Matter and Mind in Spirealism: A Deep Understanding

Matter and Mind: An Inseparable Relationship

Materialism: This infinity in the large and the infinity in the small are impossible to understand. The concept of existence in materialism is contradictory and unclear in itself, although it should be completely clear. Even when considering our spiritual experiences, materialism is inconclusive. After all, we see the connection between mind and matter in ourselves.

Spirealism: Matter and mind as a unity. Matter is not separate from mind; rather, thought is gradually different from matter within the mind. This thesis has far-reaching consequences. Spirealism deals with these consequences. For example:

Matter does not exist independently of consciousness.
Space and time are a stage created by the mind for the existence of objects.
The concept of objective truth disappears.
The need arises to see the genesis process of the world differently.

Spirealism assumes that there is a great mind in which we are parts, similar to a hologram. In a hologram, each part shows the image of the whole, but with less information, comparable to a blurry image where one can still recognize the outlines, such as those of a cat. The sections of the whole can also be attributed the quality of a fractal, which applies a formula to an image. A fractal section can always be calculated deeper, thus achieving infinite depth of field. However, this is not because the fractal has this sharpness from the beginning, but because it can be further calculated. Time is necessary, and time is not infinite. The materialization process of the great mind is similar in both the large and the small.

The Materialization Process

The perceivable difference between matter and mind is as follows: matter is visible and forces the mind into certain forms. Example: when someone enters a room, they perceive the matter—their thought objects take on certain forms. They do not see the thoughts of others. Material objects are permanently present and can be seen by others at a later time. Thoughts, on the other hand, are fleeting. Tomorrow, when someone enters this room again, they will see the material objects, but the thoughts of others will have changed.

A materialization process turns individual thoughts into thought objects for many. Something becomes a thought object for others by becoming known. Thoughts become a compelling thought object through communication—e.g., when one becomes part of a larger group that holds certain thoughts. Example: a group with a certain narrative that a newcomer joins.

Keywords: when a dictatorship imposes certain thought patterns on people, i.e., indoctrination. Also: fashion, mass psychosis, stampede, mass panic, social proof.

Escaping Materialization

Conversely, one can escape an imposing thought by staying outside of human groups. Examples:

Witches in the Middle Ages (etymology Hag-Sesse – a person residing in the forest)
Hermits
Spiritual teachers
Meditation as a search for mental emptiness
Zen Buddhism

The Creative Mind

What this great mind constantly thinks, we call matter. But we humans can also bring about materializations. The strongest form of this is belief. When many people share the same belief, a materialization occurs that the individual cannot escape. This is why Kant asks what God is outside of our thoughts, and not whether God exists.
 
 
  more about Spirealism: https://spireo.de article on Wikipedia: Perspectives on consciousness and matterhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consciousness