to beat
faster and also constricts the peripheral blood vessels, thus raising blood
pressure.
The sex glands or gonads are the
testes in men and the ovaries in women. The hormones they produce are
responsible for the marked physical changes that take place during puberty --
the beginning of menstruation, growth of the breasts, voice changes and beard
and body hair growth.
It is important to recognize that the
complex activity of manufacturing the hormones and enzymes, which regulate
both neural transmission and the endocrine system, is guided by the subtle
programming coded into the genetic structure of each cell in the body. One can
view these three modes of physiological functioning as communication systems.
Neural transmission provides rapid communication for the whole body --
requiring fractions of a second for feedback. The endocrine system provides
inter-organ, slow communication -- requiring minutes to hours for feedback.
While the genetic structure can be seen as an organism-environment
communication system requiring many generations for feedback.
It is recognized that manufacturing
protein substances within the cells is guided by the DNA codes; however
scientists have yet to find a satisfactory explanation for the development of
tissues, organs, and whole organisms.
Melanin: The Organizing Molecule
Building on the "reflexive universe"
model of Arthur M. Young (to be presented at the end of Section IV), physician
Frank Barr hypothesizes that neuromelanin, a complex category of light and
sound absorbing molecules, is responsible for our experience of a continuum of
mental states. It is the molecule, he claims, that coordinates interactions
between the endocrine and nervous systems. Barr summarizes his theory:
Neuromelanin -- through 1) its
photon-phonon-(exciton)-(soliton) interactions; 2) its semi- (and possibly
super-) conductive capacities; 3) its cation exchange flow; 4) its continuous
free radical signal; 5) its neuroglial direct current; 6) its potentially
diverse covalent modifications; 7) its potential to trigger reversible enzyme
cascade amplifications; etc. -- could precisely regulate the neuroendocrine
system. By meticulous phase-timing, neuromelanin could coordinate the
synthesis, release, uptake, destruction, modification, and/or recycling of the
various neuroamines and peptides throughout the brain.
The
Temporal Lobe Factor in Psychic Experience
Psychologist Michael A. Persinger of
Laurentian University in Canada that, whether psi experiences are real or
imagined, the temporal lobes of the brain play a significant role in mediating
such experiences. Deep within the temporal lobes are the mesiobasal
structures, specifically the hippocampus (often referred to as the gateway to
memory) and the more anterior, amygdala (the mediator of affect and meaning).
The temporal lobes have diverse
structures and multiple functions including memory, the sense of self in space
and time, the attribution of meaning and emotional significance, audition,
organization of complex visual patterns, smell, and language.
Persinger suggests that psi
information signals are carried on extremely low electromagnetic frequencies
to which temporal lobe structures are sensitive. He describes his approach to
understanding psychic functioning in the temporal lobes:
The deep structures of the temporal
lobes are the most electrically unstable portions of the human brain. This
instability is really a sensitivity, due to the microcircuitry of the neurons;
it allows the phenomena of declarative memory and its consolidation to occur.
However, there are consequences to this sensitivity. The temporal lobe
structures are prone to electrically active foci...Local and paroxysmal
discharges can even be produced by specific memories and biofrequency
(extremely low frequency) magnetic fields that penetrate brain tissue.
The contribution of temporal lobe
processes to psi phenomena have two important implications. Firstly, the
phenomenological characteristics of psi experiences, especially spontaneous
ones, should be dominated by the functions of the temporal lobes. Such
evidence is clearly seen in the propensity for spontaneous psi experiences to
involve visuoauditory modalities, dreams (modulated via the hippocampus), and
intense affect (the amygdala) that attributes the experience with intense,
personal meaningfulness. Secondly, the electrical lability means that many
other stimuli could both compete for neural substrates that facilitate psi
experiences and stimulate psi-like experinces, that is generate pseudo-psi or
quasi-psi.
Persinger also notes that no
other brain condition simulates spontaneous psi experiences as closely as
temporal lobe epilepsy. This disorder is associated with brief paroxysmal
electrical discharges within the mesiobasal regions of the temporal lobe. If
the discharge remains within one lobe and does not propagate to motor regions,
there are no convulsions. An observer might not realize the person is
experiencing a seizure.
However, there are often experiential
phenomena that are associated with such discharges which resemble the major
manifestations of spontaneous psi experiences. These include deja vu,
depersonalization, out-of-body types of experiences, a sense of a presence,
time distortions, an internal "hearing and knowing," anxiety or panic,
experiences of floating or falling, shapes in the peripheral visual field
(especially the upper quadrant), and complex visual "hallucinations."
Electrical stimulation studies have demonstrated that these experiences are
specific to temporal lobe structures.,
People who have chronic electrical
discharges within temporal lobe structures also develop a behavioral pattern
which overlaps with the profile of persons interested in psychic and "new age"
matters. These patterns include: a widening of affect, such that unusual
events acquire special personal meaning; an interest in philosophy and
mysticism; a sense of personal destiny; episodes of delusions; and a desire to
either record one's experiences or to communicate one's beliefs.
Following up on his interest in
geomagnetic effects upon consciousness (which will be discussed further),
Persinger has assembled a body of data suggesting a marked similarity between
the diurnal distribution of limbic epilepsy and psi experiences. The number of
temporal lobe seizures (with observable motor activity) were plotted for each
one hour interval from a population of about 100,000 events collected before
anticonvulsants were introduced into medicine. Seizures were most prominent
between 0200 and 0400 hours local time, with a secondary peak around 2200
hours.
For comparison, the percentage of
total cases per hour for all of the histories of spontaneous telepathy
concerning death and crises to significant others from the Society for
Psychical Research collections that contained the hour of the occurrence (open
circles)., In addition, Persinger collected similar cases that contained this
information as reported in Fate Magazine. A statistical analysis
demonstrated no significant difference between the well-documented SPR
collections and the less documented Fate cases -- suggesting the possibility
of a similar mechanism effecting their occurrence.
Peak displays of spontaneous
experiences concerning death and crises to significant others occurred between
0200 and 0400 hrs, with a secondary peak around 2100 to 2300 hours. However,
unlike the epileptic events, there was increased incidence of ostensible psi
experiences around 1600 hours.
The partial similarity of the hourly
distribution of the incidence of both epileptic episodes and ostensible psi
experiences is an example of the commonality of the two phenomena. They appear
to exist along a continuum of temporal lobe lability or sensitivity. They may
both involve local microseizuring that generate experiential phenomena without
overt motoric displays. However, Persinger claims that "it would be incorrect
to assume that psi experiences are a form of limbic epilepsy." One must also
take into account that normal microseizuring occurs every night, during the
dream or REM (rapid eye movement) state. The most important difference from
the perspective of psi research, of course, is the trigger that evokes the
experience.
Persinger has verified the
existence of a temporal lobe continuum of activity in normal individuals who
show no signs of epilepsy or abnormal personality. The more frequent the
number of temporal lobe signs a person reports, Persinger suggests, the more
likely they are to report spontaneous psi experiences and to score well in
laboratory tests of psi.
The Ecology of
Consciousness
One of the most interesting new areas
of science concerns electrostatic interactions between biological organisms
and the environment. I have already indicated that the electro-chemical nature
of neural transmission plays an important role in mediating
information-transfer throughout the body. Now we will take a look at some of
the more subtle extensions of our biological functioning:
Our bodies are influenced -- in ways
often overlooked -- by the existence of small ions in the atmosphere. The
research of scientists such as Albert P. Krueger are sometimes dismissed as
insignificant in the face of gross environmental pollution, however they seem
to show important implications for consciousness:
Albert P. Krueger
Air ion formation begins when enough
energy acts on a gaseous molecule to eject an electron. Most of this energy
comes from radioactive substances in the Earth's crust, and some from cosmic
rays. The displaced electron attaches itself to an adjacent molecule, which
becomes a negative ion, the original molecule then becoming a positive
ion...natural gas or water molecules cluster about the ions to form small air
ions of four types: H+(HzO)n, (HaO)+(HzO)n, Oz(HzO)n and OH-(HzO)n, where n is
a small number.
In normal clean air over land, there
are 1500 to 4000 ions/cubic centimeter. But negative ions are more mobile and
the earth's surface has a negative charge, so negative ions are repelled from
the earth's surface. Thus the normal ratio of negative to positive ions is 1.2
to l.
Man often encounters very low
concentrations of ions, and modern city life increases the ratio of positive
to negative small air ions. A 14-day study in 1971 by B. Maczynski (lnt. J.
Biometeor, vol. 15, p. 11) in an office containing four people showed that
the small air ion concentration dropped as the day went on, falling on average
to only 34 positive ions and 20 negative ions/cm1. And a test at a light
industry area of San Francisco by J. C. Beckett (J. Amer. Soc. Heating,
Refrig, and Air Cond., vol 1- p 47) showed a small ion count of less than
80 ions/cm3. In both cases the number of physiologically inert large ions rose
considerably-apparently small ions react with dust and pollutants to form
large ions.
People travelling to work in polluted
air, spending eight hours a day in offices or factories, and living their
leisure hours in urban dwellings, inescapably breathe ion-depleted air for
substantial portions of their lives. There is increasing evidence that this
ion depletion leads to discomfort, enervation and lassitude, and loss of
mental and physical efficiency. This syndrome appears to develop quite apart
from the direct toxic effects of the usual atmospheric pollutants. It occurs
in the absence of such pollutants, in the "clean" air of rural schools or
libraries which happen to be ion-depleted due to special factors which remove
ions, such as stray electrical fields. On the other hand, evidence is
accumulating that substantial increases in ions can have highly beneficial
effects, from relieving the pain of burns to promoting plant growth.
Experiments have shown that negative
ions promote the healing rate of animals with severed peripheral nerves, skin
lacerations, burns, and post-operative discomfort. They are known to greatly
enhance cell proliferation, and under certain circumstances they are known to
raise the critical fusion frequency threshold (the point at which a flickering
light appears constant) in humans and decrease visual reaction time.
In several instances both positive
and negative ions are shown to have similar effects. High doses of either type
of ion have been shown to be lethal to bacteria. High densities of negative or
positive ions increase, on the other hand, the maze learning ability of rats.
Low concentrations of positive and negative ions are known to produce fewer
alpha frequency brain waves in human beings. High concentrations of ions tend
to disrupt alpha frequencies in a more variable fashion. In rats, varying
outputs of ions in either polarity will produce measurable changes in urine,
defecation, sleeping period, respiration rate, and attacks on the aluminum
foil ground plate used to generate the ions. In general, oddly enough, the
lowest ion concentrations were the most effective in evoking (or provoking)
such changes.
Particularly interesting is Kreuger's
demonstration of the effects small air ions have on the levels of serotonin in
the blood and in the brain. He has shown that in mice positive ions raise
blood levels of serotonin and negative ions depress them. In these rodents'
brains, low dosages as well as high dosages of both negative and positive ions
produced significant decreases in serotonin-as compared to normal atmospheric
levels. This disparity can be accounted for by the fact that serotonin does
not cross the blood-brain barrier. (You will recall the important role
brain-serotonin plays in mediating many facets of consciousness.) Negative
ions are also known to play a role in speeding up plant growth and in
increasing resistance to influenza.
Research from Israel dramatically
illustrates the link between atmospheric ionization, physiological levels of
serotonin, and consciousness. In many parts of the world, observers have noted
that certain "winds of ill repute" have a discomforting effect upon
individuals -- the Santa Ana winds in Southern California, the Chinook winds
in Canada, the Mistral winds of France, the Zonda winds of Argentina, Sirocco
winds of Italy, and the Sharav or Chamsin winds of the Near East. Symptoms
such as sleeplessness, irritability, tension, migraines, nausea and vomiting,
scotoma (diminished vision), amblyopia (dimness of vision), and edemata
(swelling of tissue) have been noted. These symptoms resemble the effects of
hyper-production of serotonin. In weather-sensitive people, urinary serotonin
output showed a steep rise two days before the onset of the Sharav winds in
Israel. They remained high the following day and dropped only after the winds
began. In addition to increase in positive ionization, the salient
meteorological features of these winds are a rapid rise in temperature and a
decrease in humidity. These factors by themselves, however, fail to account
for the physiological changes noted. The negative psychological and
physiological effects are attributed to the rise in the ratio of positively
charged ions in the atmosphere preceeding the onset of the winds. It is
interesting to note in this connection that the word doldrums has two
dictionary meanings: (1) dullness; a state of listlessness and boredom, (2) a
part of the ocean near the equator abounding in calms, light winds, and
squalls.
On the other hand, in locations where
(-) air ion densities are relatively high, such as near water falls, the
general effect of the local environment is tranquilizing and conducive to good
health. It is no wonder then that scientists in the know, such as Dr. Albert
Krueger in Berkeley, use air filters and negative ion generators at all times
to restore the environment around them to its natural unpolluted and
electrostatically balanced state.
Stepping into Krueger's laboratory in
the Life Science Building at the University of California, Berkeley, and
breathing deeply was like all of a sudden being out in the crisp, clean air of
a mountain wilderness.
Closely related to the electrostatic
and ionic phenomena of the biosphere, are electromagnetic phenomena that also
play an important role in the ecology of consciousness.
The magnetic field of the earth
extends around the planet like a large donut and is probably created by the
flow of molten metals in the earth's core. The average intensity of this field
is about 0.5 gauss and it pulses at frequencies ranging from 0.1 to 100 cycles
per second. The predominant frequency range of magnetic pulsations, known as
the Schumann resonance, is around 7.5 cycles per second. Several researchers
have suggested that this resonance in the geomagnetic and electrostatic field
has an effect upon the human nervous system-and upon consciousness itself.
The Schumann resonance is an effect
due to the fact that an electromagnetic wave (traveling at the speed of light,
186,000 miles a second) goes around the earth's 25,000 mile circumference
around 7.5 times a second. Perhaps it is useful to think of the 7.5 c.p.s.
brain wave frequency as the boundary between alpha waves and theta waves. If
that frequency predominates in your brain waves you are generally in the
hypnogogic or hypnopompic state just on the border of wak`ng up or falling
asleep. The theta wave is frequently observed in the EEG patterns of
experienced meditators, who must pass through the Schumann resonance portal
without falling asleep.
The field of the earth is about 1000
times weaker than the field from a small horseshoe magnet. The reported
effects of such weak magnetic fields include altered cellular reproduction,
plant growth and germination, orientation to direction, amplitude of motor
activity, and enzyme activity. Of particular interest is the work of Dull and
Dull, which showed a striking correlation between incidents of human illness
and death during periods of sharp geomagnetic disturbances (such disturbances
are often related to solar-storm activity). Another study conducted by Robert
Becker and his associates at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Syracuse,
New York, showed a positive correlation between days of geomagnetic intensity
and the number of persons admitted to a psychiatric hospital.
Professor Michael Persinger, of the
Psychophysiology Laboratory at Laurentian University, hypothesizes that the
extremely low frequency (ELF) Schumann waves may serve as a carrier for psi
information. He points out the near impossibility of shielding against such
waves, requiring no less than "an underground bunker surrounded by several
inches of steel."
Noting that ELF waves propagate more
easily from midnight to 4:00 a.m., and that they are easier to transmit from
west to east rather than east to west, Persinger surveyed the ESP literature
for any correlations. His findings were as he predicted. Telepathy and
clairvoyance do show a tendency to peak roughly between midnight and 4:00 a.m.
There is also a slight tendency for the telepathic agent to be west of the
percipient rather than to the east. To clinch his argument, Persinger observes
that fewer psi experiences are reported during periods of geomagnetic
disturbance. Such disturbances also impair the propagation of ELF waves.,
Several investigators have shown that
humans are sensitive to slight variations of magnetic intensity. Once
accustomed to distinguish between the presence and absence of a weak magnetic
field, subjects in several experiments were asked to walk back and forth over
a given area without knowing whether an artificial magnetic field had been
activitated. Under these conditions, the subjects were extremely accurate in
guessing whether the current was in operation., This sensitivity is offered as
a partial explanation for the effectiveness of dowsers in finding water:
Water filtering through porous media
produces electric currents through electrofiltration potential and
concentration batteries. If the medium is sufficiently conducting, and the
current of the soil is sufficiently high, then there exists at the surface of
the soil a small magnetic anomaly.
The precise channels by which the
human body detects magnetism are still a matter of speculation. However we
know most biological processes are based on chemical interactions, which can
be accounted for, in the last resort, by the interactions of atomic nuclei and
electrons. In one study with dowsers, using strict experimental controls and a
double blind, weak magnetic fields were shown to cause measurable changes in
the electrical skin potential.
Another study was conducted in which
future astronauts spent up to ten days in a special chamber free of magnetic
fields. During this time, no serious psychological or physiological deviations
were reported--although some of the findings have remained classified. It was
found, however, that the subjective perception of general brightness was lower
under the non-magnetic condition--thus implying a magnetic effect upon the
visual cortex. Soviet Studies, in addition, have determined that weak magnetic
fields can effect the direction-finding orientation of birds, fish, and
insects.,, Research with honey bees shows that they are sensitive to fields of
one gamma, i.e. several thousand times weaker than the earth's 1/2 gauss
field. Homing pigeons may rival honey bees in sensitivity. Other studies have
shown that germs and viruses are sensitive to the slightest departure of the
earth's magnetic field from the average--this is reflected in reproduction
rates and in genetic changes. For example, exposure to magnetic fields causes
resistance to penicillin in certain strains.
Sister M. Justa Smith, Ph.D., a
biochemist associated with the Roswell Park Memorial Institute in Buffalo, New
York, has shown that strong magnetic fields affect the reactivity of certain
enzymes in the human body. These enzymes can act as a catalyst to speed up the
body's natural healing processes; and, in fact, Sister Smith observed that
psychic healers do exert a non-magnetic effect on the enzyme similar to the
magnetic field. Studies such as this have left scientists with a firm
conviction that magnetic fields play an important role in the body's healing
and immunological processes.
The world map shows the variations in
the intensity of the earth's geomagnetic field. Movement of high and low
centers varies very slowly with time-the rate of this movement is measured in
feet per year. The center of lowest magnetic intensity on the planet (25
gauss) is in Brazil right over Rio de Janeiro.
From "The Airborne
Magnetometer," by Homer Jensen
Copyright (C) June 1961 by
Scientific American, Inc., all rights reserved
(In terms of psychic consciousness,
it is interesting to note that Spiritism has flourished in Brazil, in spite of
opposition from the Catholic Church, perhaps more than in any other nation.
Brazilian spiritists, synthesizing modern European, native Indian, and African
culture, number over a third of Brazil's population and comprise powerful
interest groups with their own elected representatives in the national
legislature. There are entire towns in Brazil composed solely of spiritists.)
The areas of greatest geomagnetic
intensity center near the poles where readings are found in the .60-.70 gauss
range. Spacecraft at the altitudes and latitudes of the usual near-earth
orbits are generally not exposed to magnetic fields lower than those in
Brazil. However, spaceflights more than about one sixth the distance to the
moon enter a magnetic environment near-zero in intensity. It is still
uncertain precisely how these variations of magnetic field will effect the
consciousness of astronauts, as scientists are just beginning to explore the
interactions of electromagnetism on the mind and body.
For nearly thirty years doctors in
Austria, West Germany and the Soviet Union have used a therapeutic technique
known as electrosleep to cure a wide variety of psychological problems related
to insomnia. A weak electric current (just enough to cause a tingling
sensation) is passed through the head by attaching electrodes over the closed
eyes and over the mastoid process (behind the ears). This induces an altered
state of consciousness, and eventually sleep.
Over 500 articles about electrosleep
have been published in the Russian literature and a number of sophisticated
studies in Western Europe have produced evidence that the therapeutic process
is effective. However, American clinicians have remained very skeptical about
all electronic therapeutic processes, which have long been associated with
medical quackery. (The unfortunate exception to this assumption is
electroshock therapy where powerful current -- 70 to 130 volts -- jolts
through a patient's brain causing convulsions, memory loss, temporary relief
of depression and other symptoms. No one is sure how or why it works.)
In the last few years, American
researchers have shown a new interest in electrosleep. A number of favorable
research papers have been presented using electrosleep with humans and
animals. Improvements have been shown in cases of insomnia as well as in
removing neurotic and psychotic symptoms. The exact mechanisms are still
unknown; but it is quite clear, as we have already pointed out, that
electromagnetic brain fluctuations are involved in the basic rest and activity
cycle.
The problem of bio-electromagnetic
interactions is much more intrinsic than the comparatively simple question of
brain activity. The enormous role light plays in our daily lives is so obvious
we ordinarily overlook it. The most dramatic responses to light can be
observed in plants, upon which we are dependent for oxygen and nutrition. The
Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1780) first noticed that various
flowers opened at different hours and could actually be used as a clock.
Linnaeus Flower Clock:
6 a.m. Spotted Cat's Ear opens
7 a.m. Afhan Marigold opens
8 a.m. Mouse Ear Hawkweed opens
9 a.m. Prickly Sowthistle closes
10 a.m. Common Nipple Wort closes
11 a.m. Star of Bethlehem opens
12 noon Passion Flower opens
1 p.m. Childing Pink closes
2 p.m. Scarlet Pimpernel closes
3 p.m. Hawkbit closes
4 p. m. Small Bindweed closes
5 p.m. White Water Lilly closes
6 p.m. Evening Primrose opens
In nineteenth century Europe, formal
gardens were sometimes planted to form a clockface, with the flowers in each
bed blossoming at a different hour. On a sunny day one could tell the time to
within a half hour by glancing at the garden.
We wake and sleep according to cycles
of light and darkness. Furthermore, our adrenal hormones, pineal hormones
(such as serotonin), and our sexual hormones all follow a twenty-four hour
circadian production cycle which changes with the seasons according to the
amount of available sunlight. Reflect for a moment you2�lf just how much
your consciousness is effected by sunlight and artifical light in your
environment in a church or temple in the forest on a bright afternoon...in the
moonlight...by the flickering firelight a lamplit room...just after
sunset...or in the dark. One of the things I love to do is get up early in the
morning, several hours before sunrise while it is still dark. From a hilltop,
I can silently watch the gentle conquest of darkness as the earth turns and
the birds, insects and the hormones flowing in my own blood are all part of
the music -- the planetary rotation raga. (The Hindu musicians understood this
perfectly well when they composed different pieces of music to be played at
different times of day.)
In Robert O. Becker's opinion,
electromagnetic fields have enormous implications for understanding
consciousness. He suggests that the analog-synaptic aspect of the central
nervous system is regulated in part by electromagnetic interaction with the
environment. His research relating geomagnetic disturbances to psychiatric
admission rates has already been cited. In other studies he has indicated that
geomagnetic disturbances effect the behavior of patients on a psychiatric
ward, and that magnetic fields also have an effect on human reaction time.,
Challenges to the Biological
Identity Model
Ever since its eloquent expression in
the philosophy of Rene Descartes, dualism has been a feature of western
philosophy and cultural thought. While most physiologists implicitly subscribe
to the materialistic, biological indentity model of consciousness, many of of
the most promiment members of the field have opted for a cleancut dualism.
Wilder Penfield, the Canadian neurosurgeon whose experiments of electrical
stimulation of the brain were instrumental in developing our knowledge of
cortical functioning, ended a reknowned scientific career by renouncing the
biological identity principle:
In the end I conclude that there is
no good evidence, in spite of new methods, such as the employment of
stimulating electrodes, the study of conscious patients and the analysis of
epileptic attacks, that the brain alone can carry out the work that the mind
does. I conclude that it is easier to rationalize man's being on the basis
of two elements than on the basis of one.
Some neurophysiologists such as
Sherrington, Eccles, and Sperry have proceeded further in stating that mind
can act on brain directly.
Nobel laureate Sir John
Eccles
Parapsychological
Association, 1976
They have not specified, however,
what they mean by mind, nor by what mechanism mental organization can
influence brain function. This is the basic problem of dualism. Nevertheless,
support for the dualistic position has come from the logician and philosopher
of science, Karl Popper, who summarizes the crux of the argument against a
materialistic biological identity model:
[Materialists suggest] that
consciousness is nothing but inner perception, perception of a second order,
or perception (scanning) of an activity of the brain by other parts of the
brain. But [they] skip and skim over the problem why this scanning should
produce consciousness or awareness, in the sense in which all of us are
acquainted with consciousness or awareness; for example, with the conscious,
critical assessment of a solution to a problem. And he never goes into the
problem of the difference between conscious awareness and physical reality.
The monist materialist can respond --
as philospher Thomas Hobbes did in refuting Descartes' dualism -- that there
is no reason why matter should not be capable of thinking. This formulation is
correct as far as it goes. If we conceive of matter vaguely at the start, we
cannot deny it the faculty of thought. But this essentially destroys the
mechanistic world view: in addition to the classical properties of extension
and motion, an entirely different sort of property is now being ascribed to
matter. The mechanistic claims of materialism are thereby fundamentally
changed, raising severe problems for conventional physical notions.
Some leading physicists have gone
even further in their dissolution of the idea of matter. Under the influence
of Ernst Mach, a physicist who believed neither in matter nor in atoms, and
who proposed a theory of knowledge reminiscent of William James' radical
empiricism, idealistic interpretations of quantum mechanics have been put
forward. As Bertrand Russell has eloquently stated:
It has begun to seem that matter,
like the Cheshire Cat, is becoming gradually diaphanous until nothing of it is
left but the grin, caused presumably, by amusement at those who still think it
is there.
References
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regions of the brain that seem to elicit pain when stimulated, these "pain
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explanation of the earth's magnetic field.
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Psychic Explorations. New York: Putmans, 1974.
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whether a particular condition is part of the control or the test group, i.e.
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Mountains. London: Souvenir Press, 1966. This book offers an unusual
balance of emotional involvement and sociological objectivity. The author, an
educated journalist, is also the founder of a spiritist church which is
attempting to synthesize the many conflicting strains of Brazilian magical
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satisfied with the quality of the European work, these American researchers
conducted their own study with encouraging results.
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120-132. This is an unabridged version of a report originally prepared for the
National Institute of Mental Health.
. John N. Ott, Health and Light.
Old Greenwich, Connecticut: Devin-Adair, 1973. Using the techniques of
time-lapse photography, this volume demonstrates the effects of light
variations on plants and points to similar responses in animals and people.
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. Bertrand Russell, "Mind and
Matter," in Portraits From Memory. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1956,
p. 145.
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