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The Marriage of Sense and Soul

The Marriage of Sense and Soul: Integrating Science and Religion is a 1998 book by American author Ken Wilber. It reasons that by adopting contemplative (e.g. meditative) disciplines related to Spirit and commissioning them within a context of broad science, that "the spiritual, subjective world of ancient wisdom" could be joined "with the objective, empirical world of modern knowledge". The text further contends that integrating science and religion in this way would in turn, "have political dimensions sewn into its very fabric".[1]

The Marriage of Sense and Soul: Integrating Science and Religion
Cover
AuthorKen Wilber
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectRelationship between religion and science
PublisherBroadway Books
Publication date
1998
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages240
ISBN978-0767903431

Importance edit

Underscoring how important the relationship between science and religion is to our unfolding world, Wilber explains that science "has given us the methods for discovering truth, while religion is the force that generates meaning". To illustrate this point, the author enlists his AQAL model to show how varying understandings of Spirit, from romanticism to idealism through postmodernism have over time, predicated humanity's own development in relation to the Big Three cultural value spheres of art (Upper Left quadrant), morals (Lower Left quadrant), and science (Right hand quadrants).

Overview edit

Part I: The Problem edit

As Roger Walsh notes in his review of the book, although there's "enormous variation from one religion to another there is also wide agreement" among academics that the Great Chain of Being can be found "at the center of virtually all major religions". Also, and because "the Great Chain of Being was" at one time "humankind's dominant worldview", "with the rise of modernity the West became the first civilization in history" to discard it.[2] In recognizing that "each senior dimension" of the Great Chain actually envelopes or enfolds "its junior" in a manner said to "transcend and include" the previous stage however, Wilber appropriates the term 'Great Nest of Being' in visualizing "a series of concentric spheres or circles" as a holarchy reaching from matter to mind to Spirit. This three-level scheme subsequently "show(s) up as the hierarchy of earth, human, and heaven" in "even the earliest shamanic traditions", and subsequently reappears with "the Hindu and Buddhist notion of the three great states of being: gross (matter and body), subtle (mind and soul), and causal (spirit)" [emphasis in original].[3]

Furthermore, where "the standard position of most classical religions and the religions of antiquity" had viewed science as "but one of several valid modes of knowing" having "an important and rightful place in the Great Chain of Being" alongside "theology and mysticism", this point of view "is now generally called epistemological pluralism". This perspective though too, according to Wilber, "was given perhaps its clearest statement by such Christian mystics as St. Bonaventure and Hugh of St. Victor: every human being has the eye of flesh, the eye of mind, and the eye of contemplation" [emphasis added].[4]

For this triple vision, man was endowed with a triple eye, as explained by Hugh of St. Victor: the eye of flesh, of reason, and of contemplation; the eye of flesh, to see the world and what it contains; the eye of reason, to see the soul and what it contains; the eye of contemplation, to see God and that which is within Him. Through the eye of the flesh, man was to see the things outside him; with the eye of reason, the things within him; with the eye of contemplation, the things above him.[5]

— St. Bonaventure, The Breviloquium, Part II, Chapter 12, No. 5

As Wilber notes however, the underlying 'problem' as posed has been further obfuscated by a set of ' which "in effect replace the eye of contemplation with the eyes of mind and flesh". Consequently, he further clarifies that "the eye of flesh is monological; the eye of mind is dialogical; and the eye of contemplation is translogical" [emphasis added].[6]

Likewise, but along with the Enlightenment, an entire set of values including "equality, freedom, and justice; representational and deliberative democracy, the equality of all citizens before the law; regardless of race, sex, or creed; political and civil rights (freedom of speech, religion, assembly, fair trial, etc.)"; all, gradually emerged. As a result, and because they'd "existed nowhere" on a large scale in "the premodern world", Wilber refers to these values and rights "as the dignity of modernity" [emphasis in original].[7] Subsequently, then, but pointing to the work of Max Weber and Jürgen Habermas, the book further contends that 'modernity' is chiefly defined by its "differentiation of the cultural value spheres" or the Big Three; "art, morals, and science; the Beautiful, the Good, and the True"; I (Upper Left quadrant), WE (Lower Left quadrant), and IT (Right hand quadrants) [emphasis added].[8] Yet, where this modern differentiation could be said to have begun "in earnest around the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries", "by the end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth the differentiation was already drifting into a painful and pathological dissociation".[9] Consequently, but in just this way, the Left-Hand or interior dimensions were ultimately "reduced to their Right-Hand or exterior correlates which utterly collapsed the Great Chain of Being, and with it, the core claims of the great wisdom traditions" [emphasis added].[10]

Part II: Previous Attempts at Integration edit

 
Immanuel Kant

Ascribing a recognition to Immanuel Kant of this "leveling and deadening of the modern monological collapse" however [emphasis added],[11] Wilber chronicles the philosopher's subsequent attempt to integrate "moral we-wisdom with scientific it-knowledge" [emphasis added].[12] From this vantage point, Kant's Critique of Pure Reason is described as an affirmation that "science alone gives cognitive knowledge, "real" knowledge, and all else is nonsensical metaphysics." Likewise, his second installment, Critique of Practical Reason ferreted humanity's moral dimensions in concluding that while "(m)en and women are not free as empirical objects—in the world of ITS . . . as ethical subjects, men and women are indeed autonomous" [emphasis in original].[13] Further pursuing this line of thought, but utilizing the moral rationale of "ought", Kant's third critique, Critique of Judgement begins by examining the realm of aesthetics in route to ascertaining; as Wilber paraphrases it, "that the interior "ought" of moral reasoning could never get going in the first place without the postulates of a transcendental Spirit".[12]

Consequently, but in the aftermath of Kant's contributions, the Romantics "began an intense effort to make the I-domain, the subjective domain—and especially the domain of aesthetics, sentiment, emotion, heroic self-expression, and feeling—the royal road to Spirit and the Absolute".[14] However, because "romanticism was a philosophical revolt against rationalism" the movement "fell violent prey to" what Wilber has termed, "the pre/trans fallacy [emphasis in original], namely, the confusion of prerational with transrational simply because both are nonrational" [emphasis added].[15]

Similarly, there also existed an ambiguity "between premodern and modern cultures" as to "the direction in which the universe" was said to be unfolding. Where a "time of creation" as recounted amongst premodern religions often entailed "a Great Spirit of one sort or another" creating "the world out of itself, or out of some prima materia", these traditions also commonly point to "a series of strange events" in which it was told, "either God began slowly to withdraw from humans, or humans withdrew from this God"; but generally depicting scenarios in which mankind inevitably "lost touch with the primal Eden".[16] Sometime during the modern era however, this "idea of history as devolution (or a fall from God) was slowly replaced by the idea of history as evolution (or a growth toward God)".[17] Thus, where history for premodern cultures was merely devolution, "one of the great announcements of the Idealists" asserted that "cosmic and human history" instead, was "most profoundly the evolution and development of Spirit".

Beginning then with Kant's assertion "that we can never know "the thing in itself", only the appearance or phenomenon that results when the thing in itself is acted on by the categories of the human mind" [emphasis added]; German Idealism shared much of its inception in "the notion that the world is not merely perceived but constructed." [emphasis in original] For them, "(n)ot naive empiricism, but mental idealism," was of essence in one's "perception of the world" [emphasis added]. In much this way, and to his credit, Johann Fichte is of special note in reasoning that "if you cannot know anything at all about the thing in itself" then ultimately, self-consciousness too is a social phenomena .[18]

Everything that from eternity has happened in heaven and earth, the life of God and all the deeds of time simply are the struggles for Mind to know itself, to make itself objective to itself, to find itself, be for itself, and finally unite itself to itself; it is alienated and divided, but only so as to be able thus to find itself and return to itself.[19]

— G.W.F. Hegel, Hegel's Lectures on the History of Philosophy, "Introduction – The Notion of the History of Philosophy"
 
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

Consequently, too, but in sublimating these same lines of thought, Wilber delineates three principal features of spiritual evolution:

1. Involution. This original "descent" of Spirit "is a forgetting, a fall, a self-alienation of Spirit".[20]
2. Evolution. In this "second major stage of development, Spirit evolves from objective Nature to subjective Mind" [emphasis added].[20]
3. Nondual Spirit. Spirit comes to know "itself objectively as Nature; knows itself subjectively as Mind; and knows itself absolutely as Spirit—the Source, the Summit, the Ground and the Process of the entire ordeal" [emphasis added].[21]

Thus, he subsequently notes that "for both Schelling and Hegel, Spirit goes out of itself to produce objective Nature, awakens to itself in subjective Mind, then recovers itself in pure nondual Spirit, where subject and object are one pure act of nondual consciousness that unifies both Nature and Mind in realized Spirit" [emphasis added].[21] Unfortunately, yet underscoring Idealism's remarkable percipience in discerning "the integration of empirical evolution with transcendental Spirit" as reflecting "Spirit-in-action"; "it possessed no yoga—that is, no tried and tested practice for reliably reproducing the transpersonal and superconscious insights that formed the very core of the great Idealist vision".[22] Furthermore, and "because the Idealists lacked a genuine spiritual injunction (practice, exemplar, paradigm), they were indeed, at least in this respect, caught in "mere metaphysics"". Consequently then, and "lacking the means of consistently delivering direct spiritual experience—Idealism in this regard degenerated into abstract speculations without the means of experiential confirmation or rejection" [emphasis in original].[23] Simply because "every holon has a Left- and a Right-Hand dimension, and therefore every holon without exception has an objective (Right) and an interpretive (Left) component" [emphasis added], postmodernism would ultimately assume "the great and nobel" aim of introducing "interpretation as an intrinsic aspect of the Kosmos" [emphasis in original].

Yet, and for "postmodernism, this moment of truth—every actual occasion has an interpretive component—was taken to absurd and self-defeating extremes" leading to a facile reasoning that since "(t)here is nothing but interpretation", dispensing "with the objective component of truth" at times, merely serves as practical convenience.[24] Disconcertingly though, "(t)his extreme denial of any sort of objective truth" has subsequently amounted "to a denial of the Right-Hand quadrants altogether, precisely the reverse disaster of modernity" [emphasis in original].[25]

If we are to integrate the wisdom of yesterday with the knowledge of today—and that means, in the broadest sweep, the best of premodern, modern, and postmodern—we will have to look carefully at what the postmodern linguistic turn brought to our understanding of the Kosmos [emphasis added].[26]

— Ken Wilber, The Marriage of Sense and Soul

For this reason perhaps, Wilber cites the relevance of three core assumptions which underlie postmodern expression in the form(s) of constructivism, contextualism, and integral-aperspectival as all, coming "to the fore with the linguistic turn" [emphasis added].[26] Similarly too, and crediting Jean Gebser for coining the term 'integral-aperspectival', Wilber further elucidates the word's meaning as a "pluralistic or multiple-perspectives view" privileging "no single perspective" but which in turn, affords "a more holistic or integral" vantage point. Enlisting the same term somewhat interchangeably with "vision-logic or network-logic" [emphasis in original],[27] Wilber recognizes Ferdinand de Saussure for taking vision-logic and applying "it to language, thus disclosing, for the first time in history, its network structure." Likewise, he further asserts "(t)he linguistic turn is, at bottom, vision-logic looking at language itself" [emphasis added].[28]

Nonetheless, but "(s)tarting from the admirable reliance on vision-logic and integral-aperspectival awareness—yet still unable to escape the collapse of the Kosmos—these postmodern movements ended up subtly embodying and even extending the reductionistic nightmare".[29] Serving as an example of this, and referring to William H. Gass's, The Tunnel as epitomizing what many claim "to be the ultimate postmodern novel",[30] Wilber voices accord with RobertAlter's view that the book's defining strategy is reflected through the manner in which "everything is deliberately reduced to the flattest surface." Thus Gass's text is said to do this by "denying the possibility of making consequential distinctions between, or meaningful ranking of, moral or aesthetic values. There is no within: murderer and victim, lover and onanist, altruist and bigot, dissolve into the same ineluctable slime".[31] Thus Wilber subsequently concludes that "under the intense gravity of flatland, integral-aperspectival awareness became simply aperspectival madness—the contradictory belief that no belief is better than any other—a total paralysis of thought, will, and action in the face of a million perspectives all given exactly the same depth, namely, zero" [emphasis added].[32]

Part III: A Reconciliation edit

 
Science and Religion are portrayed to be in harmony in the Tiffany window Education (1890).

Consequently, and because "(a) modern and postmodern spirituality has continued to elude us," Wilber poses his vision for a spirituality capable of standing "up to scientific authority . . . by announcing its own means and modes, data and evidence, validates and verifications".[33] Along these same lines, the author subsequently outlines what he regards as empirical science's two primary objections to an integration of science and religion:

  • That "there are no irreducible interior domains that can be studied by different modes of knowing, there are only objective ITS (atomistic or holistic) studied best by science. In short, interior domains have no reality of their own; thus there are no "interior" modes of knowing that cannot be explained away, literally."
  • "Even if there were other modes of knowing than the sensory-empirical, they would have no mean of validation and thus could not be taken seriously."[34]

In addressing the first objection Wilber reasons that if "empirical science rejects the validity of any and all forms of interior apprehension and knowledge, then it" must also reject "its own validity as well". This is so because "a great deal" of this knowledge itself, already "rests on interior structures and apprehensions that are not delivered by" and hence can't be confirmed by, "the senses (such as logic and mathematics, to name only two)." Likewise, "(i)f science acknowledges these interior apprehensions, upon which its own operations depend, then it cannot object to interior knowledge per se. It cannot toss all interiors into the garbage can without tossing itself with it."

Similarly, Wilber asserts "(o)bjection number 2 can be answered by showing that the scientific method, in general consists of three basic strands of knowing (injunction, apprehension, confirmation/rejection). If it can be shown that the genuine interior modes of knowing also follow these same three strands, then objection number 2 . . . would be substantially refuted" [emphasis in original]. In this way, and "(w)ith the two major scientific objections to the interior domains undone", "a genuine reconciliation of science and religion (and the Big Three in general)" is afforded practical viability [emphasis added].[35]

For these reasons, Wilber subsequently deduces that "sensory empiricism" cannot be included as one of "the defining characteristics of the scientific method", arguing that the "defining patterns of scientific knowledge" instead, "must be able to embrace both biology and mathematics, both geology and anthropology, both physics and logic—some of which are sensory-empirical, some of which are not." In this same regard however, he notes "there is sensory empiricism (of the sensorimotor world)" or empiricism in the narrow sense, "mental empiricism (including logic, mathematics, semiotics, phenomenology, and hermeneutics), and spiritual empiricism (experiential mysticism, spiritual experiences)" or empiricism in the broad sense. "In other words, there is evidence seen by the eye of flesh (e.g., intrinsic features of the sensorimotor world), evidence seen by the eye of mind (e.g., mathematics and logic and symbolic interpretations), and evidence seen by the eye of contemplation (e.g., satori, nirvikalpa samadhi, gnosis)" [emphasis in original].[36]

 
1579 drawing of the Great Chain of Being from Didacus Valadés, Rhetorica Christiana.

Wilber then outlines what he states as believing "are three of the essential aspects of scientific inquiry"; referring to them as the "three strands of all valid knowing":

1. Instrumental injunction. "This is an actual practice, an exemplar, a paradigm, an experiment, an ordinance. It is always of the form "If you want to know this, do this."
2. Direct apprehension. "This is an immediate experience of the domain brought forth by the injunction; that is, a direct experience or apprehension of data (even if the data is mediated, at the moment of experience it is immediately apprehended)."
3. Communal confirmation (or rejection). "This is a checking of the results—the data, the evidence—with others who have adequately completed the injunctive and apprehensive strands" [emphasis added].[37]

Advocating that science "expand from narrow empiricism (sensory experience only) to broad empiricism (direct experience in general) [emphasis added],[38] Wilber similarly reasons that religion too "must open its truth claims to direct verification—or rejection—by experiential evidence." He subsequently asserts that "(r)eligion, like science, will have to engage the three strands of all valid knowledge and anchor its claims in direct experience" [emphasis added].[39]

Authentic spirituality, then, can no longer be mythic, imaginal, mythological, or mythopoetic: it must be based on falsifiable evidence. In other words, it must be, at its core, a series of direct mystical, transcendental, meditative, contemplative, or yogic experiences—not sensory and not mental [emphasis in original], but transsensual, transmental, transpersonal, transcendental consciousness—data seen not merely with the eye of flesh or with the eye of mind, but with the eye of contemplation [emphasis added].[40]

— Ken Wilber, The Marriage of Sense and Soul

Likewise, Wilber contends that "in the modern and postmodern world", religion "will rest on its unique strength—namely, contemplation" or serve to merely "support a premodern, predifferentiated level of development in its own adherents: not (as) an engine of growth and transformation, but (as) a regressive, antiliberal, reactionary force of lesser engagements".[41] He subsequently observes that "(i)f religion possesses something that is uniquely its own, it is contemplation" [emphasis in original]. Moreover, though, "it is the eye of contemplation adequately employed, that follows all three strands of valid knowing" [emphasis added]. "Thus religion's great, enduring, and unique strength is that, at its core, it is a science of spiritual experience (using "science" in the broad sense as direct experience, in any domain, that submits to the three strands of injunction, data, and falsifiability)" [emphasis in original].[42]

In this same way, but "namely, to find some scheme that could accommodate both premodern and modern worldviews, and thus integrate religion and science"; because "the core of premodern religion was the Great Chain, and since the essence of modernity was the differentiation of the value spheres (the Big Three or the four quadrants)" [emphasis added], Wilber's text claims to accomplish a reintegration of religion and science by conjoining "the Great Chain with the four quadrants" [emphasis in original].[43]

Part IV: The Path Ahead edit

Wilber similarly notes however, that "(w)hat needs to be integrated is not the dissociations but the differentiations of modernity, for not only do these define the dignity of modernity [emphasis added], they are an irreversible part of the evolutionary process of differentiation-and-integration" [emphasis in original].[44] Also, but by virtue of the likelihood that this "future evolution" proves to be a "process of collectively unfolding the yet higher stages of the Great Chain, as it has already unfolded the lower", Wilber envisions too that "real religion—genuine spirituality and the deep sciences of the interior" could subsequently serve "an unprecedented role as the vanguard of evolution, the growing tip of the universal organism, growing toward its own highest potentials, namely, the ever-unfolding realization and actualization of Spirit [emphasis added]".[45]

For this reason too, and because "(t)raditional conservatism is "in many ways" adduced as being "anchored in premodern worldviews . . . whereas liberalism is largely anchored in the rational differentiations of modernity", Wilber envisages an integration of religion and science as opening "up the possibility of a significant reconciliation of conservative and liberal views".[46] Prospects for this harmonization are further expressed as the means by which transrational awareness [emphasis added], "standing within the political freedom—the liberal freedom—offered by the Enlightenment . . . moves into its own higher estate by pursuing Spiritual Enlightenment, which it then offers, within that same political freedom, to any and all who desire to be released from the chains of space and time, self and suffering, hope and fear, death and wonder" [emphasis in original]. This "politics of meaning" then, in "its own spiritual realization" is "thoroughly transliberal, bringing together the Enlightenment of the East with the Enlightenment of the West" [emphasis added].[47]

Criticism edit

Reflecting an array of impassioned thought concerning a demarcation problem in the relationship between religion and science, The Marriage of Sense and Soul has spawned a range of intellectual response; both affirming and derogatory. Included among these many views was that of Dutch author Frank Visser who published an article addressing the book's detractors. From his perspective, Wilber's tome had "alarmed several critics, not too familiar with [the author's] works" even though (or perhaps, because) it represents "a view of reality which is large enough to absorb ANY conclusion of science—be it natural, human or spiritual—without giving science the last word" [emphasis added].[48]

In response to Visser's piece, Wilber drafted a reply of his own saying that his "critics have completely missed" one "simple but essential point"; that was, by assuming "that in expanding science to include the higher realms", they'd inferred he was "somehow reducing the higher realms to science." This misconception is negated in the fact however, that "even with an expanded definition of science", he never reduces "the higher realms to science only, for there are the art and morals and science of the higher realms. And the art and morals have different specific methodologies than the sciences, as" he'd already explained in length [emphasis added].[49]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 211
  2. ^ Walsh (1997)
  3. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 7–8
  4. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 17–18
  5. ^ St. Bonaventure (1257), II.12.5
  6. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 36
  7. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 44
  8. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 74
  9. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 55
  10. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 75–76
  11. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 85
  12. ^ a b Wilber (1998), p. 87
  13. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 88
  14. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 90
  15. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 91–92
  16. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 102
  17. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 103
  18. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 104
  19. ^ Hegel (1833–36), Intro. - A
  20. ^ a b Wilber (1998), p. 106
  21. ^ a b Wilber (1998), p. 108
  22. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 111–112
  23. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 113
  24. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 118–119
  25. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 120
  26. ^ a b Wilber (1998), p. 125
  27. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 131
  28. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 132
  29. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 134
  30. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 135
  31. ^ Alter (1995)
  32. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 136
  33. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 139
  34. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 143
  35. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 144–145
  36. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 152–154
  37. ^ Wilber (1998), pp. 155–156
  38. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 160
  39. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 161
  40. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 166
  41. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 167
  42. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 169
  43. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 183
  44. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 189
  45. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 208
  46. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 212
  47. ^ Wilber (1998), p. 213
  48. ^ Visser, Frank. ""The Marriage of Sense and Soul" and it's [sic] critics". Integral World. Retrieved 7 Jan 2013.
  49. ^ Wilber, Ken. "Reply to "The Marriage of Sense and Soul and it's critics"". Integral World. Retrieved 7 Jan 2013.

References edit

  • Alter, Robert (1995). "The Leveling Wind". New Republic. Vol. 212, no. 13. pp. 29–32.
  • Hegel, G. W. F. (1833–36). Lectures on the History of Philosophy. Moscow, ID: University of Idaho.
  • St. Bonaventure (1257). Breviloquium. Paterson, NJ: St. Anthony Guild Press.
  • Walsh, Roger (1997). "Science and religion: proposals for reconciliation" (PDF). Journal of Transpersonal Psychology. 29: 123–142.
  • Wilber, Ken (1998). The Marriage of Sense and Soul: Integrating Science and Religion. Broadway Books. ISBN 978-0767903431.

External links edit

  • "The Development of Absolute Idealism"
  • The Marriage of Sense and Soul (book review)
  • "Unique Self Dialogue: Ken Wilber & Marc Gafni, Part 1"

marriage, sense, soul, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, december, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, this, article, contains, many, overly, lengthy, quotations, please, help, sum. This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations Please help summarize the quotations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource December 2023 The Marriage of Sense and Soul Integrating Science and Religion is a 1998 book by American author Ken Wilber It reasons that by adopting contemplative e g meditative disciplines related to Spirit and commissioning them within a context of broad science that the spiritual subjective world of ancient wisdom could be joined with the objective empirical world of modern knowledge The text further contends that integrating science and religion in this way would in turn have political dimensions sewn into its very fabric 1 The Marriage of Sense and Soul Integrating Science and ReligionCoverAuthorKen WilberCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectRelationship between religion and sciencePublisherBroadway BooksPublication date1998Media typePrint Paperback Pages240ISBN978 0767903431 Contents 1 Importance 2 Overview 2 1 Part I The Problem 2 2 Part II Previous Attempts at Integration 2 3 Part III A Reconciliation 2 4 Part IV The Path Ahead 3 Criticism 4 See also 5 Notes 5 1 References 6 External linksImportance editUnderscoring how important the relationship between science and religion is to our unfolding world Wilber explains that science has given us the methods for discovering truth while religion is the force that generates meaning To illustrate this point the author enlists his AQAL model to show how varying understandings of Spirit from romanticism to idealism through postmodernism have over time predicated humanity s own development in relation to the Big Three cultural value spheres of art Upper Left quadrant morals Lower Left quadrant and science Right hand quadrants Overview editPart I The Problem edit As Roger Walsh notes in his review of the book although there s enormous variation from one religion to another there is also wide agreement among academics that the Great Chain of Being can be found at the center of virtually all major religions Also and because the Great Chain of Being was at one time humankind s dominant worldview with the rise of modernity the West became the first civilization in history to discard it 2 In recognizing that each senior dimension of the Great Chain actually envelopes or enfolds its junior in a manner said to transcend and include the previous stage however Wilber appropriates the term Great Nest of Being in visualizing a series of concentric spheres or circles as a holarchy reaching from matter to mind to Spirit This three level scheme subsequently show s up as the hierarchy of earth human and heaven in even the earliest shamanic traditions and subsequently reappears with the Hindu and Buddhist notion of the three great states of being gross matter and body subtle mind and soul and causal spirit emphasis in original 3 Furthermore where the standard position of most classical religions and the religions of antiquity had viewed science as but one of several valid modes of knowing having an important and rightful place in the Great Chain of Being alongside theology and mysticism this point of view is now generally called epistemological pluralism This perspective though too according to Wilber was given perhaps its clearest statement by such Christian mystics as St Bonaventure and Hugh of St Victor every human being has the eye of flesh the eye of mind and the eye of contemplation emphasis added 4 For this triple vision man was endowed with a triple eye as explained by Hugh of St Victor the eye of flesh of reason and of contemplation the eye of flesh to see the world and what it contains the eye of reason to see the soul and what it contains the eye of contemplation to see God and that which is within Him Through the eye of the flesh man was to see the things outside him with the eye of reason the things within him with the eye of contemplation the things above him 5 St Bonaventure The Breviloquium Part II Chapter 12 No 5 As Wilber notes however the underlying problem as posed has been further obfuscated by a set of which in effect replace the eye of contemplation with the eyes of mind and flesh Consequently he further clarifies that the eye of flesh is monological the eye of mind is dialogical and the eye of contemplation is translogical emphasis added 6 Likewise but along with the Enlightenment an entire set of values including equality freedom and justice representational and deliberative democracy the equality of all citizens before the law regardless of race sex or creed political and civil rights freedom of speech religion assembly fair trial etc all gradually emerged As a result and because they d existed nowhere on a large scale in the premodern world Wilber refers to these values and rights as the dignity of modernity emphasis in original 7 Subsequently then but pointing to the work of Max Weber and Jurgen Habermas the book further contends that modernity is chiefly defined by its differentiation of the cultural value spheres or the Big Three art morals and science the Beautiful the Good and the True I Upper Left quadrant WE Lower Left quadrant and IT Right hand quadrants emphasis added 8 Yet where this modern differentiation could be said to have begun in earnest around the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries by the end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth the differentiation was already drifting into a painful and pathological dissociation 9 Consequently but in just this way the Left Hand or interior dimensions were ultimately reduced to their Right Hand or exterior correlates which utterly collapsed the Great Chain of Being and with it the core claims of the great wisdom traditions emphasis added 10 Part II Previous Attempts at Integration edit nbsp Immanuel KantAscribing a recognition to Immanuel Kant of this leveling and deadening of the modern monological collapse however emphasis added 11 Wilber chronicles the philosopher s subsequent attempt to integrate moral we wisdom with scientific it knowledge emphasis added 12 From this vantage point Kant s Critique of Pure Reason is described as an affirmation that science alone gives cognitive knowledge real knowledge and all else is nonsensical metaphysics Likewise his second installment Critique of Practical Reason ferreted humanity s moral dimensions in concluding that while m en and women are not free as empirical objects in the world of ITS as ethical subjects men and women are indeed autonomous emphasis in original 13 Further pursuing this line of thought but utilizing the moral rationale of ought Kant s third critique Critique of Judgement begins by examining the realm of aesthetics in route to ascertaining as Wilber paraphrases it that the interior ought of moral reasoning could never get going in the first place without the postulates of a transcendental Spirit 12 Consequently but in the aftermath of Kant s contributions the Romantics began an intense effort to make the I domain the subjective domain and especially the domain of aesthetics sentiment emotion heroic self expression and feeling the royal road to Spirit and the Absolute 14 However because romanticism was a philosophical revolt against rationalism the movement fell violent prey to what Wilber has termed the pre trans fallacy emphasis in original namely the confusion of prerational with transrational simply because both are nonrational emphasis added 15 Similarly there also existed an ambiguity between premodern and modern cultures as to the direction in which the universe was said to be unfolding Where a time of creation as recounted amongst premodern religions often entailed a Great Spirit of one sort or another creating the world out of itself or out of some prima materia these traditions also commonly point to a series of strange events in which it was told either God began slowly to withdraw from humans or humans withdrew from this God but generally depicting scenarios in which mankind inevitably lost touch with the primal Eden 16 Sometime during the modern era however this idea of history as devolution or a fall from God was slowly replaced by the idea of history as evolution or a growth toward God 17 Thus where history for premodern cultures was merely devolution one of the great announcements of the Idealists asserted that cosmic and human history instead was most profoundly the evolution and development of Spirit Beginning then with Kant s assertion that we can never know the thing in itself only the appearance or phenomenon that results when the thing in itself is acted on by the categories of the human mind emphasis added German Idealism shared much of its inception in the notion that the world is not merely perceived but constructed emphasis in original For them n ot naive empiricism but mental idealism was of essence in one s perception of the world emphasis added In much this way and to his credit Johann Fichte is of special note in reasoning that if you cannot know anything at all about the thing in itself then ultimately self consciousness too is a social phenomena 18 Everything that from eternity has happened in heaven and earth the life of God and all the deeds of time simply are the struggles for Mind to know itself to make itself objective to itself to find itself be for itself and finally unite itself to itself it is alienated and divided but only so as to be able thus to find itself and return to itself 19 G W F Hegel Hegel s Lectures on the History of Philosophy Introduction The Notion of the History of Philosophy nbsp Georg Wilhelm Friedrich HegelConsequently too but in sublimating these same lines of thought Wilber delineates three principal features of spiritual evolution 1 Involution This original descent of Spirit is a forgetting a fall a self alienation of Spirit 20 2 Evolution In this second major stage of development Spirit evolves from objective Nature to subjective Mind emphasis added 20 3 Nondual Spirit Spirit comes to know itself objectively as Nature knows itself subjectively as Mind and knows itself absolutely as Spirit the Source the Summit the Ground and the Process of the entire ordeal emphasis added 21 Thus he subsequently notes that for both Schelling and Hegel Spirit goes out of itself to produce objective Nature awakens to itself in subjective Mind then recovers itself in pure nondual Spirit where subject and object are one pure act of nondual consciousness that unifies both Nature and Mind in realized Spirit emphasis added 21 Unfortunately yet underscoring Idealism s remarkable percipience in discerning the integration of empirical evolution with transcendental Spirit as reflecting Spirit in action it possessed no yoga that is no tried and tested practice for reliably reproducing the transpersonal and superconscious insights that formed the very core of the great Idealist vision 22 Furthermore and because the Idealists lacked a genuine spiritual injunction practice exemplar paradigm they were indeed at least in this respect caught in mere metaphysics Consequently then and lacking the means of consistently delivering direct spiritual experience Idealism in this regard degenerated into abstract speculations without the means of experiential confirmation or rejection emphasis in original 23 Simply because every holon has a Left and a Right Hand dimension and therefore every holon without exception has an objective Right and an interpretive Left component emphasis added postmodernism would ultimately assume the great and nobel aim of introducing interpretation as an intrinsic aspect of the Kosmos emphasis in original Yet and for postmodernism this moment of truth every actual occasion has an interpretive component was taken to absurd and self defeating extremes leading to a facile reasoning that since t here is nothing but interpretation dispensing with the objective component of truth at times merely serves as practical convenience 24 Disconcertingly though t his extreme denial of any sort of objective truth has subsequently amounted to a denial of the Right Hand quadrants altogether precisely the reverse disaster of modernity emphasis in original 25 If we are to integrate the wisdom of yesterday with the knowledge of today and that means in the broadest sweep the best of premodern modern and postmodern we will have to look carefully at what the postmodern linguistic turn brought to our understanding of the Kosmos emphasis added 26 Ken Wilber The Marriage of Sense and Soul For this reason perhaps Wilber cites the relevance of three core assumptions which underlie postmodern expression in the form s of constructivism contextualism and integral aperspectival as all coming to the fore with the linguistic turn emphasis added 26 Similarly too and crediting Jean Gebser for coining the term integral aperspectival Wilber further elucidates the word s meaning as a pluralistic or multiple perspectives view privileging no single perspective but which in turn affords a more holistic or integral vantage point Enlisting the same term somewhat interchangeably with vision logic or network logic emphasis in original 27 Wilber recognizes Ferdinand de Saussure for taking vision logic and applying it to language thus disclosing for the first time in history its network structure Likewise he further asserts t he linguistic turn is at bottom vision logic looking at language itself emphasis added 28 Nonetheless but s tarting from the admirable reliance on vision logic and integral aperspectival awareness yet still unable to escape the collapse of the Kosmos these postmodern movements ended up subtly embodying and even extending the reductionistic nightmare 29 Serving as an example of this and referring to William H Gass s The Tunnel as epitomizing what many claim to be the ultimate postmodern novel 30 Wilber voices accord with RobertAlter s view that the book s defining strategy is reflected through the manner in which everything is deliberately reduced to the flattest surface Thus Gass s text is said to do this by denying the possibility of making consequential distinctions between or meaningful ranking of moral or aesthetic values There is no within murderer and victim lover and onanist altruist and bigot dissolve into the same ineluctable slime 31 Thus Wilber subsequently concludes that under the intense gravity of flatland integral aperspectival awareness became simply aperspectival madness the contradictory belief that no belief is better than any other a total paralysis of thought will and action in the face of a million perspectives all given exactly the same depth namely zero emphasis added 32 Part III A Reconciliation edit nbsp Science and Religion are portrayed to be in harmony in the Tiffany window Education 1890 Consequently and because a modern and postmodern spirituality has continued to elude us Wilber poses his vision for a spirituality capable of standing up to scientific authority by announcing its own means and modes data and evidence validates and verifications 33 Along these same lines the author subsequently outlines what he regards as empirical science s two primary objections to an integration of science and religion That there are no irreducible interior domains that can be studied by different modes of knowing there are only objective ITS atomistic or holistic studied best by science In short interior domains have no reality of their own thus there are no interior modes of knowing that cannot be explained away literally Even if there were other modes of knowing than the sensory empirical they would have no mean of validation and thus could not be taken seriously 34 In addressing the first objection Wilber reasons that if empirical science rejects the validity of any and all forms of interior apprehension and knowledge then it must also reject its own validity as well This is so because a great deal of this knowledge itself already rests on interior structures and apprehensions that are not delivered by and hence can t be confirmed by the senses such as logic and mathematics to name only two Likewise i f science acknowledges these interior apprehensions upon which its own operations depend then it cannot object to interior knowledge per se It cannot toss all interiors into the garbage can without tossing itself with it Similarly Wilber asserts o bjection number 2 can be answered by showing that the scientific method in general consists of three basic strands of knowing injunction apprehension confirmation rejection If it can be shown that the genuine interior modes of knowing also follow these same three strands then objection number 2 would be substantially refuted emphasis in original In this way and w ith the two major scientific objections to the interior domains undone a genuine reconciliation of science and religion and the Big Three in general is afforded practical viability emphasis added 35 For these reasons Wilber subsequently deduces that sensory empiricism cannot be included as one of the defining characteristics of the scientific method arguing that the defining patterns of scientific knowledge instead must be able to embrace both biology and mathematics both geology and anthropology both physics and logic some of which are sensory empirical some of which are not In this same regard however he notes there is sensory empiricism of the sensorimotor world or empiricism in the narrow sense mental empiricism including logic mathematics semiotics phenomenology and hermeneutics and spiritual empiricism experiential mysticism spiritual experiences or empiricism in the broad sense In other words there is evidence seen by the eye of flesh e g intrinsic features of the sensorimotor world evidence seen by the eye of mind e g mathematics and logic and symbolic interpretations and evidence seen by the eye of contemplation e g satori nirvikalpa samadhi gnosis emphasis in original 36 nbsp 1579 drawing of the Great Chain of Being from Didacus Valades Rhetorica Christiana Wilber then outlines what he states as believing are three of the essential aspects of scientific inquiry referring to them as the three strands of all valid knowing 1 Instrumental injunction This is an actual practice an exemplar a paradigm an experiment an ordinance It is always of the form If you want to know this do this 2 Direct apprehension This is an immediate experience of the domain brought forth by the injunction that is a direct experience or apprehension of data even if the data is mediated at the moment of experience it is immediately apprehended 3 Communal confirmation or rejection This is a checking of the results the data the evidence with others who have adequately completed the injunctive and apprehensive strands emphasis added 37 Advocating that science expand from narrow empiricism sensory experience only to broad empiricism direct experience in general emphasis added 38 Wilber similarly reasons that religion too must open its truth claims to direct verification or rejection by experiential evidence He subsequently asserts that r eligion like science will have to engage the three strands of all valid knowledge and anchor its claims in direct experience emphasis added 39 Authentic spirituality then can no longer be mythic imaginal mythological or mythopoetic it must be based on falsifiable evidence In other words it must be at its core a series of direct mystical transcendental meditative contemplative or yogic experiences not sensory and not mental emphasis in original but transsensual transmental transpersonal transcendental consciousness data seen not merely with the eye of flesh or with the eye of mind but with the eye of contemplation emphasis added 40 Ken Wilber The Marriage of Sense and Soul Likewise Wilber contends that in the modern and postmodern world religion will rest on its unique strength namely contemplation or serve to merely support a premodern predifferentiated level of development in its own adherents not as an engine of growth and transformation but as a regressive antiliberal reactionary force of lesser engagements 41 He subsequently observes that i f religion possesses something that is uniquely its own it is contemplation emphasis in original Moreover though it is the eye of contemplation adequately employed that follows all three strands of valid knowing emphasis added Thus religion s great enduring and unique strength is that at its core it is a science of spiritual experience using science in the broad sense as direct experience in any domain that submits to the three strands of injunction data and falsifiability emphasis in original 42 In this same way but namely to find some scheme that could accommodate both premodern and modern worldviews and thus integrate religion and science because the core of premodern religion was the Great Chain and since the essence of modernity was the differentiation of the value spheres the Big Three or the four quadrants emphasis added Wilber s text claims to accomplish a reintegration of religion and science by conjoining the Great Chain with the four quadrants emphasis in original 43 Part IV The Path Ahead edit Wilber similarly notes however that w hat needs to be integrated is not the dissociations but the differentiations of modernity for not only do these define the dignity of modernity emphasis added they are an irreversible part of the evolutionary process of differentiation and integration emphasis in original 44 Also but by virtue of the likelihood that this future evolution proves to be a process of collectively unfolding the yet higher stages of the Great Chain as it has already unfolded the lower Wilber envisions too that real religion genuine spirituality and the deep sciences of the interior could subsequently serve an unprecedented role as the vanguard of evolution the growing tip of the universal organism growing toward its own highest potentials namely the ever unfolding realization and actualization of Spirit emphasis added 45 For this reason too and because t raditional conservatism is in many ways adduced as being anchored in premodern worldviews whereas liberalism is largely anchored in the rational differentiations of modernity Wilber envisages an integration of religion and science as opening up the possibility of a significant reconciliation of conservative and liberal views 46 Prospects for this harmonization are further expressed as the means by which transrational awareness emphasis added standing within the political freedom the liberal freedom offered by the Enlightenment moves into its own higher estate by pursuing Spiritual Enlightenment which it then offers within that same political freedom to any and all who desire to be released from the chains of space and time self and suffering hope and fear death and wonder emphasis in original This politics of meaning then in its own spiritual realization is thoroughly transliberal bringing together the Enlightenment of the East with the Enlightenment of the West emphasis added 47 Criticism editReflecting an array of impassioned thought concerning a demarcation problem in the relationship between religion and science The Marriage of Sense and Soul has spawned a range of intellectual response both affirming and derogatory Included among these many views was that of Dutch author Frank Visser who published an article addressing the book s detractors From his perspective Wilber s tome had alarmed several critics not too familiar with the author s works even though or perhaps because it represents a view of reality which is large enough to absorb ANY conclusion of science be it natural human or spiritual without giving science the last word emphasis added 48 In response to Visser s piece Wilber drafted a reply of his own saying that his critics have completely missed one simple but essential point that was by assuming that in expanding science to include the higher realms they d inferred he was somehow reducing the higher realms to science This misconception is negated in the fact however that even with an expanded definition of science he never reduces the higher realms to science only for there are the art and morals and science of the higher realms And the art and morals have different specific methodologies than the sciences as he d already explained in length emphasis added 49 See also editConstructive empiricism Constructivism Contextualism Integral theory Integral spirituality Involution Jurgen Habermas Phenomenology Relationship between religion and science Signifier floating Validity disambiguation Notes edit Wilber 1998 p 211 Walsh 1997 Wilber 1998 pp 7 8 Wilber 1998 pp 17 18 St Bonaventure 1257 II 12 5 Wilber 1998 p 36 Wilber 1998 p 44 Wilber 1998 p 74 Wilber 1998 p 55 Wilber 1998 pp 75 76 Wilber 1998 p 85 a b Wilber 1998 p 87 Wilber 1998 p 88 Wilber 1998 p 90 Wilber 1998 pp 91 92 Wilber 1998 p 102 Wilber 1998 p 103 Wilber 1998 p 104 Hegel 1833 36 Intro A a b Wilber 1998 p 106 a b Wilber 1998 p 108 Wilber 1998 pp 111 112 Wilber 1998 p 113 Wilber 1998 pp 118 119 Wilber 1998 p 120 a b Wilber 1998 p 125 Wilber 1998 p 131 Wilber 1998 p 132 Wilber 1998 p 134 Wilber 1998 p 135 Alter 1995 Wilber 1998 p 136 Wilber 1998 p 139 Wilber 1998 p 143 Wilber 1998 pp 144 145 Wilber 1998 pp 152 154 Wilber 1998 pp 155 156 Wilber 1998 p 160 Wilber 1998 p 161 Wilber 1998 p 166 Wilber 1998 p 167 Wilber 1998 p 169 Wilber 1998 p 183 Wilber 1998 p 189 Wilber 1998 p 208 Wilber 1998 p 212 Wilber 1998 p 213 Visser Frank The Marriage of Sense and Soul and it s sic critics Integral World Retrieved 7 Jan 2013 Wilber Ken Reply to The Marriage of Sense and Soul and it s critics Integral World Retrieved 7 Jan 2013 References edit Alter Robert 1995 The Leveling Wind New Republic Vol 212 no 13 pp 29 32 Hegel G W F 1833 36 Lectures on the History of Philosophy Moscow ID University of Idaho St Bonaventure 1257 Breviloquium Paterson NJ St Anthony Guild Press Walsh Roger 1997 Science and religion proposals for reconciliation PDF Journal of Transpersonal Psychology 29 123 142 Wilber Ken 1998 The Marriage of Sense and Soul Integrating Science and Religion Broadway Books ISBN 978 0767903431 External links edit The Development of Absolute Idealism The Marriage of Sense and Soul book review Unique Self Dialogue Ken Wilber amp Marc Gafni Part 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Marriage of Sense and Soul amp oldid 1204687983, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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