Never
did I imagine that spirituality would be so important in my life. Throughout
my childhood and student years I always thought I would end up as a
scientist.
I loved science. I loved discovering how the world works...
The
more I discovered, the more fascinated I became. At sixteen I was
devouring
Einstein and marveling at the paradoxical world of quantum physics. I
delved
into different theories of how the universe began, and pondered the
mysteries
of space and time. I had a passion for knowing, an insatiable curiosity
about the laws and principles that governed the world.
I-was
not, however, a materialist, believing that everything could be
explained
by the physical sciences. By
my mid-teens I had developed an interest in the untapped potentials of
the human mind. Stories of yogis being buried alive for days, or lying
on beds of nails, intrigued me. I dabbled in so-called out-of-body
experiences
and experimented with the altered states of
consciousness
produced by hyperventilating or entraining the brain's alpha rhythms
with
pulsating lights. I developed my own techniques of meditation, though I
did not recognize them as such at the time.
Nevertheless,
my overriding interest was still in the physical sciences, and, above
all,
mathematics. Thus, when it came to choosing which subject I was to
study
at university, the choice was obvious. And when it came to deciding
which
university I should apply to, the choice was again clear: Cambridge. It
was, and probably remains, the best British university for studying
mathematics.
The
Turning Point
In
my
third year, I was exactly where I thought I would want to be. Stephen
Hawking
was my supervisor. Although he had fallen prey to the motor-neuron
disorder
known as Lou Gehrig's disease several years earlier, the illness had
not
yet taken its full toll. He could walk with the aid of a cane and speak
well enough to be understood.
Sitting
with him in his study, I found half my attention would be on whatever
he
was explaining to me (such as the solution of a particularly difficult
set of differential equations), while my eye would be caught by the
hundreds
of sheets of paper strewn across his desk, on which were scrawled, in
very
large handwriting, equations that I could hardly begin to fathom. Only
later did I realize these papers were probably part of his seminal work
on black holes...
So
there I was, studying with the best of minds in the best of
universities,
yet something else was stirring deep inside me.
My
studies in mathematics and quantum physics explained how the entire
material
universe could have evolved from the simplest of the elements-hydrogen.
Yet the most fascinating question for me had now become: How had
hydrogen-a
single electron orbiting a single proton-evolved into a system that
could
be aware of itself? How had the universe
become
conscious? It was becoming clear that however hard I
studied
the physical sciences, they were never going to answer this deeper,
more
fundamental, question.
I
felt a growing sense of frustration, manifesting at times as
depression.
I found myself reading more about mind and consciousness, and less able
to focus on my mathematical assignments.
The
Best of Both Worlds
My
tutor must have sensed I was not at ease in myself and approached me
one
day to ask how I was doing. I shared with him as best I could my
confusion
and misgivings about my chosen path. His response surprised me: "Either
complete your degree in mathematics [I was in my final year] or take
the
rest of the year off and use it to decide what you really want to
study."
Then, knowing how hard it would be for me to make such a choice without
a deadline, he added, "I want your decision by noon on Saturday."
Saturday,
five minutes before noon, I was still torn between my two options,
struggling
with feelings of failure, and a sense of wasted time. In the end, I
surrendered
to an inner knowing that I would not be fulfilled continuing with
mathematics,
and that I really wanted to take the rest of the year off. By late
afternoon
I had packed, said a temporary farewell to my friends, and was on my
way,
with only uncertainty ahead.
During
the next six months I produced light shows, worked in a jam factory at
night, and from time to time pondered my future career.
After
exploring various options I returned to Cambridge to study experimental
psychology; it seemed the closest academic approach to understanding
consciousness.
Whereas clinical psychology involves treating those who are mentally
ill
at ease, experimental psychology is concerned with the functioning of
the
normal human brain. It includes the study of the physiological process
of perception and how the brain builds up a picture of the world. It
encompasses
learning and memory, the brain's control of the body, and the
biochemistry
of neuronal interactions. Understanding the brain seemed a start in the
right direction.
So
I found myself able to continue pursuing my interests in mathematics
and
physics, while at the same time embarking on my exploration of the
inner
world of consciousness.
Today,
after thirty years of investigation into the nature of consciousness, I
have come to appreciate just how big a problem the subject is for
contemporary
science. We all know, beyond any doubt, that we are conscious beings.
It
is the most intimate and obvious fact of our existence. Indeed, all we
ever directly know are the thoughts, images, and feelings arising in
consciousness.
Yet
as far as Western science is concerned, there is nothing more difficult
to explain.
The
'Hard Problem' of Consciousness
The
really hard problem-as David Chalmers, professor of philosophy at the
University
of Arizona, has said-is consciousness itself. Why should the complex
processing
of information in the brain lead to an inner experience? Why doesn't it
all go on in the dark, without any subjective aspect? Why do we have
any
inner life at all?
This
paradox-namely, the absolutely undeniable existence of human
consciousness
set against the complete absence of any satisfactory scientific account
for it-suggests to me that something is seriously amiss with the
contemporary
scientific worldview. For a long time I could not put my finger on
exactly
what it was. Then suddenly, about four years ago on a flight back to
San
Francisco, I saw where the error lay.
If
consciousness is not some emergent property of life, as Western science
supposes, but is instead a primary quality
of the cosmos-as fundamental as space, time, and matter, perhaps
even
more fundamental-then we arrive at a very different picture of reality.
As far as our understanding of the material world goes, nothing much
changes;
but when it comes to our understanding of mind, we are led to a very
different
worldview indeed. I realized that the hard problem of consciousness was
not a problem to be solved so much as the trigger that would, in time,
push Western science into what the American philosopher Thomas
Kuhn called a "paradigm shift."
The
continued failure of science to make any appreciable headway into this
fundamental problem suggests that, to date, all approaches may be on
the
wrong track. They are all based on the assumption that consciousness
emerges
from, or is dependent upon, the physical world of space, time, and
matter.
In one way or another they are trying to accommodate the anomaly of
consciousness
within a worldview that is intrinsically materialist. As happened with
the medieval astronomers, who kept adding more and more epicycles to
explain
the anomalous motions of the planets, the underlying assumptions are
seldom,
if ever, questioned.
I
now believe that rather than trying to explain consciousness in terms
of
the material world, we should be developing a new worldview in
which
consciousness is a fundamental component of reality. The
key ingredients for this new paradigm-a "superparadigm"-are already
in place. We need not wait for any new discoveries. All we need do is
put
various pieces of our existing knowledge together, and consider the new
picture of reality that emerges.
Consciousness
and Reality
Because
the word "consciousness" can be used in so many different ways,
confusion
often arises around statements about its nature. The way I use the word
is not in reference to a particular state of consciousness, or
particular
way of thinking, but to the faculty of consciousness itself-the
capacity
for inner experience, whatever the nature or degree of the experience.
A
useful analogy is the image from a video projector. The projector
shines
light onto a screen, modifying the light so as to produce any one of an
infinity of images. These images are like the perceptions, sensations,
dreams, memories, thoughts, and feelings that we experience-what I call
the "contents of consciousness." The light itself, without which no
images
would be possible, corresponds to the faculty of consciousness.
We
know all the images on the screen are composed of this light, but we
are
not usually aware of the light itself; our attention is caught up in
the
images that appear and the stories they tell. In much the same way, we
know we are conscious, but we are usually aware only of the many
different
experiences, thoughts, and feelings that appear in the mind. We are
seldom
aware of consciousness itself. Yet without this faculty there would be
no experience of any kind.
The
faculty of consciousness is one thing we all share, but what goes on in
our consciousness, the content of our consciousness, varies widely.
This
is our personal reality, the reality we each know and experience. Most
of the time, however, we forget that this is just our personal reality
and think we are experiencing physical reality directly. We see the
ground
beneath our feet; we can pick up a rock, and throw it through the air;
we feel the heat from a fire, and smell its burning wood. It feels as
if
we are in direct contact with the world "out there." But this is not
so.
The colors, textures, smells, and sounds we experience are not really
"out
there"; they are all images of reality constructed in the mind.
It
was this aspect of perception that most caught my attention during my
studies
of experimental psychology (and amplified by my readings of the
philosophy
of Immanuel Kant). At that time, scientists were beginning to discover
the ways in which the brain pieces together its perception of the
world,
and I was fascinated by the implications of these discoveries for the
way
we construct our picture of reality. It was clear that what we perceive
and what is actually out there are two different things.
This,
I know, runs counter to common sense. Right now you are aware of the
pages
in front of you, various objects around you, sensations in your own
body,
and sounds in the air. Even though you may understand that all of this
is just your reconstruction of reality, it still seems as if you are
having
a direct perception of the physical world. And I am not suggesting you
should try to see it otherwise. What is important for now is the
understanding
that all our experience is an image of reality constructed in the mind.
Unknowable
Reality
Because
our perception of the world is so different from the actual physical
reality,
some people have claimed that our experience is an illusion. But that
is
misleading. It may all be a creation of my own mind, but it is very,
very
real-the only reality we ever know.
The
illusion comes when we confuse our experience of the world with the
physical
reality, the thing-in-itself. The Vedantic
philosophers of ancient India spoke of this as "maya." Often
translated
as illusion (a false perception of the world), the word is more
accurately
translated as delusion (a false belief about the world). I suffer a
delusion
when I believe that the manifestations in my mind are the external
world.
I deceive myself when I think that the tree I see is the tree itself.
If
all that we ever know are the images that appear in our minds, how can
we be sure there is a physical reality behind our perceptions? Is it
not
just an assumption? My answer to that is: Yes, it is an assumption;
nevertheless,
it seems a most plausible assumption.
For
a start, there are definite constraints on my experience. I cannot, for
example, walk through walls. If I try to, there are predictable
consequences.
Nor can I, when awake, float through the air, or walk upon water.
Second,
my experience generally follows well-defined laws and principles. Balls
thrown through the air follow |precisely defined paths. Cups of coffee
cool at similar rates. The sun rises on time. Furthermore, this
predictability
is not peculiar to my personal reality. You, whom I assume to exist,
report
similar patterns in your own experience. The simplest way, by far, of
accounting
for these constraints and for their consistency is to assume that there
is indeed a physical reality. We may not know it directly, and its
nature
may be nothing like our experience of it, but it is there.
To
reveal the nature of this underlying reality has been the goal of the
physical
sciences, and over the years they have elucidated many of the laws and
principles that govern its behavior. Yet curiously the more deeply they
have delved into its true nature, the more it appears that physical
reality
is nothing like we imagined it to be. Actually, this should not be too
surprising. All we can imagine are the forms and qualities that appear
in consciousness. These are unlikely to be very appropriate models for
describing the underlying physical reality, which is of a very
different
nature.
Take,
for example, our ideas as to the nature of matter. For two thousand
years
it was believed that atoms were tiny balls of solid matter-a model
clearly
drawn from everyday experience. Then, as physicists discovered that
atoms
were composed of more elementary, subatomic, |particles (electrons,
protons,
neutrons, and suchlike), the model shifted to one of a central nucleus
surrounded by orbiting electrons-again a model based on experience.
An
atom may be small, a mere billionth of an inch across, but these
subatomic
particles are a hundred-thousand times smaller still. Imagine the
nucleus
of an atom magnified to the size of a grain of rice. The whole atom
would
then be the size of a football stadium, and the electrons would be
other
grains of rice flying round the stands. As the early twentieth-century
British physicist Sir Arthur Eddington put it, "matter is mostly
ghostly
empty space"-99.9999999 percent empty space, to be a little more
precise.
With
the advent of quantum theory, it was found that even these minute
subatomic
particles were themselves far from solid. In fact, they are not much
like
matter at all-at least nothing like matter as we know it. They can't be
pinned down and measured precisely. They are more like fuzzy clouds of
potential existence, with no definite location. Much of the time they
seem
more like waves than particles. Whatever matter is, it has little, if
any,
substance to it.
Somewhat
ironically, science, having set out to know the ultimate nature of
reality,
is discovering that not only is this world beyond any direct
experience,
it may also be inherently unknowable.
The
Paradox of Light
With
hindsight, my decision to study theoretical physics along with
experimental
psychology was definitely the right one. They provided two
complementary
directions to my personal search for truth. Theoretical physics was
taking
me closer toward the ultimate truths of the physical world, while my
pursuit
of experimental psychology was a first step toward truth in the inner
world
of consciousness. Moreover, the deeper I went in these two
directions,
the closer the truths of the inner and outer worlds became. And the
bridge
between them was light.
Both
relativity and quantum physics, the two great paradigm shifts of modern
physics, started from anomalies in the behavior of light, and both led
to radical new understandings of the nature of light. For example, in
relativity
theory, at the speed of light time comes to a stop-in effect, that
means
for light there is no time whatsoever. Furthermore, a photon can
traverse
the entire universe without using up any energy-in effect, that means
for
light there is no space. In quantum theory, we find that light has zero
mass and charge, which in effect means that it is immaterial. Light,
therefore,
seems to occupy a very special place in the cosmic scheme; it is in
some
ways more fundamental than time, space, or matter. The same, I later
discovered,
was true of the inner light of consciousness.
Although
all we ever see is light, paradoxically, we never know light directly.
The light that strikes the eye is known only through the energy it
releases.
This energy is translated into a visual image in the mind, and that
image
seems to be composed of light-but that light is a quality of mind. We
never
know the light itself.
Physics,
like Genesis, suggests that in the beginning there was light, or,
rather,
in the beginning there is light, for light underlies every process in
the
present moment. Any exchange of energy between any two atoms in the
universe
involves the exchange of photons. Every interaction in the material
world is mediated by light. In this way, light penetrates and
interconnects
the entire cosmos.
An
oft-quoted phrase comes to mind: God is Light. God is said to be
absolute-and
in physics, so is light. God lies beyond the manifest world of matter,
shape, and form, beyond both space and time-so does light. God cannot
be
known directly-nor can light.
The
Light of Consciousness
My
studies in experimental psychology taught me much about the basic
functioning
of the human brain. Yet, despite all I was learning about
neurophysiology,
biochemistry, memory, behavior, and perception, I found myself no
closer
to understanding the nature of consciousness itself. The East, however,
seemed to have a lot to say about consciousness, and so had many
mystics,
from around the world. For thousands of years they had focused on the
realm
of the mind, exploring its subtleties through direct personal
experience.
I realized that such approaches might offer insights unavailable to the
objective approach of Western science, and began delving into ancient
texts
such as the Upanishads, The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation, The
Cloud
of Unknowing, and works of contemporary writers such as Alan Watts,
Aldous
Huxley, Carl Jung, and Christopher Isherwood.
I
was fascinated to find that here, as in modern physics, light is a
recurring
theme. Consciousness is often spoken of as the inner light. St John
refers
to "the true light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the
world."
The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation speaks of "the self-originated
Clear Light, eternally unborn . . . shining forth within one's own
mind."
Those
who have awakened to the truth about reality-whom we often call
illumined,
or enlightened-frequently describe their experiences in terms of light.
The sufi Abu'l-Hosian al-Nuri experienced a light "gleaming in the
Unseen.
. . . I gazed at it continually, until the time came when I had wholly
become that light."
The
more I read about this inner light, the more I saw close parallels with
the light of physics. Physical light has no mass, and is not part
of
the material world; the same is true of consciousness. Light seems in
some
way fundamental to the universe, its values are absolute, universal
constants.
The light of consciousness is likewise fundamental; without it there
would
be no experience.
This
led me to wonder whether there was some deeper significance to these
similarities.
Were they pointing to a more fundamental connection between the light
of
the physical world and the light of consciousness? Do physical reality
and the reality of the mind share the same common ground-a ground whose
essence is light?
Meditation
Hunting
through my local library one day, I happened upon a book titled The
Science of Being and Art of Living by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. This
was
the Indian teacher who had recently made the headlines when The Beatles
renounced their use of drugs in favor of his technique of
Transcendental
Meditation, or TM for short... Maharishi was saying the exact opposite
of just about everything I'd heard or read on meditation; yet it made
sense.
To
give just one example, most of the books I had read on meditation
talked
about how much concentration and effort it took to still the restless
mind
and discover the deep peace and fulfillment that lies within. Maharishi
looked at the whole matter in a different way. Any concentration, the
least
bit of trying, even a wanting the mind to settle down, would, he
observed,
be counterproductive. It would be promoting mental activity rather than
lessening it. He suggested that the reason the mind was restless was
because
it was looking for something-namely, greater satisfaction and
fulfillment.
But it was looking for it in the wrong direction, in the world of
thinking
and sensory experience...
Maharishi's
ideas appealed to my scientific mind. They were simple and
elegant-almost
like a mathematical derivation. But the skeptic in me was not going to
take anything on faith. Just because something is written in a book, or
because some famous person says it, or because many others believe it,
does not mean it is true. The only way to know how well his technique
worked
was to try it.
Journey
to India
As
soon as I completed my undergraduate degree, I earned some money
driving
a truck, then set off in an old VW van for India (it was the sixties,
after
all). My destination was Rishikesh, an Indian holy town, about 150
miles
north of Delhi, at the foot of the Himalayas... Rishikesh nestles
right where plain turns into mountain, and at the very point where the
Ganges comes tumbling out of its deep Himalayan gorge...
About
two miles down river from the bridge was Maharishi's ashram, the last
habitation
before the winding track disappeared into the jungle. Here, perched on
a cliff top, a hundred feet above the swirling Ganges, were
half-a-dozen
bungalows, a meeting hall, dining room, showers, and other facilities
providing
some basic Western comforts.
Here,
just over a hundred of us, of all ages, from many countries, had
gathered
for a teacher training course. Many were like myself, recent graduates
and looking for intellectual understanding of Maharishi's teachings as
much as experience of deep meditation. There were PhDs in philosophy,
medical
doctors, and long-term students of theology.
Over
the coming weeks we listened to Maharishi talk at length, and asked
question
after question, virtually interrogating him at times. We teased out
everything,
from the finer distinctions of higher states of consciousness and
subtle
influences of meditation to the exact meaning of various esoteric
concepts.
Pure
Consciousness
Even
more important than our growing understanding of meditation was the
opportunity
to deepen our experience. Initially we meditated for three or four
hours
a day. As the course progressed, Maharishi gradually increased our
practice
times until we were spending most of the day in meditation-and much of
the night as well. He wanted us to have clear experiences of the states
of consciousness he was describing.
During
these long meditations, the habitual chatter of my mind began to fade
away...
What thoughts there were became fainter and fainter, until finally my
thinking
mind fell completely silent. In Maharishi's terminology I had
transcended
(literally gone beyond) thinking-hence the name "Transcendental
Meditation."
Indian
teachings call this state samadhi, literally "still mind." They
identify it as a fundamentally different state of consciousness from
the
three major states we normally experience-waking, dreaming, and deep
sleep.
In waking consciousness we are aware and experience the world perceived
by the senses. In dreaming we are aware and experience worlds conjured
by the imagination. In deep sleep there is no awareness, either of
outer
world or inner world. Samadhi they define as a fourth major state.
There
is awareness, one is wide awake, but there is no object of the
awareness.
It is pure consciousness-pure in the sense of being unmodified by
thoughts
and images - consciousness without content.
In
terms of the video projector analogy, this fourth state of
consciousness
corresponds to the projector being on, but without any data being fed
to
it; only white light falls on the screen. Likewise, in samadhi you know
consciousness itself, in its unmanifest state, before it takes on the
many
forms and qualities of thinking, feeling, and sensory experience.
One
further quality of this state of consciousness marks it out from all
our
normal states. When you are in this state you discover a sense of
self
that is more real and more fundamental than any you have known before.
You
are no longer an individual person, with individual characteristics.
Here,
in the complete absence of all normal experience, you find your true
identity,
an identity with the essence of all beings and all creation.
Looking
for the self is rather like being in a room at night with only a
flashlight,
looking for the source of the light. All you would find would be the
various
objects in the room that the light fell upon. It is the same when we
try
to look for the self which is the subject of all experience. All we
find
are the various ideas, images, and feelings that the attention falls
upon.
But these are all objects of experience; they cannot therefore be the
subject
of the experience. For this reason, the self cannot be known in the way
that anything else is known.
Universal
Light
We
can now begin to see just how close are the parallels between
the
light of physics and the light of consciousness. Both are beyond the
material
world. And both seem to lie beyond space and time. Both seem
intrinsically
unknowable-at least in the way that everything else is known. And both
are absolutes. Every photon of light is an identical quantum of action,
and the foundation of every interaction in the universe. The light of
consciousness
is likewise absolute and invariant. It is the source of every quality
that
we ever experience. And its essential nature is the same for everyone.
Since it is beyond all attributes and identifying characteristics,
there
is no way to distinguish the light of consciousness in me from the
light
that shines in you. In other words, how it feels to me to be
conscious-that
sense of being we label "I"-is the same as how it feels to you. In this
sense we are one. We all know the same inner self.
I am
the light. And so are you. And so is every sentient being in the
universe.
Mystics
have spoken of this inner light as the Divine Light, the Cosmic Light,
the Light of Light, the Eternal Light that shines in every heart, the
Uncreated
Light from which all creation takes form.
Once
again the phrase "God is Light" comes to mind. But now God
begins to take on a much richer and more personal meaning. If God
is
the name we give to the light of consciousness shining at the core of
every
sentient being, and if that pure consciousness is the very
essence
of self, then it is only a short step to the assertion that "I
am
God."
Consciousness
and God
To
many, the statement "I am God" sounds ridiculous. God is not a human
being,
but the supreme deity, the almighty, eternal creator. How can any lowly
human being claim that he or she is God? To those of a more religious
disposition,
the statement may sound heretical, if not blasphemous. When the
fourteenth-century
Christian priest and mystic Meister Eckhart preached that "God and I
are
One," he was brought before Pope John XXII and forced to "recant
everything
that he had falsely taught." Not all were so lucky. The tenth-century
Islamic
mystic al-Hallãj was crucified for using language that claimed
an
identity with God.
To
those who do not believe in God at all, such statements are
meaningless,
the symptoms of some delusion or pathology. They might have been
tolerable
a couple of hundred years ago, but not in the
modern
scientific era, where God seems a totally
unnecessary concept.
Science
has looked out into deep space, across the breadth of creation to the
edges
of the universe. It has looked back in "deep time" to the beginning of
creation. And it has looked down into the "deep structure" of the
cosmos,
to the fundamental constituents of matter. In each case science
finds no evidence for God; nor any need for God - the Universe
seems
to work perfectly well without any divine assistance. Thus anyone
talking
of a personal identity with God is clearly talking nonsense.
That
is where I stood thirty years ago. Now I recognize that I was rejecting
a rather naïve and old-fashioned interpretation of God. When we
look
to mystical writings, we do not find many claims for God being in the
realm
of space, time, and matter. When mystics refer to God, they are, more
often
than not, pointing toward the realm of personal experience, not
something
in the physical realm. If we want to find God, we have to look
within,
into the realm of deep mind-a realm that science has yet to explore.
Abridged
version of Peter Russell's new book 'From
Science
to God'
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