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Terence McKenna

Timewave Zero Theory

Can mankind have such a jump in consciousness over the next four years that the planet can be literally transformed. If there was a Planet X headed our way, could we get prepared for whatever that might mean? I’ll not list another half dozen possible scenarios predicted for 2012. Has there been a time in history when there was a massive, exponential jump in consciousness? The answer is yes and it’s called the Axial Age.

Terrence McKenna called such a concept as Timewave Zero.

Another name is “novelty theory”. It is an idea conceived by Terence McKenna from the early 1970s until his death in the year 2000. Novelty theory involves ontology, morphogenesis, and eschatology. Novelty, in this context, can be thought of as newness, density of complexity, and dynamic change as opposed to static habituation. According to McKenna, when “novelty” is graphed over time, a fractal waveform known as timewave zero or simply the timewave results.

Ray Kurzweil speaks of a similar concept but calls it singularity. Singularity is a mathematical formula that breaks down and becomes meaningless after a certain point- as in dividing something by a zero!

What is so interesting is how Terrence McKenna’s theory began in 1960 with a novelty increase factor of 64 and continuing until with such exponential novelty and changes until- December 22, 2012. Mind you, this was long before Terrence McKenna had ever heard of the Mayan long count calendar ending December 21, 2012.

And the point is?

There are many but let’s limit them to two. First, we are definitely moving into an era (are actually way into it) wherein productivity, knowledge, computational abilities, and overall speed of expansion in all things will blow us away. Secondly, the year 2012, and the month December, keeps coming back to haunt us as something special ancient cultures (many) and modern prophets keep pointing us to December, 2012.

Maybe we should spend some serious time trying to figure out what it means!

Maybe?

Picture of Terence McKenna in 1998



Image taken on 2009-09-27 07:31:49 by Giorgio Samorini.

Terence Mckenna Discussing the Schizophrenic or the Shamanic?

Terence Mckenna giving his view on how we define the mentally ill because we haven’t got any place in our society to put these strange perceptions of reality that some people experience and how we should not fear these states but be confident and turn them into some sort of planetary worldview.

Terence McKenna Lectures on a Psychedelic Society

Terence Mckenna – the AlienT

How to contact extraterrestial species in hyperspace.

Link: Terence Mckenna – The Alien.

Terence McKenna – Culture Is Your Operating System

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The late, great Terence McKenna explains how the psychedelic experience clears all preconceived notions and prejudices and leaves the psyche with a clean, pure view of the self and the universe

Link: Terence McKenna – Culture is your operating system

Terence McKenna on the Purpose of Psychedelics

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Link: Terence McKenna on the purpose of psychedelics

Terence McKenna – Meditation vs Hallucinogens

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Link: Terence McKenna – Meditation vs Hallucinogens

Terence McKenna and Rupert Sheldrake Speak on Morphogenetic Field Theory.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8346001127958763110

A morphogenetic field (a subset of morphic field) is a hypothetical biological (and potentially social) field that contains the information … all » necessary to shape the exact form of a living thing, as part of its epigenetics, and may also shape its behaviour and coordination with other beings (see also morphogenesis). This hypothesis is not accepted by the scientific community, who consider it pseudoscientific

Link: Terence McKenna and Rupert Sheldrake speak on Morphogenetic Field Theory.

The Machine Elves of Hyperspace

Is it still possible to freak people out? These are conservative times, but after you’ve first heard the Residents or seen rednecks battle to be the ‘filthiest people alive’ in a John Waters film, can music on its own repeat the experience?

The Machine Elves of Hyperspace hope so. Peter Hajje, the dreadlocked and bearded multi-instrumentalist behind the outfit named after alien clowns, imps and jesters Terence McKenna saw on DMT benders, name-checks Timothy Leary, McKenna and psilocybin, DMT, LSD, Hawkwind, Yes and Jethro Tull; could this be the Floyd/Jarre revival pundits are touting?

Link: The Machine Elves of Hyperspace