Difference between revisions of "1979-0403-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Synod-Hall"

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[[Category:1970s]]
[[Category:1970s]]
[[Category:Pittsburgh]]
[[Category:Pittsburgh]]
[[Category:Oakland PA]]
[[Category:Psychology of the Observer]]
[[Category:Psychology of the Observer]]
[[Category:2nd Pass]]
[[Category:Fragments]]
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== Data Template ==
== Data Template ==
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{{Recording Data
{{Recording Data
|record-date          = April 3, 1979
|record-date          = April 3, 1979
|location            = University of Pittsburgh
|location            = Synod Hall in Oakland, PA near the Pitt campus
|number-tapes        = DM = 4 @ 60 out of order (see notes) ; MJ == 10 files
|number-tapes        = DM = 4 @ 60 out of order (see notes) ; MJ == 10 files
|source              = DM, MJ (mj was "undated")
|source              = DM, MJ (mj was "undated")
Line 16: Line 20:
|other-versions      =  
|other-versions      =  
|dvd-number          =  
|dvd-number          =  
|number-mp3s          =  
|number-mp3s          = Tapes are two lectures combined. See reconciliation in notes.
|total-time          =  
|total-time          =  
|transcription-status = Pramod 2nd pass Jan 2016
|transcription-status = Pramod 121 pages sent Jan 20, 2016. SH working on draft Aug 2016.
|distribution-link    =   
|distribution-link    =   
|distribution-pdf    =  
|distribution-pdf    =  
|published-book      = Psychology of the Observer. See note.
|published-book      = Psychology of the Observer. See note.
|published-website    =  
|published-website    =  
|remarks              = See extensive notes for reconciliation of versions here: [[1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU]]
|remarks              = See extensive notes for reconciliation of lecture and book versions here: [[1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU]]
|audio-quality        =  
|audio-quality        =  
|who-is-present      =  
|who-is-present      =  
|url-direct-mind      =  
|url-direct-mind      =  
|}}
|}}
== Mapping of DM and MJ files ==
DM and MJ versions are numbered the same.
dm0 = mj0 = introduction Pittsburgh
dm1 = File 1 Pittsburgh
dm2 = File 1 KSU
dm3 = File 2 KSU
dm4 = File 2 Pittsburgh
dm5 = File 3 Pittsburgh
dm6 = File 3 KSU
dm7 = File 4 Pittsburgh
dm8 = File 5 Pittsburgh
Note: The commercial recording is the talk at KSU :
[[1977-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording ]]  is now renamed [[1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording]] which is also [[1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State]]


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
Dave Mettle and Mark Jaqua have versions
Dave Mettle and Mark Jaqua have versions  


DM version Undated-Psychology-of-the-Observer
DM version: Undated-Psychology-of-the-Observer


In DM there are 9 files – 7 are approx 30 min and one (#8) is 7 minutes (intro excluded).
In DM there are 9 files – 7 are approx 30 min and one (#8) is 7 minutes (intro excluded).


File numbering-Jake’s files: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
File numbering-Jake’s files: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 << See Pramod’s chart for renumbering
 
This is in Pittsburgh but not at U. Pitt. (file mj1 at 03:22)


At start Rose says the book is typeset and coming out soon.
At start Rose says the book is typeset and coming out soon.


Tape 1 = sides 1 & 6
Physical order on (DM) tapes
Tape 1 = sides 1 & 6 ; Tape 2 = sides 2, 3 ; Tape 3 = sides 4, 5 ; Tape 4 = sides 7, 8


Tape 2 = sides 2, 3
For all versions see: Category: Psychology_of_the_Observer


Tape 3 = sides 4, 5
See extensive notes at these next links for reconciliation of different versions of Psychology of the Observer:


Tape 4 = sides 7, 8
[[1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU]]


Check other versions: Category:Psychology_of_the_Observer
[[1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State]] << Same as commercial CD


[[1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU]]
[[1977-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording]] << same as KSU


[[1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State]]
[[Psychology-of-the-Observer-book-text]]


[[1977-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording]]
Need to check all tracks at CD baby to see if they are included:
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/richardrose4
There is no mention of the location on CD Baby page.


[[Psychology-of-the-Observer-book-text]]
=== venue KSU portion (or possibly Cleveland) ===
Tim Calhoun, Tim Franta, Harnish speak. Rose speaks to Andy.
=== venue Pittsburgh portion ===
Venue is Synod Hall, Oakland, PA, see Whitely email below


This is in Pittsburgh but not at the University (Pitt). (file mj1 at 03:22)


== File 0 - intro ==
At dm5-18:36 – Rose gives location as Pittsburgh
Total time: 1 min 32 secs.


This is a separate file
At dm4-21:52 Rose says, “But what time is it ? Oh it’s 6 o’clock.” April 3, 1979 was a Tuesday – odd that it’s so early.]


Intro by Mike Whitely:


00:00
Email from Mike Whitely, Feb 3, 2016: “We could not get a room on the Pitt campus, so that year we had Rose speak at the Synod Hall, a community room next to Saint Patrick's Cathedral. It's on Craig Street in Oakland very close to the Pitt campus. So you could say Synod Hall in Oakland near the Pitt campus.


Many of you, I’m sure are familiar with Richard Rose already but some of you may not so I’ll try to fill in a little bit.
dm7-07:11
[Grating noise (some kind of machine?) here same as the noise in the unknown “ashram” tape, but happens only once. But it may help establish that the ashram meeting was in Pittsburgh]


He’s kind of a hard man to define in a little of ways.


I could say maybe that he’s a writer, or maybe a researcher, or maybe a philosopher and those things would be true.
== File 0 Pittsburgh, Intro (mj0, dm0) ==
Total time: 1 min 32 secs.


And I could say he’s a father, he raised a family and he was a contractor – he did that for years or that he was a teacher – that’s what he’s interested in now.
Introduction by Mike Whitely:


And those things would be true but I think they all would be pretty much off the mark a little bit.
dm0-00:00


I could say he spent a lot of time seeking himself and studying eastern philosophy, western philosophy, joining a lot of movements and evaluating them because he was curious and he had answers and he wanted questions that he would really like answers to.  
Many of you, I’m sure are familiar with Richard Rose already; but some of you may not be, so I’ll try to fill in a little bit. He’s kind of a hard man to define in a lot of ways. I could say that he’s a writer, or maybe a researcher, or maybe a philosopher, and those things would be true. And I could say he’s a father and he raised a family. Or he was a contractor, because he did that for years. Or that he was a teacher. That’s what he’s interested in now. And those things would be true, but I think they all would be pretty much off the mark a little bit.


And that would be true too but I think all of those things even though they are true, all of them miss the mark a little bit. So that kind of leaves me in a quandary and the only thing I have left to do now is to ….
I could say that he spent a lot of time seeking himself and studying different systems, eastern philosophy, western philosophy, joining a lot of movements and evaluating them; because he was curious and he had questions that he would really like answers to. And that would be true too. But I think all of those things, even though they are true, all of them miss the mark. So that kind of leaves me in a quandary and the only thing I have left to do now is to ….


R. Don’t tell them about the time I spent in jail.  
R. Don’t tell them about the time I spent in jail.  


(Laughter)
[laughter]


M. I was just getting to that. But now that he’s filled you in on that little tidbit, the only thing I can do now is to present Richard Rose, who’s coming to share his insights on psychology and whatever.
M. I was just getting to that. But now that he’s filled you in on that tidbit, the only thing I can do now is to present Richard Rose, who’s coming to share his insights on psychology and whatever.


R. Thank you Mike.
R. Thank you Mike.  


File 0 intro ends at 01:32
dm0 ends at 01:32 – mj0 ends at 01:34
== File DM 1 ==
== File 1 Pittsburgh (mj1, dm1) ==
Total time: 29:32  
Total time: 29:32  


00:00
dm1-00:00


(RoseWe’re going to talk tonight about the psychology of the observer. That might sound, well, it doesn’t sound too complicated, but I think it is a new direction, a new psychological direction. Possibly a new way of working wording an old direction. I have a, I’ve still got the, the book on this is coming out (Wikipedia says published 1979 – check Al’s book) and I have the typeset duplicate here and I just want to read to you the thing that will go on the front page. I consider everyone to be robots, incidentally. (Don’t know what happened to my voice)
[Note for Transcript.]
Transcript by Pramod Babu.
 
In this lecture Mr Rose reads and comments on selections from Psychology of the Observer, available in paperback from Rose Publications. richardroseteachings.com/PsychObsBook.html
 
 
We’re going to talk tonight about the Psychology of the Observer. That might not sound too complicated, but I think it is a new psychological direction, possibly a new way of wording an old direction. The book is coming out soon and I have the typeset duplicate here. I want to read something to you from the front page.  
 
I consider everyone to be robots, incidentally.
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
In the robot, the Designer placed a little curiosity, to keep the robot moving once it was assembled and born, so that the Designer would not have to perform every motion for every robot.  
In the robot, the Designer placed a little curiosity, to keep the robot moving once it was assembled and born, so that the Designer would not have to perform every motion for every robot. But the robot became curious about his origin, and immediately the Designer became a direction of this curiosity. In the robot the Designer placed an ability to recreate, so that that which was created creates, not only by reproducing but also by projecting mental creations. All of this was designed to transform the robot into a self-sustaining unit.
But the robot became curious about his origin, and immediately the Designer became a direction of the curiosity.  
In the robot the Designer placed an ability to recreate, so that, that which was created creates, not only by reproducing but also by projecting mental creations.
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
In other words, we create with our head as well as our body.
 
So we create with our head as well as our body.
 
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
And all of this was designed to transform the robot into a self-sustaining unit.
And thereupon the original creation with its orderly intentions was placed in jeopardy. And the robot forgot his curiosity about his Designer, and projected phantoms of false hope and monsters of desire. And darkness was projected as light.  
And thereupon the original creation with its orderly intentions was placed in jeopardy. And the robot forgot his curiosity about his Designer, and projected phantoms of false hope and monsters of desire. And darkness was projected as light.  
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
dm1-01:53
(Silence)
dm1-01:59
I maintain that man does not observe; he thinks he observes. So consequently, this little treatise was written on the basis of the erratic observation. And out of this erratic observation comes, let’s say, a tremendous lot of man’s difficulties, including his misconceptions on philosophy and religion.


Man in his present mind is expressed by his personality and beliefs. That is, the man that we see on the street does not observe. He is part of an observation process. Man, as we know ourselves, does not experience – he is experienced. In other words, we get the idea that we’re doing things. In other words, we do not always catch the fish. Sometimes the fish catches us. The thing that we go out and seize for our, seemingly we’re doing something, is actually – we become the victim of the doing, in other words.
mj1-01:59 --- dm1-01:59


dm1-03:07
I maintain that man does not observe: he thinks he observes. Consequently, this little treatise was written on the basis of the erratic observation. And out of this erratic observation comes a tremendous lot of man’s difficulties, including his misconceptions on philosophy and religion.


Now the basis of a lot of this self-study is the understanding of the self. And I remember a couple years ago I gave a talk over at the University of Pittsburgh [so this is where? Duquesne?] and we were talking about the definition of self. And a man put up his hand and he said, “I know who I am.” And I said, “Who are you?” And he says, “I’m the fellow who’s sitting in front of you.” But he was identifying a voice, and a body which wasn’t his Self. And this is what I’m going to try to demonstrate.
Man in his present mind is expressed by his personality and beliefs. That is, the man who we see on the street does not observe; he is part of an observation process. Man, as we know ourselves, does not experience; he is experienced. We get the idea that we’re doing things, but we do not always catch the fish; sometimes the fish catches us. The thing that we go out and seize seemingly we’re doing something, but actually we become the victim of the doing.


dm1-03:46
dm1-03:07 – mj1-03:10


When you ask yourself, “Who are you?” – and this is the old question that was asked by sages , they say, “First know thyself” and then when you know yourself, everything else will be answered. But it’s said glibly and it’s taken easily, and nobody gives it any serious thought, this thing of questioning who you are. And of course the first impression, for the materialist, is to say, “You’re looking at it.” Well, maybe that’s all there is. But again, I’m saying behind that, there’s something looking.  
The basis of this self-study is the understanding of the real self. I remember a couple years ago I gave a talk over at the University of Pittsburgh and we were talking about the definition of the self. A man put up his hand and said, “I know who I am.” And I said, “Who are you?” And he says, “I’m the fellow who’s sitting in front of you.” But he was identifying himself as a voice and a body – which wasn’t his self. And this is what I’m going to try to demonstrate.


There’s something looking which we fail to take into account. Even the fellow who says, “I’m the fellow sitting in front of you,” sees himself sitting in front of you. He hears himself talking to you and telling you that he’s in front of you. So he observes this process. And my point is, that if we are going to define ourselves, that which is us, from the very beginning, it’s going to be that which observes, not that which is seen.
You ask yourself, “Who am I?” This is the old question that was asked by sages. They say, “First know thyself,” and then if you know yourself, everything else will be answered. But it’s said glibly and it’s taken easily, and nobody gives it any serious thought, this thing of questioning who you are. Of course the first impression for the materialist is to say, “You’re looking at it.” Well, maybe that’s all there is. But I’m saying that behind that, there’s something looking.  


dm1-04:46
There is something looking which we fail to take into account. Even the fellow who says, “I’m the fellow sitting in front of you,” sees himself sitting in front of you. He hears himself talking to you and telling you that he’s in front of you. So he observes this process. And my point is, that if we’re going to define ourselves, that which is us, from the very beginning, it’s going to be that which observes, not that which is seen.


Now, I distinctly separate the view from the viewer. This is the analogy. In other words, the view is never the viewer. The man who looks out on the landscape is the observer. The landscape is external. The man who looks at his own body – that which observes the body is the true self; the body is not the true self.
mj1-04:50 --- dm1-04:46


Now, I know we’ve got a lot of people who think the body’s all we’ve got. We’ve got a whole system of psychology that would like to say that all you’ve got is a body with a bunch of conditioned reflexes and all sorts of little wires and genes and DNA molecules running around to compose and to stimulate thought and that sort of thing. But this body – we can cut the biggest part of it away and we can still think, and we can still observe. We can even cut parts of the brain out. We can have people pronounced dead, that the body’s totally gone, and when the person revives, his senses should have been extinct, and he remembers things distinctly. He comes back and he lives again. This seems to imply that the body isn’t – the eyeballs to this person who was seemingly dead were closed, yet he saw things in the room. I’m going to refer you now to works like Kübler-Ross  and Raymond Moody.
I distinctly separate the view from the viewer. This is the analogy: the view is never the viewer. The man who looks out on the landscape is the observer. The landscape is external. For the man who looks at his own body, that which observes the body is the true self. The body is not the true self.


dm1-06:15
Now a lot of people think that the body is all we’ve got. We have a whole system of psychology that says that all you’ve got is a body with a bunch of conditioned reflexes, and all sorts of little wires and genes and DNA molecules running around to compose and to stimulate thoughts. But we can cut the biggest part of this body away and we can still think, and we can still observe. We can even cut parts of the brain out. We can have people pronounced dead, that the body’s totally gone; but when the person revives, his senses should have been extinct but he remembers things distinctly. He comes back and he lives again. The eyeballs of this person who was seemingly dead were closed, yet he saw things in the room. I’m going to refer you now to works like Kübler-Ross  and Raymond Moody.  
But the body necessarily is not us. So again we way, “What is ‘us’?” Well, we don’t know. If we knew, we’d have the answer immediately. But it’s evident that the most substantial part of us is not that which seems material and substantial, but that which observes, that which witnesses.


dm1-06:35
But the body necessarily is not us. So again we say, “What is ‘us’?” Well, we don’t know. If we knew, we’d have the answer immediately. But it’s evident that the most substantial part of us is not that which seems material and substantial, but that which observes, that which witnesses.


Okay. So – I don’t doubt that there are other attitudes that can be taken on that. But I carry this through for a specific reason – because this is the way I did. To me, the whole process of meditation, the most, I consider the most sensible and fruitful form of meditation, is not on accepting what I consider, and what Chilton Pearce  might have considered the projected plan, that humanity projects in front of it and says, “This is the world and this is life.”
dm1-06:35 --- mj1-06:45


I think the most important thing is to find out more about the looker; find out that which is conscious, that which is aware. And as you start to get into this thing, there’s a very simple psychological system of self-observation that we get into which points the way. And I think it does it rather quickly. And I of course, if we do it quickly here, but if you try it yourself it may take years. The system may take years.
Now there are other attitudes that can be taken on that. But I carry this through for a specific reason – because this is the way I did it. To me, the whole process of meditation, that which I consider the most sensible and fruitful form of meditation, is not on accepting what I consider, and what Joseph Chilton-Pearce  might have considered the projected plan, that humanity projects in front and says, “This is the world and this is life.


dm1-07:39
I think the most important thing is to find out more about the looker; find out that which is conscious, that which is aware. And as you start to get into this, there’s a very simple psychological system of self-observation we get into that points the way. And it does it rather quickly. Of course we go through the system quickly here; but if you try it yourself it may take years.
=== Body and Mind ===
mj1-07:46 --- dm1-07:39


And I start with a very simple thing. I say you look at your toes, and that’s not you, basically. If you get diabetes you’ll lose them and you’ll go on living, clear up beyond your knees you’ll lose them. Your arms likewise, and a lot of your..a lot of the thing can go.
I start with a very simple thing: you look at your toes, and that’s not you, basically. If you get diabetes you’ll lose them and you’ll go on living, clear up above your knees you’ll lose them. Likewise your can lose your arms; a lot of the thing can go.


Okay, then we go back and a person says, “I am my thoughts.” And of course this is a, seemingly at the time a revelation to the person. They think, “Well, if there’s any part of me that is constant or able to escape from the corruption of death, it must be the mental part. But after a while you realize that you’ve had a wrong idea about your own thinking. That your thoughts were not necessarily ‘you’ as much as they were imposed upon you. That’s what I meant when I said that man does not experience, he is an experience.
Okay, so then a person says, “I am my thoughts.” This is seemingly at the time a revelation. They think, “Well, if there’s any part of me that is constant or able to escape from the corruption of death, it must be the mental part.But after a while you realize that you’ve had a wrong idea about your own thinking. That your thoughts were not necessarily “you” as much as they were imposed upon you. That’s what I meant when I said that man does not experience, he is an experience.


dm1-08:36
mj1-08:44 --- dm1-08:36


Our whole thinking processes are programmed upon us. So that we’re, if we’re looking at the DNA molecules or genes or that sort of thing, we’re merely the continuation of some life strand that goes back to our ancestors who thought similarly to us, had the same drives and that sort of thing. So that the individual – we’re looking for an individual identification, an identification of some part of us that has, is an individual essence.
Our whole thinking processes are programmed upon us. If we’re looking at the DNA molecules or the genes or that sort of thing, we’re merely the continuation of some life strand that goes back to our ancestors who thought similarly to us, had the same drives and so on. But we’re looking for an individual identification, an identification of some part of us that is an individual essence.


I’ve got a little drawing here, and this flat line at the bottom where it says Negative and Positive represents the realm of [mundane] human experience.
Jacob’s Ladder diagram


Now I’ve got a little drawing here, and this flat line at the bottom where it says Negative and Positive represents the realm of human experience.
   
   
 
We are relative creatures, and everything is defined in terms of something at the other end of the spectrum. So there’s no such thing in the relative world as a cold, clear definition. It’s only defined in terms of the opposite. If you pick up a dictionary and look up the word “good,you’ll find that the definition rests upon the definition of “bad,and “bad” rests upon the definition of “good.” You never really have anything except the opposite of something else. When you look up the definition of a cat, the cat is defined as a certain type of animal, it goes down through the genus and species; but you find out that you’re defining everything else in the dictionary but the cat, and the cat is that which is not in the rest of the dictionary.
We are relative creatures, and everything is defined in terms of something at the other end of the spectrum. So that there’s no such thing in the relative world as a cold, clear definition. It’s only defined in terms of the opposite. So that if you pick up a dictionary and you define “good”, you’ll find that the definition rests upon the definition of “bad”, and the definition of “bad” rests upon the definition of “good”. And you never really have anything except the opposite of something else. When you look up the definition of a cat or a dog, the cat is defined as a certain type of animal, it goes down through the genus and species, but you find out that you’re defining everything else in the dictionary but the cat, and the cat is that which is not what’s in the rest of the dictionary, see.
   
   
dm1-10:06
dm1-10:06 --- mj1-10:15


So consequently, we’re, in our whole thinking mechanism, we’re tied up in this wobble, or this thrashing about between the positive and negative, between existence, the concept of existence and nonexistence, of thought and thoughtlessness, of up and down, or well, good and bad – anything that you think of. So we’re trying to define ourselves with this type of mind. We’re trying to look for a spark of particularized essence or whatever, that we will say is us. And we’re trying to do it with a mind that is continually – well, in other words, at each end of that little line could be a philosophy. You could have a philosophy for libertarianism and one for determinism, at two ends of the line and they argue for eternity. And this is what goes on through religions and everything else is that you’ve got opposite concepts which seem to be just as sound as anything else, because they’re defined with the same dictionary.  
So in all our thinking mechanisms we’re tied up in this wobble, or this thrashing about between the positive and negative, between the concept of existence and nonexistence, of thought and thoughtlessness, of up and down, good and bad – anything you think of. And we’re trying to define ourselves with this type of mind. We’re trying to look for a spark of particularized essence or whatever, that we will say is us. We’re trying to do it with a mind that is continually struggling. At each end of that little line could be a philosophy: You can have a philosophy for libertarianism and one for determinism, at two ends of the line, and they argue for eternity. This is what goes on through religions and everything else; you’ve got opposite concepts which seem to be just as sound as anything else, because they’re defined with the same dictionary.  


dm1-11:08
mj1-11:19 --- dm1-11:08


Okay. So there was a writer called Benoit, Hubert Benoit who wrote on Zen. And he was the first fellow to come up, as I ever read (I don’t have, I haven’t read them all, there might have been somebody before him) with what he calls the conciliatory principle. And I remember when I first came to Pittsburgh [first lecture, Theosophical Society. This would be George Blazer] there was a man who was in the audience, and we were talking about Zen and a few other subjects, and [afterwards] we went down to a little restaurant. And he put his finger on the table and he says, “There’s this,” [to the left] “and there’s this,” [to the right] – he put his finger over here, but he said, he hesitated, he said [whispering] “but there’s this also.” [in the middle] And we all thought, “Boy, what a joke is that?” Everybody laughed at him and thought he was an idiot.  
There’s a writer Hubert Benoit who wrote on Zen. ,  He was the first fellow I ever read to come up with what he calls a conciliatory principle. (I haven’t read them all; there might have been somebody before him.) When I first came to Pittsburgh we were talking about Zen and a few other subjects.  There was a man  in the audience who went down with us to a little restaurant afterwards. He put his finger on the table and he says, “There’s this,” [to the left] “and there’s this,” [to the right] – then he hesitated and he whispers, “but there’s this also.” [in the middle] And we all thought, “Boy, what a joke is that?” Everybody laughed at him and thought he was an idiot. But this was the thing. It isn’t the extremities, it isn’t the polarity. It’s this conciliatory principle that gives us our definition.  


But this was the thing: it isn’t the extremities, it isn’t the polarity. It’s this conciliatory principle that gives us our definition.  
So go back to human action now, the individual things that happen to you in your life. For example, we want to strike a moral code. We don’t know what a soul is, we don’t know what the mind is, but somehow we want to strike a moral code, hoping that this will take us by some religious or some scientific means into a better state of mind. And immediately, because we haven’t defined ourselves, we get into trouble trying to define the moral code. But we think the moral code will take us to our self-definition. This is the supreme paradox we’re always wallowing with.  


In other words, to go back to human action now, to go back to the individual things that happen to you in your life - we say, we want to strike a moral code; we don’t know what a soul is, we don’t know what the mind is, but somehow we want to strike a moral code, hoping that that moral code will take us by some religious means or some scientific means into a better state of mind.
mj1-12:56 -- dm1-12:42


dm1-12:29
We take a certain act; we say, “I want to follow a certain path.” Let’s say it’s a macrobiotic path. We’re going to purify ourselves and eat nothing but macrobiotics, and we form a philosophy that eating the poor little animals is wrong, that killing anything is wrong. But then we encounter somewhere along the line the need to kill, maybe to survive. We have to inject some serum into the children’s bloodstream to keep them from getting a disease, or we have to kill the rats that are trying to get into the house, if you have babies around.
 
And immediately we get – because we haven’t defined ourselves we get into trouble trying to define the moral code. But we think the moral code will take us to our self-definition. Now this is the supreme paradox that we’re always wallowing with. So what happens is, we take a certain act. And we say, “Well, I want to follow a certain path.” Let’s say it’s a macrobiotic path;  we want to purify ourselves and take nothing but macrobiotics. And we form a whole philosophy that eating the poor little animals is wrong. And so we tune to that, build a philosophy around it, and we decide that killing is wrong. And then we encounter somewhere along the line the need to kill - maybe to survive. We have to inject some serum into the children’s bloodstream to keep them from getting a disease, or we have to kill the rats that are trying to get into the house, if you have babies around, or something of that sort.


dm1-13:35
dm1-13:35


So we start to come up with thing of the ridiculousness. All of a sudden we see in some instances, this concept that we’re clinging so tightly to seems to be ridiculous. It’s like the – I often think of the Christian Scientist,  for instance, who believes that he doesn’t need medicine, or some religious person who believes he doesn’t need medicine. And then you find them going through agony they can face it themself, but when their children get sick the crisis comes about: have they been kidding themselves? This is what goes through their head. Have they been kidding themselves? Okay.
So in applying this, all of a sudden we see in some instances, this concept that we’re clinging so tightly to seems to be ridiculous. I often think of the Christian Scientist   or some religious person who believes that he doesn’t need medicine. And then you find them going through agony: they can face it themself, but when their children get sick the crisis comes about. Have they been kidding themselves? This is what goes through their head.


dm1-14:08
dm1-14:08


So the point is, what I’m getting at is, everybody has gone through this to some degree or another. And we – by self-observing these patterns, this wrestling with the two extremes of our thinking in the relative dimension we come to the conclusion that something is guiding it. We have a judge inside of us. And some of the old religious writers called it the conscience. I call it the umpire.  
Everybody has gone through this to some degree or another. And by observing these patterns, this wrestling with the two extremes in our thinking in our relative dimension, we come to the conclusion that something is guiding it. We have a judge inside of us. Some of the old religious writers called it the conscience. I call it the umpire.  


Now the umpire, I maintain, makes decisions for every act that we do. In other words, if you have two things to do tonight – one of them might have been to go out and get drunk, the other was to come here. And one of them was cheaper than the other one. [laughter] So you came here. But regardless, there was a decision made. Everything that you do has an alternative. There’s an alternative thing you can do. And so constantly, thousands of decisions are made a day: to step here or to step over there. Everything. This is the umpire.
The umpire, I maintain, makes decisions for every act that we do. For instance, if you had two things to do tonight – one of them might have been to go out and get drunk, the other was to come here. One was cheaper than the other, so you came here. [laughter] But regardless, there was a decision made. Everything that you do has an alternative. Constantly, thousands of decisions are made per day. To step here or to step over there. Everything. This is the umpire.


dm1-15:14
mj1-15:32 --- dm1-15:14


When we notice that this thing going on inside of us, we decide that we’ve, well, we discovered the real self now; we’ve discovered the fellow that’s running the body. We’ve discovered the observer, so to speak, the observer of the actions, the thing that weighs them.
When we notice that this is going on inside of us, we decide that we’ve discovered the real self. We’ve discovered the fellow that’s running the body. We’ve discovered the observer, so to speak, the observer of the actions, the thing that weighs them. I contend that this is the somatic mind [point C on the chart]. When you start observing the umpire, you see that this is something that works almost automatically, from the time a person is a baby. There are decisions made because of resistance, pain, pleasure, whatever. So it starts to gauge itself, and it expresses itself through the umpire, or through the decision maker, or the conscience. And when we see this, we think we’ve got a complete picture.  


Now I contend that this is the somatic mind. [points to chart, point C] When you start observing the umpire, this is something that works almost automatically from the time a person is a baby. There are decisions made because of resistance, pain, pleasure, whatever. And so that it starts to gauge itself, and it expresses itself through the umpire, or through the decision maker, or through the conscience. And we think we’ve got a complete picture.
dm1-15:58


dm1-15:58
But after you watch the umpire, you start to see that some of these decisions, say that were made last year – this year you don’t approve of them. Supposing you were a devout Quaker or something of that sort, but you got drafted into the Army and you fall into that state of mind, and you go out and see the need for maybe killing people, doing the opposite of your prior convictions. And there are times that we see that these umpire decisions are not always the best for us. They’re good for a certain period of time, and then maybe a new rationale comes up and we find out that this wasn’t us either; it was imposed upon us.
 
I’ll give you an example; it’s more blatant or commonly understood than the average set of things that go on. We have appetites that we respond to, like eating. You get hungry and the impulse is to eat, but also perhaps to eat too much; and the umpire may say, “Don’t eat too much.” So if you get sick the next day, then your umpire failed you the day before. That’s what I’m trying to get at. Then there’s a new decision made by the umpire to correct this, and you start to inhibit yourself. 
 
mj1-17:44 --- dm1-17:24
 
Another thing that happens is sex. A person gets a few years on them and they decide they’re capable of sex. So they go out the same as with the food – they may fall in love or fall into a situation where sex seems to be the only important thing to them in their life. They lose their job over the love affair and they stay in the motel for two or three weeks and get hungry because they lost their job. And another set of dissatisfaction sets in for the individual. The umpire has to balance things now and says, “Hey, you got to stop this and go out and get a job so you can continue to support the person you love, etc.”
 
All the time this is going on, we see that this is nothing more than an umpire between appetites, between different directions. But it doesn’t always follow through for the best of the individual. We set up things according to the social patterns that exist in your particular country, for instance, and the sexual decision made by our umpire would not be the same decision that would be made in Iran, from what I hear. There would be a lot of dead people around. Consequently, their umpire is going to have a different decision.
 
Now why isn’t this universal? The reason it’s not universal is that it’s a somatic mind. It’s only interested in the survival of this individual, this body. When we study that, though, we discover that something else says to us occasionally, “Sex is bad, period, boom, slavery. It doesn’t do any good for you. Sure it’s necessary but it’s a trap.” You can get your head cut off in certain places, or something of that sort. Regardless, even if you’re not in Iran, certain decisions are going to come through your mind sooner or later. I generally hear the very old men making jokes about how stupid the young people are, while the young people are looking at the old man and saying how stupid he is, because he hasn’t come up to the modern forms of degeneracy.


But after you watch the umpire and you start to see some of these decisions, say that were made last year – and this year you don’t approve of them. In other words, supposing you were a devout Quaker or something of that sort, but you got drafted into the Army and you fall into the state of mind, and you go out and see the need for maybe, killing people, or doing the opposite.
mj1-20:12 --- dm1-19:47


Anyhow, there are times that we see that these umpire decisions are not always the best for us. They’re good for a certain period of time, and maybe a new rationale comes up and we find out that out that wasn’t us either; that was imposed upon us.
Regardless, what I’m talking about now is another plane of thinking that develops, and the man becomes aware that he has an intuition, and the human mind doesn’t work by logic alone. Unless the human mind, the logical somatic mind, which seems to be very reasonable, is not balanced and supported by an intuition, it isn’t complete. Much of our lives are guided by intuition – down to the point where if you’re a salesman and you meet somebody on the street, in five minute or five seconds time you know who you’re talking to, because you’ve developed this faculty that’s not logical. It may be direct-mind experience and it will lead to that. The development of an intuition will lead to direct mind experience.  


Now I’m going to give you an example of – it’s more blatant or commonly understood than the average set of things that go on. For instance, we have appetites that we respond to – like of eating – and the umpire may say, “Don’t eat too much.” You know, in other words, you get hungry, so the impulse is to eat. But – the impulse to eat too much too, perhaps. But if you get sick the next day, then your umpire failed you the day before. That’s what I’m trying to get at.
What happens then is you begin to apply this, almost consciously. If you pick up a book of philosophy you may start to apply the logical or somatic mind to it, but your intuition might tell you that this is what you want to believe. What really is the truth? Are you picking something that you’d like to believe? Or are you picking something that isn’t related to body talk?


dm1-17:18
But all the time, what we’re talking about here is somebody observing processes. That’s what we’ve been doing: we’ve been observing mental processes. I maintain that the observer is the person. So that we are not the somatic mind, we are not the umpire, because that’s in the scenery, that’s part of the view. We are not the body, we are not the body-mind, we are not the intuition because we can observe it, analyse it, talk about it, watch its manipulations.


So there’s a new decision made by the umpire. You start to inhibit yourself. Then another thing that happens is sex. A person gets a few years on them and they decide they’re capable of sex. So they go out the same as the food – they may fall in love or fall into a situation where sex seems to be the only important thing to them in their life and they go for ... they lose their job over the love affair and they stay in the motel for two or three weeks and get hungry because they lost their job.
mj1-22:04 --- dm1-21:38
dm1-17:49
So another set of dissatisfactions that are in the individual.  The umpire has to balance things now and says,”hey you got to stop this and go out and get a job so that you can continue to support the person you love etc”. So that all the time this is going on, this we see, this umpire is nothing more than an umpire between appetites and an umpire between different directions. But it doesn’t always follow through for the best of the individual because we set up things according to the social patterns that exist in your particular country. So that the, for instance, the sexual decision to be made by our umpire would not be the same decision that would be made in Iran from what I hear (Laughter) – they got dead people around. Consequently their umpire is going to be of different decision making.


Now why isn’t this universal? The reason it’s not universal is because it’s a somatic mind. It’s only interested in the survival of this individual, this body. When we get into that we discover that something else says to us occasionally, “Sex is bad. Period. Boom.Slavery. It doesn’t do any good for it. Sure it’s necessary but it’s a trap. It can get your head cut off in certain places” or something of that sort. Regardless, even if you’re not in Iran, certain decisions are going to come through your mind sooner or later. And I generally hear the very old men making jokes about how stupid the young people are while the young people are looking at the old man and saying how stupid he is because he hasn’t come up to the modern forms of degeneracy. (Laughter)
What is this that’s going on then? We’ve got a process observer, a person observing processes. You go into meditation and you think about thinking, and you’re thinking about ten thousand different ways of thinking – hundreds of tracks you’re thinking gets into, directions it takes, attempts to control thinking. And this becomes very intricate. Incidentally, when you get as far as the process observer in this sort of contemplation, you have progressed more than the average person. The average person does not bother to think about processes of thinking. He may sense that he’s got an intuition and he’ll give it a little word like an instinct or he may even claim to be intuitive.  
dm1-19:47


Regardless what I’m talking about now is another plane of thinking develops and the man become aware that he has an intuition and the human mind doesn’t work by logic alone unless the human mind, the logical somatic mind, which is very reasonable - seems to be at least - is not balanced and supported by an intuition, it isn’t complete. Much of our lives are guided by intuition down to the point if you’re a salesman and you meet someone down the street , in five minutes time or five seconds time you know who you’re talking to because you’ve developed this faculty that’s not logical. It may be direct mind experience and it will lead – the development of an intuition will lead to direct mind experience. So what happens then is you begin to apply, almost consciously, both a logical thing – if you pick up a book of philosophy you start to apply the logical or somatic mind to it, of what you’d like to believe but your intuition may tell you that’s what you like to believe.
But you sit back and watch this thing going on. And when you watch your intuition and your somatic mind, you start to get a very perfect picture of all the traps that you’re falling into. You see the traps as you go along. And you think this is the end of the line. Ordinarily you’d say, “I am that which watches.” But this isn’t true either. There is another. Again, we’re still a relative creature and we’ve only hit one corner of the line [point E on the chart]. Now if you notice, these triangles interlock, because the conciliatory principle of one becomes only the corner of another triangle.  
dm1-20:53
What really is – what really is the truth? Are you picking something that you like to believe? Are you picking something that doesn’t have any relationship to blah-di talk. [??]


Okay now, what I’m saying is that what we have all the time all time we’re talking here is somebody observing processes. That’s what we’ve been doing - we’ve been observing mental processes. I maintain that the observer is the person. So that we are not the somatic mind, we are not the umpire because that’s in the scenery, that’s the view. We are not the body, we are not the body-mind, we are not the intuition because we can observe it, analyse it, talk about it, watch its manipulations.
mj1-23:33 --- dm1-23:04
dm1-21:38


What is this that’s going on then? We’ve got a process observer, we’ve got a person observing processes. You go into meditation and you think about thinking and you’re thinking about ten thousand different ways of thinking, hundreds of tracks that you’re thinking it’s into, directions it takes, attempts to control thinkingAnd this becomes very intricate and this incidentally, when you get as far as the process observer in this sort of contemplation, you have progressed more than the average person. The average person does not bother to think about processes of thinking. He may sense that he’s got an intuition and he’ll give it a little word like an instinct or he may even claim to be intuitive.  
So we continue this process of attacking thought. I’m getting now into experience and history, not into logicI don’t know that there’s too much logic in anything I’m saying, and I don’t expect you to take it from a logical viewpoint. I’m expecting you to take it from an intuitional viewpoint, that some of this stuff may ring a bell. But for the mystic, the philosopher, who sits and watches his processes and struggles with them, trying to analyse them to find out who is having the process thinking – this is what he’ll become aware of. Somebody is watching these processes, and he immediately becomes aware of himself.  
But to sit back and watch this thing going on and when you watch that you get a very perfect picture. When you watch your intuition and your somatic mind, you start to get a very perfect picture of all the traps that you’re falling in - you see the traps as you go along. So you think that’s the end of the line. Ordinarily you’d say, “I am that which watches”. But this isn’t true.
dm1-22:48


There is another. Again we’re still a relative creature and we’ve only hit one corner of the line. Now if you’ve noticed that these things interlock, these triangles interlock because the conciliatory principle of one becomes only the corner of another triangle. And by continuing this process of attacking thought – and I’m getting now into experience and history not into logic. I don’t know that there’s too much logic in anything I’m saying and I wouldn’t expect you to take it from a logical viewpoint; I’m expecting you to take it from an intuitional viewpoint and some of this stuff may ring a bell.  
When he becomes aware of himself as a process observer [point E] then something peculiar happens. He becomes aware of the awareness of consciousness [F] by accident. So the movement goes in this direction: it naturally comes up here [E] but it goes over there [F] because as soon as you’re aware of one thing you immediately have to be aware of the opposite, in a relative plane. So he becomes aware of consciousness. And when he’s aware of consciousness, he’s reached a stage similar to cosmic consciousness or what Ramana Maharshi might call kevala nirvikalpa samadhi.


But the mystic, the philosopher who sits and watches his processes and struggles with them, trying to analyse them to find out who is having the process thinking. This is what he will merely become aware of - that somebody is watching these processes and he becomes aware of himself. When he becomes aware of himself as a process observer then something peculiar happens. He becomes aware of the awareness of consciousness by accident. And when he reaches this point – so the movement goes in this direction – it actually comes up here but it goes over there because as soon as you’re aware of one thing you immediately have to be aware of the opposite in a relative plane. So he becomes aware of consciousness and when he’s aware of consciousness, he’s reached a stage similar to cosmic consciousness or what Ramana Maharishi  might call ‘Kevala Samadhi’ .
dm1-24:33
dm1-24:33
He’s aware ... it’s a ‘Mountain Experience’  so to speak and again, though, he returns. He’s still a relative creature and he returns and continues to, let’s say, fluctuate back between these, still puzzling because he doesn’t know for sure the final answer. All he knows is that he’s aware of awareness. He’s basically aware of awareness and the only result to this is an endless attack on this line brings you to another conciliatory principle which is the total answer.
dm1-25:12
Now, there’s a whole lot being said there, I mean a whole lot implied, let’s put it that way. And all I can say is this the … if you take the life experience of anyone who has claimed to have reached total consciousness and you analyse it, you will find that it’s pretty much the same thing told in other words, in other terminology. I remember that when I wrote the book, that was before I had heard of Ramana Maharishi and I …{break in tape}
dm1-25:45


….in the mind. The mind is like a roll of film which is continuously photographing things and throwing it away and almost simultaneously projecting it out. In other words we are almost creating our universe from our mind as we go. We’re seeing something that is stimulated but at the same time we are projecting it out. And I tried to describe that in the book [unclear] I think and I ran into Ramana Maharishi’s book and he had done this almost thirty years before and he had used the same thing, almost the same terminology – using the camera analogy. Of course the wording is ... I recommend this. If anybody wants to get into this thing, the terminology and some of the examples he uses are very clear, they’re very simple and come right to the point.
It’s the mountain experience, so to speak. And again, though, he returns; he’s still a relative creature. He returns and continues, let’s say, to fluctuate back between these, still puzzling because he doesn’t know for sure the final answer. All he knows is that he’s aware of awareness. And this results in an endless attack on this line, [E-F] which brings you to another conciliatory principle which is the total answer. [point G]
I want to get away from that for a while. I want to open up for questions. This is the most important thing. I don’t think this is clear to you and I find that there’s a tape written on it ... made on it and the tape wasn’t … I don’t think it was sufficient because you have to identify this, you have to relay this to yourself. Now, I just have some notes here but again we were talking about the self, what the self was.
 
mj1-25:45 --- dm1-25:12
 
Now, there’s a whole lot being said there, I mean a whole lot implied, let’s put it that way. And all I can say is that if you take the life experience of anyone who has claimed to have reached total consciousness and you analyse it, you will find that it’s pretty much the same thing told in other words, in other terminology. When I wrote the book, it was before I had heard of Ramana Maharishi and I …
 
[break in tape – MJ version, also DM version. MJ version is very low quality beginning here. DM is also muffled. DM version is better quality here than MJ version]
 
mj1-26:19 --- dm1-25:46


dm1-27:17
When man discovers the umpire he realizes that previously the self that part of his functioning was not the more real self. All of one’s actions are recognised as automatic reflexes or as pre-natal programming. For instance all this work from the umpire down could be very automatic. In other words it’s more or less imposed upon the individual. I draw the analogy of the new-born child. There’s no one speaks to a calf or a colt of a horse and says, “Hey, there’s a breast and you’ve got to find this breast and get fed”. It gets up off it’s feet and staggers around with just a few hours of life and if the horse’s young don’t find a breast within a couple of hours, it dies – there’s no hope for it. But that animal get up, muddles around and goes right to where it’s supposed to get its food and it eats. Now we think we’re very smart but we do the same thing. We do a lot for the baby than the baby would do for itself but all I’m saying is that all of our decisions no matter how much philosophy we put behind them on the relative plane with the human body are nearly all programmed.
And it’s only when you get considerably beyond that the…the thoughts themselves may not be programmed. Meditative thoughts and philosophic thoughts don’t resolve all the time in action. But all thoughts that come to our head and resolve in action are generally programmed and I’m going to every little bit of dream and reverie that a person gets into. The biggest part of our reverie thoughts originate in the glands. That may sound hard to you but I maintain that the glands cause thoughts and the thoughts cause the glands to function. There is a tremendous physical relationship there. In other words we are tremendously programmed. And you discover that only when you get watching from a superior position which has…


File 1 ends at 29:36
….of the human mind. The mind is like a roll of film which is continually photographing things and storing it away, and almost simultaneously projecting it out. In other words, we are almost creating our universe from our mind as we go. We’re seeing something that stimulates it, but at the same time we’re projecting it out. I tried to describe that in the book, rather clumsily I think, but then I ran into Ramana Maharishi’s book,  and he had done this I guess thirty years before. He used almost the same terminology, using a camera analogy. Incidentally, I recommend his book. If anybody wants to get into this, the terminology and some of the examples he uses are very clear; they’re very simple and come right to the point.
== File 2 ==


Total time: 31:10
mj1-27:20 ---
=== Notes from the Text ===
I have a few more notes to read and then I want to open it up for questions; this is the most important thing. I don’t think this is clear to you. We made a tape on this  but I don’t think it was sufficient because you have to identify this; you have to relate it to yourself.
 
See [[1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State]]
 
mj1-27:41 --- dm1-27:07


dm2-00:00
Again, we were talking about the self, what the self is.  
R: We’re going to tape this naturally so I’m going to straight through it and after I’m through then we’ll go back to questions and answers. So make a mental note of anything. I’d appreciate it if you didn’t interrupt me until the paper is read. The reason for reading it is I’ve tried to give this off the top of my head and it doesn’t work because there’s a structure to where this is going and it has to be taken more or less, paragraph by paragraph. It’s called the psychology of the observer. And it has to do with knowing and when you talk about knowing we presume a lot. We presume that we know what knowing is. I think after you do a little introspection you’ll find out that people don’t know as much about knowing as they just presume.
dm2-01:05
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)
When man discovers the umpire he realizes that previously, the self that thought it was functioning was not the more real self. All of one’s actions are recognized as automatic reflexes or as pre-natal programming.  
There’s two forms of knowing or two directions of knowing – the outside and the inside. In other words you have an external system of knowing and an internal system of knowing. The outside knowing is or involves the physical world and it also involves the body and observable products of the body. One of the products of the body that is observable is thought, thought patterns and dreams. With this statement I immediately have to get into the business of defining the lines between inside and outside experience. The designation depends on the interpretation of the word ‘observer’.
This must not be an arbitrary designation used merely to expedite some argument that I wish to use. We must at least attempt to be scientific and methodical in our handling of any complex problem. Yet these things should be expressed simply. We should be able to express them as simply as possible.
</blockquote>
</blockquote>


dm2-02:14
For instance all this work from the umpire down could be very automatic. It’s more or less imposed upon the individual. I draw the analogy of the newborn child. No one speaks to a calf or a colt, a young horse and says, “Hey, there’s a breast and you’ve got to find it and get fed.” If the horse’s young doesn’t find the breast within a couple of hours, it dies; there’s no hope for it. But that animal gets up on its feet and staggers around with just a few hours of life, and goes right to where it’s supposed to get its food and it eats. Now we think we’re very smart, but humans do the same thing. We do a lot for the baby that maybe the baby would do for itself. But what I’m saying is that all of our decisions on the relative plane, with the human body, no matter how much philosophy we put behind them, are nearly all programmed.
<blockquote>
 
(This section is not in the book)
dm1-28:44
First let’s look at the observer ourself. The word observed is chosen to indicate not that that which is seen but that which is apprehended by any means – by the senses or by internal mental observation. Psychology, especially psychology of the modern utilitarian type wants to be scientific and in order to follow this pretense with the least amount of responsibility, takes a very materialistic pose. It pretends further and declares that the body is all that we have. But it does not say who ‘we’ is. It talks of behaviour as though behaviour was something which the body did neglecting the reservoir of thoughts and thought data that goes to make up the impetus for behaviour.
 
Behaviourists would pretend that we do not think, that is we don’t have little entities called thoughts, that we just have reactions and that we’re somewhat conscious of these reactions. That which reacts is the observer.
Now when you get considerably beyond that, the thoughts themselves may not be programmed, because meditative thoughts and philosophic thoughts don’t result in action all the time. But all thoughts that come to our head and result in action are generally programmed. And I’m going down to every little bit of dream and reverie that a person gets into. The biggest part of our reverie-thoughts originate in the glands. That might sound hard to you, but I maintain that the glands can cause thoughts and the thoughts can cause the glands to function. There is a tremendous physical relationship there. So we are tremendously programmed. And you discover that only when you get to watching from a superior position which as…
</blockquote>
 
dm2-03:17
File 1 ends at mj1-30:18 --- dm1-29:35
<blockquote>
 
(This section is not in the book)
== File 2 Pittsburgh (mj4, dm4) ==
Let’s take a look now at the ability of the psychologist to be scientific. Being scientific does not mean that we have to have things in a test tube in order to examine them. Being scientific means that we think in an orderly manner and being scientific also implies that we are able to make predictions according to our findings.  
Total time: 31:03
In chemical procedure, chemistry proves itself by predicting how water can be created from hydrogen and oxygen. Physics predicts by various means of studying physical properties the amount of weights that can be lifted by a string, a rope or a steel cable. And modern psychology pretends to know how to predict behaviour and to create a social relationship that will avoid social trauma. However, modern psychiatrists usually piddle around allowing the healing of the patients to come by group therapy, meaning group accidents.
 
(This section is in the book)
[This continues of dm1 – has some overlap, no loss of words.]
Socio-psychologists are uttering advice on all levels of social authority and social authorities are implementing the prescriptions of the former, the socio-psychologists. And what is the result? Our social climate is becoming increasingly more muddled. Our morality is declining under the pretense that morality is only a subjective attitude. And in the wholesale acceptance of B.F.Skinner  we have decided to make morality a sacrifice deemed necessary for the peace of the herd.
 
</blockquote>
mj4-00:00 --- dm4-00:00 --- DM version is bettter
 
[repeated text in red]
 
... that a person gets into. The biggest part of our reverie-thoughts originate in the glands. That might sound hard to you, but I maintain that the glands can cause thoughts and the thoughts can cause glands to function. There’s a tremendous physical relationship there. So that we’re tremendously programmed. And you discover this only when you get to watching from a superior position, which as I said, Benoit called a conciliatory position.
 
It’s only when you get clear above that umpire, that somatic mind, that you’re able to see it for what it is. You can’t see it while you’re in it. When you’re in it, you think it’s God. You think you’re the God, you’re the big shot, you’re doing everything. People do nothing.
 
mj4-00:43 --- dm4-00:44
 
[ Long pause, possible wait for tape change. 18 seconds ]
 
dm4-01:01
 
R. Now of course, one of the things everyone’s trying to do is to pull the strings of life before they find out what’s going on. Somewhere there’s an instinct that people have, that as soon as they find the answer, we’ll be able to do that. But I think that to do anything really, that hasn’t been programmed by some other force, would require a tremendous amount of knowledge; almost the knowledge of the why.
 
I can see where every railroad or automobile accident, every marriage, every divorce and all this stuff, is planned ahead of time. We just experience it. Because there doesn’t seem to be much of a way of avoiding this. We think in a highly complex culture that everything that’s happening is due to chance or accident. Maybe so. But I think a lot of this, after you get a few years on you and you look back, you see that things seem to happen almost magically, in retrospect. And they went in the right direction. And lots of times the direction at the moment was one we opposed. If we had had our choice, we would have wrecked things.
 
dm4-02:29 – mj4-02:31
 
What I’m trying to say is that there’s almost a master plan, so to speak, and in order for us to affect that, to cause one action of our own, we would have to upset that whole master plan. It’s almost like the electrons in a molecule: if we’re able to find the science to disrupt just one of those electrons, we’ll upset a tremendous electronic field in the process. And I think that this would happen with us.
 
I maintain that what we fail to pick up in the analysis, is that the human being lives in a dimension that he thinks is the only one. But there’s a parent dimension. Our dimension is projected from that parent dimension, that being Mind. I think that this entire picture we see is an emanation, a mental emanation, which is somehow projected into the human consciousness. And we in turn project it with common agreement – agreed-upon definitions, agreed-upon landscapes – in anything that we see.
 
This is brought out by Chilton-Pearce in The Crack in the Cosmic Egg.  I’m going to mention a few words about him because you may not have read the book. His wife was dying of cancer, and Chilton-Pearce came to the conclusion that the reason was, that everybody had agreed upon cancer. We see that in individuals, where a person will tell you, “I’m going to die of cancer; I’m smoking too many cigarettes.” And the next thing you know, you find out he’s got cancer.
 
dm4-04:25 – mj4-04:31
 
But even beyond that, there’s the mere fact that we accept it, the mere fact that we say that cancer is. That’s the old fact – if you’ve read anything in the kabbalah, it speaks of the laws of creation. The law of creation was the will plus the imagination plus the fiat. ,  And when you spoke it, God help you, you had it. This is what happens: we talk and we say it is, and then it is.
 
Okay, I can’t prove that and neither did Chilton-Pearce. But he came up with this concept that maybe he could divorce himself entirely of this whole paradigm that humanity had created, the verbal paradigm. “In the beginning was the Word,” and after that there was nothing but chaos because words created words. Now that seems maybe a vulgar analysis or translation of a statement in Genesis.  But regardless, our biggest enemies are words, perhaps. And the idea was that we could create a new paradigm in which there were no diseases. Even the Christian Scientists would agree with this: that we believe that the diseases are there, so they’re there. And if that could happen, then Chilton-Pearce could cure his wife. Well, he never cured his wife; she died. But he did get a couple of books out, and I think he opened this up to something. There were others beside him who felt the same way.
 
We are just now beginning to get a breath of knowledge about the mind. Before, it was, “I have a mind.” Then the second mistake was, “I am a mind.” In the diagram here is the somatic mind [point C]. But this [F] is neither.
 
We come from the mind. The mind is a dimension. And in order to change this life of ours, we have to know all of the causes. If you you’ve got a disease, the doctor may say to you, “What did your parents die of?” because you emanate from something, and that has a relationship to whatever affects you. And we emanate from a mind dimension.
 
Mary Baker Eddy  way back there, sensed this. That if you were able to change the mind, to affect the universal mind, then miracles might happen. At least “miracles” as viewed from our relative viewpoint. I think there’s a basic failure in the idea of Christian Science in this respect: Faith will not move mountains. No one ever put a leg back on.
 
I remember an argument I had with a man I used to work with in Alliance, Ohio, on the atomic submarine. There was a Christian Scientist who worked there, and he was very touchy about everything we said, because his belief was that it was made flesh. Don’t curse people because it becomes real, and that sort of thing. I thought it was a huge joke. But we’d get into some interesting discussions and arguments. I said to him one day, “Hey, knock it off. Do you really think that a massive belief will change this world?” And he said, “Sure.” I said, “What about these healers, running around all over the place pretending to heal people? They can’t put a leg back on when it gets chopped it off.
 
dm4-08:14 – mj4-08:26
 
You can possibly heal a person of a mental syndrome or something of that sort, or convince them that they didn’t have it in the first place. And I don’t even deny that maybe you can change some things. It’s my belief that there are certain limitations within which you can change. But there are limitation: there’s a limitation to our knowledge of this mind dimension. Faith will not move the mountain because two hundred million people don’t believe it will move, if nothing else. You’re not going to move that mountain over on top of a city and smash a lot of people. The people just refuse to believe it. This negative form of belief is what Chilton-Pearce was up against, and he couldn’t do it himself.
 
But there are cases down through time where people have discovered ways of affecting this mind dimension. This is the catch. And it’s done through intense application. I maintain that if you concentrate long enough on anything, you will get an answer. You might be crazy when you get it, but you’ll get an answer. I believe that if you desire to be a millionaire and you push hard enough, apply total energy, throw enough mud at the ceiling, you’ll be a millionaire. But you’ve got to shut out everything else and put total energy into it.
 
dm4-09:47 – mj4-10:01
 
I maintain that if you want to find yourself, you apply the same principles and you’ll find yourself. If you want to know something about the mind, I think you can do that by applying the same amount of energy. Now I don’t say, that in some cases people won’t quit short of the goal, rationalizing that they’ve found the answer, because we’ve got no yardstick for that.
 
=== Modern Psychology ===
 
This whole thing has a bearing upon what I consider the errors in psychology and sociology today. The theme is, the word goes out, “We’re going to change the world.” I talked to a sociology teacher one time and she said, “We’re going to create a culture.” I said, “What you’re teaching is lies.” And she said, “Yes. But if people believe those lies, we’ll create a culture.”
 
dm4-10:49 --- mj4-11:05
 
And this is the drive. I see that this has been happening a tremendous lot recently. Get in and brainwash the public en masse. You’re getting it right now on the price of gas.  Because a tremendous educational campaign is going out to convince people, so they’ll believe eagerly that they must sacrifice. I remember World War II when everybody was getting into the big self-sacrifice thing and we were short on everything imaginable. But these are experts at impelling moods, and they go unchallenged because people want to believe.
 
I found out something else about the human being in relation to religion. The majority of people want to believe the most impossible thing. Alice in Wonderland. They don’t want a simple, basic psychological analysis to human nature, or to the next dimension, or to where they’re going when they die. No. It has to have pearls, it has to look like a Christmas tree, you have to have categories of deities, you have to have indulgences and blessings, favored sons and bastards who are going to hell. It has to really be elaborate, and then you have to run between the raindrops – and pay every step of the way.
 
dm4-12:15
 
I don’t know, I sometimes think that all of this is programmed. I one time was initiated into a sect out of India called Radha Soami.  Some of you may be acquainted with it. Kirpal Singh  made a tour of the country recently; he was branch that splintered off the Radha Soami sect. One of their headquarters is in Beas and another is in Kashmir. They also have one at Agra. But they had something that caught my ear. They maintain that there were seven planes of existence. This one was the lowest plane, possibly. There were three low planes in which we kept reincarnating: we’d run up three steps and down three steps, up three steps, down three steps. There was a creature in charge of this, a god, the head of it, called Radha Soami. And he had made a deal with a character that was running a concession on the lower three levels. This was what we would call the devil but they call it Kal. 
 
dm4-13:44
 
Kal had priorities. He had the right to keep these people from escaping. Only the very shrewd and few, escaped from the third plane and got up into the fourth plane. There are Indian names for them but I’ve forgotten them. I went through the initiation – I’m sharing something with you, but it didn’t cost me any money. You’re supposed to wait for people who are ready, but I don’t know if anybody’s ready.  
 
But they said Kal penetrates everything. For example, you’re going to try to escape from these dimensions so you start a religion. And soon as it starts, some thief steals the treasury and runs off with it. Or he sells the leader out for a few nickels. Or he becomes a schismatic. Right after Christ died, I think, Peter was arguing with one of the other apostles and he says, “Already we have begun to dissemble.”  In other words, the man is hardly dead in his grave and they’re chewing at each other; one of them is going this way with the dogma, and the other is going that way.
 
And this was the work of Kal. It may have been true or false, but to see the analogy, if that’s all it was, was very good to me. There’s something that wrecks the progressive efforts of man on a spiritual or a psychological level. It may be nothing but his head. Maybe the endless variations that occur when anything is brought up. He’s got to face these endless variations and the result is confusion. So he never really finds his way out with a dogmatic or mundane religion.
 
dm4-15:24
 
Now just in passing, another fellow came along who also believed that we were robots, and that was Gurdjieff.  Gurdjieff and Ouspensky formed a kind of a team. And I think Gurdjieff was the greatest psychologist who ever hit the western world. I think the majority of psychologists today are behaviorists. I say it’s like taking soil samples to discover what’s at the core of the earth. This is behavioristic psychology: taking nerve reflexes to discover the soul of a man, or the destiny of man, or the ideas of the designer. But who wrote the blueprint? This guy knows the score.
 
dm4-16:14
 
The guy taking pinpricks or testing reflexes or inkblots – or conceptualizing – does not know from whence the man came. Yet he’s going to legislate for the purpose of keeping himself in office. This is my belief. Our psychologists are not pure psychologists; they want to be funded. The only one I had much respect for was Carl Jung,  because I think he was an honest man. Freud was a merchant, basically, and he wanted to have a string of clinics strung through Europe – and possibly America if he had lived long enough – selling one product and packaging it with the nicest words possible. Confusing words that is, so that nobody could challenge him: psychoanalysis.
 
Another guy comes along, and the word he’s packaging is psychotherapy. Then Viktor Frankl comes along;  and each of them comes up with a word. Kübler-Ross  wants to be the chief merchant in charge of death and dying. Before you can die you have to consult her or some of her disciples, who will worry the hell out of you while you’re dying, not let you die in peace.  
 
dm4-17:36
 
To me the whole field of psychology today is backing up the establishment paradigm; the paradigm that teaches degeneracy so there will be no riots in the streets.  We have adopted a degenerate psychology. And you can find reasons for any psychology you wish. As I said, the dictionary is a big book. It’s the same with the Bible: you can get the Bible to back you up, if you search hard enough, on almost anything you want.
 
But I don’t believe that they are going to the most important thing, which is looking at the source of thought. They’re not doing that. What are the tools of a bricklayer? Or an engineer? He has a calculus book that he can refer to and he’ll give you reasons for his actions. The domain of the medical doctor is the body. But the domain of the psychiatrist and psychologist is the psyche, not the body. The body is biology; that’s veterinarianism. We’ve got veterinarians raking off fifty dollars an hour. To me the domain of the psychologist goes back to the very soul of man. To find out why a man thinks, you’ve got to find out why this machine was created to think.
 
Now, that sounds impossible, and they say, “Well, we can’t do that. We’ve just got to patch these guys up and get them back into the field and have them pay taxes. Because if they don’t pay any taxes and don’t hold a job, they can’t pay us fifty dollars an hour. And the government isn’t going to fund us and they’re not going to hire psychology professors in colleges, so the whole thing will collapse. We’ve got to keep this paradigm going.” Now I don’t know why we got into that, but we’re into it. [laughter]
dm4-19:30
 
=== Awakening ===
But what we’re trying to do is pull strings. This whole idea behind discovering yourself is possibly to affect that from which you came. Gurdjieff had this idea of the “sly man” approach. That there are little things you can do to awaken another person, but you can’t awaken yourself. We are, as I said, robots, sound asleep, grooved in. Try to stop, try to change your course, try to set yourself a thinking pattern, and see how quickly it’s interfered with.
 
Everybody here, I imagine, is tied to a routine that takes him from daylight to dark. And try to break that routine. Try to set up a different self-analysis. It may take you a couple of weeks, or a couple of months or a couple of years. Set aside maybe an hour or a half hour per day – and you’ll go along maybe for a week or so. But supposing in that hour a day or half hour a day you’re provoked to try to do something else: That you’re not going to just sit around and think about thinking, or thinking about ways and means. No, you’re going to find the ways and means; you’re going to experiment. And if you try to set yourself up an experimental pattern, you’ll find that it’s almost impossible.
 
dm4-20:53
 
So then, why is it impossible? It’s impossible because your head is set on something: you’ve got to have those cigarettes or you’ve got to have that dope, or you’ve got to have that security, that mansion up at Mt .Lebanon  or someplace and pay for those bricks. And you’re not going to stop working until you drop dead – so your wife can entertain some lover in those bricks.
 
But regardless, we can’t let go of this squirrel cage. It takes somebody from outside. And this has been the theme behind pure religion. In fact, there have been a lot of religions that started out pure. The guy says, “Hey, take a day off; make Sunday holy and stop, so that these dummies can do some thinking.” But then the guy in charge of the religion finds that it’s profitable and he starts selling candles, and you’re back where you started: you’ve got to work an extra day of the week to pay for the candles.
 
dm4-21:52
=== Universal Mind ===
I’d like to stop for a minute. There’s some other information I want to give you about what I consider the examples of man’s ability to see
 
But what time is it ? Oh it’s 6 o’clock. [April 3, 1979 was a Tuesday – odd that it’s so early.]
 
Now I rambled a little bit toward the end of that, but I’d like to clarify anything about this diagram you’d like to hear. I didn’t want to get too deep into this business. You can [ask] if you wish. [But] I think there are ways; I think there is a good psychotherapy system if a person wanted to get into it and people are honest with each other, and they could help each other. Prod each other to wake up and that sort of thing. But there are only two ways I know that you can affect your life. One of them is, if you can find somebody you can trust, who won’t pick your pockets while he’s helping you. And the other one is to study for the laws of the mind.
 
I think there are some laws that were discovered. You’ll see them in operation, and the average person refuses to believe them when they see them. Like with hypnosis: when hypnosis first came out everybody said, “Oh, that’s maybe the work of the Devil.” That’s one nice solution for it. Or it’s a trick. That the subjects just agree, and it’s a little game they play. I used to do some hypnotic demonstrations and people chuckled to themselves, “He’s clever. These people put on a pretty good act.”
 
dm4-23:32
 
Hypnosis is one of the minor laws, and that’s just of the somatic mind. But I know that there are people living who can touch people’s minds at a distance without all the routine. And we have been visited by a few of these people from India.  They study for years to learn to zap and they can knock you off your feet by looking at you and concentrating. After people lose their children to these systems for maybe ten years, they begin to realize that they were zapped. But prior to this they say, “Oh, that can’t happen here, not under Old Glory; nothing like that happens here.”
 
But there are people who know some of the workings of it. Now this isn’t the individual mind; this is some matrix that is pervasive. It goes from mind to mind. When you enter this, when you’re able to enter it, is when you have your direct-mind experiences. That’s when you can read another person’s mind. That’s when you can contact your thoughts to them. And it happens; everybody experiences it sometime or another. I remember driving with my wife in the car one time. Neither one of us had mentioned this family for I guess five or ten years, and both of us said at the same time, “Let’s get down to John So-and-So’s house.” There are so many of these it seems to be above coincidence, that there was something transmitted. So there is a connection. There’s some sort of field, which I like to say is a universal mind.
 
dm4-25:20


dm2-04:49
Q. Do you think this is the same thing Karl Jung was talking about, synchronicity?
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)
But the herd is becoming daily more hateful because it is rankled by the idea of shotgun-love. When confronted with the hate-trends in society, the socio-psychological authorities, reinforced by specially vested groups, (which may be minorities of special interest), or by lone individuals who think they can become famous or funded by accurately representing a trend or a zeitgeist .
This modern approach is failing because the wants of the individual cannot be granted to that individual until we know more about the real nature of that individual. A man who pretends to know what is best for humanity, or a socio-psychological dynasty, or a group that thinks it knows best for humanity, and knows how to force upon humanity (like we force castor-oil on a constipated child) – the prescriptions of spiritual leeching through physical masturbation in order to render everyone placid, helpless and harmless – they do not take into account the nature of the individual let alone the nature of that which drew the blueprint for humanity.
</blockquote>


dm2-06:01
R. These are words. I maintain that Chilton-Pearce sensed something. Colin Wilson  sensed it. Colin Wilson wrote it as fiction, which is a nice way to write: you can never get criticized, you don’t have to prove anything. But you can get ahold of his book The Mind Parasites.  When I read it I was utterly amazed that he had this knowledge, and the way he put it out. He had the idea that if fifty people discovered this secret they would be able to move the planet. Because the world is nothing more than an illusion, the moon is nothing more than an illusion, but that fifty minds held in a certain position would affect the planet. Of course this would sound like science fiction.
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)


In other words, even discounting the force that we might call God, it is manifest that there is an order in the universe, not just among the inhabitants of this terrestrial, natural aquarium. This natural plan must be known, not guessed at - and it may go deeper than we think. It may go beyond the fertility of the soil.  
But what he was saying was what I refer to in one of the papers I’ve written as the law of betweenness, where things happen in a peculiar in-between state. ,   All the wisdom of man, and all the great things, happen in a state of betweenness. This, I maintain, is part of the thing that sustains the universe. That each planet exists in a particular field of gravity and anti-gravity. It extends out so far; a big planet has more of a field of gravity, the moon has a smaller one. But somewhere in between there’s a point of no gravity.
Now I am making these remarks for a point because I am talking about objective psychological efforts as opposed to interior work. The material scientist would like to ignore all that is not seen with the eye. However, you can take one eye out and look at it with the other one. We can discover that nerves run to the brain but upon examining the brain, we cannot decide "that which sees."
We look at an apple on the table, close our eyes and we can see the apple in our mind. Where is the second picture? Call it imagination. We might say that we imagine an apple. But we see an apple by this visualization, and we do not see it in the physical eyeball. We do not see the apple when the eyeballs are removed except by visualization and we do not see things except with the whole sense, nerve, the brain and visualization.
</blockquote>


dm2-07:24
dm4-26:57
Now it is important to catch this, if you are thinking about thinking. Or thinking about perception.


<blockquote>
This what I mean by the state of betweenness. When the head is in that same thing in relation to the heads of others, then a new type of motion can be created. My theory is if you had a spaceship you could function in what I call that …
(This section is slightly modified from the book)


Visualization occurs not only in dreams or deliberate recall but with every perception at the time of perception. Do a little thinking on this and you’ll see what I mean. You see something and then you visualize what you see. Scientifically or chemically sometimes it is exactly the same as what you project.
dm4-27:11
Somewhere behind the brain, part of the combination, there is a part that visualizes. The word ‘visualizes’ means create because we’re able to create that picture of the apple at any later time when the apple itself is no longer there. With the ability to create, comes the ability to delude yourself. If we are creating a picture of an apple, we can create a picture of most anything.
We have all experienced this self-delusion, but neglect to note that we have just dichotomized ourselves by finding one self is doing something to another self. If you delude yourself, that means that there is recognized as true, one self, and there is recognized as being untrue, certain faculties which are part of an erroneous self, or certain faculties of an outside self, that lack ability for reacting properly to environmental thoughts and reactions, and various stimuli. In other words we are all getting the same stimuli, but people are capable of reacting differently and people are capable of deluding themselves.
</blockquote>


dm2-09:08
[break in tape in both dm4 and mj4]
<blockquote>
(This section does not exist in the book)


Of course we can say this in a different way and say that the inside self is at times incapable of true apprehension and is capable of making distorted creations. An entire separate set of instructions on the intuition is necessary at this point to try to correct this delusion and distorted creative ability. This creative ability is projection.
dm4-27:14 --- mj4-27:57
</blockquote>


I don’t know how many of you are acquainted with the word projection but man … some men see or think they see and others know that they project.  
[commence tape, dm4 and mj4 the same. Sound no longer muffled]
<blockquote>


(This section does not exist in the book)
… and I maintain at least that some people in India have discovered it and they use it. And there’s transformation of material and that sort of thing as a result of it. On a very small scale of course: they don’t move any planets. But Colin Wilson made it dramatic by citing that you could move the moon. Has anybody here read The Mind Parasites? Well, you can understand what I’m talking about. It’s just fiction but I think it’s well worth reading because it gives a hint of this.


We must return to the point at hand and the point is that behavioural psychology is a science of behavior observed, we cannot neglect these internal observations. Which may well correct for us … (break in tape)
dm4-27:51 – mj4-28:35
</blockquote>


dm2-10:02
Q. What kind of initiation did you have, that you were talking about?


dm2-10:18
R. [This was the Radha Soami sect.] Well, it was the naming and the identification of the seven planes, so that when I died I would know, by the sound of certain musical instruments, the names of the deities that presided over them. ,
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)
… which up until the present mention of it may never have occurred to us as being in existence at all. The point to determine is that when something is observed we must admit that there is an observer. This brings us to the admission first of all that we can observe our own behaviour. And we can observe not only our own thoughts, but we can observe thought processes such as visualization and introspection. It brings us to the admission also that either the observer and the observed are one and the same thing, or the ‘we’ that we refer to when we say we think or behave a certain way, is separate from that which is observed.
(This section does not exist in the book)
In other words, the seer is not what is seen. The viewer is not the view. This means the true self is always that anterior observer and the observation of the anterior observer brings us to an ultimate or absolute observer. This sounds like a simple formula but it is in reality, the true method of reaching a realization of the absolute state of mind pointed to by writers on enlightenment.


(This section is slightly modified from the book)
Q. Did you experience anything?
We go back to the beginning of our simple search for inside and outside knowledge. We usually want to know that which is ‘out there’ first. The external world attracts us from the moment of our birth. We build an orderly explanation of that which we, mankind, collectively see. Our external world is largely one of agreement, and material science is really just a system of getting along.
</blockquote>
dm2-12:06
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)
I picked up a book just yesterday by Ornstein. Ornstein is the man that talks about the two sides of the brain and he quotes Kuhn, saying each science has its assumptions, and he includes psychology in this. He calls it a ‘paradigm’. And this is basically what we have to live with in each of these sciences is that paradigm. Just an agreement that a certain collective vocabulary means something to all of us jointly not that there is any proof to any of it.
We develop systems of measurement and cataloguing according to genus and species and later on we discovere that we have failed somewhat in our methods of cataloguing and calculating. Forty years ago we agreed that all matter consisted of atomic limited in exact number – ninety two. We now agree that there are considerably over a hundred elements.
</blockquote>
I was majoring in Chemistry at the time and they told us flatly that this is what the universe is composed of – ninety two parts. And now we have discovered that that was just an agreement at that time. Valence is another sort of an agreement on how things work.
dm2-13:18
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)
This habit of agreeing upon things not fully understood has not caused very great mishap to humanity as a whole when such agreements were limited to the materialistic sciences. Many of us believed that penicillin would cure everybody of a certain virus infection, but when deaths were reported of allergic reactions to penicillin there were no great lamentations, because the findings for penicillin were orderly and they worked on the average person.
However, when psychic or psychological determinations are made it seems they are not made from an orderly examination of the field or phenomena involved, but are determined rather by a propaganda campaign upon the public's mind by a fragment of humanity, who are always interested in perpetuating their individual ambitions, or the ambition of their church or trade.
Now we have this from psychologists from Freud down on. Freud tried to start a chain-store of therapy healing places all over Europe. And he issued a bunch of talk or propaganda on behalf of his theory.
There is an understandable fault that causes our reliance upon agreement rather than exact knowledge. To begin with, exact knowledge is the same as absolute knowledge.
</blockquote>
We would like to say that we have exact knowledge but it would be absolute and absolute knowledge carries a lot of implication.
dm2-14:45
<blockquote>
(This section is slightly modified from the book)
We cannot delay the preparation of all the medicines until we know exactly all the side-effects upon all the people. This is where the word reasonable comes in. And we use the term as a euphemism instead of the word "orderly”. We hang a man when he is guilty by virtue of circumstantial evidence that leaves no reasonable doubt as to his guilt. It is true that we are going to be hanging or gassing a certain percentage of the population, and the lethal lottery must bear with it, explanations for the sake of conscience, that depict our actions as being rational.
What we are getting into here is this business of, as I said, inside knowledge. We are drifting in the direction of the need for inside knowledge and psychology is the province of inside knowledge. So consequently we have to talk a bit about the direction of psychology and if it is possible to add to this, if Zen  or any type of thinking, any type of interior type thinking leads closer to it.
While exact knowledge is, for practical purposes, impossible, there are methods that can be used that might eliminate some of the bungling, trepanning and hanging. We soon learn that our inadequate understanding of the outside world is the result of defective observation-mechanisms. This points to the direction of not only our senses, but also in the direction of mental habits of visualization, dreaming, creating and projecting.
</blockquote>


dm2-16:18
R. No. But don’t get me wrong, I don’t take issue with them, because they were good people. There was no racket connected with it, didn’t cost a cent. I reject everything that costs money, especially if it’s fantastic sums of money. But these people didn’t charge. Now, they may have operated on donations or something.  
In other words, we may not understand the external world properly, until we understand our self.  
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)
This is especially true in the psycho-therapy departments and the attempts of individuals to get along with their fellow-man. The psychiatrist who can no longer prescribe for a patient In terms of medicine or behavioural analysis, turns the patient over to group-therapy, in the hopes that an accident will do for the patient that which therapy or theory-agreement failed to do.
The other people in the therapy-group serve as a mirror for the individual. He begins to see himself in a new light and realizes that he may be taking an erratic or selfish pose that alienated him from the mainstream of agreement. Now he goes back inside of himself and realizes that he has been fooling himself. When he recognizes this, instead of becoming a social misfit, he may immediately become a budding psychologist. When one part of a man fools another part, the part that has been fooled is the essential or anterior self. With an ability to create visions and states of mind so powerful, that the anterior self accepts as valid all of its creations.
We might dramatize this idea a bit by mentioning a practice of some Tibetans who are very adept at creating a tulpa . I don’t know how many of you have heard of a tulpa but a tulpa is a humanoid figure that’s created by certain Tibetans. It seems to be a human being in all forms. Some Tibetan priests are supposed to be so skillful mentally that they can actually create an entity in human form from their will and imagination. This tulpa becomes their companion and often their master. One Tibetan priest commented that it took him six months to create his tulpa, and six years to get rid of her.
</blockquote>
This is an example of projection. That’s the reason I brought that up.
<blockquote>
(This section is heavily modified from the book)
We get into habits which seem to be socially acceptable and later find that our peace of mind has been permanently impaired. We may have acquired the habits, such as drinking, because we thought the habit was harmless and then afforded us and humanity an easy medium for communicating and getting along. After we find that it has made us miserable, we also find that all the other people in AA  are likewise miserable. And all of them had the same idea – that they did it to get along. It was a social thing and that people had to do certain things that dropped them a little bit by just to get along with the rest of the herd.
</blockquote>


dm2-19:08
Another concept they had was that the guru appeared at the point of death; he would take you over the threshold. You were tied to the guru through Darshan. You establish this bond and then when you died, automatically he’d pick you up. And I thought, “Well, that’s interesting; all you have to do is be around one of them who’s dying and you can see what goes on.” There was an old guru who initiated me and I said to him, “Were you ever around when any of the members of the religion died?” He said, “I missed my wife by a half hour.” She died while he was out of the house. He was hoping that she would say, “Here he is. Here’s Charan Singh.”  They were all named Singh, they were Sikhs.
<blockquote>
(This section is heavily modified from the book)
Let us get down to the business of studying the inside of ourself. It is not as easy as it sounds. Most people think that they know themselves. One time in Pittsburgh I was giving a lecture and I mentioned this that people didn’t know themselves and a fellow spoke up and said, “I know who I am”. And I said, “Who are you?” and he said, "I am the fellow sitting in front of you." And he was referring to a physical presence and of course I could have mentioned to him he didn’t. He probably could have been clever had he followed the Descartes’ line and said, “I think therefore I am. That’s proof of my existence”.  
But if a man states he thinks he should immediately ask himself who’s doing the thinking. Is it the mouth and the body talking or is there something behind the body that is trying to communicate. For instance if a Tibetan priest talks to his tulpa, is he the one who is talking or is the desire for the tulpa talking? It’s the equivalent you’ve got with a girl or a boyfriend. Are you talking or is your desire for that person talking?
We can see in this latter case that the tulpa is a creation of the mind of the priest. But the tulpa is also a materialised embodiment of the desires of the priest. So the desires may be talking to the tulpa which in turn is the desires of the priest. That’s quite a circle.
</blockquote>


dm2-20:32
dm4-29:44 --- mj4-30:33
<blockquote>
=== Life after death experiences ===
(This section is heavily modified from the book)


We can see that a man could quickly lose track of himself if he were this priest. But there may not be too much difference between the tulpa of Tibet and the Galatea Pygmalion  or between any sexual voyeur and the objects it caused in response to his desires. If desires are observable, then desires are objective and "outside." When the subjective considerations are viewed, they immediately become knowable considerations and they become objective. Whether the desires are recognized by us as Gestalts or entities, they are external afflictions or assets. They are not us.
But my belief is that somebody appears for you anyhow. There’s a common denominator that runs through a lot of movements and isms: the HGA, Holy Guardian AngelThe Rosicrucians I think believe that the master appears. But also many of them believe that you have a guardian angel, like a protective spirit that follows you all through life. And when you wear out, he picks you up and put you into another system of trouble. [laughs]
</blockquote>
I was just thinking Andy, if we could kind of watch that door when somebody comes in, stand there and keep it from banging because we’re going to have this on the tape.
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)
Desires may try to involve us, try to identify themselves as being us but if we go to jail or to the hospital because of our desires, we will become quickly identified with another set of desires. Which are the desires for health and survival or the desire for equanimity. When this happens we divorce ourselves from our desires normally by identifying the dangerous ones as being not us. We continue to deify ourselves by saying that we desire to love and be loved. We use this as a bond with the cosmos and with God by announcing that God is love.
Many of us identify ourselves very closely with a desire for love. We are little, harmless, fluffy balls of love. But this becomes apparent to us – we are really not as loving and as lovable as we project ourselves to be. And it is then that we view our fluffiness and our loveableness as being external ideas more acceptable to our fellow man than the possibly manifest desires for lust and blood.
</blockquote>
dm2-22:49
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)
And we still recognize that our love is a projection born out of a desire for love. As we choose to order it.  
</blockquote>


Everybody wants ... they protest love, protest that they want to be loved, but they basically want to be loved as they want to be loved.
dm4-30:17 --- mj4-31:05
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)
We are able to recognize our desires and fears as being external better when they conflict with one another. You don’t see them until there’s a fight inside yourself. The desire to get drunk will be countered by the desire to be delivered from the consequences. The fear of death will temper our desire for body pleasures enjoined with a desire for the prolongation of life.
Now we watch this contest for human energy and then we notice that we are acting. We are taking steps to conserve our energy and this step-taking is witnessed by us as a process. I would like to give a name to this anterior self and call it the Umpire.
The Umpire has a motive, and this motive is the preservation of the body, or the self, -- the small `s' self. I will get into this later why we say small `s' self, because it’s the mundane self. The Umpire may be extremely intricate because in the contests between desires it is necessary to study the thought processes so that we can identify and forestall any destructive trends before they get too strong. We can’t protect the body, in other words, without knowing something about the mind.
We now find another anterior observer – that which observes the Umpire. The Umpire seems to be very real, meaning very objective. The new anterior observer is still hypothetical until we see it. And when we see it, it will become something observed. It will not be us.  And of course we do not see the Umpire with the physical eye, nor does it have an image that might be visualized.
</blockquote>


dm2-24:56
People on the battlefield also seem to reach for their mother. I’ve seen people dying who have called for their mother. Old people, I’ve seen them in hospitals dying, and in their last breath they’d shout, “Mother, Mother, Mother,” and look for them. Who knows?
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)


We witness a process and this witnessing is scientific because we define science as an orderly thinking process that carries with it predictionability. We observe our own reactions for instance, in regard to the senses and our fears and desires. We observe these things not directly but as forces and factors which impinge upon the body itself. And when they impinge upon the body, the effects are observable, with the senses. I am not saying that all reactions are perfect, or bring ideal results, nor that the Umpire knows how to protect the body in all cases – the Umpire makes mistakes. But reactions of the Umpire are predictable.
[next paragraphs are repeated at the beginning of the next tape]
This where we get into the basic science of behavior which is the prediction of human reactions or Umpire reactions – decisions that are made by the self. We can witness adjustment in the body as a result of this umpire. If we have been in jail from getting drunk, the promptings of the Umpire, with an appeal to the survival ego, may create conditions for the body in which the body may be free from jail and legal complications.
Everyone who goes through these changes is aware of the processes of thinking mentioned and they will never will deny that these thinking processes are extremely logical and valid for the new self. But the individual rarely watches the complexity of the inner struggle nor does he see all the factors involved. Nor does he name these factors the same as others name them in similar experiences. We have a wide category of psychological terms as a result. Trying to name Umpire reactions.
</blockquote>


dm2-26:40
But that’s the type of evidence that Kübler-Ross bases her book on.  
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)
Some say they’re delivered from alcohol and say that God was the agent. Others will say that they just made up their minds. And others received help from clinic or a special group of people. However, they had to make a decision to search out their God, their inner strength or human assistance. And the Umpire was behind that decision, and a lot of thinking and reasoning went on that is never talked about.
We get a picture now of an Umpire being observed by a newly discovered more anterior observer. This second observer is distinct or unique in that it is totally a process observer. The Umpire watches over the body or the small `s' self, and while being interested in preserving the body life, cannot help get into planning for ultimate survival or immortality. The aim of all survival has to be a hope and plan for eternal survival.
Because the Umpire has somatic values at stake, it cannot get into the problems of ultimate survival as much as it would like to. Since it identifies with the physical survival first, it takes up all its time. Just getting by today you might say.
The Process Observer retreats from material observation and contemplates patterns and thinking. And this, I think, is somehow parallels Ornstein's division of the brain into two parts. I’m not saying that the Umpire is in the left side of the brain and that the anterior observer to the Umpire is in the right side of the brain but there is a parallel there that one of them deals in very objective matter and the other deals in very subjective matter or processes.
</blockquote>


dm2-28:24
And incidentally, getting back to the idea of evidence of life after death, both Raymond Moody and Kübler-Ross missed the categorization of these death phenomena. I maintain, that your death scene will measure for you where you’re going.
<blockquote>
(This section is modified from the book)
This may well be called higher meditation. Where you’re thinking about mental processes – this is what higher meditation is. And it is this observer that watches the mind and comes up with the results that are like mathematical functional curves instead of exact demonstrable answers that we like to get in scientific work.
For instance, it is this Process Observer that sees the physical universe may well exist and may well not exist at the same time. At the same time we will see that the physical universe may exist as an illusion only to people able to reach certain abilities for observation.
Likewise it takes an abstraction such as ‘good’ and again realizes that the definition depends upon the position of the observer who takes the value ‘good’ into consideration. He may see that ‘good’ is God and everything is final destiny. Or he may at the same time see ‘good’ as a polar point of ‘evil’ and he may, by observing the previous two conclusions come to the further conclusion that ‘good is defined from the position of the observer and has no real meaning as a thing in itself.
You take your choice. The amazing thing is that all of the different conclusions are valid in relation to the accepted validity standards of each position of the observer. For instance according to material standards, material exists. If we identify ourselves as being strictly material bodies in a physical universe, we are valid and we are being consistent.
(This section is heavily modified from the book)
But it is like saying that material defines material and on this hinges a very important point for the rest of this talk. Definition requires comparison. Knowing may be direct and absolute in understanding the nature of things and we know that we are not absolute creatures. Or in the event that we know that we are absolute creatures we have not found a means of communicating that finding except with things that are words. The words relate to bodies and that includes our own body or body-mind or mundane consciousness. So that regardless we have come back to definition unless we have found a state of being that satisfies us and which we don’t care to promote it among our fellow-man.
When the man who has become enlightened says that the universe does not exist, he means that it does not exist as permanently as does another dimension.
</blockquote>


dm2-31:09
dm4-31:02
File dm2 ends at 31:10.


File dm4 ends at 31:03 --- mj4 ends at 31:51 (same place; overlap, no loss of words)


== File 3 ==
== File 3 Pittsburgh (dm5, mj5) ==


=== Life after death experiences-continued ===


Total time: 31:10
Total time: 31:10


dm5-00:00
[Repeated section from dm4 and mj4 is in yellow]
R. But that’s the type of evidence that Kübler-Ross bases her book on.
And incidentally, getting back to the idea of evidence of life after death, both Raymond Moody and Kübler-Ross missed the categorization of these death phenomena. I maintain that your death scene will measure for you where you’re going. Because it’s just like with LSD: you only get out of life what you put into it. The trip you get is going to be what type of character went into the trip.
And the ones who seem to find other people, even though it’s loved ones, are on what I call the emotional level. I borrow this classification from Gurdjieff, incidentally: the instinctive, emotional, intellectual, and philosophic.  And occasionally you hear of people who have the nonhuman experience; that there are no human beings there, but they witness beautiful vistas and sometimes mathematical designs and stuff. Yet they seem to feel when they come back that they’ve witnessed a heaven that they’re going to enter. Still others find that they enter something that they can’t describe.
dm5-01:21 --- mj5-01:24
I always refer to the October 1974 issue of Reader’s Digest. There was a man who died in an automobile from a heart attack. ,  His wife was there. She called an emergency unit and they got him to the hospital. He was pronounced dead but he came back. He described his experience, and he was quite convinced of what would have happened to him if he hadn’t come back – he would have still been in that experience. He didn’t see any relatives. He was a man who personally didn’t believe in life after death. But he became one with something enormous. He realized that this was the Atman and the Brahman, ,  which is the best way you can put it although he didn’t have that vocabulary. His nationality was Jewish, I gather from his name. But he made the remark that he felt that there’s no need to fear death. He had experienced this.
Well, I’ve heard different accounts, and I notice they fall into these categories. The business of spatial travel at the end of which is a vista. Somebody takes off and they look down and see the body on the bed. Or maybe they’re not aware of the bed but they just see somebody coming and they reach out their hand and that person picks them up and takes them away. And then somebody else says, “Oh you’ve got to get back. We can’t take you.” You know, “You didn’t pay all your taxes so you have to return.”
dm5-03:11 --- mj5-03:15
I think they correspond to the different levels of the man’s potential. And the one where the person merges with unity was something that he really doesn’t understand, but realizes beyond a shadow of a doubt that he exists and he’s one with God. Sometimes they use the word God and sometimes they use some other terminology. But you pick up the same pattern. They’re naming it maybe according to their religious training, or their atheistic training. And I thought it was amazing that Moody and Kübler-Ross both missed this. All you have to do is talk to enough doctors and nurses in hospitals and you can get a tremendous encyclopedia of death experiences. And not only that but of experiences like I mentioned before: people who are pronounced dead and they witness what’s going on.
dm5-04:11
My own brother  was in an automobile wreck and I got a telegram saying he was dying, and I couldn’t possibly get there in time. He lived, but he watched from the ceiling, remembered everything that was taking place. My wife was a nurse and she used to tell me about people who were supposedly unconscious. The other nurses were throwing them around and mistreating them because they thought they were out. When this one party woke up, she said to my wife, “You treated me alright. I know you by your voice.” She couldn’t see her but she knew her voice. “The rest of these people were dogs.” Because they treated her badly. So evidently with the unconscious body there’s still an awareness of some sort.
dm5-04:56 --- mj5-05:04
Q. You spoke earlier of a master plan. Can we know anything of the nature of that, and does that presuppose a master planner?
R. I have no proof of it; I have a feeling that’s all. I have a feeling that this surely isn’t all nonsense. It seems like it is. But I have this feeling, because things work in kind of an orderly manner despite our desires and our ambitions and everything. Things seem to work out. And so my conclusion is – I’m not lapsing into religious superstition – but I think it would be folly to presume that we are forming our civilization and we are creators of the earth. And that we should go any further, or too far or too fast without knowing why.
That’s my belief and with that in mind, I’m of the opinion that it’s very possible that looking back on our history we haven’t been too long inside of clothes even, much less in the business of creating planets. So I have a feeling that there is a plan to it. Of course, my idea of the creation is not the creation of matter – I don’t believe that matter exists as we believe it. And I don’t believe that it’s strictly create-able either as the Christian Scientist would believe it. That just by a half a dozen people getting together you can remove a tumor or something of that sort.
dm5-06:39 --- mj5-06:49
I believe that what we have to do, to get a true apprehension of anything, is to go back into the source where we came from, which is the mind dimension. I maintain that we emanate from mind stuff.  The reason for saying that, is this is the best way I can draw the picture that I travelled. There again, somebody else might be able to express it differently. You get all kinds of pictures when you get analyses of experience. But the experience I had resulted from an incessant application of concentration, and observation of my own processes. In other words you go within. This is the true way to go within. You don’t go within by just concentrating on your navel or your toes.
dm5-07:32 --- mj5-07:47
Q. Tonight you’ve been painting a very bleak picture for humanity, that man is sort of following this programming, caught in a prison camp, say. Now I know you claim to have escaped from this prison camp somewhat. For the people like us who are prisoners following this around, I wouldn’t put much value on that kind of life. I don’t know if you do. Now that you’ve escaped, now that you’re free, what value …?
R. I’m not free. I’ve momentarily seen, or it feels as though I’ve seen the score. But you know, I still have to eat and I still have the pay the price for it. And I have to believe or leave.
Q. Are you familiar with the “cave dwellers”?
R. Oh, Plato? Yes, this is described by Plato in the Republic – the cave of shadows,  man’s comprehension of reality. I thought it was amazing that Plato said this. We deify modern thinking but they don’t come up to Plato. If they had the insight of Plato they’d have a different insight into psychology. He maintained that men are chained with their back to the mouth of the cave and they see the shadows of the things passing outside. They see the shadows on the wall of the cave and they interpret that as reality. And the only way they can find the real reality is to break their chains and get up and turn around and go out into the daylight. This is an analogy of course, but very true I think.
dm5-09:16 --- mj5-09:31


dm3-00:00
Q. So all you’ve done is just seen the prison and you’re still stuck in it like everybody else?


<blockquote>
R. I think I’m here. Sometimes I wake up and think that I’m going through some motions, and one day I’ll find out I’m dead. But I’ve got an idea that I’m still here.
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
 
... he means that it does not exist as permanently as does another dimension. He looks from this other dimension, and uses words on us that have been used to explain the validity of the material universe. From this practice results an endless explaining of limitations of language, and of the limitation of the listeners’ minds, that is explained itself best in the word ‘paradox’.
Q. I don’t think you give us enough credit for our abilities to change our realities.
</blockquote>
 
The paradox seems to permeate all of this talk of esoteric phenomena and enlightenment.
R. Oh, hell. Let me give you all the credit you need. I’d like to see you do it. Where are your implements? That would be more difficult than Archimedes with his fulcrum and lever, moving the earth. How can you change if you’re programmed?
<blockquote>
 
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
Q. I don’t believe in the finality of that program.
 
R. See that’s your privilege. I don’t want to upset your belief. In fact I think hope springs eternal. And only because hope springs eternal do the little ones keep the wheels turning. It’s necessary for you to have that hope. I can live without it.
 
dm5-10:30 --- mj5-10:47
 
Q. Can you give a couple of more examples about how to spot the umpire at work?
 
R. There’s a very simple one: when you hear an argument inside yourself. Did you ever hear an argument? – when you say, “Hey I want to get off those cigarettes,” and something says, “Well, one more won’t hurt.” That’s the quibble that’s going on, and whatever decision is made, is made by the umpire. That’s my point. It’s very plain and very evident in the basic appetites. Now, there are other decisions that are made when you start watching yourself, meditating upon your actions; they will become more evident. But it’s very evident to watch a person making decisions about: Which pleasure shall he have? Shall he have vanilla ice cream or raspberry?. You know, shall you have a big fat woman or a skinny one? All night? Two weeks? You want to drop dead or do you want to get back to work? That’s the umpire.
 
I maintain that this applies to everything. I’ve known people for instance, they sit in a house – I don’t know how it starts, but they can’t get up and go out. They can’t make a decision; they’ll just sit there. I knew a man one time who was 20 years of age and he stayed 20 years in bed. His umpire just failed. He couldn’t make that decision to move. Well, he made a decision – it was to stay in bed.
 
dm5-12:05
 
Q. In your dealings with other people, when you’re running on automatic, how do you spot the umpire?
 
R. The thing of course is to improve the umpire, and I think you do. In your dealings with other people these things are functioning. This is the reason, I think, that psychology is so hard to come up with. The factors are changing. Your umpire decision may be different next month if you make enough mistakes. We’re always trying to predict our relationships with other people. And I think this is one of the mistakes made today; it’s imperfect umpires even.
 
These geniuses who are going to change the earth are all located down here [on line A-B]. They think that they can take dope, have weird sex acts, and grow in experience, and they make decisions in that direction. The result is, well, we get millions of them who are ploughed under already because their umpires were faulty. They wind up in the nut houses and in suicide, overdoses and that sort of thing. These are classic examples of faulty umpires and a faulty system of psychology. It says, “Hey, you go right ahead. Don’t let anybody tell you that what you’re doing is wrong.” I’m talking about a psychologist who’s interested only in the body, perhaps, the survival of the body. They don’t know anything about the mind, but at least they could help the body survive a little longer. But no, they believe that experience is broadening and people are capable.  
 
dm5-13:51 --- mj5-14:13
 
I find that the more you learn about the things that go on in the head, making up a decision, the more you’re convinced that you’re ignorant. The more you realize the vast scope of possibility, of factors that go into things. Like a person who sets out to make a million dollars. Maybe he has a heck of a time just saving the first thousand. But after a while he learns to play the stock market and he becomes rather proficient and he thinks he’s got all the factors. But some wise guy gets in there and tampers with the gears someplace; maybe he tampers with a computer in the bank like in LA and their stock collapses.  So then he loses his life; he may have a stroke as a result of it, because he didn’t take in all the factors on a simple thing like making money. And there are millions of factors connected with the stock market. So now figure the abstract sciences. Figure the science of the human mind: thinking about thinking about thinking about thinking about thinking, ad infinitum, which you have to get into.
 
dm5-15:06 --- mj5-15:31
 
Q. I’d like to have your opinion about this incident that happens not on a regular basis but erratically. A person walks into the bathroom and looks into the mirror. And whatever it is, it’s unexplainable. But you look at this face in the mirror and it looks familiar, and you force that form to say a word and the voice is familiar. And yet whatever it is that is watching all of this in the mirror, finds this face and this voice alien and removed from whatever is watching the whole incident.
 
R. Well, I would have to possibly hear in more detail and depth. Although I think a lot of people have this feeling that there’s somebody else looking back, if that’s what you’re talking about. Now you may be talking about a person that’s obsessed or possessed. I’ve seen people who had a lot of insight into the mirror when they were drunk. They’d have quite an argument going. The one party would be calling the other an SOB and this one would be arguing because he was insulted. I think it’s an ideal place for like a split, a schizoid thing, to take effect, where you can identify with two halves of yourself, and put one on the other side of the looking glass so to speak.
 
Q. I’m speaking of myself, obviously.
 
R. Well, you could have something actually interposing itself between you and the mirror too. That’s another mistake in modern psychology. Modern psychology should explain everything in its domain. Or when a better explanation comes up, it should re-examine its textbooks. I maintain that this story The Exorcist is very real.  But the psychiatrists and psychologists presume to say this is superstition and it didn’t happen. Ten thousand years of science, wisdom about exorcising and dealing with things has to go down the drain because it’s easier to pretend it doesn’t exist than to face it.
 
dm5-17:51 --- mj5-18:20
 
Now I maintain that the foolishness has to do with the fact that this [life] is a projection. There are many projections. This is a dimension, there are many dimensions. And it isn’t logical to say they don’t exist because you can’t see them – because you can’t see a virus and you can’t see an electron. But we accept the scientist who says there is an electron. We accept the diagnosis that comes from the guy who says there’s a virus doing this. We can’t see it but [we know] it happens because it’s predictable. The disease is predictable and of course so are certain symptoms. And I maintain that there are such things as other-dimensional creatures co-inhabiting this stage.
 
dm5-18:36 --- mj5-19:11 Rose gives location as Pittsburgh


And people know this. I’ve had a lady come down to my place from right here in Pittsburgh years ago. I’ve had one from each town I think; every place I lecture somebody comes up to me and says, “I got one.” This lady from Pittsburgh said she had five; five people that were with her all the time.  I saw the one, so I’m equally nuts, if she was nuts. It was standing behind her. There are a couple boys present here, I think, who were with me when she came down. In fact they weren’t supposed to bring her and they brought her by mistake. [laughs]


We take a stand on good and evil, for instance. We say that life is good and death is evil. For the pig about to be butchered, death is bad. But for the man about to eat the pig, the pig’s death is good, as it extends the life of the man. However, for the man who has become afflicted with trichinosis from eating the pork, the situation may change, and death as evil for the pig once more becomes evil for the man. However, there is still another point of observation. The man may sometime later view the whole scene from another dimension and decide that neither pig nor man held the same values as before, and that death, good and evil were simply positions of observation, or the results of man’s position at the time.
I’m not a healer. I don’t want to become involved in that. But I don’t believe you can disperse them by therapy. In fact, I think the reason we have a high percentage of suicides among our psychiatrists is the fact that they become smitten with diseases that they never dream existed. And that’s the reason they have to go; the only cure is suicide. They can’t handle it.
Most of us do not like to accept the possibility that we might view the physical universe from a dimension of any validity, other than this. We cannot accept this possibility until we realize that we are demanding that a non-material dimension make itself material so that we can measure it with material standards.
</blockquote>
dm3-01:46


In other words, as soon as a claim is made by a psychic or a mystic, the pseudoscientific psychologist or materialist hops up and says, “Prove that.” And of course he means, “Prove it by my standards”.
dm5-19:39
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
And of course this cannot be done except by ineffective word-imagery, if that new dimension is more real than the physical universe.
Up until now I’ve only hinted that these new dimensions are possibilities that might be surmised by pattern observation, and by taking note of pattern thinking that results from inadequate physical senses.
</blockquote>
dm3-02:23


In other words, we’re getting these patterns from senses that are manifestly – we know that – they’re inadequate.
Q. You speak of mind as a dimension and you say there are many dimensions. Are you inferring that all the other dimensions come from this same mind?
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)


That which happens to the process observer is that this consideration of possibility of alternate natures for things apparent, brings the observer to a point of high confusion – once you realize this is a possibility – that puts all physical evidence in jeopardy for him. The world starts to melt – and then puts all mental processes and mental observation in jeopardy too.
R. I presume so. I don’t say that the last thing is the mind. What happens here [line E-F] is that there is an incessant observation of man’s potential – his highest potential of being a process observer and being aware of his consciousness. Aware of awareness. When this is observed with relentless observation you blow your head. Thoughts, the relative mind, the relative world disappears. Reality enters for the first time. Reality.
</blockquote>
Which is what it should be.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
The process observer is the mind in its deepest potentials. This becomes with relentless meditation upon pattern possibilities, and observing-the-observer processes, a dynamic study of the mind with the mind. And the results are an explosive quandary.
</blockquote>
Disaster.
dm3-03:23
<blockquote>
(This section is possibly heavily modified from the book)
This is the first time that we really realize, that we have been studying the mind itself. When we talk of an anterior observer to another objective observer, it looks like we are either chasing our own tail, or that man has an infinite number of observers.
</blockquote>
That’s the first thought that comes to your head: “Oh well, there’s an observer observing an observer indefinitely”. This is not true.
<blockquote>
(This section is possibly heavily modified from the book)
However if we take another look we will remember that we are really thinking about a purification of the definition of Ultimate Observer, as the Real observer, capital R ‘Real observer’, unfolds or is simply known more clearly. There is only one observer.
When the Umpire is known and the correlative functioning of the Umpire is seen then it immediately is an observation not an observer. We have then become mental in centre which we only know later because we are watching our thinking patterns and reactions and the patterns of all sorts of possibilities as well. We take this process observer alias mind consciousness as being us, once more, never dreaming in the beginning that it too will become an observation. And when it truly becomes an observation, not just the possibility of being an externality or observation, I mean it really becomes an observation it happens by reaching a deeper or more anterior position of observing.
</blockquote>
dm3-04:57
We have to have that point of comparison.
<blockquote>
(This section is possibly heavily modified from the book)
We are now approaching our Real Self (capital ‘R’ Real, capital ‘S’ Self) by divorcing all our thinking from imposed patterns of thinking. As in Zen we begin to see the mind as a bridge to cross or an erroneous area to transcend. We come across an awareness of correlation in watching these patterns.
(This section is almost the same as 1977-1004)
In the initial stages of observing patterns, we look deliberately for patterns. And one method of looking for patterns is to examine a field of data for common denominators. This does not always bring us mathematical revelations unless we can throw into the computer all the factors that cause common denominators. To give an example, one justifying argument for the God theory in theology would be the common-denominator type of evidence of the God theory in nearly every religious system.
Many are eager to seize this type of evidence as they are hungry to believe and too tired to do further thinking. The factor that is missed is that things are not proven by belief. A belief is only a postulation. Another factor that affects the conclusion is that the beliefs may have sprung from a desire to believe a certain dogma, rather than to try to find things out for whatever they are.
</blockquote>
dm3-06:24
We should not try to prove or summon evidence for that which we would like to hear.
<blockquote>


(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
Now, to an observer you may be a nut. But in that state of reality you have transcended the human mind and the mind dimension; you realize it’s only something you pass through. And nearly everyone who has had these experiences speaks of it, of killing the mind. They speak of it in Zen, that you have to kill the mind. That it’s false; it’s like the crazy house in the circus, the house of mirrors, illusions and that sort of thing.
Still, correlation may be of some use. In esoteric writings we come across the correlation, “As above, so below.” This is no more absurd than Einstein’s theory of relativity. Checking patterns of thinking with patterns of thinking – common denominators, for example – may be the only tools we have for mental observations. We just have to keep an eye on our slipping into projections through desires or as a result of desires.
We hit a snag in our studies of the material world by using material to check material.
</blockquote>
I mentioned that point before. That was the end of the true analysation of the material world – we had no other vantage point for comparison. We were looking at the thing with the thing. 
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
We found a happy synchronicity or harmony of material measurements from material things. But we missed a very important point. Definition, which applies to the material world alone, demands that we have comparison.
The thing under scrutiny must be viewed in terms of something else – something outside itself – in order to determine its uniqueness.
</blockquote>
Which means its is-ness.
dm3-07:44
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
So that a man is defined as an animal but a unique type of animal, and the difference becomes his definition. However, when we lump the entire material picture together and attempt to define the visible, material universe we can only do it adequately from another dimension. We cannot do it properly from another universe if that universe is of similar material and operates under the same patterns.
The relative mind demands a similar comparison with that which a thing is not. The mind cannot adequately know the mind with the mind.
</blockquote>
These are little evidences that have been overlooked for years in psychology.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
And yet so many of our relative minds reject the idea than man can, from some anterior mental dimension, really perceive the material universe in a valid, if not really real, appreciation of this world.
In trying to be reasonable, we might say that we will accept the above findings if we could be sure that the exponent of the new theory or the describer of the new dimension, is not creating the new dimension out of whole cloth.
</blockquote>
And we run into a lot of people who are describing things from another dimension. But we find that there’s a lot of confusion there because everyone has a different story it seems.
dm3-09:11
<blockquote>
(Does not appear in the book)
The validity of the describer and the description depends upon our acceptance of his honesty or upon his possible perpetration of a concept rather than actual knowledge or knowing. There is only one answer to this complaint.
</blockquote>
And the complaint is just and even more, it is necessary because all of us should doubt.
<blockquote>
(Does not appear in the book)
We cannot, by relative mentation, know that which another man knows by direct mind action alone. We cannot know by contemplation know what a man knows by direct mentation. We have to learn to view things directly. We must start by directly viewing the inside in the manner described above.
Returning to the use of the correlation ‘as above so below’ we look back at the fallacy of trying to study material with material, we notice now that we are trying to study the mind with the mind. And we are doing it still, right now, with our relative mind.
The fact that we have become more intricate in our thinking and possibly much more clear in our appraisals does not alter the fact that it is all being done with the mundane mind. The fact that we may have contemplated a different type of mind from toying with infinite possibilities of that which the mind, or the anterior mind to the relative mind-observing mind, might be, does not immediately make these possibilities real.
</blockquote>
Just because you can think about this thing doesn’t make it existent. You have to actually witness, you have to actually be there.
dm3-10:38
<blockquote>
(Does not appear in the book)
We will be cursed with confusion until we are able to look at the mind from outside the mind. It might be said that the absolute self or the ultimate observer is that which knows itself but cannot define itself. No mirror is available with which to compare it. Nothing is beyond it and the only thing you can do is try it.
</blockquote>
This idea of looking at the mind as I said, you can look at it and it will just cause you an infinite tangle, an increasing tangle. And of course we have to go through it. Yet strangely enough, this tangle we get into eventually leads to what I said was an explosion and the explosion becomes a revelation.
Now I want to get a little bit into method. What I’ve been trying to do with this whole talk is to show you how to get inside by starting and looking at the person who’s looking. And this is what we’ve been talking about and it’s been a little bit complicated – we can’t talk about things without being somewhat complicated. I’d like to make some comments on the methods for searching an anterior observer.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
There is no sense in looking for anything but the observer or he who is looking. We should not try to define something and then try to find it.
</blockquote>
In other words lots of people will eagerly say, “Yeah I understand what you’re saying and I agree with you a 100%. Take me to the next step in this discipline or whatever”. No, the first step is that you go there yourself. Can’t let anybody take you. You’ve got to make up your mind to make the trip yourself. Nobody can take you. You can’t agree. A lot of people will say, “Yeah I agree, give me the word”.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)


The anterior observer must be discovered; not just substantiated by evidence. We begin the adventure of inside investigation from a basis of no conviction. The average psychologist does not take this stand. He accepts with conviction, testimony of predecessors in the field of psychology or he accepts the definitions or mental attributes as laid out by fellow psychologists. Very few scientists go back to the roots of their scientific field and prove to themselves, step by step, the postulations that are the backbone of their own consequent work or experimentation.
dm5-21:10
</blockquote>
dm3-13:00
In other words, if you’ve been in any research into Chemistry or Physics, you’ll find this out. Somebody says a certain chemical has a valence of 6,2,or 3 or something, nobody says, “Why?” – they memorise it and they write it down, they accept it.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
In other words, much of scientific work is the acceptance of previous groundwork, even though the groundwork is admittedly only conceptual.
We have to take into consideration just that which we know for sure when we are looking at ourselves. We mentioned previously that there are three major explanations for the existence of the physical universe: One is that material is the real substance of our possible experiential field.
</blockquote>
See only thing we can experience is material.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
Another is that all is an illusion. And still another is that any definition of the physical universe must and will be qualified by the position of our understanding and observation.
</blockquote>
In other words it depends on a point of relativity - where we’re standing.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
In other words, to an ant, the universe might be an acre of ground. To an insane person the universe might be something found in the core of an apple. So we must get a clear idea of he who is looking.
</blockquote>
From outside, the mind is getting inside the Self – when we get outside of the mind, we get inside the Self (that’s the capital S ‘Self’, at least approaching the capital S ‘Self’).
dm3-14:43
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
We do not know who is looking, and we are not too sure of that which we see, especially after we have been hallucinated, or have seen a hologram or a mirage.
So we start with nothing (this is important - we have to start with nothing, no postulations) deciding to look inside. We know nothing for sure. Descartes had an urgency for self-definition not based upon simple internal observations. Much of our thinking is forced upon us.
</blockquote>
We don’t think because we are free agents. We think because we can’t help it, we can’t stop it.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
We have little choice in picking or claiming a thought as being our property. If it is caused by previous thought, previous determinations which are caused by previous situations forced upon us and by present environmental influences that afflict us before we can prevent them. Many of these environmental influences exist in the body, or they affect body area reactions that we do not completely understand and endorse.
We cannot start by negating our presence. That would be absurd.
</blockquote>
We can say we start with nothing but we can’t start with a personal negation.
dm3-16:03
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
And in this reverse searching we must always retreat from the absurd, in favor of things or ideas that are manifestly less absurd or are more orderly or reasonable.
</blockquote>
And I’ve said repeatedly in my different talks that this whole thing is a retreat from error, not a postulation and then a charging and a trying to prove the postulation. It’s taking zero and building on zero.
<blockquote>
(Parts of this section almost the same as 1977-1004)
When we ask ourselves, “Who am I?” we take an initial step. We do not begin by saying, “I am this or that.”  We then explore the fields of possibility. We may be only a body. We may be a soul or spirit housed in a body. We may be a body with a mind separate from a body and still separate from the spirit. Or we may decide that we are something that we really can’t identify properly. But we may conclude that we are an awareness that witnesses a mind and body functioning in some relation to our individual point of awareness.
</blockquote>
So we are aware of our mind. We are also aware of our body.
<blockquote>
(Neither in the book nor in 1977-1004)
We may think we are that which asks but it may be that we are not that which we think is doing the asking.
</blockquote>
Like the fellow says, “I’m the guy that just asked you the question”. Well, that might be a phase of you, may be a desire that’s talking – not you, not the real capital  ‘You’.
dm3-17:43
<blockquote>
(Neither in the book nor in 1977-1004)
The mind may be asking the question because it identifies with the body. And the result is a spontaneous evolving question, an outburst which starts with the examination of the fingers or toes as as an infant. Eventually the question comes to any child, ”What is all this about?”
</blockquote>
In this manner we locate our awareness by changing things or trying to change things or observing things that we thought we were. First we see them and then if we don’t like them, we try to alter them. But all this comes from basic observation.
<blockquote>
(Neither in the book nor in 1977-1004)
We are not our fingers and not our toes and we are not our body. We are aware of them. We are not our senses but we are aware of them. We are aware of thinking and we describe it as observing our thoughts.
But even the Umpire knows that some thoughts are more harm than good. And consequently are not only representative of the anterior eye or observer but they can bring more harm to the whole combination of body and mind.
</blockquote>
In other words, a lot of thoughts come to us and we think, “Well they come from God or some good force or some excellent intuitional computer”. But when we examine them over a period of time we find that they didn’t come from that source at all. They may have come from a physical appetite or something.
dm3-19:22
<blockquote>
(Modified from the book)
And the thoughts are basically not us. Thoughts are obsessions in that we are unable to control them. To control them we must first understand them. And to understand them we must make an obsession of understanding our thoughts.
Determination must be summoned, reinforced and be reminded as to direction, ways and means and goals for the adventurer’s obsession.
When we are attracted to things about us, too many hours of the day, we should retreat and deliberately look at ourselves by looking at our previous actions. We must observe our thoughts and then ask ourselves, "Why did I think that?" Or, "Where did this thought originate?" Or, "What is thought?"
However, the most important thing to ask ourself in this business of introspection concerns the source and direction of thought. There are two directions of thought, and both are projections. Certain thoughts are projected upon us and others are projected by us.
</blockquote>
This is not too complex. You get thoughts that didn’t originate inside yourself and everyone who has experienced ESP  knows that you can project thoughts. That they can be sent out just like a radio sends out a message.
<blockquote>
(Neither in the book nor in 1977-1004)
Van der Leeuw  gives an explanation or description of this process especially the process of projecting by the individual.
We only know things about the physical universe that are interpreted by the senses. It is evident that the senses are not infallible nor are they exact. We have a limited colour range as well as a limitation on the vibrations that we’re able to perceive with our ears. A radio picks up things and amplifies them which a human ear cannot pick up etc.
</blockquote>
So it’s manifest that sounds are there – we just don’t get them.
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
To give an example of it - a person views a certain object, which means he receives certain sensory impressions or stimuli. But this is not always what he sees. We have an example in the mirage or hologram. In the case of the mirage, the phenomenon is witnessed by the eyes but in reality it proves not to exist as part of the material world. This results from inadequate seeing ability.
</blockquote>
Your eyes are not infallible. We do not see it for what it is. I saw a cylindrical hologram in Pittsburgh. It was a floating wagon and I looked at it from all sides and I could see the underside of the wagon and everything but inside the cylinder there was nothing. It was a projection. I projected the vision.
dm3-22:16
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
To some degree or other when we receive a percept, we immediately project a vision upon the object that takes our attention.
</blockquote>
This is important – what I said before is every time we think, our every thought is a projection. It’s inspired by the senses. In other words, the senses hammer something into the central mind and we project what we think is out there. This is basically what it is.
blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
We rarely see an object as it really is. We see our own projected vision.
</blockquote>
As I mentioned before, the human eye has a limited colour range and limited hearing range. There is no way to know of colours other than those we see. So these walls may be of an entirely different colour had we more rods in our eyeballs, in the retina to pick them up.
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
Sometimes it is claimed that lower animals have less colour possibility than we do.
</blockquote>
They claim that some of them see black and white only. I don’t know how they determine this but if so, it’s an entirely different vision that they see than is seen by us. And they see it by agreement – in other words, they all see the same thing.
dm3-23:27
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
These are all examples of projection and more than the senses alone are responsible for projecting this type of vision. There is a pervasive agreement on meaning by collective mankind that becomes a factor in the projection of meaning upon an object.
</blockquote>
We are not trained – this comes with our childhood, with our infancy. When we are born we learn to interpret the same as the parent and the grandparents and everybody around us. But we don’t learn to see.
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
One of these is the projection of beauty upon an object which requires a universal agreement on that which beauty is. Much of our study of ourselves comes about by comparing ourselves with others.
</blockquote>
Again, another viewpoint.
dm3-24:11
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
Sometimes we use other people for mirrors so that by their attitudes and comments we can better gauge consistency in our own reactions. We may be using this type of mirror for quite a few years without success in knowing our self any better until we realize that we were projecting characteristics upon these people that did not exist.
</blockquote>
This is the reason for the social incompatibility that I maintain the whole field of psychology is missing. You’ve got to go inside that person. I said this before and it bounces off I think. You’ve got to walk in another man’s moccasins; you’ve got to think with his thoughts. And then there’s no arguments.
Instead of that we project all sorts of things and we accuse him of not being compatible with the modern psychological dogmas or the modern psychological religion, morality. It’s like a child walking to the zoo after watching a Disney picture and having his arm torn off by an animal because stuff had been projected on the animals through the Disney cartoons.
I want to summarise now and open this up for questions later on. A few things and if you can remember them it may be good. Because this summary is a result of my lifetime of investigation of psychology and you’ll find that this has very little bearing on other systems of psychology.
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
I find that the qualities of the mind are basically three:
1. Perception
2. Retention
3. Reaction
</blockquote>
Now, I say five and I’ll read them to you.


dm3-25:52
Q. Then the mind is possibly a false dimension like all the other dimensions.
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
Sensory perception, retention and reaction; mental perception; and projection.
</blockquote>
There’s still three but there’s two types of perception, there’s two types of reaction.


Basically we perceive, remember and react. But this projection is a type of reaction that is mentally unique because it’s like a mental extrusion. Like an arm to the mind, so to speak.
R. Well, the same as this, in my estimation; if you take it seriously it will worry you.
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
Perception is largely ignored.
</blockquote>
Many tests and systems relating to memory and reaction exist in psychology and … IQ tests that sort of thing. Testing your co-ordinative ability – that’s reaction ability. Or memory ability -remember the set of symbols that they gave you at the beginning of the problem
dm3-26:44
<blockquote>
(Heavily modified from the book)
Perception – self observing is one type of perception, perceiving yourself – has many directions and qualifications.
</blockquote>
In other words, there’s a sensory perception which sees, feels, hears and so on in the external world. But then there’s a mental perception. This mental perception has a wide range of possibility. Because the mind, if you take case histories of phenomena (that you haven’t had and if you’ve had some yourself, not everyone’s had them) of where you saw something in your mind that did not exist in your past. It wasn’t taken from memory.  


For instance, you’re sitting in your chair and you see a man falling in front of a bullet – the bullet hits him and he falls. You jump up and you say, “Jack’s been shot”. Now this is a memory – I’m reciting something that can’t be proven of course, there’s always criticism. But we get a lot of stuff directly into our mind that doesn’t come to our senses. We call that ESP or Psi  phenomena. So there is an ability of the mind to see without the senses. Consequently it’s necessary to mark a different type of perception not just sensory perception. The mind perceives.
dm5-21:24 --- mj5-21:59


Q. You were talking about out-of-the-body experiences. I was a bedside nurse for a woman who had multiple sclerosis. She had been in bed for ten years unable to move, unable to talk, but she was able to hear and see. She weighed about 70 pounds and she was 54 years old. I worked for her for several months. When I first saw her, in my heart I said, “Oh my God, how can I do this, how can I work for this woman?” But my intuition said, “Yes, go for it. There’s something to learn.”


Now reaction – all of our qualities are perception we automatically remember. It’s just like it’s branded as it goes through as the memory, retention I would call it, the permanence of our experience, and the reaction is automatic. It’s just like a reflex we automatically react. And the reaction becomes very complex. A child, a new-born child has a very limited set of reactions. It picks up a tremendous lot – millions and millions of possibilities. And then it gets complicated – it may have thousands of reaction Gestalts, meaning patterns of reaction. Such as driving an automobile automatically, that sort of thing.
So through the weeks I learned something about someone who had their mind controlled. I mean who had the power of their own mind. Can you imagine being in bed and unable to move for 10 years and having the will to live and having the will to give and to experience life. She experienced her grandchild they brought the grandchild to her and put the grandchild on her chest and the baby kissed her. And it was all very moving to me.


What I wanted to bring out was a certain look that she would get in her eyes when I would go into the kitchen and cook for her. There was a mirror in the room in front of me and there was a glass window from the kitchen to her room, which was actually the porch. And I kept an eye on that mirror because there was no other way of communicating to me in case she needed her suction machine. In case she was dying, because she was dying. They told her she should have been dead about 10 years ago but she’s still very much alive.


But your mental perceptions and projections – these are the ones that we are little aware of.  We don’t talk too much about them. And I mentioned before that perception is ignored and I want to point out some of these types of perceptions. And I call them visions. I say that everything a man sees is a vision. Even a thought. A man gets an impression which is chemical. There’s a chemical reaction – the light on the rod, or the eardrum or whatever. But this is translated into a vision. So that what I’m seeing here now is a vision and what you’re seeing is a vision. An interpretation too but nevertheless a projected vision.
dm5-23:15 --- mj5-23:51


R. Is she still living now you mean?


dm3-29:54
Q. Oh yes, she’s very much alive. So I would check the mirror occasionally and there was a strange feeling that I had when I saw her eyes. Because her eyes would go up and there was a definite glaze around her face. I talked to the other nurses about it. She had seen a program on television about out of the body experiences and somehow she had communicated with the angel, that’s what she said to her nurse. She didn’t want anybody else to know.


There’s five main types of visions and nearly all the visions you have are the phenomena that come out of these five types.  
R. Oh yeah, this is quite common.


First is sensory perception – this is objects apprehended by whatever sense. Smell, touch, taste etc.
Q. And, yeah there was something going on. I could feel it. And to a nurse she said, “The angel comes.” And she’s very calm and very peaceful, and very contented in that situation. The nurse asked her, “Well, what do you say to the angel?” and Corkie would say, “I’m not ready yet.” And the angel would say, “Okay, we’ll leave you be.


Then there’s such a thing as memory perception. Visualisation. Which we see from the mind internally. We sit and dream of things that happened. We relive, so to speak. Or we make new combinations even. Like I said you can imagine an apple, you remember a green apple that you ate. Okay, how about putting some purple stars on it. You can see that in your mind’s eye. A green apple with purple stars. Right around the middle. This is not something we saw – it doesn’t exist – but we can visualise this, this is mental perception. The mind projecting upon the mind. And the sensory perception is the external world projecting upon the person. And the internal projecting back on the external world. But in memory perception it’s strictly the mind projecting upon…
[next paragraph is rewritten for logical order]
dm3-31:09
File dm3 ends at 31:09


R. Yes. I have had some peculiar things happen to me. I don’t consider this a talent and I couldn’t duplicate it if I tried. They just happen, and when they happened they’re there. But I was in the contracting business years back and I had a partner, and when he was 60 years of age he got cancer of the lungs. He was broke, he had spent all his money on doctors and stuff. Two daughters had come up from Florida They were living in a house trailer – they’re called 40 foot trailers but they’re really about 35, about as long as this room is wide. The daughters had little kids about two years old. So the two daughters, maybe three children, and his wife and he were in this 40 foot trailer.


dm5-25:26 --- mj5-26:07


== File 4 ==
Well, I went over to see him, and he was asking me questions about things. We had never discussed religion or anything else. We just worked together, and it was hard work; we kept that out of the conversation so we’d get something done. We had enough to fight about. Anyhow he seemed to sense that he should ask me a question, and he said to me, “Where do you go when you die?” Now this was just a couple of days before he died. I said, “Well, I don’t know where you’re going,


[tape break (both dm and mj versions) and restarts, small repeat, no loss of words]


Total time: 31:03
but I know what I feel happens to people after death.” And I told him.
[This seems to be the continuation of dm1]


dm4-00:00
A couple of days later I went over and it was the day before Easter, Saturday night. And the women were putting on their coats, going to the Eagles to play Bingo. He was on a studio couch. And his wife kind of knelt down on one knee, talking to him and she’s saying, “I’ll be back at 10 o’clock,” and so on. And I saw his hand reaching up like this, real slow, and he was patting her on the back. So when she got up I said, “What’s wrong with Frank?” And she says, “Oh, he’s in a coma.” Now when someone tells me somebody’s in a coma I presume they’re unconscious but he knew she was there. So I said, “I think he knows you’re there.” She said, “Oh yeah, but he’s in a coma. He gets into those and slips in and out of them.”


R: [muffled audio]
[break in tape in dm version, also mj version.]  


... that a person gets into. The biggest part of our reverie thoughts are originated in the glands. That might sound hard to you but I maintain that the glands can cause thoughts and the thoughts can cause glands to function. There’s a tremendous physical relationship there. So that we’re tremendously programmed. And you discover that only when you get to watching from a superior position, which as I said, Benoit called a conciliatory position.  
[Due to the tape gap, words are omitted that Rose took the man’s hand. Inserted here, necessary for the story.]


It’s only when you get clear above that Umpire, that somatic mind that you’re able to see it for what it is. You can’t see it while you’re in it. When you’re in it, you think it’s God. You think you’re the God, you’re the big shot, you’re doing everything. People do nothing.
So I went over to the couch, reached over, and took this man’s hand. Now I know you’ll think this is a damn big lie, but this man actually told me he was dying. And how I translated that, I don’t know. There wasn’t a word spoken. But it was just a slight pressure and I stood up and I said to the woman, “Don’t go.” She said, “Why not?” I said, “He’s dying.” She said, “How do you know?.” I said, “He told me so.” She said, “He didn’t say a word.” I said, “Don’t kid yourself. He’s dying.” I was that convinced. You could have thought it was superstition, or just a hunch I had or something.


dm04-00:44
dm5-27:48


Either long pause or  inaudible [18 seconds]
I often look back upon it and think what an ass I might have made out of myself if he had lived another day, because of the things I did. They took their coats off and they stayed there. I said, “We’ve got to get him into the hospital.” She says, “Why?” I said, “You’ve got these little children here, and when people die with cancer of the lungs sometimes it’s not pretty when they go.” This is what happened to him. When he died his lungs seemed to come up out of his mouth.


dm4-01:01
She said, “We have no money to take him to the hospital.” I said, “You don’t have to have money when a man’s dying.” I picked up the telephone and called the volunteer fire department in this little community, and said, “We need an ambulance over here.” I took this all on myself. That’s why I felt that it would have really been foolish looking, imposing on somebody else’s domestic situation. We got him into the hospital that night and he died on Easter morning. And he coughed up his lungs.


R. Now of course, what we’re trying to do, one of the things that everyone’s trying to do, is pull the strings of life before they find out what’s going on. And I think somewhere there’s an instinct that people have, that think as soon as you find the answer if there’s any – we’ll be able to do that. I think that to do anything really, that hasn’t been programmed by some other force, could require a tremendous amount of knowledge, to begin with. Almost the knowledge of the why.
dm5-28:45


In other words, I can see where every railroad accident, every automobile accident, every marriage, every divorce and all this stuff, is planned ahead of time. In other words, we just experience it. But because there doesn’t seem to be much way of avoiding this, we’re thinking of a highly complex culture that everything’s happening is really chance or accident. Maybe so. But I think a lot of this, after you get a few years on you and you look back and you see that things seem to happen almost magically, in retrospect. And they went the right direction. And lots of times the direction at the moment was one that we opposed without our choice directing.
But I think that you can communicate. You run into these incidents all the time. That’s what I call a direct-mind experience. I don’t think it was the hand. I don’t think he talked to me through his hand. I think the contact was made and I think this happens with a lot of people, that you can communicate. My brother, when he was in the automobile wreck, he saw and heard what was going on but he couldn’t communicate with anybody. Maybe if somebody had touched him he could have.


dm4-02:29
dm5-29:18


So that, what I’m trying to say is that there is an over, a master plan, and in order for us to affect that, to cause one action of our own, we would have to upset that whole master plan, so to speak. It’s almost like the molecule, the electrons in a molecule – if we’re able to find the science to disrupt one of those electrons, we’ll upset the field, the tremendous electronic field in the process. And I think that this would happen with us.
Q. I just have the same question I asked before, so I’m trying again: What good is it for a person to know he’s in a prison, if he could never get out?


And I maintain that what we fail to pick up in the analysis here, is that the human being lives in a dimension that he thinks is the only one. And there’s a parent dimension. And this dimension is projected from that parent dimension, that being, mind. I think that this entire picture that we see is an emanation, a mental emanation, which is somehow projected into the human consciousness. And he in turn projects it with common agreement: agreed-upon definitions, agreed-upon landscapes, in anything that we see.
R. Well, that was the decision I made when I was 21 years of age. I realized I was facing that, and maybe I would find out something I couldn’t change. And I found out something I couldn’t change. But I prefer to know than to die in ignorance. I preferred it then and I think the decision was worthwhile. Because there is a certain equanimity. I’ve been in some tight places and when I get into those tight places, it’s then that it returns to me and I say, “Hey, you know, there’s nothing happening here of any importance.” Then all that importance vanishes. Whereas if I hadn’t gone through that, I would have still been taking things very seriously.


dm4-03:51
dm5-30:15


Now this is brought out, it might sound weird but I’ll give you a reference, in Chilton Pearce . Chilton Pearce came to the conclusion that – I’m going to mention a few words about him because you may not have read his books. But his wife was dying of cancer, and he came to the conclusion that the reason his wife was dying of cancer was because everybody had agreed upon cancer. And having agreed upon cancer – you know – and we see that in individuals - a person will tell you, “I’m going to die of cancer. I’m smoking too many cigarettes,” or something. And the next thing you know we find out that he gets cancer.
Q. As a teacher can you offer us that anything in life has value, any joy, any of these things?


dm4-04:25
R. There is no such thing as enjoyment ...


But beyond that, even beyond that, there’s the mere fact that we accept it. The mere fact that we say there is cancer - cancer is. That’s the old fact if you’ve read anything in the Kabbalah , the Kabbalah speaks of the laws of creation. The law of creation was the will plus the imagination plus the Theos. And when you spoke it, God help you, you had it. And this is what happens – we talk and then we say it is and then it is.
[remove, Rose is not responding to this.] Q. Does anything have value?


Okay, I can’t prove that and neither did Chilton Pearce. He said , he came up with this concept that if he could divorce himself entirely of this whole paradigm that humanity had created, the verbal paradigm – ‘In the beginning was the Word’ and after that there was nothing but chaos because words created words. Now that maybe a vulgar analysation or translation of the Genesis  - of a statement in Genesis.
R. This is the icing we put on the cake ourselves. Nobody enjoys. People are enjoyed. That’s bait. Let’s say the most intense or most wonderful pleasure there is, is sex. Hell, that’s animal. If you didn’t have that you wouldn’t take on the burden. The animals are brought together under the bait of pleasure and they sign up for twenty years of slavery. You’re talking about slavery, but you could be free as a bird if you weren’t hooked on that idea of pleasure. But sooner or later everybody realizes, I think, that they [have been] …


[end of tape] File dm5 ends at 31:10
== File 4 Pittsburgh (dm7, mj7) ==
Total time: 31:00


But regardless we are … our biggest enemy are words perhaps. And the idea was that if we could create a new paradigm in which there were no diseases, even the Christian Scientists  would agree with this, that we believe that they’re there so they’re there. And if that could happen he could cure his wife. Well, he never cured his wife, she died, but he did get a couple of books off. (Laughter)
dm7-00:00 --- mj7-00:00


dm4-06:00
Q. How about in a person’s relation with his fellowman. Is there anything of value in there?


And I think he opened us up to something. And there were others beside him that felt the same way. Now what happens is … we are just now beginning to get a breath of knowledge about the mind. Before it was, ”I have a mind” , then the second mistake was, “I am a mind” - so I say here, somatic mind. And this is neither.  
R. Sure, sure. Everybody and me are the same. That’s the way I look at it. I’d like to be able to treat everybody as myself, but I don’t always do it.


We come from the mind. The mind is a dimension and in order to change this life of ours, we have to know all the causes. In other words, if you get down and you’ve got a disease, the doctor may say to you, “What is your current .[inaudible]” because you emanate from something and that has a relationship to whatever affects you. And we emanate from a mind dimension.
Q. Could you talk more about the connection between thoughts and the glands?


Mary Baker Eddy  way back there, said this. That if you were able to change the mind, affect the universal mind then miracles might happen. At least miracles would… [inaudible]. I think it’s a basic failure. I think the idea of Christian Science is, the failure in this respect is faith will not move mountains. No one put a leg back on.
R. Yes. Didn’t you ever have that happen?


I remember an argument I had with a man when I used to work at the Alliance atomic Submarine and a Christian Scientist worked there and he was very touchy about everything we said to him – he said was made flesh. He said don’t curse people because it becomes real and all that sort of thing. You joke but we got into some interesting discussions and arguments. And I said to him one day, “Hey, knock it off. Do you really think that the massive belief will change this world?” and he said, “Sure”. I said, “Why can’t, you take these [inaudible] healers, they’re running around all over the place that are pretending to heal people but they can’t put a leg back on?” Did you ever hear of one putting a leg back on when somebody chopped it off. You can possibly heal a person of a mental syndrome or something of that sort or convince them that they didn’t have it in the first place or something like that. But there’s a [inaudible] deny that maybe you can change.  
Q. Could you explain a little more? I don’t really understand what you mean.


dm4-08:32
R. Sure, sure. I maintain for instance, that a woman, her thoughts change with every day of her 28 day cycle. And she has no control over this. And I have had women go through, put the calendar up on the wall and write down their mood, their desire, whether they would be in a sexual mood or in an indifferent or an angry mood – they repeat, almost exactly the same day in that 28-day period. This is because the glands provoke the thought. The cow that runs and jumps over the fence doesn’t do it because she logically decides that there’s a bull ten miles away. She does it because the hormones key in. It’s just like a clock; they’ve got a clock wound up inside themselves and they move.


My belief is there are certain limitations on that you can change. There’s a limitation to all of this. There’s a limitation to our knowledge of this mind dimension. You can’t put a leg back on and faith will not move the mountain because two hundred billion people don’t believe it will move. There’s nothing else. You’re not going to move that mountain over on top of the city and smash it on all the people. The people just refuse to believe it and this negative form of belief is what Chilton Pearson was up against and he couldn’t do it himself.
dm7-01:20


Now there are and they have discovered down through time, people have discovered ways of affecting this mind dimension. [inaudible]. And through intense application – I maintain that if you concentrate long enough on anything you will get an answer. You might be crazy when you get it but you’ll get an answer. I believe that if you desire to be a millionaire and you push hard enough, apply total energy, throw enough mud at the ceiling, you’ll be a millionaire. But you’ve got to sell out everything else and put that energy into it.
Q. Okay, what about a woman who has an erratic system of hormones?
R. It will still be an erratic regularity. She will be erratic in a regular pattern.


dm4-09:47
Q. Do you think other things could be achieved in that? Let’s say ...


I maintain that if you want to find yourself you can apply the same principles and you’ll find yourself. I think if you want to know something about the mind, I think you can do that by applying the same amount of energy. Now I don’t say that in some cases people will not quit short of the goal by virtue of rationalizing that they’ve found the answer. This is the thing we can’t say – there’s no yardstick for that.
R. Children.


What it comes to is this whole thing has a bearing on what I consider the errors in psychology today. I think that there are errors in sociology. For instance the theme [inaudible] out, “We’re going to change the world”. I talked to a sociology teacher one time and she said,”Well we’re going to create a culture”. I said, “What you’re teaching is lies”. And she said, “Yes. But if people believe those lies, we’ll create a culture”. 
Q. Pardon?


dm4-10:49
R. Children.


And this is the drive. I see that this has been happening a tremendous lot recently. Get in and brainwash the public en masse. You’re getting it right now on the price of gas. I think everyone’s getting brainwashed on the price of gas. Because a tremendous educational campaign is going out to convince people so that they will believe eagerly that they must sacrifice. I remember World War 2 - everybody was getting into the big self-sacrifice thing and we were short on everything imaginable. But this all has a … these are mood impellers, these are experts at impelling moods and they go unchallenged because people want to believe.
Q. No, no that’s not what I’m talking about ...


I found out something else about the human being in relation to religion. The majority of the people want to believe the most impossible things. Alice in Wonderland. They don’t want a simple, basic psychological analysis to human nature or to the next dimension or to where they’re going when the die. No. It has to have pearls, it has to look like a Christmas tree, you have to have categories and deities, you have to have indulgences and bluffings, you have to have favoured sons and bastards that are going to hell. You have to really be elaborate and then you have to run between the raindrops and pay every step of the way. (Laughter)
R. Well, that’s what’s achieved. What are you talking about?


dm4-12:15
Q. Well, you talk about a normal pattern, there’s certain…


I don’t know – I sometimes think all of this is programmed in. I think all of this is programmed in. I one time was initiated into a sect out of India called the Radha Soami  sect. Some of you may be acquainted with it. Kirpal Singh  made a tour of the country recently. He was branch of [inaudible] of the Radha Soami sect. Their headquarters is in Beas, one of them is in Beas and Kashmir. But they have something that caught my ear, something about it caught my ear. They maintain that there were seven planes of existence and this was the lowest plane, possibly. And there were three low planes in which we kept reincarnating – we’d run up three steps and down three steps, up three steps, down three steps. There was a creature in charge of this, it was a God, the head of it called Radha Soami. And he had made a deal with a character that was running a … he had the concession on the lower three levels. And this was the Devil, what we call the Devil but they call it Kal –K-a-l.
R. Well, I don’t talk about a normal, I don’t know what normal is. You have to define it when you say normal.


dm4-13:44
dm7-01:57


Kal had priorities. He had the right to keep these people from escaping. Only the very shrewd and few escaped from the third plane and got up into the fourth plane. There are Indian names for them – I’ve forgotten them. I went through the initiation – I’m sharing something with you – it didn’t cost me any money. It was supposed to be for people who were ready but I don’t know of anybody who’s ready. But the thing I noticed about it was they said Kal penetrates everything. In other words, you’re going to try to escape from these dimensions. So you start a religion and soon as it starts some thief just steals the treasury and runs off with it. Or he sells the leader out for a few nickels. Or he becomes this maddy. Before Christ died, or right after he died I think, Peter was arguing with one of the other apostles and he says, “Already we have begun to dissemble”. In other words the man is hardly dead in his grave and they’re chewing at each other and starting to … and one of them is going this way, this dogma, and the other is going this way.  
Q. Okay, balanced.


dm4-14:49
R. Okay.


And this was the work of Kal. It may have been true or false but to see the analogy, if that’s all it was, was very good to me. There’s something that wrecks the progressive efforts of man on a spiritual level or psychological level - it maybe nothing but his head. Maybe the endless variations that occur when anything is brought up  - that he’s got to face the endless variations and the result will be confusion. So that he never really finds his way out with a dogmatic or mundane religion.
Q. I’m talking about a balance as opposed to an erratic system, okay. One is a level of estrogen and other hormones, and there’s testosterone. If that level of testosterone is interfering, is at an exaggerated level that the other levels of the hormones cannot function properly. How does that affect …?


Now there’s another fellow came along, just in passing, before I stop, that had a theory about ... he also knew that we were robots. [inaudible] Gurdjieff , Gurdjieff … and he formed a kind of a team. But I thought Gurdjieff was the greatest psychologist to ever hit the western world and I still do. I think the majority of psychologists today are behaviourists. In other words, I say it’s like taking soil samples to discover what’s at the core of the earth – that is behaviouristic psychology. Taking nerve reflexes to discover the soul of a man, or the [inaudible] to be a man, or the ideas of the designer. Who wrote the blueprint? This guy knows the score.
R. Well, I don’t know anything about that. I’m not an endocrinologist. I just know that everything works, and the people that are crazy and go out and stick their heads under streetcars, it’s all part of the plan. In other words, if somebody’s glands are unbalanced it may be because of, as the Bible says, the sins of the parents or the grandparents. Or it may be that the kid fouled herself up when she was little, see, by playing games. I don’t know what causes it. I’m just saying that regardless of what it is, the individual, she or he, will have a regular pattern that they follow, and they can’t control it. They can’t control it. I was watching them even trying to write it on the calendar and they’d still say, “It happened again.” It occurs again.  


dm4-16:14
dm7-03:08


This guy is sitting down there taking pinpricks or testing reflex or inkblots or something of this sort or conceptualizing does not know from whence the man came. And yet he’s going to legislate for the purpose of keeping himself in office. This is my belief. Psychologists are not pure psychologists. They want to be funded. And I believe that Freud  – the only one I had much respect for was Jung, I rather respect Carl Jung  because I think he is an honest man – but Freud was a merchant basically. And owned a string of clinics strung through Europe and possibly America, because he lived long enough, selling one product. And packaging it with the nicest word possible, confusing word that is, challenging – psychoanalysis.
Q. What do you think about the present state of physics or any of the physical sciences? I mean do you think they’re getting at something? Or are they still stuck in the paradigm?


Another guy comes along, his word - he’s packaging it - is psychotherapy. And Viktor Frankl  comes along ... and each one of them comes up with a word. Kubler-Ross  - she wants to be the chief merchant of death and dying. Before you die you have to consult her or some of her disciples who will worry the hell out of you while you’re dying, not let you die in peace. (Laughter).
R. Well, they produce material for meditation. I think it helps. I’ve learned a lot from the laws of physics. I think the laws of physics are reflected in psychological laws and spiritual laws. I’ve written a few of them down, like the law of proportional returns;  that’s a law of physics. In other words, we find that there is a non-destruction of matter. Of course I think that’s going to be disproven later. They found already, I heard a guy up there, somebody was [working on that]. In other words, there’s a concept that matter has only so much energy, and it’s indestructible. You can change the form but the energy’s still there.


dm4-17:36
dm7-04:03


To me the whole field of psychology today is backing up the establishment paradigm. The establishment paradigm teach degeneracy so that there will be no riots on the streets. We have adopted a degenerate psychology and you can find reasons for any psychology that you wish. As I said the dictionary is a big book. It’s like the same way with the bible. You can get the bible to back you up if you search hard enough on almost anything you want.
What I read the other day was that somebody was experimenting down in Florida with hydrogen, light, and one other chemical. Did you guys read that?


But I don’t believe that they’re going to the thing of looking at the source of thought. In other words, what are the tools of a bricklayer, an engineer? He has a calculus book that he can refer to and he’ll give you reasons for his actions. But the domain of the psychologists, the domain of the medical doctors [inaudible], the domain of the psychiatrists and psychologists is the psyche, not the body. That’s biology. That’s veterinarianism. We’ve got veterinarians making fifty dollars an hour. To me the domain of the psychologist goes back to the very soul of man. In other words to find out why a man thinks he’s got to find out why this machine was created to think.
Q. Chlorine, wasn’t it?


dm4-19:02
R. Right, chlorine, hydrogen and light. And they claimed that the extra energy seemed to come from the light.  And they got six or seven times as much. Like say that you could calculate exactly the Btu in a ton of coal, and that will move a ten-ton locomotive exactly so many feet, as a prediction of science. Well, if somebody threw a ton of coal in there and it took it seven times further, then you destroy that law of chemistry or physics. So evidently that’s coming about. They say the atomic energy did it, overbalanced that law or outmoded it.


Now, that sounds impossible. Then they say, “Well, we can’t do that. We’ve just to patch these guys up and get them back into the field and have them pay taxes. If they don’t pay taxes they won’t hold a job and if they don’t hold a job they can’t pay us fifty dollars an hour and the government is not going to fund us and they’re not going to hire psychology professors in colleges. So the whole thing will collapse. We’ve got to keep this paradigm going”.
dm7-05:03


Now I don’t know why we got into that [inaudible]. (Laughter) What we’re trying to do is pull strings in other words. This whole idea behind discovering yourself is probably to affect that from which you came. And Gurdjieff had this idea of a sly man approach. There are little things that you can do to awaken another person if you can’t awaken yourself. Now we are, as I said, robots – sound asleep. Grooved in [?] to a point where try to stop, try to change your course, try to set yourself a thinking pattern and see how quickly it’s interfered with. Everybody here, I imagine is tied to a routine that takes them from daylight to dark. And try to break that routine. Try to set up a different self-analysis. It may take you a couple of weeks, or a couple of months or a couple of years – maybe an hour a day or a half hour a day – and you’ll go along maybe for a week or so. But supposing that in that hour a day or half hour a day you’re provoked to try to do something else. Now you’re not just going to sit around and think about thinking or think about ways and means. No, you’re going to find the ways and means – you’re going to experiment. So if you try to set yourself up an experimental pattern, you’ll find that it’s almost impossible in [inaudible – cough].
Q. When you meditate and you find some solutions for some problem, do you feel that it wouldn’t have come except through meditation?


dm4-20:53
R. Well, when you talk about meditation, you’re talking about stopping a little bit, that’s all. The hours of the day are taken up, so that you’re always running from one exigency to another. And the meditation is the deliberate setting aside of some time in order to look at the situation, that’s all. And when you do that, automatically you’re going to get solutions. I think a lot of the problems, maybe nothing great but the little problems like domestic difficulties and that sort of thing could be solved with a little bit of meditation where you sit down and just look at it.


So, consequently …  then why is it impossible? It’s impossible because your head is set on something – you’ve got to have those cigarettes, or you’ve got to have that dough or you’ve got to have that security, you’ve got have to that mansion up at Mt.Leaven [?] or some place to pay for those bricks. (Laughter) And you’re not going to stop working until you drop dead so that your wife can entertain some lover in the bricks. (Laughter)
dm7-06:05


But regardless we can’t let go. We just can’t let go of this squirrel cage – it takes somebody outside. And this has been the theme behind pure religion. In fact there have been a lot of religions where they started out were pure and then a guy says, “Hey, take a day off. Make Sunday holy or something to stop so that these dummies can do some thinking”. But the guy in charge of the religion finds that it’s profitable if he starts selling candles and you’re back where you started from – you have to work an extra day of the week to pay for the candles.
I’ve got a little paper I wrote on meditation  and I advise running through the reel of film. Cold history. Don’t meditate on the present, because you’re still angry or excited about it. But if you want to understand yourself, look back about two or three months, or two or three years or so. The things that made you angry you can laugh at now. So you get a better perspective and see what’s wrong. I believe in traumatic meditation. I don’t believe in peaceful meditation. I believe peace belongs in the cemetery. You’re going to have plenty of peace when they plant you. So if you want to discover something, cause some turmoil in your head and get to the root of things.


dm4-21:52
Yeah, over here, Dave.


I’d like to stop for a minute. There’s another information I want to give you about what I consider the examples of man’s ability to see. But what time is it ? Oh it’s 6 o’clock.
dm7-06:52


I’d like to clarify, I rambled a little bit more at the end, but I’d like to clarify anything about this diagram that you’d like to hear. And … I didn’t want to get in too deep into this business. You can [inaudible] if you wish. I think there are ways, I think there is a good psychotherapy system if a person wants to get into it and people are honest with each other, they could help each other. Prod each other to wake up and that sort of thing. But those are the only two ways that I know that you can affect your life.
Q. You mentioned jumping up and taking steps. You talk about that being a function of perhaps determination, awareness of your thinking, your energy level and those types of things. Would you think any one factor is more important than the others?


One of them is if you can find somebody that you can trust, that won’t pick your pockets while he’s helping you. And the other one is to study the laws of the mind. I think there are some laws that were discovered. And these laws as they are discovered, you’ll see them in operation and the average person refuses to believe them when they them – it’s like hypnosis. When hypnosis first came out everybody said that’s maybe the work of the Devil. That’s one nice solution for it. Or it’s a trick. We agreed, everybody agrees and it’s just a little game they play. I used to give demonstrations and people chuckled to themselves – “He’s clever. These hypnotists can put on a pretty good act”.
dm7-07:11
[Grating noise (some kind of machine?) here same as the noise in the unknown “ashram” tape, but happens only once. But it may help establish that the ashram meeting was in Pittsburgh]


dm4-23:32
R. Well, I think determination is the most important factor. If you want to say, put your energy or your chips on a certain direction, or a certain aspect of the search, I think that determination is important. Because if you’re determined enough, you’ll find ways and means. Some people just wait and study, spend their entire life speculating and buying enormous libraries of books, and the latest thing on this and that. My point is you can throw away most of the books and just go direct into your head. And if you’ve got enough determination to pursue it, then results are proportional to energy applied.


This is one of the minor laws and that’s just of the somatic mind. I know there are people living who can touch people’s minds at a distance without all the routine and we have been visited by a few of these people from India. They study for years to learn to zap and they can knock you off your feet by looking at you and concentrating. And people say, after they lose their children to these systems for maybe ten years they begin to realize that they were zapped. But prior to that they say, “Oh that can’t happen here. Not under Old Glory. Nothing like that happens here”.
dm7-07:59


But there are people who know some of the workings of – this isn’t the individual mind, this is some matrix that is pervasive, goes from mind to mind. When you enter this, when you’re able to enter it is when you have your direct mind experience. That’s when you can read another person’s mind. That’s when you can contact your thoughts to … and it happens, everybody experiences it sometime or another. Or you’ll be driving – I remember driving with my wife in the car one time. Neither one of us had mentioned this family for, I guess, five or ten years and both of us said it at the same time, “Let’s get down to Joan’s house. Joan [last name inaudible]”. I said, “That’s amazing. That’s what I was going to say”, you know.
Q. You were talking about before of how people cling to beliefs. Is there any way of giving up those beliefs without being traumatized?


So what happens is … this seems to be about coincidence, that there was something transmitted. So there is a connection to some sort of field which I like to say is a universal mind.
R. I don’t believe you give up anything. I believe they’re taken away. I remember one time I had a certain belief about love, and I didn’t realize I was being hypnotized. But once I realized that this girl had not done anything evil to me, that I had done it to myself, then my belief in love as such vanished immediately. I could look at it dispassionately.


dm4-25:20
dm7-08:40


Q: Do you think this is the same thing that Paul Young [?] was talking about incidentally?
Q. Was it like something you allowed to happen to you?


R: These are words. It’s just like I maintain that Chilton Pearce sensed something. Colin Wilson  sensed it. Colin Wilson, well he writes it as fiction - nice way to write - you can never get criticized, you don’t have to to prove anything. But he put out this and you’ve got get a hold of this book – it’s ‘Mind Parasites’. And when I read it I was utterly amazed that he had this knowledge and he had the way to put it out. He had the idea that fifty people discovered the secret they would be able to move the planet because the world is nothing more than illusion, the moon is nothing more than illusion but fifty minds held in a certain position would affect the planet. Of course it sounds like science fiction.  
R. Yes, well, you allow everything pretty much to happen to you. That’s the proper attitude unless it’s something that’s going to hurt you; you don’t have to allow that to happen. It’s just like indulgence in a religion, say. Suppose you get into a religion and you’re not going to change your belief; you’ll never change your belief, but you may outgrow it. As I said, like he’s a staunch Christian Scientist but his kid’s dying now, and he says, “Ho, I could be wrong.” So then a new frame of mind comes over him and for the first time he has a clearer perspective.


But what he was saying was what I refer to in one of the papers I’ve written – The Law of Betweenness  – where things happen in a peculiar in-between state. All the wisdom of man and all the great things happen in a state of ‘betweenness’. This is, I maintain, is part of the sustained universe is that there is a … each planet exists in a particular field of gravity, anti-gravity and in between those planets, it extends out so far. In other words, like a big planet has more of a field of gravity, the moon has a smaller one. But somewhere in between there’s a point of no-gravity.
Sometimes it happens by accident. That’s what I say: we don’t deliberately educate ourselves. I think the best thing we can do is make a declaration that we’re open for learning. Admit to ourselves that we want to learn, admit to ourselves that we hope something gets ahold of us and teaches us something. And then ride with it. If you start saying, “Well, I believe this and I’m going to enforce it,” you’re done. You’ve cemented yourself in.  


dm4-26:57
dm7-10:03


This what I mean by the state of ‘betweenness’. When the head is in that same thing in relation to the heads of others then a new type of motion can be created. So that if you had a, my theory is if you had a spaceship you could function in I call that … (break in tape)
I can remember when I was a younger, I had a belief that men were thinkers and women were zero, that they had no capacity for thinking. And with that in mind, I got married. And you know, I was fortunate: I met somebody who wasn’t too particular, but I survived it and I learned. [laughs] I learnt a hell of a lot about the human mind on both sides of the fence. And they’re different, believe me. But I couldn’t have forced myself on my own. If somebody had said, “Rose you’ve got to learn female psychology and understand the uniqueness of this person, and the importance of this person,” I wouldn’t have done it that’s all. It had to be that it happened in the path of living, having children and that kind of stuff. And the result is I think that I have one of the best marriage relationships that there is: we’re divorced. [laughs] But we’re good friends, always will be. But we don’t have to live together to be friends. That’s more important than being nuts about each other.
dm7-11:23


dm4-27:11
Q. Did you learn a lot from raising kids?
dm4-27:14


(commence tape but no longer muffled – perhaps different lecture?)
R. Oh yes, I think so. I began to see myself. Some of the mistakes I’d made, I’d forgotten about them. I saw my kid going through them and I said, “Ye Gods, that happened to me and I overlooked it.”


… and I maintain that some people in India ve discovered it and they use it. And there’s transformation of material and that sort of thing is caused as a result of it. On a very small scale of course. They don’t move any planets. They could have also made it dramatic by citing that you could move the moon or something.
Q. Only an older person would know this, but speaking of sex, that is the one point where a potentially intelligent person becomes a total idiot. [laughter] All thought, all cerebration is wrong; as you are highly sexed you are going to be an idiot. You’ve got to get past that stage before you can start even thinking.


Has anybody read Colin Wilson’s ‘Mind Parasites’? You can understand what I’m talking about. It’s just fiction but I think it’s well worth reading because it gives a hint of it.
R. Sure. I believe you’re entirely right. A classic example is the billy goat: it drops dead doing that.


Yes.
dm7-12:23


Q 1: What was the kind of initiation you had with Sant Kirpal Singh  that you were talking about?
Q. Are we obliged by something or someone to make this climb?  


R: Uh, what did you want to know?
R. No.


Q 1: What is it? [?]
Q. So for what purpose? Is it more comfortable there ... ?  


R: Well, it was the naming and the identification of the seven planes so that when I died I would know by the sound of certain musical instruments, the names of the deities that presided over them.
R. See, you’re talking in utilitarian terms. You can’t view it that way. Everybody says, “Will that help my business?” No, no. Just what is, is. Do you want to know what is or do you want to be comfortable? And do you think when you’re comfortable, you’re really comfortable? No, nobody’s comfortable. So I say you dig. Or you go up to the top of the mountain to see what’s up there, if for no other reason.


dm4-28:14
dm7-13:06


Q 1: Did you experience anything?
Q. There was a man in this physical therapy class who we worked with and he’d been in a car accident and lost his wife and his child. A young man, about 23, bright red hair, strong body; he’d been lifting weights for a long time.


R: No. No, no. Don’t get me wrong – I don’t take issue with them because they were good people. There was no racket connected with it, didn’t cost a cent. I reject everything that costs money, especially if it’s fantastic sums of money. But these people didn’t … now maybe they may have operated on donations or something. Agra. They had a temple at Agra too.
R. You must have been attracted to him if you remember all that stuff. [laughter] Go ahead, I didn’t mean to interrupt you.


But there was an old guru that initiated me and I said to him, “You ever run into anybody that …”. Another concept they had was that the guru appeared at the point of death, would take you over the threshold. You were tied to the guru through Darshan . You establish this bond and then when you died, you automatically, he’d pick you up.
Q. I was working as a physical therapist. He was good looking. [laughter]. So …


And so I said, “Oh that’s interesting. All you have to do is be around one of them that’s dying and you can see what goes on”. So I said to him, “Were you ever around when any of the members of the religion died?”. He said, “I missed my wife just by a half hour”. She died while he was out of the house. Hoping that she would say, “Here he is. Here’s Charan Singh ”. They were all Singhs, they were Sikhs.
R. Those were the days, huh?


But my belief is that somebody appears for you anyhow. There’s a common denominator that runs through a lot of movements and -isms. The HGA – Holy Guardian Angel – the Rosicrucians, I think believe, that the master appears. But also many of them believe that you have a guardian angel, like a protector spirit that follows you all through your life. And when you wear out, why he picks you up and put you in another system of trouble. (Laughter)
Q. So I would watch him work out and it was inspiring to see he had a lot of will. As a physical therapist assistant you get to see a lot of will. People would come in, all kinds of conditions, and they had been through a different experience than I had been through. And I thought well, there’s something to learn about will here; because these people don’t play games like a lot of normal people do, who have all their facilities.


dm4-30:17
But after the car accident they told him he’d never walk or talk. He was in a coma for three months. He probably weighs close to 200 pounds now, but he weighed about a 120 then. So when he’s coming out of the coma, the first thing he saw was himself and he was in heaven and in the clouds – this is how he described it to me. He was standing on a cloud, dressed in black, and there was a man at a podium in a white robe with a long white beard. It was like a God or something. So the boy said, “Hello”, and God said, “Well, hello. It’s not your time to come with us now. You’ll have to wait; you still have more work to do.”


But people on the battlefield also seem to reach for their mother. I’ve seen people dying that called for their mother. Old people. I’ve seen them in hospitals dying and in their last breath they’d shout, “Mother, Mother, Mother”. Looks like they’re seeing them. Who knows? That’s the evidence, that’s the type of evidence that Kubler-Ross bases their book on.
dm7-15:50


And incidentally getting back to the idea of evidence of life after death, both Raymond Moody  and Kubler-Ross missed the categorization of these phenomena - these death phenomena. There’s some people ... I maintain, that your death scene will measure for you where you’re going.
So he said okay and then he signed off and he came back into his body and then he woke up and he got out of bed, got up to start walking; well, he landed flat on the floor like an infant. And he said, “Hey what’s going on?” So he taught himself to crawl and he taught himself to talk and he said, “Damned if I’m going to be in bed the rest of my life as an invalid not walking or talking.” So now he’s walking and he’s talking and he’s doing quite well. Anyway I thought that was interesting experience.


dm4-31:02 
R. I think this an example, you’ll run into them every once in a while, where according to science, people were doomed to a form of a life but somehow persisted and surmounted it.


File dm4 ends at 31:03
Q. The doctors pronounced him dead three times and he kept coming back.


R. In fact, I think you can keep other people alive. I’ve seen instances of this, and I don’t think it’s a good idea. Just with sheer will power. You can keep them alive but I don’t think they appreciate it.


== File 5 ==
dm7-17:09


Total time: 31:10
[30 seconds of silence]


[This seems to be the continuation of dm4]
dm7-17:38


dm5-00:00
[somebody in audience snaps fingers twice]


(Good audio quality)
R. No, no! See that was alright. We were having a rapport. They didn’t know it but we were having a rapport.  It’s really pleasant to know that everything’s plain and no explanations are necessary; now we know. That happens quite often when I’m talking. If you just let it ride you’ll find it. Everybody’s getting an insight, right? Can you confirm it, anybody, insights when that quiet is there?


R: That’s the evidence, that’s the type of evidence that Kubler-Ross bases their book on.
[more silence]
=== Six Types of Visions ===
dm7-18:32


And incidentally getting back to the idea of evidence of life after death, both Raymond Moody and Kubler-Ross missed the categorization of these phenomena - these death phenomena. There’s some people ... I maintain, that your death scene will measure for you where you’re going. Because this is like LSD  – you only get out of life what you put in it. The trip you get is going to be what type of character went into the trip.
I’ve got a little thing here that I’ll leave with you before I go, for what it’s worth. I’ll have to read it. We were talking about this business of observation, and this is a little angle that many of you may not have thought about; maybe you have. I maintain that you don’t see. People do not see; they have visions. You have incoming stuff that hits your eyeballs or your ears, and this gets together inside the head, and you have an accepted projection then. You project.


And people that seem to find people, even though it’s loved ones, are on what I call the emotional level. I classify – I borrow this from Gurdjieff, incidentally: the instinctive, emotional, intellectual, and philosophic. And occasionally you hear of people that have the nonhuman [experience] – there are no human beings there, but they witness beautiful vistas and sometimes, mathematical designs and stuff. Yet they seem to feel when they come back that they’ve witnessed a heaven that they’re going to enter. Still others find that they enter something that they can’t describe.  
There’s a little book on it, Conquest of Illusion, by J.J. van der Leeuw. ,  He brings this out very well. He says that we may well be a point of light, that’s all, and all the rest is interpreted. By that I mean we just project things out because there’s an agreement in the paradigm. But anyhow, we know this, that we project what we see. We have for instance a color spectrum which the animal doesn’t have; he can’t project the same thing, so we don’t exactly live in the same world. Although the animals accept our interpretation of the life and what’s around us.


dm5-01:21
But when we run through these, you’ll get an idea of what I call the different visions that people have. When you see something, that’s a perception. But a vision is something that is created, concocted so to speak. The human being has six types of visions.


I always refer to the … 1974, I think it was – the October issue of 1974 of Reader’s Digest. There was a man died in an automobile . His wife was there, she called an emergency unit and they came. I think it took a couple of hours getting him into the hospital. Pronounced dead - he came back. And he described his experience which he was quite convinced was what would have happened to him if he hadn’t come back – he would have still been in that experience. And he didn’t see any relatives. He was a man that personally didn’t believe in life after death. But he became one with something enormous. He realized that he was … his was … the Atman  and the Brahman  is the best way he could put it. But he didn’t have that vocabulary. His nationality was Jewish - I get that from his name. But he made the remark that he felt that there’s no need to fear death – he had experiences.
dm7-20:51


Well, I’ve had different accounts and I notice they fall into these categories. The business of spatial travel at the end of which is a vista. Somebody takes off and they look down and see the body on the bed. Or maybe they’re not aware of the bed but they just see somebody coming and they reach out their hand and that person picks them up and takes them away. And then somebody else says, “Oh you’ve got to get back. We can’t take you, you know. You didn’t pay all your taxes so you have to return“. (Laughter)
[Rose reads from Psychology of the Observer]
<blockquote>
The first is normal sensory perception. This is ordinary seeing or perceiving. As a result of a sensory stimulus, the mind coordinates the stimulus with previous stimuli, and projects back upon the physical environment that which it wants to see. Only this projection is seen by the individual's awareness.
</blockquote>


dm5-03:11
So whatever you project out there is what your awareness will see. Now the reason we know this happens is that occasionally people project the wrong thing, and they find they walk out to touch something that isn’t there like a hologram.


I think they correspond to the different levels of the man’s potential and the one where the person merges with unity was something that he really doesn’t understand but realizes beyond the shadow of a doubt that he exists and he’s one with God. Sometimes I use the word God and sometimes I use some other terminology. But you pick up the same pattern. They’re naming it according to their, maybe, religious training order, atheistic training. And I thought it was amazing that Moody and Kubler-Ross both … all you have to do is talk to enough doctors and nurses in hospitals and you can get a tremendous encyclopedia of death experiences. And not only that but of experiences like I mentioned before – people who are pronounced dead and they witness what’s going on.
21:31
<blockquote>
To say the same thing more precisely, man visualizes everything that he perceives (thinks he perceives) through the physical senses. It is a “normal” percept followed by a “normal” projection.  


dm5-04:11
</blockquote>


My own brother for one was in an automobile wreck and [inaudible]. He was dying and couldn’t possibly get there in time. He lived but he watched from the ceiling – remembered everything that was taken. My wife was a nurse – she used to come back and tell me about people that were supposedly … the other nurses were throwing them around and mistreating them because they thought they were unconscious. When this one party woke up, she said, “You treated me alright. I can tell by your voice (she couldn’t see her, she knew her voice). The rest of these people were dogs”, you know because they treated her bad. So the unconscious body, there’s still an awareness there of some sort.
This is the reason we have to go through these, if you want to study yourself and your thinking processes; and that gives you a better idea who’s in behind it.


Yes.
<blockquote>
The second one is abnormal sensory perception, i.e., illusory or non-validated phenomena. These are visions which apparently are seen by the eyes (or percepts connected with the other senses; it could be heard by the ears), which later will be found to be invalid or illusory in nature. Included in this category are ghosts that cannot be checked out, hallucinations, holograms, mirages, and hypnotic phenomena that involve the imposition of illusions upon the mind of the subject.
</blockquote>


Q: You spoke earlier of a master plan. Would you comment or can we know anything of the nature of a master plan and does that pre-suppose a master plan or..?
We consider those abnormal because in this unreal world they are even more unreal.  


R: Well, I think that there’s … I have no proof of it, I have a feeling that’s all. I have a feeling and it surely isn’t all nonsense. It seems like it. But I have a feeling that there’s … because things work in a kind of an orderly manner despite our desires and our ambitions and everything, things seem to work out. And so my conclusion is that I think it would be folly – I’m not lapsing into religious superstition – but I think it would be folly to presume that We are forming Our civilization and we are creators of the earth and that we should go any further or too far or too fast without knowing why.
Now the next four categories have to do with mental perception. I maintain that you can see with your eyeballs to a certain extent, but you can also see with the mind. I’m going to demonstrate that with these next four.


That’s my belief and with that in mind, I’m of the opinion that it’s very possible that looking back on our history we haven’t been too long inside our clothes even, much less in the business of creating planets. So I have a feeling that there is a plan to it. Of course, my idea of creation is not the creation of matter – I don’t believe that matter exists as we, you know, as we believe it. And I don’t believe that it’s strictly create-able either as a Christian Scientist would believe it. That you can just by, a few half a dozen people getting together, you know, remove a tumour or something of that sort.
dm7-22:49


dm5-06:39
<blockquote>
A while back I discussed the ability of the mind to see or perceive. The examples given show clearly that such perceiving result from initial sensory stimuli. There are, however instances where the mind “sees” independently of the senses. I call this ability visualization-projection not warranted by percepts.
</blockquote>


But I believe that what we have to do to get a true apprehension of anything is to go back into the source of where we came from which is the mind dimension. I mean, if anything, we emanate from mind stuff. And the reason I say that is because this was the best way that I can draw the picture that I travelled. There again somebody else might be able to … you get all kinds of pictures. You get analyses of experience but the experience I had was one of … resulted from an incessant application of concentration and observation on mind processes.
The others are warranted by physical perceptions. Now we get into the third class which is mental visions.


In other words you’d go within. This is the true way to go within. You don’t go within by just concentrating on your navel or your toes.
<blockquote>
Here the mind watches synthetic projections from its memory bank. We can conjure up an apple with diamonds embedded in the sides.
</blockquote>


Yeah
In the book earlier, I gave this idea of conjuring up pictures. We do it all the time. Kids will sit around and dream up whole fantasy lands. And that’s a mental vision. It doesn’t come from something they’ve seen outside; it comes from inside their own heads or from inside their memory bank, or a combination. And you can see things that never existed, the same way.


Q 2: Tonight you’ve been painting a very bleak picture for humanity, let’s say, sort of following this programming, caught in a prison camp, say. Now I know you claim to have escaped from this prison camp somewhat. For the people like us that are prisoners following this around, I wouldn’t put much value in that kind of life. I don’t know if you do. Now that you’ve escaped, that you’re free what value do …
For instance we can take an example right now: you imagine a green apple. Everybody’s seen a green apple, and soon as I say it, a picture of a green apple flashes in front of your eye. And then I say, “Put a string of swastikas around it, or diamonds – purple diamonds.” And you’ll see that in your mind’s eye. So therefore the mind is seeing something that was never seen with the physical eye. You see it in your head but it was never seen with the physical eye, an apple with diamonds on it.


R: I’m not free. I’ve momentarily seen or feels or seen the score. But you know, I still have to eat and I still have the pay the price for it. And I have to believe or leave.
dm7-24:27


Female Voice: Cave dwellers. Are you familiar with the cave dwellers?
[Tape break in (both in dm and mj versions) but words repeated, no loss of words]


R: Who wrote it? Oh, Plato ? Plato yeah. This is described by Plato in Plato’s ‘Republic ’ – the cave of the shadows . Man’s comprehension of reality. He says man is tied. I thought it was amazing that Plato modern thinking, we deify modern thinking. They don’t come up to Plato. If they had the insight of Plato they’d have a different insight into psychology. He maintained that men are chained with their back to the mouth of the cave and they see the shadows of the things passing outside. They see the shadows on the wall of the cave and they interpret that as reality.
dm7-24:29
[delete repeated sentence]
seeing something that was never seen with the physical eye. You see it in your head but it was never seen with the physical eye, an apple with diamonds on it.


And the only way they can find the real reality is to break their chains and get up and turn around and go out in the daylight. This is an analogy of course. But it’s very, very true I think.
<blockquote>
This is memory revisited and rearranged. This is commonly called imagination. It’s mental vision.


dm5-09:16
The fourth category is: visions without projection by the perceiver. This is not something projected. These are non-physical visions, valid according to some means of corroboration or laws of reference. Their general corroboration lies in the fact that they often are found later to have been revelations of some sort. They are ghosts that substantiate their presence by warnings or prophecies.
</blockquote>


Q 2: So, so all you’ve done [inaudible] seen the prison and you’re still stuck in it like everybody else?
We can say that this thing didn’t exist, but he says, “Hey, don’t take the car today because you’ll have a wreck.” And the neighbor takes the car instead and gets killed. So you realize that something was trying to tell you something. This is a vision of something that you didn’t project.


R: I think I’m here. Sometimes I wake up and I think that, you know, I’m going through some motions and one day I’ll find out I’m dead. (Laughter) I’ve got an idea I’m still here.
<blockquote>
They are dreams, articulate voices from non-visible sources, and instances of deja-vu which are found to be more than a hallucination.  


Q 3: Why don’t you give us enough credit for our abilities to change, to change our realities?
</blockquote>


R: Let me give you all the credit you need. I’d like to see you do it. Where are your implements? It would be more difficult than Archimedes with his fulcrum and lever moving the earth. How can you change if you’re programmed?
This lady was talking here, this is the category I think you were talking about, some articulate voices or sights that you can’t tell where they come from, but they seem to prove their existence by some means. Also, proven deja-vu experiences.  


Q 3: I don’t believe in the finality of that program.
<blockquote>
It may be that some of these visions are contacts with the Manifested Mind, or with emanations from the Manifested Mind.  
</blockquote>


R: See that’s your privilege. I don’t want to upset your belief. In fact I think hope springs eternal. And only because hope springs eternal do the little ones keep the wheels turning. It’s necessary, necessary for you to have that hope. I can live without it. I can live without it.
I’m talking about an Overmind now, a dimensional mind. They seem to come from a very orderly source but they’re not from our individual mind.  


Yeah.
<blockquote>
Also in the fourth category are direct-mind communication which we pick up accurately from another person, such as in mind-reading. In the past many phenomena which we now describe under the heading of ESP or Psi phenomena, were previously described for the recipient as being an ability called the sixth sense.
</blockquote>


dm5-10:30
dm7-26:37


Q 4: I wonder if you can give me a couple of more examples about how to spot the Umpire at work.
[Break in tape – words are missing in dm7, check other versions, but missing words marked in blue are taken from the book]


R: Oh there’s a very simple one. When you hear an argument inside yourself. You ever hear an argument when you say, “Hey I want to get over the cigarettes” and someone says ,”One more won’t hurt”. See that’s the quibble that’s going on and whatever decision is made, is made by the Umpire. That’s my point. Regardless, it’s very plain and very evident in the basic appetites. Now, there are other decisions that are made when you start watching yourself, meditating upon your actions, it’ll become more evident. But it’s very evident to watch a person making decisions about, ”Which pleasure shall we have? Shall we have vanilla ice cream or raspberry?”. You know, shall you have a big fat woman or a skinny one? All night? Two weeks? You want to drop dead? Or do you want to get back to work? See? That’s the Umpire.
dm7-26:39


I maintain that everything …it’s just like … I’ve known people, for instance, they sit in a house, I’ve seen people get into a house. I don’t know why they … how it starts, but they can’t get up and go out. They can’t make a decision, they’ll sit there. I knew a man one time who was 20 years of age and he stayed 20 years in bed. His Umpire just failed. And he couldn’t make that decision to move. He made a decision – it was to stay in bed.
<blockquote>
This sense can be discovered and developed. It amounts to a sort of sensitive feeler which the mind extends to the mind of another, using in the beginning all manner of clues from the countenance of the other person and even items of posture and tone of voice, to guess at first that which the other person may be thinking. But after a while, success will breed accuracy, and later still, we will be able to possess a feeling of knowing instead of uncertainty. This feeling of knowing results from persistent checking over a long period of time with the person whom we are reading.  
</blockquote>


dm5-12:05
J.B. Rhine got into this, if you’re acquainted with him.


Q 5: In your dealings with other people, when you’re running on automatic, how do you spot the Umpire?
<blockquote>
Group sessions for the purpose of attempting to have a rapport and picking up information are good.
</blockquote>


R: Well, the thing is of course to improve the Umpire and I think you do. And in your dealings with other people, they’re functioning … this is the reason, I think, psychology is so hard to come up with is the factors. The factors are changing. For instance, your Umpire decision may be different next month if you make enough mistakes. And we’re always trying to predict our relationships with other people, we’re always trying predict this and I think one of the mistakes that’s made today is that … it’s imperfect umpires even. We can’t get … these geniuses that are going to change the earth are all located down here and they think that they can take dope and grow in experience, have weird sex acts and grow in experience and they make the decisions in that direction. And the result is, well, we get millions of them that are .. we’ve ploughed them under already because their Umpires were faulty. They wind up in the nut houses and in suicide, overdoses and that sort of thing. These are classic examples of faulty Umpires and a faulty system of psychology. It says, “Hey you go right ahead. Don’t let anybody tell you that what you’re doing is wrong”.
That’s the reason I don’t disturb the rapports when they go on.  


dm5-13:36
<blockquote>
Now the fifth category is visions of mental processes.
</blockquote>


And I’m talking about a psychologist who’s interested only in the body, survival of the body perhaps. They don’t know anything about the mind but they could help the body to survive a little longer. No, they believe that experience is broadening and people are capable.  
This is the vision where this person as a process observer is watching an abstract function. You can’t symbolize it with any physical symbol at all; you’re just watching the mind working.


I find that the more you learn about the things that go in the head, the things that go to make up a decision, the more you’re convinced that you’re ignorant. The more you realize the vast scope of possibility, the factors that go into … it’s just like a person sets out to make a million dollars. And maybe he has a heck of a time just saving the first thousand. But after a while he learns to play the stock market or something and he becomes rather proficient and he thinks he’s got all the factors but some wise guy gets in there and tampers with the gears someplace. Maybe he tampers with a computer in the bank like in LA and the stock market collapses. So then he loses his life. He may have a stroke as a result of it. Because he didn’t take into all the factors in a simple thing like making money and there are millions of factors, millions and billions of factors just connected with the stock market see.
dm7-27:39


So figure abstract sciences, figure the abstract science of the human mind – thinking about thinking about thinking about thinking about thinking ad infinitum, see. So you have to get into it.
<blockquote>
This is not the same as the third category which is reverie or imagination. This is that which we will later call the process observer. This is the mind which is anterior to the umpire and its phenomena.  It is a part of us that sees. It sees the mind, the somatic or umpire mind. It is, in turn unable to watch itself, or any processes peculiar to itself. This is a genuine mental awareness by the real Self, or ultimate Self.


Yeah
The sixth and last category is deliberate mental projections: that which is caused by some other person’s mind. This is a projection by them which has an impact upon other minds, to a point where the recipient may have the conviction that he physically sees the projection.
</blockquote>
In other words, this is a vision projected upon us by another person.
<blockquote>
They are visions projected upon the world-scene, or upon our consciousness by another. Under this heading we have tulpas and the Indian rope trick. , 
</blockquote>


dm5-15:06
dm7-28:38


Q 6:  I’d like to have your opinion about this incident. The incidents happen not on an established, regular basis but erratically. A person walks into the bathroom and looks in the mirror. And whatever it is … I have not, it’s unexplainable. But you look at this face in the mirror and it looks familiar to you and you force that form to say a word and the voice is familiar. And yet whatever it is that is watching all of this in the bathroom mirror finds this face and this voice alien and removed from whatever is watching this whole incident.
I don’t know how many of you are acquainted with tulpas. There were people in Tibet who were able to project and create a living being. Alexandra David-Neel writes about it. , Or Evans-Wentz. , 


R: Well, I would have to possibly hear in more detail depth although … I think this is quite, a lot of people have this feeling that there’s somebody else looking back if that’s what you’re talking about. Now you may be talking about a person that’s obsessed or possessed. I’ve seen people that had a lot of insight into the mirror when they were drunk. They’d have quite an argument going, you know. The one party would be calling one an SOB and the other would be arguing because he was insulted. I think it’s an ideal place for, like a split, schizoid thing to take effect where you can identify with two halves of yourself and put one on the other side of the looking glass so to speak.
These monks would get lonely up in the mountains and would create a woman, to have intercourse with her. And she was tangible, she was real. This was a deliberate mental projection. But the author of the book questioned one monk on one of these tulpas, and he said that it took him six months, I think, to create her and six years to get rid of her. She didn’t want to leave. [laughter]  , 


Q 6: I’m not speaking of myself [inaudible] (Laughter)
dm7-29:37


R: Well, you could have something, I believe you could have something actually interposing itself between you and the mirror too. See one of the mistakes we make, this is another mistake in modern psychology, is we don’t … modern psychology should explain everything in its domain. Or when a better explanation comes up , it should re-examine its textbooks.
<blockquote>
The Indian rope trick is another case of where something is projected upon your mentality. Other instances are cases of bi-location (people being in two places at once), healing at a distance, psycho kinesis, transubstantiation (water into wine, they say), and possession.
</blockquote>


In this business of The Exorcist , I maintain The Exorcist story is very real. But the psychiatrists and psychologists presume to say this is superstition and this didn’t happen. Ten thousand years of science, wisdom about exorcising things and dealing with things has to go down the drain because it’s easier to pretend it doesn’t exist than to face it.
Now possession is a case where somebody actually projects something into you.


dm5-17:51
<blockquote>
I would like to devote an entire book to this subject, and to the methods of attaining expertise in this type of projection.
</blockquote>
Not that I want to, but I’d like to clear it up for some people.


Now I maintain that the foolishness has to do with the fact that this is a projection, there are many projections. This is a dimension, there are many dimensions. And it isn’t logical to say they don’t exist because you can’t see them because you can’t see a virus and you can’t see an electron but we accept the scientist. We say, “There is an electron”. We accept the diagnosis that comes from the guy that says there’s a virus doing this. We can’t see it but it happens because it’s predictable. You know, the disease is predictable and, of course so are the symptoms. And I maintain that there are such things as other dimensional creatures co-inhabiting this stage.
dm7-30:06


And people know that. I’ve had a lady come down to my place from right here in Pittsburgh years ago. I have one in each town I think. Every place I lecture, I have … somebody comes up to me and says I got one. And this one lady said she had five, five people there with her all the time. I saw the one, I saw the one, so I’m equally nuts if she was nuts. I was standing behind her and so I said to her … there’s a couple of boys present here, I think, was with me when she came down. In fact they were supposed to bring her and they brought her by mistake (laughs).
Q. There was one word that you were going to bring out …


I’m not a healer. I don’t want to become involved in the … but I don’t believe you can disperse them by therapy. In fact, I think the reason we have a high percentage of suicides among our psychiatrists is the fact that they become smitten with diseases that they never dreamed existed. And that’s the reason they got to go – the only cure is suicide. They can’t handle it.
R. Oh, deja-vu? You go into a place and you feel as though you’ve been there, you recognize things. And in order for it to be accurate or to be a real phenomenon it has to be corroborated. They talk of a person in England, to give you an example, going to a certain place along the shore and saying there was a convent there or a castle. And he would go and tell you where it stood, in reference to a little ravine, and they would dig down and find the thing.  


Yeah.
Now this person would ...


dm5-19:39
File dm7 ends at 31:00


Q 7: You speak of mind as dimension and you say there are many dimensions. Are you inferring that all the other dimensions come from this same mind or the mind is simply one of the [inaudible]
== File 5 Pittsburgh (dm8, mj8) ==
Total time: 07:18


R: I presume, I presume. I don’t say that the last thing is the mind. See, there’s a saying that before … what happens here is that there is an incessant observation of man’s potential – his highest potential of being a process observer and being aware of his consciousness. Aware of awareness. When this is observed with relentless observation, you blow your head  - thoughts, the relative mind, the relative world disappears. Reality enters for the first time – reality.
[continuation of dm7, a few words lost, still talking about deja-vu.]


Now, to the observer you may be a nut. But in that state of reality you have transcended the human mind and the mind dimension. And you realize it’s only something that you pass through. And nearly everyone has these experiences speaks of it. Of killing the mind. They speak of it in Zen – you have to kill the mind. It’s (mind) false – in other words it’s like a crazy house in the circus, you know the house of mirrors, illusions and that sort of thing.
dm8-00:00


dm5-21:10
R. [This one fellow mentioned] a boat, with a deja-vu. He had seen it before. Now the psychologists of course, unless they find a foundation or something like that, it’s written off as being [imagination]. It’s like when a fellow predicts [in deja-vu] a train wreck after it happens. He says, “Oh, I saw that train wreck.” And they say, “Well he got there and then he imagined that he was there.” But this is common to a lot of people. You read a lot of accounts in literature of people who went to places and were quite convinced they’d been there before. That’s what deja-vu means.


Q 7: [Then the mind?] is possibly a false dimension like all the other dimensions.
dm8-00:40


R: Well, it’s the same as this in my estimation. If you take it seriously , it’ll worry you.
[silence]


Q 8: You were talking about out of the body experiences. And I worked with a woman, for a woman – I was a bedside nurse for her and she had multiple sclerosis. She had been in bed for ten years unable to move, unable to talk. She was able to hear and able to see. And I worked for her for several months and she weighed about 70 pounds and she was 54 years old. When I first saw her, in my heart  I said, “Oh my God, how can I do this, how can I work with this woman?” But my intuition said, “Yes, go for it. There’s something to learn”.
dm8-00:55


So through the weeks I learnt something about someone who had their mind controlled. I mean who had the power of their own mind. Can you imagine being in bed and unable to move for 10 years and having the will to live and having the will to give and to experience life. She experienced her grandchild – they brought the grandchild to her and put the grandchild on her chest and the baby kissed her. And it was all very moving to me.
Q. How do you know you’re not fooling yourself with this answer?


What I wanted to bring out was a certain look in her eyes, that she would get in her eyes when I would go in the kitchen and cook for her. There was a mirror in the room in front of me and there was a glass window from the kitchen to her room, which was actually the porch. And I kept an eye on that mirror because there was no other way of communicating to me in case she needed her suction machine. In case she was dying because she was dying. They told she should have been dead about 10 years ago but she’s still very much alive.
R. With what answer?


dm5-23:15
Q. With the way that you see things, that that’s the way they are.


R: Is she still living now you mean?
R. I don’t feel as though I’m fooling myself at all with what I know. Of course, I could be crazy – you have to use your intuition. But I may be fooling myself a lot with the verbalization. What happens is you experience nothingness and try to put it into words of something-ness and there is where the difficulty lies. As far as what I experienced, I’m not fooling myself about that. Because, well, again that’s something I can’t prove.


Q 8: Oh yes, she’s very much alive. So I would check the mirror occasionally and there was a strange feeling that I had when I saw her eyes. Because her eyes would go up and there was a definite glaze around her face. And I noticed this and I talked to the other nurses about it. She had seen a program on television about out of the body experiences and somehow she had communicated with the angel, that’s what she said to her nurse. She didn’t want anybody else to know.
That happens all the time in this type of thing. It’s like me describing Cairo, Egypt if you’ve never been there. I could describe it but you could say I was lying. I couldn’t prove that I wasn’t lying. So it’s just one of those things. If your intuition picks it up, you pick it up. And if you pick up the fact that I’m nuts, well, that’s what you got to live with, a nut. [laughs]


R: Oh yeah this is quite common.
dm8-02:09


Q 8: And, yeah there was something going on. I could feel it. And to a nurse she said that the angel comes. And she’s very calm and very peaceful, you know, and very contented in that situation. She said the angel comes and the the nurse asked her, “Well, what do you say to the angel?” and Corkie [?] would say, “I’m not ready yet.” And the angel would say ,”Okay, we’ll leave it be”.
[silence]


R: Yes I’ve had … I was in the contracting business years back and I had a partner. When he was 60 years of age he got cancer, cancer of the lungs. And I’d had some peculiar things happen to me and I don’t consider to tell them and I couldn’t duplicate it if I tried. The just happened when they happened – they’re there. But he was living in a house trailer, he was broke – he had spent all his money on doctors and stuff and he had this house trailer. And two daughters came up from Florida and the house was about 40 feet long, as long as this – they’re called 40 foot trailers they’re really about 35. Wide as this … long as this room and wide. They had little children, the daughters had little kids about two years old. Two daughters, I think there were maybe three children there, and his wife and him in this 40 foot trailer.
dm8-02:28


dm5-25:26
Q. You said that a real person is one who observes; that somehow there’s a higher power of reality, that you have this capacity to observe. But observation implies that you’re at a distance from the thing that you’re observing. Therefore you’re not part of it. And all the mystics tell us that we are supposed to be at one with everything and that is the highest point of reality. How would you resolve that paradox?


When I went over to see him and he was asking me questions about … we never discussed religion or anything else. We just worked together and more or less it was hard work and we kept that out of the conversation so we’d get something done. We had enough to fight about. Anyhow he seemed to sense that he should ask me a question, you know and he said to me, “Where do you go when you die?” Now this is just a couple of days before he died. Well I said, ‘I don’t know where you’re going (tape break and restarts) but I know what I feel happens to people after death” , and I told him.  
R. Well, in the first place I don’t believe that you could take, let’s say, advice or just a sentence from a mystic and make it a rule of life. You’ve got to go there yourself. This is the answer. And I don’t think I quibble with that. In the final analysis you are one, you reach one-ness. But I’m talking about the relative. [If you observe yourself, then] one of them is not you. In the relative dimension you are not the cat, you’re not the dog. And many mystics even make that mistake, in thinking they are not the cat or the dog or the horse or the other man. But it isn’t a mistake, it’s strictly the way our paradigm is forced upon us.  


Couple of days later I went over and it was the night before Easter, day before Easter- Saturday night. And the women were putting on their coats and they were going to the Eagles to play Bingo. And the wife had kind of … he was on a studio couch. She kind of knelt down on one knee and she was talking to him and saying, “I’ll be back at 10’oclock”, and so on. And I saw his hand reaching out real slow and he was patting her on the back. Like this, you know, real slow.
dm8-03:53


So when she got I up I said, “What’s wrong with Frank?’. And she says, “Oh he’s in a coma”. Coma? Now whenever somebody tells me somebody’s in a coma I presume they’re unconscious but he knew she was there. So I said, ”I think he knows you’re there”. She said, “Oh yeah but he’s in a coma. He gets into those and slips in and out of them”.  
Okay but you may reach a point by this analysis of the observer looking at the view, to where you blend. If you notice at the top, there’s nothing. There is no more relative adventure. You are the view and the viewer. The only way to learn is not to study with symbology but to become. Now you can’t just become by saying, “I’m going to become.” No, you have to belabor yourself with relativity and symbology. And don’t confuse the idea of this battle of relative things with the idea of unity at the end. Don’t presume there’s unity in the end; you don’t know that. And me telling you that isn’t going to make it for you.


And I know you’ll  think this is a damn big lie but this man actually told me he was dying. And how I translated it I don’t know. There were no words spoken. But it was just a slight pressure and I stood up and I said, “Don’t go.” I said to the woman, “Don’t go.” She said, “Why not?”, I said, “He’s dying”. She said, “How do you know?”. I said, “Because he told me so”. She said, ”He didn’t say a word”. I said, “Don’t kid yourself. He’s dying”.
dm8-04:40


dm5-27:38
Don’t pay any attention to what the mystics say, or what I say. I say there’s a problem to be solved. Solve the problem. And if something I say stimulates you or makes it a little easier for you or accelerates you, good. But I cannot convey this. I think it’s foolishness to take any book by any mystic or anything that I say and act upon it, or put your life’s actions on it. I think that would be bad. I think you have to fight this thing for yourself. That’s the reason I don’t believe in paying into cults and rackets and religions.


I was that convinced, you know. It could have been superstition or you’d have thought it could just have been [inaudible] or something. And I often look back upon it and think what an ass I might have made out of myself if he had lived another day. The things I did. They took their clothes off, they stayed there. I said, “We’ve got to get him to the hospital.” She says, ”Why?” I said, “You have these little children here. And when you have cancer of the lungs sometimes, it’s not pretty when they go”, you know. That’s what happened to him. When he died, his lungs seemed to come up out of his mouth. But she said, “We have no money to take him to the hospital”. I said, ”You don’t have to have any money when a man’s dying.” And when I picked up the telephone and called up the volunteer fire department, this little community and said, “We need an ambulance over here” ,I took this all on myself. And that’s why I said, you know, it would have really been foolish, imposing on somebody else’s domestic situation. They got him into the hospital that night, he died on Easter morning. And he coughed up his lungs.
dm8-05:16


dm5-28:45
Q. Didn’t you write that in your book? Don’t follow the mystics, find it yourself, experience it yourself.


I think that you can communicate. There’s …  you run into these incidents all the time of people that are … that’s what I call a direct mind experience. I don’t think it was the hand. I don’t think he talked to me through his hand. I think the contact was made and I think this happens – it happens with a lot of people that you can communicate. My brother, when he was in the automobile wreck, he saw and heard what was going on but he couldn’t communicate with anybody. Maybe if somebody had touched him he could.
R. Oh yes. God is within. If you want to call it God, it’s within.


Q 2: I just had the same question I asked you before because I’m trying to get … what good is it for a prisoner now he’s in a prison, if he could never get out?
Q. You can’t do it through another person.


R: Well, that was the decision I made when I was 21 years of age. I realized I was facing that and maybe I would find out something I couldn’t change and I found out something I couldn’t change. But I prefer to know than to die in ignorance. And I preferred it then and I think that decision was worthwhile. Because there is a certain equanimity – I’ve been in some tight places and when I get into those tight places it’s then that it returns to me and I say, “Hey, you know, there’s nothing happening here of any importance”. Then all that importance vanishes. Whereas if I hadn’t gone through that, I would have still been taking things very seriously.
R. Well, they can help.  


Q2 : Can you, as a teacher can you offer us anything in life has value, any joy, any of these things..
Q. By inspiration.


R: There is no such thing as enjoyment. There is no such thing as enjoyment.
R. Yeah. My wife helped me. She put me through hell and I found heaven. [laughs] I refuse to be serious. [laughs] That’s one thing I believe in: I’ve given up everything but laughing. I think a lot of this so-called creation is a joke – so why not laugh? Life doesn’t take you seriously, why should you take it seriously? The least you can do is laugh a little in return. Laugh back.


Q2 : Is there anything [inaudible] …
dm8-06:01 -- dm8-06:10


R: This is the icing that we’ve put on ourselves, that’s the icing we put on the cake. Nobody enjoys – people are enjoyed. That’s bait. That’s bait. Let’s say the most intense, the most wonderful pleasure there is, is sex. Hell, that’s animal. If you didn’t have that you wouldn’t take on the burden. The animals are brought together under the bait of pleasure and they sign up for twenty years of slavery. You talk about slavery, see. You could be free as a bird if you weren’t hooked on the idea of pleasure. Then you realize, sooner or later every body realizes, I think, that the…..
Q. Raymond Moody, who wrote Life After Life has now written Laugh After Laugh.  


dm5-31:09 
R. Good. [laughter] You finally got onto something you know something about.


File dm5 ends at 31:10
Q. He’s a Southern boy and he pronounced them both the same too.


R. Yeah, that’s right they do. Life. Laugh. I’ll never forget the first time I heard my sister-in-law pronounce the word “ice”. I was shocked. [laughter]


== File 6 ==
dm8-06:39


[silence]


dm8-06:53


Well it’s been a nice evening.


File 7 ends at 07:30
[applause]
== File 9 ==
Total time: 31:59


File 9 ends at 31:59
That was nice. I’ll come back the next time for that. I’ll be reincarnated just for you.
== File 10 ==
Total time: 29:54


File 10 ends at 29:54
dm8-07:17
== File 11 ==
Total time: 34:14


File dm8 ends at 07:19


File 11 ends at 34:14
== Footnotes ==
== Footnotes ==
   Url: http://www.direct-mind.org/index.php?title=1979-0403-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Pittsburgh
   Url: www.direct-mind.org/index.php?title=1979-0403-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Synod-Hall
For access, send email to editors@direct-mind.org  
For information, send email to editors@direct-mind.org  
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Know_thyself
   Close to the campus of the University of Pittsburgh.
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_Kubler-Ross  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_Kubler-Ross  
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Moody  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Moody  
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Chilton_Pearce  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Chilton_Pearce  
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubert_Benoit_(psychotherapist)  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubert_Benoit_(psychotherapist)  
   The Supreme Doctrine (1952 French, 1955 English). Full text here: http://selfdefinition.org/zen/benoit/ with link to the PDF. Benoit also translated works by D. T. Suzuki into French in 1952.
   The Supreme Doctrine Full text: http://selfdefinition.org/zen/benoit/supreme-doctrine/
   Popular in the 1960s-1970s associated with Japanese Zen. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrobiotic_diet "Zen Macrobiotic Diets", Journal of the American Medical Association, 1971.
  Lecture at the Theosophical Society, July 1972.
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Science
  George Blazer.
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramana_Maharshi
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Science
   There are distinctions amongst various kinds of Samadhis. A brief summary of Ramana’s teachings on this topic are here: http://www.advaita.org.uk/discourses/teachers/samadhi_ramana.htm
  Franz Hartmann: “Man's consciousness rotates between the two poles of good and evil, of spirit and matter.” Magic White and Black, ch. 8 http://selfdefinition.org/magic/hartmann/white-and-black/chapter-08-unconsciousness.htm
   According to Rose the Mountain Experience is the viewing of the Unmanifested Mind. Projecting ourselves back through the mind ray, we come to the universal, or Unmanifested Mind-Matrix. Here is experienced the truth of our own insignificance in relation to values once assumed by the Individual Mind.  
   The personal experience and history of the mystic.
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._F._Skinner
  Chart of Ramana Maharshi on samadhi: http://albigen.com/uarelove/sahaja.htm  
 
   The term is possibly rooted in Rose’s experience in Seattle, where he felt as if he had been transported to a mountain top. From The Albigen Papers, chapter 8. “As we project ourselves back trough the mind-ray we naturally come to the universal or Unmanifested Mind-Matrix. Specialized mind is the result of absolute mind-stuff. And here, it is true, we do experience the truth of our own insignificance, or nothingness in relation to values once assumed by the Individual Mind. This viewing of the Unmanifested Mind is often mistaken for Satori. It is in fact, the ‘mountain experience’ which we often hear described. Often it is quite depressing, depending on how much we remember of our relative selves.
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeitgeist
  Rose wrote The Albigen Papers in 1972, circulated as a mimeograph; the paperback was printed in the spring of 1975.  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zen
   Rose discovered Spiritual Teachings of Ramana Maharshi late in 1974. Ramana died in 1950. Rose had read Brunton’s accounts of Ramana Maharshi many years earlier, but Brunton’s words apparently did not register with Rose then.
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulpa
  See 1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State.
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcoholics_Anonymous
  Diagram 2 in Rose’s “The Mind”: http://selfdefinition.org/rose/writings/richard-rose-the-mind.htm
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pygmalion_and_Galatea
  Pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/science/Joseph-Chilton-Pearce-Crack-in-the-Cosmic-Egg.pdf
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestalt
  Quote from “The Mind” by Rose, referenced above: “The Law of Creation involves Imagination plus Faith, plus the Fiat. It is said that God imagined, or dreamed up the physical world, believed in himself, and said, "Let there be Light."
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extrasensory_perception
  Eliphas Levi covers this extensively in Transcendental Magic. “So be it; I desire it to be so; such is the last word of all professions of faith.” PDFs here: http://selfdefinition.org/magic/
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerard_van_der_Leeuw
  The phrase Rose quotes.” In the beginning was the Word” is from John ch. 1. The book of Genesis begins with a reference to chaos as follows: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, [i.e., the word] “Let there be light,....” etc.
   http://www.parapsych.org/what_is_psi_varvoglis.htm
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Baker_Eddy
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Chilton_Pearce
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_energy_crisis
   https://www.kabbalah.com/what-kabbalah
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radha_Soami
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Genesis
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirpal_Singh
   http://christianscience.com/what-is-christian-science
  See http://selfdefinition.org/radha-soami/radha-soami-satsang.htm#cosmology
   http://www.marybakereddylibrary.org/mary-baker-eddy/the-life-of-mary-baker-eddy/
   Possibly Paul and Peter in Galatians 2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_at_Antioch
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radha_Soami
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Gurdjieff
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirpal_Singh
   PD Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/gurdjieff/  
   http://www.gurdjieff.com/about.php
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigmund_Freud
   Logotherapy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Frankl
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_Kubler-Ross
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Frankl
   See http://selfdefinition.org/rose/images/talks/protest-psychosis-haldol-ad.jpg
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_K%C3%BCbler-Ross
  Near Pittsburgh.
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Wilson
  See 1976-0304-Pittsburgh-Meeting for a discussion of Meher Baba. [group meeting, not transcribed]
  Betweeness
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Wilson
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirpal_Singh
   Pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/colin-wilson/
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dar%C5%9Bana
  Energy Transmutation, Between-ness and Transmission. http://tatfoundation.org/energy.htm
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charan_Singh_(guru)
  Also see “Lecture on Betweenness” (chapter 6) and “Note on Betweenness” (chapter 7) of The Direct-Mind Experience. http://tatfoundation.org/direct.htm
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Moody
   Rose met with a Radha Soami group in Ohio in the 1950s. See “Yoga: Hatha, Shabd, and Raja” from TAT Journal, issue 8: http://www.searchwithin.org/journal/tat_journal-08.html#9
   See 1977-11-Method-of-Going-Inside – a reference to the early years of the farm: “I remember talking ... with some people who had LSD and psilocybin and some other drugs. And I said, ‘What does this do for you?’  One girl ... was pretty much of an authority on it – she had ruined both her kidneys with it. I don’t know whether the LSD did it or the needles or what, but her kidneys were shot, and she was pretty much of a philosopher in her last days. But she said to me, ‘You get out of LSD what you put into it.’ And I find that this is very true.”
  Radha Soami primer: http://selfdefinition.org/radha-soami/radha-soami-satsang.htm
   See Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, Chapter 4, “Seven gradations of the concept ‘man’." PDF is here: http://selfdefinition.org/gurdjieff/  
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darsana
   http://tatfoundation.org/forum2003-12.htm#5
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charan_Singh_(guru)
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C4%80tman_(Hinduism)
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Guardian_Angel
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahman
  Franz Hartmann: “The state of consciousness of the fourth principle (the animal soul) … differs widely in different persons, according to the conditions that have been established during its connection with the body.” Magic White and Black, ch. 8.
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plato
   See P.D. Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, chapter 4, “Seven gradations of the concept ‘man’", pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/gurdjieff/
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_(Plato)
  Victor D. Solow, "I Died at 10:52 AM." http://tatfoundation.org/forum2003-12.htm#5
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory_of_the_Cave
   Newspaper articles and biographical information here: http://selfdefinition.org/afterlife/victor-solow/
   http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070047/
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atman_(Hinduism)
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahman
  Vincent Rose.
  Meaning is unclear; written verbatim. Possibly that man deserves to know his purpose?
   Explained here: http://selfdefinition.org/rose/writings/richard-rose-the-mind.htm
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory_of_the_Cave
   Equity Funding Corporation scandal, a computer-based fraud. The company collapsed in 1973 but lawsuits were still in the news in 1979: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_Funding
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exorcism_of_Roland_Doe
   See Torkom Saraydarian, “Obsession and Possession”: http://selfdefinition.org/possession/quotes/torkom-saraydarian-obsession-and-possession.htm
   Franz Hartmann: “Cases of obsession are by no means unfrequent, and many cases of insanity are merely cases of obsession. It is extremely desirable in the interests of humanity that our superintendents and doctors of insane asylums should study the occult laws of nature, and learn to know the causes of insanity, instead of merely studying their external effects.” – Magic White and Black, chapter 7 http://selfdefinition.org/magic/hartmann/white-and-black/chapter-07-consciousness.htm
   Rose tells this story in more detail in 1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU.
  Vincent Rose. http://www.richardroseteachings.com/about.html
  The Albigen Papers, ch. 7, “Discernment.”
  See “A Law of Physics Repealed?” Solar Reactor Corp of Miami, invented by Robert L. Scragg of West Virginia,. Spotlight, April 18, 1979. http://www.rexresearch.com/scragg/scragg.htm#spotlite
  http://tatfoundation.org/meditate.htm
  Rose may be speaking of his mother here, based on other stories.
  From “Lecture at Boston College”, chapter 3 of Direct-Mind Experience: “We have what we call rapport sessions in which we are trying to develop the intuition, and to sort of get the head in a position where transmission can be effected; where direct mind-to-mind can be experienced. ... This comes about slowly but surely, and this is where your head is ready for transmission.”
   Franz Hartmann: “The explanation which material science gives in regard to the process of seeing only explains the formation of a picture on the retina of the physical eye, but gives no explanation whatever how these pictures come to the consciousness of the mind.” Magic White and Black, chapter 7,
  Full text: http://selfdefinition.org/van-der-leeuw/conquest-of-illusion/  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Jacobus_(J._J.)_van_der_Leeuw
  Hartmann: “Perception is passive imagination, because if we perceive an object, the relation which it bears to us comes to our consciousness without any active exertion on our part.” Ch. 7.
  From Psychology of the Observer: “The mind dimension is like a universal agreement of pre-incarnate man. It is the Universal Mind of Mary Baker Eddy, and the Oversoul of Paul Brunton. I prefer to call it the Manifesting or Manifested Mind. The Manifested Mind emanates from the Unmanifested Mind. The Unmanifested Mind might be likened to the Logos, and the Absolute to the Parabrahm, from which the Logos and the Unmanifested Mind emanates.”
  See Notebooks of Paul Brunton. Brunton describes Overmind as “the sum total of all individual minds.” http://paulbrunton.org/notebooks/para/15032
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Banks_Rhine
  As described earlier in the lecture.
  The sentence is ambiguous: according to Rose, the ultimate self is beyond the process observer.
  Alexandra David-Neel: “Tibetans disagree in their explanations of such phenomena; some think a material form is really brought into being; others consider the apparition as a mere case of suggestion, the creator's thought impressing others and causing them to see what he himself sees.” With Magicians and Mystics in Tibet. http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/tulpa-creation/alexandra-david-neel-comments.htm
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_rope_trick
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_David-Neel
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Evans-Wentz
   Evans-Wentz refers to tulpas briefly in a footnote on page 29 of The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation, 1954 http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/tulpa-creation/walter-evans-wentz-comments.htm
  Alexandra David-Neel, With Mystics and Magicians in Tibet. Two versions (different translations) of this book are available here: http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/ David-Neel created her own tulpa and had difficulty escaping from her creation. Her account does not include a reference to monks using tulpas for sexual purposes except possibly figuratively, where she refers to her translator as follows: “Dawasandup was an occultist and even, in a certain way, a mystic. He sought for secret intercourse with the Dâkinîs and the dreadful gods hoping to gain supernormal powers.”
  For detail plus extensive footnotes see 1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU.
  Rose’s trip to Cairo was in 1976, probably March.
   http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/497412.Laugh_After_Laugh


== End ==
== end ==
</div>
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Latest revision as of 11:09, 3 February 2024

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Metadata repository: https://data.direct-mind.org/

Data Template

Title 1979-0403-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Synod-Hall
Recorded date April 3, 1979
Location Synod Hall in Oakland, PA near the Pitt campus
Number of tapes DM = 4 @ 60 out of order (see notes) ; MJ == 10 files
Other recorders audible?
Alternate versions exist?
Source DM, MJ (mj was "undated")
No. of MP3 files Tapes are two lectures combined. See reconciliation in notes.
Total time
Transcription status Pramod 121 pages sent Jan 20, 2016. SH working on draft Aug 2016.
Link to distribution copy http://distribution.direct-mind.org/
Link to PDF http://distribution.direct-mind.org/ Or try http://selfdefinition.org/rose/
Published in what book? Psychology of the Observer. See note.
Published on which website?
Remarks See extensive notes for reconciliation of lecture and book versions here: 1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU
Audio quality
Identifiable voices
URL at direct-mind.org https://www.direct-mind.org/index.php/1979-0403-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Synod-Hall
For access, send email to: editors@direct-mind.org
Revision timestamp 20240203110905

Mapping of DM and MJ files

DM and MJ versions are numbered the same.

dm0 = mj0 = introduction Pittsburgh

dm1 = File 1 Pittsburgh

dm2 = File 1 KSU

dm3 = File 2 KSU

dm4 = File 2 Pittsburgh

dm5 = File 3 Pittsburgh

dm6 = File 3 KSU

dm7 = File 4 Pittsburgh

dm8 = File 5 Pittsburgh

Note: The commercial recording is the talk at KSU :

1977-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording is now renamed 1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording which is also 1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State

Notes

Dave Mettle and Mark Jaqua have versions

DM version: Undated-Psychology-of-the-Observer

In DM there are 9 files – 7 are approx 30 min and one (#8) is 7 minutes (intro excluded).

File numbering-Jake’s files: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 << See Pramod’s chart for renumbering

At start Rose says the book is typeset and coming out soon.

Physical order on (DM) tapes Tape 1 = sides 1 & 6 ; Tape 2 = sides 2, 3 ; Tape 3 = sides 4, 5 ; Tape 4 = sides 7, 8

For all versions see: Category: Psychology_of_the_Observer

See extensive notes at these next links for reconciliation of different versions of Psychology of the Observer:

1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU

1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State << Same as commercial CD

1977-Psychology-of-the-Observer-commercial-recording << same as KSU

Psychology-of-the-Observer-book-text

Need to check all tracks at CD baby to see if they are included: http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/richardrose4 There is no mention of the location on CD Baby page.

venue KSU portion (or possibly Cleveland)

Tim Calhoun, Tim Franta, Harnish speak. Rose speaks to Andy.

venue Pittsburgh portion

Venue is Synod Hall, Oakland, PA, see Whitely email below

This is in Pittsburgh but not at the University (Pitt). (file mj1 at 03:22)

At dm5-18:36 – Rose gives location as Pittsburgh

At dm4-21:52 Rose says, “But what time is it ? Oh it’s 6 o’clock.” April 3, 1979 was a Tuesday – odd that it’s so early.]


Email from Mike Whitely, Feb 3, 2016: “We could not get a room on the Pitt campus, so that year we had Rose speak at the Synod Hall, a community room next to Saint Patrick's Cathedral. It's on Craig Street in Oakland very close to the Pitt campus. So you could say Synod Hall in Oakland near the Pitt campus.

dm7-07:11 [Grating noise (some kind of machine?) here same as the noise in the unknown “ashram” tape, but happens only once. But it may help establish that the ashram meeting was in Pittsburgh]


File 0 Pittsburgh, Intro (mj0, dm0)

Total time: 1 min 32 secs.

Introduction by Mike Whitely:

dm0-00:00

Many of you, I’m sure are familiar with Richard Rose already; but some of you may not be, so I’ll try to fill in a little bit. He’s kind of a hard man to define in a lot of ways. I could say that he’s a writer, or maybe a researcher, or maybe a philosopher, and those things would be true. And I could say he’s a father and he raised a family. Or he was a contractor, because he did that for years. Or that he was a teacher. That’s what he’s interested in now. And those things would be true, but I think they all would be pretty much off the mark a little bit.

I could say that he spent a lot of time seeking himself and studying different systems, eastern philosophy, western philosophy, joining a lot of movements and evaluating them; because he was curious and he had questions that he would really like answers to. And that would be true too. But I think all of those things, even though they are true, all of them miss the mark. So that kind of leaves me in a quandary and the only thing I have left to do now is to ….

R. Don’t tell them about the time I spent in jail.

[laughter]

M. I was just getting to that. But now that he’s filled you in on that tidbit, the only thing I can do now is to present Richard Rose, who’s coming to share his insights on psychology and whatever.

R. Thank you Mike.

dm0 ends at 01:32 – mj0 ends at 01:34

File 1 Pittsburgh (mj1, dm1)

Total time: 29:32

dm1-00:00

[Note for Transcript.] Transcript by Pramod Babu.

In this lecture Mr Rose reads and comments on selections from Psychology of the Observer, available in paperback from Rose Publications. richardroseteachings.com/PsychObsBook.html


We’re going to talk tonight about the Psychology of the Observer. That might not sound too complicated, but I think it is a new psychological direction, possibly a new way of wording an old direction. The book is coming out soon and I have the typeset duplicate here. I want to read something to you from the front page.

I consider everyone to be robots, incidentally.

In the robot, the Designer placed a little curiosity, to keep the robot moving once it was assembled and born, so that the Designer would not have to perform every motion for every robot. But the robot became curious about his origin, and immediately the Designer became a direction of this curiosity. In the robot the Designer placed an ability to recreate, so that that which was created creates, not only by reproducing but also by projecting mental creations. All of this was designed to transform the robot into a self-sustaining unit.

So we create with our head as well as our body.

And thereupon the original creation with its orderly intentions was placed in jeopardy. And the robot forgot his curiosity about his Designer, and projected phantoms of false hope and monsters of desire. And darkness was projected as light.

mj1-01:59 --- dm1-01:59

I maintain that man does not observe: he thinks he observes. Consequently, this little treatise was written on the basis of the erratic observation. And out of this erratic observation comes a tremendous lot of man’s difficulties, including his misconceptions on philosophy and religion.

Man in his present mind is expressed by his personality and beliefs. That is, the man who we see on the street does not observe; he is part of an observation process. Man, as we know ourselves, does not experience; he is experienced. We get the idea that we’re doing things, but we do not always catch the fish; sometimes the fish catches us. The thing that we go out and seize – seemingly we’re doing something, but actually we become the victim of the doing.

dm1-03:07 – mj1-03:10

The basis of this self-study is the understanding of the real self. I remember a couple years ago I gave a talk over at the University of Pittsburgh and we were talking about the definition of the self. A man put up his hand and said, “I know who I am.” And I said, “Who are you?” And he says, “I’m the fellow who’s sitting in front of you.” But he was identifying himself as a voice and a body – which wasn’t his self. And this is what I’m going to try to demonstrate.

You ask yourself, “Who am I?” This is the old question that was asked by sages. They say, “First know thyself,” and then if you know yourself, everything else will be answered. But it’s said glibly and it’s taken easily, and nobody gives it any serious thought, this thing of questioning who you are. Of course the first impression for the materialist is to say, “You’re looking at it.” Well, maybe that’s all there is. But I’m saying that behind that, there’s something looking.

There is something looking which we fail to take into account. Even the fellow who says, “I’m the fellow sitting in front of you,” sees himself sitting in front of you. He hears himself talking to you and telling you that he’s in front of you. So he observes this process. And my point is, that if we’re going to define ourselves, that which is us, from the very beginning, it’s going to be that which observes, not that which is seen.

mj1-04:50 --- dm1-04:46

I distinctly separate the view from the viewer. This is the analogy: the view is never the viewer. The man who looks out on the landscape is the observer. The landscape is external. For the man who looks at his own body, that which observes the body is the true self. The body is not the true self.

Now a lot of people think that the body is all we’ve got. We have a whole system of psychology that says that all you’ve got is a body with a bunch of conditioned reflexes, and all sorts of little wires and genes and DNA molecules running around to compose and to stimulate thoughts. But we can cut the biggest part of this body away and we can still think, and we can still observe. We can even cut parts of the brain out. We can have people pronounced dead, that the body’s totally gone; but when the person revives, his senses should have been extinct but he remembers things distinctly. He comes back and he lives again. The eyeballs of this person who was seemingly dead were closed, yet he saw things in the room. I’m going to refer you now to works like Kübler-Ross and Raymond Moody.

But the body necessarily is not us. So again we say, “What is ‘us’?” Well, we don’t know. If we knew, we’d have the answer immediately. But it’s evident that the most substantial part of us is not that which seems material and substantial, but that which observes, that which witnesses.

dm1-06:35 --- mj1-06:45

Now there are other attitudes that can be taken on that. But I carry this through for a specific reason – because this is the way I did it. To me, the whole process of meditation, that which I consider the most sensible and fruitful form of meditation, is not on accepting what I consider, and what Joseph Chilton-Pearce might have considered the projected plan, that humanity projects in front and says, “This is the world and this is life.”

I think the most important thing is to find out more about the looker; find out that which is conscious, that which is aware. And as you start to get into this, there’s a very simple psychological system of self-observation we get into that points the way. And it does it rather quickly. Of course we go through the system quickly here; but if you try it yourself it may take years.

Body and Mind

mj1-07:46 --- dm1-07:39

I start with a very simple thing: you look at your toes, and that’s not you, basically. If you get diabetes you’ll lose them and you’ll go on living, clear up above your knees you’ll lose them. Likewise your can lose your arms; a lot of the thing can go.

Okay, so then a person says, “I am my thoughts.” This is seemingly at the time a revelation. They think, “Well, if there’s any part of me that is constant or able to escape from the corruption of death, it must be the mental part.” But after a while you realize that you’ve had a wrong idea about your own thinking. That your thoughts were not necessarily “you” as much as they were imposed upon you. That’s what I meant when I said that man does not experience, he is an experience.

mj1-08:44 --- dm1-08:36

Our whole thinking processes are programmed upon us. If we’re looking at the DNA molecules or the genes or that sort of thing, we’re merely the continuation of some life strand that goes back to our ancestors who thought similarly to us, had the same drives and so on. But we’re looking for an individual identification, an identification of some part of us that is an individual essence.

I’ve got a little drawing here, and this flat line at the bottom where it says Negative and Positive represents the realm of [mundane] human experience. Jacob’s Ladder diagram


We are relative creatures, and everything is defined in terms of something at the other end of the spectrum. So there’s no such thing in the relative world as a cold, clear definition. It’s only defined in terms of the opposite. If you pick up a dictionary and look up the word “good,” you’ll find that the definition rests upon the definition of “bad,” and “bad” rests upon the definition of “good.” You never really have anything except the opposite of something else. When you look up the definition of a cat, the cat is defined as a certain type of animal, it goes down through the genus and species; but you find out that you’re defining everything else in the dictionary but the cat, and the cat is that which is not in the rest of the dictionary.

dm1-10:06 --- mj1-10:15

So in all our thinking mechanisms we’re tied up in this wobble, or this thrashing about between the positive and negative, between the concept of existence and nonexistence, of thought and thoughtlessness, of up and down, good and bad – anything you think of. And we’re trying to define ourselves with this type of mind. We’re trying to look for a spark of particularized essence or whatever, that we will say is us. We’re trying to do it with a mind that is continually struggling. At each end of that little line could be a philosophy: You can have a philosophy for libertarianism and one for determinism, at two ends of the line, and they argue for eternity. This is what goes on through religions and everything else; you’ve got opposite concepts which seem to be just as sound as anything else, because they’re defined with the same dictionary.

mj1-11:19 --- dm1-11:08

There’s a writer Hubert Benoit who wrote on Zen. , He was the first fellow I ever read to come up with what he calls a conciliatory principle. (I haven’t read them all; there might have been somebody before him.) When I first came to Pittsburgh we were talking about Zen and a few other subjects. There was a man in the audience who went down with us to a little restaurant afterwards. He put his finger on the table and he says, “There’s this,” [to the left] “and there’s this,” [to the right] – then he hesitated and he whispers, “but there’s this also.” [in the middle] And we all thought, “Boy, what a joke is that?” Everybody laughed at him and thought he was an idiot. But this was the thing. It isn’t the extremities, it isn’t the polarity. It’s this conciliatory principle that gives us our definition.

So go back to human action now, the individual things that happen to you in your life. For example, we want to strike a moral code. We don’t know what a soul is, we don’t know what the mind is, but somehow we want to strike a moral code, hoping that this will take us by some religious or some scientific means into a better state of mind. And immediately, because we haven’t defined ourselves, we get into trouble trying to define the moral code. But we think the moral code will take us to our self-definition. This is the supreme paradox we’re always wallowing with.

mj1-12:56 -- dm1-12:42

We take a certain act; we say, “I want to follow a certain path.” Let’s say it’s a macrobiotic path. We’re going to purify ourselves and eat nothing but macrobiotics, and we form a philosophy that eating the poor little animals is wrong, that killing anything is wrong. But then we encounter somewhere along the line the need to kill, maybe to survive. We have to inject some serum into the children’s bloodstream to keep them from getting a disease, or we have to kill the rats that are trying to get into the house, if you have babies around.

dm1-13:35

So in applying this, all of a sudden we see in some instances, this concept that we’re clinging so tightly to seems to be ridiculous. I often think of the Christian Scientist or some religious person who believes that he doesn’t need medicine. And then you find them going through agony: they can face it themself, but when their children get sick the crisis comes about. Have they been kidding themselves? This is what goes through their head.

dm1-14:08

Everybody has gone through this to some degree or another. And by observing these patterns, this wrestling with the two extremes in our thinking in our relative dimension, we come to the conclusion that something is guiding it. We have a judge inside of us. Some of the old religious writers called it the conscience. I call it the umpire.

The umpire, I maintain, makes decisions for every act that we do. For instance, if you had two things to do tonight – one of them might have been to go out and get drunk, the other was to come here. One was cheaper than the other, so you came here. [laughter] But regardless, there was a decision made. Everything that you do has an alternative. Constantly, thousands of decisions are made per day. To step here or to step over there. Everything. This is the umpire.

mj1-15:32 --- dm1-15:14

When we notice that this is going on inside of us, we decide that we’ve discovered the real self. We’ve discovered the fellow that’s running the body. We’ve discovered the observer, so to speak, the observer of the actions, the thing that weighs them. I contend that this is the somatic mind [point C on the chart]. When you start observing the umpire, you see that this is something that works almost automatically, from the time a person is a baby. There are decisions made because of resistance, pain, pleasure, whatever. So it starts to gauge itself, and it expresses itself through the umpire, or through the decision maker, or the conscience. And when we see this, we think we’ve got a complete picture.

dm1-15:58

But after you watch the umpire, you start to see that some of these decisions, say that were made last year – this year you don’t approve of them. Supposing you were a devout Quaker or something of that sort, but you got drafted into the Army and you fall into that state of mind, and you go out and see the need for maybe killing people, doing the opposite of your prior convictions. And there are times that we see that these umpire decisions are not always the best for us. They’re good for a certain period of time, and then maybe a new rationale comes up and we find out that this wasn’t us either; it was imposed upon us.

I’ll give you an example; it’s more blatant or commonly understood than the average set of things that go on. We have appetites that we respond to, like eating. You get hungry and the impulse is to eat, but also perhaps to eat too much; and the umpire may say, “Don’t eat too much.” So if you get sick the next day, then your umpire failed you the day before. That’s what I’m trying to get at. Then there’s a new decision made by the umpire to correct this, and you start to inhibit yourself.

mj1-17:44 --- dm1-17:24

Another thing that happens is sex. A person gets a few years on them and they decide they’re capable of sex. So they go out the same as with the food – they may fall in love or fall into a situation where sex seems to be the only important thing to them in their life. They lose their job over the love affair and they stay in the motel for two or three weeks and get hungry because they lost their job. And another set of dissatisfaction sets in for the individual. The umpire has to balance things now and says, “Hey, you got to stop this and go out and get a job so you can continue to support the person you love, etc.”

All the time this is going on, we see that this is nothing more than an umpire between appetites, between different directions. But it doesn’t always follow through for the best of the individual. We set up things according to the social patterns that exist in your particular country, for instance, and the sexual decision made by our umpire would not be the same decision that would be made in Iran, from what I hear. There would be a lot of dead people around. Consequently, their umpire is going to have a different decision.

Now why isn’t this universal? The reason it’s not universal is that it’s a somatic mind. It’s only interested in the survival of this individual, this body. When we study that, though, we discover that something else says to us occasionally, “Sex is bad, period, boom, slavery. It doesn’t do any good for you. Sure it’s necessary but it’s a trap.” You can get your head cut off in certain places, or something of that sort. Regardless, even if you’re not in Iran, certain decisions are going to come through your mind sooner or later. I generally hear the very old men making jokes about how stupid the young people are, while the young people are looking at the old man and saying how stupid he is, because he hasn’t come up to the modern forms of degeneracy.

mj1-20:12 --- dm1-19:47

Regardless, what I’m talking about now is another plane of thinking that develops, and the man becomes aware that he has an intuition, and the human mind doesn’t work by logic alone. Unless the human mind, the logical somatic mind, which seems to be very reasonable, is not balanced and supported by an intuition, it isn’t complete. Much of our lives are guided by intuition – down to the point where if you’re a salesman and you meet somebody on the street, in five minute or five seconds time you know who you’re talking to, because you’ve developed this faculty that’s not logical. It may be direct-mind experience and it will lead to that. The development of an intuition will lead to direct mind experience.

What happens then is you begin to apply this, almost consciously. If you pick up a book of philosophy you may start to apply the logical or somatic mind to it, but your intuition might tell you that this is what you want to believe. What really is the truth? Are you picking something that you’d like to believe? Or are you picking something that isn’t related to body talk?

But all the time, what we’re talking about here is somebody observing processes. That’s what we’ve been doing: we’ve been observing mental processes. I maintain that the observer is the person. So that we are not the somatic mind, we are not the umpire, because that’s in the scenery, that’s part of the view. We are not the body, we are not the body-mind, we are not the intuition because we can observe it, analyse it, talk about it, watch its manipulations.

mj1-22:04 --- dm1-21:38

What is this that’s going on then? We’ve got a process observer, a person observing processes. You go into meditation and you think about thinking, and you’re thinking about ten thousand different ways of thinking – hundreds of tracks you’re thinking gets into, directions it takes, attempts to control thinking. And this becomes very intricate. Incidentally, when you get as far as the process observer in this sort of contemplation, you have progressed more than the average person. The average person does not bother to think about processes of thinking. He may sense that he’s got an intuition and he’ll give it a little word like an instinct or he may even claim to be intuitive.

But you sit back and watch this thing going on. And when you watch your intuition and your somatic mind, you start to get a very perfect picture of all the traps that you’re falling into. You see the traps as you go along. And you think this is the end of the line. Ordinarily you’d say, “I am that which watches.” But this isn’t true either. There is another. Again, we’re still a relative creature and we’ve only hit one corner of the line [point E on the chart]. Now if you notice, these triangles interlock, because the conciliatory principle of one becomes only the corner of another triangle.

mj1-23:33 --- dm1-23:04

So we continue this process of attacking thought. I’m getting now into experience and history, not into logic. I don’t know that there’s too much logic in anything I’m saying, and I don’t expect you to take it from a logical viewpoint. I’m expecting you to take it from an intuitional viewpoint, that some of this stuff may ring a bell. But for the mystic, the philosopher, who sits and watches his processes and struggles with them, trying to analyse them to find out who is having the process thinking – this is what he’ll become aware of. Somebody is watching these processes, and he immediately becomes aware of himself.

When he becomes aware of himself as a process observer [point E] then something peculiar happens. He becomes aware of the awareness of consciousness [F] by accident. So the movement goes in this direction: it naturally comes up here [E] but it goes over there [F] because as soon as you’re aware of one thing you immediately have to be aware of the opposite, in a relative plane. So he becomes aware of consciousness. And when he’s aware of consciousness, he’s reached a stage similar to cosmic consciousness or what Ramana Maharshi might call kevala nirvikalpa samadhi.

dm1-24:33

It’s the mountain experience, so to speak. And again, though, he returns; he’s still a relative creature. He returns and continues, let’s say, to fluctuate back between these, still puzzling because he doesn’t know for sure the final answer. All he knows is that he’s aware of awareness. And this results in an endless attack on this line, [E-F] which brings you to another conciliatory principle which is the total answer. [point G]

mj1-25:45 --- dm1-25:12

Now, there’s a whole lot being said there, I mean a whole lot implied, let’s put it that way. And all I can say is that if you take the life experience of anyone who has claimed to have reached total consciousness and you analyse it, you will find that it’s pretty much the same thing told in other words, in other terminology. When I wrote the book, it was before I had heard of Ramana Maharishi and I …

[break in tape – MJ version, also DM version. MJ version is very low quality beginning here. DM is also muffled. DM version is better quality here than MJ version]

mj1-26:19 --- dm1-25:46


….of the human mind. The mind is like a roll of film which is continually photographing things and storing it away, and almost simultaneously projecting it out. In other words, we are almost creating our universe from our mind as we go. We’re seeing something that stimulates it, but at the same time we’re projecting it out. I tried to describe that in the book, rather clumsily I think, but then I ran into Ramana Maharishi’s book, and he had done this I guess thirty years before. He used almost the same terminology, using a camera analogy. Incidentally, I recommend his book. If anybody wants to get into this, the terminology and some of the examples he uses are very clear; they’re very simple and come right to the point.

mj1-27:20 ---

Notes from the Text

I have a few more notes to read and then I want to open it up for questions; this is the most important thing. I don’t think this is clear to you. We made a tape on this but I don’t think it was sufficient because you have to identify this; you have to relate it to yourself.

See 1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State

mj1-27:41 --- dm1-27:07

Again, we were talking about the self, what the self is.

When man discovers the umpire he realizes that previously, the self that thought it was functioning was not the more real self. All of one’s actions are recognized as automatic reflexes or as pre-natal programming.

For instance all this work from the umpire down could be very automatic. It’s more or less imposed upon the individual. I draw the analogy of the newborn child. No one speaks to a calf or a colt, a young horse and says, “Hey, there’s a breast and you’ve got to find it and get fed.” If the horse’s young doesn’t find the breast within a couple of hours, it dies; there’s no hope for it. But that animal gets up on its feet and staggers around with just a few hours of life, and goes right to where it’s supposed to get its food and it eats. Now we think we’re very smart, but humans do the same thing. We do a lot for the baby that maybe the baby would do for itself. But what I’m saying is that all of our decisions on the relative plane, with the human body, no matter how much philosophy we put behind them, are nearly all programmed.

dm1-28:44

Now when you get considerably beyond that, the thoughts themselves may not be programmed, because meditative thoughts and philosophic thoughts don’t result in action all the time. But all thoughts that come to our head and result in action are generally programmed. And I’m going down to every little bit of dream and reverie that a person gets into. The biggest part of our reverie-thoughts originate in the glands. That might sound hard to you, but I maintain that the glands can cause thoughts and the thoughts can cause the glands to function. There is a tremendous physical relationship there. So we are tremendously programmed. And you discover that only when you get to watching from a superior position which as…

File 1 ends at mj1-30:18 --- dm1-29:35

File 2 Pittsburgh (mj4, dm4)

Total time: 31:03

[This continues of dm1 – has some overlap, no loss of words.]

mj4-00:00 --- dm4-00:00 --- DM version is bettter

[repeated text in red]

... that a person gets into. The biggest part of our reverie-thoughts originate in the glands. That might sound hard to you, but I maintain that the glands can cause thoughts and the thoughts can cause glands to function. There’s a tremendous physical relationship there. So that we’re tremendously programmed. And you discover this only when you get to watching from a superior position, which as I said, Benoit called a conciliatory position.

It’s only when you get clear above that umpire, that somatic mind, that you’re able to see it for what it is. You can’t see it while you’re in it. When you’re in it, you think it’s God. You think you’re the God, you’re the big shot, you’re doing everything. People do nothing.

mj4-00:43 --- dm4-00:44

[ Long pause, possible wait for tape change. 18 seconds ]

dm4-01:01

R. Now of course, one of the things everyone’s trying to do is to pull the strings of life before they find out what’s going on. Somewhere there’s an instinct that people have, that as soon as they find the answer, we’ll be able to do that. But I think that to do anything really, that hasn’t been programmed by some other force, would require a tremendous amount of knowledge; almost the knowledge of the why.

I can see where every railroad or automobile accident, every marriage, every divorce and all this stuff, is planned ahead of time. We just experience it. Because there doesn’t seem to be much of a way of avoiding this. We think in a highly complex culture that everything that’s happening is due to chance or accident. Maybe so. But I think a lot of this, after you get a few years on you and you look back, you see that things seem to happen almost magically, in retrospect. And they went in the right direction. And lots of times the direction at the moment was one we opposed. If we had had our choice, we would have wrecked things.

dm4-02:29 – mj4-02:31

What I’m trying to say is that there’s almost a master plan, so to speak, and in order for us to affect that, to cause one action of our own, we would have to upset that whole master plan. It’s almost like the electrons in a molecule: if we’re able to find the science to disrupt just one of those electrons, we’ll upset a tremendous electronic field in the process. And I think that this would happen with us.

I maintain that what we fail to pick up in the analysis, is that the human being lives in a dimension that he thinks is the only one. But there’s a parent dimension. Our dimension is projected from that parent dimension, that being Mind. I think that this entire picture we see is an emanation, a mental emanation, which is somehow projected into the human consciousness. And we in turn project it with common agreement – agreed-upon definitions, agreed-upon landscapes – in anything that we see.

This is brought out by Chilton-Pearce in The Crack in the Cosmic Egg. I’m going to mention a few words about him because you may not have read the book. His wife was dying of cancer, and Chilton-Pearce came to the conclusion that the reason was, that everybody had agreed upon cancer. We see that in individuals, where a person will tell you, “I’m going to die of cancer; I’m smoking too many cigarettes.” And the next thing you know, you find out he’s got cancer.

dm4-04:25 – mj4-04:31

But even beyond that, there’s the mere fact that we accept it, the mere fact that we say that cancer is. That’s the old fact – if you’ve read anything in the kabbalah, it speaks of the laws of creation. The law of creation was the will plus the imagination plus the fiat. , And when you spoke it, God help you, you had it. This is what happens: we talk and we say it is, and then it is.

Okay, I can’t prove that and neither did Chilton-Pearce. But he came up with this concept that maybe he could divorce himself entirely of this whole paradigm that humanity had created, the verbal paradigm. “In the beginning was the Word,” and after that there was nothing but chaos because words created words. Now that seems maybe a vulgar analysis or translation of a statement in Genesis. But regardless, our biggest enemies are words, perhaps. And the idea was that we could create a new paradigm in which there were no diseases. Even the Christian Scientists would agree with this: that we believe that the diseases are there, so they’re there. And if that could happen, then Chilton-Pearce could cure his wife. Well, he never cured his wife; she died. But he did get a couple of books out, and I think he opened this up to something. There were others beside him who felt the same way.

We are just now beginning to get a breath of knowledge about the mind. Before, it was, “I have a mind.” Then the second mistake was, “I am a mind.” In the diagram here is the somatic mind [point C]. But this [F] is neither.

We come from the mind. The mind is a dimension. And in order to change this life of ours, we have to know all of the causes. If you you’ve got a disease, the doctor may say to you, “What did your parents die of?” because you emanate from something, and that has a relationship to whatever affects you. And we emanate from a mind dimension.

Mary Baker Eddy way back there, sensed this. That if you were able to change the mind, to affect the universal mind, then miracles might happen. At least “miracles” as viewed from our relative viewpoint. I think there’s a basic failure in the idea of Christian Science in this respect: Faith will not move mountains. No one ever put a leg back on.

I remember an argument I had with a man I used to work with in Alliance, Ohio, on the atomic submarine. There was a Christian Scientist who worked there, and he was very touchy about everything we said, because his belief was that it was made flesh. Don’t curse people because it becomes real, and that sort of thing. I thought it was a huge joke. But we’d get into some interesting discussions and arguments. I said to him one day, “Hey, knock it off. Do you really think that a massive belief will change this world?” And he said, “Sure.” I said, “What about these healers, running around all over the place pretending to heal people? They can’t put a leg back on when it gets chopped it off.”

dm4-08:14 – mj4-08:26

You can possibly heal a person of a mental syndrome or something of that sort, or convince them that they didn’t have it in the first place. And I don’t even deny that maybe you can change some things. It’s my belief that there are certain limitations within which you can change. But there are limitation: there’s a limitation to our knowledge of this mind dimension. Faith will not move the mountain because two hundred million people don’t believe it will move, if nothing else. You’re not going to move that mountain over on top of a city and smash a lot of people. The people just refuse to believe it. This negative form of belief is what Chilton-Pearce was up against, and he couldn’t do it himself.

But there are cases down through time where people have discovered ways of affecting this mind dimension. This is the catch. And it’s done through intense application. I maintain that if you concentrate long enough on anything, you will get an answer. You might be crazy when you get it, but you’ll get an answer. I believe that if you desire to be a millionaire and you push hard enough, apply total energy, throw enough mud at the ceiling, you’ll be a millionaire. But you’ve got to shut out everything else and put total energy into it.

dm4-09:47 – mj4-10:01

I maintain that if you want to find yourself, you apply the same principles and you’ll find yourself. If you want to know something about the mind, I think you can do that by applying the same amount of energy. Now I don’t say, that in some cases people won’t quit short of the goal, rationalizing that they’ve found the answer, because we’ve got no yardstick for that.

Modern Psychology

This whole thing has a bearing upon what I consider the errors in psychology and sociology today. The theme is, the word goes out, “We’re going to change the world.” I talked to a sociology teacher one time and she said, “We’re going to create a culture.” I said, “What you’re teaching is lies.” And she said, “Yes. But if people believe those lies, we’ll create a culture.”

dm4-10:49 --- mj4-11:05

And this is the drive. I see that this has been happening a tremendous lot recently. Get in and brainwash the public en masse. You’re getting it right now on the price of gas. Because a tremendous educational campaign is going out to convince people, so they’ll believe eagerly that they must sacrifice. I remember World War II when everybody was getting into the big self-sacrifice thing and we were short on everything imaginable. But these are experts at impelling moods, and they go unchallenged because people want to believe.

I found out something else about the human being in relation to religion. The majority of people want to believe the most impossible thing. Alice in Wonderland. They don’t want a simple, basic psychological analysis to human nature, or to the next dimension, or to where they’re going when they die. No. It has to have pearls, it has to look like a Christmas tree, you have to have categories of deities, you have to have indulgences and blessings, favored sons and bastards who are going to hell. It has to really be elaborate, and then you have to run between the raindrops – and pay every step of the way.

dm4-12:15

I don’t know, I sometimes think that all of this is programmed. I one time was initiated into a sect out of India called Radha Soami. Some of you may be acquainted with it. Kirpal Singh made a tour of the country recently; he was branch that splintered off the Radha Soami sect. One of their headquarters is in Beas and another is in Kashmir. They also have one at Agra. But they had something that caught my ear. They maintain that there were seven planes of existence. This one was the lowest plane, possibly. There were three low planes in which we kept reincarnating: we’d run up three steps and down three steps, up three steps, down three steps. There was a creature in charge of this, a god, the head of it, called Radha Soami. And he had made a deal with a character that was running a concession on the lower three levels. This was what we would call the devil but they call it Kal.

dm4-13:44

Kal had priorities. He had the right to keep these people from escaping. Only the very shrewd and few, escaped from the third plane and got up into the fourth plane. There are Indian names for them but I’ve forgotten them. I went through the initiation – I’m sharing something with you, but it didn’t cost me any money. You’re supposed to wait for people who are ready, but I don’t know if anybody’s ready.

But they said Kal penetrates everything. For example, you’re going to try to escape from these dimensions so you start a religion. And soon as it starts, some thief steals the treasury and runs off with it. Or he sells the leader out for a few nickels. Or he becomes a schismatic. Right after Christ died, I think, Peter was arguing with one of the other apostles and he says, “Already we have begun to dissemble.” In other words, the man is hardly dead in his grave and they’re chewing at each other; one of them is going this way with the dogma, and the other is going that way.

And this was the work of Kal. It may have been true or false, but to see the analogy, if that’s all it was, was very good to me. There’s something that wrecks the progressive efforts of man on a spiritual or a psychological level. It may be nothing but his head. Maybe the endless variations that occur when anything is brought up. He’s got to face these endless variations and the result is confusion. So he never really finds his way out with a dogmatic or mundane religion.

dm4-15:24

Now just in passing, another fellow came along who also believed that we were robots, and that was Gurdjieff. Gurdjieff and Ouspensky formed a kind of a team. And I think Gurdjieff was the greatest psychologist who ever hit the western world. I think the majority of psychologists today are behaviorists. I say it’s like taking soil samples to discover what’s at the core of the earth. This is behavioristic psychology: taking nerve reflexes to discover the soul of a man, or the destiny of man, or the ideas of the designer. But who wrote the blueprint? This guy knows the score.

dm4-16:14

The guy taking pinpricks or testing reflexes or inkblots – or conceptualizing – does not know from whence the man came. Yet he’s going to legislate for the purpose of keeping himself in office. This is my belief. Our psychologists are not pure psychologists; they want to be funded. The only one I had much respect for was Carl Jung, because I think he was an honest man. Freud was a merchant, basically, and he wanted to have a string of clinics strung through Europe – and possibly America if he had lived long enough – selling one product and packaging it with the nicest words possible. Confusing words that is, so that nobody could challenge him: psychoanalysis.

Another guy comes along, and the word he’s packaging is psychotherapy. Then Viktor Frankl comes along; and each of them comes up with a word. Kübler-Ross wants to be the chief merchant in charge of death and dying. Before you can die you have to consult her or some of her disciples, who will worry the hell out of you while you’re dying, not let you die in peace.

dm4-17:36

To me the whole field of psychology today is backing up the establishment paradigm; the paradigm that teaches degeneracy so there will be no riots in the streets. We have adopted a degenerate psychology. And you can find reasons for any psychology you wish. As I said, the dictionary is a big book. It’s the same with the Bible: you can get the Bible to back you up, if you search hard enough, on almost anything you want.

But I don’t believe that they are going to the most important thing, which is looking at the source of thought. They’re not doing that. What are the tools of a bricklayer? Or an engineer? He has a calculus book that he can refer to and he’ll give you reasons for his actions. The domain of the medical doctor is the body. But the domain of the psychiatrist and psychologist is the psyche, not the body. The body is biology; that’s veterinarianism. We’ve got veterinarians raking off fifty dollars an hour. To me the domain of the psychologist goes back to the very soul of man. To find out why a man thinks, you’ve got to find out why this machine was created to think.

Now, that sounds impossible, and they say, “Well, we can’t do that. We’ve just got to patch these guys up and get them back into the field and have them pay taxes. Because if they don’t pay any taxes and don’t hold a job, they can’t pay us fifty dollars an hour. And the government isn’t going to fund us and they’re not going to hire psychology professors in colleges, so the whole thing will collapse. We’ve got to keep this paradigm going.” Now I don’t know why we got into that, but we’re into it. [laughter] dm4-19:30

Awakening

But what we’re trying to do is pull strings. This whole idea behind discovering yourself is possibly to affect that from which you came. Gurdjieff had this idea of the “sly man” approach. That there are little things you can do to awaken another person, but you can’t awaken yourself. We are, as I said, robots, sound asleep, grooved in. Try to stop, try to change your course, try to set yourself a thinking pattern, and see how quickly it’s interfered with.

Everybody here, I imagine, is tied to a routine that takes him from daylight to dark. And try to break that routine. Try to set up a different self-analysis. It may take you a couple of weeks, or a couple of months or a couple of years. Set aside maybe an hour or a half hour per day – and you’ll go along maybe for a week or so. But supposing in that hour a day or half hour a day you’re provoked to try to do something else: That you’re not going to just sit around and think about thinking, or thinking about ways and means. No, you’re going to find the ways and means; you’re going to experiment. And if you try to set yourself up an experimental pattern, you’ll find that it’s almost impossible.

dm4-20:53

So then, why is it impossible? It’s impossible because your head is set on something: you’ve got to have those cigarettes or you’ve got to have that dope, or you’ve got to have that security, that mansion up at Mt .Lebanon or someplace and pay for those bricks. And you’re not going to stop working until you drop dead – so your wife can entertain some lover in those bricks.

But regardless, we can’t let go of this squirrel cage. It takes somebody from outside. And this has been the theme behind pure religion. In fact, there have been a lot of religions that started out pure. The guy says, “Hey, take a day off; make Sunday holy and stop, so that these dummies can do some thinking.” But then the guy in charge of the religion finds that it’s profitable and he starts selling candles, and you’re back where you started: you’ve got to work an extra day of the week to pay for the candles.

dm4-21:52

Universal Mind

I’d like to stop for a minute. There’s some other information I want to give you about what I consider the examples of man’s ability to see

But what time is it ? Oh it’s 6 o’clock. [April 3, 1979 was a Tuesday – odd that it’s so early.]

Now I rambled a little bit toward the end of that, but I’d like to clarify anything about this diagram you’d like to hear. I didn’t want to get too deep into this business. You can [ask] if you wish. [But] I think there are ways; I think there is a good psychotherapy system if a person wanted to get into it and people are honest with each other, and they could help each other. Prod each other to wake up and that sort of thing. But there are only two ways I know that you can affect your life. One of them is, if you can find somebody you can trust, who won’t pick your pockets while he’s helping you. And the other one is to study for the laws of the mind.

I think there are some laws that were discovered. You’ll see them in operation, and the average person refuses to believe them when they see them. Like with hypnosis: when hypnosis first came out everybody said, “Oh, that’s maybe the work of the Devil.” That’s one nice solution for it. Or it’s a trick. That the subjects just agree, and it’s a little game they play. I used to do some hypnotic demonstrations and people chuckled to themselves, “He’s clever. These people put on a pretty good act.”

dm4-23:32

Hypnosis is one of the minor laws, and that’s just of the somatic mind. But I know that there are people living who can touch people’s minds at a distance without all the routine. And we have been visited by a few of these people from India. They study for years to learn to zap and they can knock you off your feet by looking at you and concentrating. After people lose their children to these systems for maybe ten years, they begin to realize that they were zapped. But prior to this they say, “Oh, that can’t happen here, not under Old Glory; nothing like that happens here.”

But there are people who know some of the workings of it. Now this isn’t the individual mind; this is some matrix that is pervasive. It goes from mind to mind. When you enter this, when you’re able to enter it, is when you have your direct-mind experiences. That’s when you can read another person’s mind. That’s when you can contact your thoughts to them. And it happens; everybody experiences it sometime or another. I remember driving with my wife in the car one time. Neither one of us had mentioned this family for I guess five or ten years, and both of us said at the same time, “Let’s get down to John So-and-So’s house.” There are so many of these it seems to be above coincidence, that there was something transmitted. So there is a connection. There’s some sort of field, which I like to say is a universal mind.

dm4-25:20

Q. Do you think this is the same thing Karl Jung was talking about, synchronicity?

R. These are words. I maintain that Chilton-Pearce sensed something. Colin Wilson sensed it. Colin Wilson wrote it as fiction, which is a nice way to write: you can never get criticized, you don’t have to prove anything. But you can get ahold of his book The Mind Parasites. When I read it I was utterly amazed that he had this knowledge, and the way he put it out. He had the idea that if fifty people discovered this secret they would be able to move the planet. Because the world is nothing more than an illusion, the moon is nothing more than an illusion, but that fifty minds held in a certain position would affect the planet. Of course this would sound like science fiction.

But what he was saying was what I refer to in one of the papers I’ve written as the law of betweenness, where things happen in a peculiar in-between state. , All the wisdom of man, and all the great things, happen in a state of betweenness. This, I maintain, is part of the thing that sustains the universe. That each planet exists in a particular field of gravity and anti-gravity. It extends out so far; a big planet has more of a field of gravity, the moon has a smaller one. But somewhere in between there’s a point of no gravity.

dm4-26:57

This what I mean by the state of betweenness. When the head is in that same thing in relation to the heads of others, then a new type of motion can be created. My theory is if you had a spaceship you could function in what I call that …

dm4-27:11

[break in tape in both dm4 and mj4]

dm4-27:14 --- mj4-27:57

[commence tape, dm4 and mj4 the same. Sound no longer muffled]

… and I maintain at least that some people in India have discovered it and they use it. And there’s transformation of material and that sort of thing as a result of it. On a very small scale of course: they don’t move any planets. But Colin Wilson made it dramatic by citing that you could move the moon. Has anybody here read The Mind Parasites? Well, you can understand what I’m talking about. It’s just fiction but I think it’s well worth reading because it gives a hint of this.

dm4-27:51 – mj4-28:35

Q. What kind of initiation did you have, that you were talking about?

R. [This was the Radha Soami sect.] Well, it was the naming and the identification of the seven planes, so that when I died I would know, by the sound of certain musical instruments, the names of the deities that presided over them. ,

Q. Did you experience anything?

R. No. But don’t get me wrong, I don’t take issue with them, because they were good people. There was no racket connected with it, didn’t cost a cent. I reject everything that costs money, especially if it’s fantastic sums of money. But these people didn’t charge. Now, they may have operated on donations or something.

Another concept they had was that the guru appeared at the point of death; he would take you over the threshold. You were tied to the guru through Darshan. You establish this bond and then when you died, automatically he’d pick you up. And I thought, “Well, that’s interesting; all you have to do is be around one of them who’s dying and you can see what goes on.” There was an old guru who initiated me and I said to him, “Were you ever around when any of the members of the religion died?” He said, “I missed my wife by a half hour.” She died while he was out of the house. He was hoping that she would say, “Here he is. Here’s Charan Singh.” They were all named Singh, they were Sikhs.

dm4-29:44 --- mj4-30:33

Life after death experiences

But my belief is that somebody appears for you anyhow. There’s a common denominator that runs through a lot of movements and isms: the HGA, Holy Guardian Angel. The Rosicrucians I think believe that the master appears. But also many of them believe that you have a guardian angel, like a protective spirit that follows you all through life. And when you wear out, he picks you up and put you into another system of trouble. [laughs]

dm4-30:17 --- mj4-31:05

People on the battlefield also seem to reach for their mother. I’ve seen people dying who have called for their mother. Old people, I’ve seen them in hospitals dying, and in their last breath they’d shout, “Mother, Mother, Mother,” and look for them. Who knows?

[next paragraphs are repeated at the beginning of the next tape]

But that’s the type of evidence that Kübler-Ross bases her book on.

And incidentally, getting back to the idea of evidence of life after death, both Raymond Moody and Kübler-Ross missed the categorization of these death phenomena. I maintain, that your death scene will measure for you where you’re going.

dm4-31:02

File dm4 ends at 31:03 --- mj4 ends at 31:51 (same place; overlap, no loss of words)

File 3 Pittsburgh (dm5, mj5)

Life after death experiences-continued

Total time: 31:10

dm5-00:00

[Repeated section from dm4 and mj4 is in yellow]

R. But that’s the type of evidence that Kübler-Ross bases her book on.


And incidentally, getting back to the idea of evidence of life after death, both Raymond Moody and Kübler-Ross missed the categorization of these death phenomena. I maintain that your death scene will measure for you where you’re going. Because it’s just like with LSD: you only get out of life what you put into it. The trip you get is going to be what type of character went into the trip.

And the ones who seem to find other people, even though it’s loved ones, are on what I call the emotional level. I borrow this classification from Gurdjieff, incidentally: the instinctive, emotional, intellectual, and philosophic. And occasionally you hear of people who have the nonhuman experience; that there are no human beings there, but they witness beautiful vistas and sometimes mathematical designs and stuff. Yet they seem to feel when they come back that they’ve witnessed a heaven that they’re going to enter. Still others find that they enter something that they can’t describe.

dm5-01:21 --- mj5-01:24

I always refer to the October 1974 issue of Reader’s Digest. There was a man who died in an automobile from a heart attack. , His wife was there. She called an emergency unit and they got him to the hospital. He was pronounced dead but he came back. He described his experience, and he was quite convinced of what would have happened to him if he hadn’t come back – he would have still been in that experience. He didn’t see any relatives. He was a man who personally didn’t believe in life after death. But he became one with something enormous. He realized that this was the Atman and the Brahman, , which is the best way you can put it although he didn’t have that vocabulary. His nationality was Jewish, I gather from his name. But he made the remark that he felt that there’s no need to fear death. He had experienced this.

Well, I’ve heard different accounts, and I notice they fall into these categories. The business of spatial travel at the end of which is a vista. Somebody takes off and they look down and see the body on the bed. Or maybe they’re not aware of the bed but they just see somebody coming and they reach out their hand and that person picks them up and takes them away. And then somebody else says, “Oh you’ve got to get back. We can’t take you.” You know, “You didn’t pay all your taxes so you have to return.”

dm5-03:11 --- mj5-03:15

I think they correspond to the different levels of the man’s potential. And the one where the person merges with unity was something that he really doesn’t understand, but realizes beyond a shadow of a doubt that he exists and he’s one with God. Sometimes they use the word God and sometimes they use some other terminology. But you pick up the same pattern. They’re naming it maybe according to their religious training, or their atheistic training. And I thought it was amazing that Moody and Kübler-Ross both missed this. All you have to do is talk to enough doctors and nurses in hospitals and you can get a tremendous encyclopedia of death experiences. And not only that but of experiences like I mentioned before: people who are pronounced dead and they witness what’s going on.

dm5-04:11

My own brother was in an automobile wreck and I got a telegram saying he was dying, and I couldn’t possibly get there in time. He lived, but he watched from the ceiling, remembered everything that was taking place. My wife was a nurse and she used to tell me about people who were supposedly unconscious. The other nurses were throwing them around and mistreating them because they thought they were out. When this one party woke up, she said to my wife, “You treated me alright. I know you by your voice.” She couldn’t see her but she knew her voice. “The rest of these people were dogs.” Because they treated her badly. So evidently with the unconscious body there’s still an awareness of some sort.

dm5-04:56 --- mj5-05:04

Q. You spoke earlier of a master plan. Can we know anything of the nature of that, and does that presuppose a master planner?

R. I have no proof of it; I have a feeling that’s all. I have a feeling that this surely isn’t all nonsense. It seems like it is. But I have this feeling, because things work in kind of an orderly manner despite our desires and our ambitions and everything. Things seem to work out. And so my conclusion is – I’m not lapsing into religious superstition – but I think it would be folly to presume that we are forming our civilization and we are creators of the earth. And that we should go any further, or too far or too fast without knowing why.

That’s my belief and with that in mind, I’m of the opinion that it’s very possible that looking back on our history we haven’t been too long inside of clothes even, much less in the business of creating planets. So I have a feeling that there is a plan to it. Of course, my idea of the creation is not the creation of matter – I don’t believe that matter exists as we believe it. And I don’t believe that it’s strictly create-able either as the Christian Scientist would believe it. That just by a half a dozen people getting together you can remove a tumor or something of that sort.

dm5-06:39 --- mj5-06:49

I believe that what we have to do, to get a true apprehension of anything, is to go back into the source where we came from, which is the mind dimension. I maintain that we emanate from mind stuff. The reason for saying that, is this is the best way I can draw the picture that I travelled. There again, somebody else might be able to express it differently. You get all kinds of pictures when you get analyses of experience. But the experience I had resulted from an incessant application of concentration, and observation of my own processes. In other words you go within. This is the true way to go within. You don’t go within by just concentrating on your navel or your toes.

dm5-07:32 --- mj5-07:47

Q. Tonight you’ve been painting a very bleak picture for humanity, that man is sort of following this programming, caught in a prison camp, say. Now I know you claim to have escaped from this prison camp somewhat. For the people like us who are prisoners following this around, I wouldn’t put much value on that kind of life. I don’t know if you do. Now that you’ve escaped, now that you’re free, what value …?

R. I’m not free. I’ve momentarily seen, or it feels as though I’ve seen the score. But you know, I still have to eat and I still have the pay the price for it. And I have to believe or leave.

Q. Are you familiar with the “cave dwellers”?

R. Oh, Plato? Yes, this is described by Plato in the Republic – the cave of shadows, man’s comprehension of reality. I thought it was amazing that Plato said this. We deify modern thinking but they don’t come up to Plato. If they had the insight of Plato they’d have a different insight into psychology. He maintained that men are chained with their back to the mouth of the cave and they see the shadows of the things passing outside. They see the shadows on the wall of the cave and they interpret that as reality. And the only way they can find the real reality is to break their chains and get up and turn around and go out into the daylight. This is an analogy of course, but very true I think.

dm5-09:16 --- mj5-09:31

Q. So all you’ve done is just seen the prison and you’re still stuck in it like everybody else?

R. I think I’m here. Sometimes I wake up and think that I’m going through some motions, and one day I’ll find out I’m dead. But I’ve got an idea that I’m still here.

Q. I don’t think you give us enough credit for our abilities to change our realities.

R. Oh, hell. Let me give you all the credit you need. I’d like to see you do it. Where are your implements? That would be more difficult than Archimedes with his fulcrum and lever, moving the earth. How can you change if you’re programmed?

Q. I don’t believe in the finality of that program.

R. See that’s your privilege. I don’t want to upset your belief. In fact I think hope springs eternal. And only because hope springs eternal do the little ones keep the wheels turning. It’s necessary for you to have that hope. I can live without it.

dm5-10:30 --- mj5-10:47

Q. Can you give a couple of more examples about how to spot the umpire at work?

R. There’s a very simple one: when you hear an argument inside yourself. Did you ever hear an argument? – when you say, “Hey I want to get off those cigarettes,” and something says, “Well, one more won’t hurt.” That’s the quibble that’s going on, and whatever decision is made, is made by the umpire. That’s my point. It’s very plain and very evident in the basic appetites. Now, there are other decisions that are made when you start watching yourself, meditating upon your actions; they will become more evident. But it’s very evident to watch a person making decisions about: Which pleasure shall he have? Shall he have vanilla ice cream or raspberry?. You know, shall you have a big fat woman or a skinny one? All night? Two weeks? You want to drop dead or do you want to get back to work? That’s the umpire.

I maintain that this applies to everything. I’ve known people for instance, they sit in a house – I don’t know how it starts, but they can’t get up and go out. They can’t make a decision; they’ll just sit there. I knew a man one time who was 20 years of age and he stayed 20 years in bed. His umpire just failed. He couldn’t make that decision to move. Well, he made a decision – it was to stay in bed.

dm5-12:05

Q. In your dealings with other people, when you’re running on automatic, how do you spot the umpire?

R. The thing of course is to improve the umpire, and I think you do. In your dealings with other people these things are functioning. This is the reason, I think, that psychology is so hard to come up with. The factors are changing. Your umpire decision may be different next month if you make enough mistakes. We’re always trying to predict our relationships with other people. And I think this is one of the mistakes made today; it’s imperfect umpires even.

These geniuses who are going to change the earth are all located down here [on line A-B]. They think that they can take dope, have weird sex acts, and grow in experience, and they make decisions in that direction. The result is, well, we get millions of them who are ploughed under already because their umpires were faulty. They wind up in the nut houses and in suicide, overdoses and that sort of thing. These are classic examples of faulty umpires and a faulty system of psychology. It says, “Hey, you go right ahead. Don’t let anybody tell you that what you’re doing is wrong.” I’m talking about a psychologist who’s interested only in the body, perhaps, the survival of the body. They don’t know anything about the mind, but at least they could help the body survive a little longer. But no, they believe that experience is broadening and people are capable.

dm5-13:51 --- mj5-14:13

I find that the more you learn about the things that go on in the head, making up a decision, the more you’re convinced that you’re ignorant. The more you realize the vast scope of possibility, of factors that go into things. Like a person who sets out to make a million dollars. Maybe he has a heck of a time just saving the first thousand. But after a while he learns to play the stock market and he becomes rather proficient and he thinks he’s got all the factors. But some wise guy gets in there and tampers with the gears someplace; maybe he tampers with a computer in the bank like in LA and their stock collapses. So then he loses his life; he may have a stroke as a result of it, because he didn’t take in all the factors on a simple thing like making money. And there are millions of factors connected with the stock market. So now figure the abstract sciences. Figure the science of the human mind: thinking about thinking about thinking about thinking about thinking, ad infinitum, which you have to get into.

dm5-15:06 --- mj5-15:31

Q. I’d like to have your opinion about this incident that happens not on a regular basis but erratically. A person walks into the bathroom and looks into the mirror. And whatever it is, it’s unexplainable. But you look at this face in the mirror and it looks familiar, and you force that form to say a word and the voice is familiar. And yet whatever it is that is watching all of this in the mirror, finds this face and this voice alien and removed from whatever is watching the whole incident.

R. Well, I would have to possibly hear in more detail and depth. Although I think a lot of people have this feeling that there’s somebody else looking back, if that’s what you’re talking about. Now you may be talking about a person that’s obsessed or possessed. I’ve seen people who had a lot of insight into the mirror when they were drunk. They’d have quite an argument going. The one party would be calling the other an SOB and this one would be arguing because he was insulted. I think it’s an ideal place for like a split, a schizoid thing, to take effect, where you can identify with two halves of yourself, and put one on the other side of the looking glass so to speak.

Q. I’m speaking of myself, obviously.

R. Well, you could have something actually interposing itself between you and the mirror too. That’s another mistake in modern psychology. Modern psychology should explain everything in its domain. Or when a better explanation comes up, it should re-examine its textbooks. I maintain that this story The Exorcist is very real. But the psychiatrists and psychologists presume to say this is superstition and it didn’t happen. Ten thousand years of science, wisdom about exorcising and dealing with things has to go down the drain because it’s easier to pretend it doesn’t exist than to face it. ,

dm5-17:51 --- mj5-18:20

Now I maintain that the foolishness has to do with the fact that this [life] is a projection. There are many projections. This is a dimension, there are many dimensions. And it isn’t logical to say they don’t exist because you can’t see them – because you can’t see a virus and you can’t see an electron. But we accept the scientist who says there is an electron. We accept the diagnosis that comes from the guy who says there’s a virus doing this. We can’t see it but [we know] it happens because it’s predictable. The disease is predictable and of course so are certain symptoms. And I maintain that there are such things as other-dimensional creatures co-inhabiting this stage.

dm5-18:36 --- mj5-19:11 Rose gives location as Pittsburgh

And people know this. I’ve had a lady come down to my place from right here in Pittsburgh years ago. I’ve had one from each town I think; every place I lecture somebody comes up to me and says, “I got one.” This lady from Pittsburgh said she had five; five people that were with her all the time. I saw the one, so I’m equally nuts, if she was nuts. It was standing behind her. There are a couple boys present here, I think, who were with me when she came down. In fact they weren’t supposed to bring her and they brought her by mistake. [laughs]

I’m not a healer. I don’t want to become involved in that. But I don’t believe you can disperse them by therapy. In fact, I think the reason we have a high percentage of suicides among our psychiatrists is the fact that they become smitten with diseases that they never dream existed. And that’s the reason they have to go; the only cure is suicide. They can’t handle it.

dm5-19:39

Q. You speak of mind as a dimension and you say there are many dimensions. Are you inferring that all the other dimensions come from this same mind?

R. I presume so. I don’t say that the last thing is the mind. What happens here [line E-F] is that there is an incessant observation of man’s potential – his highest potential of being a process observer and being aware of his consciousness. Aware of awareness. When this is observed with relentless observation you blow your head. Thoughts, the relative mind, the relative world disappears. Reality enters for the first time. Reality.

Now, to an observer you may be a nut. But in that state of reality you have transcended the human mind and the mind dimension; you realize it’s only something you pass through. And nearly everyone who has had these experiences speaks of it, of killing the mind. They speak of it in Zen, that you have to kill the mind. That it’s false; it’s like the crazy house in the circus, the house of mirrors, illusions and that sort of thing.

dm5-21:10

Q. Then the mind is possibly a false dimension like all the other dimensions.

R. Well, the same as this, in my estimation; if you take it seriously it will worry you.

dm5-21:24 --- mj5-21:59

Q. You were talking about out-of-the-body experiences. I was a bedside nurse for a woman who had multiple sclerosis. She had been in bed for ten years unable to move, unable to talk, but she was able to hear and see. She weighed about 70 pounds and she was 54 years old. I worked for her for several months. When I first saw her, in my heart I said, “Oh my God, how can I do this, how can I work for this woman?” But my intuition said, “Yes, go for it. There’s something to learn.”

So through the weeks I learned something about someone who had their mind controlled. I mean who had the power of their own mind. Can you imagine being in bed and unable to move for 10 years and having the will to live and having the will to give and to experience life. She experienced her grandchild – they brought the grandchild to her and put the grandchild on her chest and the baby kissed her. And it was all very moving to me.

What I wanted to bring out was a certain look that she would get in her eyes when I would go into the kitchen and cook for her. There was a mirror in the room in front of me and there was a glass window from the kitchen to her room, which was actually the porch. And I kept an eye on that mirror because there was no other way of communicating to me in case she needed her suction machine. In case she was dying, because she was dying. They told her she should have been dead about 10 years ago but she’s still very much alive.

dm5-23:15 --- mj5-23:51

R. Is she still living now you mean?

Q. Oh yes, she’s very much alive. So I would check the mirror occasionally and there was a strange feeling that I had when I saw her eyes. Because her eyes would go up and there was a definite glaze around her face. I talked to the other nurses about it. She had seen a program on television about out of the body experiences and somehow she had communicated with the angel, that’s what she said to her nurse. She didn’t want anybody else to know.

R. Oh yeah, this is quite common.

Q. And, yeah there was something going on. I could feel it. And to a nurse she said, “The angel comes.” And she’s very calm and very peaceful, and very contented in that situation. The nurse asked her, “Well, what do you say to the angel?” and Corkie would say, “I’m not ready yet.” And the angel would say, “Okay, we’ll leave you be.”

[next paragraph is rewritten for logical order]

R. Yes. I have had some peculiar things happen to me. I don’t consider this a talent and I couldn’t duplicate it if I tried. They just happen, and when they happened they’re there. But I was in the contracting business years back and I had a partner, and when he was 60 years of age he got cancer of the lungs. He was broke, he had spent all his money on doctors and stuff. Two daughters had come up from Florida They were living in a house trailer – they’re called 40 foot trailers but they’re really about 35, about as long as this room is wide. The daughters had little kids about two years old. So the two daughters, maybe three children, and his wife and he were in this 40 foot trailer.

dm5-25:26 --- mj5-26:07

Well, I went over to see him, and he was asking me questions about things. We had never discussed religion or anything else. We just worked together, and it was hard work; we kept that out of the conversation so we’d get something done. We had enough to fight about. Anyhow he seemed to sense that he should ask me a question, and he said to me, “Where do you go when you die?” Now this was just a couple of days before he died. I said, “Well, I don’t know where you’re going,

[tape break (both dm and mj versions) and restarts, small repeat, no loss of words]

but I know what I feel happens to people after death.” And I told him.

A couple of days later I went over and it was the day before Easter, Saturday night. And the women were putting on their coats, going to the Eagles to play Bingo. He was on a studio couch. And his wife kind of knelt down on one knee, talking to him and she’s saying, “I’ll be back at 10 o’clock,” and so on. And I saw his hand reaching up like this, real slow, and he was patting her on the back. So when she got up I said, “What’s wrong with Frank?” And she says, “Oh, he’s in a coma.” Now when someone tells me somebody’s in a coma I presume they’re unconscious but he knew she was there. So I said, “I think he knows you’re there.” She said, “Oh yeah, but he’s in a coma. He gets into those and slips in and out of them.”

[break in tape in dm version, also mj version.]

[Due to the tape gap, words are omitted that Rose took the man’s hand. Inserted here, necessary for the story.]

So I went over to the couch, reached over, and took this man’s hand. Now I know you’ll think this is a damn big lie, but this man actually told me he was dying. And how I translated that, I don’t know. There wasn’t a word spoken. But it was just a slight pressure and I stood up and I said to the woman, “Don’t go.” She said, “Why not?” I said, “He’s dying.” She said, “How do you know?.” I said, “He told me so.” She said, “He didn’t say a word.” I said, “Don’t kid yourself. He’s dying.” I was that convinced. You could have thought it was superstition, or just a hunch I had or something.

dm5-27:48

I often look back upon it and think what an ass I might have made out of myself if he had lived another day, because of the things I did. They took their coats off and they stayed there. I said, “We’ve got to get him into the hospital.” She says, “Why?” I said, “You’ve got these little children here, and when people die with cancer of the lungs sometimes it’s not pretty when they go.” This is what happened to him. When he died his lungs seemed to come up out of his mouth.

She said, “We have no money to take him to the hospital.” I said, “You don’t have to have money when a man’s dying.” I picked up the telephone and called the volunteer fire department in this little community, and said, “We need an ambulance over here.” I took this all on myself. That’s why I felt that it would have really been foolish looking, imposing on somebody else’s domestic situation. We got him into the hospital that night and he died on Easter morning. And he coughed up his lungs.

dm5-28:45

But I think that you can communicate. You run into these incidents all the time. That’s what I call a direct-mind experience. I don’t think it was the hand. I don’t think he talked to me through his hand. I think the contact was made and I think this happens with a lot of people, that you can communicate. My brother, when he was in the automobile wreck, he saw and heard what was going on but he couldn’t communicate with anybody. Maybe if somebody had touched him he could have.

dm5-29:18

Q. I just have the same question I asked before, so I’m trying again: What good is it for a person to know he’s in a prison, if he could never get out?

R. Well, that was the decision I made when I was 21 years of age. I realized I was facing that, and maybe I would find out something I couldn’t change. And I found out something I couldn’t change. But I prefer to know than to die in ignorance. I preferred it then and I think the decision was worthwhile. Because there is a certain equanimity. I’ve been in some tight places and when I get into those tight places, it’s then that it returns to me and I say, “Hey, you know, there’s nothing happening here of any importance.” Then all that importance vanishes. Whereas if I hadn’t gone through that, I would have still been taking things very seriously.

dm5-30:15

Q. As a teacher can you offer us that anything in life has value, any joy, any of these things?

R. There is no such thing as enjoyment ...

[remove, Rose is not responding to this.] Q. Does anything have value?

R. This is the icing we put on the cake ourselves. Nobody enjoys. People are enjoyed. That’s bait. Let’s say the most intense or most wonderful pleasure there is, is sex. Hell, that’s animal. If you didn’t have that you wouldn’t take on the burden. The animals are brought together under the bait of pleasure and they sign up for twenty years of slavery. You’re talking about slavery, but you could be free as a bird if you weren’t hooked on that idea of pleasure. But sooner or later everybody realizes, I think, that they [have been] …

[end of tape] File dm5 ends at 31:10

File 4 Pittsburgh (dm7, mj7)

Total time: 31:00

dm7-00:00 --- mj7-00:00

Q. How about in a person’s relation with his fellowman. Is there anything of value in there?

R. Sure, sure. Everybody and me are the same. That’s the way I look at it. I’d like to be able to treat everybody as myself, but I don’t always do it.

Q. Could you talk more about the connection between thoughts and the glands?

R. Yes. Didn’t you ever have that happen?

Q. Could you explain a little more? I don’t really understand what you mean.

R. Sure, sure. I maintain for instance, that a woman, her thoughts change with every day of her 28 day cycle. And she has no control over this. And I have had women go through, put the calendar up on the wall and write down their mood, their desire, whether they would be in a sexual mood or in an indifferent or an angry mood – they repeat, almost exactly the same day in that 28-day period. This is because the glands provoke the thought. The cow that runs and jumps over the fence doesn’t do it because she logically decides that there’s a bull ten miles away. She does it because the hormones key in. It’s just like a clock; they’ve got a clock wound up inside themselves and they move.

dm7-01:20

Q. Okay, what about a woman who has an erratic system of hormones?

R. It will still be an erratic regularity. She will be erratic in a regular pattern.

Q. Do you think other things could be achieved in that? Let’s say ...

R. Children.

Q. Pardon?

R. Children.

Q. No, no that’s not what I’m talking about ...

R. Well, that’s what’s achieved. What are you talking about?

Q. Well, you talk about a normal pattern, there’s certain…

R. Well, I don’t talk about a normal, I don’t know what normal is. You have to define it when you say normal.

dm7-01:57

Q. Okay, balanced.

R. Okay.

Q. I’m talking about a balance as opposed to an erratic system, okay. One is a level of estrogen and other hormones, and there’s testosterone. If that level of testosterone is interfering, is at an exaggerated level that the other levels of the hormones cannot function properly. How does that affect …?

R. Well, I don’t know anything about that. I’m not an endocrinologist. I just know that everything works, and the people that are crazy and go out and stick their heads under streetcars, it’s all part of the plan. In other words, if somebody’s glands are unbalanced it may be because of, as the Bible says, the sins of the parents or the grandparents. Or it may be that the kid fouled herself up when she was little, see, by playing games. I don’t know what causes it. I’m just saying that regardless of what it is, the individual, she or he, will have a regular pattern that they follow, and they can’t control it. They can’t control it. I was watching them even trying to write it on the calendar and they’d still say, “It happened again.” It occurs again.

dm7-03:08

Q. What do you think about the present state of physics or any of the physical sciences? I mean do you think they’re getting at something? Or are they still stuck in the paradigm?

R. Well, they produce material for meditation. I think it helps. I’ve learned a lot from the laws of physics. I think the laws of physics are reflected in psychological laws and spiritual laws. I’ve written a few of them down, like the law of proportional returns; that’s a law of physics. In other words, we find that there is a non-destruction of matter. Of course I think that’s going to be disproven later. They found already, I heard a guy up there, somebody was [working on that]. In other words, there’s a concept that matter has only so much energy, and it’s indestructible. You can change the form but the energy’s still there.

dm7-04:03

What I read the other day was that somebody was experimenting down in Florida with hydrogen, light, and one other chemical. Did you guys read that?

Q. Chlorine, wasn’t it?

R. Right, chlorine, hydrogen and light. And they claimed that the extra energy seemed to come from the light. And they got six or seven times as much. Like say that you could calculate exactly the Btu in a ton of coal, and that will move a ten-ton locomotive exactly so many feet, as a prediction of science. Well, if somebody threw a ton of coal in there and it took it seven times further, then you destroy that law of chemistry or physics. So evidently that’s coming about. They say the atomic energy did it, overbalanced that law or outmoded it.

dm7-05:03

Q. When you meditate and you find some solutions for some problem, do you feel that it wouldn’t have come except through meditation?

R. Well, when you talk about meditation, you’re talking about stopping a little bit, that’s all. The hours of the day are taken up, so that you’re always running from one exigency to another. And the meditation is the deliberate setting aside of some time in order to look at the situation, that’s all. And when you do that, automatically you’re going to get solutions. I think a lot of the problems, maybe nothing great but the little problems like domestic difficulties and that sort of thing could be solved with a little bit of meditation where you sit down and just look at it.

dm7-06:05

I’ve got a little paper I wrote on meditation and I advise running through the reel of film. Cold history. Don’t meditate on the present, because you’re still angry or excited about it. But if you want to understand yourself, look back about two or three months, or two or three years or so. The things that made you angry you can laugh at now. So you get a better perspective and see what’s wrong. I believe in traumatic meditation. I don’t believe in peaceful meditation. I believe peace belongs in the cemetery. You’re going to have plenty of peace when they plant you. So if you want to discover something, cause some turmoil in your head and get to the root of things.

Yeah, over here, Dave.

dm7-06:52

Q. You mentioned jumping up and taking steps. You talk about that being a function of perhaps determination, awareness of your thinking, your energy level and those types of things. Would you think any one factor is more important than the others?

dm7-07:11 [Grating noise (some kind of machine?) here same as the noise in the unknown “ashram” tape, but happens only once. But it may help establish that the ashram meeting was in Pittsburgh]

R. Well, I think determination is the most important factor. If you want to say, put your energy or your chips on a certain direction, or a certain aspect of the search, I think that determination is important. Because if you’re determined enough, you’ll find ways and means. Some people just wait and study, spend their entire life speculating and buying enormous libraries of books, and the latest thing on this and that. My point is you can throw away most of the books and just go direct into your head. And if you’ve got enough determination to pursue it, then results are proportional to energy applied.

dm7-07:59

Q. You were talking about before of how people cling to beliefs. Is there any way of giving up those beliefs without being traumatized?

R. I don’t believe you give up anything. I believe they’re taken away. I remember one time I had a certain belief about love, and I didn’t realize I was being hypnotized. But once I realized that this girl had not done anything evil to me, that I had done it to myself, then my belief in love as such vanished immediately. I could look at it dispassionately.

dm7-08:40

Q. Was it like something you allowed to happen to you?

R. Yes, well, you allow everything pretty much to happen to you. That’s the proper attitude unless it’s something that’s going to hurt you; you don’t have to allow that to happen. It’s just like indulgence in a religion, say. Suppose you get into a religion and you’re not going to change your belief; you’ll never change your belief, but you may outgrow it. As I said, like he’s a staunch Christian Scientist but his kid’s dying now, and he says, “Ho, I could be wrong.” So then a new frame of mind comes over him and for the first time he has a clearer perspective.

Sometimes it happens by accident. That’s what I say: we don’t deliberately educate ourselves. I think the best thing we can do is make a declaration that we’re open for learning. Admit to ourselves that we want to learn, admit to ourselves that we hope something gets ahold of us and teaches us something. And then ride with it. If you start saying, “Well, I believe this and I’m going to enforce it,” you’re done. You’ve cemented yourself in.

dm7-10:03

I can remember when I was a younger, I had a belief that men were thinkers and women were zero, that they had no capacity for thinking. And with that in mind, I got married. And you know, I was fortunate: I met somebody who wasn’t too particular, but I survived it and I learned. [laughs] I learnt a hell of a lot about the human mind on both sides of the fence. And they’re different, believe me. But I couldn’t have forced myself on my own. If somebody had said, “Rose you’ve got to learn female psychology and understand the uniqueness of this person, and the importance of this person,” I wouldn’t have done it that’s all. It had to be that it happened in the path of living, having children and that kind of stuff. And the result is I think that I have one of the best marriage relationships that there is: we’re divorced. [laughs] But we’re good friends, always will be. But we don’t have to live together to be friends. That’s more important than being nuts about each other. dm7-11:23

Q. Did you learn a lot from raising kids?

R. Oh yes, I think so. I began to see myself. Some of the mistakes I’d made, I’d forgotten about them. I saw my kid going through them and I said, “Ye Gods, that happened to me and I overlooked it.”

Q. Only an older person would know this, but speaking of sex, that is the one point where a potentially intelligent person becomes a total idiot. [laughter] All thought, all cerebration is wrong; as you are highly sexed you are going to be an idiot. You’ve got to get past that stage before you can start even thinking.

R. Sure. I believe you’re entirely right. A classic example is the billy goat: it drops dead doing that.

dm7-12:23

Q. Are we obliged by something or someone to make this climb?

R. No.

Q. So for what purpose? Is it more comfortable there ... ?

R. See, you’re talking in utilitarian terms. You can’t view it that way. Everybody says, “Will that help my business?” No, no. Just what is, is. Do you want to know what is or do you want to be comfortable? And do you think when you’re comfortable, you’re really comfortable? No, nobody’s comfortable. So I say you dig. Or you go up to the top of the mountain to see what’s up there, if for no other reason.

dm7-13:06

Q. There was a man in this physical therapy class who we worked with and he’d been in a car accident and lost his wife and his child. A young man, about 23, bright red hair, strong body; he’d been lifting weights for a long time.

R. You must have been attracted to him if you remember all that stuff. [laughter] Go ahead, I didn’t mean to interrupt you.

Q. I was working as a physical therapist. He was good looking. [laughter]. So …

R. Those were the days, huh?

Q. So I would watch him work out and it was inspiring to see he had a lot of will. As a physical therapist assistant you get to see a lot of will. People would come in, all kinds of conditions, and they had been through a different experience than I had been through. And I thought well, there’s something to learn about will here; because these people don’t play games like a lot of normal people do, who have all their facilities.

But after the car accident they told him he’d never walk or talk. He was in a coma for three months. He probably weighs close to 200 pounds now, but he weighed about a 120 then. So when he’s coming out of the coma, the first thing he saw was himself and he was in heaven and in the clouds – this is how he described it to me. He was standing on a cloud, dressed in black, and there was a man at a podium in a white robe with a long white beard. It was like a God or something. So the boy said, “Hello”, and God said, “Well, hello. It’s not your time to come with us now. You’ll have to wait; you still have more work to do.”

dm7-15:50

So he said okay and then he signed off and he came back into his body and then he woke up and he got out of bed, got up to start walking; well, he landed flat on the floor like an infant. And he said, “Hey what’s going on?” So he taught himself to crawl and he taught himself to talk and he said, “Damned if I’m going to be in bed the rest of my life as an invalid not walking or talking.” So now he’s walking and he’s talking and he’s doing quite well. Anyway I thought that was interesting experience.

R. I think this an example, you’ll run into them every once in a while, where according to science, people were doomed to a form of a life but somehow persisted and surmounted it.

Q. The doctors pronounced him dead three times and he kept coming back.

R. In fact, I think you can keep other people alive. I’ve seen instances of this, and I don’t think it’s a good idea. Just with sheer will power. You can keep them alive but I don’t think they appreciate it.

dm7-17:09

[30 seconds of silence]

dm7-17:38

[somebody in audience snaps fingers twice]

R. No, no! See that was alright. We were having a rapport. They didn’t know it but we were having a rapport. It’s really pleasant to know that everything’s plain and no explanations are necessary; now we know. That happens quite often when I’m talking. If you just let it ride you’ll find it. Everybody’s getting an insight, right? Can you confirm it, anybody, insights when that quiet is there?

[more silence]

Six Types of Visions

dm7-18:32

I’ve got a little thing here that I’ll leave with you before I go, for what it’s worth. I’ll have to read it. We were talking about this business of observation, and this is a little angle that many of you may not have thought about; maybe you have. I maintain that you don’t see. People do not see; they have visions. You have incoming stuff that hits your eyeballs or your ears, and this gets together inside the head, and you have an accepted projection then. You project.

There’s a little book on it, Conquest of Illusion, by J.J. van der Leeuw. , He brings this out very well. He says that we may well be a point of light, that’s all, and all the rest is interpreted. By that I mean we just project things out because there’s an agreement in the paradigm. But anyhow, we know this, that we project what we see. We have for instance a color spectrum which the animal doesn’t have; he can’t project the same thing, so we don’t exactly live in the same world. Although the animals accept our interpretation of the life and what’s around us.

But when we run through these, you’ll get an idea of what I call the different visions that people have. When you see something, that’s a perception. But a vision is something that is created, concocted so to speak. The human being has six types of visions.

dm7-20:51

[Rose reads from Psychology of the Observer]

The first is normal sensory perception. This is ordinary seeing or perceiving. As a result of a sensory stimulus, the mind coordinates the stimulus with previous stimuli, and projects back upon the physical environment that which it wants to see. Only this projection is seen by the individual's awareness.

So whatever you project out there is what your awareness will see. Now the reason we know this happens is that occasionally people project the wrong thing, and they find they walk out to touch something that isn’t there like a hologram.

21:31

To say the same thing more precisely, man visualizes everything that he perceives (thinks he perceives) through the physical senses. It is a “normal” percept followed by a “normal” projection.

This is the reason we have to go through these, if you want to study yourself and your thinking processes; and that gives you a better idea who’s in behind it.

The second one is abnormal sensory perception, i.e., illusory or non-validated phenomena. These are visions which apparently are seen by the eyes (or percepts connected with the other senses; it could be heard by the ears), which later will be found to be invalid or illusory in nature. Included in this category are ghosts that cannot be checked out, hallucinations, holograms, mirages, and hypnotic phenomena that involve the imposition of illusions upon the mind of the subject.

We consider those abnormal because in this unreal world they are even more unreal.

Now the next four categories have to do with mental perception. I maintain that you can see with your eyeballs to a certain extent, but you can also see with the mind. I’m going to demonstrate that with these next four.

dm7-22:49

A while back I discussed the ability of the mind to see or perceive. The examples given show clearly that such perceiving result from initial sensory stimuli. There are, however instances where the mind “sees” independently of the senses. I call this ability visualization-projection not warranted by percepts.

The others are warranted by physical perceptions. Now we get into the third class which is mental visions.

Here the mind watches synthetic projections from its memory bank. We can conjure up an apple with diamonds embedded in the sides.

In the book earlier, I gave this idea of conjuring up pictures. We do it all the time. Kids will sit around and dream up whole fantasy lands. And that’s a mental vision. It doesn’t come from something they’ve seen outside; it comes from inside their own heads or from inside their memory bank, or a combination. And you can see things that never existed, the same way.

For instance we can take an example right now: you imagine a green apple. Everybody’s seen a green apple, and soon as I say it, a picture of a green apple flashes in front of your eye. And then I say, “Put a string of swastikas around it, or diamonds – purple diamonds.” And you’ll see that in your mind’s eye. So therefore the mind is seeing something that was never seen with the physical eye. You see it in your head but it was never seen with the physical eye, an apple with diamonds on it.

dm7-24:27

[Tape break in (both in dm and mj versions) but words repeated, no loss of words]

dm7-24:29 [delete repeated sentence] … seeing something that was never seen with the physical eye. You see it in your head but it was never seen with the physical eye, an apple with diamonds on it.

This is memory revisited and rearranged. This is commonly called imagination. It’s mental vision.

The fourth category is: visions without projection by the perceiver. This is not something projected. These are non-physical visions, valid according to some means of corroboration or laws of reference. Their general corroboration lies in the fact that they often are found later to have been revelations of some sort. They are ghosts that substantiate their presence by warnings or prophecies.

We can say that this thing didn’t exist, but he says, “Hey, don’t take the car today because you’ll have a wreck.” And the neighbor takes the car instead and gets killed. So you realize that something was trying to tell you something. This is a vision of something that you didn’t project.

They are dreams, articulate voices from non-visible sources, and instances of deja-vu which are found to be more than a hallucination.

This lady was talking here, this is the category I think you were talking about, some articulate voices or sights that you can’t tell where they come from, but they seem to prove their existence by some means. Also, proven deja-vu experiences.

It may be that some of these visions are contacts with the Manifested Mind, or with emanations from the Manifested Mind.

I’m talking about an Overmind now, a dimensional mind. They seem to come from a very orderly source but they’re not from our individual mind.

Also in the fourth category are direct-mind communication which we pick up accurately from another person, such as in mind-reading. In the past many phenomena which we now describe under the heading of ESP or Psi phenomena, were previously described for the recipient as being an ability called the sixth sense.

dm7-26:37

[Break in tape – words are missing in dm7, check other versions, but missing words marked in blue are taken from the book]

dm7-26:39

This sense can be discovered and developed. It amounts to a sort of sensitive feeler which the mind extends to the mind of another, using in the beginning all manner of clues from the countenance of the other person and even items of posture and tone of voice, to guess at first that which the other person may be thinking. But after a while, success will breed accuracy, and later still, we will be able to possess a feeling of knowing instead of uncertainty. This feeling of knowing results from persistent checking over a long period of time with the person whom we are reading.

J.B. Rhine got into this, if you’re acquainted with him.

Group sessions for the purpose of attempting to have a rapport and picking up information are good.

That’s the reason I don’t disturb the rapports when they go on.

Now the fifth category is visions of mental processes.

This is the vision where this person as a process observer is watching an abstract function. You can’t symbolize it with any physical symbol at all; you’re just watching the mind working.

dm7-27:39

This is not the same as the third category which is reverie or imagination. This is that which we will later call the process observer. This is the mind which is anterior to the umpire and its phenomena. It is a part of us that sees. It sees the mind, the somatic or umpire mind. It is, in turn unable to watch itself, or any processes peculiar to itself. This is a genuine mental awareness by the real Self, or ultimate Self.

The sixth and last category is deliberate mental projections: that which is caused by some other person’s mind. This is a projection by them which has an impact upon other minds, to a point where the recipient may have the conviction that he physically sees the projection.

In other words, this is a vision projected upon us by another person.

They are visions projected upon the world-scene, or upon our consciousness by another. Under this heading we have tulpas and the Indian rope trick. ,

dm7-28:38

I don’t know how many of you are acquainted with tulpas. There were people in Tibet who were able to project and create a living being. Alexandra David-Neel writes about it. , Or Evans-Wentz. ,

These monks would get lonely up in the mountains and would create a woman, to have intercourse with her. And she was tangible, she was real. This was a deliberate mental projection. But the author of the book questioned one monk on one of these tulpas, and he said that it took him six months, I think, to create her and six years to get rid of her. She didn’t want to leave. [laughter] ,

dm7-29:37

The Indian rope trick is another case of where something is projected upon your mentality. Other instances are cases of bi-location (people being in two places at once), healing at a distance, psycho kinesis, transubstantiation (water into wine, they say), and possession.

Now possession is a case where somebody actually projects something into you.

I would like to devote an entire book to this subject, and to the methods of attaining expertise in this type of projection.

Not that I want to, but I’d like to clear it up for some people.

dm7-30:06

Q. There was one word that you were going to bring out …

R. Oh, deja-vu? You go into a place and you feel as though you’ve been there, you recognize things. And in order for it to be accurate or to be a real phenomenon it has to be corroborated. They talk of a person in England, to give you an example, going to a certain place along the shore and saying there was a convent there or a castle. And he would go and tell you where it stood, in reference to a little ravine, and they would dig down and find the thing.

Now this person would ...

File dm7 ends at 31:00

File 5 Pittsburgh (dm8, mj8)

Total time: 07:18

[continuation of dm7, a few words lost, still talking about deja-vu.]

dm8-00:00

R. [This one fellow mentioned] a boat, with a deja-vu. He had seen it before. Now the psychologists of course, unless they find a foundation or something like that, it’s written off as being [imagination]. It’s like when a fellow predicts [in deja-vu] a train wreck after it happens. He says, “Oh, I saw that train wreck.” And they say, “Well he got there and then he imagined that he was there.” But this is common to a lot of people. You read a lot of accounts in literature of people who went to places and were quite convinced they’d been there before. That’s what deja-vu means.

dm8-00:40

[silence]

dm8-00:55

Q. How do you know you’re not fooling yourself with this answer?

R. With what answer?

Q. With the way that you see things, that that’s the way they are.

R. I don’t feel as though I’m fooling myself at all with what I know. Of course, I could be crazy – you have to use your intuition. But I may be fooling myself a lot with the verbalization. What happens is you experience nothingness and try to put it into words of something-ness and there is where the difficulty lies. As far as what I experienced, I’m not fooling myself about that. Because, well, again that’s something I can’t prove.

That happens all the time in this type of thing. It’s like me describing Cairo, Egypt if you’ve never been there. I could describe it but you could say I was lying. I couldn’t prove that I wasn’t lying. So it’s just one of those things. If your intuition picks it up, you pick it up. And if you pick up the fact that I’m nuts, well, that’s what you got to live with, a nut. [laughs]

dm8-02:09

[silence]

dm8-02:28

Q. You said that a real person is one who observes; that somehow there’s a higher power of reality, that you have this capacity to observe. But observation implies that you’re at a distance from the thing that you’re observing. Therefore you’re not part of it. And all the mystics tell us that we are supposed to be at one with everything and that is the highest point of reality. How would you resolve that paradox?

R. Well, in the first place I don’t believe that you could take, let’s say, advice or just a sentence from a mystic and make it a rule of life. You’ve got to go there yourself. This is the answer. And I don’t think I quibble with that. In the final analysis you are one, you reach one-ness. But I’m talking about the relative. [If you observe yourself, then] one of them is not you. In the relative dimension you are not the cat, you’re not the dog. And many mystics even make that mistake, in thinking they are not the cat or the dog or the horse or the other man. But it isn’t a mistake, it’s strictly the way our paradigm is forced upon us.

dm8-03:53

Okay but you may reach a point by this analysis of the observer looking at the view, to where you blend. If you notice at the top, there’s nothing. There is no more relative adventure. You are the view and the viewer. The only way to learn is not to study with symbology but to become. Now you can’t just become by saying, “I’m going to become.” No, you have to belabor yourself with relativity and symbology. And don’t confuse the idea of this battle of relative things with the idea of unity at the end. Don’t presume there’s unity in the end; you don’t know that. And me telling you that isn’t going to make it for you.

dm8-04:40

Don’t pay any attention to what the mystics say, or what I say. I say there’s a problem to be solved. Solve the problem. And if something I say stimulates you or makes it a little easier for you or accelerates you, good. But I cannot convey this. I think it’s foolishness to take any book by any mystic or anything that I say and act upon it, or put your life’s actions on it. I think that would be bad. I think you have to fight this thing for yourself. That’s the reason I don’t believe in paying into cults and rackets and religions.

dm8-05:16

Q. Didn’t you write that in your book? Don’t follow the mystics, find it yourself, experience it yourself.

R. Oh yes. God is within. If you want to call it God, it’s within.

Q. You can’t do it through another person.

R. Well, they can help.

Q. By inspiration.

R. Yeah. My wife helped me. She put me through hell and I found heaven. [laughs] I refuse to be serious. [laughs] That’s one thing I believe in: I’ve given up everything but laughing. I think a lot of this so-called creation is a joke – so why not laugh? Life doesn’t take you seriously, why should you take it seriously? The least you can do is laugh a little in return. Laugh back.

dm8-06:01 -- dm8-06:10

Q. Raymond Moody, who wrote Life After Life has now written Laugh After Laugh.

R. Good. [laughter] You finally got onto something you know something about.

Q. He’s a Southern boy and he pronounced them both the same too.

R. Yeah, that’s right they do. Life. Laugh. I’ll never forget the first time I heard my sister-in-law pronounce the word “ice”. I was shocked. [laughter]

dm8-06:39

[silence]

dm8-06:53

Well it’s been a nice evening.

[applause]

That was nice. I’ll come back the next time for that. I’ll be reincarnated just for you.

dm8-07:17

File dm8 ends at 07:19

Footnotes

 Url: www.direct-mind.org/index.php?title=1979-0403-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Synod-Hall 

For information, send email to editors@direct-mind.org

 Close to the campus of the University of Pittsburgh.
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_Kubler-Ross 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Moody 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Chilton_Pearce 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubert_Benoit_(psychotherapist) 
 The Supreme Doctrine Full text: http://selfdefinition.org/zen/benoit/supreme-doctrine/ 
 Lecture at the Theosophical Society, July 1972.
 George Blazer.
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Science 
 Franz Hartmann: “Man's consciousness rotates between the two poles of good and evil, of spirit and matter.” Magic White and Black, ch. 8 http://selfdefinition.org/magic/hartmann/white-and-black/chapter-08-unconsciousness.htm 
 The personal experience and history of the mystic.
 Chart of Ramana Maharshi on samadhi: http://albigen.com/uarelove/sahaja.htm 
 The term is possibly rooted in Rose’s experience in Seattle, where he felt as if he had been transported to a mountain top. From The Albigen Papers, chapter 8. “As we project ourselves back trough the mind-ray we naturally come to the universal or Unmanifested Mind-Matrix. Specialized mind is the result of absolute mind-stuff. And here, it is true, we do experience the truth of our own insignificance, or nothingness in relation to values once assumed by the Individual Mind. This viewing of the Unmanifested Mind is often mistaken for Satori. It is in fact, the ‘mountain experience’ which we often hear described. Often it is quite depressing, depending on how much we remember of our relative selves.
 Rose wrote The Albigen Papers in 1972, circulated as a mimeograph; the paperback was printed in the spring of 1975. 
 Rose discovered Spiritual Teachings of Ramana Maharshi late in 1974. Ramana died in 1950. Rose had read Brunton’s accounts of Ramana Maharshi many years earlier, but Brunton’s words apparently did not register with Rose then.
 See 1977-1012-Psychology-of-the-Observer-Kent-State.
 Diagram 2 in Rose’s “The Mind”: http://selfdefinition.org/rose/writings/richard-rose-the-mind.htm
 Pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/science/Joseph-Chilton-Pearce-Crack-in-the-Cosmic-Egg.pdf 
 Quote from “The Mind” by Rose, referenced above: “The Law of Creation involves Imagination plus Faith, plus the Fiat. It is said that God imagined, or dreamed up the physical world, believed in himself, and said, "Let there be Light." 
 Eliphas Levi covers this extensively in Transcendental Magic. “So be it; I desire it to be so; such is the last word of all professions of faith.” PDFs here: http://selfdefinition.org/magic/ 
 The phrase Rose quotes.” In the beginning was the Word” is from John ch. 1. The book of Genesis begins with a reference to chaos as follows: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters. And God said, [i.e., the word] “Let there be light,....” etc.
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Baker_Eddy 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_energy_crisis 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radha_Soami 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirpal_Singh 
 See http://selfdefinition.org/radha-soami/radha-soami-satsang.htm#cosmology 
 Possibly Paul and Peter in Galatians 2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_at_Antioch 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Gurdjieff 
 PD Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/gurdjieff/ 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Jung 
 Logotherapy. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Frankl 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_Kubler-Ross 
 See http://selfdefinition.org/rose/images/talks/protest-psychosis-haldol-ad.jpg 
 Near Pittsburgh.
 See 1976-0304-Pittsburgh-Meeting for a discussion of Meher Baba. [group meeting, not transcribed]
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Wilson 
 Pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/colin-wilson/ 
 Energy Transmutation, Between-ness and Transmission. http://tatfoundation.org/energy.htm 
 Also see “Lecture on Betweenness” (chapter 6) and “Note on Betweenness” (chapter 7) of The Direct-Mind Experience. http://tatfoundation.org/direct.htm 
 Rose met with a Radha Soami group in Ohio in the 1950s. See “Yoga: Hatha, Shabd, and Raja” from TAT Journal, issue 8: http://www.searchwithin.org/journal/tat_journal-08.html#9 
 Radha Soami primer: http://selfdefinition.org/radha-soami/radha-soami-satsang.htm 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darsana 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charan_Singh_(guru) 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Guardian_Angel 
 Franz Hartmann: “The state of consciousness of the fourth principle (the animal soul) … differs widely in different persons, according to the conditions that have been established during its connection with the body.” Magic White and Black, ch. 8. 
 See P.D. Ouspensky, In Search of the Miraculous, chapter 4, “Seven gradations of the concept ‘man’", pdf here: http://selfdefinition.org/gurdjieff/ 
 Victor D. Solow, "I Died at 10:52 AM." http://tatfoundation.org/forum2003-12.htm#5
 Newspaper articles and biographical information here: http://selfdefinition.org/afterlife/victor-solow/
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atman_(Hinduism) 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahman 
 Vincent Rose.
 Meaning is unclear; written verbatim. Possibly that man deserves to know his purpose?
 Explained here: http://selfdefinition.org/rose/writings/richard-rose-the-mind.htm
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory_of_the_Cave 
 Equity Funding Corporation scandal, a computer-based fraud. The company collapsed in 1973 but lawsuits were still in the news in 1979: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_Funding 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exorcism_of_Roland_Doe 
 See Torkom Saraydarian, “Obsession and Possession”: http://selfdefinition.org/possession/quotes/torkom-saraydarian-obsession-and-possession.htm 
 Franz Hartmann: “Cases of obsession are by no means unfrequent, and many cases of insanity are merely cases of obsession. It is extremely desirable in the interests of humanity that our superintendents and doctors of insane asylums should study the occult laws of nature, and learn to know the causes of insanity, instead of merely studying their external effects.” – Magic White and Black, chapter 7 http://selfdefinition.org/magic/hartmann/white-and-black/chapter-07-consciousness.htm 
 Rose tells this story in more detail in 1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU.
 Vincent Rose. http://www.richardroseteachings.com/about.html 
 The Albigen Papers, ch. 7, “Discernment.”
 See “A Law of Physics Repealed?” Solar Reactor Corp of Miami, invented by Robert L. Scragg of West Virginia,. Spotlight, April 18, 1979. http://www.rexresearch.com/scragg/scragg.htm#spotlite 
 http://tatfoundation.org/meditate.htm 
 Rose may be speaking of his mother here, based on other stories.
 From “Lecture at Boston College”, chapter 3 of Direct-Mind Experience: “We have what we call rapport sessions in which we are trying to develop the intuition, and to sort of get the head in a position where transmission can be effected; where direct mind-to-mind can be experienced. ... This comes about slowly but surely, and this is where your head is ready for transmission.”
 Franz Hartmann: “The explanation which material science gives in regard to the process of seeing only explains the formation of a picture on the retina of the physical eye, but gives no explanation whatever how these pictures come to the consciousness of the mind.” Magic White and Black, chapter 7, 
 Full text: http://selfdefinition.org/van-der-leeuw/conquest-of-illusion/ 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Jacobus_(J._J.)_van_der_Leeuw 
 Hartmann: “Perception is passive imagination, because if we perceive an object, the relation which it bears to us comes to our consciousness without any active exertion on our part.” Ch. 7.
 From Psychology of the Observer: “The mind dimension is like a universal agreement of pre-incarnate man. It is the Universal Mind of Mary Baker Eddy, and the Oversoul of Paul Brunton. I prefer to call it the Manifesting or Manifested Mind. The Manifested Mind emanates from the Unmanifested Mind. The Unmanifested Mind might be likened to the Logos, and the Absolute to the Parabrahm, from which the Logos and the Unmanifested Mind emanates.”
 See Notebooks of Paul Brunton. Brunton describes Overmind as “the sum total of all individual minds.” http://paulbrunton.org/notebooks/para/15032 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Banks_Rhine 
 As described earlier in the lecture.
 The sentence is ambiguous: according to Rose, the ultimate self is beyond the process observer.
 Alexandra David-Neel: “Tibetans disagree in their explanations of such phenomena; some think a material form is really brought into being; others consider the apparition as a mere case of suggestion, the creator's thought impressing others and causing them to see what he himself sees.” With Magicians and Mystics in Tibet. http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/tulpa-creation/alexandra-david-neel-comments.htm 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_rope_trick 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_David-Neel 
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Evans-Wentz 
 Evans-Wentz refers to tulpas briefly in a footnote on page 29 of The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation, 1954 http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/tulpa-creation/walter-evans-wentz-comments.htm 
 Alexandra David-Neel, With Mystics and Magicians in Tibet. Two versions (different translations) of this book are available here: http://selfdefinition.org/tibetan/ David-Neel created her own tulpa and had difficulty escaping from her creation. Her account does not include a reference to monks using tulpas for sexual purposes except possibly figuratively, where she refers to her translator as follows: “Dawasandup was an occultist and even, in a certain way, a mystic. He sought for secret intercourse with the Dâkinîs and the dreadful gods hoping to gain supernormal powers.” 
 For detail plus extensive footnotes see 1977-1004-Psychology-of-Zen-Science-of-Knowing-OSU.
 Rose’s trip to Cairo was in 1976, probably March.
 http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/497412.Laugh_After_Laugh 

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