Mind in the - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 59
About This Presentation
Title:

Mind in the

Description:

In the previous session, I said that the motivation for this course is the ... (Billiard-ball model of universe) Only what can be measured is real' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 60
Provided by: Chris1645
Category:
Tags: billiard | mind

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Mind in the


1
Mind in the
Mind in the Cosmos
  • Evolution of Consciousness

Christian de Quincey, Ph.D.
University of Philosophical Research Institute of
Noetic Sciences John F. Kennedy University
2
Session Two
Crisis Nature is Under Threat.Who Can Help?
3
Overview of Session 2
In the previous session, I said that the
motivation for this course is the urgent fact
that nature is under threatand that our species
plays a critical role in the crisis. I asked
Who Can Help?and pointed out that science and
religion are unlikely candidates because they are
a core part of the problem. In this session, we
will move deeper into that questionand explore
further why science is so problematic.
Specifically, we will look more closely at what
science has to say about consciousnessand how
it fits into the physical world. For the next
hour or so, then, our guiding question will be
Can we turn to science for knowledge about
consciousness? Can science inform us about mind
in the cosmoswhat it is and where it came
from? Later on, we will look to see if religion
may be able to help us relate to nature . . . to
Earth . . . to cosmos
4
Science Cosmos
  • Universe began about 15 billion years ago
    (b.y.a.)
  • Big Bang. Abundant, really hot, energy. No life
    or mind.
  • Galaxies formed about 14 b.y.a.
  • Matter and stars galore. Still no life or mind.
  • Our solar system about 4.5 b.y.a.
  • Family of planets. Still no life or mind.
  • Life on Earth appears about 3.5 b.y.a.
  • Bacteria. No mind.
  • No evidence for life elsewhere in cosmos
  • For all we know We are alone. No other
    intelligent beings.

5
Science Evolution
  • Life on Earth evolves for 3.5 billion years
  • Bacteria. Jellyfish. Fish. Amphibians.
    Reptiles/Birds. Mammals.
  • Still no mind.
  • Primitive nervous system evolves about 500 m.y.a.
  • Neural reflexes. Still no mind or consciousness.
    Nobody home.
  • Brains evolve about 400 m.y.a.
  • Perhaps primitive minds. Somebody home, but
    unconscious.
  • Humans appear about 2 m.y.a.
  • Human neocortex seat of self-reflective
    intelligence
  • True consciousness arrives! Finally, somebody
    home who knows it!
  • Homo sapiens sapiens (man who knows that he
    knows)

6
Why Science?
  • Purpose of Science
  • To know and understand the world
  • What the world is made of, what it is doing
  • How it is structured
  • Motivation
  • Why do we want such knowledge?
  • Simple answer curiosity (just want to know)
  • Complex answer prediction (know the future)
  • Why?
  • Because prediction leads to control
  • Control gives us power over nature
  • Science serves human needs and desires

7
What is Science?
If science aims for prediction, is it any
different from an oracle?
  • science
  • The observation, identification, description,
    experimental investigation, and theoretical
    explanation of phenomena. American Heritage
    Dictionary
  • oracle
  • An authoritative or wise statement or
    prediction American Heritage Dictionary
  • Something that is foretold by (or as if by)
    supernatural means Rogets Thesaurus

8
What is Science?
  • Science is like an oracle
  • Both attempt authoritative statements or
    predictions
  • Science unlike an oracle
  • Oracle something foretold by supernatural
    means
  • Science something foretold by natural means

9
What is Science?
  • Science is a method for outing nature
  • Observing the present (senses)
  • Understanding the past (reason)
  • Telling the future (prediction)
  • OUT-maneuvering nature by manipulating changes
    (control)

10
What is Science?
  • The ERROR Method
  • Empiricism Use senses instruments to get data
  • Rationalism Analyze data with reason / logic
  • Reductionism Explain wholes from smallest parts
  • Objectification Separate subject (knower) from
    object (known)
  • Replication Repeat experiment to falsify or
    confirm predictions

11
Science In A Nutshell
  • An Experimental Method for Prediction
  • Observe Look closely and systematically at
    nature
  • Predict Propose falsifiable hypothesis about
    specific part of nature
  • Data Collect information about that part of
    nature
  • Manipulate See how nature changes by controlling
    some variable
  • Measure Quantify changing variable to produce
    objective evidence
  • Confirm (or not) Test to see if results match
    prediction
  • Theory Develop theory to explain experimental
    results
  • Report Communicate results to community of peers
    (peer review)
  • Repeat To replicate results, begin experimental
    cycle over again. . .
  • Laws If no further tests contradict theoryit
    rises to status of law

12
  • Science is a method for discovering . . .
  • Laws of Nature
  • Remember this (it will be important later . . .)

13
Foundations of Science
  • Modern science rests on a set of foundational
    assumptionsbeginning with the
  • 3 Ms

14
Foundations of Science
  • Materialism
  • Reality ultimately composed of physical objects
  • Mind or consciousness an epiphenomenon
  • Mechanism
  • All causality is physical
  • All change due to energy exchange
  • (Billiard-ball model of universe)
  • Measurement
  • Only what can be measured is real
  • What counts is what matters to science

15
  • Not everything that can be counted counts . . .
  • . . . and not everything that counts can be
    counted. Albert Einstein

16
Assumptions of Science
  • Objectivity
  • (1) Objects exist independent of mind
    (ontological)
  • Cosmos consists entirely of objects out there
  • (2) Knowledge undistorted by subjective bias
    (epistemological)
  • Knowledge of cosmos as it is in itself
  • Causality
  • Every effect is result of prior cause
  • All causes are physical, involving energy
    exchanges
  • There can be no non-physical causes
  • Universal Laws
  • Nature is governed by laws
  • All laws ultimately grounded in physics
  • Scientific laws hold universally
  • There can be no exceptions

17
Sciences Ultimate Ideal
  • Science is a law-making enterprise
  • It is nomothetic

Laws
  • Seeks laws that are
  • Objective (independent of mind)
  • Quantifiable (expressed mathematically)
  • Universal (same everywhere in the cosmos)

18
Sciences Ultimate Ideal
  • Discover the laws of the universe
  • By knowing all the physical causes
  • Be able to predict all inevitable effects
  • Ideal result Complete control of nature

19
Benefits of Science
  • Control-science very successful
  • Highly sophisticated technologies
  • Agriculture feeds growing populations
  • Medicine sanitation help against diseases
  • Architecture houses centralized communities
  • Communications speed spread of education and
    commerce
  • Industry feeds insatiable appetite for perpetual
    progress . . .
  • . . . all this and more from our mastery of matter

20
Theres just one little problem . . .
21
Consciousness!
  • Consciousness and laws dont mix
  • Given the nomothetic ideal that . . .
  • all causes are governed by laws
  • all laws are objective, quantifiable, and
    universal,
  • Given metaphysical assumption of materialism
  • all causes are physical, then . . .
  • Consciousness cannot exist
  • Scientific causality must exclude consciousness
  • Because consciousness is non-physical,
    non-objective, and not measurable
  • At best it is epiphenomenal
  • Consciousness cannot be causalcan have no
    potency
  • Volition, free will, or choice must be illusion

22
If Consciousness were Causal
  • Choices would affect behavior of matter
  • Something other than physical causes would
    interrupt the flow of events
  • There could be no scientific laws!
  • Laws would not be universal
  • Precise prediction would be impossible
  • Instead of laws wed have habits of nature

23
A World of Its
  • Scientific ideal laws are true everywhere
  • goes hand-in-hand with ideal of objectivityof
    having no viewpoint at alla world without any
    subjects
  • Laws are wholly objective descriptions of a
    universe composed utterly of external objects
  • A world composed entirely of external
    third-person its
  • Science cannot cope with first-person Is or
    second-person yous
  • Science cannot cope with subjectswith knowers

24
Paradox
  • In a world full of objects science would be
    impossible
  • All knowledge requires experiencing subjects
    consciousness
  • But that would be absurd, so . . .

25
Sciences Amnesia
  • To avoid absurdity of knowledge without a knower
  • Science had to create gap between knower and
    known
  • As a methodology this worked for objective
    universe
  • It allowed science to study nature w/o worrying
    about mind
  • Subject-object split was just a convenience
  • Science soon forgot, and elevated an
    epistemological maneuver into a ontological
    principle
  • Science moved from all we want to know about are
    objects in the world (epistemological
    objectivity) to
  • all the world contains are objects (ontological
    objectivity)

26
Plate-Glass Science
  • Objectivity assumes a gap between subjects and
    objects
  • Science views nature as if behind a plate-glass
    window
  • Nature is remote, a detached other
  • Scientist is a detached, remote observer
  • Works (more or less) until science focuses on
    mind
  • Plate-glass science cannot work for mind
  • Detached observation impossible in study of mind
  • Because now consciousness studies itself

27
Summary
  • Criteria for Standard Plate-Glass Science
  • Objectivityfor observation
  • Measurement/Quantityfor precision and certainty
  • Mechanismfor explanation
  • Predictionfor control
  • Controlunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

28
Fear-Based Science?
  • Metaphysical Assumption of Materialism
  • Nature/cosmos is intrinsically insentientwithout
    purpose or meaning
  • Evolution is result of accumulated random
    accidents
  • Survival goes to the fittest
  • Fittest are those who reproduce most
    successfully
  • Reproduction means turning matter into living
    flesh
  • Anything that disrupts conversion of matter into
    human flesh threatens human population growth

29
Fear-Based Science?
  • Humans have the intellectual might (and the
    right?) to secure maximum acreage for human
    consumption
  • But nature is either indifferent or hostile to
    idea of human privilege
  • So, we need to tame the wild beast
  • Science helps us OUT-maneuver nature
  • by Observation of present. Understanding the
    past. Telling/Predicting the futureachieved by
    Manipulation/Control.
  • Science gives us human-centered technologies (at
    the expense of the rest of nature)

30
What Gives Us the Right?
  • Scientific Materialism
  • Matter is dead, dumb, insentient, mindless
  • Consciousness emerges with brains
  • Only creatures with brains have intelligence
  • Humans have highly-developed neocortex
  • Humans have self-reflective intelligence
  • Humans can understand and control nature
  • Only humans can OUT-smart nature
  • Therefore, humans are special.

31
Humans Right?
  • Examine the logic
  • Humans are special because of superior
    intelligence
  • Produced by highly-complex brainsmade of matter
  • Matter is nothing but insentient, objective
    energy
  • And thats all there is . . . Nothing else exists
  • Core metaphysical assumption of materialism
  • But this cannot account for consciousness
  • Without consciousness, no possibility of science
  • Yet science exists. So, consciousness must exist.
  • So materialism must be flawed or incomplete

32
Humans Right?
  • If materialism is flawed because it cannot
    account for consciousness
  • Then perhaps we dont live in an indifferent,
    hostile, unfeeling cosmos
  • Consciousness would come from something other
    than insentient, dead matter
  • It would come from sentient, experiential matter
  • In which case, we are surrounded by a natural
    world brim-full of sentience and consciousness
  • We cannot OUT-smart nature because our
    intelligence is rooted in the intelligence of
    nature itself

33
Learning from Nature
  • The presence of consciousness in nature does not
    automatically guarantee fairness and balance
    (just witness the example of humans)
  • We may still need to protect ourselves from other
    creatures and the vagaries of nature
  • However, with consciousness comes purpose and
    meaningand we can be open to learning from
    nature by participating with it, rather than by
    attempting to control it.
  • We may learn to communicate with other
    intelligences in nature, and thereby learn to
    trust itinstead of fearing it.

34
A New Kind of Science
  • Trusting nature opens the way for a new kind of
    science
  • includes exploration of consciousness as well as
    exploration of matter
  • explores subjects as well as objects
  • moves beyond myth of objectivity to include
    subjectivity and intersubjectivity
  • Employs different ways of knowing beyond the
    senses and reason
  • intuition, feeling, transrational, nonsensory

35
  • Instead of Plate-Glass Science

We get . . .
36
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science

37
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Objectivityfor observation
  • Measurement/Quantityfor precision certainty
  • Mechanismfor explanation
  • Predictionfor control
  • Controlunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

38
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivityfor observation-participation
  • Measurement/Quantityfor precision certainty
  • Mechanismfor explanation
  • Predictionfor control
  • Controlunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

39
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivityfor observation-participation
  • Engagement/Qualityfor subtle discernment
  • Mechanismfor explanation
  • Predictionfor control
  • Controlunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

40
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivityfor observation-participation
  • Engagement/Qualityfor subtle discernment
  • Meaningfor understanding
  • Predictionfor control
  • Controlunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

41
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivityfor observation-participation
  • Engagement/Qualityfor subtle discernment
  • Meaningfor understanding
  • Growthfor transformation
  • Controlunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

42
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivityfor observation-participation
  • Engagement/Qualityfor subtle discernment
  • Meaningfor understanding
  • Growthfor transformation
  • Transformationunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationfear (of losing control)

43
New Consciousness Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivityfor observation-participation
  • Engagement/Qualityfor subtle discernment
  • Meaningfor understanding
  • Growthfor transformation
  • Transformationunderlying motivation
  • Deep motivationtrust (in natures process)

44
Old and New Science
  • Looking-Glass Science
  • Subjectivity
  • Engagement/Quality
  • Meaning
  • Growth
  • Transformation
  • Deep motivation Trust
  • Plate-Glass Science
  • Objectivity
  • Measurement/Quantity
  • Mechanism
  • Prediction
  • Control
  • Deep motivation Fear

45
How Can Science Help?
  • Summary
  • By changing foundational story of materialism
  • from an ontology of dead matter to
  • one where matter tingles with experience
  • By recognizing mind in nature
  • By acknowledging the obvious potency of
    consciousness
  • giving up brain-centric dogma of epiphenomenal
    consciousness
  • By acknowledging sacredness of all nature
  • By radically changing the way science is done
  • adopting a radical epistemology
  • that honors other ways of knowing such as
    intuition, feeling
  • By adopting new guiding criteriaespecially when
    exploring consciousness

46
Religion
  • Having looked closely at science and how it tries
    to explain the relationship between humans and
    nature, between consciousness and cosmos . . .
  • Lets now recap the problem with religion ...

47
Can Religion Help?
  • religion
  • Belief in and reverence for a supernatural power
    or powers regarded as creator and governor of the
    universe.
  • American Heritage Dictionary
  • God is supernatural
  • transcendent, remote, Other
  • Focused on afterlife
  • Attention elsewhere beyond nature

48
Religion
  • Simplified generalizations
  • about mainstream monotheistic religions
  • Many varieties
  • Each religion has many subtle variations in
    beliefs
  • With some exceptions, all focus attention on
    human spiritual welfare and salvation
  • Exceptions include indigenous religions, some
    forms of Taoism and Buddhism
  • However, to the extent that any religion singles
    out human souls for divine attention, it
    privileges our species, and contributes to the
    split between humans and the rest of nature

49
Monotheistic Religions
  • Judaism
  • Supreme deity Yahweh is creator of the world
  • Focused less on afterlife, more on future
    messiah
  • Genesis story emphasizes mans dominion over
    nature. Focus is on historically chosen people
  • Christianity
  • God is transcendent yet historically incarnate
  • Emphasizes caritas or human love
  • Ultimate focus on heaven in afterlife
  • Body/flesh seen as sinful
  • Islam
  • Allah is utterly transcendent
  • Focus on getting afterlife reward in paradise

50
Polytheistic Religions
  • Hinduism
  • Multiple gods all unified in ultimate Brahman
  • Nature is maya or illusionyet may deserve
    respect
  • Buddhism
  • Essentially a non-theistic psychospiritual
    therapy-religion
  • Avoids metaphysical speculation
  • Urges liberation from wheel of samsara
  • Honors all sentient beings
  • Taoism
  • Religious Taoism full of ancestral gods nature
    spirits
  • Philosophical Taoism deep reverence for nature

51
Human-Nature Split
  • Conventional religious doctrines do not teach us
    to look for meaning and spiritual guidance in
    nature
  • Many religions say we are special by divine fiat
  • God gave us souls so we may survive and transcend
    inevitable corruption of the flesh
  • Human souls are separate from body
  • . . . from human body, Earth body, Cosmic body

52
Human-Nature Split
  • Path to meaning Pray to remote God
  • Relies on priests, rabbis, and mullahs . . .
  • Only humans have souls
  • No soul, no intelligence or purpose in nature
  • Humans are special
  • Created in the image of God

53
New Religion
  • God is not supernatural
  • not remote/transcendent
  • Spirit is present throughout Nature
  • Spirit talks to us thru Natureif we listen
  • No need for priests to mediate with God
  • priests become shamans, guiding us to communicate
    with Spirit-in-Nature

54
New Religion
  • Sacred is all around us
  • Path to sacred not only through priests and
    churches
  • We can experience the sacred anywhere in nature
  • watching a sunset
  • playing with animals
  • walking through a forest or on a beach
  • climbing a mountain
  • digging in the garden or planting flowers
  • filling our lungs with fresh air
  • dancing through crackling autumn leaves
  • embracing a loved one
  • holding the hand of a dying parent . . .
  • Most direct way to divine
  • Touching and feeling the Earth and its
    inhabitants
  • Open to spirit in ordinary, everyday events

55
New Religion
  • Way to meaning
  • By reconnecting with world of nature
  • Through exuberant participation or through
    stillness of meditation
  • By just being present and listening with our
    whole bodies and being
  • And then we learn . . .
  • We are not alone
  • We are not uniquely special
  • We share this magnificent planet and cosmos with
    countless billions of fellow sentient beings

56
Pantheism
  • New religion is ancient wisdom
  • common to indigenous peoples
  • Often called pantheism . . .
  • God is Nature, Nature is God
  • In philosophy panpsychism . . .
  • mind or spirit everywhere throughout Nature

57
Beyond Science Religion
  • Problem in a nutshell
  • Neither science or religion recognize humans as
    wholly one with nature
  • Solution A New Story
  • Weve looked at how science and religion can take
    a broader view of how humans fit into nature
  • By giving up the story that humans are special
  • By recognizing that all of nature is ensouled
  • That matter itself tingles with the spark of
    spirit
  • Next we turn to philosophy . . .

58
Philosophy
  • Question basic assumptions of science
  • Question assumptions of religion
  • Question metaphysics
  • Especially relation between matter spirit
  • Thats the topic for our next session
  • Major Worldviews on Mind and Matter

59
Next Session 3Major Worldviews on Mind and
Matter
  • In the next session, we will move deeper into
    philosophy of mind to see how the major paradigms
    of dualism, materialism, and idealism help or
    hinder our understanding of mind in the cosmos.
  • We will also look at a fourth alternative,
    panpsychism, that places consciousness right at
    the heart of the physical universe.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com