Delight Springs

Thursday, December 8, 2022

"Matter's possibilities"

Alan Lightman "calls himself a spiritual materialist." I've called myself that too, to the consternation of those who prefer to think in boxes. 

On my reading, William James was a spiritual materialist. Likewise Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan. That's what I was thinking about yesterday when I started to draw up the syllabus for our upcoming Experience course beginning in January. We'll meet weekly for three hours, giving WJ's Varieties the first segment of each class and Sagan's and Druyan's the last. 

It was Druyan who conceived (perceived?) her late partner's 1985 Gifford lectures as a natural bookend for James's of 1902, and who spotlighted his affinity for WJ's habitual defense of those varieties of experience that enable their possessors to feel "at home in the universe." Her Cosmos: Possible Worlds invites us to make ourselves at home with the idea of a future life on earth no longer vexed by strife and strain. Envisioning that world is surely a crucial condition of its possibility. 

"Dreams are maps... If the series of pilgrimages toward understanding our actual circumstances in the universe, the origin of life, and the laws of nature are not spiritual quests, then I don’t know what could be."

That's why WJ said "the really vital question for us all is, What is this world going to be? What is life eventually to make of itself? The centre of gravity of philosophy must therefore alter its place. The earth of things, long thrown into shadow by the glories of the upper ether, must resume its rights." 

Spiritual materialists are all about "the earth of things," about matter's possibilities. The greatest of those is experience.

https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2022/12/cosmos-space-time-universe/672344/

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