Consciousness

Developments in Western science and medicine have reinforced what Eastern philosophies have long stated: the brain and the mind are not the same. Given that, where is the mind, and, further, where is consciousness? Is it part of both? What have we truly learned about thought and its origins?

The Institute examines individual consciousness, collective consciousness, and the interplay of dimensions beyond the four traditionally accepted (length, width, height, and time). We explore concepts such as time, space, and other human or mathematical constructs to which we assign definitiveness.

We spend much of our time on this Earth thinking about what happens to us after our physical bodies die. Many feel connected to loved ones after they have passed, yet those experiences tend to be relegated to intuition, old wives’ tales, or the like.

The Institute brings scientific rigor to the study of consciousness, death, and dimensions, including research into nonlocality that has permeated science over the past 100+ years.