We often read or are told that all
life and all things, including all people, are one. It’s a nice, comforting, New-Agey
idea … but it’s not true. Not at all.
Now, look. Nothing in this world is simple.
Whatever exists in this universe is complex and has internal differentiation, involving numerous differences and
relations. Each thing is ‘a multum in parvo plurally related,’ to borrow a
phrase from William James [pictured left]. ‘Things
are with one another in many ways,’ wrote James, ‘but nothing includes
everything, or dominates over everything.’
Not only that, whatever exists does,
however, do so in situations. Those situations are themselves complex and are
also in complex relationship to other complex situations, and all these complex
situations exist in the one
space-time, belong to the one order
of being, and exist under certain invariably complex conditions. For example, a
table consists of wood, nails, glue, etc, not to mention the carpenter with his
tools who ‘made’ the table. The table sits on the floor of the room. The floor
is supported by the foundations of the building, and so on. Yes, whatever
exists does so in situations which are in complex relationship to other
situations.
In realist philosophy this state of
affairs is known as ‘situationality.’ Yes, everything that exists has some relation with some other thing that exists, but it is not true to say that
everything is related to everything else nor is everything one in some overall
monistic sense, and nothing in quantum physics proves otherwise. Co-existing
situations often comprise or constitute a system, and some systems are very
much connected to other such situations. However, while some situations have
connections with other systems, not all systems are connected to all other
systems. We know all this to be the
case.
Traditional Buddhism,
for the most part, is empirical and realist in its overall thrust and content (even though you will find in
many places a considerable amount of superadded superstitious nonsense). A
cardinal, perhaps the core, teaching of Buddhism---arguably the only thing that holds all Buddhist
teachings together---is this: all phenomena
are arising together in a mutually interdependent web of cause and effect. This
is known as the teaching or principle of interdependent relations.
Perhaps even
more importantly, this teaching more accurately states that things arise dependent on conditions and
cease when those same conditions cease. Buddhism sees causation as a complex
phenomenon going far beyond mere constant conjunction in the nature of some
‘regularity’ theory. The emphasis is on causal connections, or the
relationship, between two events that are separated in space-time. (Note. At
the sub-atomic level phenomena such as quantum entanglement show that
connections can at times survive even physical separation, but it remains the
fact that those connections exist under certain conditions even if we don’t
fully understand the nature, extent and scope of those conditions.)
Causation is
never a simple thing. Invariably, multiple factors are necessary to produce any
given effect. In light of this complexity and plurality, it is never as simple
as selecting one such factor from a set of jointly and severally sufficient conditions
and taking that factor to be the cause of the particular effect, for we are
dealing with a complex system whose parts, as previously mentioned, are at
least to some extent interdependent.
Buddhism goes
further and seeks to distinguish causes and conditions In that regard, the
English word ‘conditionality’ encapsulates essence of the Buddha’s teaching of
(in Pāli) paţicca-samuppāda (in
Sanskrit, pratītya-samutpāda), or
‘dependent arising’. Now, conditionality and causality are not the exact same
thing. Conditionality is a much broader concept of causality. When we speak of
the ‘cause’ of some event we are referring to something that is directly and
immediately responsible for the occurrence of the event, whereas the word
‘condition’ is wide enough to embrace supporting and contributing factors as
well. Buddha Shakyamuni is reported to have said on many occasions, ‘This
being, that becomes.’ In other words, the most general quality or a thing is
that it is the condition for another.
More fully, the Buddha would say:
This being,
that becomes; from the arising of this, that arises;
This not
being, that does not become; from the ceasing of this, that ceases.
This conditionality---that
is, all things are ‘conditioned things’---was said by the Buddha to be
universal, underlying all of reality, irrespective and quite independently of
anyone noticing it.
Now,
there is a sense in which all life is one. I am not advocating monism or pantheism. When I say that life is one, I am trying to say a couple
of things. First, a single logic applies to all things and how they are
related. Secondly, all things exist in the same order or level of reality, and
on the same ‘plane’ of observability. If these two things were not the
case, it would be impossible for us to be attentive to, and otherwise aware of,
what happens from one moment to the next, let alone speak meaningfully about
things. Just think about that for a few seconds, and it should be obvious to
you that such is indeed the case.
Call it the ‘interconnectedness of all life’ or, if
you like, ‘InterBeing.’ The latter wonderful term comes from the
Vietnamese Zen Buddhist monk and teacher Thich Nhat Hanh [pictured right]. I love that word
‘InterBeing.’
The bottom line is this. Although all things are not
one, there nevertheless is only one life manifesting
itself in all things and as all things. And
if that be the case, we owe each other certain ethical duties. Those ethical
duties (for example, the golden rule) do not depend for their existence on any
religion---not even Buddhism, for which I have the greatest respect. They flow
naturally and inevitably from the very nature of existence itself.
RELATED POSTS
MINDFULNESS
AND THE LIVINGNESS OF LIFE
MINDFULNESS, PROFESSOR JOHN ANDERSON AND THE FACTICITY OF THINGS
BUDDHISM AND THE PLURALITY OF ALL THINGS
MINDFULNESS, PROFESSOR JOHN ANDERSON AND THE FACTICITY OF THINGS
BUDDHISM AND THE PLURALITY OF ALL THINGS
InterBeing
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