Plainly put, there are no separate objects out there. There is no out-there world; the world of objects is an illusion. Everything is part of a single unified whole.
The very act of observation removes the boundary between the observer and what is being observed. Walter Heitler, who authored a standard textbook on light/matter interactions, believes the observer is a necessary part of a whole singular structure - as a conscious being. This implies that everything, as part of that whole structure is conscious.
If the observer does create reality, then he is a part of the reality he is creating. There only appears to be an out-there world. The very act of observation creates the illusion of separation and the appearance of a world of objects. The physical being, also an object, is manifest as part of that illusionary world as well. Maybe all that remains is consciousness, and if reality is an undivided wholeness, it goes without saying that consciousness must be one singular wholeness as well. There are interesting implications here.
David Bohm (1917-1994) was one of the foremost physicists and influential theorists responsible for redefining the way many scientists view quantum physics today. He held a very strong belief that consciousness was an intrinsic component of reality. The name of his best-known recent work Wholeness and the Implicate Order definitely demonstrates where his views lie. This work essentially states that any element (person, particle, tree anything) contains enfolded within itself the totality of its universe. This would include the totality of both matter and mind. Concerning the wholeness issue Bohm is quoted as stating "... The inseparable quantum interconnectedness of the whole universe is the fundamental reality."
I would like to add this. Give this some serious thought. We perceive a world of objects and ourselves as conscious objects within this world. Yet we do not experience anything directly. Everything we assume to exist out there is filtered though our senses. Sight, smell, touch, taste and hearing are all physical senses. In this context, your consciousness does not really touch anything directly. We only assume the outside world exists because our senses tell us it is so.
But what are you really? Think about your mind right now. The very act of thinking, remembering, visualizing, these are all processes going on in your mind on top of your consciousness. Strip your mind of all thoughts and images – what is left?
With no thoughts of any kind you become simply an area of perception, a consciousness that perceives via senses, but nothing else to differentiate you from anyone else, except your physical location. It is very possible that all consciousness is really one consciousness, one unified whole – fragmented into the illusion of many.



