AW: In this video Sam Harris focuses on meditation as secular meditation. There is an urgent need of separating Meditation practices from religious rituals or from religion itself. Meditation should be taught in schools and colleges along with secular subjects like Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics etc. Meditation deals specifically with understanding the nature of mind. It has little to do with faith in God or lack of it or any other religious matter.
Transcript
Sam Harris:
Mindfulness is very much in vogue at this moment as many of you probably know.
And it’s often taught as though it were a glorified version of an executive
stress ball. It’s a tool you want in your tool kit. It prepares you emotionally
to go into a new experience with a positive attitude and you know you’re not
hauling around baggage from the past. And that’s true.
Actually having focus and
having your mind in the present moment is a little bit of a superpower in
situations that we’re all in from day to day. But that actually undervalues
what mindfulness really is and its true potential. It’s more like the large
hadron collider in that it’s a real tool for making some fundamental
discoveries about the nature of the mind.
And one of these discoveries
is that the sense of self that we all carry around from day to day is an
illusion. And cutting through that illusion I think is actually more important
than stress reduction or any of the other conventional benefits that are
accurately ascribed to mindfulness.
The enemy of mindfulness and
really of any meditation practice is being lost in thought, is to be thinking
without knowing that you’re thinking.
Now the problem is not
thoughts themselves. We need to think. We need to think to do almost anything
that makes us human – to reason, to plan, to have social relationships, to do
science. Thinking is indispensable to us but most of us spend every moment of
our waking lives thinking without knowing that we’re thinking. And this
automaticity is a kind of scrim thrown over at the present moment through which
we view everything. And it’s distorting of our lives. It’s distorting of our
emotions. It engineers our unhappiness in every moment because most of what we
think is quite unpleasant.
We’re judging ourselves, we’re
judging others, we’re worrying about the future, we’re regretting the past,
we’re at war with our experience in subtle or coarse ways. And much of this
self-talk is unpleasant and diminishing our happiness in every moment. And so
meditation is a tool for cutting through that.
It’s interrupting this
continuous conversation we’re having with ourselves. So that is – that in and
of itself is beneficial. But there are features of our experience that we don’t
notice when we’re lost in thought.
So, for instance, every
experience you’ve ever had, every emotion, the anger you felt yesterday or a
year ago isn’t here anymore. It arises and it passes away. And if it comes back
in the present moment by virtue of your thinking about it again, it will
subside again when you’re no longer thinking about it.
Now this is something that
people tend not to notice because we rather than merely feel an emotion like
anger, we spend our time thinking of all the reasons why we have every right to
be angry. And so the conversation keeps this emotion in play for much, much
longer than its natural half-life.
And if you’re able, through
mindfulness to interrupt this conversation and simply witness the feeling of
anger as it arises you’ll find that you can’t be angry for more than a few
moments at a time. If you think you can be angry for a day or even an hour
without continually manufacturing this emotion by thinking without knowing that
you’re thinking, you’re mistaken.
And this is something you can
just witness for yourself. This is – again this is an objective truth claim
about the nature of subjective experience. And it’s testable. And mindfulness
is the tool that you would use to test it.
One problem is that most of
the people who teach mindfulness – and I know many of the great vipassana
teachers in the West and in the East and I have immense respect for these
people. I learned to meditate in a traditionally Buddhist context. But most
people who teach mindfulness are still in the religion business. They’re still
– they’re propagating Western Buddhism or American Buddhism.
The connection to the
tradition of Buddhism in particular is explicit and I think there are problems
with that because when you, if you are declaring yourself a Buddhist you are
part of the problem of religious sectarianism that has needlessly shattered our
world. And I think we have to get out of the religion business.
That whatever is true about
mindfulness and meditation and any introspective methodology that will deliver
truths about the nature of consciousness is non-sectarian. It’s no more
Buddhist than physics is Christian. You know the Christians invented physics or
discovered physics but anyone talking about Christian physics clearly doesn’t
understand the significance of what we’ve understood through that means. It’s
the same with meditation.
There’s going to come a time
where we no longer are tempted to talk about Buddhist meditation as opposed to
any other form. We’re just talking about turning consciousness upon itself and
what can be discovered by that process.
Now it just so happens that
Buddhism almost uniquely has given us a language and a methodology to do this
in a way that is really well designed for export to secular culture because you
can get to the core truths of Buddhism, the truth of selflessness, the
ceaseless impermanence of mental phenomenon, the intrinsic unsatisfactoriness
of experience because you can’t hold on to anything.
No matter how pleasant an
experience is it arises and then passes away. And no matter how much you
protect yourself, unpleasant experience is destined to come. These features of
our minds can be fully tested and understood without believing anything on
insufficient evidence.
So it’s true to say that
despite all of the spooky metaphysics and unjustified claims within Buddhism
you can get to the core of it without any faith claim and without being
intellectually dishonest.
But it is intellectually
dishonest, I think, to keep talking about these truths in an exclusively
Buddhist context because it’s misleading. It subtly gives the message that in
order to have rich, meaningful, important spiritual lives we must somehow
continue to endorse religious sectarianism. We must still frame this inquiry
with an ancient allegiance to one accidental strand of human culture as opposed
to using all of the concepts and tools and conversations that are available to
us in the twenty-first century.
Directed / Produced by Jonathan Fowler, Elizabeth Rodd,
and Dillon Fitton
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