Sunday, July 27, 2014

Awesome? An understatement...

“The tragedy of man is that he has developed
an intelligence eager to uncover mysteries,
but not strong enough to penetrate them.”
Hans Zinsser – Rats, Lice and History

Quickly…first impressions only:

       1.     What is the smallest thing you can imagine?
       2.     What is the largest thing you can conceive? 
       3.     Who is the oldest person on you know?
       4.     What does your best friend look like?
       5.     Where were the stove and refrigerator in the kitchen of your            home when you a teenager?

How long did it take you to ‘see’ the answer to each of these questions?  It doesn’t matter how old you are, I suspect the images came pretty rapidly to your mind…possibly as you finished reading the question.

A lot of things could be said about this, but the point here is the astonishing capacity our brains have to bring ideas…reflections really…of things ‘imagined’giving them as much credibility as though they were actually right in front of us.  Maybe the smallest thing you imagined was a grain of sand, an atom or a quark – which by the way is ONLY imaginable.  As an aside, a quark is so tiny that compared to an atom it would be a magnitude difference of the earth (atom) compared to a clenched fist (quark)! 

Maybe the largest thing was the Earth, Sun, Milky Way or Universe – which like the quark, can also ONLY be imagined!  You might have taken a moment regarding the appearance of your best friend, but were probably a bit surprised how almost instantly you were able to see the kitchen in your mind’s eye.

This little exercise happened so quickly and naturally, that you didn’t even think about what an astonishingly complex thing you just performed.  Considering you used 3-pound ‘computer’ residing inside a 7 to 8 pound box – including skin, eyes, muscles, teeth, tongue and ears – it is mind blowing!

The building blocks for this intricate system began when we were babies with ideas or impressions entering our sensory system – touch, taste, smell, sight, sound – from the outside, like sand in an hourglass, slipping in one ‘grain’ or notion at a time.

Initially, these ideas seemed isolated and disconnected, but like seeds planted in the ground, a lot was going on ‘under the surface’ – an unconscious germination, weaving together small patchworks of concepts that quietly interacted…taking on life…growing together in an ever increasing body of information. 

In the early cultivation process, it was not so clear what any of this ‘incidental’ educational programming meant, but as we began to mature, we learned to control the direction of that informational body’s growth finding ourselves attracted to different ideas, that became the world in which we now live…a world where we can imagine the smallest of elements and the largest of constructs by simply redirecting our thoughts.

When you take a moment to consider that from a fertilized egg combining our parent’s genetic code, the bodies that we inhabit were created.  Our minds matured into a few billion neurons (an estimate) interconnected in the liquid chemistry of our brains, generating electrical current, in enough of a coordinated way, to capture and retain ideas, sounds, tastes, touches and smells – accessed pretty much at will.  How does one find any vocabulary to describe the magnitude of this creation??!!  Amazing would be an understatement of the greatest degree.


A little perspective…

As astonishing as our bodies and minds are, look at this picture taken in 1990 from the Voyager 1 space probe as it was leaving our solar system.  It is a picture of the earth from a distance of 3.7 billion miles (6 billion km).  The image is called ‘The Pale Blue Dot’, and as you will note, without the arrow and inset, it would be almost impossible to see (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_Blue_Dot). 

The late Carl Sagan said,
       “Look…at that dot. That's here. That's home. That's us. On it everyone you love, 
            everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being 
            who ever was, lived out their lives. The aggregate of our joy and suffering, 
            thousands of confident religions, ideologies, and economic doctrines, every 
            hunter and forager, every hero and coward, every creator and destroyer of 
            civilization, every king and peasant, every young couple in love, every 
            mother and father, hopeful child, inventor and explorer, every 
            teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every "superstar," every 
            "supreme leader," every saint and sinner in the history of our species 
            lived there-on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam."

Today, as you go about your daily life, note the things around you – your car and roads upon which you drive…the buildings in your town…the airplanes that fly overhead…the computer you are using…your phone…your house or apartment. 
  

All of it…every single bit of it began as a thought in someone’s mind, which found a way to gather the resources from the earth (directly or indirectly) to then create it…not doubt impressive.

And yet…as incredible and intricately interacting our system of life is…we and the minds we have been given are little more than a tiny spot of moisture, on a infinitesimally small life supporting dot in a universe inconceivably complex.

When I think about this, my brain hurts and I find no words.  Maybe the Psalmest sums it up the best for me:

“When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers,
the moon and the stars, which thou hast ordained;
What is man, that thou art mindful of him?
and the son of man, that thou visitest him?”
- Psalm 8:3,4

How does one then find their place?  Maybe the words of Sri Nisargadatta provide a workable sense of meaning:

“Wisdom says I am nothing
Love says I am everything. 
Between these two, my life flows.”

- ted

1 comment:

  1. A wonderful addition to your blog, my friend. I think I'll send you an e-mail which tries to capture my astonishment at the rapidity and extent of the growth in the mental capability of my 18 month old great niece. From seed and egg to being capable of understanding the concept and meaning of language ... as in recognizing a question as such and knowing she is expected to respond with an answer. Astonishing.

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