Why is consciousness becoming a topos—a place in the world of thought where it is discussed,
examined, explored? Why does it prompt us to wonder and speculation? The first answer that comes to
mind: Consciousness is where everything is at. It is where we all live, the dimension by means of which we
all experience “reality.” Consciousness
is what everything comes down to, the place we can never get out of, escape
from or transcend. What we are and
what we feel and think and imagine are born of consciousness; without
consciousness, our greatest thoughts, our most wonderful and horrific
experiences are null and void.
Consciousness is the primary fact of our existence; it is also the most
intimate.
That’s my first answer to the question about the fuss. The second has to do with the singular
nature of consciousness. This
consciousness that defines us is a complete mystery. That is, science is at a loss to explain it in terms of
physical reality. We know there is a general connection between consciousness
and the brain. There are
connections and correlations but no satisfying explanations or clear causations;
consciousness, mental experiences, are totally unlike physical brain
processes. My mental life is physically
undetectable; my thoughts, perceptions, feelings, dreams, memories intentions,
hallucinations are invisible, intangible, unmeasurable, if not immeasurable—quite
unlike my brain, which is visible, localized, and measurable.
So much for the second reason, which leads to a third. Given that consciousness is so intimate, so inexplicable, and given
it cannot be reduced to the brain, one wonders about the extent of conscious
existence. Grant the mystery of the
sheer fact of consciousness, there is the question of its outer limits. Our
minds and conscious awareness extend much further into the world than common
sense would normally suggest.
Mystical and other supernormal phenomena prove that over and over
again. Our immediate awareness is
grounded in a much wider and deeper mental life. With Heraclitus, the early Greek philosopher, we can
describe it as “boundless.”
Now to my fourth reason for being curious about
consciousness. Consciousness
provides a vocabulary for discussing classic philosophical questions such as
the perennial one about the existence of God. Western science has destroyed the naïve belief in gods and goddesses
and the literal-minded adherence to the great creation mythologies. Can consciousness rescue God from being
ousted by science?
We will have to distinguish between “God” and “God
consciousness.” The God of the old
mythologies may have ceased to be credible in the minds of many educated
people, but “God-consciousness” remains an empirical possibility, I mean the
possibility of having transcendent, transformative experiences characterized as
godlike or god-inspired.
This distinction is clear in classical Indian and Buddhist religions
where enlightenment and divinity are primarily conceived of in terms of states
of consciousness. The mythologies
are not treated with the same literal-mindedness often apparent in the
Abrahamic religions, the exceptions being the mystical traditions where consciousness
is central.
People everywhere and at all times and in endlessly varied
ways have such experiences. The
traditional mythologies of the divine and the transcendent may be pronounced “dead,” but the experiences
that people have continue to occur and be reported. The forms of what is called divine consciousness keep changing;
we are free to view them with kindly intent through the lens of phenomenology.
The big point: consciousness is fundamental and the root of the
belief in transcendence. Our relationship to our inherited gods is optional;
what is not optional is that we exist in a world of consciousness. The interest
in consciousness is about the need to recapture dimensions of human experience we’ve
lost, the effect of living in a world dominated by material science and
technology.
The fascination with consciousness is
part of the revolt against being imprisoned in one-dimensional reality.
Michael, Well stated. Let me add:
ReplyDelete"Neither a person nor a nation can exist without some higher idea. And there is only one higher idea on earth, and it is the idea of the immortality of the human soul, for all other "higher" ideas of life by which humans might live derive from that idea alone."
~ Fyodor Dostoyevsky