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Lonny J. Brown , Ph.D., is a feelance interdisciplinarian and holistic mystic living in an electronic cottage in Peterborough, New Hampshire. This article is an excerpt from his forthcoming book, JEWELS IN THE NET(c) -
THE SPIRITUAL SEARCH IN CYBERSPACE(c) See also, THE ENLIGHTENMENT ON-LINE HOME.
Anyone who hasn’t been hibernating for the past decade knows that
our civilization is going through changes of unprecedented proportions.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the communications revolution.
Nearly a hundred million humans are now on-line, with the number growing by
10 percent per month. PC-based communications will soon become as
ubiquitous as phones, fax, TV, and ground mail, and probably even more significant
as a universal change agent. The information age is upon us, and nothing will ever be the same. The fantastic dream of instant universal access to each other and all human
knowledge is fast becoming a reality. Nicholas Negroponte, author of
Being Digital, calls this communications revolution a 10.5 on the Richter
scale of social change.The Global Village predicted by 60’s media philosopher Marshal McLuhan
is here. While the world is shrinking, our collective consciousness is
expanding, as the great new knowledge repository of Cyberspace grows,
becoming the electronic nervous system through which mankind is destined
to know itself on a whole new level.
The Internet as a pulsating earth-encompassing net of countless millions of energetically-linked, computerized intelligence nodes, each directly
and instantaneously accessible to all the others. This omni- distributed
array allows the human minds positioned at those terminals to become
potentially cognizant of the collective knowledge and ideas of everyone else.
The conception of a multi-dimensional illuminated living web is as old
as the Vedic mytho-poetic image of Indra’s Net of Jewels, and as new as
holography, the remarkable laser-based imaging technology which utilizes
the inter-penetration of light rays to project three dimensional visions
in thin air. Another ancient metaphor for the Great Matrix of Cyberspace is the
Universal sensorium known in esoteric traditions as the Akashic Records.
In this metaphysical realm, -- unlike in material, atom-based
repositories -- once information is impressed into memory, it lives virtually,
forever... something like the Mind of God.
In a complex interactive feedback process between creator and creation,
the knowledge-base of the digital realm is continuously being downloaded
into human consciousness. How will this affect our precarious collective
destiny? What shall we do with this information-age equivalent of atomic
power? Accumulate so much trivia and babble that we go into psychic
meltdown? Or create a Web of Wisdom that enlightens us and, not
coincidentally, saves the world?
The visionary French philosopher, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, posited a
"Noosphere", an emerging global super-consciousness known and
experienced by all. We may soon see the moment in history when at least most people
most of the time realize their underlying Unity with everyone else and
the world, and begin to behave accordingly. To quote an editorial in
Scientific American, computer networking offers the soundest basis for world peace
that has yet been presented... International computer networks will knit
together the peoples of the world in bonds of mutual respect; its
possibilities are vast, indeed.
More than a few credible contemporary observers feel that the advent of
the electronic intellisphere heralds a spiritual quantum leap in human
evolution. Richard Thieme, a writer and lecturer specializing in the
impact of technology on culture, says, "Our transition from a print culture to
a digital one is as profound a shift in human consciousness as that
created by the move from oral culture to written, or written to printed. Our
interaction with computers has given birth to new forms of religious
community. The Net is an imagined territory with a real spirituality in
it."
Peter Russell, author of The Global Brain Awakens says: "The potential
marriage of science and mysticism, the growth of highly efficient
methods for disseminating spiritual wisdom, the burgeoning interest in inner
development, and the possibility of direct transference of higher states
of consciousness are all combining to make it possible, for the first time
in human history, for the wisdom of the perennial philosophy to take a firm
and lasting hold."
The World Wide Web (WWW) is like the multi-media Citizens Band of
cyberspace, the quintessential omni-dimensional, people-to-people
contact medium and knowledge base. Suddenly, artists, electronic publishers,
home-office merchants, social critics, professionals and amateurs alike
are opening home pages, their own digital open front doors to the cyberhood.
The implications are historic. Ralph Abraham, author of The Web Empowerment Book, says, "The advent of the Web is a spiritual transformation in progress, a supernaturally guided
miracle... it’s the only sphere where we have totally unrestricted,
unbridled creativity run amuck! ... the WWW is one of the most important
developments in centuries, if not millennia... it may enable a major
social transformation, and the creation of a sane future for mankind, in
harmony with our environment."
For now, Cyberspace is like the huge elephant, and we -- at the dawn of
the information age -- are the proverbial blind men attempting to discern
its nature. Hackers are fascinated with the technology of internetting.
Research scientists focus on the data it accesses. Educators want to
realize the promise of interactive learning and remote teaching.
Business professionals network and communicate for profit. Kids are mesmerized by
the multi-media games. And of course, pornographers, swindlers and
sociopaths have their own view of the limitless possibilities waiting on
the digital frontier. My particular fascination is with the metaphysical side of cyberspace. I
am convinced that the info-hiway is potentially the best means we may ever
have for conveying spirituality and wisdom to Everyman: more accessible
than holy books, more reliable than gurus and churches, deeper and more
interactive than television.
Three years ago I embarked on my own electronic vision-quest, full of
questions and hopes: Who else out there is feeling inspired by the
possibilities of enlightened 21st century communications? How can the
new world knowledge base become a true source of wisdom and guidance? Does
the parallel digital universe hold at least the potential to liberate
individuals and enlighten mankind? Is God on-line?
In search of answers and the valuable tools of personal transformation,
I visited spiritual home pages, religious electronic bulletin boards, New
Age forums, mystical Gopher sites, goddess-loving Usenet newgroups, and
digitized sacred text libraries throughout the world. I found a
proliferation of Buddhist networks, religious and esoteric special
interest groups, and inspiring electronic newsletters. There are numerous subsets
of the Internet devoted to yoga, meditation, metaphysics, Christian and
Hindu traditions, Jewish mysticism, "good news", channeling, philosophy,
astrology, feminist theology, wicca, transpersonal and parapsychology,
community building, "freethought," "ageless wisdom", inspiration,
shamanism, and much more. I’m pleased to report that there is Spirit in Cyberspace,
and increasing numbers of cyber-pilgrims are accessing it.
But how can we recognize authentic spirituality in the vast
full/emptiness of Cyberspace? Is there not even more room for pseudo-truth and
self-deception out there in the etheric foam of the digital sea? Of
course one person’s spirituality may be another’s blasphemy. The Internet
approach to the quest is so democratic and so personal; all religions, sects,
texts, and teachers await your consideration. You’re no longer limited to
someone else’s idea of what you should know or believe.
If the price of this on-line eclecticism is the potential for more
dilettantism, delusion and confusion, still cyberspace greatly
accelerates the learning process. Besides, can we have too much religious freedom?
In Cyberspace as in life, we should know the genuine article by its
effects: What good is it? Quite simply, something (or someone) is
spiritual if his/her/its influence actually reduces human suffering and increases
freedom: not only freedom from fear, ignorance, shame, guilt, hunger,
and pain, but freedom for growth. It’s not enough for a teacher (or
teaching) to sound good. If it’s authentic, by definition it benefits people and
the planet. If it’s enlightening, the soul stirs and the spirit soars from
the contact, as if lifted by angels.
For the first time in history we now have the option of deliberately
manifesting this dynamic fabric of mutually-interactive intelligence
for the benefit of all. Within such systems, when a critical mass of
connections and complexity are achieved, a flashover phase
transformation occurs, like carbon under pressure becoming diamond. We participate in
and become the larger awareness, the evolving self-consciousness of Gaia,
the emerging super-intelligence of the Earth Herself. After decades
dominated by nationalism and militarism, I now feel my hope for humanity restored
by the promise of the coming global consciousness. The inspired folks at
Unifying Fields Foundation (http://www.sun-angel.com/uff/) put it this
way:
"Science will discover answers to its mysteries; nations will evolve new
forms of governance; businesses will use new forms of harmonious
commerce; arts and religions will enter a new golden era; and individuals can
construe new paradigms for self transformation, interpersonal
relationships, and spiritual unfoldment. We want to be a part of this
discovery. We believe this mission to be profound.

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