Friday, August 26, 2011

The Evolution of the Brain and the Mind

During this time, ancestral shamans described Creation as a web of life in which we are all interconnected. This was a kind of Indra's Net, which the mythology of ancient India describes as a web with an infinite number of intersecting strands and a precious jewel at the intersection of every strand. Each of the infinite number of jewels reflects every other jewel perfectly. Within this mythical net, all beings are interrelated, and all of our actions, no matter how slight, affect everyone else. Within this net, prophets converse with God and interpret His will, while mystics search for the elixir of immortality and alchemists attempt to transform lead into gold. These sages, mystics, and alchemists shared the same preoccupations as seers of today. They asked, as we do now: How can we live long and healthy lives, unaffected by debilitating illness and degenerative brain disease? How can we turn the dense lead of human suffering into the gold of enlightened consciousness?
In the scheme of history, the quest for metaphysical answers about the origin of life died when Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species. The popular understanding of the time was that life is a perennial struggle for survival, that humankind is governed by a harsh Law of the Jungle where only the fittest win.
But, fortunately, after centuries of scientists' dismissal and ignoring of the ancient teachings, people in all walks of life are once again asking the mystic's questions about the significance and potential of human consciousness. Could evolution have also been favoring the survival of the wisest?  link

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