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Science
is pointing towards an LSD-like world without LSD intake. And we are
wholly unprepared for both. Math, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Psychology—the
things we are made of—are inextricably intertwined. People though,
remain interactiveless and disentangled.
Eduardo
Punset
Neuroscientists have recently
discovered that a given visual perception of the Universe activates
the same group of neurons than just to imagine that perception. Surprisingly,
the discovery did not make headlines in the press.
Apparently,
it does not matter that much to perceive a fraction of the tiniest part
of the Universe—that is to say, the visible part—or imagine
instead the dominant invisible reality of atoms and void, in order to
feel something, the glory of colours in Newton's words, or to be self-conscious.
The immediate
corollary for corporate life of the absence of barriers between visible
and invisible at the level of consciousness is that the same degree,
at least, of attention should be paid to evaluating customers degree
of satisfaction, than to what is going on in their imagination. Both
might be very different and equally relevant. It is obvious that some
corporate projects might be geared to fulfill consumers visible needs,
and others to short-cut this lengthy process by direct access to the
imagination.
By and
large people have not realized yet the impact of the sudden crumbling
down of all sorts of barriers. From the neuron's point of view there
is no difference between a visually perceived or imagined bit of the
Universe. From a professional chemist's point of view, it has become
irrelevant too to distinguish between a synthetic or a natural compound.
Both are likely to be impure, more so natural extracts usually made
of complex mixtures, unless processed to separate the components.
Biologist
John Bonner at Princeton has, following more than forty years research,
proved that it is impossible to distinguish between human intelligence
and that of a social amoeba like slime molds. You just cannot demonstrate
that slim molds—or bacteria for that matter—are unconscious.
Since Darwin and modern genetics, the old debate around what distinguishes
humans from other animals has become redundant. If anything, we are
looking now into the differences betweens humans and minerals.
Astrophysicist
John Gribbin—to the dismay of many—has been meticulously
unscafolding away the existence of that last barrier. Life and the Universe
are inextricably intertwined. There would be no planets like the Earth,
and no life forms like us, if there were no clouds of gas laced with
tiny traces of dusty debris produced by the previous explosions of supernova.
There is no doubt now. We are made of interstellar galactic mineral
dust.
Last but
not least, the mother of all barriers, the last frontier between life
and death is becoming ever more suspicious and difficult to ascertain.
Hardly three years ago it was discovered that we humans too—like
mouse and rats—have stem cells. Or, stem cells happen to be immortal.
Stem cells command the process of morphogenesis from the incipient and
magic zygot to the finished embryo. They are not the least important
cells in the body. On the contrary. No wonder if the mother of all barriers
has been deadly shaken. If atoms are eternal, and stem cells are immortal,
what on earth dies out when somebody dies.
The unprecedented disappearance of barriers clashes with every social
convention. Most people only feel comfortable within the narrow limits
of his or her own identity, if duly ranged with equals from the same
species, tribe, generation, church, country and culture. And identical
cultures provide similar sight, taste, tact and hearing. That is the
way the neocortex works. But the sudden lack of barriers tunes very
well with the unconscious brain and its capacity to allucinate under
the effects of LSD. The most powerful drug on earth happens to destroy
barriers between people, between mind and body, between oneself and
other living organisms and, finally, between the spirit and the Universe.
Science
is pointing towards an LSD-like world without LSD intake. And we are
wholly unprepared for both. Math, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Psychology—the
things we are made of—are inextricably intertwined. People though,
remain interactiveless and disentangled.
Governments
have no more urgent task than to help to conciliate individuals, corporations,
institutions, and society at large with the new frontierless Universe.
Otherwise, managers will continue to hold that science has nothing to
do with their entrepreneurial projects, citizens and their legal systems
will be crushed by unexplained violence, Universities will go on focusing
on specific subjects amidst growing demands for global interconnectivity
between humans, robots and computers, the practice of medicine will
continue to exorcise symptoms instead of regenerating tissues, and in
a frontierless Universe nations will continue to fight and hide behind
frontiers.
Eduardo
Punset
Professor of Economic Policy at the Chemical Institute of Ramon Llull
University in Barcelona
Director and Producer of Networks (a weekly programme of Spanish public
television on Science).
Author of A Field Guide to Survive in the XXI st Century.
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