Alchemical Transformation:
Consciousness and matter, form and
information
F. David
Peat
Department of International Relations, Gyengsang
National University
The paper cautions that seeking rapid resolution of questions
involving consciousness and matter may only obscure some of the deeper issues
involved. A plea is given for maintaining a certain creative tension or
alchemical containment with regard to these issues. Phenomena such as mystical
states, projective identification and synchronicities suggest the existence of
global mind that transcend quasi-mechanistic theories of consciousness.
Alternative approaches based upon the ideas of active information, patterns of
form and meaning, and the implicate order are discussed.
There has grown up, relatively recently, a nucleus of
interests called ìconsciousness studiesî in which physicists and mathematicians,
as well as neuroscientists and psychologists, attempt to discover the origins of
ìconsciousnessî within the brain. A variety of approaches are employed, some
based upon neural networks, others that argue that consciousness must have a
quantum mechanical basis, or involve self-organization arising out of
non-linearity. A common thread is a certain sense of optimism that ìthe question
of consciousnessî will yield its secrets in the same way as, for example, the
genetic code or sub-atomic matter.
I must confess that I find none of the
approaches or arguments particularly convincing. "It could be soî, I find myself
thinking, "but it could equally be otherwise.î My greatest concern is that old
habits of thinking and ways of seeing, which could, in part, be termed
mechanistic or reductionist abound in this new field, a field, I believe, that
is radically different from anything science has hitherto explored. There are
deep philosophical problems still to be debated, issues involving questions of
identity, the role of the observer, the movement from object to process, the
role of the subtle and the transformation of matter by what may lie beyond. We
must move cautiously.
The issue is informed from several different
sources. There is the subjective, which can be perfectly rational and, in a
cer
tain sense, scientific. The subjective includes knowledge and approaches from
the personal, the psychotherapeutic and various meditative and mystical
traditions. Then there is our increasing scientific knowledge of the brain's
structure and chemistry, as well as the similarity of certain neurotransmitters
to molecules employed by the immune system, which, distributed throughout the
body, may well be as complex and equally subtle as the brain itself.
Speculations about consciousness, non-locality, subtle levels of matter and
active information also come from theoretical physics. Such an influx of
creativity, from the theoretical sciences, is to be welcomed yet there is a
danger of a certain naivetÈ capable of glossing over much deeper
issues.
To this list of sources I would add the philosophical tradition,
of West and East, instruments of investigation that are sometimes ignored by
scientists working in the field. Anyone speaking about "consciousness", for
example, should be cautioned by Wittgenstein's writings on language games.
Indeed, language is one of the key issues in our whole venture. Having had the
privilege of discussions with Native American elders who speak the Algonquin
family of languagesóall strongly verb-basedóI realize how deeply conditioned is
our thinking by noun-based Indo- European languages. Our acts of speech incline
us to
perceive a world of objects and of concepts. The creation of the concept,
placing a boundary around thoughts, ordering them into classes, and classes of
classes, seems inevitable to us and the very basis of our logical thought. It is
therefore salutary to realize that an equally rational and deeply philosophical
people do not involve themselves with the creation of concepts but base their
thinking on process, transformation and flux.
Were a Blackfoot to write
an essay on the subject of ìconsciousness" (of course this concept itself would
never arise) many of the problems that currently face us-would never arise; a
different set of difficulties could, to us, be particularly illuminating. in
particular, since group consciousness, shared dreams, constant transformation,
and participation in a world of ìenergies" or ìspirits,î seems perfectly
natural, Blackfoot philosophers may be less interested in ìcollective mindî that
in speculating as how such a thing as an individual consciousness and a fixed
ego could ever emerge out of such a flux.
In engaging in these
investigations we should keep Niels Bohrís maxim before us, ìWe are suspended in
language in such a way that we cannot say what is up and what is down. We must
never forget that ìrealityî too is a human word just like ìwave' or
ìconsciousnessî. Our task is to learn to use these words
correc
tly.î
1. ALCHEMICAL TENSION
Our investigation can
be approached by a number of different routes or disciplines and we should
maintain a creative tension between them, not giving in too quickly to the
natural impulse to discover new solutions, propose exhaustive definitions and
seek intellectual closure to every problem.
The psychologist Carl Jung
gave us the image of the alchemical vessel in which processes of sublimation and
purification take place. Psychotherapy provides this same kind of containment
whereby a person's tensions and paradoxes are contained within the therapeutic
hour, charges with such energy that they may eventually give way to active
transformation. Within the alchemical vessel thereís no resolution of paradox
and opposition, no compromise, no simple order that ties in between. Rather, a
transcendental functions required which moves beyond the limits inherent in
different positions by creating new domains. But for this to happen it is
necessary to have a period, and a means, of active containment. Even nuclear
fusion requires the hot plasma to be contained long enough for fusion reactions
to take place.
The same is true of scientific and philosophical ideas.
David Bohm regretted the speed with which Niels Bohr attempted to resolve the
tensions inherent in quantum theory. Within a year of Heisenbe
rgís
discovery of
matrix mechanics, Schr^dinger produced his wave equation and Bohr and his
colleagues were quick to demonstrate the mathematical equivalence of the two
approaches. Yet Heisenberg and Schr^dinger approached the same problem in subtly
different ways-while Schr^dinger wave equation is written, using Cartesian
coordinates, in configuration space, Heisenberg's matrix mechanics makes no
reference to an underlying or background space. If only the two approaches had
been held in tension, emphasizing both their similarities and differences, Bohr
argued, then it may have been possible to develop a much deeper theory, one that
transcended conventional notions of space-time and allowed for an intimate
connection with relativity.
A similar tension exists today between
scientific approaches to consciousness theory (in which the origin of mind is
attributed to objective structures and processes within the brainóalbeit some of
them quite novel, such as Penrose's notions of the gravitational collapse of the
wave function) and our subjective experience of consciousness, rare moment
s o
f
transcendence and those inexplicable occurrences in which the irrational breaks
through in dreams, synchronicities, etc. Then there are those phenomena which
seem to have a foot in both camps. These include Jungís psychoid which is
neither matter nor mind but bot
h, the a
forementioned synchronicities, and
phenomena such as projective identification.
Rather than seeking an
immediate resolution between the subjective and objective, it is valuable to
hold on to the differences and to the paradoxes, using them as pointers to
something deeper. As Wolfgang Pauli put is, now that psychology has discovered
the objective within consciousness (Jung's collective unconscious) so too
physics. must discover the subjective in matter. He also suggested that physics
must come to terms with "the irrational in matterî.
While the problems
that face us have been around since the dawn of philosophy, we happen to be in a
particularly privileged position today. Science is producing ever more
information about subtle structures and electrochemical processes within the
brain. Openness to Eastern meditative traditions brings with it alternative
theories of consciousness and subtle matter. Transpersonal psychology addresses
the idea of collective mind. Quantum theory and chaos theory loosen the appeal
of traditional mechanistic theories and reductionistic approaches and, in the
process, provide us with new metaphors.
Nevertheless we still remain
victim to over two hundred years of mechanistic thinking and we think and
communicate with language that reflects and supports such a world view. As soon
as we speak about min
d or consciousness we find ourselves talking about objects,
concepts, things, localization in space, separation, and movement in time. Both
quantum theory and Eastern psychology point to timelessness, to active process
and the ultimate illusion of the personal observer. Yet, despite the fifty years
of its existence, it instill difficult for us, even now, to fully embrace the
quantum paradigm, As the physicist Basil Hiley puts it, ìPhysicists come to
praise Bohr and decry Einstein (for his adherence to causality and independent
elements of reality), yet they end up thinking like Einstein and ignoring
Bohr.î
Even the mathematics of quantum theory is still (paradoxically)
expressed using space-time coordinates while the theory itself predicts the
breakdown of space-time structure. And time itself, as Prigogine points out, has
never been treated correctly in physics. Up to now it has been used more as an
ordering parameter ëtí, and conveys nothing of the dynamic in which being gives
way to becoming.
In this essay, already we find ourselves seduced by
details and must constantly remind ourselves that the question is not simply one
of dispassionate scientific enquiry. We consider the existence of collective
consciousness and what this may mean for world peace. Again we need to maintain
that alchemical tension between, on the one hand love and human c
ompassion,
and,
on the other, rational enquiry and clarity of argument and
communication.
2. LOCALITY AND BEYOND
Considering the
question of collective consciousness I find myself asking: 'What is it that
could exist independent of the physical brain?' Yet as soon as I formulate the
question I prejudice the answer with concepts of object, location in space and
so on. Maybe the most difficult task that faces us is understanding how to
formulate the correct question!
Current ìconsciousness studiesî in the
hard sciences assumes that mind, or consciousness, evolves and emerges out of
the physical brain and cannot therefore exist independent of itóalthough variety
of physical signals can be sent between brains. Our experience of consciousness
awarenessóscanning the environment and having access to our memoriesóis
certainly conditioned by the state of the physical brain. But to suggest that
brain is the sole cause of mind does not follow logically.
One school of
thought within consciousness studies argues infamous of a quantum mechanical
origin for mind. While this may well be the case, I do not find the argument
particularly satisfying or logically compelling. In its barest form it proposes
that the sort of things done by consciousness (Penrose picks our mathematics)
cannot all be reduced to algorithmic processes and t
herefore min
d cannot have an
exclusively mechanical basis. While parts of the brain may be hard-wired it
cannot totally operate like a computer or neural net. Quantum theory, the
argument goes, is the only other physical domain we know about that cannot be
reduced to algorithmic form. Ergo quantum theory must have something to do with
consciousness. From this point researchers rush on to theories of quantum
tunneling, collapsing wave functions, non-local connections and coherent quantum
structures.
But a variety of other approaches are possible:
That
mind was present in the universe ab initio. For example, in the form of a proto
mind associated even with the elementary particles. The emergence and evolution
of complexity occurs in both matter and mind, each perhaps assisting the
other.
That mind is of a totally different order from matter, that it
cannot be reduced to any scientific, quantitative description animates its
liaison with matter via the medium of the brain (The dualism of Popper and
Eccles).
That both mind and matter (at the quantum or sub-quantum level)
arise out of some deeper level.
Or, to follow Bohm, that mind and matter
constitute an unanalyzable whole which must therefore be addressed within a
totally different order of explanationóthe Implicate Order. In this case the
Cartesian cut between matter and m
ind is an illu
sion, albeit a very effective
and compelling one, that is present only at the Implicate Order of perception,
language and explanation.
3. PHENOMENA
Before we go too
far along this road of invoking various theoretical explanations it is important
to return to the direct experience of psyche. The examples below are totally at
odds with a scientific and mechanistic description of the world but are held to
be true by a variety of traditions, or in psychiatric theory.
a.
Projective Identification.
Projective Identification offers a
paradigm case of the tension between, on the one hand, a physics still steeped
in mechanistic thinking and the immediacy of psychic experience. Projective
identification should be distinguished-from Transference, in which the patient
"projects" his or her fantasies (for example, involving authority figures) onto
the blank screen of the therapist. While the therapist will be aware of the
nature of the projection, these are never internalized (unless
counter-transference takes place). In projective identification something more
akin to a literal projection of psychic material takes place.
It may
happen that, during a session, the therapist experiences, without necessarily
being aware that something unusual is going on, memories, feelings attitudes,
associations that
lie outside his
or her experience. At the time, however, these
are indistinguishable from ìtrue memories.î It is only later that the therapist
realizes that the patient has injected external psychic material into the
therapistís mind where, for a time, they had taken root and integrated with the
therapist's own personality.
It is very difficult to account for what
happens. Clearly some aspect of the patient's psyche-a set of associations or a
complex of memories and desires-has fragmented from the self and been projected
outwards into the mind of the therapist. In its new location, and for a limited
time, it integrates with the therapist's own consciousness to produce awareness
of new memories and associations. The patient is now able to view what was
previously the very painful contents of personal consciousne
ss in an o
bjective
way for now it belongs to someone else. The final result, hopefully, is to allow
this material to be reabsorbed and reintegrated in a more creative manner.
Projective identification appears to be a strategy used by the mind to
induce movement and transformation. One thinks of certain chemical reactions
which, although energetically advantageous, cannot take place because energy
barriers between molecules must first be overcome. Although chemical
transformation is desired, it is prevented by these internal energy
barriers.
Using
a catalyst, however, molecules absorb on its surface and then 'borrow"
energy needed to undergo the necessary transformations whereby they can react
together. After reacting they are then free to leave the catalyst's surface. In
Projective Identification the mind of the therapist may play a similar role,
allowing certain complexes to be absorbed into anew psychic matrix where they
become "free" and more able to undergo creative transformation. Presumably the
healthy mind of the therapist possesses something akin to a "psychic immune
system" which is able to detect such projected material and eventually reject it
so that alien memories do not possess the therapist for too long.
Projective Identification forces us in the position that ìsomethingî is
being projected across space, from one mind to the other. This seems a more
satisfying explanation than the assumption that both minds have access to some
common pool of consciousness-for something seems to be shot, like the darts of a
Medicine Person, from one to another. Of course this does not mean than "mind"
as such is projected. It may simply be some sort of encoded information about
mental processes, structure and content that projects from one brain to another.
Once in its new location this information activates (like a virus) and makes use
of mental energy to form a new cente
r within consciousness
. (A key question of
this essay is how and where such information is encoded.)
I believe that
Projective Identification is more common than we assume and may have a much
wider purpose than purely neurotic or psychotic relief. It is, for example, the
mechanism whereby art operates, is projected outwards and encoded on the surface
of a painting as gestures, masses, shapes, colors, and everything else that
makes up a "visual code". Likewise music, as the composer Edgar Varese put it,
is "the corporealization of thought". The listener or viewer can also "enter
into" the work and gain access to this activity of encoded information which
then acts to induce transformations of consciousness. The greatest art and music
involves a transformation of consciousness and operates at the level of the
psychoid. It also deals in what lies beyond the purely personal and enters into
the universal and transcendental, the artist no longer projecting individual
material but acting as a vehicle.
b. Mystical State
In such
states ego boundaries disappear as the mystic partakes in a transcendental
reality, or speaks of having access to ancient knowledge, powerful symbols or
alternative realities. Psychiatry may seek to explain this in terms of psychic
inflation, access to the archetypes or (following Grof) as an inherited
body-memory. Mystics, however,
suggest that consciousness opens to the ground of
all being. The Indian teacher, J. Krishnamurti proposed that when the brain dies
to thought, something else operates that brings about mutation of the brain's
structure and a permanent transformation of consciousness. This suggests quite
different mechanisms than Projective Identification, for now the mind becomes an
aspect of something much larger. This wider entity does not seem to be a Group
Mind, as such, but more a non-corporal intelligence or World Soul.
c.
Group Mind
The sharing of consciousness, particularly during
dreaming, is a well established phenomenon amongst many Indigenous peoples.
Indeed, it is often the basis upon which their society functions and decisions
are made. From a pragmatic position within such societies Group Mind must be
taken as a fact of life. David Bohm also believed that something similar could
be achieved through his 'dialogue process.' (Thirty to forty people meet on a
regular basis for many months or even years to dialogue in a free or open way.)
Does this imply some new form of communication between individual minds, or does
it lie in the ability of each minds to enter into some deeper, collective
domain?
d. Paranormal Phenomenon
There are a variety
of anecdotal reports suggesting that individuals
can practice remote viewi
ng,
move objects or have access to other minds. Personally I find it difficult to
come to terms with such material. To my mind the experiments are not always
convincing, moreover their design and interpretation often seems to me quite
mechanistic and the phenomena themselves sometimes appear quite commonplace when
compared with the richness of human experience and creativity.
e.
Synchronicities
During periods of extreme psychic stress experiences,
replete with meaning, occur that appear to transcend the boundaries of matter
and mind, space, time and causality. The touchstone of such experiences is the
deep nature of their meaning. In a sense they are true epiphanies, moments of
illumination and possible transcendence, certainly far from mere acts of
coincidence. Like (d) above, they remain anecdotal but are, difficult to
dismiss. They suggest that mind and matter may be aspects of some underlying
realityóJung's psychoid, Bohm's Implicate order.
4. NON-LOCAL
MIND
How are the various phenomena above to be explained? There are
two general lines of approach. The first asserts that something is being
transmitted, transferred or projected between two individuals. The second that
mind is able to partake, dip into, or unfold out of some common underlying
ground that is not bound by the
categories of space, time a
nd
causality.
I do not believe that these need be mutually exclusive. The
former may generally operate in, for example, projective identification and
hypothetical psychic phenomena while the latter occurs during synchronicities,
group minds and manifestations of the psychoid.
a.
Transmissions
Theories of transmission assume that, in addition to
speech, pheromones, subliminal gestures, touch, and various hypothetical
electromagnetic effects, there exist more subtle forms of
transmission.
Yet as soon as one begins with the assumption of
interchanges between two spatially located minds then one is firmly based within
a mechanical order of space and time. Transmission effects may indeed occur but
it is difficult to see how they can account for the richness of all the
phenomena discussed above.
b. Fields
This is currently a
popular explanation for the way people appear to share, communicate, or become
involved in common thought processes and behaviour. It is an approach that
attempts to transcend earlier mechanistic explanations involving senders and
receivers of information. Rather, different individuals are supposed to be able
to dip into, or even be captured by, this field. Yet one should never forged
that a field is, in essence, a notion imported from classical physics. A field
carries energy and
is defined at each point in space. Hence, as one tries to
flee mechanism, one still remains trapped in the language of objects and
location.
There are also quantum fields, but these are also defined at
all space-time points and can only be stop-gap notions on the way to a deeper
quantum theory. It may turn out, for example, that there exist non-local quantum
fields but to my knowledge the mathematics for such a description are yet to be
worked out.
Fields may well appear more subtle than Newtonian billiard
balls, neverthe
less, they stil
l belong to the world of matter since they are the
means by which particles interact with each other. (There are also non4inear
fields in which the particles become singularities or solitons of the field
itself.) Fields are still very different from minds. Of course, one could
attempt to retain the idea of field while progressively dropping the notion of
object, space, time, energy, and so on. But in such a case one has really given
birth to a radically new concept in science, something which is not, in fact, a
field at all.
I am therefore very cautious about using the term 'field"
and importing with it a flurry of unexamined assumptions -into the study of
consciousness. It may be a short hand way of speaking about whatíre vague and
subtle concepts but I cannot see how
it helps us understand things in
any
clearer way since the concept of "field" carries with it much baggage from
classical, mechanistic physics. What is called for is a totally new concept.
Maybe if we agree to set aside that word "field", on a temporary basis at least,
we will be forced to face phenomena themselves and seek some more appropriate
concept.
c. Non-local connections.
Quantum theory (Bell's
Theorem) permits non-local connections and at first sight this is sometimes
taken as the mechanism for communication between minds, or evidence of
"non-local mind". But, it must be emphasized, these quantum correlations cannot
be used to carry signals or information. Neither can quantum connections be
invoked to explain paranormal phenomena.
This is not to deny that
non-local connections may indeed exist between brains. Or that mind transcends
the distinctions of space and time. But this cannot be justified by appealing to
Bellís Theorem. It may, however, be useful to propose that Bell's non-local
connections are themselves a special case of something more general.
Non-locality may, for example, be the direct consequence of global forms, forms
that are not defined within conventional space-time. In view of the importance
of form in biological systems, in the Jungian archetypes, and as the "form of
the wave function", the role
of form in consciousness may be a p
rofitable route
to explore.
d. Information
An idea that escapes from the
associations connected with "fields" into the domain of the subtle is that of
information. It is a notion that is beginning to surface within the physical
sciences, immunology, and even psychotherapy. Indeed, the argument could be made
that just as during the nineteenth century science moved from an exclusive focus
upon matter, its movement and transformations into a consideration of energy in
its various aspects, so too today physics will incorporate on an even more
subtle level the notion of information.
Hitherto information has been
treated in a somewhat subjective way as something exterior or peripheral to
physical law. An increase in entropy could be equated with a decrease in order,
or information about a system. Yet there were always difficulties connected with
the definition of entropy. Shannon and Weaver's "Information Theory" was more
concerned with redundancy and degradation of information than with its
particular content. Perhaps the first objective use of information came with
Beckenstein's discovery that the radius of a Black Hole is related to its
entropy or information content.
Yet over the past years there has been an
increasing appeal to the notion of information. Rupert Sheldrake's
"morphoge
netic fields" are supposed to "guide"
the development of everything
from crystals and organism to instincts and learning. Since these hypothetical
fields contain or store the memories, or habits, of matter and consciousness
they could indeed be called repositories of information. The drawback of
Sheldrake's approach is that the nature of existence of these fields or their
means of operation on matter and consciousness is not spelled out.
Ervin
Laszlo had also proposed a reservoir of information in what he terms the psi
field. This information appears to contain, amongst other things, the totality
of what a person has thought, said and done. In this sense human minds would, in
principle, have access tithe totality of human knowledge. The existence of the
field itself appears to be equated with a proposed scalar spectrum of the vacuum
field of quantum theory. The present author has not studied Laszlo's work to
such an extent that he could make any definitive comments on the
theory.
David Bohm has also introduced the notion of information in his
Ontological Interpretation of quantum theory and extended this to speculations
on the immune system and the nature of consciousness. His notion of "active
informationî will be discussed below.
There are obvious advantages of
beginning with the concept of information since, because it partakes of b
oth, it
offers the possibility of tr
anscending the traditional division between
subjective and objective, matter and mind. The major difficulty lies in its
ontology. What exactly is the nature of its existence and in what form is it
present in mind and matter? If, for example, one talks of 'fields of
information" then one is back again to the old Cartesian world of objects in
space and the need for a medium for the transmission of signals. If information
is to prove useful then it has to have its own new level of description and its
own mode of existence. Clearly, information demands mathematical forms that lie
beyond the concept of field. Maybe, for example, information is born at the
level of prepack.
There is also the question of what is being encoded and
how is this done. A clue to the nature of encoding can, I believe, come from
art. Over centuries and even millennia, artists have developed visual codes in
which to convey such things as mimesis, numinous power, emotional force,
movement and the like. Similar codes exist in music. Such codes lie far from a
1:1 mapping. They are more subtle since acts of encoding and decoding rely upon
a deep intuitive understanding of the human perceptual system as well as upon
the history of art, human symbolism, and the nature of particular
societies.
To take but one example about perception. Matiss
e began with
fairly detailed drawings
of the female figure which were progressively
ìsimplified,î in the sense of a decreasing density of marks upon the page. The
final drawing may have the appearance of extreme simplicity yet the placing of
each line, its relationships to others, the nature of its gesture, and so on,
all convey a surprising amount of information. In a certain sense the most
successful could be said to have a higher ìinformation content.î Yet where does
this information lie? Certainly not on the page alone, in the sense of number of
bytes of information. Rather in involves the activity of perception on the part
of the human viewer, in his or her engagement with the work and knowledge of
visual codes. Art, in this sense, becomes a dialogue over the centuries through
the medium of visual codes. It is a discussion of painting through
painting.
It is my conjecture that, within the context of consciousness
studies, 'information' is also of this type. It is not a simple representation
of quantitative data-mass, position, momentum and so on, nor it is a mere
digital read out or what was said and done. Rather it must be some sort of
'artistic' encoding that requires the active participation of human
consciousness to reactivate. In this sense a mathematics of the code would have
to be developed that specifically incorporated the activity
of consciousness in
its interaction and
activation of information. One could also speculate that
this process of activation is not confined to human consciousness but may
pervade the cosmos.
e. Active Information and
Prespace.
Bohm's Ontological Interpretation
of quantum theory
p
roposes that, at one l
evel, the electron is a particle guided by a quantum
potential. (At a deeper level Bohm speculated that the electron is a process
that takes place in some hypothetical prespace.) In seeking to explain the
quantum measurement problem Bohm also introduced what he called ìactive
informationî to explain the relationship between the electron and the quantum
potential.(Essentially the quantum potential and the electron are aspects of an
indivisible whole but, for the purposes of presenting his theory, Bohm treated
them as separate.)
Bohm proposed that quantum processes are guided by
information-not passive encoded data but an actual activity of information.
Bohm's analogy is with the way subtle information in a television signal
impresses itself upon, and thus gives form to, the crude energy entering the
electrical plug. In this way a subtle signal can give rise to pictures and
sounds. For Bohm, the activity of information acts on both matter and energy. He
also speculated about active information within the immune system-a form
of
intelligence delocalized over the whole b
ody. Thus, for Bohm, a change of
meaning in the mind becomes a change of actual being in the body.
Bohm's
hypothesis is important, I believe, for the following reason. It is not so much
that the Ontological Interpretation may or may not be correct but rather that it
is a formal, mathematical system (one that can be used to make calculations and
predict result) that incorporates the notion of information. Hence information
has been brought into physics in an entirely objective fashion. Yet, having said
this, it is clear that a number of serious problems remain. What exactly is the
ontological status of active information? How is it to be described? Where does
it exist? The whole topic is exciting but requires much work. It is tied to
other speculative ideas in quantum theory about structures that exist prior to
space and matter.*
Prespace algebras, such as the Grassman algebra, begin
with a fundamental distinction in a featureless ground. Thought is indivisible
yet creative perception can distinguish opposite poles in thought. Once the
first perception, or distinction, has been established then the algebra begins
to generate itself and in the process develop structures that may be the
precursor of space. In an analogous fashion a thought in the mind is created out
of an instant of perception. Onc
e this perception has taken place and the
thou
ght is born, then it begins to move by a dialectical process-in this way
psychological time is born. Both space and thought seem to be born out of an
analogous timeless, creative process.
f. Form
Another
approach to thinking about information is through the notion of "form". Form is
a key concept in biology. The function of everything from the activity of an
enzyme to a cell or organ is relate to its physical form. Growth from the
fertilized cell to the adult is a process of differentiation and transformation
of form; hence biologists from Aristotle to Waddington, Sheldrake and Goodwin
have postulated notions of ìmorphic fields.î
__________________
* As to the
encoding of information at the quantum level, important clues may come from the
reduced density matrix (a 2-particle form which contains information about the
total N-particle wave function). N-particle information is encoded, or enfolded,
within the reduced density matrix (as it is in Green's Function). The
N-representability problem deals with the question of how the antisymmetric form
of the wave function places restrictions on the form of the reduced density
matrix. It should be recalled that quantum non-locality exists precisely because
of the antisymmetric form of the wav
e function-an antisymmetric form cannot be
facto
rized into subcomponents. Hence there is a deep connection between
non-locality, information and the form of the density matrix. A further
connection is that N-representability conditions are connected to Grassman
algebras (the algebras of exterior forms) and it is precisely than same algebras
that seem to hold the key to prespace. Such a rich interconnection of ideas
cannot be mere coincidence.
Form has
associated with it the idea of a Gestalt, of global patterns, perception and
non-locality; such notions may well connect with the functioning of
consciousness and with the immune system. The universal importance of form and
its transformation was, in the 1960s, the subject of a new branch of
mathematics, RenÈ Thom's Catastrophe Theory.
A particularly important
aspect of form is its global nature, since it deals with changing shapes, shapes
that must be seen in a gestalt manner, shapes that are entire and complete in
themselves. Dealing with form is the reverse of trying to build up larger
structures from individual elements, or describing space in terms of
coordinates. Form seems to be an ideal way of dealing with the collective and
distributed.
Form also has a role to play in physics. In classical
physics it is the form of the Hamiltonian that remains
invariant under canonical
transformations. In this
way, Newtonian mechanics can be transformed from the
mechanical interaction of individual particles into global form-preserving
processes. Likewise, General Relativity is about the invariance of form under
all possible coordinate
transformations. In this sense, motion under gravity
has to do with the preservation of a certain form. One could perhaps generalize
the concept of inertia to that of the ìlaw of persistence of form.î
Most
dramatically, form appears in the guise of the wave function. It is the global
form of the wave function (symmetric or antisymmetric) that is responsible for
the existence of Fermi-Dirac or Bose-Einstein statistics. The fact that such
forms are non-factorizable (into spatially independent components) is the deep
reason for quantum non-locality (Bellís mysterious correlation between distant
particles). The global form of the wave function is ultimately responsible for
collective modes in physics-plasma, superfluid, superconductor and hypothetical
Frochlich systems. The form of the wave function orchestrates each of an
astronomical number of particles into a highly coordinated dance.
Bohm's
quantum potential also connects with the notion of form. As a potential it is
unique in physics since the nature of its effect on the motion of an electron
does not arise f
rom its strength or intensity but from its formóits part
icular
complex shape. The quantum potential is inherently nonlocal, its effects do no
fall off with distance and for this reason quantum objects, well separated in
space, can remain strongly correlated.
Form could also have something to
do with global (quantum) processes within the brain that give rise to
consciousness. As a global property it may be relevant to the evolution of
space-time structure out of some more primitive quantum prespace. Penrose, for
example, proposes that the quantum mechanical ìcollapse of the wave functionî is
a global phenomenon connected with the geometrical properties of space-time. He
also speculates that global quantum processes have a role to play in the liaison
between consciousness and brain structure.
g. Meaning
If
form begins with biology (and leads into quantum theory), meaning surely starts
in psychology. It was Carl Jung who stressed the role of meaning in
Synchronicityóthat region where form and pattern spill over the boundaries
between mind and matter. For Jung the key was the deep internal significance
associated with an experience of synchronistic patterns, a significance that
does not end at the boundaries of personal consciousness. Meaning therefore is
both subjective and objective. Jung termed this speculum between matter and mi
nd
the ìp
sychoidî; its integrating fac
tor is meaning.
In t
he context of
Dialogue, Bohm spoke of a "field of meaning" shared by all participants. He
stressed that the way to bring about effective social change is through an
overall change of meaning. Meaning, which could be thought of as a field of
form; Bohm associated this with the immune system. The immune system is what
keeps the body whole, coordinates the processes of the body and maintains its
level of meaning. If this meaning is somehow degraded then the body becomes
sick.
Bohm stressed that his maxim 'a change of meaning is a change of
being" was to be taken literally. An assailant seen on a dark night turns out to
be the shadow of a tree trunk. Immediately a flurry of electrochemical changes
takes place in mind and body. Laboratory research suggests that shifts in
'meaning" bring about subtle restructuring of nerve pathways and the
sensitivities of connections. Meaning, which is normally taken to be subjective,
turns out to have an objective, physical consequence. Meaning can act on matter
and, presumably, matter on meaning.
5. IMPLICATE
ORDERS
Discussions of mind and matter constantly run up against
limitations of language and formalism. Much of our thinking and language is
based in a world of space, time and causality. Bohm termed this the Explicat
e
Order and proposed that a radically different Implicate,
or Enfolded Order
exists. Within this order the duality of matter and mind obtain their
resolution. What appear as distinct objects, well separated in space and time
are, within the Implicate order, enfolded each within the other. What at one
level appears as object at another becomes process.
While personal
consciousness appears to be attached to an individual brain and body, Carl Jung
proposed the collective unconscious which contains material shared by all people
in the form of powerful symbols and archetypical forms. Even deeper than the
collective lies the psychoid which partakes of both matter and mind while
transcending their distinction. It is at the level of the psychoid that
synchronicities occur and at the level of the collective that an archetype may
become activated across a whole society.
Jung's ideas are seductive, yet
again the nature and ontological status of the collective is far from clear.
Maybe this is why the shift offered by the Implicate Order is so attractive.
Ontology attempts to answer questions about an object's status of existence. But
it may note useful, at this junction, to keep enquiring about the nature of the
existence of mind, or information, or the psychoid. It is here that Bohm's
Implicate Order offers a new way of proceeding for it offers desc
ription, and a
perception, which escapes mechanistic thinkin
g. Questions of transmission,
localization and delocalization simply do not arise within the Implicate Order
since it ties beyond the categories of space and time.
Instead of talking
about object we deal in process, we enquire as to how a particular explicate
(individual mind/body) unfolds out of the Implicate. Minds become both truly
collective and personal by virtue of the continuous process of unfoldment and
enfoldment whereby they are united within the Implicate and individuated within
the Explicate. Mind and matter are connected because of their essential identity
within the Implicate Order.
Acknowledgements
This enquiry has
encouraged and illuminated on two fronts, discussions with Basil Hiley at the
Physics Department, Breakneck College and with Christopher Hauke, a Jungian
therapist.
KEYWORDS:
consciousness, non-locality, global mind, projective identification,
synchronicity, prespace, implicate order
World Future, 1997, Vol. 48. pp. 3-22. © 1997
OPA (Overseas Publishers Association).
Reprinted with permission. Reprints
available directly from the publisher, Amsterdam B. V..
Published in The
Netherlands under license by Gordon and Breach Science
Publishers.
Photocopying permitted by license only. Printed in
Malaysia.