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What Is Noetic Science?

Posted: 09/21/09 04:02 PM ET

The New York Times book review of Dan Brown's new book, The Lost Symbol mentions noetic science:

Dr. Katherine Solomon specializes in noetic science, with its focus on mind-body connections. She admits that her field is not widely known. But when her story comes out, she suggests, noetics could get the kind of public relations bump that Mr. Brown gave to the Holy Grail.

In fact, with Katherine as the female protagonist, the noetic sciences figure prominently in the book.

When I introduce myself as director of research at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, also mentioned several times in the book, the invariable response is "That's great...um, what are noetic sciences?" Here are a few definitions:

no•et•ic: From the Greek noēsis/ noētikos, meaning inner wisdom, direct knowing, or subjective understanding. As defined by the philosopher William James in 1902, noetic refers to "states of insight into depths of truth unplumbed by the discursive intellect. They are illuminations, revelations, full of significance and importance, all inarticulate though they remain; and as a rule they carry with them a curious sense of authority..."

sci•ence: Systems of acquiring knowledge that use observation, experimentation, and replication to describe and explain natural phenomena

no•et•ic sci•ences: A multidisciplinary field that brings objective scientific tools and techniques together with subjective inner knowing to study the full range of human experience.

In other words, there are several ways we can know the world around us. Science focuses on external observation and is grounded in objective evaluation, measurement, and experimentation. This is useful in increasing objectivity and reducing bias and inaccuracy as we interpret what we observe.

But another way of knowing is subjective -- or internal -- including gut feelings, intuition, hunches -- the way you know you love your children, for example, or experiences you have that cannot be explained or proven, but feel absolutely real nonetheless. This way of knowing is what we call noetic.

From a purely materialist, mechanistic perspective, all subjective -- noetic -- experience arises from physical matter, and consciousness is simply a byproduct of brain and body processes. The noetic sciences focus on bringing a scientific lens to the study of subjective experience, and to ways that consciousness may influence the physical world.

Consciousness has been defined in many ways, but in this context, consciousness is awareness -- how people perceive, interpret, and direct their attention and intention toward their environment. Collective consciousness is how a group (an institution, a society, a species) perceives, attends to, and makes meaning of the world. In its largest, most universal sense, consciousness has been referred to as a "milieu of potential," the shared ground of being from which all experiences and phenomena arise and eventually return.

The essential hypothesis underlying the noetic sciences is, put simply, that consciousness matters. The question is when, how, and why does it matter?

What Is the Institute of Noetic Sciences?

From its inception in 1973, the Institute of Noetic Sciences has explored the big questions: Who are we? What are our potentials, and how can we achieve those potentials? What leads to personal and societal healing and transformation? Our work rests on the notion that limitations in human consciousness and in our understanding of it underlie many of the most pressing problems that face us as a global society (violence, inequity, misuse of resources), and that gaining a more complete understanding of the nature of consciousness will reduce suffering and enhance quality of life for all. Our mission is to "advance the science of consciousness and human experience to serve individual and collective transformation."

Therefore, our research focuses on the fundamental nature of consciousness, its interaction with the physical world, and how the human experience of consciousness can dramatically transform. We conduct basic science and laboratory research on mind-matter interactions, social science investigations of transformational experiences and practices and their impact on individual and collective wellness, and clinical and applied studies testing the real-world effectiveness of consciousness-based interventions.

We also advance the study of consciousness by training young scientists through our internship program, stimulating innovative new work through our awards and small grants programs, and facilitating strategic collaborations and invitational meetings among scientists to accelerate development of new, crossdisciplinary studies. We synthesize bodies of knowledge, such as the science of meditation or the role of consciousness in healing, disseminate these summaries, and use what we've learned to identify next steps. We then communicate what we've learned in peer-reviewed scientific journals and scholarly meetings as well as to the general public, and we translate our findings into educational products and curricula for targeted audiences.

"The idea of universal consciousness is no ethereal New Age concept, it's hard core scientific reality, and harnessing it has the potential to transform our world," says the fictional Dr. Katherine Solomon in The Lost Symbol. She continues, "I promise...if we as humans can grasp this one simple truth...the world will change overnight."

In the non-fictional world, while proof of a universal consciousness may not be a "hard core scientific reality" yet, a growing body of scientific evidence indicates that in a variety of settings and in many different ways, consciousness does matter. Noetic experiences are real, they influence our health, our behaviors, and our lives, and they provide important clues about who and what we are and what we may be capable of. So real life noetic scientists are dedicated to their rigorous exploration, and to the potential that it holds for human evolution.

 
 
 

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01:25 AM on 09/25/2009
Oh, dear. I am only half way through Dan Brown's book, "The Lost Symbol." I have gotten as far as
a reasonable explanation of Noetics. Frankly, I think it is something many of us have been talking
about, but didn't have a word for. "Trending, statistics, universal unconscious, etc." It is a wonderful
book so far and I have no doubt it will end with some illumination greater than it began. I congratulate
Dan Brown on tackling so ephemeral a subject. It is not a bloodline or a computer gone insane.
This is a real, human idea or attribute. I congratulate him and thank him for the one thing I think he
really intended: Magic is science. Religious belief is a way to fulfill our potential, but it has been misused. A religion, or political policy, or group idea tells its members to do the inhumane, is inherently in conflict with Humanity. (My Grandmother always said a weed is something we simply
haven't found a use for. I think she would apply that idea to people who believe deeply but have mis-identified their purpose. Inhumanity creates more of the same.)

Amen=(King of Gods-Egyptian)=So mote it be=Oman(as God wills it)=Om(universal sound of unity)
and on and on.

My Grandmother also said to be very careful what you wish for. It would be a good thing if we
learned to wish for wisdom. The rest will take care of itself. Mostly....
Thank you, Mr. Brown
12:03 AM on 09/25/2009
I have been doing some personal study for pleasure of ancient Egypt. They have an interesting
facet of both society and religion. It is the concept of Ma'at. Every attempts to keep things balanced.
Level. The male and female aspects of society are attended to. Maintaining Ma'at is the very first
obligation of a ruler.

This understanding was a universal idea, regardless what area one lived along the Nile. It was
a full bodied idea.

I have to wonder if this national idea was so present with the people over thousands of years, that
it was sustained as a reality. I do not mean that Egypt never went to war. Never had hard times. Never
changed rulers. But those "incidents" weren't just that. Incidental when compared to the national
understanding of Ma'at. Egypt, I believe is the longest, contintuous running nation the world has ever
known. As many as 5,000 or 6,000 years. The scientific community has to keep pushing the date
further back in time.

It seems to me to be that Noetics is a worthwhile study, given the evidence of the Egyptians. And
I think Ma'at is a true and relevant indicator of what Noetics is trying to prove. Mind over matter, mind over time. The WAY we think predicates our future. (An interesting aside is that Sharia, the hard core
movement that has entered Pakistan? Sharia means street or path in Arabic. People understand the
essence of Noetics. But those people are the powerful.)
07:13 PM on 09/23/2009
Perhaps readers should go back and explore Carlos Castanaya's ideas found in his last series of books: The Power Of Silence and his final masterpiece, The Art of Dreaming. "Intent" is a concept that brings together disparate cognitive theory, mysticism, and what Dr. Solomon is attempting to link it to in science. I'm only on page 72 in Brown's novel, but I can see the fascinating ingredients for a good read for all of the "NF's" out there.
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William1950
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12:30 PM on 10/31/2009
loved Casteneda's books... and regarding noetics.. it is something i have intuitively known all my life.. our thoughts really do influence our reality. That is why i always advocate that for us to change our world is not so hard, we only need to change our nature.. sounds easy?
unfortunately, our education and our society all indoctrinate us from day one that we are victims of the world and that reality is something that happens to us, we live in the world and must adapt.. not that what we think, what we feel, is the construction... so much of the pain and trauma in the world is needless and if humans only thought differently would vanish like a bad dream.

peace
05:18 PM on 09/22/2009
Big Dan Brown fan here; I'm reading The Lost Symbol as we 'speak' - he's a most marvelous spinner of tales.

One chapter in, and I already perused through IONS's website.

Here's the thing: representing their site's online 'psi games' as objective tools in scientific data collection is, quite simply, absurd. This alone degrades IONS's claims of scientific integrity. I am a proponent, indeed a subject, of transformational learning, but I also understand the mechanics of website coding. There's nothing scientifically useful about these games and the skewed user data collected. Frankly, I'm embarrassed for IONS.
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Theresa Huntley
what'sthisfor?
07:52 PM on 11/15/2009
I'm glad you commented on the site's psi games. I finished the book today and of course, the first thing I googled was Noetic science and was lured into IONS games. It seems pretty hokey at best, and unfortunately I'm all set to be turned off by the lack of science in a series of games like that............ disappointing, to say the least.
03:47 PM on 09/22/2009
I loved his new book, although i thought it was somewhat rushed.. Just me. But it did however get me interested in Noetic Science, so I guess that is a good thing!