WHY DO ASTRONAUTS EXPERIENCE GOD?
In February, 1971, Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell experienced the little understood phenomenon sometimes called the “Overview Effect”.
DAILY GALAXY
By, Rebecca Sato
Apollo 14 astronaut Edgar Mitchell describes being completely engulfed by a profound sense of universal connectedness. Without warning, he says, a feeing of bliss, timelessness, and connectedness began to
overwhelm him.

Ed Mitchell
He describes becoming instantly and profoundly aware that each of his constituent atoms were connected to the fragile planet he saw in the window and to every other atom in the Universe. He described experiencing an intense awareness that Earth, with its humans, other animal species, and systems were all one synergistic whole.
He says the feeling that rushed over him was a sense of interconnected euphoria. He was not the first—nor the last—to experience this strange “cosmic connection”.

Rusty Schweikart
Rusty Schweikart experienced it on March 6th 1969
during a spacewalk outside his Apollo 9 vehicle: “When you go around the Earth
in an hour and a half, you begin to recognize that your identity is with that
whole thing. That makes a change…it comes through to you so powerfully that
you’re the sensing element for
Their experiences, along with dozens of other
similar experiences described by other astronauts, intrigue scientists who
study the brain. This “Overview Effect”, or acute awareness of all matter as
synergistically connected, sounds somewhat similar to certain religious
experiences described by Buddhist monks, for example.
Where does it come from and why?
Andy Newberg
Andy Newberg, a neuroscientist/physician with a
background in space medicine, is learning how to identify the markers of
someone who has had the experience. “You can often tell when you’re with
someone who has flown in space,” he says, “It’s palpable.” Andy scans brains
for a living: praying nuns, transcendental mediators, and others in the act of
focused states.
Newberg can pinpoint regions in subjects’ gray
matter that correlate to these circumstances. Newberg is seriously looking at
how to fly equipment that could study—in action—the brain functions of space
travelers. If this Overview Effect is a real, physiological phenomenon—he wants
to watch it happen.
Newberg’s first test subject will not be a paid
astronaut, but rather a paying space tourist: Reda Andersen slated to fly with
Rocketplane Kistler says, “It would be criminal NOT to study the first of us
(space adventure travelers).”
After decades of study and contemplation about his
experience, Ed Mitchell believes that the feeling of “oneness” with the
Universe that he and others have experienced is a consequence of little
understood quantum physics.
In a recent interview with writer Diana deRegnier of American Chronicle, Mitchell explains how the event changed his life and his entire perspective on the world and how each of us fits into the grand scale of the cosmos.

Rene Descartes
“Four hundred years ago. the philosopher Rene
Descartes came to the conclusion that physicality, spirituality, mind and body
belonged to different realms of reality that didn’t interact. Now, that served
the purpose to get the Inquisition off the backs of the intellectuals so they
could disagree on material things with the church and without the fear of being
burned at the stake. So that ended that, but it did cause, for four hundred
years, science to consider consciousness and mind a subject for philosophy and
religion and not a subject for science.

Norbert Wiener, MIT
Now, one of the things that happened, in the 1940s,
was the mathematician, physicist, Norbert Wiener (MIT, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology) for the first time really defined information as the negative of
entropy, and entropy as the idea of the universe is running down and wastes
energy. But, Wiener defined information as the negative of entropy, and that’s
wonderful but it didn’t go far enough.”
Mitchell says that in an attempt to fill in some of
the missing gap, the 2008 revised edition of his book The Way of the Explorer explores
the largely ignored science of human consciousness. Using what he calls the
“dyadic model” he outlines the “two faces” of energy. “Instead of being two
separate things, it’s the energy as the basis of our existence in matter. And,
it’s the basis of our knowing and information,” Mitchell explains.
“We had not had, in science, a definition of consciousness. The only definition of consciousness from the dictionary is that at its basic level it is awareness. Consciousness means to be aware, and then we have different levels of consciousness depending upon how complex the substance is. It has been demonstrated many times over in laboratories that basic awareness is demonstrable at the level of plants, at simple bacteria, at simple life forms.

Faraday cage
This is done with Faraday cages. It’s shown that
this information at this deep level, at the quantum level, can transcend
electromagnetic theory. And, now we’re getting into quantum physics and we don’t
want to go there at this point. But it’s a very fundamental notion that
awareness is at the very basis of things.”
Mitchell believes that perhaps both the theologians
and scientists have missed the mark.
“All I can suggest to the mystic and the theologian
is that our gods have been too small; they fill the universe. And to the
scientist all I can say is that the gods do exist; they are the eternal,
connected, and aware Self experienced by all intelligent beings.’
In response to DeRegnier questioning whether or not
Mitchell believes in the idea of God, he responds that while he does not
believe in the traditional “grandfather figure” version of God, “we do have
great mystery about what is the origin of the universe, how it came to be.
There’s a great deal of question as to whether the big bang is the correct
answer to the way the universe arose, and under what auspices and conditions. I
don’t think we have the full answers to that yet. Hopefully in due course we’ll
be able to find a much better way to describe all this.”
But while Mitchell does not claim to know how to perfectly interpret his experience, he is certain that it was a glimpse into a largely ignored reality: People, places and things are all more closely connected than they sometimes appear. He also mentions the need for better stewardship of our precious planet.
“The great thinker Buckminster Fuller, philosopher,
now deceased but for a goodly portion of the twentieth century, pointed out at
the beginning of our space exploration that we are the crew of ‘space ship
earth’. But we ‘re a crew of mutiny and how can you run a space ship with a
mutinous crew?”
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