Page 104 - The Final Appeal to Mankind
P. 104

«The Final Appeal to Mankind» by Nicolai Levashov

            2. A temporarily functioning complex psi-field consists of a colony of individuals of
            the same species. The size of the colony depends upon the complexity of the problem

            needed to be solved by the shared psi-field and upon the complexity of the individual
            members’  psi-fields.  The  reasons  for  the  emergence  of  such  temporary
            superorganismic psi-fields, are as follows:

            a)  A capability acquired during the process  of evolution  ensuring the survival and
            evolution of the species. Example: migratory birds.

            b) Sudden, life-threatening changes in natural events: this applies to practically all
            species. Normally the psi-field of each individual is a closed system:


             kcom(N;S) → 0.

            Under the impact of changing natural events that threaten death to the entire population,
            the structure of each individual’s psi-field changes. The closed system transforms into
            an open system:

            kcom(N;S) → 1.


            Upon  reestablishment  of  natural  conditions  that  are  normal  for  that  species,  the
            structure of each individual’s psi-field reverts to its original state.

            3. A permanently active complex psi-field is an interactive accumulation of several
            billion neurons concentrated in one individual. The psi-field of each neuron is an open
            system:

            k(N;S) → 1,


            whereas the shared psi-field of all neurons is a closed system:

            kextern(N;S) → 0.

            Interacting neurons create a shared protective psi-field ensuring the stable functioning
            of the system as a whole. The human psi-field possesses the capacity for self-perfection
            and evolutionary development. From the day of birth the human brain actively absorbs
            all  information  accessible  to  its  sensory  organs.  Along  with  the  accumulation  of

            information a qualitative change takes place in the structure of the original neurons.
            The attainment of a certain quantitative level of information induces a qualitative leap
            in the evolution of the human brain. Individuals begin to differentiate themselves from
            their  surrounding  environment,  acquiring  the  ability  to  understand  processes  in
            themselves and in nature. The human brain becomes an instrument for studying and
            understanding nature and for self-perfection.


            The amount of information necessary for a qualitative leap in development cannot be
            accumulated during even a thousand life times. This is the aggregate experience of
            hundreds of generations, millions of people. Only the absorption of all the information





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