In the beginning was the cosmos, fundamentally as incomprehensible to our human brains as quantum chemistry is to a dog’s brain.
What
our human brains can understand is that our ultimate emergence from
countless generations of less complex organisms can be largely explained
by a simple mechanism that tests the reproductive fitness of varying
replicants.
Systems that try to
predict the future and dictate whether to go for it or scram - from the
chemotaxis of bacteria to the predictive processing of our humans brains
- have proved to be more likely to survive and propagate.
Modern neuroscience has proved that our experienced perceptions of sensing and acting are these predictions. They are fantasies, or illusions, as is our sense of having a self with agency that experiences value, purpose, and meaning. Everything we do and experience is in the service of reducing surprises by fulling these fantasies. An array of neuroendocrine mechanisms have evolved to support this process because it forms the bedrock of human culture and language.
We
are as gods, who invent ourselves and our cultures through impersonal
emergent processes rising from our biological substrate.
Personal
and social dysfunctions can sometimes be addressed by insight into this
process, as when interoceptive awareness of the settings of our
autonomic nervous system's axes of arousal, valence, and agency allows
us to dial them to more life sustaining values and better regulate our
well-being in each instance of the present.
We can distinguish this autonomic substrate from the linguistic cultural overlay it it generates, and allow the latter to be viewed in a more objective light. This is a deconstruction that permits us to not only let awareness rest closer to the 'engine room' or 'original mind' underlying its transient reactive products, but also to derive from this open awareness the kind of succor or equanimity we once found in the imagined stability of an external world.
(The above is MindBlog's 10/25/23 post, repeated here and given a new title.)