Research Article
Does collective consciousness compromise during epidemics and pandemics?
@ARTICLE{10.4108/eai.18-8-2020.166358, author={Anoushka Khanna and Namita I and Rina Chakrabarti and Prem Kumar Indraganti}, title={Does collective consciousness compromise during epidemics and pandemics?}, journal={EAI Endorsed Transactions on Smart Cities}, volume={5}, number={13}, publisher={EAI}, journal_a={SC}, year={2020}, month={9}, keywords={COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, consciousness, collective consciousness, hierarchical consciousness, epidemics, pandemics, mass casualty, global consciousness project, quantum entanglement, reality}, doi={10.4108/eai.18-8-2020.166358} }
- Anoushka Khanna
Namita I
Rina Chakrabarti
Prem Kumar Indraganti
Year: 2020
Does collective consciousness compromise during epidemics and pandemics?
SC
EAI
DOI: 10.4108/eai.18-8-2020.166358
Abstract
The ongoing pandemic, COVID-19, has received unprecedented global attention. Though a pathogen is essentially the causative agent, the dynamics of the cause-effect in major events like the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic is not well understood. It is not even clear if the focused attention of the normal population impacts the safety and health of the exposed victims and in what way the different groups interact with each other, is also a big question. The idea of panpsychism and hierarchical consciousness suggests that consciousness functions beyond an individual and works at distinct levels such as family, community, state, territories, nations, and world. In this perspective, keeping in mind, the idea of hierarchical consciousness, the impact of higher consciousness in major events like the COVID-19 pandemic, on the well-being and fate of the exposed population along with the probable role of quantum entanglement, has been discussed.
Copyright © 2020 Anoushka Khanna et al., licensed to EAI. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license, which permits unlimited use, distribution and reproduction in any medium so long as the original work is properly cited.