
Tom Flynn, the editor of Free Inquiry,
has invited me to contribute four essays to this magazine over the
course of the next year. This invitation comes after he wrote a
mixed, misleading, and ultimately exasperating review of my book, The
End of Faith, in these very pages.[1] Having accepted his invitation, I
now feel a mixture of emotions about which psychological science has
precious little to say. In this first essay, I will resist the
temptation to rise heroically to the defense of my own book—but I
will fail.
If anyone has written a book more critical of religious faith than I have, I’m not aware of it. This is not to say that The End of Faith does not have many shortcomings—but appeasing religious irrationality is not among them. These claims are not as self-serving in this context as they might first appear. While Flynn is guilty of some surprising misinterpretations of my argument,[2] his support for my book was fundamentally eroded by something I did, in fact, do: I used the words spirituality and mysticism affirmatively, in an attempt to put the range of human experience signified by these terms on a rational footing. It seems to me that the difficulty Flynn had with this enterprise is not a problem with my book, or merely with Flynn, but a larger problem with secularism itself.
As a worldview, secularism has defined
itself in opposition to the whirling absurdity of religion. Like
atheism (with which it is more or less interchangeable), secularism
is a negative dispensation. Being secular is not a positive virtue
like being reasonable, wise, or loving. To be secular, one need do
nothing more than live in perpetual opposition to the unsubstantiated
claims of religious dogmatists. Consequently, secularism has
negligible appeal to the culture at large (a practical concern) and
negligible content (an intellectual concern). There is, in fact, not
much to secularism that should be of interest to anyone, apart from
the fact that it is all that stands between sensible people like
ourselves and the mad hordes of religious imbeciles who have
balkanized our world, impeded the progress of science, and now place
civilization itself in jeopardy. Criticizing religious irrationality
is absolutely essential. But secularism, being nothing more than the
totality of such criticism, can lead its practitioners to reject
important features of human experience simply because they have been
traditionally associated with religious practice.
The final chapter of my book, which
gave Flynn the most trouble, is devoted to the subject of meditation.
Meditation, in the sense that I use the term, is nothing more than a
method of paying extraordinarily close attention to one’s
moment-to-moment experience of the world. There is nothing irrational
about doing this (and Flynn admits as much). In fact, such a practice
constitutes the only rational basis for making detailed
(first-person) claims about the nature of human subjectivity.
Difficulties arise for secularists like Flynn, however, once we begin
speaking about the kinds of experiences that diligent practitioners
of meditation are apt to have. It is an empirical fact that sustained
meditation can result in a variety of insights that intelligent
people regularly find intellectually credible and personally
transformative. The problem, however, is that these insights are
almost always sought and expressed in a religious context. One such
insight is that the feeling we call “I”—the sense that there is
a thinker giving rise to our thoughts, an experiencer distinct from
the mere flow of experience—can disappear when looked for in a
rigorous way. Our conventional sense of “self” is, in fact,
nothing more than a cognitive illusion, and dispelling this illusion
opens the mind to extraordinary experiences of happiness. This is not
a proposition to be accepted on faith; it is an empirical
observation, analogous to the discovery of one’s optic blind spots.
Most people never notice their blind spots (caused by the transit of
the optic nerve through the retina of each eye), but they can be
pointed out with a little effort. The absence of a reified self can
also be pointed out, though this tends to require considerably more
training on the part of both teacher and student. The only “faith”
required to get such a project off the ground is the faith of
scientific hypothesis. The hypothesis is this: if I use my attention
in the prescribed way, it may have a specific, reproducible effect.
Needless to say, what happens (or fails to happen) along any path of
“spiritual” practice has to be interpreted in light of some
conceptual scheme, and everything must remain open to rational
discussion. How this discussion proceeds will ultimately be decided
by contemplative scientists. As I said in my book, if we ever develop
a mature science of the mind, most of our religious texts will be no
more useful to mystics than they now are to astronomers.
What words should we use to acknowledge
the fact that the happiest person on this earth at this moment might
have spent the last twenty years living alone in a cave? Any
experienced meditator knows that this is a serious possibility.
(Indeed, I consider it not only possible, but likely.) What can we
say about the fact that the conventional sources of human
happiness—association with family and friends, positive engagement
with society, diverse experiences of physical pleasure, etc.—might
be neither necessary nor sufficient to produce happiness in its most
profound forms? This is not New Age mumbo jumbo. What secularists
like Flynn tend not to realize is that there are genuine,
introspective insights that can be terribly difficult to acquire. The
lack of general accessibility does not render such insights at all
suspect. The average person could spend the rest of his life trying
to determine whether string theory makes any sense (and still fail);
this is not a measure of whether string theory is mumbo jumbo. As any
serious practitioner of meditation knows, there is something to the
claims that have been made by mystics over the ages. And yet, the
fact that such claims have always been advanced in the language of
one or another religious ideology continues to confound secularists.
Flynn condemns my book simply because I
have found no better words than spiritual or mystical to denote this
rarefied terrain.[3] As Flynn concedes, I took great pains to distance
myself from the unfortunate associations these terms carry in our
culture, deluded as it is by absurd religious certainties. Still,
Flynn felt that my caveats were insufficient, and he would have had
me employ words like “meditative” or “attentional” to
describe the experience of human consciousness shorn of the illusion
of the human ego. The problem, however, is that there is a kernel of
truth in the grandiosity and otherworldly language of religion. It
really is possible to have one’s moment-to-moment perception of the
world radically transfigured by “attentional” discipline. Such a
transfiguration, being both rare and profoundly positive, may
occasionally merit a little poetry.
1. Tom Flynn, “Glimpses of Nirvana,” Free Inquiry 25, no. 2 (February/March 2005).
2. Flynn accuses me of “implicit Zionism” when what I explicitly say is this:
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