Higher Dimensional Models: Making Space and Time for Psi
Bernard Carr
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Bridging the Worlds of Matter, Mind, and Spirit
Bernard Carr
Bernard Carr
Quote:Since psi involves an interaction between consciousness and the physical world, any
theory for it requires some sort of extension of physics. This is not implausible since
physics regularly undergoes paradigm shifts and there is some indication from
physics itself that consciousness is a fundamental rather than incidental feature of the
world. However, the new paradigm will require one to reassess the traditional divide
between matter and mind. This talk will discuss the hyperspatial model of psi. This
involves a higher dimensional “reality structure” and is reminiscent of ideas already
invoked by modern physics. It relates to the traditional signaling and quantum models
of psi but goes beyond them. The starting assumption is that many psychic
experiences (eg. telepathy, clairvoyance, apparitions, OBEs, NDEs) seem to require
the existence of some form of communal space. This is not the same as physical
space but a higher-dimensional space of which physical space and ordinary
perceptual space (including memories and dreams) are just a lower-dimensional
projections. This space is termed the “Universal Structure” and can be viewed as a
sort of extended reality - an information space which goes beyond physical space but
subtly interacts with it. The crucial step is the identification of the Universal Structure
with the higher-dimensional space invoked by modern physics. In particular, the
physical world is regarded as 4-dimensional “brane” in a higher-dimensional “bulk”.
This identification allows an amalgamated description of physical, psychical and
even some mystical phenomena, these forming a natural continuum. The extra
dimensions of the Universal Structure comprise a hierarchy of times, with closed
timelike curves being associated with the minimum timescale of consciousness or
“specious present”. Psi is then interpreted as a variation in the specious present (an
increase for ESP and a decrease for PK) and there could be levels of consciousness
for which the specious present is much longer or shorter than usual.
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Bridging the Worlds of Matter, Mind, and Spirit
Bernard Carr
Quote:When I was a fifteen-year-old schoolboy at Harrow—a well-known English public school—I misbehaved and as a punishment was “roomed” for a week, which meant that, apart from lessons, I was confined to my room. Having nothing else to do, I read three books which determined the subsequent course of my life. The first, The ABC of Relativity by Bertrand Russell, was about Einstein’s theory of relativity and got me interested in physics and the nature of space and time. The second, An Experiment with Time by J.W. Dunne, was about his precognitive dreams and got me interested in psychical research. The third, The Third Eye by Lobsang Rampa, allegedly by a Tibetan lama who had taken over the body of a plumber from Devonshire, England, was about various psychic and mystical experiences associated with his life as a monk; this book got me interested in Buddhism and religious experience. It is strange that my misbehavior had such beneficial consequences!
Quote:I suggest that one also needs a higher-dimensional space to describe mental and psychic experiences. For example, ordinary dreams take place in a space which can appear just as real as physical space and in a lucid dream it can be hard to tell the difference. Some paranormal experiences—such as an OBE or NDE—also involve some sort of space, which is not the same as physical space but bears some relationship to it. Accounts of apparitions are usually dismissed by skeptics as hallucinations, but there are also collective apparitions, which are seen by more than one person at the same time, or the traditional ghost, which is seen by different people at different times. These apparitions don’t seem to be in normal physical space, because they cannot be photographed, but they appear to be localized. Many mystical and psychedelic experiences also involve some form of space, and sometimes this is explicitly described as higher-dimensional.
'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