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Enlightenment, Meaning, and the Religion versus Science-Academia Divide: Waking up versus “Waking up”

Ted Christopher

Open Journal of Philosophy January 1, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.4236/ojpp.2024.142034 via OpenAlex

Summary

The abstract discusses the limitations of a purely materialist view of life in science, highlighting its implications for dualistic and religious beliefs. It argues that the challenges posed by missing heritability in DNA understanding support a dualistic perspective common to religions. The text emphasizes experiences of transcendence linked to religious practices, particularly through examples from Buddhism and modern interpretations. It suggests that these experiences may offer insights into meaning amidst a scientifically influenced worldview.

Study at a glance

Key finding The argument is made that the problems with a materialist understanding of life bolster support for dualistic beliefs commonly found in religions.

Abstract

The unfolding problems with science’s materialist understanding of life are obviously noteworthy in and of themselves, but the associated potential support for dualistic/religious beliefs is particularly significant. Beyond a number of behavioral conundrums, the general problem facing the scientific molecular-only vision is the unfolding missing heritability (or DNA origins)—problem. Given our innate dualistic/religious understanding of life and its presumed—but increasingly questionable—DNA basis, it is argued here that this combination offers a straightforward preliminary argument supporting the basic dualism common to religions. With this as a backdrop, a focus herein will be placed on experiences of transcendence (or unified consciousness or enlightenment) associated with religious/mystical practices. With such real-life transformations, there is the possibility of glimpsing the ultimate goal associated with religious practices. An introduction will be provided via the independent Unity experience given in Jacque Lusseyran’s And There Was Light. Next, a sequence of similar experiences associated with Buddhist practices is given. A suggested framework then connects such experiences to the religious/dualistic element, a soul, and with this a potential new avenue for discussions on meaning. A modern framing of these discussions is found in comparisons between traditional Buddhism, and its contemporary science-influenced, Western peer. Sam Harris’ Waking Up is utilized in part as a guide to the latter. It is not unlikely that other spiritual or religious traditions are facing analogous detours in our science-led, meaning-deprived, and increasingly superficial era.

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