Stanislav Grof Alternative Cosmologies and Altered States
Stanislav Grof Alternative Cosmologies and Altered States
Stanislav Grof Alternative Cosmologies and Altered States
Cosmologies and
Altered States
Stanislav Grof
From a talk given at the Institute of Noetic Sciences
conference "The Sacred Source: Life, Death, and the
Survival of Consciousness", Chicago, Illinois, July 15-17,
1994.
1
Editor’s Note:
In Western societies, the dominant paradigm presents a
cosmology in which humans, as biological matter, live and
die in a universe governed by the laws of physics. In this
worldview, there is no room for the possibility of life after
death, and different states of consciousness have
significance only as pathological deviations from that
worldview.
In sharp contrast, the cosmologies of other cultures—
ancient and contemporary pre-industrial—have taken for
granted the existence of an afterlife. For them, dying is a
meaningful part of life, and death is a journey for which the
individual can and should prepare. To aid in this, many
cultures throughout history have developed experiential
"technologies"—techniques and practices intended to train
initiates in the art and science of dying and postmortem
survival. These experiential "technologies" invariably
involve training in altered or non-ordinary states of
consciousness throughout the individual’s lifetime.
This fundamental difference between Western and
pre-industrial cosmologies and their respective end-of-
life technologies has profound consequences for how
societies view living, dying, death, and non-ordinary states
of consciousness. In this article, psychiatrist Stanislav Grof
explores some of the key elements in pre-industrial
cosmologies and their emphasis on transformative
"technologies" for training in altered states throughout the
individual’s lifetime.
In general, the conditions of life existing in modern
technologized countries do not offer much ideological or
psychological support for people who are facing death.
This contrasts very sharply with the situation encountered
by those dying in one of the ancient and pre-industrial
societies. Their cosmologies, philosophies, mythologies,
as well as spiritual and ritual life, contain a clear message
that death is not the absolute and irrevocable end of
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everything, that life or existence continues in some form
after biological demise.
Reincarnation.
Many cultures have independently developed a belief
system in reincarnation that includes return of the unit of
consciousness to another physical lifetime on Earth. The
concept of karma and reincarnation represents a
cornerstone of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism,
Zoroastrianism, the Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, and
Taoism. Similar ideas can be found in such
geographically, historically, and culturally diverse groups
as various African tribes, American Indians, pre-
Columbian cultures, the Polynesian kahunas, practitioners
of the Brazilian Umbanda, the Gauls, and the Druids. In
ancient Greece, several important schools of thought
subscribed to it; among these were the Pythagoreans, the
Orphics, and the Platonists. This doctrine was also
adopted by the Essenes, the Pharisees, the Karaites, and
other Jewish and semi-Jewish groups, and it formed an
important part of the kabbalistic theology of medieval
Jewry. It was also held by the Neoplatonists and
Gnostics.
3
Maps for the soul’s journey.
Pre-industrial societies thus seemed to agree that death
was not the ultimate defeat and end of everything, but
an important transition. The experiences associated with
death were seen as visits to important dimensions of
reality that deserved to be experienced, studied, and
carefully mapped. The dying were familiar with the
eschatological cartographies of their cultures, whether
these were shamanic maps of the funeral landscapes or
sophisticated descriptions of the Eastern spiritual systems,
such as those found in the Tibetan Bardo Thödol. This
important text of Tibetan Buddhism represents an
interesting counterpoint to the exclusive pragmatic
emphasis on productive life and denial of death
characterizing the Western civilization. It describes the
time of death as a unique opportunity for spiritual
liberation from the cycles of death and rebirth and a period
that determines our next incarnation, if we do not achieve
liberation. In this context, it is possible to see the
intermediate state between lives (bardo) as being in a way
more important than incarnate existence. It would be
prudent, then, to prepare for this time by systematic
practice during our lifetime.
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rituals conducted at the time of death designed to assist
individuals facing the ultimate transition, or even specific
guidance of the dying, such as the approach described in
the Bardo Thödol.
Experiential Training
An extremely important factor influencing the attitude
toward death and the experience of dying has been the
existence of various forms of experiential training for dying
involving NOSC.
Shamanism.
The oldest among them is the practice of shamanism, the
most ancient religion and healing art of humanity, the
roots of which reach far back into the Paleolithic era.
Shamanism is not only ancient, but also universal; it can
be found in North and South America, in Europe, Africa,
Asia, Australia, and Polynesia. Shamanism is intimately
connected with NOSC, as well as with death and dying.
The career of many shamans begins with the "shamanic
illness", a spontaneous initiatory crisis conducive to
profound healing and psychospiritual transformation. It is a
visionary journey involving a visit to the underworld,
painful and frightening ordeals, and an experience of
psychological death and rebirth followed by ascent into
supernal realms. In this experience, the novice shaman
connects to the forces of nature and to the animal realm
and learns how to diagnose and heal diseases. The
knowledge of the realm of death acquired during this
transformation makes it possible for the shaman to move
freely back and forth and mediate these journeys for other
people.
Rites of passage.
Anthropologists have also described rites of passage,
elaborate rituals conducted by various aboriginal cultures
at the time of important biological and social transitions,
such as birth, circumcision, puberty, marriage, and dying.
5
They employ powerful mind-altering technologies and the
experiences induced by them revolve around the triad
birth-sex-death. Their symbolism involves different
combinations of perinatal and transpersonal elements.
Clinical work with psychedelics and various non-drug
experiential approaches (such as the Holotropic
Breathwork)1 has helped us to understand these events
and appreciate their importance for individuals and human
groups.
Ancient mysteries.
Closely related to the rites of passage were the ancient
mysteries of death and rebirth, complex sacred and secret
procedures that were also using powerful mind-altering
techniques. They were particularly prevalent in the
Mediterranean area, as exemplified by the Babylonian
ceremonies of Inanna and Tammuz, the Egyptian
mysteries of Isis and Osiris, the Orphic Cult, the
Bacchanalia, the Eleusinian mysteries, the Corybantic
rites, and the mysteries of Attis and Adonis. The mysteries
were based on mythological stories of deities that
symbolize death and rebirth. The most famous of them
were the Eleusinian mysteries conducted near Athens
every five years without interruption for a period of almost
2,000 years. According to a modern study by Wasson,
Hofmann, and Ruck, the ritual potion ("kykeon") used in
these mysteries contained ergot preparations related
closely to LSD.2
Sacred technologies.
Of particular interest for transpersonally oriented
researchers is the sacred literature of the various mystical
traditions and the great spiritual philosophies of the East.
Here belong the various systems of yoga, the theory and
practice of Buddhism, Taoism, the Tibetan Vajrayana,
Sufism, Christian mysticism, the Kabbalah, and many
others. These systems developed effective forms of
prayer, meditation, movement meditation, breathing
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exercise, and other powerful techniques for inducing
NOSC with profound spiritual components. Like the
experiences of the shamans, initiates in the rites of
passage, and neophytes in ancient mysteries, these
procedures offered the possibility of confronting one’s
impermanence and mortality, transcending the fear of
death, and radically transforming one’s being in the world.
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occurring psychospiritual crises showed that in all these
situations, people can encounter an entire spectrum of
unusual experiences, including sequences of agony and
dying, passing through hell, facing divine judgment, being
reborn, reaching the celestial realms, and confronting
memories from previous incarnations. These states were
strikingly similar to those described in the eschatological
texts of ancient and pre-industrial cultures.
Another missing piece of the puzzle was provided by
thanatology, the new scientific discipline specifically
studying death and dying. Thanatological studies of near-
death states by people such as Raymond Moody,3
Kenneth Ring,4 Michael Sabom,5 Bruce Greyson and
Charles Flynn 6showed that the experiences associated
with life-threatening situations bear a deep resemblance to
the descriptions from the ancient books of the dead, as
well as those reported by subjects in psychedelic sessions
and modern experiential psychotherapy.
It has thus become clear that the ancient eschatological
texts are actually maps of the inner territories of the
psyche encountered in profound NOSC, including those
associated with biological dying.7The experiences
involved seem to transcend race and culture and
originate in the collective unconscious as described by
C. G. Jung. It is possible to spend one’s entire lifetime
without ever experiencing these realms or even without
being aware of their existence, until one is catapulted into
them at the time of biological death. However, for some
people this experiential area becomes available during
their lifetime in a variety of situations including
psychedelic sessions or some other powerful forms of
self-exploration, serious spiritual practice,
participation in shamanic rituals, or during
spontaneous psycho-spiritual crises. This opens up
for them the possibility of experiential exploration of
these territories of the psyche on their own terms so
that the encounter with death does not come as a
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complete surprise when it is imposed on them at the time
of biological demise.
The Austrian Augustinian monk Abraham a Sancta Clara,
who lived in the seventeenth century, expressed in a
succinct way the importance of the experiential practice of
dying: "The man who dies before he dies does not die
when he dies." This "dying before dying" has two
important consequences: It liberates the individual from
the fear of death and changes his or her attitude toward it,
as well as influences the actual experience of dying at the
time of the biological demise. However, this elimination of
the fear of death also transforms the individual’s way of
being in the world. For this reason, there is no
fundamental difference between the preparation for death
and the practice of dying, on the one hand, and spiritual
practice leading to enlightenment, on the other. This is the
reason why the ancient books of the dead could be used
in both situations.
Let us now briefly review the observations from various
fields of research that challenge the materialistic
understanding, according to which biological death
represents the final end of existence and of all conscious
activity. In any exploration of this kind, it is important to
keep an open mind and focus as much as possible only
on the facts of observation. An unshakeable commitment
to the existing paradigm (held by many mainstream
scientists) is an attitude well known from fundamentalist
religions. Unlike scientism, science in the true sense of the
word is open to unbiased investigation of any existing
phenomena. With this in mind, we can divide the
evidence into two categories:
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Challenging Conventional Concepts
The work with NOSC has generated a vast body of
evidence that forms a serious challenge for the Cartesian-
Newtonian paradigm of materialistic science. Most of the
challenging data are related to transpersonal phenomena
that represent an important part of the spectrum of
experiences observed in NOSC. They suggest an urgent
need for a radical revision of our current concepts of the
nature of consciousness and its relationship to matter
and the brain. Since the materialistic paradigm of
Western science has been a major obstacle for any
objective evaluation of the data describing the events
occurring at the time of death, the study of transpersonal
experiences has an indirect relevance for thanatology.
Archetypal domains.
In addition, transpersonal experiences can take us into the
archetypal domains of the collective unconscious and
mediate encounters with blissful and wrathful deities of
various cultures and visits to mythological realms. In all
these types of experiences, it is possible to access entirely
new information that by far surpasses anything that we
obtained earlier through the conventional channels.
Theta consciousness.
The study of consciousness that can extend beyond the
body—William Roll’s "theta consciousness" or the "long
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body" of the Iroquois—is extremely important for the issue
of survival, since it is this part of human personality that
would be likely to survive death.
Field of consciousness.
According to materialistic science, any memory requires a
material substrate, such as the neuronal network in the
brain or the DNA molecules of the genes. However, it is
impossible to imagine any material medium for the
information conveyed by various forms of
transpersonal experiences described above. This
information clearly has not been acquired during the
individual’s lifetime through the conventional means,
that is by sensory perception. It seems to exist
independently of matter and to be contained in the
field of consciousness itself, or in some other types of
fields that cannot be detected by our scientific
instruments. The observations from the study of
transpersonal experiences are supported by evidence that
comes from other avenues of research. Challenging the
basic metaphysical assumptions of Cartesian-Newtonian
thinking, scientists like Rupert Sheldrake 8seriously
explore such possibilities as "memory without a material
substrate" and "morphogenetic fields".
Traditional academic science describes human beings as
highly developed animals and biological thinking
machines. Experienced and studied in the everyday state
of consciousness, we appear to be Newtonian objects
made of atoms, molecules, cells, tissues, and organs.
However, transpersonal experiences clearly show that
each of us can also manifest the properties of a field of
consciousness that transcends space, time, and linear
causality.The complete new formula, remotely reminiscent
of the wave-particle paradox in modern physics, thus
describes humans as paradoxical beings who have two
complementary aspects: They can show properties of
Newtonian objects and also those of infinite fields of
consciousness. The appropriateness of each of these
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descriptions depends on the state of consciousness in
which these observations are made. Physical death then
seems to terminate one half of this definition, while the
other comes into full expression.
Apparitions.
Numerous visions of people who had just died have been
reported by their relatives, friends, and acquaintances. It
has been found that such visions show statistically
significant correlation with distantly occurring deaths of the
appearing people within a twelve-hour period.9
Unexplained events.
There also exist reports of unexplained physical events
occurring at the time of death, such as watches stopping
and starting, bells ringing, paintings or photographs falling
off the wall, that seem to announce a person’s death.10
Death-bed visions.
Individuals approaching death often experience
encounters with their dead relatives who seem to welcome
them to the next world. These deathbed visions are
authentic and convincing; they are often followed by a
state of euphoria and seem to ease the transition. A
number of cases have been reported in which a dying
individual has a vision of a person about whose death he
or she did not know.
Near-death experiences.
Of particular interest are near-death experiences (NDEs)
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that occur in about one-third of the people who encounter
various forms of life-threatening situations, such as car
accidents, near-drowning, heart attacks, or cardiac arrests
during operations. Raymond Moody,3 Kenneth Ring,4
Michael Sabom,5 Bruce Greyson,6 and others have done
extensive research of this phenomenon and have
described a characteristic experiential pattern that typically
includes a life-review, passage through a dark tunnel,
personal judgment with ethical evaluation of one’s life,
encounter with a radiant divine being, and visit to various
transcendental realms. Less frequent are painful, anxiety-
provoking, and infernal types of NDEs.
Psychedelic therapies.
In our program of psychedelic therapy with terminal
cancer patients, conducted at the Maryland Psychiatric
Research Center in Baltimore, we were able to obtain
some evidence about the similarity of NDEs with
experiences induced by psychedelic substances. We
observed several patients who had first psychedelic
experiences and later an actual NDE when their disease
progressed (for example, a cardiac arrest during an
operation). They reported that these situations were very
similar and described the psychedelic sessions as an
invaluable experiential training for dying.11
13
it seems reasonable to infer that if consciousness can
function independently of the body during one’s lifetime, it
could be able to do the same after death.
2. Past-Life Experiences
There exists a category of transpersonal experiences that
has very direct relevance for the problem of survival of
consciousness after death. It involves reliving or
remembering vivid episodes from other historical periods
and various parts of the world. The historical and
geographical universality of these experiences suggests
that they represent a very important cultural phenomenon.
They also have critical implications for understanding the
nature of consciousness, psyche, and human beings and
for the theory and practice of psychiatry, psychology, and
psychotherapy. For Hindus, Buddhists, and also for open-
minded and knowledgeable consciousness researchers,
reincarnation is not a matter of belief, but an empirical
issue, based on a variety of experiences and
observations. According to Christopher Bache, the
evidence in this area is extremely rich and
extraordinary.14Careful study of the amassed evidence is
absolutely necessary to make any valid conclusions in this
area. As we will discuss later, the beliefs concerning the
issue of reincarnation have great ethical impact on human
life and our relationship to the world.
14
disappears between the ages of five and eight.
Ian Stevenson, professor of psychology at the University
of Virginia in Charlottesville, has conducted meticulous
studies of more than three thousand such cases (see his
books Twenty Cases Suggestive of Reincarnation,
Unlearned Language, and Children Who Remember
Previous Lives 15), reporting only those that met his high
research standards.
Birthmarks.
Possibly the strongest evidence in support of the
reincarnation hypothesis is the incidence of striking
birthmarks that reflect injuries and other events from the
remembered life. Stevenson’s cases were not only from
"primitive", "exotic" cultures with a priori belief in
reincarnation, but also from Western countries, including
Great Britain and the USA. His research meets high
standards and received considerable esteem. In 1977, the
Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases devoted almost
an entire issue to this subject and the work was reviewed
in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
15
rebirthing, or Holotropic Breathwork). They often appear
unsolicited in sessions with therapists who do not aim for
them and do not even believe in them, catching them
completely off guard. Their emergence is also completely
independent of the subject’s previous philosophical and
religious belief system. In addition, past-life experiences
occur on the same continuum with accurate memories
from adolescence, childhood, infancy, birth, and prenatal
memories that can be regularly reliably verified;
sometimes they coexist or alternate with them.16
There are important reasons to assume that past-life
experiences are authentic phenomena sui generis that
have important implications for psychology and
psychotherapy because of their heuristic and therapeutic
potential:
1. They feel extremely real and authentic and often
mediate access to accurate information about historical
periods, cultures, and even historical events that the
individual could not have acquired through ordinary
channels.
2. In some instances, the accuracy of these memories can
be objectively verified, sometimes with remarkable detail.
3. They are often involved in pathodynamics of various
emotional, psychosomatic, and interpersonal problems. It
seems to matter little to the psyche whether the
pathogenic forces are related to events from ancient
Egypt, Nazi Germany, prenatal life, birth of the individual,
or from the infancy and childhood in the present lifetime.
4. They have a great therapeutic potential, more powerful
than memories from the present lifetime.
5. They are often associated with inexplicable meaningful
synchronicities.
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published several remarkable cases, where most unusual
aspects of such experiences could be verified by
independent historical research.17
17
vast amount of data from various disciplines, a basic
strategy that is characteristic for fundamentalist religions,
but one that should not exist in science.
18
for our behavior. The idea that belief in immortality has
profound moral implications can be found already in Plato,
who in Laws has Socrates say that disconcern for the
postmortem consequences of one’s deeds would be "a
boon to the wicked". Modern authors such as Alan
Harrington 18 and Ernest Becker 19 have emphasized
that massive denial of death leads to social pathologies
that have dangerous consequences for humanity. Modern
consciousness research certainly supports this point of
view.17
At a time when a combination of unbridled greed,
malignant aggression, and existence of weapons of mass
destruction threatens the survival of humanity and
possibly life on this planet, we should seriously consider
any avenue that offers some hope. While this is not a
sufficient reason for embracing uncritically the material
suggesting survival of consciousness after death, it should
be an additional incentive for reviewing the existing data
with an open mind and in the spirit of true science. The
same applies to the powerful experiential technologies
involving NOSC that make it possible to confront the fear
of death and can facilitate deep positive personality
changes and spiritual opening. A radical inner
transformation and rise to a new level of
consciousness might be the only real hope we have in
the current global crisis brought on by the dominance of
the Western mechanistic paradigm.
—S. G.
19
Reunions(Villard Books, 1993).
4. K. Ring, Life at Death: A Scientific Investigation of the
Near-Death Experience (Quill, 1982); and Heading
Toward Omega: In Search of the Meaning of the Near-
Death Experience (Quill, 1985).
5. M. Sabom, Recollections of Death: A Medical
Investigation (Harper & Row, 1982).
6. B. Greyson and C. P. Flynn (Eds.), The Near-Death
Experience: Problems, Prospects, Perspectives (Charles
C. Thomas, 1984).
7. S. Grof, Books of the Dead (Thames and Hudson,
1994).
8. R. Sheldrake, A New Science of Life (J. P. Tarcher,
1981).
9. H. Sidgwick et al., "Report on the Census of
Hallucinations", Proceedings of the Society for Psychical
Research, Vol. 10, 245-51, 1894.
10. E. Bozzano, Dei Fenomeni di Telekinesia in Rapporto
con Eventi di Morti (Casa Editrice Europa, 1948).
11. S. Grof and J. Halifax, The Human Encounter with
Death (E. P. Dutton, 1977).
12. C. Tart, "A Psychophysiological Study of Out-of-Body
Phenomena", Journal of the Society for Psychical
Research, 62:3-27, 1968.
13. K. Osis and D. McCormick, "Kinetic Effects at the
Ostensible Location of an Out-of-Body Projection During
Perceptual Testing", Journal of the American Society for
Psychical Research, 74:319-24, 1980.
14. C. Bache, Lifecycles: Reincarnation and the Web of
Life (Paragon Press, 1988).
15. I. Stevenson, Twenty Cases Suggestive of
Reincarnation (University Press of Virginia, 1966);
Unlearned Language (University Press of Virginia, 1984);
and Children Who Remember Previous Lives (University
Press of Virginia, 1987).
16. S. Grof, The Adventure of Self-Discovery (State
University of New York Press, 1988), and The Holotropic
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Mind (HarperSanFrancisco, 1992).
17. S. Grof, Beyond the Brain: Birth, Death, and
Transcendence in Psychotherapy (State University of New
York Press, 1985).
18. A. Harrington, The Immortalist (Celestial Arts, 1969).
19. E. Becker, The Denial of Death (The Free Press,
1973).
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