Stanley Sobottka,
by Ivan Frimmel
This article consists of an e-mail interview with Prof. Stanley Sobottka, Professor
Emeritus at the University of Virginia, conducted by Ivan Frimmel. Prof. Sobottka
created a web-course covering the relation between consciousness and quantum theory.
In addition to these topics, his course covers issues in advaita, Western philosophy of
mind, and the practice of nondual inquiry. The course is available at:
http://faculty.virginia.edu/consciousness/home.html.
--The Editors
Stanley: In answering your personal questions, Ivan, I must make it clear that I
identify with Awareness much more than with the body-mind, so your questions
and my answers apply mostly to the latter, not to me. That in a nutshell is also
the answer to your question about how Advaita has influenced my life.
Ivan: Why did you in your reply depart from the original terminology in your
paper, and used the word Awareness and not Consciousness when referring to
your true identity?
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Ivan: If we use the word Consciousness (or Noumenon) for our true, essential,
impersonal identity, i.e. for the "state" of impersonal non-dual reality which is
"beyond" the states of personal consciousness of being awake, dreaming and
dreamless sleep, then is this non-dual, all-encompassing, impersonal
Consciousness (permanently) aware per se (i.e. aware of being aware or
conscious)?
Stanley: Good question! I have spent many hours with it myself. The best
answer, as always, is to see for yourself. The way I have found most effective is
through inquiry, again see Section 22.2. Once you see that you are pure
Awareness, you also see that there can be no experience without an object of
Awareness. Thus, in deep sleep, anesthesia, or death there is no experience, but
you--pure Awareness- -are always present because you are the unchanging
background. Different teachers give different answers to this question. Ramesh
usually evades it, or gives the standard answer that you must have been present
during deep sleep because you know you are present when awake. I find this
less than satisfactory because it is a logical conclusion rather than direct
knowledge. Francis Lucille answers by saying there is a residual "perfume"--
meaning an intuitive knowledge rather than a memory--remaining after deep
sleep that tells you that you were present then.
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Ivan: I, myself, can only come up with these possible answers to the above
question, but maybe I am missing some other alternatives:
if that is so, then how can this kind of total unawareness, total
oblivion, be of any real help, use, significance or interest (to "me"),
other than just as an interesting concept to ponder on?
b. even when all sentient, aware beings are gone, the World,
Universe. continues happily without us, doing its own thing.
probably totally unaware / unconscious of what it is doing,
unaware in the sense we understand the word awareness or
consciousness. What do you say, Stanley? You can also
refer me to a section in your paper that deals with this
dilemma and answers these questions, if I missed seeing it
or understanding it in your paper.
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Stanley: As I said above, the best answer is to "see" that you are pure
Awareness and that this is unchanging.
Ivan: The main benefit (to "me") of using the concept Consciousness (and the
concepts of non-duality, nothingness, sunyata, no free-will, wu wei...), and the
statement that Consciousness is all, seems to be, like the statement that God is
omnipresent, in helping us to relax our individual mind and ego (the individual
"me") away from all effort, into egolessness, effortlessness, into a total surrender
to what is, to Consciousness or God... So, ultimately, in Consciousness
(egolessness) there is no benefit or advantage to "me" at all, only the
disappearance of "me"... Then why should "I" ever bother to contribute anything
whatsoever towards "my own" annihilation?
Stanley: Ivan has no choice, because Ivan doesn't exist! See Section 22.1.
Ivan: Can such an "egoless" person (his/her body-mind) still continue living and
functioning in the society, or will he/she become totally "useless" for living in this
world, either too much resigned to fate or totally indifferent to life (and death)? Is
there still life after "enlightenment" for a "self-less" or "ego-less" person with no
"I" (and no individual free-will), and what kind of life would that be? Who or what
would be "deciding" what such body-mind will still be "doing" here, after
enlightenment? Hopefully not instincts, society, unconscious conditioning, or
whim again...
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Ivan: After having read many modern authors on Advaita, I suspect that
Consciousness recently became a new, better-sounding and thus more
fashionable synonym for what used to be called I, Self, Soul, Atman, Brahman, or
even God... in other words: just a new name referring to my (deepest, essential)
self; a new name that can make the same, old, unchanged self and ego feel very
important and as if it really accomplished something very profound, whereas all
that happened was re-naming it. Is this not what often happens under the label
"enlightenment" nowadays, or is there really anything more to it, some truly
profound transformation, a personal event in time and space, that the word
"enlightenment" refers to, perhaps a dissolution of personality into (timeless)
impersonality?
Stanley: Self and Atman refer to the Unmanifest, while Consciousness refers to
both Unmanifest and manifest. Enlightenment is more than a concept. It is not a
personal event because it is the disappearance of the person, like awakening
after a dream. Sages say this is a non- event because it does not happen in time
and space since they both disappear upon awakening. The sage knows that
space-time is nothing but a concept that is part of the dream.
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Ivan: I find it a bit puzzling that Consciousness (at least the way Advaita, and
you, use the term) is described on the one hand as non- dual and without any
qualities or properties, and yet, on the other hand, referred to by some such
dualistic terms (properties or qualities) as, for example: Impersonal, Bliss, Joy,
Light, Life... (absolute).
But what I find even more puzzling is that for me, based on everything I read and
heard about It (about Consciousness or Noumenon), if there is such a "thing" or
"state" at all, if It is not just a concept that refers to nothing in particular, and if It
can ever be referred to by any word at all, "It" could be probably more aptly
described (understood) by such terms as (absolute) unconsciousness,
nothingness, darkness, voidness, death... - and thus lead to the conclusion you
also came to, namely that NOTHING IS. No wonder it has been accused of being
nihilistic.
Is Advaita, even if it is true, a "prescription" for Bliss and Joy, or for Misery and
Hopelessness in this life? But then, you will probably ask me: Who is there, in
absolute non-duality, to be joyful or miserable?
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Once again, isn't Advaita a very sad, hopeless, pessimistic, nihilistic philosophy
to adopt in life?
Consciousness is all there is. What more can you say or do you want to say?
-- End --