It is a curious fact that we have successfully
used our minds to penetrate profound secrets of the physical universe; but when
it comes to grasping the nature of our minds, we are baffled.[i] This is the famous mind-body problem,
the “hard” problem being to account for our consciousness, which is utterly
unlike anything physical. The
mind, it seems, has a hard time trying to understand itself.
In this essay, I
describe how I evolved my view of the subject, which is deeply at odds with mainstream
physicalism. Without putting a
label on my view, there were two kinds of crucial step I had to take, theoretical
and empirical.
First, however, a comment on the
word empirical -- it comes from a Greek verb that means
“experience”, but the modern trend has been to use it only for sense
experience, which is too narrow.
All kinds of experience are possible, including dreams, out-off-body
states, hallucinations, visionary trances -- the whole range of reported mental
experiences.
Certain
experiences I had were decisive in helping me form my concept of mind. Very few people are concerned with trying
to understand the nature of their own minds; we all use our minds constantly
but rarely reflectively. This
shouldn’t surprise us; our brains evolved to help us survive and replicate in a
material world. To wonder too much
at the mysteries of being could be extremely hazardous. To do so represents a study called
philosophy of mind, one of a subset of problems that come under the heading of metaphysics.
The
question about the nature of our minds is not only fundamental but riddled with
controversy. Nor is the
topic inconsequential, as I suggest in my conclusion. But here is the problem. In an age of advanced physical science,
a certain default conception of mind has jelled into a state of uncritical
acceptance. Although people
constantly use mental terminology -- the problem is on my mind, I dreamed of
my dead aunt, I remember the first
time we met, I am afraid to take the
exam, I felt that was a beautiful
piece of music, etc., etc., -- the mainline view has taken the form of
physicalism. According to this
view, our mental life is in one way or another reducible to some set of
physical conditions, especially if they are brain-based. Talk of mind for many who subscribe to
physicalism is pegged as folklorish.
It’s talk of something that either doesn’t exist or if it does is some kind of
puzzling illusion without any real effects on anything. My instinctive response to that
self-satisfied conceit: bullshit!
I
first became conscious of this situation when I was in graduate school at
Columbia University. I recall one
day casually mentioning to a fellow student that from time to time I had
psychic experiences. My friend looked
at me rather wide-eyed and said: “But that’s impossible! It would imply
dualism!” Evidently, it was
official; I could not have had the experiences I said I had. I realized there was a choice; ignore,
deny, indeed destroy my own experience or
reject the mainline dogma that my fellow student had blithely repeated.
One
thing I learned from this exchange.
The counter-intuitive anti-mind position is entrenched in the prevailing
‘educated’ culture. It often seems
necessary to have a jolting psychic encounter before one comes out and opposes
the reigning dogmas. Neuroscientists who have near-death epiphanies make strong witnesses willing to come out and challenge
mainstream materialism.[ii]
After
graduate school I continued to
have psychic experiences that were officially forbidden: telepathic and
precognitive, as well as incidents of unexplained physical events, and even some
that pointed toward postmortem survival.[iii]
All
these are officially forbidden because they contradict the materialist creed; they
imply the independent reality of mental occurrences and therefore perhaps of a
mental world. But most outrageous would
be anything suggesting that people survive bodily death. The official standpoint wants us completely and totally dead.
I
knew I wasn’t the only person in the world to have psychic experiences. So I met others who had been in the
metaphysical twilight zone, began to read the vast literature on the subject, and got to know contemporary researchers.
All of this information and all the
persons involved in this largely extra-institutional field of study altered my perception
of reality. I learned to see
myself in a different light. I
often had dreams that I lived in a house with rooms I didn’t know I had, rooms
that opened up into wild landscapes. I would often wake up feeling both uneasy and
exhilarated. I was confident I had
hardly begun to know myself. And
here is one coup I can boast of.
I learned to resist feeling nauseated when I listened to know-it-alls
pontificate about the non-existence of things I knew by acquaintance.
I taught college level courses on
psychic phenomena and found that virtually all my students were able to write
reports -- given highly specific criteria to guide them – on cases of apparent psychic
performance they were able to dig up from their immediate social environment. Add the constant appearance of such
phenomena as themes in movies, TV, fiction, art, and now everywhere on the Internet
-- and finally, and scarcely a minor matter, the whole of history, especially
the so-called ‘religious’ history of humankind, is oozing at every pore with
all that officially forbidden psychic, spiritual, and mystical stuff with its
attendant physical weirdness. The
most extraordinary case I came across was the ecstatic, Joseph of Copertino, a
full-spectrum thaumaturge, and in my eyes, a neat mock-up for a postmodern
Superman.[iv]
How the massively
profound and mysterious experience of the human race can be squeezed into the
pint-sized intellectual apparatus that reductive physicalism is, beats me. To insist on such a tyrannically
constricted peep-hole into reality is a war-crime against the human
spirit. The main point: my
own experience and the experience of countless human beings blatantly
contradict the little jail-house worldview of reductive physicalism. So much for that initial but for me
decisive first step in talking about the nature of mind: as it should, experience
trumps theoretical obsession. On
now to theory.
Certain theoretical steps freed me to form a picture of mind more in tune
with my experience. Ideas of William James, Irwin Schrödinger,
and Carl Jung combined to get rid of an oppressive assumption. As long as I saw my mind and interior world
as solely an outgrowth of my brain, my existence seemed that of a doomed
outlier, a creature tainted to the core by contingency and suffering from
severe causal impotence.
William James,
however, offered an alternate view of what might be going on. In a lecture on immortality he gave to a Harvard audience at
the end of the nineteenth century, he was faced with trying to account for a
variety of human experiences that made no sense in light of the new scientific
materialism, according to which everything mental must be some kind of secondary side effect of the really real
stuff, the physical. James
showed that we are free to assume that consciousness does not emerge from the
brain at all. We may in fact assume
that brains transmit but do not create consciousness. Consciousness may be a reality, or dimension of being, in
and of and even for itself. Mind, not
derived from anything physical, does interact with the physical. So we can grant all the mind-brain
correlations of neuroscience, without assuming that mind is brain-born or
brain-derived.
The idea used to
illustrate this is a radio or a TV set: what is heard or seen through such
machines originate from somewhere outside the machines. The machines (our
brains) are detectors, transmitters, transducers of signals, energies, but from
elsewhere; brains are not creators of anything and minds are not machines.
I -- my mind -- is
affected by my body; I can also
affect my body, even my brain, and it turns out that the brain is more plastic
than formerly assumed; by effort and practice one’s mind can appropriate parts
of the brain to reconnect and recapture a lost function. But then brain disease can impair
mental function. However, evidence
shows that people with impaired brains sometimes recover their mental
capacities just before death. This
seems to show that impaired brains suppress but do not destroy mental function
and content since the latter may reappears as death disentangles mind from
brain.
The big point
learned from James is that although we live enmeshed with and through our
brains, our personal mental life is part of a pre-existing and larger reality. The irreducibility of the mind to the brain that James’s view
entails has been reiterated in a different form in recent times with talk of
the so-called “hard problem” enunciated by David Chalmers. Virtually everybody
nowadays agrees that the reduction consciousness to any physical is not even
remotely conceivable.
Now to a big
idea. It seemed perfectly
reasonable to assume that consciousness, if not brain-derived, is then a given,
a basic part of the basic furniture of being. As far as the mainline view, with a little help from James,
we have just turned it upside down.
Instead of reducing and eviscerating the substance of mind, we have
assigned it a much wider and more fundamental place in nature.
There’s a second move
I made toward the radical liberation of my mental life. Schrödinger, one of the founders of
quantum mechanics, declared that mind is and can only be numerically one. There is nowhere in the world of mind
that you can carve out pieces so as to make mind plural, as you could a sheet
of paper or a carbon atom. This
doctrine of the one mind, which inspired Schrödinger, can be traced back to
the Hindu Upanishads,
The one mind that
is filtered through my brain is bound to create the illusion of isolation and
separateness. We then naturally
identify with our bodies and unique personal perspectives, so the differences
between you and me are real enough.
And yet, the more deeply we enter ourselves, the more we merge toward
the oneness of our humanity that lies in our common consciousness. Simply as a practical point I would say:
The way toward the oneness of humanity is not by forcing uniformity but by not
fixating on our uniqueness. We can
celebrate diversity without neglecting the underlying oneness of spirit.
Another teacher
that helped free me to place mind as the center of my worldview was C. G.
Jung. According to Jung, we live from
moment to moment and from first to last in a psychical world of images. The stream of interweaving mental and
bodily imagery that we experience, punctuated by episodes of more but different
kinds of dream imagery, is our existential milieu; there is no exit from this
infinitely complex and nuanced world of subjectivity. Jung’s psychical idealism in which the
psyche is composed of images is literally where
it’s at. It’s impossible
to exit from our subjectivity. This, however, does not imply solipsism. In fact, it suggests a much wider range
of communication potential. According
to the physicalist, however, we have no deep communal mental or spiritual
roots; we are separate bodies driven wholly and solely to consume and
replicate.
Thanks
to my own experience, and helped by fellow travelers, I fought my way free from
the suffocating worldview that would have imposed itself on me, if I had let
it. Aware now of the primal status
of my inner reality, of its numerical oneness in Schrödinger’s Upanishadic sense, and
of its self-existence and pervasiveness in nature, I’m in a better place than I
began, with the albatross of physicalism off my back. Once we expand our concept of mind, the range of the possible
increases exponentially. The
idea is not just to think this but to embrace it as we embrace somebody we
love.
I
want to discuss two big ideas in relation to this expanded concept of mind. The first is the question of life
after death, a perennial belief or at least hope of humankind. No doubt that if the prevailing
view of mind as some blurry side-effect of living brains is correct, afterlife
or immortality talk would have to sputter to a stop. My story is not
quite so grim. I can at
least report that a large body of evidence exists suggesting that some people survive
death with their personalities intact.[v] The vast majority of competent
scientists and generally educated people are ignorant of this evidence, and seem
to lack the curiosity (or the courage) to look into it with an open mind.
I
will make one specific point about the idea of consciousness after death. If physicalism were true, we’d have to
say no to life after death. But
physicalism is false, as anyone with a mind can prove with thoughtful
self-scrutiny. So the question
remains open. If the model suggested
here is true, and consciousness does not “emerge” from the brain – if in short
the brain does not create but transmit
consciousness -- then brain-death would not entail consciousness-death. This move will not guarantee there is a
heaven. But the scene has shifted
to a sunnier living-room, a room with bay windows that look out upon what seems
a magical and enticing forest. Consciousness
after bodily death assumes a new mantle of possibility. In light of the evidence collected by
researchers, a country of new thought awaits explorers with honest minds and
rich hearts.
Given
the premise of a primary mental reality, as here put forth, there is another
big issue related to rejection of the mainstream view of mind. In the world traditions, besides the
idea of life after death, we find ideas of divine agencies; of spirits, angels,
demons, gods, goddesses, and so forth. The so-called new atheists have tried to demolish religion, but
the critique is shallow, intolerant and too sweeping. They mostly have nothing to say of interest about the core
spiritual beliefs that revolve around the mystical experiences of religion.
Expansion
of the concept of mind as one and transpersonal, based on our discussion of
James, Schrödinger, and Jung, helps us understand how certain religious
ideas might arise: for example, the belief in agencies listed above, along with
the belief that humans can interact with these higher ones, however named or
described. Different cultures and
individuals perennially engage the transcendent mind we have described, always
in diverse ways, using diverse vocabularies, rites and myths. While happily granting all this, we
also assume there is the transcendent one mind, the one underlying
consciousness that seeps into our experience through our uniquely conditioned
brains and cultures. This too is
real and may be thought of as the matrix of all transcendent experience.
In short, while
materialists are forced to condemn the whole of ‘religion’ as nonsensical and
pernicious, once we acknowledge the reality of transcendent mind, we can appreciate the positive content
of all the religions but we can – must -- also carry on a critique of the
violently stupid and anti-human offshoots of religious psychopathy.
I
think that a good deal of anti-religionism can be as narrow and destructive as
the warped religionism the critics love to attack. This leads to my final thought regarding my evolution
toward this highly expanded (and radically democratic) view of mind. My views are broadly shared by a significant portion of
scholars and thinkers, living and dead.
But at this point we are a minority, a voice in the wilderness of
self-destructing neo-liberalism,[vi] and at a
time when physicalist metaphysics and practical materialist ideologies are
triumphant almost everywhere on the planet.
To
take a single but revealing example, consider the amount of money the U.S.
invests in its military budget. Of
the $1.11 trillion dollars of federal discretionary spending, the U.S. in 2015
consumed 54% or $598.5 billion dollars on the military budget, equal to the
next seven largest military budgets, China, Saudi Arabia, etc.. Now here is my strange-sounding
question: How much of the discretionary spending goes to research on what
happens to people after we kill them?
The answer of course is nothing at
all. More than half the national
treasure is spent on producing and sustaining an unprecedented world-dominating
military machine, with tentacles in the 800 bases planted all over the
planet.
This
may be an odd way to point out how our civilization operates, but it’s only one
example of how materialist values are acted out to the detriment of life
everywhere. What’s clear is that the default option is military not diplomatic,
force rather than persuasion. Another
example is the way the pharmaceutical industries are edging talk (and therefore
mental) therapy out of existence.[vii] Our entire capitalist-consumerist
economy privileges materialist values such as limitless profit and
gratification of appetite over justice and self-mastery. Materialism today is not just a philosophical position to putter
with conceptually. It is an
attitude, a disposition -- a cancer metastasizing in human society. It needs to be not just intellectually
refuted but excised from the entrails of a morally corrupt culture.
[i] This essay
was published in New Dawn, 2016,
Vol.10, No.4.
[ii] See, for
example, Eben Alexander’s challenging Proof
of Heaven (2012) and Marjorie Woolacott’s equally compelling Infinite Awareness (2015), both
neuroscientists with experiences that helped them realize they were misled by
their mainstream teachers in the field of medicine, as I was at first misled by
the mainstream current of thought.
[iii] See, Soulmaking (1997), also www://consciousnessunbound.blogspot.com
[iv] The Man Who Could Fly: St. Joseph of
Copertino and the Mystery of Levitation (2016)
[v] The
literature on this is vast but the reader might begin with Irreducible Mind (2007), Eds. Ed Kelly, Emily Kelly.
[vi] See Noam
Chomsky, Chris Hedges, Naomi Klein, Abbe Martin, etc. much that is instructive
is available online, especially YouTube.
[vii] See Peter
Goetsche’s Deadly Medicines and Organized
Crime: How Big Pharma Has Corrupted Healthcare (2013).
Excellent !!! Thank you kind sir for this most thoughtful and revealing work of art !
ReplyDeleteI feel transcendent mind working through you !
“The total number of minds in the Universe is One. In fact, consciousness is a singularity phasing within all beings.”
ReplyDelete- Erwin Schrödinger
“I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness.”
- Max Planck
It's true.