Humanity’s Next Step

Generated with AI

“There will be no further evolution without conscious evolution.”
– Robert Ornstein, The Evolution of Consciousness

Robert Ornstein, PhD; David Sobel, MD, MPH; and Sally Mallam
Contributing Writers

The content of this section, unless indicated, represents Robert Ornstein’s award-winning Psychology of Evolution Trilogy and Multimind. It is reproduced here by kind permission of the Estate of Robert Ornstein.

Consciousness changes continually within each of us and does so radically each day. It shifts from the hallucination of dreams, to the fluid thought that is experienced in hypna­gogic states, to narrowly focused workaday full alertness — and to everything in between. This fluidity of our minds makes a possible alteration in con­sciousness closer to our daily experiences than we usually as­sume.

This alternate system is the activation of an innate network of connections that when developed can access an awareness of a parallel reality, one that provides insights and understanding that are more objective – “outside the Self.” To do this, areas inside the brain temporarily shut off normal thinking to make way for this new level of understanding. It’s a further development of what we experience when we get an insight into how another person is thinking, or when we suddenly discover the solution to a problem.

Normal thinking, or normal consciousness, you’ll remember, evolved for the primary purpose of ensuring each individual’s biological survival, so its major concern is “ME”. Reflect now on what it’s like when you suddenly come up with a solution to a problem that’s been haunting you for a while. It’s usually when we’re distracted away from self-talk and self-reflection, away from thinking about what others think of us, what we need to do and why, or when we’re distracted by something else that absorbs our attention. Einstein used to play the violin whilst waiting for an insight. Sometimes a solution pops into our mind the moment we wake up. You may have noticed that when, for example, a painting or poem you’re creating works, is when you’re totally taken up with it, so that it seems to happen of its own accord, without your personal intervention.  Experiences like these mark the beginning activation of this continuum.

As we mentioned in Our Emotions, we experience awe when faced with something unfathomably vast or incomprehensively marvelous like a solar eclipse or great work of art. This experience can also give us a sense of shifting away from the “me first” focus of normal consciousness.

The Higher Cognition Continuum

As we’ve said, all of us possess a nascent, intuitive sense which is the basis of this expanded consciousness; but it is not fully developed in most of us, just as a lot of other human capacities lie embryonic and untrained. All human beings can speak and understand language, but to write it and read it demands a lot of teaching, and to write like a James Joyce or Toni Morrison requires a rare combination of talents. Similarly, all human beings can understand the concept of “one, two and many” but to learn arithmetic, algebra, geometry and calculus is not, as we all know, natural. It takes work.

And beyond that, from time to time, a prodigy comes along. As a child in rural India, Srinivasa Ramanujan somehow learned, almost on his own, to do advanced mathematics. Mozart composed music on a level considerably more advanced than that to which he had been trained. Einstein somehow developed a conception of the universe far beyond anything conceived of by his predecessors or contemporaries (or even by us today) and worked out specific predictions about the laws of physics, which were confirmed years later. 

The ability to develop consciousness follows the same pattern. Most people have a basic intuitive, perceptual ability to develop insights about complex daily events. Thousands evince “gifts” in their own realms: artists, writers and composers, inventors and innovators in all fields. At the far end of this continuum are those extraordinary individuals, spiritual teachers and prophets, such as those we’ve spoken about on this site, Moses, Muhammad, Jesus and Hillel. 

The activation of this more inclusive consciousness is sometimes called “wisdom,” “second sight,” “the sight of the seer” (an da shealladh in Gaelic), “deep” or “direct perception,” or “seeing God” as described by prophets and saints. As we discuss elsewhere on the site, terms such as “Son of God,” statements such as “I am Truth,” understood by the ancient world to be metaphorical, were frequently descriptors of this alternate higher cognition.

Thanks to modern neuroscience we understand how this alternate state of consciousness happens, and how it can be activated in a way relevant to our rapidly changing modern world.