Beyond the Self

Full Title: Beyond the Self: Conversations Between Buddhism and Neuroscience
Author / Editor: Matthieu Ricard and Wolf Singer
Publisher: MIT Press, 2017

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Review © Metapsychology Vol. 22, No. 36
Reviewer: J. Jeremy Wisnewski

Beyond the Self is a series of dialogues between the neuroscientist Wolf Singer and the Buddhist monk and author Matthieu Ricard. Both are extremely well-known in their respective worlds. Wolf Singer ran the Max Plank Institute for Brain Research; Matthieu Ricard is the French translator for the Dalai Lama and has authored numerous well-received books (including The Quantum and the Lotus, with Trinh Thuan, among others). Their conversations take up issues central to cognitive science and the philosophy of mind and action. The dialogues are rich in content, avoiding needless technicality without ignoring the difficult issues. The authors characterize the origins of their book as follows:

It all started in London in 2005, when we first discussed the theme of consciousness. That same year we saw each other in Washington, DC, to talk about the neuronal basis of meditation organized by the Mind and Life Institute. For eight years, we took every chance we could to continue our exchanges all over the world, twice in Nepal, in the rainforests of Thailand, and with His Holiness the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala, India. This book is the result of this extended conversation, nourished by friendship and our shared interests. (ix)

I quote at length to provide a feel for the nature and quality of the conversations presented in Beyond the Self—these are not first passes through difficult terrain; they are rather the explorations of two guides to the mind/brain, challenging and helping each other secure their footing as they explore the conceptual and experiential terrain.

To get a sense of the range of topics covered, one could do no better than scan the chapter titles (and their usefully organized subheadings). Though the conversations are fluid, they are helpfully organized to give a reader a sense of the overall structure they have.  This allows the reader to jump around or to re-visit particular topics with ease—and there’s plenty worth revisiting. The notes are also a useful resource, offering academic sources for those interested in pursuing particular issues or particular studies. There are chapters dedicated to meditation and its effects on the brain, the role of the subconscious, epistemology, the nature of the self (or lack thereof), the alleged existence of freewill, and the nature of consciousness. A prospective reader can be assured of surprisingly in-depth treatment of these issues. While different readers will be rewarded in different ways by the dialogue (depending on one’s background and familiarity with the issues), there’s certain to something for nearly everyone interested in the topic.

As someone with meditation experience and an academic background in philosophy, I found many familiar and welcoming descriptions of the process of attentive mindfulness, as well as its role in producing more compassion in those who practice it. I was also delighted to see the level of nuance brought to bear on the issue of ‘pure awareness’ and its relationship to reductionism (the view that the mind can be explained entirely in terms of the activity of the brain). Singer’s take on the role social interaction might play in generating certain kinds of experience is illuminating (it allows new forms of ‘mental content’ to emerge, creating a social level of reality unavailable for the unsocialized)). His articulation of the architecture of the brain as constitutive of memories, beliefs, and so on, is delightfully clear. Likewise, Ricard’s insistence on a place for ‘pure awareness’ that is not simply explainable in terms of brain states (even when supplemented with social interaction) is compelling. One comes away from these conversations with a deeper appreciation of the issues and their possible solutions, and it’s all done in very accessible prose.

As is perhaps obvious, Singer and Ricard do not agree on every issue. If they did, the book (and its conversations) wouldn’t be nearly as good. But time and again, Singer and Ricard find spaces of agreement despite very different approaches (one based on ‘third-personal’ evidence in the form of scientific experiments, the other based on ‘first-personal’ evidence in the form of study and practical expertise). Even when they do not agree, their disagreements are instructive ones, emphasizing the complexity of the issues discussed.

Beyond the Self  is rewarding, both for its content as well as for the intellectual generosity on display in that content. It is a model for how two very different worldviews can be brought to mutually elucidate each other. I highly recommend it.

 

© 2018 J. Jeremy Wisnewski

 

J. Jeremy Wisnewski; Professor of Philosophy, Hartwick College