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Friday, April 26, 2019

What causes the experience of sensory perception?

(The current article deals with sensory perception and meditation practices. Other articles are found in the column on the right and are arranged by date of posting. Please click the year and the month to find  the title and the text.)



What causes the experience of sensory perception?


Experiences from the anthroposophical path of spiritual knowledge.


The introduction of pathiaesthesia concept



According to the current, prevailing neuroscientific paradigm, both the content of consciousness and the level of consciousness are considered to be based on a biological foundation. Pragmatically, assumptions that can be tested by the scientific methods are favored in the layout of the questions. This model states that the traditional concept of a separate conscious spirit in addition to physical body, have been rejected. However, there is a long tradition of otherwordly spiritual reality. The balance of the hard problem of the philosophy of consciousness (1) has moved from dualism to monism ontologically. Each of us begins and continues to conceive existence from the building blocks he has come across in his life. In my youth, the undersigned has become familiar with a dualistic – to be more specific, pluralistic - discipline, which is still being supported, namely theosophy and the closely associated ideologies of Rosicrucianism and Rudolf Steiner´s anthroposophy. These doctrines advise on how to learn to perceive the supernatural spiritual world.

To begin with, I'll tell about the theosophical world view from the viewpoint of perception. Next, I’ll move on to the spiritual exercises described by Steiner in order to revive the supernatural means to observe the spiritual world. I publish my own results, the material of which has been gathered mainly about 50 years ago. I have not previously published results in a written form. I have already analyzed the results of the research when collecting the data of my introspection research and shortly thereafter. The main conclusions have not changed over the decades. In the reflection section, I’ll look at recent concepts of neuroscience concerning conscious perception experiences and compare these concepts with my original conclusions, as well as with rosicrucian and anthroposophical views. The unrestrained development of the 21st century neuroscience has opened up new perspectives for explaining the conscious perception.

It can’t be taken for granted that someone should start and continue to study consciousness. One has to have some reasons for this kind of enterprise. A reader of this article presumably wonders the undersigned’s reasons.  Although these reasons are beyond the scope of the present topic, I want to mention one apparently deterministic item, namely the intensive, overwhelming sense of being alive and experiencing the undersigned have undergone repeatedly.


Dualism in Theosophy and Anthroposophy


According to the theosophical and anthroposophical world view, the world of emotion and thought are concrete and objective facts. We not only subjectively feel and think, but our feelings and thoughts can also be the subject of other people's observations directly. We can, under certain conditions, look directly at others' feelings and thoughts, not just by deducting one's behavior or listening to his speech or reading his writings. Directly, without the physical means, the received information can be perception, "vibration", for example sympathy or antipathy, hearing the "inner" voice or seeing with the eyes of the soul.

Theosophy and anthroposophy teach that we will develop new senses according to nature in the future: clairaudience and clairvoyance in the far distant future. However, we can develop these senses previously, even in this life, with active exercise and ethical living. Many theosophical teachers have explained these exercises. To my knowledge, Steiner's Book “The path of Spiritual Knowledge” has been published in Finnish more than a hundred years ago in 1912. The undersigned found Reijo Wilenius’ and Katri Sorma's Finnish version. The title of the book is "How to achieve knowledge of the higher worlds" and it was published in 1968, shortly before I bought it. The English translation can be found at attached internet site (2). I began the experiment intensively, with enthusiasm and excitement. I completely trusted the instructor's personal knowledge of the item and his sincerity. The basic ethical conditions I kept in mind. In addition to Steiner, these ethical terms were offered by other theosophical literature and by Ernest Wood's "Yoga" book. The latter also deals with meditation exercises I conducted according to the instructions given.


Steiner’s training instructions and the presentation of the supposed results of the training



Steiner presents spiritual life and knowledge in three stages: preparation, illumination, and initiation. Each stage includes exercises. I'll look at each step separately in next chapters.

I. Initially, at the preparation stage, he calls for our attention to be paid to sprouting, growing and flourishing life and, on the other hand, to wilting, fading and dying. These phenomena, he claims, are associated with a certain form of emotion, spiritual lines and patterns that always appear in the same phenomena in the same way and in the same way to different persons. The objects of these observations are thus objective facts. In my opinion, the terms emotional form and mental lines and patterns were difficult to understand as ideas. We are used to the thought that a feeling is a feeling and it is not associated with a concept in two- or three-dimensional world. In other words, the shape is a visually perceptible part of two- or three-dimensional space, and it is not associated with the basic concept of subjective emotion. In thoughts, of course, we can create any kind of forms by the eyes of our soul. The end product, the form, is mental or spiritual, but the form is an object and the subject’s emotion is a separate concept.

As a practical exercise, an object is examined visually, the idea of growing is created in the mind, then one should be devoted to the feeling brought by the process of growing, and then forms and lines should be observed. Thus, when we are studying a concrete object, the process goes: first an experience of visual perception → a thought → an emotion → an experience of visual perception. If I have correctly understood, when studying an abstract case: first idea, which does not have a shape → an emotion → an experience of visual perception. Thus, the feeling is followed by a vision that is not a vision of the physical world, but a vision of via the spiritual eyes. Steiner emphasizes that one should not ponder a longer time about what this or that fact means, nor should one try at all by speculative mind to find out what these things mean. Getting acquainted with the higher worlds begins when the student is convinced of the reality of the feelings and the thoughts.

II. The pupil should pay her attention to the sounds. She should take a stand that the voice brings knowledge from the outside world of the human self. She should put her soul to what kind of emotion the producer of the sound expresses out of herself. Observation concerns both living and inanimate nature. In The exercise develops the auditory sense of the soul.

III. Particular attention should be paid to the way in which other people are listened to; one should refrain from criticizing and should lean on the audible attitude. The practice awakens the ability to perceive the inner word. Higher beings speak to the disciple precisely through the inner word that the physical ear cannot hear. Thus, it is the transfer of ideas and thoughts from a higher being to a human being. According to Steiner, internal words are not just ideas, but also have power. He would mean that power is something that causes something. Thus, the spiritual inner word can be divided into parts: idea and power.

IV. During the illumination phase, the pupil must compare a stone and an animal. How they differ from each other in terms of the ability to move. The movement of an animal is caused by desire, the shape of the stone is shaped by the power of indifference. Such exercises should awaken emotional species that are different in an animal and in a plant. These feelings can also wake up without an external object. Such feelings, and thoughts associated with them, develop spiritual eyes that add color to the shapes of observed during the preparation stage. The term color indicates roughly the quality of the observation. From a stone flows blue or purple, from an animal red or reddish yellow and from a vegetable green, which turns into an ethereal rose. Color nuances appear on a large scale. When one has attained the ability to see with the spiritual eye, at some point he also encounters higher or lower beings that are not in the physical world.

V. Take a seed before you. You have to imagine its color and shape and imagine the plant growing from the seed as an adult. Then you have to think that the imagined is accomplished by the power of the earth and the light, but an artificial seed could not accomplish the imagined, only a real seed. One has to create the idea that the invisible becomes visible and remain in this thought. By this way, you can feel by yourself a certain power, which produces a sensory-spiritual flame, a bluish-red middle and a blue edge.

VI. Next, focus on the flourishing plant and think it will die, but there is something in the plant that prevents it from disappearing, it forms seeds. The prevention of disappearing results in a feeling that turns into a new perception that resembles physical coloration; a flame formation whose center is greenish-blue and the edges are yellow-red. These exercises do not only see the present state of the objects but also the beginning and the end state. One should not just imagine the seeds and the plant, that is to say, create them yourself, but it is essential that reality creates observations in me.

VII. The next step is to think of a person whom you have sometimes found longing for something. Attention must be paid to this desire at the moment when it is at its most intense, and it is still uncertain whether the person would obtain the object of his desire. When there is as much inner peace as possible in mind, the image creates in the soul a feeling that grows in the soul to a force, which in turn becomes a spiritual perception of the soul of another person. A magnificent astral image rises in the field of view. The center creates a feeling of yellowish-red and it looks reddish blue or bluish-red at its edges.

VIII. As an addition to the exercise, you should pay attention to a person who has obtained the object of his or her desire. In this case you will experience a spiritual flame formation, the center of which feels yellow and the edges are greenish.


My results and critical comments


I tried my best to understand and follow the instructions. Initially there is an object, either a concrete object or an imagined object or an abstract concept. Then, you should try to be just a receiving observer without your own emotions or prejudices; let the object flow into you information that is expressed only as emotion or lines and patterns, or in particular as a feeling of color. The feeling of color is, to be precise, understood as seeing the color, and the text often refers to seeing color. On the other hand, it could be understood that the feeling is similar to the feeling that a particular color awakens in us. Thus, we would compare the feeling of a matter in question with that of a particular color; if we found it to be similar to, for example, a red-awakened feeling, we would call the result red. In this case, we should have a really wide range of different emotions that match different colors and their intensities. However, I could not imagine myself - and hardly anything else - to have the enormous scale of emotion needed and thus excluded this interpretation. I concluded that the end result is experience of shape and/or color. I practiced closely but I experienced no emotion or color or shape perception.

I changed the exercise so that I created the feeling I imagined the object should generate. Even this training did not generate a color-form perception despite numerous attempts. In the next step I imagined the color that should be detected. In this case I was able to perceive, I could experience, I could see just like by my physical eyes, the color, the color combinations and shapes I had chosen. It is quite easy to combine a specific concept and an appropriate color-form combination and learn to remember what color-form combination appears when you think about the chosen thing. I increased to a thing or a color-form combination, I have chosen, an emotion and the intensity of the color increased amazingly. As a good example of the increase in intensity of colors in physical world, one could say, for example, is the color saturation of a planed wood board that emerges by the use of wood oil.

I was able to attach to each idea what color, color intensity, shape and plastic movement I just wanted. Sometimes I needed hardly a noticeable effort of will or an intention of an effort of will, or it was enough to draw attention to an internal or external object, to create an inner color experience. Eventually, the color-shaped video could start completely spontaneously. Likewise, I could learn, for example, the connection of certain red nuance to passion or pale blue nuance to mental coldness, and the experience of color could be repeated when I paid attention to that meaning.

In my own meditation exercises, I tried to act either only as an insensitive receiver or as an emotional receiver. However, I could not detect to appear information flow that was different from information through physical senses; not from an imagined or concrete object, not a type of sense perception or emotion or meaning. I learned to listen to fellow people without preliminary appraisal or prejudices, and tried to experience the experience of the speaker or the object of my perception. I practiced both mere emphatizing or mere intellectual analysis. The ability to experience empathy increased, but I found the negative feelings and thoughts of others to be very strong and offensive and it was difficult to subside back to a neutral state of the soul.

Color-form films were not the only spontaneously occurring experiences, but I began to hear the inner music that later evolved into a symphony music type. If the music was over, it was only necessary to think of an instrument or a piece of melody, and the musical performance continued. Both the color-form video and the music were, in a sense, without referential meaning; wonderful performances indeed, but no conceptual connection to the surrounding world.


Evaluation especially from neuroscientific viewpoints and discussion


In my opinion, Steiner's way of using the power term is problematic; the feeling does not become a force and further from force to spiritual perception. His text implies conceptual confusion. Power refers to the concept that it changes something to something but it does not change itself to some other concept. Power, of course, can vary in magnitude. The feeling of power can certainly be felt but it is a feeling and not a force. I do not know whether there is any ambiguity in the terms of the original text or a blunder of translators. The difficulty of defining the concepts and words used by Steiner and the deviation from usual sense, blurs and makes it difficult to understand the things presented, unfortunately.

Pekka Ervast, a Finnish Rosicrucian, presents (Ervast 1960. Chapter VII, Värien ja muotojen maalima,The World of Colors and Shapes) that the findings of different clairvoyants from the same subject may be different. As an example, he mentions that one clairvoyant can see red in the aura of a person and the other sees green. Likewise, different clairvoyants may see the shapes in the aura of a person differently. He interprets the differences in observations due to the personal traits of clairvoyants; a person sees, hopes and admires something he lacks. After a man has removed his personal feelings, he sees the right colors and when he has cleansed his thoughts, he sees the right shapes. According to Ervast, clairvoyance is about color and shape detection. The observation can thus vary from a person to a person. Perceptions must be interpreted to understand the significance of the observations. The interpretation must be divided into the analysis of the properties of the object itself and, on the other hand, the analysis of the observer's characteristics and, thirdly, the analysis of the information transfer process. There is also a need for an ontological (the doctrine of the ultimate quality of being) analysis of the connection between feeling and color. Which one is primary, do they always appear together, can there be a feeling without color, what is the emotional and the color substance, etc.? Ervast argues that from one person flows information to another person’s aura, the receiving person becomes conscious of the information and the conscious interpretation of the information is color. He does not clearly state whether the effect of the information is also a conscious or unconscious feeling. If the effect is a conscious feeling, why is color needed for interpretation? If the effect is unconscious, then the color is more suitable for interpretation. But because color as such is not a meaningful experience, it has to be transformed in consciousness into meaning or feeling.

The phenomenon of synaesthesia has been known in literature for centuries. The phenomenon means perception in the area of one sense modality caused by stimulation in the area of another sense modality. That is to say, for example, hearing a sound, say C, causes the perception of blue.  In synesthesia, a stimulus of single sensory region (modality) is attached by a perception that has no counterpart in the object. Additional perception may be within the same sensory region (modality) or another sensory region. This kind of general form of synaesthesia is a color that is automatically associated with a letter, number, day of the week, or month. Traditionally, it has been thought that sensory stimulation produces a perception that has no clear representation in the sensory object. More detailed new studies have shown that this is not a so-called low-level combination of perception experience, but rather a “higher” level idea theory; discerning the idea, meaning, concept, intellectual state, event, thoughts, moods, memories, or imagination in color. Mroczko-Wąsowicz and Nikolić have published a scientific overview of semantic meanings in synesthesia (3). They have come to the ideaesthesia theory that man is not a mechanical mirror, which without distortion creates an image of an external reality. On the contrary, the sensory sensation is subjected to the meaning experience that modifies the sensory sensation. Numbers, letters, and time units are the most common forms of synaesthesia. Such factors are, at least in Western countries, the first truly abstract concepts a child must learn. In the learning process, in the absence of a concrete object, the child creates an internal object - a color - rather than a concrete object, when he has not yet learned thoughtfully demanding abstract content. Thus, the synaesthetic integration facilitates the transition from concrete thinking to abstract. Each synaesthetic has his own, individual, usually quite narrow region of in the experienced world, idea-related sense experience such as colors.

The main purpose of my own research was to investigate, the perception outside physical senses, about reality above material world. My meditation practice was designed and performed for this particular purpose. In order to eliminate the effect of a presumption on possible results, I did not initially read carefully or print in my mind what color or shape should be observed. So the philosophical bottom-up idea was that the object would produce a perception that would then be given an interpretation. Because I didn't generate the observation, I tried to imagine myself the concept-related observations. This way I came to investigate the idea of ​​synaesthesia, even though at that time I did not understand I performed such research and I did not knew the whole concept. In the ideaestesia, the philosophical foundation reverses the traditional from object to observation model; in contrast the flow is from a concept to a perception. In addition, according to an EEG-based study, the concept-based perception is again interpreted as a significant new stimulus (8). I ended up with the same interpretation as the ideaesthesia researchers, although I could not analyze my findings very far. My crystallized conclusion was that I see what I imagine.

I am not the only one who has developed synaesthesic experiences. Adults can be trained to acquire synaesthetic experiences. A study published in 2014 shows how 13 university students acquired letter-color synestesia (9).

Activation of the meaning of words or grammatical modifications can manifest as changes in the saturation or luminosity of the experienced colors (3,4,5,6,7). The undersigned experienced that color saturation and luminosity changed as a function of intensity of emotion. Synaesthesia can be divided into a surface projection, where the colors appear at the object and in the neighborhood projection where the colors are located in the observer's immediate space. The descriptions of Steiner and Ervast are about the surface projection, the undersigned had both forms.

The undersigned's studies deepened and made clearer concepts-based experiences of phenomena, the perception of world, thinking and conceptualization. The title of Steiner's book is strongly associated with the promise of knowledge of higher world. I did not achieve the goal to get experiential knowledge of a higher world in the sense the book means. The extent to which the failure to meet or fail to comply with ethical terms have had an effect on the failure of achieving the goal, has been excluded from the scope of this article. However, I would like to mention that I tried to fulfill the conditions conscientiously. Because I did not have enough references and I found the study as zero study for I did not achieve the presumed results, I did not write my research report, or even tell about my study. The new concept ideaesthesia combines my experience with the experience and research of other researchers. For my part, I would propose a new term to describe some of my own research results, namely the term pathiaesthesia. The name is due to the Greek words pathia, feeling, and aesthesia, sensation. Although the original goal did not materialize as described by Steiner, my research, however, helps to grasp an understanding of how the biological system can produce experience or how the monad of theosophy communicates with our physical world and with the biological system. My study clarifies how the conceptual network communicates with the sensory experience and figure out the conceptual network’s role in the ability to be awake and act in the surrounding world. The results did not reveal the actual transcendental world, as shown by occultism, but they decipher the abstract world.

It is known that sensory stimuli cause electrical impulses to the nerves. How impulses or unknown parallels with impulses or independent unknown factors create consciousness is still a big question mark. According to occultism, consciousness exists even without the physical body. In contrast to Leibniz's windowless monads, consciousness is considered, by occultism, also receiving information through superphysical organs, and this information must be transformed in consciousness into meanings, concepts and feelings. Certain mechanisms and laws must work in this over-physical conversion process. In recent decades, the connection between physical brain function and mental experiences, feelings and thoughts has been explored in a variety of ways. Whatever the essence of the "superphysical" brains is, philosophically the principle is the same concerning physical and superphysical; an object triggers a stimulus, a stimulus causes perception, in other worlds experience, and the higher form of experience is the experience of meaning. In the case of ideaesthesia, the situation is the opposite: the experience of meaning causes sense experience, which can be mistakenly kept as a result of the stimulus created by an external object.

As my training progressed, the inner world, especially for sight and hearing experiences, became very real. I could not doubt its reality. At best, the inner world is more real and brighter than the physical world. I can very well imagine that such intense experiences will entice you to interpret the cause of the experience coming from the world around you, not from the experiencer self. Faith, hope, and a firm belief in transcendental reality are capable of dazzle other interpretations of the experience of the phenomenon. I looked at myself - as today - as a seeker of truth, incorruptibly open to all interpretations. With impartial, accurate observation and analysis, I became disappointed with a different result than Steiner: my perception experience told me about myself, not the outside world. In my view, the relationships of the connection of colors and shapes to concepts described by Steiner and Ervast, can also be explained by the ideaestesia.

Unlike the interpretation of the synaesthesia researchers and the signer, Steiner and Ervast consider visual perception to come from an external, supernatural object. The interpretation of Steiner and Ervast can, of course, be correct but sufficient explanation of their description, and from the findings of the signer presented in this research report, is ideaestesia in which a person's natural way to form concepts, the integral connection of concept formation to sensory perception, modification of sensory perception, and the effect of pre-assumption on sensory experience are essential. Although the phenomena described by Steiner and Ervast are suited to the concept of ideaestesia, their argument cannot be denied directly. My research did not support their understanding; the interpretation remains open.

References:


Ervast, Pekka (1960). Salaperäinen ihminen. Ruusu-Risti Helsingissä 1960. Hyvinkään Kirjapaino. Hyvinkää 1960.

Steiner, Rudolf (1968). Miten saavutetaan tietoa korkeammista maailmoista. Suomalaisten Antroposofien Liitto. Helsinki. Vammalan Kirjapaino Oy. Vammala 1968.






6. journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2007.01981.x?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori%3Arid%3Acrossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub%3Dpubmed&


8. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02103.x

9. https://www.nature.com/articles/srep07089.pdf


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