The Meaning Without
The
Meaning Without
We live in an
uncertain world. Uncertainty ticks relentlessly at the core of the universe,
i.e., the world of subatomic particles. Laws that govern this realm can be
formulated and understood only in terms of the laws of probability. This
esoteric branch of physics was discovered in the beginning of twentieth century
and was called Quantum Mechanics. Over the years, its truth and its powers of
prediction of natural phenomena- a major test of the veracity of any scientific
theory- have been confirmed incontrovertibly. Richard Feynman, a Noble laureate
and a celebrated Quantum physicist, compared the precision of Quantum
prediction to measuring of distance between New York and Los Angeles accurately
to the width of one human hair. But quantum physics is also unfathomably
counterintuitive. Einstein, one of the forefathers of Quantum physics, could
never accept the inherent uncertainty in the working of universe, on which this
exact science is predicated. He constantly evoked his God- Einstein’s God were
the simple immutable laws that governed the working of the infinitely nuanced
Universe- and remarked repeatedly, ‘God doesn’t play dice,’. To this his
lifelong friend and another founding fathers of Quantum physics, Neils Bohr, is
said to have quipped in frustration, ‘Einstein, stop telling God what to do’.
Human beings
evolved in a world where immediate dangers and opportunities in environment had
to be interpreted successfully and expeditiously to survive each passing
moment. Can the movement in the nearby bush signify a predator? Can the thin
rope-like structure on the path be a snake? Does sudden appearance of green
grass indicate a nearby source of water? Do red fruits on trees point towards a
source of rich food? Correct and speedy interpretation of such stimuli could
decide between life and death. Intuitive answers, which came to mind
instantaneously, served this purpose. Brain which could supply these came to be
passed on -through genes of parents- to maximum progeny and the species
thrived. For about two hundred thousand years of the existence of our species,
these were the only queries which confronted our ancestors and a brain capable
of resolving these, proffered unparalleled advantage to the body that sheltered
it. Understanding of Quantum Mechanics and laws of probability did not and does
not offer any survival benefit to such a brain. Thus, pathways in our brain,
that empower us to look at the world through the prism of probability are
forever hidden from our consciousness by the overpowering influence of the
intuitive pathways which supply swift, unambiguous answers. That we are the
most successful species, other than microbes, that ever lived on earth- judged
from our numbers and power to inhabit and proliferate in a vast range of varied
environments- tells us that this decision-making apparatus in our brains has
served us well.
Humans did not
evolve to live in skyscrapers hundreds of metres tall, to navigate a highway
where vehicles are zooming at breakneck speeds, to fly in the sky at speeds
faster than sound, to travel in to the deep dark space, to defy disease and
ageing and live well in to ninth decade, to fathom the workings of the forces
of nature, to predict the unpredictable vagaries of weather, to observe the
unobservable world of subatomic particles, to unravel origins of life and
universe, to cogitate over the reality of space and time, and neither to make
and loose wealth in stock market. We came to this life gradually in the last
millennium. For more than two hundred millennia before this, our forefathers
spent their days as hunter-gatherers. This vast cornucopia of modern knowledge
is alien to our intuitive brain, which evolved to serve the needs of our
ancestors. It requires rigorous application of analytical tools which our mind
abhors to employ readily. Hence even in a situation like predicting weather
phenomena, market behaviour, natural course of a disease, effects of different
treatment strategies; processes which are governed by many uncertainties, our
mind reflexively summons the fast, intuitive pathway and often errs massively.
But it is loath to submit to the dictates of the laws of probability.
We start our
lives in a dense miasma of millions of possibilities. A female has about three
to four hundred thousand eggs at puberty. She releases one during each
menstrual cycle. A male releases 40 million to 1.2 billion sperms in one
ejaculation. Each of this ovum and sperm, code for a unique you and I: some
with light coloured eyes, some with black; some slim, others given to corpulence;
some with balding pates in youth, others with exuberant hair in their sixties;
some irredeemably introverts, others profusely gregarious; some endowed with
skilful hands, others with imaginative minds; some who exult in seeing their
thoughts faithfully reflected on a page, others who cannot understand the lure
of the written word. Yet it’s a reality that I sit here stringing words in an
effort to convey a thought and you would read them in future as surely as I
write them. Isn’t it an unbelievably wonderful chance, one in many millions or
billions, that the day you and I were conceived, two particular cells out of
millions united to produce such individuals as will one day feel the need to
indulge in these activities, while the remaining millions just remained
possibilities which were never realised. And I am not even touching on the
chances inherent in the process of formation of reproductive cells which
involves random mixing of genes between two strands of a chromosome, the
innumerable combination of environmental influences which are capable of
engendering myriads of different personalities from the same genetic material.
Aren’t we then truly the creation of uncertainty?
In a previous post I wondered at man’s need for finding meaning in his life. Our intuitive
mind, obsessed with deriving truth in the world through its own experiences,
compels us to look at the world through the glasses tinted in hue of certainty.
And we conceive that every event has a cause. We want to believe that things
happen, because they were meant to happen. Thus, we not only find meaning within our
lives, but strive to see a meaning without too: in
the world we live in, in the events that surround us. We see faces in the
clouds and in damp patches on a wall; we see our fate in the patterns of star-constellation
in the sky, in the creases in our palms, in the way cards turn out in our
hands, in the manner tealeaves settle on a platter. We reckon that everything
that happens to us was preordained. We were destined to meet our life-partners,
to beget our children, to forge friendships we gathered, to practice professions we
came to choose, to experience the joys and the sorrows that we came by. We do
not know how we come to harbour these dogmatic beliefs. If asked, most will
attribute this certitude to a gut-feeling. But our guts are not organs of
thinking.
Howsoever
against our intuition it may be, in modern science there is nothing certain.
Uncertainty in universe is irreducible. It is an ineluctable strand in its
fabric. Certainty is an illusion. I wrote about the role chance plays in
conception of life. Even the universe need not have been the way it is. There
are some constants in our universe so minutely fine-tuned, that even a
millionth variation in their values would make the universe and life as we see
it, impossible. Some of these are: ratio of gravitational and electromagnetic
forces, mass and charge of basic particles, distance between earth and sun.
Most of us would like to conceive that these rigid constants are another proof
that our universe was meant to be as it is. But science tells us this may not
be true. All the various combinations and values of these attributes could be
realised in some universe. We could only exist in a universe where chance had
contrived a combination of such values that make evolution of life and a
thinking brain possible. Hence this illusion about a universe which is designed
just for us.
Gottfried
Wilhelm Leibniz, a seventeenth century German philosopher, logician and
mathematician, compatriot of Newton, co-discoverer of calculus, asked the most
vital, the mother of all existential questions, ‘Why is there something rather
than nothing?’ A modern astrophysicist might say it need not have been. Science
teaches us to think in terms of probabilities, in this world teeming with
possibilities. Likelihood of monsoon hitting the southern tip of Indian
peninsula by the end of this May, a brilliant student walking into an ivy
league university for graduation, a dullard succeeding in family business,
share price of a blue chip company plummeting in two years, withdrawal of US
troops from Afghanistan in a year from now, a fifty-year male leading a
vigorous life developing a block in his heart’s vessel, surgical removal of
cancerous growth from a seventy-five-year old smoker’s mouth affecting a
complete cure, India becoming an economic superpower in coming years, and
COVID-19 melting away in the heat of Indian summer; these are all possibilities
with varying degrees of certainty. Only after an event has occurred does it
acquire an aura of inevitability, of being predestined.
Once more I
return to a story about Einstein and Neils Bohr. They invented ingenious
thought experiments and argued incessantly over the tentative view of reality
that Quantum physics postulates. Einstein is alleged to have asked once, ‘does
the moon not exist when I am not looking at it?’ Bohr snapped back, ‘you can’t
prove it does, however hard you try. Why bother about moon when you are not
looking at it?’ Though the story may be apocryphal, it highlights the uncertain
fabric of existence. God, it appears, does play dice.
The scientific
truth notwithstanding, human mind will always endeavour to discern meaning in
existence of universe and life. There is a solace in the belief that the world
has been created to achieve an end; that our lives are not mere chance
occurrences drifting like fallen leaves in the wayward winds of an aimlessly unwinding
universe, but have been created deliberately to fulfil a role in a grand cosmic
scheme. Human life is replete with unending tribulations. This belief in
inevitability of life events, gives strength to the believer to bear the
unbearable. Psychological experiments and studies have shown that people who
attribute purpose to natural calamities like tsunami, seem to endure the
resulting stress much better. It may be that they lead a happier, contended
life. Unhappiness then would appear to be the price one pays for believing in
an uncertain world, wages of the sin of rational thinking.
Superbly written piece, it feels like reading Youval Noah Harari's book. You have such expertise with words and indepth knowledge about intricate topics. I really enjoyed going through it.
ReplyDeleteThanks. However allegorical you might be, you make me proud but a disservice to Harari. I try to learn from the stunningly lucid prose and crystal clear thoughts of masters like Harari, Pinker, Dawkins and others.
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