The Self-Aware Universe
Goswami (Physics/University of Oregon; coauthor, The Cosmic Dancers,
1983) uses quantum physics to promote monistic idealism- -the theory
that both matter and mind have their origin in consciousness. The
villain here is materialism--the teaching that everything is comprised
of atoms--and its tag-along doctrines of locality (that interactions
between objects occur in local space-time), strong objectivity (that
objects exist independently of consciousness), and epiphenomenalism
(that mind is an accidental by-product of brain function). According to
Goswami, quantum physics has laid to rest this view of reality: Quantum
objects jump from here to there without passing through intervening
space, disproving locality; Heisenberg's uncertainty principle
disproves strong objectivity, etc. Goswami's explication of modern
physics- -which draws on everything from Winnie-the-Pooh to optical
illusions--is a model of clarity. Vastly less satisfying is his brief
for monistic idealism. For one thing, he writes off an important
alternative, dualism--the ``common-sense'' view that mind and matter
both exist, that a rock is a rock and a thought is a thought--in a few
skimpy paragraphs. For another, his argument is inconsistent: He cites
paranormal events as evidence for idealism, but when an exception
arises (such as out-of-body experiences, which suggest dualism), he
becomes a debunker. Worst of all, when he tries to describe how
idealism actually shapes the world, he sounds like Madame Blavatsky
with a hangover (``the universe exists as formless potentia in myriad
possible branches in the transcendent domain''). Goswami's aim is
inviting--who does not wish us to ``realize our full potential--an
integrated access to our quantum and classical selves''?--but most
readers will remain agnostic. More substantial than Fritjof Capra,
which isn't saying much. This is one cosmic egg that may be too big to
crack.
ISBN-10: 0874777984








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