600139 research-article2015 WFRXXX10.1177/1946756715600139World Future ReviewMontecucco Evolving Consciousness-Based View The Neuroevolution of Consciousness: The New Paradigm Contribution to Global Self-Awareness Evolution World Future Review 2015, Vol. 7(2-3) 279­–295 © The Author(s) 2015 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/1946756715600139 wfr.sagepub.com Nitamo Federico Montecucco1 Abstract Consciousness is the core of every living being and the key of human evolution. Consciousness is the core of the new paradigm now emerging in every field of science, culture, and spirituality. For centuries, consciousness has been divided from matter like the soul from the physical body. Now, at the historical beginning of globalized civilization, the exponential development of physics, genetics, neuroscience, and PNEI (psycho-neuro-endocrine-immunology) is making possible a new unitary understanding of the evolutionary process of living being from quantum proto consciousness to human self-awareness. This article will focus on the brainmind psychosomatic human evolution, called neuroevolution of consciousness that is leading to understanding the direction of human individual and collective self-awareness evolution toward a planetary consciousness and a sustainable civilization. Keywords evolution, consciousness, unitary system, neuroscience, self-awareness, brain coherence, meditation The Neuroevolution of Consciousness The new paradigm represents the most important cultural, scientific, and spiritual breakthrough in the history of human knowledge. Consciousness is the “core” of the new paradigm. The fundamental understanding of any holistic paradigm is that consciousness is pervading, informing, and organizing the whole of existence. The new paradigm’s first mission is to allow a unitary understanding of the evolution of consciousness, from quantum, physical, to human self-awareness. Evolution is the most important phenomenon of life, because it is concerned not only with the already amazing process of existence of living beings but also with their astonishing development into higher complexities of organization, knowledge, and wisdom. The understanding of the general laws of the evolutionary process allows us to understand how intelligence, compassion, and consciousness evolve in living organisms, and therefore the direction we can take to evolve individually and collectively toward a planetary consciousness and move from an old 1 Instituto di Psicosomatica PNEI, Italy Corresponding Author: Nitamo Federico Montecucco, Instituto di Psicosomatica PNEI, Associazione Villaggio Globale, Villa Demidoff, LU 55022, Italy. Email: info@villaggioglobale.eu 280 fragmented and unsustainable eco-social situation to a new sustainable global civilization. The exponential development of neuroscience and PNEI (psycho-neuro-endocrine-immunology) researches consents a new comprehensive understanding of the evolution of brain-mindconsciousness psychosomatic unity, that we call neuroevolution of consciousness. The Dichotomous Paradigm and Driven-by-Chance Evolution Ecological, economic, and social crises can be imputed to the old unconscious dichotomous paradigm that divided existence into matter and spirit. The neuroscience understanding allowed to presume that the old dichotomous-fragmented paradigm was born from persons with a dichotomous perception of themselves and of existence, resulting from a “fragmented neuro-cognitive function” of the three brains (instinctive-emotional-mental) and of the two hemispheres, that the neuroscientist Paul Maclean called “schizophysiology.”1 The materialistic side of this dichotomy is represented by the mechanistic, reductionist neo-Darwinian scientific interpretation that considers evolution to be a mere result of chance, as if the entire complexity of life and the whole of nature were only a reflection of blind, material mechanisms. The religious side of the dichotomy is represented by the patriarchal, ideological, and metaphysical interpretation, recently sustained by “creationism” and by “intelligent design,” which consider a superior and transcendental entity as the sole creator of every form of biological or “superior” life, denying all paleontological and scientific evidence. In both the cases, the fundamental role of individual consciousness and intelligence in evolution is negated. The New Paradigm and the Evolution of Consciousness The new paradigm emerges from a conscious unitary perception of self and existence, and is the result of a “unitary/coherent/synergic neuro-cognitive function” of the three brains World Future Review 7(2-3) (instinctive-emotional-mental) and of the two hemispheres (analytic-rational and intuitivecreative), which unify science and spirituality, reason and sentiment. The new paradigm is a holistic, systemic synthesis that highlights the intrinsic unity between materialism and spiritualism and focuses the active and intelligent role of single individual and cultural groups, which sustain the process of the evolution of consciousness. Five Basic Definitions Consciousness. For a new understanding of evolution, we need a new operating definition of consciousness as the faculty of a system to understand the meaning of information, to elaborate it (perception, memorization, analysis, etc.), and to use it in an intelligent functional way for survival or for self-evolution and co-evolution.2,3,4 Any form of quantum, atomic, physical, biological, or psychological sensory perception is a form of knowledge based on the cognitive capacity of consciousness to understand the meaning of information. Consciousness has the basic intrinsic qualities of mind, memory, and intelligence (see Figure 1). Mind. Mind is the cognitive capacity of the system to process (to perceive, analyze, combine, compare, categorize, select, transmit, abstract, evaluate, etc.) information. Synonyms are psyche, mind, and intellect. Memory. Memory is the systemic capacity to retain information. Memory is present, in different degrees of evolutionary complexity, in every living organism. Intelligence. Intelligence is the capacity to process and organize systemic information and energy to solve a problem and to realize functional structures (negentropy) and projects geared for survival, well-being, or evolution. In light of these new definitions, it is possible to reinterpret living organisms as Unitary Systems defined as “systems that can perceive and process the meaning of information with a unitary consciousness.” 281 Montecucco Figure 1. System consciousness scheme. In accordance with all the ancient spiritual traditions of the world, such as Greek “Cosmos and Logos,” Hindu “Brahma,” Chinese “Tao,” Christian “God,” or Buddhist “Dharma,” and from the most forward-thinking scientific understanding such as David Bohme’s “implicate/explicate wholeness” and “holographic universe,” Ervin Laszlo’s Akasha Paradigm, to Amit Goswami’s Self-Aware Universe, to Erich Jantsch’s Self-Organizing Universe, Giuliano Preparata’s Quantum Oneness, and John Archibald Wheeler’s Participatory Universe, we can assume that the whole universe is a “unitary system”: a one, conscious, intelligent, multidimensional, infinite, entangled network that pervades all its parts. Any fractal sub-system therefore creatively participates in this unity on different levels of evolution and complexity. The deep coherent information network that connects and glues all the sub systems in a unitary wholeness is based on and explained by the “quantum electrodynamics coherence” laws proposed by physicists Giuliano Preparata and Emilio Del Giudice.5 Quantum coherence explains even the nega-entropic evolutionary tendency to higher order and knowledge that characterize the four most important classes of sub-system units: particles, atoms, cells, and multicellular beings. These four units are “unitary systems” themselves. They are similar to holograms, microcosmic fractals that show the same qualities of unity, self-consciousness, intelligence, self-organization, and beauty of the whole. These four classes of “unitary systems” are the basic living elements that make up the whole of existence with differencing levels of complexity and consciousness. This article will focus particularly on the neuroevolution of brain-consciousness of the higher class of unitary systems: from the cell to human beings. Every living “unitary system” is characterized by a state of negentropy, high level of energetic coherence (quantum coherence domain), and by the ability to communicate a high level of information between all its parts (electroencephalography [EEG] coherence), thus, creating a higher order and complexity of structures and functions: so the system acts as a whole. Every “unitary system” is an autopoietic system,6 a “far from equilibrium system,”7 and a self-referential cybernetic system, capable of knowing through a circular and recursive flow of information. These unitary systems can be considered psychosomatic unities, because inside them the body biological-biochemical “energy-matter” and the conscious brain-cognitive “information-meaning” functional organization are inseparably linked. The unitary system consciousness is evolutionarily superior to the sum of its individual parts. Thanks to the “unitary system” model, it is possible to formulate an organic “unitary evolution systems theory” that can include consciousness and its neuro-evolutionary processes, in terms of capacity, quality and amount of processing, storing, organizing, intelligent use of information, and communication. From One to Many to One: The Logic of Co-evolution Figure 2 illustrates the pattern of co-evolution from simple unitary systems to more complex unitary systems, through a series of steps of increasing complexity and organization. A simple unitary system, similar to the unicellular (at the left-hand side of the scheme) through a process of reproduction, creates a 282 World Future Review 7(2-3) Figure 2. Unitary systems co-evolution scheme. “complex set” of cells, such as a bacterial colony, which is not yet a unitary system but only a collective aggregate. In millions of years, the “complex set” increases in organization and information exchange becoming like a primitive algae colonial being (middle position of the scheme), and in other million years, becomes a collective set, more organized but still not yet unified, such as pleodorina or volvox (collective green algae) that show a certain level of “collective consciousness” but have not yet reached a sufficient level of communication and information integration to generate a unitary consciousness. At some point, a true “evolutionary quantum leap” happens, and from a complex collective living set, we observe the emergence of a multicellular “unitary system” with a “unity of consciousness”: the first animal. We can compare this shift toward an awakening of the collective consciousness of the single elements (unitary systems) that constitute the complex system, similar to when a group of boys or girls become aware of being “one” team, or when, in the nineteenth century, millions of people became aware of being citizens of “one” larger nation. For millennia, this unitary state of consciousness called buddhafield (from the Sanskrit buddhi [the awakened consciousness] and the energy field) has been understood and used in many spiritual schools and is the basis of the profound unity that binds all spiritual master and disciples together in spiritual communities, monasteries, and ashrams. More general is the perception of being part of a larger, collective consciousness. The unity of consciousness that characterizes a “unitary system” is the awareness by each single element that it is part of a larger whole, a higher-level system. The Isomorphic Unitary System Co-evolution Table This table (Figure 3) illustrates the isomorphic co-evolutionary processes of increasing complexity, from simple unitary systems to more evolved unitary systems. In the first column on the left, we have aligned the four basic unitary systems (particles, atoms, cells, and animals) that have aggregated to form complex systems (second, third, and fourth column), evolving over time in terms of organization, specialization, communication, and knowledge. The bottom row shows the evolution of the elementary particle “proto consciousness,” through stages of complexity, to generate the first atomic unitary system. The second line shows the parallel co-evolution from the atom to the first prokaryotic cell unitary system. The third line shows the evolution of cell consciousness up to the generation of the first animal (multicellular) unitary system. The top line starts from the human being (multicellular) to the formation of collective social complexes, such as the communities, cities, nations, and finally the possible creation of a planetary consciousness or Gaia consciousness. The logic of co-evolution is highly isomorphic on all levels of complexity. The table shows the main steps of this process in successive columns, showing the deep analogies and similarities (vertical column) between the different evolutionary steps of these four fundamental units. This confirms one of the main points of Ludwig Von Bertalanffy’s general systems Montecucco 283 Figure 3. Unitary systems co-evolution table. Note. RNA = ribonucleic acid. theory, highlighting that the laws that govern systems are repeated in a similar way on different levels of evolution and complexity. The Quantum Leap in the Evolution of Consciousness The Unitary Systems Evolution Curve (see Figure 4) highlights the levels of complexity of the three “evolutionary quantum leaps” that have already taken place and the possible fourth leap. The first quantum leap was made in a very short cosmic time, “only” 300,000 years after the Big Bang, when quarks and elementary particles merged to form “one” atom, a unitary system of fundamental importance in the development of the entire universe. It is indicated by the line at the bottom of the chart. Atoms, in the next 14 million years, evolved in complexity from the simple hydrogen to heavier and complex atoms such as uranium and came together in complex systems (nonunitary), such as molecules, amino acids, proteins, and “genetic” molecules such as ribonucleic acid (RNA). This is reflected by the second line up on the graph. Then the complexity of the system reached a critical point, when billions of atoms became “one” cell: a unitary system of great intelligence and adaptability that ultimately generated all the living beings we know. 284 World Future Review 7(2-3) Figure 4. Unitary systems evolution curve. The first cell (prokaryotic) without a nucleus, evolved in complexity, and within four billion years, generated its own nucleus with a genetic code of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA; eukaryotic cell). It developed internal organelles to produce energy and other specific molecules for sense organs and movement. This is the third line on the graph. Cells gradually came together in colonies, developed specialized organs, and began to communicate and organize themselves into increasingly larger and more complex sets such as algae, pleodorine, volvox, and so on. Then an “evolutionary quantum leap” occurred, generating the first multicellular unitary system. This is the magic of life, a “complex system” of billions of cells becomes “one” single living being, a multicellular unit, plant, or animal. This brings us to the top line on our chart of the evolution process, and the curve of the evolution of complexity rears upward. In an evershorter time, countless new species emerged that were more adapted and aware. In over a billion years, the first worms amazingly evolved, generating shellfish, fish, amphibians, then reptiles, birds, and mammals, up to the evolution of the human being who, in less than two million years (the small blue vertical line on the right of the curve), developed written language, history, and the arts and sciences, and ultimately realized selfawareness and spiritual consciousness. We are now approaching the possibility of a further quantum leap: the moment when all human beings on the planet realize that they are citizens of the world; indispensable elements of a giant living network called Gaia, a planetary consciousness, a unitary system that lives and evolves through all living being and each one of us. For the past two decades, our institute in close collaboration with the Laszlo Institute of New Paradigm Researche and a team of quantum physicists, biologists, and geneticists, has extensively studied and found important validation for the fundamental laws of the first three level of evolution, from atomic proto consciousness to the creation of cellular and multicellular consciousness. This article will consider briefly only the fourth level, based on neuroscience research and insights on the evolution of higher consciousness and human self-awareness. The Emergence of the Nervous System as the Basis of the Self At the beginning of the fourth row, we observe two parallel processes of multicellular evolution: 285 Montecucco Figure 5. Primitive brain structures. (1) plants that are without nervous systems and (2) animals with a centralized nervous system (brain): the neurophysiological basis of selfawareness or identity. The brain, derived from the exoderm (the outermost of the three primary germ layers of the human embryo, from the eighteenth day of development), invaginates to form the neural tube from which originates the entire nervous system. The top of the neural tube forms three vesicles called forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain (see Figure 5). From this primitive brain will develop the reptilian, instinctive, somatic brain; the mammalian affective, emotional brain; and the human neocortical mental, cognitive brain, which we will describe in Figure 6. Figure 6 represents the three main neuro-cognitive levels (three brains, three areas of the body) of the human being. This picture serves as a color code reference (hindbrain in red, midbrain in green, and forebrain in blue) linking images throughout this article. Readers can download all the true color pictures and diagrams of this article at http://www.psicosomaticapnei. com/psicosomaticapnei.php?id=figures. The Neuroevolution of the Brain-Consciousness Psychosomatic System A unitary system evolves as a whole psychosomatic unit. The evolution of all living systems proceeds synchronically on the neurophysiological and cognitive levels as integral parts of the same psychosomatic “unitary system.” At each evolutionary leap, the development of a higher, more specialized, and adapted consciousness takes place, parallel to the development of a more structured, complex, and specialized nervous system. The brain is the structure that has most evolved in complexity over the last 350 million years from fish, reptiles, mammals, to the human being. Figure 6 shows that the reptile’s nervous system is already differentiated into three brains and that by the appearance of the development of the neo-cortex of the first mammal, the evolutionary curve rises rapidly. With the human development of neocortical consciousness and self-awareness, the curve increase and the evolution accelerate even more, becoming an exponential curve. Self-Awareness: The “Core” of the New Paradigm The emergence of the “self” represents a fundamental leap in the process of evolution of consciousness. The animal brain’s “cognitive centralization” is the neurophysiological basis of self-awareness and generates a greater speed for the elaboration of information, and therefore a better adaptive response. Mary Catherine Bateson stated that “the heart of every living system is the experience of Self.”8 The Self is the core of every animal and human being: it is the cognitive center that is perceived as identity. The Self is the unitary experience of the totality of one’s being, the sensory and cognitive awareness of self as a psychosomatic system, where body, emotions, thoughts, and consciousness exist as an organic unity. Definition: The Self is the systemic cognitive centralized capacity to integrate, elaborate, memorize information, and provide intelligent responses and unitary decisions to fit the many challenges of life. Compare the self with an orchestra conductor who brings together and harmonizes the sound of different musicians and instruments (internal events), creating a unified complex expression that interacts with the audience 286 World Future Review 7(2-3) Figure 6. Three brain evolution exponential curve. (external events). The neural basis of selfconsciousness makes possible the scientific understanding of what had been, until now, purely philosophical concepts, such as “soul” or “identity,” common to the majority of ancient and modern philosophies, psychology, and spiritual paths. The Psychosomatic Self as Governor of the PNEI System In psychosomatics, we consider the Self as the governor of the PNEI (psycho-neuro-endocrine-immunologic) network (see Figure 7). According to Candace Pert, the human being is a “psychosomatic self,”9 a PNEI network based on the cognitive, cybernetic, and systemic understanding that all biochemical, physiological, endocrine, and neuropsychological processes are elements of an unbroken flow of intelligent information. The psychosomatic self becomes aware of a situation: it is able to react to disease by activating the immune response and to adapt to stress situations and solve problems by changing and activating specific neuro hormonal responses and behaviors with different epigenetic–genetic activations, to better adapt to the environment and expand its knowledge. Figure 7. Self-PNEI interaction. The Neuronal Basis of Consciousness of Self Until a few decades ago, neuroscientists such as Sir John Eccles, winner of the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1963, in his book The Self and Its Brain,10 believed that consciousness was the expression of the higher cognitive functions of the neo-cortex, the most evolved and 287 Montecucco mental part of the brain, whereas the emotional and bodily functions, connected with the subcortical areas of the brain, the oldest mammal and reptile (limbic system and trunk), were essentially automatic and unconscious. Today, however, research shows instead that even animals whose neo-cortex has been surgically removed at a young age, have no visible consciousness deficits, and therefore, we must assume that the center of consciousness is subcortical.11 The Three Brains of MacLean To clarify this critical point on the neural nature of the Self, we need to understand the triune nature of the human brain. The neuroscientist Paul MacLean pointed out that the process of human consciousness neuroevolution is the result of the parallel development of the three brains: reptilian, mammalian, and neocortical (see Figure 8). In the human brain, therefore, we find the oldest most instinctive-physical consciousness related to the “reptilian brain,” a more affective-emotional consciousness related to the “mammalian brain,” and a higher cognitivepsychological mental consciousness related to the neocortical brain. In the growth of every human being, there is a personal, familial, and social evolution from the instinctive consciousness connected to the egotistic primary needs of the child (the reptile brain), to the emotional consciousness of youth, connected to affective and relational needs (mammalian brain), and on to the adult mental consciousness connected with rational-scientific comprehension, and the perceptions of beauty and ethics (involving the two hemispheres of the neocortical brain). Potentially, this process of evolution may continue even further to attain the higher neuro-functional state connected to self-consciousness (the neocortical brain, feedback circuits thalamic-cortical-frontal-thalamic) and even to the global awareness of Self (synchronized thalamic and elevated cerebral coherence). The Bodily Self: The Neurocognitive Roots of Consciousness Jaak Panksepp, psycho-biologist and researcher in neuroscience at Washington State University, states that all forms of human higher consciousness are the result of an evolution of primitive states of consciousness of the old circuits of brain stem and that the primordial “sense of self” or “core self” is rooted in the PAG (Peri Aqueductal Gray) in the low areas of the reptilian brain. The PAG controls the basic body and emotional perceptions as a “coherent whole,” a kind of “bodily-instinctive self” that has a complete neural representation of the entire body and all the emotional primary processes such as pain, fear, anger, stress and separation, sex, and maternal behaviors.12 Edelman named this “the bodily self” and stated that “the first self-consciousness is based on the body-self” and that the fundamental bodily-based “primary consciousness” must still be present in animals.13 The PAG relays sensory messages from spinal neurons to the thalamus and then to the neo-cortex. The PAG area is also deeply connected with the serotoninergic raphe nuclei and ARAS (ascending reticular activating system) that activates the awakening consciousness and sleep. When the PAG and system of pleasure and body stability, mediated by serotonin, become weak, psychological and psychiatric disorders begin to emerge. The Emotional Self and the Seven Emotional Systems Panksepp has identified seven major neuronal emotions systems, as specific neuronal pathways common to all mammals and human brains, which will be described below. In his books Affective Neuroscience14 and The Archeology of Mind,15 Panksepp highlights that these emotional systems are the main channels of expression of the self: the psychological, emotional, and behavioral ways through which self-consciousness manifests in 288 World Future Review 7(2-3) Figure 8. The Psychosomatic Self. life. They represent the psychosomatic basic living functions that regulate all the different essential aspects of life and the physical, emotional, and cognitive specific behaviors. The emotional circuits connect across the brain from the PAG, the center of the instinctivebody self; develop toward the thalamus, center of the emotional Self; and then to the neo-cortex for higher cognitive elaboration. develops in emotional-mammalian self, centered in the thalamus, which coordinates the functions of the consciousness-affective emotional limbic system and that further evolves in the human being with the development in the neocortical cognitive Self and with the CMS, critical to mental psychological analysis and social and cultural understanding, rational analysis and strategic behavior, and to develop its creative potential. The Neocortical Cognitive Self The “Dynamic Core of The neo-cortex is the most advanced brain Consciousness” structure, with higher cognitive processing capacities. The neo-cortex is essential for the development of higher cognitive processes, ideational, rational, ethical, strategic evaluation in large part attributable to the complex interpretation of relational, family, social, cultural, political, and religious meanings that encode human relationships. In particular, the CMS (Cortical Midline Structures) elaborates the higher psychological and social cognitive consciousness and self-consciousness process.16 From an evolutionary point of view, it is useful to recall that the primitive bodily self, linked to the PAG and the reptilian brain, The real revolution in neuroscience’s understanding of self-consciousness has been proposed by Gerald Edelman,17 Nobel Prize winner in medicine, who demonstrated that “self consciousness is a process” that is not reducible to an anatomical object or a neurophysiological function of a specific brain center, but emerges from the whole brain neural network. Edelman, supported by Damasio,18 has highlighted that consciousness and the sense of Self are strongly related to the thalamus-neocortical circuit that connects the thalamus (the center of the emotional Self and the mammal brain) to the whole neo-cortex (the center of the cognitive Self and 289 Montecucco higher human brain) and to the PAG (the center of the body Self and lower reptilian brain). Edelman called the thalamus-neocortex network the “Dynamic Core of Consciousness,” or “Core Self” that is in constantly active communication with the neocortical processing system and represents the more cognitive-oriented delicate social, ethical, and relational function of self-consciousness. In this system, the thalamus represents the emotional-affective, and the PAG the body-instinctive primary functions and drives. The Self through this whole neural network is thus able to be conscious and to unify the information of the whole body-mind psychosomatic system. Research has demonstrated that this unitary process is related to higher EEG coherence between the thalamus and all brain areas.19,20 The thalamus and PAG are fundamental centers of consciousness, both with a strong psychosomatic activity because they regulate all major bodily and emotional functions, and are the two key areas related to self-consciousness, as even small lesions of the thalamus and/or the PAG will seriously affect or nullify consciousness. Accordingly, the “Self”—the psychosomatic consciousness of our being— appears to be primarily rooted in body consciousness, subsequently evolving in the emotional levels and then in the mind. To sum up, the “Psychosomatic Self System” that emerges from neuroscience and PNEI is a model that brings together, in an organic unity, the physical, affective, and cognitive dimensions and highlights the fact that the center of being, the core self, is not exclusively rational as once believed, but instead is deeply rooted in the body and in the emotions. Self-Consciousness and the Seven Emotional Systems The seven main emotional systems identified by neuroscientist Jaak Panksepp and named by him in capital letters, are: RAGE/DOMINANCE, FEAR/ANXIETY, LUST/SEXUALITY, SEEKING/ENTHUSIASM, CARE/LOVE, GRIEF/PANIC, and PLAY/DREAMLIKE.21 These emotional systems manifest themselves as specific “psychosomatic functions”: physical, emotional, and cognitive behaviors that are essential for life. Their inhibition simultaneously locks specific muscular systems, emotional levels, and psychological structures. When the inhibition or blockage is particularly strong or deep (trauma), it will even cause the inhibition of the Self. These seven neuroemotional systems, along with their hormones and neurotransmitters, are the neurophysiological roots of the psychological personality and of the body–emotional character.22 Their effects are so strong and precisely determined that we named them neuropersonality.23 Neuropersonality assembling can create every imaginable pattern of personality with infinite and unique shadings. There is strong evidence that these emotional system structures and activities are partly genetically and epigenetically determined, and partly determined by parental, family, and social conditioning.24 So, every human being is born with their own neuropersonality (temperament), which will be modified in a unique way by life experiences such as maternal, affective, and social conditionings. Each of the seven emotional systems is expressed by a set of specific bodily, emotional, and cognitive “psychosomatic functions.” For instance, anger is manifested by such characteristic muscular, emotional, and psychological behaviors as increased sympathetic tone and shallow breathing, extreme muscle tension, intense aggressive emotions, and thoughts of conflict and revenge. In other words, we can then say that neuropeptides, neurotransmitters, and hormones act as “emotional molecules” or “consciousness molecules” within this “psychosomatic network.”25,26 PNEI studies have demonstrated that eight main hormones and neurotransmitters, serotonin, dopamine, testosterone, cortisol, adrenaline, noradrenaline, oxytocin, and endorphins, have a strong and deep impact on psychosomatic activities. The PNEI Map In the PNEI Psychosomatic Map (see Figure 9), we have systematized the function of “instinctive, emotional and cognitive consciousness.” In the center named “psychosomatic self sphere,” the homeostatic, functional, and balanced 290 World Future Review 7(2-3) Figure 9. The Psychosomatic PNEI Map. Note. PNEI = psycho-neuro-endocrine-immunology; DSM-IV = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., American Psychiatric Association 1994). neuropersonality area, all the main emotional system and their hormones/neurotransmitters are in a natural equilibrium. In the middle area are the unbalanced and slightly dysfunctional neuropersonalities, and the homologous neuro-hormones. In this area, we find one or more personality traits with which people tend to identify themselves, thus, creating a “false self” perception. In the outer area, we find the severely unbalanced and dysfunctional neuropersonalities, those with psychiatric disorders and their DSM-IV classifications. The model of the human being that emerges from neuroscience and PNEI is a “psychosomatic self system,” an organic and inseparable unity of body, with emotional and cognitive abilities, which supports the understandings and the clinical field of action that characterizes the body/psychotherapy paradigm. The PNEI Psychosomatic Map (Figure 9) presents the most advanced PNEI model and can enable direct and effective dialogue between medicine, psychology, and education. This scientific approach highlights the way in which the inhibition-hyperactivation of the emotional psychosomatic systems generates a simultaneous inhibition-hyperactivation or psychosomatic blockage of specific body functions (physiological, muscular, autonomic, etc.), emotional and psychological, and, potentially, a simultaneous inhibition of the self.27 From a more systematic and holistic perspective, the effects of the emotional systems and their hormones do not appear to be purely mechanical, but are largely affected by childhood imprinting, upbringing traditions, individual determination, and awareness. Our Research on Brain EEG Coherence and SelfAwareness To understand the laws of evolution of selfawareness, our institute has conducted several brain experiments demonstrating the existence of self-aware communication between the brain areas of a person, between the brains of couples, and between the brains of groups of people, in terms of EEG coherence. 291 Montecucco Figure 10. Unbalanced low EEG-coherent brain-mind system (left) and balanced high EEG-coherent brain-mind system (right). In our 1989 brain experiments, we studied the coherence between both hemispheres within a single brain and among the three brains, which produced surprising results. In state of self-awareness, we documented a high increase of EEG coherence—up to 90 percent to 100 percent (see Figure 10). These studies have shown that the practice of self-awareness, mindfulness, and meditation techniques tend to increase EEG coherence and produce “harmonic waves,” thus, becoming an important parameter to quantify the state of psychophysical integrity and of consciousness. In the graph at right is the result of our research on the relationship between EEG coherence, psychosomatic health, and self-awareness. The average values of about 20 percent of EEG coherence in severely depressed individuals progressively increased to 40 percent in average depression, to 50 percent in mild depression, up to about 60 percent in people in a state of normal well-being, and rising to about 80 percent in individuals who practice meditation. Meditation and self-awareness techniques can be considered, therefore, fundamental practices for the evolution of human consciousness and for improving well-being. Research on Brain EEG Coherence between Partners From 1992, we started experiments on collective consciousness between couples. Our research institute has studied the phenomenon Figure 11. Statistical correspondences between self-consciousness EEG coherence vs. states of depression and better psychosomatic health. of synchronization or “neuropsychic resonance” (EEG mirroring) between the brains of two people in a state of empathy or self-awareness (meditation), showing a significant increase of synchronization between their brains (EEG coherence). This has been the first international research to show that empathy and self-awareness are important tools for improving relationships and creating greater understanding, communication, sense of confidence, and security among people. The results were impressive, as you can see in Figures 12 and 13. We found low EEG coherence between couples of empathetic friends, and very high EEG coherence between meditators. In more than twenty years of research, we have demonstrated that self-awareness improves 292 World Future Review 7(2-3) Figure 12. Two non-coherent brains compared to two coherent brains. empathy, communication, and emotional intelligence among people. Research on Brain EEG Coherence between Groups of People In 1993, we started to experiment on group consciousness. The results (see Figure 13) show scientific evidence of a “collective field of consciousness,” with a low level of synchronization between people in normal state (left) that highly increased in states of self-consciousness (right). The pictures show that in meditation, all the EEG waves of the different subjects were coherent and synchronized as if they where EEG waves of the same brain. Self-awareness improves group empathy, collaboration, emotional intelligence, and the spirit of unity among people. In 2007, we did the first experiment to pick up EEG coherence between two groups of people meditating 200 km apart. The experiment shows similar results, but on a lower level of coherence (from 2% to 5%). This was the first experiment to prove the existence of a non-local consciousness entanglement between people: the basis for a possible planetary consciousness network. The Medical and Psychological Effects of SelfAwareness Research in neuroscience has proven that practices of self-awareness and mindfulness have an effect of synchronization between different areas of the brain that are measurable through EEG coherence. The effects of practices of self-awareness, meditation, and particularly mindfulness have been scientifically validated by more than 2,400 psychological and international clinical research studies (PubMed) to reduce stress, anxiety, and depression. Several international studies show that the development of self-awareness (mindfulness) improves mental and physical health, self-esteem, attention, concentration, and academic performance. Meditation and selfawareness practices need to be considered as the main skills for the well-being and growth of the individual. New Paradigm and Tools to Evolve toward a Global Civilization The coherent and synergic activity of the whole brain produces an integral human being, more aware of self and of the world (see Figure 14). Self-awareness (high EEG coherence) allows to go beyond the cultural divisions between materialism, spirituality, rationality, and intuition, and to reunite them in a holistic vision and understanding. The new paradigm emerges from this unitary consciousness of self and existence as the result of “unitary/coherent/synergic neuro-cognitive functions.” Self-awareness in the sense of global consciousness is the principal aim of human evolution as a means to realize global civilization. 293 Montecucco Figure 13. Twelve non-coherent brains compared to twelves coherent brains. Figure 14. The new paradigm neural basis. Sociological surveys on the new culture, conducted in the United States, Italy, France, Japan, and Hungary, show that the number of people experimenting with meditation and other techniques of consciousness evolution, is strongly increasing in the last decades.28,29 Meditation and mindfulness are no longer isolated practices but are becoming mainstream experiences to promote a more conscious, sensitive, and intelligent way of living. Global Consciousness Education: A Planetary Challenge To realize this self-awareness renaissance on a planetary level, in the year 2012–2013, we developed an education program called the Figure 15. Gaia project scheme. “Gaia Project: A global consciousness education program” (see Figure 15) based on the new paradigm (www.progettogaia.eu) and on the scientifically validated “Psychosomatic Mindfulness Protocol.” The Gaia Project promotes an educational program centered on the development of global awareness by individuals of themselves and the planet, with a base of scientific, ethical, and practical information that includes ten short multimedia videos and two films on the new paradigm and how to improve human knowledge to become creative citizens of the kind of global society in which we would all like to live. 294 The Gaia Project has been supported and funded by the Italian Ministry of Labor and Social Policies and sustained by the Federazione Italiana Centri e Club UNESCO (UNESCO-FILCLU), and has reached more than ten thousand people including more than four thousand students at all school levels, in every region of Italy. The statistical results of appreciation and of clinical and cognitive effectiveness have been excellent. The Gaia Project, thanks to mindfulness meditation and self-awareness techniques, has succeeded in promoting a “new paradigm based” whole human consciousness program to awaken and prepare people for a planetary sustainable future. World Future Review 7(2-3) 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Declaration of Conflicting Interests 14. The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. 15. 16. Funding The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Notes 1. Paul MacLean, The Triune Brain in Evolution: Its Role in Paleocerebral Functions (New York: Plenum Press, 1990). 2. David Bohm, Wholeness and the Implicate Order (London: Ark, 1983). 3. Ervin Laszlo, Quantum Shift in the Global Brain (St. Petersburg, FL: Lake Books, 2008). 4. Nitamo F. Montecucco, Cyber, la Visione Olistica [Cyber, the holistic vision] (Roma: Mediterranee, 2000) 5. Emilio Del Giudice et al., “Coherent Quantum Electrodynamics in Living Matter,” Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine, 24, no. 3 (2005): 199–210. 6. Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela, Autopoiesis and Cognition, Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science (Boston: D. Reidel, 1979). 7. Ilya Prigogine and Gregoire Nicolis, SelfOrganization in Non-equilibrium Systems (Hobokemn: Wiley, 1977). 8. Gregory Bateson and Mary Catherin Bateson, Angels Fear: Towards an Epistemology of the 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. Sacred, Chapter 17 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988), 291. Candace Pert, Michael R. Ruff; Richard J. Weber, and Miles Herkenham, “Neuropeptides and Their Receptors: A Psychosomatic Network,” The Journal of Immunology 135, 2 Suppl. (1985): 820–26. John Eccles and Karl Popper, The Self and Its Brain (Berlin: Springer, 1977). 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Montecucco, Psicosomatica Olistica [Holistic psychosomatic] (Roma: Mediterranee, 2005). Claude Robert Cloninger, Personality and Psychopathology (Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing, 1999). Pert et al., “Neuropeptides and Their Receptors.” Candace Pert, Molecules of Emotion: The Science between Mind-Body Medicine (New York: Scribner, 1999). Henri Laborit, L’Inibition de l’action [The inhibition of the action] (Paris: Masson, 1969). Paul Ray, “The Emerging Culture,” American Demographics, 19, no. 2 (February 1997): 56. Enrico Cheli and Nitamo F. Montecucco, I creativi culturali [Cultural creatives] (Milano: Xenia edizioni, 2009), 64–70. Montecucco 295 Reference University of Medicine of Milan, and Professor at the University of Medicine of Pavia and Siena. Since 1994, following the directives of World Health organization (WHO), he has developed an integrated neurophysiological map of self-consciousness and the “Psychosomatic Mindfulness Protocol” for global health and personal transformation. He has directed two films and published books and articles in Italian and English scientific magazines and also broadcast on European television networks. American Psychiatric Association. 1994. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. 4th ed. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association. Author Biography Nitamo Federico Montecucco, MD, PhD, is Co-director of the Laszlo Institute of New Paradigm Researche Professor of neuropsychosomatics at the