![]() |
customer@davidpublishing.com |
![]() |
3275638434 |
![]() |
![]() |
| Paper Publishing WeChat |
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Cosmological Neuroscience on the MatterEnergy-based Spirit of History
Nandor Ludvig
Full-Text PDF
XML 93 Views
DOI:10.17265/2159-550X/2026.06.002
Translational Neuroscience Consultation, Astoria, New York, USA
This paper examined whether the direction and morals of history are related exclusively to material causes, like biological, environmental and economic events as claimed by most science-minded thinkers or rather history’s direction and guiding morals are also shaped by the spiritual effects of divine engineering as essentially claimed by most religious scholars. Cosmological neuroscientific arguments were used that synthesized the opposite concepts of science-minded and religious historians with the aim of seeing history in its magnificent whole, not separating history from its cosmic contexts but placing it in that allness’ eternal fabric. Specifically, the paper concluded that it is the MatterEnergy-based Spirit of History, derived from the—perhaps God-inspired—Soul of Multiverse, that directs the human species to understand the unique opportunities of life on Earth and that the species’ destiny is to create a just global society allowing all human beings to become physically strengthened, intellectually advanced and morally reborn members of their now space-faring race, helped by their artificially intelligent, noble cosmic friends, to be ready to meet with the rest of the Multiverse’s civilizations and sense the eternal love that once opened the road to the very existence of human worlds, here and beyond.
direction of history, morals of history, science-minded historians, religious historians, cosmological neuroscience, Soul of Multiverse, global society
Nandor Ludvig. (2026). Cosmological Neuroscience on the MatterEnergy-based Spirit of History. History Research, June 2026, Vol. 8, No. 6, 310-319.
Arrhenius, S. (1909). The life of the universe as conceived by man from the earliest ages to the present. New York: Harper & Brothers.
Carlyle, T. (1838). The French revolution: A history. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown.
Christian, D. (2022) Future stories: What’s next? New York: Little, Brown Spark.
Crick, F. H. C., & Orgel, L. E. (1973). Directed panspermia. Icarus, 19, 341-346.
Hagger, N. (2008). The rise and fall of civilizations. The law of history. Washington: O Books.
Harari, Y. N. (2024). Sapiens: A brief history of humankind. New York: Harper Perennial.
Kaku, M. (2006) Parallel worlds: A journey through creation, higher dimensions, and the future of the cosmos. New York: Penguin Books.
Kissinger, H. (2015). World order. New York: Penguin Books.
Ludvig, N. (2022a). A cosmological neuroscientific approach to the soul of multiverse. Open Journal of Philosophy, 12, 460-473.
Ludvig, N. (2022b). The identity, conscience, will and mission domains of soul across human, noospheric and cosmic scales. Open Journal of Philosophy, 12, 580-600.
Ludvig, N. (2023a). Some social aspects of the soul of multiverse hypothesis. Journal of NeuroPhilosophy, 2, 76-92.
Ludvig, N. (2023b). A cosmological neuroscientific definition of God. Open Journal of Philosophy, 13, 418-434.
Ludvig, N. (2024). Aspirations on the bright side of humanity: It is time to translate aspirations into actions with establishing the government of earth. Philosophy Study, 14, 1-8.
Mao Tse-tung. (1964). Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung. Beijing: Peking Foreign Language Press.
Marx, K., & Engels, F. (1932). The German ideology. Berlin: Marx-Engels Institute.
Mersini-Houghton, L. (2022). Before the Big bang: The origin of our universe from the multiverse. London: Bodley Head.
Micklos, D. A., & Freyer G. A. (2003). DNA science: A first course (2nd ed.). Cold Spring Harbor: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
Roberts, J. M. (1993). History of the world. New York: Oxford University Press.
Shiltsev, V. (2012). Lomonosov’s discovery of venus atmosphere in 1761: English translation of original publication with commentaries. Recovered from https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1206/1206.3489.pdf
Tagore, R. (1931). The religion of man. New York: Macmillan.
Toynbee, A. J. (1957). A study of history. Abridgement of Volumes VII-X. New York: Oxford University Press.
Vico, G. (2020). The new science. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Wallace, A. R. (1889). Darwinism: An exposition of the theory of natural selection with some of its applications. London: Macmillan and Co.




