Source: Journal of Nonlocality Vol II, Nr 2, December 2013 ISSN: 2167-62831 QUANTUM INFORMATION SELF-ORGANIZATION AND CONSCIOUSNESS A HOLOINFORMATIONAL MODEL OF CONSCIOUSNESS, By Francisco Di Biase
In this scholarly synthesis, Francisco Di Biase proposes a holoinformational model of consciousness that bridges the gap between the human brain and the cosmos. By integrating Karl Pribram’s holonomic brain theory with David Bohm’s quantum-holographic universe, the author argues that consciousness is not a mere byproduct of local neural activity but a fundamental, non-local property of nature. This framework suggests that the mind functions through a dual informational flow: a local Newtonian component managing brain networks and a quantum holistic component interconnecting with a universal field. Ultimately, the text defines the universe as an intelligent, self-organizing wholeness where information acts as an irreducible organizational principle, much like matter or energy, allowing for a transpersonal understanding of human experience within a participatory reality.
Consciousness - Universe's OS.mp4
Holoinformation - A Unified Field.pdf
Your_Brain_Is_a_Quantum_Transceiver.m4a

What is consciousness? For decades, the dominant scientific view has treated the brain as a complex biological computer, with our thoughts, feelings, and subjective awareness being little more than the electrical chatter between neurons. In this model, we are essentially intricate machines, isolated within our own skulls, observing a separate, external universe. But what if this picture is fundamentally wrong?
Challenging this reductionist view, an emerging scientific paradigm proposes a radical and reality-altering model that integrates the work of pioneers like physicist David Bohm, neuroscientist Karl Pribram, and information theorist John Wheeler. This "holoinformational" perspective suggests that consciousness isn't something the brain produces, like a generator making electricity. Instead, it posits that consciousness is "quantum non-local significant information interconnecting the brain and the cosmos."
This article explores the five mind-bending pillars of this unified model, a view that suggests we are not just observers of the universe, but active participants in an interconnected, intelligent whole.