Consciousness-Driven Ufology: A Participatory, Monistic Vision of Reality

To the point

Proposing a science of ufology centered on consciousness, it treats precognition, near-death and abduction experiences as real in a non-linear, monistic universe where imagination mediates encounters with the Real and symbols carry meaning, drawing on Jung, Husserl, Nietzsche, Corbin and mystics, with Zimbabwe 1994, John Allison, and Karin Austin as illustrative cases.

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Consciousness-Driven Ufology: A Participatory, Monistic Vision of Reality

A provocative framework for ufology argues that a science grounded in consciousness and altered states makes real a spectrum of extraordinary experiences—precognitive events, afterlife and near-death experiences, abductions, and religious phenomena—within a non-linear, non-material causality, advancing an experience-source hypothesis in which encounters with the Real are mediated by imagination and interpreted through phenomenology and symbol-rich analysis, endorsing a monistic, participatory universe with block time, drawing on thinkers like Henry Corbin, Nietzsche, Husserl, Jung and mystics to illuminate the imaginal world and the bi-unity of self and angelic twin, offering a practical epistemology that blends rational inquiry with imagination, treats experiences as data, values humility and laughter, and sees symbols as conduits of meaning, with case footprints such as Zimbabwe 1994, John Allison’s time-vision, and Karin Austin’s telepathic visions as evidentiary traces of a broader gnostic spirituality linking consciousness to the cosmos, and urging a future science of man framed by perception, imagination, and shared sense-making through dialogic engagement with experiencers.