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Exploring the neural and biophysical correlates of consciousness and religious and meditative practices: a commentary


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Abstract

This commentary synthesizes findings from four articles exploring consciousness, meditative practices, and subtle physical phenomena. An article on fractals and consciousness1 proposes a theoretical link between consciousness and fractal processes, suggesting inherent limitations in modeling consciousness. An article on religious practice2 presents a study on the neurophysiological and biological effects of chanting Nam-MyohoRenge-Kyo, revealing specific sound frequencies, increased prefrontal cortex activity, and enhanced microbial metabolism. An article on ultraweak photon emission3 describes changes in emission patterns during meditation, suggesting influence on metabolic processes. Complementing these, a new observational study4 explores correlations between chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo and subtle variations in local natural radioactivity, reporting higher detected counts and increased variability during chanting periods, aligning conceptually with consciousness influencing random physical systems (e.g., PEAR, GCP). The commentary interprets Gardiner’s fractal concepts through the lens of chanting effects, suggesting links between fractal brain activity and chanting, and connects ultraweak photon emission results to neural and metabolic changes. Furthermore, it integrates the radioactivity findings as another empirical layer, suggesting potential correlations between the focused state of chanting and subtle physical effects on the environment. While acknowledging limitations like single-subject or small sample sizes and the need for further studies, the commentary underscores the interdisciplinary nature of consciousness research and the potential for convergent findings across diverse methodologies, including neurophysiology, biophysics, and environmental measurements, in understanding the profound effects of meditative and religious practices.

Keywords

cognition, kurtosis, emission

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