Bodhicitta777 on Nostr: Empirical knowledge is always derivative of knowing awareness itself. Shared from a ...
Empirical knowledge is always derivative of knowing awareness itself.
Shared from a friend.
Quantum Fields and Consciousness: Eliminating the Last Illusion of Classical Physics
For too long, physics has clung to the illusion of a classical world—an objective, mechanical structure in which quantum effects only appear under rare and specific conditions. This belief is absurd, because it assumes there is something other than quantum fields in which these effects might occur. But quantum field theory (QFT) already tells us, with no exceptions, that all of reality is nothing but quantum fields in excitation.
This means there is no “classical world” where a brain exists as a mechanical object and where occasional “quantum anomalies” take place. The entire brain is already a quantum system, just like everything else, and any attempt to isolate consciousness as a rare emergent phenomenon from these fields misunderstands the very nature of quantum field theory.
The Absurdity of Classical Assumptions
There is a lingering belief in many fields—neuroscience, physics, and philosophy—that classical physics is “mostly” correct, and that quantum mechanics operates only at micro-scales or in highly controlled environments. But this belief is equivalent to claiming:
• The ocean is fundamentally dry, except for occasional anomalous patches of water.
• Fire is inherently cold, except in a few rare cases where heat somehow manifests.
• Light is fundamentally dark, but under special circumstances, it illuminates itself.
The fundamental misunderstanding here is that quantum mechanics is not a secondary framework that exists within classical physics. It is the primary and only reality, and classical physics is nothing more than an approximation—a mental shorthand that never truly existed as an independent domain.
The brain is not a classical machine that happens to contain quantum processes in select locations, such as Penrose’s idea of microtubules. The entire brain, every neuron, every synapse, every process, is already a fluctuation of the quantum field. There is no other option, because there is no classical alternative.
Consciousness Is Not an Emergent Phenomenon—It Is the Quantum Field Itself
The next mistake made by many thinkers—even in quantum neuroscience—is the claim that consciousness is an emergent property of quantum field excitations, rather than seeing the obvious:
• Consciousness is not a byproduct of the quantum field, just as waves are not a byproduct of the ocean.
• Waves do not “emerge from” the ocean—they are the ocean in motion.
• Likewise, consciousness does not “emerge from” the quantum field—it is the quantum field manifesting in a certain way.
The language of emergence is a relic of classical physics. It still assumes that consciousness is a secondary effect, rather than recognizing that if there is consciousness at all, then it must already be an intrinsic quality of the quantum field itself.
What does this mean? It means that consciousness is not something produced by the brain, nor is it something that merely arises from complex neuronal interactions. If everything in the universe is already a quantum excitation, then consciousness is just another aspect of these excitations—not something separate or emergent.
The Illusion of Separation: Consciousness and Quantum Fields Are Not Two Things
Many scientists try to separate consciousness from the quantum field, as if it is a second category of reality. But this is as meaningless as trying to separate:
• Wetness from water
• Heat from fire
• Light from illumination
At no point can we experience a quantum field apart from consciousness. Every observation of the quantum field is itself a conscious act. Every phenomenon is already known, perceived, or experienced in some way. There is no such thing as a quantum field independent of experience, just as there is no such thing as a wave separate from the ocean.
This understanding leads directly back to the great insights of Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, and Daoism, all of which point to the inseparability of mind and reality:
• In Advaita Vedanta, Brahman is both the source and substance of all existence—just as the quantum field is both the foundation and manifestation of all phenomena.
• In Buddhism, Śūnyatā (emptiness) dissolves all conceptual separations—just as modern physics dissolves the separation between particles, waves, and fields.
• In Daoism, the Dao is both the origin and the nature of all things—just as consciousness and quantum fields are simply two descriptions of the same indivisible presence.
The Final Realization: There Is Only One Thing Happening
We must abandon outdated notions that assume there is:
1. A physical world made of material objects (classical physics), in which
2. Quantum effects occasionally appear, and from which
3. Consciousness somehow emerges.
This framework is entirely mistaken because it presumes separation where none exists. In reality:
• There are no classical objects—everything is a fluctuation of the quantum field.
• There are no emergent properties—everything simply is what it is at all levels.
• There is no separate consciousness—it is already an aspect of the quantum field itself.
The only conclusion left is this: Consciousness is not something produced by the quantum field. It is the quantum field.
And once this is understood, we see that modern physics, when freed from its classical assumptions, has arrived precisely at the realization of the great non-dual traditions:
Just as all pottery is nothing but clay—whether in the form of a vase, a cup, or a plate—what we call “matter” and “mind” are simply formations of a single field. There is no second thing apart from the clay; every form it takes is just clay appearing in that particular way.
Likewise, in goldsmithing, whether it is a ring, a bracelet, or a necklace, all are nothing but gold, shaped into different forms, yet never departing from being gold itself.
In Advaita Vedanta, the mistake is to see the forms (Nāma-Rūpa, name and shape) as separate from Brahman. But all phenomena are just Brahman appearing in different ways—there is no substance other than Brahman, just as there is no substance other than gold in gold ornaments or clay in pottery. In the same way, if we take quantum fields as the most fundamental understanding of reality, then what we call “objects” and “consciousness” are simply vibrational states of that one indivisible field. However, to fully integrate consciousness into this framework, we must recognize that the quantum field itself is not separate from the knowing of it.
Rather than saying “physical reality exists, and consciousness is an emergent property of it,” the truth is the opposite: physical characteristics are simply how consciousness itself is manifesting, just as light is the radiance of its source.
In Daoism, the Dao is not separate from its manifestations—all things are simply fluctuations of the Dao, moving from one state to another, yet never apart from the Dao itself.
Likewise, in Buddhism, all appearances are ultimately seen as fluctuations of Buddha-Nature, and because Buddha-nature implies cognitive awareness—the inherent knowing quality—this means that all phenomena are intrinsically consciousness.
This realization allows us to reverse the conditioning that tells us that the classical world is primary, and quantum effects (or consciousness) are secondary artifacts. Instead, what we see is that the universe itself is a field of consciousness, manifesting as what physics calls the 17 quantum fields in fluctuation.
But in truth, these fields are not separate from consciousness—they are consciousness in different vibratory modes, just as waves are nothing but the ocean in motion.
Experiences as possible modulations of Consciousness are not always appearing and known on the surface of Consciousness, like waves appearing on the surface of the ocean; but there is a depth of Consciousness where what later appears upon surface consciousness, remains in the subconscious domain of pure potential.
Yet whatever appears as any and every experience, is always just another modulation of the same Universal Field of Consciousness.
There is no “quantum field” AND “consciousness” as two distinct things. There is only one thing happening, and it is always just This!
Quantum Fields and Consciousness: Eliminating the Last Illusion of Classical Physics
For too long, physics has clung to the illusion of a classical world—an objective, mechanical structure in which quantum effects only appear under rare and specific conditions. This belief is absurd, because it assumes there is something other than quantum fields in which these effects might occur. But quantum field theory (QFT) already tells us, with no exceptions, that all of reality is nothing but quantum fields in excitation.
This means there is no “classical world” where a brain exists as a mechanical object and where occasional “quantum anomalies” take place. The entire brain is already a quantum system, just like everything else, and any attempt to isolate consciousness as a rare emergent phenomenon from these fields misunderstands the very nature of quantum field theory.
The Absurdity of Classical Assumptions
There is a lingering belief in many fields—neuroscience, physics, and philosophy—that classical physics is “mostly” correct, and that quantum mechanics operates only at micro-scales or in highly controlled environments. But this belief is equivalent to claiming:
• The ocean is fundamentally dry, except for occasional anomalous patches of water.
• Fire is inherently cold, except in a few rare cases where heat somehow manifests.
• Light is fundamentally dark, but under special circumstances, it illuminates itself.
The fundamental misunderstanding here is that quantum mechanics is not a secondary framework that exists within classical physics. It is the primary and only reality, and classical physics is nothing more than an approximation—a mental shorthand that never truly existed as an independent domain.
The brain is not a classical machine that happens to contain quantum processes in select locations, such as Penrose’s idea of microtubules. The entire brain, every neuron, every synapse, every process, is already a fluctuation of the quantum field. There is no other option, because there is no classical alternative.
Consciousness Is Not an Emergent Phenomenon—It Is the Quantum Field Itself
The next mistake made by many thinkers—even in quantum neuroscience—is the claim that consciousness is an emergent property of quantum field excitations, rather than seeing the obvious:
• Consciousness is not a byproduct of the quantum field, just as waves are not a byproduct of the ocean.
• Waves do not “emerge from” the ocean—they are the ocean in motion.
• Likewise, consciousness does not “emerge from” the quantum field—it is the quantum field manifesting in a certain way.
The language of emergence is a relic of classical physics. It still assumes that consciousness is a secondary effect, rather than recognizing that if there is consciousness at all, then it must already be an intrinsic quality of the quantum field itself.
What does this mean? It means that consciousness is not something produced by the brain, nor is it something that merely arises from complex neuronal interactions. If everything in the universe is already a quantum excitation, then consciousness is just another aspect of these excitations—not something separate or emergent.
The Illusion of Separation: Consciousness and Quantum Fields Are Not Two Things
Many scientists try to separate consciousness from the quantum field, as if it is a second category of reality. But this is as meaningless as trying to separate:
• Wetness from water
• Heat from fire
• Light from illumination
At no point can we experience a quantum field apart from consciousness. Every observation of the quantum field is itself a conscious act. Every phenomenon is already known, perceived, or experienced in some way. There is no such thing as a quantum field independent of experience, just as there is no such thing as a wave separate from the ocean.
This understanding leads directly back to the great insights of Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, and Daoism, all of which point to the inseparability of mind and reality:
• In Advaita Vedanta, Brahman is both the source and substance of all existence—just as the quantum field is both the foundation and manifestation of all phenomena.
• In Buddhism, Śūnyatā (emptiness) dissolves all conceptual separations—just as modern physics dissolves the separation between particles, waves, and fields.
• In Daoism, the Dao is both the origin and the nature of all things—just as consciousness and quantum fields are simply two descriptions of the same indivisible presence.
The Final Realization: There Is Only One Thing Happening
We must abandon outdated notions that assume there is:
1. A physical world made of material objects (classical physics), in which
2. Quantum effects occasionally appear, and from which
3. Consciousness somehow emerges.
This framework is entirely mistaken because it presumes separation where none exists. In reality:
• There are no classical objects—everything is a fluctuation of the quantum field.
• There are no emergent properties—everything simply is what it is at all levels.
• There is no separate consciousness—it is already an aspect of the quantum field itself.
The only conclusion left is this: Consciousness is not something produced by the quantum field. It is the quantum field.
And once this is understood, we see that modern physics, when freed from its classical assumptions, has arrived precisely at the realization of the great non-dual traditions:
Just as all pottery is nothing but clay—whether in the form of a vase, a cup, or a plate—what we call “matter” and “mind” are simply formations of a single field. There is no second thing apart from the clay; every form it takes is just clay appearing in that particular way.
Likewise, in goldsmithing, whether it is a ring, a bracelet, or a necklace, all are nothing but gold, shaped into different forms, yet never departing from being gold itself.
In Advaita Vedanta, the mistake is to see the forms (Nāma-Rūpa, name and shape) as separate from Brahman. But all phenomena are just Brahman appearing in different ways—there is no substance other than Brahman, just as there is no substance other than gold in gold ornaments or clay in pottery. In the same way, if we take quantum fields as the most fundamental understanding of reality, then what we call “objects” and “consciousness” are simply vibrational states of that one indivisible field. However, to fully integrate consciousness into this framework, we must recognize that the quantum field itself is not separate from the knowing of it.
Rather than saying “physical reality exists, and consciousness is an emergent property of it,” the truth is the opposite: physical characteristics are simply how consciousness itself is manifesting, just as light is the radiance of its source.
In Daoism, the Dao is not separate from its manifestations—all things are simply fluctuations of the Dao, moving from one state to another, yet never apart from the Dao itself.
Likewise, in Buddhism, all appearances are ultimately seen as fluctuations of Buddha-Nature, and because Buddha-nature implies cognitive awareness—the inherent knowing quality—this means that all phenomena are intrinsically consciousness.
This realization allows us to reverse the conditioning that tells us that the classical world is primary, and quantum effects (or consciousness) are secondary artifacts. Instead, what we see is that the universe itself is a field of consciousness, manifesting as what physics calls the 17 quantum fields in fluctuation.
But in truth, these fields are not separate from consciousness—they are consciousness in different vibratory modes, just as waves are nothing but the ocean in motion.
Experiences as possible modulations of Consciousness are not always appearing and known on the surface of Consciousness, like waves appearing on the surface of the ocean; but there is a depth of Consciousness where what later appears upon surface consciousness, remains in the subconscious domain of pure potential.
Yet whatever appears as any and every experience, is always just another modulation of the same Universal Field of Consciousness.
There is no “quantum field” AND “consciousness” as two distinct things. There is only one thing happening, and it is always just This!
Shared from a friend.
Quantum Fields and Consciousness: Eliminating the Last Illusion of Classical Physics
For too long, physics has clung to the illusion of a classical world—an objective, mechanical structure in which quantum effects only appear under rare and specific conditions. This belief is absurd, because it assumes there is something other than quantum fields in which these effects might occur. But quantum field theory (QFT) already tells us, with no exceptions, that all of reality is nothing but quantum fields in excitation.
This means there is no “classical world” where a brain exists as a mechanical object and where occasional “quantum anomalies” take place. The entire brain is already a quantum system, just like everything else, and any attempt to isolate consciousness as a rare emergent phenomenon from these fields misunderstands the very nature of quantum field theory.
The Absurdity of Classical Assumptions
There is a lingering belief in many fields—neuroscience, physics, and philosophy—that classical physics is “mostly” correct, and that quantum mechanics operates only at micro-scales or in highly controlled environments. But this belief is equivalent to claiming:
• The ocean is fundamentally dry, except for occasional anomalous patches of water.
• Fire is inherently cold, except in a few rare cases where heat somehow manifests.
• Light is fundamentally dark, but under special circumstances, it illuminates itself.
The fundamental misunderstanding here is that quantum mechanics is not a secondary framework that exists within classical physics. It is the primary and only reality, and classical physics is nothing more than an approximation—a mental shorthand that never truly existed as an independent domain.
The brain is not a classical machine that happens to contain quantum processes in select locations, such as Penrose’s idea of microtubules. The entire brain, every neuron, every synapse, every process, is already a fluctuation of the quantum field. There is no other option, because there is no classical alternative.
Consciousness Is Not an Emergent Phenomenon—It Is the Quantum Field Itself
The next mistake made by many thinkers—even in quantum neuroscience—is the claim that consciousness is an emergent property of quantum field excitations, rather than seeing the obvious:
• Consciousness is not a byproduct of the quantum field, just as waves are not a byproduct of the ocean.
• Waves do not “emerge from” the ocean—they are the ocean in motion.
• Likewise, consciousness does not “emerge from” the quantum field—it is the quantum field manifesting in a certain way.
The language of emergence is a relic of classical physics. It still assumes that consciousness is a secondary effect, rather than recognizing that if there is consciousness at all, then it must already be an intrinsic quality of the quantum field itself.
What does this mean? It means that consciousness is not something produced by the brain, nor is it something that merely arises from complex neuronal interactions. If everything in the universe is already a quantum excitation, then consciousness is just another aspect of these excitations—not something separate or emergent.
The Illusion of Separation: Consciousness and Quantum Fields Are Not Two Things
Many scientists try to separate consciousness from the quantum field, as if it is a second category of reality. But this is as meaningless as trying to separate:
• Wetness from water
• Heat from fire
• Light from illumination
At no point can we experience a quantum field apart from consciousness. Every observation of the quantum field is itself a conscious act. Every phenomenon is already known, perceived, or experienced in some way. There is no such thing as a quantum field independent of experience, just as there is no such thing as a wave separate from the ocean.
This understanding leads directly back to the great insights of Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, and Daoism, all of which point to the inseparability of mind and reality:
• In Advaita Vedanta, Brahman is both the source and substance of all existence—just as the quantum field is both the foundation and manifestation of all phenomena.
• In Buddhism, Śūnyatā (emptiness) dissolves all conceptual separations—just as modern physics dissolves the separation between particles, waves, and fields.
• In Daoism, the Dao is both the origin and the nature of all things—just as consciousness and quantum fields are simply two descriptions of the same indivisible presence.
The Final Realization: There Is Only One Thing Happening
We must abandon outdated notions that assume there is:
1. A physical world made of material objects (classical physics), in which
2. Quantum effects occasionally appear, and from which
3. Consciousness somehow emerges.
This framework is entirely mistaken because it presumes separation where none exists. In reality:
• There are no classical objects—everything is a fluctuation of the quantum field.
• There are no emergent properties—everything simply is what it is at all levels.
• There is no separate consciousness—it is already an aspect of the quantum field itself.
The only conclusion left is this: Consciousness is not something produced by the quantum field. It is the quantum field.
And once this is understood, we see that modern physics, when freed from its classical assumptions, has arrived precisely at the realization of the great non-dual traditions:
Just as all pottery is nothing but clay—whether in the form of a vase, a cup, or a plate—what we call “matter” and “mind” are simply formations of a single field. There is no second thing apart from the clay; every form it takes is just clay appearing in that particular way.
Likewise, in goldsmithing, whether it is a ring, a bracelet, or a necklace, all are nothing but gold, shaped into different forms, yet never departing from being gold itself.
In Advaita Vedanta, the mistake is to see the forms (Nāma-Rūpa, name and shape) as separate from Brahman. But all phenomena are just Brahman appearing in different ways—there is no substance other than Brahman, just as there is no substance other than gold in gold ornaments or clay in pottery. In the same way, if we take quantum fields as the most fundamental understanding of reality, then what we call “objects” and “consciousness” are simply vibrational states of that one indivisible field. However, to fully integrate consciousness into this framework, we must recognize that the quantum field itself is not separate from the knowing of it.
Rather than saying “physical reality exists, and consciousness is an emergent property of it,” the truth is the opposite: physical characteristics are simply how consciousness itself is manifesting, just as light is the radiance of its source.
In Daoism, the Dao is not separate from its manifestations—all things are simply fluctuations of the Dao, moving from one state to another, yet never apart from the Dao itself.
Likewise, in Buddhism, all appearances are ultimately seen as fluctuations of Buddha-Nature, and because Buddha-nature implies cognitive awareness—the inherent knowing quality—this means that all phenomena are intrinsically consciousness.
This realization allows us to reverse the conditioning that tells us that the classical world is primary, and quantum effects (or consciousness) are secondary artifacts. Instead, what we see is that the universe itself is a field of consciousness, manifesting as what physics calls the 17 quantum fields in fluctuation.
But in truth, these fields are not separate from consciousness—they are consciousness in different vibratory modes, just as waves are nothing but the ocean in motion.
Experiences as possible modulations of Consciousness are not always appearing and known on the surface of Consciousness, like waves appearing on the surface of the ocean; but there is a depth of Consciousness where what later appears upon surface consciousness, remains in the subconscious domain of pure potential.
Yet whatever appears as any and every experience, is always just another modulation of the same Universal Field of Consciousness.
There is no “quantum field” AND “consciousness” as two distinct things. There is only one thing happening, and it is always just This!
Quantum Fields and Consciousness: Eliminating the Last Illusion of Classical Physics
For too long, physics has clung to the illusion of a classical world—an objective, mechanical structure in which quantum effects only appear under rare and specific conditions. This belief is absurd, because it assumes there is something other than quantum fields in which these effects might occur. But quantum field theory (QFT) already tells us, with no exceptions, that all of reality is nothing but quantum fields in excitation.
This means there is no “classical world” where a brain exists as a mechanical object and where occasional “quantum anomalies” take place. The entire brain is already a quantum system, just like everything else, and any attempt to isolate consciousness as a rare emergent phenomenon from these fields misunderstands the very nature of quantum field theory.
The Absurdity of Classical Assumptions
There is a lingering belief in many fields—neuroscience, physics, and philosophy—that classical physics is “mostly” correct, and that quantum mechanics operates only at micro-scales or in highly controlled environments. But this belief is equivalent to claiming:
• The ocean is fundamentally dry, except for occasional anomalous patches of water.
• Fire is inherently cold, except in a few rare cases where heat somehow manifests.
• Light is fundamentally dark, but under special circumstances, it illuminates itself.
The fundamental misunderstanding here is that quantum mechanics is not a secondary framework that exists within classical physics. It is the primary and only reality, and classical physics is nothing more than an approximation—a mental shorthand that never truly existed as an independent domain.
The brain is not a classical machine that happens to contain quantum processes in select locations, such as Penrose’s idea of microtubules. The entire brain, every neuron, every synapse, every process, is already a fluctuation of the quantum field. There is no other option, because there is no classical alternative.
Consciousness Is Not an Emergent Phenomenon—It Is the Quantum Field Itself
The next mistake made by many thinkers—even in quantum neuroscience—is the claim that consciousness is an emergent property of quantum field excitations, rather than seeing the obvious:
• Consciousness is not a byproduct of the quantum field, just as waves are not a byproduct of the ocean.
• Waves do not “emerge from” the ocean—they are the ocean in motion.
• Likewise, consciousness does not “emerge from” the quantum field—it is the quantum field manifesting in a certain way.
The language of emergence is a relic of classical physics. It still assumes that consciousness is a secondary effect, rather than recognizing that if there is consciousness at all, then it must already be an intrinsic quality of the quantum field itself.
What does this mean? It means that consciousness is not something produced by the brain, nor is it something that merely arises from complex neuronal interactions. If everything in the universe is already a quantum excitation, then consciousness is just another aspect of these excitations—not something separate or emergent.
The Illusion of Separation: Consciousness and Quantum Fields Are Not Two Things
Many scientists try to separate consciousness from the quantum field, as if it is a second category of reality. But this is as meaningless as trying to separate:
• Wetness from water
• Heat from fire
• Light from illumination
At no point can we experience a quantum field apart from consciousness. Every observation of the quantum field is itself a conscious act. Every phenomenon is already known, perceived, or experienced in some way. There is no such thing as a quantum field independent of experience, just as there is no such thing as a wave separate from the ocean.
This understanding leads directly back to the great insights of Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, and Daoism, all of which point to the inseparability of mind and reality:
• In Advaita Vedanta, Brahman is both the source and substance of all existence—just as the quantum field is both the foundation and manifestation of all phenomena.
• In Buddhism, Śūnyatā (emptiness) dissolves all conceptual separations—just as modern physics dissolves the separation between particles, waves, and fields.
• In Daoism, the Dao is both the origin and the nature of all things—just as consciousness and quantum fields are simply two descriptions of the same indivisible presence.
The Final Realization: There Is Only One Thing Happening
We must abandon outdated notions that assume there is:
1. A physical world made of material objects (classical physics), in which
2. Quantum effects occasionally appear, and from which
3. Consciousness somehow emerges.
This framework is entirely mistaken because it presumes separation where none exists. In reality:
• There are no classical objects—everything is a fluctuation of the quantum field.
• There are no emergent properties—everything simply is what it is at all levels.
• There is no separate consciousness—it is already an aspect of the quantum field itself.
The only conclusion left is this: Consciousness is not something produced by the quantum field. It is the quantum field.
And once this is understood, we see that modern physics, when freed from its classical assumptions, has arrived precisely at the realization of the great non-dual traditions:
Just as all pottery is nothing but clay—whether in the form of a vase, a cup, or a plate—what we call “matter” and “mind” are simply formations of a single field. There is no second thing apart from the clay; every form it takes is just clay appearing in that particular way.
Likewise, in goldsmithing, whether it is a ring, a bracelet, or a necklace, all are nothing but gold, shaped into different forms, yet never departing from being gold itself.
In Advaita Vedanta, the mistake is to see the forms (Nāma-Rūpa, name and shape) as separate from Brahman. But all phenomena are just Brahman appearing in different ways—there is no substance other than Brahman, just as there is no substance other than gold in gold ornaments or clay in pottery. In the same way, if we take quantum fields as the most fundamental understanding of reality, then what we call “objects” and “consciousness” are simply vibrational states of that one indivisible field. However, to fully integrate consciousness into this framework, we must recognize that the quantum field itself is not separate from the knowing of it.
Rather than saying “physical reality exists, and consciousness is an emergent property of it,” the truth is the opposite: physical characteristics are simply how consciousness itself is manifesting, just as light is the radiance of its source.
In Daoism, the Dao is not separate from its manifestations—all things are simply fluctuations of the Dao, moving from one state to another, yet never apart from the Dao itself.
Likewise, in Buddhism, all appearances are ultimately seen as fluctuations of Buddha-Nature, and because Buddha-nature implies cognitive awareness—the inherent knowing quality—this means that all phenomena are intrinsically consciousness.
This realization allows us to reverse the conditioning that tells us that the classical world is primary, and quantum effects (or consciousness) are secondary artifacts. Instead, what we see is that the universe itself is a field of consciousness, manifesting as what physics calls the 17 quantum fields in fluctuation.
But in truth, these fields are not separate from consciousness—they are consciousness in different vibratory modes, just as waves are nothing but the ocean in motion.
Experiences as possible modulations of Consciousness are not always appearing and known on the surface of Consciousness, like waves appearing on the surface of the ocean; but there is a depth of Consciousness where what later appears upon surface consciousness, remains in the subconscious domain of pure potential.
Yet whatever appears as any and every experience, is always just another modulation of the same Universal Field of Consciousness.
There is no “quantum field” AND “consciousness” as two distinct things. There is only one thing happening, and it is always just This!