Dark Matter wrote:You do know that the observer cannot be the thing observed, don't you?Assertion without evidence.
Dark Matter wrote:Evaluation demands some degree of transcendence of, or separation from, the thing which is evaluated. The hitch is, there is no separation.Demands? Says who? Evidence please.
Dark Matter wrote:We live in a participatory universe: every impulse of every electron, thought, or spirit is an acting unit in the whole universe.Meaningless gobbledygook.
Dark Matter wrote:“My brain is only a receiver, in the Universe there is a core from which we obtain knowledge, strength and inspiration. I have not penetrated into the secrets of this core, but I know that it exists.”
― Nikola Tesla
Dark Matter wrote:Even in mice, the brain works like a radio receiver[/url]I note with some interest and more than a little dismay that you have misrepresented the quote and the link.
The abstract of the link reads, "Brain circuits can tune into the frequency of other brain parts relevant at the time." (emphasis added) Note that there is no evidence for the brain of mice (or anything else, for that matter) somehow "tuning in" to anything outside the subject's brain or body.
Now, if you can show me the mechanism by which the brain is influenced by "spiritual" (or whatever non-physical) forces outside the brain or body, then we might be on to something. If there was a mechanism, there would be evidence for it.
This harkens back to Cartesian dualism which was discredited back in the 17th century and again, soundly, in 1949 through Gilbert Ryle's book, The Concept of Mind.
See Cartesian dualism has been discredited by philosophers and cognitive scientists and Mind-Body-Problem. There are countless more sources should you wish to avail yourself of them.