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- The God Delusion? Part 7
The God Delusion? Part 7
- By Deepak Chopra
- Published 09/26/2008
- Public Speaking
- Unrated
Ultimately,
Richard Dawkins can fight with religion all he wants and it will be only a
sideshow. He is a color commentator sitting in the bleachers, not a player in
the game. Skepticism offers critiques, not discoveries. Ironically, this is a
shared fate with religion, which has ceased to play a progressive and vital
role in modern society. The two are locked in a sterile embrace. So how can a
new conception of God change this situation? The answer centers on the last
point from Dawkins in our discussion.
7. The universe is full of wonder and mystery, but these will be solved, one at
a time, until science has a complete understanding. In this way the entire
supernatural tradition--and God himself--will be erased.
This is a powerful and optimistic claim that seems plausible in an age of heady
discoveries in physics and biology. The famous Theory of Everything draws
closer to fulfillment than ever. In fact, science has become even more
ambitious. The original Theory of Everything belonged solely to physics. It had
no intention of explaining the evolution of life. But with the completion of
the human genome project, life will also cease to be a mystery, so Dawkins
assures us. Every mechanism hidden inside DNA will be mastered and used for
human good.
It's hard for materialists not to thump their chests, as Dawkins so brazenly
does. Unfortunately, the Theory of Everything has hit a brick wall. Quantum
physics lacks the power to cross the border into the invisible world that lies
beyond subatomic particles, the so-called virtual domain. Not only is this the
realm of 'dark matter' and 'dark energy'--mysterious shadows of the matter and
energy we see around us--but all possible universes also lie across the same
boundary, as well as the "zero point" where space and time are born.
Genetics seems to be riding higher, but behind the display of public triumph,
biology has not solved the existence of mind, and therefore the same obstacle
faces both fields. An invisible world lies sealed off from investigation,
leaving us to trace its footprints and echoes. MRIs and CAT scans are
impressive but limited. As someone once commented, brain research is like
putting a stethoscope to the outside of the Astrodome and trying to figure out
the rules of football. Dawkins finds consciousness (as well as quantum physics)
totally irrelevant, a comment on his own intellectual limitations rather than
reality. If God is going to become viable again, he will have to be a God who
solves some key mysteries in the virtual domain:
--What separates life from inert matter?
--What part does the observer play in creating reality?
--How does the infinite quantum field organize and govern every event in the
universe?
--How does chaos relate to order? Are they enemies or secret allies?
--How did evolution overcome entropy, the ceaseless march of the physical
universe toward chaos and the deep freezer of "heat death"?
--Why is the universe so amazingly hospitable to human life?
This last question is the most pressing one, for both believers and
non-believers. To claim that the swirling, chaotic quantum soup that erupted
from the Big Bang evolved into human life by random chance is only believable
because science has no urgent need to find a credible alternative. As long as a
scientist stands outside nature with his nose pressed against the glass like a
child peering through a bakery shop window (to borrow an image from the noted
physicist John Wheeler) we get a false picture of the cosmos. The only
advantage of isolating yourself in this way is that it fits the scientific
method. But no matter how many rats run through the maze, it's futile to
pretend that we are outside the experiment. The truth is completely different:
--We are imbedded in the universe. What we observe is ourselves reflected back
at us.
--Every sight, sound, texture, taste, and smell is the product of an observer.
As the observer changes, so do all these qualities.
--We perceive imagination, beauty, creativity, etc. in ourselves and thus we
see the same in Nature. Every attribute of the human mind is imbedded in the
universe.
Why can you remember your birthday and the face of someone you love? Because
DNA can remember how to produce generations of human beings. Why does DNA
remember? There's the mystery. We can link memory as a human attribute to
chemical memory. But when we ask where chemicals learned to remember, science
is baffled. Dissecting DNA is one thing. Asking the "why" of DNA is
another.
Dawkins feels that why is a foolish, probably meaningless question, totally
devoid of scientific interest. So be it. But why is the single most important
question humans ask, particularly when it comes to ourselves. Ultimately we
want to know who we are and our purpose for being here. Dawkins doesn't seem to
have any doubt about who he is: he's the evolutionary byproduct of chemical
forces, physical laws, random events, natural selection, competition,
adaptation, and survival. So is an amoeba. Sadly, this reductionist picture of
human life is devoid of meaning. It's merely a map of how a physical machine
called the body came to be built. Such knowledge is like knowing everything
about a computer except how to plug it in.
What if memory is an attribute of Nature itself? All around us we see memory at
work. The insulin that functions in primitive organisms retains the same
function in higher mammals. The chemical reaction that propels a butterfly's
wings to beat is duplicated to make human heart cells beat. Once we take
seriously the notion that we are inside the bake shop, not standing outside
with our noses pressed up against the glass, it becomes obvious that memory
isn't a separate, isolated attribute.
Nature is constantly remembering. Nature is constantly creating, exercising
imagination, discovering quantum leaps. When hydrogen and oxygen combined, the
result wasn't another inert gas. It was water, and water represents a huge
imaginative leap on the part of the universe. The reason one can say this with
confidence is simple: if the universe didn't have imagination, neither would
we. That's what it means to be imbedded in the field. Nothing we know about
ourselves can be separated from what Nature displays.
Which finally, at long last, breathes new life into God. Dawkins is absolutely
right to declare a requiem service over the God of organized religion and to
warn us about the dangers of superstition, dogma, and pseudo-science. (Too bad
he isn't wise enough to heed the words of a right-wing fundamentalist on CNN:
"As long as you hate us, we're not going away.") But what Dawkins
tragically misses holds far more optimism for the future than he ever could:
the universe is renewing itself through us. Science is God explaining God to
God using a human nervous system. Or as one wit put it, God created scientists
to prove that he doesn't exist--and failed.
There is nothing outside the field. It displays omnipresence and omnipotence,
being all-pervasive and containing all matter and energy. Soon science will
come to terms with the presence of consciousness in the field (advanced systems
theory as well as information theory is hard at work already) and we will add
omniscience to the list. This new God will be the source of mind. Its ability
to orchestrate evolution will make sense because it must. Humans cannot have
any knowledge except knowledge of ourselves. Every facet of the cosmos is a
mirror. The fact that the chemical reaction driving a butterfly's wings also
keeps you and me alive is no accident--it's part of a design.
Contrary to what Dawkins thinks, this design isn't a blueprint or a diagram set
down by a fictitious God. It's a vital, ever-evolving, imaginative, dramatic
process. Strangely enough, so is human existence. The similarity isn't a
coincidence--there is nothing we call human that isn't, quite literally,
transcendent. Beyond the physical world lies the womb of creation, and whether
we call it God is irrelevant. We came from a source, we are forever in contact
with our source, and we are constantly returning to our source. This is the
real mystery of existence that Dawkins trivializes with his over-heated
skepticism. Far more profound are the words of T.S. Eliot:
And what you thought you came for
Is only a shell, a husk of meaning
From which the purpose breaks only when it is fulfilled.
In
the final post on this topic I will address some of the responses I have
recieved to this subject.
Some
responders have problems with a sentence from this post: "When hydrogen
and oxygen combined, the result wasn't another inert gas. " I meant, of
course, another inert gas like radon or neon. If I thought that oxygen and
hydrogen were inert gases, I wouldn't have stated that they combine, since by
definition inert gases can't combine. They have no free electron(s) in their
outer orbits with which to combine.
This discussion will be more productive if we all grant each other the respect
we would like to receive.
Love, Deepak
Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deepak-chopra/the-god-delusion-part-7_b_35513.html


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