Is the world headed to a new scientific mindset? I think this might be happening, even though with the current political hellscape in the USA, the Ukraine war still raging, the genocide in Gaza, and countless other atrocities unfolding across the globe, it can feel as if human evolution is running backwards.
Yet online – in discussion forums, academic debates, and emerging intellectual communities – there are signs that the long-standing dominance of materialism may be beginning to fade.
Changing the collective ‘mega-mind’ of the public is no small feat; such shifts often take generations. Quantum mechanics brought the mind into the realm of physics as early as the twentieth century, and yet public understanding of consciousness has remained largely unchanged.
What is a huge contributor to a new mindset is popular culture. New ways of thinking can spread virus-like, thanks to books, movies, television series, social media, and now also A.I. The material mindset – that sees the universe as unintelligent, and life and consciousness as having no relation to the physical world – has been largely resistant to change.
For that to change, the biocentric ideas researched on my website Free-Consciousness.com have to reach a contagion level, so that they can replicate like a virus. It cannot be predicted when this will happen, but products of popular culture can help to speed up the transition. The latest of such products is a brand new novel by best selling author Dan Brown (‘The Da Vinci Code’). It is called ‘The Secret of Secrets’ and it’s the sixth novel in the Robert Langdon series.
The book opens with the near-death experience of a neuroscientist. She explains to herself in clear terms that what she is experiencing – floating above the city of Prague, massless, and formless – cannot be happening. In the materialist perspective, death is the end and all experience, which is created by chemical compounds held in suspension by electrical charges in our brains, dissolve into nothing. The afterlife is a shared illusion… created to make our actual lives more bearable.
This is the typical materialist mindset. Brown immediately invites the reader to question that assumption…

