A major new paper on science and consciousness, with one of the major contributors being Dean Radin (in Frontiers in Psychology, at https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10....55594/full ):
"What if consciousness is not an emergent property of the brain? Observational and empirical challenges to materialistic models", by
Helané Wahbeh, Dean Radin, Cedric Cannard and Arnaud Delorme.
This article tries hard to be objective and thorough and uncompromisingly "scientific" (following its own scientistic definition of what is pseudoscientific), with both materialistic theories of consciousness and immaterial theories. The main topic is divided into Physicalist Theories and Non-local consciousness theories. Non-local theories are summarized as:
However, this summary paper's credibility is overall in the end severely damaged by its prominent even glaring exclusion of even mentioning (much less covering in detail) the subject of NDEs, which are one of the major areas of excellent empirical evidence for the existence of an immaterial center of human consciousness that can leave the body under extremely stressful traumatic circumstances where the brain is severly compromised. And can even bring back veridical information strongly establishing the reality of the event, with numerous cases having been carefully investigated and confirmed. I guess the authors, from their lofty stance as arbiters of what is "scientific" as opposed to what is "pseudo-scientific", decided to leave out a very major area of the evidence, with the result of making their survey article fundamentally biased. By implication they dismissed the bulk of the exhaustive collective efforts of the authors of the slew of excellent essays submitted in the recent Bigelow contest for the best paper on the evidence for an afterlife, which essays focused mainly on the NDE evidence, and rightly so. I can imagine heated remarks like, "God forbid such a disreputable pseudoscientific subject matter - let there be no mention of it."
So put this down to an ultimately unsuccessful project irretrievably marred by a scientistic bias leading to exclusion of one of the major (if not the major) areas of empirical evidence for the existence of the human spirit. Of course, being "scientific", such terms as "spiritual" and "spirit" will not be found within the paper. It's still useful however as a seemingly thorough review of the current state of theoretical work on the nature of consciousness, albeit excluding one of the major areas of evidence.
(This post was last modified: 2022-09-08, 06:04 PM by nbtruthman. Edited 5 times in total.)
"What if consciousness is not an emergent property of the brain? Observational and empirical challenges to materialistic models", by
Helané Wahbeh, Dean Radin, Cedric Cannard and Arnaud Delorme.
This article tries hard to be objective and thorough and uncompromisingly "scientific" (following its own scientistic definition of what is pseudoscientific), with both materialistic theories of consciousness and immaterial theories. The main topic is divided into Physicalist Theories and Non-local consciousness theories. Non-local theories are summarized as:
Quote:Alternative non-physicalist theories may inform other aspects of consciousness that are not completely explained by physicalist theories. Physicalist theories usually assume that consciousness is generated solely and purely from the brain and is only local to the brain. Alternatively, non-physicalist theories do not make these assumptions, even though both types of theories attempt to explain the underlying brain mechanisms of consciousness. Physicalist theories purport that consciousness originates from physical substrates like neurons that have evolved to be more and more complex over time through adaptation, leading to the emergence of consciousness. Non-physical models do not assume a physical substrate generates consciousness, and many even propose that consciousness is, in fact, more fundamental than matter and spacetime. In this view, that is the natural view for most ancient and eastern cultures, matter and spacetime arise from consciousness rather than the other way around. Perhaps a non-physicalist framework where consciousness is considered fundamental and has non-local properties (such as at the quantum scale) would better explain the full range of reported human phenomenology. For example, there are well-documented experiences of people perceiving information from distant locations, the future, and mental impressions from other people without the use of rationale or traditional means (Cardeña, 2018). In addition, there are verified cases of cognitive function when the neural substrate is severely degenerated, precluding normal brain function. These experiences, most of which are currently regarded as anomalous, will be described in the Section “Phenomena suggested by a model of nonlocal consciousness” as cases of what would be observed should non-physicalist theories of consciousness be valid.
These and other documented phenomenological experiences suggest a different nature of consciousness: one that may not be exclusively generated by neuronal activity and exhibits properties that transcend the conventional constraints of spacetime and, therefore, the physical body. The term “non-local consciousness” has been proposed to denote these purported transcendent properties of consciousness...
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Summary of non-local consciousness models
Most of these theories assume that consciousness is fundamental and primary to all else. Our subjective intersection with this fundamental consciousness is described in different ways, such as being an interface, a dissociative boundary, or a consciousness unit. Moreover, the mechanistic structure of our world with consciousness as fundamental is explained in various ways (e.g., dimensions, conscious agents, gimmel).
However, it is important to note that physicalist theories still have a place in this framework. Even if consciousness is fundamental, these theories will inform on the mechanisms for the embodiment of consciousness into this materialistic reality (e.g., how the interface works).
However, this summary paper's credibility is overall in the end severely damaged by its prominent even glaring exclusion of even mentioning (much less covering in detail) the subject of NDEs, which are one of the major areas of excellent empirical evidence for the existence of an immaterial center of human consciousness that can leave the body under extremely stressful traumatic circumstances where the brain is severly compromised. And can even bring back veridical information strongly establishing the reality of the event, with numerous cases having been carefully investigated and confirmed. I guess the authors, from their lofty stance as arbiters of what is "scientific" as opposed to what is "pseudo-scientific", decided to leave out a very major area of the evidence, with the result of making their survey article fundamentally biased. By implication they dismissed the bulk of the exhaustive collective efforts of the authors of the slew of excellent essays submitted in the recent Bigelow contest for the best paper on the evidence for an afterlife, which essays focused mainly on the NDE evidence, and rightly so. I can imagine heated remarks like, "God forbid such a disreputable pseudoscientific subject matter - let there be no mention of it."
So put this down to an ultimately unsuccessful project irretrievably marred by a scientistic bias leading to exclusion of one of the major (if not the major) areas of empirical evidence for the existence of the human spirit. Of course, being "scientific", such terms as "spiritual" and "spirit" will not be found within the paper. It's still useful however as a seemingly thorough review of the current state of theoretical work on the nature of consciousness, albeit excluding one of the major areas of evidence.