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SEEING
What Is Consciousness?
What exactly is consciousness? The oldest answer to this question comes from India, almost three thousand years ago.
Long before Socrates interrogated his fellow Athenians and Plato wrote his Dialogues, a great debate is said to have taken place in the land of Videha in what is now northeastern India. Staged before the throne of the learned and mighty King Janaka, the debate pitted the great sage YÄjñavalkya against the other renowned Brahmins of the kingdom. The king set the prize at a thousand cows with ten gold pieces attached to each oneâs horns, and he declared that whoever was the most learned would win the animals. Apparently YÄjñavalkyaâs sagacity did not entail modesty, for while all the other priests kept silent, not daring to step forward, YÄjñavalkya called out to his student to take possession of the cows. Challenged by eight great Brahmins, one by one, YÄjñavalkya demonstrated his superior knowledge. As a favor to the king, he allowed him to ask any question he wanted. In the ensuing dialogue, told in the âGreat Forest Teachingâ (BáčhadÄraáčyaka UpaniáčŁad)âa text dating from the seventh century B.C.E. and the oldest of the ancient Indian scriptures called the UpanishadsâYÄjñavalkya gave the first recorded account of the nature of consciousness and its main modes or states.1
AN ILLUMINATING QUESTION
The dialogue begins with the king, knowing exactly where he wants to lead the sage, asking a simple question: âWhat light does a person have?â Or, as it can also be translated: âWhat is the source of light for a person here?â
âThe sun,â replies the sage. âBy the light of the sun, a person sits, goes about, does his work, and returns.â
âAnd when the sun sets,â asks the king, âthen what light does he have?â
âHe has the moon as his light,â comes the reply.
âAnd when the sun has set and the moon has set, then what light does a person have?â
âFire,â answers the sage.
Persisting, the king asks what light a person has when the fire goes out, and he gets in reply the clever answer, âSpeech.â YÄjñavalkya explains: âEven when one cannot see oneâs own hand, when speech is uttered, one goes toward it.â In pitch-black darkness, a voice can light your way.
The king, however, still isnât satisfied and demands to know what light there is when speech has fallen silent. In the absence of sun, moon, fire, and speech, what source of light does a person have?
âThe self (Ätman),â YÄjñavalkya answers. âIt is by the light of the self that he sits, goes about, does his work, and returns.â
This answer makes plain that the dialogue has been moving backward, from the distant, outer, and visible to the close, inner, and invisible. Nothing is brighter than the sun, or the moon at night, but they reside far away, at an unbridgeable distance. Fire lies closer to hand; it can be tended and cultivated. Speech, however, is produced by the mind. Darkness canât negate the peculiar luminosity of language, the power of words to light up things and to close the distance between you and another. Yet speech is still external in its being as physical sound. The sun, moon, fire, and speechâwe know each one by means of outer perception. The self, however, canât be known through outer perception, because it resides at the source of perception. It isnât the perceived, but that which lies behind the perceiving. The self dwells closest, at the maximum point of nearness. Itâs never there, but always here. How could we possibly find our way around without it? How could outer sources of light reveal anything to us, if they werenât themselves lit up by the self? And yet, precisely because the self is so intimate, it seems impossible to have any clear view of it and to know what it is.
Finally, the king is able to ask the question he has all along been aiming toward: âWhat is the self?â
A REVEALING ANSWER
YÄjñavalkya answers that the self (Ätman) is the inner light that is the person (puruáčŁa). This light, which consists of knowledge, resides within the heart, surrounded by the vital breath. In the waking state, the person travels this world; in sleep, the person goes beyond this world. The person is his own light and is self-luminous.
As this answer unfolds, it becomes clear that the âlightâ YÄjñavalkya is talking about is what we would call âconsciousness.â Consciousness is like a light; it illuminates or reveals things so they can be known. In the waking state, consciousness illuminates the outer world; in dreams, it illuminates the dream world.
Itâs here, in YÄjñavalkyaâs answer to the kingâs question about the self, that we find the first map of consciousness in written history.
WAKING, DREAMING, SLEEPING
YÄjñavalkya explains to the king that a person has two dwellingsâthis world and the world beyond. Between them lies the borderland of dreams where the two worlds meet. When we rest in the intermediate state of dreams, we see both worlds. The dream state serves as an entryway to the other world, and as we move through it we see both bad things and joyful things.
In the waking state, we see the outer world lit up by the sun. Yet we also see things when we dream. Where do they come from, and what makes them visible? What is the source of the light illuminating things in the dream state?
YÄjñavalkya explains that in the dream state we take materials from the entire worldâthis world and the other oneâbreak them down, and put them back together again. Although the dream state lies between the two worlds, itâs a state of our own making. The person creates everything for himself in dreams and illuminates it all with his own radiance:
When he falls asleep, he takes with him the material of this all-containing world, himself breaks it up, himself re-makes it. He sleeps by his own radiance, his own light. Here the person becomes lit by his own light.
There are no chariots, nor chariot-horses, nor roads there, but he creates chariots, chariot-horses and roads. There are no pleasures, no enjoyments, nor delights there, but he creates pleasures, enjoyments and delights. There are no ponds, nor lotus-pools, nor rivers there, but he creates ponds, lotus-pools and rivers. For he is a maker.2
Like a great fish swimming back and forth between the banks of a wide river, the person alternates between waking and dreaming. Yet the self never attaches fully to either state, as the fish never touches the riverbanks when it swims between them.
Thereâs also a third state, the state of deep and dreamless sleep. Here the person rests quietly with no desires:
As a hawk or eagle, tired after flying around in the sky, folds its wings and is carried to its roosting-place, even so the person runs to the state where he desires no desire and dreams no dream. âŠ
As a man closely embraced by a beloved wife knows nothing outside, nothing inside, so the person, closely embraced by the self of wisdom, knows nothing outside, nothing inside. That is the form of him in which his desires are fulfilled, with the self as his desire, free from desire, beyond sorrow.3
These images present deep and dreamless sleep as a sought-for state of peace and bliss. Conventional characteristics and burdens drop away: âHere a father is not a father, a mother is not a mother ⊠a thief is not a thief, a murderer not a murderer ⊠a monk not a monk, an ascetic not an ascetic.â4 Instead, we rest in the embrace and wisdom of the cosmic or universal self (Ätman), which is free from desire and without fear.
If deep sleep is peaceful and blissful, does this mean weâre somehow conscious in deep sleep? Is awareness present, or is deep sleep the oblivion of awareness? Put another way, is deep sleep a state of consciousness, like waking and dreaming, or is it a state where consciousness is absent, as most neuroscientists think today?
YÄjñavalkyaâs description of deep and dreamless sleepâand many later Indian interpretations of what he meantâimplies that consciousness pervades deep sleep. Consider the following rich but enigmatic passage: âThough then he does not see, yet seeing he does not see. There is no cutting off of the seeing of the seer, because it is imperishable. But there is no second, no other, separate from himself, that he might see.â5
This passage seems to be saying that although there are no longer any dream images to be seen (âhe does not seeâ), there remains a kind of awareness in dreamless sleep (âyet seeing he does not seeâ). As the sun cannot stop shining, so the self cannot lose all consciousness; specifically, it cannot lose the basic luminosity of awareness (âthere is no cutting off of the seeing of the seerâ). In deep sleep, however, this awareness doesnât witness any object separate from itselfâno waking world of perceptible things and no dream world of images (âthere is no second, no other, separate from himself, that he might seeâ). So the awareness here must be of a subtle and subliminal kind, devoid of images and desires, while peaceful and at ease.
In later texts of the Upanishads, as well as other Indian philosophical works, dreamless sleep is described as lacking the obvious or gross subject/object duality thatâs present in the waking and dreaming states. In the waking state, the subject appears as the body and the object appears as what we perceive. In dreams, the subject appears as the dream ego or self-within-the-dream and the object as the dream world. In deep sleep, consciousness doesnât differentiate this way between subject and object, knower and known. Instead, it rests as one quiescent âmass.â Consciousness withdraws into itself while its function of being directed toward external objects lies dormant. Yet this dormancy isnât a total loss or oblivion of awareness; itâs a peaceful absorption that offers a foretaste of the lucid bliss belonging to the self-realized consciousness liberated from illusion.
Later philosophers belonging to the Yoga and VedÄnta schools would also offer the following argument in support of the idea that consciousness continues in deep sleep: if there were no awareness at all in deep and dreamless sleep, then you couldnât have the memory, âI slept well,â immediately upon waking up. Memory is the recollection of past experience; when you remember something, you recall an earlier experience and you recall it as your own. In remembering you slept peacefully, you recall something from deep sleep, so that state must have been a subtly conscious one. Weâll examine this argument in light of the neuroscience of consciousness in chapter 8.
YÄjñavalkyaâs progression from the waking state to the dreaming state to the deep-sleep state recapitulates his earlier progression from the sun, moon, fire, and speech to the self. Both narratives move increasingly away from what is outer and obvious to what is inner and subtle. Both trace the visibility of something in the waking and dreaming states back to its source in the basic luminosity of consciousness.
SUBTLE CONSCIOUSNESS
Weâve now uncovered an important difference between Western cognitive science and the Indian yogic philosophies. Cognitive science focuses on the contrast between the presence and the absence of consciousnessâfor example, between being awake and being under anesthesia, or between being able to report seeing a stimulus, such as the image of a face, and not being able to report seeing it, even though you show some other kind of behavioral or brain response to its presence. The Indian yogic traditions, however, focus on the contrast between coarse or gross consciousness and subtle consciousnessâfor example, between waking perception of outer material objects and subliminal awareness in deep sleep.
From a meditative perspective, consciousness comprises a continuum of levels of awareness, ranging from gross to subtle. Gross consciousness is waking sense perception, which tells you about things outside you, like the words youâre reading now, and gives you the feeling of your body from within. Dreaming is subtler because you withdraw from the outside world and create what you see and feel on the basis of memory and imagination. Deep sleep is subtler still because itâs consciousness without mental images. Subtle aspects of consciousness are also said to manifest in certain states of deep meditation where all overt thinking and perceiving cease, as well as at the time of death. These subtler or deeper aspects of consciousness arenât apparent to the ordinary untrained mind; they take a high degree of meditative awareness to discern.
In Western philosophy of mind, itâs common to distinguish between two meanings of the word âconscious.â On the one hand, we can say youâre conscious of something when it appears to you some way in your experience. Feeling a pain or having a visual experience of the color red are two standard examples philosophers give of a conscious experience. As they say, there is âsomething itâs likeâ for you to see color or to feel pain. In this sense, a mental or bodily state is conscious when there is something itâs like for the subject to be in that state. Philosophers call this concept of consciousness âphenomenal consciousnessâ (âphenomenalâ here means how things seem or appear in experience). On the other hand, we can also ...