Noises from the Darkroom
The Science and Mystery of the Mind
Guy Claxton
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Body-Building: The Origins of Life
Chapter 4 The Self-Organizing Organizer
Chapter 6 The Pressures of Society
Chapter 7 Languaging the Brain
PART II: THE STORY OF THE SELF
Chapter 8 The Language of the Self
Chapter 9 Affluence, Leisure and Learning
Chapter 10 Identity and Survival
Chapter 11 Accentuate the Permanent: the Narrative Self
PART III: THE EMERGENCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Chapter 12 Alarums and Excursions
Chapter 13 Feelings and Seeings
Chapter 14 The Circumcision of Consciousness
Chapter 15 The Cultivation of Ignorance
Chapter 16 Stupidity: the Retardation of Perception
PART IV: UNCONSCIOUSNESS REGAINED
Chapter 19 Unconsciousness — The Essential Mystery
Chapter 20 The Reconsecration of Unconsciousness
Chapter 21 The Restoration of Sanity
Our minds lie in us like fish in the pond of a man who cannot fish.
Ted Hughes
It is the impossible job of the mystic, if he wishes to try to teach what he knows, to scrute the inscrutable, speak the unspeakable, and eff the ineffable.
Alan Watts
The human mind is mysterious in two fundamentally different ways. It is mysterious in the sense that we do not yet have a clear understanding of how it works. Penetrating this mystery is the job of science, and there is, currently, a flurry of very fruitful and exciting activity going on in laboratories and seminar rooms around the world. One of the aims of this book is to provide a reader-friendly synthesis of, and some novel contributions to, this research. The approach of ‘cognitive science’, as it is called, sees the mystery of the mind as a temporary fog of incomprehension which precise experimentation and smart theorizing will eventually dispel.
But the mind is mysterious in a much more profound and indelible sense – and this meaning of mystery is not scientific but religious. The great spiritual traditions of the world agree that a brush with God is a close encounter of an essentially mysterious kind. The more clearly we see, the more obvious it becomes that at the very heart of human experience there is an ineffable Something, greater by far than the human mind could ever, in principle, encompass. ‘The peace of God passeth all understanding’, and ‘God moves in a mysterious way’, not because we don’t yet have enough data about the Almighty, but because He/She/It/They are fundamentally, intrinsically enigmatic. And that enigma, so the mystical explorers tell us, is not remote but present, accessible in every moment of mundane human experience. Thus the larger aim of this book is to bring these two meanings of ‘mystery’ into conjunction, and to show how science, by clarifying what it is to be a living human being, demands that we remember the invisible bedrock on which we are built. For our modern intuitive understanding of our own psychology leaves it out. And this oversight is not a matter of academic interest, but of vital personal and even global significance.
Not to put too fine a point on it, the world is in a mess because the human mind is in a mess. The problems we face are not at root technological, political or economic; they are psychological and spiritual. And the mind is in a mess because it misunderstands itself. We pollute the skies and ruin the earth because we are confused about who and what we are. It is because of our improper and unjust relationship with our own psychology that some of us plough up fields of good wheat while others of us are starving;