April 11, 2018. I was sitting in the second row of the very large and totally
packed Paramount Theater, located on the downtown mall in Charlottesville,
Virginia, not far from Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson.
When John Cleese of the legendary Monty Python Circus stepped
on stage, the applause was overwhelming. John retreats to offstage and the
applause dies down. Out on stage again, the roars of approval resume, and again
he vanishes. Next time the audience gets the hint, and lets him speak.
“Hello Charlotte villains,” I hear him say—first laugh--and
we’re off.
This and a presentation the following day were benefit
performances that Cleese was giving on behalf of the University of Virginia’s
Division of Perceptual Studies (DOPS).
It was an attempt to raise money to support the unusual research conducted
by this Division.
This evening’s talk is titled, “Why There Is No Hope.”
Donors have paid hundreds of dollars for their seats and
couldn’t wait to listen to Cleese explain why there is no hope. As it turned out, the hour or so it
took for him to make the case left me and an audience of well over a thousand in
fits of uncontrollable laughter. The man showed us no mercy. It was an event of group transcendence
by laughter.
But what’s funny about the hopelessness of the human
condition? Well, that depends on
the Cleese wit, tone, and timing.
And why do we laugh when told we’re doomed? Bit of “gallows humor” maybe?
The big idea—and inlet to a sea of laughs—is that the world
is largely run by ignoramuses and incompetents of low moral caliber.
So, beside all the hilarity, Cleese advanced with lawyerlike
precision a grimly serious argument.
He wasn’t joking. He went
through reasons we might have for being hopeful that “we will ever live in a rational, sensible, well organized, kind,
intelligent society.” The answer
will be a faintly qualified “NO!”
The starting broadside
was against so-called “experts,” concluding that the authentic ones in any
field are few and far between—and just as often ignored. He made this point by noting that the
“experts”—critics, producers, etc.—all began by panning Monty Python, Fawlty Towers,
and A Fish Called Wanda--all today
deemed classics in the world of comedy.
Cleese notes
that it took 250 years for economists to figure out that economic behavior has
nothing to do with rational self-interest. We may look to religion and science for hope, but we find in
religion hypocrisy and fanaticism and in science egotism and dogmatism. No hope there.
The problem of
course is deep within. At all
costs, everybody wants to be
right. We suffer from a thing
called confirmatory bias. We are biased against anything that
contradicts our views. All we know
in the last run is how to confirm our almighty selves, and this no matter how
intelligent we are. Hope keeps
falling on its face.
Getting down to
some really basic reasons for losing hope is a phenomenon that Cleese may be
the first to identify and name: pure
stupidity. The speaker had a very
entertaining story to illustrate the phenomenon, concerning the weird loss and recovery
of his shoes in a hotel.
But no less
deadly is learned stupidity.
Cleese gives the example of the famous biologist, Francis Crick, who
doubted the reality of dreams because his own dream life was boringly
defective. Ditto for the learned
stupidity of intellectuals who project their limited experience on everyone
else around them.
Cleese reminds
us that in tests, the stupid vastly overrate themselves; whereas the smart tend
to underrate themselves. Chalk up
another for hopelessness.
Cleese suggests
that our brains have not evolved to favor the love of truth; they are primarily
about saving our own hides, not about being kind, fair, or nuanced in matters
of truthfulness. So you can be as
smart as an angel but choose to hook up with the devil.
This certainly
detracts from hope, and so does the miserable greed of the unhappy, insatiable
rich. Finally, we were told, the
so-called millennials provide no hope
because their attention span is seven seconds, trailing behind goldfish who can
stay focused for nine seconds.
Overall, what
emerged was a plea for awareness of our ignorance. Channeling Socrates, he said
we need to realize what we don’t know. And given that so far there is no
reason to hope, we might at least be more curious, less uptight in our
imagination of what is possible.
So on the following day, John Cleese returned to the
Paramount Theater to conduct a dialogue with some real experts on one of the perennial problems: what happens to people
when they die?
So, is there any evidence that the mental life of people goes
on after their bodies are dead?
I arrived at the Paramount Theater, expecting to see a much
smaller crowd. Wrong! I barely snagged an aisle seat. I was surprised that so many people—a
full house, in fact—now showed up to listen to Cleese engage experts on death,
near-death, and after-death—not exactly grounds for a laugh-fest. He was going
to interview five people from the Division of Perceptual Studies (DOPS).
A few facts worth noting. DOPS may be the only academic department of its kind in the
United States. And yet the subject-matter is, and has always been, of
compelling interest to most people.
But it has become an outsider if not a pariah to mainstream academic
culture. Why this is so is not a hopeful
story.
On balance, it’s fair to say that today’s mainstream scientific
culture shows very little interest in the topic. We might as well admit that the way things are, the real research
money, the real interest is in making people dead—not in trying to figure out what happens to them after they’re
dead.
Excuse me if what I say is not fake news. The U.S. runs the
most expensive military apparatus in world history, has 800 bases planted
around the globe to keep the empire rolling, and is the biggest arms dealer on
the planet. But no money for research on life after death is available—nothing,
zero! All the money is wrapped up in the killing business.
And so here we are, this second night of the benefit, meant to
inform the public about the unique work of DOPS and raise some money to advance their research.
The DOPS personnel
spoke about 15 minutes, each giving the gist and highlights of their work. Each
speaker brought out a particular facet of what is really a complex field of
research. Psychiatrist Bruce Greyson is one of the pioneers of near-death studies,
and the longest, having been at it for forty years. Greyson recited a series a
cases, each like a James Joyce short story, with an epiphany hinting of
afterlife. Child psychiatrist Jim Tucker has been enriching the data-base of
reincarnation studies, massively launched by the late Ian Stevenson. Dr. Tucker
has been traveling around America investigating cases of the reincarnation
type, proving the phenomenon is not culture-bound. People everywhere on earth
report remembering past lives; the Division has amassed a data-base of 2,500
case histories suggestive of reincarnation.
Psychologist Dr.
Emily Kelly discussed older types of survival evidence such as crisis
apparitions (people appearing to loved ones at the moment of death), deathbed
apparitions, and striking accounts of mental mediumship. Again, there are
facts, observations, narratives that force us to think, to wonder, to want to
explore more deeply. Psychotherapist Jennifer Pemberthy brings a threefold background
as therapist, teacher, and meditation researcher. Dr. Pemberthy vividly described
one of her clients, an angry substance abuser, who took up meditation and was
transformed by a voice that spoke to him. Finally, psychologist and neuroscientist,
Edward Kelly, who has edited two massive tomes, Irreducible Mind and Beyond
Physicalism, the former an overview of data that destroys physicalism and
the latter that explores theories that might explain the extraordinary data. A
careful study of these two books should alter any reader’s perception of
reality. The pleasure, however, will cost you a certain amount of intellectual
energy.
Thus some vignettes of fascinating phenomena, in response to
Cleese’s questions and comments. Much to explore! Much that prods and invites science to expand. The problem
is that science is beholden to the powers of the military-industrial complex
and voracious capitalism, all tethered to the Leviathan of materialism.
And yet, science is poised to hone in on the mystery of
consciousness and possibly even death.
But the perversity of our times is the scientific non-interest in the possibility
of more life even as science creates the
greatest technology of mass murder in the history of human viciousness. Certainly
bad news for those still clinging to hope.
Some one asked John how she could inject a little life into her
moribund hope. For that he said we need to let go, relax our whole self until
the laughter and the creative spirit gush up freely from deep within.
Finally, the liberating aim of Cleese’s talk—but let’s hear
it from the man himself:
“If I can
persuade you this evening to abandon this hope, you will find yourself a lot
more relaxed, you'll worry less and laugh more. I promise you that.”
Beautifully written, super-accurate depiction of the gatherings. Let's recognize the reality of our US killing machine and turn those swords into the intellectually rigorous plowshares required to study the survival of the human soul. Share this will all you know on your social media!!!!!!!!!!!! (Bernie Beitman)
ReplyDeleteJohn Clease is one of my heroes. Thanks for this entertaining and informative report, Mike. Of course you are familiar with my solution -- an entirely new science based on a revolutionary new way of engaging with Nature.
ReplyDeletehttp://quantumtantra.blogspot.com/2009/04/lifting-veil-of-new-sensual-science.html
This proposal has the distinction of being rejected for a proposed collection of speculations about the direction of physics in the New Millennium, not for lack of originality, not for lack of competence (I have a PhD in physics, for God's sake) but for lack of decency.
(Nick Herbert)
Excellent review. You can see the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RGizqsLumo&t=744s
ReplyDelete