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We Cannot Rise to a More Spiritual World if We Only Teach our Children About Materialism

abracad, · Categories: externally authored, science and spirituality

by Philip Mereton - Author, The Heaven at the End of Science: An Argument for a New Worldview of Hope
www.heavenattheendofscience.com

"[O]ne may well wonder how materialism, the doctrine that "life could be explained by sophisticated combinations of physical and chemical laws," could so long be accepted by the majority of scientists. The reason is probably that it is an emotional necessity to exalt the problem to which one wants to devote a lifetime."
Eugene Wigner, Remarks on the Mind-Body Question (1961)

Human consciousness is rising.  It is rising to the realization that there is more to this world than brute, faceless matter and impersonal scientific laws.   We know we are more than particles in motion, more than leftover stardust.  Underlying the world is a force, a power so strong that it cannot measured by the instruments of science.  It is the power that created the world; a unifying force; one Spirit.  God?

The worldview of materialism − of a machine programmed by mysterious scientific forces and operating on its own power -- is showing signs of decay,  as the rising spirit of humankind demands more.  Spirit is finding a foothold in logic; the curtain of darkness is being swept away.  Modern science is beginning the retreat from a purely mechanistic account of the human experience.  Consciousness is no longer being ignored as an integral part to the make-up of world. 

Quantum theory shows consciousness creating the particles that make up the world.  Bruce Rosenblum & Fred Kuttner, Quantum Enigma.  The deeper scientists look into the laws of nature, the more they seem finely tuned to allow life to exist, Bernard Haisch, The God Theory; attempting to escape the conclusion that God or Mind must be the cause of this fine tuning, scientists now speculate that an infinity of universes actually exist, at least one of which was bound to contain the right conditions to allow life to exist.  Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow, The Grand Design. Undeniable experiences of the paranormal point to a Conscious Universe (Dean Radin), a united mind sharing information between discrete forms. Books of the new spirituality, such as Neale Donald Walsh's Tomorrow's God, Eckhart Tolle's, The New Earth, and Duane Elgin's, The Living Universe, speak of a hidden power at the base of being, something we cannot describe in words but is ever present and therefore undeniable.  Ken Wilber writes authoritatively of the levels of consciousness yet to come, where humankind realizes Being is the world itself, and lives immersed in that fact.  See, e.g., The One Two Three of God (Audio).  Approaching the world as great dream explains more than approaching it as a mindless machine. (http://www.heavenattheendofscience.com/).  At some point this fact will be impossible to ignore.

If we were to try and list the fundamental elements of this new world outlook they would include: 

 This new worldview of spiritualism needs a logical basis, and we can reach it from any one of several directions: 

 This worldview is logical, uses the full range of human experience as its proof,  and provides a basis for a new morality. 

 But it is not taught in our schools. 

 Big Bang materialism and Darwinism dominate the textbooks that tell our children about the real world.  A real, objective, Newtonian world that scientists and the textbook writers want to exist, but know does not exist.  Schools teach our children only about materialism —a world of wonder emerging from mindless particles and impersonal laws.  We know that spiritualism is real, but we pretend it is an outlier for new-age bookstores and aging hippies. 

 And this is not another argument about how intelligent design should be taught alongside Darwinism in biology classes. There is a middle ground between the extremes of scientific materialism and creationism.  A place between the machine and the angels.  This place is the worldview of the one consciousness; a world that is the united dream of God.  

So what should we teach our children?  We should teach them more philosophy, about how the great thinkers in history have struggled to define "ultimate reality" and humankind's place in the cosmos; about how science, beginning with Galileo, Kepler, and Newton, set up a mechanistic model of the universe in order to conduct experiments and to understand the "music of the spheres,"  while never relinquishing their belief in a greater power behind nature's scenery; about how modern science has managed to separate the model from this greater power —and the human mind — as it seeks to explain the cosmos with no help from an intelligence; about how science, at the end of its rainbow-quest, is finding that the outer world reflects the inner world; about how the peculiar, human-tuned laws of nature have compelled modern scientists to go to the extreme of inventing an infinity of additional universes to explain the coincidences in this one; about how leading quantum theorists now concede that there is no way to explain the world without giving consciousness a central role; about how Darwin's mindless process of natural selection cannot account for the diversity and wonder of nature; about how the evidence for psychic phenomena is now so overwhelming that scientists are forced to ignore it rather than deal with it; about how an increasing number of science writers are finding a place for mind or consciousness in scientific theory; about how most people know there is more to this world than the brute matter and impersonal laws of modern science.  About how science teaches that God is dead, when we know he is not.

If these thoughts seem radical it is because they differ from what we have been taught.  But is what we have been taught correct? There is one way to find out. Teach both worldviews side-by-side and see which one makes more sense.

We cannot rise to a more spiritual world if we only teach our children about materialism.

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