The past is the prelude to the future. An
understanding of how our perception of ourselves as a species in the world
has changed is useful to see how we may view our cosmic place in the scheme
of things later. There has been a trend to see the world more concretely
from ambiguous prana to discrete spirits to pictographic words to
particular atoms and more abstractly to polytheistic gods to a monotheistic
god and/ or general ideals such as liberty and from multitudinous atoms
to more unified forces and fields. These trends seem to have made a complete
circle and be leading to an integrated
system of thought in which their is a unity of the percept and perceiver
both neurological and astrophysical in scientific terms and as a single
global and as a single global culture instead of competing tribes. Hopefully
the telecommunications of the superhighway your accessing now from anywhere
in the world will provide a common conceptual language so that eventually
the regional economic and political unions such as NAFDA and the European
Community (and others e.g. OSEAN, OAS, Confederation of Independent States,
NATO, etc.) will unite as a planetary alliance possibly as a democratic
republic under auspices of a United Nations or the League of nations that
preceded it.
Cognitive Evolution, Cultural Anthropology or the History of Ideas
I Biological, adaptive prerequisites for self
awareness
(top of page)
A The earliest humans date from the Pliocene Epoch of the Tertiary Period
of the current Cenozoic Era from two to ten million years ago.
B The trend during most of this time has been towards the development of
a larger forebrain to allow for greater perceptual and conceptual ability.
C The opposable thumb in the prehensile hand and pelvic, vertebral and
pedal skeletal changes were towards a fully upright stance to allow for
humans' general manipulation of the environment afforded by permitting
the hands to be free with the upright stance and able to easily grasp things
with its maneuverable hand.
D By the Pleistocene Epoch, these modifications allowed mankind to adjust
behaviorally to their environment of reduced land and food. These shortages
were due to the flooding of the coastal lands and the spread of deserts.
Both of these climatic changes are caused by the general rise in temperature
which melted the glaciers during the last Würmian ice age. Humans
intensified their food production by developing agriculture to replace
hunting and gathering so as to cope with both less food and less land to
gather food. The sedentary populations that resulted allowed for the slow
development of hamlets, villages, towns and eventually cities and the rise
of civilization and ever increasingly larger levels of social, economic
and political organization.
II Theological - Religious
(top of page)
Links to theological and religious
web sites are available here.
A Supernaturalism - prana
Prehistoric man - cave paintings
Belief in an ambiguous force in the universe which possessed power
Early humanity lives in a "state of nature". Evidence suggests Homo habilis,
homo erectus and other early humans had a sense of "religion" in its fear
of the uncontrollable power of nature. This fear leads to the shamans to
try to control nature. The distinction of various spirits in animism versus
the ambiguous prana may be considered a function of the development
of language as various objects get individual names. Often the names would
be considered to represent the essence of the object which must be immaterial
(it was thought) if we can conceive of it separately from its concrete
occurrence.
B Shamanism - Animism :
The belief that dead people carry power over the earth and that they can
be entreated to help humans by special people that can communicate with
these ghosts called shamans
Often plants and animals (especially animals) were thought to have spirits
as well as dead ancestors which shamans could also commune with. This ability
for the shamans to commune especially with animal spirits was important
so that the shaman could help the hunters to find the meat which was so
important as an essential protein source for the hunter gatherer tribes
of primitive humanity.
Ancestor worship is another form of this stage where one's predecessors
are watching over their respective families and are similarly appeased
to curry their favor much as the shaman does with animal spirits.
C Theism - churches and cities develop -
1 Polytheism - here the many ghosts which were worshiped are granted more
power as human centralize political power into urban centers and agricultural
settlements expand.
Early agricultural civilizations such as the Egyptian, Mayan and Chinese
were polytheistic.
2 Monotheism - Large cities and nation-states combine into far more powerful
monarchies as the gods are combined into a single all powerful [omnipotent]
god.
In Europe, this occurred largely during the very powerful and centralized
Roman Empire in which, once it was no longer thought to be a threat, Christianity
became the state religion of the Roman Empire.
Transcendent Idealism - As the industrial revolution changes the agricultural
society around the turn of the century [1900 C.E.], increased automation
causes the generation of ideas, and creativity to be a source of production
especially in such areas as marketing, advertising, telecommunications,
etc.
Abstract principles become the central feature of those religions which
either believe "god is love" or Intelligence or are without a concept of
god but include philosophical principles such as "the inherent worth and
dignity of every person".
III Metaphysical - Philosophical
(top of page)
Links to philosophy web sites
are available here.
As the island civilization of Greece expanded, it became increasingly
dependent on regional trade from Europe to Asia Minor. Here, an unusually
cosmopolitan blending of cultures took place as people from India, Egypt,
and other distant regions were encountered by the Greeks routinely. Some
have suggested that this provided the right atmosphere for philosophy.
Exotically different ideas as well as goods entered the marketplace of
regional trade and the Greeks became fascinated with the comparison and
analysis of these ideas.
Early Greek philosophy is also practical in that it started as
speculations about how the physical world itself was composed and worked.
It was not until later philosophers such as Plato and Pythagoras when this
emphasis is lost. Many have suggested that the merchant lifestyle also
predisposed the Greeks to be particularly open to consider new ideas that
might prove useful in some way.
A Presocratics
In the Miletian school, god was intimately associated with the universe
itself and not above or separate from it.
These were Thales, Anaximander and Anaximenes primarily.
The Miletians saw the nature of god or the universe to be regular law-like
and knowable
It was "a theology of general principles not the arbitrary rule of a pantheon
of gods"
In the Eleatic school, a nontheistic skepticism is introduced by Parmenides
in which the criteria for truth are:
systematic coherence
inclusiveness
agreement with observed phenomena
Similar arguments were introduced by Zeno, his student
In reaction to the Eleatic skepticism came increasingly skeptical and even
cynical philosophies in the Sophistic school
Protagoras is the best example in which he argued for reliance on immediate
sensory experience and for the cultural relativism for which he is more
famous.
The "Hellenistic" Schools of philosophy such as the Epicureans and Stoics
focused on theory of how men should relate to each other.
Epicureans suggested that pleasure is the goal of life. One should endeavor
to use one's intelligence to achieve the most amount of long term pleasure
as possible
Later philosophers such as the Utilitarians have been influenced by this
notion.
The Stoics thought that emotion was overvalued. The only way to achieve
peace in the world is to be emotionally removed from it.
The Atomist school of Democritus and Anaxogoras was influenced by the Sophists
in that they determined that the truth which is general principles must
be determined entirely by the sensory input which can be misleading.
The Atomist school lead to the emphasis on reason and the need to
distinguish truth from falsehood in the potentially deceptive appearance
of things. This notion influenced Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
B Socrates
Taught the highly skeptical technique of endlessly successive questioning
in which perpetual analysis eventually leads the questioner into a contradictory
statement.
His technique was later called the Socratic Method and was referred to
by Plato as the dialectic. This is also the beginning of the discipline
of logic.
C Plato
Taught that there was a separation of the World of Forms and the World
of Physical Reality and that the forms were similar to template which informed
or shaped the matter and gave the things of this world their essence. Matter
provided imperfect representations of the forms of the higher world
He also taught that a select few philosophers who were well trained in
the mental disciplines can reach the World of the Forms and realize the
highest form in this other world, the Form of the Good
Those people who have realized the Form of the Good know what is the best
[what is Good] for people and therefore should be kings known as philosopher-kings
as explained in his Republic.
The theologian St. Augustine was heavily influenced by Plato as cited by
Augustine in his seminal work City of God.
D Aristotle
Argued that the forms [the essences] of the things in this world are to
be found by analyzing the things themselves [much like the Atomists, the
Sophists and the Eleatic philosophers before him]
His political philosophy was not based on the philosopher-king model and
therefore was not as elitist.
He did not believe in the notion of mystical insight into knowledge because
such knowledge was not in a separate world but within this one.
He is sometimes considered the founder of science because he reintroduced
this empirical emphasis against the Platonic trend.
The theologian St. Thomas Aquinas was heavily influenced by Aristotle as
he is cited in his early work Summa contra Gentiles which is later
incorporated into his five "proofs" of God's Existence in Summa Theologiae.
Reneé Descartes
In taking Eleatic, Socratic, Atomist skepticism to its extreme he argued
persuasively that one cannot know anything with certainty except that one
exists as stated in his famous Latin phase "Cogito ergo sum", "I think,
therefore I exist".
He also refined the scientific method that was studied by Aristotle and
others before him
Immanuel Kant
Argued that Descartes dilemma of philosophical uncertainty is unsolvable
and that one should simply strive for internal coherence among the ideas
within one's head
He also argued for a total devotion to duty based on "a cold respect for
the truth". This truth was a priori knowledge which is based on
the structure of our minds and how it processes information not on the
empirical evidence of the senses.
Later philosophers expanded upon these Cartesian/ Kantian ideas such as
William James, Alfred Jules Ayer and Bertrand Russell. Edmund Husserl is
influenced by Kant's epistemology (theory of knowledge) in writing his
book Ideas, An Introduction to Pure Phenomenology.
Friedrick Nietzsche around the turn of the century reacted against this
highly rationalist doubting and argued for the primacy of the emotions.
He wrote all of his philosophy in lyrical poetry and suggested that "God
is dead" because of the rationalism of the emerging sciences which were
replacing religion as the guiding force behind society.
He suggested a biological evolution of the human race into an ubërmench
or "overman" which will reach a "higher state of existence".
Soren Kierkegaard, in Nietzsche's tradition, emphasized the irrational
and the need for each person individually to determine the meaning of his
own life.
Later philosophers who also taught that each person creates his own meaning
out of a meaningless and absurd universe are Jean Paul Sartre, and Martin
Heidegger who, like Kierkegaard, are known as existentialists.
IV Positivistic - Scientific
(top of page)
(Web links to scientific sites can be found in later pages of this web
site.)
Science began as a rediscovery of the ideas of the classical philosophers
mainly of Greece (and Rome). It may be considered to have flourished because
of the same basic social and economic forces that might have driven the
initial philosophical schools of Greece which is a burgeoning expansion
of an empire (especially under Alexander the Great) which in the seventeenth
century was the expansion of colonialism which brought an age of exploration
and the discovery of two entirely new continents in the Western hemisphere.
These discoveries spurred scientific interest and caused many explorers
to investigate the new flora, fauna and societies which were present. Back
on the European continent especially in Britain, science was used to start
an industrial revolution and revolutionize economics. What had begun weakly
in the middle ages in astronomy was now being more fully developed in physics
(Opticks by Isaac Newton) and later biology (Origin
of Species). Some of the social sciences also started around this
time such as economics with Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations
and psychology with Sigmund Freud's The Interpretation of Dreams.
Some pragmatic political science was also expounded by Niccoló Machiavelli
with The Prince. Around the turn of the nineteenth century,
anthropology and sociology were started by Sir Edward Taylor and August
Cmte respectively.
Science is based on many of the metaphysical presuppositions of
earlier philosophers such as the Eleatic, Sophistic and Atomistic
Isaac Newton discovered the three laws of motion which are described in
his book Principia:
law of inertia - an object in motion tends to stay in a uniform straight
line motion unless acted on by another unbalanced force.
law cause and effect - force acting on an object produces acceleration,
the potential energy of mass [inertia] is converted into kinetic. Force
= (mass)(acceleration).
law of action and reaction - for every action there is an equal and opposite
reaction.
He also discovered the mathematical relationship between bodies we call
gravitation:
F= (6.67 x 10 )-11 mass1 x mass2
[distance between centers]2
.
Reneé Descartes refined the scientific method in his book Discourse
on Method.
Galileo Galelei made well known the cosmological investigations of Copernicus
which Copernicus had published quietly in De Revolutionibus.
Johannes Kepler determined much of the mathematics regarding the revolutions
of celestial bodies.
Charles Darwin formalized the mechanism of biological evolution that early
Greeks had speculated about in his books The Origin of Species and
The
Descent of Man.
Gregor Mendel discovered the principles of inheritance by giving mathematical
and experimental demonstration of these principles.
James Watson and Francis Crick discovered the molecular structure of the
mode of inheritance is deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and published their
discovery in the journal Nature.
Joseph Thompson discovered the electron as part of the atom and, with Ernest
Rutherford, started a more modern model of the atom as particles that orbit
others elaborated by Niels Bohr.
That the atom behaves like a wave as well as a particle was conceived of
by de Broglie, encouraged by Einstein and mathematically discovered by
Erwin Schrödinger in his quantum mechanical wave equation.
In cosmological mechanics the work of Isaac Newton and Johannes Kepler
has been modified by Einstein's general theory of relativity in which space
and time as well as matter and energy are integrated into a simple equation,
E = MC2 .
The relativity equation was discovered before the quantum mechanical equation
and do not mathematically agree with complete exactness. Astrophysicists
and quantum physicists are both working in an attempt to find a grand unified
theory where the gravitation force of relativity are united with the electromagnetic
and nuclear forces of quantum mechanics. People such as Stephen Hawking
are continuing the work towards such a solution which Einstein had begun.
In the field of quantum cosmology, Stephen Hawking is using Einstein's
equation combined with quantum mechanics to "quantize" the entire universe
into a wave function of the universe in which other potential universes
are represented mathematically and with with ours is connected at least
through small wormholes [the size of Plank's constant]. These wormholes
are connections between black holes, caused by the death of massive stars,
and white holes into which some of the matter may be emitted.
Others have studied the two equations and found a mathematically elegant
and rigorous solution referred to as superstrings in which matter is ripples
in the fabric of space-time. Space-time is unified by integrating the four
forces [and two basic equations] with higher dimensional geometry in which,
mathematically, ten dimensions are needed to generate a single equation.
Matter is ultimately caused by a breaking of symmetry in primordial matter
in the first few seconds after the Big Bang in which some fundamental particle
or stuff becomes unevenly distributed. This asymmetry causes the clumping
of particles which give rise to the existence of atoms (and matter) as
well as the uneven large scale warping of the geometric space-time near
these large collections of matter (primarily stars and also planets - pulsars,
quasars, etc. are stars at the end or near the beginning of their time
span). The four fundamental forces have been integrated into two forces
mathematically. The origin of the universe and its more exact structure,
microscopically and macroscopically, may be at least hinted at if not solved
by a grand unification of these two forces, the electroweak (electromagnetic,
strong nuclear and weak nuclear forces - all microscopic) and the gravitational
force.
V A Potential Synthesis of These Three Cognitive
Perspectives
(top of page)
A Science is asking philosophical questions that have never been considered
to be answerable in empirical terms.
Quantum and astrophysicists are asking epistemological questions about
how we can know about the universe in terms of its more distant objects
[quasars, black holes], its size [finite vs. infinite], quantity [several
universes? bubble universes?], and "life span" [eternal (i.e. open) or
thermodynamically limited (i.e. closed and inevitably doomed to collapse
into a Big Crunch and then another Big Bang, a pulsating universe].
Geneticists are asking ethical questions about what is the nature of man
in molecular terms regarding possible genetic controls of behavior and
man's similarity or close kinship with chimpanzees and other "advanced"
animals. They are also asking questions about to what extent the genetic
code of humans should be altered or edited to remove defects or even improve
humankind. The theoretical possibility of splicing in nonhuman genetic
material into people has even been considered.
Medical technologists have asked the question of whether life should be
extended "at any expense" both physically and financially. Advanced life
support systems can maintain otherwise hopelessly incapacitated people
in a vegetative state almost indefinitely. The issue of quality of life
and whether life is worth living under those conditions arises and therefore
the value or meaning of life itself is questioned.
These questions go to man's fundamental assumptions about his universe
and himself which traditionally is the study of first principles or metaphysics,
the core discipline of philosophy.
C Philosophy in modern industrial societies has replaced or transformed
theology as an explanation of existence and reality through these ubiquitous
scientific issues in every aspect of life. This is, however, not true among
evangelical and fundamentalist whom sociologists often consider to be reacting
to a sense of moral malaise about the uncertainty of the answers to the
questions mentioned above that science raises. It is an experience of future
shock which is culture shock in one's own society due to the extremely
rapid rate of change and the inability to adapt to the incessant changes
of values and behavioral norms which makes one disorientated and seeking
flight from the present into a more secure, stable, constant. orderly and
unchanging past.
D A philosophical - scientific approach to life's questions in which final
judgment is routinely suspended for more input or analysis is emerging
in secularizing societies such as Europe, Japan, Singapore, South Korea,
Taiwan and to some extent in the United States. [Sociological studies of
the process of secularization which is defined as less religious and more
philosophical explanations for various questions about life shows that
in surveys the U.S. still ranks as far less secularized than the other
countries mentioned. However, it is far more secularized than Third World
nonindustrialized countries indicating a connection between the processes
of industrialization and secularization.]
E It seems that religion is influenced strongly by the economic system
of a society as illustrated in the hunting-gathering, agricultural, industrial
and information-based societies of the world show in anthropological studies.
F It seems that as more societies advance to these industrial and information
based economies and receive the notions of these societies by cultural
diffusion through telecommunication networks, this industrial/ information-based
philosophical-scientific worldview will become a genuinely global view
as the term worldview might suggest.
G The rise of science in influence was both presaged and reacted against
by early existentialists and their forerunners [e.g. Dostoevsky and Nietzsche].
This sensitivity to the metaphysical adjustments that modern man would
have to undergo has made this school rather influential in the present
century. However, it has reached a dead end in its pessimistic and nihilistic
conclusions with its most recent exponents [e.g. Heidegger and Sartre]
which has caused a decline in its prominence. A recent existentialist,
Colin Wilson, has pointed out a few mistakes that, if corrected, could
get existentialism off to a new start that is both optimistic and futuristic.
1 Existentialism is ultimately based on the Cartesian notion "cogito ergo
sum" in which one's awareness of his own consciousness is the only absolute
certainty
2 No major philosophy since has focused on consciousness as the primary
[much less the only] item of investigation thereby assuming that
it is "a reflection of reality"
3 Philosophers such as Edmund Husserl in his Phenomenology of Perception
point out that consciousness affects its own reality by the expectations
it has of the physical world. We redefine stimuli [through the primary
process of intentionality] and filter out other stimuli [through the secondary
process of "bracketing" also called epoche]
4 Our consciousness can be expanded if we systematically investigate the
workings of our own minds both through the use of phenomenology and its
applications in psychology.
This expansion of consciousness can become the start in "the first step
in a new phase of human evolution".
H Neuropsychology can help in the study of the structures of consciousness
by identifying organismally where various cognitive processes occur and
their interaction with each other and the rest of the body through the
nervous system. Neuropsychology thus provides a physical model indicating
how the cognition may be physically occurring.
I The possibility of parapsychological phenomena such as telepathy (which
Colin Wilson briefly mentions) can be researched phenomenologically as
he suggests but it may in the future be possible to study it physically
as a quantum mechanical field interaction with consciousness.
J Free will it seems would then emerge as partly a statistical fluctuation
in the quantum mechanical electrochemical state of the brain's activity
and partly as the self-organizing tendency towards coherence of the brain's
activity within these random fluctuations it is subjected to.
1 Technological, biocybernetic or bionetic
2 Pharmacological and neutriceutical (often based on neurochemistry)
L Avenues for future research:
1 Phenomenology (Edmund Husserl)
a Bracketing concept is analogous to Zen as is the concept of intentionality
somewhat.
b The search for "pure experience" in phenomenology, free of brackets,
is a very Zennish idea as Zen seeks direct perception of the human condition
(which is thought to be suffering or dukka) to reach a higher state
of consciousness (known as nirvana, satori or kenso).
2 Shamanism or Naguelism (Carlos Castenada)
a Focuses on levels of energy or reality (which can be compared to frequencies
of the electromagnetic spectrum as is often loosely done)
b "Energy filaments" are thought to be self aware or conscious
i) Filaments as fundamental seems analogous to the Superstrings grand unified
theory of quantum astrophysics to unite the gravitational and electroweak
forces into a single mathematical equation to account for all microcosmic
and macrocosmic phenomena
ii) The notion that all matter (or energy which is primary) is conscious
is consistent with Dr. Wolf's hypothesis of the Dreaming Universe and is,
incidentally, similar to Henri Bergson's concept of the elán
vital.
iii) Teaches that level of consciousness is based on the shifting or movement
of the assemblage point which is located behind the shoulder blade in the
energetic egg shaped field surrounding humans.
1 Analogous to chakras in yoga
2 Analogous to auras in parapsychology
iv) Teaches that the displacing of the assemblage point is particularly
easy during sleep but requires focus and control and memory of dreams which
carries over into one's waking state.
1 Seems consistent with Wolf's Dreaming Universe hypothesis and its nonrational
focus on the consciousness of the universe as a whole.
2 Is analogous to the control of dreams through "active imagination" as
propounded by Carl Jung.
iv) The process of bracketing may lead to "pure" states of consciousness
like those in shamanism if this phenomenological exploration is considered
to be a voyage into new realms of consciousness.
3 Zen
a Anti-conceptual in its focus on nonrational experience to transcend the
cognitive perception of the world usually by use of the meditation uponkoansor
riddles which include paradoxes or apparent contradictions.
b Its focus on direct perception, again, is similar to the phenomenological
approach of bracketing (epoche) to reach a higher state of
consciousness or "pure experience"
4 Dreaming Universe hypothesis (Dr. Fred Allan Wolf)
a Supports the shamanistic worldview of Castenada in that Wolf's notion
of all matter as conscious is similar to the world of "inorganic beings"
described by Castenada.
b Uses scientific language and understanding to achieve a view of the cosmos
analogous to that of Castenada and somewhat similar to that of Zen in its
nonrational or synchronistic focus on the unity of all experience and of
the cosmos. The monistic overtones of Zen are captured in Wolf's hypothesis
though his hypothesis is admittedly more rationalistic (scientifically
or analytically prone) than Zen is which attempts to avoid or bypass this
route of perception.
{Items 4 through 6 are areas of current interest but not of which I have
a great familiarity of yet.}
4 Artifiicial Intelligence
5 Biocybernetics or Bionetics
6 Cognitive Neuropsychology
Bibliography
(top of page)
Beauchamp, Tom L and LeRoy Walters Contemporary Issues in Bioethics
Wadsworth Publishing Company, Belmont, CA 1978
Castenada, Carlos The Art of Dreaming HarperCollins Publishers,
New York 1993
Christian, James L. Philosophy, An Introduction to the Art ofWondering
Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Chicago 1981
Enomiya-Lassalle, Hugo M. The Practice of Zen Meditation
HarperCollins Publishers, San Francisco 1990
Farley, John E. Sociology Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ
1990
Gribbin, John In Search of Schrödinger's Cat, Physics
and Reality Bantam Books, New York 1984
Haviland, William A. Cultural Anthropology Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, Chicago 1990
Hawking, Stephen W. A Brief History of Time, From the Big Bang to
Black Holes Bantam Books, New York 1988
Hussey, Edward The Presocratics Charles Scribner's Sons, New
York 1972
Kaku, Michio Hyperspace, A Scientific Odyssey Through Parallel Universes,
Time Warps, and the 10th Dimension Oxford University Press, New York
1994
Kaufmann, Walter Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre Meridian
Books, New York 1989
Magill, Frank N. Masterpieces of World Philosophy HarperCollins
Publishers, New York 1990
Marty, Martin E. A Nation of Behavers University of Chicago Press
, Chicago 1976
Novitski, Edward "Manipulation of the Human Genetic System" in Human
Genetics MacMillian Publishing Co., Inc., New York 1982 pages 439-461
Roberts, Keith A. Religion in Sociological Perspective Wadsworth
Publishing Company, Belmont, Ca 1990
Sagan, Carl Cosmos Ballantine Books, New York 1985
Stark, Rodney and Charles Y. Glock American Piety: The Nature of
Religious Commitment University of California Press, Berkeley 1968
Toffler, Alvin Future Shock Bantam Books, New York 1970
Toffler, Alvin The Third Wave William Morrow and Company, Inc.
New York, 1980
Weiner, Jonathon Planet Earth Bantam Books, New York 1986
Wilson, Colin Introduction to the New Existentialism Houghton
Mifflin Company, Boston 1967
Wilson, Jerry D. Technical College Physics Saunders College Publishing,
Chicago 1987
Wolf, Fred Allan, Ph.D. The Dreaming Universe, A Mind-Expanding Journey
into the Realm Where Psyche and Physics Meet Simon & Schuster,
New York 1995
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