Reflexive self-consciousness

Reflexive self-consciousness

Reflexive self-consciousness is a concept, related to that of enlightenment, formulated by Eugene Halliday during the 1940s/1950s in England.

Eugene Halliday, made a lifelong study of art, religion, philosophy, psychology and science. From his understanding he formulated a coherent set of ideas. In his seminal work “Reflexive Self-Consciousness”, he sets out the nature of consciousness and its relation to the world of phenomena, being, and mankind. From this he explains how consciousness itself can become 'reflexive'. By this he means that consciousness becomes completely self-transparent and continuously aware of its own presence and nature.

He says that when observing a thing or situation we can promote this reflexive state by turning our own consciousness back onto itself. "It is the self, which is consciousness itself which is observing this thing, this self I am, I return to the self." By placing our nature as observer at the heart of his work, Halliday sets out a method by which to liberate ourselves from object-identification, which locks us into a cycle of conditioned reflexes, pleasure pursuit and pain avoidance (p 58).

In the prologue to his book, Halliday examines the meaning of the related terms sentience, consciousness, feeling, sensation, awareness. All are related, and to some degree interchangeable; all refer to “that in and by which we know what we know, and that we know”. Halliday sees consciousness as a fundamental quality of being and not, as some materialists would suggest a product of complexity in matter derived from evolution. Halliday states that if we do not posit sentience or consciousness as a property of that source which is present “from the very beginning of creation or evolution, we cannot find a point later at which we may logically introduce it” (p v). This assertion may be challenged by those looking for proof. Halliday explains, that if we ask ourselves what this statement means, we can only say “we know what we mean. Consciousness is its own evidence” (p i). He then goes on to say that we cannot indicate what we mean by one of these consciousness-related words “without appealing to that in us, which corresponds with their significance, that is, to that in us which knows that it knows” (p i).

He sees a complex structure of cells, such as the brain, as “a vehicle for the expression of the complex processes of consciousness” and not as the origin of that consciousness. No matter how complex the arrangement, consciousness cannot arise from the biochemical interactions of a large number of non-sentient particles.

Halliday posits that the ultimate source and origin of our being is sentient and conscious. He sees this origin as an infinite field of sentience. Halliday compares the activity of this infinite field of sentience, the source of all beings, to that of the sea. Its internal movements, its waves, create vortices within it, which give rise to all the observable phenomena of the world. Atoms, molecules, cells, plants, animals, mankind, human beings, all are formed within this infinite sentient field, and all are sentient. There is no non-sentient level of being. Thus agreeing with the philosopher Alfred North Whitehead when he said “there are no dead gaps in Nature”. This infinite field of sentience, which is the ultimate source of the universe and all within it, is the Godhead of the theologians, the Absolute of the philosophers.

Halliday says that the true nature of the self is consciousness itself. As beings with physical bodies, we are tyrannised by the limitations of our sense organs, by the pursuit of pleasure and the avoidance of pain, by emotional charges in the records of our experiences, so that we often behave in a reactive manner, as if we were no more than animals, with no free choice. However, if we learn to remember the nature of our true self, and our source in consciousness, we can free ourselves from this enslavement and become human, capable of free choice and action.

Before evolution, Eugene Halliday posits an 'involution', whereby the motions of this absolute sentience create the universe and all the beings in it. Sentience tends to fall into identification with beings, down to the grossest physical level of the mineral world. Through the process of evolution, sentience evolves through mineral, plant, animal and human to rediscover its true nature as Consciousness itself, at one with the infinite field of consciousness. This return of consciousness to its source, is the “Reflexive Self-Consciousness” of the title of the book.

References

"Reflexive Self-Consciousness", Published by the Melchisedec Press, 1989, ISBN 1-872240-01-1


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Consciousness — Representation of consciousness from the seventeenth century. Consciousness is a term that refers to the relati …   Wikipedia

  • Reflexive monism — Monism is the view that the universe, at the deepest level of analysis, is one thing or composed of one fundamental kind of stuff. This is usually contrasted with Substance Dualism, the view found for example in the writings of Plato and… …   Wikipedia

  • reflexive modernization — A term devised by the German social theorist Ulrich Beck, which refers to the way in which advanced modernity ‘becomes its own theme’, in the sense that ‘questions of the development and employment of technologies (in the realms of nature,… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • self — n. & adj. n. (pl. selves) 1 a person s or thing s own individuality or essence (showed his true self). 2 a person or thing as the object of introspection or reflexive action (the consciousness of self). 3 a one s own interests or pleasure (cares… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Double consciousness — Double consciousness, in its contemporary sense, is a term coined by W. E. B. Du Bois. The term is used to describe an individual whose identity is divided into several facets. Du Bois saw double consciousness as a useful theoretical model for… …   Wikipedia

  • Divided consciousness — is a term coined by Ernest Hilgard to define a psychological state in which one s consciousness is split into distinct components, possibly during hypnosis. Origin(s) The theory of a division of consciousness was touched upon by Carl Jung in 1935 …   Wikipedia

  • Eugene Halliday — (1911 1987) was an artist, philosopher and teacher. For a large part of his life he lived and taught in Manchester and Altrincham, England, giving talks, running groups and giving personal tuition to a large number of interested people. He was a… …   Wikipedia

  • The Examined Life — is a collection of philosophical meditations written by Robert Nozick and published in 1989.Having pursued philosophy in an argumentative mode in Anarchy, State, and Utopia , and in an explanatory mode in Philosophical Explanations , his mode in… …   Wikipedia

  • Awareness — Aware redirects here. For other uses, see Aware (disambiguation). Awareness is the state or ability to perceive, to feel, or to be conscious of events, objects or sensory patterns. In this level of consciousness, sense data can be confirmed by an …   Wikipedia

  • Deconstruction and Derrida — Simon Critchley and Timothy Mooney DERRIDIAN DECONSTRUCTION1 In the last twenty five years or so, particularly in the English speaking world, no philosopher has attracted more notoriety, controversy and misunderstanding than Jacques Derrida.… …   History of philosophy

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”