Biocentrism And The Existence of God
http://www.robertlanzabiocentrism.com/biocentrism-and-the-existence-of-god/
All human knowledge is relational. What is light without dark? Good without evil? Perhaps free will and determinism, order and chaos, something and nothingness, are simply different sides of the same circle of scientific logic. As science has penetrated the atom, we’ve discovered that solid matter consists mainly of empty space. We’ve discovered that inert objects, such as rocks, consist of particles whirling round each other trillions of times a second. Likewise, believers and nonbelievers in God may both be right, just traveling the same circle in opposite directions.
All human knowledge is relational. What is light without dark? Good without evil? Perhaps free will and determinism, order and chaos, something and nothingness, are simply different sides of the same circle of scientific logic. As science has penetrated the atom, we’ve discovered that solid matter consists mainly of empty space. We’ve discovered that inert objects, such as rocks, consist of particles whirling round each other trillions of times a second. Likewise, believers and nonbelievers in God may both be right, just traveling the same circle in opposite directions.
All human knowledge is
relational. “Discordant opinions,” said Emerson “are reconciled by being seen
to be two extremes of one principle.”
Of course, there have been
myriad conceptions of God since the dawn of civilization. There are the
Abrahamic conceptions of God, including the monotheistic God of Judaism and the
trinitarian God of Christians. In Buddhism, God is almost non-theist. In fact,
conceptions of God vary so widely there’s no clear consensus on the definition
of God. In short, believers believe God has an incorporeal (immaterial)
existence, and that there’s an afterlife. Atheists believe in a strictly
corporeal (material) world, and it’s bye-bye when you die.
According to biocentrism, a
new “theory of everything,” the material and immaterial worlds are co-relative.
Life and consciousness represents one side of the equation, matter and energy
the other. They can’t be divorced; split them and the reality is gone. Although
the current scientific paradigm is based on the belief that the world has an
objective observer-independent existence, a long list of experiments shows the
opposite. Consider the double-slit experiment: When scientists watch
particles pass through two slits in a barrier, they behave like bullets and go
through one slit or the other. But if you don’t watch, they act like waves and
go through both slits at the same time. How can a particle change its behavior
depending on whether it’s watched or not? Biocentrism maintains reality is a
process that involves our consciousness.
We think life is just the
activity of atoms and molecules – we live awhile and die. But biocentrism shows
that if you add life to the equation, you can explain some of the biggest
puzzles of science. For instance, it becomes clear why space and time – and the
properties of matter itself – depend on the observer. How
can entangled particles be instantaneously connected on opposite sides of the
galaxy as if there’s no space or time between them? And how can events in the
present affect those in the past? Recently, scientists sent particles into an
apparatus and showed they could retroactively change something that had already
happened in the past (Science
2007). Biocentrism says these phenomena occur because space and time aren’t
just “out there,” but are tools of our mind. Remember you can’t see through the
bone surrounding your brain – everything is woven together in your mind.
In the end, life is motion
and change, and is only comprehensible through a biological concept of time.
Motion is possible through the representation of time. “No concept, no matter
what it might be,” said Immanuel Kant, “could render comprehensible the possibility
of an alteration … for instance the being and the not-being of one and the same
thing in one and the same place.” God, too, lives in action and is a relational
concept, both existing and not-existing at the same time. “Discordant
opinions,” said Emerson “are reconciled by being seen to be two extremes of one
principle, and we can never go so far back as to preclude a still higher
vision.”
Those who believe in God
believe in an afterlife. Nonbelievers believe death is the end. Biocentrism
reinforces the primacy of consciousness found in the work of Kant, as well as
Descartes, Berkeley, Schopenhauer and Bergson. Without consciousness, space and
time are nothing. At death, there’s a break in the continuity of space and
time; you can take any point as your new frame of reference and estimate
everything relative to it. Like the particles that can pass through two holes
at the same time, you can consider yourself both alive and dead, outside of
time.
According to nonbelievers,
you simply die and rot into the ground. The universe continues to tick along
like a clock; and in a few billion years, the sun will expand into a red giant,
devouring all the inner planets, including the Earth. In one scenario, the
universe will reverse its expansion, growing hotter until everything is crushed
out of existence. Some theorists say the universe may bounce back into
expansion in a “Big Bounce,” and so on indefinitely. In this view, the Big Bang
was simply the beginning of one, say, 20-billion-year cycle time. We might be
living in the trillionth universe (or any of an infinite sequential universes).
Some say this oscillating model is consistent with the Buddhist worldview.
Although speculation, it provides a sense of scale: If it takes a gazillion
cycles to be reborn, that’s only 70 years out of what (in terms of human
comprehension) is essentially infinity — the mathematical equivalent of
materialistic death.
In contrast to the old
mechanical worldview, biocentrism maintains that time is a form of animal
intuition, not an object that ticks along independent of the observer. Without
consciousness, the passage of time is meaningless. From this viewpoint you
never die (see “Is
Death the End?” and “Does Death Exist?” for
development of this idea).
The implications of this
were clear with the loss of my friend Bill Caldwell, who died over the holidays
of a heart attack after golfing. Bill was CEO of Advanced Cell Technology
(where I work), and one of the most decent human beings I’ve known. He
struggled against the last day to cure human disease. When the company almost
folded, Bill was the only other officer who didn’t jump ship. He refused to
give up and believed we could make the world a better place for millions
suffering from horrific diseases. Indeed, a few weeks ago we received FDA
approval to carry out the world’s first clinical trial to use embryonic stem
cells to try to prevent blindness. Accepting responsibility for the hopes of
patients, Bill said “We do not intend to let them down.” My regret is that
someday patients will benefit from stem cell therapies, but will never know the
sacrifices that Bill and his wife, Nancy, made for their well-being.
At the viewing, Nancy
leaned over the casket, tears streaming down her face. She was with Bill at
every step. When the company couldn’t make payroll, she used her own money to
pay the employees. It seems like yesterday I was at their wedding dancing with
Nancy under the stars in her flowing gown. As Nancy guarded over Bill’s body,
surrounded by majestic floral arrangements, I recalled the words of Loren Eiseley:
“There remained in his garden only the dried husk of an old plant among flowers
reaching for the sun.” But I knew that God or no God, that somewhere outside of
our primitive thinking – of any particular spatio-temporal possibility – that
Bill missed yet another golf game, and that he, Nancy, and I were sitting on
the beach with a bottle of Champagne celebrating our recent success.
Robert Lanza has published
extensively in leading scientific journals. His books “Biocentrism” and “Beyond Biocentrism” lay out the scientific
argument for his theory of everything.
Read more at http://www.robertlanzabiocentrism.com/biocentrism-and-the-existence-of-god/#48dRxWMOuf4j0CJb.99
Read more at http://www.robertlanzabiocentrism.com/biocentrism-and-the-existence-of-god/#48dRxWMOuf4j0CJb.99
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