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Healing Thought

 

Donivan Bessinger, MD

 

 

(unpublished)

 

 

The discoveries by quantum physics in the twentieth century have deeply challenged our notions about the cosmos, so much so that the mechanistic worldview is now exposed (in the expressive words of Willis Harmon) as Aa dying orthodoxy.@ 1   However, the implications of this scientific and philosophical revolution have hardly at all been assimilated into biology and medicine. 

 

We have reached a point at which our prevailing medical thinking is disconnected from what is known about the nonlocal reality of the physical world.  For a profession which bases itself on evidence of physical reality, such a disconnect is a disruption, a wound in its body of knowledge which calls for healing if the profession is itself to be healthy. It seems natural to think of this process of re-examining our relationship to reality as healing thought, in which we heal our thinking so as to think more comprehensively about healing.

 

The recent studies showing that prayer can favorably influence at a distance the probabilities of healthcare outcomes  2-5  do not fit within the frame of our present biomolecular medical model. Such data require us to rethink how mental techniques fit within modern medical practice. Even more importantly, they force us into a search for a new structure of thought within which these and other unexpected Aanomalous@ results can be examined, discussed, and tentatively understood.

 


Building a Noetic Foundation

 

Quantum physics has discovered a nonlocal realm,  6, 7  which lies within (and Abeyond@ and Aunder@) the familiar relativistic spacetime physical realm. In other words, effects have been observed which lie outside the causal reach of speed-of-light forces.  What kind of cosmos would it take to allow nonlocal results, not only at the quantum level, but also in the complex levels of the stressed human organism? What do the new quantum concepts mean for medicine?   The answers will have profound influence on our entire approach to healing, for they address our most basic notions of individuality and of the relationships among all things at all levels. They would redefine our concepts about the connectedness of objects, and the notion of objectivity itself.

 

For several decades now, physics has been occupied with a search for Aa theory of everything.@ In physical terms that means unifying relativistic effects and quantum mechanics (Aquantum gravity@). Since modern medicine is deeply grounded in the idea that physical reality is primary in healing, any change in foundational ideas about the physical world has immediate implication for theories of medical practice.

 

But the problem is larger than that. Since medicine deals with human experience, we must also harmonize theories of both physics and psyche. The prevailing view has been that consciousness is a mechanistic Aepiphenomenon,@ emerging from the physical organization of the brain at a certain level of complexity. However, the new physical knowledge exposes a profound paradox :  (1) If consciousness is a physical phenomenon, it must have the quality and character of physical reality ;  (2) physical reality has been shown to be nonlocal ;  (3) therefore consciousness cannot be merely a mechanistic (local) epiphenomenon.

 

Physics has found that a unification theory is more intractable than first hoped, and the prospect of a unifying theory of physics and psyche must be even more so.  Yet emerging clinical evidence keeps driving the process, and Aevidence-based medicine@ must honor all evidence, even that which does not conveniently fit our current ideas.  This essay (outlining a more complete presentation,8  forthcoming), attempts to survey the ground on which the new medical edifice is being built. Of course, this is a highly speculative and intuitive view, which must be evaluated and refined over time. Ironically, it is based on a re-examination of time itself.

 

 


Nuospace

 

Nonlocal reality can be represented as being Amindlike@ in several senses :  (1) it exists beyond the realm of matter and mass ;  (2) it is unrestrained in its scope of operation by time-distance relationships; (3) it is an infinite connecting principle which encompasses all that is ;  (4)  it is the realm of the effective Aobserver@ who on the whole-cosmos level resolves quantum probabilities into actualities ; and (5) it is the reality base from which individual consciousness (and everything else) emerges.  Elsewhere I have called this realm a nuocontinuum, 9  but here let us call it nuospace for short.

 

During the discussion of these ideas, it will be helpful to keep in mind the vast scale of the cosmos, in terms of orders of magnitude (powers of ten):  The cosmos, 1029 meters ( ~ 15 billion light years);  human height,  100 m (~ 1.8 m);  erythrocyte 10-6 m, (7 microns);  nanometer technology, 10-9 m; proton, 10-15 m;  quark 10-17 m.  Below this level of quantum effects there is a very large gap of twenty orders of magnitude, down to the smallest theoretically permissible size, the Planck length, 10-37 m. 

 

There is more room on the scale of magnitude lying below human size than beyond it. In the vast unknown of the domain between quark size and the Planck length, there is more room for organizational detail than between the quark and human scales, or about as much as between the scale of a small human cell and that of the observable cosmos. The Asubquantum@ Planck-to-quark scale is still within the spacetime realm, though from our perspective, relativistic effects in the near-Planck region are increasingly bizarre. At Planck scale, relativistic effects must cease ; beyond it lies nonlocality, in which space and time are not definable.

 

Nuospace is construed as the sub-Planck realm which contains the potentialities (Heisenberg=s potentia 10 ) and probabilities (Schrödinger equation 11 ) which govern the outcome of quantum events, and of all clusters of quantum events, and thus all physical relationships.  However, there is a lingering mystery:  In the physics laboratory, a particular act of consciousness (an observation or Ameasurement@) is said to Areduce the wave function@ to turn the probabilities of the equation into a physical actuality. But how do we explain that Ain the wild,@ that is, in the cosmos before anybody was looking?  In our quest for a descriptive model we are confronted with several other key questions as well:  (1) How is nonlocality coupled to local physical events?  (2) What accounts for a speed limit for light?   (3) What accounts for dimensionality?   (4) What accounts for the one-way Aarrow of time@?

 

 

Towards a Synthesis

 

The search for a unified physical theory has led to a continuing proliferation of proposed particles, such as a Higgs boson. 12  Much more promising has been string theory, which posits the most fundamental Athing@ as very small strings of diameters on the order of magnitude of the Planck length. That is well beyond the reach of experimental confirmation, unless they are extended enough to be detected at the level of quantum effects.

 

Smolin, 13  whose research approach is loop quantum gravity, recently summarized loop theory, string theory (and its companion M-theory), and quantum black hole thermodynamics (which points to a holographic principle). If the  loops (at the Planck length) are taken to be the fundamental physical object, and thus constituents of strings, Smolin predicts that all of the three approaches can be harmonized into a Afinal theory.@ That final theory would include a space structured in discrete Planck-scale units, which is nonlocal and relational, and which is best understood in terms of process rather than mechanistic Astates.@

 

Various physicists have suggested that the sought-for theory is likely to be simple but decidedly unconventional. Smolin 14 has also suggested that the unification likely will require a new understanding of time, and must account for extraordinary organic complexity, in addition to its unification of quantum theory and relativity. However, we must add that a truly final theory must also unify physics with psyche, since both domains relate to nonlocal reality. 9

 

The theories just mentioned have focused on finding the most fundamental discrete features of empty space.  However, they do not clarify the nature of time, which increasingly is seen as a fundamental problem.15, 16  Further, the complexity of their mathematics puts such solutions out of the reach of an ordinary intuitive understanding of cosmos. Even if (when) confirmed, it now seems that any final theory of space will require some sort of metaphorical interpretation, if it is to become a Aworking theory@ in healthcare practice.

 


There seems to be a philosophical way around this dilemma.  Focusing on the tiniest features of time, rather than of space, allows creating an intuitive theory by which we can visualize relationships between physics and psyche in healthcare practice, pending a Afinal@ physical theory.

 

 

 

P-Time

 

Time measurement in the local domain is relativistic; we might refer to that as Einsteinian time, or "E‑time."  But, according to one's state of consciousness, perception of time passing is strikingly variable. In deference to Whitehead=s reference 17  to discrete occasions of experience, let us designate that as psychological time, or "W‑time."

 

Time's arrow for both E‑time and W‑time is reversible. But events in cosmos are never seen to reverse or Aun-do@ themselves, so some new conception of time (or new relativization of time) must be forthcoming.  How do we conceptualize a one-way cosmic time which is consistent both with relativistic E-time and with quantum duality and uncertainty?  To do so, we must discard the idea of a fundamental, absolute space and time. 16  We will define a dimension as simply a degree of freedom, i.e. as a Alicense@ or potential granted by the operations of nuospace to move in relationship to other entities, or to have an effect.

 

The smallest interval imaginable in current physical theory is the Planck time, a natural unit defined by the speed of light, but it is unimaginably infinitesimal:  10-43 seconds.  The key to our synthesis is to imagine that the whole-cosmos Energy is pulsed. That is, Energy is distributed across the cosmos in infinitesimal Planck-time ticks (one can hardly avoid calling them plicks), and thereby re-converted to mass and momentum according to the probability-vectors of Schrödinger=s (time-independent) equation. The new condition re-seeds the equation for the next plick, and each iteration of the process creates a new degree of freedom.  Creating cosmos would be something like a digital video process, with an infinitely high sampling rate (nonlocally across cosmos) providing the highest conceivable Aimage@ resolution, namely, Apixels@ of Planck scale units.

 

Nuospace is imagined to be a growing (abstract, conceptual, “mental”) Hilbert space (an infinitely dimensioned mathematical structure 18 ), in which each new state enfolds the history of its predecessor state, yielding an "implicate order" (cf. Bohm 19 and Bohm and Hiley. 20 )  The momentum and all other historical characteristics of any quantum object would be represented in the multi-dimensional wholeness of the current state of cosmos.


 

This “ticking” of whole-cosmos Energy would represent a synchronization pulse between nonlocality and locality, but cosmos offers no external reference against which such a mechanism could yield a timing.  One can never know what time it is in nuospace. The "P-clock" is not really a clock, but the pulsing of nonlocality would represent the critical interaction between nuospace (the realm of the quantum world's potentia) and the physical actuality realized through quantum‑level process.

 

Timing (E-time) becomes apparent only as motion is tracked within spacetime, from plick to plick.  There would be a speed limit for physical objects (photons), since nothing may move faster than the P‑clock. We could state that another way: Physical characteristics do not exist beyond the Planck limit.  A speed limit of light is inherent in that process.  The Planck interval would be the fundamental parameter, from which all other physical parameters derive.

 

In such a pulsed-nonlocality cosmos, the interval between the plicks, being nonlocal, would be undefinable and imperceptible. The state expressed at each dimensional increment would include the characteristics of all interference waves at all harmonics among all clusters of quantum objects.  Since the probability wave function of local‑level interactions would be renormalized to nonlocality (zero point field) at each plick, nuospace would in effect be the observer who reduces its own wave function.  This is consistent with Zurek's work on quantum decoherence by the environment. 21, 22

 

Nuospace Dynamics

 

The probability would become extremely high that an atom would continue in existence as an element of the same type.  If it were an unstable element, it would decay in a probabilistic way.  For an object consisting of many atoms/molecules, the probabilities that it would tend to retain its present state of motion would be so high as to give rise to a "law" of inertia.

 

For a complex system, especially a life system, the P‑clock process would result in a growing (large scale) probability of expressing some new degree of freedom as a new characteristic.  We could think of that as an "impetus" which could be expressible as a probabilistic state vector.  The inherent probabilities also favor its returning (smaller scale) toward its stable historical condition after perturbation.  There would always be tension between emergence and equilibrium (physiological homeostasis), as we observe. Something similar would be seen at the cosmological level, in the tension between expansion and gravity, but discussion of that requires more space than is allotted here.

 

 

Time for Eternity

 

Such a schema, taken as a theory of the current cosmos, would be rather startling.  Cosmos would be "neorealist" in the sense that it is "really there" even in the absence of a human or other sentient observer to collapse the (probability) wave function.  But human consciousness, expressing its own degrees of freedom in various ways, would be one aspect of the state of cosmos being integrated at each plick.  It would thus be interactive with cosmos with a potential to affect nonlocally, in subtle but unconventional ways, the probabilities governing local states.

 

It has been proposed that individual consciousness is achieved by quantum-level interactions within the brain, through the neuronal microtubules, 23, 24 or through boson condensates in brain water. 25, 26  The new view offers the possibility of understanding consciousness as a diffuse sensing by quantum mind of cosmic integration within nonlocality, providing a screen on which local content is projected by the  multi-level processes of ordinary neurological scale.  In any case, the P‑time idea would have a number of interesting implications for consciousness studies, as well as medical practice and other fields.

 

Nonlocality confronts medicine with critical reality issues, as we search for an  understanding of consciousness, including medical experience. One might hope that discussing such ideas will help science-based medical practice re-establish a relationship with its ground of being, however we name it or construe it in our many cultural traditions.  Doing so requires extending our frame of reference beyond the local domain, to encompass the richness of the ground of being in the nonlocal mix of energy and potentia in the nuospace, interactive with the physical and psychic states of being in each moment.

 

 

The Philosophical Milieu

 

Regardless of whether the pulsed-nonlocality idea is accepted, it is inevitable that other, already well-established concepts from quantum physics will have a major impact on the philosophic milieu of healing practice. Let us very briefly list some of them:

 

 

Reality / Physicality:  From the mechanistic point of view, reality equates with the physical world of discrete historical space-time events. Nonlocality establishes that there is another aspect to reality, with characteristics which heretofore have been ascribed to the realm of the spiritual (Asupernatural@) or mental.  Science must now accept this non-physical realm as real, because it has been shown by experiment to have effects within the physical world.

 

Causality / Probability:  In the mechanistic view, all causation is linear, as though any effect is accomplished through discrete links in a chain of actions. In the face of variability of clinical outcomes, we assume that the direct deterministic chain was obscured by the complexity of the situation, which harbors Ahidden variables.@   Quantum mechanics, however, forces an entirely different view.  At the most basic level of the currently known forms of matter, all physical events occur probabilistically, and must be analyzed using complex vectors.

 

Probabilistic uncertainty is a basic feature of cosmos, and is not consistent with a mechanistic- deterministic worldview.  The physician who realizes that Ainterventions@ do not directly control outcomes, but only influence them probabilistically, is better positioned to evaluate all factors bearing on a clinical situation, in an attitude of humility.

 

Complementarity/Superposition:  The Atruth@ of the nature of a quantum object cannot be known exactly; sometimes it acts like a particle, sometimes like a wave, depending on the nature of the observation (experiment) chosen by consciousness. The truth of the situation is suspended paradoxically between two conflicting concepts.

 


The same can be said in many other arenas of observation.  Nadeau and Kafatos  27 have pointed to a number of other complementarities encountered in physics and mathematics, such as time/space, matter/energy, field/object, part/whole, zero/infinity, and real/imaginary numbers, which led physicist Niels Bohr to speak of complementarity as the Alogic of nature.@  The apparent micro/macro discrepancy in modes of observation between quantum events and the larger-scale  events of classical physics is itself a major complementarity which has made it difficult to see the universe as a whole as a quantum object. 

 

The complementarity principle bears noting in clinical practice, for no single clinical observation or diagnosis can provide a complete description of a patient=s state of being. From the nonlocal perspective of nuospace, in the complexity of the human organism a vast number of states at all levels of description are superposed and integrated into levels of function which often compensate to remarkable degrees for various debilitating conditions.

 

Healing thought  is itself a complementarity which refers both to linear and non-linear processing of received information, about healing specifically and about the universe of knowledge. Healing thought is a participation in the nonlocal Alogic of nature,@ by which all complementarities are resolved into the actuality of the cosmos as a whole. Nonlocality is equivalent to infinite relationality, and is the whole-cosmos connecting principle. 

 

Acknowledging this nonlocal, trans-physical aspect of reality opens for modern healing practice a vast new realm of opportunity for investigation and innovation of healing actions, especially in the field of medical spirituality 28 and perhaps eventually in medical physics.  Even more promising is the prospect that, in such a practice milieu, we could move more rapidly beyond an immediate focus on method, to a truly unitive vision of life and healing for the benefit of all B practitioner, patient, and planet.

 

 

 



Notes and References

 

1. Harmon W et al. New Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science. Institute of Noetic Sciences, 1994. p. 375.

 

2. Byrd RC. Positive therapeutic effects of intercessory prayer in a coronary care unit population. Southern Medical Journal, 1988; 81: 826-829.

 

3. Harris WS et al. A randomized, controlled trial of the effects of remote, intercessory prayer on outcomes in patients admitted to the coronary care unit. Arch Int Med, 1999 (Oct 25); 159: 2273-8.

 

 4.  Krucoff MW, et al. Integrative noetic therapies as adjuncts to percutaneous intervention during unstable coronary syndromes: Monitoring and actualization of noetic training (MANTRA) feasibility pilot. American Heart Journal, 2001; 142: 760-767.

 

5. Schlitz M and Braud W. Distant intentionality and healing: Assessing the evidence. Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, 1997; 3: 62-73. (65 references)

 

6. Aspect A. Bell=s inequality test: more ideal than ever.  Nature, 1999 (Mar 18); 398: 189-190.

 

7. Rowe MA et al.. Experimental violation of a Bell=s inequality with efficient detection. Nature, 2001 (Feb 15); 409: 791-794.

 

8. See “Noetic Medicine” at http://members.aol.com/dbscriptor/scr.htm   [ Foundations of Noetic Medicine ]

 

9. Bessinger, D. Reflections on reality, healing and consciousness. Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine, 1996; 2(2): 40-45.

 

10. Potentia is Heisenberg’s term for the probabilistic precursor states of quantum actualities; see any general summary of “new physics,” such as Herbert N. Quantum Reality: Beyond the New Physics. Garden City NY: Anchor/ Doubleday, 1985 .  

 

11. Schrödinger’s “time independent” equation analyzes quantum events in terms of a probability wave function (see Barbour, ref.. 16, p. 230).  It is now generally favored over Heisenberg’s  S-matrix approach.

 

12. Lederman, L with Teresi D. The God Particle: If the Universe is the Answer, What is the Question? New York, Bantam Doubleday/Delta, 1994 

 

13. Smolin L. Three Roads to Quantum Gravity. New York: Basic Books, 2001

 

14. Smolin L. The Life of the Cosmos. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997

 

15. Price H. Time=s Arrow and Archimedes= Point. Oxford University Press, 1996

 

16. Barbour J. The End of Time: The Next Revolution in Physics. Oxford University Press, 1999

 

17. Whitehead AN. Process and Reality. New York: Macmillan, 1929

 

18. Byron FW, Fuller RW.  Mathematics of Classical and Quantum Physics. Mineola NY: Dover, 1992

 

 

19, Bohm D. Wholeness and the Implicate Order. New York: Arc/Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1983

 

 

20. Bohm D, Hiley BJ. The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory . New York: Routledge, 1993

 

21. Zurek WH. Decoherence and the transition from quantum to classical. Physics Today, 1991;44(10): 36‑44

 

22. Zurek WH. Sub-Planck structure in phase space and its relevance for quantum decoherence. Nature, 2001 (16 Aug); 412: 712-717

23.  Hameroff SA. Quantum coherence in microtubules: A neural basis for emergent consciousness? 

J Consc Studies, 1994; 1(1): 91-118

 

24.  Hameroff S and Penrose R. Conscious events as orchestrated space‑time selections. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 1996; 3(1):36‑53

 

 25. Jibu M, Pribham KH, Yasue K. From conscious experience to memory storage and retrieval: The role of quantum brain dynamics and boson condensation of evanescent photons. Int J Mod Physics B, 1996;10:1735-54. Cited by Pribham KH. J Consc Studies, 1999; 6(5):19-42

 

26. Globus G. Self, cognition, qualia and world in quantum brain dynamics.  J Consc Studies, 1998; 5(1): 34-52.

 

27. Nadeau R and Kafatos M. The Non-local Universe: The New Physics of Matter and Mind. New York:  Oxford University Press, 1999.

28. Bessinger D and Kuhne T. Medical spirituality: Defining domains and boundaries. Southern Medical Journal, 2002 (Dec); 95:1385-1388  

 


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