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New research suggests the brain may harness the zero-point field
Posted on Wednesday, December 10, 2025 @ 14:22:35 UTC by vlad
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 Via Phys.org/news: Quantum clues to consciousness: New research suggests the brain may harness the zero-point field /by Joachim Keppler
What if your conscious experiences were not just the chatter of neurons, but were connected to the hum of the universe? In a paper published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, I present new evidence indicating that conscious states may arise from the brain's capacity to resonate with the quantum vacuum—the zero-point field that permeates all of space.
More specifically, I argue that macroscopic quantum effects are at play inside our heads. This insight results from a synthesis of brain architectural and neurophysiological findings supplemented with quantitative model calculations.
The novel synthesis suggests that the brain's basic functional building blocks, cortical microcolumns, couple directly to the zero-point field, igniting the complex dynamics characteristic of conscious processes.
Self-organized criticality in the brain
Neuroscientists have long observed that conscious states are linked to synchronized brain activity in the beta and gamma ranges. These patterns display the hallmarks of self-organized criticality, a delicate balance where the brain operates in the vicinity of a critical point of a phase transition.
In this regime, sensory inputs can trigger large neuronal avalanches that are thought to underlie conscious perception. When consciousness fades, such as under anesthesia, this critical balance disappears. The big question has been: What keeps the brain tuned to this critical state?
Resonance in microcolumns
The answer lies in quantum electrodynamics (QED), the fundamental theory of electromagnetism. In this theory, the vacuum is not empty but filled with a fluctuating ocean of energy known as the electromagnetic zero-point field (ZPF). QED-based model calculations demonstrate that specific frequencies (modes) of the ZPF can resonate with glutamate, the brain's most abundant neurotransmitter. The resonant interaction takes place in microcolumns, cortical units made up of about 100 neurons bathed in a glutamate pool.
It is precisely this interaction that turns out to be crucial for self-organized criticality. On the one hand, resonant glutamate-ZPF coupling results in the formation of coherence domains where a large number of molecules vibrate in unison. These domains are protected by energy gaps, making quantum coherence surprisingly stable in the warm, noisy brain.
On the other hand, the coupling leads to the excitation of specific ZPF modes and the generation of intracolumnar microwave fields that modulate ion channels, fine-tune neuronal firing rates, and maintain the excitatory-inhibitory balance essential for critical dynamics.
Conscious awareness arises from resonant brain-ZPF coupling
The implications are profound. If the model proves to be correct, consciousness arises not merely from electrochemical signaling but from a bottom-up orchestration involving the brain's resonant coupling to the ZPF. In this view, awareness is tied to the selective excitation of ZPF modes, reflected in the brain's critical dynamics.
During periods of unconsciousness, a pronounced deviation from critical dynamics is observed, implying that the coupling of the brain to the ZPF is disrupted and the ZPF, the hidden orchestrator of brain activity, is disengaged.
Experimental horizons and outlook
The model opens up intriguing avenues for empirical testing. By smart, systematic manipulations of conditions in the cerebral cortex, researchers can explore whether the brain harnesses the ZPF and whether consciousness truly depends on resonant brain-ZPF interaction. Such experiments could break new ground in neuroscience and shed light on long-standing metaphysical questions about the nature of awareness.
In conclusion, the model adds a fresh dimension to the search for a theory of consciousness, one that unites neuroscience with foundational physics. For centuries, consciousness has been humanity's deepest mystery. Is it purely emergent from neural networks, or does it connect to something more fundamental? The new findings that I present in my work suggest that the ubiquitous ZPF holds the key to the understanding of consciousness.
This story is part of Science X Dialog, where researchers can report findings from their published research articles. Visit this page for information about Science X Dialog and how to participate...
Source: https://phys.org/news/2025-12-quantum-clues-consciousness-brain-harness.html
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Cosmic Aether: 28 Theories of the Invisible Fabric of the Universe (Score: 1) by yru4 on Sunday, December 14, 2025 @ 19:11:19 UTC (User Info | Send a Message) | From Eric Thompson's Stream of Consciousness substack: Cosmic Aether: 28 Theories of the Invisible Fabric of the Universe/ The Polarized, Spiraling Energies of Creation and Dissolution
“Dayton Miller’s 1933 paper in Reviews of Modern Physics details the positive results from over 20 years of experimental research into the question of ether-drift, and remains the most definitive body of work on the subject of light-beam interferometry.”
—James DeMeo, Dayton Miller's Ether Drift Experiments: A Fresh Look
If you read Stream of Consciousness regularly, you’ll know I’m fascinated with the aether.
The concept of a single primordial substance as the fundamental foundation for all existence has been around, in one form or another, for a very, very long time.
It appears in numerous ancient indigenous cultures worldwide, though not always under the name aether.
The term "aether" has roots going back at least to the 8th century BC in Greek literature and was later formalized in philosophical discourse by figures like Aristotle.
Aristotle described aether as the fifth element: "quintessence," filling the heavens, while being distinct from the other elements (earth, air, water, and fire).
Sir Isaac Newton used the term “ether” in his 1704 book, Opticks.1
The idea of the luminiferous ether was later proposed in the 1800s as the medium for light-wave propagation.2
But when the Michelson-Morley experiment (1881 - 1887) failed to produce what was considered to be a significant effect for ether-drift, the scientific community dismissed the ether in favor of Einstein's relativity.
Despite the fact that Dayton Miller and Yuri Galaev, among others, later published credible evidence for an ether-drift, their work was mostly dismissed and ignored.
After years of studying the aether concept, I’ve been amazed at how resistant mainstream science has been to this idea, especially as it appears to offer a viable unified field theory as well as a theory of everything (TOE) that includes consciousness in a non-reductive way.
The aether concept is absolutely essential to a new science of subtle energy and consciousness for it serves as the foundation for explaining virtually all scientifically observed subtle energetic and psi phenomena.
To this day, modified aether theories are still offered as possible explanations for little understood phenomena in scientific journals, though they often use different nomenclature and avoid actually referring to the aether by name.
One such theory is Federico Faggin’s theory of quantum information panpsychism, which essentially equates the quantum informational field with the aether without explicitly saying so.3
Although it is a single concept, theories and experimental research related to the aether have varied widely.
There are, however, four basic elements on which most aether or aether-related theories agree:
1. The universe is interpenetrated and interconnected by a subtle, invisible field of intelligent energy.
2. Everything in the universe originates from this field, is maintained by it, and returns to it.
3. The universal field of energy and consciousness features complementary polarities.
4. These polarized energies of order and entropy, creation and dissolution, are associated with spiraling, rotational motion.
In the interest of carrying the torch for a new science of subtle energy and furthering the conversation and research around the aether, here is a synopsis of 28 different aether or aether-related theories, listed in no particular order...
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