Pain perception
and vision
We already know
from the last
century which
are the neurons
involved in the
perception of
pain, and visual
images. The
neurologist
knows the entire
route covered by
the sensation of
a sting in the
skin and which
causes pain. The
same goes for
the objects
registered by
the retina, and
is
image coding by
the brain.
What we already
know, as well,
is that this
entire route of
nerve pathways
represents only
a small
percentage in
the two
phenomena, pain
perception, and
vision of the
objects.
In both cases,
the most
important is the
mental process
that interprets
pain and gives
meaning to the
images.
Neurologists say
that this mental
phenomenon
depends on a
number of
factors. The way
we express our
pain and give
meaning to what
we are seeing is
strongly linked
to our culture,
personality,
previous
experiences,
memories, and
environment. In
fact, both pain
and vision are
mental processes
of
interpretation,
or, as the more
liberal
neurologists
say, it is all a
"personal
opinion."
It is amazing
what we can
learn in
The Book of
Spirits
that teaches us
how these two
phenomena affect
the Spirit: "The
memory of pain,
which the soul
keeps, can be
very painful."
"The pain you
feel is not
therefore a
physical pain:
it is a vague
inner feeling
... because the
pain is not
localized and it
is not produced
by external
agents" (The
Book of Spirits,
question 257).
Regarding the
vision
(questions 245,
246 and 247),
"it lies in all
of it. They see
for themselves,
without the need
of external
light. As the
Spirit carries
himself to
wherever he
wants, with the
speed of
thought, it can
be said that it
sees everywhere
at the same
time".
Neurology should
confirm in the
future these two
data, passed by
Kardec to us for
study.
Initially,
Neurology shall
need to consider
the mind as
synonymous of
the soul.
Time
In Newton's
mechanistic
theory, time was
considered an
absolute
magnitude;
otherwise, the
calculations
that mediate the
distances
between the
planets would
have been wrong.
Einstein,
however,
pervaded that
relation,
proposed the
relativity of
time, increasing
the accuracy of
those
measurements.
Regardless of
scientific
propositions,
philosophers
always
speculated about
the nature of
time. Henri
Bergson gave us
a poetic
statement that
"Time of
consciousness is
not the same as
Time of
Science."
According to
common sense, we
have all found
that the passage
of time is
circumstantial.
Just consider
the year for
school students,
the months for
pregnant woman,
the days for
those who pay
rent, the hours
for those who
have an
appointment, the
minutes for the
train to pass,
and the
milliseconds for
Formula 1.
Neurology
considers the
notion of time
as a clearly
mental
experiment,
occupying
different areas
of the brain
simultaneously.
Kardec received
from the Spirits
the information
that "time is
only a relative
measure of the
succession of
transitory
things; eternity
is not
susceptible of
any measure, in
terms of
duration; for
eternity there
is no beginning
or end: all is
the present" (Genesis,
Chapter VI,
item 2). We
need to
highlight this
statement of
extraordinary
complexity and
consequences:
for the Spirit
everything is
the present.
The properties
of matter
In The
Book of Spirits
(questions 29 to
34), we learned
about the
existence of a
single primitive
element that
origins all the
properties of
matter. Being
attached to the
material reality
of our world, we
can identify the
chemical and
physical
properties of
gross matter
that makes up
our physical
dimension.
However, the
primitive
element (cosmic
fluid), which
expands
throughout the
universe, has
special
properties that
we still do not
know and that
give the
material the
ability to
experience all
the changes and
acquire all
properties.
Moreover, the
Spirits say,
"that everything
is in
everything."
Only then can we
understand the
extraordinary
expressions of
the psychic
phenomena of
physical effects
when the laws of
ponderability
are pervaded.
A stone, as
solid as we know
it, can cross a
roof and settle
inside a closed
cabinet. The
cosmic fluid
carries out
these changes in
the properties
of matter, and
which are still
unknown by
Science, because
it ignores the
principles of
its operation.
We also do not
have the power
yet, to
understand the
extent of the
spiritual
connection that
this universal
fluid allows the
matter to submit
to the thought
of God. In
Genesis
(Chapter II),
the Spirits say,
"every atom of
this fluid, if
thus we can
express
ourselves,
having the
thought, i.e.,
the essential
attributes of
deity, and being
the same fluid
everywhere,
everything is
subject to its
intelligent
action, its
foresight, to
its care." "The
whole of nature
is immersed in
this divine
fluid."
Creative
thinking and
fixed ideas
Berkeley's
immaterialism
(Donald George
Berkeley, Irish
philosopher,
1685-1753)
proposed "to
exist is nothing
but to be
perceived."
"Matter only
exists when it
is perceived."
"Visual
perceptions are
not of external
things, but
simply ideas in
the mind."
Socrates stated,
"Things exist
due to how we
perceive them."
In The
Book of Spirits
(question 32),
the Spirits
teach that the
qualities of the
bodies
("flavors,
smells, colors,
poisonous or
wholesome
qualities") only
exist due to the
disposition of
the organs
intended to
perceive them.
It is like this
that the
Neurology today
arrangement of
organs for
perceiving them.
Nowadays,
Neurology, in
accordance with
this line of
thinking,
understands the
perception we
have of an
object that
reaches our
senses.
Present
proposals are
stating that
matter only
manifests itself
as a mental
interaction.
However,
neurologists
still fail to
understand the
nature of mental
creation, except
when a behavior
expresses an
answer to a
sensory
stimulus.
Intuitive
thinking, or
abstract
thinking, is far
from any
laboratory
experiment.
In Spiritism, we
learn that
thinking
proceeds from
the Spirit,
source of
creative energy
that uses the
brain as an
instrument of
its ideas.
Regarding the
thinking area,
the Spirits
added
unprecedented
knowledge, and
so extraordinary
that even today
Science even has
tools to study
it. The Spirits
say that the
thought acts on
the universal
fluid creating
on it "fluidic
images." The
thought is
reflected in our
perispiritic
involucres, as
in a mirror, and
there somehow it
is photographed.
"This fluid (perispiritic)
is not the
thought of the
Spirit; it is,
however, the
agent and the
intermediary of
that thought.
Considering that
it is the agent
that transmits
the thought, the
though
transmitted
impregnates the
agent too."
(Genesis,
Chapter II, item
23).
Hence, the
seriousness of
letting
ourselves be
enslaved by
persistent
thoughts that
imprison us, the
desires that
disturb us, the
unjustified
revenges, the
hatred that
never fades, the
passions that
unbalance us,
and the projects
that we cannot
reach. They are
all "fixed
ideas," that
"materialize" in
our mental
sphere, creating
"ideas-forms",
"fluidic
images", "mental
miasma" that
justify the
numerous
expressions of
neuroses and
psychoses common
in human
psychopathology.
Vitalism
Claudius Galen,
physician of the
second century,
stated that
there were
forces of
attraction and
repulsion to
keep the organs
functioning. For
him, life would
be maintained by
an immaterial
element called
vital pneuma, in
the heart,
spreading
through the
blood existing
in the veins. In
the brain, it is
transformed into
animal pneuma,
allowing us to
react to stimuli
of the senses,
and in the
liver, it is
transformed in
natural pneuma
with the
property to
digest food.
Galen's theories
have been
accepted for
over twelve
centuries.
In the early
sixteenth
century, Georg
Stahl revived
the vitalism
theory defending
the existence of
a "sensitive
soul" necessary
for the
maintenance of
life. On this
occasion, Stahl
suffered a
fierce
opposition from
the mechanistic
theories,
defended mainly
by Frederich
Hoffman.
Excluding the
existence of the
soul, Hoffman
saw in the vital
processes only
phenomena of
fermentation of
substances and
combustion of
gases, thus
explaining
digestion and
breathing.
The spiritual
doctrine
strongly revives
the vitalism
theory. It
teaches that
there is an
immaterial
element that
sustains life in
organic matter
(The Book of
Spirits,
questions 60 to
67), and "not to
mention the
intelligent
principle, which
is a separate
issue, there is
in the organic
matter a special
principal,
inapprehensible
and that cannot
yet be defined:
the vital
principle"
(Genesis,
Chapter X, item
16).
Sleepwalking
Nowadays,
sleepwalking no
longer arouses
the same
interest and
prestige it
enjoyed in the
time of Kardec.
Treaties with
massive
casuistic were
written by
Ambrose-August
Liébeaut, Abbot
Faria and
Charles Richet.
The Charcot
school in Paris
accepted it as a
form of therapy,
used on their
hysterical
patients.
Kardec informs
having studied
sleepwalking in
all its phases
for 35 years (The
Book of Spirits,
Introduction).
In the same
book, he writes
several pages
making a
"theoretical
summary of
somnambulism,
from ecstasy and
second
sight." He makes
it clear that
"for Spiritism,
sleepwalking is
more than a
psychological
phenomenon; it
is a projected
light on
psychology. This
is where you can
study the soul,
because this is
when it shows
itself
unclosed."
In that excerpt,
Kardec discusses
about natural
and magnetic
somnambulism and
emphasizes that
clairvoyance is
an attribute
of the soul,
allowing the
sleepwalker to
see everywhere
where his soul
is carried. In
this view at a
distance, "the
sleepwalker does
not see the
things from
where his body
is, as if
through a
telescope. He
sees them
present, as if
he is in the
place where they
exist, because
his soul, in
reality, is
there." (The
Book of Spirits,
issue 455).
Sleep and dreams
We already know
a lot about
sleeping
physiology. It
occurs in
rhythms with
certain
standards that
are identified
by EEG. Age,
gender, the
environment, the
food, the
profession are
part of the
numerous factors
that influence
the quantity and
quality of
sleep. We
already know how
much we need it,
but we still
cannot say all
about the reason
why we really
need to sleep.
Dreams are
clearly linked
to experiences
during the day,
they have an
intimate
relation with
the acquisition
of memories, but
we also are
unaware of its
real meaning.
Freud claimed to
have noticed
that his
patients sought
him not only to
make their
complaints, but
also to report
their dreams.
This aroused in
him the idea
that dreams have
some hidden
meaning. His
book "The
Interpretation
of Dreams,"
1900, triggered
the most
extraordinary
revolution
regarding the
human mind.
Dreams reveal an
unsuspected
content, since
they signal
desires
contained in the
unconscious.
Plato in his
"Republic"
anticipated
Freud by stating
that during the
sleep the soul
tries to
withdraw from
external and
internal
influences,
which are
expressed in
dreams, desires,
which usually do
not express
themselves in
the waking
state.
Kardec, in The
Book of Spirits
starts the
chapter on the
Emancipation of
the Soul
studying sleep
and dreams.
Spirits clarify
that during
sleep the soul
sees itself
partially
released from
the body and
"goes into more
direct relation
with the
Spirits." In
such
circumstances,
the soul can
keep in touch
with familiar
Spirits that
guide, advice
and become aware
of its past and
sometimes of the
future. This is
a field for
future research,
which needs to
be developed and
confirmed in the
Spiritist
circles.
Deserved tribute
We have
approached
fourteen topics
of relevant
scientific
interest taken
from two basic
of the Spiritist
Coding. After a
century and a
half, some of
their claims are
pending approval
from official
Science, while
others are
gradually being
confirmed. For
some time now,
the Spiritist
circles are
devoting
themselves more
systematically
to the study of
Spiritism, as a
science,
together with
its
philosophical
content, and its
moral
consequences.
Only in this
way, can we make
human Science
record the name
of Allan Kardec
as one of its
leading figures.
We need to do a
tribute to Allan
Kardec for his
scientific
legacy.
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