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Tag: "emergence"

The Remarkable Plurality of the Singularity (Think About This)

by Carter Phipps

The winner of the 2003 Templeton Prize, Holmes Ralston III has blazed a long and distinguished career exploring the relationship between nature, science, and religious inspiration. As one of the brightest lights in the dialogue between science and religion, he has fused his deep ecological concerns, his passion for philosophy, and a strong religious sensibility into a career exploring the significance of what it means to be human at this unique moment in history.

In his latest work, Three Big Bangs: Matter-Energy, Life, Mind, Ralston takes on the biggest of the big subjects—the foundations of matter, life, and mind. He suggests that there have been three big bangs in the history of our universe. Science has given us the primordial big bang, the genesis of matter, and has documented the genesis of life on Earth. But Ralston is determined to give equal weight to the third singularity, the human singularity, the internal big bang that gave birth to the mind of the Homo sapiens. He writes:

We can take Albert Einstein as an icon of discovering the first big bang in the astronomical heavens (or at least of contemporary physics); we can take Charles Darwin as an icon of discovering the second big bang, evolutionary life on earth. But then the third big bang inescapably confronts us. Continuing to take Einstein and Darwin as icons, the marvel is not just in the heavens above or Earth beneath; the marvel is equally, indeed more so, the human minds capable of such knowledge.

You can find Holmes Ralston’s Three Big Bangs: Matter-Energy, Life, Mind at the following link: http://cup.columbia.edu/book/978-0-231-15639-4/three-big-bangs

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Evolutionary Becoming: A New Orientation (Quote of the Week)

by Andrew Cohen

The notion of evolutionary becoming, or evolutionary emergence, is a very new and unique orientation for the self. It’s hard to even conceive of how different this orientation is from the ways we have traditionally and culturally been conditioned to relate to the human experience. With the exception of very rare individuals, throughout history our orientation has generally been toward creating security, towards carving out a safe place in which to experience comfort and pleasure. Even revolutionaries who challenge the status quo in order to gain more rights and freedoms usually do so only until those rights and freedoms are achieved, after which they tend to settle in to a new status quo. Of course, there have always been rare individuals and inspired geniuses who, animated by the pulsation of the evolutionary impulse, are ever-reaching for that which is new, who have felt compelled to make significant progress and create new pathways in their particular fields. But what I’m speaking about here is not a particular kind of genius or talent—it’s a certain attitude and aspiration in relationship to the whole process of being alive. This shift in values that creates the conditions for perpetual emergence is a fundamental shift in orientation that is just beginning to dawn on us as we awaken to the fact that we are part of a process that is going somewhere. And it’s not merely a personal shift; it is a very deep cultural change in the human psyche as a whole.

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An Emergent Potential (Quote of the Week)

by Andrew Cohen

Evolutionary Enlightenment, and the new culture it promises, is something we can deliberately and consciously bring into being together, if we care deeply enough about the potential it is pointing to. But it is not something that can be simply manufactured through sitting in a circle and practicing a certain technique or generating a particular emotional state. It is an emergent perspective, or state of consciousness, that bursts forth spontaneously and miraculously only when the conditions are right. “Emergent” means that it is something greater than the sum of its parts—a new order of relatedness, a new level of consciousness, a deeper and higher perspective that is always unimaginable until the moment it explodes into existence.

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The Greatest Good (Quote of the Week)

by Andrew Cohen

From an evolutionary perspective or worldview, development—the emergence of that which is new—is seen as the greatest good. So during the limited time that each of us has here on Earth, we all have the opportunity to develop, to make a difference in this world through applying our God-given capacity for free agency, or freedom of choice, to our own conscious evolution. No matter who we are, we all have some measurable, not insignificant degree of free agency. And learning how to activate that gift, so that which is truly higher and new can emerge through us, is what makes all the difference.

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Guest Blogger Duane Elgin on the Emergent Universe

by Duane Elgin


After reading the latest Guru & Pandit dialogue between EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen and integral philosopher Ken Wilber in the current issue of EnlightenNext magazine, titled “Vertical vs. Horizontal Development,” author and evolutionary activist Duane Elgin wrote us a letter voicing his opinion on the subject. Elgin, who is the bestselling author of the eco-classic Voluntary Simplicity and the recently published Living Universe, has been a longtime partner of EnlightenNext (check out our interviews with him), so we wanted to post his response here on the blog to get a conversation started about the often confusing subject of human development. Continue reading…

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Think About This: Creative Friction (VIDEO)

by Joel Pitney

In early 2007, Deepak Chopra and EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen gave a public talk in New York City sponsored by the Alliance for a New Humanity. What followed was an inspiring dialogue between the two renowned spiritual teachers about the nature and purpose of human creativity. Here’s a short video excerpt from the event:

Make sure not to miss Deepak Chopra engaging live with Andrew Cohen and the rest of the EnlightenNext magazine editorial team during our free virtual seminar on Saturday May 15th, called “The Evolutionary Worldview.”

–>Click here for more information and to register.

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Vertical Emergence (Quote of the Week: 4/12/10)

by Andrew Cohen

In my recent teachings and retreats, I have been putting a lot of emphasis on the difference between what I call vertical and horizontal development. When I talk about verticality, it means that the whole self is going through a process that is going to result in the emergence of capacities and ways of thinking that are genuinely, authentically new and that weren’t there before. It’s not the same as a horizontal path of self-improvement where we are modifying, often in positive and important ways, the self that we already are. We’re not simply making the self, as it is, better. We are engaging with the spiritual process in such a way that the result is going to be the emergence of some quality, ability, and capacity that was not there before.

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A Conversation with Philip Clayton at the Parliament of the World’s Religions

by Joel Pitney

In their latest conversation at the 2009 Parliament of the World’s Religions in Melbourne, Australia, EnlightenNext founder Andrew Cohen and director of education Jeff Carreira, spoke with process theologian Dr. Philip Clayton. Clayton is a Professor of Religion and Philosophy at the Claremont Graduate University, focusing specifically on the combining the idea of emergence with Christian theology. Dr. Clayton believes that only a religion that is constantly evolving—or emergent–will be valid in the upcoming decades. The following video includes a short clip from the opening presentation he gave at a panel discussion and then an interview that EnlightenNext conducted with him afterward:

Please stay tuned to the EnlightenNext Editors’ Blog for more updates from EnlighteNext at the 2009 Parliament of the World’s Religions!

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One Between Two

by Andrew Cohen

emergenceThe goal of Evolutionary Enlightenment is the emergence of a miraculous potential that I call “intersubjective nonduality.” What does that mean? “Nonduality” is most commonly used to mean oneness, or not-two-ness. It points to the perennial spiritual revelation that there is no other. And “intersubjective” means between subjects. So “intersubjective nonduality,” to put it simply, means one between two. It means the experience of oneness in a context of relatedness. Continue reading…

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