Friday, July 15, 2016
According to the logic of the so-called
“skeptics,” spirituality and religion is craziness.
By that definition, the bulk of
humanity is mentally ill, as the bulk of humanity has one or another
form of spirituality. This leaves these people thinking that they are
the only sane people out there.
If there is such a thing as narcissism,
I can think of no more glaring narcissism than that.
Most “skeptics” are not even
scientists. Real scientists are curious, and many are as curious
about spirituality as they are about everything else. I am good
friends with a distinguished scientist who openly talks about having
had very real spiritual experiences. He has a vast body of academic
knowledge, is very well-reasoned and uses scientific method to
excellent standard. That has not prevented him from having a
spiritual life.
Spiritual experiences happen all the
time, at least they do in my life. I've had many experiences with
less than a billionth chance of happening; and I am nowhere close to
being the only one. Many people either forget the experiences that
they have or deny them; but if you dig enough you will find in many
cases that they have in fact had very real spiritual experiences. The
problem is that they do not know how to make them parse with what
they know about the world from science and mathematics. This results
in many of them denying these experiences; and toward that effect any
number of people have come up with any number of tricks.
Some want to say that experience is
“anecdotal” and does not count as valid evidence. Others want to
ascribe it to being on drugs, or being depressed or anorexic, or
being otherwise non compos mentis during the time of the experience.
Others still start going into beliefs such as that truth itself is
relative. In all cases we find dishonesty. It is dishonesty that
comes from dischordance between the logical implications of the
experience and the worldview.
Is science wrong? No, it isn't.
Materialist fundamentalism however is completely wrong. I seek an
explanation that will be consistent with both scientific fact and the
facts of my and other people's spiritual experiences; and I am
continuing to look for this explanation in any number of paths.
3 Comments:
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Thank you for writing this article. To my thinking, every experience is a potentially spiritual one. The question is, how capable or how willing are we to perceive everyday miracles? This provokes a much welcomed train of thought. Thank you, again, Ilya.
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