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Contemplative Science
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Table of Contents
THE COLUMBIA SERIES IN SCIENCE AND RELIGION
Title Page
Acknowledgements
Epigraph
Chapter 1 - PRINCIPLES OF CONTEMPLATIVE SCIENCE
THE ESSENTIALS OF A MEANINGFUL LIFE
THE ORIGINS OF THE PSYCHE
CHALLENGES FOR A CONTEMPLATIVE SCIENCE
Chapter 2 - WHERE SCIENCE AND RELIGION COLLIDE
THE DOGMA OF SCIENTIFIC MATERIALISM
HOW WELL DOES SCIENTIFIC MATERIALISM WORK?
SCIENTIFIC MATERIALISM AS A RELIGIOUS DOGMA
TEACHING RELIGION AND SCIENCE IN THE STATE EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM
Chapter 3 - THE STUDY OF CONSCIOUSNESS, EAST AND WEST
HISTORICAL IMPEDIMENTS TO THE EMERGENCE OF A SCIENCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS IN THE WEST
THE BUDDHIST SCIENCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS
TOWARD AN INTEGRATION OF BUDDHIST AND WESTERN SCIENCE
Chapter 4 - SPIRITUAL AWAKENING AND OBJECTIVE KNOWLEDGE
TWO IDEALS OF OBJECTIVITY
THE SCIENTIFIC PURSUIT OF OBJECTIVE KNOWLEDGE
THE BUDDHIST PURSUIT OF OBJECTIVE KNOWLEDGE
PERCEPTUAL KNOWLEDGE OF EVIDENT PHENOMENA
INFERENTIAL KNOWLEDGE OF HIDDEN OBJECTS
INFERENTIAL KNOWLEDGE OF VERY HIDDEN OBJECTS
CONCLUSION
Chapter 5 - BUDDHIST NONTHEISM, POLYTHEISM, AND MONOTHEISM
THE QUASI-ATHEISTIC STATUS OF THE RAVĀDA BUDDHISM
THE QUASI-MONOTHEISTIC STATUS OF MAHĀYĀNA BUDDHISM
THE MONOTHEISTIC STATUS OF VAJRAYĀNA BUDDHISM
CONCLUSION
Chapter 6 - WORLDS OF INTERSUBJECTIVITY
MEDITATIVE QUIESCENCE
THE FOUR APPLICATIONS OF MINDFULNESS
THE FOUR IMMEASURABLES
DREAM YOGA
THE GREAT PERFECTION
Chapter 7 - ŚAMATHA
THE NATURE AND PURPOSE OF ŚAMATHA
THE USE OF A MENTAL IMAGE AS THE OBJECT IN ŚAMATHA PRACTICE
THE STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT OF ŚAMATHA
THE ATTAINMENT OF ŚAMATHA
THE USE OF NONIDEATION AS THE OBJECT IN ŚAMATHA PRACTICE
SETTLING THE MIND IN ITS NATURAL STATE
THE ALLEGED TRAIT EFFECTS OF ACCOMPLISHING ŚAMATHA
PROLEGOMENA TO A FUTURE CONTEMPLATIVE SCIENCE
Chapter 8 - BEYOND IDOLATRY
RELIGIOUS IDOLATRIES
SCIENTIFIC IDOLATRIES
CONVERGENCE
CONCLUSION
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
Copyright Page
THE COLUMBIA SERIES IN SCIENCE AND RELIGION
The Columbia Series in Science and Religion is sponsored by the Center for the Study of Science and Religion (CSSR) at Columbia University. It is a forum for the examination of issues that lie at the boundary of these two complementary ways of comprehending the world and our place in it. By examining the intersections between one or more of the sciences and one or more religions, the CSSR hopes to stimulate dialogue and encourage understanding.
ROBERT POLLACK
The Faith of Biology and the Biology of Faith
B. ALAN WALLACE, ED.
Buddhism and Science: Breaking New Ground
LISA SIDERIS
Environmental Ethics, Ecological Theory, and Natural Selection: Suffering
and Responsibility
WAYNE PROUDFOOT, ED.
William James and a Science of Religions: Reexperiencing The Varieties of
Religious Experience
MORTIMER OSTOW
Spirit, Mind, and Brain: A Psychoanalytic Examination of Spirituality and Religion
PHILIP CLAYTON AND JIM SCHAAL, EDITORS
Practicing Science, Living Faith: Interviews with Twelve Scientists
B. ALAN WALLACE
Hidden Dimensions: The Unification of Physics and Consciousness
PIER LUIGI LUISI WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF ZARA HOUSHMAND
Mind and Life: Discusssions with the Dalai Lama on the Nature of Reality
B. ALAN WALLACE
Mind in the Balance: Meditation in Science, Buddhism, and Christianity
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would first like to express my gratitude to Brian Hodel, who worked closely with me for months editing this series of essays into the present volume. Without his many editorial suggestions, from very specific aspects of the book to its general layout, this book likely would not have seen the light of day. My thanks also go to James Elliott, who helped to polish the manuscript, and to Wendy Lochner and Leslie Kriesel at Columbia University Press, for their invaluable role in producing this work.
I am indebted to the many fine scholars, contemplatives, and scientists who have inspired and critiqued this work, including Michel Bitbol, José Ignacio Cabezón, David Ritz Finkelstein, Owen Flanagan, Paul Gailey, Daniel Goleman, William Grassie, Charles L. Harper, Van Harvey, Anne Harrington, Piet Hut, David E. Meyer, Ken Paller, David Presti, Matthieu Ricard, Ben Shapiro, William Waldron, Zhihua Yao, and Arthur Zajonc. My understanding has been deeply enriched by all these individuals, and I am grateful for their collaboration.
I also wish to thank my parents for a lifetime of encouragement and good counsel, and my wife, Vesna A. Wallace, for her constant support and advice, which I seek at every turn. Finally, my boundless gratitude goes to all my teachers, particularly His Holiness the Dalai Lama, who have guided me in my pursuit of genuine happiness, truth, and virtue. I offer this book as a small token of thanks. May it be of benefit to others, as my teachers have benefited me.
He looked at his own Soul with a Telescope. What seemed all irregular, he saw and shewed to be beautiful Constellations: and he added to the Consciousness worlds within worlds.
—SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
1
PRINCIPLES OF CONTEMPLATIVE SCIENCE
THE VERY IDEA of proposing a discipline called “contemplative science” may arouse suspicion among those who value the triumphs of science, which have been won, in part, by divorcing its mode of inquiry from all religious affiliations. Such unease has a strong historical basis, so it should be taken seriously. But there are also historical roots to the principles of contemplation and of science that suggest a possible reconciliation and even integration between the two approaches.
The Latin term contemplatio, from which “contemplation” is derived, corresponds to the Greek word theoria. Both refer to a total devotion to revealing, clarifying, and making manifest the nature of reality. Their focus is the pursuit of truth, and nothing less. As the Christian theologian Josef Pieper comments, the first element of the concept of contemplation is the silent perception of reality.1 This, he claims, is a form of knowing arrived at not by thinking but by seeing. “Intuition is without doubt the perfect form of knowing. For intuition is knowledge of what is actually present; the parallel to seeing with the senses is exact.”2 But unlike objective knowledge, contemplation does not merely move toward its object; it already rests in it.
While the term “science” has long been affiliated solely with the exploration of objective, physical, quantitative phenomena—even to the point that they alone are deemed by some scientists to be real—there are also grounds for viewing science in a broader context. Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary defines the scientific method as follows: “Principles and procedures for the systematic pursuit of knowledge involving the recognition and formulation of a problem, the collection of data through observation and experiment, and the formulation and testing of hypotheses.” There is nothing in this definition to preclude the possibility of first-person observations of mental phenomena and their relation to the world at large. Just as scientists make observati
ons and conduct experiments with the aid of technology, contemplatives have long made their own observations and run experiments with the aid of enhanced attentional skills and the play of the imagination. In principle, then, there is nothing fundamentally incompatible between contemplation and science. But the weight of history is still against any fruitful collaboration between the two.
The strength science has acquired by divorcing itself from religion, and more recently from philosophy, has taken a severe toll on its host societies. It is sobering to note that the twentieth century, which generated the greatest growth of scientific knowledge in the entire course of human history, also witnessed man’s greatest inhumanity to man, as well as the greatest degradation of our natural environment and the decimation of other species. The expansion of scientific knowledge has not brought about any comparable growth in ethics or virtue. Modern society has become more knowledgeable and powerful as a result, but it has not grown wiser or more compassionate.
Science has long been viewed proudly, not without justification, as being “value free.” Time and again I have met with scientists who speak of the sheer joy of discovery, unrelated to any practical applications of their research. But we cannot ignore the fact that most scientific research is presently funded by governments and private institutions that have very specific goals in mind. They want a good return on their investments. With the modern dissolution of the medieval fusion of religion, philosophy, and science, there has occurred a similar disintegration of the pursuits of genuine happiness, truth, and virtue—three elements that are essential to a meaningful life. The contemplative science I have in mind seeks to reintegrate these three pursuits in a thoroughly empirical way, without dogmatic allegiance to any belief system, religious or otherwise. To explore this possibility, let us first review the salient features of genuine happiness, truth, and virtue that are to be united.
THE ESSENTIALS OF A MEANINGFUL LIFE
Genuine Happiness
Genuine happiness is a way of flourishing that underlies and suffuses all emotional states, embracing all the vicissitudes of life, and it is distinguished from “hedonic pleasure,” which is the sense of well-being that arises in response to pleasurable stimuli. The Greek term that I am translating as genuine happiness is eudaimonia, which Aristotle in his Nicomachean Ethics equated with the human good. This is disclosed as a being-at-work of the soul in accordance with virtue, and if the virtues are more than one, in accordance with the best and most complete virtue.3 Genuine happiness is not simply the culmination of a meaningful life, but a characteristic of a developing person in the process of ethical and spiritual maturation. This is an intentionally general notion of human flourishing that leaves it up to the individual reader to determine what virtues are “the best and most complete.” Clearly, this ideal of genuine happiness can be embraced by both religious and nonreligious people, who may define its specific attributes in terms of their own worldviews. As we shall see in the following discussion, such well-being is a natural consequence of developing mental balance in ways that fortify the “psychological immune system,” so that one rarely succumbs to a wide range of mental afflictions. A state of calm presence, emotional equilibrium, and clear intelligence are all characteristics of such genuine happiness, which naturally expresses itself in a harmonious, altruistic way of life.
Saint Augustine (354–430) raised this theme when he declared that the only thing we need to know is the answer to the question “How can man be happy?”4 Genuine happiness, he declared, is a “truth-given joy,”5 while the two real causes of the miseries of this life are “the profundity of ignorance” and the “love of things vain and noxious.” The path to genuine happiness, he declared, is motivated by the love of God, which is the desire for union with him. This emphasis on the profundity of the pursuit of happiness is not confined to Greek antiquity or Christian theology. The Dalai Lama writes in his best-selling book The Art of Happiness, “I believe that the very purpose of our life is to seek happiness. Whether one believes in religion or not, whether one believes in this religion or that religion, we all are seeking something better in life. So, I think, the very motion of our life is towards happiness.”6
Truth
Genuine happiness is not experienced simply as a result of encountering a pleasant sensory or intellectual stimulus. Nor is it produced merely by learning to think in a certain way or by adopting an optimistic attitude. It must be based on a sound understanding of truth. But there are many truths that have little relevance to human flourishing. Many of the aspects of the natural world studied by scientists seem far removed from human values, and there seems no reason to believe that scientists in general, for all their knowledge of the physical world, are happier than members of any other profession. As noted earlier, the exponential growth of scientific knowledge in the past century did not correspond to any comparable growth in human happiness, though advances in medicine have certainly contributed enormously to our physical well-being.
This implies that the types of truths most relevant to human flourishing are not those most commonly and successfully explored in modern science. While scientists have primarily focused their attention on the external world, there is no aspect of reality more pertinent to genuine happiness than the nature of human identity. Christian theologian Joseph Maréchal addresses this topic within the context of contemplative inquiry:7 The human mind ... is a faculty in quest of its intuition—that is to say, of assimilation with Being, Being pure and simple, sovereignly one, without restriction, without distinction of essence and existence, of possible and real.... But here below, in place of the One, it meets with the manifold, the fragmentary. Now, in the order of truth, the unreduced multiplicity of objects suspends affirmation and engenders doubt.... The affirmation of reality, then, is nothing else than the expression of the fundamental tendency of the mind to unification in and with the Absolute.
In the Buddhist tradition, as well, the importance of self-knowledge cannot be exaggerated, especially in light of the Buddhist assertion that the fundamental cause of human suffering is ignorance and delusion, specifically pertaining to one’s own identity. Of all the virtues emphasized in Buddhism, none is more important than that of wisdom, entailing insight into the ultimate nature of reality. The seventh-century Indian Buddhist contemplative Śāntideva wrote, “The Sage taught this entire system for the sake of wisdom. Therefore, with the desire to ward off suffering, one should develop wisdom.” 8
Virtue
Just as genuine happiness is inextricably related to the understanding of truth, so it cannot be understood apart from virtue. While diverse theories of virtue abound among philosophers and theologians, Augustine’s short definition is particularly salient and universal, as he explained it in terms of “the order of love,” which has to do with the priority of our values.9 Following the words of Jesus concerning the centrality of the love of God and of one’s fellow humans, theologian John Burnaby writes, “The love of God which is the desire for union with Him, and the love of men which is the sense of unity with all those who are capable of sharing the love of God, are indeed bound up most intimately with one another.”10 This is the basis of all virtues within this theistic context.
In Buddhism, which is commonly referred to as a nontheistic religion, a life of virtue is a necessary foundation for pursuing truth and genuine happiness, or human flourishing, of which there are three kinds: social/environmental, psychological, and spiritual. While Buddhist theories of ethics are deeply embedded in the Buddhist worldview, including its assertions of reincarnation and karma, in his book Ethics for the New Millennium the Dalai Lama has developed a view of secular ethics that is equally relevant to religious believers and nonbelievers alike.
Psychological Flourishing
The explanatory power of behaviorism, psychology, and neuroscience pertains to topics such as decision making, attention, and statements about what subjects experience under various controlled conditions. The mental processes studied in t
he cognitive sciences consist largely of those that have, from an evolutionary perspective, helped mankind survive and procreate. All branches of psychophysics, attentional psychology, cognitive psychology, and personality and social psychology depend on asking people such questions as how bright something seems, what color they see, how loud they hear a sound, what they believe, what attitudes they have, and so on. Many of these data have been organized in terms of coherent principles, and the structured sets of findings that cognitive scientists have been trying to organize and understand are very large. Contemporary neuroscience has shed additional light on what psychologists have explored regarding memory, attention, emotions, attitudes, and so forth.
Especially since the Second World War, most psychological research, particularly in the United States, has been focused on normal and pathological mental processes. Only recently has scientific attention begun to focus on mental well-being, but funding for such research has been limited due to the fact that the nature of well-being and its behavioral effects are not well understood—a catch-22! This is where the contemplative traditions of the world, which have long been concerned with human flourishing within the context of truth and virtue, could make significant contributions.
Within the broad context of genuine happiness, it may be useful to identify specific domains of flourishing. On the basis of the social and environmental well-being that derives from the cultivation of ethical behavior, one may bring about psychological flourishing that emerges from a healthy, balanced psyche. I am using the word “psyche” to refer to the whole range of conscious and unconscious mental phenomena studied by psychologists, including perceptions of all kinds, thoughts, emotions, memories, fantasies, dreams, mental imagery, and so on. Psychological processes are conditioned by the body, personal history, the physical environment, and society, and from moment to moment they are closely correlated with specific brain functions. The psyche can be studied indirectly by the interrogation of individuals and by the examination of behavior and the brain, and it can be observed directly through introspection.