Showing posts with label Mind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mind. Show all posts

Saturday, April 8, 2017

God, I and the Universe



I see a broken mirror at an unsure time in Brooklyn. The early hours of the morning leave the streets quiet. I am walking with good energy next to me, and a whole lot of conversation that means little to me logically — for opinion appeals to my heart. My friend speaks of god, and inner peace, and my mind is screaming, ’this makes no sense.’ My heart says, yes. This fits like puzzle pieces.

In the beginning, maybe there is silence within. Usually, thoughts create thought processes, which build the scaffolding for a story, which creates a feeling. Beyond this, there is a gut-reaction phase, an ability to intuitively grab what the mind puzzles to understand. But I wish to understand. What happens when I am religious? Is my thought-process in complete submission to superstition? Am I moving sideways to my thinking? Am I shutting down my mind working on blunt ‘faith’?

Is God necessary for morals? I see no statistical difference between atheists and religious believers in making moral judgments. Robb Willer argues, when feeling compassionate, Atheists and Agnostics may actually be more inclined to help their fellow citizens than more religious people. Besides, religious people don't derive their morals from scripture, or if they do, they choose the nice bits and reject the nasty. Their personal judgment of what is relevant from the bible is very much at play. Many Old Testament passages we would now describe as immoral. Richard Dawkins writes: ‘the very idea that we get a moral compass from religion is horrible. Not only should we not get our moral compass from religion, as a matter of fact we don’t. We shouldn’t, because if you actually look at the bible or the Koran, and get your moral compass from there, it’s horrible – stoning people to death, stoning people for breaking the Sabbath.’ ‘You don't need religion to have morals. If you can't determine right from wrong then you lack empathy, not religion.’

Maybe religious ideology exacerbates the world’s problems? Taboos against marrying out, the labeling of children in terms of their religious beliefs (before they even know what they believe), and damaging emotional blackmail, such as threats of Eternal Damnation, and whatever other undefined ideas they can conjure up, leave a person wondering if there is even any space for god inside these archaic structures. I wonder: is religion actively perverting morality? Only religious faith is a strong enough force to motivate utter madness —from holy wars to countless terrorist attacks. The current war against terrorism is a tragic consequence of religious idealists who have an unquestioning faith. Unquestioning faith is not a path to peace, but a pathway to war.

As for the logical reasoning, there is an argument for the existence of god that goes as follows: when I see a complex object such as a watch, I know it has been designed. Therefore, when I see a complex object such as a tiger, I should infer that it has been designed. This act of comparing two objects and drawing similar conclusions based on similarities (while ignoring important differences) is a prime example of a false analogy. The point of the analogy of the watch is that a watch implies a watchmaker, and that the world is like a watch, in that the world implies a world-maker. There are many flaws to this analogy (the world isn't even remotely comparable to a watch, for example), and in fact, Scottish philosopher David Hume pretty much demolished this argument, called the teleological argument, before Paley was even born in his Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. The watchmaker analogy has evolved to include the notion of "irreducible complexity," a term coined by the prominent Intelligent Design proponent Michael Behe. So now instead of having the mere presence of a watch imply a watchmaker, we are to conclude that the watch is far too complicated to have been created by natural processes, and that therefore the watch must have been designed by an intelligent agent. Thus life, like the watch, is too complicated to have arisen by natural causes. But if the watch looks designed compared to its surroundings, the only logical conclusion we could draw is that its surroundings are not designed. (If we were unable to differentiate the watch from its natural surroundings, then we would deem it to be a natural object no different from a rock or a tree.) If we say that life is designed, again, with what are we making the comparison? Suppose we say that the entire universe is designed. Well, we don't have another universe to compare ours to. We only have experience with one universe, and unless we have the opportunity to examine other universes (which we have not done as of yet), we cannot say with any degree of certainty that our universe is designed for lack of comparison.

Other shaky arguments include that it is impossible to fake a mass revelation (it is), and the cosmological argument of First Cause. The First Cause Argument is popular, and asks what came before The Big Bang i.e. what happened before time, which means something like what was color like before color? The basic premise of the argument is that something caused or continuously causes the Universe to exist, and this First Cause is what we call God. However, ‘any god capable of intelligently designing something as complex as DNA…must have been at least as complex and organized as the machine itself - far more so if we suppose him additionally capable of such advanced functions as listening to prayers and forgiving sins. To explain the origin of the DNA/protein machine by invoking a supernatural Designer is to explain precisely nothing, for it leaves unexplained the origin of the Designer. You have to say something like "God was always there", and if you allow yourself that kind of lazy way out, you might as well just say "DNA was always there", or "Life was always there", and be done with it.’ (Richard Dawkins).

Science has effectively replaced religion in terms of understanding the natural world. Apologists have tried to find God in the realm of physics too, attempting to attribute the big bang to a supernatural origin. Unfortunately for them the data strongly indicates to us that no such miracle occurred to kick-start our universe into being. Some scientists place the formation of the singularity inside a cycle called the big bounce in which our expanding universe will eventually collapse back in on itself in an event called the big crunch. A singularity once more, the universe will then expand in another big bang. This process would be eternal and, as such, every big bang and big crunch the universe ever experiences would be nothing but a rebirth into another phase of existence.

Stephen Hawking wrote in 1988, "In the case of a universe that is approximately uniform in space, one can show that the negative gravitational energy exactly cancels the positive energy represented by the matter. So the total energy of the universe is zero." Apologists will then most likely posit the question 'Why is there something rather than nothing?’

Any attempt to answer the question has to be clear about the definition of “nothing.” It is not enough to describe a mechanism in which a baby universe might spark into being through a quantum fluctuation and then undergo expansion and inflation and increasing complexity until finally we wind up with galaxies and planets and dolphins shooting up out of a pool to grab a fish from the trainer. In that scenario your “nothing” still has qualities that give rise to something. It’s not a true nothing. My version of zero has no superscripts. And if you can tell me there’s a Multiverse from which our universe bubbled forth, you’ve merely moved the fundamental problem of existence back onto a broader platform. This also covers the god explanation. If god is the ultimate cause of the universe I’ll want to know why God exists. The obvious answer is: He just does. He is. He’s what Holt calls the Supreme Brute Fact. He explains himself. And so on. A secular version of that, one that doesn’t require a supreme Creator, is how I approach the something-nothing question.

Seems to me that “nothing,” for all its simplicity and symmetry and lack of arbitrariness, is nonetheless an entirely imaginary state, or condition, and we can say with confidence that it has never existed. “Nothing” is dreamed up in the world of something, in the brains of philosophers etc. on a little blue planet orbiting an ordinary yellow star in a certain spiral galaxy. I wouldn’t go so far as to say that nothing could not in theory “exist,” but seems to me that it hasn’t. We live in the something universe, either in our tidy little Big Bang universe or in a Big Bang bubble within the Multiverse, and no amount of deletion of the elements and forces of this universe would ever get us to a condition of absolutely nothing.

The idea of nothing has bugged people for centuries, especially in the Western world. We have a saying in Latin, Ex nihilo nihil fit, which means, "out of nothing comes nothing." It has occurred to me that this is a fallacy of tremendous proportions. It lies at the root of all our common sense, not only in the West, but in many parts of the East as well. It manifests in a kind of terror of nothing, a put-down on nothing, and a put-down on everything associated with nothing, such as sleep, passivity, rest, and even the feminine principles. But to me nothing — the negative, the empty — is exceedingly powerful. I would say, on the contrary, you can't have something without nothing. Image nothing but space, going on and on, with nothing in it forever. But there you are imagining it, and you are something in it. The whole idea of there being only space, and nothing else at all is not only inconceivable but perfectly meaningless, because we always know what we mean by contrast.’ (Alan Watts).

So, then, why is there something rather than nothing? Or rather, is there everything? Obviously there remain huge cosmological questions, and we’d all like to know what happened before the Big Bang, but I’m fairly persuaded by the Hawking notion that time itself begins at the Big Bang and there’s no “before.” There’s no boundary. The universe is finite but unbounded, like the 2-D surface of a sphere.

Next, is when people resort to using the word god interchangeably, saying that scientists replace the word god with the word energy, and so on. However, the laws of nature are not the laws of God. Rather than have a reverence for existence as we understand it to be as science has revealed it to be.

If there is no ‘nothing’ maybe we have everything, I wonder. Naturalistic pantheism paraphrases and reinterprets our current understanding to ascribe nature with a higher meaning. Something that does not exist, except in peoples imaginations — as of yet.

Next, comes the question of psychic phenomena. If you strip away the fallacy of most of it, you are left with a nagging something: people seeing spirits, reading minds and auras, telling the future, or the past. But to define this we must first define the self. And ‘I find that the sensation of myself as an ego inside a bag of skin is really hallucination. What we really are is, first of all, the whole of our body. And although our bodies are bounded with skin, and we can differentiate between outside and inside, they cannot exist except in a certain kind of natural environment. Obviously a body requires air, and the air must be within a certain temperature range. The body also requires certain kinds of nutrition. So in order to occur the body must be on a mild and nutritive planet with just enough oxygen in the atmosphere spinning regularly around in a harmonious and rhythmical way near a certain kind of warm star. That arrangement is just as essential to the existence of my body as my heart, my lungs, and my brain. So to describe myself in a scientific way, I must also describe my surroundings, which is a clumsy way getting around to the realization that you are the entire universe. However we do not normally feel that way because we have constructed in thought an abstract idea of our self.’ (Alan Watts). From there, we can surmise that altered states in consciousness can bring about altered states of perception. And sometimes these perceptions will include the breakdown of prescribed frames of mind, and an introduction of psychic phenomena.

In Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass, the White Queen tells Alice that in her land, "memory works both ways." Not only can the Queen remember things from the past, but she also remembers "things that happened the week after next." Alice attempts to argue with the Queen, stating "I'm sure mine only works one way...I can't remember things before they happen." The Queen replies, "It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards.”

People I’ve met, and those I’ve read about, who claim that psychic abilities (such as telepathy, clairvoyance or telekinesis) or paranormal phenomena (such as ghostly apparitions) do not exist because there is no scientific basis or proof for such things, do so out of sheer ignorance. Both the British and the American Societies for Psychical Research, established in the late 1800s, have tons of research data pointing to the existence of psychic and paranormal phenomena. Psychic skills are totally real. We are all wired to do it. The problem with 'natural' psychics is that they do not know the exact and precise method, which the subconscious mind communicates with conscious awareness.

But the truth is that these effects are actually pretty consistent with modern physics' take on time and space. For example, Einstein believed that the mere act of observing something here could affect something there, a phenomenon he called "spooky action at a distance.” (Quantum Entanglement). Similarly, modern quantum physics has demonstrated that light particles seem to know what lies ahead of them and will adjust their behavior accordingly, even though the future event hasn't occurred yet. For example, in the classic "double slit experiment," physicists discovered that light particles respond differently when they are observed. But in 1999, researchers pushed this experiment to the limits by asking, "what if the observation occurred after the light particles were deployed?” Surprisingly, they found the particles acted the same way, as if they knew they were going to be observed in the future even though it hadn't happened yet.

Such trippy time-effects seem to contradict common sense and trying to make sense of them may give the average person a headache. “Quantum Mechanics is completely counter-intuitive and outside our everyday experience, but physicists have kind of gotten used to it.” (Chiao). So although humans perceive time as linear, it doesn't necessarily mean it is so. If we suspend our beliefs about time and accept that the brain is capable of reaching into the future, the next question becomes "how does it do this?" Just because the effect seems "supernatural" doesn't necessarily mean the cause is.

Lastly, we have spiritual experiences. The concept of seeing God, of seeing angels, of seeing Jesus, or whomever. Seeing things within the mind is imagination, and the expression of these visions can result in beautiful works of art: writing, paintings, religious text etc. As J.K. Rowling famously wrote: “Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should that mean that it is not real?” The experience of someone who is having a spiritual experience is profoundly ‘real’. But this in no way makes it true to shared reality, much in the way that someone can hallucinate an experience, to the extent that they can taste and smell and see the experience, without ever having had the experience. “What is real? How do you define real? If you're talking about what you can feel, what you can smell, what you can taste and see, then real is simply electrical signals interpreted by your brain.” (The Matrix, 1999). The things we imagine are ‘real’ within our heads. But then again, so is life.

Waking up like lucid dreamers, fantasy and reality become a matter of converting ideas into form. Humanity takes an early retirement. Physics continues. Computers replace us and we evolve further. We go home, we stare the most powerful creator we have witnessed in the mirror.

‘Have you been I all along?’ We think aloud.



 Rachel Landes

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Consciousness As Yet Undefined



I stepped out and away from really big thoughts for quite a while.  I guess I needed a break for a bit.  But, lately consciousness as a topic of thought calls from that precious place I left it some time ago and it tells me I’m not done yet.  Have you any idea the frustration this causes or why?  There have been over 200 papers written on the topic of consciousness and yet, we are still unable to pin point exactly where it begins and ends. The theories are abundant.  Some are very outlandish and some seem so rational and logical.  I cannot help but wonder though, if it remains truly illusive because we are looking for it with the wrong perspective and possibly, the wrong equipment.

What if consciousness is a type of energy field pervasive in its existence to the point it cannot be defined in terms of beginnings and endings?  What if it is such an intrinsic part of this world we experience that we will be unable to differentiate it coming from the mind or soul because both are a part of consciousness?  If we raise ourselves up to the consciousness of spirit and beyond, we still could not define its borders because we cannot get outside of it in order to fully look at it.  We have a word or a concept that carries multiple meanings only because we have no words to define the fullness of the essence of the infinite.

I had to stop looking it this for a while.  I had to cut myself off from thinking about it.  Not because it was a problem I couldn’t solve or it was frustrating or anything like that.  I had to stop looking at it to reconnect with it in a better light.  It has been a stressful year for me in so many ways I just won’t bore you with.  But that stress has been the impetus for my return to aware consciousness.  I think, sometimes, we need something painful to bring us back to the center of our being where there is peace, there is comfort and there is this vast and depthless expanse of pure consciousness we are always engaged with, plugged into and a very focal part of.

I guess in all my inquiry about consciousness, contemplating all the theories, I guess I have to smile and say “Yes” all are not only plausible but likely in some way.  There is no mind over soul over body here in terms of origins.  I think the reality would be much closer to a “yes” to quite possibly all theories.  I have no scientific proof but you see, science cant really measure it from the inside.  It hasn’t got the proper tools or the right perspectives yet to see itself from the inside.  It would be like a fish trying to formulate the existence of the ocean?  What would that be to a fish?  It is in it and so how could it be defined properly?  What framework would the fish use?  You might have to catch glimpses where you could step outside of consciousness but I ask you, how on Earth would you do that?  How in any realm could you do that?

I like to think of us all as interactive processors in a way.  We take in data at various frequencies, process that data and put out a world view that suits us but realize that output is dependent upon our processing equipment.  Not all of us process data in the same manner and even if we are comprised of similar components, the way we were put together creates many and varied ways in which we see, process and output information into the realities that we embrace.  No two processors (humans) are fully alike and each will have his areas of focus based on how he or she was created (and I’m including here genetic memes and psychology as well as environmental psychology and social impact upon our development).  So, within consciousness, how do we see consciousness when we are actually processors of consciousness?  I don’t have the answers.  I, like many others, only have questions. 

At some level, I think I can accept the concept of being conscious, in a sea of consciousness, I consciously interpret to exist within a larger global shared consciousness.  At first this sounded so silly to me but then I stepped back, stopped thinking about it so much and it became more clear to me.  What purpose would it serve for me or anyone to define the indefinable at this point in our human-conscious development?  In this frame and within this plane of existence at this time, I do not think we have yet developed the right equipment, thought processes or perceptive ability to definitively articulate what precisely consciousness is.  Clever as we may be, the best we can hope for, I think, is to define aspects of it and maybe coin some better words to contain the aspects we define…like Spirit, Soul, Sub-Conscious, Latent Consciousness and Awake/Aware Consciousness.  But those are merely points on a spectrum that is really not limited to just the points.  What about the whole plane?  What about the other planes?

I’m more content today knowing I don’t have the tools to do a job I somehow started to take on without realizing it.  Rather than drive myself mad, I am happy to look for the right tools to begin to define component parts, go back to the studies and reread them, go back to the world of rich, beautiful and amazing experiences within the global consciousness and allow what is to manifest to, well, manifest with much greater ease and much less intense thinking on at least this topic in particular.  Because we exist to process and respond to what we both take in and put out, we bring naturally, this space-time continuum into the mix of consciousness.  We are the crossroads or culmination of time and space and the consciousness that keeps these things dimensionaly in tact in our experience.  Hmmm, more thoughts to come.
 
© 2016 JL Harter (Photo: http://www.wallpaperhi.com)

 Dr. J.L. Harter, Editor see bio section for more information.

Sunday, March 20, 2016

Shift in Consciousness

Abstract

Consciousness seemingly carries so many layers that it is difficult to understand fully with any certainty.  We have Freudian definitions; Jungian thoughts on consciousness as well as a slew of philosophical thoughts and papers on what it is and how it is.  This article looks not directly at consciousness but the operation of observation and awareness within and perhaps beyond or before it and the impact of awareness and observation on the perception of time through a first-hand experience of a few moments in time some time ago.

 

Key Words  

Awareness, Consciousness, Mind, Observation, Perception, Consciousness, Time

 


Always in the quiet and cool stillness of the wee morning hours do I find myself the happiest. The peace seems palpable, as if you could hold it in the palms of your hands. I treasure such moments as I do many others. When the world gets chaotic, emotional and seemingly out of control, I learned a little trick while walking along my up and down path in life. It’s simple gratitude and appreciation. For example, earlier in the week I was feeling a bit chaotic juggling all of the seemingly important things in my world when all at once I was struck by the depth of a cerulean blue sky. Not to stop there, as it seemed my perception was rapidly expanding, in the span of seconds I lost all concept of time. My consciousness expanded in an indescribable way and my senses came so very alive. It was so warm out and the grass had just been cut.

That smell of fresh cut grass on a warm day always reminds me of the summer time of my childhood...days spent in a little suburban neighborhood in Southern  California. I was always up so early just waiting for the sun, choking down breakfast quickly so I could go outside and play. I stopped in the moment in my present reality and all of those memories and scenes played in my mind's eye and I was filled with the joy and laughter of childhood memories of play and friends. But the moment was still expanding and I caught sight of the poppy flowers in a bed near my building at work from the parking lot. The colors of those flowers in the distance  seemed electric and alive...the brightest alive orange I’ve ever seen, the deepest soft pink in contrast with the deep green grass along with bright and vibrant yellow. I stood transfixed for what seemed like an hour. But the moment of expanding consciousness wasn’t yet done with me. My sight was pulled upward to a hawk hovering above the trees hunting for something small and delicious to eat. She looked magical floating on a warm up-draft of a gentle wind current. She circled effortlessly and I just watched in awe as if I could feel the wind beneath her wings.

But the moment still was not yet complete. Suddenly my consciousness was pulled to the scores of people walking around the campus. I saw them moving so quickly and noticed they hadn’t noticed their surroundings at all, too caught up in the drudgery as well as the superficiality of work-a-day existence by the looks on their faces. I could feel their thoughts and the cacophony seemed deafening. I observed only pulling back from my own thoughts and just observing a feeling of what was happening around me. A cool breeze kicked up out of no where and blew my hair into my face. I looked at my phone and realized all of this awareness, sensation, perception and observation occurred in a span of 3 minutes as I stood in the shade of a very large tree by my car in the parking lot. I smiled with an ear to ear grin. It’s like life is a simple joke sometimes. The things we think are so serious mean nothing and the things we miss, the things we don’t see mean everything. You might think it’s a cruel joke but to feel it you clearly know it’s not. A simple shift in your conscious observation can bring joy and love or infinite serenity spilling into your inner sight, your heart and your mind and the trivial things shift their phase out of the focus of your being for as long as you remain open and refrain from control. It’s an amazing space to exist in if even only for 3 minutes.

I find I slip into such much moments more frequently. Perhaps I’ve been through so much raw emotion these past couple of years that I’ve really lost my mind and those moments I am transfixed in observation may just be moments in which my sanity is lost or maybe it’s that I’m insane all the other times but those short 3 minute escapes I encounter or simply allow at times. I’m really not sure and I’ll probably question that forever. The one thing I do know is the effects are a bit intoxicating in a rather interesting way.  Maybe it is the true essence of that "high on life" feeling evidenced in John Denver’s Rocky Mountain High song? Such moments remind me that there is so much more to life than we allow ourselves to see, hear and experience. You have to shift your focus a bit or become acutely aware when the shift occurs on its own; remember what that feels like so you can go back to that space any time you want to.  It is an allowing, increasing observation of detail and feeling or seeing all that is happening within and around you and your consciousness.


Conclusion

From an experiential perspective in this moment, I observed a shift in time.  What seemed to be an hour of awareness of everything in crisp detail and allowing consciousness to unfold in an ever-expanding way outside of my elf and personal concerns, time had no meaning for a few moments.  What was once linear and limited by ticking seconds and sequential order disappeared and was no longer entirely sequential at all in terms of the perception while observing life in a very open state.  I question whether consciousness, time and perception are things much more in our control than we realize and that such descriptions are themselves so very limited.  Time may seem to be consistent with a clock that seemingly measures each moment and we experience that sometimes as quick and fleeting with shallow perception or, we observe it and truly feel it as expansive, with great depth, infinite detail and moving much more slowly to not at all.  We have much yet to understand and explore concerning how these perspectives of our minds work to influence time.  Perhaps it is just another facet of the quantum whole of existence seeming to move but really just an aspect of our awareness pre-consciousness slipping through the veil of what we commonly understand as the conscious and physical mind. 

 Dr. J.L. Harter, Founding Editor - See bio section for detail.


Monday, January 11, 2016

Imaginings and Imaginations of the Soul


Imaginings and imaginations of the soul
Contzen Pereira and J Shashi Kiran Reddy

Abstract
The soul is agile and transparent; it does not make the body weighty. It streams limitless within the patterns of regimented matter, gratifies the body until it can fill it no more, but remains as a swirling ball of energy with it. We do not see it, but can imagine it; like the wind; an energy, we do not see but can feel and there is no kerb to imagine its likeness. The soul so translucent lies beneath the scabbard of the body; brings the flesh to life; a heave of energy within and out of every speck of flesh. It abides the laws of nature and so departs the body upon death to be transformed and reutilized. Cosmic energy shapes matter and so shapes life; fabricates the mind and the soul; makes the body conscious of its presence. To seek it, we need to imagine it; imagination helps us see within the stores of the cosmic energy matrix. For no matter what, the soul exists, it is no extraordinary form, no mysterious form; a sphere of energy; pure, created with the purposefulness of engaging life in forms that can support it; us; to experience the magnificence of what is and why it was created. This paper is an insight into the imaginings and imaginations of the soul that deepens the ability of the human mind to venture into the depths of the cosmic energy which crafts it.

Key Words
Soul, Imaginations, Imaging, Cosmos, Energy, Mind

The Journey of the Soul: Images and Imaginations
Imagination and imaginings, is an adeptness of the human mind and this ability of the mind has led to several hypothesis and many discoveries. If we look at the soul from a science based reductive approach, it is a fabrication of the ever prevalent cosmic energy. The cosmic energy we feel; the energy we generate and the energy we expel; that cannot be created nor can it be destroyed, but is not as unadorned as we think it is. Cosmic energy can create and can destroy; for matter is a product of this energy and so can be reduced to energy. We perceive the macroscopic world created by this energy; for energy created matter; matter created matter and so on, but the most beautiful amendment was when energy inhabited matter to bring it to life. Unfortunately, life as we imagine is only the life that is around us; superficial; taken for granted, which may differ otherwise; and that which yet needs to be imagined and explored.


The mind is the soul; a product of cosmic energy that resides in the body that holds the design to develop the brain and the body; enhancing its capability to create, store and process information. The mind in reality is much different from the brain, for it is the mind that creates the brain and not the brain that creates the mind. The mind is the soul the true blueprint of a body, as long as it stays associated with the body. The brain is the organ evolved to accomplish the works of the body and as a medium to imagine and imaginate deep within the depths of energy. 

Imaginations are created by the mind within the limits of the cosmic information and beyond limits of memories that has been retained by the brain. Imaginations are formed with the blend of information that is retrieved by the mind from within the energy matrix of the cosmos; energy that contains information from origination to the cessation; the beginning and the end that reside beyond the limits of the dimensions of time and space. Imagining and imagination of the mind is entering into the depths of the cosmic energy that dwells in the body as the soul and mind, with matter playing the role of a support medium.  


The structural design that energy created since its instigation, is what lies embedded in the energy of the soul; energy is the root cause of all creation; the creation of matter, the body, the soul and the mind. What resides in the mind is what is in the soul and is all around us, and it is for us to imagine all that is in the visible and invisible; learning the art of exploring the energy within. The soul within organized matter gives rise to consciousness; it is the awareness of the existence of oneself. Consciousness is the energy map created when matter is organized, to direct matter to its right path. Death of organized matter releases the energy as soul, mind and consciousness, but the imaginations and images stay ensnared within this matrix expelled into the cosmos. The soul exists but with no identity; it exists like the wind, where we need to imagine and feel it as virtuous energy. Imagination is the pathway that leads the soul into the depths of cosmic energy and its amassed information.  

Cosmic energy flows within every single cell of the body; creates the mind and consciousness; nourishes the soul within the body; helps to learn and imaginate through the mind. Structured selves can bear the energy to imagine the imaginations and imaginings stored within the mind and soul as it flows through the body, effortlessly.


For the soul, is an interactive energy ball, constantly interacting with the eternal cosmic energy within and outside the body; it stays interconnected and intertwined to the matrix and with every soul interacting with the matrix gets cosmologically connected; balls of energy overlap the matrix to form patterns within the cosmos. We are beings composed of the universe. Our bodies were formed from the original energy that formed the universe and therefore we are connected forms, sharing the forces and charges that apply. To imagine the ball of energy as the soul is an image of the complex intertwined networking of the cosmic energy. This is a network that can link the soul to soul and soul to eternity.  


 Imaginations of the soul are imaginations stored within the cosmic energy of the universe and we as humans imagine it in a human state of mind. Energy has patterns much better than the human form and these patterns can be felt only through imaginations of oneself. Cosmic energy takes shape of the body when it resides within the body; the soul forms the body and so the soul shapes the body and resembles the body as an embodied image. The soul does not exit the body until death loses its identity in the absence of the body.


Humans have souls and so do other beings, but imagining the soul of another being is leaping into the depths of cosmic energy. Evolution has bought us way ahead of other beings but the energy that flows within every being is yet the same. The cosmic energy holds information to all that was, all that is and all that will be, for it has been imprinted within the matrix at its materialization. We connect to every living being, for no other is lesser than oneself; no other is less aware than oneself and so there is no limitations in imagining the soul of the other.  


Entanglement is the bizarreness of the microscopic world which is actually the true comportment of energy. Through connections of cosmic energy we realize that no energy is different and possess the same paraphernalia; entangled to perform as one. The energy of a soul is constantly entangled with the cosmic energy network that forms a mode of transmittance of information across dimensions. This entanglement within the body creates the mind; holds memories; that can survive outside the body until the body is resuscitated. Imagination enhances the process of entanglement; makes the soul powerful and the mind mindful. 


An imaginary collection of entangled souls is the imaginary shape that energy takes; entangled to hold information that is being constantly processed and that which has been already processed. We may imagine the images of many souls, which is actually a picture of information sharing between similar energies being released from their own matter. Identity of a soul is lost when it leaves the body but the information resides within energy. The true connections of energy within the cosmos look like an intertwined sphere which extends beyond the dimensions of space and time forming an undulating web of cosmic energy. 



Imagining death or the image death is an emancipation of the cosmic energy from the body; it is the release of the mind; the release of the soul, which remains in an entangled state for a while, before it merges with the energy matrix of the cosmos. The fear of death is that of a perplexed soul; for death is a passage from one energy form to another; the conversion of matter to energy; the disposition of energy to matter. Death leads to birth and birth leads towards death; information codified within the soul enriches the cosmic energy. Imagining death is picturesque for it is the interaction of the soul with the cosmic energy.  


The imaginary journey of the soul as imagined and experienced by many, seems unending as the entangled state of the soul stays until the body opts to give it up and so the information within it. The passage of the soul occurs beyond the dimension of space and time into the depths of energy but since its energy it cannot defy the conservation laws of energy and therefore follows the energy recycling process; a conversion from one form to another and the formation of matter and matter of matters. Time in soul state is in incomparable to the dimension of time in the bodily state as energy flows with no restrictions. A near-death experience is the experience of imagination and a memory of images of what lies beyond and within the depths of the cosmos.  


The path of the soul seems never-ending, for it traverses through dimensions beyond the perception of oneself. The time taken in pure soul state is far beyond the time in the bodily state; energy has no boundaries and can move between dimensions; forward and backwards of time. A realization of the experience of its limits makes the soul officious; energy is prurient and exploratory for it pursues new approaches whenever it gets a chance. It can be justifiably said, that energy has the ability to evolve and design. For energy to design and create, imagination by the mind is needed. Imaginations create orders and energy can bring these orders to life, all it needs is a body, the soul and the mind. The soul appreciates the beauty of energy through imagination. Fulfilment is achieved when the inquisitiveness of the soul is complete.  Within the imaginations of the soul lies the imaginary self of what one desires; it evokes information that has been hitherto stored. 



The body loses this entangled state to a journey which has a possibility of being transposed; the body re-claims the soul in the event of a near-death or out-of-body experience. Entanglement plays an important role during this process, as the entangled soul bears thoughts and memories of the past; information of one’s life. A near-death experience is a best example of a soul–body reversal linked to the supernatural; a force powerful to be called the creator; a guiding factor to this reversal with limits to the understanding of its working. A chance given has no reason, for it is wholly based on the organization of matter and its ability to support the soul. 


The supernatural is over all energy and energies to be known and therefore the imaginations of the supernatural are many. But to imagine the supernatural like mankind is a selfish imagination which develops from a superficial mind. Imagining the supernatural from the depths of the cosmic energy matrix that satiates the body, will image it to be overwhelming; an image like never seen before. An experience of the depth of reality where few can go and imagine; for the more we seek it the more it deepens and the energy evolves. The imprint of the cosmic energy matrix is the creation of the supernatural which has no beginning and no end. A thought itself of the supernatural can invoke the soul and the mind; there need not be an image, but the imagination itself connects the soul to the divine.

 
The cosmic energy is a collection of the souls of many; the minds of many; the consciousness of many, for it is not known but can be imagined to be the energy that thinks and that can make one think; creates and destroys matter to harbour itself in order for beings to realize its beauty. An imaginary place like the biblical heaven is actually a collection of this energy; energy filled with the information gathered by souls; their minds. Heaven is an imagination of the cosmos and its collective energy that is transformed from one form to another. If we imagine heaven, we need to imagine hell and if we do imagine both we differentiate energy into good and bad. A paltry thought that brings a divide in the mind and in the beauty of the cosmic energy doubting the creation of the supernatural.   


A divide in energy leads to a divide in the soul; a damned soul and a good soul. Cosmic energy seeks no differentiation, for the energy that prevails is pure; it is how the energy is utilized. Energy can create and so can destroy; energy creates matter and matter supports energy; energy creates the mind and the soul generates consciousness but evil is a shallow imagination of the mind. The soul within a body can choose, but outside the body is pure for it lies beyond the bounds of matter. Imaging and imagining the unclean, deprives the body to seek a better life, for the soul dies and so does the mind and as per the law of energy conservation leads to the loss of the bodily soul. The cosmic energy around us is evolving and will disavow, if the energy is utilized for unworthy purposes; a law of the supernatural.


The journey of the soul abides by the laws of energy conservation; an energy that cannot be created nor destroyed but transformed from matter to matter. From birth to death the body seeks the energy within and from the outside, and upon death the energy transforms to create matter of another kind. This imaginary cycle is the reality of all beings and is the truth of the existence of the cosmic energy and its capabilities. The cosmic energy gives us the ability to create, seek, understand and learn, but there lies more to this energy than we actually know. Our lives only experience a superficial part of this energy, the depths of which remain unexplored. Imagination can take us to great depths of the cosmic energy that resides around us, within us and beyond us.


Conclusion
Imaginations and images stored within the matrix of the cosmic energy helps to imagine the mind, the soul and consciousness bringing it out in varied colours, depictions, art and music and also through science, philosophy, culture and religion. Soul is not defined in science, but if we call it energy, it has to be defined by science, as energy is all what science is about and it is because of energy that science exists, in fact we all exist. The soul is therefore a signature of the cosmic energy created from a supernatural source that expands beyond the dimensions we perceive and so if we look deep into the imaginations of our soul we can seek what may not be perceived by us superficially. There is a need to look for things where they are, and not in places where you can’t find them; for we seek these in places where it does not exist. The power of imagination is a window to all understanding and therefore understanding the soul through imaginings and imaginations can help us understand the true nature of creativity of the cosmos, the works of the supernatural and the potential of the energy that prevails in it.

 Dr. Contzen Pereira Independent Scholar, Mumbai, India Corresponding Author. Address: Nandadeep, 302, Tarun Bharat Soc, Chakala, Andheri (East), Mumbai 400 099, India. Tel: +919819642456, +912266750530 Email Address: contzen@rediffmail.com, contzen@gmail.com







 J. Shashi Kiran Reddy
M.S (Engg) Research student, EMU, JNCASR, Bangalore.