The Mind Philosophy of Mysticism: Non-Locality and Collective Fields
BY NICOLE LAU
The Assumption of Mental Isolation
Modern psychology assumes: Your mind is private, isolated, contained within your skull.
Your thoughts are yours alone. Your consciousness is separate from mine. Mental privacy is absolute.
This is the Cartesian modelβmind as isolated substance, trapped in the prison of the individual brain.
But mysticism reveals a radically different reality: Mind is not localizedβit's a non-local field phenomenon.
Your mind is not separate from mine. We're nodes in a vast interconnected network of consciousness. Mental boundaries are permeable, not absolute.
This is Field Theory of Mindβand it explains phenomena that seem "paranormal" in the isolated-mind model but are normal in the field model: telepathy, collective unconscious, morphic resonance, synchronicity.
From Localized Mind to Field Mind
The Localized Mind Model (Standard View)
Assumption: Mind is produced by and contained within the individual brain.
Implications:
- Mental privacy is absolute (no one can access your thoughts)
- Telepathy is impossible (no mechanism for mind-to-mind communication)
- Collective consciousness is metaphorical (not literally real)
- Death of brain = death of mind (no continuity)
Problems:
- Cannot explain telepathy, remote viewing, or precognition (dismissed as "impossible")
- Cannot explain collective phenomena (mass movements, cultural shifts, zeitgeist)
- Cannot explain archetypal patterns recurring across cultures
- Cannot explain synchronicity or meaningful coincidences
The Field Mind Model (Mystical View)
Assumption: Mind is a field that extends beyond the brainβthe brain is a receiver/transceiver, not the source.
Implications:
- Mental boundaries are permeable (information can flow between minds)
- Telepathy is natural (field coupling between minds)
- Collective consciousness is real (shared mental fields)
- Mind can exist independent of brain (field persists)
Advantages:
- Explains telepathy, remote viewing, precognition (non-local field access)
- Explains collective unconscious (shared archetypal field)
- Explains morphic resonance (species memory fields)
- Explains synchronicity (correlation through informational fields)
The Field Theory of Mind: Core Principles
Principle 1: Mind Extends Beyond the Brain
Just as electromagnetic fields extend beyond their source (a magnet's field extends into space), mental fields extend beyond the brain.
Your thoughts, emotions, and awareness create a field that radiates outwardβlike an aura, but not just visual. It's an informational and energetic field.
Evidence:
- You can "feel" when someone is staring at you (field detection)
- You can sense the "vibe" of a room (collective field)
- Emotions are contagious (field coupling)
- Twins report feeling each other's pain or emotions at a distance (entangled fields)
Principle 2: Mental Fields Overlap and Interact
When two people are in proximity (physical or emotional), their mental fields overlap.
Where fields overlap, information exchange occursβnot through language or sensory channels, but through direct field coupling.
This is why:
- You "pick up" on others' emotions without them saying anything
- Groups develop shared understanding without explicit communication
- Lovers can sense each other's thoughts or feelings
- Therapists absorb clients' emotional states
This is not metaphorβit's field dynamics.
Principle 3: Boundaries Are Permeable, Not Absolute
The boundary between "my mind" and "your mind" is semi-permeableβlike a cell membrane, not a brick wall.
Information, emotions, and awareness can flow across boundaries through:
- Resonance (similar frequencies couple)
- Attention (focus creates connection)
- Relationship (love, intimacy, shared experience strengthens coupling)
- Intention (deliberate mental connection)
This is why:
- Empathy is possible (you feel what others feel)
- Telepathy occurs (direct mind-to-mind communication)
- Collective consciousness emerges (group minds form)
The Collective Unconscious: Jung's Revolutionary Insight
Carl Jung proposed: Beneath individual consciousness lies a collective unconsciousβa shared mental field containing universal patterns (archetypes).
What Is the Collective Unconscious?
Definition: A transpersonal layer of mind shared by all humans (and possibly all life), containing archetypal patterns, symbols, and themes.
Characteristics:
- Universal (not personal or cultural)
- Archetypal (contains fundamental patterns)
- Autonomous (operates independently of individual will)
- Accessible (can be accessed through dreams, meditation, active imagination)
Archetypes as Attractors in the Collective Field
Archetypes are not just "symbols"βthey're informational structures in the collective unconscious.
Think of them as attractors in the mental fieldβpatterns that shape individual thoughts, emotions, and behaviors.
Major Archetypes:
- The Hero: Journey, challenge, transformation
- The Mother: Nurturing, protection, unconditional love
- The Shadow: Repressed aspects, darkness, the unconscious
- The Wise Old Man/Woman: Wisdom, guidance, knowledge
- The Trickster: Chaos, disruption, transformation through mischief
- The Anima/Animus: Feminine in masculine, masculine in feminine
Why Archetypes Recur Across Cultures:
Not because of cultural transmission, but because all humans access the same collective field.
The Hero's Journey appears in Greek myths, Hindu epics, African folktales, and modern filmsβnot because they copied each other, but because they're all drawing from the same archetypal field.
Accessing the Collective Unconscious
You access the collective unconscious through:
- Dreams: Archetypal symbols appear spontaneously
- Meditation: Deep states access transpersonal layers
- Active imagination: Dialoguing with archetypal figures
- Synchronicity: Meaningful coincidences reveal archetypal patterns
- Creative work: Artists channel archetypal energies
Morphic Fields: Rupert Sheldrake's Hypothesis
Biologist Rupert Sheldrake proposed morphic fieldsβinformational fields that store patterns and memories for species, systems, and forms.
What Are Morphic Fields?
Definition: Non-material fields that contain the "memory" of forms, behaviors, and patterns, influencing the development and behavior of similar systems.
Key Concept: Morphic resonanceβpast instances of a pattern make future instances more likely.
Example:
- When rats in one lab learn a maze, rats in other labs (with no contact) learn the same maze faster
- When a new chemical compound is synthesized, it's hard to crystallize at firstβbut once it's been done, it becomes easier everywhere (the morphic field "remembers")
- When one person learns a skill, it becomes slightly easier for others to learn (collective learning through morphic resonance)
Morphic Fields and Collective Memory
Morphic fields are species memory:
- Birds inherit migration routes through avian morphic fields
- Humans inherit archetypal patterns through human morphic fields
- Cultures inherit traditions through cultural morphic fields
This explains:
- Why instincts exist (inherited behavioral patterns)
- Why certain skills seem "natural" (resonance with ancestral patterns)
- Why cultural knowledge persists even without explicit teaching
Implications for Learning and Evolution
If morphic fields are real:
- Learning is not just individualβit contributes to collective fields
- Evolution is not just geneticβit's also informational (field-based)
- The more people do something, the easier it becomes for others (the "hundredth monkey" effect)
Telepathy: Natural Consequence of Field Coupling
In the localized-mind model, telepathy is impossible. In the field-mind model, telepathy is natural.
How Telepathy Works (Field Model)
1. Mental Fields Couple
When two minds are strongly connected (through love, attention, or intention), their fields coupleβlike two tuning forks resonating.
2. Information Transfers Through Resonance
Thoughts, emotions, or images in one mind create patterns in the mental field. If another mind is coupled to that field, it can detect those patterns.
3. Reception Depends on Sensitivity
Not everyone is equally sensitive to field information. Factors that increase sensitivity:
- Emotional closeness (love, intimacy)
- Meditative practice (quiets mental noise)
- Relaxed state (alpha/theta brainwaves)
- Intention (deliberate focus on connection)
Types of Telepathic Experience
Spontaneous Telepathy:
- Thinking of someone right before they call
- Knowing a loved one is in distress
- Finishing each other's sentences
- Shared dreams
Intentional Telepathy:
- Sending a mental message to someone
- Remote viewing (perceiving distant locations)
- Psychic readings (accessing another's mental field)
Why Telepathy Seems Rare
Not because it doesn't exist, but because:
- Modern culture emphasizes mental isolation ("my thoughts are private")
- Constant mental noise (busy minds can't detect subtle signals)
- Lack of training (we're not taught to develop telepathic sensitivity)
- Skepticism creates resistance ("it's impossible" becomes self-fulfilling)
In cultures that accept telepathy, it's more commonβbecause belief opens the channel.
Indra's Net: The Holographic Mind
Buddhist philosophy offers a powerful metaphor: Indra's Net.
The Metaphor
Imagine an infinite net where each intersection contains a jewel. Each jewel reflects all other jewelsβso in each jewel, you see the entire net.
Applied to Mind:
Each individual mind is a jewel in Indra's Net. Each mind contains/reflects the whole collective consciousness.
This is why:
- You can access universal knowledge (it's already within you)
- Mystics across cultures have similar insights (they're accessing the same whole)
- The microcosm reflects the macrocosm (each part contains the whole)
The Holographic Principle
In a hologram, each part contains information about the whole.
Similarly: Each individual mind contains the whole collective consciousnessβnot as a copy, but as a perspective on the unified field.
This is why deep meditation can access universal wisdomβyou're not reaching "out" to something external, you're reaching "in" to the whole that's already present.
Collective Intelligence and Group Minds
When individual minds couple strongly, collective intelligence emergesβa group mind that's more than the sum of individual minds.
Examples of Collective Intelligence
1. Swarm Intelligence
Flocks of birds, schools of fish, ant coloniesβthey exhibit coordinated behavior without central control. Each individual follows simple rules, but the collective displays intelligence.
This is emergent collective mind.
2. Group Flow States
Jazz musicians improvising, sports teams in "the zone," collaborative brainstormingβthe group enters a state where individual boundaries dissolve and collective creativity emerges.
3. Cultural Consciousness
Cultures have a "mind"βshared values, beliefs, worldviews that shape individual thinking. You're not just influenced by cultureβyou participate in cultural consciousness.
4. Mass Movements
Revolutions, social movements, paradigm shiftsβthese emerge when collective consciousness reaches a tipping point. Individual minds synchronize into a unified field.
Cultivating Collective Intelligence
Groups can intentionally create collective mind through:
- Shared intention: Aligning on common purpose
- Deep listening: Tuning into each other's fields
- Synchronized practice: Meditation, chanting, ritual together
- Removing ego barriers: Letting go of individual agendas
When this happens, the group becomes smarter than any individualβcollective intelligence emerges.
Mental Entanglement: Quantum Metaphor for Connected Minds
Quantum entanglement: Two particles become correlated such that measuring one instantly affects the other, regardless of distance.
Mental entanglement (metaphorically): Two minds become correlated through deep relationship, shared experience, or intentional connection.
How Minds Become Entangled
- Love and intimacy: Deep emotional bonds create strong field coupling
- Shared trauma: Intense shared experiences create lasting connections
- Spiritual practice together: Meditating or praying together synchronizes fields
- Intentional bonding: Rituals, vows, commitments create energetic links
Once entangled, minds remain non-locally connectedβthey can influence each other across distance.
Examples of Mental Entanglement
- Mothers sensing when their children are in danger
- Twins feeling each other's pain or emotions
- Long-term partners knowing what the other is thinking
- Spiritual teachers and students maintaining connection across distance
Implications: Living in an Interconnected Mind-Field
If mind is non-local and interconnected, several profound implications follow:
1. Mental Privacy Is Relative, Not Absolute
Your thoughts are not as private as you think. Strong emotions, intense focus, or deep connections can "leak" into others' fields.
This is why:
- Sensitive people pick up on others' thoughts/emotions
- Psychics can access information about you
- Your mental state affects those around you
2. You're Responsible for Your Mental Field
Your thoughts and emotions don't just affect youβthey radiate outward, influencing the collective field.
Negative thoughts contribute to collective negativity. Positive thoughts contribute to collective positivity.
This is not "woo"βit's field dynamics.
3. Collective Healing Is Possible
If minds are interconnected, then healing one mind contributes to healing the collective.
This is why:
- Meditation groups can affect crime rates (documented in studies)
- Mass prayers or intentions can have measurable effects
- Individual awakening contributes to collective awakening
4. Isolation Is Illusion
You're never truly alone. You're always embedded in collective fieldsβfamily, culture, species, universal consciousness.
Loneliness is the feeling of disconnection, not the reality. The connection is always thereβyou just need to tune into it.
5. Telepathy and Synchronicity Are Natural
These are not "paranormal"βthey're normal consequences of field-based mind.
The more you accept and work with this reality, the more you'll experience it.
Conclusion: The Non-Local Mind
Mystical mind philosophy reveals:
- Mind is a field, not localized in the brain
- Mental fields extend beyond the body and overlap with others
- Boundaries are permeableβinformation flows between minds
- Collective unconscious is real (shared archetypal field)
- Morphic fields store species memory and patterns
- Telepathy is natural (field coupling)
- Indra's Net: each mind contains/reflects the whole
- Collective intelligence emerges from coupled minds
- Mental entanglement creates non-local connections
This framework is:
- Philosophically coherent: Resolves problems in isolated-mind models
- Empirically supported: Aligns with telepathy research, collective phenomena, and field theories
- Practically useful: Explains how to work with collective consciousness and mental fields
In the next article, we'll explore Mystical Self Philosophyβthe multi-layered nature of identity, the distinction between ego and true self, and the process of individuation.
This is Part VI of the "Philosophy of Mysticism" series. Part I: The Ontology of Mysticism | Part II: The Epistemology of Mysticism | Part III: The Causality of Mysticism | Part IV: The Time Philosophy of Mysticism | Part V: The Consciousness Philosophy of Mysticism
Related Articles
The Self Philosophy of Mysticism: True Self and Individuation
Mystical self philosophy: self is multi-layeredβPersona (social mask), Ego (personal identity), Shadow (repressed asp...
Read More β
The Consciousness Philosophy of Mysticism: Awareness as Ground
Mystical consciousness philosophy: consciousness is fundamental, not derivative (solves Hard Problem). Three position...
Read More β
The Time Philosophy of Mysticism: Beyond Linear Chronology
Mystical time philosophy: three modelsβ(1) Linear/Chronos (quantitative clock time), (2) Cyclical (recurring patterns...
Read More β
The Causality of Mysticism: Beyond Linear Cause and Effect
Mystical causality: four types operate simultaneouslyβ(1) Linear (traditional cause-effect), (2) Circular/Feedback (e...
Read More β
The Epistemology of Mysticism: Multi-Modal Knowledge Acquisition
Mystical epistemology: three modes of cognition (Rational/Intellectual, Experiential/Empirical, Intuitive/Direct) mus...
Read More β
The Ontology of Mysticism: Reality's Multi-Layered Structure
Mystical ontology: reality consists of four interpenetrating layersβMaterial (physical matter), Energy (vibrational f...
Read More β