BRILLIANT SCIENTISTS WHO ACCEPT
THE PARANORMAL
Manifesto for a Post-Materialist Science (PDF)
International Summit on Post-Materialist Science: Summary
Report (PDF)
We are a group of internationally known scientists, from
a variety of scientific fields (biology, neuroscience, psychology,
medicine, psychiatry), who participated in an international
summit on post-materialist science, spirituality and society.
The summit was co-organized by Gary E. Schwartz, PhD and
Mario Beauregard, PhD, the University of Arizona, and Lisa
Miller, PhD, Columbia University. This summit was held at
Canyon Ranch in Tucson, Arizona, on February 7-9, 2014.
Our purpose was to discuss the impact of the materialist
ideology on science and the emergence of a post-materialist
paradigm for science, spirituality, and society. We have
come to the following conclusions:
1. The modern scientific worldview is predominantly
predicated on assumptions that are closely associated with
classical physics. Materialism—the idea that matter
is the only reality—is one of these assumptions. A
related assumption is reductionism, the notion that complex
things can be understood by reducing them to the interactions
of their parts, or to simpler or more fundamental things
such as tiny material particles.
2. During the 19th century, these assumptions
narrowed, turned into dogmas, and coalesced into an ideological
belief system that came to be known as "scientific
materialism." This belief system implies that the mind
is nothing but the physical activity of the brain, and that
our thoughts cannot have any effect upon our brains and
bodies, our actions, and the physical world.
3. The ideology of scientific materialism
became dominant in academia during the 20th century. So
dominant that a majority of scientists started to believe
that it was based on established empirical evidence, and
represented the only rational view of the world.
4. Scientific methods based upon materialistic
philosophy have been highly successful in not only increasing
our understanding of nature but also in bringing greater
control and freedom through advances in technology.
5. However, the nearly absolute dominance
of materialism in the academic world has seriously constricted
the sciences and hampered the development of the scientific
study of mind and spirituality. Faith in this ideology,
as an exclusive explanatory framework for reality, has compelled
scientists to neglect the subjective dimension of human
experience. This has led to a severely distorted and impoverished
understanding of ourselves and our place in nature.
6. Science is first and foremost a non-dogmatic,
open-minded method of acquiring knowledge about nature through
the observation, experimental investigation, and theoretical
explanation of phenomena. Its methodology is not synonymous
with materialism and should not be committed to any particular
beliefs, dogmas, or ideologies.
7. At the end of the nineteenth century,
physicists discovered empirical phenomena that could not
be explained by classical physics. This led to the development,
during the 1920s and early 1930s, of a revolutionary new
branch of physics called quantum mechanics (QM). QM has
questioned the material foundations of the world by showing
that atoms and subatomic particles are not really solid
objects—they do not exist with certainty at definite
spatial locations and definite times. Most importantly,
QM explicitly introduced the mind into its basic conceptual
structure since it was found that particles being observed
and the observer—the physicist and the method used
for observation—are linked. According to one interpretation
of QM, this phenomenon implies that the consciousness of
the observer is vital to the existence of the physical events
being observed, and that mental events can affect the physical
world. The results of recent experiments support this interpretation.
These results suggest that the physical world is no longer
the primary or sole component of reality, and that it cannot
be fully understood without making reference to the mind.
8. Psychological studies have shown that
conscious mental activity can causally influence behavior,
and that the explanatory and predictive value of agentic
factors (e.g. beliefs, goals, desires and expectations)
is very high. Moreover, research in psychoneuroimmunology
indicates that our thoughts and emotions can markedly affect
the activity of the physiological systems (e.g., immune,
endocrine, cardiovascular) connected to the brain. In other
respects, neuroimaging studies of emotional self-regulation,
psychotherapy, and the placebo effect demonstrate that mental
events significantly influence the activity of the brain.
9. Studies of the so-called "psi phenomena"
indicate that we can sometimes receive meaningful information
without the use of ordinary senses, and in ways that transcend
the habitual space and time constraints. Furthermore, psi
research demonstrates that we can mentally influence—at
a distance—physical devices and living organisms (including
other human beings). Psi research also shows that distant
minds may behave in ways that are nonlocally correlated,
i.e. the correlations between distant minds are hypothesized
to be unmediated (they are not linked to any known energetic
signal), unmitigated (they do not degrade with increasing
distance), and immediate (they appear to be simultaneous).
These events are so common that they cannot be viewed as
anomolous nor as exceptions to natural laws, but as indications
of the need for a broader explanatory framework that cannot
be predicated exclusively on materialism.
10. Conscious mental activity can be experienced
in clinical death during a cardiac arrest (this is what
has been called a "near-death experience" [NDE]).
Some near-death experiencers (NDErs) have reported veridical
out-of-body perceptions (i.e. perceptions that can be proven
to coincide with reality) that occurred during cardiac arrest.
NDErs also report profound spiritual experiences during
NDEs triggered by cardiac arrest. It is noteworthy that
the electrical activity of the brain ceases within a few
seconds following a cardiac arrest.
11. Controlled laboratory experiments have
documented that skilled research mediums (people who claim
that they can communicate with the minds of people who have
physically died) can sometimes obtain highly accurate information
about deceased individuals. This further supports the conclusion
that mind can exist separate from the brain.
12. Some materialistically inclined scientists
and philosophers refuse to acknowledge these phenomena because
they are not consistent with their exclusive conception
of the world. Rejection of post-materialist investigation
of nature or refusal to publish strong science findings
supporting a post-materialist framework are antithetical
to the true spirit of scientific inquiry, which is that
empirical data must always be adequately dealt with. Data
which do not fit favored theories and beliefs cannot be
dismissed a priori. Such dismissal is the realm of ideology,
not science.
13. It is important to realize that psi
phenomena, NDEs in cardiac arrest, and replicable evidence
from credible research mediums, appear anomalous only when
seen through the lens of materialism.
14. Moreover, materialist theories fail
to elucidate how brain could generate the mind, and they
are unable to account for the empirical evidence alluded
to in this manifesto. This failure tells us that it is now
time to free ourselves from the shackles and blinders of
the old materialist ideology, to enlarge our concept of
the natural world, and to embrace a post-materialist paradigm.
15. According to the post-materialist paradigm:
a) Mind represents an aspect of reality
as primordial as the physical world. Mind is fundamental
in the universe, i.e. it cannot be derived from matter and
reduced to anything more basic.
b) There is a deep interconnectedness between
mind and the physical world.
c) Mind (will/intention) can influence the
state of the physical world, and operate in a nonlocal (or
extended) fashion, i.e. it is not confined to specific points
in space, such as brains and bodies, nor to specific points
in time, such as the present. Since the mind may nonlocally
influence the physical world, the intentions, emotions,
and desires of an experimenter may not be completely isolated
from experimental outcomes, even in controlled and blinded
experimental designs.
d) Minds are apparently unbounded, and may
unite in ways suggesting a unitary, One Mind that includes
all individual, single minds.
e) NDEs in cardiac arrest suggest that the
brain acts as a transceiver of mental activity, i.e. the
mind can work through the brain, but is not produced by
it. NDEs occurring in cardiac arrest, coupled with evidence
from research mediums, further suggest the survival of consciousness,
following bodily death, and the existence of other levels
of reality that are non-physical.
f) Scientists should not be afraid to investigate
spirituality and spiritual experiences since they represent
a central aspect of human existence.
16. Post-materialist science does not reject
the empirical observations and great value of scientific
achievements realized up until now. It seeks to expand the
human capacity to better understand the wonders of nature,
and in the process rediscover the importance of mind and
spirit as being part of the core fabric of the universe.
Post-materialism is inclusive of matter, which is seen as
a basic constituent of the universe.
17. The post-materialist paradigm has far-reaching
implications. It fundamentally alters the vision we have
of ourselves, giving us back our dignity and power, as humans
and as scientists. This paradigm fosters positive values
such as compassion, respect, and peace. By emphasizing a
deep connection between ourselves and nature at large, the
post-materialist paradigm also promotes environmental awareness
and the preservation of our biosphere. In addition, it is
not new, but only forgotten for four hundred years, that
a lived transmaterial understanding may be the cornerstone
of health and wellness, as it has been held and preserved
in ancient mind-body-spirit practices, religious traditions,
and contemplative approaches.
18. The shift from materialist science to
post-materialist science may be of vital importance to the
evolution of the human civilization. It may be even more
pivotal than the transition from geocentrism to heliocentrism.
We invite you, scientists of the world,
to read the Manifesto for a Post-Materialist Science and
sign it, if you wish to show your support (see http://opensciences.org/).
* The Manifesto for a Post-Materialist Science
was prepared by Mario Beauregard, PhD (University of Arizona),
Gary E. Schwartz, PhD (University of Arizona), and Lisa
Miller, PhD (Columbia University), in collaboration with
Larry Dossey, MD, Alexander Moreira-Almeida, MD, PhD, Marilyn
Schlitz, PhD, Rupert Sheldrake, PhD, and Charles Tart, PhD.
**Contact
For further information, please contact
Dr Mario Beauregard, Laboratory for Advances in Consciousness
and Health, Department of Psychology, University of Arizona,
Tucson, USA. Email: mariobeauregard@email.arizona.edu
*** We considered two ways of referring
to the emerging paradigm presented in this Manifesto: the
hyphenated version (post-materialism) and the non-hyphenated
version (postmaterialism). The hyphenated form was selected
for the sake of clarity for both scientists and lay people.
**** The Summary Report of the International
Summit on Post-Materialist Science, Spirituality and Society
can be downloaded here: International Summit on Post-Materialist
Science: Summary Report (PDF).
To become a signatory to this manifesto,
please email Dr Mario Beauregard with your name, academic
degree, fields of study, title and institution.
Manifesto Authors
Mario Beauregard, PhD, Neuroscience of Consciousness
Laboratory for Advances in Consciousness
and Health, Dept. of Psychology, University of Arizona,
USA Author of The Spiritual Brain and Brain Wars
Larry Dossey, MD, Internal
Medicine
Independent Scholar and Executive Editor, Explore
Author of Recovering the Soul, USA
Lisa Jane Miller, PhD, Clinical Psychology
Editor, Oxford Handbook of Psychology &
Spirituality, Editor-in-Chief, Spirituality in Clinical
Practice
Professor & Director, Spirituality & Mind Body Institute,
Columbia University, USA
Alexander Moreira-Almeida, MD, PhD,
Psychiatry
Associate Professor, Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora
Founder & Director, Research Center in Spirituality
and Health, Brazil
Marilyn Schlitz, PhD, Social Anthropology
Founder & CEO, Worldview Enterprises
President Emeritus & Senior Fellow, Institute of Noetic
Sciences, USA
Gary Schwartz, PhD, Psychology, Neurology,
Psychiatry & Surgery
Professor, University of Arizona
Director, Laboratory for Advances in Consciousness and Health,
USA
Rupert Sheldrake, PhD, Biochemistry, Developmental
Biology, Consciousness Studies
Fellow, Institute of Noetic Sciences, Fellow, Schumacher
College
Author of A New Science of Life, UK
Charles T. Tart, PhD, Transpersonal
Psychology
Core Faculty Member, Sofia University
Professor Emeritus of Psychology, University of California,
USA
Scientists, Doctors and Philosophers
Who Agree with this Manifesto
Robert Almeder, Phd, Philosophy
of Science and Epistemology
Professor Emeritus, Georgia State University Department
of Philosophy, USA
Yasco Aracava, PhD
Research Associate, University of Maryland
School of Medicine, Dept. of Epidemiology & Public Health,
USA
Leonardo Ferreira Caixeta, MD, PhD, Psychiatry
and Neurosciences
Associate Professor of Neuropsychiatry, Federal
University of Goias, Brazil
Ana Catarina Araújo Elias, PhD, Psychology
Post-doc Researcher, University of São Paulo, Institute
of Cancer of the State of São Paulo, Brazil
Jean-Jacques Charbonier, MD, Anesthesiology,
Near-death Experience
Author of 7 Reasons to Believe in the Afterlife, France
Julio Maria Fonseca Chebli, MD, PhD, Gastroenterology
Associate Professor and Rector Elect of the Federal University
of Juiz de Fora, Brazil
Humberto Schubert Coelho, PhD, Philosophy
Assistant Professor, Universidade Federal
de Juiz de Fora, Brazil
Arnaud Delorme, PhD, Computational
Neurosciences
Principal investigator, CNRS, France
Sylvie Dethiollaz, PhD, Altered
States of Consciousness Studies
Director of the Swiss Institute of Noetic Sciences, Switzerland
Sonia Q. Doi, MD, PhD, Medicine
Research Associate Professor, Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences, USA
Elizabeth S Freire, PhD, Psychology
Research Fellow, Federal University of Juiz
de Fora, Brazil
Antonio Giuditta, MD, Physiology-Neurobiology
Emeritus Professor, The Federico II University Department
of Biology, Naples, Italy
Erlendur Haraldsson PhD, Psychology
Professor Emeritus, University of Iceland,
Reykjavik, Iceland
Emily R. Hawken, PhD, Biomedical and Molecular
Sciences
Postdoctoral Fellow, Queen's University,
Canada
Louis A.G. Hissink III, Msc. MAIG. MIEEE
Editor Australian Inst. Geoscientists News,
retired geologist, New South Wales, Australia
Dora Incontri (Dora Alice Colombo), PhD,
Education, Philosophy and Spirituality
Independent Scholar, Author, Editor of Educação
e Espiritualidade
Christopher K. Johannes, PhD, Transpersonal
Psychology
Tokunin Assistant Professor, Kansai Gaidai
College, Kyoto, Japan
Ingeborg Kader, PhD, Archeology
Curator Museum für Abgüsse Klassischer
Bildwerke, Munich, Germany
Pim van Lommel, Cardiologist, NDE-researcher
Author of Consciousness beyond Life, Netherlands
Carlos Alberto Mourão Jr., PhD,
Neuroscience
Professor of Physiology, Federal University of Juiz de Fora,
Brazil
Caio Márcio de Oliveira Monteiro,
PhD, Zoology, Parasitology
Research Fellow, Federal University of Juiz
de Fora, Brazil
Adrian Parker, PhD, Clinical Psychology,
Consciousness Studies
Professor, Gothenburg University Department of Psychology,
Sweden
Julio F. P. Peres, PhD, Neuroscience
and Behavior
Clinical Psychologist, University of São Paulo, Brazil
Jeffrey D. Rediger, MD, MDiv
Medical and Clinical Director, McLean Hospital
SE and Community Programs, Harvard Medical School, USA
Antonio Roazzi, PhD Oxford, Cognitive
Psychology
Professor, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco Programa,
Brazil
Franklin Santana Santos, MD, PhD, Thanatology,
Palliative Care, Death Education & Grief
School of Medicine, Federal University of Bahia, Brazil
Rolf Sattler, PhD, DSc (h.c.), FLS, FRSC,
Biology and Philosophy
Professor Emeritus, McGill University, Montreal, Canada
Eduardo Ekman Schenberg, PhD, Neuroscience
Researcher, Universidade Federal de São Paulo; General
Director, Instituto Plantando Consciência, Brazil
Valdemar W. Setzer, Ph.D.,
Computer Science, Education and Anthroposophy
Professor, Department of Computer Science, Institute of
Mathematics and Statistics, Univsersity of São Paulo,
Brazil
David J Shuch, BS(Biol),
DDS Founder and Director, The Center for Integrative Dentistry,
Augusta, NJ, USA
Richard Silberstein, PhD, Cognitive Neuroscience
and Neuro-Imaging
Professor Emeritus, Swinburne University
of Technology, Australia
Cicero T Silva, MD, Pediatric radiology
Associate professor of diagnostic radiology,
Yale School of Medicine, USA
Henryk Skolimowski, DPhil, Philosophy
Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, USA
William A Tiller, PhD, Materials Science,
Engineering, Psychoenergetics
Professor Emeritus, Stanford University, Department of Materials
Science and Engineering
John V Thomas, PhD, Lecturer of Philosophy
of Science, Cosmology, Metaphysics
De Paul Institute of Religion and Philosophy, Bangalore,
India
Eduardo Tosta, MD, PhD, Medical
Immunology
Professor Emeritus & Senior Researcher, University of
Brasília, Brazil
Natalie Trent, PhD, Neuroscience
and Psychology
Research Fellow at Harvard University Department of Psychology,
USA
Sébastien Tremblay, PhD,
Mathematical Physics
Professor, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières,
Canada
Patrizio Tressoldi, PhD, Psychology
Researcher, Dipartimento di Psicologia Generale,
Università di Padova, Italy
Alvaro Vannucci, PhD, Physics
Associate Professor, Physics Institute, University
os São Paulo, Brazil
Florence Vinit, PhD, Sociology, Psychology,
Phenomenology of the Body, Sensoriality
Professor, Université du Québec à Montréal,
Co-founder & Psychosocial Director, Dr Clown, Canada
Harald Walach, PhD, Clinical Psychology,
PhD, History and Theory of Science
Director of the Institute for Transcultural Health Sciences,
European University Viadrina, Germany
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