The World Is Magic. So Where Is the Magician?
By Deepak Chopra, MD, FACP, FRCP
The phrase “magical thinking” has a bad reputation. It is associated with superstition, schizophrenia, hallucination, and other escapes from reality. If you seek a definition that is free of judgment, however, magical thinking is the belief that a hidden cause connects events where no cause actually exists. Science has gone through a long, hard slog to replace magical thinking with rational cause-and-effect, which is why we study the sun through telescopes rather than worshiping it.
It’s ironic, then, that the most advanced sciences has confronted us with problems that overturn everyday reality so radically that some kind of magical thinking seems inevitable. We are all embedded in a magical reality that has no cause or explanation. The main features of magical reality are the following:
· Nature is built from ripples in the quantum field that have the ability to turn into particles. This dual nature has no explanation.
· Across the threshold of space, time, matter, and energy is a pre-created state that cannot be reached from our side of the threshold. Therefore, physics accepts that the universe is an example of creating “something from nothing.” How this occurs has no explanation.
· So-called “dark” matter and energy constitute the vast majority of matter and energy in creation, yet there are only the tiniest hints about what they are, since they apparently do not obey the lexicon of natural laws that operate in the known universe.
· The human brain is composed of the same atoms, molecules and electrical fields that pertain to other cells in the body (with a few distinctive changes). The accepted fact that the brain can think falls apart when you seek the cause of thinking, since no one has discovered how, when, or where basic atoms and molecules suddenly became conscious.
· The five senses do not pick up sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell. They create them through an act of transformation no one can explain. Red looks red, salt tastes, salty, and sandpaper is rough as we perceive them, but in Nature none of those qualities exist.
If you consolidate these mysteries, reality itself becomes one, vast, inexplicable magic act, adding a few more factors accepted by science, like the fine tuning that kept the infant universe from collapsing in on itself or, the other alternative, flying apart in a formless cloud (alter primordial forces by one part in a billion, and the infant universe would go poof!)
The amazing part is that the everyday three-dimensional world exists and secondly, that human beings navigate through it so effortlessly. We accept a 24–7, wrap-around illusion because our ancestors accepted it, leaving on the fringe a motley crew of sages, mystics, seers, and other people with anomalous ways of seeing reality.
This motley crew generally met with a dismal fate, becoming outcasts subject to rejection, suspicion, and persecution. A relative handful, however, became the source of the world’s spiritual traditions. Their united message, leaving aside all the differences, was “Wake up!” But the truth that everyday reality is pure illusion has had an even harder time sinking in than science’s project of convincing us that there is no illusion. Hence the irony when magical thinking came back to bite the hand of science and force it to confront the mystery that lies at the heart of Nature.
Let’s say we cut to the chase and accept the magic act that creates reality. This doesn’t involve the rejection of science, the abolition of reason, the rise of superstition of any other bugaboo. It only involves a change of perspective. At the most fundamental level, a change of perspective is the common thread that runs through all spiritual traditions. Nor do we have to say, “My perspective is right, and yours is wrong.” The human mind is designed to adopt any perspective freely, and to stand back to examine any perspective.
In other words, we are aware, which is the only ingredient needed to be awake. It is the gap between these two states that raises all the barriers, resistance, ignorance, received opinions, and other trappings that our wrap-around illusion depends on. Getting from aware to awake is the whole game. So how is it done?
There are numerous answers to that question, but once again we can cut to the chase. The world is magic — that much we’ve just accepted — so who is the magician? Before offering a cut-and-dried answer like “The magician must be God” or “Nature creates everything,” consider the one piece of magic we cannot do without. The one piece of magic that underlies the entire wrap-around illusion is the transformation that turns quanta to qualia.