Showing posts with label HuffPost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HuffPost. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Consciousness: The Currency of Life



Posted: 08/28/2012 3:11 pm

On the night of Thursday, May 8, 1997, my father had a stroke. When I visited him in the hospital, I felt profoundly disturbed by what I witnessed. This sluggish, exhausted man in front of me looked like my father, but I knew, deep down, that he wasn't.
There were disconcerting clues that betrayed this impostor: He had effectively reverted from a sharp, responsible man into a confused child. Even more bizarrely, his attitude toward me would radically alter depending on whether I sat on the right or left side of his bed. When I sat on his right, he would take an interest in me, and we'd have a semi-coherent conversation. When I went instead to his left, it was as though I wasn't in the room. He simply wasn't aware of my presence.
From the first painful glimpse of my father's fractured consciousness, I understood how vital and fundamental this field is, and soon after I began to carry out research into how the brain generates our experiences.
There is nothing more important to us than our own awareness. We see the breathtaking beauty of snow-capped mountains, the exhilarating grace and speed of a cheetah on a hunt. We fall in love, or experience the joy of our child's first smile. All these, and everything else we care about, are conscious events. If none of these events were conscious, if we weren't conscious to experience any of them, we'd hardly consider ourselves alive -- at least not in any way that matters.
When I'm reveling in a glowing pleasure, or even if I'm enduring a sharp sadness, I always sense that behind everything there is the privilege and passion of experience. Our consciousness is the essence of who we perceive ourselves to be. It is the citadel for our senses, the melting pot of thoughts, the welcoming home for every emotion that pricks or placates us. For us, consciousness simply is the currency of life.
But what actually is it? In The Ravenous Brain, I argue that consciousness is that choice mental space dedicated to innovation, a key component of which is the discovery of deep patterns within the contents of our awareness. This allows us to take great strides in every intellectual field we explore, as we weave a vast tapestry of meaning inside us. One consequence of this patient, piecemeal endeavor is that when we spot a chair, we don't see it according to its basic sensory features. Instead, we unavoidably recognize it as a chair, and immediately have access to a pyramid of meaning relating to this one object -- what forms chairs take, what functions they serve, and so on. In fact, as we gaze around our world, we ineluctably view each component of the scene via the dense filter of the structure of knowledge we've acquired throughout our lives. Every single object on which we cast our eyes triggers a conscious wave of understanding, its own pyramid of meaning.
Consciousness concerns itself only with the most meaningful mental constructions and is ever hungry to build new patterns over existing architectures. To help in this aim, it itches to combine and compare any objects in our awareness. How the brain supports consciousness closely mirrors these functions. Those specialist regions of the cortex that manage the processing endpoints of our senses -- for instance, areas involved in recognizing faces, rather than merely the colors and textures that constitute a face -- furnish our awareness with its specific content. But there is also a network of our most advanced general-purpose regions that directly draws in all manner of content from these specialist regions. This is the core network, incredibly densely connected together, both internally and across major regions throughout the brain. In this inner core, multiple sources of meaningful, potentially highly structured information are combined by ultra-fast brain rhythms. And this, neurally speaking, is how and where consciousness arises.
Our awareness gives us incredible gifts of understanding, though there is a heavy price to pay for such a vast consciousness. The organ that has grown so large and complex in order to support the amazing innovation machine of human consciousness is intensely fragile. We are especially prone to serious brain injury, which can persistently rob us of awareness. Thankfully, though, many new techniques are arising to diagnose the levels of awareness that may still secretly reside in brain-damaged patients. Extensions of this research are beginning to offer us a chance to "hear" these patients, just by reading their brain signals, and for them to communicate with the outside world. Some emerging methods may even allow us to restore some degree of consciousness to patients in which it is clear that awareness is tragically absent as a result of injury.
Cases where severe brain injury leads to a persistent twilight of awareness are, thankfully, relatively rare. Unfortunately, though, the fragility of the human brain manifests very commonly, in more subtle forms. For optimum consciousness to occur, a complex interplay of various brain chemicals and activity between regions must be balanced just right. Some people have genes that make brain instabilities likely, and much of the population can be repeatedly battered by life's stressful events, which further strains their intricate neural machinery. The result can easily be mental illness, a pandemic that gets far less focus than it deserves.
But vital new clues in both understanding and treatment are arising, with almost all psychiatric conditions being repainted in terms of disorders of awareness. Various techniques that literally expand and reinvigorate consciousness are being successfully applied to almost all psychiatric patient groups. However, this is not just the story of what consciousness is, and when it breaks down, but how we can apply this knowledge to aid our daily lives. For instance, many of these awareness building approaches could just as easily be adopted by all of us, both to reduce the daily weight of stress we endure and to enable us to view the world more directly, with fresh eyes. And, in time, we can learn tenderly to nurture a consciousness that is quiet, open, and ready to discover many beautiful new patterns around us.
Excerpted with permission from 'The Ravenous Brain: How the New Science of Consciousness Explains Our Insatiable Search for Meaning,' by Daniel Bor.  Available from Basic Books, a member of The Perseus Books Group.  Copyright © 2012.
 

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Saturday, July 21, 2012

Revolutionizing Revolutions: Virtual Collective Consciousness and the Arab Spring


Posted: 07/17/2012 9:59 am

Discussions about the influence of social media often remind those on the impact of TV in the 1980s: Everyone has an opinion, some have statistics, and a few others are trying to understand the psychological and sociological mechanisms that lie beneath.
The incredible connectivity amongst people that is provided by social media, combined with the speed at which information is exchanged and its potential global reach, have significantly empowered people. One way to have an estimate of this empowerment is to look at how users managed to "hijack" some social media platforms from their initial use. Twitter and Facebook users provide a spontaneous snapshot of their individual states of minds but, unintentionally, they also turn them into an incredible tool for collective estimates of behavioral dynamics (see, for example, a recent study on happiness) and crowdsourcing. Facebook -- despite its highly criticized IPO -- is on its way to reaching the billion-user landmark and has already changed the way more than 10 percent of the people on this planet interact with each other as revealed by a rich body of research in social sciences. Some people, including the founders of Twitter and Facebook, might have anticipated for all of this to happen. But did they expect the role social media play not only in igniting revolutions but also in modifying how regime change is achieved?
Think about what history will now remember as the Arab Spring. This recent wave of revolutions has yielded some successful and significant regime changes including, so far, Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen. One year after, established social movements' theories fall short in explaining how both the Tunisian and the Egyptian revolutions occurred. One reason is the influence of cyber-activism via social media platforms that classical approaches tocollective movements do not take into account. Indeed, these two successful popular uprisings are marked by the absence of a clearly identified leader, a political party or figure, an association, or an organizing capacity.
Instead of a leader that would have inspired people and driven them to start -- and achieve -- a revolution, Facebook was the main channel that facilitated and accelerated the Tunisian revolution as repeatedly reported in the news and by many observers. Twitter, too, played a crucial role during the Egyptian revolution. Hence, it is very likely that without these social networking platforms, these revolutions would certainly have evolved more slowly, if at alland would have never reached the global opinion.
But Twitter and Facebook were not ghosts in the machine. They were "just" catalysts to these emerging patterns of popular uprisings. They allowed not only to speed up information exchange but also to provide unprecedented waves of spread. A recently published study that was launched five days after the fall of the Ben Ali regime and lead by our team at Aix-Marseille University & CNRS provides a novel "cyberpsychological" take on how Tunisian Internet users perceive the contribution of Facebook to their 2011 revolution. The method is pretty straightforward. After analyzing a sizeable text corpus from Tunisian Internet users' responses to an onlinequestionnaire, three main clusters were extracted corresponding to what were labeled Facebook's (1) political function, (2) informational function and (3) media platform function.
This study provides a bottom-up approach to these new social uprisings that relied on virtual environments instead of the dominant top-down accounts of "classical revolutions" powered by leaders pulling strings. Accordingly, the interpretation of the results of this study lies on complex dynamical system by invoking the concept of emergent behavior. Indeed, the complex interconnectivity between individuals involved in the revolutionary process within the Tunisian Facebook cyber-activism network -- and the Twitter one in Egypt -- yields patterns of accumulating change.
Hence, the possibility of a leaderless revolution is likely to be (at least partially) explained by the spontaneity, the homogeneity and the synchronicity of the actions of these cyber-activism networks that were catalyzed by social media. This explanation is supported by what we coined virtual collective consciousness (VCC) referring to an internal knowledge shared by a plurality of persons. Coupled with "citizen media" activism, this knowledge emerges as a new form of consciousness via communication tools. The VCC in this study can be seen as an up-to-date version of the Durkheim's collective representation and as being also highly comparable to Žižek's collective mind or to the more recent Boguta's new collective consciousness to describe the computational history of the Internet shutdown during the Egyptian revolution. Accordingly, VCC has to be: timely, acute, rapid, domain-specific and purpose-oriented, which are potential "qualities" of a successful movement (see figure).
2012-07-17-MarzoukiOullier_Figurecopy.jpg
A tentative model explaining the dynamic of the "virtual collective consciousness" (VCC) as a byproduct of complex interactions between Internet users within a social networking platform. Adapted from Marzouki et al., 2012, Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking, Vol. 15(5), p. 243.
André Panisson and his team provided a dynamic visualization of the network of retweets with the hashtag #jan25 few hours before and Mubarak'sresignation became public. This elegant work is to be considered through the lens provided by the model described in the figure especially when VCC is reaching a momentum of complexity that significantly impacts real-life behavior.
With the deepening of globalization in 21st century, the new geopolitical landscape allows a new vision of democracy where ordinary citizen might be more empowered than ever before to choose an alternative system and change policies. Carne Ross anticipated such global citizen behavior months before the Arab Spring burst out. In his manifesto "The Leaderless Revolution: How ordinary people will take power and change politics in the 21st century," he provides nine principles on how ordinary citizens can regain control of the decisions that directly impact their lives. We support the idea that these principles should be federated around a global consensus shared by citizens.
One of the lessons to be learned from the Arab Spring is that a new breed of revolutions, henceforth called leaderless revolutions, has started, driven by VCC and facilitated by social media. This does not mean that leaders cannot play a significant role in such contexts. Only that, with social media as catalysts, they are no longer a sine qua non condition to successful regime changes.
Virtual collective consciousness afforded by social media might have very well revolutionized revolutions.
Yousri Marzouki, PhD, is an associate Professor at Aix-Marseille University where he teaches cognitive psychology and statistical modeling applied to behavioral sciences. After his post-doc training at Tufts University where he studied cognitive neuroscience of visual attention, he is currently conducting research at the Laboratoire de Psychologie Cognitive (CNRS, France) focusing on the relationship between emotion, attention and consciousness. Yousri can be followed on twitter (@YousriMarzouki)
Olivier Oullier, PhD, is a full professor at Aix-Marseille University where he teaches behavioral and brain sciences and conducts research at the Cognitive Psychology Lab (UMR 7290) on social coordination dynamics and decision-making. A scientific adviser to the Center for Strategic Analysis of the French Prime Minister, the World Economic Forum named him a Young Global Leader in 2011 and the vice-chair of its Global Agenda Council on Brain and Behavior in 2012. Olivier can be followed on twitter (@emorationality).
 

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Occupying Consciousness: Spiritual Activism 2.0


Posted: 06/07/2012 12:54 pm

The Evolver Social Movement has just released a free e-book anthology examining the unprecedented spiritual activism of the Occupy Movement. Featuring writers like media guru Doug Rushkoff, Yale anthropology associate professor David Graeber, "Fifth Sacred Thing" author Starhawk and British comedian/actor Russell Brand, "OCCUPY CONSCIOUSNESS: Essays on the Global Insurrection" explores the culture, mythology, possibilities and spiritual awakening of this nascent movement. The book, edited by my Evolver colleague and bestselling "2012" author Daniel Pinchbeck and Reality Sandwich Associate Editor Mitch Mignano, covers topics ranging from "Occupying Gaia" to interfaith coalition building, "Metta-tations for the 100 Percent" to the ongoing evolution of the mediasphere, sacred economics to strategic nonviolent direct action.
According to Pinchbeck, "These pieces offer an essential perspective on the true significance of Occupy -- not a protest movement essentially, but a harbinger of a new way of being."
HuffPost readers can download the free e-book at Reality Sandwich.
"Is this movement's implicit goal to re-engage our humanity? To reach beyond the political, the national and other illusory, temporary concepts and into our true, spiritual nature?" --Russell Brand
"Direct action is, ultimately, the defiant insistence on acting as if one is already free." --David Graeber.
"The transition we are called to make goes far beyond incremental policy changes within the current system, positive though such changes might be. We are called to re- imagine and re-create our world around fundamentally new organizing principles. The old world is essentially on life support in any case. Our choice really is to participate consciously in the birth of the new era, or to have it forcibly and painfully delivered to us." --David Nicol
This anthology is available as a free gift from the Evolver Social Movement. In exchange, we ask that you consider making a contribution to our non-profit initiative, which organizes 40+ local chapters transforming their communities.

Friday, June 8, 2012

An Inconvenient Truth: The Pollution of American Consciousness


Posted: 06/08/2012 9:06 am

Only the strong survive. Yeah, we have all heard this deceptively honorable maxim before. Even some of the greatest minds of science stand behind the theory of Social Darwinism. Remarkably, what is often overlooked is the tactic used by the "strong" in order to "survive." It is evident that the tactic employed in America has been and continues to be the exploitation of the weak.
America was founded on the exploitation of the weak. Early Americans were aware of the technological advantages they had over the "ignorant" natives' primitive weaponry. As a result, America mercilessly held a gun to the backs of the natives and forced them to trudge along a trail of tears into the distant impoverished reservations -- knowing they could overpower them in any moment of conflict.
This act of exploitation is still alive and well in today's America. As a matter of fact, America plasters the face of this ethnic cleansing process on its $20 bill. When the foundation of a nation is built on exploitation rather than diplomacy, it only follows that this tactic remains consistent throughout the experience of that nation. It was exploitation that planted the seeds on the soil stolen from the last of the Mohicans -- the seeds that eventually sprouted and became the jungle that is America.
The growth of the jungle was fertilized by the exploitation of the weak. After centuries of stabilizing African-Americans in society's basement through the exploitative legal institutions of slavery -- the Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws -- America eventually turned to a group of laborers with an even greater weakness: desperation.
The new immigrants of the 19th century became the major workforce of American industries and helped propel America to its position as the greatest manufacturer in the world. However, these new immigrants had their weaknesses: Not only were they ignorant of the ills of the working class in America, but they were also desperate for a life away from their homes plagued with religious and political oppression. Aware of these vulnerabilities, the heads of American companies forced their workers into an endless cycle of debt and arduous labor, eventually wearing them out to a point of exhaustion, only to replace them like the burnt tires of a Formula One racecar driven by the ambition to always win first place.
The ills of the working class prove to be chronic as many Americans today face the same sort of exploitation seen during the Gilded Age. The Occupy Wall Street movement protests the exploitation of the 99 percent by the overpowering one percent. Protesters feel betrayed andclaim that they are being taken advantage of by big corporations and federal government policies. According to an Al Jazeera report, "The Top 1%," published in October 2011, the richest one percent of America controls 40 percent of the nation's wealth -- numbers comparable to those of the Gilded Age. Whenever there is a social gap this large, it is because the rich authorities exploit their powers over the helpless commoners in order to maintain their economic supremacy.
Nowadays, it is not only the American people who are being exploited -- foreign nations face the same issue. South Korea, Kuwait, Pakistan are only three nations that are home to countless U.S. military bases. Often, the bases are in developing nations or nations that are politically unstable. These weaker nations serve as breeding ground for America to spread its political and cultural influence -- to establish itself as the "law enforcer" of the world and portray itself as the "city upon a hill."
Even the greatest American authors have continuously depicted a theme of exploitation with their social and political commentary. From Thomas Paine's Common Sense to James Fennimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans; from Upton Sinclair's The Jungle to the Narrative Life of Frederick Douglass, the American experience typifies exploitation in all facets. Ask any American what they know of Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer and they will at least be able to narrate how Tom takes advantage of his friends' naiveté and gets them to paint the fence instead of him.
The American experience has been filled with countless acts of exploitation, the victims usually being the weak. Exploitation, however, has propelled America into its dominant position in the world. This world hegemony comes at the expense of masses suffering both inside and outside of America. America plucks the vulnerable fruit and squeezes out the juices of prosperity and power with its strangling grasp, leaving the tree lifeless and bare.