A Mathematical and Conceptual Analysis of Brian D. Josephson’s Scientific and Philosophical Contributions

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Abstract

This paper develops a unified conceptual framework linking Brian D. Josephson’s later mind–matter proposals, Brahma Kumaris (BK) metaphysics, and the G¨odel–Brahe–Maxwell (GBM) rotating universe model, extended through the user’s Trilok real–imaginary dimensional structure. Beginning with Josephson’s thesis that coherence, meaning, and nonlocal biological order are fundamental rather than emergent, the work integrates these ideas with BK concepts of the soul, the subtle region, Paramdham, and Avyakt communication. The GBM universe contributes a cosmological background in which consciousness evolves in resonance with a rotating carrier field, while the Trilok model provides a geometrical mapping of corporeal, subtle, and soul realms onto real, wormhole, and imaginary sectors. Across the manuscript, peace is treated as a fundamental field-like quantity, dharna is interpreted as the stabilization of cognitive potentials, entropy reduction is connected with meditative silence, and group meditation is approached as a large-scale coherence phenomenon. Historical accounts of Josephson’s India visits and his interactions with the BK organisation are incorporated to contextualize the technical constructs. The resulting synthesis proposes that consciousness, cosmic rotation, and subtle-dimensional dynamics form a single interdependent system in which peace, coherence, and transformation arise naturally from phase alignment between the individual, collective, and cosmological fields.

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