You
don’t have to look far to find outlandish theories on the nature of the cosmos
and human consciousness. These days, notions once relegated to science fiction
are finding their way into esoteric academic journals, and from there, into
mainstream discourse.

One
example of this is the Simulation Argument, recently championed by Elon Musk; another is ‘time
crystals,’ a tantalizing non-linear phase of matter. The newest
symphony of mind jazz being broadcast across the Internet posits new ideas
about the embattled theory of “panpsychism,” or the belief that mind is a
fundamental property of the physical universe and is imbued into all states of
matter.
A new paper,
published by physicist Gregory Matloff, has brought the idea back into
scientific discussions, promising experimental tests that could “validate or
falsify” the concept of a ubiquitous “proto-consciousness field.” Matloff also
pushes the controversial idea of volitional stars, suggesting there is actually
evidence that stars control their own galactic paths.
As
absurd as the theory sounds, it has several prominent adherents, including
British theoretical physicist Sir Roger Penrose, who introduced panpsychism
three decades ago. Penrose believed consciousness arises from the properties of
quantum entanglement. He and anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff authored the
Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR)
hypothesis, which asserts, among other things, that consciousness results from
quantum vibrations inside microtubules.
In
2006, German physicist Bernard Haisch took the idea further and proposed that
consciousness arises within a “quantum vacuum” any time there is a
significantly advanced system through which energy flows. Neuroscientist Christof Koch, another proponent of panpsychism, approaches
it from a different angle, using integrated information theory to argue that
consciousness is not unique to biological organisms.
“The only dominant theory we have of consciousness says that it is associated with complexity — with a system’s ability to act upon its own state and determine its own fate,” Koch argues. “Theory states that it could go down to very simple systems. In principle, some purely physical systems that are not biological or organic may also be conscious.”
Matloff
and other scientists are moving the argument into a new phase: experimentation.
Matloff intends to study the behavior of stars, specifically analyzing an
anomaly in stellar motion known as Paranego’s Discontinuity. Matloff wants to
know why certain cooler stars appear to emit jets of energy pointed in one
direction, a characteristic that seems oddly and inexplicably ubiquitous in the
galaxy. In 2018, he plans to use results from the Gaia star-mapping space
telescope to show that the anomaly may be a willful stellar action.
Meanwhile,
as Matloff studies cosmic activity on the grandest scale, Koch approaches the
experimental phase of the theory using brain-impaired patients. He wants to
know if their information responses match underlying neurochemical foundations
of consciousness. He plans to test this by wiring the brains of mice together
to see if their minds merge into a larger information system.
Panpsychism
certainly has critics, as well. In an article for The Atlantic entitled “Why Panpsychism Is Probably Wrong,” Keith
Frankish writes:
“Panpsychism gives consciousness a curious status. It places it at the very heart of every physical entity yet threatens to render it explanatorily idle. For the behavior of subatomic particles and the systems they constitute promises to be fully explained by physics and the other physical sciences. Panpsychism offers no distinctive predictions or explanations. It finds a place for consciousness in the physical world, but that place is a sort of limbo.”
The
quote expresses a general sense that panpsychism oversimplifies the hard
problem of consciousness in the universe, an opinion many scientists share.
However, Matloff, Penrose, and other proponents continue undertaking the job of
venturing outside the margins of accepted science to try reconciling
intractable contradictions and anomalies exposed by quantum theory.
This article somehow fails to acknowledge that far from an "out there" theory, a majority of humans in all of human history have believed precisely this. It is the basis for Jewish mysticism, Christian Gnosticism, as well as mysticism from all over the world. We ARE all made out of the mind of god. Scientific proof would be cool, but if you really want to know, meditate, or take a high dose of psychedelics and find out for yourself. Its a beautiful truth that can change your life.
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