E-Book Overview
Conventional neuroscience assumes that there is a real objective world ‘out
there’ and that the brain constructs a world that is representative of this
world. But how do we prove that? Do we use our three- dimensional instruments
to probe and our three-dimensional consciousness to verify?
What exactly is out there?
Contrary to the conventional neuroscientific three-dimensional model,
cutting-edge physics tells us that the world ‘out there’ is multi-dimensional
and not solid but a cacophony of waveforms. The three-dimensional world
constructed by the brain is a reduction and a limited interpretation of what
is really out there. In Eastern religious philosophy and certain Western philosophies,
there is a bold assertion that what is out there is a paradoxical
‘full-void’ — i.e. a nothingness which contains everything. Apparently, this
void has been ‘experienced’ by mystics and advanced meditators — as recorded
quite extensively in religious scriptures and the metaphysical literature.
In this void, space and time are meaningless. The Surangama Sutra of
the Buddhists emphatically point out that location in space is illusionary.
Saint Augustine believed in an ever-present eternity which was not accessible
to humans. Both space and time may be illusions.
"Ultimately, all moments are really one. Therefore now is
eternity." (David Bohm, Physicist)
For a long time it was assumed that space and time were fundamental to
the underlying reality; but Einstein’s Theory of Special Relativity toppled
this assumption. What we observe as space and what we observe as time
are now regarded as two aspects of a more fundamental spacetime continuum.
To what extent this continuum manifests as space and how much of it
manifests as time varies according to the relative motion of the observer. In
other words, they are both subject to our perception within specific frames
of reference which provide three-dimensional frameworks to structure our
mental image of the world. But we are perhaps deceiving ourselves when we
assume that they are also fundamental to the underlying reality.
"Space and time are like the two lenses in a pair of glasses.
Without the glasses we could see nothing. The actual world,
the world external to our minds, is not directly perceivable;
we see only what is transmitted to us by our space-time
spectacles. The real object, what Kant called the ‘Thing-in-
Itself’, is transcendent, beyond our space-time, completely
unknowable… Perceptions are in, in a sense, illusions. They
are shaped and colored by our subjective sense of space and
time." (Martin Gardner, Mathematician)
Advances in Brain Science
Recently, science has made significant advances in studying the brain during
meditative states. Using cutting-edge medical imaging methods, observations
have been made of specific areas in the brain which are activated or
deactivated during meditation. It has also been widely observed that many
meditative traditions emphasise the activation and development of the right
hemisphere of the brain. In fact, certain studies have shown that various
areas in the right hemisphere grow thicker with regular meditation.
Is it possible to modify the operation of the brain to allow a meditator
to experience a totally different reality? Can we bypass the brain’s constructions
to reach a more fundamental reality? It is becoming increasingly
evident that we are blocked by our perceptual apparatus from experiencing
a more primordial reality. Hence, it would make sense to look at how the
human brain processes information to understand better the models that
it uses to construct its interpretation of the underlying reality; while being
limited by its own processing