Guest guest Posted October 15, 2007 Report Share Posted October 15, 2007 In the West there have been some fundamental influences in the manner of our thinking that has shaped the evolution of our culture and society. Of course there are influences upon influences and so it is quite wrong to say that there are only a few or even one influence. But if we probe deep into the human psyche, slipping underneath external influences such as epidemics, climate change and war, past the human passions that cause all manner of harm through anger and fear, we arrive at the place of logic, or rationality. Logic as we consider it in the West began in ancient Greece with a line of philosophers starting with Parmenides, and was modified by a line of successors that included Socrates and Plato, and ended with Aristotle. It is generally accepted that Aristotle successfully integrated the ideas of his predecessors into a unified system consisting of three basic logical propositions: 1. The Law of Identity 2. The Law of Non-contradiction 3. The Law of the Excluded Middle The first of these would appear to be really simple to understand. The Law of Identity states that when something is beheld to be, it is known to be, and thus we may give it a name. Logicians, being fiercely efficient in their expression, usually express this as 'X is X'. But for our purposes, all they mean is that a bird is a bird, a nail is a nail, and a sneeze is a sneeze. Not so complicated. The Law of Contradiction however is a little more subtle. It states that when something is, another thing cannot simultaneously be that same thing. Thus I am me and you are you, and there is mother and baby, apples and oranges, mountains and valleys, and cats and dogs. But sometimes the law of non-contradiction is very subtle. For example, a hermaphrodite would seem to be a contradiction, since it is both female and male. However, the term 'hermaphrodite' implies that it is neither entirely male nor entirely female: it is a hermaphrodite, a unique gender in and of itself and thus there is no contradiction. Ultimately, the law of non-contradiction is an analytical tool to help us analyze and discriminate between various things, to arrive at a relative truth that can be assumed and if desired, applied for some constructive purpose. It is an effective problem solving tool, as Ayn Rand famously stated, “whenever you think you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong.” Mathematically, we can describe the law of non-contradiction as 'not (X and not-X)'. Lastly, we have the Law of the Excluded Middle, which in essence is simply an extension of the law of non-contradiction. It is logical statement that says that because there are no contradictions, a thing is either one thing or another. Logically, we can define the law of the excluded middle as X or not-X. From these three logical propositions an entire structure of logic has been developed in the West, and integrated into scientific thinking, as the very basic of the scientific method and mathematics. Copernicus, Bacon, Descartes, Newton, and Hegel have all expounded complex logical propositions from Aristotle's basic conception of logic. And this has meant enormous changes for human society, as these logical systems have found their way into technological applications, from steam engines to microprocessors to nuclear weapons. Aristotle is not only the father of logic, he can be viewed as the architect of Western civilization, and few people have had the audacity to contradict Aristotle, and certainly not without suffering the censure of their colleagues. As the famous Persian physician Ibn Sina stated, anyone who denies the law of non- contradiction “…should be beaten and burned until he admits that to be beaten is not the same as not to be beaten, and to be burned is not the same as not to be burned”. The pattern of the evolution of logic in ancient Greece is very much an archetype of Western scientific advancement. Here we have the model of an innovator, who proposes a solution to a problem, and then those who come after to dissect this work, changing or modifying it until the problem is solved to everyone's satisfaction. This is the way science works. As I mentioned earlier the basic premise of logic in the West began with a fellow named Parmenides and ended with Aristotle. And with Aristotle the laws of logic were set down in stone as the basis of all knowledge, and despite the fact that much everything else he stated about biology, physics or astronomy have been disproved, his method of logic has remained intact ever since, like the immutable laws of physics. Although we might think that the evolution of logic from Parmenides through Aristotle was a logical, natural progression, in fact it wasn't. There are some vast and fundamental differences between each philosopher, although they all used a dialectical method of argument, which is a method of exchanging propositions (theses) and counter- propositions (antitheses) to arrive at a correct answer. One common feature of Parmenides through Aristotle however was an unquestioned belief in God. Although different conceptions of this were held, God was a necessary component of logic, representing a frame of reference, an “umoved mover” from which these logical principles emanated. Aristotle's conception of God and his approach to logic was later embraced by both Judaism, Christianity and to some extent by Islam, used as basis by which each understands and explains the logic of their spiritual traditions, which in turn, has had enormous influences on the evolution of Western culture. While Aristotle gets lots of attention, some of his ideas were very different from his teachers. As I mentioned, our bias is to assume that Aristotle corrected the misconceptions of his predecessors. Parmenides, for example, stated that there was only one unchanging and static reality, something that is evidently quite wrong because clearly the world is constantly changing: seasons change, people grow older, and women have babies - how is this evidence of an unchanging static reality? Parmenides goes on to explain however that things do indeed appear to change, but that the only method by which we can account for this change is our perception of it, which itself, is subject to change. As a result, perception cannot not be trusted, and thus external appearances are essentially empty. Parmenides stated that this teaching is the Way of Truth, distinguishing it from the Way of Opinion, in which there is only relative truth based on the relativity of our perceptions. Parmenides' most notable student was Zeno of Elea, who in his youth formulated several paradoxical statements to explain Parmenides teachings. While many of these paradoxes have been solved mathematically they only do so when we make the assumption that our perception provides us with complete knowledge, something that Parmenides states is untrue. In his paradox entitled The Dichotomy, Zeno describes a runner in a race who must travel a given distance (d) in a given amount of time. Zeno suggests in this paradox that before the runner can finish the race, he must travel half the distance (d/2). And in order to travel half the distance, the runner must travel one-quarter the distance (d/4), and so on, over an infinite number of points ordered in the sequence d/2, d/4, d/8, etc. Since this sequence goes on forever, it appears that the runner will never finish the race. Zeno's theory however is in direct contrast to the experience of the wildly cheering crowds who perceive the runner finishing the race. So who is right? Measurement is an act of division, of separating the whole into a system of units. As Zeno illustrated in his paradox, there are an infinite number of points, both in time and space that need to be crossed during the race. Although the crowd sees the runner finish the race, they do not perceive the infinite nature of time and space that has been crossed. Thus the observation of the runner finishing the race is not the complete experience, but a mental construct based upon incomplete data. This illustrates how our experience, or that which we interpret as being reality, is in fact only a small part of what is actually happening. While modern science have interpreted Zeno's paradoxes as a mathematical challenge, when we consider the philosophy of his teacher, it should be fairly obvious that these paradoxes, created in Zeno's youth and allegedly stolen and published without his permission, are only meant to illustrate the problem of perception in simple, logical terms. The most important difference between Parmenides and Aristotle is the law of identity. Both philosophers postulated this principle, but on a radically different basis. For Parmenides, the proposition of 'X' had nothing to do with perception. 'X' exists, and so it is, and what exists in whatever form is itself the same as 'X'. There is no difference. For Aristotle however, 'X' is only that by which perception acknowledges it to exist. Thus the form of a dog, with all its traits and characteristics is taken to be a dog. Parmenides would not deny the appearance of the dog however, but state that the perception of the dog is not the same as a complete knowledge of it. Thus the perception of the dog is not absolute truth but at best a relative truth that will change according to differing perceptions, for example, between a veterinarian, a child and a person that regularly eats dogs. Parmenides is asking you to logically examine the nature of your own consciousness. You behold a form, but what beholds this form? Your perception of it. And what is it that perceives this form? The mind. And what is mind? Unfortunately only fragments of Parmenides teachings have survived, and as a result the West has been left with the unsolved problem of the nature of mind, for how can we understand the nature of being if we don't understand the function that perceives it? Sure, we can manipulate mind easily enough, whether using religion, marketing, electromagnetic fields, drugs and phytochemicals, but each of these components doesn't tell us on an individual basis what is mind, the intrinsic nature of that which each of us experiences as consciousness. For Aristotle, mind is X. Mind is the “unmoved mover”, the origin of the law of identity that formulates the law of non-contradiction as “I am this, but not that.” As I write this, I have a very clear notion that I am me and that you are the reader, familiar to me or not, with an entirely different identity. When we examine this closely we will see that the law of identity is nothing other the logical proposition of one self, not as some abstract concept but as a very real sense or function of 'self-ness'. And yet if we probe deeper, begged on by the law of identity, we arrive at a problem. How can the self know itself? How does one observe and behold in its entirety the mind when the mind itself participates in this function? How can mind be both observer and the observed, both subject and object? The failure to address this conundrum, not through a dialectical method (which should require first that we address the issue of identity), but through direct experience is the heart of our human condition. If we assume identity we may be no better than Aristotle's most notable of students, Alexander the Great, who surged forward in the name of empire laying waste and ruin to all that stood before him, understanding nothing. In ancient India inquiry into the nature of mind is the first logical problem, and in the process of this inquiry Her peoples have evolved an amazingly diverse and heterogenous array of methods to resolve the problem of Aristotle's law of identity. The process of the realization of this inquiry is thought to reside within the Vedas, and in particular, is addressed in its primary system of ontology called the Sankhya (the Enumerated). The inclusion of the Sankhya is interesting in the Vedas, because even though it is considered to be astika, meaning that it toes the party line in the Vedas that God is the ultimate principle, the Sankhya is decidedly atheistic. The only other traditions in India that are similarly atheistic are the heterodox nastika spiritual traditions such as Jainism and Buddhism. I should mention however that there are two basic schools of Sankhya: the much older atheistic Sankhya expounded by an ancient sage named Kapila, and the much more recent theistic revision by Ishvara Krishna that interpolated Sankhya into the Vedic school of Yoga, the path that teaches union ('yuj') with God. The Sankhya is remarkably similar to Parmenides' Way of Truth and Way of Opinion in that it posits two simultaneously realities, but only one of which that is fundamentally real and true. The Sankhya teaches that underlying every aspect of existence, whether seen or unseen, material or immaterial, manifest or unmanifest, arises from an eternal unchanging reality called Purusha, also known by other names such as Brahman ('the vast expanse') and Atman ('the great soul'). Existing within the infinite field of Purusha is Prakriti, the aspect that relates to the perception of an eternal yet constantly changing reality, representing the manifold creation of the universe and beyond, the matrix from which all things arise and return. In the Vedas Prakriti is given various epithets, such as Leela, the divine play of life, and Maya, the fundamental illusion of our perception. In religious terms Prakriti is the Originator of life, the Provider, the Sustainer, and the Compassionate, and yet it is also the opposite of these qualities, as the Causer of Death, The Withholder, The Destroyer, and The Reckoner. In Buddhist terms Prakriti is nothing other than samsara, the eternal wheel of birth, life and death, promulgated by an unceasing dynamic of cause and effect. In Taoist terms, Prakriti contains the fundamental dichotomy of yin and yang and the ceaseless doctrine of change. Due to the impaired faculty of perception we are easily confused by Prakriti, fruitlessly looking for an eternal truth in its manifold names, concepts and forms. But still no eternal truth is found, beyond that of belief and faith, which is often nothing more than a product of social conditioning and circular secondary logic rather than true inquiry and personal experience. Emanating from Prakriti is a second principle called Mahat, the Great One, also known as Buddhi, or Pure Consciousness. According to Sankhya, Mahat is the principle of consciousness in its entirety. In psychological terms we might call it the superconsciousness or transcendent consciousness that pervades all aspects of reality as an awareness of being that 'it' exists, that it is 'being'. From this awareness of All Being, Mahat perceives the totality of Prakriti, beyond its changing forms and functions, and in turn understands that Prakriti is simply Purusha: an unchanging static reality in which differences are seen to be nothing more than bubbles of foam on a vast ocean of being: inconsequential, unimportant and empty. Arising from Mahat as the principle of consciousness is the principle of self-identification, self-elaboration and self-becoming called Ahamkara. Ahamkara represents the awareness of Mahat (the transcendent consciousness) conditioned by the function of Prakriti, establishing itself as a conscious, singular entity, separate from everything else. Ahamkara is the process that establishes a sense of personal self, whether this self be a planetary system (Gaia), an ecological community (such as forest or desert), a community of people (such as a family or social group) or an individual person (such as yourself). Ahamkara is the continual process of 'I-ness”, the sense of being and becoming that relates to specific circumstances. For you who read these words, Ahamkara is that which recognizes itself within itself as 'self'. According to the Sankhya, there are three qualities that reside in this process of self-identification, called sattva, rajas and tamas. These three qualities explain the modal operation of Ahamkara within the manifest reality of Prakriti. Sattva refers to the subjective experience, the mind and senses, whereas tamas refers to the object of awareness, as the phenomenological reality of sensation, function and structure. Rajas is the capacity within Ahamkara to bind Sattva to Tamas. Thus subject becomes enmeshed with object and our sense of self becomes unified with the reality of having a body and maintaining a field of physical awareness. In Aristotelian terms, Ahamkara is the law of identity, the very process of self-being, whether we attribute this to ourselves or project this awareness onto something else. The primary difference between Sankhya and Aristotle however is that for Aristotle there is no essential differentiation between sense and sense object. In this way, Aristotle and the school of scientific materialism that arose from his school of thought have only one inquiry: the nature of phenomena. This essentially denies a distinction between subject and object, suggesting that the mind itself is nothing more than a complex interaction of neuronal circuits. But if we return back to Parmenides, Aristotle's venerable Elder, we are told to recognize that true knowledge does not exist within an inquiry of object. A perception of object can never yield the entire truth of that object because perception itself is an object. How can perception perceive itself? The Sankhya states that only by understanding the quality of sattva, the subjective reality, can we understand the nature of perception. That only by directing our consciousness internally, by harnessing the power of tapas, the spiritual fire that burns away the bond between subject and object, can we perceive the true nature of being. And it is in this realization that we find that Ahamkara as the proposition of an individual self, as the sense of “I-ness”, is empty and impermanent. In Buddhist terms Ahamkara is anatta, 'not- self', not true being. By perceiving the awareness of an individual self as empty we realize Mahat, the superconsciousness, or buddhi. We understand the unity of all consciousness and see beyond the ceaseless cycle of impermanence and change that is Prakriti. We become buddha, one able to see beyond the appearance of all things, to realize that it is an unchanging eternal static reality in which we attain nirvana, which literally means to “cease moving”. While all this may seem abstract and very much removed from any practical endeavor, I submit that the logic and ontology of Parmenides and the Sankhya, and in particular their conclusion that all phenomena emanates from an unchanging eternal reality, is sorely missing in Western culture. But how do we integrate such thinking in practical pursuits, when we necessarily posit this separate, individual sense of self as a primary principle. How can we apply the teaching when we do not perceive the absolute totality of it? In the every day world in which we use the logic of Aristotle, even though we do not perceive the totality of anything, we can still perceive a function of unity within it. We engage this perception in our day to day lives when we observe correspondences and relationships between apparently disparate things and functions. Of course it can be difficult to explain this unity because it is only a perception, and like any perception has no independent existence, being subject to variance and change. From the Sankhya perspective, the difference is that this perception arises as a function of sattva, as an inherently subjective (although possibly shared) experience that resonates within a deeper eternal truth, that although hidden from plain sight, there nevertheless exists a transcendent nature to all phenomena. It is through developing a relationship with this perception that we begin to postulate and comprehend the profound inter-relationship and interdependence of all things. It is actively knowing that we cannot 'know' the entirety of anything, but that we have the humility to look for synergy and interrelationship, study it, and actively engage it. It is a uniquely different method of operation, of data collection, analysis and conclusion as compared to the science driven by Aristotle's logic, which fundamentally seeks to establish a difference between things. It is amazing to me that Aristotle's logic has remained unquestioned for so long in Western culture, despite the myriad other ways of thinking, both indigenous and foreign to the Western mind, that essentially contradict it. From Parmenides to Sankhya, as well as the “primitive” beliefs of our pre-agrarian ancestors, there is an underlying principle in almost every philosophy besides that which owes its orientation to Aristotle, of a unity that binds all things together, not just in thought, but also in action. For too long have we in the West separated ourselves from the equation, and remained unconscious of the universality of our actions. The West as a global influence of Ahamkara has actively taught and continues to teach the world to ignore the complex and indeterminate result of its actions, to remained focused on the object of awareness without consideration for anything else, without seeing the implication of action that is not cautious and humble and fundamentally admits that it cannot know itself. As a result, empowered by Aristotle's logic and the dialectics of technological evolution, we now have widespread ecological degradation caused by short term thinking, science that manipulates DNA without knowing the results of its impact, and an increasingly large number of communities where technology actively isolates and separates entire aspects of our being from nature and each other. Without fundamentally changing the logical basis of our thought and actions, humanity will continue to be compelled by this logical function, and that by any logic, it will be our eventual demise. It is time for a new philosophy. Caldecott, Dip. Cl.H, RH(AHG) Ayurvedic practitioner, Medical Herbalist web: http//:www.toddcaldecott.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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