26 January 2003, 11:48pm IST
Karan Singh.
Some years ago, I called upon the great scientist Prof S Chandrasekhar in Chicago and asked him how seers of the Vedas and Upanishads had two astounding insights that have emerged in modern science only recently. The first is the concept of anantakoti brahmanda, endless universes. The second is the concept of vast aeons of time through which creation passes, much like the ancient belief that a single day of Brahma is 4.32 million human years long, so that his one year corresponds roughly to the age of planet earth. When I suggested that perhaps this knowledge came to seers in enhanced states of consciousness, Prof Chandrasekhar seemed to agree. In Indic traditions, consciousness is not merely an epi-phenomenon of evolving matter, rather it is the prime principle that calls forth these millions of worlds. The great icon of Shiva Nataraja portrays this kinetic universe in which all things, from galaxies to sub-atomic particles, are in flux. The drum in Shiva's left hand represents creation, while the fire in his right hand represents its destruction in the cycles of time. Shiva's other two hands point to the possibility of individual realisation amidst cosmic chaos. One hand is raised in a gesture of benediction, while the fourth points to his upraised foot as the path of liberation. The question of consciousness and its evolution is one that has attracted some of the best minds in the world. In India, we have developed over the millennia systems of yoga which are surely the most integral exploration of consciousness ever essayed by humanity. Indian civilisation took a unique turn - our most creative minds turned the searchlight inwards towards the source of consciousness, and built an entire science based upon creative introspection. The yoga-sutras of Patanjali, for instance, are seminal guidelines for exploring the deeper recesses of our being. Post-Freudian movements in western psychology have gradually developed these deeper insights, notably with C G Jung and Transpersonal Psychology. The study of consciousness has now become a respectable area for intellectual and experiential exploration. Albert Einstein's famous remark that ‘‘science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind'', makes an important point. Before him, the Cartesian-Newtonian- Marxist paradigm of thought postulated an unbreachable dichotomy between matter and spirit. After Einstein and Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, quantum mechanics and extra-galactic cosmology, the situation has changed considerably. Science is in one of its creative periods where old barriers are breaking down and we can discern outlines of a convergence between science and spirituality. I use the term ‘spirituality' advisedly, because ‘religion' carries a lot of baggage, some of it negative. Spirituality transcends barriers of race, religion, creed and nationality. Seers of all great faiths have sought to describe what is essentially an indescribable experience, whether it is the Beatific Vision of the Christians, the Bodhichitta of the Buddhists, the Noor-e-llahi of the Muslims, the Ek Onkar of the Sikh gurus or the self-realisation of the Hindus. Clearly there are states of higher consciousness which are the heritage of the entire human race. This flows from the persistent tradition of the light that illuminates the universe - that of consciousness itself. It is awareness of this light in all human beings that alone can become the cornerstone of a harmonious global society. What is needed is a symbiosis between the inner and the outer, the quietist and the activist, and in the broader dimension, between science and spirituality.
(Extracted from Dr Karan Singh's inaugural address at the symposium ‘Science and Beyond: Cosmology, Consciousness and Technology in the Indic Traditions')
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