It was given by Julia Mossbridge, PhD at Colours of Ostrava 

Some neuroscientists are beginning to come to similar conclusion about the nature of mind – that it originates from a fundamental information substrate that is not subject to constraints of place and time. What evidence support this thinking?

Why did I find the presentation so fascinating?

  • Words fail us often when we speak about things like this. E.g when you say “universal consciousness” you may sound strange in the world that needs to see evidence, that needs to measure, quantify, yet we all have experienced it in some form. Julia uses the language of science, can support her arguments with evidence and research so she makes the idea more accessible, more valid for some. 
  • If we admit, if we learn to be aware that the connection between our individual and bigger consciousness exist, we can tap into something beyond borders of our imaginations. (I have had glimpses of this in my work – knowing things, asking questions that in reality I hardly could know. My daughter who is a vet experiences this during difficult operations, when her mind comes still and then the answer, the next step appears.)
  • I am a pragmatic who at the same time (based on experience) believes that anything is possible. I have been working with pragmatics who fortunatelly are willing to admit that there is something beyond logic, numbers, proof. And then they experience it in some form. They love it and say: “It feels like somebody opened the window.” 

I believe Julia is doing this – opening the windows. The question is – can we admit that there is something outside? Do we have the courage to explore it?