
And the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started,
and know the place for the first time.Thomas Stearns Elliot
| Much has been written in recent years about the
enlightening parallels between modern physical theory and ancient metaphysics. Not
only is science finding it increasingly difficult to keep itself separated from
philosophical speculation, but as we develop our abstract understanding of the Universe as
a whole, the fields of physics and metaphysics seem to be losing their distinction
altogether. More than ever, as we examine our field of spacetime from every possible
perspective, we probe our consciousness for the mystical Truth.
The most fundamental principle of
mysticism is transcendental
omnipresence, a state of being which is totally independent of spacetime while
at the same time is everywhere at
once in spacetime. The notion of oneness is
intrinsic to the principle
since it refers to a single, undifferentiated state of being. The second most
fundamental principle is a characteristic of the first, polarity,
referring to the dynamic-creative aspect of the transcendental
state. It is said to
be the essence of consciousness, both at the universal level and the individual level.
The scientific fields of cosmology and particle physics can at first seem to be remote and unimportant studies as far as the human condition is concerned, yet they actually provide insight into the nature of consciousness itself, our awareness of existence and how we perceive it. Most intriguing, modern science is recognizing that our Universe is not simply composed of separate particles scattered around in space -- it is uncovering a unified state of the Universe, a higher dimension that exists in its unified state at this very moment, not just in the singularity at t=0 of the Big Bang. Our consciousness, our bodies, and every last particle in the Universe are an inseparable part of this higher dimension, as if the physical world were merely a "transient projection" from a pristine higher realm that never changes. The various models of unified field theories in today's physics all point toward the same reality, and we should not get so entangle in their differences that we let it get in the way of the infinitely more important realization that there is in fact a unified reality, a transcendental and omnipresent higher reality which creates our experience of being in a universe in the first place.
Because of this paradoxical yet fundamental-to-creation condition, the problems with Creation were to be expected. The separateness and solidity of the physical realm is particularly convincing, and to say we have experienced trials and tribulations in our spacetime would seem an understatement. However, with our new understanding of the physical world and with a new mindfulness of the ancient wisdom, it seems time to awaken to an intuitive understanding of the statement mystics have used for ages to confound and stimulate the logical mind: "There is only That (unified state of Being); we are That." We may be re-learning an ancient system of spiritual understanding but we have the opportunity to understand it on an entirely new and conceptually very clear level. There seems no reason, then, why we should not just naturally go forth and act accordingly, with a mindfulness of transcendental unity in every moment of our lives. Of course, that is the ideal -- to be spiritually aware in EVERY objective action, thus eliminating selfish motivations and actions, the source of bad karma, suffering, and all the negativity getting in the way of transforming our world into our ideal next age. It is easier to talk of ideal conditions than to live them, but if the beauty of the ancient wisdom can be shared in a new and powerful way we could probably take a big step toward transcending many of today's worst problems. "There is one mind common to all individual men. Every man is an inlet to the same... Who hath access to this universal mind is a party to all that is or can be done, for this is the only and sovereign agent." -- Ralph Waldo Emerson |
By Thy Grace I remember my Light, and now gone is my delusion.
My doubts are no more, my faith is firm;
and now I can say 'Thy Will be done'.
Bhagavad Gita
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