AXIOM 1. Thought-emotion waves are generated by the mind as an interaction of biological, sensory, perceptual, memory and abstracting processes, which transcend and project beyond the human brain. Every human thought-emotion generates its corresponding pilot wave, which travels through space.

The pilot wave parallels deBroglie's proposal in 1900 that a pilot wave is attached to every particle of matter. DeBroglie's concept was quickly adopted by Einstein (Herbert, 1985, p. 40).
The emanation of waveforms from living organisms provides an explanation for ESP phenomena, plant reactions to thought, animals that respond to human emotion and mental states, and many other phenomena found by Soviet and former Eastern block countries chronicled by Ostander and Schroeder (1970).
Rodriquez et al (1999), may have found support for the neuronal basis of thought waves with their finding that, after distributed parts of the brain do their processing, for 1/4th of a second, thousands of neurons emit equivalent signals at 40 times per second, creating gamma waves. This may underlie the binding problem (Pinel, 2004), the question of how the parallel processing of information in different brain areas is reintegrated into the holographs we see in consciousness.
Neural synchrony may form the basis of consciousness, giving a continuously changing focus that constitutes the "perceptual now," the internal movie screen of attention.
Wolf Singer (Coren et al, 2004. p. 339) found further support for neuronal synchrony with the discovery that active neurons have a tendency to cause other neurons with which they are connected to fire with precisely the same temporal pattern on a millisecond scale. Participants in this research wore caps of electrodes registering ERPs, event-related potentials.
Neural synchrony shows firing coincidences which seem to increase and decrease in cycles, creating waves of activation that repeat themselves between 20 and 60 times a second. These oscillations take the form of Fourier waves, and may reveal that different brain areas are in communication about the same visual object (Coren et al, 2004. p. 339).
This may be the substrate of how varying patterns are produced in consciousness, where different cortical areas firing in a vast array of patterns produce an abundance of conscious domains.
Edelman (1987) formulated the concept of neural Darwinism, in that some cortical connections survive and flourish, and others become extinct. He also introduced the idea of re-entrant neural processing, or neural feedback loops in the processing of consciousness.
Edelman and Tononi (2000) built upon these concepts in their discussion of the dynamic core of consciousness, where synchronous activity of neurons in different brain regions is both necessary and sufficient for perceptual awareness to occur. Perceptual objects currently in consciousness at any given time are represented by the dynamic core, and those not so represented are not currently in consciousness.
For vision, this means synchronous time-locking occurs between dorsal and ventral streams, the thalamus, amygdala and the frontal and parietal lobes. Rees et al. (2002) built upon this concept in proposing a need for synchrony to occur at some level of strength for consciousness to occur."

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Author's Bio: 

GO NOW TO: www.quantumfieldpsychology.com FOR YOUR FREE COPY. DO IT NOW. THERE IS NO TIME TO WASTE. For more information on upcoming seminars in Las Vegas and other locations... Or, if you would like to joinTHE QUANTUM FIELD PSYCHOLOGY SOCIETYCONTACT:DR. RON DALRYMPLEPOB 29953LAUGHLIN, NV 89028drrondal@hotmail.comBIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH: Dr. Ron Dalrymple (1949- ) was born in Denver, Colorado. He earned his bachelor's degree in psychology and mathematics at the University of Maryland in 1971, graduating Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi. He worked as a psychiatric technician at different psychiatric facilities, and as a research associate at the University of Colorado and the University of Maryland, before returning to graduate school in 1980. He earned his doctorate in psychology at the University of Maryland in 1984. A member of Mensa, he is listed in numerous Who's Who and is a licensed psychologist in 9 states. He is the author of many articles, and wrote a newspaper column for five years titled "The Voice Within." His work The Feeding won awards as a novel and screenplay. His book The Inner Manager is a best-seller. He is an associate professor with the University of Maryland Overseas program, and a world traveler.