Does Consciousness Exist Outside of the Brain?
Clifford N. Lazarus Ph.D.
An amusing article, given it seems to spend a lot of time on Fenwick's work and ideas only to make a quick break back to the status quo. But then we've seen this sort of thing in the past, that the only way to get past the censors is to shift back to at least a veneer of support for brain=mind.
Clifford N. Lazarus Ph.D.
Quote:What’s more, according to Fenwick, our consciousness tricks us into perceiving a false duality of self and other when in fact there is only unity. We are not separate from other aspects of the universe but an integral and inextricable part of them. And when we die, we transcend the human experience of consciousness, and its illusion of duality, and merge with the universe's entire and unified property of consciousness. So, ironically, only in death can we be fully conscious.
This is not to be taken as joining God or a creator because the cosmic consciousness that Fenwick describes did not create the universe but is simply a property of it. Obviously, despite his impressive body of research into this subject, there is no current way to empirically establish the validity of Fenwick’s cosmic consciousness hypothesis. Ultimately, it aligns more with faith than science. Thus it seems the answer to the question in this post’s title is “No.” There is no empirically established explanatory framework for understanding how consciousness can exist independently and outside of the brain.
An amusing article, given it seems to spend a lot of time on Fenwick's work and ideas only to make a quick break back to the status quo. But then we've seen this sort of thing in the past, that the only way to get past the censors is to shift back to at least a veneer of support for brain=mind.
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell