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=======UNDERSTANDING HINDUISM========

 

Hinduism & Quantum Physics

 

Click on underscored words to open paragraph

 

The Implications of this theorem are staggering

Bell's Theorem - Vedanta and Quantum Physics

 

Transcendental meditation lowers cholesterol

 

Hurry sickness

 

Vedanta as the synthesis of Science and Religion

 

Modern physics and Philosophical Reason

The basic oneness of the universe is not only the central

characteristic of the mystical experience, but is also one

of the most important revelations of modern physics.

 

" THE MOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERY IN THE HISTORY OF SCIENCE "

-Prof.Henry Stapp, Quantum physicist.

 

BELL'S THEOREM - VEDANTA AND QUANTUM PHYSICS

 

HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE PHYSICAL WORLD

 

'Om Isha vasyam idam sarvam, yat kincha jagatyam jagat'

 

" All this- whatever exists in this changing

universe, is pervaded by God "

-Isa Upanishad

 

" Om purnamadah purnamidam purnaat purnamudachyate,

purnasya purnamadaya purnamevaavashishyate "

 

" That (pure consciousness) is full(perfect); this(the manifest

universe of matter; of names and forms being maya) is full. This

fullness has been projected from that fullness. When this fullness

merges in that fullness, all that remains is fullness. "

-Peace invocation- Isa Upanishad

 

The Supreme Brahman(God) is the only Reality. The idea of the

phenomenal universe is falsely superimposed upon it. "

-Swami Nikhilananda of Ramakrishna-Vivekananda Centre, New York.

 

The implications of this theorem are staggering

 

In recent years physicists have had to address the interplay of

consciousness and the physical world. In Quantum Physics much has been

made over Bell's Theorem. The implications of this theorem and the

experimental findings that flow from it are staggering. They force us

to consider that the entire notion of a purely objective world is in

conflict not only with the theory of quantum mechanics, but with the

facts drawn from actual experiments. These findings point insistently

to a profound interaction between conscious mental activity and the

physical world itself.

 

 

The Rishi's vision

 

The Rishi's vision of a world in which man participates in a seamless

existence, indivisibly united with the universe around him, resonates

through a discovery called " BELL'S THEOREM " . This discovery, first

proposed in 1964 by the physicist John S. Bell was first confirmed by

experiment in 1972 by Professor John Clauser at Berkley. It is an

almost unbelievable result - unbelievable because the logical mind has

great difficulty in comprehending how it can be true. Its impact on

the physics community has been enormous. Professor Henry Stapp, a

physicist at Berkley and an authority on the implications of Bell's

Theorem, has called it

 

The most important discovery in the history of science.

 

 

A description of the proof of Bell's theory, as given by Stapp reads:

 

" If the statistical predictions of quantum theory are true, an

objective universe is incompatible with the law of local causes. "

 

Although formidable at first glance, Bell's Theorem seems simpler once

key terms are understood.

 

First, an " objective universe " is simply one that exists apart from

our consciousness.

 

In 1935, Albert Einstein, together with Nathan Rosen and Boris

Podolsky proposed through flawless mathematical reasoning that if the

quantum theory were correct, then 'A change in the spin of one

particle in a two particle system would affect its twin

simultaneously, even if the two had been widely separated in the

meantime'. And 'simultaneous' is a dirty word in the theory of special

relativity, which forbids the transmission of any signal faster than

the speed of light. Obviously, a signal telling the particle 'what to

do' would have to travel faster than the speed of light if

instantaneous changes were to occur between the two particles.

 

The dilemma into which Einstein, Rosen and Podolsky dragged the

quantum theory was a profound one, coming to be known as THE ERP EFFECT.

 

In 1964 Bell's Theorem emerged as a proof that Einstein's impossible

proposition did in fact hold true: instantaneous changes in widely

separated systems did occur.

 

In 1972, Clauser confirmed the statistical predictions of quantum

mechanics, working with an elaborate system involving photons, calcite

crystals, and photo multiplier tubes The experiment has since been run

several times with the same consistent results; Bell's Theorem stands

solid.

 

The implications of Bell's theorem

are practically unthinkable

 

Even for the physicists involved, the implications of Bell's Theorem

are practically unthinkable. Mathematics and experimentation have

taken us where our logical mind cannot go. Imagine, two particles once

in contact, separated even to the ends of the universe, change

instantaneously when a change in one of them occurs!

 

Slowly, new ideas are emerging to explain these unthinkable

occurrences. One view is that, in some unexplainable way, the

separated particles are still in contact although separated in space.

This is the suggestion of the French physicist Bernard D'Espagnat. In

1979, writing about quantum reality, he said that " the entire notion

of an external, fixed, objective world now lies in conflict not only

with quantum theory, but in facts drawn from actual experiments.... in

some sense all these objects constitute an indivisible whole. "

 

Physicist Jack Sarfatti of the Physics/Consciousness Research Group

proposes that no actual energy-requiring signal is transmitted between

the distant objects, but 'information' is transmitted instead. Thus no

violation of Einstein's special theory of relativity occurs. Exactly

what this information is is unclear, and it is a strange thing which

might travel instantly and require no energy to do so.

 

Nic Herbert, a physicist who heads the C-Life Institute, suggests that

we have merely discovered an elemental oneness of the world. This

oneness cannot be diminished by spatial separation. An invisible

wholeness unites the objects that are given birth in the universe, and

it is this wholeness that we have stumbled into through modern

experimental methods. Herbert alludes to the words of the poet Charles

Williams: " Separation without separateness, reality without rift. "

 

It would be a mistake to suppose that these effects operate only with

relevance to the invisible world of the atom. Professor Henry Stapp

states that the real importance of these findings is that they

translate directly to our microcosmic existence, implying that the

oneness that is implicit in Bell's Theorem envelopes human beings and

atoms alike.

 

The interrelation of human consciousness and the observed world is

obvious in Bell's Theorem. Human consciousness and the physical world

cannot be regarded as distinct, separate entities. What we call

physical reality, the external world, is shaped - to some extent - by

human thought. The lesson is clear; we cannot separate our own

existence from that of the world outside. We are intimately associated

not only with the earth we inhabit, but with the farthest reaches of

the cosmos.

 

Certain quantum physicists now say that each part of the universe

contains all the information present in the entire cosmos itself

(similar to a giant oak tree producing an acorn that contains all the

information to replicate itself).

 

This assertion is so audacious that it would be dismissed out of hand

were it not for the scientific stature of its chief proponent David

Bohm, a former associate of Einstein, professor of theoretical physics

at Birbeck College of University of London. He is regarded as one of

the pre-eminent theoretical physicists of our day.

 

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The Hologram

 

Bohm maintains that the information of the entire universe is

contained in each of its parts. There is, he says, a stunning example

of this principle in photography: the hologram (literally whole message).

 

Hologram is a specially constructed image which, when illuminated by a

laser beam, seems eerily suspended in three dimensional space. The

most incredible feature of holograms is that any piece of it, if

illuminated with coherent light, provides an image of the entire

hologram. The information of the whole is contained in each part. The

entire representation of the original object is contained in each

portion of the hologram. This principle, says Bohm, extends to the

universe at large, that the universe is constructed on the same

principles as the hologram. His theory rests on concepts that flow

from modern physics. The world is an indivisible whole.

 

For Bohm, order and unity are spread throughout the universe in a way

which escapes our senses. In the same way that order and organisation

are spread throughout the hologram. Each part of the universe contains

enough information to reconstitute the whole. The form and structure

of the entire universe is enfolded within each part.

 

For many working physicists, these concepts are inescapable

conclusions that flow from quantum mechanics and relativity. It is

crucial to appreciate the scope of these implications. We frequently

assume that quantum physics applies only to the diminutive realm of

nature - electrons, protons etc., and that relativity has only to do

with massive objects of cosmic proportions -stars, galaxies, nebulae

etc. But Bohm's contention is that we are squarely in the middle of

these phenomena. Ultimately the entire universe (with all its

'particles' including those constituting human beings, their

laboratories, observing instruments etc). has to be understood as a

single undivided whole, in which analysis into separately and

independently existent parts has no fundamental status.

 

What are the implications of a holographic universe? As part of the

universe, do we have holographic features ourselves that allow us to

comprehend a holographic universe? This question has been answered

affirmatively by Stanford neurophysiologist Karl Pribram. In an

attempt to account for key observations about brain function which for

decades have puzzled brain physiologists, Pribram arrived at a radical

proposal: the hologram is a model brain function. In essence, the

brain is the 'photographic plate' on which information in the universe

is encoded.

 

When the proposals of Bohm and Pribram are conceptually joined, a new

model of man emerges: we use a brain that encodes information

holographically; and it is a hologram that is a part of an even larger

hologram - the universe itself.

 

Pribram's radical suggestions are founded on work that originated in

the laboratory of one of the pioneers of modern neurophysiology, Karl

Lashley. At a time when it was popularly believed that there were

specific centres in the brain for practically every human function -

such as speech, vision, appetite, sleep etc.,- Lashley demonstrated

that this was apparently not true for memory. Working with animals, he

found that even when bulk of the cerebral cortex was surgically

removed, leaving only a remnant intact, the memory of how to perform

specific tasks remained. The rapidity and accuracy of the performance

was frequently attenuated, but the knowledge was retained.

 

These findings fit poorly with existing theories about how information

is stored in the brain. It was as if memory was spread everywhere in

the cortex - but how? Pribram reasoned that the brain contained the

memory in each of its parts. The analogy to a hologram was obvious.

The entire memory pattern could be found throughout the cerebral

cortex if the information had originally been encoded holographically.

 

In most right handed persons, the left side of the brain is presumed

to control the movements of the right side of the body. In instances

where the left side of the brain is injured - for example through a

stroke or with a trauma -paralysis or profound weakness of the right

side of the body is the predictable result. A physician, Richard

Restak, has reported a case, in a twenty one year old female in which

the entire left side of the brain was removed surgically in order to

control epileptic seizures that were unmanageable with any other known

form of therapy. The results of the therapy were astonishing.

 

Although the seizures were stopped, within a few weeks the woman began

to regain control of the right side of her body. She was able to

return to work and to lead an active social life. Where did the right

side of her body receive its motor information with the left side of

the brain in the surgeon's pail?

 

In 1975 a similar case was reported by Smith & Sugar. A six year old

male underwent total removal of the left cerebral hemisphere because

of intractable epileptic seizures. Conventional neurophysiological

wisdom asserts that the left side of the cerebral cortex is

responsible for our speech, mathematical reasoning and logical thought

in general, and that the right cerebral hemisphere controls our

intuitive, non-rational, non-verbal forms of thought. Yet this young

man grew up to become a gifted student, proficient in verbal reasoning

and language abilities, testing even into the gifted range of on

standard intelligence tests.

 

Space and Time-the Holoverse

 

This indivisibility also applied fundamentally to space and time.

Relativity has shown that they are inextricably linked, and cannot be

teased apart.

 

Recall one of the possibilities embodied in Bell's theorem involving

non-local features of the universe: objects once in contact, though

separated spatially, even if placed at distant ends of the universe,

are somehow in inseparable contact. Since any change in one

immediately and unmitigatedly causes change in the other, this is a

nonlocal occurance, meaning that any information passing between the

two objects would have to travel faster than the speed of light to

cause such instantaneous change. Since it is impossible for the speed

of light to be exceeded, according to the special theory of

relativity, this event is said to be noncausal-i.e. not caused by the

transfer of any conceivable kind of energy passing between the distant

objects.

 

Although these nonlocal and noncausal descriptions are worked out for

objects separated in space, Bohm states that the implications of

quantum theory also apply to moments in 'TIME'.

 

What is crucial is that, according to the theory of relativity, a

sharp distinction between space and time cannot be maintained.

 

We all have roots in the universe. Conscious mental activity exerts

measurable effects on the physical world - a world that includes human

bodies, organs, tissues, and cells. Mind becomes a legitimate factor

in the unfolding of health and disease. The inter-penetration of all

matter is the rule. The dividing line between life and non-life is

illusory and arbitrary. There is only one valid way, thus, to partake

of the universe and that way is characterised by reverence - a

reverence born of a felt sense of participation in the universe, of a

kinship with all others and with all matter. A reverential attitude

that bespeaks a oneness with the universe can transform the commonest act.

 

Bhagavad Gita, Ch.13,Verses 15 :

" Without and within all beings the unmoving and also the moving;

because of Its subtlety, unknowable; and near and far away is That(God) " .

 

Bhagavad Gita, Ch.13, Verse 16:

" And undivided, yet He exists as if divided in beings; He is to be

known as the supporter of beings; He devours and He generates. "

 

No division in Consciousness is admissible at any time as it is always

one and the same. Even the individuality of the Jiva must be known as

false, like the delusion of a snake in a rope. Shankaracharya

(Aparokshanubhuti.43)

 

City of Brahman

What is in the macrocosm is in this microcosm.

 

Within the city of Brahman, which is the body, there is the heart, and

within the heart there is a little house.

 

This house has the shape of a lotus, and within it dwells that which

is to be sought after, inquired about, and realized.

 

What then is that which, dwelling within this little house, this lotus

of the heart, is to be sought after, inquired about, and realized?

 

As large as the universe outside, even so large is the universe within

the lotus of the heart.

 

Within it are heaven and earth, the sun, the moon, the lightning, and

all the stars.

 

What is in the macrocosm is in this microcosm.

-Chandogya Upanishad

 

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Transcendental meditation lowers cholesterol

 

By Larry Dossey , M.D.

 

" In 1980, subjects with elevated blood cholesterol levels were taught

the technique of transcendental meditation. Serial determinations of

the blood cholesterol level were made. It was found that in subjects

who practiced this technique the cholesterol level fell on the average

of 20 percent. While this fall may seem modest, it should be noted

that there are no drugs that are consistently more effective, safe,

and inexpensive as this method of voluntary relaxation and mental

quieting. Moreover, blood pressure, heart and respiratory rate, as

well as the blood levels of insulin, hydrocortisone, adrenaline, and

norepinephrine are modified to more desirable levels. "

 

- Cooper and Aygen " The effect of Meditation. "

 

The significance of these observations is inestimable: by taking

thought in ways which 'elongate' the time sense, time-sick individuals

can alter many of the devastating effects of the time syndrome.

 

Hurry sickness

 

Our sense of time affects our health by influencing the development

and course of specific diseases. This is nowhere more obvious than in

persons who have been called Type A individuals by Friedman and

Rosenman. Type A persons have " hurry sickness. " Their lives are

oriented around goals, deadlines, and objectives, which they seem to

react to in a driven fashion. They are unable to approach a task in a

healthy, balanced way, but in extreme cases seem almost consumed by a

need to accomplish and achieve.

 

Not only do they have an inward sense of urgency, their outward

behaviour suggests the same quality. When sitting they may be in

constant motion, not only with thoughts, but with body parts- hands,

fingers, legs, feet. They are usually vocal, verbally expressing the

products of a mind that cannot rest. This behaviour frequently

generates discomfort and tension in those around them.

 

It is as if Type A persons are " time sick. " Type A persons are usually

ambitious and frequently are highly successsful, having succeeded in

harnessing their high motivation and sense of purpose.Yet for all the

qualities for which they are admired- their vision, energy, and

dedication- they possess, as a group, a characteristic that nobody

envies: they have a high mortality rate from heart disease.Type A

individuals as a group, die earlier. Their behaviour puts them at risk

for the most frequent cause of death in our society, coronary artery

disease.

 

The importance of the exaggerated response to time , the sense of

urgency displayed by Type A individuals, is that it is translated into

physiologic effects. These effects are pervasive and are seen long

before heart disease supervenes. These physiological events are so

characteristic of time-sick persons, they could be called the time

syndrome. Among them are increased heart rate and blood pressure at

rest; elevation of certain blood hormones such as adrenaline,

norepinephrine, insulin, growth hormone, and hydrocortisone, all of

which are ordinarily secreted in an exaggerated way during times of

urgency or stress; increased gastric acid secretion; increased blood

cholesterol; an increased respiratory rate; increased secretory

activity of sweat glands; an increased muscle tension throughout the

body. The time syndrome is a body-mind process with effects on all

major systems.

 

As we learn to meditate, or when we become familiar with the states of

consciousness through techniques employing deep relaxation, we develop

a familiarity with a new sense of time. We begin to experience time in

new ways. We begin to feel at home with time as it expands. Phrases

such as " the ever-present now " and " the eternal moment " become full

with meaning. Above all, we develop a friendliness with time.

 

The health-sustaining role of social support systems

 

We affect the health of those about us. Human events such as caring,

loving,touching and confiding exert profound consequences on health.

 

In Alameda County, California, 4700 men and women were followed over a

nine year period, and mortality rates from all causes were examined.

Mortality rates in men were significantly higher among the unmarried.

Those men who chose fewer social contacts with friends and relatives,

and those who were not church members,demonstrated a higher death rate.

 

A striking result was found in an experiment at Ohio State University.

A group of investigators were studying the effects of a diet high in

fat and cholesterol in rabbits. At the end of a certain period the

rabbits were sacrificed, and certain arteries in their bodies were

examined for evidence of atherosclerosis. This process of cholesterol

deposition forms obstructions and ulcerations in arteries, and in

humans results in vascular disease of various types, such as heart

attacks and stroke.

 

The results of the study should have been rather predictable. But when

a certain group of the test rabbits demonstrated atherosclerotic

changes which were 60 percent less than that of the overall group, the

investigators were astonished! The rabbits who were affected less

severely were those who were fed and cared for by one of the

investigators who, during the course of the experiment, regularly took

them from their cages and petted, stroked, and talked to them.

 

In order to test this 'coincidence', systematic controlled studies

were designed in which two groups of rabbits were again fed the same

diet and were treated identically except that one group was removed

from their cages several times a day for petting, and were talked to

each time by the same person. The results? The petted and talked to

group once again demonstrated a 60 percent lower incidence of

atherosclerosis.

 

Not content with the possibility of two coincidences, the Ohio State

investigators repeated the study. The results were the same. Touching,

petting, handling, and gentle talking emerged as a crucial determinant

in the disease process.

 

A task force in Massachusetts reported to the Secretary of H.E.W.

their findings on the likelihood of survival from atherosclerotic

heart disease. They found the most reliable factor in determining

survival was not smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, or

high blood cholesterol levels, but job satisfaction. And the second

overall predictor was what the task force termed " overall happiness. "

 

Angina pectoris is the term applied to the pain experienced by

patients with atherosclerotic heart disease. Medalie and Goldbourt

followed 10,000 Israeli males aged forty years and older to determine

the impact of risk factors on the frequency of angina.Most of the

commonly known risk factors were correlated with angina, but so too

were anxiety and severe psychosocial problems. Most surprising of all

was the finding that, among men with severe anxiety, those who

perceived their wives to be loving and supportive had half the rate of

angina of those who felt unloved and unsupported.

 

Brown and his colleagues have conducted a series of studies in the

United Kingdom, investigating the incidence and prevalence of

psychiatric disorders. In a variety of settings (urban and rural) and

among different social classes (working and middle class).

 

The most potent protective factor against psychiatric illness was the

presence or absence of an intimate and confiding relationship with a

husband or boyfriend; that is, one in which feelings could be shared,

whether or not sexual intimacy occurred.

 

One of the most stressful events in life is the death of a husband or

wife. Holmes and Rahe, in assessing the relative stress imposed by

various events rated the death of a spouse as the single most

stressful occurrence in life.

 

Krause and Lilienfeld found that age-specific mortality ratios for

widowed men and women were two to fourfold higher than for those who

were married.

 

Schleifer found that bereavement, a profoundly stressful event,

produce changes in the body's immune system, compromising the defense

against infection and cancer.

 

How do such human experiences as job satisfaction, happiness, and

meditation get into the cells? There is a physiology of loving and

caring, ranging from embarrassing facial blush to palpitations,

sweating and stammering. Feelings of love generate physical events.It

may seem a distant transition from being in love in one's teens to

being a confidant or a supportive spouse later in life, but

physiologic changes are involved on both ends of the spectrum. These

changes are not trivial. They can make the difference between life and

death.

 

Social support systems are important for survival

 

Loving, caring and confiding are crucial matters; matters of life and

death.

 

" A solitary individual wholly independent of others is largely a

fiction. In reality, most or even all living beings exist in more or

less integrated communities, and the ability to maintain these

associations entails some co-operations, or at least,

'proto-co-operation. " - T.Dobzhansky, New York.

 

Our urge toward associating with those of our own kind is rooted in

our earliest beginnings.

 

" Dependency and interdependency are the indispensable conditions of

life. " - A.Montague, " On Being Human. "

 

Separated from their companions, individual amoebae begin immediately

to find their way back to the group.

 

Wilhelm Roux shook apart the cells in a frog's eggs early in the

course of its development and separated the cells at some distance in

water. The cells slowly began to approach each other, eventually

making contact. There are endless examples in the plant and animal

world that social systems are important in the reproductive cycles and

survival of living organisms.

 

If our health is coupled with the perpetuation of our genes, it is

also tied to our association with members of our species. As

G.G.Simpson has said in 'Life of the Past':

 

" No animal or plant lives alone or is self-sustaining. All live in

communities including other members of their own species and also a

number, usually a large variety, of other sorts of animals and plants.

The quest to be alone is indeed a futile one, never successfully

followed in the history of life. "

 

The psychological effects of urgency - stress, anxiety, tension- do

not stay in the psyche. They are translated into the body where they

eventuate in physical ailments. The sense of urgency generates

infirmity, disease and death.

 

In contrast, the psychological sense that accompanies the perception

of time as static and nonflowing is one of tranquility, serenity and

peace. It is the sense of oneness of unity, the feeling of calm and

release. Mind and body are intrinsically united, and consciousness is

the fulcrum of health.

__________

 

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Vedanta as the synthesis of Science and Religion

By Swami Ranganathananda, Ramakrishna Math:

Extracts (abridged)

 

The spirit of enquiry finds expression in any department of scientific

study in the gathering of relevant facts and their rational

interpretation. The practice of religion is nothing but a ceaseless

quest after the facts of the inner life. A dispassionate study of

these facts constitutes the science of religion which seeks to unravel

the mystery of our inner being- the lights that guide us and the laws

that mould us.

 

If 'man, the known', constituted of his body and its environing world,

is the subject of study of the natural sciences, 'man. the unknown' is

the subject of study of the science of religion. The synthesis of both

these sciences is the high function of philosophy as understood in

India. It is this function which Vedanta has performed in this country

(India), ever since the time of the Upanishads. Exercising a pervasive

and effective influence on our national thought and culture, Vedanta

has spared us not only the fruitless opposition of reason to faith and

vice versa, but also the more dangerous manifestation of this

opposition in the form of intolerance, persecution, and suppression of

opinion.

 

The need for a Vedantic approach to science and religion is insistent

today when both have shed their respective prejudices and come closer

to each other, imbued with the passion to serve man and save his

civilisation. It is only such a synthesis of philosophy which blends

in itself the flavour of the faith of religion and the reason of

science that can reconstruct modern man, by restoring to him the

integrity of his being and the unity

 

The 'Within' and the 'Without' of Nature

 

Explaining this Indian approach to religion and the cause of the

misunderstanding between science and religion, Swami Vivekananda said:

 

" Religion deals with the truths of the metaphysical world, just as

chemistry and the other natural sciences deal with the truth of the

physical world. The book one must read to learn chemistry is the book

of (external) nature. The book from which to learn religion is your

own mind and heart. The sage is often ignorant of physical science,

because he reads the wrong book - the book within and the scientist is

too often is ignorant of religion, because he, too, reads the wrong

book - the book without " .

 

The practice of religion is a ceaseless quest after the facts of a

man's inner life, at the innermost depth of which it finds the truth

of God, which it defines as infinite existence, infinite knowledge,

and infinite bliss, the Sat-Chit-Ananda Brahman it comes across, at

the intermediate depths, and all higher values which find expression

in man's ethical, moral, and aesthetic experiences. A dispassionate

study of these facts constitutes the science of religion, the science

of art of the spiritual life.

 

Upanishads grappled with these questions: What is this universe? What

is man? What is his destiny? Long ago they discovered that the

universe of experience consists of two broad categories, the

subjective and the objective. It is important to remember that this

idea is basic to an understanding of Vedanta and to an understanding

of whither science is going today. Now, when we apply this

classification to the whole universe, we get the corollary that modern

science is the study of only one of the two categories, namely, the

objective field. But modern science is also trying to understand the

subjective field.

 

Psychology is one such science. But Western psychology has suffered

from too great a dominance by psychology . By resorting to time and

space methodology, we get a knowledge of the 'without' of things, but

not of their 'within'. Much of psychology in the West is

behaviouristic psychology: it is a study of the human mind through the

study of human behaviour.

 

But Western psychologists have also tried to break from this kind of

limitation and have developed, through psycho-analysis, the beginning

of what is called depth psychology. This is just the beginning of a

great movement in modern psychology which, if continued steadily and

penetratingly, will bring it to the truth of the real nature of man

which Vedanta reached ages ago in India - the eternal, undying Self of

man, the Atman.

 

Vedanta and modern science are close to each other in spirit and

temper. They are close to each other in their objectives and in very

many of their conclusions as well. Even in the cosmology of the

physical universe, we find so many points of contact. The fundamental

position in the cosmology of both science and Vedanta is what Swami

Vivekananda calls the postulate of a self-evolving cause. Vedanta says

that there is one self-evolving cause, Brahman, behind the universe.

Science says that behind this universe there is one self-evolving

cause, the background material, in the words of astronomer Fred Hoyle.

 

Both believe in the theory of a cosmic evolution. There are a number

of such similarities. The truths expounded in the Upanishads are

impersonal, Apauruseya, not deriving sanction from any person.

Scientific truths are similarly impersonal, objective, not deriving

sanction from any person. Because they are impersonal, they are

universal, and provide a clear insight into the nature of the world.

That is science.

 

When we study the development of science during the last hundred

years, we can trace the higher reaches of science slowly appearing on

the horizon, and trace also the slow emergence of a non-materialistic

outlook in science.

 

Modern physics and Philosophical Reason

 

In countless ways, every department of physical science today is

extending the bounds of man's knowledge of fundamental unity behind

the manifold diversities of the universe. Physical science started

with the exploration of the mysteries of external nature; but at the

farthest end of this search, it finds itself face to face with the

mystery of man, of his mind and consciousness, the deepest mystery of all.

 

The philosophies of the East, particularly the Vedanta of India,

including Buddhist thought, directly faced this mystery of man, more

than two thousand years ago, by initiating the exploration of the

internal world and carrying it through to its depths. And, today, we

witness a steady convergence of these two indirect and direct

approaches in the steady emergence of a common philosophy of the one

behind the many.

 

Physicists of the first quarter of the twentieth century, faced with

the challenge of the revolutionary discoveries of relativity and

quantum physics, turned into bold philosophical thinkers, initiating

the development of reason of physics into Buddhi or philosophical

Reason, by transforming it into a critique , not only of the observed

sense-data of the physical world, but also of man the observer.

Starting with Eddington, Jeans, Max Planck, Einstein, Shrodinger,

Niels Bohr, Heisenberg, and other great creators of twentieth-century

physics, this philosophical trend has grown through the last five

decades, culminating in The Tao of Physics of Berkeley University

Physics Professor, Dr.Fritjof Capra.

 

Concluding his Space, Time and Gravitation, Eddington hinted at the

emergence of the mystery of man from the study of the mystery of

physical nature:

 

" The theory of relativity has passed in review the whole

subject-matter of physics. It has unified the great laws which, by the

precision of their formulation and the exactness of their application,

have won the proud place in human knowledge which physical science

holds today. And yet, in regard to the nature of things, this

knowledge is only an empty shell- a form of symbols. It is knowledge

of structural form, and not knowledge of content. All through the

physical world runs that unknown content, which must surely be the

stuff of our consciousness.

 

Here is a hint of aspects deep within the world of physics, and yet

unattainable by the methods of physics. And, moreover, we have found

that, where science has progressed the farthest, the mind has but

regained from nature that which the mind has put into nature. We have

found a strange footprint on the shores of the unknown. We have

devised profound theories, one after another, to account for its

origin. At last, we have succeeded in reconstructing the creature that

made the footprint. And lo! It is our own. "

 

Hints such as these, given by the earlier philosopher-scientists, have

developed into positive affirmations in Dr.Capra. The very title of

his book: `The Tao of Physics', is significant in this connection,

apart from the masterly and fascinating exposition he gives, in the

course of the book, of his main thesis that:

 

" the basic elements of the Eastern world-view are also those of the

world-view emerging from modern physics, "

 

and that:

 

" Eastern thought, and more generally, mystical thought, provide a

consistent and relevant philosophical background to the theories of

contemporary science. "

 

Noting that, through the two centuries of association with the

philosophy of materialism and the contemporary reaction against the

ravages wrought by over-technology, the image of science in the eyes

of modern man has suffered much damage, Capra seeks to restore the

image of pure science as the discipline in the pursuit of truth and

human excellence, not in opposition but in tune with the spiritual

heritage of man, and more especially, of the spiritual heritage of the

East:

 

Capra writes:

 

" This book aims at improving the image of science by showing that

there is an essential harmony between the spirit of Eastern wisdom and

Western science. It attempts to suggest that modern physics goes far

beyond technology, that the way–or Tao-of physics can be a path with a

heart, a way to spiritual knowledge and self-realisation. "

 

Echoing the voice of Vedanta and all mystical thought that the

fundamental search for reality takes man beyond the senses and the

sensory world of phenomena, Capra says:

 

" On this journey to the world of the infinitely small, the most

important step, from a philosophical point of view, was the first one:

the step into the world of atoms. Probing inside the atom and

investigating its structure, science transcended the limits of our

sensory imagination. From this point on, it could no longer rely with

absolute certainty on logic and common sense. Atomic physics provided

the scientists with the first glimpses of the essential nature of

things. Like the mystics, physicists were now dealing with a

non-sensory experience of reality and, like the mystics, they had to

face the paradoxical aspects of this experience. From then on,

therefore, the models and images of modern physics became akin to

those of Eastern philosophy. "

 

Referring to the basic unity of the universe, as upheld in Eastern

mysticism and modern physics, Capra says:

 

" The most important characteristic of the Eastern world-view- one

could almost say the essence of it- is the awareness of the unity and

mutual interrelation of all things and events…. The Eastern traditions

constantly refer to this ultimate indivisible reality, which manifests

itself in all things, and of which all things are parts. It is called

Brahman in Hinduism, Dharmakaya in Buddhism, and Tao in Taoism… "

 

" The basic oneness of the universe is not only the central

characteristic of the mystical experience, but is also one of the most

important revelations of modern physics. It becomes apparent at the

atomic level, and manifests itself more and more as one penetrates

deeper into matter, down into the realm of sub-atomic particles. The

unity of all things and events will be a recurring theme throughout

our comparison of modern physics and the Eastern philosophy. "

 

Both speak of reality as transcending space, time, and causality.

Referring to this kinship, Dr.Capra says:

 

" The space-time of relativistic physics is a similar timeless space of

a higher dimension. All events in it are interconnected, but the

connections are not causal. Particle interactions can be interpreted

in terms of cause and effect only when the space-time diagrams are

read in a definite direction, e.g., from the bottom to the top. When

they are taken as four dimensional patterns without any definite

direction of time attached to them, there is no `before' and no

`after', and thus no causation " .

 

" Similarly, the Eastern mystics assert that, in transcending time,

they also transcend the world of cause and effect. Like our ordinary

notions of space and time, causation is an idea which is limited to a

certain experience of the world and has to be abandoned when this

experience is extended. In the words of Swami Vivekananda (Jnana Yoga):

 

`Time, space, and causation are like the glass through which the

Absolute is seen. … In the Absolute there is neither time, space, nor

causation.' –Swami Vivekananda

 

Capra continues:

 

" The Eastern spiritual traditions show their followers various ways of

going beyond the ordinary experience of time and of freeing themselves

from the chain of cause and effect- from the bondage of Karma, as the

Hindus and Buddhists say. It has therefore been said that Eastern

mysticism is a liberation from time. The same may be said of

relativistic physics. "

 

Again Capra says:

 

" Subsequent to the emergence of the field concept, physicists have

attempted to unify the various fields into a single fundamental field

which would incorporate all physical phenomena. Einstein, in

particular, spent the last years of his life searching for such a

unified field. The Brahman of the Hindus, like the Dharmakaya of the

Buddhists, and the Tao of the Taoists, can be seen, perhaps, as the

ultimate unified field, from which spring not only the phenomena

studied in physics, but all other phenomena as well "

 

" In the Eastern view, the reality underlying all phenomena is beyond

all forms and defies all description and specification. It is,

therefore, often said to be formless, empty, or void. But this

emptiness is not to be taken for mere nothingness. It is, on the

contrary, the essence of all forms and the source of all life. Thus

the Upanishads say (Chandogya Upanishad, 4-10-4):

 

`Brahman is life, Brahman is joy.

Brahman is the void. …

Joy ,verily, that is the same as the void.

The void, verily, that is the same as joy' " .

 

Atomic physics is confronted with the problem of consciousness through

the datum of the `observer' or to use the new, and more meaningful

term coined by physicist John Wheeler, `participator.' Accordingly,

Dr.Capra says:

 

" In modern physics, the question of consciousness has arisen in

connection with the observation of atomic phenomena. Quantum theory

has made it clear that these phenomena can only be understood as links

in a chain of processes, the end of which lies in the consciousness of

the human observer. In the words of Eugene Wigner (Symmetries and

Reflections- Scientific Essays):

 

`It was not possible to formulate the laws (of quantum theory) in a

fully consistent way without reference to consciousness.' – Eugene Wigner

 

Dr.Capra continues:

 

" The pragmatic formulation of quantum theory used by the scientists in

their work does not refer to their consciousness explicitly. Wigner

and other physicists have argued, however, that the explicit inclusion

of human consciousness may be an essential aspect of future theories

of matter. "

 

" Such a development would open exciting possibilities for a direct

interaction between physics and Eastern mysticism. The understanding

of one's consciousness and its relation to the rest of the universe is

the starting point of all mystical experience. … If physicists really

want to include the nature of human consciousness in their realm of

research, a study of Eastern ideas may well provide them with

stimulating new viewpoints. "

 

Referring to spiritual kinship between modern science and ancient

Vedanta, Swami Vivekananda said in his speech at the Parliament of

Religions held at Chicago in 1893:

 

" Manifestation, and not creation, is the word of science today, and

the Hindu is only glad that what he has been cherishing in his bosom

for ages is going to be taught in more forcible language, and with

further light, from the latest conclusions of science. "

 

Confirming this view of Swami Vivekananda, that the physicist and the

mystic reach the truth of unity, though following different

approaches, Dr.Capra says:

 

" In contrast to the mystic, the physicist begins his inquiry into the

essential nature of things by studying the material world. Penetrating

into ever deeper realms of matter, he has become aware of the

essential unity of all things and events. More than that, he has also

learnt that he himself and his consciousness are an integral part of

this unity. Thus the mystic and the physicist arrive at the same

conclusion; one starting from the inner realm, the other from the

outer world. The harmony between their views confirms the ancient

Indian wisdom that Brahman, the ultimate reality, is identical to

Atman, the reality within. "

 

Conclusion

 

Understood in this light, there is no conflict between science and

religion, between the physical sciences and the science of

spirituality. Both have the identical aim of discovering truth and

helping man to grow physically, mentally, and spiritually, and achieve

fulfilment. But each by itself is insufficient and helpless. They have

been tried separately with unsatisfactory results. The older

civilisations took guidance mostly from religion; their achievements

were partial and limited. Modern civilisation relies solely on

science; its achievements also have turned out to be partial and limited.

 

The combination today, of the spiritual energies of these two

complementary disciplines in the life of man will produce fully

integrated human beings, and thus help to evolve a complete human

civilisation, for which the world is ripe and waiting. This is the

most outstanding contribution of Swami Vivekananda to human thought

today. This synthetic vision of his finds lucid expression in a brief

but comprehensive testament of his Vedantic conviction:

 

" Each soul is potentially divine.

 

The goal of life is to manifest this divinity within by controlling

nature, external (through physical sciences, technology, and

socio-political processes) and internal (through ethical, aesthetic,

and religious processes):

 

Do this either by work, or worship, or psychic control, or

philosophy-by one, or more, or all of these-and be free.

 

This is the whole of religion. Doctrines or dogmas or rituals or books

or temples or forms, are but secondary details. "

-Swami Vivekananda

 

This science and technique for realising the true glory of man,

followed with scientific thoroughness and detachment by the sages of

the Upanishads, and revalidated by a succession of spiritual

experimenters down the ages from Buddha to Ramakrishna, is glowingly

revealed in one of the immortal verses of the Svetasvatara Upanishad:

 

" Hear, ye children of immortal bliss, even ye that reside in higher

spheres! I have found the Ancient One, who is beyond all darkness, all

delusion; knowing Him alone, you shall be saved from death over again. "

========================================

 

Amazing Science

 

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