The Daily Forest Report July 22, 2014 Halo of Flies (Or Lack Thereof)

by nielskunze on July 22, 2014

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(Halo of Flies by Alice Cooper from his 1971 album Killer. I had to speed up the turntable to cram an 8:30 long song into about 7:15 as to not exceed the 7 MB limit for embedded audio, so Alice sounds a bit like a chipmunk and his band sounds like they’re enjoying a bit of cocaine.)

We had a celebrity guest on this day– the intrepid Darren whom you may remember from The Amazing Race Canada season one… you know, one half of the BC hippies. Being a curious fellow, Darren urged us further afield this day, deep into bigsquatch and cougar territory.

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I don’t often venture up into the gorge where my old cabin lies because of the summer incursion of mosquitos. On this day however, they weren’t bad at all. As a result, we had the opportunity to explore the unique vegetation of the thick forest surrounding the tiny stream cutting through the gorge.

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The prize of this exploration was the numerous elderberry trees which were loaded with fruit. They combine especially well with Merlot for the making of a unique and very tasty wine.

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Generally, red elderberries are considered inedible while the black ones are edible.

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As you can see, it only takes a few minutes to pick several pounds of elderberries.

Our most significant encounter this day was with a rabbit. Sitka ventured up ahead from where we were bushwhacking, and flushed out a rabbit towards us. The frightened hare nearly ran right into me and then dodged and weaved for a confused moment before disappearing into a bush right beside Lhasa. As Lhasa stuck her nose in, we quickly urged her not to attack the rabbit and she was happy to oblige. Amidst three dogs and two humans, the bunny finally escaped into the forest behind us no worse for wear.

Darren remarked that it seemed to him that animals and humans were currently redefining their relationships, even in wild settings. I readily agreed. We’re all getting along much better it seems.

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Darren was also able to help me identify the “mystery bird” from a couple of days ago. It’s a grey jay, a relative of the bluejay. Jays come into the lives of dabblers– people like myself who know a little about lots of things and are able to make it appear that we know more than we actually do. His message is about the appropriate use of power in a more focused manner.

Message heeded. Thank you.

The Daily Forest Report July 21, 2014 Silver Tightrope

by nielskunze on July 21, 2014

As we tread our own silver tightrope to the One who animates this skin suit…

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(Silver Tightrope by Armageddon from their self-titled 1975 debut– a one-off album despite its enormous appeal and promise)

I’ve been asked whether I think that the Earth could sustain the current human population through providing for foraging alone. Yes and no. It all depends which world(s) we choose to inhabit.

Despite being not even remotely scientifically supportable, the prevailing world view among our global population is still very much a Newtonian one. That view has it that there is only one Earth– a highly complex machine operating independently from our conscious belief– with very limited resources. Within this prevailing view, the answer is a clear no… the Earth cannot currently sustain the human (and animal) population through providing wild foods alone.

The scientifically supportable view which hasn’t been seriously disputed for– oh, about four generations– has it that the “world’s” productivity is a function of our own interaction with it. My own experience has been that as I interact and appreciate the response from the world to my foraging proclivities, the Earth responds with greater and greater abundance with every thank you.

Of course what I’m talking about here is the classical Newtonian world view versus the relativistic/quantum world view. I find it personally astounding that so many still cling to a view which became obsolete nearly a century ago. This was the topic of a recent essay I wrote: Once (More) and for All (Time)

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Sitka certainly demands her fair share too! And lacking the dextrous lips of a black bear, I usually have to help her with the picking.

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These are the gooseberries coming ripe. Some of the bushes are unbelievably loaded!

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And this is my most recent prize… pineapple weed! I’ve known of this plant in the chamomile family for many years, but this is the first time I spotted it along my regular route. The taste is– like the name suggests– very pineapple with a sweet hint of coconut. Maybe I’ll rename it pina colada weed!

I intend to make another unique ale from these soon.

The Daily Forest Report July 19, 2014 Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch

by nielskunze on July 19, 2014

You were expecting Zappa… Ha! Fooled ya.

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(Drowned by Pete Townsend 1979 live at The Secret Policeman’s Ball)

Someone needs to invent a camera capable of taking pictures of the unbidden scenes that occasionally drop into my mind. I keep getting the image of a cracked dam… and a boy apparently trying to plug the leaks with his finger(s). The boy isn’t Dutch though; he’s black– or kinda mocha– with big ears, and it’s not clear whether he’s actually trying to plug the leaks or just pretending. I hope he’s a good swimmer ’cause that sucker’s gonna burst!

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Our valley is filled with smoke. We’re surrounded. There are major fires burning all around us… although none of them is very close. It doesn’t matter which way the wind blows; every direction offers more smoke.

We could use some rain.

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I don’t know who this guy is, but he definitely vied for my attention. Although on the smallish side, he flew like a raptor with long glides, but his perfectly straight beak denies that identity.

Regardless, his message is about Grace. If you listen closely to the words of the song above, you will gain insight into Grace. Pete had it right.

At the “mystery bird’s” suggestion, I will finish today with a little poem:

I Am Water

I am water,
and you are a leaky bucket.
It is inevitable
that I will escape
your efforts to contain me…
For you do not understand
my nature.
There is no striving
For me to be relentless
or tenacious;
I am water.
Your only recourse
has been to deny
that I am water…
Deprive me of self-knowledge.
You sought to sustain
Perpetual winter.
As ice,
My fluid nature lay forgotten…
As you also forgot
that you are a leaky bucket!
Even glaciers know
that the thaw is inevitable.
You cannot withhold from me
my true nature;
You cannot grasp
what you don’t understand.
I am water…
And you have no idea
what I am talking about.

The Daily Forest Report July 18, 2014 Blue Smoke

by nielskunze on July 18, 2014

Ah, the smell of red flags burning! So much smoke from one deemed false!

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(Blue Smoke by E.J. Gold first published in 1984 and subsequently released as the title track on his 1998 album)

Messenger, guardian, protector… Hawk was with us the whole time.

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Her presence is reassuring. There’s just something mystical about a hawk or two accompanying you on a four-hour hike. She watched like a mother over her children the whole way as we indulged in the day’s treasures.

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It’s official; there will be a Saskatoon Berry Ale this year! It took me all of ten minutes to pick these. It was a real pleasure to go around tasting all the different bushes to try and identify the berries that still retained the almond-vanilla flavour so characteristic of their early spring flowers. This will be a new brew for me; I only really “discovered” saskatoon berries last year.

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Despite the bluish haze from distant fires, the Forest truly smelled of vanilla. The first of the sweet clovers are now in full bloom– mostly whites and only a few yellows so far. Last year the yellow sweet clover blossoms were superior in taste, but this year it’s the whites who taste better. They work well in teas, smoothies and especially in combination with raspberries… for a raspberry-ripple foraging experience!

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We knew that something was up. Laura of the Oracle Report had warned us that conditions were perfect for a highly predictable false flag event… and Hawk seemed to confirm it. But this butterfly went about her business regardless. She sagely said “Is there anything you can do about it?” No, I suppose not… except watch as the sleepwalkers contort their thinking in order to accommodate the call for more idiotic violence!

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Twenty-five thousand years of playing among the ruins. I think perhaps we’ve had enough now…?

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The narrative of the Ancient Sorcerers has been passed off to Hawk now. She was Ajna’s view from the sky when the dark forces clashed in the distant past. She remembers that defeat… and reminds us of our victory now.

The dross of a bygone world smoulders… as the phoenix rises…

The Daily Forest Report July 16, 2014 Oh to Live On Sugar Mountain!

by nielskunze on July 16, 2014

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(Sugar Mountain by Neil Young from his 1979 album Live Rust)

Typically, bears aren’t known for their subtlety and stealth… but I was happy nevertheless to detect this singular sign in the dust upon the Mesa. A single footprint near the raspberry profusion hints at the possibility of a meeting in the near future!

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The raspberries are just coming ripe now, and after the prolific flowering season we’ve had, the prospect for an incredible harvest is hungrily anticipated. Yeah, they’re a bit smaller than the domestic varieties, but they’re tasty, free and abundant!

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Saskatoon berry season is in full swing now, so I shouldn’t be surprised by the return of the Invisible Bear. The saskatoons are huge! As some of them move into the deepest of purple, others are still perfectly green, so the feast should still last several weeks.

And for those who may not know, goji berries grow well here in Canada too. They begin flowering and producing berries in about their third year.

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This one is actually growing in my yard, but it needs no special care or protection. I’m sure that it would fare well in the wild too. (I met up with the Invasive Species Poisoning Technician out in the forest last week. I should have asked him whether he’d consider goji berries an invasive species… you know, if somehow some berries “accidentally” fell from someone’s hand who was eating superfood trail mix or something.)

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They seem to keep to their own schedule as to when to flower and produce berries. For the past three years they’ve fruited at radically different times throughout the growing season. I like a berry that can think for itself!

I planted them on a whim, not knowing whether they’d survive our severe winters. Well, after last winter’s unending debacle, I’m confident in their adaptability– a quality they’re happy to pass along to consumers.

If you’re interested in growing your own goji berries, all you need is a reasonably fresh goji berry… and by reasonably fresh I mean less than three years old. Tear the berry open with your hands and plant pieces of the seed-containing flesh about a half inch deep and you should have dozens of gojis sprouting in a couple of weeks. Transplant them out into your garden once they’ve established themselves (a few inches high).

And feel free to join me for a real sugar high on Sugar Mountain… I’m not leaving here anytime soon!

Audio Version of July 2014 Newsletter

by nielskunze on July 15, 2014

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Here are the audio versions of each of this month’s articles:

July 2014 Newsletter Introduction

Once (More) and for All (Time)

Proof of Souls

Message To/From the TOURS #15 The Demise of the Objective Universe

The Jury

The Daily Forest Report July 14, 2014 Rise of the Ancient Sorcerers

by nielskunze on July 14, 2014

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(Waiting By the Bridge by Ritual from their 2007 album The Hemulic Voluntary Band)

In case you haven’t noticed, the Hoodoos are the most attention-grabbing landscape feature in our neck of the woods. The highway curves around their base just across the Dutch Creek bridge where things often get a bit tricky. Tourists don’t hesitate to stop anywhere on highways, even in blind curves, when they see something so obviously photo-worthy. The Hoodoos have been the site of many many motor vehicle accidents over the years. There’s just something about them…

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“The world over,” began Rodney’s latest presentation, “the Amnesiacs insisted that there was only one right way to live, and they enforced it through a policy of genocide. There’s was an agroindustrial form of domination that demanded the forests and vales be abandoned or transformed according to a totalitarian method of food production.”

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“Once the StoryKeepers had passed their oral traditions to the Rodderick clan of the Raven Nation for safekeeping, they abandoned their peaceful homes and embarked upon a journey of warriorship. They knew that without their oral traditions, the Amnesiacs would be disconnected from the Earth… for they would be disconnected from that portion of their minds engaged in myth. All of their plans would become so very short-sighted… and ultimately doomed.”

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“The StoryKeepers transformed themselves into the Ancient Sorcerers; their magicks relied upon the art of ritual; they remained mythic in their basic orientation… for as long as they could endure.”

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“But the unliving, unloving technology of the Amnesiacs became too proficient at dealing death to any resistance… and ritual is blocked by a mind in fear. Among the Ancient Sorcerers a fatal doubt took hold.”

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“With the loss of the ritualistic mind, with the loss of myth and intuition, their magicks became weak and ineffectual. There was only one, Ajna, who continued to rally the noble cause of the Ancient Sorcerers. Ajna was whole and complete in himself, a being of great vision. If ever his leadership was severed from the rest of the clan, the fight would be over…”

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…and all their dreams for themselves and their children would all turn to stone.”

The Daily Forest Report July 13, 2014 The Rhythmatist

by nielskunze on July 13, 2014

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(Rhythmatist by Dweezil Zappa from his 2006 album Go With What You Know)

Despite the accolades, it was still Rodney’s responsibility to remind everyone that there was a subtle war going on. Fortunately, he had a great deal more credence suddenly.

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He warned that indeed there would still be casualties. Not everyone was able to adapt to rapid changes. Evolution was a headstrong taskmaster.

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This grouse, the Forest’s own expert rhythmatist, hadn’t been quite up to the new incoming frequencies. He had flown at the New Reality with enthusiasm, but couldn’t adjust his internal dissonance in order to match the New Symphony.

Rodney spoke encouraging words nevertheless. He spoke of “The Cavalry” coming soon to tip the balance in favour of the New Unfoldment. He stole furtive glances at the “General” standing on his own facing his slumbering army.

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He was still hemmed in by the electromagnetic matrix of the Old Controllers… but Rodney assured everyone that the old grid would eventually come down… and a floodgate would open upon the Earth…

In the meantime, they were all to prepare for the coming fray. Summer’s provisions were especially bountiful.

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The saskatoon berries were just coming ripe, and they were everywhere! There was even talk of brewing a special fortifying ale from the bounty.

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And in a week or two, the high bush cranberries would be ready too… not to mention all the wild raspberries which threatened to overtake the landscape like some voracious jam sweetening the air with the New Rhythm of ultra-abundance!

Rodney’s words were encouraging. Now he needed to compose himself again and prepare for the next phase of the narrative… The Rise of the Ancient Sorcerers…

Message To/From the TOURS #15 The Demise of the Objective Universe

by nielskunze on July 12, 2014

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It has been extremely difficult for the average human on Earth to accept the demise of the objective universe. It doesn’t seem to matter that it never existed in the first place!

The current discussion is not about convincing my readers of this verity. That was addressed in my most recent essay Once (More) and for All (Time), wherein I let the physicists and physics professors do most of the convincing. Here, I would like to delve further into the implications, especially for members of the TOURS.

Specifically, it is evolutionary theory which concerns me in this discussion. First, let me be perfectly clear: I do believe that evolution occurs; it is a very real process. Exactly how it occurs needs to be addressed in light of there being no independent physical universe sitting out there like some grand and complex machine churning out conscious lifeforms. Relativity and quantum theory have insisted that this universe is participatory, that observership causes the universe of our experience to come into being, that consciousness in some form is a prerequisite to the whole physical process. It appears that consciousness is the foundational matrix for all that is. For the purposes of this discussion, I will proceed on this premise.

First, what needs to be asked in light of this new view of evolution is: what exactly is undergoing an evolution? What is evolving? The old answer was: physical systems. But since physical systems don’t exist independently from consciousness, our new revised answer is obviously: consciousness. Consciousness is evolving. The easiest way to think about this is that physical systems– what we perceive as the objective universe– are actually reflections or representations of consciousness. How the physical universe is structured and how its components interact are reflections of our collectively held beliefs, or what Heisenberg referred to as our “method of questioning.” In simplest terms then, what we observe as physical evolution is the reflection of the progressive development of our collective belief systems.

The universe presents itself to our perception according to our belief– or our understanding, if you prefer.

We can use our imaginations to harken back to the times of Copernicus. The prevailing collective belief was that the Earth was at the centre of the universe and everything revolved around it. And that is exactly how the people of those times experienced it. “But wait,” you insist, “they were wrong! The Earth is not at the centre of the universe.” But in terms of their experience… yes it was! Even for a handful of astronomers and mathematicians who recognized anomalies and inconsistencies in their observations and calculations, they were just part and parcel of the inexplicable mystery. Their basic orientation underlying their experience as a universal denizen was still that the Earth was solidly at the centre. Whatever Copernicus would come to prove so convincingly in the future was powerless to influence the human experience at that time until the collective belief changed. Only then did humans begin to experience a universe in which they were not the centre.

It’s all about what we experience.

We have to drop this notion of “Yeah, but the universe is really this way… or really that way.” No it’s not. For the last hundred years or so, our very best science has informed us indisputably that a provable objectified reality having any intrinsic properties is scientifically unsupportable. It is always subject to– dependent upon– our method of questioning, our level of understanding… and that determines our individual and collective experience of it.

Modern physics has pretty much shown us that the very basis of all matter and energy is information.

Information is the purview of consciousness. How information is organized creates beliefs or belief systems. Can you see how evolution is the refinement of belief, the refinement of our questioning?

The universe is intelligent… because the universe is us.

So far I’ve suggested that we regard the “objective” universe as a reflection or a representation of our consciousness. But the image in a mirror is not intelligent; it merely reflects our own intelligence (or lack thereof). So perhaps it would be better to regard the universe as an extension of us. It is us stretched and spaced out through eternity. Indeed, our physical bodies are part of the physical universe and we feel them to be intrinsically us.

Physicality is another expression or extension of what we are… and we need to own this shit! All of it!

Clinging desperately to the old belief in an objective universe makes us necessarily small. We gaze out into the night sky and say “That’s not me; that’s something else. I’m insignificant.”

We’re currently stuck at this evolutionary bifurcation point because we keep falling back on this notion of a vast universe “out there.” We’ve lost ourselves, and we keep insisting upon remaining lost!

It all seems so terribly counterintuitive because everything about our language gives credence to objects outside of ourselves. Every time we speak or write, we inadvertently affirm a universe which doesn’t exist outside of our belief in it. That’s the nature of the illusion… and we created it… and yes, it’s insidious… now, let’s get over it!

Once (More) and for All (Time)

by nielskunze on July 11, 2014

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In the relativistic Earth realm of our current experience, there is simply no such thing as the objective universe.

This notion of a machine-like universe existing singularly in space and time, being primarily composed of matter, and functioning largely independently from the consciousness of the living organisms within it is scientifically unsupportable. The cold, dead, implacable machine of Newton’s era is assuredly a fiction– albeit a persistent one!

The role of the observer, of the participant, the role of consciousness at the very foundation of all human experience is reasonably undeniable. For many years I had taken the support for this position (orientation) from reading various New Age books about quantum physics. And since I had never actually read an honest-to-goodness physics book on the matter, I always held out the possibility that perhaps these “spiritual” authors were taking some unwarranted liberties with their interpretations of quantum theory. Although their conclusions always made good sense to me, I nevertheless conceded the possibility that perhaps they weren’t being perfectly scientific.

Now, in the past few weeks, I’ve read four proper physics books delving into quantum mechanics, relativity, cosmology and specifically the quantum enigma. And now let me say it again: there is simply no such thing as the objective universe!

Let’s delve into this further by first examining a few quotes from the pioneers of relativity and quantum mechanics. Let’s see what the best minds who actually developed the theories have to say about their implications.

We’ll begin with Einstein. Who else, right? A very famous quote by the good doctor goes something like this: “I like to think that the moon is there even when I am not looking at it.” I call this Albert’s lament. Einstein couldn’t outright state that the moon– or the objective universe– is, in fact, there, but he would much prefer that he could. And despite a lifetime spent in pursuit of explicating that preference, the science just couldn’t support it.

Next, we’ll listen to what John Wheeler has to say. “Nothing is more important about quantum physics than this: it has destroyed the concept of the world as ‘sitting out there.’ The universe will never afterwards be the same.” And that fits very well with what one of the fathers of quantum theory, Werner Heisenberg, had to say: “The hope that new experiments will lead us back to objective events in space and time is about as well founded as the hope of discovering the end of the world in the unexplored regions of the Antarctic.” It doesn’t really get much clearer than that! But perhaps you’re holding out the hope that I’m misconstruing the true meaning of these quotes by taking them out of context or something, so let’s continue.

Eugene Wigner simply said “[T]hrough the creation of quantum mechanics, the concept of consciousness came to the fore again. It was not possible to formulate the laws of quantum mechanics in a fully consistent way without reference to consciousness.” Here’s John Wheeler again making it ever so clear. “Useful as it is under everyday circumstances to say that the world exists ‘out there’ independent of us, that view can no longer be upheld. There is a strange sense in which this is a ‘participatory universe.’” And just for emphasis, he goes on to add “The strangeness of the quantum world, from which Einstein incessantly sought escape and from which Bohr saw no escape, is real.”

Aye, that’s the rub, trying to get at what’s real. Here’s Heisenberg again: “But the atoms or elementary particles themselves are not real, they form a world of potentialities or possibilities rather than one of things or facts.” And from a true pioneer, Max Planck: “Mind is the matrix of all matter.” Another of Einstein’s most famous quotes was short and sweet. “The field is the only reality.”

Now let’s move some eighty years ahead and see what physicists of the twenty-first century are saying. “[T]oday’s cosmology, our view of the universe as a whole, presents a quantum enigma, one seeming to involve consciousness on an ever-grander scale.” This is from two seasoned physics professors, Rosenblum and Kuttner, the authors of The Quantum Enigma. “The physical reality of an object depends on how you choose to look at it.” And now this from physics professor Andrei Linde: “Will it not turn out, with the further development of science, that the study of the universe and the study of consciousness will be inseparably linked, and that ultimate progress in the one will be impossible without progress in the other?… will the next important step be the development of a unified approach to our entire world, including the world of consciousness?” And more from Rosenblum and Kuttner: “[T]his reliable and useful physics challenges any reasonable worldview. It actually denies the existence of a physically real world independent of its observation.” And further… “Quantum theory tells us that physics’ encounter with consciousness, which is demonstrated for the small, applies, in principle, to everything. And this ‘everything’ can include the entire universe. Copernicus dethroned humanity from the cosmic center. Does quantum theory suggest that, in some mysterious sense, we are a cosmic center?” I think you’re probably starting to get the picture…

But just to be sure… “Sometimes it almost appears that the theories are not a description of a nearly inaccessible reality, but that so-called reality is a result of the theory.” -Hendrick Casimir. “Consciousness is the ground of all being.” -Amit Goswami. “Observations not only disturb what is to be measured, they produce it.” -Pascual Jordan. “I think the important and extremely difficult task of our time is to try to build up a fresh idea of reality.” -Wolfgang Pauli. And finally, back to Mr. Heisenberg: “What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning.”

For a moment now, let us leave the quantum arena and step into the even older and more established (if that’s even possible) physics of relativity. It seems perhaps a bit strange that Einstein’s own achievement already cast the existence of the objective universe into serious doubt. Oh wait, it actually obliterated it!

Being desk-bound at his job at the patent office, Einstein often employed thought experiments to resolve conundrums in physics. The one I am going to ever-so-briefly describe is actually a mainstay in modern physics texts. It deals with simultaneity.

Alice, observer A, is standing beside a moving train, aboard which Bob, observer B, is traveling in the very centre of a carriage belonging to the same train. At the precise moment when Alice and Bob are exactly adjacent to each other– Bob inside the moving train and Alice standing outside– two bolts of lightning strike, one at the front of the carriage containing Bob and one at the back. To Alice’s observation, and properly confirmed by her very sophisticated measuring equipment, the two bolts of lightning struck simultaneously, one at the front of the carriage and one at the back. For Bob however, who observes the very same phenomena, the lightning bolt at the front of the carriage strikes first and the one at the back follows a fraction of a second later. Bob has all the same very sophisticated measuring equipment as Alice, and just like Alice he measures that the distance of each strike from his point of observation is exactly the same. He also measures that the speed of the light traveling from each bolt is exactly the same. And yet the light rays did not reach Bob simultaneously as they did for Alice; the one at the front of the carriage was observed as being first.

Alice is 100% correct in declaring that from her point of view the two bolts of lightning struck simultaneously. Bob is also 100% correct in declaring that from his point of view the bolt of lightning at the front of the carriage struck first. They are both absolutely correct! So what does it all mean?

Here I’ll play it safe and quote the author of the physics book from which this was taken, lest you think I’m taking unwarranted liberties. Andrew Thomas, author of Hidden in Plain Sight 3, states the inescapable conclusion thusly: “It shows that merely by moving relative to each other, two observers inhabit different realities. It is as if they inhabit two different universes.” Now ain’t that interesting? And this comes from Einstein’s own work on general relativity a century ago!

The extraordinary result of this thought experiment, called relativity of simultaneity, is dealing with only the physical attributes of the universe(s). It matters not one whit what Alice or Bob believe about any of it. This result is not dependent upon their consciousness; it is derived solely from the fact that Alice and Bob are in relative motion to each other. Schroedinger’s cat be damned! Simple relativity places every observer in relative motion into a unique universe where the order of events is strictly determined by the nature of the relative motion in play!

So in a very real and everyday sense, on the macroscopic level, it is safe to say that we each inhabit a unique universe wherein the events or experiences in that universe are unique to ourselves as observers. There is no objective singularity of what “really” happened. To give an even simpler example which makes the same point, although not quite as compellingly, we could have simply asked the question “How fast is the train moving?” Alice might answer 100 mph, while Bob might say it’s not moving at all if the windows were blocked and the ride was perfectly smooth. A bird flying overhead in the opposite direction might answer 110 mph, while a car traveling alongside in the same direction might answer 50 mph. The thing is, when it comes to relativity– and our reality, each of those answers is equally correct. Again, there isn’t a singular objective answer to the question as it was posed.

And that brings us back to Heisenberg with his “What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning.” Already we inhabit differing physical universes, but what happens when we bring consciousness and belief into the equation? Don’t worry, I’m not about to get all woo-woo and new-agey. Let’s stick with the science.

Next, I’d like to consider the placebo effect. I think I’m safe in saying that there aren’t many credible science-type people who deny that the placebo effect is real. In all FDA-approved drug trials, the drugs in question must be shown to perform statistically significantly better than a mere placebo. It is widely recognized that some patients will show measurable improvement of a medical condition when administered nothing more than an inert placebo. It is also widely recognized that the active agent in the placebo effect is the patient’s own belief… the state of her consciousness… the method of her questioning.

To me it’s rather frustrating and quite puzzling that the placebo effect is “scientifically” regarded as something to be overcome. For those on whom it works, it’s the whole of the answer; it’s the solution and the resolution! Instead of endlessly trying to find drugs that work marginally better than placebos, wouldn’t it make much more sense to try to understand the placebo effect fully, and thereby obtain the cure for, well, everything?

And much along the same lines as the placebo effect, what about the medical phenomenon of spontaneous remission? This is when patients– often terminal– are deemed to be beyond the recourse of effective treatment and are left solely to their own devices… and somehow, miraculously, they cure themselves. Anecdotally, the medical literature is littered with cases of spontaneous remission. Although considered rare, over the centuries the number of instances is quite substantial. Interestingly, there is often no physical cause accounting for the cure. The patient often cites a profound change in attitude or belief as being the curative agent. Such anecdotal evidence is certainly not able to prove anything, but it sure does suggest that consciousness might play a central role in our human experience. And for the cured patient, I’m sure he doesn’t really give a damn what the medical scientists think anyway!

We could further look into the mechanics of hypnosis to see how changes in mentation and mood can alter the physiology of the body, or how hypnosis can radically alter one’s perception of their physical surroundings. Or we can talk about how certain personality profiles are directly correlated with heart disease. Am I making my point yet?

Indeed. Isn’t it time that we fully admitted that scientific materialism is a dead end? It’s bankrupt; it’s unsupportable on any reasonable scientific basis. A science which seeks to explain the universe while excluding consciousness– the very place where all of our experiences are registered– is a science which explains sweet fuck all.

I’m so very tired of self-proclaimed scientific skeptics misusing science to narrow the field of our collective inquiries. Science shouldn’t be used to shrink our world view unnecessarily. The existence of the objective physical universe– along with Elvis– left the building long ago. Why do we have such trouble accepting the centrality of our own psyches at the heart of every unique universe we each inhabit… and hopefully explore?

For long enough we’ve clung to this outmoded orientation which has us as insignificant bundles of happenstance pitted against a cold, uncaring, entropic machine determined to obliterate any trace of our own significance. Look where it’s gotten us! We need a new basic orientation within reality, one supported by the undisputed science of the last century. Consciousness matters! Got that? Consciousness– not matter– matters. Indisputably, the physical attributes of the universe I inhabit are different from the physical attributes defining your experience. Your history is very different from my history… and there is no objectifiable, verifiable “true” history to be found anywhere. It’s just a red herring!

I was going to go further into the implications of all this for evolutionary theory, but rather than present more of my own ideas, I’ll just pose a question for you to answer however you see fit within the reality you inhabit. Here it is:

Can consciousness be both a prerequisite for bringing the physical universe into being as well as the end result of a random evolution?

The quantum enigma strongly suggests that consciousness must somehow exist first, providing the matrix for physical evolution to occur in the first place, but Darwinian evolution posits consciousness only as an end result. How does that make you feel?

Allow me to end with Rosenblum and Kuttner again: “The experimental facts basic to the quantum enigma are undisputed. But talking of the encounter of physics with ‘non-physical’ stuff like consciousness is controversial. It’s been called our ‘skeleton in the closet.’ You can look at the undisputed facts, and ponder for yourself what they mean.”

And that, my friends, is the whole of my point: you decide what it all means.