Metanexus: Views 2002.12.10 1844 wordsToday's column is a review of two books that have been published
simultaneously in Russia and in America:
1.V. N. Katasonov: "The Ladder to the Sky (A Genesis of the Set Theory of G.
Cantor and The Problem of the Limits of Science)". Russian text in the
Internet:<http://www.philosophy.ru/iphras/library/granitsy/katasonov.htm>.
2.Amir D. Aczel: "Mystery of the Aleph: Mathematics, the Kabbalah, and the
Search for Infinity". 258p. Four Walls Eight Windows edition, 2000, 258
pages; $24.95
And according to today's columnist, Igor Voronov, the "basic and heuristic
concepts for the best understanding of the ideas stated in these two books
are contained in the book by Andrew Newberg et al.: Why God Won't Go Away."
For Voronov, the basic thesis of the review:
"Many ideas of modern mathematics are based on the work of the same
functional modules of a human brain, which served in the last history of
mankind and form now a basis for the creation of religious feelings." To
substantiate his claim, he adds that "both spiritual experiences and
experiences of a more ordinary material nature are made real to the mind in
the very same way - through the processing powers of the brain and the
cognitive function of the mind." (from Andrew Newberg and others, "Why God
Won't Go Away", page 37.)
Read on to continue the exploration.
Today's columnist is Igor B. Voronov of the Sechenov Institute of
Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry and the Russian Academy of
Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia. Since 1959, he has worked at the Sechenov
Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Russian Academy of
Sciences, now as a leading research fellow, candidate of medical sciences.
Areas of scientific interests include: comparative and age physiology of
blood circulation and respiration, especially the problems of connections
between the rhythm of heart beating and the rhythm of breathing,
gerontology, the problems of birth and death rates, the reasons of human
populations rise or fall, and evolutionary aspects of the origin of belief
in the God, including the descent of various religion branches. Author or
coauthor of some 50 research papers on evolutionary physiology and
pharmacology, 16 of them are cited in Medline.
--Stacey E. Ake
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Subject: God, Infinity, the Right Hemisphere of the Cerebral Cortex, and the
Limits of Knowledge
From: Igor Voronov
Email: <voroni@IV4555.spb.edu>
During last decades the leading scholars and scientists from many countries
and cultures have started to call in question the dichotomy between a
natural sciences and religion existing for the last three centuries.
The mathematics is not one of the natural sciences. It is engaged not in
research on nature, but in the study of those formal structures that it
creates for herself. Therefore mathematics, like art and especially music,
can be one of the important links that could restore the connection between
the natural sciences and religion.
It is impossible to consider as a simple accident the simultaneous and
independent publication in America and in Russia of the two afore-mentioned
interesting books discussing the connections of mathematics with the
religion.
The center of attention of both these books is the person and work of the
great mathematician of the fin-de-siecle era who was also the founder of
mathematical set theory: George Cantor (born: 3 March 1845 in St Petersburg,
Russia; died: 6 Jan 1918 in Halle, Germany)
The distinctive feature of Cantor's scientific work consisted in his
attempting, with the help of mathematics, to find a way to an understanding
of God. The matter is that the belief in God is a purely psychological
function, not subject to the rational analysis and not having any relation
to the question on real existence of the God. Not by means of reason, but
more often besides it, such feelings, as honor, selflessness, religious
belief, love to the glory and to fatherland - feeling which were till now
and will stay in the future the main springs of any civilization have
arisen.
The 1981 Nobel Prize winner for physiology or medicine was Roger Sperry of
Caltech. The work of Sperry and his collaborators revolutionized our
understanding of brain functions. They elucidated the unique capabilities of
each hemisphere and demonstrated that the combined effect of bi-hemispheric
activity amounted to more than the simple additive effects of the two
separate hemispheres.
Despite the complexity of the question on interbrain localization of
psychological functions, modern science has enough convincing data on
primary localization of the emotional functions, which are similar to belief
in the God, as being located in the right brain hemisphere. It is also
usually accepted, that the left brain hemisphere is predominately logical
and verbal, and in most cases the dominating half of the brain while the
right hemisphere has got reputation as the figurative side, emotional,
promoting orientation in space, but in most cases not dominating.
It is possible to cite convincing scientific data showing how rational
functions of knowledge, found in the left hemisphere of a brain, were
evolved by our distant ancestors, inhabitants of the Stone Age, later, than
religious functions of the right hemisphere. It will demand a lot of space
and time. Better we shall show, as the new stage in the human evolution is
described in the beautiful ancient legend.
"And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was
pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of
the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and
he did eat."
Richard J. Davidson, a psychology and psychiatry professor at the University
of Wisconsin, Madison, has amassed evidence that people with less left-sided
and more right-sided brain activation are specifically vulnerable to mental
depression.
In this regard, it is interesting to recollect that the hero of today's
reviewed books, namely, George Cantor, suffered from a heavy form of mental
illness-namely, depression--during the last 30 years of his life, eventually
ending his life in the psychiatric hospital.
Though Cantor's life ended in the psychiatric hospital, his works have led
to recognition of studying of infinity as quite natural component of a
mathematical science. Using the methods of set theory as developed by him,
Cantor has shown, that there is an indefinite number of actually infinities.
Furthermore, he has shown that there are not only an indefinite quantity of
all integers, but also precisely the same indefinite amount of odd integers,
even integers, integers divisible by 7, and so on. Cantor has also shown
that as paradoxical as it may seem all these indefinitely big sets of
numbers are equal among themselves. For example, the infinite amount of all
integers is not twice the size of the infinite amount of odd integers as it
would be possible to expect, but has precisely the same size. Cantor has
named the actual infinity as "transfinite" numbers and to their mathematical
designation in the formulas and equations has applied the first letter of
the Jewish alphabet, the letter "aleph".
In fact the main purpose of Cantor's work, as he viewed it, was the proof of
the real existence not only of the so-called "potentially infinite" number
sets, that is such sets or series of numbers that increase indefinitely or
without limits even with the addition of further numbers, but also the
so-called "actually infinite" number sets, i.e., those which cease to
increase further.
Cantor has carried out his life endeavoring to prove this hypothesis. In the
Jewish religious tradition of Kabbalah, the letter "aleph" designates "the
infinite nature and exclusiveness of existence of the God". Cantor had
purposely chosen a symbol "aleph" for the designation of actual infinity:
his attempts to understand the absolute infinity actually represented his
attempt to approach the essence of the God.
Now we shall return to a problem of the brain hemispheric asymmetry. We
shall recollect, that religious experiences are connected to the activity of
the right hemisphere, and that that mental disease, depression, which
suffered Cantor is connected to same activity. Was George Cantor's mental
disease really connected to subjects of his scientific researches? It cannot
be proved with certainty, but such an assumption is rather probable. And
yet, strangely enough, the other great mathematician who successfully
continued and developed the ideas of George Cantor--Kurt Goedel-also
concluded his life in a condition of heavy mental illness.
But in fact it is far from being true that all great scientists showed
attributes of mental illnesses. For example, Isaac Newton was a deep and
sincere believing Christian, and his faith did not prevented him to become
one of the greatest scientists of mankind. Apparently, the point is in the
harmonious interaction of Reason and Belief.
The Knowledge and the Belief are localized separately: Knowledge in the left
hemisphere; Belief, in the right one.
Set in the heading of the Review--"existence of limits of Knowledge" can be
explained very simply-for, as Roger Sperry has already shown, high-grade
activity of the brain can be carried out only at the coordinated, harmonious
interaction of its both hemispheres. To put it briefly, Knowledge without
the participation of Belief (or Religion, though it is not same) cannot be
rich or complete Knowledge. And it also true for Religion, where it becomes
an ideology that is defective and low-grade due to a lack interaction with
Knowledge and with Science.
That fact, that the Muslim and the Western worlds gave opposite estimations
to events in New York on September 11 last year, confirms the competency of
the paradigm suggested by Harvard political scientist Huntington: after the
end of the "cold war" will begin an epoch of the "civilizations collision".
Now in the first place is the collision of Islamic world with the Western
civilizations. Key attributes of the modern Islamic
ideology--aestheticization of death, extolling of the military forces,
worship of martyrdom, and appeal to the heroic--are characteristic of the
activity of the right cerebral hemisphere. Just they were and are now the
integral part of all totalitarian ideologies.
In my opinion it is necessary to recognize the certain defectiveness and at
the Western civilization--absence of a harmony, excessive prevalence of the
Reason over the Belief, dry business calculation over love and friendship,
sex over romantic love, to put it briefly--the prevalence of left brain
hemisphere above right one.
I have the boldness to expect and hope, that my native land-Russia--which
has survived this past century of such terrible and epic historical events,
can become that bridge, that connecting part, between the East and the West,
between Belief and Reason, between Love and Business, between right and left
hemispheres of the brain (Corpus Callosum!) which are necessary for the
successful development of mankind during the next centuries.
"Oh, East is East and West is West,
and never the twain shall meet,
Till Earth and Sky stand presently at
God's great Judgement Seat;
But there is neither East nor West,
Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,
When two strong men stand face to face,
tho' they come from the ends of the earth!"
(Rudyard Kipling)
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