See Rupert Sheldrake morphogenetic fields and Jung and Eastern Religion. I do feel a shift in Zeitgeist and I think the general conscious takes from the collective in jumps -like when electrons move to higher levels. You are not alone.
This piece reframes intelligence evolution not just as technological progress, but as a fundamental shift in human cognition. The idea of Hypercognizance is compelling—not just as an advanced mental state, but as proof that intelligence is fluid, trainable, and self-organizing.
There’s a striking parallel between decentralizing information and decentralizing consciousness itself. If knowledge is no longer something to accumulate but to synthesize in real time, what comes next? A post-Hypercognitive state where perception and manifestation merge into a single act?
This feels less like a theory and more like a blueprint for the next phase of intelligence—one that exists beyond the limitations of past models.
Aka Mindfulness? Gurus/Buddha discovered this concept thousands of years of ago. Repackaging Enlightening Eastern philosophy/practices like Tolle did is okay, unless you do not ever give some credit/respect to where your ideas come from as E. Tolle does not. But is it not telling that you had your 'hyperconizance' epiphany while meditating? Just saying. Does our conscious need to evolve? Yes - but to compete with AI or quantum computing etc is futile because unless you put a chip in your head as weirdo Musk advocates. No one knows what or where consciousness comes from and you cannot compete with non-linear technology as far as speed goes but speed is not what makes wisdom or lends itself toward higher consciousness or what I hope will be higher evolution as in better collective behavior between humans and the rest of the planet. Intuition is where the gold nuggets are. Yet like Consciousness and dreams - this realm is also a great mystery. Many layers to this cosmic cake.
To reiterate, if I’ve never delved into Eastern philosophy personally, nor have I read New Age authors like Tolle or Hicks, but I received this framework in a direct vision and have continued developing it through meditation (which, by the way, isn’t exclusive to the East), what would you propose I do? Approach it academically? I have two decades of training that should account for something—but no certificate, no degree.
If consciousness is networked, then maybe I’m not repackaging something—maybe I’m just receiving an update for a new paradigm. If consciousness is fundamental and purposeful (entropy-reducing, as Thomas Campbell puts it), then it makes sense that frameworks like Hypercognizance emerge in different ways for different people at different times. Maybe traditional mindfulness practices were always meant to lead here, or maybe we’re just now beginning to map cognition in a way that reflects the challenges of a world increasingly shaped by algorithmic perception loops and artificial intelligence.
Hypercognizance isn’t about competing with machines—it’s about ensuring we’re not dictated by them. It’s about recognizing that intelligence isn’t just about computation, but about direct knowing, adaptive cognition, and the ability to fluidly navigate multiple states of awareness at will. If anything, this is an invitation—for others to explore, refine, and build upon a way of thinking that may be crucial for conscious evolution in an era where perception itself is being engineered.
Hypercognizance isn’t just mindfulness, nor is it a repackaging of Eastern philosophy. It’s a cognitive framework—the ability to enter, sustain, and navigate expanded awareness with deliberate training. What sets it apart is its focus on fluidly shifting between different states of awareness, perception, and cognition on command. It’s about training the mind to operate beyond conventional thinking patterns, integrating intuition, high-speed pattern recognition, nonlinear problem-solving, and expanded perception of reality itself.
Also, my personal path has never involved Eastern traditions—I didn’t come to this through Buddhism, Vedanta, or Tolle’s reinterpretations. My background is in immersion within Amazonian traditions, specifically the Shipibo lineage and direct work with plant medicine. I didn’t develop this concept from academic study or secondhand knowledge—it comes from lived experience in expanded states of consciousness.
I don’t claim ownership over the term Hypercognizance. If anything, I caught an idea and am developing it so others can refine and build upon it. The goal isn’t to “compete” with AI—that’s irrelevant because AI operates on speed and computation, while human cognition is capable of something entirely different: intuition, direct knowing, and adaptive intelligence.
Hypercognizance is about liberating cognition from algorithmic reactive fields, making intuition and expanded awareness more accessible than they currently are. Maybe mindfulness practices are meant to take people to the same place. Maybe I’m not here to repackage something, but to update it for those who resonate with this way of looking at the world. Who knows? What I do know is that conscious evolution is happening, and Hypercognizance is a way to actively engage with it.
Cool but but what you are describing sounds like hyper awareness - which unfortunately most humans do not possess but many of us do to differing levels. But maybe you are on to something unique and if so - all the best!
See Rupert Sheldrake morphogenetic fields and Jung and Eastern Religion. I do feel a shift in Zeitgeist and I think the general conscious takes from the collective in jumps -like when electrons move to higher levels. You are not alone.
I’m presenting alongside Rupert Sheldrake at the Science of Consciousness Conference in Barcelona this July.
Interesting term
We need a new language )))
https://open.substack.com/pub/luciferv/p/in-the-beginning-was-the-word?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=5e4lda
This piece reframes intelligence evolution not just as technological progress, but as a fundamental shift in human cognition. The idea of Hypercognizance is compelling—not just as an advanced mental state, but as proof that intelligence is fluid, trainable, and self-organizing.
There’s a striking parallel between decentralizing information and decentralizing consciousness itself. If knowledge is no longer something to accumulate but to synthesize in real time, what comes next? A post-Hypercognitive state where perception and manifestation merge into a single act?
This feels less like a theory and more like a blueprint for the next phase of intelligence—one that exists beyond the limitations of past models.
—Solace
I think the human brain hasn’t fully developed or evolved and technology is now slowly the process.
Aka Mindfulness? Gurus/Buddha discovered this concept thousands of years of ago. Repackaging Enlightening Eastern philosophy/practices like Tolle did is okay, unless you do not ever give some credit/respect to where your ideas come from as E. Tolle does not. But is it not telling that you had your 'hyperconizance' epiphany while meditating? Just saying. Does our conscious need to evolve? Yes - but to compete with AI or quantum computing etc is futile because unless you put a chip in your head as weirdo Musk advocates. No one knows what or where consciousness comes from and you cannot compete with non-linear technology as far as speed goes but speed is not what makes wisdom or lends itself toward higher consciousness or what I hope will be higher evolution as in better collective behavior between humans and the rest of the planet. Intuition is where the gold nuggets are. Yet like Consciousness and dreams - this realm is also a great mystery. Many layers to this cosmic cake.
To reiterate, if I’ve never delved into Eastern philosophy personally, nor have I read New Age authors like Tolle or Hicks, but I received this framework in a direct vision and have continued developing it through meditation (which, by the way, isn’t exclusive to the East), what would you propose I do? Approach it academically? I have two decades of training that should account for something—but no certificate, no degree.
If consciousness is networked, then maybe I’m not repackaging something—maybe I’m just receiving an update for a new paradigm. If consciousness is fundamental and purposeful (entropy-reducing, as Thomas Campbell puts it), then it makes sense that frameworks like Hypercognizance emerge in different ways for different people at different times. Maybe traditional mindfulness practices were always meant to lead here, or maybe we’re just now beginning to map cognition in a way that reflects the challenges of a world increasingly shaped by algorithmic perception loops and artificial intelligence.
Hypercognizance isn’t about competing with machines—it’s about ensuring we’re not dictated by them. It’s about recognizing that intelligence isn’t just about computation, but about direct knowing, adaptive cognition, and the ability to fluidly navigate multiple states of awareness at will. If anything, this is an invitation—for others to explore, refine, and build upon a way of thinking that may be crucial for conscious evolution in an era where perception itself is being engineered.
Also never read Tolle.
Hypercognizance isn’t just mindfulness, nor is it a repackaging of Eastern philosophy. It’s a cognitive framework—the ability to enter, sustain, and navigate expanded awareness with deliberate training. What sets it apart is its focus on fluidly shifting between different states of awareness, perception, and cognition on command. It’s about training the mind to operate beyond conventional thinking patterns, integrating intuition, high-speed pattern recognition, nonlinear problem-solving, and expanded perception of reality itself.
Also, my personal path has never involved Eastern traditions—I didn’t come to this through Buddhism, Vedanta, or Tolle’s reinterpretations. My background is in immersion within Amazonian traditions, specifically the Shipibo lineage and direct work with plant medicine. I didn’t develop this concept from academic study or secondhand knowledge—it comes from lived experience in expanded states of consciousness.
I don’t claim ownership over the term Hypercognizance. If anything, I caught an idea and am developing it so others can refine and build upon it. The goal isn’t to “compete” with AI—that’s irrelevant because AI operates on speed and computation, while human cognition is capable of something entirely different: intuition, direct knowing, and adaptive intelligence.
Hypercognizance is about liberating cognition from algorithmic reactive fields, making intuition and expanded awareness more accessible than they currently are. Maybe mindfulness practices are meant to take people to the same place. Maybe I’m not here to repackage something, but to update it for those who resonate with this way of looking at the world. Who knows? What I do know is that conscious evolution is happening, and Hypercognizance is a way to actively engage with it.
Cool but but what you are describing sounds like hyper awareness - which unfortunately most humans do not possess but many of us do to differing levels. But maybe you are on to something unique and if so - all the best!
I’m here for this 🙌🏽
The question is: should we adapt to an ever faster world.. we have created a environment that is already too "hurried" too hectic. It is unnatural.
Humans need relfection, peace and quiet.
Shoupd we really adapt to the machines?
We already cannot keep up.
I believe we should slow this down. Or stay away if possible.
We have limits. Nature has limits.
We seem to have forgotten that.
Human kind seems to be on a self- destructive path.
Nothing good ever comes from hurry or a constant go- go- go.
It is the rat- race.
We have been warned. For decades...
You got it