A sharp jab in the I

Demiurge, painting by SRS, oils on canvas, 50.5 x 40.5 cm. In the context of this post, "Where's Wally" would be a better title for this painting, "Wally" being the lost and/or non-existent Self.
According to Heraclitus you can’t step in the same river twice. Why not? Because no river is ever the same; the water is never the same – there’s always new water flowing downstream. (If the water isn’t flowing, it’s not a river). In fact, not only can’t you step in the same river twice, the same you can’t step twice into a river. Why not? Because there is no “you” that stays the same.

Physically, you’re always changing. Your body is never the same. Your blood is always flowing. Your heart is always pumping. Cells die and new cells are born all the time. And living cells are changing all the time: their biochemical processes only stop when the cell dies.

Nor is your mind ever still. New thoughts, ideas, imaginings are constantly emerging then fading away. And if you think you don’t always think, think again: you’re constantly receiving information about the “outside world” via your senses. Even when you’re asleep you’re monitoring internal processes such as breathing as well as external factors such as temperature. Your brain is a perpetual motion machine – neurons are firing all the time, in sleep and in wakefulness, even in coma.

So, if you are always changing, if you are never the same from instant to instant, then what exactly is it that corresponds to you: which set of cells, which thoughts, which feelings, which sense perceptions, which electrical impulses? Is there anything that stays the same for long enough to warrant being a something? Is the current “me” (whoever that is) responsible for the actions of a previous “me” (whoever that was)?

It’s difficult if not impossible to come up with a clear and trustworthy definition of the thing we label as the “self”. The self is a slippery beast that wriggles and squirms out of the grasp of any mind. There's the issue of where the self lives. There's the issue of whether the “I” that I am now is the same as the “I” of ten years ago, or a minute ago, or even the “I” in the memory or mind of another.

And then there's the issue of what I believe and what I perceive. The experiments of Benjamin Libet highlight the problems of identifying who or what possesses the contents of consciousness, who or what if anything is the agent capable of intentionality, and whether “free will” actually means anything at all.

Light travels very quickly (186,000 miles per second) but it still takes time for a photon to get from A to B. And it takes time for data about the “outside world” to be received and processed by the mind. Everything I see, hear, smell or feel is in the past. By the time I become aware of what I am looking at, it is no longer the same thing as it was before. When I look through a telescope at, say, the nearest star (Proxima Centauri), I see Proxima Centari as it was 4.24 years ago. (Proxima Centauri is 4.24 light-years away from our sun, Sol.) The data on which a Self constructs reality, constructs itself, is old data. Not only is it old, it is unreliable data, pertaining to that which no longer exists.

Some believe that right now is the only time there is. Now is the eternal instant when the three times are one, as the Tibetan Book of the Dead puts it* (the three times being past, present and future). Tibetan Buddhists (among others) believe that the eternal moment is all there is, was and ever will be; that all I am, have, do and know is the whole of the eternal moment, per the "Tat Tvam Asi" of non-dualism, in which the soul/self/consciousness is the only reality (whatever that means).

I don’t know about that; in fact I don’t truly know anything at all.

~~~

* Tibetan Book of the Dead, Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition, published in Britain 2005, p. 47

HOME

eBooks by Cosmic Rapture
(for kindle, tablet, smartphone or e-reader.)

NIGHTMERRIES: THE LIGHTER SIDE OF DARKNESS. This so-called "book" will chew you up, spit you out, and leave you twitching and frothing on the carpet. More than 60 dark and feculent fictions (read ‘em and weep) copiously and grotesquely illustrated.

AWAREWOLF & OTHER CRHYMES AGAINST HUMANITY (Vot could be Verse?). We all hate poetry, right? But we might make an exception for this sick and twisted stuff. This devil's banquet of adults-only offal features more than 50 satanic sonnets, vitriolic verses and odious odes.

MANIC MEMES & OTHER MINDSPACE INVADERS. A disturbing repository of quirky quotes, sayings, proverbs, maxims, ponderances, adages and aphorisms. This menagerie holds no fewer than 184 memes from eight meme-species perfectly adapted to their respective environments.

MASTRESS & OTHER TWISTED TAILS. An unholy corpus of oddities, strangelings, bizarritudes and peculiaritisms, including but not limited to barbaric episodes of herring-flinging and kipper-kissing. A cacklingly bizarre read that may induce fatal hysteria. Not Recommended!

FIENDS & FREAKS and serpents, dragons, devils, lobsters, anguished spirits, hungry ghosts, hell-beings, zombies, organ-grinders, anti-gods, gods and other horse-thieves you wouldn't want to meet in a dark cosmos. Immature Content! Adults Maybe.

HAGS TO HAGGIS. An obnoxious folio featuring a puke of whiskey-soaked war-nags, witches, maniacs, manticores and escapegoats. Not to mention (please don't!) debottlenecking and desilofication, illustrated. Take your brain for a walk on the wild side. Leave your guts behind.

No comments