A Critique of Scientific Realism Based in Vedic Principles

NeuroQuantology | September 2013 | Volume 11 | Issue 3 |

Abstract
The shift from particle to field theories has been crumbling pillars of classical objective science, and is reverberating in philosophy of science. Fundamental issues implicit in objective science—process of observing, observer or subject, dividing line between objective and subjective—are now more explicit. These issues are examined in this critique of scientific realism, held to be the best argument for objective science. A developmental model of levels of reality in different states of consciousness is introduced as a more integrated framework for addressing the core challenges to scientific realism.

Unpacking Quantum Wave Function Collapse: Introduction to the 3-in­‐1 Ontological Model of Nature

NeuroQuantology | 2012 |

Abstract
This paper examines major interpretations of quantum wave function collapse, including the orthodox, many-worlds, decoherence, and neorealist interpretations. The interpretations increasingly support quantum reality, and are progressing toward a three-level model of the ‘explicate’ local, ‘implicate’ nonlocal, and ‘super-implicate’ unified field levels consistent with the ancient 3-in-1 Vedic model. This completely holistic model is ontologically rich enough for a logically consistent account of the causal influence of mind over matter, as well as the change from mathematical possibilities to physical actualities without positing quantum wave function collapse.

The Place and Role of Consciousness in Human Psychoarchitecture

The Place and Role of Consciousness in Human Psychoarchitecture

NeuroQuantology | March-June-September-December 2011 | Vol 9 | Issue 1 |

Abstract
The ontological place and causal role of consciousness is examined in evidence-based models of mind. The challenge is highlighted of placing disembodied functional cognitive models of conscious processes emphasizing downward causation into embodied neuropsychological structural models of unconscious processes emphasizing upward causation. Recent quantum theories that posit abstract information space and nonlocal mind are shown to be progressing toward the model of mind in ancient Vedic literature. The Vedic model provides the basis to resolve the challenge through an expanded ontology of subtler levels of nature underlying the physical.

The Place and Role of Consciousness in Human Psychoarchitecture

Toward an Integrated View of Particles and Forces

Consciousness-Based Education: A Foundation for Teaching and Learning in the Academic Disciplines, Volume IV Consciousness-Based Education and Physics, Maharishi University of Management, 2009

R. W. Boyer and P. Hensley
Abstract
In the ancient Vedic tradition of Sankhya, three fundamental forces are identified that can be associated with creative, maintenance, and dissolution operators. These three forces materialize five fields or constituents said to comprise the entire physical universe. This framework may be helpful for contemporary particle-force theories with a multitude of particles emerging from four quantum fields—electromagnetism, weak and strong nuclear, and gravity—that gain mass via another more recently theorized Higgs field.

Making Room for Mental Space

NeuroQuantology | September 2009 | Vol 7 | Issue 3

Abstract
According to the consensus cosmological theory of the inflationary big bang, the universe originated about 14 billion years ago with no initial conditions, inherent nature, order, or purpose—from literally nothing. Instantaneously it was randomly fluctuating quantized gravity and Higgs fields that through spontaneous symmetry breaking formed into four fundamental particle-forces. The forces congealed into atomic structures, elements, stars, planets, organic molecules, living cellular organisms, and eventually humans with complex enough nervous systems to generate higher-order conscious mind with apparent causal control of its lower-order parts. How the closed physical causal chain unlinked and inserted a causally efficacious conscious mind at some stage of neural complexity is inexplicable; there is no room for it in the physicalist view—it must be epiphenomenal and a fundamental misperception. A coherent alternative is developing in quantum and quantum gravity theories of a proposed information space or nonlocal mental space underneath the physical. The progression of theories is overviewed with respect to the nature of space, and are shown to be increasingly consistent with holistic interpretations of ancient Vedic science that make room for a causally efficacious conscious mind.

The Place and Role of Consciousness in Human Psychoarchitecture

Major Progress Linking Modern Science and Vedic Science

Sambodhi, Vol. XXXII, 2009, Ahmedabad, India, 1-32.

S. N. Bhavasar and R. W. Boyer
prasaad cinhani purah phalani
Auspicious signs and signatures precede eventual fruitful actions. (Kalidasa)
The exponential rate of growth of information in recent years is one indicator of the unprecedented phase transition we are witnessing throughout the world. In virtually every area of society, it is a time of rapid change marked by shifting paradigms, erosion of traditional social values, moral and ethical challenges, tension and violence, and even risk of nuclear annihilation and dismantling of our natural genetic heritage. We are at a critical threshold at which the outer objective focus on the material level of life has gotten ahead of inner subjective development of our minds (1). But in the fog and mist of these turbulent times, a new era of hope and progress in scientific knowledge is unfolding that is far more significant than any paradigm shift in the 400 hundred year history of this Age of Science. Scientific advances now have brought us to the doorstep of the ultimate unification of nature in unified field theory. These advances are auspicious precursors to a profound integration of knowledge that is propelling the Age of Science into a genuine Age of Enlightenment.