Consciousness Is the Only Thing That Truly Exists, Scientist Says

Danielle Zickl

Sat, May 23, 2026 (Yahoo.com)

human head dissolving into space
Is Consciousness the Universe’s Foundation?Getty Images


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Picture this: You’re watching a sunset on the beach during the summer. As the sun sinks down into the ocean, you watch the sky transform into a canvas of warm reds, deep oranges, and pastel violets. You’re warm and happy as memories of childhood vacations come flooding back to you.

Feeling what it’s actually like to be alive in that moment, watching the sunset, is the essence of consciousness—otherwise known as the state of being awake, aware of your surroundings, and able to process experiences. One explanation for consciousness likens your brain to a computer, and consciousness is the software running on it. Neurons fire, signals zip across synapses, and voilà, you experience the world. But what if consciousness is actually a fundamental building block of the universe itself, similar to gravity or mass, rather than something the brain creates?

That’s the crux of a recent presentation from neuroscientist Christof Koch, PhD, a meritorious investigator at the Allen Institute, a multidisciplinary research organization based in Seattle—and the theory could finally answer some of the cosmos’ greatest mysteries.

“The question is whether—and to what extent—the entire physical world is a manifestation of something mental,” Koch says in an interview.

He explains that everything we experience in the external world—from seeing the sun set over the horizon or feeling —is mediated by our conscious experience. To Koch, this implies that only conscious experience truly exists. Everything else, like the material world, is secondary, he says.

Koch explains how previous consciousness theories—like physicalism—fail to explain things like why people have love for their children, why people find Beethoven beautiful, and why we like the sunshine.

Physicalism states every thought, emotion, and experience you have is due to underlying physical and neurobiological processes. But it doesn’t account for the subjective aspect of them. For instance, physicalism explains how your brain registers a sunset, but it doesn’t explain how you actually feel when you see the beautiful mix of colors in the sky.

For Nicco Reggente, PhD—research director of the Institute for Advanced Consciousness Studies, a research lab based in Santa Monica, California—“consciousness” is the capacity for experience. Like Koch, Reggente also believes consciousness is a basic component of reality, rather than something produced solely by the brain.

He compares our working minds to a flying kite, where the kite is the brain and the wind is consciousness as a fundamental part of reality. “The kite has to be built from the right materials in the right configuration with the right tether, but its flight depends entirely on the wind,” Reggente says.

A radio makes another good analogy, Reggente explains.

“[The radio] doesn’t produce the broadcast, it receives and transduces a signal that’s already present,” he says. “But unlike a radio, the brain isn’t merely reproducing that signal with high fidelity—it’s interacting with it. And that interaction is what gives rise to our particular subjective experience.”

So, if consciousness is indeed a fundamental part of the universe, what does this mean for us as people? For starters, it could answer a host of questions we’ve otherwise viewed as impossible, according to Reggente.

He believes that the “hard problem of consciousness”—or how subjective experience could arise from physical matter—is the obvious case.

“If consciousness is fundamental, the question dissolves: You no more need to explain how the mind emerges from matter than a physicist needs to explain how spacetime emerges from something more basic,” Reggente says. “With this view, the ‘hard problem’ is not a problem at all.”

The same logic applies to cosmological puzzles—or other all-encompassing questions that seem impossible to answer—like, “What came before the Big Bang?” or “What is the universe expanding into?” according to Reggente.

“They feel unanswerable because they’re category errors, not because the answers are hidden,” he says. “Instead of asking how matter produces mind, we ask how mind structures itself into the appearance of matter. Many of our hardest problems may turn out to be artifacts of starting from the wrong place.”

That same logic might apply to problems on a much more human level, too. Consciousness is already a consideration in medicine—but if it’s a fundamental part of reality, might that change how medical professionals treat patients, like those in comas or who have been clinically pronounced dead but were successfully resuscitated?

Roughly 10 percent of patients who survive an in-hospital cardiac arrest report having a near-death experience (NDE), in which they temporarily died, according to Koch. Regardless of any metaphysical explanations, those who experience an NDE come back permanently transformed for the better.

Indeed, despite experiencing a massive physical trauma like a heart attack, the vast majority of NDEs are overwhelmingly positive. Patients frequently report that they “encountered the absolute,” Koch says—which, according to his theory, might be some sort of fundamental consciousness.

But Koch says doctors are generally not taught about this in medical school, and as such, will often dismiss these patient experiences. On the other hand, Reggente argues the view of consciousness as fundamental does not substantially alter clinical treatment. The kite can be broken, the radio can be damaged, but the brain remains a necessary receiver for that individual’s consciousness, Reggente says.

Should researchers ever prove Koch and Reggente correct, it would not only decode the mysteries of our minds, but also of our universe. So next time you admire a beautiful sunset lowering toward the horizon, know that your consciousness may be the ultimate stage hand pulling the strings.

(Contributed by Janet Cornwell, H.W., m.)

Book: “Lamed Vav and the Power of Mystical Kindness: Awakening to the Presence of the 36 Hidden Messengers”

Lamed Vav and the Power of Mystical Kindness

About The Book

Explore the Lamed Vav mythos in the Kabbalah, early Hasidism, and Jewish folklore

• Highlights the tradition of the Lamed Vav—36 hidden righteous individuals in every generation who sustain the world with acts of kindness

• Relates the Lamed Vav mythos to topics of positive psychology such as meditation, peak-experiences, synchronicity, and higher consciousness

• Provides activities based on the Kabbalah and early Hasidism to enhance your receptivity to Lamed Vav individuals in your life and become a Lamed Vav for others

If you have ever witnessed an act of extraordinary kindness, the sort that seems to come from beyond everyday human experience, perhaps you had an encounter with one of the Lamed Vav. According to Jewish mysticism, these 36 hidden and righteous individuals keep humanity alive through acts of sublime kindness.

Psychologist and professor Edward Hoffman explores this fascinating mythos from its Talmudic origins through the Kabbalah, early Hasidism, and recent appearance in the contemporary world. He examines the esoteric meaning of the number 36 (literally lamed=30, vav=6) in Kabbalistic lore as well as the Elijah archetype and its importance in the work of Carl Jung and his protégé Erich Neumann.

Hoffman develops the notion of Lamed Vav consciousness—a powerful, inborn force for kindness that exists within each of us. He provides guided visualizations to call forth our Lamed Vav consciousness by drawing on themes from sacred texts like the Zohar and Jewish folklore, such as Miriam’s Well, Solomon’s Ring, and the Tree of Life. He also shares self-reflection exercises to help us recognize hidden Lamed Vav figures in our daily life and become a Lamed Vav to others by boosting our compassion, empathy, simplicity, playfulness, reverence for nature, and joy.

About The Author

Edward Hoffman

Edward Hoffman, PhD, is a licensed psychologist and has been an adjunct associate professor at Yeshiva University in New York City for more than 20 years. An award-winning author, his books include Paths to Happiness, The Wisdom of Maimonides, and The Kabbalah Reader and have been translated into more than a dozen languages. He lectures widely on psychology and Jewish spirituality throughout the United States and abroad.

Lamed Vav and the Power of Mystical Kindness

Awakening to the Presence of the 36 Hidden Messengers

By Edward Hoffman

Published by Inner Traditions

Distributed by Simon & Schuster

© 2026 Simon & Schuster, LLC. All rights reserved.

(simonandschuster.com)

Dick Van Dyke on meditation

Van Dyke in 2024

“When you’re a kid, you lay in the grass and watch the clouds going over, and you don’t have a thought in your mind. It’s purely meditation, and we lose that.”

— Dick Van Dyke

Richard Wayne Van Dyke is an American actor, comedian, singer, dancer, writer, and producer whose career has spanned nearly eight decades. He’s known for his roles in Mary PoppinsChitty Chitty Bang Bang, and Bye Bye Birdie, as well as the sitcom The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961–1966). Van Dyke’s career began in radio in the late 1940s, and he later toured as part of the comedy duo “The Merry Mutes”. 

Born December 13, 1925 (age 100 years), West Plains, MO

(Contributed by Calvin Harris, H.W., M.)

Hearing lips and seeing voices: The science of the McGurk Effect

Language of Mind Aug 16, 2022 Spoken language is all about sound, right? Maybe not! Our brains make use of every bit of information available to figure out what we’re experiencing, but this process can cause us to experience some trippy illusions. Let’s explore the McGurk effect – the visual/auditory illusion where what you see rewrites what you hear! If you’re interested in perception, check out the Perception Census project! You can contribute to the largest study on perceptual diversity in the world! https://perceptioncensus.dreamachine…. 0:00 – Intro 1:10 – The McGurk effect 2:06 – Timing 3:19 – McGurk on the brain 5:53 – Can you McGurk a baby? 7:48 – Tactile McGurk 9:19 – Why do we get McGurked? 10:11 – Outro Sources: McGurk, H., & MacDonald, J. (1976). Hearing lips and seeing voices. https://doi.org/10.1038/264746a0 Van Wassenhove, Grant & Poeppel (2007). Temporal window of integration in auditory-visual speech perception. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsycho… Colin, Radeau, Soquet, Demolin, Colin & Deltenre (2002). Mismatch negativity evoked by the McGurk–MacDonald effect: a phonetic representation within short-term memory. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1388-2457(02… Kislyuk, Möttönen & Sams (2008). Visual processing affects the neural basis of auditory discrimination. https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn.2008.20152 Rosenblum, Schmuckler & Johnson (1997). The McGurk effect in infants. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211902 Burnham & Dodd (2004). Auditory–visual speech integration by prelinguistic infants: perception of an emergent consonant in the McGurk effect. https://doi.org/10.1002/dev.20032 Fowler & Dekle (1991). Listening with eye and hand: cross-modal contributions to speech perception. https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.17….

The Wisdom of Hafez, Part II, with Haleh Pourafzal (1956 -2002)

New Thinking Allowed with Jeffrey Mishlove May 22, 2026 This video is a special release from the original Thinking Allowed series that ran on public television from 1986 until 2002. It was recorded in about 1990. It will remain public for only one week.  The fourteenth century poet, Haféz, has been described as one of the “Iranian oil wells that never run dry.” He was a mystic, a philosopher, who translated the ancient Zoroastrian world view into an Islamic mileau. His vision was so large as to speak across the centuries and touch, lovingly, upon virtually all aspects of life. His spiritual genius was recognized by western poets such as Goethe, Nietzsche and Emerson. The late Haleh Pourafzal points out that Haféz criticized the tendency of the human mind to fixate upon any one idea. He used the metaphor of intoxication to symbolize the spiritual path. Haleh Pourafzal is co-author, with Roger Montgomery, of The Spiritual Wisdom of Haféz. Now you can watch all of the programs from the original Thinking Allowed Video Collection, hosted by Jeffrey Mishlove. Subscribe to the new Streaming Channel (https://thinkingallowed.vhx.tv/) and watch more than 350 programs now, with more, previously unreleased titles added weekly. Free month of the classic Thinking Allowed streaming channel for New Thinking Allowed subscribers only. Use code THINKFREELY.

Carl Rogers on suppressed feelings

(unicarlrogers.com.mx)

“I regret it when I suppress my feelings too long and they burst forth in ways that are distorted or attacking or hurtful.”

~ Carl Rogers

Carl Ransom Rogers was an American psychologist who was one of the founders of humanistic psychology and was known especially for his person-centered psychotherapy. Wikipedia

Born January 8, 1902, Oak Park, IL

Died February 4, 1987 (age 85 years), La Jolla, San Diego, CA

Google Is Making Huge Changes That Are Poised to Decimate What’s Left of Journalism

AI strikes again.

By Frank Landymore

Published May 21, 2026 (Futurism.com)

A person wearing a bright red suit is holding a newspaper that is on fire, with flames and smoke rising from the top edge of the paper. The background is dark and blurred, highlighting the burning newspaper and the person's outfit. The person's face is partially visible, showing long blonde hair and neutral lips.
Getty / Futurism

It’s looking like time to sound two death knells. One for the demise of the simple Google search, and another for the entire journalism industry.

On Tuesday, Google announced a massive change to its homepage that’ll transforms the old-school search box, and with it, the entire web ecosystem. Going forward, it’ll be an “intelligent” search box that expands into a more chatbot-like experience that weaves together the company’s existing AI features. 

The layout encourages you to ask lengthy questions like you would with a chatbot, and comes with an AI-powered autocomplete feature to help flesh out your thoughts. Questions like these will prompt the search box to show AI Overviews, Google’s AI-generated — and notoriously unreliable — summaries that appear above the actual search results. Since the search box is “designed to anticipate your intent,” Google claims, it can also expand into AI Mode, Google’s fully AI-powered search feature, allowing you to upload pictures and documents.

But the most consequential change is what the revamped searches will return. Instead of showing you a ranked list of links to other websites, you’ll get conversational-style answers. As is already happening with the years-long rollout of AI Overviews — plus AI chatbots broadly — this means even fewer people will be visiting the sites that the AI features are pilfering their answers from in the first place.

This is bad news for any business dependent on web traffic and ad revenue to keep the lights on, and it’s especially perilous for journalism, an industry that’s always had trouble keeping up in the internet age, when fewer people are willing to pay for access to information. Now that its product can be wholly regurgitated by a chatbot, it could spell the end for a vast swathe of publications.

One study, for example, found that that users are 58 percent less likely to click a link when an AI overview appears above it. Another report found that after the advent of AI Overviews, ten major tech news outlets lost as much as 97 percent of US web traffic from Google.

If fewer and fewer people are actually visiting news sites because an AI chatbot — or Google’s revamped AI search — regurgitates their content, how are these sites expected to stay afloat?

The answer: many in the industry are expecting that they won’t. A survey of hundreds of media leaders conducted by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism found that on average, they predicted traffic to their websites to plummet by nearly half over the next three years. These fears have fueled layoffs across the industry, with some publishers embracing AI tools to speed up work.

What’s replacing journalism adds insult to injury. A recent analysis found that Google’s AI-generated summaries are accurate around 91 percent of the time. Across the trillions of search queries Google processes every year, that translates to tens of millions of inaccurate answers that Google’s AI is giving every hour.

More on AI: An Entire “Local Newspaper” Just Shut Down When All Its Reporters Were Busted as AI Fakes

Frank Landymore

Contributing Writer

I’m a tech and science correspondent for Futurism, where I’m particularly interested in astrophysics, the business and ethics of artificial intelligence and automation, and the environment.

Weekly Translation: I expected my doctors to comfort me.  Instead they made things worse.

By Mike Zonta, BB editor

Translation is a 5-step process of “straight thinking in the abstract” comparing and contrasting what seems to be truth with what you can syllogistically, axiomatically and mathematically (using word equations) prove is the truth. It is not an effort to change, alter or heal anything other than our consciousness.

The claims in a Translation should be outrageous and mind-blowing, but they are always (or should always be) based on self-evident syllogistic reasoning. Here is my Translation from this week. 

1)    Truth is that which is so.  That which is not truth is not so.  Therefore Truth is all that is.  Truth being all is therefore total, therefore whole, therefore complete, therefore all-inclusive, therefore otherless, therefore one, therefore united, therefore harmonious.  i think therefore I am.  Since I am and since Truth is all that is, I cannot be anything other than all that is, therefore the beingness of me is Truth.  Since there is no being without consciousness of it, therefore Truth is Consciousness.

2)    I expected my doctors to comfort me.  Instead they made things worse.

Word-tracking:
expect:  to anticipate beforehand
doctor:  teacher, scholar, teacher of religious doctrine, professor, docile, teachable, willing to be taught
docile:  easily taught
comfort:  assure
assure: cure, to take care of, accurate
accurate: to take care 
cataract:  to break down, to smite, to dash down
worse:  to entangle, mix up, confuse

3)    Truth being consciousness is therefore knowing.  Truth being knowing, cannot at the same time be unknowing or confusion. Therefore Truth is clarity of thought.  Truth being all that is there can be no expectation of anything but Truth.  Therefore Truth is the  expectation of Truth.  Truth being all-knowing doesn’t really require a doctor or a teacher to show the way.  Therefore Truth is the way.  Truth being otherless, cannot be struck down, or stricken down.  Therefore Truth stands unopposed.  Truth being true is therefore accurate, therefore careful, therefore assuring.  Therefore Truth assures Itself.

4)     Truth is clarity of thought. 
         Truth is the expectation of Truth.
        Truth is the way. 
         Truth stands unopposed. 
        Truth assures Itself.

5)    Truth is the expectation of Self-evident clarity of thought.

For information about Translation or other Prosperos classes go to: https://www.theprosperos.org/teaching.

Or, if you have taken Translation class, join us each Saturday for Translation Saturday Meeting at 11 a.m. Pacific time for current, up-to-the-minute Translations on the issues of the day.  Email zonta1111@aol.com for the Zoom link.

Translation Saturday Meeting May 23

May 23:  11:00 AM – 12:00 PM PST

Mike Zonta, H.W., M.

In a crisis — any crisis — The Prosperos offers Translation.  Translation Saturday Meetings is a weekly series of Translation presentations by veteran Translators, live and up to date on the issues of the day.

It is not a Translation workshop,  It is not a Translation class.  It is not a group Translation in the usual sense, though group participation is encouraged.

It is, however, restricted to those who have taken Translation class. So if you have never taken Translation class, check the calendar tab on The Prosperos website (TheProsperos.org) or get in touch with us and we will schedule a class.

Last week our sense testimony was:  SOBOE.  Shortness of breath on exertion may relate to restrictions as a kid.  And our conclusion was:   Truth is the freedom of effortless, confident inspiration.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – See you there!!! – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Here’s the link:  https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81749347119

For more info and link to join please email Mike Zonta at:

zonta1111@aol.com

Kant and the Limits of Reason

Popular Philosophy May 17, 2026 Can reason still be trusted after Rousseau’s critique of modernity? Or must reason first learn its own limits? In this episode we turn to Immanuel Kant and the philosophical revolution that reshaped modern thought. After Rousseau exposed the possibility that progress, civilization, and rationality may corrupt rather than liberate humanity, Kant attempts to rescue reason by redefining what it can and cannot know. Rather than abandoning Enlightenment thought, Kant transforms it from within. We explore the three Critiques and the tensions that drive them. In the *Critique of Pure Reason*, Kant argues that the human mind actively structures experience and that we can never know reality entirely independent of ourselves. In the *Critique of Practical Reason*, he develops a conception of freedom grounded in moral autonomy. And in the *Critique of Judgment*, Kant confronts the problem of organism, purposiveness, and reflective judgment, opening the door to later continental philosophy and German Idealism. This episode also shows why Kant becomes the essential bridge between Rousseau and Hegel. By placing limits within reason itself while also emphasizing the active role of subjectivity, Kant creates the philosophical tensions that later thinkers would radicalize. The questions of freedom, history, unity, and meaning begin to transform philosophy into something entirely new. In this video we explore: • Kant’s “Copernican Revolution” in philosophy • The limits of knowledge and the distinction between phenomena and noumena • Freedom, autonomy, and the moral law • Reflective judgment and teleology in the Third Critique • Kant’s influence on continental philosophy and German Idealism • Why Kant becomes the foundation for Hegel’s philosophy This episode continues our journey through the origins of continental philosophy and prepares the way for the next major turning point in modern thought: Hegel and dialectical philosophy. Works Cited: Primary Sources Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Pure Reason. Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Practical Reason. Kant, Immanuel. Critique of the Power of Judgment. Kant, Immanuel. Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals. Secondary Sources Allison, Henry E. Kant’s Transcendental Idealism. Allison, Henry E. Kant’s Theory of Freedom. Pippin, Robert B. Idealism as Modernism. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. “Immanuel Kant.” Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. “Immanuel Kant.” Longuenesse, Béatrice. Kant and the Capacity to Judge.

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