Définition

Théorie selon laquelle il n’y a qu’une seule conscience qui est Absolue. Les apparentes séparations entre le Soi et les Autres serait dû au fait que ta Bulle de perception est filtrée en ce moment. Dans cette théorie, c’est toujours le même Soi qui expérimente chaque Moment présent.

Consciousness is never experienced in the plural, only in the singular.
The total number of minds in the Universe is one. In fact, consciousness is a singularity phasing within all beings.
Erwin Schrôdinger

Tu expérimentes ce Corps-Esprit actuellement, et comme tu es éternel, c’est toujours le même Soi qui expérimente le Corps-Esprit des Autres, mais à un autre Moment présent. Ça ne fonctionne que parceque le Soi est infini et éternel.

Because Open Individualism allows us to consider the lives of all the living beings as though they were different stages of our own life, ethical behavior ends up coinciding with rational behavior, as Kolak points out in I Am You

Open Individualism
(coined by Daniel Kolak; ref: 1, 2, 3, 4)
This is the personal identity view that we are all one single consciousness. The apparent partitions and separations between the universal consciousness, in this view, are the result of partial information access from one moment of experience to the next. Regardless, the subject who gets to experience every moment is the same. Each sentient being is fundamentally part of the same universal subject of experience.

Source : https://qri.org/ https://qualiacomputing.com/2015/12/17/ontological-qualia-the-future-of-personal-identity/ https://opentheory.net/2018/09/a-new-theory-of-open-individualism/

Pourquoi tu ne te souviens pas des autres vies ?

 our ability to recall is entirely a matter of context. When a context changes we recall different things, the more drastic the shift in context the more drastically different the things we can recall. Put another way, recall is a function of what is happening right now. Therefore since the context of this life is so vastly different to the last, we cannot recall any of it. — Source

Comment comprendre cela ?

Il y a un seul Moment présent, mais de nombreuses théories existent (voir cela)

Liens : Philosophie Ta conscience Interdépendance des choses