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Consilience – The Web of Life

by Rajgopal Nidamboor(more info)

listed in psychic and spiritual, originally published in issue 296 - August 2024

Originally Published in thehimalayantimes.com

https://thehimalayantimes.com/opinion/consilience-the-web-of-life

 

The idea of consciousness and its relationship between mind and brain have puzzled, bamboozled and flummoxed philosophers and scientists alike since the dawn of civilisation. They still do – notwithstanding a host of new, breath-taking discoveries, that include peptides, our molecules of emotions. This isn't all. Molecular biologists have discovered the fundamental building blocks of life and also unraveled the human genetic code. Yet, such amazing scientific realities have not helped them to fully understand the vital, integrative repertoire, or interconnected orchestrated 'jazz' of living organisms.

Agreed that a host of new concepts in physics, for instance, have brought about profound, mind-boggling changes – transforming the mechanistic worldview of René Descartes and Sir Isaac Newton into a holistic, natural view. New scientific developments have undoubtedly brought scientists into contact with a peculiar and not-so-expected actuality, yes; but, it has also offered them a puzzling parable. In their tussle to clasp this new reality, they have become agonizingly wary - that their fundamental concepts, as also language, including their 'time-tested' whole new mode of thinking were, or are, for instance, insufficient to defining the atomic phenomenon.

 

Cover Fritjof Capra The Web of Life

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Web-Life-Synthesis-Mind-Matter/dp/0002554992/ref=sr_1_1

The Web of Life by Fritjof Capra

 

This new paradigm shift, or holistic worldview, is, of course, accepted as scientific, as also spiritual entity. As physicist and author Fritjof Capra explains, "When the concept of the human spirit is understood as the mode of consciousness in which the individual feels a sense of belonging, of connectedness, to the cosmos as a whole, it becomes clear that ecological awareness is spiritual in its deepest sense, essence. It is, therefore, not surprising that the emerging new vision of reality based on deep ecological awareness is consistent with the so-called perennial philosophy of spiritual traditions."

A full 'organismic' conception of biology, for instance, or the belief that in every complex system the behaviour of the whole can be understood essentially from the properties of its parts, is central to mediaeval thought – or, Descartes and his celebrated, albeit outdated, method of 'analytical' thinking. Modern science has reversed the relationship.

Systems, as we now understand, cannot be understood by analysis alone. In other words, it only means that the myriad properties of the parts are not intrinsic entities; they can be appreciated, for the most part, within the context of the larger whole.

The classical Cartesian line of thinking relates to scientific description as objective – that is, independent of the human observer and the process of knowing. To quote Capra, again, "The new paradigm implies that epistemology – understanding the process of knowing – has to be included explicitly in the description of natural phenomenon." This is principally because systems are all interdependent. You may exemplify them as a network of relationships, including nature, with a corresponding arrangement of concepts and models.

Knowledge is relative and not absolute. This new paradigm is in consonance with such a thought that originates in ancient Indian philosophy; logically too. It recognizes that all scientific concepts and theories are limited and approximate; and, that science cannot always provide a complete and/or definitive understanding. This takes us to the pioneering work of polymath Alexander Bogdanov and the formulation of his ground-breaking concept called tektology. By using terms, such as complexity and systems interchangeably, Bogdanov distinguished three kinds of systems – organized complexes, where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts; disorganized complexes, where the whole is smaller than the sum of its parts; and, neutral complexes, where the organizing and disorganizing activities revoke each other.

All through the history of philosophy and science, there's been a stressful relationship between the study of substance and the study of form. Well, if the study of substance began in Greek antiquity, we have now come a long way – from the idea of four fundamental elements, earth, air, fire and water, to atoms, cells, enzymes, proteins, amino acids, and so on. You'd call them the study of patterns, to be precise. For one simple reason – the study of patterns is crucial to understanding living systems. More so, because systemic properties tend to often emerge from a configuration of 'ordered' relationships. This is no less a profound, clear-cut truth. Because, there's certainly something about life, something non-material, even irreducible – a pattern of organisation.

The view of living systems as self-organizing networks, whose components are all interconnected and interdependent, has been well expressed since the beginning of time. However, precisely detailed models of such systems came to be formulated in the recent past, thanks to new mathematical tools. This new, novel 'mathematics of complexity' has allowed scientists to model non-linear interconnectedness – that epitomize characteristics of networks – with the help of high-speed computers.

The process of living is not the world, but a world – one that is always dependent on interdependent structures – be it human beings, language, thought, or consciousness, including the genetic information encoded in our DNA. The most important point is simple, also profound – we can understand human consciousness primarily through semantics and the whole social context in which it is embedded in its Latin root, 'consilience,' or the interconnectedness of all things in the universe.

What does this signify, or quantify? That to be human is to be endowed with reflective consciousness – of body movements that become tightly linked in a complex dance of behavioural co-ordination. It celebrates the sum total, or essence, of complexity, with a new vision of reality – a pragmatic web of life, including living systems, that envelops us all.

Acknowledgment Citation

Originally Published in thehimalayantimes.com

https://thehimalayantimes.com/opinion/consilience-the-web-of-life

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About Rajgopal Nidamboor

Rajgopal Nidamboor PhD FCCP M-CAM is a Board-Certified wellness physician, Fellow of the College of Chest Physicians (FCCP), Member of the Center of Applied Medicine (M-CAM), writer-editor, commentator, critic, columnist, author, and publisher. His special interests include natural health and wellness, mind-body/integrative medicine, nutritional medicine, psychology, philosophy, and spirituality. His focus areas also encompass contemporary research and dissemination of dependable information for people concerned about their health. He feels that it is increasingly gratifying to see most individuals, including physicians, thinking outside the box – especially in areas such as natural health, where the body knows best to heal itself from the inside out. His published work includes hundreds of newspaper, magazine, Web articles, four books on natural health, two coffee-table books, a handful of E-books, a primer on therapeutics, and, most recently, Cricket Odyssey. He’s Chief Wellness Officer, Docco360, a mobile health application/platform, connecting patients with Ayurveda, homeopathic, Unani physicians, and nutrition therapists, among others, from the comfort of their home — and, Editor-in-Chief, ThinkWellness360.  Rajgopal Nidamboor lives in Navi Mumbai, India. He may be contacted via raj@rajnidamboor.com 

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