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Book Cover
E-book
Author Jones, David E. H., author.

Title Why are we conscious? : a scientist's take on consciousness and extrasensory perception / David E.H. Jones
Published Singapore : Pan Stanford Publishing, [2017]
©2017

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Contents 1. The human experience -- 2. The physical world -- 3. Life and its information -- 4. The unconscious mind -- 5. Methods in physical science: feelings don't matter -- 6. Methods in paranormal science: feelings do matter -- 7. The physical properties of the unknown world outside our diving bell -- 8. Observed effects of the unconscious mind and the unknown world. 1: Mental effects -- 9. Observed effects on the unconscious mind and the unknown world. 2: Mechanical effects -- 10. Observed effects on the unconscious mind and the unknown world. 3: Optical effects -- 11. Observed effects on the unconscious mind and the unknown world. 4: Acoustic and other physical effects -- 12. Unscientific but widespread human beliefs -- 13. Organizations and unusual people -- 14. Mediumship, the societies for psychical research, and star guessers -- 15. Getting information from the unknown world by insight and by writing -- 16. Getting information from the unknown world -- 17. Some technical questions for the unknown world -- 18. Concluding remarks -- Appendixes -- References -- Index
Summary "There are two huge gaps in scientific theory. One, the contradiction between classical and quantum mechanics, is discussed in many publications. The other, the total failure to explain why anything made of atoms (such as ourselves) can be conscious, has little acknowledgement. The main thesis of this book is that to be conscious at all, you need an unconscious mind. The author explores the idea that this mind sometimes makes contact with a whole unknown world, sporadically revealed by paranormal effects, but perhaps discoverable by hitherto uninvented scientific instruments. The book looks at the notion of the unconscious mind, one of the most important hypotheses of the twentieth century. Psychiatrists often deploy it rather informally, but there is no accepted theory of it. No region of the human brain seems to hold it. The author delves into the notion that the unknown world exists and is very weakly coupled to the physical world. He ponders the properties it may have to allow this coupling, looks at several paranormal effects scientifically and points out that many of them seem to imply brief but dramatic changes of the forces between atoms--a possible effect of the unknown world, unexamined by physical science. No existing publication seeks to talk both about paranormal mysteries and scientific theory. If scientists know about the gaps in existing knowledge, they might initiate research into such gaps, or notice experimental oddities they now gloss over. If the general public was aware of the gaps in physical theory, they would be less overwhelmed by the intellectual diktats of some scientists."--Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed August 23, 2017)
Subject Consciousness.
Extrasensory perception.
Parapsychology.
Consciousness
Parapsychology
PSYCHOLOGY -- Cognitive Psychology.
SCIENCE -- Cognitive Science.
Parapsychology
Consciousness
Extrasensory perception
Genre/Form Electronic books
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781315166889
1315166887
9781351681315
1351681311
9781351681322
135168132X
9781351681308
1351681303