While I was reading Teilhard, my
mind kept wandering back to the Wilson text, and the importance he placed on
social interactions and the role they played in evolution. Wilson’s text raised
a lot questions in my mind about social interactions in terms of their affect
on the evolution/non-evolution of other creatures, and I began to form vague,
and perhaps slightly ignorant theories that, to a scientist, might have verged
on complete absurdities. Despite this, some of these ideas seemed to be
symbiotic to views Teilhard expressed, for example, his brief discussion of the
“The Crystallising World” (p.68) states – at least in my interpretation – that
the reason why we cannot perceive “consciousness” within mineral formations
(despite Teilhard’s theory that everything has some amount of consciousness) is
because their structure, or the way the particles making them up have
interacted with one another – i.e. socialized – created a “narrow limit to the
internal architecture of its elements” p. 69. This structure has pretty much
frozen the molecules into place, rendering them incapable of further
socialization, and perhaps through that, unable to participate further in the
process of evolution, especially the evolution of conscious, and so these
mineral formations are unable to change, or to cumulate a level of
consciousness that we, as humans with the most complex conscious abilities of
all, are capable of identifying.
This aligns itself with the
original idea I had after reading Wilson’s text; that perhaps the reason why
some organisms/overall things on earth – yes, I’m speaking in terms of
inanimate objects too i.e. the mineral world – have had greater evolutionary
success than others can be attributed to the ways in which the particles
interacted with one another, and the amount of “social interactions” that took
place between particles. For example, I posited that perhaps consciousness does
have to exist within everything in the world, to some degree, because it seems
to me that if we are to identify the atom as the basic building block of
matter, we also have to acknowledge that these units consist of smaller units;
protons, neutrons, and electrons. And perhaps each of these parts of the atom
possess some inherent sense of what they were – in terms of their charges – and
from that sense they developed the knowledge of how they should interact with
one another, and joined forces to form the atom which possessed this same sort
of knowledge about its own functionality and proceeded to join with others and
create the molecule, and so on, ultimately reaching the complex level of
structures we can observe today. Now, admittedly it’s self-conscious on the
smallest level, but in this train of thought it seemed to make sense to me that
in order to identify their individual charges (positive, neutral, and negative)
these tiny particles had to have some slight degree of self awareness, and from
there launched the course of evolution.
Following this, in my attempt to
make sense of the world we identify as “inanimate” now having life thrust onto
it by this acceptance of conscious permeating everything, I posited that
perhaps the reason why the mineral world, for example, has not continued in the
same evolutionary trajectory towards life and conscious minds as the “living,”
“cellular world” is due to the fact that the elements that interacted to form
them did so in a way that bound them to a particular structure within the solid
state that we see them in today, and due to this formation, the mobility of the
particles was stopped, or at least slowed down to such a high degree that their
social interactions happen on a much slower scale, and between a limited number
of elements, or perhaps do not happen at all. Personally, I’m more inclined to
believe that these interactions are still taking place, but at such a level
that our minds cannot fathom or at least be bothered to trace them. I find
support in this belief from Teilhard’s statement that within rocks there is a
“perpetual transformation of a mineral species” p. 69. This is not to say that
I believe that one day, rocks will have the complex cognitive abilities that
we, as humans, possess. On the contrary, the mineral world has a limited number
of elements that it’s particles are able to interact with, and this defined
number of elements puts a limit on the degree of socialization that can take
place within this realm. This limited degree of social mobility lessens the
already slim chances that a particle, or element, will interact with another
that it a.) has not interacted with before and b.) that this interaction will
create such a large transformation that these mineral forms would be able to
take a step forward on the evolutionary scale, or tree of life. Thus the structural
complex of particles placed within the solid bounds of minerals is a limiting force
on the possibilities of total evolution, viewed from the perspective regarding
the importance of social interactions in the history of evolution.
However, it’s also important to
note that if we continue to accept Teilhard’s theories as holding true, and
what he posits about the beginning of the world containing nothing but this
primordial dust, consisting of particles that were “(i) perfectly alike among
themselves (at least if they are observed from a great distance) ; (ii) each
co-extensive with the whole of the cosmic realm ; (iii) mysteriously connected
among themselves… by a global energy,” then these minerals have in fact
participated in the process of evolution to form their current structures
(p.59). Teilhard states that consciousness travels from its standpoint today,
back in time throughout the history of evolution in a way that it is
continuously lessening, not in terms of the quantity of its existence, but in
the quality, or complexity of it, reaching all the way back to the uniform
particles of primordial dust that the earth was covered in. At this point, the
quality of consciousness would have been so low that for us as humans to
perceive of it would be impossible, both because our conscious’ are so complex
and individual and because the type that existed within these particles was not
only present in such slight amounts, it was also uniform. Thus consciousness
participates in its own branch of the evolutionary tree as it is simultaneously
participating – as an inherent part of the pre-living primordial dust that is
the foundation for every form of life – in the evolution of each branch
throughout the course of time. The significance of social interactions in this
evolution is of the utmost importance, because the evolution of consciousness
took place through the accumulation of greater and more complex levels being
created by the interactions of these primordial particles as they joined
together and formed more complex structures amongst themselves, ultimately
stumbling upon a construct in which the level of consciousness reached a point
in which are able to identify the first living things as kinds of “megamolecules”
and from there continuing onwards in the same manner to form the conscious that
we posses today. Ultimately the evolution of consciousness works in conjunction
with the evolution of organisms, or as Teilhard states it “a consciousness is
that much more perfected according as it lines a richer and better organised
material edifice,” thus both of these processes rely on social interactions –
ranging from the smallest particle to human interaction today - to propel them
forwards in their evolutionary journeys.
The crystalizing world that Teilhard writes about is interesting. Minerals being blocked out of the social realm because of their structures made me think about a theory that there are organisms somewhere in the cosmos on an unknown planet; unable to communicate with outsiders because the planet is covered with a thick layer of ice, and under that layer, the organisms live in an aqueous environment. If this actually exists, and we were able to travel thousands of light years through the cosmos we would probably not be able to get to these species to communicate with them, thus they are inhibited from outside knowledge.
ReplyDeleteMy question to both Teilhard's theory and the one I described is: where does it come from? What was the process that led them to these conclusions? These propositions are so beyond apprehension that to even bother sharing them is absurd. How does one have confidence in an explanation of these sorts when they could certainly be wrong. My point is not to say that they are wrong, because all theories are just proposed explanations, my point is to say that these topics are so far beyond comprehension, and for that very reason, the theorist has to believe in his/her mind that his/her theory is 100 percent true, to even be able to share it with others. The process of creating these thoughts must be laborious, but logicians continue to create complex thoughts about unfathomable topics because they are interesting and of course as humans everything that is unexplained has to be theorized about. I am saying all this to say: whatever the process may be for one to create such eloquent thoughts and then share them with others is both beautiful and brave. May the theorist struggle on!