The Great Splintering - Tapa blanda

Gallant, Rob

 
9798996337439: The Great Splintering

Sinopsis

Have you ever had the feeling that you are more than your circumstances suggest? Not more successful, or more talented, or more deserving - but more fundamental. That behind the daily routine, the roles you play, the person your history has made you, there is something older and quieter looking out through your eyes. Most people have. It tends to arrive uninvited: in the silence after a piece of music ends, at the edge of sleep, in the aftermath of grief or unexpected joy. A sense of depth beneath the surface of ordinary life. A faint recognition, like catching your own reflection in a window you did not know was there.
This feeling has been reported in every culture and every century for as long as human beings have kept records of their inner lives. The mystics of the Christian tradition described it as the ground of the soul. The Hindu sages called it the Atman - the self beneath the self. The Sufi poets wrote of a longing to return to an origin that cannot be named. The Zen masters pointed at it obliquely, because they knew it could not be pointed at directly. That this experience appears so consistently across traditions that share nothing else - no common language, no common scripture, no shared history - is itself a kind of evidence. It suggests that whatever is being encountered is not a cultural artifact. It is something real.
This book is built around a single idea that I believe makes sense of that recognition - and of a great deal else. The idea is this: what we call the Creator, the Source, the One - that infinite awareness at the root of all things - did not make us from the outside, the way a craftsman makes a table. It became us. The One splintered itself into every fragment of experience in this universe - every particle, every living creature, every conscious mind - in order to do something that infinite knowledge alone could never accomplish: to feel what it is like to be alive.
That proposition sits at an intersection that this book will try to hold carefully throughout. It is a spiritual idea - perhaps the most ancient spiritual idea there is. It is also consistent with what modern physics has discovered about the nonlocal, deeply interconnected nature of reality. And it is a profoundly personal idea, because if it is true, it reframes everything about what you are and why you are here. Walking that intersection - between the spiritual and the scientific, the cosmic and the intimate, the ancient and the urgently contemporary - is what this book is about.
I want to be clear about what this book is not. It is not an argument for any particular religion, though it will find things worth honoring in all of them. It is not a physics textbook, though it will take certain discoveries in quantum mechanics seriously enough to follow where they lead. It is not a self-help manual, though I believe the framework it offers changes things in practical, daily-life ways. What it is, more than anything, is an invitation: to consider that the question of what the Creator is and the question of what you are may have the same answer, approached from opposite ends.
One final note before we proceed. Like all ideas, this one has gaps, flaws, and inconsistencies. This book does not claim to have discovered the final answer to existence. What it humbly suggests is that the explanation may be simpler than we have given it credit for. As you explore the concept you may find it compelling, you may find flaws in it, you may find places where it stretches further than the evidence supports. All of that is welcome. The journey of exploration is itself the real success of this kind of thinking. Hold the framework lightly, test it against your experience, and keep what is useful.

"Sinopsis" puede pertenecer a otra edición de este libro.