Saturday, December 31, 2011

Chapter 11 LSD My Problem Child - Albert Hoffman



    Was kann ein Mensch im Leben mehr gewinnen Als dass sich Gott-Natur ihm offenbare? What more can a person gain in life Than that God-Nature reveals himself to him?-Goethe
I am often asked what has made the deepest impression upon me in my LSD experiments, and whether I have arrived at new understandings through these experiences.
 
11.1 VARIOUS REALITIES
Of greatest significance to me has been the insight that I attained as a fundamental understanding from all of my LSD experiments: what one commonly takes as "the reality," including the reality of one's own individual person, by no means signifies something fixed, but rather something that is ambiguous-that there is not only one, but that there are many realities, each comprising also a different consciousness of the ego.
One can also arrive at this insight through scientific reflections. The problem of reality is and has been from time immemorial a central concern of philosophy. It is, however, a fundamental distinction, whether one approaches the problem of reality rationally, with the logical methods of philosophy, or if one obtrudes upon this problem emotionally, through an existential experience. The first planned LSD experiment was therefore so deeply moving and alarming, because everyday reality and the ego experiencing it, which I had until then considered to be the only reality, dissolved, and an unfamiliar ego experienced another, unfamiliar reality. The problem concerning the innermost self also appeared, which, itself unmoved, was able to record these external and internal transformations.
Reality is inconceivable without an experiencing subject, without an ego. It is the product of the exterior world, of the sender and of a receiver, an ego in whose deepest self the emanations of the exterior world, registered by the antennae of the sense organs, become conscious. If one of the two is lacking, no reality happens, no radio music plays, the picture screen remains blank.
If one continues with the conception of reality as a product of sender and receiver, then the entry of another reality under the influence of LSD may be explained by the fact that the brain, the seat of the receiver, becomes biochemically altered. The receiver is thereby tuned into another wavelength than that corresponding to normal, everyday reality. Since the endless variety and diversity of the universe correspond to infinitely many different wavelengths, depending on the adjustment of the receiver, many different realities, including the respective ego, can become conscious. These different realities, more correctly designated as different aspects of the reality, are not mutually exclusive but are complementary, and form together a portion of the all-encompassing, timeless, transcendental reality, in which even the unimpeachable core of self-consciousness, which has the power to record the different egos, is located.
The true importance of LSD and related hallucinogens lies in their capacity to shift the wavelength setting of the receiving "self," and thereby to evoke alterations in reality consciousness. This ability to allow different, new pictures of reality to arise, this truly cosmogonic power, makes the cultish worship of hallucinogenic plants as sacred drugs understandable.
What constitutes the essential, characteristic difference between everyday reality and the world picture experienced in LSD inebriation? Ego and the outer world are separated in the normal condition of consciousness, in everyday reality; one stands face-to-face with the outer world; it has become an object. In the LSD state the boundaries between the experiencing self and the outer world more or less disappear, depending on the depth of the inebriation. Feedback between receiver and sender takes place. A portion of the self overflows into the outer world, into objects, which begin to live, to have another, a deeper meaning. This can be perceived as a blessed, or as a demonic transformation imbued with terror, proceeding to a loss of the trusted ego. In an auspicious case, the new ego feels blissfully united with the objects of the outer world and consequently also with its fellow beings. This experience of deep oneness with the exterior world can even intensify to a feeling of the self being one with the universe. This condition of cosmic consciousness, which under favorable conditions can be evoked by LSD or by another hallucinogen from the group of Mexican sacred drugs, is analogous to spontaneous religious enlightenment, with the unio mystica. In both conditions, which often last only for a timeless moment, a reality is experienced that exposes a gleam of the transcendental reality, in vihich universe and self, sender and receiver, are one. [The relationship of spontaneous to drug-induced enlightenment has been most extensively investigated by R. C. Zaehner, Mysticismacred and Profane (The Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1957).]
Gottfried Benn, in his essay "Provoziertes Leben" [Provoked life] (in Ausdnckswelt, Limes Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1949), characterized the reality in which self and world are separated, as "the schizoid catastrophe, the Western entelechy neurosis." He further writes:
    . . . In the southern part of our continent this concept of reality began to be formed. The Hellenistic-European agonistic principle of victory through effort, cunning, malice, talent, force, and later, European Darwinism and "superman," was instrumental in its formation. The ego emerged, dominated, fought; for this it needed instruments, material, power. It had a different relationship to matter, more removed sensually, but closer formally. It analyzed matter, tested, sorted: weapons, object of exchange, ransom money. It clarified matter through isolation, reduced it to formulas, took pieces out of it, divided it up. [Matter became] a concept which hung like a disaster over the West, with which the West fought, without grasping it, to which it sacrified enormous quantities of blood and happiness; a concept whose inner tension and fragmentations it was impossible to dissolve through a natural viewing or methodical insight into the inherent unity and peace of prelogical forms of being . . . instead the cataclysmic character of this idea became clearer and clearer . . . a state, a social organization, a public morality, for which life is economically usable life and which does not recognize the world of provoked life, cannot stop its destructive force. A society, whose hygiene and race cultivation as a modern ritual is founded solely on hollow biological statistics, can only represent the external viewpoint of the mass; for this point of view it can wage war, incessantly, for reality is simply raw material, but its metaphysical background remains forever obscured. [This excerpt from Benn's essay was taken from Ralph Metzner's translation "Provoked Life: An Essay on the Anthropology of the Ego," which was published in Psychedelic Review I (1): 47-54, 1963. Minor corrections in Metzner's text have been made by A. H.]
As Gottfried Benn formulates it in these sentences, a concept of reality that separates self and the world has decisively determined the evolutionary course of European intellectual history. Experience of the world as matter, as object, to which man stands opposed, has produced modern natural science and technology- creations of the Western mind that have changed the world. With their help human beings have subdued the world. Its wealth has been exploited in a manner that may be characterized as plundering, and the sublime accomplishment of technological civilization, the comfort of Western industrial society, stands face-to-face with a catastrophic destruction of the environment. Even to the heart of matter, to the nucleus of the atom and its splitting, this objective intellect has progressed and has unleashed energies that threaten all life on our planet.A misuse of knowledge and understanding, the products of searching intelligence, could not have emerged from a consciousness of reality in which human beings are not separated from the environment but rather exist as part of living nature and the universe. All attempts today to make amends for the damage through environmentally protective measures must remain only hopeless, superficial patchwork, if no curing of the "Western entelechy neurosis" ensues, as Benn has characterized the objective reality conception. Healing would mean existential experience of a deeper, self-encompassing reality.
The experience of such a comprehensive reality is impeded in an environment rendered dead by human hands, such as is present in our great cities and industrial districts. Here the contrast between self and outer world becomes especially evident. Sensations of alienation, of loneliness, and of menace arise. It is these sensations that impress themselves on everyday consciousness in Western industrial society; they also take the upper hand everywhere that technological civilization extends itself, and they largely determine the production of modern art and literature.
There is less danger of a cleft reality experience arising in a natural environment. In field and forest, and in the animal world sheltered therein, indeed in every garden, a reality is perceptible that is infinitely more real, older, deeper, and more wondrous than everything made by people, and that will yet endure, when the inanimate, mechanical, and concrete world again vanishes, becomes rusted and fallen into ruin. In the sprouting, growth, blooming, fruiting, death, and regermination of plants, in their relationship with the sun, whose light they are able to convert into chemically bound energy in the form of organic compounds, out of which all that lives on our earth is built; in the being of plants the same mysterious, inexhaustible, eternal life energy is evident that has also brought us forth and takes us back again into its womb, and in which we are sheltered and united with all living things.
We are not leading up to a sentimental enthusiasm for nature, to "back to nature" in Rousseau's sense. That romantic movement, which sought the idyll in nature, can also be explained by a feeling of humankind's separation from nature. What is needed today is a fundamental reexperience of the oneness of all living things, a comprehensive reality consciousness that ever more infrequently develops spontaneously, the more the primordial flora and fauna of our mother earth must yield to a dead technological environment.
 
11.2 MYSTERY AND MYTH
The notion of reality as the self juxtaposed to the world, in confrontation with the outer world, began to form itself, as reported in the citation from Benn, in the southern portion of the European continent in Greek antiquity. No doubt people at that time knew the suffering that was connected with such a cleft reality consciousness. The Greek genius tried the cure, by supplementing the multiformed and richly colored, sensual as well as deeply sorrowful Apollonian world view created by the subject/object cleavage, with the Dionysian world of experience, in which this cleavage is abolished in ecstatic inebriation. Nietzsche writes in The Birth of Tragedy:
    It is either through the influence of narcotic potions, of which all primitive peoples and races speak in hymns, or through the powerful approach of spring, penetrating with joy all of nature, that those Dionysian stirrings arise, which in their intensification lead the individual to forget himself completely.... Not only does the bond between man and man come to be forged once again by the magic of the Dionysian rite, but alienated, hostile, or subjugated nature again celebrates her reconciliation with her prodigal son, man.
The Mysteries of Eleusis, which were celebrated annually in the fall, over an interval of approximately 2,000 years, from about 1500 B.C. until the fourth century A.D., were intimately connected with the ceremonies and festivals in honor of the god Dionysus. These Mysteries were established by the goddess of agriculture, Demeter, as thanks for the recovery of her daughter Persephone, whom Hades, the god of the underworld, had abducted. A further thank offering was the ear of grain, which was presented by the two goddesses to Triptolemus, the first high priest of Eleusis. They taught him the cultivation of grain, which Triptolemus then disseminated over the whole globe. Persephone, however, was not always allowed to remain with her mother, because she had taken nourishment from Hades, contrary to the order of the highest gods. As punishment she had to return to the underworld for a part of the year. During this time, it was winter on the earth, the plants died and were withdrawn into the ground, to awaken to new life early in the year with Persephone's journey to earth.The myth of Demeter, Persephone, Hades, and the other gods, which was enacted as a drama, formed, however, only the external framework of events. The climax of the yearly ceremonies, which began with a procession from Athens to Eleusis lasting several days, was the concluding ceremony with the initiation, which took place in the night. The initiates were forbidden by penalty of death to divulge what they had learned, beheld, in the innermost, holiest chamber of the temple, the tetesterion (goal). Not one of the multitude that were initiated into the secret of Eleusis has ever done this. Pausanias, Plato, many Roman emperors like Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius, and many other known personages of antiquity were party to this initiation. It must have been an illumination, a visionary glimpse of a deeper reality, an insight into the true basis of the universe. That can be concluded from the statements of initiates about the value, about the importance of the vision. Thus it is reported in a Homeric Hymn: "Blissful is he among men on Earth, who has beheld that! He who has not been initiated into the holy Mysteries, who has had no part therein, remains a corpse in gloomy darkness." Pindar speaks of the Eleusinian benediction with the following words: "Blissful is he, who after having beheld this enters on the way beneath the Earth. He knows the end of life as well as its divinely granted beginning." Cicero, also a famous initiate, likewise put in first position the splendor that fell upon his life from Eleusis, when he said: " Not only have we received the reason there, that we may live in joy, but also, besides, that we may die with better hope."
How could the mythological representation of such an obvious occurrence, which runs its course annually before our eyes-the seed grain that is dropped into the earth, dies there, in order to allow a new plant, new life, to ascend into the light-prove to be such a deep, comforting experience as that attested by the cited reports? It is traditional knowledge that the initiates were furnished with a potion, the kykeon, for the final ceremony. It is also known that barley extract and mint were ingredients of the kykeon. Religious scholars and scholars of mythology, like Karl Kerenyi, from whose book on the Eleusinian Mysteries (Rhein-Verlag, Zurich, 1962) the preceding statements were taken, and with whom I was associated in relation to the research on this mysterious potion [In the English publication of Kerenyi's book Eleusis (Schocken Books, New York, 1977) a reference is made to this collaboration.], are of the opinion that the kykeon was mixed with an hallucinogenic drug. [In The Road to Eleusis by R. Gordon Wasson, Albert Hofmann, and Carl A. P. Ruck (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York, 1978) the possibility is discussed that the kykeon could have acted through an LSD-like preparation of ergot.] That would make understandable the ecstatic-visionary experience of the DemeterPersephone myth, as a symbol of the cycle of life and death in both a comprehensive and timeless reality.
When the Gothic king Alarich, coming from the north, invaded Greece in 396 A.D. and destroyed the sanctuary of Eleusis, it was not only the end of a religious center, but it also signified the decisive downfall of the ancient world. With the monks that accompanied Alarich, Christianity penetrated into the country that must be regarded as the cradle of European culture.
The cultural-historical meaning of the Eleusinian Mysteries, their influence on European intellectual history, can scarcely be overestimated. Here suffering humankind found a cure for its rational, objective, cleft intellect, in a mystical totality experience, that let it believe in immortality, in an everlasting existence.
This belief had survived in early Christianity, although with other symbols. It is found as a promise, even in particular passages of the Gospels, most clearly in the Gospel according to John, as in Chapter 14: 120. Jesus speaks to his disciples, as he takes leave of them:
    And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that he may abide with you forever;Even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him: but ye know him; for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you. I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall live also. At that day ye shatl know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in you.
This promise constitutes the heart of my Christian beliefs and my call to natural-scientific research: we will attain to knowledge of the universe through the spirit of truth, and thereby to understanding of our being one with the deepest, most comprehensive reality, God.Ecclesiastical Christianity, determined by the duality of creator and creation, has, however, with its nature-alienated religiosity largely obliterated the Eleusinian-Dionysian legacy of antiquity. In the Christian sphere of belief, only special blessed men have attested to a timeless, comforting reality, experienced in a spontaneous vision, an experience to which in antiquity the elite of innumerable generations had access through the initiation at Eleusis. The unio mystica of Catholic saints and the visions that the representatives of Christian mysticism-Jakob Boehme, Meister Eckhart, Angelus Silesius, Thomas Traherne, William Blake, and others describe in their writings, are obviously essentially related to the enlightenment that the initiates to the Eleusinian Mysteries experienced.
The fundamental importance of a mystical experience, for the recovery of people in Western industrial societies who are sickened by a one-sided, rational, materialistic world view, is today given primary emphasis, not only by adherents to Eastern religious movements like Zen Buddhism, but also by leading representatives of academic psychiatry. Of the appropriate literature, we will here refer only to the books of Balthasar Staehelin, the Basel psychiatrist working in Zurich. [Haben und Sein (1969), Die Welt als Du (1970), Urvertrauen und zweite Wirklichkeit (1973), and Der flnale Mensch (1976); all published by Theologischer Verlag, Zurich.] They make reference to numerous other authors who deal with the same problem. Today a type of "metamedicine," "metapsychology," and "metapsychiatry" is beginning to call upon the metaphysical element in people, which manifests itself as an experience of a deeper, duality-surmounting reality, and to make this element a basic healing principle in therapeutic practice.
In addition, it is most significant that not only medicine but also wider circles of our society consider the overcoming of the dualistic, cleft world view to be a prerequisite and basis for the recovery and spiritual renewal of occidental civilization and culture. This renewal could lead to the renunciation of the materialistic philosophy of life and the development of a new reality consciousness.
As a path to the perception of a deeper, comprehensive reality, in which the experiencing individual is also sheltered, meditation, in its different forms, occupies a prominent place today. The essential difference between meditation and prayer in the usual sense, which is based upon the duality of creatorcreation, is that meditation aspires to the abolishment of the I-you-barrier by a fusing of object and subject, of sender and receiver, of objective reality and self.
Objective reality, the world view produced by the spirit of scientific inquiry, is the myth of our time. It has replaced the ecclesiastical-Christian and mythical-Apollonian world view.
But this ever broadening factual knowledge, which constitutes objective reality, need not be a desecration. On the contrary, if it only advances deep enough, it inevitably leads to the inexplicable, primal ground of the universe: the wonder, the mystery of the divine-in the microcosm of the atom, in the macrocosm of the spiral nebula; in the seeds of plants, in the body and soul of people.
Meditation begins at the limits of objective reality, at the farthest point yet reached by rational knowledge and perception. Meditation thus does not mean rejection of objective reality; on the contrary, it consists of a penetration to deeper dimensions of reality. It is not escape into an imaginary dream world; rather it seeks after the comprehensive truth of objective reality, by simultaneous, stereoscopic contemplation of its surfaces and depths.
It could become of fundamental importance, and be not merely a transient fashion of the present, if more and more people today would make a daily habit of devoting an hour, or at least a few minutes, to meditation. As a result of the meditative penetration and broadening of the natural-scientific world view, a new, deepened reality consciousness would have to evolve, which would increasingly become the property of all humankind. This could become the basis of a new religiosity, which would not be based on belief in the dogmas of various religions, but rather on perception through the "spirit of truth." What is meant here is a perception, a reading and understanding of the text at first hand, "out of the book that God's finger has written" (Paracelsus), out of the creation.
The transformation of the objective world view into a deepened and thereby religious reality consciousness can be accomplished gradually, by continuing practice of meditation. It can also come about, however, as a sudden enlightenment; a visionary experience. It is then particularly profound, blessed, and meaningful. Such a mystical experience may nevertheless "not be induced even by decade-long meditation," as Balthasar Staehelin writes. Also, it does not happen to everyone, although the capacity for mystical experience belongs to the essence of human spirituality.
Nevertheless, at Eleusis, the mystical vision, the healing, comforting experience, could be arranged in the prescribed place at the appointed time, for all of the multitudes who were initiated into the holy Mysteries. This could be accounted for by the fact that an hallucinogenic drug came into use; this, as already mentioned, is something that religious scholars believe.
The characteristic property of hallucinogens, to suspend the boundaries between the experiencing self and the outer world in an ecstatic, emotional experience, makes it possible with their help, and after suitable internal and external preparation, as it was accomplished in a perfect way at Eleusis, to evoke a mystical experience according to plan, so to speak.
Meditation is a preparation for the same goal that was aspired to and was attained in the Eleusinian Mysteries. Accordingly it seems feasible that in the future, with the help of LSD, the mystical vision, crowning meditation, could be made accessible to an increasing number of practitioners of meditation
I see the true importance of LSD in the possibitity ofproviding material aid to meditation aimed at the mystical experience of a deeper, comprehensive reality. Such a use accords entirely with the essence and working character of LSD as a sacred drug

Monday, December 26, 2011

It's all Consciousness

How ever we perceive that what our brain allows us to perceive is variously called consciousness.

It's the blending of brain facts, accumulated through education, with upbringing influences that colored our early years to define the adult member of the species. So very important, and so utterly unimportant.

Happy, depressed, energized, beaten down, or in control is dictated by thoughts and energy that has originated in our brain.!

Chemicals control brain functions.

Brain functions control behavior


You do the rest


Gary O

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

From HuffPost 2012

2012: Apocalypse Fatigue

Posted: 12/21/11 08:31 PM ET

By:Noah Nelson
2011-12-22-earthNASAh.jpg
Photo Credit: Image: NASA/Public Domain
Earth: it was fun while it lasted.
Today is the beginning of the final countdown. We've got just 366 days -- thank you leap year -- until a comet strikes the planet, a massive solar flare microwaves the globe, and sentient machine life evolves into the avatar of the Old Gods and does away with the pestilence that is mankind. Alternatively you may believe we've actually due for a new Golden Age when the Mayan calendar cycles back around.
If I was a professional skeptic and dedicated materialist, I'd begin to chastise those who hold to the belief that something big is coming down the pipeline a year from now. There would be a flogging of believers so that we could make way for a cool, bloodless rationality and get to the serious business of dealing with the very scary problems we have here in the "real" world, and to stop spreading myths and get down to facts.
But there's a slight problem with dismissing myth.
The late mythologist Joseph Campbell liked to say that a "myth was a metaphor." For Campbell, the stories that make up myths contain key psychological insights and moral lessons that shape society. It is the lynchpin of a Romantic view of the world, one that the poet Muriel Rukeyser summed up in The Speed of Darkness with the line "the Universe is made of stories, not of atoms."
Our society's collective obsession with the end of the world seems to be hardwired in. What makes 2012 particularly interesting is that it feels like the last in the current series of predicted apocalypses, which began with the Y2K panic (remember that one?) running right up to the proclamation by Harold Camping that the Rapture was due earlier this year. 
New Age psychedelic consciousness explorers -- and I don't intend that term as a pejorative, mind you -- like Terrence McKenna have done a lot to popularize the idea that the end of the Mayan calendar signals a tectonic shift in our culture. The overall message is a positive one. If economic globalization is the downside of a connected world, then an expansion of empathy is required to make our increasingly interdependent world one worth living in. In broad terms, they envision a transformation of society from that of a bunch of selfish actors exclusively pursuing their own interests to one where individuality and collective interest are balanced in our decision-making: shades of a cyber-psychedelic utopia.
Yet you can't put the idea of the "end of the world as we know it" out there without some people losing track of the "as we know it" and obsessing over the "end". When that happens, you get to some pretty dark places, pretty quickly.
A CHILD'S FEAR
Bill Hudson is an information systems manager ("I'm basically a glorified computer geek") and amateur astronomer who gives presentations on the science of astronomy to elementary students in California.
"About three years ago I [started] getting these really strange questions about 2012," said Hudson. "At first I blew them off, but then I started thinking about them a little bit. That's basically how I got into the whole 2012 debunking thing: kids were hearing about it, and asking me about it, and that set me down this path."
The "2012 debunking thing" that Hudson speaks of is the 2012hoax.net  wiki, where Hudson and a group of like-minded editors collect 2012 theories and apply a generous dose of scientific facts to the claims. Hudson sees the hype that has been built around 2012 as a real problem.
"I think [the 2012 obsession is] dangerous in a couple of different ways," Hudson said. "The first way that it's dangerous is there are a lot of people who are susceptible to the belief in this kind of thing. We've already had suggestions or reports of people, especially young [people], who are in vulnerable states already, harming themselves. We had one woman post to the forums on the website that her daughter attempted suicide. I think it's dangerous from that standpoint.
"I think it's also dangerous from the standpoint that it's the focus of a lot of generalized anxiety. People are generally anxious about things whether that's the economy or you know, political situations or whatever, and when people are in that state they tend to focus on something like this."
During our conversation I suggested to Hudson that what we see in cultural fights over 2012 is the latest battleground in the battle between the Romantic/spiritual worldview and the Enlightenment/rational approach. Hudson parried that notion with a personal fact I found surprising.
"I hesitate to place it just on critical thinking and religion or what you termed the Enlightenment-type of thinking and more religious thinking," Hudson told me. "I'm a religious person. I'm a Christian. I think that a lack of the ability to self-examine your beliefs is a big part of this. From my own standpoint, as a Christian, I have certain beliefs that I understand are not scientific. But on the other hand, I'm willing to say, 'I believe this. I might be wrong and that's okay.' And I don't really see that in a lot of other people. I don't really see that ability to say 'Hey, I could be wrong here.'
"Science is self-correcting. Meaning that science understands that it could be wrong. Somebody could come along with a better theory and replace Einstein any day. Probably not gonna happen, but it's possible."
I pressed Hudson: as a Christian, did he believe in the prophecies in the Book of Revelation, long the obsession of Evangelical Christians here in the United States?
"What I will say will run counter to most American Protestant denominations," said Hudson. "I don't view the book of revelations as a prophecy of the future so much as it was a warning by John of Patmos to the Church about the corruption and the persecution of the Christians under the Roman empire. So it was a contemporary narrative which is what prophecy originally meant. That word prophecy meant preaching about the current situation, the current narrative that was happening at the moment and not necessarily what was happening in the future."
Indeed, the drift in the meaning of the word prophecy from "preaching" to "prediction" is one way that our understanding of sacred texts in the world has become muddled. As it is with a modern priest or astrologer, a Mayan day keeper -- the priest who interpreted the sacred calendars -- had a duty to his community to interpret divine will for application in the moment.
A PROPHECY OF CHANGE
Daniel Pinchbeck has a unique role in the popularization of 2012 as a significant year. His book,2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, is a record of his explorations of shamanic and metaphysical belief systems. Because of his investigations into Mayan traditions, and of course the name of the book, Pinchbeck is often spoken of in conjunction with the "doomsday" scenarios.
Nothing could be farther from his actual message concerning what 2012 represents.
"I've only and always, and over and over again, said that I don't believe that anything literally dramatic at all is going to happen on that date."
What we find in Pinchbeck -- who for all intents and purposes is the heir to Terrence McKenna in the psychedelic tradition -- is something a lot closer to the use of prophecy in the sense of preaching and less in terms of prediction. If the popular fascination with the date is about a collective desire for change that can address the massive challenges humanity faces -- of climate change, income inequality, and a staggering concentration of power in the hands of a few souls -- then Pinchbeck's message is gospel ("good news") indeed.
"I don't think we're on the verge of a massive shift; I think we're in that shift," Pinchbeck told me. "I think we're already in that prophetic change over and the 'We' that can't confront the climate change is the system that now exists, which is the capitalist system, which has become the world's dominant paradigm. The system of the ego structure, the hierarchy and the centralized secretive model of control. All that stuff is what's beginning to break down, and what has to emerge is the coherent alternative. Which I think the Occupy movement is pointing towards."
Pinchbeck, who lives in New York City, has been following that movement closely.
"The Occupy movement is less to me a protest movement and more a constructive movement seeking to build a direct democratic decision-making infrastructure based on consensus. That's a real challenge; it's kind of the open-source model challenging the hierarchical, secretive centralized model that really dominates."
While Pinchbeck emphatically discounts a cosmic event happening on Dec. 21, 2012, he isn't ignoring the focused attention it provides.
"The date, because it's become kind of fixed in the popular consciousness in whatever fashion provides an opportunity," he tells me. "So I've been working with a group to do a global spectacle event on that day."
The group, Unify Earth , has the motto "what we can imagine, we can create" on their website. The centerpiece of the site is an interactive Google map where individuals and groups can organize gatherings on that date. If one goal is to create a more connected, democratic future, then as the Occupy movement has reminded us, the first step is to get people off their computers and speaking face to face again.
CONNECTIVITY IS A DOUBLE EDGED SWORD
Human society evolves rapidly, but human beings themselves have the same basic needs, physically and emotionally, that they have had for millennia. Our myths and prophecies, in the classical sense, provide individuals and our culture with guidebooks for interpreting events in emotional terms.
The fascination with a 2012 Apocalypse/Consciousness Evolution is both a reflection of our rapidly changing society and a product of those changes.
"I think that the change since Y2K really has to do more with the availability of social networking on the internet," said Bill Hudson. "The ability to communicate these things broadly. So there have always been the Harold Campings of the world. Think back to history and we talk about the Millerites and the foundation of the 7th Day Adventist church. They have always been around. I kind of think that it's just the availability of the broad communication."
The pervasiveness of online communication means that fear and paranoia can spread quickly, as easily as a video file can leak around the globe. This is balanced by what we have seen in the Arab Spring, where social media was instrumental in breaking the backs of tyrants.
"The question," said Pinchbeck, "is whether the new social technologies of communication and collaboration can kind of overturn the dominant model."
The price we pay for the chance to change, it seems, is the perennial night terror that crawls up out of our collective unconscious. Resisting change is as much a part of being human as the inevitability of change is part of being alive. It comes as no surprise that a technological advance as disruptive as the internet should bring with it the full spectrum of humanity's hopes and fears.
In the DNA of the 2012 myth is a sketch of a global society connected by technology and concerned with the challenges humanity faces as a species: climate change, famine, poverty, and the creeping class divide. Very real problems that, while they may not be as dramatic as a comet strike, could very well have just as much of an impact if left unchecked. To give one example, futurist John Shirley points out in a TEDXBrussles talk  that when scientists argue we are in the five-year window to reverse climate change, no one can reasonably believe that the political will exists to adapt in time.
In this sense, the 2012 prophecies hew close to the old school definition of the word. They serve as a warning to humanity whose message is as old as life itself: evolve or die.
Originally published on Turnstylenews.com , a digital information service surfacing emerging stories in news, entertainment, art and culture; powered by award-winning journalists.