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Hmm… I could see what Grandma meant. I wondered how I would have reacted in a
similar situation. Perhaps I would have
taken the middle path. One cannot sit idle and believe in a God one has never
actually seen or experienced unequivocally, while life was under threat? The instinct for survival and the rush of
adrenaline would surely drive me to action? But, then the punishing strength of
the wave would demand that I draw upon sources of power greater than myself! I would certainly hope that there is a
supreme intelligence which would intervene on behalf of my puny self!
Should we seek the wise counsel of
Science?
Growing up in a world that worshiped
at the feet of science and technology, God was not a term one bandied about
freely. I was uneasily made aware that
the world of rationalism and scientific temperament would frown upon, and perhaps
strongly condemn, belief in any being whose existence was not repeatedly proven
and objectively demonstrated beyond doubt.
Lack of explanations for natural phenomena or personal experience of
miracles, would not be considered proof enough.
The scientifically-minded would laugh and say “Science may not have all
the answers to what you call miracles, today. Someday, it will have those
answers. What you call miracles or gaps
in scientific reasoning will be closed with objective and demonstrable
explanations. Science will be able to
close the gaps in the “God of the Gaps” argument that are being advanced. How can anyone risk life on a belief in a
being whose very existence is in doubt?”
Unfortunately, I found myself
retreating from such arguments shaken and unsure. “Was life just an accident? Is there no
ordering intelligence that engineered this universe?” Deep within me was a fount of dissatisfaction
at the explanations offered by the Scientists.
My existential experience informed me that there was a consciousness and
an awareness that distinguished me from the unthinking, sense-driven existence that
seemingly characterized the plant and animal kingdom. “Surely, my awareness of
existence had some meaning? That cannot be an accident!”
The hard problem of consciousness
Searching for answers to this
extremely subjective and emotional response to the unsettling facts presented
by science, I was surprised to find that scientists too had come up against
this wall and were desperately trying to climb over/ walk through and find the
necessary explanations for what they called “the hard problem of
consciousness”. I gleefully joined the melee and read all the papers; watched all
the debates and discussions on YouTube, that engaged, nay riveted the
attention, of the hardened scientific community.
Let
me pause here, to warn you that if you join the melee, you are in for a merry ride
down the proverbial rabbit hole!
Scientists and philosophers have entered the arena and are having a
pitched battle out there. That is not to
say, that I did not enjoy the ride!
Following the principle of KISS
(Keep it simple stupid), I will try to reduce the discourses to the bare
essentials for our understanding. The
“hard problem of consciousness’ is the gap that scientists experience when they
try to resolve the “easy problems of consciousness”. In other words, any ‘sentient experience’,
that cannot be explained by a study of the functions of the neural pathways and
brain (physical mechanisms), can be defined as the ‘hard problem of
consciousness’. If you experience fear,
the adrenaline pumping into your system will force you to run from the object
of fear. That is a physical response-the
easy problem of consciousness. You can report it, study the physical impact of
it and even identify the triggers etc., If you ignore the bodily reaction (the
adrenaline coursing through your bloodstream) and decide to undergo the
suffering for the sake of a principle you hold dear, there is no physical
explanation to the reaction. You can
report it. But you cannot study the physical cause of the reaction. Ignore the
verbal reports and there is nothing to study. That is the hard problem of consciousness. Mother Theresa’s altruism in the face of the
immense sacrifices she had to make is a classic example of the ‘hard problem of
consciousness’!
Can religion explain this phenomena?
Religion does not spend any time on
analyzing the hard or easy problem of consciousness. They accept that
consciousness exists and it is fundamental to our understanding of the world. They are more concerned with the actions and
reactions that are generated by the existence of awareness. Socrates,
Aristotle, Plato and their ilk in the West and Vishwamitra, Vashishta and
scores of others in the East, bent their minds to an analysis of fundamental
questions that arose by virtue of the existence of ‘consciousness’.
The Western philosophers observed
that sentient beings received inputs of the objective world through the medium
of the senses. However, conscious (note the distinction between sentient and
conscious) beings processed the inputs so received in ways in which other
sentient beings did not. They related the object received as input with other
similar objects and brought analytical acumen to dissect and ruminate on the physical
object. They concluded that awareness
can be enhanced; new understandings gained and fine-tuned by actually
dissecting, analyzing and studying the object of the sensory input. Scientific thinking emerged as they pushed
the boundaries of human understanding into the objective world.
Eastern philosophers were convinced
that consciousness is all there is. The world ceases to exist the moment we are
unconscious or in deep sleep. Hence, the world emerges from our consciousness
and therefore, the world out there, is an illusion created by our
consciousness. While the illusion is valid, it is not real. In order to
understand the world, one must understand the consciousness and its operations.
They went within in an effort to understand this phenomenon and came up with a
number of ways in which one can arrive at an understanding of the nature of
this unique human experience. Yoga, meditation and a score of religious beliefs
emerged as they dug deep into subjective experience.
Are we any wiser?
Has all the discussion above made us
any wiser? Should we go with science and
assert that God is a “crutch for the weak to hold on at times of distress” or
go with religion and affirm “God is the rock on which we must build our homes”?
Or should we take the middle path and say with the majority “I hope there is
God and I hope he/she will offer succor if I am in trouble! But, I must learn
to rely on myself and my skills too!” I
do not think I am (for that matter anyone is) in the position to take a
inflexible stand at this point in the history of man’s evolution. Most of us
would, probably select the middle path.
Truly, it is not material whether you or I believe in the
“God-of-religion(s)” or the “fact(s)-of-science”. It is more material to keep an open mind and
discover for ourselves, the true nature of our experiential self. How we go about is it, is our business.
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ReplyDeleteA great analysis on a simple-to-be seen picture. Hard facts on Religion and Science. Makes us to think on which path we would tread. Awesome revelations by Mrs Vanitha Vaidialingam 🙏🙏🙏
ReplyDeleteNo middle path for me! Total faith and surrender to God will take care of all your problems. But of course you have to do your best and then leave the rest to god!
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