Hi irrelevant_string,
I'm happy to exchange with you even if it's difficult for me to focus due to my illness.
I see that you like a lot mathematics, I loved them too when I was teen, but I chose art later.
Your questions are really pertinent, all of the following is pure imagination.
Firstly, we have to distinguish two principles inherent in cosmic consciousness united in a single point before big bang. The sum of a presence and its world of ideas is what we call « god » We could of course add the potentiality of cristallisation, time and space, but let's think that they are just ideas in order to simplify.
In Zen soto buddhism, we experience during meditation what we call thought, non-thought, and hishiryo « beyond thought ». So when we use only our pure attention, thoughts go trough the mind and instead of follow their neverending sequence, we do nothing but observe. Then we begin to experience non-thought, the intervals that we can observe between thoughts when they became more rare, we can even be absorbed by void. But the only real awakening, according to the masters, is hishiryo. Freud would say unconscious that emerges, but here we're talking about awakening to cosmic consciousness.
So we could think about a difference of quality between human and cosmic consciousness, but with a possibility for lower consciousness to go back to the source. We would be reductions but the principle remains. It's kind of like the ideas of Bohm about implied order, each parcels of the image of a hologram contains information about the entire image. We could even influence the source, unconsciously or by our only attentive presence.
But this could go even further. Human and even animal consciousness, in the only sense of attentive presence, might be the only way for cosmic consciousness to experience itself. The « mise en abîme ». The leaves would only exists because the tree has no perspective to see itself, leaves are limited in the sense that they decide nothing, but they have the capacity of seeing. It would be here a cosmic unconscious , which would follow its own principle, and the surface of its expansion would be attention.
How could we know ourselves, if we remain unified and immutable in a single spot smaller than a head of a pin ? You can't read a book by just seeing the cover.
We could think that the attention of species is what performs wave functions collapse, but we would have to admit that this principle can go back in time, and that seems to be absurd. However, EPR paradox told us that it could be a possibility. Costa de Beauregard, which was idealist, developed that hypothesis. And there's even materialists who believe that connected particles could go back in time.
We know nowadays that time, which is immaterial like consciousness would be, is infinitely complex, beyond understanding and raises many paradox. Far more complex than the « simple relativity » that we can measure on clock.
But cosmic unconscious, that interleaved dimension, that principle, could be a kind of non local hidden variable. And we would only be the attention in surface watching the center, exchanging with our fellows, and discovering the world of ideas of mathematicians, the unconscious of Freud, the hishiryo of buddhists.
A dimension that grows in order to enrich itself, or on the contrary that deinterlace its infinity in order to discover itself. I find beautiful to imagine that, almost touching.
I often experienced in my life absolutely mysterious feelings, leaving to me a profound impression that they come from somewhere else. Exactly like when I find myself in a particular place, at a particular time, and suddenly an ineffable sensation overwhelms me, and disappears as quickly. I will never feel it again, I will never be able to describe it with words. As a being who overwhelms us behind the glass of a metro, where did he go ?
I wonder if cosmic consciousness created that feeling in me, or if she unfold it trough me. Or maybe that's me connecting intuitively to her.
Now to conclude, I would say that all of this might only be fantasies.
You're right, it's important in science to stick to the facts, but don't forget that Einstein said that imagination is essential for the development of science, and that he believed in god