Archives for category: Science and Spirit

Moving up the spiral of life....our view of God and prayer changes

The title sure sounds pretty heavy.  Don’t let it scare you away.  First, a brief reminder… the underlying theme of all the articles I write here is that there is a direction to life… that things are evolving and that evolution has a positive direction… that within evolution’s “arrow” there is free will choice which leads to an infinite variety of experiences…some of these experiences, we label positive, others negative, but the general direction of evolution is ever upward and higher… therefore, my continuous hope is that you take from these writings the reminder that you live in this upward evolutionary spiral of life, that you see the interconnectedness and value of all levels of this spiral, and you understand the role you play through your thoughts, words and deeds to move your self and the collective in a positive direction towards our return to our realization of oneness.  Whew!

So here’s the connection I want to make today… as humanity evolved in its consciousness, so did its picture of what God or Spirit is.  Then, as our concept of God or Spirit evolved, so did our form of prayer… prayer being our way of communicating and experiencing the divine.  This is not necessarily a new concept, of course, but an interesting connection for me is that if we step back and see the complete unfoldment, it shows us the direction we are heading as we continue to evolve.

Let’s quickly look at the evolutionary path of humanity using Spiral Dynamics memes as the underpinnings.  (As always, more detail about Spiral Dynamics is available in other articles or links on the website.)  When early humanity crossed the threshold in consciousness  to the level of becoming self-aware, our ancestors lived off the land and sought basic survival (beige meme).  In time they began to see the value in living together in clans (purple meme).  At this level of consciousness, our ancestors were in tune with the passing of seasons and their interconnectedness to nature.  Their view of God was one of magical powers rising out of a nature world.  Their prayers came in the form of seasonal rituals, full of music, rhythm and dance.

As humanity evolved, individuals developed strong personal egos and sought power.  This gave rise to the survival of the fittest, kings with their servants, tribal leaders with their followers, the haves and the have-nots (red meme).  At this level of consciousness, our understanding of God grew out of “gods in nature” to the gods that were behind nature to a pantheon of gods ruled by one God (such as Zeus).  Our new view of God brought a new way to honor him… temples and monuments, gifts and offerings, sacrifices.

The sense of inequity at the tribal level led to a new level of consciousness where humanity sought order and structure and rules.  Here we sought meaning and purpose in living and attributed a divine plan that was beyond our comprehension to explain life (blue meme).  Our new view of God shifted from one powerful God who ruled other gods to simply being one God.  This God communicated to us through tablets with rules, sacred texts with laws, through others who claimed to be our intermediary.  We prayed to this God through prayers of petition, asking for favors and intervention in our lives.

The Enlightenment brought the rise of science and rational thought.  Humanity shifted its view of the world to sensing it as a machine that we could learn to control for our own benefit.  Competition, technology and material abundance (orange meme) brought with it a sense that the old man God in the sky was a myth we needed to release.  God is dead.  Prayer is an outdated superstition.

Material wealth did not satisfy us and we sought meaning in community and relationships.  We began to explore consciousness itself, turning inward to find meaning.  We believed that everyone was equal, and the earth was here for all of us to share (green meme).  We released dogma and sought to become spiritual but not religious.  God was resurrected but not as an external being.  God became a “unity”, a unified field of energy, and underlying intelligent force that pervaded everything.  How do you communicate with an intelligent field of energy?  You direct its flow as it moves through you.  You see the power in your thoughts and consciousness and consciously work to direct that power.  As your development had just come through the level of science and reason, you attempt to apply logic to your prayers to convince yourself and shift your belief.  Prayer is now an affirmative statement of truth placed into the infinite field of possibilities, collapsing the quantum uncertainties in the desired direction.

People new to New Thought teachings such as the Science of Mind generally resonate with applying logic and reason through a predefined five-step prayer process.  Ernest Holmes called it “argumentative” prayer, as we argue with our own minds to convince it of the truth.  The five steps take us from identification with the external world of matter to an inward world where we sense the interconnectedness of everything, the power embedded in it, and our ability to direct that power.  Through connecting with Spirit, stating our truth, sensing gratitude and releasing our awareness “into the flow”, we convince our logical minds of the truth and power of our prayer.  Our emotional certainty is seen as a critical factor in directing this flow.

By now you’ve probably stopped and considered where you are in this evolutionary process.  In 21st-century America, most of us fall in one of three general categories, in our belief of God and prayer.  Either (1) God is an external being to whom we pray; (2) God is a myth and prayer is superstition; or (3) God is an intelligent power that we can tap via our consciousness.

Robert Wright outlined in great detail how our view of God has changed in his recent bestseller, “The Evolution of God.”  There were several key points that he made that are worth listing here…. God doesn’t evolve, we do; our perception of God changes as our cultural needs change; and there is a continuous direction towards positive change over time.

In fact, Wright sees this positive trend as potential evidence of a divine power when he says: “If history naturally pushes people toward moral improvement, toward moral truth, and their God, as they conceive their God, grows accordingly, becoming morally richer, then maybe this growth is evidence of some higher purpose, and maybe — conceivably — the source of that purpose is worthy of the name divinity.”

So where then is this evolution taking us?  How is our perception of God continuing to evolve?  How is our method of communication with the divine growing?  Both mystics and Spiral Dynamics point in the same direction.

Joel Goldsmith, founder of “The Infinite Way”, gave a lecture in 1959 where he outlined this evolution of prayer we have been discussing.  He said, “Most in orthodox religion still use pagan forms of prayer, which came to them when their churches were first founded, and their own forms of prayer had not developed: they used the prayer of petition… these ancient paganistic forms of prayer were the only forms of prayer the church had to work with… there is nothing wrong with these forms of prayer, anymore than there is anything wrong with our form of treatment… it isn’t a question of right or wrong, it is a question of the degree of consciousness.  Because we are in a human state of consciousness at the moment, it is necessary that we start our prayer work with words and thoughts.  In the metaphysical world these are called treatments; in the mystical world they’re called realizations.  The attainment of harmony is never accomplished by words or thoughts… they are but the introductions, the aids, given to bring us into an atmosphere where words and thoughts are no longer necessary to lift us to an inner communion through which God’s grace reaches us.”

Ernest Holmes also spoke of this evolutionary process.  He advised us that “God comes to us as we come to him” meaning that how we see God and communicate with God depends upon our consciousness. “God is not a becoming God.  God is not an evolving God.  God is that which was, is, and will remain perfect, complete, happy and harmonious.”  Again, God is not evolving — humanity and its perception of God is evolving.

As stated, Holmes taught an argumentative style of prayer designed to shift our consciousness.  In other words, he gave us a method to meet us where we were in our awareness (desiring logic and reason and applied science).  He also taught another method called “realization”.  In this method, you did not need convincing, you went straight to the truth.  He defined realization as turning “to that Living Presence within… recognize It as the  One and Only Power in the Universe, unify with it.”  He added, “there is a point in the supreme moment of realization, where the individual merges with the Universe, but not to the loss of his individuality; where a sense of the Oneness of all Life so enters their being that there is no sense of otherness.”

Spiral Dynamics tells us that humanity is making a great leap in consciousness.  As we step into the second tier of awareness, we are able to see the entire spiral below us and value each level and stage as being necessary for our perfect unfoldment.  We see the interconnectedness of all of nature, we understand its natural systems and flows (yellow and turquoise memes).  We begin to see our individual self is part of a greater Self… the conscious, spiritual whole… where everything is part of one great living system… where we value all religions and all spiritual paths, seeing their necessity to bringing us to this point on our journey… where we live and wonder, awe, unity, harmony and love.

My wish is that as you have read through this, you have stepped outside our evolutionary path for a moment in your awareness and witnessed it from a higher level where you can see its beauty and perfection and view where you are along the road.  Hopefully, you have glimpsed both the path you have walked spiritually and the road that lies ahead.  Evolution’s arrow is returning us all back home.  Our consciousness is evolving back to unity with the divine.  Your next step calls you.  Surrender to your evolution.

Mark

Love Shines its Light in All

So, where is “love” in Ken Wilber’s AQAL model which we have been exploring the past 2 days?  On our first day (What the Heck is Integral Theory and Why Should I Care?) we looked at why I find it interesting and how it can be useful to our intentions for the highest future.  Yesterday (Integral Theory Made Simple) we looked at the nuts and bolts of the AQAL model.  Today we move beyond the intellectual aspect of integral (the ”head”) and down into the “heart”. 

This question swirled around in my mind after a recent meeting I attended. On that evening, a gentleman was giving an overview of Ken Wilber’s work and his AQAL model. In addition, he and an assistant were also attempting to cover Spiral Dynamics as a part of the presentation. Knowing a bit about both subjects and having taught them both, I listened not only to the content but the manner of their presentation to see if I could glean a new way of describing things. I also thought about each of the questions from the audience and considered  how I would respond.  Generally, I was fairly pleased with my internal answers.

It was the question on “love” in today’s title that stopped me dead in my tracks. The answer given by the instructors seemed somewhat incomplete or unclear. As for myself, although some general thoughts came to mind, I realized I was going to have to think more on the issue. So, without checking in with Wilber’s writings to see what he says, I gave it some thought and here is where I am at the moment: 

As most religions and mystics have claimed, God is love. What is love, though? Although I am sure there are lots of writings out there to define it (including a couple of my own that have discussed love in recent weeks!), I would at this moment say that love is some feeling that comes from within us that seems to percolate out of our essence and in our awareness is directed out beyond us. This feeling can seem to overwhelm us at times. It moves us to sense of connectedness for which there are no words which even seem to adequately describe what we are feeling. We do know that the feeling is positive and something within us calls us to experience it more and more. 

This feeling’s outward direction tends to lead us into focusing on certain specific things in our environment to which we attach the feeling. In early life, our feeling of love is directed to our parents and caretakers, our family, our pets, those things in our immediate environment. Later in life, we “fall in love” with one or more significant others who we hope will walk through life with us. Still later, many have children who become the objects of their love. Although most of us keep this attachment of the feeling of love to others in our lives, at some point we also expand beyond those in our lives to a broader sense of love. Yes, the description here obviously relates to the movement through the moral stages of development…..from egocentric to ethnocentric to worldcentric and beyond…but we are also talking about a sense of love that begins to transcend people and be less specifically directed. We begin to love our experiences, our life, our sense of something transcendent, and recognizing that everything out there that we are “loving” is also a part of inside us, we begin to love ourselves as a part of that Oneness.

Ultimately, we begin to realize that love is a gift from Spirit. The ability to experience love was placed within everyone of us. We were given the free will to choose in this life how to use and express this gift. We can express it in only a limited manner if we choose, although generally such choices are not totally “conscious” ones. Such limited uses may have us not express love or only express it with a few people. We may never reach a sense of feeling love for the world and everyone in it. We may never sense a love of Spirit. We may never love ourselves. However, the possibility is always there. 

What is the ultimate purpose of this gift? In a sense it relates to the old story about Spirit looking for a place to hide our Truth or Essence and then after giving up on placing it anywhere in the world “out there” ends up hiding our Essence within us. Love then becomes the “clue” Spirit gives us to guide us where to look. Love feels good and grabs our attention. We want more of it. We follow its path. It takes us to other people and things and events and ultimately to Life, to Spirit, and back to where Spirit was hiding all along, within us.

But what really is Spirit? Wilber tells us that the term along with “spiritual” can have up to six different meanings: (1) God, consciousness, ground of all being. (2) The conscious energy of life such as prana, qi, Holy Spirit, etc. (3) The higher levels of development in every line where we experience some transpersonal sense that we might label “spiritual”. (4) A specific “spiritual” intelligence line of development through which we grow. (5) Peak numinous experiences or states of consciousness that can be called “spiritual”. (6) Finally, “Spiritual” can refer to a special attitude involving love or compassion or wisdom. 

So where is love in AQAL? 

Love is part of this special attitude that we label spiritual. And again, God is love. At the highest level of development in each line or intelligence, we experience God. Therefore, God or Spirit is in everything. in all quadrants, lines, levels, types, and states. Hence, love is in all aspects of the AQAL model. 

Love is an evolutionary spiritual force. Love is the feeling that guides us and moves us towards our knowing of Spirit.

Blessings.

Mark

Map of the Quadrants

Today, we continue our 3 part series on integral theory.  Yesterday (What the Heck is Integral Theory and Why Should I Care?) we looked at why I was drawn to it and find it beneficial for us to understand.   Today, we are going to look at Ken Wilber’s AQAL model (which is at the center of Integral Theory but by no means conveys all aspects of it) and break it down into simple terms.  Most folks avoid it as it seems at first blush to be overly intellectual.  But, at its core, it is fairly simple to understand as you will see (but, yes, alas, a bit “heady”….tomorrow we take it to “heart”).

So let’s get into the details….Wilber’s AQAL map begins with four quadrants (consider simply a box that is divided into 4 internal boxes and you have the four quadrants!).  These are areas of our life we can stop and experience in any moment.

The upper left of the quadrants represents an individual’s interior (our sense of  “I”) which for humans is our sense of self and consciousness.  The upper right represents an individual’s exterior (or “It”) which for humans is our brains and all of our physical body.  The lower left represents a collective interior (or “We”) which for humans is our culture and worldviews.  Finally, the lower right represents the collective exterior (or “Its”) which for humans is our social systems and environment.

Wilber then looks at how we are evolving or growing.   This growth is occurring in all four of the quadrants, along what he calls “lines” of development.   Stated simply, these lines incorporate what we commonly refer to as “multiple intelligences”.   These are areas such as our intellect, emotions, morals, spirituality, musical ability, interpersonal skills, kinesthetic ability and so forth.

Each of these “lines” or “intelligences” appear to have a common path of development that all humans move through as they grow.   For example, humans have been shown to grow morally through the same stages.  Children are first concerned with only themselves (egocentric) but later expand their care and concern to their larger group (ethnocentric).  If they are able to transcend this level, morally they begin to care about all humans (worldcentric).

As we gain life experience and grow in an individual line or intelligence (such as this moral path), we attain and retain that growth in what Wilber terms “levels” or “stages”.  Egocentric is a level, ethnocentric is a level, etc.   Think of anything that you have learned and you can see that you progressed through certain levels as you learned more.  We do not have access to the “higher” levels of development until we have moved through the prerequisite experience of the “lower” levels.  However, once we grow into a level, it has a degree of permanency even though we can temporarily shift back to lower levels.

Next in the AQAL model,  “states” refers to our various states of consciousness such as awake, dreaming or deep sleep.  We also experience other “states” such as ones induced via meditation, spiritual experiences, peak experiences or drugs.  These “states of consciousness” can be experienced by everyone without any training and they are temporary and fleeting.

Finally, “types” refers to any kind of classification that generally speaking is not a state of consciousness or line of development.  We are either male or female.  We all have some type of indicator on the Myers-Briggs instrument.  We all have a specific enneagram type.  Normally, all types can have both a “healthy” or “unhealthy” (shadow) manifestation.

So that’s the model in fairly simple terms.  There are other aspects to Integral Theory that I have obviously omitted, but if you understand these key concepts, you can put it to use right away.

As mentioned yesterday, the value in the theory comes from  mixing and matching different concepts onto the map and seeing what it offers us.  The advantage is that in everything—from spiritual growth, to medicine, to business, law, psychotherapy, and so on—integral theory reminds you to consider how the various elements of Truth are at play in your life.  This way, Wilber says you “can more easily appreciate them, exercise them, use them.”  If you only consider something from one perspective, then you are limiting the  possibilities for attaining the highest solution.

To make this more real, let’s look at a brief example.  One area where the integral view has been employed immediately is in the world of medicine.  Traditional western medical treatment has generally focused exclusively on the upper right quadrant.  That is, it seeks to treat the individual’s body without concern for their inner world or the person’s relationships. Drugs, surgery and other body focused treatments are helpful, but are they the highest possibility for how we can provide health care?

Yet, looking at health care integrally calls us to consider the patient’s inner states of awareness (emotions, attitudes, spiritual beliefs, etc.) and  how they have a bearing on health.  Hence there has been an increase in treatments such as counseling, visualizations,  meditation and so forth which consider this.  An integral approach also requires we look at the impact of our interpersonal relationships (attitudes of the family, communications between doctor and patient and so on) and our social systems (impact of health insurance coverage).  Failure to consider the interplay of all of these factors leads to our providing health care that may not lead to healing the whole person.   If we are to look to what are the highest possibilities for providing health care we must look at all of these factors and how their interactions are at play in healing.

So then for any issue with which we are trying to determine the best course of action, the challenge is for us to expand our awareness beyond the myopic way we might normally have approached it simply because it’s the way “I know” or it’s the common practice (etc.) and to ask how we see it with fresh eyes and a new perspective.  It opens us to new solutions and a reinforces within us an awareness that  everything really is connected.  Now, let’s connect the head and the heart…..(tomorrow).

Mark

Bringing Things Together

Starting today, we’re taking a three-day look at Ken Wilber’s Integral Theory.  Today, I want to explain why the integral model appeals to me and how it can be helpful to all of us.  Tomorrow we will look at the basics of integral (which will be a bit “intellectually oriented”–sorry) and then on the third day will bring it back to the heart and see how love fits into the model.  I hope you find all of this beneficial.

Every once in a while, I bump into a concept or idea which makes me see things in a different light.  Integral theory is one of those ideas.  I’ve noticed that one common denominator that is generally present whenever I have an a-ha moment is that the information being absorbed builds upon things with which I’m already familiar.  There is this mixing and matching of different facts and ideas that brings me to see them in a new light.  It’s sort of like those clear acetate pictures that used to be in the old World Book Encyclopedias where you would overlay page over page and see how things like organs in the body were connected.  Each acetate picture contained its own bit of the whole, but when you put them together you understood better how things interacted.

This fascination with connections between seemingly unrelated aspects of life has been a pattern of mine as far back as I can recall.  Recently, I came across in my files an old college psychology paper from 1973.  The interesting thing about this paper was that I had taken Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (a theory that has always made a lot of sense to me) and combined it with my understanding of split brain theory as presented by Robert Ornstein in his book “the Psychology of Consciousness.”  Now, I don’t claim that the paper had any great revelations in it, but I do find it of note that one of the few papers I’ve held onto for all these years was an attempt to integrate two different concepts and see what truths were revealed.

A few years later, I started working for the government and took a class in creative problem-solving.  Although it’s now been over 30 years since this class, I still remember two key concepts presented by the instructor.  His first point was advice on how to be successful in life.  He counseled us to “find a human need and fill it” (still beneficial guidance!).  His second suggestion I retained was on how to be creative.  He offered that we take two things that seem to be unrelated, to combine them, and then look for the insights that came from the combination.

Later in life while I was on my spiritual quest, I discovered the writings of Ernest Holmes and his teaching called the Science of Mind and Spirit.  It resonated great truth for me.  Interestingly, Holmes’ philosophy was derived by his combining truths from science, religion and philosophy.  Therefore, it probably comes as no great surprise that integral theory caught my interest as it too combines wisdom from all branches of human knowledge to see what insights it will bring.

As a way of background, the term “integral” was first widely introduced in the early part of the 20th century by the visionary yogi Sri Aurobindo.  His integral yoga sought spiritual liberation by bringing about a divine transformation through practices that included all aspects of ones being including the physical body, intellect, emotions, and more.  Central to Aurobindo’s teachings was that man continued to evolve spiritually and that his evolution occurred in relation to the evolution of society.

Although other teachers and writers have contributed to the concept of an integral philosophy, it is Ken Wilber and his prolific writings starting in the 1980s and continuing up through the present that have become synonymous with the term.  Wilber’s idea was that all of the wisdom traditions had a core of truth running through them and the key was to find a means of putting these truths together in a useful way.  As Wilber started “mapping” the essential ideas from various sources, he hit upon the key idea that has organically grown in his writings into something called the  “AQAL model” (short for “all quadrants, levels, lines, states and types”) .  We will look at this model tomorrow.

But beyond a personal fascination with learning something new by combining things that appear to be separate, why else are we covering integral theory?  My stated goal with these writings and this website is to shift our awareness away from any limitations we might sense, either in our personal lives or on the planet, and towards our highest possible future.  In order to transcend our current problems, we must find new ways of thinking.  We must use all human wisdom. We must not keep our wisdom contained in neat boxes like college subjects and encyclopedia articles.  We must find truth by moving knowledge outside human imposed boxes.

Like those old world book acetates, we must explore not only each area of human knowledge individually to see what it offers us, but we must also overlay the acetates of that knowledge and gain new perspectives from their intersection.  I believe the integral model leads us to the highest solutions for the problems of our day as it calls us to consider all views of an issue.   If we search for solutions that neither considers all possibilities nor taps all existing human wisdom, then we will find neither the best approach nor our highest potential for humanity.  Our times call for  the new thinking which integral offers.

Finally, integral calls  us to consider how we are growing and evolving in all aspects of life.  The question then becomes—what kind of future evolution do we want? 

Mark

Who me?  Yes, you.  Deny it all you want, I’m here to tell you that you are a spiritual teacher.

Oh, I can hear your right now… you’re thinking “I’m no Billy Graham, Deepak Chopra, Wayne Dyer, Dalai Lama (or fill in the name that came to your mind).  Those guys are spiritual teachers, not me.”  Or, you might be thinking “how can I be a spiritual teacher?  I’m not sure that I even believe in God.”  You might even be conjuring up other objections.

Consider for a moment simply that you’re a teacher.  We all are.  We may not work in schools or teach classes, but by the very example that we set, we teach those around us.  Consider the role of parents as they model behavior that their children learn.  Consider your coworkers or your supervisors in some job from your career, and how you learned by watching their actions.  Just as you have learned by watching others, others learn by watching you.

Now consider that you have a spiritual worldview.  What?  You have some concept of what God or Spirit is or is not.  As you walk around in life, that concept molds your behavior whether you realize it or not.  As we’ve written about previously, there are three major worldviews about God in our current culture.  There is the traditional worldview that sees God as an external being such as an old man in the sky, who intervenes in our lives and judges us upon our death.  There is the modern worldview that frequently denies there is a God seeing all the world is simply the interplay of matter and forces.  Then there is the postmodern worldview that generally sees God or Spirit as an intelligent energy that permeates and connects everything.  I suspect your view of God is a variation of one of these three worldviews.

Now as you go about your business each day, you may or may not think much about God or Spirit.  But underlying your choices and actions are beliefs that are framed by this worldview.  This is generally easy to see if you are overtly religious or spiritual as you may bring God or Spirit into the equation in your decisions.  But even if you don’t believe in God or Spirit and hold to a strict materialist viewpoint, your actions model this belief by your attempt to manipulate physical life for personal gain.

So ultimately, we are all learners and we are all teachers.  There are those who we consider our teachers, either formally through classes, books, etc., or informally, such as influential people whose behavior we emulate.  We can all look in the direction of those from whom we learn and identify our teachers.  What we may not see as easily are those who look in our direction for their guidance.  I sort of envision it like a giant conga line, where we are moving forward in the manner of those in front of us yet not often thinking about those who are following us.

Many of us may be afraid to look behind and see who is there.  Awareness of this fact brings with it responsibility.  Are we being the teacher that we would desire?  But denying that we have followers who learn from us doesn’t change the fact that they are there.

Mystic Joel Goldsmith writes “all shall be ministers in one form or another, not to serve as ministers of the church but to minister where they are: in business, court, in the classroom, showing forth that same spiritual integrity they expect of their ministers, imparting the same spiritual light, exemplifying the same Christ-like qualities that transform this world into heaven.”  He calls us to claim this role.

So whether you deny it or not, you are a spiritual teacher.  The question then becomes, how does that knowledge change how you show up in the world?

Blessings, Mark

[This is part 3 of a 3 part article on the basics of Spiral Dynamics and their relationship to the Science of Mind.  An edited version of this article appeared in Science of Mind magazine's April 2008 issue.  Please read the previous posts to put the following in context.]

Ironically, Beck says that this second tier emerges in response to the chaotic life conditions of a modern world where all these “competing” worldviews battle for control.  With a higher awareness, we recognize that the solution to moving humanity up the evolutionary spiral is to help people meet the needs of their current life conditions.  We can only do this with an awareness of where they are on the spiral of life. Their meeting their current needs allows the natural evolutionary process to bring the necessary emergence into their lives of the next level of the spiral.  

Interestingly, it is in these second tier levels of existence (yellow, turquoise, and the continuous development of still higher ones) that Spiral Dynamics’ research finds human values emerging that are very much in alignment with the teachings of Science of Mind.

Spiral Dynamics shows that at these higher levels of consciousness we begin to understand the big-picture view of living systems and the evolutionary flow of life where chaos and change are a natural part of life. We begin to see the role that we each play in our own evolution.

At these higher levels, we begin to honor and respect others beliefs and worldviews without necessarily agreeing with them.  We acknowledge the connection between spirituality and physics.  We focus on and see the good in all living entities.  We expand our use of brain and mind tools for developing consciousness.  We see the individual self as part of a larger, conscious, spiritual whole that also serves the self.  And, we value the spiritual beliefs of all the other levels as we stand in awe of the overall cosmic order.

Spiral Dynamics shows us that as man evolves, so does his view of the divine.  The spirits that we saw in all of nature was a proper view for our purple mythic worldview.  The “old man God in the sky” who judged us on our death met the needs of a blue worldview desiring a life of control and rules.  Even the denying that God exists which frequently comes with a fundamental scientific worldview serves our needs at that level of understanding. God presents God to us in a manner that our level of consciousness can understand.   This is part of the natural process.  For as Holmes says, “Evolution is the awakening of the soul to a recognition of its unity with the Whole.” This is where both Science of Mind and Spiral Dynamics says our consciousness is evolving.

Using Spiral Dynamics in connection with Science of Mind gives me hope.  They both  affirm for me that there is a natural direction in which our collective consciousness is ultimately evolving.  And they both affirm for me that we will ever be evolving.  For as Holmes said,  “What we must avoid, however, is the confusion which arises from a belief in final revelations, from the belief that all truth is at last discovered, or that some one person or some one system of thought has delivered the last word.  There are no finalities in any science, any philosophy, or any religion.  Through the continual emergence of the creative Principle any last finality proves to be but the beginning of a new creative series.  This eternal spiral, finding its base in the everlasting Reality, will never cease to emerge.”

[This is part 2 of a 3 part article on the basics of Spiral Dynamics and their relationship to the Science of Mind.  An edited version of this article appeared in Science of Mind magazine's April 2008 issue.  Please read the previous posts to put the following in context.]

We do not all have the same life conditions, therefore we don’t all have the same worldview.  Ultimately, this is the crux of our differences.  By looking at the differing level of needs of individuals, groups, organizations, cultures or countries, we can see that they are often operating with different views of what is important.  This unfortunately is usually invisible to us.  For as Graves stated the error most people make  “is that they assume the nature of man is fixed and there is a single set of human values by which he should live.” 

Beck and Cowan suggested that these levels of existence are DNA-like codes called “value-memes” or “v-memes” which reside in the mind or brain.  They stated that their potential lies available to all of us and that they are “awakened” as life conditions outside us interact with these latent systems within us.  In Science of Mind terms we might consider that these v-meme codes are a part of the One Mind which is subjectively available to all of us.  Holmes reminds us that, “This Mind contains everything that was ever thought or perceived.  From it flow all ideas that are now inherent within it.  Any demand made upon it creates a new idea.”  Hence, the demands of new life conditions brings forth from within our subjective minds the creation of the new inherent worldview to deal with them.  This is part of our evolutionary nature.

So what are these Spiral Dynamic levels of existence and how do they show we have and are continuing to evolve?  Let’s look at them briefly.

First, early man was faced with life conditions of basic survival.  This “beige” level of existence gave rise to a worldview related to purely meeting biological needs. We became aware that we were distinct selves, began to sense cause and effect in the outer world, and developed heightened sensory abilities to best survive in that world.  As we began to meet these needs, we sensed a desire to foster group effort to support meeting our challenges.  Hence, there arose the second or “purple” level of existence wherein we formed tribes to create safety and stability.  Here,  there emerged the belief in mystical spirits in nature, a seasonal sense of time, and the development of myth and tradition.  However as needs were met at this level, the security of the tribe was disrupted eventually by the emergence of the personal ego and the sense that the self was more powerful than the tribe.

The third or “red” level of existence brought forth our power impulses; “might is right”; a  spontaneous, guilt-free, daring nature; desire for immediate gratification, and a lack of concern for consequences.   Historically, these were the powerful warlords creating a system of those in power and those who submitted to the powerful.  Yet as our needs were met at this level we began to reflect upon the unfairness of the system of haves and the have nots.  This gave search to our belief that there are forces guiding our destiny and a need to understand the underlying rules of life giving rise to the fourth or “blue” level of existence.  Here we find a desire for meaning and purpose, a sacrifice now for rewards later, order and rules, and a need to control impulses causing our newly found guilt.  Historically, this level gave rise to our major religions and our systems of laws.  However, as the needs of this level were met, we began to question the cost we paid in our loss of individual freedom due to absolutistic rules.

In the fifth or “orange” level of existence we begin to question these rules, authority and the delayed gratification of our needs.   We began to strive to conquer the world, unlock its secrets, and achieve personal material success.   We sought pleasure in life now, not in the future.  This level saw the rise of goal oriented planning, economic competition and the pursuit of scientific truths.  But alas, our material success did not give us true happiness and we began to turn inward to find our truth.  The sixth or “green” level of existence saw us begin to seek consensus for decisions, pursue humanitarian efforts and display a tolerance of personal differences.  We sought harmony through belonging, acceptance, community, unity, and understanding our inner nature.

These six “first tier” levels are characterized by the fact that if you look at life through one of them, you don’t recognize that there are other valid ways of looking at life.   We can see this playing out in the world today as the various religious fundamentalists (blue) have conflict with one another over whose “truth”, order and God is the “right” one.  We begin to understand why popular books written by scientists (orange) are driven to deny that God (or more accurately the God as defined by the blue level) exists.  We start to understand why often well intentioned humanitarian efforts (green) to assist the conditions in certain third world countries often are confiscated by the local leaders (red) who have not developed the conscience and rules that only come in the higher blue system.  

When we start using the map offered by Spiral Dynamics, we begin to see why people often don’t understand one another.   We recognize why the solutions developed at one level of thinking do not always work when they imposed onto the life conditions that exist at another level.  And you can’t just tell people to think differently because their thinking is generally appropriate for them given their experiences.  As Don Beck often says, “you can’t say don’t think that way, because they do think that way”.

So how do we begin to heal these differences?  It is only with what Graves called the “momentous leap” into “second tier” consciousness where you begin to see the validity of these different worldviews.  You come to understand not only that each person has the right to believe what they want, but that there is a good reason for why they believe as they do.  Their beliefs are serving to assist them with their current life conditions.  To put this in Science of Mind terms, we begin to see perfection and wholeness in all of life as it plays out before us.  Everything is in right and divine order even if it is not what we may personally choose.

[Concluded tomorrow]

[This is part 1 of a 3 part article on the basics of Spiral Dynamics and their relationship to the Science of Mind.  An edited version of this article appeared in Science of Mind magazine's April 2008 issue.]

One of the first things that attracted me to the Science of Mind was its view of God.  The idea that God is a power that moves in and through everything as that thing totally resonated with me.  I also loved that Ernest Holmes’ philosophy blessed all paths to God seeing how they serve the whole of life.  I often think that if everyone studied and applied the concepts of Science of Mind, we would bridge the differences of separation that appear to exist in the outer world.

But then I am hit by questions such as why do people think so differently?  Why is there so much conflict in the world between religions and between those of faith and science?  Why is it that people cannot see beyond their differences to their common unity?  Why do people have such drastically different visions of God?  In Spiral Dynamics, I found a theory that helps me answer those questions.  

Spiral Dynamics is a scientific theory derived from the work of Dr. Claire Graves in the early 1970s and popularized in the last 10 years or so by the work of Dr. Don Beck and Chris Cowan.  It describes a process by which humanity develops and moves through an upward spiral of emerging values or ways of looking at the world that come forth in response to our changing life conditions.   Applying the model can be useful (and has been) in the areas of breaking down cultural barriers, assisting in organizational leadership, meeting varying educational needs and more.

Moreover, I believe that understanding Spiral Dynamics allows us to enhance our use of Science of Mind principles.  We know that how people think creates their lives.  The better we understand how we and others think the way we do, gives us insight as to the underlying beliefs that may be limiting us.  It also opens us to compassion and understanding when confronted with the limited beliefs of ourselves and others.  And most importantly, Spiral Dynamics can help us bridge our differences in how we see God.  

Ernest Holmes repeatedly stressed that we were evolving and described where that evolution was taking us.  He stated both  “Evolution is the emergence of that which already is in form, in an ever-upward spiraling” and that “the whole process of evolution is to produce a being who can consciously co-operate with the Evolutionary Principle, which is Pure Spirit.”  Spiral Dynamics supports this.

Just as Holmes developed the cross-disciplined philosophy of Science of Mind based on the golden thread of truth he saw between science, religion and philosophy; psychologist Graves first developed his theory of human development based on years of research into human values that crossed into the areas of psychology, sociology and biology.  His data indicated that human beings exist at different “levels of existence” where we exhibit behavior and values that are characteristic of people at that level.   We learn our behavior and values in order to meet the needs of the life conditions which surround us.  Yet, as we meet our needs at one level of existence there emerges new life conditions which require us to grow. As Einstein said, “the significant problems we face cannot be solved at the same level of thinking we were at when we created them.” 

Spiral Dynamics maps a system of nine or more levels of consciousness or worldviews through which humans move in order.  For ease in describing the levels, they are color coded, although the colors assigned have no particular significance. These levels alternate between a focus on the external world and attempts to change it and a focus on the inner world and attempts to come to peace with it.   When charted, this pattern of evolutionary consciousness resembles a spiral.  New life conditions bring new levels of thinking which bring new life conditions in an ever repeating pattern.

[Continued tomorrow....]

What the heck does that mean?  I guess I’m asking is what comes to us through our consciousness a true reflection of the world?  Or, is it somehow colored by factors of which we are generally not aware?

I’m sure most of you know that what is delivered to our consciousness by our senses is simply a limited snapshot of what is going on around us in the physical world.  Obviously, we only hear a small range of potential sounds and see only a small sliver of the light spectrum.  Dogs howl at sounds we cannot hear.  Our skin burns when we are outside on a cloudy day from ultraviolet rays cannot see.

Even within the sensory inputs that are within the range of our physical senses, we tune out most of it as unneeded background noise.  Our consciousness delivers to our awareness only those sensory inputs that are deemed important.  Simply consider those times when you’ve been in a crowded room and tuned out all the noise but immediately came to focus upon your name being spoken across the room.

So yes, there is a lot going on around you of which you are unaware.  Even so, can we rely on the validity of that which is both delivered to our senses and then delivered to our awareness?  More and more science is telling us no.  Studies have shown that our awareness is colored by our history, our background, our worldview.  These factors interpret our sensory input invisibly.

But what about the information that comes to us from beyond our senses?  What about that “inner knowingness”?  What about intuition?  What about spiritual experiences such as those received during meditation?  Can’t we trust those to be true and real?  Unfortunately, the answer according to Integral philosopher Ken Wilber is no, we cannot count on these experiences to be untainted either.

Wilber says that the failure to consider the extensive evidence that shows how our subjective personal reality is constructed by intersubjective cultural connections leads us into naïvely believing that there exists one purely objective, pre-given world for all to experience free of any cultural bias.  One of our greatest mistakes he believes is that we inaccurately think that our inner experience, no matter its original source, is a pure reflection of reality. 

The reality Wilber says is that no matter how much we meditate and develop our consciousness there will always be invisible structures which play a role in constructing our consciousness awareness.  Without an awareness of the impact of these structures, we may think something is ultimate truth when it is not.  Some of these structures include linguistics, cultural beliefs, and our level of development on what Wilber calls “lines of development.”  A simple way to think about these lines is like multiple intelligences… cognitive, social skills, moral, emotional, etc. will speak more of this at a later time (or you can go Google “integral lines of development”).

What I want you to consider for a moment is this….you are born on the planet and you are growing… not only physically, but that there are aspects of your being within you and your consciousness which are also developing through various stages… and these inner states of consciousness generally settle into one stage which then becomes predominant in “coloring” your awareness of life. 

One model which has been helpful to me in understanding these stages of development has been Spiral Dynamics.  An understanding of this model will help you better see how these invisible structures are at play. For the next few days, we will look at Spiral Dynamics and its relationship to the Science of Mind. I hope you will find it as fascinating as me!

Mark