Showing posts with label Lao Tzu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lao Tzu. Show all posts

Friday, September 17, 2010

#79. A Dowd Sampler


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In my previous post, I said that Michael Dowd's book, Thank God for Evolution, is so comprehensive that, in trying to describe it, I hardly know where to start.



The most basic thought about Dowd's work I'd like to share with readers is simple enough; it's that he has taken the new cosmology to heart. He offers countless practical thoughts for an understanding of our creative participation in the evolution of the universe. As far as I'm aware, nothing else comparable-- in terms of his many down-to-earth suggestions-- is available.

And because of his background as an evangelical minister, he is able to sympathetically address the concerns of many religious people. As a reader commented recently, "Michael Dowd’s book fills the niche we have been waiting for. It reinterprets mysteries of the Christian faith in light of the evolutionary story. [It] is an inspiring and unique insight into what the Great Story means for each of us in our daily lives."

But Dowd is surprisingly good at addressing the concerns of non-religious people as well. And his broad inter-religious perspective is an excellent model of how our planet's traditional religions can respectfully relate to one another.

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For the record, I want to say that when I first heard of his work I mistrusted him. "Even if it's the new cosmology he's fanatical about," I thought to myself, "who needs another fanatical preacher?"

It wasn't until I heard him speak and got to shake his hand that I could see that his style and personality had nothing about them of the righteousness and rigidity or fanaticism we see in so many religious leaders.

Dowd is just the opposite. As the reader quoted above says, "Throughout his book he speaks as a pastor, with compassion and understanding of human frailties."

In this post I want to offer three samples of Dowd's practical ideas. I hope to keep them brief, to provide readers with just enough information for you to decide if you want to do any follow-up reading. If you prefer web sites to old-fashioned books, you can do your reading on-line. I'll provide some web links at the end this post.

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Sample #1. One of Michael Dowd's most practical thoughts with regard to the connections between science and religion is that religious people don't need to be afraid to make changes in their traditional religious views. In fact, they need to make some changes if our religions are to regain their power for good in the world.

Dowd quotes the early-20th-century English mathematician and evolution-friendly philosopher Alfred North Whitehead, who says, "Religion will not gain its old power until it faces change as science does."

Science is constantly updating itself-- continually refining its understanding of the world at every level from stars and atoms to life on Earth and the workings of the nervous system and brain. Religion needs to do no less.

In our day it's apparent that some aspects of the Earth's religions are getting in the way of their own best traditions. Dowd says they need to let go of some of the mythological aspects of our religious traditions. 

He's talking about things like the New Testament story of Jesus walking on water and the Taoist story of Lao Tzu, the author of the Tao Te Ching, who was at his birth already 98 years old!

The cosmologies of the pre-Modern religions are filled with such attention-getting and often delightful stories. But we don't need to be afraid to recognize them precisely as stories.

Dowd gives an excellent example on page 362 where he lists no fewer than twenty-seven religious traditions which honor a virgin-mother. 

Some of the more familiar names of individuals with virgin-mothers include Heracles, Plato, Perseus, Krishna, Tammuz, Horus, Hermes, the emperor Augustus, Alexander the Great, Dionysus, and Romulus and Remus.

Dowd's list also provides another example of a mythological feature that's commonly found in pre-modern religions: at least five of these figures were not only born of a virgin-mother but were also born at the winter solstice. On the old calendars, that was December 25.

In our day, religions need to give up their insistence on the literalness of such mythological features.

Ken Wilber offers a similar point in his Marriage of Sense and Soul, where he notes that it's not an issue if participants in a specific tradition want to believe things like the virginity of the founder's mother. It only becomes an issue if believers insist that everybody else has to believe it, or if non-believers insist that no one should believe it.

In Christianity, for example, the virginity of the Virgin Mary is a time-honored belief, and there's no reason for not accepting it if you want to-- or for not accepting it if you don't want to. The basics of the Christian tradition don't depend on it.

Over the last several decades, a comment that has increasingly been heard from young people is, "I'm spiritual but not religious." To a great extent it's their way of saying that they want to hold on to basics but don't feel any need to accept mythological features.

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Sample #2. Another thing that young people mean when they say "I'm spiritual but not religious" has to do with the attitudes of religious institutions toward different kinds of people.

In a widely publicized article which appeared recently on Facebook and in the national media, Anne Rice, the writer of popular Vampire stories, publicly disowned the institutional form of Christianity to which she had earlier been a convert. Her point is that in our day the institutional forms of religion seem to be mostly negative.

She views institutional Christianity as anti-gay, anti-women, anti-Moslem, anti-sinners, anti-nonbelievers, "anti-" just about everything and everyone. "Anti-life," she says.

Michael Dowd is especially good at making clear that these "anti-" attitudes are not part of the basic Western religious tradition. He says that the Judeo-Christian tradition is by its very essence inclusive of everyone, that we can see-- more clearly than ever from the evolutionary perspective-- that that's what the tradition is all about.

Justice, peace, and equality have been the basics of Western religious tradition from the time of the Hebrew prophets, long before Jesus' own preaching about God's "kingdom"-- the "reign of God"-- as welcoming and promoting the welfare of all.

The Dali Lama says "Compassion is my religion." It's hard to imagine anyone who takes the Western religious tradition seriously wanting to say less.

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Sample #3. As I see it, respect for persons--and for personal freedom-- comes first of all from our respect for ourselves. Science has been making a major contribution along those lines with its findings in the area of brain and nervous system studies for the last fifty years.

As the reader I quoted above notes, Dowd speaks with "compassion and understanding of our human frailties." They are, as he says, "part of our deep ancestral heritage." When we know something about our ancestral heritage we can see that there's no possible place for the righteousness and rigidity of religious fundamentalists or for the exclusionary attitudes of many religious institutions.

Dowd does an especially good job in presenting an easy-to-understand summary of the evolutionary development of the brain, the biological source of our frailties. He calls it the "brain's creation story." In terms of living out the New Cosmology in everyday life, this sacred story of our brain allows us to trust that we are called, with all our frailties, to be co-creative participants in the world's evolutionary development.

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It is likely that you are familiar with the term "triune brain" from the popular media. It's the insight, developed by scientist Paul MacLean about a half-century ago, that the human brain has several layers, each of which comes from a different level of our evolutionary past.

A good example of science updating itself is that a fourth area of the brain has recently been recognized, so that Dowd can refer now to the "quadrune brain." The basic idea is that we share the deepest of these four layers with reptiles, and the next two more recently evolved layers with mammals and primates. There is also, of course, a uniquely human layer to our brain.

Dowd gives these four layers of the brain cute easy-to-remember names: "Lizard Legacy," "Furry Li'l Mammal," "Monkey Mind" and "Higher Porpoise." He says, "Children and teens, especially, delight in these playful ways of talking about our brain." (I do, and you probably will, too.) He makes use of these ideas frequently in his book, so I'm going to offer a few brief thoughts about each of them in this "sample #3" of my Dowd Sampler.

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"Lizard Legacy." This is innermost part of the brain, the earliest layer in terms of biological evolution; we share it with reptiles. It includes the brain stem and what scientists call the cerebellum. It's that part of the brain that keeps us breathing and allows us to physically move our muscles without having to consciously think about it. Without our Lizard Legacy we couldn't drive a car, play a musical instrument or type on a computer keyboard.

It's also the seat of those instinctual urges, not much under conscious control, which Dowd calls our "inherited proclivities." These are our basic biological drives for food, sex and shelter which are biological essentials for individual and species survival.

Dowd points out that our Lizard Legacy, which itself developed from the nervous system of even earlier creatures who lived in the sea, is also the basic source of our addictions. As an example of its power, Dowd mentions that scientists have found that even creatures like nematode worms, who have almost no brain at all, can get addicted to nicotine. 

So our inclinations toward excess in terms of food, sex and "feel-good substances" are part of our evolutionary heritage. They are deeply rooted in our reptilian brain and we don't need to feel guilty about them.

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"Furry Li'l Mammal." This is Dowd's name for the middle part of the brain, which we share with our mammalian relatives (those animals who have hair or fur on their bodies, give birth to live young and have milk glands to feed them). Scientists refer to this old mammalian brain as the limbic system; it is the seat of our memory and emotions.

The limbic system transforms the earlier reptilian drives for food and sex into powerful emotional-charged cravings. It's responsible for the fact that we can respond emotionally to music and that we can be violently repelled by the odor of rotten food.

Reptiles don't have a limbic system and don't care for their young after they hatch; mammals do. The Furry Li'l Mammal is the source of the deep drives we experience for relationships, to be bonded with others, and to acquire some recognition in our social groups. It's also the basis for close friendship and warmth in human relationships.

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"Monkey Mind." Scientists call this newer part of the mammalian brain the neocortex. We share it with our primate relatives. It's also called the "Chatterbox Mind" because it is incessantly talking to itself. It's the source of language, of sequential thinking, and it's what allows us to learn by reasoning as well as by experience.

The neocortex lets us choose between our competing reptilian (Lizard Legacy) instincts and our more social (Furry Li'l Mammal) urges. It also allows us to look ahead: "If I do this, then that might happen." But it also causes us to constantly fret about the past and worry about the future. It's hard to turn off the Monkey Mind.

Addictions to watching TV, playing computer games and surfing the web are consequences of our "chatterbox" neocortex. It endlessly takes us from one thought to another and keeps us from being in the present moment. The term "Monkey Mind" comes from Buddhism, where exercises such as meditation, drumming and chanting have been used for many centuries to quiet down this part of the mind that just wants to keep on spinning and spinning.

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"Higher Porpoise." This is the most recently evolved part of our brain and unique to humans. It's called the "executive brain" because it lets us not only choose between competing drives from the older parts of the brain but also enables us to do so with strength and conviction. Scientists refer to it as the frontal lobes or pre-frontal cortex.

This part of our brain is what accounts for our sense of the future and our vision of what might be. Dowd gives some down-to-earth examples of how it works. It's what allows a teenage boy, for example, to get up early to practice for a swim meet or to avoid drug use so he won't get thrown off the football team. It's thanks to our brain's "Higher Porpoise" that we can envision and plan for a future, and work to accomplish our goals.

The pre-frontal cortex is especially significant because it is what makes each of us not just a living being or a mammal or a primate but a person. It is the home of our personal consciousness and freedom-- of the mystery which we experience ourselves to be.

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It's this sense of personal freedom that's the very essence of Modern and Post-modern worldview, and being better informed about the brain's Sacred Story gives us an understanding of human freedom that people in earlier centuries did not have. I quoted Ken Wilber in post #76 with regard to Modernity's Gains: "Slavery existed in every pre-modern society and none of the world's pre-modern religions offered these rights and dignities on any large scale."

The point is that knowing the brain's creation story "allows us," as Dowd says, "to trust our shadow side." And it's only when we trust ourselves that we can be willing to let go of things like the mythological features of our religious traditions, and that we are able to trust, rather than fear or exclude, other persons. We all have a Lizard Legacy as well as a Furry Li'l Mammal and a Monkey Mind; but we also all have a Higher Porpoise.

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I hope my "Dowd Sampler" will encourage you to learn more of what Dowd has to say. If you're interested in using electronic media, these two web sites may be of special interest:

One is a link to an on-going discussion he's been having with the head of a major Baptist seminary (look for "Is Biblical Christianity Bankrupt?"):

The other is a list of some of the world's top science and religion leaders, including a number of Nobel Prize winners, who support his work:

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Monday, May 10, 2010

#68. Sam's Tao Te, Intro



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The Tao Te Ching is an ancient Chinese book about the way the world works and the power and presence of the mystery behind it. It's about 3,000 years old.

Ching simply means "book," but Tao and Te are less easy to translate. Their meanings go together, something along these lines: The Tao Te Ching is a book is about the way (tao) the ultimate mystery behind the existence of the universe shows itself in terms of its power and presence (te) operating in the world. The most common English title is The Book of the Way and its Power.

It's a set of guidelines for living in communion with the cosmic process-- exactly what the convergence of science and religion calls us to in our time.

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Although it was written long before the emergence of both contemporary science and the institutional forms of religion as we know them today, it constitutes what I think of as A Manual for the New Cosmology. Its ancient wisdom is relevant for anyone interested in the evolutionary perspectives of modern science and concerned about the kind of spirituality that goes with them.

The Tao Te Ching's dynamic perspective makes it distinctly different from the static worldview of Western religion in recent centuries. At the same time, its emphasis on personal communion with the creative process puts it in deepest agreement with the heart of the West's Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition.

The Tao Te is specifically addressed to people in responsible positions-- from baby-sitters to emperors, and to everyone in between: mothers and fathers, politicians and police, scholars and religious leaders, business persons and military generals.

It describes how anyone who is in charge of others needs to exercise authority in accordance with the Way the world works. It stresses that each of us can only do that by personally living in harmony with the Way.

The Book of the Tao Te is made up of 81 brief sections, sometimes called "verses" or "chapters." The first section is about the ultimate Mystery from which the cosmos emerges; the second is about human beings acting in accord with it. These first two verses set the pattern for the entire collection of 81 short "chapters."

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Traditionally, the name of the author is given as Lao Tzu, but that might simply mean "Old Man" or "the old Wise One."

Despite the fact that Lao Tzu's text is three thousand years old, much of what he has to say is specifically relevant for our time of Immense Transition.

We need all the help we can get as we come to a new understanding of how the world works and how we should live so as to be aligned with the processes of cosmic evolution. This ancient book offers that kind of help.

While much of it, as I've said, is specifically addressed to political leaders and, more generally, to persons in responsible positions, Lao Tzu especially challenges anyone in authority to be aware of those conventional cultural views which are incompatible with the Way the world works.

Lao Tzu did not have the evolutionary perspectives we have available to us-- anyone reading this post knows more than he possibly could have about deep space, deep time and DNA, for example-- but he did have that fundamental sense of the dynamic nature of the world which is central to the evolutionary perspective.

That's what makes it so valuable for us.

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That dynamic energy which in the book of Genesis is said to have "hovered over the waters of creation," and is known in many spiritual traditions by words such as wind, air, life-breath and spiritus, is here called "te."

Te is described as the power and presence of the Mystery behind the universe; it's understood to be always flowing and moving, never static. The whole purpose of the Tao Te is make clear how we, as participants in the cosmic process, can be in dynamic balance with that holy spiritus as it operates in the world.

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I mentioned back in post #8 (Background to Biogenetic Structuralism) that "Over the years, I've found it helpful to use Greek terms to talk about the material world, humanity and divinity: the meanings of cosmos, anthropos and theos are clear enough and yet relatively free of the conventional emotional connotations which the English words tend to evoke."

Since then, I have made good use of those Greek terms in many posts. As I said in post #8, "The Immense Transition we are currently experiencing involves a significant change in our understanding of all three of these basic aspects of our existence."

I think those Greek terms-- cosmos, anthropos and theos-- are especially useful here, too.

Like most of the spiritual traditions of the East, the Tao Te focuses on the anthropos-cosmos relationship. That's in strong contrast to the West's Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions which emphasize the anthropos-theos relationship-- to an almost total disregard of cosmos.

But at the same time, the Tao Te also speaks of the dynamic power and presence of the ultimate Mystery (theos) as the very means by which we humans are empowered to live full, happy, creative lives in the world (cosmos).

So this ancient text brings together the Judeo-Christian and Islamic perspectives of the West, where the starting point of everything spiritual is theos, with those of the East, such as Buddhism, where the emphasis is on anthropos-cosmos and theos is honored primarily by silence.

Beyond that, the Tao Te Ching is also especially significant in one other way. It helps us bring together the West's traditional understanding of theos with modern science's new dynamic view of cosmos.

The words may sound confusing, but it's worth thinking them through. The result is a dynamic, all-embracing, unified world view of cosmos, theos and anthropos together. It specifically includes a renewed understanding of the dynamic holy spiritus, which has been neglected for centuries in Western religion and spirituality.

And this perspective is precisely what's needed most for the convergence of science and religion in our time.

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Currently, there are more than forty English translations of the Tao Te available.

Sometimes, when comparing two English versions, it's hard to believe that they really are translations of the same Chinese text.

But I've found that the more I think about them, the more clear it becomes that the different translations are expressions of similar ideas, although from very different starting points.

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For the last several years, I've been creating my own "translation" of the Tao Te. It's not really a "translation," since the only Chinese words I know are the few I've picked up studying tai chi. What I've been doing is using a half-dozen of the available English translations to create a readily understandable version in contemporary language.

I did it primarily for my own sake. But my teacher-instincts have been urging me to share it with blog readers. At first I thought that I would share just a few of the more obviously relevant verses, but I eventually decided to share all 81 chapters of my version.

That's far too many to read through in one sitting, even though each chapter is usually no more than a sentence or two, and never longer than a few paragraphs .

And it often happens that even a single line will hold your attention and call you back to itself a number of times.

So I'll be sharing my version of the Tao Te in three separate posts following this one: #69 will be the first third (sections 1-27), #70 will be the middle third (sections 28-54), and #71 will be the final third (sections 55-81).

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Of the translations I'm familiar with, the most down-to-earth, readable version is Backwards Down the Path by Jerry O. Dalton (1994).

The most scholarly translation is Ellen M. Chen's The Tao Te Ching (1989). In her Preface she specifically mentions the "inspiration and encouragement" which she received for her work from Thomas Berry-- a clear indication of this ancient text's relevance to the New Cosmology.

The most beautiful edition, containing spectacular photographs by John Cleare, is Ralph Alan Dale's Tao Te Ching (2002).

There's also a convenient on-line version by Steven Mitchell (1995). I've used this one to provide the basic structure for what I'll be sharing in the next three posts.

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Lao Tzu didn't distinguish between political leaders and what are often called today "spiritual leaders." That kind of distinction wasn't of much concern 30 centuries ago.

The Wise Old Man's intention is to help people understand how we can go about responding to our fundamental human vocation of living in harmony with the world's workings and the Mystery behind it.

In my version, I refer to persons attuned to the cosmic process as "balanced persons" or "balanced leaders." It's important that you not hear "balanced" as meaning the same thing as "static."

It's always a dynamic balance that's meant.

The familiar medical term, "electrolyte balance," is a good example of the kind of balance I mean. The relative proportions in our blood of the concentrations of electrolytes-- chemical ions such as potassium, sodium, chloride and calcium-- are constantly being adjusted from second to second by the wisdom of the body to keep us alive and well.

In the same way, "balanced persons" are constantly active, always re-adjusting the details of their lives whenever they become aware that they are lopsided in some way.

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In addition to the many translations of the Tao Te, there are numerous commentaries available. I'm deliberately not including any commentary with my version. In a way, all the thoughts I've been sharing in this blog over the last few years are a commentary on The Book of the Way and its Power.

It helps to think of this document as a part of the global world's wisdom literature-- relevant again in our day as we re-discover the dynamic workings of the world and are newly coming to understand our place as creative participants in it.

My hope is that while you are reading this "translation" of these ancient words you will watch for those which speak strongly to you. Whatever calls to you or grabs your attention in some way, especially if it strikes you as inaccurate or annoying; those may be the ones that are especially relevant for you personally.

I hope you will enjoy reading it. I'm absolutely certain you will find it challenging!

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As usual, your feedback is welcome.

To send a comment: use either "Click here to send a comment" (below) or click on "Post a Comment" (at the bottom).

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