Integrative Health – Integrative Spirituality?

March 2nd, 2011   by   Andrew

Dr. Andrew Weil, a conventionally trained and educated medical doctor, wasn’t satisfied with how medicine was being practiced. He teamed up with the University of Arizona to establish the Arizona Centre for Integrative Medicine. The purpose behind integrative medicine is to provide personal care to patients and address the underlying causes of illness with all the verifiable resources or tools available. Alternative medical practices are used alongside more conventional practices for a more holistic approach to health.

Here is a quick chart comparing the two medical approaches.

Integrative Medical Practices Conventional Medical Practices
Team-based approach – contributive problem-solving Individual professional approach – singular authority but can make referrals to other individual professionals
Preventive-based (being healthy and staying healthy) Intervention-based (when there is a problem, the medical professional steps in to fix the singular problem, then remains uninvolved until next problem)
Whole-living – looking at how you think, how you eat and how you use your body as all inter-related Segregated, independent spheres that can be analyzed regardless of inter-relation

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Sam Harris compares morality to health in his recent book, and I think it’s one of his more compelling points  (my recent review). Even if the word ‘healthy’ is abstract or used differently person to person, the concept is still meaningful and measurable.

This got me wondering about a new model for spirituality. Can you imagine a place for Integrated Spirituality?

CBC Television has a show called Little Mosque on the Prairie. A group of Muslims have graciously accepted a few rooms in the local Anglican Church to gather and practice their faith. All this takes place in a little town called Mercy (clever… eh?).

There are plenty of opportunities for the imam and the minister to lock antlers. One of the main families in the show is a mix of cultures. Sarah married Yasir and has ever since tried to be a good modern Muslim wife (all the while remaining obviously whitebread). The show is an odd mix (in my opinion. I’ve only seen part of an episode, so grain of salt please). It can be poignant, charming, tasteless and tiresome, all in the same gag (it is a sitcom, after all).

But all the same, Little Mosque is asking a contemporary question — can two different worldviews join hands and share a space, or share a joke? I would like to imagine the two community leaders could give referrals for each other when people come seeking spiritual advice, just like doctors whose patients might ask for a second opinion.

Imagine your local community hall, or maybe the megachurch that was recently built in your city. Now imagine it being shared.

Here is a quick chart comparing the two approaches to spirituality.

Integrative Spirituality Conventional Spirituality
Multiple Worldviews explored Singular Worldview reinforced, other worldviews acknowledged to degrees
Resource-based environment encouraging personal growth of experience and knowledge Belief-based structures encouraging authoritative observance and member strength
Cosmopolitan attitude reflecting contemporary community Parochial attitude reflecting a segment of the larger community

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Now, a potential problem would be the assumed universality in most worldviews. I would hope, for example, the resident atheist wouldn’t unnerve the resident evangelical too much. I would hope they could play shuffleboard together. Maybe they could enjoy the strawberry social Thursday night and then afterward help out with the dishes.

If doctors can open their minds and see there might be better ways to treat illnesses through teamwork, then surely spiritual professionals could temporarily suspend their ownership of truth for the sake of people’s spiritual health.

What do you think?

I’m not asking if it’s possible. I’m asking if you can imagine it.



The Moral Landscape by Sam Harris Part 2

February 27th, 2011   by   Andrew


Quotations

A few quotes from Same Harris. I was impressed with his ability to sometimes say things short-n-sweet. The quotes below are focused on evolution, happiness and personal identity (and how little our own intuitions match up to them). If you really require page numbers or anything like that, just ask.


Our minds do not merely conform to the logic of natural selection. In fact, anyone who wears eyeglasses or uses sunscreen has confessed his disinclination to live the life that his genes have made for him.

Many people imagine that the theory of evolution entails selfishness as a biological imperative. This popular misconception has been very harmful to the reputation of science. In truth, human cooperation and its attendant moral emotions are fully compatible with biological evolution.

While each of us is selfish, we are not merely so.

we should not lose sight of the fact that societies do not suffer; people do.

I would be more wisely and effectively selfish if I were less selfish. This is not a paradox.

We must continually remind ourselves that there is a difference between what is natural and what is actually good for us.[my emphasis]

We are now poised to consciously engineer our further evolution. Should we do this, and if so, in which ways? Only a scientific understanding of the possibilities of human well-being could guide us.

There is no question that human beings regularly fail to achieve the norms of rationality. But we do not merely fail – we fail reliably. We can, in other words, use reason to understand, quantify, and predict our violations of its norms.



What do you think?



The Moral Landscape by Sam Harris

February 23rd, 2011   by   Andrew

Author

Sam Harris is writing his name into a historical line of individuals that includes Auguste Comte and Sigmund Freud. Auguste Comte was a French philosopher of the early 1800s who came up with social physics and positivism. Social physics grew up to become our modern sociology. Positivism had a lot of influence on some rugged political policies and in some ways championed the scientific method as the “best, most predictable source” for understanding how to live a human life in the world. Sigmund Freud is an icon for his own contributions — psychoanalysis and the unconscious mind. Our everyday language is now heavily steeped in psychological consciousness. Self-analysis and group analysis are possibly the most popular pastimes, easily out-distancing bowling and baseball, and putting a (more) legitimate stamp on our tendency to gossip.

We are still feeling the effects of both of these men today, despite how little their stories are used by the disciplines they initially constructed. But each of them decided to begin a conversation, start with definitions they could defend, and then push ahead into new visions or new fields of study. And they did this despite criticisms, roadblocks, or potentially dangerous directions.

Sam Harris wants to begin a conversation in which science can find the best understanding of human values.

Technical Bits

Before going too far, I should make a note to show that Harris is not the first start this conversation. For example, Joseph Daleiden wrote a book called The Science of Morality (1998), which  examined the nature of morality under the lens of the scientific method. I suspect he did not have the same P.R. forces as Harris (I should also note my personal lack of rigor and integrity — I haven’t sought out or read Daleiden’s book either…) .

In truth, a whole history could be outlined in which we have tried to look at morality more systematically. Religion certainly holds no monopoly on morality since it is clear we take moral lessons from everywhere. We have a knack for learning as many moral lessons from our children, or from watching someone else stub a toe on a rock,  as we do from God.

The Moral Landscape is a metaphor Harris uses to illustrate his vision for systematic moral understanding. He does not dive too deeply into the pools or valleys of his metaphor, or climb the heights. This book is short, only about 190 pages, and is intended more as an opening question, or compass check, before exploring the wilderness. And that being said, Harris doesn’t really get anywhere, in my opinion.

His writing is clear and lucid. His arguments are practical and his comparisons inspire deep consideration. Even his personal asides are illuminating while remaining professional. This book felt like a combination of academic care, practiced reservation and confident opinion. It left me with a feeling of hopeful boredom. He is looking down the road a mile and asking for it, but he’s only taking an inch.

Harris states that if we were to define morality as “the well-being of conscious creatures,” then values would translate into facts that can be scientifically understood and examined.  He openly declares his premise — human well-being entirely depends on events in the world and on states of the human brain. As his metaphorical landscape would suggest, there is a range of peaks and valleys and mid-grounds to moral living. However, these ‘places’ are interdependent with conditions of the world, which we experience each day, and the states of our brains, which we are studying more and more each day.

His clearest comparison deals with how we use the word ‘health’. There is no one food, for example, that everyone should eat. And the healthy lifestyle of one person may in fact be dangerous or impossible for someone else. But the concept of health is still vibrant and useful. We can use it to guide our measurements of healthy living, to discuss what it means to be healthy, and to value the healthy choices of ourselves and others. Just as important, we can say what is unhealthy. And according to Harris, we can use science to guide our measurements of moral living, to discuss what it means to be moral, and to value the moral choices of ourselves and others. As well, we should be able to say what is immoral too, and not have to hide behind the delicacy of moral relativity.

The world of measurement and the world of meaning must eventually be reconciled… As with all matters of fact, differences of opinion on moral questions merely reveal the incompleteness of our knowledge, they do not oblige us to respect a diversity of views indefinitely. (p. 10)

The book has five chapters — Moral Truth, Good and Evil, Belief, Religion and The Future of Happiness. Like any good New Atheist, he spends more time than I think is necessary laying out barbs against the religious standpoint on morality. For the philosophers out there, Harris does give his own brief dissections for some of the big questions. When it comes to David Hume‘s is vs ought distinction, Harris offers what I think might be called a softer ought.

…to say that we ought to treat children with kindness seem identical to saying that everyone would tend to be better off if we do… the person who insists that he is committed to treating children with kindness for reasons that have nothing to do with anyone’s well-being is not making sense. (p.38)

Concerning good and evil, Harris dives into some research on psychopathic behavior and on our tendency to empathize with individuals rather than with small groups or wider populations. On determinacy vs. free will he gives a few highlights on what MRI machines are telling us about our brains and behavior.

And like any good academic, Harris uses this book to voice his opinions and objections on other people in the field. In particular, he questions Jonathan’s Haidt’s research which organizes morality into political categories. He takes some exception to Joshua Greene’s moral skepticism. In the chapter on religion, Harris voices his thoughts on Barack Obama’s choice for the director of the American National Institutes of Health — the Evangelical Christian Francis Collins.

The one inch Sam Harris takes in this book is quite simple really. There must be something we can know about meaning, morality and values in principle, whether or not we get there in practice. But defining morality has been a large part of the problem when it comes to systematically understanding it. The courage or brashness Harris demonstrates in his new definition is admirable but likely won’t stall his opponents. That being said, I think the next inch Harris takes might have to be more provocative than this one.

Commentary

I have taken a lot of pleasure in the past in saying the New Atheists are just selling a new brand of fundamentalism. It’s one of those  simple reversals, a weak attempt to shake people out of a mindset. But this small book from Sam Harris has changed my mind. I have hope for at least two of the New Atheists now (Dan Dennett won my heart long ago).

In a few passages, Sam Harris refers to an emerging global consciousness and community. He seems genuinely worried that if we don’t have a reliable way of telling right from wrong then we might not achieve the world he wants for his daughter. If we don’t think about it with systematic methods and reasonable conclusions, we might not be able to trust ourselves or the world.

This book was unsatisfying in that it wasn’t revolutionary, but it wasn’t really intended to be. The book can be dry and boring unless you are really interested in moral arguments. However, it was endearing in that Harris does seem to believe we can have a moral system based on something of this world, and he seems to have faith that we can all be rational participants in our communities.

However,  I think his definition for morality may stand up as well as Comte’s formulation of social physics, or Freud’s narrative of the unconscious. When it comes to contributions to human history, no one escapes the editing process or the long years of proofing.



My New High Priest: The Traffic Light

November 30th, 2010   by   Andrew

This thing happened a few months ago. I was driving into town on the four-lane highway with only two trucks ahead of me and some cars a short stretch behind. The sky was overcast and shading into the darker greys of dusk. Ahead I could see an amber pulse above the intersection.

A brief moment of emotion clouded my mind. Not dread. I wasn’t anxious. More disappointment. The usual order of red-amber-green was temporarily not serving the public. Lights not working. Great.

Hardly chaos, but there was that nagging commentary coming up in my head.  Are we going to have a dingus barreling through the intersection, ruining it for all of us? Does everyone know what to do?

Of course everyone knew what to do. Everyone took that test and was smacked over the head with the importance of giving the right of way to the person on the right. Once that plastic permit card is safely tucked into our wallet, we can feel the feel the weight of it upon us, being born into a new freedom and responsibility. For the most part no one really wants to put their expensive vehicle into a vulnerable situation. Our day-to-day lifestyles are too important to interrupt with something as annoying or distracting as a fender-bender.

Everyone stopped. Everyone looked. Everyone waited in turn. And then got on with where they were going.

But it woke me up.

The things we do every day ground into us the behaviours of getting on with the people that share our day. Despite my own interior monologue, it wasn’t assumed that anyone would be so evil as to get out of line at that traffic light. There is a system of training, practice and regulation in place so that people will behave well and know how to do the right thing.

I’ve only been to Central America a few times and haven’t taken up any opportunities to try out the roads. The system is different and I don’t have the practice. The red-octagon ALTO signs look so familiar but don’t seem to carry the same imperative as I’m used to. They’re more like suggestions.

In Belize City, a population of maybe 100,000, there are three traffic lights. And two are almost always not working properly. What would it be like if only a third of your hometown traffic lights worked? In trying to get on with your day, would you not find a better system to use?

The blast of a tired horn in that part of the world carries an entire spectrum of meanings — I’m coming into the intersection, ok? It’s your turn, go ahead! Just want to make sure we have eye-contact! Wait, what are you doing? Thank you for letting me through! Maybe it depends on the driver you get, but we have never had a driver that didn’t smile while working his horn.

I’ve never worn out a horn on any of my own cars.

Someone told me recently that Costa Rica is 95% Catholic. I’d imagine other Central American countries have similar statistics with appropriate variation. In such a place I don’t really know if it is actually assumed that each individual has an evil heart and sinful nature. I saw no evidence. Even when trying to get through the noisy intersections and clogged traffic ways, I only saw people trying to get on with their day. In many ways I’ve felt more at home and more welcomed by those bright smiles and that eagerness to communicate than the cold, orderly quiet of Canada’s highways. But when I’m in Canada, I know what to do. I’ve done the day-to-day practice.

When they go to their priest, do they bring up their traffic offenses? I cut three people off and ran two stop signs since my last confession.  But the lights weren’t working again and I didn’t want to hold up traffic..

I don’t think the key to morality is some process of accepting, admitting and then retroactively confessing away our sinful natures. If we are capable of designing a system of lights that does get us to behave right, and if we are aware enough to train people ahead of time, then surely we can upgrade our assumptions about ourselves.

What do you think?



Parenting, Trust, and the Weather

November 9th, 2010   by   Andrew

I want to make it up to my sister-in-law. In a recent post she might come off as a little too uni-dimensional. And to be fair, the the post was about 2/3 factual and 1/3 story. I think I wrote 5 emails to her instead of 3. Also, the whole thing stemmed from some problems I was having at the time in my love-life. There is an old writing lesson that goes like this: exaggeration trumps truth. I hope someday the blogging world also understands that omission (and good ol’ fashioned editing) can sometimes trump exaggeration.

But she did do something very important for me in being so dismissive of my rationalizations. Emotional choices do have to be understood on at least some emotional level.

So I want to bring up this story where I defend her, as a kind of thank-you for being understanding and patient with the family she married into. She’s likely heard about this already. I love her and want to make sure she knows that she has taught this distracted observer to think about things right before his eyes as much as things just beyond his vision. This one is a mix of fact and story too.

My brother and sister-in-law have two beautiful, healthy, smiley and active children that suffer only from the lack of nothing. I think the two parents are enjoying every moment of it, even the pains and catastrophes and blunders. But their parenting, being the personal and ever-changing pursuit that it is, has been the inspiration for a few criticisms now and then.

Parenting is a funny thing, eh. We’re not supposed to judge how other people raise their kids, and yet we can blame a lot of our social problems on ‘bad parenting’. We can’t really offer much advice when it comes to parenting because it means we are butting in or being rude, and yet mountains of parenting books are available and recommended daily. Is parenting like the weather? Everyone talks about it but nobody does anything about it??

A few years ago, when the children were quite little,  a certain conversation came up when my brother and sister-in-law weren’t around. Now I won’t name names, but a little bit of worry came up from a certain someone  about how these two young parents were getting along.

“She’s giving them too many choices. She’s giving in too much! She’s trying to negotiate and coax too much!  She has to get control of that young boy before he gets out of hand!”

I was listening and nodding through all of this and about to give a standard, “Yup, absolutely!” when a short moment of awareness hit me. Normally, I agree with a lot of what this certain someone says. It likely isn’t that surprising, since I tend to think a lot like this certain other someone.  Generally speaking, we tend to pay attention to what confirms our thoughts and dismiss things that we don’t want to hear anyway. But being my usual self didn’t seem the right response for that moment.

I thought about my sister-in-law in her kitchen. A quick picture came up of her slicing up an apple and a peach for her children. She had made them first sit at the table, then decide on the snack they wanted. She then continued to talk to them while preparing the fruit, keeping them engaged and focused, though just sitting at the kitchen table. Everything was smooth and fluid, and I was able to realize just how well prepared and happy she was.

“You know what,” I blurted, “I trust her completely with those two kids. She’s wanted children all her life, she wants to be a good parent and she is thinking about it every day when she looks at them.”

The conversation softened. Some words of consideration came up, minds began to change, and in a short time we were talking about something else entirely.

What struck me as important at the time was that my trust in her actually came from the realization of how different we were. I pictured her in her life, not me in her life. She is a public school teacher that believes in her work and believes in her ability to do her work. She has always wanted to be a parent and she has worked at it consciously. And she does have incredible control over her children. They adore and respect her as much as she adores and respects them. (Well, they aren’t teenagers yet… he he…)

There is an old business lesson that goes something like this: don’t hire yourself. You will do the jobs that you like to do. Hire someone very different from yourself, as opposite as you can find. They’ll want to do the jobs you don’t like to do.

I think this is a moral lesson as well, a community lesson. We are far beyond the historical point where everyone in the family or the group has to be the same. In fact, it can be disastrous now to put such expectations on people. Forcing parenthood upon unprepared and uninterested people is a sure-fire way to cause bad parenting. (Just an aside here, but I find it funny how much is said about the effects of bad parenting, but so little is said about the causes of bad parenting…)

There are rewards now in trusting those people that are different precisely because they think and want different things, just as there are rewards for letting people pursue their own career paths (and social paths and family paths).

It might mean more debates, and some bickering, and even some over-philosophizing, but people do all that anyway.

What do you think?



Will Sitcoms Do More for Morality than Religion?

October 19th, 2010   by   Andrew

“The duty of comedy is to correct men by amusing them.”
- Moliere


Three illustrations (Not necessarily linked by cause or effect):

1. TV becomes the primary medium of the 20th Century for distributing information. It literally brings the entire world into any home almost instantaneously. And with it comes a load of social changes. It even affects how writers write and how we evaluate writing. The accepted, ‘good’ writing style now is short and scene-driven. And the visual aspects are of the utmost importance. With video, the lesson of “Show, don’t tell!” is unavoidable.

The sitcom is born, and in almost all circumstances is an attempt to reflect the audience through the lens of comedy. The medium is the message and the viewer is the content. (MacLuhan)

2. Despite all the evidence that demonstrates just how little we learn if we only hear something or read something, the sermon and the sacred text continue to be the main tools associated with religious instruction.

Strangely enough, shopping for a good service’ has become the norm for North American families. People try out different denominations, different religions even, until they find something entertaining (“Oh the minister was fired up today!”) or something that gives them what they want (“I loved the singing!” or “The Prosperity Gospel speaks to me like no other!”)

3. Homer Simpson is declared a Catholic by the Vatican. The longest-running primetime TV show has almost always shown the Simpson family attending a “Presbylutheran” church, not a Catholic cathedral. And yet for some reason the Vatican wishes to claim association with and ownership over Homer’s soul. Why is that?

Ok, often enough the plot of an episode of the Simpsons involves Homer doing something selfish,  stupid or half-baked. When things go from bad to worse, he admits to his idiocy, often enough publicly or maybe just to his confessor Marge. He usually appears sheepish, even shameful, completely dependent and more or less repentant. Ok, maybe pseudo-repentant. But what’s the difference in a sitcom? And, as if by some miracle, he is shown forgiveness. His family, his friends, even his work, forgive him and embrace him back into the fold. Why doesn’t Marge ever really leave him?


Possible Conclusion:

The sitcom may very well do more for encouraging morality because it shows stories and people that the audience will relate to immediately. It does not tell people how they should act, but instead shows them how they are. In a sense, the sitcom shows the viewer to himself or herself in a context or situation and then shows the consequences of the actions in that situation.


Consequences:

  • But this doesn’t mean we are better people now – we laugh at a lot together, but it is often enough about meaningless, absurd stuff

Maybe so, but we seem to recognize the idiots in ourselves more. We are able to laugh at ourselves more and thus maybe even admit when we are wrong.

  • Television is no longer the primary medium. The sitcom may not last as long as religion

Ah. Yes. Instead we have internet, and we have viral videos. So all the more we are pulled together by the mundane and the absurd. Maybe we aren’t that deep of a species after all. But then again, maybe morality doesn’t need to be that deep either. It is not an academic exercise. That’s the most ridiculous part. Homer doesn’t think his way out of his idiocy.

It is about how well we live our lives.

  • [please add your thoughts or consequences here...]