Metanexus Views. 2003.06.20. 4895 Words.John Stewart explores "The Evolutionary Significance of Spiritual
Development" in the essay below. Humans have developed a new kind of
adaptation strategy based on "mental modelling," but "We use our mental
modelling to work out how to achieve the goals set by our internal reward
and motivation system-goals that we have been fitted out with by natural
selection and that are modified to a limited extent by conditioning during
our upbringing... But when our evolutionary interests clash with these
motivations and emotional responses, our evolutionary interests lose out.
We have not yet developed a comprehensive capacity to free ourselves from
the dictates of our biological and social past."
Stewart argues that humanity's adaptability is "seriously limited" in our
inability to pursue "evolutionary ends." Thus enters religion and
spirituality:
"If humanity is to realise the full evolutionary potential of mental
modelling, we will have to free ourselves from our biological and cultural
past... [T]he world's major religious systems all advocate the development
of an ability to free oneself from particular emotional responses, desires
and motivations."
John Stewart is a biological sciences graduate of the University of
Queensland in Australia. A number of his papers on evolutionary theory have
been published in international science journals in recent years, and he is
the author of the book "Evolution's Arrow: The Direction of Evolution and
the Future of Humanity", Canberra: The Chapman Press, 2000. ISBN
0-646-394975. The book is also available online at<http://www4.tpg.com.au/users/jes999>
-- Editor
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THE EVOLUTIONARY SIGNIFICANCE OF SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT
By John Stewart <jes999@tpg.com.au>
Adaptability is of central importance to the evolutionary process. It is
through adaptation that organisms are able to survive in changing
environments, become better suited to their existing environment, or expand
into new environments. In general, organisms that are more adaptable can be
expected to be more successful in evolutionary terms. A major improvement
in adaptive ability is a major evolutionary advance.
Humans are the most adaptable organism to live on this planet. We use our
rapidly improving science and technology to survive and satisfy our adaptive
goals in a wide range of environments. Whatever adaptive problem we put our
minds to, we can generally find a solution. We have proven far more
adaptable than organisms that evolve by gene-based evolution. It took
millions of years for genetic evolution to discover how to produce reptiles
that fly, while humans developed the technology to achieve this in a few
thousand years. The massive adaptive improvements seen in human capacities
over recent centuries are significantly greater than could be achieved by
genetic evolution over hundreds of millions of years.
Whatever our wants, whatever our needs, we are very effective at finding
ways to manipulate our environment to achieve them. But we are very poor at
achieving things that we do not want. We don't use our creativity to find
better ways to achieve things we are not motivated to achieve. In
evolutionary terms, this turns out to be the central limitation in human
adaptability.
Typically we do not see this as a limitation. It does not prevent us from
doing anything that we want to do. It does not stop us from living happy
and fulfilled lives. We do not feel restricted because we have no desire to
do what we have no desire to do. If we evaluate our adaptability by asking
whether it enables us to satisfy our needs and wants, we continue to see
ourselves as being highly adaptable.
But if we measure our adaptive ability in evolutionary terms, we reach a
very different conclusion. What if our continued evolutionary success
demands that we adapt in ways that conflict with the satisfaction of our
existing needs and wants? What if our existing motivations and needs do not
produce the behaviours that are best in evolutionary terms? These sorts of
conflicts between our needs and evolution's needs seem highly likely to
emerge during our evolutionary future. It is improbable that the needs and
wants implanted in us by our evolutionary past will produce the behaviour
that is also optimal for our future. This means that our adaptability is
seriously limited in evolutionary terms.
There is an enormous range of behaviours, life styles and technologies that
we would not want given our current needs and motivations. But these might
be critically important for achieving evolutionary success in the future.
We have a very large evolutionary blind spot. We are not motivated to
explore an immense variety of adaptive possibilities, no matter how useful
they may be in evolutionary terms. Until we overcome this limitation, we
will continue to use genetic engineering, artificial intelligence and other
technological advances to satisfy our past evolutionary needs and
conditioning, rather than to achieve future evolutionary success.
If we are to be successful in evolutionary terms in the future, we will need
to overcome this adaptive limitation. We will have to be able to do
whatever it takes for future success. Humanity will need to free itself
from the needs and wants installed in us by our biological and cultural
past. For this we will find that we will need to develop in ways that have
traditionally been classified as spiritual. Humanity will need to widely
adopt the practices currently associated with spiritual development if we
are to continue to be successful in evolutionary terms.
To get a better understanding of how human adaptability would need to change
in the future, it is useful to see how adaptability has improved during the
past evolution of life on Earth. This will enable us to locate the current
level of human adaptability within a long sequence of evolutionary
improvements. We will see how our current level surpassed previous
abilities, but how it too is limited. This will help identify the new
capacities we would have to develop if we are to overcome these limitations.
It will point to the new psychological skills and capacities we need if we
are to overcome our current deficiencies.
There are a number of quite distinct mechanisms that adapt organisms on our
planet [1]. One of the first to emerge was gene-based natural selection.
With this mechanism, organisms produce offspring that differ genetically
from each other and from their parents. The genetic difference might
produce a change within the organism that carries it. This changed
characteristic might in turn make the individual more successful and have a
greater number of surviving offspring. If so, the proportion of individuals
that carry the genetic difference will increase, and the genetic difference
will spread throughout the population. The population will be better
adapted, having acquired an improved characteristic. Gene-based natural
selection discovers adaptations by trying out changes amongst offspring.
But gene-based natural selection operates only across generations. It does
not adapt individual organisms during their life. It is unable to discover
new adaptations by trying out changes within the individual while it lives.
Obviously an adaptive mechanism that could do so would have a significant
advantage in evolutionary terms. It could discover and implement improved
adaptations continuously within individuals, long before genetic evolution
was able to do so.
Somewhat ironically, the adaptive arrangements that operate within organisms
during their life were discovered and established by genetic evolution.
Genetic evolution has developed the superior adaptive mechanisms that have
the potential to replace it, at least in humans. The first adaptive
mechanisms established by genetic evolution searched for better adaptation
by trying out changes within the organism, using trial and error. But how
could the organism's systems know whether a particular change had improved
the organism's adaptation? This was a key challenge for genetic evolution-it
had to install the organism with some way of identifying the internal
changes that were beneficial in evolutionary terms.
This challenge was easier in the case of changes that produced some
immediate improvement in the functioning of the organism. The efficacy of a
change could be judged against its immediate effects within the organism.
For example, changes to the amount of oxygen delivered to a tissue could be
evaluated by their effect on the metabolic rate in the tissue.
The challenge could not be met so easily for changes that might produce
longer-term evolutionary advantage, without immediate beneficial effects on
the organism. Behaviour that leads to sexual reproduction provides a clear
example. These behaviours have no immediate pay-off for the organism. They
do not improve its functioning, and may even impede it. How could evolution
fit out organisms so that they implemented behavioural changes that led
towards successful reproduction, and rejected behaviour that did not?
The answer discovered by genetic evolution was to install organisms with an
internal reward system. This system rewards individuals internally when
they try out behaviours that are beneficial in evolutionary terms, and
punishes them when they do otherwise. We experience these internal rewards
as various kinds of attractive feelings, motivations and emotions. The
habits and behaviour patterns that an organism adopts are those that are
positively reinforced by its internal reward system. Its behaviour and
lifestyle is shaped by the goals that are established by its motivations and
emotions.
The internal rewards and punishments act as proxies for evolutionary
success. Genetic evolution tunes the system of motivations and emotions so
that when an organism pursues its internal rewards, it acts in a way that
leads to evolutionary success. An organism's motivations and emotions guide
it to discover and implement adaptations that are beneficial in evolutionary
terms. If circumstances change, and a particular behaviour is no longer
optimal in evolutionary terms, genetic evolution will modify the internal
reward system so that the behaviour is no longer reinforced. Genetic
evolution adapts the internal reward system so that the organism's goals
continue to be aligned with evolutionary success.
Other important developments in the evolution of adaptive mechanisms within
organisms were learning and imitation. Once an organism discovered by
trial-and-error that a particular change was useful in particular
circumstances, learning enabled it to implement that adaptive change
whenever those circumstances arose again. And imitation enabled an organism
to adopt an adaptive change discovered by another individual, without having
to discover it for itself. Both these improvements reduced the amount of
trial-and-error that organisms had to use to adapt.
But the most significant and far-reaching advance in adaptability came with
the development of a capacity for mental modeling [2]. This capacity is
very familiar to us-it is most fully developed in humans. We use thinking
and other mental representations to model the effects of our behaviour on
our environment. So instead of having to try out alternative actions in
practice, humans can use mental models to predict their effects. We can try
out possible adaptations mentally. This significantly reduces the need for
costly trial and error in the search for adaptive behaviour, and enables us
to take account of the (predicted) future consequences of our actions.
Our ability to test alternative behaviours mentally is the basis of our
capacity to plan ahead, imagine alternatives, invent and adapt technology,
build structures such as houses and roads, radically modify our external
environment for our adaptive goals, establish long-term objectives, imagine
how we might change the world, develop strategic plans, design projects and
undertake activities that pay off only in the future (such as plant crops
and feed animals).
The acquisition of language was a critically important step forward in our
ability to construct mental models. Language and associated forms of
communication enabled humans to share the knowledge used for building
models. Communication enabled all members of a society to acquire and use
the knowledge discovered by any individual. It also enabled knowledge to be
accumulated across the generations. The progressive accumulation of
knowledge has enabled humans to model a greater range of interactions with
our environment, and to predict the consequences of our actions over wider
scales of space and time. This has enabled us to discover more effective
ways of achieving our adaptive goals and obtaining positive reinforcement
from our internal reward systems.
Our ability to construct and manipulate models has also improved as we have
learnt to augment our mental abilities with external artefacts such as pen
and paper, books, recording devices, computers and other forms of artificial
intelligence. Our mental adaptability can be expected to continue to
improve as humanity accumulates more knowledge about how the external world
responds to our interventions and as artificial intelligence is developed.
The full evolutionary potential of mental modelling is obvious. Once
organisms have accumulated sufficient knowledge, their modelling will often
be superior to the internal reward system at identifying the adaptations
that are best in evolutionary terms. No longer would the organisms have to
be guided towards evolutionary success solely by a system of motivations and
emotions. Instead the organisms could use mental modelling to identify and
implement the actions that would enable it to survive and flourish into the
future.
Mental models have the potential to be far superior than the internal reward
system established by genetic evolution in the organisms' evolutionary past.
The motivations and volitions (moral or otherwise) that were favoured by
Darwinian selection in their evolutionary past are highly unlikely to be
optimal for their successful survival throughout the next million years.
And as circumstances change into the future, the values and motivations that
are optimal are likely to change repeatedly.
But mental modelling is not able to fulfil its enormous adaptive potential
when it first emerges. Initially, it does not have the capability to take
over the adaptation of the organism. It has not accumulated the detailed
knowledge and information needed to predict the future consequences of a
wide range of alternative actions. As a result, modelling will be less
effective than the pre-existing motivation and reward systems at discovering
the best adaptations.
However mental modelling will still provide immediate advantages. It
enables the organism to find better ways of achieving its internal rewards
and motivations. The organism can use mental models to identify the
behaviours that will achieve outcomes that produce desirable internal
states. Initially mental modelling will not establish or change the
adaptive goals of the organism-it begins as a servant of the pre-existing
motivation and reward systems.
It is easy to locate humanity within this evolutionary sequence [3]. Humans
are not yet organisms that use mental modelling to adapt in whatever ways
are necessary for future evolutionary success. We are still organisms that
spend their lives pursuing proxies for evolutionary success as ends in
themselves. We use our mental modelling to work out how to achieve the
goals set by our internal reward and motivation system-goals that we have
been fitted out with by natural selection and that are modified to a limited
extent by conditioning during our upbringing. We use the enormous power of
mental modelling to see how we can act on the world to produce desirable
psychological states and avoid unpleasant ones. For most this means using
modelling to pursue sex, wealth, popularity, satisfying relationships,
social status, power, feelings of uniqueness, and so on. And we spend our
lives trying to avoid undesirable psychological states such as those
associated with stress, guilt, depression, loneliness, hunger, and shame.
But when our evolutionary interests clash with these motivations and
emotional responses, our evolutionary interests lose out. We have not yet
developed a comprehensive capacity to free ourselves from the dictates of
our biological and social past. We cannot adapt or modify at will our likes
and dislikes, our emotional reactions, our motivations, what it is that
gives us pleasure or displeasure, our habits, or our personality traits
(e.g. we cannot change from extrovert to introvert at will). Few of us can
effortlessly 'turn the other cheek' even when we can see mentally that it is
in our interests to do so. This is the case whether these predispositions
are largely inherited, or the product of individual experience during our
upbringing.
As a result, the evolutionary adaptability of humanity is seriously limited.
We do not use the immense capacity of mental modelling to pursue
evolutionary ends. Adaptations exist that are superior in evolutionary
terms, we can see that they are superior, but we do not implement them.
Instead we spend our lives chasing positive reinforcement from our internal
reward system. If humanity is to realise the full evolutionary potential of
mental modelling, we will have to free ourselves from our biological and
cultural past.
Can humans develop such a psychological capacity? Or will our ability to
adapt be forever constrained by the predispositions resulting from our
evolutionary history? Will we be able to adapt only in directions currently
rewarded by our internal reward system, irrespective of what is best for our
evolutionary future? Or can we develop the capacity to move at right angles
to our history and conditioning, and to adapt in whatever ways will produce
future evolutionary success?
Modern scientific psychology has not yet developed an understanding of how
we can develop a psychological capacity along these lines. To date it has
concentrated on understanding how our psychology currently operates, and how
pathologies can be corrected. It has little to say about our potential for
future psychological development.
But humans have accumulated an extensive body of knowledge and practice
about how we can develop these new psychological capacities. This knowledge
is embodied in religious and spiritual systems. Although some systems are
more explicit about it than others, and some have a number of other goals
for spiritual development, the world's major religious systems all advocate
the development of an ability to free oneself from particular emotional
responses, desires and motivations. Furthermore, all systems contain
methodologies and practices that can assist the development of such a
capacity.
Despite the fact that religious systems use widely different terminology to
describe their practices and beliefs, it is possible to identify a broadly
common approach to spiritual development. Most practices are directed at
promoting the emergence of a new self that stands outside the individual's
emotional states, thoughts, and sensations. This new observing self is not
bound up in the flow of thoughts and feelings and sees them as objects of
attention. The individual experiences herself as the new observing self, as
separate from her thoughts, feelings and sensations, and able to treat them
as objects that can be managed and modified [4]. What were once part of the
subject are objects in relation to the new self, and can be managed and
controlled by it [5].
This contrasts with the individual's experience before a new observing self
is developed. Previously the individual tended to be absorbed in and
identified with emotional reactions and thoughts, was not aware of herself
as separate to them, and could not easily choose whether to be influenced by
them. The individual experienced herself as her motivations and thoughts,
and defined herself through them and through the personality traits and
behaviour patterns they entrenched.
The new self is given a wide variety of names in various religious and
philosophical systems. Aspects of the new self are referred to variously as
the silent witness, the true self, Buddha mind, the Lord, the observer, the
soul, atman, the master, Christ consciousness, the observing "I", an
emergent metasystem [6], and the higher self.
Religious systems generally promote the emergence of the new self through
practices that separate the mind into an observing part and an observed
part. The observing part is the precursor to the new self. These practices
typically operate by turning attention and awareness inwards, and directing
it at mental contents-at sensations, emotions, motivations, mental images
and thoughts as they arise in the mind. For example, many religious systems
require adherents to struggle against the dictates of their 'lower' desires
and impulses. Doing so directs attention inwards, makes these mental states
objects of attention and begins the separation of the mind into an observing
part and an observed part. The waging of an internal war against desires
and impulses will assist the development a new self that stands outside them
and is no longer identified with them.
Other practices also enhance the separation of the mind into an observing
part and an observed part. Meditation typically involves turning attention
inwards and making thoughts and emotional states objects of attention [7].
Similarly the mindfulness practices of Buddhism and the self-observation [8]
of Gurdjieff promote the development of the new observing self during
ordinary life. These practices focus attention on the physical sensations,
emotions, mental images and thought that arise as the individual goes about
daily activities and interactions. All these techniques emphasise that
self-observation it to be passive and non-judgemental. This assists in
ensuring that the new observing self does not identify with or become
absorbed in mental contents as they arise.
A number of practices help the observing self to remain separate from mental
contents. Some of these operate by dampening mental activity and reducing
the incidence of intense emotional experiences. This makes it easier for
the new self to stand outside the flow of mental contents without becoming
absorbed and identified with them. Examples include practices that take
individuals away from the pressures of normal life such as retreats,
monastic life, asceticism, and pilgrimages. Many systems have also
discovered that meditation is an effective method of tranquillising mental
activity, and that prayer and devotion can have similar effects. Most
systems emphasise that repeated effort and vigilance is needed to maintain
separation-the individual will tend to slip back into identification with
thoughts and emotional states, and will find it very difficult to stand
outside and observe them for extended periods.
These practices also develop the ability of the individual to dispose
attention wilfully and to break the control of attention by emotional
states. Devotional practices also enhance this ability-they require the
individual to continually bring attention back to the object of devotion and
away from distractions.
The new self that can be developed as a result of these practices is
relatively free of the adaptive goals of the internal reward system. Once
the emerging new self can remain functionally separate from motivations and
emotional impulses, it can decide whether or not to be influenced by them.
Instead of 'going with' these impulses as they arise, it can decide not to
act on them. This functional separation also enables the new self to
control the disposition of attention. The new self can direct attention and
energy only at activities that serve the aims of the self.
As the observing self accumulates knowledge about the operation of the
motivational and emotional system, it improves its capacity to manage them.
The individual learns how to modify the goals of her internal reward system,
and is then able to align them with goals and objectives of her choosing.
As a result, the individual can find motivation and emotional satisfaction
in whatever activities serve her goals and objectives. For example, if an
individual chooses to pursue evolutionary success as her ultimate goal, she
will be able to align her internal reward system with evolutionary goals
[9].
The metaphor of a carriage (or chariot) drawn by horses has been used by a
number of religious and philosophical systems to represent the psychology of
a person who has developed these capacities [10]. Generally the driver is
the intellect, the horses the emotions, the carriage the body, and the
master in the carriage (or lord of the chariot) is the new self. The master
coordinates the actions of the various components so that they cooperate
together to serve the objectives and goals set by the master. Importantly,
this metaphor emphasises that the new self does not repress, override, or
take over the functions of the emotions and the body. A competent higher
self, like a competent manager of a modern corporation, or like the
conductor of an orchestra, works with and makes best use of the special
abilities of the elements it manages.
Why have religions developed this extensive body of knowledge and practice
about freeing humans from the requirements of their motivational and
emotional systems? A key reason is that religions generally promote
adherence to ethical systems that conflict with the dictates of our internal
reward system. Religions have learnt that it takes much more than an
intellectual commitment to an ethical system before an individual is able to
implement it. Reason does not control the passions until the individual has
developed a new psychological structure that has the capacity to manage the
individual's internal reward system.
Another reason for religions' deep interest in this area is the intuition
that only a self that has transcended emotional impulses could conceivably
live beyond the body. A self that is bound up in bodily desires and
emotional responses will surely die when the body that gave rise to them
dies. A number of religious traditions that take this position also believe
that the end point of spiritual development is the fusion of this
transcendent self with the absolute (eg God).
Of course, the great majority of the members of religions do not develop a
higher self. Most do not adopt in full the practices prescribed by their
religion, and few understand the practices and beliefs in the terms
described here. Very few Christians develop the capacity to effortlessly
turn the other cheek in the full sense of that metaphor. If the practices
of spiritual development are to succeed in transforming the psychology of
humanity in general, they will need to be enhanced and developed. This is
most likely to be achieved if the practices are investigated by modern
scientific psychology, and eventually integrated into it. If spiritual
practices are subjected to the sceptical scrutiny and rigorous testing of
modern science, the practices and beliefs that are grounded in fact could be
separated from those that are embedded in supposition and baseless
mysticism. And the powerful techniques and extensive resources of modern
science could be used to discover new and better practices. This process
would continue the progressive expansion of science into new domains that
has taken place throughout its relatively young history. Science has grown
by incorporating and developing bodies of knowledge that were initially
unsystematic and riddled with contradictions and folk knowledge.
Until we humans develop the capacity to free ourselves from our biological
and cultural past, our evolutionary adaptability will be seriously
constrained. We will not use the enormous potential of mental modelling to
identify and implement the actions that will contribute most to the
evolutionary success of humanity. Instead of using our technological
advances and economic resources for evolutionary goals, we will continue to
use them only to serve the needs and wants established by our evolutionary
past and conditioning. Humanity will continue to spend its time on this
planet masturbating stone age desires, going nowhere in evolutionary terms.
Alternatively we could massively enhance our evolutionary adaptability by
freeing ourselves from the dictates of our biological and cultural past. We
could develop the ability to align our internal reward and motivation system
with evolutionary goals. This would enable us to find satisfaction and
motivation in whatever adaptations serve these goals. With this capacity we
could choose to implement whatever actions would advance the evolutionary
success of humanity, and would find satisfaction and motivation in doing so.
This would enable us to use the immense power of mental modelling to pursue
evolutionary goals, rather than continue to blindly pursue outdated and
inaccurate proxies for evolutionary success as ends in themselves.
If we make this transition, humans would become self-evolving beings, able
to adapt in whatever directions are necessary for future evolutionary
success, relatively unfettered by our biological past or by our previous
life experiences. As we move out into the solar system, the galaxy and the
universe, we would be able to change our adaptive goals and behaviour in
whatever ways were demanded by the challenges we meet. We would be able to
continually recreate ourselves, to change human nature at will, to
repeatedly sacrifice what we are for what we can become, to continually die
and be born again.
1 For a more detailed discussion of the evolution of these mechanisms see
Dennett, D. C. (1995), Darwin's Dangerous Idea (New York: Simon and
Schuster).
2 The evolutionary significance of mental modelling was first clearly
recognised by Popper, K. R. (1972), Objective knowledge - an evolutionary
approach (Oxford: Clarendon).
3 For a fuller discussion see Stewart, J. E. (2000), Evolution's Arrow
(Rivett: Chapman Press) [online at http://www4.tpg.com.au/users/jes999/ ].
4 For more on the relationship between the new self and mental contents, see
Nicol, M. (1980b), 'The Four Bodies of man', in Psychological Commentaries
on the Teachings of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky (London: Watkins) 1, pp.
218-35.
5 This point is made very well by Keegan, R. (1994), In over our heads -
the mental demands of modern life (Cambridge: Harvard University Press).
6 See Heylighen, F. (1991), 'Cognitive Levels of Evolution: from
pre-rational to meta-rational', in The Cybernetics of Complex Systems -
Self-organisation, Evolution and Social Change, F. Geyer Ed., (Salinas,
California: Intersystems) pp.75-91.
7 For example, see Goleman, D. (1988), The meditative mind - the varieties
of meditative experience (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons).
8 For more on self-observation see Nicol, M. (1980c), 'Commentary on
Self-Observation and 'I's', in Psychological Commentaries on the Teachings
of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky (London: Watkins) 1, pp. 302-17.
9 This notion is developed in greater detail in Stewart, J. E. (2001),
'Future psychological evolution', Dynamical Psychology [online athttp://www.goertzel.org/dynapsyc/ ].
10 For example, see the Katha Upanishad, Plato's Phaedrus, and Gurdjieff's
Beelzebub's tales to his Grandson.
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