The noosphere is the planetary sphere of mind or thinking layer of planet Earth. To grasp the idea of the noosphere we must elevate our consciousness and open ourselves to the most general, elemental and cosmic principles of life on Earth.
As the mental sheathe of the planet, the noosphere characterizes mind and consciousness as a unitary phenomenon. This means that the quality and nature of our individual and collective thoughts directly effects the noosphere and creates the quality of our environment—the biosphere.
As the Earth’s “mental sheathe,” the noosphere represents the breakthrough to a new consciousness, a new time and a new reality arising from the biospheric crisis. This is known as the biosphere-noosphere transition.
Just as the biosphere is the unity of all of life and its support system, the noosphere is the unity of all mind and its thinking layers. In this way the noosphere can be understood as the sum of the mental interactions of all life. Within the noosphere exists the evolutionary control panels, known as the psi bank, the storage and retrieval system for all the mental programs.
As the next stage of evolution of the terrestrial biosphere, the noosphere signifies the advent of a qualitative/dimensional shift - the passage from one state to another. This is the main investigative topic of the Noosphere II project.
This perspective of the noosphere, as an evolutionary event, has been scientifically anticipated by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, the noted French paleontologist, as well as his colleague (with whom he jointly coined the word noosphere in 1926), Russian geochemist, Vladimir Vernadsky (see The Theory and History of the Noosphere).
“The historic process is changing dramatically before our eyes … Mankind taken as a whole is becoming a powerful geological force. Humanity’s mind and work face the problem of reconstructing the biosphere in the interests of freely thinking mankind as a single entity. This new state of the world we are approaching without noticing it is the ‘Noosphere.’”
V.I. Vernadsky
The Internet is the third-dimensional reflection of the noosphere, a form of proto-telepathy. When the noosphere is fully activated, then the human species will experience telepathy as a collective norm.
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José Argüelles was born January 24, 1939 in Rochester, Minnesota. He and his twin brother, Ivan, were the son of a Mexican father and German-American mother and lived their first five years in Mexico.
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Argüelles was best known as the initiator of the world famous Harmonic Convergence global peace meditation, which occurred on August 16-17, 1987. During that time, he also awakened the mass consciousness to the significance of the year 2012 and turned the world’s attention toward the Maya and their calendric system. His best selling book, “The Mayan Factor” (1987) gives credence to the Mayan Calendar’s cycles of natural time, and reveals the historically unprecedented galactic shift in time coming in 2012.
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José Argüelles is also recognized as one of the creators of the Earth Day concept and founder of the Whole Earth Festival, now in its 43rd year in Davis, California. During the Fifth Annual Whole Earth Festival in 1974, he received a special commendation from the State of California for being the "Father of the Whole Earth Festival” and for his contribution to the art and culture of California.
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His love of art and culture inspired him to obtain his Ph.D. in art history and aesthetics from the University of Chicago in 1969. His academic career led to professorships at Princeton University, University of California Davis, the Evergreen State College, the Naropa Institute, San Francisco State University, San Francisco Institute of Art, University of Colorado Denver, and the Union Graduate School.
Author of numerous philosophical and cultural essays, as well as poetry, his pioneering books were translated into many languages and include: The Mayan Factor, Earth Ascending, Surfers of the Zuvuya, The Arcturus Probe, Time and the Technosphere: The Law of Time in Human Affairs, the seven volume Cosmic History Chronicles (with Stephanie South) and Manifesto for the Noosphere: The Evolution of Human Consciousness. (For full bibliography see below).
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As a prolific artist, Argüelles has provided the illustrations for a number of his books, as well as the cover art for the periodical Psychedelics: Their Uses and Implications (Osmund & Aaronson, 1969). His activity as a painter includes exhibits at the Princeton University Art Museum, 1968, and the Inner City Gallery, Los Angeles, 1969. His murals can still be seen at the Psychology Department, University of California, Davis (1969), and in the Dan Evans Library Building, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, Washington (1972). With Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, he assisted in the Dharma Art Exhibits in Los Angeles (1980) and San Francisco (1981). His visionary drawings were also exhibited at the Time is Art Gallery, Portland, Oregon (1999-2000) and his "Doors of Perception" paintings exhibited at the Time is Art Gallery, Ashland, Oregon (2004-2005).
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Argüelles is a lifelong arts activist for peace and the planetary transformation of consciousness. In 1968 he co-organized the Transformation Event, New York City, March 25, 1968. He is co-founder with former wife Lloydine of the Planet Art Network (1983), and World Thirteen Calendar Change Peace Movement (1994). The Planet Art Network (PAN) spread to more than 90 countries promoting art as the foundation for global peace, while reviving the Nicholas Roerich Peace Pact and Banner of Peace (1935).
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Inspired by prophetic information received from Tony Shearer in 1970, Argüelles distilled his lifelong study of the mathematics and prophecies of the Mayan Calendar into the Harmonic Convergence (1987). This event commemorated the last day of the “Thirteen Heavens and Nine Hell” cycles as prophesied by Mexican prophet Quetzalcoatl.
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As a scholar of comparative religion and world thought, he has made major contributions to research on the I Ching, and studied and practiced Tibetan Buddhism for many years with artist and meditation master, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche. More recently he had focused his attention on the mathematics of the Qur’an in relation with the Law of Time.
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But he is most noted for his pioneering work on the mathematics of the Mayan Calendar. A visionary experience at the age of fourteen atop the Pyramid of the Sun, Teotihuacán, Mexico, in 1953, led him to a lifelong investigation of the mathematics and prophecies associated with the Mayan Calendar. His decoding of its mathematics resulted in the discovery of the Law of Time (1989).
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According to the Law of Time, modern humanity is in crisis because it is immersed in an erroneous and artificial perception of time, causing civilization to deviate at an accelerated rate from the natural order of the universe. To remedy this self-destructive situation, a collective unification into galactic consciousness is required. For this reason, José Argüelles promoted the return to a natural timing cycle through the regular measure of the 13-Moon 28-day calendar. Knowing that the Maya used up to 17 calendars simultaneously, and after experimenting living many cycles at once,
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Argüelles found that the 13-Moon 28-day cycle was more than a calendar, but a master synchronization matrix that all other systems and counts could be synchronized by. For this reason he called it a synchronomoter, a tool for measuring synchronicity.
To prepare for a shift from linear time to galactic time, he created numerous tools for navigating fourth-dimensional time, including the Dreamspell: Journey of Timeship Earth 2013, and his decoding of the prophecy of Pacal Votan, Telektonon, followed by 7:7::7:7 and the Mystery of the Stone, and most recently the Synchronotron system.
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Since 1992 until his passing in 2011, Argüelles had promoted and organized the annual July 25th Day Out of Time Peace through Culture festivals throughout the world and promoted the circumpolar rainbow bridge meditation. He continued to travel the world several times over, giving numerous conferences and seminars and promoting the paradigm shift from “Time is Money” to “Time is Art.”
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José Argüelles has received recognition from many cultures. He was a recipient of the Magical Blend 2000 Millennium Award. On March 3, 2002, he was honored as "Valum Votan, Closer of the Cycle" by Nine Indigenous Elders atop the Pyramid of the Sun, Teotihuacán, Mexico. They recognized him as bringing new knowledge to regenerate the traditional knowledge, and awarded him a ceremonial staff for helping to wake humanity up to the meaning of 2012, the conclusion of the 5,125-year Great Cycle of the Mayan Calendar (as well as many other cycles). On October 9, 2003, The Archbishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church of St. Petersburg, Russia, publicly recognized him as the bearer of Mayan prophecy.
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He was chief Founder and President of the Foundation for the Law of Time (2000-Present), a non-profit organization that promotes the new time knowledge and 13 Moon calendar.
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In 2002, he recognized his apprentice, Stephanie South, and soon thereafter began a process of education known as the Galactic Mayan Mind Transmission that continued until his passing in 2011. In 2005, he began the Noosphere II Project with South, and participated in the Pakal Votan global telepathic experiment in conjunction with ISRICA, a branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
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In 2005, he initiated the vision of CREST13: Centers for the Restitution, Investigation and Education of the Natural Mind, self-sustainable centers with an eye to global telepathic experiments (www.crest13.org). As a member of the Noosphere Spiritual-Ecological World Assembly (Moscow, Russia) in 2009, he launched the Noosphere World Forum (www.noosphereforum.org).
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In 2009, he presented his final 7-day seminar, “Synchronotron” at the Babaji ashram in Cisternino, Italy. In 2009 he was also named Honorary Member of the Club of Budapest.
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In 2010, he received the highest honor of the International Committee of the Banner of Peace in Mexico City: the Nicholas Roerich Peace Medallion. In 2010 he was honored for his lifelong work with the Mayan Calendar, by Flordemayo, Mayan curandera and member of the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers.
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José Argüelles passed away on March 23, 2011 (9.17, Kin 89), 6:10 a.m. (exactly the same time as his birth) and precisely 1,328 days after the passing of Pacal Votan (683).
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