Source: Scientific GOD Journal | February 2016 | Volume 7 | Issue 2 | pp. 59-81 Amoroso, R. L. & Di Biase, F., Unified Field Mechanics & Its Applications: Elucidating the Objective Character of Experience
This research paper challenges the conventional mind-brain identity hypothesis by arguing that consciousness is not a byproduct of neural activity, but rather a result of Unified Field (UF) Mechanics. The authors propose a radical shift from traditional quantum models toward a 12-dimensional noetic cosmology, where the "light of the mind" is mediated through a complex spacetime gating mechanism known as the exciplex. Central to this theory is the formalization of the Eccles psychon, a new physical unit used to quantify the energy of awareness as it couples with biological structures like dendrons and microtubules. By defining qualia as a physically real substance that arises from the ontological force of coherence, the text moves beyond subjective philosophy to suggest that experience has an objective character that can be empirically measured. Ultimately, the source provides a framework for fourteen experimental protocols designed to "poke a hole in spacetime," aiming to prove that a teleological life principle animates all living systems through continuous interaction with the Unified Field.
Objective Physics of Experience.pdf
The_Physics_of_Consciousness_Beyond_Quantum_Theory.m4a

Why do we have subjective experiences? Why does the firing of neurons in our brain produce the feeling of warmth, the scent of rain, or the brilliant redness of a sunset? This is often called the "hard problem of consciousness," and as philosopher Thomas Nagel has argued, it remains one of the greatest challenges in science. While mainstream science typically attempts to explain awareness as an emergent property of the brain—a concept known as the "mind-brain identity hypothesis"—this approach has struggled to explain the purely subjective nature of our inner world.
A radical new framework, called Unified Field Mechanics, proposes a set of startling, counter-intuitive answers that challenge our most basic assumptions about reality itself. It suggests that our current understanding of physics is incomplete and that consciousness is far more fundamental to the cosmos than we ever imagined. This article explores five of the most impactful ideas from this theory that could completely rewrite our understanding of who—and what—we are.
Our current understanding of physics is split into two distinct domains: Classical mechanics, which governs the large-scale world of planets and baseballs, and Quantum mechanics, which describes the bizarre behavior of particles at the smallest scales. A new theory argues that this picture is missing a crucial piece. It proposes that there is a necessary third regime of physics called the Unified Field (UF), creating a progression from Classical to Quantum to Unified (CQU).