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Difference between revisions of "Science and Mysticism in the Twentieth Century"

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Not without [[reason]] has the twentieth century been called The Revolutionary Century. Hardly any field of [[human]] endeavor has escaped some major upheaval. There have been {{Wiki|political}} revolutions, economic revolutions, {{Wiki|social}} revolutions, revolutions in technology, in transportation, in [[medicine]], in communication—even in our everyday manners. For the [[spiritual]] seeker, however (and ultimately for [[humanity]], itself), none of these can compare in importance to the twin revolutions which have occurred in the fields of [[science]] and [[religion]]. So, let us take a brief look at these two revolutions and how they affect us.
 
  
When the twentieth century opened, [[science]] and [[religion]] were locked in a protracted [[war]] in which it seemed no compromise was possible. There were two [[primary]] [[reasons]] for this. The first was epistemological,1 involving different notions about what constitutes [[truth]] and how it can be known. While [[science]] boasted that [[scientific]] [[truths]] could be tested and verified through [[empirical]] experiments, [[religion]] apparently demanded that [[spiritual]] [[truths]] be accepted on blind [[faith]].
 
  
The second [[reason]] was ontological.2 That is, [[science]] and [[religion]] were founded on diametrically opposed [[views]] concerning the fundamental nature of [[reality]]. [[Religious]] believers insisted that, ultimately, the nature of [[reality]] was [[spiritual]], and that, apart from this All-Encompassing [[Spiritual]] [[Reality]], [[nothing]] would or could [[exist]]. Advocates for [[science]], on the other hand, adopted a strictly {{Wiki|materialist}} position, arguing that everything could be reduced to, and explained by, the interactions of independently [[existing]] [[atoms]] and the [[physical]] forces which acted on them.
 
  
Faced with two such irreconcilable worldviews, it appeared that any [[thinking]] [[person]] would have to choose sides—and many did. But for those who admired [[science]], yet also intuited there must be more to [[life]] than the "wiggling and jiggling of atoms,"3 the apparent intractability of this historical conflict presented something of a personal dilemma. To pursue a [[spiritual]] [[path]] while simultaneously maintaining a [[scientific]] outlook required a kind of [[philosophical]] schizophrenia. How else could one pray for [[divine]] guidance by night and then take one's automobile to a mechanic in the morning? The underlying paradigms upon which these two [[actions]] were based simply refused to mesh.
 
  
As this century draws to a close, however, the situation in both [[science]] and [[religion]] has changed dramatically—so much so, that we must now rethink the very terms in which the whole controversy between them has been cast.
 
  
First, in the field of [[religion]], the last hundred years has seen a veritable explosion in our [[knowledge]] of humanity's great [[religious]] [[traditions]]. A plethora of new translations of [[sacred]] texts from around the [[world]] is expanding and re-shaping our basic understanding of what it can mean to be [[religious]] and to lead a [[spiritual]] [[life]]. In particular, we have discovered that, at the core of all the major [[religions]], there [[exists]] a current of [[mystical]] teachings which, when compared to one another, exhibit a startling degree of cross-cultural agreement.
 
  
What's especially interesting about these [[mystical]] teachings is their {{Wiki|epistemology}}, which in many respects resembles that of [[science]]. For instance, while mystics [[recognize]] that [[faith]] is, indeed, a significant part of a [[spiritual]] [[path]], they also maintain that [[faith]] alone is not enough. In fact, according to the mystics, if [[faith]] solidifies into {{Wiki|dogmatic}} [[belief]], it will actually become an obstacle to further progress. As Simone Weil wrote: "In what concerns [[divine]] things, [[belief]] is not fitting. Only certainty will do."4 It was out of this same [[concern]] that his [[disciples]] not rest on mere [[faith]] that the [[Buddha]] admonished them:
+
 
 +
 
 +
Not without [[reason]] has the twentieth century been called The {{Wiki|Revolutionary}} Century. Hardly any field of [[human]] endeavor has escaped some major upheaval. There have been {{Wiki|political}} revolutions, economic revolutions, {{Wiki|social}} revolutions, revolutions in technology, in transportation, in [[medicine]], in communication—even in our everyday manners. For the [[spiritual]] seeker, however (and ultimately for [[humanity]], itself), none of these can compare in importance to the twin revolutions which have occurred in the fields of [[science]] and [[religion]]. So, let us take a brief look at these two revolutions and how they affect us.
 +
 
 +
When the twentieth century opened, [[science]] and [[religion]] were locked in a protracted [[war]] in which it seemed no compromise was possible. There were two [[primary]] [[reasons]] for this. The first was epistemological,1 involving different notions about what constitutes [[truth]] and how it can be known. While [[science]] boasted that [[scientific]] [[truths]] could be tested and verified through [[empirical]] experiments, [[religion]] apparently demanded that [[spiritual]] [[truths]] be accepted on [[blind]] [[faith]].
 +
 
 +
The second [[reason]] was ontological.2 That is, [[science]] and [[religion]] were founded on diametrically opposed [[views]] concerning the fundamental [[nature]] of [[reality]]. [[Religious]] believers insisted that, ultimately, the [[nature]] of [[reality]] was [[spiritual]], and that, apart from this All-Encompassing [[Spiritual]] [[Reality]], [[nothing]] would or could [[exist]]. Advocates for [[science]], on the other hand, adopted a strictly {{Wiki|materialist}} position, arguing that everything could be reduced to, and explained by, the interactions of {{Wiki|independently}} [[existing]] [[atoms]] and the [[physical]] forces which acted on them.
 +
 
 +
Faced with two such irreconcilable worldviews, it appeared that any [[thinking]] [[person]] would have to choose sides—and many did. But for those who admired [[science]], yet also intuited there must be more to [[life]] than the "wiggling and jiggling of atoms,"3 the apparent intractability of this historical conflict presented something of a personal {{Wiki|dilemma}}. To pursue a [[spiritual]] [[path]] while simultaneously maintaining a [[scientific]] outlook required a kind of [[philosophical]] [[schizophrenia]]. How else could one pray for [[divine]] guidance by night and then take one's automobile to a mechanic in the morning? The underlying [[paradigms]] upon which these two [[actions]] were based simply refused to mesh.
 +
 
 +
As this century draws to a close, however, the situation in both [[science]] and [[religion]] has changed dramatically—so much so, that we must now rethink the very terms in which the whole [[controversy]] between them has been cast.
 +
 
 +
First, in the field of [[religion]], the last hundred years has seen a veritable explosion in our [[knowledge]] of humanity's great [[religious]] [[traditions]]. A plethora of [[new translations]] of [[sacred]] texts from around the [[world]] is expanding and re-shaping our basic [[understanding]] of what it can mean to be [[religious]] and to lead a [[spiritual]] [[life]]. In particular, we have discovered that, at the core of all the major [[religions]], there [[exists]] a current of [[mystical]] teachings which, when compared to one another, exhibit a startling [[degree]] of cross-cultural agreement.
 +
 
 +
What's especially [[interesting]] about these [[mystical]] teachings is their {{Wiki|epistemology}}, which in many respects resembles that of [[science]]. For instance, while [[mystics]] [[recognize]] that [[faith]] is, indeed, a significant part of a [[spiritual]] [[path]], they also maintain that [[faith]] alone is not enough. In fact, according to the [[mystics]], if [[faith]] solidifies into {{Wiki|dogmatic}} [[belief]], it will actually become an [[obstacle]] to further progress. As Simone Weil wrote: "In what concerns [[divine]] things, [[belief]] is not fitting. Only {{Wiki|certainty}} will do."4 It was out of this same [[concern]] that his [[disciples]] not rest on mere [[faith]] that the [[Buddha]] admonished them:
  
 
:    As the [[wise]] test {{Wiki|gold}} by burning, cutting and rubbing it (on a piece of touchstone), so are you to accept my words after examining them and not merely out of regard for me.5
 
:    As the [[wise]] test {{Wiki|gold}} by burning, cutting and rubbing it (on a piece of touchstone), so are you to accept my words after examining them and not merely out of regard for me.5
  
This is also why Sufis (the mystics of {{Wiki|Islam}}) who have reached the end of their [[path]] are called al-muhaqqiqun, which means "verifiers." They, too, have examined the teachings and verified their [[truth]] for themselves.
+
This is also why [[Sufis]] (the [[mystics]] of {{Wiki|Islam}}) who have reached the end of their [[path]] are called al-muhaqqiqun, which means "verifiers." They, too, have examined the teachings and verified their [[truth]] for themselves.
  
Moreover, just as [[science]] incorporates a well-defined {{Wiki|methodology}} for testing its theories, so do [[mystical]] [[traditions]]. [[Thus]], while [[scientific]] theories can be verified by observation made within the context of various kinds of [[physical]] experiments, [[mystical]] teachings can be verified by insights gained within the context of various kinds of [[spiritual]] practices. In fact, engaging in such practices is considered [[essential]] in [[mystical]] [[traditions]], because, as the anonymous author of the {{Wiki|Christian}} Cloud of Unknowing warned: "you will not really understand all this until your own contemplative [[experience]] confirms it."6
+
Moreover, just as [[science]] incorporates a well-defined {{Wiki|methodology}} for testing its theories, so do [[mystical]] [[traditions]]. [[Thus]], while [[scientific]] theories can be verified by observation made within the context of various kinds of [[physical]] experiments, [[mystical]] teachings can be verified by [[insights]] gained within the context of various kinds of [[spiritual]] practices. In fact, engaging in such practices is considered [[essential]] in [[mystical]] [[traditions]], because, as the anonymous author of the {{Wiki|Christian}} Cloud of Unknowing warned: "you will not really understand all this until your [[own]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[experience]] confirms it."6
  
In [[Mysticism]], then, we find a type of [[spirituality]] which has close {{Wiki|epistemological}} parallels to science—a [[spirituality]] that begins with [[faith]] but ends in a certainty which each of us can and must discover in our own practice. [[Thus]], for seekers who cannot accept [[religious]] [[doctrines]] on [[faith]] alone, the recovery and dissemination of these [[mystical]] teachings is good news, indeed.
+
In [[Mysticism]], then, we find a type of [[spirituality]] which has close {{Wiki|epistemological}} parallels to science—a [[spirituality]] that begins with [[faith]] but ends in a {{Wiki|certainty}} which each of us can and must discover in our [[own]] practice. [[Thus]], for seekers who cannot accept [[religious]] [[doctrines]] on [[faith]] alone, the recovery and dissemination of these [[mystical]] teachings is good news, indeed.
  
In the field of [[science]], the last hundred years has wrought a revolution that has been, quite literally, world-shattering. The revolution we are talking about is {{Wiki|quantum physics}}, and the "[[world]]" it shattered was the {{Wiki|materialist}} [[world]] which the older classical {{Wiki|physics}} seemed to support. Here is how {{Wiki|Werner Heisenberg}}, one of {{Wiki|quantum physics}}' founders, describes it: "{{Wiki|Quantum theory}} has led the {{Wiki|physicists}} far away from the simple materialistic [[views]] that prevailed in the natural [[science]] of the nineteenth century."7 In short, {{Wiki|materialism}} is no longer a {{Wiki|scientifically}} tenable {{Wiki|paradigm}}.
+
In the field of [[science]], the last hundred years has wrought a {{Wiki|revolution}} that has been, quite literally, world-shattering. The {{Wiki|revolution}} we are talking about is {{Wiki|quantum physics}}, and the "[[world]]" it shattered was the {{Wiki|materialist}} [[world]] which the older classical {{Wiki|physics}} seemed to support. Here is how {{Wiki|Werner Heisenberg}}, one of {{Wiki|quantum physics}}' founders, describes it: "{{Wiki|Quantum theory}} has led the {{Wiki|physicists}} far away from the simple {{Wiki|materialistic}} [[views]] that prevailed in the natural [[science]] of the nineteenth century."7 In short, {{Wiki|materialism}} is no longer a {{Wiki|scientifically}} tenable {{Wiki|paradigm}}.
  
This, too, is good news for modern [[spiritual]] seekers who cannot ignore the evidence of [[science]]. The fact that {{Wiki|quantum physics}} has rendered the {{Wiki|materialist}} {{Wiki|paradigm}} {{Wiki|scientifically}} untenable means that an otherwise insurmountable barrier to a rapprochement between [[science]] and [[religion]] (at least in its [[mystical]] aspect) has been removed. And while {{Wiki|quantum physics}} does not "prove" [[mystical]] teachings (as some overly eager enthusiasts have claimed), the fundamental [[reality]] which it describes is not at all incompatible with the fundamental [[reality]] testified to by the mystics.
+
This, too, is good news for {{Wiki|modern}} [[spiritual]] seekers who cannot ignore the {{Wiki|evidence}} of [[science]]. The fact that {{Wiki|quantum physics}} has rendered the {{Wiki|materialist}} {{Wiki|paradigm}} {{Wiki|scientifically}} untenable means that an otherwise insurmountable barrier to a rapprochement between [[science]] and [[religion]] (at least in its [[mystical]] aspect) has been removed. And while {{Wiki|quantum physics}} does not "prove" [[mystical]] teachings (as some overly eager enthusiasts have claimed), the fundamental [[reality]] which it describes is not at all incompatible with the fundamental [[reality]] testified to by the [[mystics]].
  
One example of this can be seen in the similarity between the modes of description which both [[scientists]] and mystics have been forced to adopt. In [[order]] to give a complete account of the properties of [[physical]] systems, {{Wiki|quantum}} {{Wiki|physicists}} have had to resort to a {{Wiki|paradoxical}} [[form]] of expression called complementarity. For instance, sub-atomic [[phenomena]] can be [[thought]] of both as "waves" and as "particles." As Heisenberg points out, however, these two concepts are:
+
One example of this can be seen in the similarity between the modes of description which both [[scientists]] and [[mystics]] have been forced to adopt. In [[order]] to give a complete account of the properties of [[physical]] systems, {{Wiki|quantum}} {{Wiki|physicists}} have had to resort to a {{Wiki|paradoxical}} [[form]] of expression called complementarity. For instance, sub-atomic [[phenomena]] can be [[thought]] of both as "waves" and as "{{Wiki|particles}}." As Heisenberg points out, however, these two [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]] are:
  
 
:    ...mutually exclusive, because a certain thing cannot at the same [[time]] be a {{Wiki|particle}} (i.e., a [[substance]] confined to a very small volume) and a wave (i.e., a field spread out over a large [[space]]), but the two[taken together] complement each other.8
 
:    ...mutually exclusive, because a certain thing cannot at the same [[time]] be a {{Wiki|particle}} (i.e., a [[substance]] confined to a very small volume) and a wave (i.e., a field spread out over a large [[space]]), but the two[taken together] complement each other.8
  
Likewise, attempts by mystics to {{Wiki|communicate}} what their [[spiritual]] practices have disclosed always result in one of those {{Wiki|paradoxical}} statements for which mystics have become so famous. To give but one example, listen to the way the great {{Wiki|Sufi}} shaykh, Ibn `Arabi, characterizes what he calls the "[[Reality]] of [[realities]]:"
+
Likewise, attempts by [[mystics]] to {{Wiki|communicate}} what their [[spiritual]] practices have disclosed always result in one of those {{Wiki|paradoxical}} statements for which [[mystics]] have become so famous. To give but one example, listen to the way the great {{Wiki|Sufi}} shaykh, Ibn `Arabi, characterizes what he calls the "[[Reality]] of [[realities]]:"
  
:    If you say that this thing is the [temporal] [[Universe]], you are right. If you say that it is [[God]] who is [[eternal]], you are right. If you say that it is neither the [[Universe]] nor [[God]] but is something conveying some additional meaning, you are right. All these [[views]] are correct, for it is the whole comprising the [[eternal]] and the temporal.9
+
:    If you say that this thing is the [{{Wiki|temporal}}] [[Universe]], you are right. If you say that it is [[God]] who is [[eternal]], you are right. If you say that it is neither the [[Universe]] nor [[God]] but is something conveying some additional meaning, you are right. All these [[views]] are correct, for it is the whole comprising the [[eternal]] and the temporal.9
  
 
An even more striking example of how science's and mysticism's [[perceptions]] of [[reality]] intersect concerns the relationship between [[subject]] and [[object]]. For {{Wiki|quantum physics}}, deciding where one begins and the other ends presents something of a quandary. Here is how physicist-mathematician, John S. [[Bell]], sums up the problem:
 
An even more striking example of how science's and mysticism's [[perceptions]] of [[reality]] intersect concerns the relationship between [[subject]] and [[object]]. For {{Wiki|quantum physics}}, deciding where one begins and the other ends presents something of a quandary. Here is how physicist-mathematician, John S. [[Bell]], sums up the problem:
  
:    The subject-object distinction is indeed at the very [[root]] of the unease that many [[people]] [[feel]] in connection with {{Wiki|quantum mechanics}}. Some such distinction is dictated by the postulates of the {{Wiki|theory}}, but exactly where or when to make it is not prescribed.10
+
:    The subject-object {{Wiki|distinction}} is indeed at the very [[root]] of the unease that many [[people]] [[feel]] in [[connection]] with {{Wiki|quantum mechanics}}. Some such {{Wiki|distinction}} is dictated by the postulates of the {{Wiki|theory}}, but exactly where or when to make it is not prescribed.10
  
For a {{Wiki|mystic}}, however, the fact that {{Wiki|quantum mechanics}} cannot tell us where or when to draw the line between [[subject]] and [[object]] comes as no surprise at all. This is because one of the most fundamental truths—attested to by mystics of all traditions—is that the distinction between [[subject]] and [[object]] is purely [[imaginary]]. It has no real [[existence]] to begin with! [[Thus]], Ibn `Arabi writes, "[[know]] you are an [[imagination]], as is all that you regard as other than yourself an imagination."11 So, too, the [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|mystic}}, Anandamayi Ma, says, "Seer-seeing-seen—these three are...modifications created by the [[mind]], superimposed on the one all-pervading Consciousness."12 Likewise, [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[master]], Longchen-pa, declares: "There is no [[duality]] of [[mind]] and its [[object]], and the perceiver is [[void]] in essence."13
+
For a {{Wiki|mystic}}, however, the fact that {{Wiki|quantum mechanics}} cannot tell us where or when to draw the line between [[subject]] and [[object]] comes as no surprise at all. This is because one of the most fundamental truths—attested to by [[mystics]] of all traditions—is that the {{Wiki|distinction}} between [[subject]] and [[object]] is purely [[imaginary]]. It has no real [[existence]] to begin with! [[Thus]], Ibn `Arabi writes, "[[know]] you are an [[imagination]], as is all that you regard as other than yourself an imagination."11 So, too, the [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|mystic}}, Anandamayi Ma, says, "Seer-seeing-seen—these three are...modifications created by the [[mind]], {{Wiki|superimposed}} on the one all-pervading Consciousness."12 Likewise, [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[master]], Longchen-pa, declares: "There is no [[duality]] of [[mind]] and its [[object]], and the {{Wiki|perceiver}} is [[void]] in essence."13
  
The discovery of such {{Wiki|ontological}} points of convergence between [[science]] and [[mysticism]] is intellectually very exciting. Not only does it abolish our [[philosophical]] schizophrenia, it also holds out the possibility of creating a [[sacred]] worldview in which both [[science]] and [[mysticism]] would be seen as distinct yet complementary ways of exploring the same underlying [[reality]]. The importance of this task for establishing a future global civilization on genuine [[spiritual]] and [[moral]] values cannot be over-estimated.
+
The discovery of such {{Wiki|ontological}} points of convergence between [[science]] and [[mysticism]] is intellectually very exciting. Not only does it abolish our [[philosophical]] [[schizophrenia]], it also holds out the possibility of creating a [[sacred]] worldview in which both [[science]] and [[mysticism]] would be seen as {{Wiki|distinct}} yet complementary ways of exploring the same underlying [[reality]]. The importance of this task for establishing a {{Wiki|future}} global {{Wiki|civilization}} on genuine [[spiritual]] and [[moral]] values cannot be over-estimated.
  
 
Here, however, a [[word]] of caution is in [[order]]. For even if the rapprochement between [[science]] and [[mysticism]] does, indeed, lead to a new worldview, there still is, and always will be, one big, big [[difference]] between them.
 
Here, however, a [[word]] of caution is in [[order]]. For even if the rapprochement between [[science]] and [[mysticism]] does, indeed, lead to a new worldview, there still is, and always will be, one big, big [[difference]] between them.
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The [[truths]] which [[science]] yields are {{Wiki|conceptual}} [[truths]], arrived at through a combination of [[thinking]] and experiencing. As such, they are also and inevitably [[relative]] [[truths]], [[subject]] to revision and change as our [[thoughts]] and [[experiences]] change.
 
The [[truths]] which [[science]] yields are {{Wiki|conceptual}} [[truths]], arrived at through a combination of [[thinking]] and experiencing. As such, they are also and inevitably [[relative]] [[truths]], [[subject]] to revision and change as our [[thoughts]] and [[experiences]] change.
  
But the [[Truth]] to which mystics bear witness is an [[Absolute]] Truth—one which, as the [[Hindu]] sage, Shankara, says, "is beyond the [[grasp]] of the senses,"14 and which, Ibn `Arabi writes, "cannot be arrived at by the {{Wiki|intellect}} by means of any [[rational]] [[thought]] process."15 This [[Absolute Truth]] can only be known through a third mode of cognition—called variously [[Enlightenment]], [[Realization]], or Gnosis—which transcends both [[thinking]] and experiencing. In fact, it is precisely our ordinary ways of [[thinking]] and experiencing that veil this [[Truth]] from us, for as [[Buddhist]] [[master]], Huang Po, writes:
+
But the [[Truth]] to which [[mystics]] bear {{Wiki|witness}} is an [[Absolute]] Truth—one which, as the [[Hindu]] [[Wikipedia:Sage (sophos|sage]], [[Wikipedia:Adi Shankara|Shankara]], says, "is beyond the [[grasp]] of the senses,"14 and which, Ibn `Arabi writes, "cannot be arrived at by the {{Wiki|intellect}} by means of any [[rational]] [[thought]] process."15 This [[Absolute Truth]] can only be known through a third mode of cognition—called variously [[Enlightenment]], [[Realization]], or Gnosis—which {{Wiki|transcends}} both [[thinking]] and experiencing. In fact, it is precisely our ordinary ways of [[thinking]] and experiencing that [[veil]] this [[Truth]] from us, for as [[Buddhist]] [[master]], [[Huang Po]], writes:
  
:    Blinded by their own [[sight]], [[hearing]], [[feeling]] and [[knowing]], they do not perceive the [[spiritual]] brilliance of the source [[substance]]. If they would only eliminate all {{Wiki|conceptual}} [[thought]] in a flash, that source-substance would [[manifest]] itself like the {{Wiki|sun}} ascending through the [[void]] and [[illuminating]] the whole [[universe]] without [[hindrance]] or bounds.16
+
:    Blinded by their [[own]] [[sight]], [[hearing]], [[feeling]] and [[knowing]], they do not {{Wiki|perceive}} the [[spiritual]] [[brilliance]] of the source [[substance]]. If they would only eliminate all {{Wiki|conceptual}} [[thought]] in a flash, that source-substance would [[manifest]] itself like the {{Wiki|sun}} ascending through the [[void]] and [[illuminating]] the whole [[universe]] without [[hindrance]] or bounds.16
  
And, at the opposite end of the [[spiritual]] spectrum, here's what Dionysius the Areopagite says of the {{Wiki|Christian}} mystic's [[Enlightenment]]:
+
And, at the opposite end of the [[spiritual]] spectrum, here's what {{Wiki|Dionysius the Areopagite}} says of the {{Wiki|Christian}} mystic's [[Enlightenment]]:
  
:    Renouncing all that the [[mind]] may conceive, wrapped entirely in the intangible and the invisible, he belongs completely to him who is beyond everything. Here, [[being]] neither oneself nor someone else, one is supremely united by a completely unknowing inactivity of all [[knowledge]], and [[knows]] beyond the [[mind]] by [[knowing]] nothing.17
+
:    Renouncing all that the [[mind]] may [[conceive]], wrapped entirely in the intangible and the {{Wiki|invisible}}, he belongs completely to him who is beyond everything. Here, [[being]] neither oneself nor someone else, one is supremely united by a completely unknowing inactivity of all [[knowledge]], and [[knows]] beyond the [[mind]] by [[knowing]] nothing.17
  
In other words, the [[Truth]] to which all Mystics testify is of an entirely different [[order]] than the [[truths]] formulated by [[science]]. When {{Wiki|Jesus}} said, "[[Know]] the [[Truth]] and it shall make you free,"18 he wasn't talking about the {{Wiki|theory}} of relativity. And when the [[Buddha]] said, "The gift of [[truth]] is the highest gift,"19 he wasn't referring to {{Wiki|quantum physics}}.
+
In other words, the [[Truth]] to which all [[Mystics]] testify is of an entirely different [[order]] than the [[truths]] formulated by [[science]]. When {{Wiki|Jesus}} said, "[[Know]] the [[Truth]] and it shall make you free,"18 he wasn't talking about the {{Wiki|theory}} of [[relativity]]. And when the [[Buddha]] said, "The [[gift]] of [[truth]] is the [[highest]] gift,"19 he wasn't referring to {{Wiki|quantum physics}}.
  
I [[stress]] this because there are quite a few seekers out there today who think that discovering [[mystical]] [[Truth]] is simply a matter of "shifting your {{Wiki|paradigm}}," or {{Wiki|learning}} a "new worldview." And while it is certainly valuable to examine your worldview and to investigate new paradigms, it is also crucial to remember that, no matter how revolutionary a worldview may seem, or how compatible with [[mysticism]] a {{Wiki|paradigm}} may be, worldviews and paradigms always remain {{Wiki|conceptual}} constructs. But the [[Absolute Truth]] revealed by [[Gnosis]] lies beyond all concepts, all paradigms, and all worldviews, whatsoever!
+
I [[stress]] this because there are quite a few seekers out there today who think that discovering [[mystical]] [[Truth]] is simply a {{Wiki|matter}} of "shifting your {{Wiki|paradigm}}," or {{Wiki|learning}} a "new worldview." And while it is certainly valuable to examine your worldview and to investigate new [[paradigms]], it is also crucial to remember that, no {{Wiki|matter}} how {{Wiki|revolutionary}} a worldview may seem, or how compatible with [[mysticism]] a {{Wiki|paradigm}} may be, worldviews and [[paradigms]] always remain {{Wiki|conceptual}} constructs. But the [[Absolute Truth]] revealed by [[Gnosis]] lies beyond all [[Wikipedia:concept|concepts]], all [[paradigms]], and all worldviews, whatsoever!
  
So, if you want to know this [[Truth]], you must finally let go of all your [[thoughts]] and all your [[experiences]]. You must allow yourself to sink beneath this whole transitory stream of [[mental]] and sensory [[phenomena]] into that Ocean of [[Silence]] at the [[Heart]] of the [[World]]. For it is only when you are completely lost and dissolved in the shoreless depths of this Ocean that [[Gnosis]] can burst forth like a bolt of lightning, "which lights up the sky from one end to the other,"20 and makes the [[Truth]] as plain to you "as an amalka [[fruit]] held in the palm of your hand."21
+
So, if you want to know this [[Truth]], you must finally let go of all your [[thoughts]] and all your [[experiences]]. You must allow yourself to sink beneath this whole transitory {{Wiki|stream}} of [[mental]] and sensory [[phenomena]] into that Ocean of [[Silence]] at the [[Heart]] of the [[World]]. For it is only when you are completely lost and dissolved in the shoreless depths of this Ocean that [[Gnosis]] can burst forth like a bolt of {{Wiki|lightning}}, "which lights up the sky from one end to the other,"20 and makes the [[Truth]] as plain to you "as an amalka [[fruit]] held in the palm of your hand."21
  
 
May all of you Realize this [[Fruit]] for yourselves!
 
May all of you Realize this [[Fruit]] for yourselves!
  
::- Joel Morwood, Center {{Wiki|Voice}}: Summer-Fall 1999. Joel is the [[spiritual]] director for the Center for [[Sacred]] Sciences in Eugene, Oregon.
+
::- Joel Morwood, [[Center]] {{Wiki|Voice}}: Summer-Fall 1999. Joel is the [[spiritual]] director for the [[Center]] for [[Sacred]] [[Sciences]] in Eugene, {{Wiki|Oregon}}.
  
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
 
<poem>
 
<poem>
1. From {{Wiki|Greek}}: episteme = "[[knowledge]]"; logos = "study of"
+
1. From {{Wiki|Greek}}: episteme = "[[knowledge]]"; {{Wiki|logos}} = "study of"
2. From {{Wiki|Greek}}: onta = "[[ultimate reality]]"; logos = "study of"
+
2. From {{Wiki|Greek}}: onta = "[[ultimate reality]]"; {{Wiki|logos}} = "study of"
3. As physicist Richard P. Feynman once put it.
+
3. As {{Wiki|physicist}} Richard P. Feynman once put it.
 
4. Simone Weil, Waiting For [[God]], trans. Emma Craufurd (1951; reprint, {{Wiki|New York}}: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1973), 209.
 
4. Simone Weil, Waiting For [[God]], trans. Emma Craufurd (1951; reprint, {{Wiki|New York}}: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1973), 209.
5. [[Mahathera]] Narada, The [[Buddha]] and His Teachings, 2nd rev. ed. (Kandy, [[Sri Lanka]]: [[Buddhist]] Publication {{Wiki|Society}}, 1988), 157.
+
5. [[Mahathera]] [[Narada]], The [[Buddha]] and His Teachings, 2nd rev. ed. ([[Kandy]], [[Sri Lanka]]: [[Buddhist]] Publication {{Wiki|Society}}, 1988), 157.
6. Anonymous, The Cloud of Unknowing And The [[Book]] of Privy Counseling, ed. William Johnston (Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday & Company, Inc., an Image [[Book]], 1973), 171.
+
6. Anonymous, The Cloud of Unknowing And The [[Book]] of Privy Counseling, ed. William Johnston ([[Garden]] City, N.Y: Doubleday & Company, Inc., an Image [[Book]], 1973), 171.
 
7. {{Wiki|Werner Heisenberg}}, {{Wiki|Physics}} and [[Philosophy]], ({{Wiki|New York}}: Harper & Row Publishers, 1962), 128.
 
7. {{Wiki|Werner Heisenberg}}, {{Wiki|Physics}} and [[Philosophy]], ({{Wiki|New York}}: Harper & Row Publishers, 1962), 128.
 
8. Ibid., 149.
 
8. Ibid., 149.
9. S.A.Q. Husaini, The Pantheistic {{Wiki|Monism}} of Ibn Al-'Arabi, 2nd ed. (Lahore: Sh. Muhammad Ashraf, 1979), 53-54.
+
9. S.A.Q. Husaini, The [[Pantheistic]] {{Wiki|Monism}} of Ibn Al-'Arabi, 2nd ed. ([[Lahore]]: Sh. [[Muhammad]] Ashraf, 1979), 53-54.
10. John S. [[Bell]], "[[Subject]] and [[Object]]," in The Physicist's Conception of Nature. ed, Jagdish Mehra (Boston: D. Reidel Publishing Company, 1973), 687.
+
10. John S. [[Bell]], "[[Subject]] and [[Object]]," in The Physicist's {{Wiki|Conception}} of [[Nature]]. ed, Jagdish Mehra ([[Boston]]: D. Reidel Publishing Company, 1973), 687.
11. Ibn Al'Arabi, The Bezels of [[Wisdom]], trans. R.W.J. Austin ({{Wiki|New York}}: Paulist Press, 1980), 125.
+
11. Ibn Al'Arabi, The Bezels of [[Wisdom]], trans. R.W.J. [[Austin]] ({{Wiki|New York}}: Paulist Press, 1980), 125.
12. Sri Anandamayi Ma, Matri Vani: Vol 2, 2nd ed., trans Atmananda (Calcutta: Shree Shree Anandamayee Charitable {{Wiki|Society}}, 1982), 138.
+
12. Sri Anandamayi Ma, Matri [[Vani]]: Vol 2, 2nd ed., trans Atmananda ([[Calcutta]]: [[Shree]] [[Shree]] Anandamayee Charitable {{Wiki|Society}}, 1982), 138.
13. [[Longchen Rabjam]], The Practice of [[Dzogchen]], 2nd ed., trans. [[Tulku Thondup]], ed. Harold Talbott (Ithaca, NY: Snow [[Lion]] Publications, 1996), 338.
+
13. [[Longchen Rabjam]], The Practice of [[Dzogchen]], 2nd ed., trans. [[Tulku Thondup]], ed. [[Harold Talbott]] ([[Ithaca]], NY: Snow [[Lion]] Publications, 1996), 338.
14. Shankara's Crest-Jewel of {{Wiki|Discrimination}}, trans. Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood, 3rd ed. (Hollywood, Calif.: [[Vedanta]] Press, 1978), 75.
+
14. [[Shankara's]] Crest-Jewel of {{Wiki|Discrimination}}, trans. [[Swami]] [[Prabhavananda]] and [[Christopher Isherwood]], 3rd ed. ({{Wiki|Hollywood}}, Calif.: [[Vedanta]] Press, 1978), 75.
15. Ibn Al'Arabi, The Bezels of [[Wisdom]], trans. R.W.J. Austin ({{Wiki|New York}}: Paulist Press, 1980), 51.
+
15. Ibn Al'Arabi, The Bezels of [[Wisdom]], trans. R.W.J. [[Austin]] ({{Wiki|New York}}: Paulist Press, 1980), 51.
16. The [[Zen]] Teachings of Huang Po, trans. John Blofeld ({{Wiki|New York}}: Grove Press, Inc., 1959), 36.
+
16. The [[Zen]] Teachings of [[Huang Po]], trans. [[John Blofeld]] ({{Wiki|New York}}: Grove Press, Inc., 1959), 36.
 
17. Pseudo-Dionysius: The Complete Works, trans. Colm Luibheid ({{Wiki|New York}}: Paulist Press, 1987), 137.
 
17. Pseudo-Dionysius: The Complete Works, trans. Colm Luibheid ({{Wiki|New York}}: Paulist Press, 1987), 137.
 
18. John 8:32
 
18. John 8:32
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[[Category:Buddhism Related Articles]]

Latest revision as of 18:03, 16 September 2023





Not without reason has the twentieth century been called The Revolutionary Century. Hardly any field of human endeavor has escaped some major upheaval. There have been political revolutions, economic revolutions, social revolutions, revolutions in technology, in transportation, in medicine, in communication—even in our everyday manners. For the spiritual seeker, however (and ultimately for humanity, itself), none of these can compare in importance to the twin revolutions which have occurred in the fields of science and religion. So, let us take a brief look at these two revolutions and how they affect us.

When the twentieth century opened, science and religion were locked in a protracted war in which it seemed no compromise was possible. There were two primary reasons for this. The first was epistemological,1 involving different notions about what constitutes truth and how it can be known. While science boasted that scientific truths could be tested and verified through empirical experiments, religion apparently demanded that spiritual truths be accepted on blind faith.

The second reason was ontological.2 That is, science and religion were founded on diametrically opposed views concerning the fundamental nature of reality. Religious believers insisted that, ultimately, the nature of reality was spiritual, and that, apart from this All-Encompassing Spiritual Reality, nothing would or could exist. Advocates for science, on the other hand, adopted a strictly materialist position, arguing that everything could be reduced to, and explained by, the interactions of independently existing atoms and the physical forces which acted on them.

Faced with two such irreconcilable worldviews, it appeared that any thinking person would have to choose sides—and many did. But for those who admired science, yet also intuited there must be more to life than the "wiggling and jiggling of atoms,"3 the apparent intractability of this historical conflict presented something of a personal dilemma. To pursue a spiritual path while simultaneously maintaining a scientific outlook required a kind of philosophical schizophrenia. How else could one pray for divine guidance by night and then take one's automobile to a mechanic in the morning? The underlying paradigms upon which these two actions were based simply refused to mesh.

As this century draws to a close, however, the situation in both science and religion has changed dramatically—so much so, that we must now rethink the very terms in which the whole controversy between them has been cast.

First, in the field of religion, the last hundred years has seen a veritable explosion in our knowledge of humanity's great religious traditions. A plethora of new translations of sacred texts from around the world is expanding and re-shaping our basic understanding of what it can mean to be religious and to lead a spiritual life. In particular, we have discovered that, at the core of all the major religions, there exists a current of mystical teachings which, when compared to one another, exhibit a startling degree of cross-cultural agreement.

What's especially interesting about these mystical teachings is their epistemology, which in many respects resembles that of science. For instance, while mystics recognize that faith is, indeed, a significant part of a spiritual path, they also maintain that faith alone is not enough. In fact, according to the mystics, if faith solidifies into dogmatic belief, it will actually become an obstacle to further progress. As Simone Weil wrote: "In what concerns divine things, belief is not fitting. Only certainty will do."4 It was out of this same concern that his disciples not rest on mere faith that the Buddha admonished them:

As the wise test gold by burning, cutting and rubbing it (on a piece of touchstone), so are you to accept my words after examining them and not merely out of regard for me.5

This is also why Sufis (the mystics of Islam) who have reached the end of their path are called al-muhaqqiqun, which means "verifiers." They, too, have examined the teachings and verified their truth for themselves.

Moreover, just as science incorporates a well-defined methodology for testing its theories, so do mystical traditions. Thus, while scientific theories can be verified by observation made within the context of various kinds of physical experiments, mystical teachings can be verified by insights gained within the context of various kinds of spiritual practices. In fact, engaging in such practices is considered essential in mystical traditions, because, as the anonymous author of the Christian Cloud of Unknowing warned: "you will not really understand all this until your own contemplative experience confirms it."6

In Mysticism, then, we find a type of spirituality which has close epistemological parallels to science—a spirituality that begins with faith but ends in a certainty which each of us can and must discover in our own practice. Thus, for seekers who cannot accept religious doctrines on faith alone, the recovery and dissemination of these mystical teachings is good news, indeed.

In the field of science, the last hundred years has wrought a revolution that has been, quite literally, world-shattering. The revolution we are talking about is quantum physics, and the "world" it shattered was the materialist world which the older classical physics seemed to support. Here is how Werner Heisenberg, one of quantum physics' founders, describes it: "Quantum theory has led the physicists far away from the simple materialistic views that prevailed in the natural science of the nineteenth century."7 In short, materialism is no longer a scientifically tenable paradigm.

This, too, is good news for modern spiritual seekers who cannot ignore the evidence of science. The fact that quantum physics has rendered the materialist paradigm scientifically untenable means that an otherwise insurmountable barrier to a rapprochement between science and religion (at least in its mystical aspect) has been removed. And while quantum physics does not "prove" mystical teachings (as some overly eager enthusiasts have claimed), the fundamental reality which it describes is not at all incompatible with the fundamental reality testified to by the mystics.

One example of this can be seen in the similarity between the modes of description which both scientists and mystics have been forced to adopt. In order to give a complete account of the properties of physical systems, quantum physicists have had to resort to a paradoxical form of expression called complementarity. For instance, sub-atomic phenomena can be thought of both as "waves" and as "particles." As Heisenberg points out, however, these two concepts are:

...mutually exclusive, because a certain thing cannot at the same time be a particle (i.e., a substance confined to a very small volume) and a wave (i.e., a field spread out over a large space), but the two[taken together] complement each other.8

Likewise, attempts by mystics to communicate what their spiritual practices have disclosed always result in one of those paradoxical statements for which mystics have become so famous. To give but one example, listen to the way the great Sufi shaykh, Ibn `Arabi, characterizes what he calls the "Reality of realities:"

If you say that this thing is the [[[Wikipedia:temporal|temporal]]] Universe, you are right. If you say that it is God who is eternal, you are right. If you say that it is neither the Universe nor God but is something conveying some additional meaning, you are right. All these views are correct, for it is the whole comprising the eternal and the temporal.9

An even more striking example of how science's and mysticism's perceptions of reality intersect concerns the relationship between subject and object. For quantum physics, deciding where one begins and the other ends presents something of a quandary. Here is how physicist-mathematician, John S. Bell, sums up the problem:

The subject-object distinction is indeed at the very root of the unease that many people feel in connection with quantum mechanics. Some such distinction is dictated by the postulates of the theory, but exactly where or when to make it is not prescribed.10

For a mystic, however, the fact that quantum mechanics cannot tell us where or when to draw the line between subject and object comes as no surprise at all. This is because one of the most fundamental truths—attested to by mystics of all traditions—is that the distinction between subject and object is purely imaginary. It has no real existence to begin with! Thus, Ibn `Arabi writes, "know you are an imagination, as is all that you regard as other than yourself an imagination."11 So, too, the Hindu mystic, Anandamayi Ma, says, "Seer-seeing-seen—these three are...modifications created by the mind, superimposed on the one all-pervading Consciousness."12 Likewise, Tibetan Buddhist master, Longchen-pa, declares: "There is no duality of mind and its object, and the perceiver is void in essence."13

The discovery of such ontological points of convergence between science and mysticism is intellectually very exciting. Not only does it abolish our philosophical schizophrenia, it also holds out the possibility of creating a sacred worldview in which both science and mysticism would be seen as distinct yet complementary ways of exploring the same underlying reality. The importance of this task for establishing a future global civilization on genuine spiritual and moral values cannot be over-estimated.

Here, however, a word of caution is in order. For even if the rapprochement between science and mysticism does, indeed, lead to a new worldview, there still is, and always will be, one big, big difference between them.

The truths which science yields are conceptual truths, arrived at through a combination of thinking and experiencing. As such, they are also and inevitably relative truths, subject to revision and change as our thoughts and experiences change.

But the Truth to which mystics bear witness is an Absolute Truth—one which, as the Hindu sage, Shankara, says, "is beyond the grasp of the senses,"14 and which, Ibn `Arabi writes, "cannot be arrived at by the intellect by means of any rational thought process."15 This Absolute Truth can only be known through a third mode of cognition—called variously Enlightenment, Realization, or Gnosis—which transcends both thinking and experiencing. In fact, it is precisely our ordinary ways of thinking and experiencing that veil this Truth from us, for as Buddhist master, Huang Po, writes:

Blinded by their own sight, hearing, feeling and knowing, they do not perceive the spiritual brilliance of the source substance. If they would only eliminate all conceptual thought in a flash, that source-substance would manifest itself like the sun ascending through the void and illuminating the whole universe without hindrance or bounds.16

And, at the opposite end of the spiritual spectrum, here's what Dionysius the Areopagite says of the Christian mystic's Enlightenment:

Renouncing all that the mind may conceive, wrapped entirely in the intangible and the invisible, he belongs completely to him who is beyond everything. Here, being neither oneself nor someone else, one is supremely united by a completely unknowing inactivity of all knowledge, and knows beyond the mind by knowing nothing.17

In other words, the Truth to which all Mystics testify is of an entirely different order than the truths formulated by science. When Jesus said, "Know the Truth and it shall make you free,"18 he wasn't talking about the theory of relativity. And when the Buddha said, "The gift of truth is the highest gift,"19 he wasn't referring to quantum physics.

I stress this because there are quite a few seekers out there today who think that discovering mystical Truth is simply a matter of "shifting your paradigm," or learning a "new worldview." And while it is certainly valuable to examine your worldview and to investigate new paradigms, it is also crucial to remember that, no matter how revolutionary a worldview may seem, or how compatible with mysticism a paradigm may be, worldviews and paradigms always remain conceptual constructs. But the Absolute Truth revealed by Gnosis lies beyond all concepts, all paradigms, and all worldviews, whatsoever!

So, if you want to know this Truth, you must finally let go of all your thoughts and all your experiences. You must allow yourself to sink beneath this whole transitory stream of mental and sensory phenomena into that Ocean of Silence at the Heart of the World. For it is only when you are completely lost and dissolved in the shoreless depths of this Ocean that Gnosis can burst forth like a bolt of lightning, "which lights up the sky from one end to the other,"20 and makes the Truth as plain to you "as an amalka fruit held in the palm of your hand."21

May all of you Realize this Fruit for yourselves!

- Joel Morwood, Center Voice: Summer-Fall 1999. Joel is the spiritual director for the Center for Sacred Sciences in Eugene, Oregon.

Notes

1. From Greek: episteme = "knowledge"; logos = "study of"
2. From Greek: onta = "ultimate reality"; logos = "study of"
3. As physicist Richard P. Feynman once put it.
4. Simone Weil, Waiting For God, trans. Emma Craufurd (1951; reprint, New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1973), 209.
5. Mahathera Narada, The Buddha and His Teachings, 2nd rev. ed. (Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society, 1988), 157.
6. Anonymous, The Cloud of Unknowing And The Book of Privy Counseling, ed. William Johnston (Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday & Company, Inc., an Image Book, 1973), 171.
7. Werner Heisenberg, Physics and Philosophy, (New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1962), 128.
8. Ibid., 149.
9. S.A.Q. Husaini, The Pantheistic Monism of Ibn Al-'Arabi, 2nd ed. (Lahore: Sh. Muhammad Ashraf, 1979), 53-54.
10. John S. Bell, "Subject and Object," in The Physicist's Conception of Nature. ed, Jagdish Mehra (Boston: D. Reidel Publishing Company, 1973), 687.
11. Ibn Al'Arabi, The Bezels of Wisdom, trans. R.W.J. Austin (New York: Paulist Press, 1980), 125.
12. Sri Anandamayi Ma, Matri Vani: Vol 2, 2nd ed., trans Atmananda (Calcutta: Shree Shree Anandamayee Charitable Society, 1982), 138.
13. Longchen Rabjam, The Practice of Dzogchen, 2nd ed., trans. Tulku Thondup, ed. Harold Talbott (Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications, 1996), 338.
14. Shankara's Crest-Jewel of Discrimination, trans. Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood, 3rd ed. (Hollywood, Calif.: Vedanta Press, 1978), 75.
15. Ibn Al'Arabi, The Bezels of Wisdom, trans. R.W.J. Austin (New York: Paulist Press, 1980), 51.
16. The Zen Teachings of Huang Po, trans. John Blofeld (New York: Grove Press, Inc., 1959), 36.
17. Pseudo-Dionysius: The Complete Works, trans. Colm Luibheid (New York: Paulist Press, 1987), 137.
18. John 8:32
19. The Dhammapada: The Path of Truth, trans. The Venerable Balangoda Ananda Maitreya, revs. Rose Kramer (Novato, Calif.: Lotsawa, 1988), 95.
20. Luke 17:24
21. A traditional analogy in both Hinduism and Buddhism.

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]http://www.centerforsacredsciences.org/publications/science-and-mysticism-in-the-twentieth-century.htm centerforsacredsciences.org]


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