SPECIAL EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION DISCRIMINATIVE INTELLIGENCE AND THE SEVEN STAGES OF
LIFE
The liability in the third stage of life is attachment to
abstract and independent mental states, based in an
experiential state of undifferentiated unity with the verbal
and lower mental dimension of the world and the body-mind.
It is the tendency toward a mental consciousness and a
willful manipulation of merely physical or elemental
conditions, without intuitive and feeling submission to the
Transcendental Consciousness and Radiant Current of Life. It
is the tendency toward superficial or merely objective
awareness, or attachment to the waking state as if it were
without a psyche. The
Way of Translation of Man into God - CHAPTER 7: The
Enlightenment of the Whole Body
The Third Stage of Life In the third stage, the lower functions of mind,
reactivity, and destructiveness in relation to himself
including will, intention, and self-control, and general
integration of the living being in its relations should
begin to develop. The weakness of this level of development,
or the absence of the cultural demand for it, is the basis
of the conflict that commonly appears at puberty. Not only
has the individual physically but has also developed an
emotional, and sexual presence. Then suddenly the suggestion
of the functions of will and intention arise in him,
accompanied by the social demand to be responsible, to
control himself, and to develop himself mentally. The
conflict between his readiness to throw himself into a life
of self-indulgence (the habit of wasting Life-Energy) and
the new demand for a life of self-control is the
conventional theatre of puberty. The third stage of life
should be a cultural moment in which the individual is
clearly confronted with the obligation to be responsible,
independent, and loving. Otherwise, the relative dependency
of his earlier life will become a source of weakness,
withdrawal, negative reactivity and destructiveness in
relation to himself and others. By the time an individual is about twenty-one should
be ready to grow into what is more than "human" in the
conventional sense. But the usual man is hardly even
equipped to be human. He has gone through this twenty-years,
but he has not come to the point of integrated functional
responsibility. He cannot control the Force of Life in
himself and use it in creative ways. He is full of fear,
continually subject to negative emotions and touts of
self-indulgence, and always looking to be consoled by the
things of life and beyond life, rather than being
responsibly and pleasurably integrated with the Great
Process into which he was born. Master Da Free John - The Eating Gorilla Comes in Peace,
pp. 266, 271.
Whereas the first stage of
life is most directly concerned with the physical aspect of
our being and' the second stage with ' the emotional-sexual
dimension, thought and intentionality are within the
province of the third stage of life. Thinking is a complex process. Some researchers
distinguish between 'logical" and "paleological" thinking.
The latter is a form of thought which is still deeply
embedded in emotion, and is thus closely associated with the
second stage of life. In this; kind of primitive thinking,
the thought/feeling "I hate you," for instance, is typically
related to the simultaneous thought / feeling "You hate me."
The possible detrimental consequences of this style of
thinking are evident in the whole egocentric and
ethnocentric dynamics of international politics. A higher form of mentation, which is more characteristic
of the third stage of life, is logical, conceptual, or
analytical thought. Ever since the days of Socrates and
Plato and, more pointedly, since the European
"Enlightenment" movement of the eighteenth century, this
form of reasoning has dominated our Western culture. It has
given rise to, and is continually reinforced by, what Master
Da Free John calls the "culture of doubt," as epitomized in
modern scientific materialism. Because of the widespread and baneful effects of the cult
of scientism, or scientific materialism, this section of The
Laughing Man is exclusively devoted to a critical
examination of this powerful force which is, today, shaping
all our lives. The three contributions - by G. Spencer Brown, Master Da
Free John, and Fritjof Capra - which we have selected, are
all strong critiques of scientism, and energetically point
out its inherent limitations and the restrictions it imposes
on human creativity and spirituality.
G. Spencer Brown is well known for, among other writings,
his book Laws of Form, which is an important work on the
theoretical foundations of logic. The passage below is
excerpted from his lesser known volume Only Two Can Play
This Game, published under the pseudonym of James Keys. In this humorous but stimulating piece, the author argues
that whatever we perceive or cognize is not what it appears
to be; there is no such thing as a thing, which may remind
one immediately of the Buddhist philosopher-sage Nagarjuna
who, having a practical bent of mind, declared: "The feeling
of suffering is experienced by picturing a thing where there
is no-thing." (Mahayana Vimshaka, vs. 10) Twelve years have elapsed since the publication of G.
Spencer Brown's book, Yet his criticism is as pertinent
today as it was then, because "thingification" (the
philosophical "reification"), in its many guises, is still
rampant in all areas of human endeavor, notably science. We
include this excerpt here as a witty reminder of this fact.
In the whole science of
physics there is no such thing as a thing. Hundreds of years
ago we carefully forgot this fact, and now it seems
astonishing even to begin to remember it again. We draw the
boundaries, we shuffle the cards, we make the distinctions.
In physics, yes physics, super-objective physics, solid
reliable four-square dam-buster physics, clean wholesome
outdoor fresh-air family entertainment science-fiction
superman physic , they don't even exist. It's all in the
mind, If you separate off this bit here (you can't really,
of course) and call it a particle (that's only a name, of
course, it's not really like that, more like waves really,
only not really like that either, not really like anything
really) surrounded by space (space is not what you think,
more a sort of mathematical invention, and just as real, or
just as unreal, as the particle. In fact the particle and
the space are the same thing really (except that we
shouldn't really say 'thing'), the sort of hypothetical
space got knotted up a bit somewhere, we don't know exactly
where because we can't see it, we can only see where it was
before we saw it, if you see what I mean, I mean even that's
not what it was really like, it was waves (or rather
photons) of light carrying a message that may well be very
unlike the thing, sorry, particle (remember this is only an
abstraction, so that we can talk about it (it? sorry, we
don't have an it in physics)) it (sorry!) came from. After
all, we don't know that a thing (pardon!) is telling the
truth about itself (would you mind looking the other way
while I change into something formal?) when it emits (excuse
me!) a blast (do forgive me!) of radiation, do we?), THEN
(if you have followed the argument so far) this (I mean all
these mathematical formulae, of course. What did you think I
meant?) is how it happens to come out. Of course, if you
start in a different place (no, I'm afraid I can't tell you
what a place is, although I could of course draw you a
graph) and do it a different way (do please stop
interrupting, darling, or we shall never get done), it (it?
What we are talking about, my dear. It is convenient to at
least pretend we are talking about something otherwise there
would not be much point in doing physics, would there?)
would naturally come out different. The significance of this way of talking, which, as
everybody knows, is called modern science, is maintained by
means of a huge and very powerful magic spell cast on
everybody to put us all to sleep for a hundred years, like
that nice Miss Sleeping Beauty, while the amusements are
being rigged up. We don't want people strolling all over the
place asking awkward questions and making it collapse before
it is ready do we? All in good time, when we have carefully
finished building ourselves this nice big house of cards, we
can, if we all keep our eyes shut tight and, hold our breath
and wish hard enough, we can all play this nice game of
houses and all go and live in it before it all falls down.
Except of course, there isn't enough room there for
everybody all at once, so we all have to not be too greedy
and take it in turns. It, is no to everyone's taste, of course. Some don't seem
to care for it much. Others try to change it when they get
there. But if, for example, you want to change the big
dipper, the time when you are least equipped to do so is the
time when you happen to be taking a trip on it. They forget
that. Some buy another. ticket and go round again. Well, Reader dear . . . we have to be a bit careful
'about doing it this way round, the authorities are none too
keen on letting every Tom, Dick and Harry behind the scenes,
we built all these amusements you see and of course we want
them to be used. Come along, ladies and gentlemen, god and
goddesses, your last chance to visit the Universe,
unbelievably realistic, have your tickets ready! Our
representative on the course is waiting to greet you, so
hurry along please, stand clear of the gates, mind the
doors, be good, see you all again soon! From Only Two Can Play This Game, by James Keys.
Copyright c 1972 by The Julian Press, Inc. By permission of
Crown Publishers, Inc.
Master Da Free John, in the following clarifying talk,
examines from a seventh stage point of view the raison
d'etre of the whole scientific enterprise. Science, he
explains, postulates an objective world of "things"
extraneous to the observer and then presumes to acquire
information about that supposedly independent universe. It
confines its definition of "the world" to the sensate,
physical dimension of existence. In other words, science
reinterprets the nonphysical dimension in terms of its own
reductionistic materialistic program. It does not entertain
any concern for transcendental Reality. - Master Da poignantly observes that the "activity of
science may not be natural at all." He characterizes science
as a "pose" (hence the Sanskrit word "asana" in the title of
his talk) or as a "gesture" or "mood" more precisely, it is
a third stage preoccupation, As Master Da affirms, this is
not anything detrimental in itself, but when science becomes
a totalitarian ideology-as it has become in recent history -
it forgoes any positive influence it might otherwise
have. Master Da continues that, those looking for an
antidote to modern. hypertrophied science will not find it
in any oriental flight from-the-world tradition or cult,
which is merely another-the contrasting - "pose," To redress
the balance, we must transcend these historical alternative,
of both the Western scientistic-extroverted approach and the
Eastern mystical-introvertive disposition.
MASTER DA FREE JOHN: Science is commonly described
as a way of observing the natural world, a method of
excluding or abstracting the viewer from the process of
observation, so that what is observed is a "reality"
untainted by the presence of the viewer. This process of
acquiring knowledge is concerned not with transforming the
viewer but with learning about the so-called objective or
natural world independent of the viewer, Now this is an interesting notion of human activity. We
are so used to the presence of science and technology in our
culture that we accept science as a natural. activity, a
sort of professionalization or technical elaboration of
something that everybody is already doing. But the activity
of science may not be natural at all. It is something' we
are already doing when' we conceive of the objective world'
or the natural world apart from, ourselves; yet, if we
become sensitive to the real Condition of our existence, can
we truly say that we ever experience or have anything
whatsoever to do with an objective world? Do we ever contact
anything objective or independent of ourselves? The common presumption of our daily lives is that there
is an objective world, but this presumption is simply a
convention of egoic life and of the society wherein we
live. Science bases its sophisticated activity upon this
conventional view of life. It seems natural enough to say
that we live in the physical world. We are all sitting
around here in this, physical world, right? But to speak of
a physical or objective world is simply a convention of our
existence, whereas in fact we do not have any actual
experience of an objective or independent world. Our actual
experience is much more complex or undefined than that
convention suggests. You refer to yourself as "me" or but if you were asked
what "I" is, how could you ever come to the end of the
description? Obviously you have not entered into an
exhaustive self analysis or observation of yourself before
using the term "me" or "I" as a self-reference. If you
understand how you presume the reality of a so-called
objective world, you will not find an "I" that could
possibly have so much as a foot inside a physical world or
that can be so defined and confined. This "I" which is
ultimately only conscious awareness, this being that is
aware of phenomena, has no direct connection to an
independently objective world. The conscious being is related to a so-called objective
world through the process of conception and perception. We
conceive and we perceive and therefore we presume an
objective world, but we do not in fact have any actual
contact with the world itself. We are associated with
perceptions but not with the world. Thus, we never directly
experience a "world" as an independent reality. Yet as we
experience this 'whole affair of perception and conception,
we make certain conventional judgments. We establish certain
conventions of thought, communication, and action whereby we
say things like, "There is this external world here," and,
"I am me, and you are you." We say these things, but they
are purely, conventional statements with no ultimate
philosophical stability. The notion of a physical world in
which we exist is a conventional notion, an idea, a
presumption on which we can act, but a presumption we need
not even share. It is not universally accepted that there is
an independent gross physical world. Many other cultures
have had totally different views of reality, and they have
used other conventions to determine their behaviors,
relations, and ideas. Science presumes to seek direct knowledge about a world
that is independent of Man. In doing so it has created other
effects that have cultural, psychological, and even
spiritual significance. Science has become the dominant
point of view of our society and thus has established a way
of life wherein human beings universally presume that the
"real world" is the physical world and that the world of the
self, the so-called internal realm, is unreal or merely
caused by the external world. Thus, science abandons the
primary feature of our condition as human beings. In fact,
you could even say that science is not a truly human
activity because in its pursuit what is specifically human
in us-the inherence of our consciousness in the Divine
Reality-is fundamentally suppressed, abstracted, and
separated out. According to the philosophy of science, we are supposed
to pursue knowledge about the external world, rather than
participate in a total world wherein Reality includes not
only the objects of perception and conception but the
process of perception and conception and the being or
consciousness in which perception and conception are
experienced or recognized. Science does not presume Reality
as the total human condition. It presumes reality to be
external to the human condition and in its study of that
reality it suppresses the human condition as a medium of
association with phenomena. The mood of science, therefore,
has chosen the so-called external world as the real world
and presumes that all the other dimensions of existence with
which human beings are directly associated are unreal or
simply caused by the "real" world, which is the gross,
physical, material, external universe. In Truth our Condition of existence includes more than
the so-called external world. We are always simply existing,
simply conscious. Every other feature of our existence is an
object to the conscious being. If a thought arises, it is
witnessed in consciousness. If a sensation arises, it is
witnessed. If a room is perceived, it is witnessed. The
fundamental aspect of our Condition, therefore, is
spontaneously existing consciousness, which has no features
of its own. Everything arises as an object to consciousness
through a spontaneous process of perception and
conception. That process of conceiving and perceiving notices and
experiences various forms, some of which are related to what
we call the external, gross world and others of which cannot
be found there at all. For instance, you cannot always find
the environments of your dreams in the gross world. At least
according to the conventions of our thinking you could say
that you cannot find them there. We associate different
levels of conceived and perceived objects with different
dimensions of experience. Therefore, there is this existing
being or existing consciousness, and there are the processes
of conception and perception, and then there are various
forms, gross and subtle, that we interpret and evaluate
according to various conventions. But our actual situation
includes all three of these fundamental conditions existing
consciousness, conception and perception, and forms-in
dynamic association with one another. Science is an invention of Man and a development of one
specific convention of interpreting reality exclusive of
other possible conventions. Thus, in the scientific
convention, existing consciousness in association with the
process of the conception and perception of forms becomes a
single conventional presumption at the level of human
relations in space and time. The conception of "me" or "I"
is basically the process of conception and perception
referring to itself. This body-mind, or the process of
conception/perception, calls itself "I." It refers to itself
as if it has thoroughly investigated itself and thus knows
exactly what it is meaning when it says "me" or "I." But the
"I" is just a convention of reference, not necessarily the
product of a thorough analysis of its true nature. "I" is a
rather intuitive gesture, but it is also just a convention
that permits ordinary communication and activity. Therefore, if the process of conception and perception is
uninspected, it conceives of itself as an independent self
over against all possible forms that arise. Once this
presumption is made (and it is made for very ordinary
reasons) it is possible to say things like, "There is the
external universe." But to call the realm of conceived and
perceived forms an "external universe" does not signify that
we understand anything profound or that we have understood
the true nature of that realm, any more than to say "I" or
"me" means that we have thoroughly analyzed and understood
the self. It is simply a convention of reference. Scientific activity is not inherently evil, but it does
become an evil or destructive force if it is permitted to
dominate our world view and to remain unaccountable to our
total realization of existence. In our time science has been
permitted to take a convention absolutely seriously, as if
such conventions had ultimate philosophical force, and it
has been permitted to do great psychological harm to
humanity. By divorcing reality from the realm of our actual
existence, science has attributed reality to that which is
apparently outside our existence. It has made the so-called
physical universe the realm of reality and it regards
everything else to be an effect of the material world. But science itself tacitly admits that we have no direct
connection to an objective universe. If we had a direct
connection to an objective universe, we would not have to go
to such lengths to find out about it scientifically. We must
create tools that abstract Man either mentally or
technologically just to find out about the external world.
In order to do science, you must "machine" Man, you must
define and discipline Man in a particular way, because Man
is not naturally habituated to knowing about things in the
way that science requires. This discipline can be useful in
acquiring certain kinds of knowledge, but if that discipline
is permitted to become an absolute point of view to the
exclusion of the total reality of Man, then human existence
becomes an alienated aberration within the physical
universe. The reality of the external world to which science points
has no psychic depth, no depth of being. It is a plastic
mass of events. When scientists study Man, they want to
prove that the mind, the psyche, the being of Man ' the
effect of bodily existence and thus an effect of matter.
They conclude that if the mind is caused by matter, then it
is basically unreal, secondary, not a primary reality. From
that point of view, however, to pursue knowledge about
reality one must dissociate from one's own being and find a
way to become involved with a so-called external, objective
world. Science as such a discipline of knowledge can be of
value, but as a point of view about existence it is
destructive and psychotic. We do not exist merely in a physical universe, you see.
We exist in a multidimensional condition, every aspect of
which is totally real and mutually related to all other
aspects. These many dimensions condition one another and
bring one another into existence. As a matter of fact, we
never observe anything's ever being brought into existence.
Existence is an inherent Condition of Transcendental Being.
All these appearances are just transformations or changes.
Nothing ever comes into existence. Nothing ever passes out
of existence. Things only change. They become apparent and
unapparent, identifiable in one moment and unidentifiable in
the next. This truth is demonstrated in the law of the
conservation of energy conceived by modern physics, which
states that energy is never destroyed but is, rather,
ceaselessly transformed. In the ancient world essential human existence, as well
as social and cultural existence, was not created and
defined by the point of view of science or anything science.
Even though some science-like enterprises may have developed
in those times and places, the fundamental conceptions or
presumptions that created the model of human existence and
established the circumstances and processes of daily life
were often based on a total and fully human presumption
about the conditions of existence. Science is a dehumanizing adventure when made into an
absolute philosophical point of view, because it chooses a
reality independent of Man as the subject of its
investigation and makes that reality the force that defines
Man and makes the physical universe senior to, superior to,
or more real than the being of Man and the subtler
dimensions in which Man participates constantly. Science
excludes the subtle dimensions of energy, the dimensions of
psyche, and the dimension of being or consciousness. But all
these conditions are our true Condition. The mere external
or objective physical world, which is only a conventional
notion anyway, is a fraction of the total Condition of which
we are directly aware in every moment. The physical
universe, which science wants to investigate, itself
represents only a portion, one dimension, of a much wider,
broader scale of dimensions in which we participate. We exist simultaneously in many dimensions. We fluidly
move attention through these dimensions. Our attention can
pass from gross physical phenomena into thinking, into
visions, into every, into a state transcending all gross
consciousness, into psychic awareness of what appear to be
environments or worlds that have nothing whatever to do with
this one, into existent being or consciousness that has no
references whatsoever, and then back again through all of
these dimensions one by one. We can, therefore, presume a
Condition of existence wherein all these dimensions are
simultaneously existing, simultaneously real. But since
science is not founded upon the observer but upon the
observed, it does not have this flexibility of movement
through many dimensions, and it is not possessed by the
paradoxes of our actual human existence. Many scientists and people sympathetic with the
scientific world view do not seem capable of thinking about
what they are doing. They have no more insight into their
presumptions and motives than enthusiastic religionists or
"creationists" possess in their domain. Scientists do not
rigorously understand that science itself is a chosen,
specific development of a single aspect of conventional
human understanding. In the enterprise of science the mind
and body are used to do a specific kind of work. But apart
from that, all the dogma about the total universe and about
reality and existence itself, and science's anti-spiritual,
anti-religious, anti-psychic point of view, and its
Victorian, archaic materialism, and its prejudices against
other kinds of knowing, all of this is insidious, not merely
nonsensical, because it has such a profoundly negative
effect on human beings. Meanwhile, many scientists who adopt this dogmatic
approach act as if they were superintelligent people with
their tweedy, pipesmoking, slow-talking, complicated
linguistic minds. This is the archetype of intelligence,
right? This is the way you are supposed to be if you are
intelligent. Well, this archetype does not necessarily
represent intelligence. It is just a pose. Real intelligence
must be fiercely capable of investigating every aspect of
existence, including the very process' of knowledge that we
call science. Science has now become so legitimized, and we have become
so serious about it, that we are beginning to forget that,
on a very basic level, we feel there is something ridiculous
and even threatening about science. When it first appeared,
science was considered heresy by the Church. Then it became
thought of as just craziness, and scientists were always
depicted as mad. Madness and science were considered the
same thing in those days. When science first began to become
prominent, before it became really official-at that
crossover point from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
into the so-called Age of Enlightenment and Romanticism of
the nineteenth century-science was considered to be possibly
aberrated. Many stories, such as the tale of Frankenstein,
appeared during that time. Science was considered to be a
kind of balminess or madness. In some level we are still very humorous about science.
We know that the left-brained, tweedy character is a poseur
and we know that science is a pose, an "asana." Apart from
the specific enterprise for which this asana or pose of
science was invented, it does not represent the disposition
wherein we are Enlightened, free, happy, totally associated
with all of the factors of our existence. To do science one must take on a pose that is not the
disposition of Man contemplating Infinity. When science
begins to propose that this asana is the disposition we must
assume relative to everything, then it becomes mad. We must
be able to reconnect with our humor, our primitive sense of
the poseur that we can be and of the ridiculousness of our
postures. To live all of life in the pose of science, to
make the asana of science a style of living, is like trying
to eat dinner while standing on your head! There are certain
things you cannot do in the posture of science, and when you
are seen trying to do them in that pose, you must be laughed
at. We must recover our humor by regaining a more complete
understanding, appreciation, and awareness of our existence
as a whole and understand science as an aspect of existence,
a tool, that we can develop as a conventional exercise with
ordinary importance but which, if it is developed otherwise,
could be very destructive to our human existence. The true alternative to the extreme pose of science,
however, is not the traditional option of orientalism. The
pose and activity of science that we are criticizing is an
enterprise of Western man. And it is necessary to begin to
see the limitations of that essentially Western exercise and
begin to feel the threats to human life that are created by
the absolutism of that pose. Yet, if you only react to the
presumptions of science, you start looking to the opposite
pose as a solution. We can clearly see, particularly in recent decades, a
developing interest in the oriental approach to life. That
interest really represents a nostalgia for the oriental
disposition, but we must understand that the oriental asana
is also a partial development of Man, an exploitation of
only one aspect of our total Condition. If you take the
oriental asana too seriously, you deny reality to the
conventional relations of human existence. You deny positive
value, therefore, to being born and to the conventional
responsibilities-of being alive as a human being. The
oriental disposition of inwardness and withdrawal from life
'promises infinite regression into security from all the
limiting effects of the perceived and conceived
universe. Both the oriental and the occidental views, in their
extremes, are reductive. They reduce reality to only one of
its features. The oriental disposition attributes reality
exclusively to the fundamental self-nature, and the
occidental disposition attributes reality exclusively to the
objective relations of the self. But when you become
dogmatically inclined to attribute reality exclusively to
one or another primary feature of our total Condition, you
are engineering your consciousness into an illusion, a
fault, a dilemma. The oriental disposition is regressive toward self, but
the occidental disposition is progressive to the exclusion
of the self. It makes Man into a moral robot whose only
significance is the accomplishment attributed to the few
individuals who have made scientific discoveries at critical
moments. From the point of view of scientific dogma, those
are the only human beings who have really done anything
other than be confined to illusions. Everybody else is sort
of babbling along in fear, believing all kinds -of nonsense.
Here and -there we find some character in a tweed coat with
a pipe who is able to break free of all that and see how
objects move in space! In terms of the ability to observe and comprehend, there
is something remarkable about such individuals. But likewise
other people have accomplished just as many remarkable
things in relation to a totally different way of knowing, a
more comprehensive or total way of knowing or realizing our
existence. Even so, _there are many babbling, frightened
people, but you can babble and be frightened as a scientist
just as much as you can babble and be :frightened as a
conventionally religious person. The oriental enterprise-which not only developed in the
East but which has been a feature of humanity all along,
East and West has provided the domain for religion;
spirituality, mysticism, magic, and all the elaborations of
the psyche. Because oriental enterprises attribute reality
only to the fundamental depth of the subject and not to the
world of forms, they tend to be ineffectively related to the
world of forms. Therefore, if the domains of religion,
spirituality, mysticism, and magic are not held accountable
to real processes, they can develop all kinds of illusions
and create views that are purely imaginary, suggestive, or
archetypal. Those views may be unified, but the. phenomena
they ate- unifying can. be totally imaginary, merely psychic
and subtle, and only partially objective in,: relation to
the material world-Thus, the mind of Man and the culture of
Man, when-permitted to develop exclusively along oriental
'lines, tend t6 create a culture of illusions. Science as we know it appeared historically at a time,
when religious enterprises (particularly Christianity),
dominated by orientalism, had; become so filled with
illusions that early scientific observations. were
arbitrarily condemned and anathematized, just as science now
arbitrarily condemns and anathematizes non illusory, real
features of psychic and Spiritual realization. Scientific
discoveries were declared heretical because they did not
square with the assumed imaginary cosmic picture that had
been created by religionists. Then, as science itself began
to achieve more and more dominance because it was
discovering some real facts, the Church, the religious point
of view, the. oriental disposition itself, began to be
viewed as wrong. Not only some of its presumptions or ideas
were presumed wrong, but religion itself was presumed
wrong. Now we are at the opposite end of this historical
pendulum. At one time even the Western world was profoundly
associated with the religious consciousness of orientalism
(in the form of Christianity, specifically), but now that
whole enterprise is presumed to be false. And another world
view, another way of knowledge, another kind of cult has
achieved power and has become associated with the State and
the machinery of worldly power, and it is using that
position to dominate its. opposite. DEVOTEE: Now even some meditation groups try to prove
their effectiveness scientifically. MASTER DA FREE JOHN: Yes. In order for religion to remain
legitimate in our time when it is so much out of favor, it
has to associate with what is in favor - the dominant
persuasion and mass of information on that, has been
generated in the cult of scientific' materialism. Thus, what
in another, setting , would be called a religious, mystical,
of spiritual practice is now called scientific yoga and the
like. But science itself is just a conventional expression
of the current stage of humanity. The cure for all of this
is not to be found in the disposition or enterprise of
science itself, nor is it to be found in the disposition and
orientation of the oriental asana" or point of view. Neither
of these two represents the fullness of human realization.
They both have, in their extreme and exclusive form, been
dominant in one or another time.' To transcend the limitations that are obvious at the
present time, we must transcend all of the historical
alternatives. We must transcend the limited disposition of
science that now dominates as well as the limited
disposition of the oriental view that seems to be its
primary alternative. In order to transcend all these limited
features we must simply and directly observe and consider
our condition as a whole prior to making any of these
limited presumptions, prior to assuming or engineering our
existence as a choice between the occidental and the
oriental dispositions. We must conceive of our condition,
our existence, as it is altogether. We must witness it and
see that it is altogether existing and real in every
dimension, not just in one dimension or feature. And our
real existence, our free and happy existence, is to be
realized only in the asana, the attitude, of our total
Condition rather than in our choice of a single aspect of
that Condition.
With the publication of The Tao of Physics in 1976,
physicist Fritjof Capra touched off a widespread interest in
the similarities between the quantum view of the world
developing in modern physics and the world view of ancient
mysticism. In his latest book, The Turning Point (New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1982), he shows how the new paradigm
first conceived to explain the realm of subatomic particles
and energy events is now beginning to reshape our view of
biology, medicine, psychology, sociology, and even
economics. The following article, prepared for The Laughing Man,
traces the influence of the older Cartesian-Newtonian world
view and shows how the current shift in scientific thinking
could produce a new perspective on reality - a new way of
looking at, and hence also relating to, the world. Fritjof Capra describes the world view of modern
physics, which spearheads the renaissance he is talking
about, as essentially "holistic" and "ecological." He
perceives certain striking parallels, and even a fundamental
consonance, between this revised model of reality and the
visionary interpretations of the world in the mystical
traditions. He does not, however, elaborate on these cursory
observations. The reason for this lies, perhaps, in the fact
that his faith in the scientific project has not been shaken
by the collapse of the Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm.
CRISIS AND TRANSFORMATION IN SCIENCE AND
SOCIETY BY FRITJOF CAPRA During the first three
decades of this century, atomic and subatomic physics led to
a dramatic revision of many basic concepts and ideas about
reality, which brought about a profound change in our world
view; from the mechanistic world view of Descartes and
Newton. to a holistic and ecological view, a view that turns
out to be very similar to the views of mystics of all ages
and traditions. The new view of reality was by no means easy to accept
for physicists at the beginning of the century. The
exploration of the atomic and subatomic world brought them
in contact with a strange and unexpected reality. In their
struggle to grasp this new reality, scientists became
painfully aware that their basic concepts, their language,
and their whole way of thinking were inadequate to describe
atomic phenomena. Their problems were not merely
intellectual, but amounted to an intense emotional and, one
could say, even existential crisis. It took them a long time
to overcome this crisis, but in the end they were rewarded
with deep insights into the nature of matter and its
relation to the human mind. I have come to believe that today our society as a whole
finds itself in a similar crisis. We can read about its
numerous manifestations every day in the newspapers. We have
high inflation and unemployment, we have an energy crisis,
we have a crisis in health care, pollution and other
environmental disasters, a rising wave of violence and
crime, and so on. I believe that these are all different
facets of one and the same crisis, and that this crisis is
essentially a crisis of perception. Like the crisis in
physics in the 1920s, it derives from the fact that we are
trying to apply the concepts of an outdated world view-the
mechanistic world view of Cartesian-Newtonian science-to a
reality which can no longer be understood in terms of these
concepts. We live today in a globally interconnected world,
in which biological, psychological, social, and
environmental phenomena are all interdependent. To describe
this world appropriately we need an ecological perspective
which the Cartesian world view does not offer. What we need, then, is a new "paradigm" - a new vision of
reality; a fundamental change in our thoughts, perceptions,
and values. The beginnings of this change, of the shift from
the mechanistic to the holistic conception of reality, are
already visible in all fields and are likely to dominate the
entire decade. The gravity and global extent of our crisis
indicate that the current changes are likely to result in a
transformation of unprecedented dimensions, a turning point
for the planet as a whole. To discuss the various aspects and implications of the
current paradigm shift, I shall first describe the old
paradigm, the Cartesian world view, and its influence on
science and society, and shall then discuss the new holistic
and ecological world view and its implications. THE MECHANISTIC CARTESIAN WORLD VIEW The mechanistic view of the world was developed in the
seventeenth century by Galileo, Descartes, Newton, and
others. Descartes based his view of nature on a fundamental
division into two separate and independent realms: that of
mind and that of matter. The material universe was a machine
and nothing but a machine. Nature worked according to
mechanical laws, and everything in the material world could
be explained in terms of the arrangement and movement of its
parts. Descartes extended this mechanistic view of matter to
living organisms. Plants and animals were considered simply
machines; human beings were inhabited by a rational soul,
but the human body was indistinguishable from an
animal-machine. The essence of Descartes's approach to knowledge was his
analytic method of reasoning. It consists in breaking up
thoughts and problems into pieces and arranging these in
their logical order. This approach has become an essential
characteristic of modern scientific thought and has proved
extremely useful in the development of scientific theories
and the realization of complex technological projects. On
the other hand, overemphasis on the Cartesian method has led
to the fragmentation that is characteristic of both our
general thinking and our academic disciplines and to the
widespread attitude of reductionism in science - the belief
that all aspects of complex phenomena can be understood by
reducing them to their constituent parts. While Descartes postulated the fundamental division
between mind and matter and outlined his mechanistic vision
of reality, Galileo was the first to combine scientific
experimentation with the use of mathematical language. In
order to make it possible for scientists to describe nature
mathematically, Galileo postulated that science should
restrict itself to studying the essential properties of
material bodies-shapes, numbers and movement - which could
be measured and quantified. Other properties, like color,
sound, taste, or smell, were merely subjective mental
projections which should be excluded from the domain of
science. This strategy has proved extremely successful
throughout modern science, but it has also exacted a heavy
toll. A science concerned only with quantity and based
exclusively on measurement is inherently unable to deal with
experience, quality, or values. Indeed, ever since Galileo
scientists have evaded all ethical and moral issues, and
this attitude is now generating disastrous consequences. The conceptual framework created by Galileo and Descartes
was completed triumphantly by Newton, who developed a
consistent mathematical formulation of the mechanistic view
of nature. From the second half of the seventeenth century
to the end of the nineteenth, the mechanistic Newtonian
model of the universe dominated all scientific thought. The
natural sciences, as well as the humanities and social
sciences, all accepted the mechanistic view of classical
physics as the correct description of reality and modeled
their own theories accordingly. Whenever psychologists,
sociologists, or economists wanted to be scientific, they
naturally turned toward the basic concepts of Newtonian
physics, and many of them hold on to these concepts even now
that physicists have gone far beyond them. INFLUENCE OF CARTESIAN-NEWTONIAN THOUGHT In biology the Cartesian
view of living organisms as machines, constructed from
separate parts, still provides the dominant conceptual
framework. Although Descartes's simple mechanistic biology
could not be carried very far and had to be modified
considerably during the subsequent three hundred years, the
belief that all aspects of living organisms can be
understood by reducing them to their smallest constituents,
and by studying the mechanisms through which these interact,
lies at the very basis of most contemporary biological
thinking. The influence of the reductionist biology on medical
thought resulted in the so-called biomedical model, which
constitutes the conceptual foundation of modern scientific
medicine. The human body is regarded as a machine that can
be analyzed in terms of its parts; disease is seen as the
malfunctioning of biological mechanisms which are studied
from the point of view of cellular and molecular biology;
the doctor's role is to intervene, either physically or
chemically, to correct the malfunctioning of a specific
mechanism, different parts of the body being treated by
different specialists. To associate a particular illness with a definite part of
the body is, of course, very useful in many cases. But
modern scientific medicine has overemphasized the
reductionist approach and has developed its specialized
disciplines to a point where doctors are often no longer
able to view illness as a disturbance of the whole organism,
nor to treat it as such. What they tend to do is to treat a
particular organ or tissue, and this is generally done
without taking the rest of the body into account, let alone
considering the psychological and social aspects of the
patient's illness. Like biology and medicine, the science of psychology has
been shaped by the Cartesian paradigm. Psychologists,
following Descartes, adopted a strict division between mind
and matter. Based on this division, two approaches were
developed for the study of the human psyche, thus creating
two major schools of psychology. The structuralists studied
the mind through introspection and tried to analyze
consciousness into its basic elements, while behaviorists
concentrated exclusively on the study of behavior and so
were led to ignore or deny the existence of mind altogether.
Both these schools emerged at a time when scientific thought
was dominated by the Newtonian model of reality.
Accordingly, they both modeled themselves after classical
physics, incorporating the basic concepts of Newtonian
mechanics into their theoretical frameworks. Meanwhile, working in the clinic and the consulting room
rather than the laboratory, Sigmund Freud used the method of
free association to develop psychoanalysis. Although this
was a very different, revolutionary theory of the human
mind, its basic concepts were again Newtonian in nature.
Thus the three main currents of psychological thinking in
the first decades of the twentieth century-two in the
academy and one in the clinic-were based not only on the
Cartesian paradigm but also on specifically Newtonian
concepts of reality. To conclude this brief survey of the influences of
Cartesian-Newtonian thought, I shall now turn to the social
sciences and, in particular, to economics. Present-day
economics, like most social sciences, is fragmentary and
reductionist. It fails to recognize that the economy is
merely one aspect of a whole ecological and social fabric.
Economists tend to dissociate the economy from this fabric,
in which it is embedded, and to describe it in terms of
simplistic and highly unrealistic theoretical models. Most
of their basic concepts - efficiency, productivity, GNP,
etc.-have been narrowly defined and are used without their
wider social and ecological context. In particular, the
social and environmental costs generated by all economic
activity are generally neglected. Consequently, the current
economic concepts and models are no longer adequate to map
economic phenomena in a fundamentally interdependent world,
and hence economists have generally been unable to
understand the major economic problems of our time. Because of its narrow, reductionist framework,
conventional economics is inherently anti-ecological.
Whereas the surrounding ecosystems are organic wholes which
are self balancing and self-adjusting, our current economies
and technologies recognize no self limiting principle.
Undifferentiated growth economic, technological and
institutional growth-is still regarded by most economists as
the sign of a "healthy" economy, although it is now causing
ecological disasters, widespread corporate crime, social
disintegration, and ever increasing likelihood of nuclear
war. The situation is further aggravated by the fact that most
economists, in a misguided striving for scientific rigor,
neglect to acknowledge explicitly the value system on which
their models are based. In doing so, they tacitly accept the
highly imbalanced set of values which dominates our culture
and is embodied in our social institutions. I have found the Chinese terminology of yin and yang very
useful for describing this cultural imbalance. Together with
the development of the mechanistic world view, our culture
has consistently favored yang values and attitudes and has
neglected their complementary, yin counterparts. We have
favored self-assertion over integration, analysis over
synthesis, rational knowledge over intuitive wisdom, science
over religion, competition over cooperation, expansion over
conservation, and so on. From the earliest times of Chinese culture, yin was also
associated with the feminine and yang with the masculine,
and in our time l feminists have repeatedly pointed out that
the values and attitudes favored by our society are those of
patriarchal cultures. The Cartesian j world view and the
yang-oriented value system have thus been supported by
patriarchy, but like the Cartesian paradigm, patriarchy is
now in its decline, and the feminist perspective will be an
essential aspect of the new vision of reality. THE NEW PARADIGM The new paradigm emerged in
physics. at the beginning of the century and is now emerging
in various other fields-biology, medicine, psychology,
economics, politics, etc. It consists not only of new
concepts, but also of a new value system, and it is
reflected in new forms of social organization and new
institutions. It is being! formulated largely outside our
academic institutions, which remain too closely tied to they
Cartesian framework to appreciate the new ideas. To describe
the new paradigm, I shall begin with the view of matter that
has emerged from modern physics, and I will then discuss the
extension of this view to living organisms, mind,
consciousness, and to social phenomena The material world, according to contemporary physics, is
not a mechanical system mad of separate objects, but rather
appears as complex web of relationships. Subatomic particles
cannot be understood as isolated separate entities but have
to be seen a interconnections, or correlation's, in a
network of events. The notion of separate objects is an
idealization which is often very useful but has no
fundamental validity. All such objects are patterns in an
inseparable cosmic process, and these patterns are
intrinsically dynamic. Subatomic particles are not made of
any material substance. They have a certain mass but this
mass is a form of energy. Energy, however, is always
associated with processes, with activity; it is a measure of
activity. Subatomic particles, then, are bundles of energy,
or patterns of activity. The energy" patterns of the subatomic world form stable
atomic and molecular structures which build up matter and
give it its macroscopic solid appearance thus making us
believe that it is made of some material substance. At the
everyday, macroscopic level, the notion of a substance is
quite useful, but at the atomic level it no longer makes
sense. Atoms consist of particles and these particles are
not made of any material stuff. When we observe them, we
never see any substance; what we observe are dynamic
patterns continually changing into one another-a continuous
dance of energy. THE SYSTEMS VIEW OF LIFE The world view of modern
physics is holistic and ecological. It emphasizes the
fundamental interrelatedness and interdependence of all
phenomena, and also the intrinsically dynamic nature of
physical reality. To extend this view to the description of
living organisms we have to go beyond physics, and there is
now a framework which seems to be a natural extension of the
concepts of modern physics. This framework is known as
systems theory, sometimes also called general systems
theory. Actually, the term "systems theory" is somewhat
misleading, since it is not a well-defined theory, like
relativity theory or quantum theory. It is rather a
particular approach, a language, a particular
perspective. The systems approach is concerned with the description of
systems, which are integrated wholes that derive their
essential properties from the interrelations between their
parts. The systems approach, therefore, does not focus on
the parts, but rather on the interrelations and
interdependencies between the parts. Examples of systems can
be found in the living and nonliving world, and I shall
concentrate here on living systems. Every living organism is
a living system-a single cell, a plant, an animal, or a
human being. But living systems need not be individual
organisms. There are social systems, such as a family or a
community, and then there are ecological systems, or
ecosystems, in which networks of organisms are interlinked,
together with various inanimate components, to form an
intricate web of relations involving the exchange of matter
and energy in continual cycles. All these are living systems
which exhibit similar patterns of organization. An important aspect of living systems is their tendency
to form multileveled structures of systems within systems.
For example, the human body consists of organs, each organ
of tissues, and each tissue of cells. All these are living
organisms, or living systems, which consist of smaller parts
and, at the same time, act as parts of larger wholes. Living
systems, then, exhibit a stratified order, and there are
interconnections and interdependencies between all systems
levels, each level interacting and communicating with its
total environment. We see that the systems view is an ecological view. Like
the view of modern physics, it emphasizes the
interrelatedness and interdependence of all phenomena and
the dynamic nature of living systems. In the systems view,
all structure is seen as a manifestation of underlying
processes, and living systems are described in terms of
patterns of organization. SELF-ORGANIZATION What, then, are the
patterns of organization that are characteristic of life?
They include a variety of processes and phenomena which can
be seen as different aspects of the same dynamic principle,
the principle of self-organization. A living organism is a
self organizing system, which means that its order in
structure and function is not imposed by the environment but
is established by the system itself. Self-organizing systems
exhibit a certain degree of autonomy; for example, they tend
to establish their size according to internal principles of
organization, independent of environmental influences. This
does not mean that living systems are isolated from their
environment; on the contrary, they interact with it
continually, but this interaction does not determine their
organization. The relative autonomy of self-organizing systems sheds
new light on the age-old philosophical question of free
will. From the systems point of view, both determinism and
freedom are relative concepts. To the extent that a system
is autonomous from its environment it is free; to the extent
that it depends on its environment through continuous
interaction its activity will be shaped by environmental
influences. The relative autonomy of organisms usually
increases with their complexity, and it reaches its
culmination in human beings. This relative concept of free will seems to be consistent
with the view of mystical traditions that exhort their
followers to transcend the notion of an isolated self and
become aware that we are inseparable parts of the cosmos in
which we are embedded. The goal of these traditions is to
shed all ego sensations completely and, in mystical
experience, merge with the totality of the cosmos. Once such
a state is reached, the question of free will seems to lose
its meaning. If I am the universe, there can be no "outside"
influences and all my actions will be spontaneous and free.
From the point of view of mystics, therefore, the notion of
free will is relative, limited, and-as they would
say-illusory, like all other concepts we use in our rational
descriptions of reality. A theory of self-organizing systems has been worked out
over the last decade in considerable detail by a number of
researchers from various disciplines under the leadership of
the Belgian Nobel Laureate Ilya Prigogine. One of the most
important characteristics of self organization is the fact
that self-organizing systems are "always at work." They have
to maintain a continuous exchange of energy and matter with
their environments to stay alive. This exchange involves
taking in ordered structures, such as food, breaking them
down and using some of the components to maintain or even
increase the order of the organism. This process is known as
metabolism. Another important aspect of the continual activity of
living systems is the process of self renewal. Every living
organism continually renews itself cells breaking down and
building up structures, tissues and organs replacing their
cells in continual cycles. In spite of this continual
change, the organism maintains its overall structure and
appearance. Its components are continually renewed and
recycled, but the pattern of organization remains stable.
Other aspects of self-organization which are closely related
to self-renewal are the phenomena of self-healing,
regeneration, and adaptation to environmental changes. In all these processes, fluctuations play a very central
role. A living system can be described in terms of
interdependent variables which oscillate between certain
limits, so that the system is in a state of continual
fluctuations. Such a state is known as homeostasis. It is a
state of dynamic balance which displays great flexibility.
When there is some disturbance, the system tends to return
to its original fluctuating state by adapting in various
ways to the disturbance. Feedback mechanisms come into play
which tend to reduce any deviation from the balanced
state. The aspects of self-organization I have described so far
can all be seen as processes of self-maintenance. What makes
the understanding of living systems quite difficult is the
fact that they have not only a tendency to maintain
themselves in their dynamic state but, at the same time,
also show a tendency to transcend themselves, to reach out
creatively beyond their boundaries and limitations to
generate new structures and new forms of organization. This
principle of self-transcendence manifests itself in the
processes of learning, development, and evolution. According to the systems view, the Darwinian theory of
evolution represents only one of two complementary views
which are both necessary to understand the phenomenon of
evolution. The other view sees evolution as an essential
manifestation of self-organization which leads over time to
an ordered unfolding of complexity. The two complementary
tendencies of self-organizing systems - self-maintenance and
self-transcendence-are in continual dynamic interplay, and
both of them contribute to the phenomenon of evolutionary
adaptation. A NEW CONCEPT OF MIND In order to apply the
systems view of life to higher organisms and, in particular,
to human beings, it is necessary to deal with the phenomenon
of mind. Gregory Bateson has proposed to define mind as a
systems phenomenon characteristic of living organisms,
societies, and ecosystems. He has listed a set of criteria
which systems have to satisfy for mind to occur. Any system
that satisfies those criteria will be able to process
information and develop various phenomena which we associate
with mind-thinking, learning, memory, etc. In Bateson's
view, mind is a necessary and inevitable consequence of a
certain complexity which begins long before organisms
develop a brain and a higher nervous system. Bateson's criteria for mind turn out to be closely
related to the characteristics of self organizing systems.
Indeed, mind is an essential property of living systems. As
Bateson put it, "Mind is the essence of being alive." From
the systems point of view, life is not substance or force,
and mind is not an entity interacting with matter. Both life
and mind are manifestations of the same set of systemic
properties; a set of processes which represent the dynamics
of self organization. This will be my definition of mind:
the dynamics of self-organization. The new concept of mind will be of tremendous value in
our attempts to overcome the Cartesian division. Mind and
matter no longer appear to belong to two separate
categories, but can be seen to represent merely different
aspects of the same phenomenon. For example, the
relationship between mind and brain, which has confused
countless scientists ever since Descartes, becomes now quite
clear. Mind is the dynamics of self-organization, and the
brain is the biological structure through which this
dynamics is carried out. I shall follow Bateson completely in his concept of mind,
but shall use a slightly different language. In order to
remain closer to conventional language, I shall reserve the
term "mind" for organisms of high complexity and will use,
"mentation," a term meaning mental activity, to describe the
dynamics of self organization at lower levels. Every living
system-a cell, a tissue, an organ, etc. .- is engaged in the
process of mentation, but in higher organisms an "inner
world" unfolds which is characteristic of mind. It includes
self-awareness, conscious experience, conceptual thought,
symbolic language, etc. Most of these characteristics exist
in rudimentary form in various animals, but they unfold
fully in human beings. The fact that the living world is organized in
multileveled structures means that there also exist levels
of mind. In the human organism, for example, there are
various levels of "metabolic" mentation involving cells,
tissues, and organs, and then there is the neural mentation
of the brain which, itself, consists of multiple levels
corresponding to different stages of human evolution. The
totality of these mentations constitutes what I would call
the human mind, or psyche. In the stratified order of
nature, individual human minds are embedded in the larger
minds of social and ecological systems, and these are
integrated into the planetary mental system, which in turn
must participate in some kind of universal or cosmic mind.
The conceptual framework of the new systems approach is in
no way restricted by associating this cosmic mind with the
traditional idea of God. In this view the deity is, of
course, neither male nor female, nor manifest in any
personal form, but represents nothing less than the
self-organizing dynamics of the entire cosmos. SCIENCE AND SPIRITUALITY The new vision of reality
is an ecological vision in a sense which goes far beyond the
immediate concerns with environmental protection. It is
supported by modern science, and in particular by the new
systems approach, but it is rooted in a perception of
reality that goes beyond the scientific framework to an
intuitive awareness of the oneness of all life, the
interdependence of its multiple manifestations, and its
cycles of change and transformation. When the concept of the
human spirit is understood as the mode of consciousness in
which the individual feels connected to the cosmos as a
whole, it becomes clear that ecological awareness is truly
spiritual. Indeed, the idea of the individual being linked to the
cosmos is expressed in the Latin root of the word religion,
religion ("to bind strongly"), as well as in the Sanskrit
yoga, which means "union." It is thus not surprising that the new vision of reality
is consistent with many ideas in mystical traditions. The
parallels between science and mysticism are not confined to
modern physics but can now be extended with equal
justification to the new systems biology. Two basic themes
emerge again and again from the study of living and
nonliving matter and are also repeatedly emphasized in the
teachings of mystics-the universal interconnectedness and
interdependence of all phenomena, and the intrinsically
dynamic nature of reality. We also find a number of ideas in
mystical traditions that are less relevant, or not yet
significant, to modern physics but are crucial to the
systems view of living organisms. The concept of stratified order plays a prominent role in
many traditions. As in modern science, it involves the
notion of multiple levels of reality which differ in their
complexities and are mutually interacting and
interdependent. These levels include, in particular, levels
of mind, which are seen as different manifestations of
cosmic consciousness. Although mystical views of
consciousness go far beyond the framework of contemporary
science, they are by no means inconsistent with the modern
systems concepts of mind and matter. Similar considerations
apply to the concept of free will, which is quite compatible
with mystical views when associated with the relative
autonomy of self-organizing systems. The concepts of process, change, and fluctuation, which
play such a crucial role in the systems view of living
organisms, are emphasized in the Eastern mystical
traditions, especially in Taoism. The idea of fluctuations
as the basis of order, which Prigogine introduced into
modern science, is one of the major themes in all Taoist
texts. Because the Taoist sages recognized the importance of
fluctuations in their observations of the living world, they
also emphasized the opposite but complementary tendencies
that seem to be an essential aspect of life. Among the
Eastern traditions Taoism is the one with the most explicit
ecological perspective, but the mutual interdependence of
all aspects of reality and the nonlinear nature of its
interconnections are emphasized throughout Eastern
mysticism. For example, these are the ideas underlying the
Indian concept of karma. SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS The systems view of life
has many important consequences not only for science but
also for society and everyday living. It will influence our
ways of dealing with health and illness, our relation to the
natural environment, and will change many of our social and
political structures. All these changes are already taking
place. The paradigm shift is not something that will happen
some time in the future; it is happening right now. The
sixties and seventies have generated a whole series of
philosophical, spiritual, and political movements which all
seem to go in the same direction; they all emphasize
different aspects of the new paradigm. There is a rising
concern with ecology, expressed by citizen movements that
are forming around social and environmental issues, pointing
out the limits to growth, advocating a new ecological ethic,
and developing appropriate "soft" technologies. They are the
sources of emerging counter economies, based on
decentralized, cooperative, and ecologically harmonious
lifestyles. In the political arena, the antinuclear movement
is fighting the most extreme outgrowth of our
self-assertive, "macho" technology and, in doing so, is
likely to become one of the most powerful political forces
of this decade. At the same time, there is the beginning of a significant
shift in values-from the admiration of large-scale
enterprises and institutions to the notion of "small is
beautiful," from material consumption to voluntary
simplicity, from economic and technological growth to inner
growth and development. These new values are being promoted
by the human-potential movement, the holistic-health
movement, and by spiritual movements that reemphasize the
quest for meaning and the spiritual dimension of life.
Lastly, but perhaps most importantly, the old value system
is being challenged and profoundly changed by the rise of
feminist awareness, originating in the women's movement,
which may well become a catalyst for the coalescence of many
other movements. So far, most of these movements still operate separately
and have not yet recognized how their purposes interrelate.
Thus, the human-potential movement and the holistic health
movement often lack a social perspective, while spiritual
movements tend to lack- ecological arid feminist awareness.
However, coalitions-between some movements have recently
begun to form. As would be expected, the ecology movement
and the feminist movement are coming together on several
issues, notably that of nuclear power, and contacts are also
being made between environmental groups, consumer groups,
and various ethnic liberation movements. I believe that during this decade the various movements
will recognize the communality of their aims and will flow
together to form a powerful force of social transformation.
This may seem an idealistic picture, in view of the current
political swing to the right in the United States and the
crusades of Christian fundamentalists promoting medieval
notions of reality. However, when we look at the situation
from a broad evolutionary perspective, these phenomena
become understandable as inevitable aspects of change and
transformation. Cultural historians have often pointed out that the
evolution of cultures is characterized by a regular pattern
of rise, culmination, decline, and disintegration. The
decline will occur when a culture has become too rigid-in
its technologies, ideas, or social organization-to meet the
challenge of changing conditions. This loss of flexibility
is accompanied by a general loss of harmony which inevitably
leads to the outbreak of social discord and disruption.
During this process of decline and disintegration, while the
cultural mainstream has become petrified by clinging to
fixed ideas and rigid patterns of behavior, creative
minorities will appear on the scene and transform some of
the old elements into new configurations which become part
of the new rising culture. This is what we are now observing in our society. The
Democratic and Republican parties, as well as the
traditional Right and Left in most European countries, the
Chrysler Corporation, the Moral Majority, and most of our
academic institutions are all part of the declining culture.
They are in the process of disintegration. The social
movements of the 1960s and 1970s represent the rising
culture... While the transformation is taking place, the
declining culture refuses to change, clinging ever more
rigidly to its outdated ideas; nor will the dominant social
institutions hand over their leading roles to the new
cultural forces. But they will inevitably go on to decline
and disintegrate while the rising culture will continue to
rise, and eventually will assume its leading role. As the
turning point approaches, the realization that evolutionary
changes of this magnitude cannot be prevented by short-term
political activities provides our strongest hope for the
future.
SUGGESTED READINGS RELATED TO THE THIRD STAGE OF LIFE Adler, Mortimer. How to Think about God: A Guide for the
20th Century Pagan. New York: Macmillan Pub. Co., 1980. Burtt, Edwin Arthur. The Metaphysical Foundation of
Modern Physical Science. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
1955. Dasgupta, Surendra Nath. Religion and Rational Outlook.
Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1974. Feyerabend, Paul. Science in a Free Society. London: NLB,
1978. Garg, R. K. Upanishadic Challenge to " Science. Delhi:
Sundeep Prakashan, 1978. Ghandi, M. K. Service Before Self. Bombay: Bharatiya
Vidya Bhavan, 1971. Horrobin, David F. Science Is God. Aylesburg, England:
Medical and Technical Publishing Co., 1969. Olson, Richard. Science as Metaphor: The Historical Rise
of Scientific Theories Informing Western Culture. Belmont,
Calif.: Wadsworth Pub. Co., 1974. Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli, ed. History of Philosophy:
Eastern and Western, 2 vols. London: George Allen and Unwin,
1952-3. Russell, Bertrand. Religion and Science. London: Oxford
University Press, 1978.
The Seven Stages of Eternal Life - Laughing Man
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"The perfect
among the sages is identical with Me. There is absolutely no
difference between us"
Tripura
Rahasya,
Chap XX,
128-133
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