by David Orme-Johnson, Ph.D.
Abstract
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi approaches peace from collective consciousness,
the holistic level of society where all its component parts are integrated.
Collective consciousness arises from the consciousness of all individuals
in society and to reciprocally influence each individual's consciousness
and behavior. The basis of all levels of individual and collective consciousness
is transcendental consciousness, which is the direct experience of the
unified field of nature's intelligence and infinite organizing power.
Extensive, well-controlled research demonstrates that the square root
of 1% of a population experiencing transcendental consciousness through
Maharishi's Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program propagates
coherence in collective consciousness, thereby resolving conflict and
improving the quality of life. This phenomenon is known as the Maharishi
Effect.
The Theory of
the Maharishi Effect
Just as modern physics has recently postulated that nature is fundamentally
composed of quantum fields that mediate action at a distance, Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi has postulated that there is a fundamental level of consciousness,
transcendental consciousness, at the basis of each individual's mind.
A direct experience of transcendental consciousness is an experience of
the unified field of nature's intelligence. Extensive research, to be
reviewed below, has demonstrated that individuals experiencing transcendental
consciousness through the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program
create coherence in society, a phenomenon that scientists have named the
Maharishi Effect.
Although action-at-a-distance phenomena have not been reliably observed
within contemporary social research, they are now well accepted in the
natural sciences. Gravity and the transmission of radio and television
signals are both examples of action at a distance that have become familiar
to us today. To understand these phenomena, physics developed the concept
of abstract quantum fields that mediate these effects. The basic understanding
given by quantum theory is that all of creation is the expression of fluctuations
of underlying universal fields, and all bodies and processes are therefore
connected at fundamental levels. (Hagelin, 1987; 1989; please refer to
Hagelin article in this issue.)
Collective Consciousness in the Social Sciences:
It bears keeping in mind that while contemporary social theory views human
beings "classically" as ontologically separate individuals, the longest
tradition of philosophical thought in the West -- the idealist tradition
-- has maintained, at least implicitly, the connection of human beings
on the level of consciousness. It is also the case that several of the
founding theorists of modern psychology proposed the concept of consciousness
as a field through which individuals may be fundamentally connected. One
of the founding fathers of modern psychology, Gustav Fechner, for example,
described a unity or continuity of "general consciousness" underlying
the discontinuities of consciousness associated with each individual,
accessible in principle simply through lowering the threshold of conscious
experience (in James, 1898/1977).
William James, the founder of psychology as an academic discipline in
America, suggested that the brain may serve to reflect or transmit, rather
than produce, consciousness, which in turn may be conceived as a transcendental,
infinite continuity underlying the phenomenal world (ibid.). Emile Durkheim,
who is considered to be one of the chief founder of modern sociology,
proposed that a conscience collective was the essence of the underlying
social fabric unifying individuals in society. This "collective conscience"
or "collective consciousness" was described by Durkheim as the mind of
society, created when "the consciousness of the individuals, instead of
remaining isolated, becomes grouped and combined" (1951, pp. 310, 312,
313).
Collective Consciousness in the Physical Sciences:
In the 20th century, a number of the founders of modern physics were
propelled by the implications of their discoveries into what might be
described as a field theory of consciousness. Sir Arthur Eddington, who
provided empirical confirmation of Einstein's General Theory of Relativity,
wrote:
"The idea of a universal Mind or Logos would be, I think, a
fairly plausible inference from the present state of scientific theory;
at least it is in harmony with it. " (1984, p. 206; c.f., Dossey, 1989,
p. 125)
The eminent astronomer, mathematician, and author Sir James Jeans wrote:
"When we view ourselves in space and time, our consciousnesses
are obviously the separate individuals of a particle-picture, but when
we pass beyond space and time, they may perhaps form ingredients of a
single continuos stream of life. As it is with light and electricity,
so may it be with life; the phenomena may be individuals carrying on separate
existences in space and time, while in the deeper reality beyond space
and time we may all be members of one body." (1981, p. 204; c.f., Dossey,
1989, p. 125)
Quantum field theory gives consciousness an ontologically fundamental
position. As the French physicist Bernard D'Espagnat (1979/1983) commented
in a Scientific American article : "The doctrine that the world is made
up of objects whose existence is independent of human consciousness turns
out to be in conflict with quantum mechanics and with the facts established
by experiment." Max Planck, the father of quantum theory, more directly
said, "I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative
from consciousness" (quoted in Klein, 1984). Hagelin (1987, 1989), one
of the architects of unified field theory, has gone the furthest of any
physicist in providing a conceptual link between the most recent advances
in unified field theory and the precise descriptions of natural law found
in the ancient Vedic tradition of India from which Maharishi has revived
his approach to world peace.
Maharishi's Principles of Collective Consciousness:
The key to Maharishi's approach to creating world peace is collective
consciousness (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 1986a, 1986b). Each level of social
organization is said to have an associated collective consciousness. For
example, one clearly experiences the change in collective consciousness
when crossing a national border. Individual consciousness is said to be
the basic unit of collective consciousness, influencing collective consciousness
and being in turn influenced by it (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 1976, p. 124).
Maharishi states:
"Just as the consciousness of an individual determines the quality
of his thought and behavior, so also there exists another type of consciousness
for society as a whole; a collective consciousness for each family, city,
state, or nation, having its own reality and the possibility of growth.
The quality of collective consciousness of a society is a direct and sensitive
reflection of the level of consciousness of its individual members." (1976,
p. 91)
Stressed individuals create stress in collective consciousness, which
in turn influences everyone else in society. A palpable influence of stressed
collective consciousness is experienced, for example, in a tense office,
an unhappy home, or a crime-ridden city. When stress predominates collective
consciousness, behavior automatically becomes cautious and defensive.
The turbulence created in the mind of an individual by the anxiety, anger,
and dullness in the collective consciousness obscures the subtle level
of feelings and creative intuition. Consequently, social relations become
coarse and creativity inhibited. On the other hand, a harmonious office,
happy home, or peaceful city provides a soothing atmosphere that is conducive
to trust, cooperation, and creative expression. In Maharishi's view, all
of the different problems in society are expressions of stress throughout
the system as a whole, i.e., in its collective consciousness. Maharishi
states:
"All occurrences of violence, negativity and conflict, crises,
or problems in any society are just the expression of growth of stress
in collective consciousness. When the level of stress becomes sufficiently
great, it bursts out into large-scale violence, war, and civil uprising
necessitating military action." (1979, p. 38)
Maharishi further explains that terrorism is also an expression of stress
in collective consciousness.
"Whatever may seem to be the cause of the outbursts of terrorism,
whatever little excuses there are, these excuses arise on the surface
of the human race only from stress in world consciousness, and stress
is not seen until it bursts out. The basis of stress in world consciousness
is the violation of natural law by the people. The basis of the violation
of natural law is the fact that the educational systems do not educate
the people to spontaneously think and act according to natural law." (1986,
pp. 83-84)
If stress in the collective consciousness is the cause of war and terrorism,
then neutralizing the stress in the whole society in one operation would
be an ideal means to creating peace. The difficulty with achieving peace
by any other means (unaided by creating coherence in collective consciousness)
is that peace, like war, must be systemic. War has many complex determinants
-- economic, political, historical, individual, ethnic -- that must all
be addressed simultaneously if peace is to become a stable reality. The
beauty of Maharishi's approach to peace is that deals with the whole system
at once through its collective consciousness, which is possible because
collective consciousness touches every aspect, every phase, and every
level of life in society.
Maharishi's Technology to Create Coherence in
Collective Consciousness: How is it possible to have
a holistic beneficial influence on collective consciousness? According
to Maharishi's Vedic Science, the source of the individual mind, and hence,
the source of all levels of collective consciousness, is the unified field,
the source of the order in nature, which has been intuitively apprehended
and logically derived by the world's great physicists. The unified field
of nature's intelligence can be systematically experienced through the
Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program. thus raising individual
consciousness, and those individuals, becoming less stressed and more
coherent in their own thought and action, generate an influence of coherence
in collective consciousness, thus nipping violence at the bud while at
the same time creating an atmosphere in which an ideal society would spontaneously
emerge. Further, the theory holds that only a small proportion of people
experiencing the unified field of natural law are needed to neutralize
stress in collective consciousness because coherence is more powerful
than incoherence.
Implicit in this view are a number of assumptions that need to be made
explicit regarding the nature of the human mind, the nature of natural
law, and the relationship between the mind and natural law at their fundamental
levels.
Transcendental Consciousness at the basis of
the mind. The first assumption is that individual consciousness
is structured in layers from gross to subtle, from sensory and cognitive
processes to finer processes of intellect and feeling, to the sense of
self (ego), to the subtlest level which is the abstract, transcendental
consciousness, the basis of all processes of the mind. Whereas the more
expressed levels of the mind are familiar to psychologists and lay persons,
transcendental consciousness is less commonly appreciated and needs some
explanation. It is called "transcendental" consciousness because it is
"beyond" or transcendental to all other levels of the mind. It is also
called "pure" consciousness because it is consciousness in its essential
nature, unmodified by experience. By analogy, pure consciousness can be
likened to an ocean and mental activity to the waves on the ocean. When
the localized waves settle down, the unbounded ocean (transcendental consciousness)
is experienced. Transcendental consciousness is also called the Self,
large "S", because it is the universal Self within every person, in contrast
to the self, small "s" which is a person's unique individuality. Pure
consciousness is the knower/observer/experiencer within each of us.
Maharishi has brought to light this ancient understanding about the structure
of the mind with transcendental consciousness at its basis as it is described
in many branches of the Vedic tradition, for example in the Bhagavad-Gita,
Upanishads, and the Upangas (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 1969;
Dillbeck, 1988). Moreover, this hierarchical structure of levels of the
mind has recently gained recognition in modern psychology. For example,
this structure is able to explain the sequence of human cognitive development
from sensory-motor processes to logical reasoning to higher states of
consciousness as the development from outer to inner levels of the mind
(Alexander, et al., 1990).
Experiencing transcendental consciousness.
Thus the first assumption of Maharishi's theory of world peace is that
transcendental consciousness exists at the basis of the mind. The second
is that it can be experienced. Transcendental consciousness ordinarily
remains hidden or transcendental to conscious experience because the conscious
experiencing mind is "object-referral," meaning that the observer, which
is transcendental consciousness, is looking outward onto the objects of
the sensory world and in observing them, does not observe itself, just
as we do not observe our glasses when looking through them. Even during
introspection, in which the mind is exploring its own contents and operations,
consciousness does not observe its own essential nature as transcendental
consciousness because it is observing contents and operations, that is,
thoughts, feelings, discriminative processes, and other denizens of subjective
life.
The endless and bewildering array of conscious activities observed during
introspection is the reason that understanding consciousness is generally
held to be the most difficult problem there in nature. During introspection,
the mind still has a tripartite division of the observer observing the
observed, or said another way, it is divided into knower, known, and processes
of knowing which connect the two, the observed or known being the mind's
own activities and contents. Therefore it is in principle impossible
for the thinking mind to experience transcendental consciousness. A trick
is needed in order for transcendental consciousness, the knower or Self
to experience/observe/know itself, i.e., to transcend its activities and
become self-referral, the knower knowing itself rather than being object-referral,
in which the knower knows something outside of itself.
Maharishi's Transcendental Meditation is a technique that takes the mind
from an "object-referral state" to a "self-referral state." Maharishi
explains:
"The Transcendental Meditation technique is an effortless procedure
for allowing the excitations of the mind to settle down until the least
excited state of mind is reached. This is a state of inner wakefulness
with no object of thought or perception, just pure consciousness aware
of its own unbounded nature It is wholeness, aware of itself, devoid of
differences, beyond the division of subject and object--transcendental
consciousness. It is a field of all possibilities, where all creative
potentialities exist together, infinitely correlated yet unexpressed.
It is a state of perfect order, the matrix from where all the laws of
nature emerge." (1976, p.123)
Maharishi further describes the self-referral state of transcendental
consciousness this way:
"The awareness is open to itself, and therefore the awareness
knows itself. Because awareness knows itself it is the knower, it is the
known, and it is the process of knowing. This is the state of pure consciousness,
wide-awake in its own nature, and completely self-referral. This is pure
consciousness, transcendental consciousness." (1986b, p. 29.)
Maharishi explains that self-referral consciousness, being the experience
of the source of the creative intelligence in nature, creates field-effects
of coherence in collective consciousness.
"When consciousness is flowing out into the field of thoughts
and activity, it identifies itself with many things [object-referral],
and this is how experience takes place. Consciousness coming back onto
itself gains an integrated state, because consciousness in itself is completely
integrated. This is pure consciousness, or transcendental consciousness
[self-referral]. From this basic level of life emerge all fields
of existence, all kinds of intelligence. This self-sufficient, self-referral
state of consciousness is the basis of the phenomenon of coherence that
radiates from such assemblies [of practitioners of Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi program] and influences the whole world consciousness."
(1986b, p. 25)
Coherence means coordinated activity: the functions and structures of
every part of a system perfectly reinforce the whole and the whole supports
all the parts. With respect to the individual, coherence means physiological,
psychological, and sociological integration producing health, happiness,
and right action, as research on individuals practicing the Transcendental
Meditation program has shown (Please refer to Alexander article in this
issue). Because collective consciousness arises from the individuals in
society, when they become more coherent, so too does collective consciousness,
and through this influence, society as a whole becomes peaceful.
The purpose of natural law. Given that the unified field of natural
law is a universal field of consciousness, as envisioned by many of the
great pioneers of modern physics, and given that it can be directly experienced
in the self-referral state of one's own consciousness, why or how would
this experience produce coherence in the individual and society? An implicit
assumption in this view is that natural law has a fundamental purpose,
which is to structure coherence as defined above. Whereas the observed
universe is created from the unmanifest, self-referral dynamics of the
unified field of nature's intelligence, the purpose of this self-referral
activity is self-referral, that is, self-knowledge of the entire range
of the unified field from infinity to a point (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi,
1986b). The human nervous system is nature's instrument for knowing itself
in its entirely. The nervous system has the capacity to experience the
unified field of nature's intelligence as transcendental consciousness.
Since transcendental consciousness is the basis of the human mind and
is the knower, the Self, the expansion of self-knowledge means increasing
knowledge of our own consciousness from its infinite basis to all its
finite expressions. Because one of the basic qualities of the unified
field, and hence transcendental consciousness, is bliss (please refer
to Hagelin article in this issue) the expansion of self-knowledge is accompanied/motivated
by the expansion of happiness. The purpose of human life can thus be said
to be the expansion of happiness (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 1966).
It may be remarkable for a scientist to think that the human nervous
system is not just an accidental outcome of the evolution of physical
matter (a very unsatisfying and epistemologically problematic point of
view), but rather that it is nature's instrument through which nature,
which is fundamentally the unified field of pure consciousness, can know
itself in its entirety. From this perspective, all human activities are
fundamentally for the purpose of expanding self-knowledge and happiness.
As the human mind looks out onto the galaxies, it is ultimately looking
for itself. Anything we do increases our self-knowledge, and if it increases
our happiness, it is nature's signal that we are evolving in the direction
of Self-knowledge, knowledge of the unified field within us.
Higher States of Consciousness. Maharishi
has brought to light that higher states of consciousness are higher states
of self-knowledge, a sequential development resulting from greater experience
of transcendental consciousness, the unified field of natural law (Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi, 1969; Orme-Johnson, 1988a, b). There are seven states of
consciousness of which the first three are the familiar states of waking,
dreaming, and sleeping. Transcendental consciousness is the fourth, and
the three higher states, cosmic consciousness, God consciousness, and
unity consciousness are a sequence of stable states of enlightenment in
which one increasingly experiences and expresses the unified field of
nature's intelligence (Alexander & Boyer, 1989).
In the fourth state, transcendental consciousness, the unified field
of nature's intelligence is experienced to the exclusion of all other
experience. All the active phases of the mind are inhibited at that time.
In the fifth state, cosmic consciousness, further neurological refinement
allows transcendental bliss consciousness, the Self, to be experienced
as a stable background or witness throughout the cycle of waking, dreaming,
and sleep. The mind becomes permeated with bliss in cosmic consciousness,
which cultures the mind to appreciate the most refined, celestial levels
of perception, giving rise to a tidal wave of love and devotion for the
creation and its creator, hence the name God-consciousness. Through further
neurophysiological refinement, the seventh state, unity consciousness,
dawns in which even the environment, which was previously conceived to
be objective and external, is appreciated in terms of the Self. This is
the climax of self-knowledge, in which all phases of existence, subjective
and objective are appreciated to be nothing other than the unified field
of nature's intelligence, the Self moving within itself. One of the mahavakyas
(great sayings) of the Upanishads declares "I am That, Thou art That,
all This is That".
The practical significance of this evolution of consciousness is that
as self-knowledge grows, one becomes increasingly in tune with the invincible,
evolutionary power of natural law, because the Self is the unified field
of natural law. In Maharishi's view (1986b), sickness, suffering, conflict,
and all other negativity in the individual and society stem from not being
in accord with natural law due to lack of experiential and intellectual
knowledge that fundamentally one's nature is pure consciousness. Stress
in the individual and collective consciousness is the consequence of life
not being in accord with natural law, and as noted above, stress in collective
consciousness is the cause of war. Thus in Maharishi's approach to world
peace, Self-knowledge, the bliss that it affords, and the coherence that
it creates in collective consciousness bring life in accord with natural
law in society, creating peace.
Maharishi has brought to light that several thousand year ago Patanjali
(Prasada, 1912/1978) referred to this approach to peace in his
Yoga Sutras (from which the TM-Sidhi program is derived) in his
statement "tat sannidhau vairatyagah" which translates as "in the
vicinity of coherence [yoga], hostile tendencies are eliminated."
Maharishi explains that an influence of coherence spreads because transcendental
consciousness is a state of infinite correlation:
"This transcendental level of nature's functioning is the level
of infinite correlation. When the group awareness is brought in attunement
with that level, then a very intensified influence of coherence radiates
and a great richness is created. Infinite correlation is a quality of
the transcendental level of nature's functioning from where orderliness
governs the universe." (1986b, p. 75)
The real genius of Maharishi's theory of collective consciousness and
its application to peace that sets it apart from all other theories and
approaches is that it is empirically testable in actual international
conflicts.
The Discovery of the Maharishi Effect
In the early 1960's Maharishi predicted that as little as 1% of a population
practicing the Transcendental Meditation technique would create an influence
of harmony throughout the entire society. Maharishi based his prediction
that a few could effect many on the principle of coherence in physics
in which influence of the coherent elements in a system is much greater
than that of the incoherent elements (Borland & Landrith, 1976; Hagelin,
1987, 1988; Orme-Johnson, et al. 1988). Research on the Maharishi Effect
began in 1974, when researcher Garland Landrith of Maharishi International
University (MIU) tested Maharishi's prediction on crime rate in four Midwestern
cities where 1% of the population had learned the Transcendental Meditation
technique. He reported that crime rate decreased significantly the year
after each became 1% cities, compared with other cities of similar size
and geographic location. Using FBI data, the study was expanded to include
all 11 cities over 25,000 population (Borland & Landrith, 1976), and
by using data from local police for cities with 10,000 population, it
was expanded again to include all 24 cities that had reached 1% of their
population practicing TM in 1972 (Dillbeck, Landrith, & Orme-Johnson,
1981). The finding of significant reduction in crime rate was replicated
both times. In the second replication, not only did crime rate decrease
the year after 1% was reached, but the crime rate trend was lower for
those cities over the following six years, controlling for total population,
geographic region, college population, unemployment rate, median education
level, stability of residence, percentage of persons 15-29 years old in
the population, and a number of other variables.
Causal Analysis
The most comprehensive studies of the Maharishi Effect on the city level
employed causal analyses of crime trends over a period of seven years
in random samples of 160 US cities and 50 Standard Statistical Metropolitan
Areas (SSMA's), the latter sample representing approximately half the
urban population of the US (Dillbeck et al, 1988). These studies, which
were published in the Journal of Mind and Behavior, found that
cities and metropolitan areas with higher proportions of meditators in
1973 had reduced crime trends for the next six years. In neither study
did the level of crime predict the number of meditators in the population
in future years. Thus, TM apparently influenced the crime rate but crime
rate did not influence TM, suggesting that TM was the causal element in
the correlation between the two. Both studies statistically controlled
for virtually all demographic variables known to influence crime, and
a significant and stable causal structure was found for both samples,
the 160 cities and the 50 SSMA's.
The TM-Sidhi Program and Super-Radiance
A major breakthrough in the Maharishi Effect research came in 1976 with
the development of the more powerful TM-Sidhi program. The incredible
power of TM-Sidhis on impacting collective consciousness was discovered
in 1978 during Maharishi's Ideal Society Campaign, which was conducted
in selected provinces in 20 countries. Maharishi sent teams of teachers
of the Transcendental Meditation technique to these countries in order
to try to inspire the 1% of the local populations to learn the technique
in to create an ideal society. As it happened, these teachers practiced
the TM-Sidhi program together in groups, particularly the powerful Yogic
Flying technique (Orme-Johnson & Gelderloos, 1987; Travis & Orme-Johnson,
1990). It was discovered that groups of the order of the square root of
1% of a population collectively practicing the TM-Sidhi program were sufficient
to produce a measurable and holistic influence of harmony and integration
in the entire population (Dillbeck et al., 1987; c.f. Maharishi Mahesh
Yogi, 1986b, p. 76). This phenomenon has been named Super-Radiance, after
the super-radiance phenomenon in lasers. Studies now have demonstrated
its effect on the city, state, national, and international levels. For
example, the first study of Super-Radiance was conducted on the state
level in Rhode Island, which was published in The Journal of
Mind and Behavior. It found improvements on a quality-of-life
index that included crime, deaths, unemployment, alcohol consumption,
cigarette consumption, pollution, motor vehicle fatalities, and accidents
(Dillbeck et al., 1987).
The square root of 1% of a population is a relatively small number, making
controlled studies even on the national and world level possible. For
example, the square root of 1% of the US population is currently approximately
1600, and the square root of 1% of the world population is approximately
7000.
The Establishment of a National Super Radiance
Group
Since 1979, a group of Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi participants
ranging in size from a few hundred to over 8000 has gathered twice a day
at Maharishi International University in Fairfield, Iowa for the purpose
of creating coherence in the US and world. A study published in Social
Indicators Research found a significant effect of the MIU group on
US violent deaths per week (homicides, suicides and traffic fatalities)
from 1979 to 1985. The square root of 1% of the US population in
1985 was approximately 1550, and the study found that an increase in Super-Radiance
groups size at MIU from zero to 1550, corresponded to a decrease of 106
fatalities per week. The study used time series analysis that controlled
for seasonal fluctuations, trends, and drifts in the data (Dillbeck, 1990).
A similar time series analysis found a reduction in violent deaths in
Canada when the threshold of 1600 for North America was reached (Assimakis,
1989).
Using a similar research design, a series of papers presented at the
Business and Economics Statistics Section of the American Statistical
Association, Cavanaugh and his collaborators found significant reductions
in the Misery Index of inflation and unemployment for both the US and
Canada, controlling for a number of economic factors (Cavanaugh, 1987;
Cavanaugh and King, 1988; Cavanaugh, King and Ertuna, 1989; please refer
to Cavanaugh article in this issue).
A study of the effects of the MIU Super-Radiance program on the quality
of life in the United States used an equally weighted composite index
of twelve social indicators from the fields of crime, justice, health,
education, economic welfare, creativity, marital stability, and safety
for the 25 year period from 1960 through 1984 (Orme-Johnson, Gelderloos,
& Dillbeck, 1988). The magnitude of the Maharishi Effect was estimated
by the "Maharishi Effect Index" that took into account the percentage
of TM participants distributed throughout the United States as well as
the square root of the number of TM and TM-Sidhi participants in the group
practice at MIU.
Analysis of the quality-of-life index showed a virtually continuous downward
trend in the overall quality of life in the United States from 1960 to
1975. This negative trend began to level off starting in 1975, the year
that Maharishi inaugurated the Dawn of the Age of Enlightenment (Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi, 1975). During the years 1982-1984, when the group of Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi program participants at MIU was large enough to
have a predicted effect on national consciousness, there was a dramatic
increase in US quality of life. The total improvement of 7.17% on the
quality-of-life index over this three-year period was 5.2 times greater
than any three-year improvement in the prior 22 years. Clearly, an unprecedented
change in recent US history had occurred.
A further analysis of the different quality-of-life variables used a
multivariate method of analysis of covariance structures (e.g., Jöreskog
& Sörbom, 1979; Long 1983) implemented by the LISREL VI program
(Jöreskog & Sörbom, 1986). The covariance structure model
combines the approaches of factor analysis and structural equation causal
modeling to assess the impact of independent variables on a set of latent
variables underlying a group of observed variables. Two quality-of-life
factors were found, a general factor and .a second factor, and the MIU
Super-Radiance group had a significant effect on both factors, accounting
for 80.4% of the variance of the general factor and 60.3% of the secondary
factor.
These studies provide strong evidence that the MIU Super-Radiance group
has significantly impacted on the quality of life in the United States,
as seen in a reduction of deaths due to suicides, homicides, and traffic
fatalities (Dillbeck, 1990), a reduction in inflation and unemployment
(Cavanaugh, 1987; Cavanaugh and King, 1988; Cavanaugh, King and Ertuna,
1989), and an improvement in the general quality of life (Orme-Johnson
et al., 1984).
The World Peace Project
Immediately following the discovery of the Super-Radiance effect in the
Fall off 1978, Maharishi decided to apply it to resolve conflicts
in the international arena. More than 1400 experts in the Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi program were sent for approximately two months
(November and December, 1978) to several trouble spots of the world, including
Central America (Nicaragua), the Middle East (Lebanon), Southern Africa
(Rhodesia-Zimbabwe) and Zambia), and to Southeast Asia (Cambodia) as well
as to surrounding countries. Their effect was studied using an independent
data base, the Conflict and Peace Data Bank (COPDAB), 1948-1978: Daily
Aggregations (Azar, 1982). The COPDAB file is the largest daily data bank
in the world coding for conflict in international affairs, including data
from over 70 major news sources.
During the World Peace Project the percentage of hostile actions between
countries as well as between factions within the trouble spots decreased
36% relative to the baseline period, and cooperative events increased
by 37%. The proportional reduction in hostile acts in these trouble-spot
countries was twice as great as the change at that time in the rest of
the world, which was used as a control (Orme-Johnson, Dillbeck, Bousquet,
& Alexander, 1990).
The COPDAB data also showed that the type of events shifted significantly
from military issues (troop deployment, security pacts, defense treaties,
wars, prisoner-of-war releases or exchanges, guerrilla raids, etc.) to
non-military issues (cultural, economic, political order, legal, human
environmental, physical environmental, and natural resources). Thus, for
the time that the groups of Maharishi's TM and TM-Sidhi participants were
in or near the trouble spots conflict decreased, cooperation increased,
and balance was restored as seen in an increase in non-military interactions.
This finding can be interpreted as a shift in the focus of collective
consciousness from destructive toward cooperative interaction as stresses
in collective consciousness began to be neutralized and coherence increased.
The International Peace Project
in the Middle East
A major experimental test of the application of the Maharishi Effect
to resolve international conflict took place in 1983 in Israel during
the war in Lebanon for a two-month period (August and September) (Orme-Johnson,
Alexander, et al., 1988). The project was funded in part through a grant
in honor of William Ellinghaus, then president of American Telephone and
Telegraph Company, from the Fund for Higher Education. Predictions were
lodged in advance with scientists in the US and in Israel. The variables,
such as traffic accidents, crime rate, and fires, all of which are major
problems in Israel, were selected because they had been used in previous
experiments. As a measure of the war in Lebanon, two war variables, war
deaths and war intensity, were derived by content analysis of a major
newspaper and other media sources using a scaling method modeled after
Azar's (Azar, 1982). Other variables included the Israeli national stock
market and the national mood from content analysis of a major newspaper.
All variables were derived from publicly available data sources. The independent
variable, the group size of TM and TM-Sidhi participants, was sent on
three different occasions to members of the review board before any of
the data analysis was undertaken.
During the first two weeks, the numbers rose gradually in response to
the call for the project, and then remained high for a 13 day period,
after which they fluctuated. The 13-day high period was created at an
arbitrarily selected time in order to approximate as closely as practical
a true random-assignment experiment. During that time, course participants
were offered advanced meditation techniques as incentives attend the course.
During this 13-day period, war deaths were a mean of 1.5 per day compared
with a mean of 33.7 per day for the 13-day periods immediately before
and after the experimental period.
The overall composite index composed of all the variables mentioned above
and the size of the coherence-creating group closely track one another.
Statistical analysis using the Box-Jenkins (1976) ARIMA (auto-regressive,
integrated, moving, averages) time series methods of transfer functions
showed that change in the size of the coherence creating group significantly
led change in the composite index by one day, controlling for any seasonal
fluctuations in the data, as well as controlling for changes in the weather
and holidays. This means that the up and down variations in the size of
the coherence creating group were followed by a corresponding variation
in the overall quality of life in the region, supporting a causal interpretation.
Using two time-series methods, transfer function and impact assessment,
all the individual and composite variables were found to be statistically
significant. Of particular interest was an index of the war in Lebanon,
computed as the arithmetic mean of the normalized (Z-transformed) war
deaths and war intensity variables. This variable was subjected to an
exhaustive time series analysis and the results were verified using 14
alternative specifications of the "noise" model. The noise model is the
mathematical model of the dependent variable (the index of war) that statistically
removes all cycles, trends, and drifts from the data (hence reducing it
to "noise" with respect to any time-dependent structure that it may have
had; that is, removing these spurious effects so that the effect of the
independent variable can be accurately evaluated). Then the independent
variable (the coherence creating group) is entered into the equation to
see if it has an independent effect on the war. Because cycles in sociological
data are statistical (stochastic) rather than exact, there can usually
be alternative ways of modeling, i.e., there may be alternative specifications
of the noise model. One objective criteria of "best" model is minimization
of the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC, Akaike, 1973) which provides
the model with the optimal balance between the opposing goals of parsimony
and model fit when evaluating model order and model structure. The model
with the lowest AIC indicates is the model that gives the best prediction
with the least numbers of parameters (Larimore, 1983, 1986; Larimore &
Mehra, 1985).
By analyzing 14 alternative noise models of the war index, we found that
the better the noise model (i.e., the lower the AIC), the more highly
statistically significant was the effect of the coherence creating group
on reducing the war. This indicates that the effect was not spuriously
due to some particular noise model. Moreover, this analysis showed that
as more of the background variation in the index of war was accounted
for by better noise models, the more clearly the effect of the coherence
creating group emerged from the data (t=5.0, p. <.0001 for the best
model).
There were several interesting aspects about this data which support
a causal interpretation that increasing the size of the coherence creating
group caused a reduction in the war in Lebanon:
1). During the arbitrarily selected period when the group size was experimentally
increased by offering incentives to course participants, the war in Lebanon
subsided dramatically.
2) The results of time series analyses were robust with respect to different
specifications of the noise model and the best model yielded the most
significant effect, as noted above. This shows that the reduction in hostilities
during days when the coherence creating group was largest was not due
to a spurious correspondence of changes in the size of the coherence creating
group with already existent cycles or tend in the data, nor due to any
unknown variable(s) that might be causing these variations.
3) The 15 out of 61 total days when the group was largest were randomly
distributed over the experiment, yet there where were 76% fewer war deaths
during these days compared to the 15 days when the group was smallest.
4) The results could not be accounted for by holidays or temperature,
whose effects were accounted for by entering them as separate variables
in the time series analysis
5) None of the dependent variables systematically led in time the changes
in the size of the coherence creating group, whereas the group size did
lead changes in many of the dependent variables, suggesting causality,
because the cause must precede or be at the same time as the effect. In
the case of the index of war variables there was a same day (lag 0) effect,
indicating that the war decreased on the same day that the coherence creating
group increased. In this case, it is significant to note that the group
met in the morning and early afternoon, whereas if hostilities occurred,
they usually did so in the evening. Thus, even for lag 0, the meditator
variable preceded or took place at the same time as the change in hostilities.
These different results all support a causal interpretation (Orme-Johnson,
Alexander, et al., 1988, p. 804; Orme-Johnson, Alexander, & Davies,
1990).
Another very interesting finding in this study was that when the individual
variables were combined into a composite variable, the results were the
clearest, showing the clear covariance between the composite of all the
raw data and the coherence creating group. Adding the individual variables
together is a type of signal averaging that enhances the common variance.
As a result, the composite of all the variables most clearly shows their
common variance. The finding that changes in the composite variable correspond
most clearly to changes in the coherence creating group is strong empirical
evidence that the common variance underling these diverse social processes
was in fact generated by the coherence creating group functioning at a
fundamental level of natural law (Orme-Johnson, Alexander, 1988, p. 806).
Replication of Reduced War
in Lebanon
Experimental replication is the most powerful test of the reliability
of a new discovery. These dramatic results on the Lebanon war have now
been replicated seven times with a statistical probability of less
that 10-19, or one in ten million trillion that the results were due to
chance (Davies and Alexander, 1989; please refer to Davies article in
this issue). This study, which was presented at the annual conference
of the America Political Science Association in 1989, found that
during the seven coherence creating assemblies large enough to have a
predicted impact on the war in Lebanon that war fatalities decreased by
an average of 71%, war injuries decreased by 68%, and cooperation among
antagonists increased by 66%. The degree of statistical certitude of this
finding is unheard of in even the physical sciences, lending strong support
to the reliability and legitimacy of the theory and empirical evidence
of the Maharishi Effect.
The Global Maharishi Effect
This research showing that coherence creating groups can reliably quell
regional conflict makes it imperative to establish groups large enough
to create coherence for the whole world . After seeing the results of
the first study in the Middle East, even before the evidence of extensive
replication was amassed, Maharishi in late 1983 set out to create an assembly
of 7000 practitioners of the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program,
the square root of 1% of the world's population, in order to give the
world a "Taste of Utopia". In addition, he created a tradition of holding
large assemblies every quarter in the hopes of raising world consciousness
and demonstrating effects that would inspire the world leadership to establish
permanent coherence creating groups as a sustained peace keeping forces
in every country.
A study of the effects of these assemblies on worldwide international
conflicts, terrorism, and economic confidence was presented at the American
Political Science Association and American Psychological Association in
1989 and 1990, respectively (Orme-Johnson., Dillbeck, Alexander, Chandler,
& Cranson, 1989; Orme-Johnson, et al. 1990). This study found that
on the three occasions when the world assemblies approached the 7000 threshold
needed for global coherence, that international conflicts decreased by
more than 30%, according to a content analysis of the New York Times
and London Times, and that international terrorism decreased by
more than 70%, using data compiled by the Rand Corporation. In addition,
the World Index of international stock prices in the 19 major industrial
countries increased significantly, indicating increased economic confidence.
As in other studies, time series analysis ruled out the possibility that
the results were spuriously due to cycles, trends, or drifts in the measures
used. The study also showed that the results were not due to changes that
usually occur during the year-end holiday seasons when two the assemblies
were held.
Improved US/Soviet Relations
The most dramatic political change of the twentieth century is the warming
of relations between the superpowers with its enormous worldwide implications.
In some of the studies reviewed above, the Maharishi Effect had a calming
effect in trouble-spot areas in which the Americans and Soviets were involved
on opposite sides, indicating indirectly and sometimes directly that the
coherence creating groups soothed the relations between the superpowers.
This evidence is further strengthened by studies of the statements of
heads of state. According to Maharishi's principles of collective consciousness,
the statements of the head of state reflect the quality of national collective
consciousness because the head of the state is the innocent mirror of
national consciousness (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, 1976). For example, one
study analyzed statements by the President of the United States (President
Reagan) published by the US government's Office of the Federal Register
of National Archives and Records Administration in the Weekly Compilation
of Presidential Documents from April 1985 to September 1987. Box-Tiao
impact assessment analysis revealed a highly significant effect of the
collective practice of the TM and TM-Sidhi program at MIU on improving
US/ Soviet relations (Gelderloos, Frid, & Xue,1989). These findings
indicate that increased coherence in US national consciousness through
the Maharishi Effect was reflected in the increased positivity of the
President's statements about the USSR.
Another study on the effects of the MIU Super-Radiance group on US-Soviet
relations used the data base from the Zurich Project on East-West Relations,
which has tracked US-Soviet relations by content analysis of news events
from 1979 to 1986. The study divided the size of the MIU group into quartiles;
less than 1100, 1100-1500, 1500-1700, above 1700. When the group reached
the Super-Radiance threshold of the square root of 1% of the US population
(1500-1700), the US actions towards the Soviets began to become significantly
more positive. US behavior towards the Soviets became even more positive
when the MIU group was over 1700, and moreover, Soviet behavior towards
the US also became significantly more positive when the group was largest
(Gelderloos, Cavanaugh, and Davies, 1990). This data is the first empirical
demonstration of why East-West relations have suddenly improved. The Maharishi
Effect, by creating coherence in national and world consciousness, has
dramatically changed the historical destiny of our time.
Conclusion
Only a technology that operates from the unified field of nature's intelligence
could be powerful enough and unifying enough to bring harmony to all the
diversity of cultures and political systems in the world. Just as quantum
field theory has provided a deeper level of analysis of physical phenomena
which complements the value of the classical level of analysis, so too
a deeper level of analysis of social phenomena is possible which complements
the behavioral levels of analysis of contemporary social science theory.
Studies of the Maharishi Effect provide empirical demonstration of the
efficacy of such an approach. Methodologically, the studies on the Maharishi
Effect are the first experimental research in history to actually attempted
to resolve real conflicts on national and international scales, and they
have used state-of-the-art statistical methodologies. There is no other
research program in the conflict resolution literature that is more directly
relevant and more rigorously validated for creating world peace than Maharishi's.
The studies have been replicated on many different populations across
a variety of measures in virtually all of the world's major conflicts.
The studies have included all instances of the phenomenon, such as all
1% cities (Borland & Landrith, 1977; Dillbeck et al., 1981), the entire
period of the MIU Super-Radiance group since its inception in 1979 in
studies of violent death and inflation/unemployment (e.g., Dillbeck, 1990;
Cavanaugh, 1987), and all cases in which the size of a Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi group was large enough to have a predicted impact,
as in the study of the Lebanon war (e.g., Davies & Alexander, 1989)
or on the world (Orme-Johnson et al., 1989). With all of this evidence
and profound theory, if this technology of peace is not being implemented
it can only be for the political reasons of special interest groups, and
does not serve the purpose of the people of the world who deeply desire
peace and prosperity for themselves and for the generations to come.
Maharishi (1986, pp. 21-24) outlines three simple steps to permanent
world peace. First step: Create coherence in world consciousness through
establishing a permanent group of 10,000 experts in Maharishi's Vedic
Science and Technology. Second step: Create coherence in national consciousness
in every country by establishing a coherence creating group numbering
the square root of one percent of that nation's population. Third step:
Create coherence in city consciousness by establishing a coherence creating
group numbering the square root of one percent of the citizens of the
cities of every country. As Maharishi has commented:
"Whether it's done by individuals in the continent or by governments,
whoever creates the groups of 7000 will have the flag of eureka! for world
peace. I don't see any other effective program for world peace." (Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi, 1986b, p. 163)
References
Akaike, H. (1973). Information theory and an extension
of the maximum likelihood principle. In Second international symposium
on information theory, edited by B. N.. Petrov and F. Csake, 267-281.
Budapest: Akademiai Kiada.
Alexander, C. N. (1992). Peaceful mind, peaceful body,
peaceful world. Modern Science and Vedic Science, 5, xxx-xxx, in
this issue.
Alexander, C. N. and Boyer, R. W. (1989). Seven states
of consciousness: unfolding the full potential of the cosmic psyche in
individual life through Maharishi's Vedic Psychology. Modern Science
and Vedic Science 2(4): 325-371.
Alexander, C. N.; Davies, J. L.; Dixon, C. A.; Dillbeck,
M. C.; Oetzel, R. M.; Drucker, S. M.; Muehlman, J. M.; and Orme-Johnson,
D. W. (1990). Growth of higher stages of consciousness: Maharishi's Vedic
psychology of human development. in Charles N. Alexander and Ellen J.
Langer (eds.), Higher Stages of Human Development: Perspectives on
Adult Growth. New York: Oxford University Press.
Assimakis, P. D. (1989). Change in the quality of life
in Canada: Intervention studies of the effect of the Transcendental Meditation
and TM-Sidhi program. Abstract published in Dissertation Abstracts
International 50(5).
Azar, E. E. (1982). Conflict and peace data bank (COPDAB):
A computer-assisted approach to monitoring and analyzing international
and domestic events. College Park, MD: Center for International Development
and Conflict Management, University of Maryland.
Borland, C. and Landrith III, G. S. (1976). Improved
quality of life through the Transcendental Meditation program: Decreased
crime rate. In Scientific research on the Transcendental Meditation
program: Collected papers, Vol. 1. Rheinweiler, Germany: Maharishi
European Research University Press.
Box, G. E. P. and Jenkins, G. M. (1976). Time series
analysis: Forecasting and control. San Francisco: Holden-Day.
Cavanaugh, K. L. (1987). Time series analysis of US and
Canadian inflation and unemployment: a test of a field-theoretic hypothesis.
Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Statistical Association,
San Francisco, California, August 17-20, 1987, and published in Proceedings
of the American Statistical Association, Business and Economics Statistics
Section . Alexandria, Virginia: American Statistical Association,
799-804.
Cavanaugh, K. L. (1992). Maharishi's Vedic Science and
Technology--The basis for economic development and world peace. Modern
Science and Vedic Science, 5, xxx-xxx, in this issue.
Cavanaugh, K. L, and King, K. D.(1988). Simultaneous
transfer function analysis of Okun's misery index: improvements in the
economic quality of life through Maharishi's Vedic Science and technology
of consciousness. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American
Statistical Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, August 22-25, 1988. An
abridged version of this paper appeared in Proceedings of the American
Statistical Association, Business and Economics Statistics Section
: 491-496.
Cavanaugh, K. L.; King, K. D.; and Ertuna, C. (1989).
A multiple-input transfer function model of Okun's misery index: an empirical
test of the Maharishi Effect. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of
the American Statistical Association, Washington, D. C., August 6-10,
1989. An abridged version of this paper appears in Proceedings of the
American Statistical Association, Business and Economics Statistics Section
(Alexandria, Virginia: American Statistical Association): 565-570.
Davies, J. L. and Alexander, C. N. (1989). Alleviating
political violence through enhancing coherence in collective consciousness:
Impact assessment analyses of the Lebanon war. Presented at the 85th Annual
Meeting of the American Political Science Association. (Refer also to
Dissertation Abstracts International 49(8): 2381A, 1988.)
D'Espagnat, B. (1979). The quantum theory and reality.
Scientific American, 24, 158-181.
Dillbeck, M. C. (1988). The self-interacting dynamics
of consciousness as the source of the creative process in nature and human
life: The mechanics of individual intelligence arising from the field
of cosmic intelligence--the Cosmic Psyche. Modern Science and Vedic
Science 2(3): 244-278.
Dillbeck, M. C. (1990). Test of a field theory of consciousness
and social change: Time series analysis of participation in the TM-Sidhi
program and reduction of violent death in the US Social Indicators
Research 22: 399-418.
Dillbeck, M. C., Banus, C. B., Polanzi, C., and Landrith
III, G. S. (1988). Test of a field model of consciousness and social change:
The Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program and decreased urban
crime. The Journal of Mind and Behavior 9, 457-486.
Dillbeck, M. C., Cavanaugh, K. L., Glenn, T., Orme-Johnson,
D. W., and Mittlefehldt, V. (1987). Consciousness as a field: The Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi program and changes in social indicators. The
Journal of Mind and Behavior 8(1): 67-104.
Dillbeck, M. C., Landrith III, G. S., and Orme-Johnson,
D. W. (1981). The Transcendental Meditation program and crime rate change
in a sample of forty-eight cities. Journal of Crime and Justice 4:
25-45.
Dossey, L., (1989). Recovering the soul. New York:
Bantam Books.
Durkheim, E. (1951). Suicide. Glencoe, IL: The
Free Press.
Eddington, A. (1984). "Defense of mysticism" in
Quantum questions: Mystical writings of the world's great physicists,
Ken Wilbur, Ed. Boston, New Science Library.
Gelderloos, P., Cavanaugh, K. L., & Davies, J. L.
(1990). The dynamics of US-Soviet relations, 1979-1986: Effects of reducing
social stress through the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program.
In Proceedings of the American Statistical Association, Alexandria,
VA: American Statistical Association.
Gelderloos, P., Frid, M. J., & Xue, X. (1989). Improved
US-Soviet relations as a function of the number of participants in the
collective practice of the TM-Sidhi program. Abstract insert in Journal
of the Iowa Academy of Science, 96(1), A33.
Hagelin, J. S. (1987). Is consciousness the unified field?
A field theorist's perspective. Modern Science and Vedic Science
1(1): 29-87.
Hagelin, J. S. (1989). Restructuring physics from its
foundation in light of Maharishi's Vedic Science. Modern Science and
Vedic Science 3(1): 3-72.
Hagelin, J. S. (1992). Achieving world peace through
a new science and technology. Modern Science and Vedic Science,
5, xxx-xxx, in this issue.
James, W. (1898/1977). Human immortality: Two supposed
objections to the doctrine. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Jöreskog, K. G., & Sörbom, D. (1979). Advances
in factor analysis and structural equation models. Cambridge, MA:
Abt Books.
Jöreskog, K. G., & Sörbom, D. (1986). LISREL
user's guide, version VI. Mooresville, IN: Scientific Software.
Jeans, J. (1981). Physics and philosophy. New
York: Dover.
Klein, D. B. (1984). The concept of consciousness:
A survey. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. (Reference cited
is facing the book title page.)
Larimore, W. E. (1983). Predictive influence, sufficiency,
entropy, and an asymptotic likelihood principle. Biometrika, 70,
175-181.
Larimore, W. E. (1986). Development of statistical methods
using predictive inference and entropy. Technical Report SSI-112.
Cambridge: Scientific Systems Inc.
Larimore, W. E. and Mehra, R. K. (1985). The problem
of overfitting data. Byte, 10, 167-180.
Long, J. S. (1983). Covariance structure models.
Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1966). Science of Being and
the Art of Living. New York, NY: Signet.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1975). Inauguration of the
Dawn of the Age of Enlightenment. Rheinweiler, Germany, MIU Press.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1976). Creating an ideal society.
Rheinweiler, Germany: Maharishi European Research University Press.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1979). World government news #
11. Rheinweiler, Germany: Maharishi European Research University Press.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1986a). Maharishi's program
to create world peace: Removing the basis of terrorism and war. Washington,
D. C.: Age of Enlightenment Press.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1986b). Life supported by natural
law. Washington, DC: Age of Enlightenment Press.
Orme-Johnson, D. W., Alexander, C. N., and Davies, J.
L. (1990). The effects of the Maharishi Technology of the Unified Field:
Reply to a methodological critique. Journal of Conflict Resolution
34(4): 756-768.
Orme-Johnson, D. W., Alexander, C. N., Davies, J. L.,
Chandler, H. M., and Larimore, W. E. (1988). International peace project
in the Middle East: The effect of the Maharishi Technology of the Unified
Field. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 32(4): 776-812.
Orme-Johnson, D. W., Cavanaugh, K. L., Alexander, C.
N., Gelderloos, P., Dillbeck, M. C., Lanford, A. G., & Abou Nader,
T. M. (1990). The influence of the Maharishi Technology of the Unified
Field on world events and global social indicators: The effects of the
Taste of Utopia Assembly.. in Scientific Research on Maharishi's Transcendental
Meditation and TM-Sidhi Program: Collected Papers, Vol. 4. Vlodrop,
Holland: Maharishi Vedic University Press.
Orme-Johnson, D. W.; and Dillbeck, M. C. (in press).
Higher states of collective consciousness: Theory and research . In J.
Gackenbach, C. N. Alexander, and H. T. Hunt (Eds.). Higher states of
consciousness: Theoretical and experimental perspectives. New York:
Plenum Press.
Orme-Johnson, D. W., Dillbeck, M. C., Alexander, C. N.,
Chandler, H. M., and Cranson, R. W. (1989). Time series impact assessment
analysis of reduced international conflict and terrorism: Effects of large
assemblies of participants in the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi
program. Presented at the 85th Annual Meeting of the American Political
Science Association, Atlanta, Georgia,. Also presented at the Annual Conference
of the American Psychological Association, Boston, Massachusetts, 1990.
Orme-Johnson, D. W., Dillbeck, M. C., Bousquet, J. G,
and Alexander, C. N. (1990). The World Peace Project of 1978: An experimental
analysis of the application of the Maharishi Technology of the Unified
Field in major world trouble spots: in Scientific Research on Maharishi's
Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi Program: Collected Papers,
Vol. 4. Vlodrop, Holland: Maharishi Vedic University Press.
Orme-Johnson, D. W. & Gelderloos P. (1988). Topographic
EEG brain mapping during "Yogic Flying." International Journal of Neuroscience
, 38, 427-434.
Orme-Johnson, D. W., Gelderloos, P., and Dillbeck, M.
C. (1988). The long-term effects of the Maharishi Technology of the Unified
Field on the quality of life in the United States (1960 to 1984). Social
Science Perspectives Journal 2(4): 127-146.
Prasada, R. (Trans).(1912/1978). Yoga sutras [of
Patanjali] New Delhi: Oriental Books Reprint Corporation.
Travis, F., and Orme-Johnson, D. W. EEG coherence and
power during yogic flying. International Journal of Neuroscience,
54: 1-12, 1990.