instantc wrote:
Divine Insight wrote:
So the materialist starts with stuff that can't have an experience to try to explain why they can have an experience.
Since consciousness and experience are defined by subjective criteria, how exactly do you know that an atom cannot have an experience? Just because there is no external manifestation of an experience doesn't mean that there is no experience,
You're exactly right. I can't know that an atom cannot have an experience. Or a rock, or anything that is material. In fact, as a mystic, the idea is that the entire universe is having an experience on some level.
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Ironically modern science actually come to the rescue of mysticism in helping to explain this which I'll explain in a moment, but first let's look at the differences between science and mysticism in more detail.
Modern science is a philosophy that begins with three main assumptions.
1. There exists a physical world "
out there" (eternal to our experience of it)
2. That external physical world can be reduced to individual parts. (i.e. reductionism correctly describes reality)
3. The individual parts of this reducible reality are
atoms so-to-speak. Although this idea actually refers to the original Greek meaning of the term atom (i.e. indivisible part). Our chemical atoms are not the Greek's atoms, as we even know that our chemical atoms are reducible further to quarks, leptons, and bosons. We are no suggesting that quarks, leptons, and bosons are further reducible to vibrating "Strings". Yet another imagined irreducible part of a physical reality that is "
out there" (eternal to our experience of it).
Mysticism is a philosophy that begins with the following assumptions.
1. The foundation of the world comes from within. Not within our physical bodies but within our sentient experience which is the ultimate foundation of all that exists.
2. That internal world cannot be reduced or divided into individual parts. In other words everything is one. Everything is interconnected and has no individual existence that is separate from everything else. In other word mysticism is a philosophy of holism not reductionism.
3. The irreducible holistic nature of reality is our true essence. Rather than imagining that we are made up of individual materialistic parts, the mystics imagine that there actually exists one holistic thing which becomes manifest in appearance as individual phenomenon.
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And now to explain how modern science comes to the rescue of the mystics in explaining the holistic nature of reality.
Albert Einstein discovered that space and time cannot even be separated into two different reducible things. Instead the only rational way to think of physical reality is in terms of a single holistic fabric of spacetime. This not only works out perfectly in terms of a mathematical description of reality, but it also predicted time dilation which has since been scientifically observed, measured and shown to be a true property of the holistic nature of spacetime.
But our super genius Einstein didn't even stop there. He also discovered that energy and matter are also one single holistic phenomenon and one can be transformed into the other via the mathematical relationship E=mc². Once again demonstrating the truth of holism and the false premise of reductionism.
Again, Einstein's theories have been vindicated and scientifically observed to be true. We can indeed change matter back into energy precisely as Einstein had mathematically predicted. We do this every day in our nuclear power plants and submarines. We also unfortunately demonstrated the truth of this fact of reality by unleashing huge amounts of energy from matter in the form of atomic bombs.
There is no question that Einstein was right. Matter and energy are indeed the same stuff and they are malleable one into the other. Matter is nothing other than pure energy bound up in standing waves of vibrations.
Evidently all that exists is energy. Indivisible non-reducible holistic energy that can become manifest as physical material objects that appear to have substance.
Science has no clue what "energy" even is. It's certainly a useful term to help describe the universe mathematically and it was so useful that Einstein was able to show that all matter can be "reduced" (or rapidly expanded) to become pure energy.
If anything, science has shown that if the universe is reducible, it is reducible to a single phenomenon called "energy" a single indivisible "stuff" that would itself be holistic since energy itself has no known boundaries. A universe that is reducible to pure energy is indeed a holistic universe that is created from a single indivisible phenomenon.
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I won't go into any more scientific details here, but I would just like to add that I haven't even used our scientific knowledge of Quantum Mechanics to illustrate this point. Yet that field of study has much to offer the holistic view of reality as well. In fact, when we get into QM we begin to see reasons to suspect that pure energy may ultimately have structure or organized behaviors that lies beneath what we deem to be our physical world.
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So now when we ask whether an "atom" or a "rock" can have an experience, we need to really ask, "Just what is it that is having an experience?" If energy is the foundational entity that becomes manifest as the universe, and we are ultimately made of pure energy (and basically nothing else), then it must be energy that is ultimately having an experience. Not atoms, not quarks, leptons, or bosons, not imagined elementary vibrating individual strings, but a totally holistic energy.
The mystics would then say, "Tat t'vam asi", which is Sanskrit meaning "You are that". You are the energy of this universe. You are the entity that has become this universe. Or at least a direct manifestation of it. Your brain is not dreaming up this universe. Your brain is a dream within this universe. It is a portal through which you (an entity of pure energy) experiences the manifestations that energy has become.
The mystics would say, "There simply is nothing else for you to be".
If you want to create a philosophy of individual strings or atoms then those must be what you are. But if that's the case then how can you be having an experience unless strings or atoms can have an experience? So any attempt at reducing reality to individual parts that cannot innately have an experience requires that you add something "
more" to reality when you eventually get to the point where something starts to have an experience.
The question then becomes, "What is it that is having an experience?"
The current scientific hypothesis at this time is that "experience" is an emergent property of complexity. But even so, the question of "Just what is it that is having this experience?" is illusive. Is an abstract notion of an "
emergent property" having an experience truly coherent?
I won't say that this idea is entirely impossible. Perhaps the materialist have it right and this is indeed the truth of reality. But I will say that it's not entirely convincing. Nor would I say that it's an "
explanation" since it's not at all clear what it is that is actually having an experience.
On the other hand, the mystics haven't offered a fully satisfying explanation either. But then again, they openly confess this. Their philosophy accepts that the ultimate truth of reality is indeed a "Mystery", this is why this philosophy is called "Mysticism".
It doesn't' claim to know the true nature of "energy" or "God" or this thing that is ultimately having an experience. The only thing it claims to know is "Tat t'vam asi" or "You are that". You are this thing that is having an experience. And that is ultimately all we can know. It's also all we need to know.
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Science is determined to "
explain" this in terms of reductionism.
Mystics are content with "
accepting" this in terms of holism.
Now I'm not saying that science should abandon their attempt to explain everything in terms of reductionism. Nor am I suggesting that they never will be able to. But I think they are only fooling themselves if they believe that they have already succeeded in this goal. I also question whether or not they will succeed. After all, if the mystic are right and our true nature is that we are beings of pure energy, then science is simply barking up the wrong tree altogether.
And it sure looks like they might be. We already know that spacetime is a single holistic fabric and that E=mc². The science of Quantum Mechanics actually points to holistic feature of reality as well.
So is science barking up the wrong tree of reductionism when even their best theories appear to be confirming a holistic reality?
Isn't it somewhat ironic that their methods of reductionism have actually ended in theories that predict holism?
