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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 137

evolve as a smooth progressive process, but rather as jumps and leaps, reminding one of a quantum jump.
After a long period of conscious effort, one suddenly feels that he has attained better organization of his mental and emotional planes.
During certain times and under certain circumstances, the organism reaches "maximum organizational coherence." This may involve a conscious or unconscious effort on the part of the individual. At this given moment we have a sudden transition from a state of lower consciousness to a higher one. This also includes a new, higher, more sensitive state of emotions. What this means is that the organism has gathered more energy, more wisdom, to enter a higher state of consciousness—a higher energy level. In order to do this the organism is like an electron which needs a certain amount of "quanta" to go to an orbit of higher energy. The transition therefore is not a progressive one but a sudden one, akin to the nature of a quantum jump.
This idea is exemplified in the movement for "spiritual awareness" prevailing in our times. According to popular thought, people, given proper and thorough preparation, can quite "suddenly" enter a "new state of consciousness."
The fact that a human being uses only a very small portion of his brain in everyday life shows the almost infinite possibilities that exist in quantum jumps in consciousness and informational coherence or Teleosis*. These jumps should not be viewed as physical achievements of the brain but rather as conscious and subconscious milestones of a self-directed evolutional process of the whole person.
38. There are inherent tendencies within every human being to either attain a state of "Teleosis" ("synthesis," "maturity") or succumb to the law of entropy and "aposynthesis."
Teleosis is not only a spiritual need but a universal urge that all human beings share and exhibit in whatever endeavor they attempt. Nobody who is healthy wants to be the worst in any particular activity he undertakes; on the contrary, he wants to be the best, the most perfect. This urge is very deeply entrenched in us. The area in which every individual wants to excel is not