II.
Hidden Realities
That Which Is
The oldest existing reality
cannot be called anything more than “that which is”. It is beyond all human
comprehension or any attempt at human definition. It is the foundation or
fundament out of which the physical Universe we inhabit arose. It is something
deeper than merely an Aristotelian “First Cause”. It is that which would still
remain even if all levels of physical reality were to be eliminated. It would
remain even if there were no space-time or energy-matter. It is quite possible
that what I am calling “that which is” has, from our point of view, existed
forever and will exist (however the term “exist” might be understood) forever
into the future. (Of course, our concepts of past, present, and future are
meaningless to that which is, or might be, eternal.) Those who are religiously inclined
might view “that which is” as a god or gods of some sort. But given the often
anthropomorphic conceptions of gods that humans have devised, or the logical
difficulties involved in postulating a god which is both immanent (within every created thing in the most intimate sense
possible) and transcendent (above and
beyond all physical or temporal boundaries),
the attempt to embody “that which is” as a god or gods strikes me as
simply another human-originated attempt to describe the indescribable. “That
which is” will forever be beyond our limited ability to understand it.
We are part of how “that which
is” manifests itself, but we do not live at its level and we are wholly
incapable of seeing reality from its perspective, as if the term “perspective”
had any meaning in this case.
One can argue that “that which
is” must lie within the boundaries of mathematics. I suppose a case for this
could be made. It is possible that what humans call, in their various
languages, mathematics, are the unbreakable rules by which “that which is” must
operate and manifest itself on different levels of organization and existence.
But is mathematical reality itself emergent,
that is, something which is a level of organization grounded in “that which
is”, or is mathematical reality itself
“that which is”? (See Is Mathematics the
Real Reality?)
Are humans who have experiences
which they believe to be mystical or transcendent touching (in some way) “that
which is”? Is this the Tao that is spoken of in the Tao Te Ching? Or are these seeming moments of insight strictly the
product of a unique chemical circumstance in the brain? Definitive answers to such questions are, of
course, impossible to give. About the best we can do, perhaps, is to say that
there must be some ultimate reality out of which every logically possible thing
emerges, and leave it at that. Beyond that point, we cannot go.
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