Information Fields in Psychology
摘要
Psychology has long grappled with the challenge of unifying its diverse theoretical paradigms while accounting for the irreducible complexity of human consciousness. This chapter proposes information fields ( \({\Psi }_{I}\) ) as a foundational framework to integrate psychological phenomena, drawing upon breakthroughs in quantum physics, information thermodynamics, and field resonance. Building on Jung’s concept of synchronicity, Freud’s unconscious dynamics, and Husserl’s phenomenology, we identify three core psychological threads: (1) the ontic core, an intrinsic life principle driving self-realization; (2) interconnectedness, manifesting in relational and nonlocal phenomena; and (3) repetition versus creativity, reflecting patterns of psychological rigidity or growth. We formalize these concepts mathematically, modeling \({\Psi }_{I}\) as a dynamic field mediating phase relationships and topological configurations without energy transfer. The framework bridges micro-scale quantum processes (e.g., neural microtubule coherence), individual cognition-emotion patterns, and collective archetypal dynamics. Empirical validation is provided through clinical case studies, dream analysis, and physiological measurements (e.g., EEG microstates, GDV bioelectrophotonic imaging), demonstrating how field distortions correlate with trauma, repression, and psychopathology. Therapeutic applications focus on restoring authenticity—realigning the ego with the ontic core by minimizing noise ( \(\eta\) ) and amplifying self-fulfillment drives ( \(\lambda\) ). Results from mixed-methods research ( \(n = 31\) ) show significant improvements in self-understanding, symptom relief, and autonomic synchrony during dream reporting, supporting the field’s role in nonlocal communication. Challenges, including resistance to directives, are discussed alongside innovations like Faraday cage experiments isolating field interactions. By synthesizing physics and depth psychology, this chapter advances a transdisciplinary paradigm where mental phenomena emerge as quantifiable yet meaning-laden field dynamics—offering a unified metric for research, clinical practice, and cross-cultural studies.