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- Path: sparky!uunet!dziuxsolim.rutgers.edu!ruhets.rutgers.edu!farris
- From: farris@ruhets.rutgers.edu (Lorenzo Farris)
- Newsgroups: alt.consciousness
- Subject: Re: Science Superior to Mysticism
- Message-ID: <Jan.22.08.30.27.1993.29100@ruhets.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 13:30:28 GMT
- References: <1993Jan20.230740.2061@gnv.ifas.ufl.edu>
- Organization: Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, N.J.
- Lines: 67
-
- In article <1993Jan20.230740.2061@gnv.ifas.ufl.edu>, jrm@gnv.ifas.ufl.edu writes:
- > [lots deleted]
- > Some claim that science and mysticism are each appropriate for
- > investigating very different aspects of reality. Is this really
- > true ? Given time, will science eventually cover the same
- > territory and questions which the mystics claim as their private
- > preserve ? If so, the detailed methodology of science will
- > yeild a superior picture of this territory. IMHO, of course.
- >
-
-
- You seem to have a somewhat skewed idea of what mysticism really is.
- As do most people, which is why the Amazing Randi and Martin Gardner
- get to keep so busy, because there are so many 'mystic' frauds.
-
- IMHO, mysticism and science are complementary. As to whether one is
- superior to the other, to me it's liking asking if a car is better
- than a horse. Certainly not if you are in very rough country. As to
- the positive or negative effects of either on human life, reasons
- based on 'mysticism' have been used to justify both harmonious
- coexistence and wholesale slaughter. Reasons based on science have
- been used to justify genocide, and it's misapplication has resulted in
- a toxic planet, nuclear weapons, and the population explosion.
-
- I will give you the perspective of a scientist (nuclear physicist) who
- is engaged in a 'mystical' practice (tibetan buddhist yoga). Science
- is based in principle on reason and objective observation. The problem
- here is that we bump into limits on both. Reason and objectivity are
- limited by the blind spots, biases, and perceptual filters of the
- 'thinker'. The observer influenced observation is unavoidable,
- especially at certain limits. Presumably, if we develop true machine
- intelligence, or it develops itself, some of the biases will be
- bypassed. However, there is the possibility that other biases will be
- present. (See Godel, Escher, Bach, by Hofstadter, on this.)
-
- With regards to mysticism. The popular picture of it is given by
- newage cosmic fluffy-bunnies, westerners who did not know how to
- properly translate eastern works, and con-men 'gurus' (of course I
- will help you to become enlightened, now drop another ruppee in the
- bowl.)
-
- There is a science to mysticism. Certainly as it is practiced in
- certain parts of asia. I will use yoga as a generic term for such
- practices. The technology of yoga is based on millenia of
- experimentation. While the practices and mental states realized are
- not amenable to verbal description, they are indeed reproducible. And
- while we have gone on here and in sci.philosophy.meta about the
- inability to transmit the experience to someone else, the fact of the
- matter is that a yogic adept is able to observe characteristic
- features of someone's practice, and 'see' whether the practices are
- being correctly followed. The practices, correctly done, lead to
- particular mental states.
-
- In some of its forms, yoga is excrutiatingly rational, to the point of
- being quite painful to our tender egos, for a while. Yogis will use
- whatever they can get their hands on for the pursuit of 'ultimate
- truth', and reason is a very potent tool in the kit. However, that
- 'truth' is beyond all the tools in the kit.
-
- I'm afraid I cannot give a particular source to read for such a
- perspective on mysticism, as this has been gleaned from reading a
- library of books about various yogas in various times.
- --
- Happiness is just a ******************************
- remembrance away. * Lorenzo Farris *
- * farris@ruhets.rutgers.edu *
- ******************************
-