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Buddhism and Modern Science - by
Dr. Granville Dharmawardena, University of Colombo "Buddha
is the greatest scientist in the history of
mankind."
I have
often heard this at bana sermons. This is completely
wrong. Scientists are people who are constrained to work
solely within and accept only, the knowledge generated by
the scientific method. They generally reject knowledge
generated by the other method. The Buddha did not use the
scientific method and therefore he is not a scientist.
Of the two methods of acquiring knowledge available to
the human being the Buddha used the right brain centered
intuition method, where as the western approach to
acquiring knowledge used the left brain method. The
Buddha trained his mind to an extreme high state of
enlightenment (Buddhahood) from where he could understand
the true reality of nature in its totality. It is based
on such knowledge that he propounded a philosophy which
is most conducive to balanced and happy living which
leads to living in harmony with others, living in harmony
with nature, meaningful living devoid of stress, anxiety,
jealousy and empty pride, ultimately ending up in a
meaningful state full of bliss. That was over 2500 years
ago. Science began much later.
Science is often explained as systematic formulated
knowledge. It is knowledge needed to understand the
phenomena that we observe and those that influence our
lives. For the early man science represented a cumulative
process of increasing knowledge and ability to understand
what is around him. It also meant a sequence of victories
over ignorance and superstition. During the time of the
Buddha, science was still speculative explanation of
common sense observations by intellectuals who devoted
much of their time for thinking and understanding natural
phenomena. Science helped to develop technology essential
for producing things needed to make life more
comfortable.
During the seventeenth century the French Mathematician
Rene Des Cartes restricted the scope of science to only
what is material by bifurcating the universe as matter
(res extensa) and mind (res cogitans) and limiting
science to the study of the former. The science that
evolved on the basis of Cartesian bifurcation was
confined to material objects within the limits of
perception of human sensory organs which are unable to
perceive anything that extended beyond three spatial
dimensions.
The above constraints on science stood on the way of
achieving its desired objective of understanding the true
reality of nature, because nature and natural phenomena
are neither confined to matter nor to three spatial
dimensions. Many of the important phenomena of nature
therefore happened to be outside the scope of science.
Science, nevertheless, has provided enormous material
benefits to mankind. Therefore people all over the world
have very high confidence in science and accept anything
explained to them in terms of science. The ultimate aim
of science is understanding the true reality of nature,
minimizing human suffering and making human beings happy
by way of providing material comforts.
The
Buddha's way of acquiring knowledge by intuition was not
subject to the limitations that stifled science and
therefore unlike science the knowledge that the Buddha
acquired is complete and represents the true reality of
nature. This is confirmed by over 2500 years of
experience. For this reason the Buddha did not have any
grey areas that need to be hidden under a cloud of
imaginary superhuman force.
Just as in science Buddhism does not require its
followers to have dogmatic belief in anything that the
Buddha taught. The Buddha advised people not to blindly
accept what he taught, but research on them for
themselves before accepting. For this reason his
teachings have remained unaltered and valid for all times
and under all circumstances.
While the knowledge the Buddha acquired represents the
true reality of nature, what scientists aspire to
understand as the ultimate destination of the scientific
method, is also the same true reality of nature. While
the goal of the teachings of the Buddha is elimination of
human suffering and making human beings happy and
contented by way of training their minds and creating
self discipline in them, the goal of science is providing
mankind with material comforts.
In 1905 Albert Einstein broke through the three
dimensional barrier in science and took the scope of
science beyond three spatial dimensions and Des Cartes
restrictions. This enabled man to aspire for a more
realistic view of nature and natural phenomena through
the scientific method. Modern twentieth century science
that developed after transcending the dimensional barrier
by twentieth century scientists such as Albert Einstein,
Erwin Schrodinger, Louis de Broglie, Paul Dirac, Werner
Heisenberg, Richard Feynman, Murray Gellman, Sir Arthur
Eddington and Stephen Hawkin is based on the theory of
relativity, quantum mechanics and uncertainty principle.
These have annihilated the artificial Cartesian
bifurcation and extreme materialism in science. By the
mid twentieth century the process of gathering scientific
knowledge constituted of well organized laboratory and
field experimentation, observation, development of
theory, prediction, verification of the predictions and
general acceptance.
Transcending the three dimensional barrier and taking
science beyond the capabilities of human sensory organs
eliminated the need to present perceptible mechanisms of
observed phenomena as an acceptance criterion. The advent
of computers has greatly enhanced the capability of the
human brain to tackle complex phenomena that are too
formidable to be tackled by the unaided and unenlightened
human brain. Computer can never aspire to acquire the
capabilities of the human brain because the human brain
is driven by consciousness which operates at a speed much
faster than the speed of light.
The
main achievement of the success of the twentieth century
scientists in transcending the three dimensional barrier
is acquiring a more realistic understanding of nature and
natural phenomena. Twentieth century transcended science
enables us to scientifically confirm that such concepts
as impermanence, rebirth, telepathy and selflessness
taught by the Buddha are true phenomena of nature which
are beyond three spatial dimentions and therefore beyond
classical science.
Derek Parfit of Oxford University (probably the world's
most important living philosopher) accepts the Buddhist
view of life and selflessness. He believes that his
acceptance of selflessness which was inspired by split
brain research, has liberated him from the prison of
self. He says,
"When
I believed that my existence was such a further fact, I
seemed imprisoned in myself. My life seemed like a glass
tunnel, through which I was moving faster every year, and
at the end of which there was darkness. When I changed my
view, the walls of my glass tunnel disappeared. I now
live in the open air."
Derek Parfit, Fritj of Capra (the well known Nuclear
Physicist) and Gary Zukav accept the Buddhist view of
matter and believes in the need to liberate ourselves
from the prison of material particles.
The process of human reproduction is explained in
Buddha's teachings as parental union when mother is
fertile and the arrival of consciousness. The former
supplies the full complement of chromosomes needed to
create a Zygote which by normal cell division creates the
physical body. The arrival of consciousness into the
physical body makes it an individual. Stating with the
creation of test tube babies in 1968 by Dr. Robert
Edwards's team of scientists at Cambridge University,
incredible advances, culminating in cloning in 1996, have
taken place in reproductive biology. Yet all
these advances have only shifted the site and altered the
mechanism of creation of the zygote. The maturing of the
zygote to a foetus, making it an individual by the
arrival of consciousness and birth remains as per
Buddha's teachings.
It
is now increasingly becoming clear to those who reach the
front lines of modern science that what science has been
discovering a new had been known to the Buddha over 2500
years ago. This is confirmed by the following statements
made by topmost scientists of the twentieth century.
Albert Einstein regarded as the father of the theory of
relativity says,
"Individual existence impresses him as a sort of
prison and he wants to experience the universe as a
single cosmic whole. The beginnings of cosmic religious
feeling already appear at an early stage of development,
as an example in the Psalms of David and in some of the
Prophets. Buddhism, as we have learned especially from
the wonderful writings of Schopenhaur, contains a much
stronger element of this."
Niels Bohr who developed the presently accepted model of
the atom together with Earnest Rutherford says,
"For a parallel to the lesson of atomic
theory
.. (we must turn) to those kind of
epistemological problems with which already thinkers like
the Buddha and Lao Tzu have been confronted, when trying
to harmonize our position as spectators and actors in the
drama of existence."
The most eminent Nuclear Physicist, Robert Oppenheimer,
who produced the first atom bomb says,
"The general notions about human understanding
which are illustrated by discoveries in atomic
physics are not in the nature of things wholly
unfamiliar, wholly unheard of, or new. Even in our own
culture they have a history, and in Buddhist and Hindu
thought a more considerable and central place. What we
shall find is an exemplification, an encouragement and a
refinement of old wisdom." - Robert Oppenheimer.
The main teaching of the Buddha is the Noble Eight Fold
Path. D. T. Suzuki writes about the first item of this
Path, right seeing as,
"The seeing plays the most important role in
Buddhist epistemology, for seeing is at the basis of
knowing. Knowing is impossible without seeing; all
knowledge has its origin in seeing are thus found
generally united in Buddha's teachings. Buddhist
philosophy therefore ultimately points to seeing reality
as it is. Seeing is experiencing enlightment".
The
teachings of the Buddha, founded on the basis of the true
reality of nature, have been recognized to be valid at
all times and under all conditions. Buddhism is the only
Doctrine based on the true reality of nature in its
totality available to mankind. It is now becoming
increasingly clear that solutions to most human problems
that arise as a result of over indulgence, excessive
competition and exploding greed leading to acquiring and
amassing unlimited wealth, increasing violence,
terrorism, drug addiction and self destruction lie in the
teachings of the Buddha. It is clear that Buddhism is
getting accepted, the world over, as the way of life of
intelligent people in the third millenium.
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