| RAJGOPAL NIDAMBOOR
Human proclivity to grasp complicated
characteristics into a combine of "we-contra-others"
should, perforce, be resolved as erroneous in our macrocosm
of shades and the perpetual. It's a facet that is more than
dangerous in the context of our anthropological penchant for
assessment: of "we-contra-others" and/or "righteous-versus-evil"
medley.
The classy doctrine
of duality, expounded by Madhvacárya, the proponent
supreme of the Dvaita [Dualistic] School of Indian philosophy,
is not only based on the utility of analyses, but also the
reliability of reason. It is a concept that is more than focused
in its broad expanse -- perforce, much more systematically
-- in defending its tenets. It's both logic and dialectics.
It's also realistic, and even idealistic. It is more than
a doctrine that believes in the multiple character of ultimate
reality, where matter, time and space are all recognised as
in[ter]dependent entities. Its principal thrust, apparently,
lies in its palpable conception of atoms, where all atoms
have taste, colour, smell, and touch: one that alludes, most
notably, to the fact that atoms may differ in their qualitative
structure. To draw an example: air has just one attribute:
touch; while fire has two: touch and colour; water has three:
touch, colour, and taste; and, Earth has all four, including
smell.
A certain disposition for reflection in
repeated branching, or dualities, may, likewise, rest deeply
within human nature itself. As philosopher Protagoras once
said: "There are two sides to every question, exactly
opposite to each other." Add to that a supplementary
dimension of human predilection, and you have a very sublime
prospect in hand: of corporeal adaptability, and its resultant
possibility, for surmounting such fundamental shortcomings
by way/s of knowledge.
Human proclivity to grasp complicated
characteristics into a combine of "we-contra-others"
should, perforce, be resolved as erroneous in our macrocosm
of shades and the perpetual. It's a facet that is more than
dangerous in the context of yet another anthropological penchant
for assessment: of "we-contra-others" belief that
could also quite nonchalantly become "righteous-versus-evil."
Such a scenario could even smack of eccentricity: of a set
oddity, triggered by our own sense of resentment, including
ethnic explosion, juxtaposed by a fulsome sheath of oblation.
Call it martyrdom, or what you may!
Yes, the accidental and fundamentally
optional character of developmental confines has sadly been
propelled, and also made "natural," by our inclination
to build dualities for the sake of dualities. To draw one
example: science versus art, the most distinct among such
dichotomies. What's more, thanks to our own fancy for insularity
and narrow-minded structures, such a deceptive demarcation
becomes amplified as two, largely non-communicating, sides
that develop distinct cultural traditions: to arouse shared
conventions, and even derision.
Let's now take a look at the context with
a tint of divergence -- or, fluid construct. Most altruistic
individuals, with a few exceptions, don't have much respect,
unlike scientists, or technologists, for using pictorial representation
in their oration. It is not that they don't appreciate the
fact that the written and the spoken language, be it English
or a local language, is different. That a select few can read
well in public also makes them different: to conveniently
mock at the darkness in the auditorium even before they begin
their "salvo" with words, not pictures and/or illustrations.
Which only explains why archetypes spin an exceptionally cogent
cusp between art and science with a common ground of methods
for tangible artistic innovation, and the scholastic probity
of combined nourishment for all types of human creativity.
They generally motivate accordance for a collective strut.
It needs to be, therefore, understood that both dominions
meet opposition in education. If only art and science could
join hands for common methods in thinking, innovation, and
historical achievement -- rather than emphasising on our disparate
substrates and trying to profit from the differences in playing
a cipher-aggregate game at the other's expense -- then we might
truly dangle together rather than hover individually.
Innovations, of course, cannot be neatly
slotted into either camp, but they can only be understood
as a reinforcing unification of goals usually equated between
the two realms of Rudyard Kipling's motif "never-the-twain-shall-meet."
Aside from that, the standard examples of Leonardo da Vinci
and other "Renascence" personages have been correctly
and fairly cited. But, our best cases should not be sought
in an earlier age that did not recognise our modern disciplinary
boundaries or even possess a word for the enterprise now called
"science." If we only look at 20th-century figures
that endured the invectives of scepticism and delusion for
working in both domains simultaneously, we can make our major
validation in more instant expressions.
There are a number of examples of innovators,
referred to as "artists," who used the tools of
their trade to make discoveries that had eluded official "scientists"
within their own parochial world. In the 18th century, the
Dutch artist Camper, for example, established rules for depicting
characteristic differences in the physiognomies of human groups
-- after he noticed that many Renaissance paintings of the
Three Kings had illustrated Balthazar, the black magus, as
a European painted dark, rather than a native of sub-Saharan
Africa. Reason: European artists could find few African models
at the time.
At the beginning of the last century,
the celebrated American artist and amateur ornithologist A
H Thayer, for instance, discovered the adaptive value of counter-shading
for making a three-dimensional object descend into invisibility
because counter-shaded organisms often seem totally flat,
or two-dimensional, against their background. It's a solution
that had eluded scientists! Interestingly, however, it seemed
starkly clear to one artist who had spent his life promoting
the opposite illusion of making flat paintings look three-dimensional.
Additionally, it was another great artist's work that led
to important advances in naval camouflage. It's an idea whose
time had come: to save innumerable lives in modern armed conflicts.
But, what could be more precious, or more difficult, than
such a conceptual field of study? Indeed! It is, therefore,
more than imperative that we need to access all the tools
at our command -- even when linguistic/sociological convention
bundles out these widespread mental tendencies among non-communicating
disciplinary camps -- to triumph in this adamantine, yet most
rewarding, of all cerebral pursuits.
It would also be interesting to note that
we are always in awe with the grandeur and immensity of our
Universe -- in spite of the fact that we sometimes tend to
forget that it is made bit by bit, through apparently not-so-significant
interactions. Call it leela, the never-ending divine
play, in which all of us -- stars, microbes, leaves, mountains,
space, the Homo sapiens etc., -- are both dancers and
the dance, or what you may, one inescapable fact endures:
the interconnectedness of things, a unity of a vast multiplicity.
The concept of interconnectedness also
extends to the human body: the mind has consciousness; the
body being simply matter in motion, even though the two may
not be distinct. Because, it's the mind that moves?! To illustrate
the idea with an Eastern aphorism:
"Is it the flag that moves, or
is it the wind that moves?"
"No," answers the Zen Master,
"It is the mind that moves."
Consciousness, as noted scholar-physicist,
Evan Harris Walker, avers, is also something that exists in
its own identity. It may, therefore, be construed that it
is quite distinct from all other objects, processes, energies,
and even realities, the physics of science would reveal. More
so, because, physicists do not mean anything that constitutes
the substance -- and, what is meant by the term, consciousness.
It is a complex credo, yes -- one that is best grappled with
the comprehension of our Zen mind -- especially with our analytical
brains just before the endeavour to achieve such abstraction
goes beyond our mental capabilities.
All the same, it may just as well be analysed
that all physical things are measurable, or built on measurable
things. For instance, space is quantifiable; time is measurable.
However this maybe, we cannot hold an answer with a similar
yardstick vis-à-vis consciousness. Consciousness characteristics,
such as pain, cannot be measured directly by the use of any
measuring device known to science. If this isn't a dualistic
postulate, what is? More so, because, consciousness is real
and non-physical, but it exists. It also unifies and constrains
us all as individual beings. What's more, it orders space
and time out of chaos and random events.
What about knowledge -- or understanding? Madhvacárya, for one, to use a classical premise, thought
of knowledge as being relative, not absolute. In so doing,
he spurned the Universal as a natural consequence: of a principal
sense of belief, or the uniqueness of a particular person
or a thing. To know a thing, said Madhvacárya, is to
know it as distinct from all others in the general sense,
and from some in a specific way. Mere appearance, Madhvacárya
also related, wasn't reality, while objective experience was.
It's a theme song that Immanuel Kant espoused -- much later.
Not only that. Madhvacárya also maintained the simple
fact that things are transient and ever-changing does not
mean they are not real. And, so he opined: every new relation
changes or modifies the substance to some extent; greater
in some, less in others.
As Fritjof Capra, one of the world's foremost
theoretical physicists, puts it in his landmark book, The
Web Of Life: "[This] new paradigm implies that epistemology
-- understanding of the process of knowing -- has to be included
explicitly in the description of natural phenomenon..."
Reason? Systems, according to Capra, are all interdependent.
They also encompass a web of relationships, including nature,
with a corresponding network of concepts and models, none
of which is any more fundamental than the others... This novel
mode of thinking, Capra also contends, recognises that all
scientific concepts are limited and approximate; and, that
science can never provide any complete or definitive, or total,
understanding. According to Capra, the process of living is
not the world, but a world: one that is always dependent on
interdependent structures, including the genetic information
encoded in the DNA.
Do I dare
Disturb the universe?
I have known them all already,
known the evenings, mornings,
afternoons,
I have measured out my life
with coffee spoons.
--
T S Eliot
To take a dekko at yet another
construct, language -- language as metaphor. Language, it need
not be over-emphasised, arises from our frame of reference:
of how we position what we want to communicate. The deduction
is obvious. If our chassis of referral is to become more efficient,
our language needs to reflect that -- like a mirror. In the
past, the matrix of reference was that of a presumed, objective,
and pre-existent reality. It also reflected and imitated such
a reality; and, even duality. Today, language is increasingly characterised by a major emphasis on rethinking -- of its nature,
role, and function.
Language, according to the German philosopher
Martin Heidegger, conveys not only information but also commitment.
Heidegger always reckoned that language was not about describing
a separate world that existed out there. His contention, in
today's context, was clear. If we were to eliminate language,
the ubiquitous computer a worker assembled would be reduced
to a nonsensical object. To quote Fernando Flores, a Heidegger
"protégé:" "A human society operates
through the expression of requests and promises."
That's not all. Complexity thinkers Howard
Sherman and Ron Schultz, for instance, contend that many organisations,
and individuals, use language as simile in the description
of narrative, or storytelling. "These language-based
ways of communicating and feeding-back information,"
they further emphasise, "are in line with pragmatic philosophy."
They argue that while business and/or management, for example,
may not have truly loved stories, all right, science's novel
attempts to lighten language to its simplest form -- an equation
-- has now helped it to rediscover the power of story to convey
it.
Flashback. The early works of philosophy
and knowledge were all written in a language that was almost
metaphorical, mythological, and even evocative. Plato, for
instance, didn't write treatises. He wrote dialogues. And,
Madhvacárya, in a totally different epoch, wrote treatises,
not dialogues. Because, language as a tool of communication
had matured -- and, there was a very deliberate effort to liberate
it from mythology/metaphorical allegory? Yes. Not only that.
Language had also begun to construct a more profound, cogent
grammar, not to speak of the processes of analyses and conditions
of intelligibility for all discourse.
It goes without saying that language is
a response to needs that arise from contacts with objects.
It's subjective too. Suppose it was the other way around --
one that was modelled for the world to fit in? Just think.
Fortunately, in practice, you just don't have such a paradox.
For one simple reason: there is no means of representing thoughts
outside language, except, of course, with the help of some
other means of expression, like art, or calculus, which is
also a form of language, no less. So, there it is! Of one
primal reason why everyone is familiar with that timeless
idea -- that it's your language that determines the
way you think! Language, as one wise soul put it, is an instinct,
an innate power of the mind. And, silence? It is more than
a part of speech: a void of mystical experience, not just
formed by language, but also induced by it.
There is more to language than what meets
the eye/ear/mind. If Aristotle, to cull a classical model,
reduced language to its essences and a whole new possibility
for the power of language, Galileo, for one, made the distinction
between primary and secondary qualities in language -- one,
which had geometric properties, with the other that did not.
The rest is history, what with the likes of Descartes, Newton
et al "masterminding" some incredible things
in comparison to their predecessors. Which also brings us
to a notable allegory: of today's thought returning to early
sources.
Language today seems to have brought a
profound balance, a wonderful analogy between Descartes and
Einstein. What's more, our language today, does not, in anyway,
reduce anything. Instead, it now includes everything -- scientific
or not. Maybe, we have got to accept that there is a very
peculiar dualism at work here. Yet, its profound analogy is
immanent. We are also now talking of concepts. We are talking
of ideas. We are also talking of experiences, behaviours,
sensations, intentions, feelings etc., Most importantly, we
are also communicating ideas through our experiences, and
stories. And, the idea -- language as similitude -- is, doubtless,
critical to us all... It is, in other words, language's very
own monumental feat of virtuosity, or vitality, and a magical
carpet of the narrative.
Which brings us to a vital chapter from
one of the most persuasive books of yore, The
Structure Of Scientific Revolutions, by T S Kuhn, who connected
the developmental cleft between visual illustration and hypothetical
representation when he used the famous gestalt delusion of
the duck-rabbit as a fundamental emblem for the definition
and character of scientific transformation. In his own words:
"It is as elementary prototype/s for these transformations
of the scientist's world that the familiar demonstrations
of a switch in visual gestalt prove so suggestive. What were
ducks in the scientist's world before the revolution are rabbits
afterwards."
It is, in sum, a perfect illustration
of duality as a wide postulate, or cosmological scheme, for
the emergence of the world, and the word -- as
we know them now -- as reality.
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