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Research proposal by Saskia Bosman, Ph.D., biologist.

Our pineal gland, a tiny organ in the center of the brain, is known in
neuroscience as an endocrine gland which produces a set of hormones which
are regulated, among other things, by the light-dark (day-night) cycle. The
hormones are serotonin, melatonin, DMT (dimethyltryptamin), 5meo-DMT
(5-methoxy-dimethyltryptamin) and pinolin.1-5 Ancient spiritual traditions
like yoga and tantra consider the pineal a “cosmic antenna” through which we
can contact the deeper mystical reality.6 Science has indications that our
pineal does play a role in mystical (or transcendental), psychic and
hallucinatory experiences, as some of the hormones it produces are
psychoactive.7-10

These hormones bind to serotonin receptors in many areas of the brain. This
leads to complex patterns of electrical activity. Subjectively the person will
have inner experiences ranging from hallucinations and dreams to mystical
experiences.7-10 During hallucinations and mystical experiences it has been
found that especially the temporal lobes show complex electrical activity
patterns.11

The question this project will attempt to answer is: which brain structures
become active before the pineal gland produces the hormones involved in
mystical experience? What is the activity of the pineal gland itself?

The mechanisms and neural pathways involved in the stimulation or inhibition


of hormone production and electrical activity of the pineal gland by the
circadian light-dark cycle are already known.1-5 The mechanisms inducing
the production of certain pineal hormones involved in mystical experiences
are unknown. Also the electrical activity of the pineal during mystical
experiences has not been measured yet.

In this project 3 groups of human subjects will be formed:


1. People who (also in the laboratory) can induce mystical experiences in
themselves by silent prayer and/or meditation.
2. People who can silently pray and/or meditate in the laboratory but who
have never been able to induce mystical experiences in themselves.
3. People who can silently pray and/or meditate in the laboratory, but who
don’t believe mystical experiences are possible today (mystical experiences
described in the Bible for them are something of the past, or metaphorical).

Group No. 3 serves to find out if their specific belief system has a negative
effect on the results. From an earlier pilot project on the relationships between
states of consciousness reached by various meditation methods and EEG
frequency distribution patterns, we know that all three groups exist.12
Measurements of the activity of the pineal gland and of the rest of the brain
will be taken during rest and during silent prayer/meditation. After each
session the participants will be interviewed about their subjective experiences
and blood samples will be taken for measuring pineal hormone levels. The
activity of the pineal gland and of the rest of the brain will be measured by:

A. A multichannel SQUID neuromagnetometer13, 14, which measures the


magnetic component of the neural electrical activity. (The first few
measurements on the pineal have been done and are promising). In order to
relate the measurements to the pineal gland and other brain structures, they
will need to be localized one time in each subject by MRI scanning.15
B. A PET scanner, which is able to localize and measure blood flow and
various kinds of metabolic activity in the brain.16-18

Both devices can measure the activity of deep brain structures. Measurement
time with these devices will be booked in various hospitals and universities in
and around The Netherlands.

Subsequently, statistical analysis will take place of the differences in


measurement results between the groups, between the rest and
prayer/meditation situations and between the subjective reports of having and
not having a mystical experience.

This project will provide more insight in what happens in the brain
topographically before, during and after a mystical experience. It is meant as a
beginning of increasingly deeper research, involving various disciplines.19

New measuring methods for the activity of the pineal gland are in
development as well: - Capacitive, using the Heart Tuner, which has been
developed by Dan Winter, Jan Souren et al.20
- Measurement of the natural microwave-emission by the pineal, with Han
Vriezen et al. and based on the work of the late German engineer Robert
Endroes.21

Saskia Bosman, Ph.D., biologist


M. Nijhoffpad 15
4103 WP Culemborg
The Netherlands
Tel. 0031-345-523953
e-mail: sothis@euronet.nl
In this early stage it is still difficult to calculate a budget, but financial
contributions to the project are always welcome, to the Sacred Earth
Foundation, Culemborg, Postbank Giro 8454380, The Netherlands.
mentioning “Pineal Project”. At this moment about 5000 Euro per month is
used for the project. You will be kept posted about the progress of this project.
1. W.B. Quay, “Pineal Chemistry (in cellular and physiological
mechanisms)”, Charles Thomas Publishers, Springfield, IL, USA, 1974, ISBN
0-398-02802-8.

2. R.J. Wurtman, J. Axelrod, D.E. Kelly, “The Pineal”, Academic Press, New
York, London, 1968, LCCCN 68-26632

3. Russel J. Reiter, “The Pineal - 1977”, Eden Press, 1977 (from series:
“Annual Research Reviews, distr. Churchill Livingstone: The Pineal, Vol. 2,
1977), ISBN 0-443-01706-9

4. “Pineal Gland”,
http://soma.npa.uiuc.edu/labs/greenough/statements/rswain/hormones/01
1996.html

5. Lukas Buehler Ph.D.: “ Drugs and Their Receptors”,


http://www.whatislife.com/reader/anaesthetics/anaesthetics.html

6. Genevieve Lewis Paulson, “Kundalini and the Chakras”, Llewellyn


Publications, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA, 1996, ISBN 0-87542-592-5

7. J.C. Callaway, “A Proposed Mechanism for the Visions of Dream Sleep”,


Medical Hypotheses Vol. 36 (1988) p. 119-124, http://www.cures-not-
wars.org/medhyp1.html

8. R. McClay, “The Pineal Gland, LSD and Serotonin”, 19 March 1976 (from
a pharmacology paper),
http://www.magnet.ch/serendipity/mcclay/pineal.html#a1.6

9. R. Strassman, M.D., “Update on the University of New Mexico Studies:


DMT and Psilocybin”,
http://www3.10pht.com/~bb/drugs/dmt/dmt_psil.html

10. T. McKenna, D. McKenna, “The Invisible Landscape”, Harper San


Francisco, 1993, ISBN 0-06-250635-8

11. M.A. Persinger: “Neuropsychological Bases of God Beliefs”, Praeger,


New York, 1987.

12. S. Bosman, T. Kuiper: “Innerlijke beelden en het brein”/”Inner Images


and the Brain” (Dutch), Bres147, p. 94-102.

13. J. Karhu & C. Tesche, “Characterization of Hippocampal and Cerebellar


Activity”, http://boojum.hut.fi/research/brain/ar98hippo.html
14. 306-kanaals neuromagnetometer from Finland:
http://boojum.hut.fi/research/brain/index.html and
http://www.neuromag.com

15. T. M. Peters: “Image-Guided Surgery: From X-Rays to Virtual Reality”,


http://www.irus.rri.on.ca/igns/documents/XRVR.pdf

16. R. Stufflebeam and W. Bechtel: “PET: Exploring the Myth and the
Method”,
http://www.cas.ilstu.edu/philosophy/stufflebeam/pages/papers/philsci.htm
l

17. “Neuroanaesthesia”,
http://www.health.adelaide.edu.au/icu/files/anaesthesia_notes/neurosurge
ry.pdf

18. D. Balériaux: “Neuroradiology: Past, Present and Future”,


http://www.medical.philips.com/clinical/mm40_3/pdf/baleria.pdf

19. S. Bosman: “A Holistic Research Project on the Role of the Pineal Gland
as an Intermediary Between the Physical and Metaphysical Worlds of
Experience.” Foundation of Environmental Consciousness, The Netherlands,
2000.

20. www.soulinvitation.com/lifeforce

21. Robert Endroes: “Die Strahlung der Erde”, Paffrath Verlag, Remschied
(D), 1988

Culemborg, April 2002 - Saskia Bosman, Ph.D. is a self-employed biologist in


The Netherlands, cooperating with the Imaging Lab in Hilversum and with the
Foundation of Environmental Consciousness in ‘s-Graveland. After doing a
multidisciplinary literature study with the latter on the role of the human pineal
gland, it became clear it plays an important role in mystical experiences because it
produces several psychoactive hormones. However, the pineal is also known to
receive (from the sensory systems) as well as produce electrical activity. Dr.
Bosman is applying (and calls) for grants for an experimental study on the role of
the electrical activity of the human pineal gland during mystical experiences. As
far as she knows, up to now, no one in the world has measured the electrical
activity non-invasively of such a small and deeply located source as the human
pineal gland. In preparation of this study the possibility is tested for a multi-
channel SQUID neuromagnetometer at an institute in The Netherlands to measure
the magnetic component of the pineal’s electrical activity. The first test results are
promising. If these appear to be reproducible, SQUID neuromagnetometry
(besides PET scanning and others) will be among the measuring methods in the
study on the role of the human pineal in mystical experiences. Because recently
also other brain structures have been demonstrated to play an important role in
mystical experiences and spiritual intelligence, they will be monitored in this
study as well.

Callaway J.C., “A Proposed Mechanism for the Visions of Dream Sleep”,


Medical Hypotheses Vol. 36 (1988) p. 119-124, http://www.cures-not-
wars.org/medhyp1.html

Dafny N.: “Electrophysiological Evidence of Photic, Acoustic, and Central Input


to the Pineal Body and Hypothalamus”, Experimental Neurology, Volume 55
(1977) p. 449-457.

McClung R. and N. Dafny: “Neurophysiological Properties of the Pineal Body (II.


Single Unit Recording)”, Life Sciences Volume 16 (1975) p. 621-628.

Morse M.: “Where God Lives - The science of the paranormal and how our brains
are linked to the universe”, Cliff Street Books, Harper Collins Publishers, New
York, 2000.

Newberg A., E. D’Aquili and V. Rause: “Why God Won’t Go Away (Brain
Science and the Biology of Belief)”, Ballantine Books, New York, 2001, ISBN 0-
345-44033-1.a

Persinger M.A.: “Neuropsychological Bases of God Beliefs”, Praeger, New York,


1987.

Quay W.B., “Pineal Chemistry (in cellular and physiological mechanisms)”,


Charles Thomas Publishers, Springfield, IL, USA, 1974, ISBN 0-398-02802-8.

Schapiro S. and M. Salas: “Effects of Age, Light and Sympathetic Innervation on


Electrical Activity of the Rat Pineal Gland”, Brain Research, Volume 28 (1971) p.
47-55.

Semm P., “Electrophysiological aspects of the mammalian pineal gland”, p.81-96


in A. Oksche & P. Pévet (eds.), “The Pineal Organ (photobiology -
biochronometry - endocrinology)”, EPSG (European Pineal Study Group), 2nd
Colloquiem, July 1-4, 1981, Elsevier/North Holland Biomedical Press,
Amsterdam, New York, Oxford, 1981, ISBN 0-444-80387-4

Zohar D. and I. Marshall: “Spiritual Intelligence (The Ultimate Intelligence)”,


Bloomsbury Paperbacks, 2001, ISBN 0747553299.

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