The Pribram-Bohm holoflux is a theory of human and non-human consciousness that emerges from evidence drawn from two sources: (1) the holonomic theories of the American mind/brain scientist Karl Pribram, and (2) the cosmological interpretation of quantum theory developed by the American nuclear physicist David Bohm. From their work emerges the amazing holoflux theory, a term proposed by Karl Pribram to express the flow characterized by David Bohm as "holomovement," a two-way flow of awareness between our explicate order of time and space (spacetime to physicists) and seven additional dimensions beyond spacetime that recent particle physics experiments have shown must exist to support the experimental data. These additional dimensions are known by physicists as string theory. Extending their theories, the holoflux theory of consciousness views reality as one energy, cycling mathematically, lens-like, in a process of transformation manifesting in three modes: (1) electromagnetic energy in space-time, (2) holoflux energy in a transcendent order, and (3) vibrating isospheres at the boundary gap separating the implicate from the explicate orders.