An introduction to David R. Hawkins' Scale of Consciousness — the framework underlying the 🧠 Consciousness tabs throughout these belief-system continuums. No prior knowledge assumed.
David R. Hawkins, M.D., Ph.D. (1927–2012) was an American psychiatrist, spiritual teacher, and author who ran one of the largest psychiatric practices in the United States before turning toward consciousness research and contemplative spirituality.
His 1995 book Power vs. Force proposed that human consciousness could be mapped on a numerical scale from 1 to 1,000 — from the depths of shame and despair at the bottom, through courage, love, and peace in the middle, to enlightenment at the summit.
Hawkins was himself a Christian mystic. He experienced a profound spiritual awakening in mid-life and practiced in the Catholic and contemplative traditions, frequently citing Jesus, the Desert Fathers, and medieval Christian mystics as the highest expressions of spiritual consciousness.
The Map is a scale of human emotional and spiritual states, each assigned a number. The numbers are logarithmic — the difference between 200 and 300 is not one hundred steps but an enormous leap in lived experience and real-world impact.
The critical threshold is 200 — Courage. Below 200, Hawkins called states "Force" — they contract, drain, and ultimately harm. Above 200 he called states "Power" — they expand, sustain, and heal. He estimated that approximately 85% of humanity lives below 200 at any given moment.
The upper ranges — Love (500), Peace (600), Enlightenment (700–1000) — he described as radiating a healing effect on everyone nearby simply through presence. One person at 700, he wrote, counterbalances the negativity of 70 million people below 200.
Hawkins used applied kinesiology — muscle testing. In this method, a person holds a thought, statement, or object in mind while a practitioner tests the strength of their arm muscle. Hawkins claimed that the body "knows" truth from falsehood: high-energy items produce a strong response; low-energy items cause weakness.
Using this method over 29 years, he and colleagues calibrated thousands of items — emotional states, historical figures, books, artworks, religious traditions, and ideas — and compiled the results into the Map.
He published his doctoral dissertation on the methodology and maintained that any two people calibrating above 200 would reach the same results — a claim that has not been independently replicated.
Applied kinesiology is not accepted by mainstream science as a reliable truth-detection method. Independent studies have not confirmed that the method produces consistent results across practitioners, and Hawkins' calibrations cannot be externally verified.
His calibrations also reduce complex, internally varied traditions to a single number — which Hawkins himself acknowledged as a simplification. Any tradition contains the full spectrum of human consciousness within it.
The most honest way to use the Map: as a contemplative mirror, not a measurement instrument. The question it invites is not "what number is this tradition?" but "what does this level feel like from the inside — and do I recognise it?"
A tradition's "calibration" describes its dominant attractor field — the consciousness it tends to evoke and reinforce — not the ceiling or floor for its members. A Haredi Jew and a secular humanist may both operate at 500 (Love). A progressive Christian and a fundamentalist may both operate at 175 (Pride) in different moments. The Map describes tendencies, not identities.
The difference between 200 and 300 is not one hundred arbitrary units — it represents a qualitative leap in inner experience and real-world influence. One person at 600 counterbalances 10 million people below 200, in Hawkins' framework. This is why a single genuinely enlightened teacher can transform a culture, while a million people operating from Fear cancel each other out.
All levels below 200 are Force — they drain and harm. But Pride is uniquely dangerous because it feels positive from the inside. The person at Shame (20) knows they are suffering. The person at Pride (175) feels righteous, certain, and superior. This is why religious and political fundamentalism — which Hawkins explicitly placed at Pride — is so resistant to self-examination.
The Love level does not refer to romantic love, affection, or sentiment. It describes a state in which one perceives the inherent worth and divinity of all things without conditions, without requiring anything in return. Only about 4% of the world's population operates at this level. Most religious traditions aspire to it; few institutional expressions reliably produce it.
Hawkins himself said the most valuable use of the Map is self-referential: not "what level is that person or tradition?" but "what level am I operating from right now, in this moment?" The Map becomes harmful when used to rank and dismiss others — which is, ironically, a Pride-level use of a framework designed to transcend Pride.
The 🧠 Consciousness tab on each tradition's detail panel contains calibration data specific to that tradition.
Return to any continuum to explore how the Map applies in context.