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Reunion of Physics And Metaphysics
Part 1: The New Physics
Daniel Hawley, PhD, USA
In the present day there is a growing movement toward the unity of knowledge,
the unification of various sciences. There is, moreover, a rapidly increasing
interest in the unity of science and metaphysics. Physicists in particular
have begun to see a harmonious relationship between their view of the
world and the esoteric systems of eastern thought such as yoga. Many physicists,
led by Nobel Prize winner Eugene P. Wigner, anticipate and argue for the
eventual explicit inclusion of consciousness into the equations of physics.
After all, there is always a conscious observer who designs the experiments,
makes the measurements and reflects on their meaning. Quantum mechanics
implies that the observer cannot be separated from what he is observing,
that the act of observing changes what is to be observed, that the way
in which nature is questioned influences the kind of answers she gives.
The unificatory trend between science and metaphysics does not represent
a new phenomenon. They were formerly not separated. Long ago Plato said
that to be complete, science must include philosophy, religion and art.
It was only with the advent of the scientific revolution that science
became the domain of the intellect alone, and all other aspects of man's
being were relegated to religion. After Galileo, 'scientists began to
pride themselves on asking how things are instead of why, separated themselves
from the idea of purpose in the universe, and moved to the desire to manipulate
nature rather than to progress in consciousness growth.' *1
The business of scientists became that of examining carefully all those
things which can be perceived through the senses, of measuring, quantifying,
analysing and organising, of producing theories that generalise and predict
how the world will act on the senses and measuring devices in given situations.
Because the results had to be reproducible by any competent observer,
he was required to have only an intellectual involvement with, and no
influence upon, what he was measuring. Considerations of whether the patterns
and consistencies found in nature might suggest a meaning in the lives
of the scientists themselves came to be outside the scope of science.
Macrocosm / microcosm
Before the scientific revolution observations of empirical phenomena
and their systemisation were not taken as ends in themselves, but were
internalised and used as part of a spiritual path. The predecessors of
modern physicists, the alchemists, are a case in point. They were working
not for the transmutation of metals, as they allowed the public to believe,
but rather for the transmutation of their own total being. They preserved
a tradition from the 'Herrnetica' of ancient Greece, which develops the
concept of man, the microcosm, being a mirror of the universe and cosmic
order, the macrocosm ('as above, so below'). In these Hermetic writings
are hints of a personal discipline which is said to enable man to experience
in himself the laws of a divinely ordered universe. By looking within,
man can understand the process of the universe, and by looking at the
cosmos he can see the reality in himself.
Some modern physicists, the new alchemists, are again returning to this
more holistic view of themselves and their work Physicist Fritjof Capra
sees physics and religion as complementary aspects of man's nature.*2
Through intellectual understanding, man's mind can be convinced of the
necessity for him to undergo change so that he can directly experience
esoteric knowledge. Furthermore, the discipline of gaining intellectual
knowledge through careful observation and mathematical reasoning helps
to prepare the mind for metaphysical knowledge and may define a path to
that knowledge. Capra sees physics itself as a possible path to enlightenment.
As Jacob Needleman points out, this can be true only if physicists put
to use in their own lives the insights they come to in their discoveries
at the frontiers of physics.
The goal of physics has been to acquire knowledge about the world. But
according to Emmanuel Kant we can never know the causes of our sensations,
what is behind the sensations or the 'things-in-themselves', by acquiring
more and more accurate sensations. Aldous Huxley wrote in the 'Perennial
Philosophy' that one's knowledge is a function of his state of being.
Needleman expressed it by saying that understanding is a function of one's
level of consciousness, so that to have a higher knowledge necessitates
being in a higher state of consciousness. One must be it to know it. Swami
Satyananda Saraswati has said that when anahata chakra is awakened there
is no difference between 'what I am' and 'what I know'.
In this light, the ultimate purpose of the new ideas from the discoveries
of physics must not only be for the intellect to analyse, categorise and
theorise, but to provide guides for the inner struggle to reach a higher
consciousness. The goal of the new kind of physicist has expanded to include
self-knowledge as well as empirical knowledge. Self-knowledge comes through
the practice of yoga which expands the consciousness so that it can know
the reality behind the senses. The new physicist performs his research
as a karma yogi and meditates on the symbols and harmonies he discovers
in nature as they are reflected in himself.
The momentum of the mind
To demonstrate the macrocosm/microcosm principle of reflection and to
show how it can provide symbols to inspire the spirit, let us examine
an example from astrophysics, the world of the very large, which must
be described by some theory of gravitation such as Einstein's general
theory of relativity. The inner microcosmic process of the transformation
of consciousness to the enlightened state, the collapse of consciousness
down to a single point and then the expansion to the infinite, is mirrored
on a grand scale in the universe by objects called black holes, gravitationally
collapsing stars.
But before we consider black holes, we can see the macrocosm/microcosm
principle in gravitational phenomena even before general relativity, in
Galileo's simple heliocentric picture of the earth circling around and
around the sun, attracted inward by the force of gravity, but maintaining
the same distance from the sun because of its angular momentum or state
of motion around the sun. This view of the universe governed by Newton's
laws provides an analogy for man, symbolic of his spiritual growth, The
mind is like the earth, continuously moving from thought to thought, emotion
to emotion, illuminated from the centre by the light of pure consciousness,
our internal sun, but unable to approach that light because it cannot
stop its incessant circular motion.
According to Newton's law of gravitation, if the earth were to stop in
its path, it would immediately begin to fall straight in toward the sun.
In the same way, according to Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, when the mind is
arrested and realises its true nature, it 'naturally gravitates toward
the state of liberation.' *3 The Bhagavad Gita says that when the mind
stops, 'when the intelligence, bewildered by vedic texts, shall stand
unshaken and stable in spirit (samadhi), thou shalt attain to insight
(yoga).' *4
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