It was a pleasure to the read the following conversation between Einstein and
Tagore and I hope you'd enjoy it too.
The last week’s discovery of Higs Boson, the God Particle was a revolutionary thought. Science does not contradict religion, but simply seeks to understand the logic behind Creation, thus creator. God wants us to seek knowledge, and declares that the best among us are the ones who know. Knowledge leads to understanding and understanding to appreciation of the creation and the creator.
More about Higs Boson at http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2012/07/god-in-flash-higgs-boson-particle.html
The last week’s discovery of Higs Boson, the God Particle was a revolutionary thought. Science does not contradict religion, but simply seeks to understand the logic behind Creation, thus creator. God wants us to seek knowledge, and declares that the best among us are the ones who know. Knowledge leads to understanding and understanding to appreciation of the creation and the creator.
More about Higs Boson at http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2012/07/god-in-flash-higgs-boson-particle.html
It is a joy to read
these discourses. Rabinrda Nath Tagore
won the Nobel prize for his poetry, Geetanjali, and he is one who bestowed the
Title Mahatma to Gandhi and he also has the distinction of only poet who wrote
national anthems of two nations, India and Bangladesh.
Enjoy both the articles.
Mike Ghouse
Mike Ghouse
When Einstein Met Tagore
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2012/04/27/when-einstein-met-tagore/
by Maria Popova
Collision
and convergence in Truth and Beauty at the intersection of science and
spirituality.
On July
14, 1930, Albert
Einstein welcomed into his home on the outskirts of Berlin the Indian
philosopher Rabindranath
Tagore. The two proceeded to have one the most stimulating,
intellectually riveting conversations in history, exploring the age-old
friction between science and
religion. Science and the Indian Tradition: When Einstein Met Tagore
recounts the historic encounter, amidst a broader discussion of the
intellectual renaissance that swept India in the early twentieth century,
germinating a curious osmosis of Indian traditions and secular Western
scientific doctrine.
The
following excerpt from one of Einstein and Tagore’s conversations dances
between previously examined definitions of science,
beauty,
consciousness,
and philosophy
in a masterful meditation on the most fundamental questions of human existence.
EINSTEIN: Do you believe in the Divine as isolated from the
world?
TAGORE: Not isolated. The infinite personality of Man
comprehends the Universe. There cannot be anything that cannot be subsumed by
the human personality, and this proves that the Truth of the Universe is human
Truth.
I have
taken a scientific fact to explain this — Matter is composed of protons and
electrons, with gaps between them; but matter may seem to be solid. Similarly
humanity is composed of individuals, yet they have their interconnection of
human relationship, which gives living unity to man’s world. The entire
universe is linked up with us in a similar manner, it is a human universe. I have
pursued this thought through art, literature and the religious consciousness of
man.
EINSTEIN: There are two different conceptions about the
nature of the universe: (1) The world as a unity dependent on humanity. (2) The
world as a reality independent of the human factor.
TAGORE: When our universe is in harmony with Man, the
eternal, we know it as Truth, we feel it as beauty.
EINSTEIN: This is the purely human conception of the
universe.
TAGORE: There can be no other conception. This world is a
human world — the scientific view of it is also that of the scientific man.
There is some standard of reason and enjoyment which gives it Truth, the
standard of the Eternal Man whose experiences are through our experiences.
EINSTEIN: This is a realization of the human entity.
TAGORE: Yes, one eternal entity. We have to realize it
through our emotions and activities. We realized the Supreme Man who has no
individual limitations through our limitations. Science is concerned with that
which is not confined to individuals; it is the impersonal human world of
Truths. Religion realizes these Truths and links them up with our deeper needs;
our individual consciousness of Truth gains universal significance. Religion
applies values to Truth, and we know this Truth as good through our own harmony
with it.
EINSTEIN: Truth, then, or Beauty is not independent of Man?
TAGORE: No.
EINSTEIN: If there would be no human beings any more, the
Apollo of Belvedere would no longer be beautiful.
TAGORE: No.
EINSTEIN: I agree with regard to this conception of Beauty,
but not with regard to Truth.
TAGORE: Why not? Truth is realized through man.
EINSTEIN: I cannot prove that my conception is right, but
that is my religion.
TAGORE: Beauty is in the ideal of perfect harmony which is
in the Universal Being; Truth the perfect comprehension of the Universal Mind.
We individuals approach it through our own mistakes and blunders, through our
accumulated experiences, through our illumined consciousness — how, otherwise,
can we know Truth?
EINSTEIN: I cannot prove scientifically that Truth must be
conceived as a Truth that is valid independent of humanity; but I believe it
firmly. I believe, for instance, that the Pythagorean theorem in geometry
states something that is approximately true, independent of the existence of
man.
Anyway,
if there is a reality independent of man, there is also a Truth relative to
this reality; and in the same way the negation of the first engenders a
negation of the existence of the latter.|
TAGORE: Truth, which is one with the Universal Being, must
essentially be human, otherwise whatever we individuals realize as true can
never be called truth – at least the Truth which is described as scientific and
which only can be reached through the process of logic, in other words, by an organ
of thoughts which is human. According to Indian Philosophy there is Brahman,
the absolute Truth, which cannot be conceived by the isolation of the
individual mind or described by words but can only be realized by completely
merging the individual in its infinity. But such a Truth cannot belong to
Science. The nature of Truth which we are discussing is an appearance – that is
to say, what appears to be true to the human mind and therefore is human, and
may be called maya or illusion.
EINSTEIN: So according to your conception, which may be the
Indian conception, it is not the illusion of the individual, but of humanity as
a whole.
TAGORE: The species also belongs to a unity, to humanity.
Therefore the entire human mind realizes Truth; the Indian or the European mind
meet in a common realization.
EINSTEIN: The word species is used in German for all human
beings, as a matter of fact, even the apes and the frogs would belong to it.
TAGORE: In science we go through the discipline of
eliminating the personal limitations of our individual minds and thus reach
that comprehension of Truth which is in the mind of the Universal Man.
EINSTEIN: The problem begins whether Truth is independent of
our consciousness.
TAGORE: What we call truth lies in the rational harmony
between the subjective and objective aspects of reality, both of which belong
to the super-personal man.
EINSTEIN: Even in our everyday life we feel compelled to
ascribe a reality independent of man to the objects we use. We do this to
connect the experiences of our senses in a reasonable way. For instance, if
nobody is in this house, yet that table remains where it is.
TAGORE: Yes, it remains outside the individual mind, but
not the universal mind. The table which I perceive is perceptible by the same
kind of consciousness which I possess.
EINSTEIN: If nobody would be in the house the table would
exist all the same — but this is already illegitimate from your point of view —
because we cannot explain what it means that the table is there, independently
of us.
Our
natural point of view in regard to the existence of truth apart from humanity
cannot be explained or proved, but it is a belief which nobody can lack — no
primitive beings even. We attribute to Truth a super-human objectivity; it is
indispensable for us, this reality which is independent of our existence and
our experience and our mind — though we cannot say what it means.
TAGORE: Science has proved that the table as a solid
object is an appearance and therefore that which the human mind perceives as a
table would not exist if that mind were naught. At the same time it must be
admitted that the fact, that the ultimate physical reality is nothing but a
multitude of separate revolving centres of electric force, also belongs to the
human mind.
In the
apprehension of Truth there is an eternal conflict between the universal human
mind and the same mind confined in the individual. The perpetual process of
reconciliation is being carried on in our science, philosophy, in our ethics.
In any case, if there be any Truth absolutely unrelated to humanity then for us
it is absolutely non-existing.
It is not
difficult to imagine a mind to which the sequence of things happens not in
space but only in time like the sequence of notes in music. For such a mind
such conception of reality is akin to the musical reality in which Pythagorean
geometry can have no meaning. There is the reality of paper, infinitely
different from the reality of literature. For the kind of mind possessed by the
moth which eats that paper literature is absolutely non-existent, yet for Man’s
mind literature has a greater value of Truth than the paper itself. In a
similar manner if there be some Truth which has no sensuous or rational
relation to the human mind, it will ever remain as nothing so long as we remain
human beings.
EINSTEIN: Then I am more religious than you are!
TAGORE: My religion is in the
reconciliation of the Super-personal Man, the universal human spirit, in my own
individual being.
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