Consciousness beyond neural fields: expanding the possibilities of what has not yet happened
Birgitta Dresp-Langley

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel view of consciousness as a non-spatial potential energy source capable of influencing the world, expanding beyond traditional neural field theories and incorporating insights from meditation, pain, aging, and well-being.
Contribution
It introduces a new conceptual framework for consciousness as a non-spatial energy source that can produce observable changes, challenging existing neural-centric theories.
Findings
Consciousness may be a non-spatial potential energy source.
It can produce significant changes observable in time.
Evolution may have shaped consciousness to help cope with adversity.
Abstract
In the field theories in physics, any particular region of the presumed space-time continuum and all interactions between elementary objects therein can be objectively measured and/or accounted for mathematically. Since this does not apply to any of the field theories, or any other neural theory, of consciousness, their explanatory power is limited. As discussed in detail herein, the matter is complicated further by the facts than any scientifically operational definition of consciousness is inevitably partial, and that the phenomenon has no spatial dimensionality. Under the light of insights from research on meditation and expanded consciousness, chronic pain syndrome, healthy ageing, and eudaimonic well-being, we may conceive consciousness as a source of potential energy that has no clearly defined spatial dimensionality, but can produce significant changes in others and in the world,…
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