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The eight-circuit model of consciousness is a holistic model originally presented as psychological philosophy (abbreviated "psy-phi") by Timothy Leary in books including Neurologic (1973) and Exo-Psychology (1977), later expanded on by Robert Anton Wilson in his books Cosmic Trigger (1977) and Prometheus Rising (1983), and by Antero Alli in his books Angel Tech (1985) and The Eight-Circuit Brain (2009), that suggests "eight periods " within the model. The eight circuits, or eight systems or "brains", as referred by other authors, operate within the human nervous system. Each corresponds to its own imprint and subjective experience of reality. Leary and Alli include three stages for each circuit, detailing developmental points for each level of consciousness.
The model lacks scientific credibility and has largely been ignored in academia.
Overview
Of the "eight circuits" in this model of consciousness, the first four circuits concern themselves with life on Earth, and the survival of the human species. The last four circuits are post-terrestrial, and concern themselves with the evolution of the human species as represented by so-called altered states of consciousness, enlightenment, mystical experiences, psychedelic states of mind, and psychic abilities. The proposal suggests that these altered states of consciousness are recently realized, but not widely utilized. Leary described the first four as "larval circuits", necessary for surviving and functioning in a terrestrial human society, and proposed that the post terrestrial circuits will be useful for future humans who, through a predetermined script, continue to act on their urge to migrate to outer space and live extra-terrestrially. Leary, Wilson, and Alli have written about the idea in depth, and have explored and attempted to define how each circuit operates, both in the lives of individual people and in societies and civilizations.
The term "circuit" is equated to a metaphor of the brain being computer hardware, and the wiring of the brain as circuitry.
Leary used the eight circuits along with recapitulation theory to explain the evolution of the human species, the personal development of an individual, and the biological evolution of all life.
Criticism
Many researchers believed that Leary provided little scientific evidence for his claims. Even before he began working on psychedelics, he was known as a theoretician rather than a data collector. His most ambitious pre-psychedelic work was Interpersonal Diagnosis Of Personality. The reviewer for The British Medical Journal, H. J. Eysenck, wrote that Leary created a confusing and overly broad rubric for testing psychiatric conditions. "Perhaps the worst failing of the book is the omission of any kind of proof for the validity and reliability of the diagnostic system," Eysenck wrote. "It is simply not enough to say" that the accuracy of the system "can be checked by the reader" in clinical practice. In 1965, Leary co-edited The Psychedelic Reader. Penn State psychology researcher Jerome E. Singer reviewed the book and singled out Leary as the worst offender in a work containing "melanges of hucksterism". In place of scientific data about the effects of LSD, Leary used metaphors about "galaxies spinning" faster than the speed of light and a cerebral cortex "turned on to a much higher voltage".
See also
- Eight Consciousnesses
- Erik Erikson's "Eight stages of man" (1950)
- Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
- Metasystem transition
- Perceptual control theory
- Programming and Metaprogramming in the Human Biocomputer
- Psychedelic experience
- Reality tunnel
References
Notes
- Kaiser, David; McCray, W. Patrick, eds. (2016). "Timothy Leary's transhumanist SMI^2LE". Groovy Science. pp. 238–262. "A once-promising researcher who abandoned the protocols of mainstream psychology for notoriety... / Neuropolitics and Exo-Psychology were clear signs that Leary had strayed far from O'Neill's comparatively straightforward ideas, which were grounded in optimistic yet measured extrapolations of 1970s technology. It's difficult to determine exactly how people responded to Leary's two books. Contemporary responses were relatively rare and memories today are hazy. / Leary incorporated another fringy ingredient besides space settlements and drug-enhanced mental capacity into his formulation for SMI^2LE. / Was Leary's SMI^2LE program an example of 1970s 'groovy science'? Can we even call it 'scientific'? Leary presented few technical details, provided no blueprints for its realization, and shrouded his ideas in cryptic references to quantum fields and neurological circuits of consciousness. In these ways, he differs sharply from 'visioneers' like O'Neill who grounded their ideas about the technological future on detailed engineering studies and who published and occasionally presented research in professional scientific venues. / Leary's ideas tapped into a potpourri of fringe sciences, including est, quantum consciousness, space habitation, and other topics that spanned physics, psychology, and the paranormal."
- Cultural historian John Higgs states that Leary hoped to rebuild his academic reputation by pivoting away from psychedelics and toward speculation on human evolution, but that " attempt at scientific credibility was doomed to fail, partly because he was the infamous Timothy Leary and his reputation would always tower over him, but mainly because it simply isn't good science to create a theoretical model and claim that it represents different things at the same time. This thinking was, essentially, occult or mystical, and would never be taken seriously by the establishment." Higgs 2006, p. 236–237
Citations
- Davis 2019, p. 251.
- Cosmic Trigger excerpt
- Leary 1987, p. xii.
- Leary 1977; Wilson 1977; Wilson 1983; Alli 1985.
- Leary 1987, 7th printing (2011), p. 16.
- Alli 2009, p. 42.
- Leary & Wilson 1979, 2nd ed, p. 48.
- Wilson 1983, 21st printing, pp. 33–41.
- Leary & Wilson 1979, 2nd ed. (1993), p. 4.
- Leary & Wilson 1979, 2nd ed. (1993), p. 86.
- Leary 1987, 7th printing (2011), p. 5.
- Eysenck, H. J. (December 21, 1957). "Review of Reviewed Work(s): Interpersonal Diagnosis Of Personality". The British Medical Journal. 2 (5059): 1478. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.5059.1478-a. PMC 1962952. S2CID 220136866.
- Singer, Jerome (April 1966). "Review: The Psychedelic Reader". American Sociological Review. 31 (2): 284. doi:10.2307/2090932. JSTOR 2090932.
Works cited
- Alli, Antero (1985). Angel Tech: A Modern Shaman's Guide to Reality Selection. (Reprint - 2008). Tempe, Arizona: The Original Falcon Press. ISBN 978-1-935150-95-4.
- Alli, Antero (2009). The Eight-Circuit Brain: Navigational Strategies for the Energetic Body. Berkeley, California: Vertical Pool Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9657341-3-4.
- Davis, Erik (2019). High Weirdness: Drugs, Esoterica, and Visionary Experience in the Seventies. MIT Press. ISBN 978-1907222-870.
- Higgs, John (2006). I Have America Surrounded: The Life of Timothy Leary. Barricade Books. ISBN 1-56980-315-3.
- Leary, Timothy (1977). Exo-Psychology: A Manual on the Use of the Human Nervous System according to the Instructions of the Manufacturers. Starseed/Peace Press. ISBN 0-915238-16-0 – via Internet Archive.
- Leary, Timothy; Wilson, Robert Anton (1979). The Game of Life. (Second Edition, 1993). Los Angeles: New Falcon Publications. ISBN 978-1-56184-050-2.
- Leary, Timothy (1987). Info-Psychology. (Seventh Print, 2011). Los Angeles: New Falcon Publications. ISBN 1-56184-105-6.
- Wilson, Robert Anton (1977). Cosmic Trigger I: The Final Secret of the Illuminati. Los Angeles: New Falcon Publications. ISBN 0-692-51397-3.
- Wilson, Robert Anton (1983). Prometheus Rising. (Reprint - 1992). Los Angeles: New Falcon Publications. ISBN 1-56184-056-4.
Further reading
- Heffernan, J. (2017). Nonlocal Nature: The Eight Circuits of Consciousness. New Falcon Publications. ISBN 978-1-56184-541-5.
- Hoffman, Eric (2021). "The Starseed Signals". Fortean Times (review). No. 407. p. 59.
- Huguelit, L. (2013). The Shamanic Path to Quantum Consciousness: The Eight Circuits of Creative Power. Inner Traditions/Bear. ISBN 978-1-59143-848-9.
- Leary, Timothy; Leary, Joanna (1973). Neurologic. San Francisco: Joanna Leary. OCLC 3006096.
- Leary, Timothy (1998) . The Politics of Ecstasy. Ronin. ISBN 1-57951-031-0.
- Lee, Dave (2006). Chaotopia! Sorcery and Ecstasy in the Fifth Aeon. Mandrake of Oxford. ISBN 1-869928-88-1.
- Valle, Ronald S.; von Eckarsberg, Rolf, eds. (1981). The Metaphors of Consciousness. New York: Plenum Press. ISBN 978-0-306-40520-4.
- Wilson, Robert Anton (August 1978). "Neurologic, Immortality & All That". Green Egg. Vol. 8, no. 72. pp. 9–11 – via Internet Archive.
- Wilson, Robert Anton (1990). Quantum Psychology. Los Angeles: New Falcon Publications. ISBN 978-1-56184-071-7.
- Wilson, Robert Anton (1996) . Reality Is What You Can Get Away With. Los Angeles: New Falcon Publications. ISBN 1-56184-080-7.
- Wilson, Robert Anton (2020). The Starseed Signals: A RAW Perspective on Timothy Leary. Hilaritas Press. ISBN 978-1-952746-07-9.
External links
- Wilson, Robert Anton (2010). "8 Circuit Psychology [audio, 7 parts]". YouTube.
- Leary's Eight Circuit Model of Consciousness
- The 8-Circuit Model of Timothy Leary and Robert Anton Wilson
- The Eight Winner and Loser Scripts
- Totem Pill - Animated Interpretation of the 8 Circuit Model by Marc Ngui
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