Third Eye Drops #28 - The Heart in the Network with Dr. Bruce Damer and Michael Garfield

Featured art - Alex GreyDr. Bruce Damer is a multidisciplinary researcher at UC Santa Cruz focused on origin of life theory, a speaker, performer and host of the Levity Zone podcast.Michael Garfield is an artist, musician, speaker and co-host of the Future Fossils podcast.LISTEN | ITUNES YOUTUBE ARCHIVE STITCHERThese mind melds are brought to you by YOU! Find out how to support us and receive rewards in the process at our Patreon page.As you probably know by now I’m an idea explorer, not an idea swallower. I’ve never been one to fully commit to a well-established reality tunnel. That said, last year I did an experiment with the I Ching, an ancient Chinese divination tool. Entering into it, I admittedly kept the “this is all just for fun" excuse at the ready.

bruce-damer-mpnI posed this question to the oracle: "Are we anything more than fancy apes? Is there a higher consciousness or purpose that we are connected to?"

The answer it gave was hexagram 53 changing into 13. Which, in a nutshell, means that we are when we come together in the spirit of something larger than ourselves. Shockingly profound.

As ontologically powerful as that moment was for me, I admit it’s all subjective. One could easily chalk up the spot-on nature of that answer to coincidence and confirmation bias.

Nonetheless, the more I consider it, it really does seem that networks, are the most potent expression of life. A network of beings with a purpose can accomplish practically anything, whether it’s a colony of ants architecting a massive system of tunnels, a group of creative friends endeavoring to elevate their respective talents, the building of the Large Hadron Collider or the horrors of war, we owe it all to networks.

This podcast you’re about to hear,  just like that I Ching moment, has really intensified my fascination with the concept of the network. We spend quite a bit of time rapping about networks at all levels of existence, from the microbial mats that gave birth to life on this planet to the modern, technology-soaked process of manifesting a technosphere that's evolving us as a species, a society and as a vessel for consciousness in general. 

Musings in this mind meld

  • The blessing and curse of the creative 
  • How VR will bring us together 
  • Massive leaps forward in understanding where life came from 
  • The basic unit of life is a network  
  • How the younger generation seems to reflect more of a group mind than an individual one
  • How the internet was born
  • Is the best model for society an open-source collective network?
  • The future of innovation isn’t in monolithic huge organizations, it’s in creative groups with singleminded missions
  • What’s the future of space travel? Why would we ever need to physically go anywhere if we can experience it through technology?
  • Bruce’s thought experiment on how consciousness began 
  • The unlikelihood of the universe existing at all 
  • Theoretical ideas versus practical ones
  • Hear the full recording of the I Ching reading 

Third Eye Drops #21 - HYPER-REALITY with Erik Davis and Michael Garfield

Erik Davis has a PhD in Religious Studies, hosts the Expanding Mind podcast and is the author of the fantastic book Techgnosis. Michael Garfield is an artist, writer, speaker and Tasmanian Devil of creativity and handsomeness.LISTEN | ITUNES YOUTUBE ARCHIVE STITCHER

I'm not a fan of absolutes (I made that pretty clear in my first mind meld with Erik and Michael). People seem to forget you can fornicate with a philosophy without putting a ring on it. 

erik-davisSometimes it’s hard sticking to that mindset. Existing in a multidisciplinary, subjective, reality-tunnel-acknowledging mind-scape isn't all agnostic bubblebaths. When shit hits the fan, or somebody passes away, it’s hard not having solid beliefs to hang your hat on. That and if someone comes up to you and says, “hey did you know Earth's molten core is actually hell and the devil really does live there?", you’ve gotta be comfortable with only being 99% sure that that person is a nut.

On the upside, (I have no rational evidence for this, mind you) it sure does seem like when you leave your mind open to possibilities, you open up a portal for the cosmic giggle to worm its way into your subjective reality. After you become absolutely sure that there are not absolutes, (aside from the fact that that’s absolutely true) you save a little room for whimsy. You also get to embrace paradox. In the words of Oscar Wilde, "Paradox is the way of truth. To test reality, we must see it on a tightrope. When the verities become acrobats, we can judge them." It’s a beautiful thought, the idea that truth is like an acrobat on a tightrope doing all sorts of contortions and inversions. It also leaves plenty of room for subjectivity, just the way I like it. 

Musings in this mind meld -

  • Michael's techno-shamanism talk
  • The story of the first trans-Atlantic communication wire and the film Proteus
  • William Irwin Thompson and the beauty of the the multi-disciplinary approach to knowledge
  • Augmented Reality, Pokemon GO and merging with technology
  • Is Pokemon GO a government psy-op?
  • The unrivaled power of cuteness
  • Can the torrent of technological innovation be resisted and should it?
  • The fantastic short film, Hyper-Reality
  • Wild views of self-designed futures
  • A possible example of psychic phenomena among gamers
  • Is the "third wave" psychedelic movement going far enough?
  • Terence McKenna's "novelty wave" theory

HYPER-REALITY from Keiichi Matsuda on Vimeo.