When Consciousness is Discussed,
Intelligent People Become Idiots
A few days
ago, I spent 45 minutes watching on YouTube a program hosted by Prof. Brian
Greene, a top-notch physicist and mathematician, in World Science Festival. The format is discursive with two high level
philosopher and neuroscientist, the guest-discussants jumping between
philosophy and neuroscience with a lot of neurons, synapses thrown in for good
measure. It is possible that the undefined and useless word “soul” was thrown
in somewhere, but it must have slipped by me.
It was all blah-blah-and more blah all through, you can see it for yourself here.
The neuroscientist did throw in the phrase, “emergent property”. So good of
him.
Now, I take
you back a few years to a
conference on neuroscience to which the Dalai Lama was invited and it was
accepted. This rubbed the scientists the wrong way like sand paper does. “Why
in the world would you invite a so-called ‘spiritualist’ when we are going to
discuss the materialism and working of the brain/mind.”
By the end
of the seminar, the Dalai Lama’s presence was acknowledged to have been useful
in the seminar, if my memory serves me correctly. He may have showed how one can
figure out that one’s own mind is going through multiple changes while practicing
meditation.
As an aside,
this is the source of the “Mindfulness” business; leave it to Americans to
create profit out of nothing and, as mind is undefined, it is nothing, and
profits continue to accrue to the “Mindfulness” gurus! Well this was about the Buddha.
What about his predecessor who abjured “Brahmanical” teachings – Mahavira?
Followers of
Mahavira (named Jains) are all over India. There are many temples in which we
still can see idols of Goddess of Education and other Gods of the Hindu
pantheon. I have visited these temples and felt very confused when I was in Kanchipuram
(once upon a time a major center of Jainism teachings) where I spent four years
of schooling and one year of college. Later, much later, did I come to know that
Jainism was against the teachings of Brahmins, the highest caste in Hindu
society. Jainism did not reject rebirth but showed the way to avoid rebirth, and
why – the cruel punishment one has to face in Hell . He also, as I understand
it, did not emphasize soul. Many of my schoolmates were Jains.
The Buddha
just took that one step further. The Buddha was an empiricist – you see, hear,
smell, taste, touch – and nothing more. The combinations of the above in ways
so many that are even beyond the imaginable, let alone infinity (itself
undefinable). No one can tell me that the stench from the toilet I respond to
is precisely the same that another person would respond to. This has a word,
just another word, qualia. Buddha did
not just invent a word: he introduced the importance of studying one’s own
experiences.
Yet, I do
think The Buddha erred when he asked his disciple to lay his head towards the
north, when he realized that he is truly near death. He must have had his own
superstition! What are you saying, the Buddha might have entertained superstitious
thoughts? Yes. I treat the Buddha as a human being who elevated himself above
the level of the mortals, yet was a mortal. Yet, this mortality is what endears
the Buddha to me, even leaving aside the error. He was just like me, except for
his intelligence and persistence that led him to enlightenment. I am nowhere
near him (note the lowercase ‘h’). I do not treat him as God, even as an
incarnate.
To get back
to the debate and the seminar I have referred, the Buddha remained unmentioned
and undiscussed in one and in the other perhaps one of the world’s foremost
Buddhist teachers was discredited because it did not recognize the empiricism
of the Buddha, while claiming science is an exercise in empiricism. Tut, tut
...
The title of
this post came to me after the write-up. People were blind to the pure
empiricism – doing scientific experiments and validating or otherwise the
hypothesis that led to them – only because they could not see through their own
blindfolds. They became idiots. They discussed consciousness without grounding
it somewhere, anywhere.
The Buddha
showed that the anchor for anyone’s consciousness lies within that individual.
This empiricism is almost existentialism – you come alive through your actions,
or your actions define who you are.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
2 comments:
Exactly sir
Thank you very much, Prof. Kanchidurai. I tried to keep it short and this was the shortest !
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