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A
Globe, Clothing Itself with a Brain
An
obscure Jesuit priest, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin,set down the
philosophical framework for planetary, Net-based consciousness 50
years ago
By Jennifer Cobb Kreisberg
He
has inspired Al Gore and Mario Cuomo. Cyberbard John Perry Barlow
finds him richly prescient. Nobel laureate Christian de Duve claims
his vision helps us find meaning in the cosmos. Even Marshall
McLuhan cited his "lyrical testimony" when formulating his
emerging global-village vision. Whom is this eclectic group
celebrating? An obscure Jesuit priest and paleontologist named
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, whose quirky philosophy points, oddly,
right into cyberspace.
Teilhard de Chardin finds allies among those searching for grains of
spiritual truth in a secular universe. As Mario Cuomo put it, "Teilhard
made negativism a sin. He taught us how the whole universe - even
pain and imperfection - is sacred." Marshall McLuhan turned to
Teilhard as a source of divine insight in The Gutenberg Galaxy, his
classic analysis of Western culture's descent into a profane world.
Al Gore, in his book Earth in the Balance, argues that Teilhard
helps us understand the importance of faith in the future.
"Armed with such faith," Gore writes, "we might find
it possible to resanctify the earth, identify it as God's creation,
and accept our responsibility to protect and defend it."
From the '20s to the '50s, Teilhard de Chardin drafted a series of
poetic works about evolution that has reemerged as a foundation for
new evolutionary theories. In particular, Teilhard and his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Vernadsky inspired the renegade Gaia hypothesis
(later set forth by James Lovelock and Lynn Margulis): the global
ecosystem is a superorganism with a whole much greater than the sum
of its parts. This vision is clearly theological - suddenly
everything, from rocks to people, takes on a holistic importance. As
a Jesuit, Teilhard felt this deeply, and a handful of
cyberphilosophers are now mining this ideological source as they
search for the deeper
implications of the Net. As Barlow says,
"Teilhard's work is about creating a consciousness so profound
it will make good company for God itself." Teilhard imagined a
stage of evolution characterized by a complex membrane of
information enveloping the globe and fueled by human consciousness.
It sounds a little
off-the-wall, until you think about the Net, that vast electronic
web encircling the Earth, running point to point through a nervelike
constellation of wires. We live in an intertwined world of telephone
lines, wireless satellite-based transmissions, and dedicated
computer circuits that allow us to travel electronically from Des
Moines to Delhi in the blink of an eye.
Teilhard saw the Net coming more than half a century before it
arrived. He believed this vast thinking membrane would ultimately
coalesce into "the living unity of a single tissue"
containing our collective thoughts and experiences. In his magnum
opus, The Phenomenon of Man, Teilhard wrote, "Is this not like
some great body which is being born - with its limbs, its nervous
system, its perceptive organs, its memory - the body in fact of that
great living Thing which had to come to fulfill the ambitions
aroused in the reflective being by the newly acquired
consciousness?"
"What Teilhard was saying here can easily be summed up in a few
words," says John Perry Barlow. "The point of all
evolution up to this stage is the creation of a collective organism
of Mind."
Teilhard's philosophy of evolution was born out of his duality as
both a Jesuit father ordained in 1911 and a paleontologist whose
career began in the early 1920s. While conducting research in the
Egyptian desert, Teilhard was scratching around for the remains of
ancient creatures when he turned over a stone, dusted it off, and
suddenly realized that everything around him was beautifully
connected in one vast, pulsating web of divine life.
Teilhard soon developed a philosophy that married the science of the
material world with the sacred forces of the Catholic Church.
Neither the Catholic Church nor the scientific academy, however,
agreed. Teilhard's premise, that rocks possessed a divine force, was
seen as flaky by scientists and outright heretical by the church.
Teilhard's writings were scorned by peers in both camps.
Throughout the '40s and '50s, the Catholic Church was on the verge
of excommunicating Teilhard. But the philosopher was committed to
his perspective, refusing to stop writing or to leave the Church. As
his problems with the Church escalated, Teilhard became something of
a cause c*l*bre within his small circle in Europe. The Church
responded by forbidding him to publish and posting him to China,
where he lived in a state of semi-exile, trekking through the Gobi
desert and developing his philosophy in isolation. (His
paleontological studies continued to circulate and was highly
regarded.) The rest of his work was not published until after his
death on Easter Sunday, 1955, when it caused a small stir in the
theological world; it was read widely for only a short time. In the
postmodern climate of today's theology, Teilhard is once again out
of favor among theologists, evolutionary biologists, and scientists,
who view his work with derision.
"Teilhard de Chardin gets too little credit for the quality of
his insights," says Ralph Abraham, one of the founders of chaos
theory and co-author of The Web Empowerment Book, a World Wide Web
primer. "He was successfully deprived of his influence by the
popes." But what were the popes so afraid of? The answer's
simple: evolution.
The concept of evolution was a central pillar, both intellectual and
spiritual, for Teilhard's life. During his early career, before
science had strong evidence for the existence of DNA, the theory of
evolution was not widely accepted. Yet, Teilhard gravitated toward
it, sensing that the theory would bridge his love of rocks and of
God. He would later describe evolution as the "general
condition to which all other theories, all hypotheses, all systems
must bow and which they must satisfy henceforward if they are to be
thinkable and true. Evolution is a light illuminating all facts, a
curve that all lines must follow."
The meaning of evolution was as hotly debated in Teilhard's day as
it is now. Some argued in the strictest Darwinian terms that
evolution's primary mechanism is necessity - "survival of the
fittest." Other evolutionists followed in the footsteps of
Jacques Monod, the
groundbreaking French biologist, who argued for a mixture of random
chance and necessity. Teilhard took Monod one step further, saying
that evolution was guided chance and necessity. In conclusion, this
brought Teilhard to the heart of his dual heresy - if evolution is
being led, what is doing the leading? And where is it going?
By the '40s, the idea of species evolution was no longer
controversial in scientific circles. But evolution was, and still
is, a radical idea in religious spheres. Every Catholic schoolchild
is taught that God is immutable. And every young science student
knows how little God has to do with the emergence of humanity from
the evolutionary ooze.
Was Teilhard implying that God evolves?
Not exactly. Teilhard's idea was more subtle, and useful for
examining the implications of the fast, loose, out-of-control world
we now call cyberspace.
Teilhard felt that the spark of divine life he experienced in the
Egyptian desert was a force present throughout the evolutionary
process, guiding and shaping it every bit as much as the material
forces
described by physical science. Teilhard would later codify this
force into two distinct, fundamental types of energy -
"radial" and "tangential." Radial energy was the
energy of Newtonian physics. This energy obeyed mechanistic laws,
such as cause and effect, and could be quantified. Teilhard called
radial energy the energy of "without." Tangential energy,
on the other hand, was the energy of "within," in other
words, the divine spark.
Teilhard described three types of tangential energy. In inanimate
objects, he called it "pre-life." In beings that are not
self-reflective, he called it "life." And in humans, he
called it "consciousness." As Teilhard began to observe
the world described by science, he noticed that in certain things,
such as rocks, the radial energy was dominant, while the tangential
energy was barely visible. Rocks, therefore, are best described by
the laws that rule radial energy - physics. But in animals, in which
tangential energy, or life, is present, the laws of physics are only
a partial explanation. Teilhard concluded that where radial energy
was dominant, the evolutionary process would be characterized by the
traditional scientific laws of necessity and chance. But in those
organisms in which the tangential energy was significant, the forces
of life and consciousness would lead the laws of chance and natural
selection.
Teilhard then moved this insight forward. As the balance of
tangential energy in any given entity grew larger, he noticed that
it developed naturally in the direction of consciousness. An
increase in
consciousness was accompanied by an increase in the overall
complexity of the organism. Teilhard called this the "law of
complexity consciousness," which stated that increasing
complexity is accompanied by increased consciousness.
Teilhard wrote, "The living world is constituted by
consciousness clothed in flesh and bone." He argued that the
primary vehicle for increasing complexity consciousness among living
organisms was the nervous system. The informational wiring of a
being, he argued - whether of neurons or electronics - gives birth
to consciousness. As the diversification of nervous connections
increases, evolution is led toward greater consciousness.
As Abraham points out, Teilhard's complexity-consciousness law is
the same as what we now think of as the neural net. "We now
know from neural-net technology that when there are more connections
between points in a system, and there is greater strength between
these connections, there will be sudden leaps in intelligence, where
intelligence is defined as success rate in performing a task."
If one accepts this power of connections, then the planetary
neural-network of the Internet is fertile soil for the emergence
of a global intelligence.
Teilhard went on to argue that there have been three major phases in
the evolutionary process. The first significant phase started when
life was born from the development of the biosphere. The second
began at the end of the Tertiary period, when humans emerged along
with self-reflective thinking. And once thinking humans began
communicating around the world, along came the third phase. This was
Teilhard's "thinking layer" of the biosphere, called the
noosphere (from the Greek noo, for mind). Though small and scattered
at first, the noosphere has continued to grow over time,
particularly during the age of electronics. Teilhard described the
noosphere on Earth as a crystallization: "A glow rippled
outward from the first spark of conscious reflection. The point of
ignition grows larger. The fire spreads in ever-widening circles, he
wrote, "till finally the whole planet is covered with
incandescence."
His picture of the noosphere as a thinking membrane covering the
planet was almost biological - it was a globe clothing itself with a
brain. Teilhard wrote that the noosphere "results from the
combined action of two curvatures - the roundness of the earth and
the cosmic convergence of the mind."
Marshall McLuhan was drawn to the concept of the noosphere.
Teilhard's description of this electromagnetic phenomenon became a
touchstone for McLuhan's theories of the global "electric
culture." In The Gutenberg Galaxy, McLuhan quotes Teilhard:
"What, in fact, do we see happening in the modern paroxysm? It
has been stated over and over again. Through the discovery yesterday
of the railway, the motor car and the aeroplane, the physical
influence of each man, formerly restricted to a few miles, now
extends to hundreds of leagues or more. Better still: thanks to the
prodigious biological event represented by the discovery of
electromagnetic waves, each individual finds himself henceforth
(actively and passively) simultaneously present, over land and sea,
in every corner of the earth."
This simultaneous quality, McLuhan believed, "provides our
lives again with a tribal base." But this time around, the
tribe comes together on a global playing field.
We stand today at the beginning of Teilhard's third phase of
evolution, the moment at which the world is covered with the
incandescent glow of consciousness. Teilhard characterized this as
"evolution becoming conscious of itself." The Net, that
great collectivizer of minds, is the primary tool for our emergence
into the third phase. "With cyberspace, we are, in effect,
hard-wiring the collective consciousness," says Barlow.
In introducing the idea of tangential energy - the energy of
consciousness - as a primary factor in evolution, Teilhard opened
the door for a new level of meaning. The history of the world, he
wrote, "would thus appear no longer as an interlocking
succession of structural types replacing one another, but as an
ascension of inner sap spreading out in a forest of consolidated
instincts." This could very well be what the Net is doing -
consolidating our instincts - so that consciousness can continue to
develop.
Artificial life fans take this idea one step further. They see
virtual life- Teilhard's tangential energy - trying to break out of
organic life into new forms. The founder of artificial life
research, Chris Langton, told reporter Steven Levy that "there
are these other forms of life, artificial ones, that want to come
into existence. And they are using me as a vehicle for reproduction
and for implementation."
According to Teilhard, this invisible virtual life has been with us
since the beginning.
We now have a vehicle - the Net - that enables us to see virtual
life for what it really is. It's not the 0s and the 1s - those are
visible. Virtual life is, as Barlow argues, "the space between
the 0s and the 1s. It's the pattern of information that is relevant.
Invisible life is composed of those life forms emerging in the space
between things. Cyberspace helps us see these forms by taking us
past the mechanical barrier."
The global mind may be more potential than actual in 1995. As de
Duve points out, if the noosphere seems laughable now, imagine how
today's technology would look to our predecessors. He writes,
"A merger of minds into Teilhard's noosphere remains no more
than a poetic image at the present time. But so would the notion of
satellite television to Lucy [an early Australopithecus hominoid] if
she had been capable of
conceiving this possibility. Who can tell what the future has in
store?"
Teilhard warned that evolution is a slow process, beset with
setbacks and reversals. We should not question the forces that are
connecting our neurons, he argued; rather we should expand our own
awareness and embrace\our new complexity. Teilhard would readily see
the Net as a necessary step along this path. At this point, the
earth needs humanity to build the noosphere. As we become conscious
of our group mind, a new relationship with the earth emerges. When
that happens, Teilhard wrote, "we have the beginning
of a new age. The earth 'gets a new skin.' Better still, it finds
its soul."
Jennifer Cobb Kreisberg (jkreisberg@igc.apc.org)
has an MA in theology
and studies the sacred dimension of technology.
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