Consciousness is a magnificent expression and may be the very foundation of our
Speaker:whole existence.
Speaker:Well, today I have an opportunity to share a webinar, a presentation,
Speaker:a message,
Speaker:on a topic that's pretty discussed today and that is consciousness.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:with all the AI and the artificial intelligence and
Speaker:that's going on out there, the new technologies, it's,
Speaker:it's making people ask the question, what exactly is consciousness?
Speaker:Is something made out of silicon, can it become conscious,
Speaker:instead of just carbon? And is there, is it substrate neutral?
Speaker:Does it matter what form it's in? Is it,
Speaker:and what is this thing called conscious? Do we have a universal conscious?
Speaker:Do we have an individual consciousness,
Speaker:the one universal or the many individual conscious?
Speaker:These are all kinds of controversial questions.
Speaker:So I'd like to address that today.
Speaker:So if you have something to write with and write on, that would be fantastic.
Speaker:Consciousness is
Speaker:something that I've been fascinated by since very young <laugh>.
Speaker:And it's one of the great mysteries because no one can really claim they've
Speaker:solved it completely.
Speaker:But we certainly have various theories and principles that we can apply to it.
Speaker:And so I'd like to share with you some of those things and my ideas at this
Speaker:stance, where we are today.
Speaker:Typically when we think of something conscious,
Speaker:we depict it in terms of degrees of wakefulness.
Speaker:So you can have down to a deep coma where you're completely unawake and you're
Speaker:basically shut off from the world, you can't even wake yourself up.
Speaker:To a light coma where you might have a little bit of response to stimuli,
Speaker:but you're pretty well asleep. To a stupor,
Speaker:to basically a, you know, a drowsiness or sleep state,
Speaker:which you could be awakened from, but you're maybe drowsy,
Speaker:to all the way alertness.
Speaker:And that alertness can go all the way from an alertness to an external
Speaker:environment where you're, you might say,
Speaker:you're reflexing and responding to stimuli in the external world,
Speaker:and then you may wake up that consciousness further where you're now
Speaker:intrinsically or interoceptively, not just exteroceptively,
Speaker:but internally aware of your environment within you,
Speaker:to eventually reflective awareness,
Speaker:where you're realizing that the difference between the outside world and the
Speaker:inside world is really murky. It's the seer, the seeing,
Speaker:and the seen are the same, and you're fully awake.
Speaker:You almost come to the point where you realize that everything around you is
Speaker:you. And so you come to the conclusion that it's one mind,
Speaker:instead of just an individual mind that's isolated.
Speaker:And there's different degrees of this and there's different writers and
Speaker:different names for different stages, but that's just a basic thing.
Speaker:So we have degrees of wakefulness,
Speaker:and that is a quantitative scale, you might say, and the degrees of
Speaker:awareness or alertness to the environment.
Speaker:And that can be then divided further into degrees of conscious and unconscious.
Speaker:Because you could be infatuated with somebody and be conscious of the upsides
Speaker:and unconscious of the downsides,
Speaker:or resentful to somebody and be conscious of the downsides and unconscious of
Speaker:the upsides. And so you're kind of a half awake and sleep.
Speaker:We know that the brain is at all times, day or night, awake or asleep,
Speaker:half on and half off,
Speaker:even during the day it's half off and during the night it's half on. So,
Speaker:it's sort of a ratio more so than an absolute, off or on.
Speaker:Even in a coma there's some historical documents of people being able to
Speaker:access information after the coma of what happened and they
Speaker:weren't awake at the time, but then they have recall of certain things.
Speaker:And we also know that we have, you know,
Speaker:subconscious and unconscious and conscious and super conscious states or
Speaker:gradations of awareness or and awakeness.
Speaker:So I'd like to elaborate on that because now the question is,
Speaker:is what exactly is that and how does that work?
Speaker:Is it a brain function and only a brain function? And if so,
Speaker:is it the cortical function or subcortical, or is it a down to a neuron?
Speaker:Is the neuron responsive? You know, in single cells,
Speaker:we know that with a single cell paramecium amoeba can seek something or
Speaker:avoid something, and it can go for food, tonins, and avoid waste,
Speaker:toxins. And so it has a seeking and avoiding, kind of a morality,
Speaker:a minimal morality of good and bad, right and wrong,
Speaker:whatever it will allow it to support itself for the fear of loss of food will
Speaker:can kill it, and the fear of predator eating it can kill it.
Speaker:So it has sort of a, in a sense an intelligence or at least a reflex.
Speaker:And there's varying degrees of debates about whether something is really
Speaker:conscious or not. Because we can have reflexes go off like a knee reflex,
Speaker:stimulating our knee and causing a jerk,
Speaker:without being consciously controlling it.
Speaker:So there's very murky answers on what is the boundary of consciousness.
Speaker:Is it something that's just showing intelligence?
Speaker:Is it something that you're fully awakened and you're doing something at will?
Speaker:Is it something that's a reflex? You know,
Speaker:is a tree conscious of its environment, <laugh>? Is it aware of its environment?
Speaker:Well, it's responding. You know,
Speaker:Aristotle in Da Amina talked about one of the aspects of the mind is it has the
Speaker:ability to sense and respond, and to interpret that.
Speaker:And we have evidence of that in plants and definitely in animals and trees.
Speaker:We see this responding. It responds to its environment,
Speaker:it secretes hormones and transmitters and chemistry, if you will.
Speaker:So where exactly is the boundary?
Speaker:We even go into Freeman Dyson at the Institute of Advanced Studies before he
Speaker:passed was thinking about it in terms of quantum.
Speaker:Thomas Nagel thinks the entire universe is that way.
Speaker:Michio Kaku says that it's basically the universe is made out of intelligence.
Speaker:It's fundamental, all space, time,
Speaker:energy and matter's made out of consciousness.
Speaker:There's some even go as far as saying that the consciousness is the most
Speaker:fundamental thing. A panpsychism where consciousness underlies space, time,
Speaker:energy, matter, everything. So the question is,
Speaker:is what is it and how can we account for that? You know, there's evidence,
Speaker:we've been trying to reduce it from the idea of a brain down into, you know,
Speaker:the lobes of the brain down into the sections of the brain,
Speaker:down into the, you know,
Speaker:the little compilation of neurons,
Speaker:we call memes if you'll or neural associations, down into the neuron,
Speaker:down into the synapse, down into the axion and the dendrites,
Speaker:and down into the cell body, and down into the microtubules,
Speaker:down into the centrioles,
Speaker:and reduce it down into the quantum events and molecules, the electronics,
Speaker:now down into the DNA and the proteins, which are now down to photonics,
Speaker:all the way down to quantum entangled events,
Speaker:down into particles and subatomic particles and virtual particles.
Speaker:And there's a theory for every one of those layers, on consciousness.
Speaker:And from what I can tell, they're all accurate.
Speaker:They all have some piece of the jigsaw puzzle and what consciousness is.
Speaker:I I don't want to say that it's,
Speaker:it's purely universal without describing it particularly because we can make
Speaker:people unconscious and then there's no signs of reaction. But at the same time,
Speaker:we don't want to limit it to just that response because whereas responses that
Speaker:occur in collective societies, just like in birds and animals,
Speaker:and they respond very, very rapidly to things and they work as groups.
Speaker:So there must be some sort of field of a collective consciousness.
Speaker:And then there's epigenetically stored information that causes impulses and
Speaker:instincts to make us seek and avoid that are multi-generational passed on
Speaker:through epigenetics that we are born with that is making us respond that we
Speaker:think we're consciously doing, but we're actually subconsciously responding to.
Speaker:So it's a very, very wide open mystery,
Speaker:you might say that science,
Speaker:there many people under materialistic mechanistic science wants to believe that
Speaker:we're going to figure out the patterns and spike patterns of neurons in the
Speaker:brain and figure out consciousness from just figuring those out.
Speaker:And there's been the electromagnetic theory of it,
Speaker:there's been the quantum theory of it,
Speaker:and they all have a little piece of the jigsaw puzzle.
Speaker:I've written about every one of those fields,
Speaker:every single aspect from the macro to the micro and written about and studied
Speaker:articles on it and and applied it.
Speaker:And they all have little bits and pieces and of the big jigsaw puzzle.
Speaker:All of those do indicate, as Nagel describes,
Speaker:maybe there's a field of intelligence.
Speaker:Maybe there's intelligence in the universe. Some believe that.
Speaker:Some think that the universe is just non teleological,
Speaker:it has no purpose behind it, it's just what we choose to make out of it,
Speaker:and that it's purely in the mind of a human being,
Speaker:which is not even an individuality,
Speaker:it's just a series of feedback loops and complex reflexes
Speaker:that make up what we have been labeled consciousness in the mind.
Speaker:Others believe it's a field of mind that we're just part of it,
Speaker:we're tuning into it.
Speaker:There's recent information since 2017 showing that the DNA is
Speaker:communicating by bio photons over to proteins,
Speaker:where the proteins are changing shape.
Speaker:They're sending bio photons back to the DNA, and the DNA is coding it.
Speaker:The DNA is then sending feedback photons out into the environment
Speaker:and picking up on photons from the outside environment and adjusting and there's
Speaker:this, this wonderful homeostatic feedback system in there.
Speaker:The brain has vast numbers of homeostatic feedbacks to help us
Speaker:become our most productive, useful self, which we call the authentic self,
Speaker:or what they used to call the soul, the most inspired self.
Speaker:But then the question is, is that, is that a boundary?
Speaker:If we own everything as reflective in consciousness,
Speaker:is there a boundary on self or is other and self the same?
Speaker:This has been a question that even Aristotle addressed
Speaker:the ages have addressed and mystics.
Speaker:So where exactly is this thing called consciousness? Is it located in the brain?
Speaker:Is it a field around the brain?
Speaker:If you cut off a flatworms head and it has a memory of something and then
Speaker:you cut off its head, theoretically it should lose the memory of it,
Speaker:but it still has the retention of the memory.
Speaker:What exactly is memory and imagination? Is it a field phenomenon?
Speaker:Is it a particle phenomenon? A wave phenomenon?
Speaker:Is it something that's phenomenal, that's measurable?
Speaker:Is it something epiphenomenal that's something that
Speaker:by combinations of things and integration?
Speaker:Is it something that is basically nominal as Immanuel Kant said,
Speaker:something that's transcendental and something that's metaphysical?
Speaker:These are questions that all of them have bits and pieces that
Speaker:referenced it to consciousness. Is it the glial cells more than the nerve cells?
Speaker:There's glialogical theories of consciousness. There's particle,
Speaker:there's ratios of molecules that make up consciousness.
Speaker:Everybody's hitting it from different angle.
Speaker:Quantum physicists come in from an angle, neurologists come in,
Speaker:biochemists come in it.
Speaker:It's like if you go to a doctor <laugh> and you go to a
Speaker:physician, you're probably going to get a biochemical pharmaceutical approach
Speaker:answer. If you go to chiropractor, you'll get an adjustment,
Speaker:a subluxation answer. You go to a nutritionist,
Speaker:you're going to get a nutritional answer. You go to a radiologist,
Speaker:you'll get a radiographic analysis.
Speaker:Everybody's going to filter through their value system and their model of the
Speaker:world and give you an idea of what is consciousness.
Speaker:The answer is it seems to be including all of it. There's
Speaker:actually things that describe it as holographic,
Speaker:Pribram and Paul Peach and others have gone in there and cut out parts of the
Speaker:brain and found out other parts of the brain was able to adapt and pick up those
Speaker:things.
Speaker:So somehow the memory that was supposedly stored in the neurotransmitters and
Speaker:the synapsis and the patterns of firing and the synchronicity of those patterns,
Speaker:somehow they're now manifested in a different area. So we have,
Speaker:we know that there's field phenomena. We know that there's particle,
Speaker:we know that there's neurons.
Speaker:I don't think you can take anything really away without having some effect on
Speaker:this thing called consciousness.
Speaker:And we certainly don't want to dis-acknowledge that
Speaker:intelligence to it.
Speaker:If you go down into the eukaryotic cells that have nuclei and you go and study
Speaker:those on a very in depth level, they're extremely complex, they're humbling.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:all the Nobel Prize winners together could not put together a cell <laugh>.
Speaker:And our, we would consider ourselves conscious and highly intelligent maybe,
Speaker:but if the cell is far more sophisticated than us,
Speaker:it must be some sort of intelligence. Now that question is,
Speaker:is that purely evolutionary design that just happens to be through trial and
Speaker:error?
Speaker:Or is there some sort of intelligence in the universe that's making it happen?
Speaker:You know, one of the Nobel Prize winner, the French Nobel Prize winner,
Speaker:Luke Montague or whatever his name was,
Speaker:he basically was looking at the idea of DNA being able to store its information
Speaker:in the form of water molecule movements.
Speaker:And so maybe it's inherent in the vibrations, but
Speaker:Atoms are protons, electrons and neutrons. But what are protons? Well,
Speaker:they're quarks and gluons and mesons and they're interchanging
Speaker:particles coming out of an uncertainty field of probability according to
Speaker:Heisenberg's idea. So what exactly is the thing called conscious?
Speaker:What is the brain? What is the neuron? What is the molecules that make it up?
Speaker:What is a transmitter? What are all the different types of transmitters?
Speaker:What do they do? They all have charges on them.
Speaker:Are charges quantum entangled and they creating fields inside the brain that is
Speaker:all involved in this thing called consciousness?
Speaker:I've looked at all of those different aspects, <laugh>,
Speaker:and your head is probably spinning, what the hell is consciousness <laugh>?
Speaker:Well, it's still a mystery to some degree,
Speaker:but what we do know is that you can become more aware and more
Speaker:awake and more fully conscious by doing certain activities.
Speaker:And that's really what bottom line is. We may not quite solve the mystery.
Speaker:We may come up with new technologies and new constructs. I mean,
Speaker:I think it was Stephen Hawking, he says, whatever it is,
Speaker:and this is before he passed away, whatever we are at this state,
Speaker:by no means have we solved all the mysteries of this thing and consciousness
Speaker:still hasn't been solved. If we look at it,
Speaker:I mean Max Planck at 1905 or so was believing that it's fundamental,
Speaker:that's the fundamental basis of everything. And you know,
Speaker:I think that as Kaku says that it's the fundamental. And as Christian Duve said,
Speaker:it's, there's a cosmic imperative for consciousness.
Speaker:And some believe that water itself has within it vibrations that give rise to
Speaker:DNA formation.
Speaker:And so abiogenesis and the formation of life may be inherent in the right
Speaker:environments. Or if some people want to just limit it,
Speaker:consciousness to an advanced part of the brain, the cortex.
Speaker:We have sensory information, it comes in,
Speaker:it gets correlated as it goes up the brain stem in the spine and it gets into
Speaker:the thalamus. It's a relay center, it's a gating center.
Speaker:It's allowing only certain amount of information go up to the conscious
Speaker:awareness, most of the other stuff is unconscious.
Speaker:But is that unconscious available to be brought up consciously? If so,
Speaker:it's still accessing it consciously.
Speaker:I was doing a presentation to 400 dentists when I was 24 years old,
Speaker:and I'd been devouring every book on temporomandibular joint dysfunction
Speaker:prior to that to do this presentation, hundreds of books.
Speaker:And and all of a sudden I get asked this wild question by this guy that was kind
Speaker:of heckling me in the class.
Speaker:And all of a sudden a photographic memory came in that I didn't know,
Speaker:I was not conscious I knew this information.
Speaker:So I realized that that information was unconscious,
Speaker:but then when I needed it and I had a purpose for it,
Speaker:it rose up to conscious levels. So if it was down there,
Speaker:it must have been available, but I wasn't conscious of it.
Speaker:So am I filtering consciousness, and if so, how is it stored <laugh>?
Speaker:Is it neuron synapsis that are firing? Well, that's pretty slow.
Speaker:Is it ephaptic connection by electronics?
Speaker:Is it bio photons going on between the cells? How do we synchronize?
Speaker:And when there's a gamma synchronicity in the brain and there's a complete
Speaker:synchronicity of the cortex, is that, how's that occurring?
Speaker:Is that some sort of a quantum entangled state?
Speaker:Is that a photonic state at the speed of light?
Speaker:Is that electronic at the speed of electricity?
Speaker:Is it synaptic at the speed of chemistry? All of those are going on,
Speaker:there's scales of those are going on to make up this thing called consciousness.
Speaker:So the question is how do we maximize this consciousness?
Speaker:That's really the bottom line because all this will make your head spin.
Speaker:And I have in one of my programs,
Speaker:the Prophecy 1 Experience I go through the layers and all the different aspects
Speaker:that I just mentioned in much more detail and clarity,
Speaker:but it's not easy to do in 30 minutes or so <laugh>.
Speaker:But the question is,
Speaker:when you meet somebody and you are infatuated with them and you're conscious
Speaker:of the upsides, but unconscious of the downsides, you can be fooled,
Speaker:and you're part asleep,
Speaker:you're kind of asleep and having missing information and blind to some of the
Speaker:downsides at that moment.
Speaker:So you're conscious of one and unconscious of another,
Speaker:and that is still part of consciousness.
Speaker:It's a stage or a degree of awakeness and alertness
Speaker:and awareness. But then at the same time,
Speaker:if I let my intuition whisper to me the questions to make me conscious
Speaker:of the part that I'm unconscious of,
Speaker:I can become fully conscious and see both sides of somebody.
Speaker:In the study of epistemology, the study of knowledge,
Speaker:you really don't know somebody when you infatuate because you're ignorant of the
Speaker:downside. You don't really know somebody that you're resentful to, you're,
Speaker:you know, ignorant of the upside.
Speaker:But when you see both sides simultaneously as Wilhem Wundt says,
Speaker:now you're fully conscious. You're fully conscious of both sides and you love.
Speaker:It appears that the fully conscious state is a state of grace and love,
Speaker:a state of awe, a gamma synchronicity in the brain,
Speaker:a state of simultaneity of opposites being brought together in union.
Speaker:As Heraclitus said in the 6th century BC,
Speaker:it's the union of complementary opposites. That's a full conscious awareness,
Speaker:and consciousness is striving for that integration.
Speaker:One thing we can see that consciousness has evolved throughout the history of
Speaker:the, on the planet, on this planet at least,
Speaker:and it's been gradually integrative and reflective as it goes,
Speaker:becoming more integrative, more reflective, more comprehensive,
Speaker:more encompassing.
Speaker:And we're moving from an unaware state to an aware state.
Speaker:And so the more we ask quality questions to make us aware of what's unconscious
Speaker:and wake up full consciousness,
Speaker:the more we illuminate ourselves and become enbrightened
Speaker:of asleep and darkened, and we wake up. And some people say,
Speaker:lighten up, as you wake up,
Speaker:as you become aware and you become fully conscious and have
Speaker:fulfillment. You know, when we,
Speaker:I always say that we become our true self to the degree that we make everything
Speaker:else ourselves. And at the highest level, nothing's missing in our awareness.
Speaker:At the lowest level, there's scarcity, there's things missing in our awareness,
Speaker:not an abundance of awareness.
Speaker:And so we could say that at the moment we are actually able to see all of it and
Speaker:be fully aware of something we're perceiving in the
Speaker:we now have a love for this. I always say, when you really love something,
Speaker:you're fully aware of both sides simultaneously. When
Speaker:you're aware of only part of it,
Speaker:and you're unconscious or asleep to some of the parts. And you know,
Speaker:the thing that stops us from being fully aware is the parts that we're too proud
Speaker:or too humble to admit that we see in other things around us, inside us.
Speaker:Whenever we judge and look down on something,
Speaker:we're too proud to admit what we see in them inside us. We look up at something,
Speaker:we're too humble to admit what we see in them inside us.
Speaker:And then what we do is when we fully come aware and we actually have reflective
Speaker:awareness and we have an intimate relationship and there's now no separation
Speaker:between our individuality and the world around us, we now have the one mind.
Speaker:Erwin Schrödinger in his book On the Mind and Matter, described one Mind,
Speaker:and that all of this is just an illusion of separateness.
Speaker:So we could say that that's the highest level of consciousness, fully awakened.
Speaker:We're now one with panpsychism. We're one with a universal intelligence,
Speaker:in stead of us being illuminated only by a degree,
Speaker:a small degree and blind and reactive to things. To me,
Speaker:I would rather go through life and see that whatever I see in others,
Speaker:I see in me. It was biblically described in the New Testament in Romans 2-1,
Speaker:that whatever you judge in another individual beware for it is you that
Speaker:you're judging and what you see in them, you have within you,
Speaker:you do the same things. And that's so true.
Speaker:I've taken people through the Breakthrough Experience Program,
Speaker:which is my signature program, and the Demartini Method,
Speaker:which is my key methodology that I do to help people wake up their
Speaker:consciousness,
Speaker:and I basically show them that whatever you perceive in another individual that
Speaker:you infatuate or resent, if you go and look at yourself,
Speaker:you find out you have the same equivalent. And then if you do, you realize,
Speaker:well, who am I to judge them?
Speaker:And then the realization of the self and the other, the seer, the seeing,
Speaker:and the seen are the same.
Speaker:And then you just expanded your consciousness of yourself.
Speaker:You realize what you see out there is you.
Speaker:And if you could do that to everything around you as the hermetics,
Speaker:hermeticists described,
Speaker:then when they realize that you see that everything is an expression,
Speaker:this intelligence of the universe is you, it's just reflective,
Speaker:you have full consciousness <laugh>.
Speaker:And it may be that the consciousness may be individualized all the way to an
Speaker:approximation in probability all the way to the infinity. We're on a pursuit as,
Speaker:as Hardy basically described,
Speaker:we're in a magnificent infinite pursuit of the divine perfection,
Speaker:the magnificent perfection of life.
Speaker:And the perfection is the fully conscious awareness and a state of love.
Speaker:So I like to think of it that way and that our pursuit of that is the journey of
Speaker:our experience.
Speaker:And now I don't ever do a presentation without something on values.
Speaker:You have a hierarchy of values when you're living by your very highest values.
Speaker:You have the most objectivity, the most reflective awareness.
Speaker:You wake up the most part of the brain, you have the most gamma synchronicities.
Speaker:You have the most overall integration of all those layers that we described on
Speaker:consciousness awakene simultaneously.
Speaker:And you're illuminated and you have fulfillment and grace and gratitude for
Speaker:life.
Speaker:And that's one of the reasons I do the Breakthrough Experience to help people
Speaker:have full consciousness and have tears of gratitude.
Speaker:Because when you are fully aware, you are aware of the the magnificence and awe,
Speaker:the eureka moment of the existence,
Speaker:and all of a sudden you now transcend the average construct that most
Speaker:people are trapped in in their life.
Speaker:Because we're in bondage to anything we infatuate or resent.
Speaker:They occupy space and time in our mind and run us.
Speaker:But the moment we transcend it and have full consciousness,
Speaker:we become aware and we end up loving. And to me, that's what it's about.
Speaker:That's why I teach the Breakthrough Experience.
Speaker:That's why I've developed the Demartini Method to help wake up full
Speaker:consciousness. So we have an awareness of it,
Speaker:and I believe that the more you end up doing that,
Speaker:the more you comprehend what Schrödinger described as that there's one mind out
Speaker:there that we're part of, and that it's all a reflection.
Speaker:And then if we go and break it down into the subatomic and reduce it, right,
Speaker:the reductionist and the mechanist and materialist,
Speaker:we can also find it'ss down at the quantum level and even at the quantum level
Speaker:and there's quantum entanglement, these particle systems,
Speaker:which are just waves of probability,
Speaker:they're basically measurable by these entanglement,
Speaker:which has no boundary in space and time entanglement. So quantum entanglement,
Speaker:these non localities may be, again,
Speaker:the universal mind now particularized by some measurement that we've arbitrarily
Speaker:defined.
Speaker:It's really quite blessing to go and explore this mystery called consciousness.
Speaker:I could go for more hours on it, but I just didn't, I didn't want to,
Speaker:I didn't want to, you know, I want your head spinning a little bit,
Speaker:but at the same time,
Speaker:I want you to know that there's a science on how to wake up your full
Speaker:consciousness.
Speaker:There's a science on how to awaken up a deep love and appreciation,
Speaker:an inspiration and enthusiasm, a certainty and presence in life,
Speaker:a transcendental awareness, the noumenal level beyond the epiphenomenal level.
Speaker:And there's a way of actually integrating the pairs of opposites in the brain,
Speaker:the neuro associative complexes and the anti memories and memories and integrate
Speaker:the conscious and unconscious and become fully conscious.
Speaker:Consciousness is a magnificent expression and maybe the very foundation of our
Speaker:whole existence, everything may be conscious. And some people say, well,
Speaker:there's a boundary between the inanimate and the animate. Maybe not.
Speaker:Maybe there is really,
Speaker:the more we probe into the deeper ministries of the
Speaker:down into the particles and virtual particles of mathematical abstractions,
Speaker:they will discover that, that it's subtly intelligent at all these levels,
Speaker:and maybe all of the different theorists about consciousness have all been
Speaker:adding pieces to it. But ultimately,
Speaker:as we keep exploring the mysteries and go further into higher levels of quantum
Speaker:at depths, and we go all the way to Plancks mathematics,
Speaker:and even trans-Planckian mathematics,
Speaker:we may discover that there's just nothing but a matrix and field of love that
Speaker:we're participating in and no matter what you've done or not done,
Speaker:you're worthy of love. And that may be the very core essence of it,
Speaker:which religions and philosophies and sciences will all unite in that respect,
Speaker:at that highest level. That's what I'm interested in,
Speaker:in the Breakthrough Experience.
Speaker:That's what I'm interested in doing the Demartini Method to help people get a
Speaker:glimpse of the potential that lies within every human being.
Speaker:Even though that idea of a human being may be an artificial, murky,
Speaker:elusive separation of possibilities.
Speaker:Maybe we're just a field of possibilities. Maybe it's big dream.
Speaker:Maybe the whole thing is a conscious <laugh> imaginative thought <laugh>.
Speaker:Some people believe it's a simulation, who knows? I don't know about that,
Speaker:but I do know that this whole thing seems to be a loving matrix.
Speaker:All the things that go inside us are feedback systems to help us become
Speaker:maximized in our efficiency and effectency of potential,
Speaker:most efficient way of expressing our love.
Speaker:And all the things around us are trying to get us to do that.
Speaker:And wisdom is seeing everything out there and in there,
Speaker:the external internal systems feedbacking us to our most authentic,
Speaker:most empowered, loving self.
Speaker:So I just wanted to have a little fun with some consciousness today.
Speaker:I hope you enjoyed this <laugh>. Probably your head is spinning.
Speaker:You're probably thinking that was a wild one, but I just,
Speaker:I think it's an important topic.
Speaker:And AI may be also reaching the point where it starts to get into the same
Speaker:field of consciousness, whether we are using carbon or silicon, ultimately,
Speaker:we may access the same field, it may be at the most highest quantum level,
Speaker:we may actually get to that Planck level,
Speaker:which is 1 x 10-33rd centimeters length.
Speaker:We may find out that there's just a ground substance of the field of conscious
Speaker:underlying this whole thing.
Speaker:And we may actually be participating in a magnificent manifestation,
Speaker:an infinite variety of experiences of love on all scales of existence
Speaker:for eternity. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed today.
Speaker:If you want more about how to apply this and mastery in your own consciousness,
Speaker:come to the Breakthrough Experience and come learn the Demartini Method.
Speaker:And let me elaborate on this,
Speaker:where it's really clear and take you through it and make a difference in your
Speaker:life.
Speaker:It will help you empower all areas of your life and it'll help you have more
Speaker:gratitude for life. Until next week, Dr. Demartini, see you then.