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Noetic Sciences

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Noetic Sciences

Post Number:#1  PostJanuary 31st, 2010, 11:56 pm

I am interested to share in this study in the sciences. Noetic meaning to "know" by inner knowing.

Noetic science is a study of "consciousness" and various methods of studying what is and why is consciousness. It studies intuition, reason, feelings and all the senses.

What is noetic science and why is it important? We need to remind ourselves from time to time why this endeavor in which we have joined seems significant, and to reassess where we are.

A new science is arising, a science of the human mind much broader than psychology has been to date. We have called it "noetic" science, after the Greek word for intuitive knowing. Perhaps it is somewhat inaccurate to speak of it as though it were totally new; it might be better to refer to a noetic emphasis in the human sciences. But the radical nature of the developments should not be underestimated. It is the second stage of a two-stage process.

The first stage, the rise of modern materialistic science, is one of the most important evolutionary leaps in human history. Its essence embodies a remarkable proposition, namely that knowledge of the objective sense-perceived world should not be based on religious or traditional authority, nor the guarded property of an elite priesthood, but should be empirically based and publicly verifiable, open and free to all. Thus there is not Russian chemistry and American chemistry, or Hindu physics and Christian physics. There is only science—the best framework of empirical relationships and conceptual models currently available, continuously tested in public by agreed-upon procedures.

The goal of the second stage, just begun, is creation of a similar body of knowledge, empirically based and publicly validated, about the realm of subjective experience. For the first time in history we are beginning to create a growing, progressively funded body of established experience about humanity's inner life—and particularly about the perennial wisdom of the great religious traditions and gnostic groups. For the first time there is hope that this knowledge can become—not a secret repeatedly lost in dogmatization and institutionalization, or degenerating into manifold varieties of cultism and occultism—but rather the living heritage of all humankind.

This extension of scientific exploration, which we have termed noetic, differs from the materialistic science of the past in a number of ways. It is centrally concerned with subjective experience where materialistic science has dealt almost entirely with objective, sensory experience. To the reductionistic models of materialistic science it adds holistic models; to deterministic explanations of events it adds teleological, purpose-recognizing explanations. Where materialistic science was largely value-inattentive, noetic science is centrally concerned with value issues. Materialistic science has tended to test knowledge by noting whether it leads to the ability to predict and control; while the consensus on validation of noetic sciences has not yet emerged, it seems clear that it will have more to do with understanding than prediction, and more with joining than control.

Furthermore, it seems likely that the noetic sciences will evolve in a way quite different from the evolution of materialistic science. The latter dealt with genuinely new discoveries, and as a result the changing view of reality in the culture tended to lag behind that of the scientists. In the case of the new science of subjective experience it is otherwise. In part, at least, we are dealing here with rediscovery of truths that in some sense have been discovered over and over again, and have left their track in the culture more rapidly than in the scientific community. Changes in the view of reality held in the culture tend to lead to corresponding changes in the sciences; for example, the role of psychological attitudes such as faith in healing, and the conviction of spiritual reality that comes with certain altered states of consciousness.

Because the noetic sciences are partially a process of rediscovery it is possible to anticipate what some of the essential characteristics will be. The new science is not really new. It is the esoteric core of all the world's religions, East and West, ancient and modern, becoming exoteric, "going public." As Aldous Huxley describes this "perennial wisdom," it "recognizes a divine Reality substantial to the world of things and lives and minds . . . finds in the soul something similar to, or even identical with, divine Reality . . . places man's final end in the knowledge of the immanent and transcendent God of all Being."

Whether it is implied by extrapolation from biofeedback training or psychic phenomena and the evidence for psychosomatic origins of illness, or whether arising from immediate intuitive experience, the fundamental profound insight appears to be recognition that in some important sense "I am cause and creator." In some sense much more fundamental than is implied in conventional psychology, our belief systems create our reality.

The fact that the key characteristics of the emerging knowledge can be anticipated is very significant. It means that there is no need to wait decades, until the new science begins to take more definite shape, before beginning to act on its basic principles. The influence of these principles can be brought to bear on social and business decision-making right now.

It is generally recognized that industrialized society is at a crisis point. Choices relating to energy, environment, control of technology, growth, employment, land use, economic incentives, government and business roles, all seem to present more and more unpalatable trade-offs, and seem in this fact to indicate an underlying fundamental change of direction. Western political tradition, based in a Judeo-Christian ethic, a force that has declined as the industrial-era paradigm has gained in influence, is wracked with self-doubts. Nation after nation is retreating from democracy. Contemporary political, economic, environmental, and social crises are reflections of an underlying moral and spiritual crisis of industrial civilization. Their resolution depends on the resolution of that crisis.

A noetic science—a science of consciousness and the world of inner experience—is the most promising contemporary framework within which to carry on that fundamental moral inquiry which stable human societies have always had to place at the center of their concerns. We do well also to recall that it was this nation more than any other in recent times which has clearly—at its inception—given this knowledge the capstone position, as symbolized by the All-seeing Eye in the Great Seal on the back of the dollar bill.

Public acceptance of the validity of a noetic emphasis in the human sciences has been rising. More importantly, there is widespread recognition of the need for deeper understanding of our spiritual nature and of the essential goals and characteristics of a workable humane society.

Reprinted from IONS Newsletter, Vol. 6, No. 1, Spring 1978.


Traveling back to Earth, having just walked on the moon, Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell had an experience for which nothing in his life had prepared him. As he approached the planet we know as home, he was filled with an inner conviction as certain as any mathematical equation he'd ever solved. He knew that the beautiful blue world to which he was returning is part of a living system, harmonious and whole—and that we all participate, as he expressed it later, "in a universe of consciousness"
Trained as an engineer and scientist, Captain Mitchell was most comfortable in the world of rationality and physical precision. Yet the understanding that came to him as he journeyed back from space felt just as trustworthy—it represented another way of knowing.

This experience radically altered his worldview: Despite science's superb technological achievements, he realized that we had barely begun to probe the deepest mystery of the universe—the fact of consciousness itself. He became convinced that the uncharted territory of the human mind was the next frontier to explore, and that it contained possibilities we had hardly begun to imagine. Within two years of his expedition, Edgar Mitchell founded the Institute of Noetic Sciences in 1973.



http://www.noetic.org/about/founder.cfm



Highlighted Projects

• Consciousness and the Physical World –—
This project studies two fundamental challenges in understanding the nature of consciousness:
In psychology, it’s the problem of how immaterial mind arises from the material world; in physics, it’s the problem of how and why observation affects activity in the quantum realm. One experiment currently under way is studying how the “mind’s eye” interacts with photons in a doubleslit optical apparatus. This and other experiments are moving beyond mere demonstrations of mind-matter interactions and linking the effects to well-established physical theories.

• Nondual States of Awareness –—
Mystics, meditators, and everyday people who have had peak experiences describe subjective states of awareness in which they experience what has been termed “nondual awareness”—the dissolving of boundaries between self and other, feeling at one with everything that is, and often a sense of timelessness. Are these experiences fantasy, hallucinations, or do they accurately reflect awareness extending beyond the accepted boundaries of time and space? We are studying this question by monitoring brain activity during states of nondual awareness and assessing brain and autonomic reactions to sensory stimuli. We hope to upgrade our equipment and expand our work to include a larger participant population and more comprehensive assessments.


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Post Number:#2  PostApril 11th, 2010, 12:28 am

Good link and an interesting field of science. What it ends up finding could be the shift not to religion but what they used to call science fiction :lol: I used to watch Star Trek in the early day`s, and they had tannoy systems and cordless mobile phones. 30 years later we got mobile phones.
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Post Number:#3  PostApril 11th, 2010, 3:24 am

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noetic_theory

I had to look it up. If mind is capable of directly influencing matter, then noetic science is a form of materialism.This is because it is impossible for immaterial mind, if it is a different substance from matter, to influence matter directly.

Of course, we know that mind is deterministically bound to matter because our thoughts, judgements, memories and motivations are factors in our choices, alongside external material factors. Relatively few people in this scientific age think that mind can all by itself move mountains or even teaspoons and forks.No, most people think that mind needs instruments such as hands and other body parts, or actual tools, to move material things.
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