Archives for posts with tag: Ken Wilber

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

Haiti Opened Our Hearts

The news reports showing the devastation of the earthquake in Haiti saddened me. The people of that island country are in my prayers. My heart is open to the pain and sorrow which they are experiencing.

My heart is opened by this event, just as it was by the Indian Ocean tsunami, the destruction of New Orleans by Katrina, and similar natural disasters that have shaken the lives of so many people. I suspect yours was too.

Natural disasters such as in Haiti not only open our hearts but bring out the best in people in countries as they reach out to help the people in need. This should always be our first response. Yet in time, tragedies such as this cause us to pause and reflect upon their greater meaning for our lives and the life of the planet.

Some people see such events as being consciously caused by a judgmental external God in retribution for human errors. I obviously don’t agree. My view of God or Spirit is not as an external being but rather an intelligence or consciousness or energy that permeates everything. This Spirit does not “judge” our actions. Comments by others regarding such acts being caused by a judgmental God simply reminds me that in the diversity of humanity there is quite a diversity in our worldviews. This diversity of thought is natural and to be understood from a higher perspective and not “judged” even when we disagree. If we were in their shoes and life experiences, we might see things the same way.

For me, there is a different and more positive message that we can take from such tragic events…simply stated, our perception of the world is shrinking, and our hearts with their care and concern for others are expanding.

It wasn’t too long ago that my perception of the world was that it was a bigger place than I sense it to be today. When the earth was “bigger” in my mind, natural disasters on the other side of the planet did not have the emotional impact that they do today. So much of technology such as pictures of Earth from space and the immediacy of television broadcasts from around the planet have served to expand my mental “neighborhood”. Now events around the world touch my heart like only tragedies in my city could do before. I know from discussions that many people feel the same way.

This is part of our spiritual evolution. Ken Wilber and his integral theory offer us a perspective here which might be useful. He points out that we are all evolving on many “lines of development”. For ease we might just consider these as different skills, abilities and intelligences that we all possess but have developed within us to a certain “stage” which will differ from person to person. For example, we all can play the piano, lift weights, and do mathematical calculations but not at the same level. One area in which we are all growing or evolving is in our care and concern for others which Wilber calls the “moral line of development”. Wilber also points out that we develop through these ‘lines” in four different “quadrants” of experience. These four areas can be sensed as we consider that we have an internal awareness of our thoughts and an external awareness of our bodies and other physical stuff. Then both our internal and external awareness occur within our individual singular world of “me” and in the collective relational world of “us”. (I, and others, have written on this elsewhere if you want to go into it in more detail.)

We might consider that as our collective external technology has evolved, such evolution has pushed us along our internal “moral line of development.” Scientific studies have shown that humans grow morally through the same sequence, generally settling into one moral way of looking at the world. When we are born, we care only about meeting our personal needs, and therefore are considered “egocentric”. As we grow up, the circle of people for whom we have care and concern expands to a broader and broader group. Here we are considered “ethnocentric”. Many people never get beyond some form of this level. Yet more and more people are expanding their circle of care and concern to all beings and to the earth at large. These moral levels are often called “worldcentric” or “kosmocentric”.

And, as we move up this moral developmental line, we sense it both internally as our hearts open and we feel empathy for others. And, we act externally from that higher view point by reaching out and sending relief and helping others that we might not have assisted in the past.

Therefore, when the time is right we might step back and view tragedies such as a Haiti in a broader light and see how they are serving our evolution. As we move through our experience of time, more of humanity senses the shrinking of the world. With this, more and more people will sense the expansion of their hearts and truly feel how we are all interconnected, and the Oneness of Life. And, that internal sense of our Oneness will out picture in the world by our treating others with dignity, respect and love….no matter who they are, where they live, or what they believe. That will truly be heaven on earth.

My heart and prayers are with the people of Haiti and all the emergency response workers who are serving there. May all of our hearts be open to sending them our love and support.

Mark