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All the human groups of the pre-industrial era were in agreement that the material
world which we perceive and in which we operate in our everyday life is not the only
reality. Their worldview included the existence of deities, demons, discarnate entities,
ancestral spirits, and power animals, as well as domains in which these existed. They had
a rich ritual and spiritual life that revolved around the possibility to achieve direct contact
with these ordinarily hidden dimensions of reality, to receive important information or
assistance, and to influence the course of material events.
Under these circumstances, the activities of everyday life were based not only on
the information received by the senses, but also on the input from these ordinarily
invisible dimensions. Western trained anthropologists were often baffled by what they
called the "double logic" of the cultures they studied. While the natives clearly possessed
extraordinary skills and ingenious implements for survival and sustenance, they
combined their practical activities, such as hunting and fishing, with rituals addressing
various realms and entities that for the anthropologists were imaginary and non-existent.
The cosmologies, philosophies, and mythologies, as well as spiritual and ritual
life of the pre-industrial societies, contain a clear message that death is not the absolute
and irrevocable end of everything, that life or existence continues in some form after the
biological demise. Their elaborate eschatological mythologies are in general agreement
that after the death of the body the soul experiences a complex series of adventures in
consciousness. The posthumous journey of the soul is sometimes described as a travel
through fantastic landscapes that bear some similarity to those on earth, other times as
encounters with various archetypal beings, or as a progression through a sequence of nonordinary states of consciousness (holotropic states). In some cultures the soul reaches a
temporary realm in the Beyond, such as the Christian purgatory or the lokas of Tibetan
Buddhism, in others an eternal abode - heaven, hell, paradise, or the sun realm.
Many cultures have independently developed a belief system in metempsychosis
or reincarnation that includes return of the unit of consciousness to another physical
lifetime on earth. The concept of karma and reincarnation represents a cornerstone of
Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism, the Tibetan Vajrayana
Buddhism, and Taoism. Similar ideas can be found in such racially, geographically,
historically, and culturally diverse groups as various African tribes, American Indians,
pre-Columbian cultures, the Polynesian kahunas, practitioners of the Brazilian umbanda,
the Gauls, and the Druids. In ancient Greece, several important schools of thought
subscribed to it; among these were the Pythagoreans, the Orphics, and the Platonists. This
doctrine was also adopted by the Essenes, the Pharisees, the Karaites, and other Jewish
and semi-Jewish groups, and it formed an important part of the kabbalistic theology of
medieval Jewry. It was also held by the Neoplatonists and Gnostics.
Pre-industrial societies thus seemed to agree that death was not the ultimate defeat
and end of everything, but an important transition. The experiences associated with death
were seen as visits to important dimensions of reality that deserved to be experienced,
studied, and carefully mapped. The dying were familiar with the eschatological
cartographies of their cultures, whether these were shamanic maps of the funeral
landscapes or sophisticated descriptions of the Eastern spiritual systems, such as those
found in the Tibetan Bardo Thdol. This important text of Tibetan Buddhism represents
an interesting counterpoint to the exclusive pragmatic emphasis on productive life and
denial of death characterizing the Western civilization. It describes the time of death as a
unique opportunity for spiritual liberation from the cycles of death and rebirth and a
period that determines our next incarnation, if we do not achieve liberation. In this
context, it is possible to see the intermediate state between lives (bardo) as being in a
way more important than incarnate existence. It is then essential to prepare for this time
by systematic practice during our lifetime.
These descriptions of the sacred dimensions of reality and the emphasis on
spiritual life are in sharp conflict with the belief system that dominates the industrial
world. According to Western mainstream academic science, only the physical world
really exists. The history of the universe is the history of developing matter; life,
consciousness, and intelligence are more or less accidental and insignificant
epiphenomena of this development. They appeared on the scene after billions of years of
evolution of passive and inert matter in a trivially small part of an immense universe.
According to Western neuroscience, consciousness is a product of the neurophysiological
processes in the brain, and thus critically dependent on the body. Very few people,
including most scientists, realize that we have absolutely no proof that consciousness is
actually produced by the brain and not even a remote notion how something like that
could possibly happen. In spite of it, this basic metaphysical assumption remains one of
the leading myths of Western materialistic science and has profound influence on our
entire society.
The Mystical Worldview and Western Psychiatry.
In a world where only what is material, tangible, and measurable is real, there is
no place for spirituality of any kind. Although religious activities are generally permitted,
or even formally encouraged, from a strictly scientific point of view any involvement in
spiritual matters appears to be and is interpreted as an irrational activity indicating
emotional and intellectual immaturity -- lack of education, primitive superstition, and
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regression to magical and infantile thinking. The belief in any form of existence after
death is generally ridiculed. The death of the body, particularly of the brain, is then seen
as the absolute end of any form of conscious activity. Belief in the posthumous journey of
the soul, afterlife, or reincarnation is seen as a product of wishful thinking of people who
are unable to accept the obvious biological imperative of death, the absolute nature of
which has been scientifically proven beyond any reasonable doubt.
Direct experiences of spiritual realities are then seen as manifestations of a serious
mental disease, psychosis. Western psychiatry does not make any distinction between a
mystical experience and a psychotic experience. The kindest judgment about mysticism
that has so far come from official academic circles was the statement of the Committee
on Psychiatry and Religion of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry that in its
statement Mysticism: Spiritual Quest or Psychic Disorder? published in 1976 declared
that mysticism might be a phenomenon that lies between normalcy and psychosis.
Religion, bereft of its experiential component has largely lost the connection to its
deep spiritual source and as a result of it has become empty, meaningless, and
increasingly irrelevant in our life. In many instances, live and lived spirituality based on
profound personal experience has been replaced by dogmatism, ritualism, and moralism.
The most belligerent partisans of mainstream religion insist on literal belief in the
exoteric versions of spiritual texts that appear childish and blatantly irrational to the
educated modern mind. This is further confounded by various indefensible attitudes of
religious authorities, such as denying women the right of ministry and dwelling on the
prohibition of contraception in face of such dangers as AIDS and overpopulation.
Rampant sexual abuse, particularly pedophilia, perpetrated by clergy on all the levels of
the hierarchy further undermines the authority of organized church.
In this form, mainstream religion cannot possibly compete with the
persuasiveness of materialistic science backed up by its technological triumphs. Even
dedicated individuals and groups of ardent believers cannot usually stay completely
immune against the undermining influence of the sophisticated skepticism of mainstream
scientific theories. Under these circumstances, religion has ceased to be a vital force
during our life, as well as at the time of dying and death. Its references to divine realities,
supernatural beings, life after death, the posthumous adventures of the soul, and the
abodes of the Beyond, such as heaven and hell, have been relegated to the realm of fairy
tales and handbooks of psychiatry.
The entire spiritual history of humanity has been pathologized. At the cradle of all
the great religions of the world were transpersonal experiences of their founders,
prophets, and saints. We can think here, for example, about Buddha's encounter with
Kama Mara, his seductive daughters, and his army or Buddha's reliving of various
episodes from his past incarnations accompanied by "tearing of the karmic bonds." The
Old Testament describes among others Abraham's interaction with God and the angel,
Moses' encounter with Yahwe appearing in the burning bush, and Ezechiel's flaming
chariot. The New Testament depicts such scenes as Jesus' temptation by the devil during
his stay in the desert, Saul's blinding vision of Jesus on the way to Damascus, and St.
John's apocalyptic epiphany in the cave on Patmos. Islamic scriptures portray the journey
of Mohammed through the seven heavens, paradise, and hell in the company of archangel
Gabriel. According to traditional psychiatry, all these experiences are indicative of severe
psychopathology, mental disease of the individuals involved.
Psychiatric literature abounds in articles and books discussing what would be the
best clinical diagnosis for various famous spiritual figures, some of them of the stature of
the Buddha, Jesus, Mohammed, Ramakrishna, or Saint Anthony. Visionary experiences
of the transpersonal realms are usually attributed to severe psychosis of the schizophrenic
type or to epilepsy, as it is in the case of Mohammed. St. John of the Cross has been
labeled "hereditary degenerate" and St. Teresa of Avila a "hysterical psychotic."
Mainstream anthropologists have argued whether shamans are schizophrenics, borderline
psychotics, hysterics, or epileptics. There is even a paper applying psychopathological
criteria to meditation. It is entitled Buddhist Training As Artificial Catatonia and its
author is the famous psychoanalyst and founder of psychosomatic medicine Franz
Alexander (Alexander 1931).
This interpretation of the nature and origin of religions is rather simplistic and
unconvincing. Western psychiatry has failed to provide an explanation as to how an
unknown pathological process affecting the brain (occurring crossculturally in about one
percent of the population) could generate the rich spectrum of specific visions, emotional
states, and extraordinary ideas found in various mystical traditions of perennial
philosophy. Moreover, it is not very plausible that artificial products of a pathological
process in the brain could become powerful forces of human history, have a profound
impact on the lives of millions of people of different times, races and cultures, and
provide inspiration for astonishing literature, art, and architecture. The degree and scope
of this influence makes it clear that we are dealing with something that is connected with
the most fundamental dynamics of the human psyche.
The profound differences between the worldviews of pre-industrial cultures and
the Western industrial civilization, particularly the disagreement about the spiritual
dimensions of existence, have been usually attributed to the superiority of Western
materialistic science in understanding the nature of reality. However, closer examination
of the existing evidence clearly shows that this is not the case. In view of the findings of
clinical and laboratory consciousness research of the last several decades, the single most
important factor responsible for the differences between the worldview of modern
technologized societies and all other human groups throughout history is not the
superiority of Western materialistic science over primitive superstition, but its disregard
and profound ignorance in regard to holotropic states of consciousness.
The only way the Newtonian-Cartesian worldview of Western science can be
maintained is by systematic suppression or misinterpretation of all the evidence generated
by consciousness studies, whether its source is history, anthropology, and comparative
religion, or various areas of modern research, such as parapsychology, thanatology,
psychedelic therapy, experiential psychotherapies, laboratory study of biofeedback,
sensory deprivation, and lucid dreaming, or the work with individuals in psychospiritual
crises ("spiritual emergencies"). Academic circles have been protecting and defending
themselves against the influx of critical information from all these areas with the rigidity,
number of books they have written. This situation is comparable to the obvious inability
of pre-adolescents, who have not had a personal experience of the sexual orgasm, to
understand its nature and compelling power.
Technologies and Technicians of the Sacred.
These methods have been employed in many different sacramental contexts, such
as various shamanic procedures, healing ceremonies, and rites of passage - powerful
rituals enacted at the time of important biological and social transitions, particularly
circumcision, puberty, marriage, or birth of a child. Here belong also the ancient
mysteries of death and rebirth, for example the Sumerian mysteries of Inanna and
Tammuz, the Egyptian temple initiations of Isis and Osiris, and the Greek Bacchanalia,
rites of Attis and Adonis, and the Eleusinian mysteries. The specifics of the procedures
involved in these secret rites have remained for the most part unknown, although it is
likely that psychedelic preparations played an important part in at least some of them
(Wasson, Hofmann, and Ruck 1978). Eastern and Western spiritual systems that have
used regular practice of exercises, meditation, fasting, and prayer are additional important
contexts.
This reverential attitude toward holotropic states of consciousness contrasts
sharply with that found in technological countries. Western industrial civilization has
pathologized all forms of holotropic states of consciousness (with the exception of
dreams that are not recurrent or nightmares), spends much time trying to develop
effective ways of suppressing them when they occur spontaneously, and tends to outlaw
tools and contexts associated with them. As I mentioned earlier, Western psychiatry
makes no distinction between a mystical experience and a psychotic experience and sees
both as manifestations of mental disease. In its rejection of religion, it does not
differentiate between primitive folk beliefs or the fundamentalists' literal interpretations
of scriptures and sophisticated mystical traditions and Eastern spiritual philosophies
based on centuries of systematic introspective exploration of the psyche.
Re-Visioning of Psychiatry and of Western Science.
paradigm of Western science has an accurate and reliable understanding of reality and of
the human psyche. All others have been primitive, ignorant, or deluded.
Systematic study of various forms of holotropic states of consciousness conducted
in the last several decades by clinicians using psychedelic therapy and powerful
experiential
psychotherapies,
thanatologists,
anthropologists,
Jungian
analysts,
researchers of meditation and biofeedback, and others has shown that Western
psychology and psychiatry have made a serious error in dismissing mystical experiences
as manifestations of brain pathology of unknown etiology. The new findings have
inspired the development of transpersonal psychology, a discipline that has undertaken
unbiased scientific research of spirituality on its own terms, rather than seeing it through
the prism of the materialistic paradigm.
In contrast with the traditional attitude that pathologizes the entire spiritual history
of humanity, transpersonal psychology seriously studies and respects the entire spectrum
of human experience, including holotropic states of consciousness, and all the domains of
the psyche, including perinatal and transpersonal phenomena. By doing it, it is more
culturally sensitive and offers a way of understanding the psyche that is universal and
applicable to any human group and any historical period. It also honors the spiritual
dimensions of existence and acknowledges the deep human need for transcendental
experiences. In this context, spiritual search appears to be an understandable and
legitimate human activity.
Religion and Spirituality.
To prevent the confusion and misunderstandings that in the past have plagued
similar discussions, it is critical to make a clear distinction between spirituality and
religion. Spirituality is based on direct experiences of other realities. It does not
necessarily require a special place, or a special person mediating contact with the divine,
although mystics can certainly benefit from spiritual guidance and from a community of
fellow seekers. Spirituality involves a special relationship between the individual and the
cosmos and is in its essence a personal and private affair. At the cradle of all great
religions were visionary (perinatal and/or transpersonal) experiences of their founders,
prophets, saints, and even ordinary followers. All major spiritual scriptures -- the Vedas,
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the Buddhist Pali Canon, the Bible, the Koran, the Book of Mormon, and many others are
based on revelations in holotropic states of consciousness.
By comparison, the basis of organized religion is institutionalized group activity
that takes place in a designated location (temple, church), and involves a system of
appointed mediators. Ideally, religions should provide for its members access to and
support for direct spiritual experiences. However, it often happens that a religion
completely loses the connection with its spiritual source and becomes a secular institution
exploiting the human spiritual needs without satisfying them. Instead, it creates a
hierarchical system focusing on the pursuit of power, control, politics, money, and other
possessions. Under these circumstances, religious hierarchy tends to actively discourage
and suppress direct spiritual experiences of its members, because they foster
independence and cannot be effectively controlled.
Direct spiritual experiences appear in two different forms. The first of these, the
experience of the immanent divine, involves subtly, but profoundly transformed
perception of the everyday reality. A person having this form of spiritual experience sees
the people, animals, and inanimate objects in the environment as radiant manifestations
of a unified field of cosmic creative energy and realizes that the boundaries between them
are illusory and unreal. This is a direct experience of nature as god, Baruch Spinoza's
deus sive natura. Using the analogy with television, this could be likened to a situation
where a black and white picture would suddenly change into one in living colors. Much
of the old perception of the world would remain in place, but would be radically
transformed by the addition of a new dimension. The second form, the experience of the
transcendental divine, involves appearance of archetypal beings and realms of reality that
are ordinarily transphenomenal, that is unavailable to perception in the everyday state of
consciousness. They seem to unfold or explicate to borrow a term from David Bohm from another level or order of reality into our field of consciousness.
These two types of transpersonal experiences represent the source of inspiration
for the founders of religions, saints, prophets, and spiritual practitioners. For many
people, the first encounter with the sacred dimensions of existence often occurs in the
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context of the death-rebirth process, when the experiences of the different stages of birth
are accompanied by archetypal visions and scenes from the historical domain of the
collective unconscious. However, the full connection with the spiritual realm is made
when the process moves to the transpersonal level of the psyche, where various spiritual
experiences appear independently of the fetal elements. Occasionally, holotropic states of
consciousness provide direct access into the transpersonal realm, bypassing the
biographical and perinatal levels.
The observations from the study of holotropic states confirm the ideas of C.G.
Jung concerning spirituality. According to him, the experiences from deeper levels of the
psyche (in my own terminology perinatal and transpersonal) have a certain quality that
Jung called (after Rudolph Otto) 'numinosity'. The subjects having such experiences feel
that they are encountering a dimension which is sacred, holy, radically different from
everyday life, belonging to another order of reality. Like Platos realm of Forms or Ideas,
it seems to be superordinated to the material world and to form and inform it. The term
numinosity is relatively neutral and thus preferable to others, such as "religious",
"mystical", "magical", "holy", "sacred", "occult", and others, which have often been used
incorrectly and are easily misleading.
People who have experiences of this kind open up to spirituality found in the
mystical branches of the great religions of the world or in their monastic orders, not
necessarily in their mainstream organizations. If these experiences take a Christian form,
the subject would feel close to St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, Meister Eckhart,
or St. Hildegarde von Bingen, rather than develop appreciation for the Vatican hierarchy,
politics, and the edicts of the popes, or understand the official position of the Church on
contraception and ban on the participation of women in the clergy. A spiritual experience
of the Islamic variety would bring the subject close to the teachings of the various Sufi
orders; it will not engender admiration for Ayatollah Khomeini, Saddam Hussein, or
Osama bin Laden or enthusiasm for jihad, the Holy War against the infidels. Similarly, a
Judaic form of this experience would connect one to the Hassidic or the Kabbalistic
tradition and not to fundamentalist Judaism or zionism.
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From the scientific point of view, the main question regarding spirituality and
religion is the ontological status of transpersonal experiences. While mainstream
psychiatry and psychology see them as products of pathology, transpersonal psychology
has shown that they are important phenomena sui generis that have great heuristic and
therapeutic value and deserve to be seriously studied. While much of what is found in
organized religions and their theologies is certainly in serious conflict with science, this is
not true in regard to spirituality based on direct transpersonal experiences.
The findings of modern consciousness research actually show remarkable
convergence between the insights from transpersonal experiences and many
revolutionary developments in Western science referred to as the emerging paradigm. As
Ken Wilber (1982) pointed out, there cannot possibly be a conflict between genuine
science and authentic religion. If there seems to be a conflict, we are very likely dealing
with "bogus science" and "bogus religion", where either side has a serious
misunderstanding of the other's position and very likely does not represent the best
example of its own discipline. Much confusion in this area has been caused by serious
misconceptions concerning the nature and function of science and scientific theories.
What is presented as a scientific refutation of spiritual realities is often based on
scientistic argumentation rather than science. An additional source of unnecessary
problems concerning religion is a serious misunderstanding and misinterpretation of the
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because the mainstream conceptual frameworks failed to account for and explain too
many of their important observations and experiences.
The work with holotropic states of consciousness has shown that human
consciousness can transcend the usual limitations of the bodyego, space, and linear time.
The disapearance of spatial boundaries can lead to authentic and convincing
identifications with other people, animals of different species, plant life, and even
inorganic materials and processes. It is also possible to transcend the customary
constraints of linear time and experience episodes from the lives of one's human and
animal ancestors, as well as collective, racial, and karmic memories. In addition,
transpersonal experiences can take us into the archetypal domains of the collective
unconscious and mediate encounter with images of blissful and wrathful deities of
various cultures and visits to mythological realms.
A fascinating property of all these different types of transpersonal phenomena is
the fact that they can mediate access to entirely new information about various aspects of
existence. The nature, depth, and scope of this information often by far surpasses the
intellectual knowledge that the individuals experiencing these phenomena have obtained
through conventional channels. The study of consciousness that can extend beyond the
body, William Roll's "theta consciousness" or the "long body" of the Iroquois (Roll
1974), has generated vast amounts of observations that question the most fundamental
assumptions of Western science. Thus, for example, the belief that perception of the
environment has to be mediated by sensory organs has been shattered by thanatological
studies of veridical out-of-body experiences. Similarly, the existence of transpersonal
experiences mentioned earlier undermines the deeply ingrained belief of materialistic
science that memory requires a material substrate, such as the neuronal network in the
brain or the DNA molecules of the genes.
It is in principle impossible to find or even imagine any material medium that
would store or convey the new information about the universe that forms an integral part
of various transpersonal experiences. This knowledge clearly has not been acquired
during the individual's lifetime through the known means - sensory perception, analysis
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and synthesis of the data, and storage of the information in the memory banks of the
brain. The information seems to exist independently of matter and be contained in some
fields that cannot be detected by our scientific instruments or in the field of consciousness
itself. These observations from the study of transpersonal experiences are supported by
evidence that comes from other avenues of research. Challenging the basic metaphysical
assumptions of Newtonian-Cartesian thinking, scientists like Heinz von Foerster, Rupert
Sheldrake, and Ervin Laszlo seriously explore such possibilities as "memory without a
material substrate," "morphogenetic fields," and the PSI or Akashic Field (von
Foerster 1965, Sheldrake 1981, Laszlo 1993, 1999, 2003, 2004).
Observations of this kind profoundly change our understanding of human nature.
Traditional academic science describes human beings as highly developed animals and
biological thinking machines. Experienced and studied in the everyday state of
consciousness, we appear to be Newtonian objects made of atoms, molecules, cells,
tissues, and organs. However, transpersonal experiences in holotropic states of
consciousness clearly show that each of us can also manifest the properties of a field of
consciousness that transcends space, time, and linear causality. The complete new
formula, remotely reminiscent of the wave-particle paradox in modern physics, thus
describes humans as paradoxical beings who have two complementary aspects: they can
show properties of Newtonian objects and also those of infinite fields of consciousness.
The appropriateness of each of these descriptions depends on the state of consciousness
in which these observations are made.
Cosmic Game: New Insights into the Nature of Reality.
The new vision of human nature certainly represents a radical departure from
Western academic science. However, modern consciousness research has generated
challenges that go even farther. The most fundamental metaphysical insight reported by
people who have experienced holotropic states of consciousness is the realization that the
universe is not an autonomous system that has evolved as a result of mechanical interplay
of material particles. Those individuals who have experienced to sufficient depth the
dimensions of reality that are hidden to our everyday perception tend to undergo
profound changes in their understanding of reality itself. They find it impossible to take
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seriously the basic assumption of Western materialistic science that the history of the
universe is nothing but the history of evolving matter. The idea that the universe, life, and
consciousness could have developed without the participation of creative intelligence
appears absurd, nave, and untenable. This then leads naturally to the question about the
existence and nature of the supreme principle in this universe, the ultimate creative force,
or God.
As a result of powerful transpersonal experiences, the world-view of Westerners,
regardless of their level of intelligence and educational background, typically shows a
considerable shift in the direction of the cosmologies of various pre-industrial cultures.
They might start seeing the universe as being ensouled in a way that is characteristic for
cultures with animistic religions. This is based on the fact that experiences of conscious
identification with animals, plants, and even inorganic materials and processes are a
common occurrence in holotropic states of consciousness. These experiences are
extremely authentic and convincing and can bring new information about the phenomena
the person identifies with. In principle, everything that in everyday life can be
experienced as an object, has in a holotropic states of consciousness a corresponding
subjective counterpart.
Another important category of transpersonal experiences involves the
mythological dimensions of the collective unconscious and profound encounters with
various archetypal beings. Sometimes these figures appear in the form of generalized
divine or demonic personages representing various universal roles, such as the images of
the Great Mother, the Terrible Mother, the Wise Old Man, Death, the Trickster, Anima,
or Animus. Other times, they assume concrete forms of deities from pantheons related to
specific geographical areas, historical periods, and cultures.
Many subjects reported, for example, visions of personified images of the
Christian God sitting on a throne surrounded by hosts of angels, Virgin Mary with the
Divine Child, Jesus on the cross, Satan crushing the souls, or the punishing god Yahwe of
the Old Testament. Others encountered the Nordic gods Wotan and Thor, or the Greek
deities Zeus, Aphrodite, Apollo, Pluto, Dionysus, and Chronos. The Indian pantheon was
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However powerful and shattering were these archetypal appearances, they were
not associated with a sense of encounter with the supreme principle in the universe and
with the feeling of full understanding of existence. These deities themselves appeared to
be creations of a higher power that transcended them. Even an anthropomorphic figure of
the Cosmic Demiurg (savikalpa samadhi) usually is not experienced as the ultimate. I
therefore searched in the reports of the people I had worked with for experiences that
were perceived as the ultimate, as the farthest reaches of consciousness and the human
spirit. On those occasions when these individuals felt that they had experienced the
Absolute, fully satisfied their spiritual longing, and attained the goal of their
philosophical quest, they had no concrete figurative images.
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The descriptions of the supreme principle were highly abstract and strikingly
similar. The individuals who experienced this ultimate revelation showed quite
remarkable agreement while describing the experiential characteristics of this
extraordinary state. They reported that it transcended all the rational categories,
limitations of the analytical mind, and constraints of Aristotelian logic. The supreme
cosmic principle seems to exist beyond space and time as we know it and contains in an
inseparable amalgam all conceivable polarities. Although it is typically described as
resembling in some sense a radiant source of light of unimaginable intensity, it differs in
some significant aspects from any forms of light that we know from everyday life. It is an
immense and unfathomable conscious entity endowed with infinite intelligence and
creative power.
The supreme creative principle can be experienced in two different ways.
Sometimes, it is possible to maintain a sense of separate identity and play the role of an
astonished observer witnessing the mysterium tremendum of existence. Other times, all
personal boundaries dissolve or are drastically obliterated and one merges with the divine
source and becomes indistinguishable from it. People who had the privilege of this
experience realize that what they encountered is in our daily life referred to as God, but
for most of them this term seemed too trivialized and discredited by mainstream religions
to be appropriate for what had happened to them. Similarly, the names like Absolute
Consciousness or Universal Mind that are often used to describe this experience are
hopelessly inadequate to convey the immensity of such an encounter.
The supreme principle can be directly experienced in holotropic states of
consciousness, but eludes any attempts at description or explanation in terms of everyday
reality and of the language we use to communicate about matters of daily life. All those
who had this experience seem to agree that it is ineffable and that words and the very
structure of our language are painfully inappropriate tools to describe its nature and
dimensions to those who have not had it.
Identification with Absolute Consciousness is not the only way to experience the
supreme principle in the cosmos or ultimate reality. There exists another type of
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experience that seems to satisfy the seekers who search for ultimate answers. It is the
identification with the Supracosmic and Metacosmic Void. The terms supracosmic and
metacosmic used in this context by educated individuals who had this experience refer to
the fact that this primordial emptiness and nothingness appears to be both underlying the
phenomenal world as we know it from our usual states of consciousness and
supraordinated to it. The Void transcends time and space, it is absolutely unchangeable,
and lies beyond all dichotomies and polarities, such as light and darkness, good and evil,
stability and motion, microcosm and macrocosm, agony and ecstasy, singularity and
plurality, form and emptiness, and even existence and non-existence.
In a strange and paradoxical way, the Void seems to represent the source of all
existence and yet, at the same time, contain all of creation in itself. While the Void does
not contain anything in a concrete form, it seems to contain all of existence in a potential
form. This metaphysical vacuum pregnant with potential for everything there is appears
to be the cradle of all being, the ultimate source of existence. Creation of phenomenal
worlds is then realization and concretization of its pre-existing potentialities. In this
paradoxical way, the usual dichotomy between emptiness and form, or existence and nonexistence is transcended. However, the possibility of such a resolution cannot be
adequately conveyed in words; it has to be experienced to be understood.
Such experiences involve transcendence of the concept of linear causality and of
the law of conservation of energy that appear mandatory in our usual states of
consciousness. Since on this level the material world is seen as an expression of Absolute
Consciousness and the latter, in turn, appears to be interchangeable with the Void,
transcendental experiences of this kind provide an unexpected solution for some of the
formidable problems and paradoxes that beset the rational mind. The baffling
cosmogenetic enigmas of the origin of the interchangeable dyad energy-matter, of threedimensional space, and of linear time disappear on this level as if by magic. Echoing
ancient Buddhist texts, this experience conveys the fundamental truth about existence:
"Form is emptiness and emptiness is form."
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Similarly, the problems of the original cause and of the Prime Mover that plague
theoreticians speculating about the origin of a mechanistic material universe are
eliminated from the cosmic scheme. The subject who experiences the transition from the
Void to Absolute Consciousness or vice versa does not have the feeling of absurdity that
he or she would have in the usual state of consciousness while considering the possibility
of something originating out of nothing and then again disappearing into nothingness
without traces. On the contrary, there is a sense of self-evidence, simplicity, and
naturalness about this process, accompanied with the feeling of sudden clarification or
'AHA' reaction. However, this sense of ultimate understanding sharply contrasts with the
inability to communicate such illuminating insights in our everyday language.
Any descriptions and definitions depend on the use of words and are thus severely
limited by the restrictions of the vocabulary that has been developed to denote
phenomena of the material world as it is experienced in constricted states of
consciousness. For this reason, ordinary language is totally inappropriate for
communication about transcendental realities and about experiences encountered in
various non-ordinary states. Educated individuals familiar with the Eastern spiritual
philosophies, often resorted to Sanskrit, Tibetan, Chinese, or Japanese terms when
describing their spiritual experiences and insights. They were using expressions like
samadhi, sunyata, Kundalini, bardo, nirvana, anatta, satori, kensho, chi (ki), and Tao for
high transcendental states or, conversely, samsara, maya, avidya, and the like when
referring to everyday reality. The Oriental languages were developed in cultures with
high sophistication in regard to spiritual practice and holotropic states of consciousness
and contain many words specifically describing nuances of the experiences and
mechanisms involved. Ultimately, even these words can be fully understood only by
those who had the corresponding experiences.
Others suggested that the language of poets, although still a highly imperfect tool
for expressing the essence of ultimate realities, seems to be more adequate and
appropriate for this purpose. They could suddenly understand why so many of the great
visionaries and religious teachers resorted to poetry while sharing their metaphysical
insights. These people often recalled and quoted passages from transcendental poetry and
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reported that previously puzzling or even incomprehensible parts of such texts seemed to
be illumined with new meaning and became lucid and intelligible. The poets who were
most frequently quoted in this context were the Middle Eastern mystics Omar Khayyam,
Rumi, and Kahlil Jibran, and the Indian visionaries Kabir, princess Mira Bai, Sri Ramana
Maharshi, Rabindranath Tagore, and Sri Aurobindo. From Western literature, the poets
who were often mentioned were William Blake, Rainer Maria Rilke, D.H. Lawrence, and
William Butler Yeates.
Tat Tvam Asi: Discovery of One's Divine Nature.
experience itself. The Newtonian world of solid matter, three- dimensional space, linear
time, and unrelenting causality, as we experience them in our ordinary states of
consciousness, appear in this context as partial and rather limited manifestations of the
overall consciousness of the Universal Mind.
In the last analysis, the material world of our everyday life, including our own
body, is nothing but an infinitely sophisticated "virtual reality", a divine play created by
Absolute Consciousness/ Cosmic Void. Since there are ultimately no boundaries between
the individual psyche of each of us and any part of creation, including the cosmic creative
principle itself, we are, in a sense, collectively, and each of us individually both the
playwrights and actors in this cosmic drama. These experiences of identification with the
cosmic creative principle are often accompanied with profound insights, concerning the
nature and dynamics of this divine play, that the Hindus call lila.
The study of holotropic states of consciousness conducted since the mid-1950s
has shown without any doubt that the infinitely rich phenomenology of the transpersonal
domain of the psyche, including the historical and archetypal collective unconscious,
complete record of the evolution of species, as well as the history of the cosmos and the
solar system, cannot be adequately explained as a product of a pathological process or as
constructs derived from our experiences in the material world. A full description of
reality thus has to include both the secular and the sacred domains as equally
ontologically real (or equally unreal) complementary aspects of existence. Without the
recognition of the numinous dimensions of the human psyche and of the universal
scheme of things our worldview will remain incomplete, incomprehensible, and
unsatisfactory.
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