Monday, April 25, 2016

Our Most Precious Possession

by Michael Grosso
Most of us rarely think about our most precious possession.   Asked about it, we’re likely to think of heirlooms, childhood memorabilia, old photographs or trophies, one’s house, one’s job, one’s life savings or other sensible-sounding things. 

To my mind, our most precious possession is intangible and essential to our well being.  It is also something we rarely think about and might not even be able to describe very well if asked to do so.  I’m talking about our view of things in general, the working picture we have of life, the values and conceptions that shape our experience. 

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

A New Kind of Enlightenment?

  by Michael Grosso

The great American experiment in democracy owes a lot to the 18th century European Enlightenment. 

Progress and enlightenment were possible, Thomas Paine proclaimed.  The road to 18th century enlightenment was paved with belief in reason, material science, and secular government, and Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin saw by the same lights.   

The forward march of material science has undoubtedly reshaped American life, making us masters of Earth’s resources.  Empires have been built, wars fought, and vast wealth created.  The ideas of the philosophes propelled American history forward, all in line with our vaunted Manifest Destiny.     

But the Enlightenment was also supposed to trend toward liberty (could that have meant unfettered capitalism?), equality (a blatant failure), and brotherly love (really?). The subjective side of enlightenment, what Jefferson called the “pursuit of happiness” was part of the founder’s vision.  But the picture from the subjective side is pretty dismal.  The nation is depressed and caught up in a killer opioid epidemic.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Marijuana and Levitation

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Levitation grows out of a peculiar mental state best described as complete ecstatic self-oblivion.  The mystery of the phenomenon is twofold: the physics, where the body temporarily escapes gravity and the psychology, where the self seems to desert the body. 

A good theory connects diverse phenomena, as Newton’s theory of gravity connected an apple falling from a tree and the earth’s orbit around the sun.  In trying to understand levitation, I look for related phenomena to connect it with. One connection turns out to be a topic recently in the news.   Active changes in the laws of some states of the U.S.A. are underway that legalize marijuana for medical as well as for recreational purposes.

Saturday, April 9, 2016

How I Got Drawn Into the Hunt for Life After Death

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I date my interest in the scientific question of what happens after death to a particular evening spent with convivial friends.  Someone got the idea of fooling around with a Ouija board.  We all agreed to give it a try.  And if truth be told, by evening’s end I had observed things I could not explain.

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Music and Intimations of Immortality


I was listening to an NPR reporter interview a preeminent Bach scholar who said that the great performers of Bach’s music -- atheists and materialists alike -- all felt as if they were communing with God when they played Bach. Hearing about what the music of Bach does to master musicians, I thought of something that Laura Dale, former editor of the Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research, once told me.  The man she loved in her youth was a musician who died before they married. It was clear that her hope of rejoining him after death was behind her passion for survival research.

There is one thing I clearly recall her saying.  What most deeply convinced her of life after death was no inference or pattern of evidence but listening to Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis.  The music convinced her in a way that went completely beyond linear reason.  It spoke directly to her soul of the reality of transcendence.  Apart from the experience, needless to say, strict rationalists are apt to see this as just an emotive outcry, a comforting illusion. 

Still, I’m sympathetic to Laura Dale’s offering a musical experience as the basis of her belief in the reality of a mind-mediated Otherworld.  I recall two similar experiences, which did something to me.  A teenager, I was listening to WQXR, which was the radio station for classical music in New York City.  The piece I heard was by the medieval composer, Johannes Ockeghem, and it had a memorable title, Credo Sine Nomine, “Belief Without a Name”.  I was so taken by this music – taken out of my normal sense of self – that I dashed off a letter to the radio station, describing (somewhat breathlessly) how the music affected me.  A few days later I turned on WQXR and, coincidentally, the classical “DJ” was reading my letter on air!

My second experience of transcendent music occurred years later when I was a student at City University of New York.   This time the composer was Claude Debussy.  I don’t remember which composition it was, but I do remember the absolutely distinct sensations and thought processes it it stirred up in me.  It put me into a singular state: I felt complete freedom from the fear of death, accompanied by the happy idea, “I can die now.”  The “proof” of immortality was the indescribable lightness of being I felt in response to certain passages of Debussy’s music.

All sorts of experiences may produce the conviction of having tasted immortality.  They’re complementary to the linear arguments from particular case histories that psychical researchers focus on.  In my view, research on life after death should include the whole range of experiences that carry the immediate, compelling sense of immortality.  Music, I’m sure, is not the only example. 

After all, what presumably does survive is us, the inner mental core of our being.  There might be interesting ways we can tease out that sense, that intrinsic quality of our immortal self-awareness.   









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