Posts Tagged ‘reality’

But What Is Real? The Limits of Perception/Conception

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Originally posted on 05-19-07:

 

I ended yesterday’s post mentioning the importance of distinguishing fantasy from reality, which brings up a really big question: What is reality?

 

Which reminds me of the current installment of Visual Dharma on Tricycle’s web site, a video of a talk by Nyogen Yeo Roshi called “Seeing Through the Illusion.” He talks specifically about the kinds of illusion that are unavoidably built into language. A favorite subject of mine, so I’ll quote myself from an essay on free will:

 

Another benefit of language is that it allows us to unite groups of things with one term rather than having to refer to them by naming all their constituent parts. This benefit has a shortcoming in that it simulates a kind of unity that may not do justice to the true complexity of that to which it refers. It leads to our thinking that words refer to objects when no true object exists. The classic example of this objectification, this blurring of complexity, is the case of the visitor being given a tour of a “university” who complained that he had only seen a bunch of buildings. In fact, you cannot see a university, which might properly be considered to include not only the campus, but the instructors and staff, the students, the curriculum, and the history.

 

So one kind of illusion that arises, almost constantly, is in seeing “things” when what we are looking at or thinking about is a process or a summary of phenomena that is much more complex than language can describe. Language necessarily simplifies, and a more rigorous view of reality requires keeping that in mind.

 

The Roshi also makes a sweeping gesture to encompass his field of view and says that “all this” is illusory. Although it may not be what he intended, what that suggests to me is the limits of our perceptual apparatus.

 

Which brings to mind a book I read for the first time a few months ago by Robert Anton Wilson, called Quantum Psychology: How Brain Software Programs You & Your World. (In getting that link I saw that he died in January, and strangely, I felt a sense of loss I didn’t feel when my own father died.) He says, “…we see that most animals perceive as accurate a reality-tunnel of their local habitat as will statistically allow most members of that species to survive long enough to reproduce. No animal, including the domesticated primate, can smugly assume the world revealed/created by its senses and brain equals in all respects the real world or the ‘only real world.’”(p. 92)

 

So part of “seeing through the illusion” is to recognize that our perceptual apparatus is limited in its abilities. Even though our perceptual realm has been vastly expanded by technology, our initial capabilities limit the kinds of things we can even imagine looking for.

 

Not only are we limited in this way, but the limits of our sensory systems limit the kind of reality we can conceive of. For example, our technology allows us to measure certain behaviors of light that are particle-like, and others that are wave-like, but our brains have no way of conceiving a “thing” that would have both those kinds of behaviors. If this is true of light, a phenomenon we are capable of seeing, it suggests that there may be other phenomena whose very existence we can’t conceive.

 

Given all these considerations, it becomes clear that the totality of reality is likely to be much more than the limited realm we can perceive and think about, and to think otherwise is illusory.

 

This doesn’t mean that our reality is, in fact, unreal, or altogether illusory. Our perceptual reality is close enough to “the real thing” to give us what we need to know to survive on this planet for a few billion years—in one form or another. If you put your hand in the fire it will probably hurt.

 

But our perceptual/conceptual reality has its limits—visual illusions being one of the most fun examples—and appreciating those limits can improve our sense of humor. It can also help us to deal with our suffering more effectively, and eliminate much of it.

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How Real Is This

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The Beauty of Things as They Are; Reality vs. Fantasy

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Originally posted on 05-12-07:

 

I’m just getting around to the Fall, 2006 issue of Tricycle, and I find two articles with apparently similar but actually opposing views. One is called “Letting Go,” by Judy Lief—a worthwhile topic but I didn’t find the article particularly inspiring. The other is called “Born Again Buddhist,” by Clark Strand, and it seems to be about letting go—letting go of reliance on oneself—but in fact it is about clinging.

 

Clark’s story is about dealing with our inherent ignorance and uncertainty by coming to believe that we are saved by Amida Buddha. Saved from what? From ignorance and uncertainty. Do you see the irony in that? We are afraid because we cannot know the “ultimate” cause or outcome of anything, so we deal with that fear by coming to believe in the certainty of our salvation. We cling to the comfort of certainty, and invent something that can give it to us, regardless of the mental contortions involved.

 

I can sympathize with that. When I first stopped smoking pot, my world view was shattered. I was filled with anxiety to the point that I feared for my sanity. I decided that the only way I could deal with that was to believe that something in the Universe cared about me, so I invented my invisible friend, “Bubba.” Bubba was with me constantly, protecting and guiding me, and my anxiety subsided. I even began to experience excitement and happiness, but after nine years of Bubba, I realized that I was still comparing myself to other people and feeling inferior or superior, and that I was afraid of being undervalued, inconsequential. So I began looking for a better way. It has been a lengthy struggle, but I finally realized that the only security is in accepting reality as it is.

 

I think that perhaps the greatest asset of being human is also the source of our greatest difficulty, and that is that we can imagine things being other than they are. On the one hand, our imagination drives us to improve our situation, and on the other it leaves us disappointed that it isn’t better than it is. We can imagine a life without pain, disability, and death, and we want it; we struggle for it, but in the end death conquers all, whether from age, wear, and tear, or from hurricane, flood, earthquake, and asteroid. And we never know what will get us in the end.

 

The good news is that we can learn to be happy with things as they are, just by facing reality and accepting it as it is. Reality is not the cause of our unhappiness, it is our imagination, and our attachment to its creations, that cause our problems.

 

I have come to accept that if I continue sipping at my coffee, the cup will eventually be empty, and I can enjoy every drop even though I can imagine an endless cup. I have become convinced that I cannot eat all the pizza and ice cream that I want without having to carry extra weight around, and so I have learned to enjoy just their smells, and just the recollection of having eaten them, even though I can imagine an endless meal. My body is breaking down, but I can maintain it as best I can and enjoy its remaining capabilities, even though I can imagine endless youth.

 

We cannot be happy with reality unless we face it, welcome it, embrace it, and relish it.

 

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Just As It Is

 

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