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Creating a
Universe
by David
Simon, M.D.
"Each
thing we see hides something else we want to see."
-- René Magritte
"The
world is moving too fast," lamented the successful
middle-aged stock broker. He had worked hard to achieve
his senior status and his top floor view office, but now
complained, "I just don't feel I can keep up with
all the changes that are happening." He was having
trouble sleeping and getting a migraine headache almost
daily. Although they were annoying during the week, they
became almost explosive on Saturday mornings requiring
him to stay in bed a good part of each weekend. He
gained partial relief by drinking coffee -- consuming
almost six cups each day. Although his house was paid
for, his pension fully funded and his children's college
funds well stocked, he hadn't taken a real vacation in
over four years.
From a
Western perspective, this man was having
caffeine-withdrawal headaches, exacerbated by his
irregular sleep-wake pattern. From the Ayurvedic
point-of-view this poor man's life was being ruled by
movement without rhythm. The air element (Vayu) had
become excessive and was carrying him away. He needed to
come back down to earth (Prithivi) , and recapture his
steadiness, stability, and balance that had always been
his character. He needed to remember what he was really
made of and return to his true nature.
In every
culture throughout history, human beings have speculated
as to how the world began, and about the principles that
continue to structure and govern it. Our fundamental
human interest in the beginning is not just of a
metaphysical nature. There has always been a sense that,
by thinking about how things began, we can understand
the powers that are still at work in our daily
experience of the world. In the ancient world these
cosmic speculations were generally quite poetic and
metaphorical. A Chinese creation myth, for instance,
describes the universe as originating from a gigantic
hen's egg, while a Norse myth refers to a primordial cow
emerging from a block of ice. Both these stories imply
that animals are vehicles through which supreme powers
express themselves, and this veneration of animals
manifested itself elsewhere in art, religion, and even
in early medicine. The Judeo-Christian tradition
describes the beginnings of the universe in more
abstract terms, with the disembodied voice of God
commanding, "Let there be light."
Anthropologists
debate the extent to which the peoples of the past
thought that their myths literally described the process
of creation. In the case of the Scandinavian peoples and
their story of the "ice cow," for example, its
clear that the myth was of primarily symbolic
significance, and that its importance was in the
psychological and perhaps subconscious connotations
evoked by the narrative, rather than as a depiction how
the universe really began. But now, at the end of the
twentieth century, there is no doubt that cosmologists
believe the current scientific model of creation is
intended to describe "what really happened."
According to the so-called Big Bang theory, the universe
began when an entity of incomprehensible density
exploded, generating the matter which comprises the
galaxies and propelling it outward at unimaginable
speeds. Over time, primordial matter cooled and
condensed resulting in galaxies, stars, and planets.
Most cosmologists believe that the universe will
continue to expand, doubling its known size over the
next ten billion years. Will gravitational forces
eventually overcome the expansion of the universe
leading to a contraction back to the center? This
concept of an oscillating universe that expands and
contracts over eons of time evokes the Vedic image of a
breathing cosmos -- the exhaling and inhaling of
Brahman, the primordial creator. Modern cosmologists
continue to debate the ultimate fate of our universe.
Despite
some dissenters, the Big Bang theory is the prevailing
explanation of the origin of the cosmos. But although it
seems to fairly accurately describe the universe as we
perceive it, the theory raises the question of what
preceded the cosmic explosion? Where did the original
entity come from? How long did it exist before
exploding? What caused it to suddenly break apart?
Scientists
respond to these inquiries in various ways. To the
physicist Steven Hawking, such questions are very
understandable but scientifically naive. Asking what
came before the Big Bang, he has said, is like asking
what's north of the North Pole. And yet, great
scientists, including Albert Einstein, have not so
readily dismissed these questions as they searched for a
unified theory that would define the essential
"stuff" our of which the universe arose.
Ayurveda
teaches that consciousness is, in effect, the unifying
principle that physicists are seeking. Consciousness is
the organizing essence of the universe which
simultaneously transcends and creates the world we
perceive. The essential "stuff" of the
universe is actually non-stuff. But this essential
"non-stuff" is not the same as emptiness, for
within it is contained the potential for all that was,
is and will be. The seen world has its roots in the
unseen field of pure potentiality -- in consciousness.
From this primal consciousness, the elements that make
up the universe come into being. Western science has not
yet named this unifying essence and might be reluctant
to embrace the terms consciousness or pure potentiality.
Yet, when we look at the original Ayurvedic term for
this primordial state from which the universe arose, the
Sanskrit word, Avyakta, simply means "Unmanifest."
Contained within the Unmanifest is the impulse to
create, known in Ayurveda as Prakruti or nature. In
essence, Ayurveda simply describes the universe as
arising from a field of potentiality that has an
intrinsic nature to create.
Modern
physics also describes the universe -- consisting of
time, space and matter -- as arising from a timeless,
spaceless point. This is the culmination of a long
tradition in Western thought. Pre-Socratic philosophers
such as Heraclitus asserted the existence of a basic
substance from which all things came and to which all
things returned. Heraclitus called this primordial
essence logos, which is the root word of logic and
intelligence. The logos of Heraclitus can be understood
as a cosmic governing and generating principle analogous
to the primordial Consciousness of Ayurveda, and here
the Western and Eastern traditions begin to sound very
much alike.
The
Ayurvedic concept of creation describes not only the
beginning of the universe, but a continuing creative
process which is occurring at every moment. Ayurveda
teaches that the entire universe unfolds through the
interaction of three vital principles, which in Sanskrit
are known as the Gunas. They are Sattva, the creative
principle; Rajas, the principle of maintenance; and
Tamas, the principle of destruction. Everything that we
perceive through our senses, from elementary particles
to galaxies, is born, has a life span, and eventually
dies. In this dynamic cycles, the Gunas are the
principles that are continuously expressing themselves.
According
to Vedic philosophy, the three Gunas interact to create
both subjective and objective realities. In the
subjective realm, the five sense organs, five motor
organs, and the conscious mind are brought into being.
On the objective side, the Gunas give rise to five great
elements, or Mahabhutas and five subtle elements, or
Tanmatras, the quanta of perceptual experience that feed
our five sense organs. The five great elements are the
codes of nature that compose the world of perceived
forms.
The
Vedic sages derived their insights into the nature of
reality without benefit of sophisticated scientific
instruments. They simply looked inside themselves, and
discovered the secrets of the universe within their own
physical beings and their consciousness. Their
understanding of the world in terms of five great
elements is at once simple and profound. Though this
perspective is of ancient origin, the concepts are
relevant to our current understanding of reality, and
can even illuminate our understanding of Western
scientific principles. We can, for example, describe
chemical reactions as the application of the fire
principle, or energy, to systems composed of the earth
element, or atoms. This increases the movement principle
(the wind element) of the atoms, causing a
reorganization of bonds (the water element), which
results in a new substance.
Similarly,
in nuclear reactions a powerful acceleration of the
movement principle (the wind element) within a system
overcomes strong intranuclear bonding (the water
element), liberating tremendous amounts of energy (fire)
as subatomic particles are released from their bondage.
The
theory of the five elements can be applied to human
social systems as well. The fast paced lives we live in
the West, which are expressions of the wind principle,
are disruptive to the social cohesion (water) that bonds
members of families, communities, or other organizations
that are expressions of the earth principle. The absence
of a unifying social fabric results in chaotic releases
of emotional energy (fire) that are the bases of the
unprecedented levels of violence in our society today.
By
beginning to think of the world in terms of space, wind,
fire, water, and earth, we can gain insight into how the
field of pure Unmanifest consciousness interacts with
itself to create manifest reality. This process is
nothing other than the miracle of creation.
Vedic
science teaches that we create our own reality.
Consciousness, the field of all possibilities,
systematically consolidates itself into the material
world. The same field of intelligence that structures
the galaxies, planets, mountains and atoms, creates
living beings. The same intelligence that organizes the
solar system, the seasons, and even the migration of
birds is the origin of the creative thoughts that arise
in our minds. This understanding is eloquently expressed
in a Vedic poem:
As is
the individual, so is the universe.
As is the human body, so is the cosmic body.
As is the human mind, is the cosmic mind.
As is the microcosm, so is the macrocosm.
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Article
excerpted from:

"The Wisdom of Healing"
by David Simon, M.D.
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About The
Author
After graduating medical
school at the University of Chicago, David Simon received
training in internal medicine and neurology. He moved to San Diego,
serving as medical director for neurological services at Sharp Cabrillo
Hospital and as chief of the medical staff. Today Dr. Simon is medical
director of The Chopra Center for Well Being in La Jolla, California.
This article is excerpted from his book The Wisdom of Healing ©1997.
Excerpted by permission of Three Rivers Press, a division of Random
House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be
reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the
publisher.
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