Long before Darwin there was a movement which challenged
certain notions espoused by the Neo-Platonists, that the spiritual Ladder of Life or Great Chain of Being was static – that individuals might rise up
through the rungs to merge with the divine One.
In the 19th century, this ladder became dynamic with
everything including the soul of the world evolving over time. This is the basic idea that Hegel espoused;
the unfolding of the world’s spirit through time. So before Darwin, the Romantics had embraced
a spiritualised form of evolution. What supposedly drives this evolution forward
is a universal striving for higher levels of perfection. Nancy Pearcey, in her book Saving Leonardo, says
that until Darwin, “concepts of spiritually directed evolution were widely
accepted because they seemed to support the concept of divine providence
directing the process….It provided a version of evolution that was
teleological…it assured people that, contrary to what materialism says, purpose
and meaning were not strictly mental,
located only in the human mind. They
were embedded in nature as well.”[1] And as the historian John Randall concluded,
“When science seemed to take God out of the universe, men had to deify some
natural force, like evolution.”[2]
Evolution means progressive change and adaptation and
for Hegel this included changes in the areas of law, ethics, philosophy and theology. Since no idea was absolutely true or
timeless, this radical relativism known as historicism implies that nothing
stands outside the unfolding, evolutionary process. The problem of historicism is that it
undermines itself – it commits suicide.
Just as one cannot assert relativism without denying it, then the very
idea of spiritual evolution may one day be surpassed by something else. To assert historicism, one needs to be able
to stand above history to see it objectively, but this isn’t possible according
historicism itself. Nancy Pearcey says,
“The only way to avoid suicide is to be logically inconsistent: Hegel had to exempt his own views from the historicist categories that he applied to
everyone else’s views.”[3]
So how does the progressive spiritual movement get out of
this trap? Diane Musho Hamilton, a
teacher of integral spirituality, recognises the problem. She says that evolutionary consciousness is “the
bridge in the territory between Zen practice and integral theory.”[4] It allows the transition to Ken Wilber’s
philosophy of reality – Integral Theory - which synthesises ideas from
psychology, philosophy, history, anthropology, religion and sociology. Recognising that psychology isn’t enough to
handle all the problems people encounter while also admitting that spirituality
alone (especially meditation) is often insufficient to help some whose problems
are deeply problematic (such as bi-polar and other forms of depression),
integral theory borrows principles and practices from both. Wilber packages this up as a theory of
everything.
Like Cohen, Wilber views history as the evolution of
consciousness and that monotheism is but a more primitive or mythic
understanding of reality. Again this
echoes Hegel’s ideas of the development of the world’s spirit, the Geist, over
time. As Douglas Groothius concludes in
a review of Wilber’s ideas, “nevertheless, Wilber’s worldview is both
unbiblical and riddled with philosophical errors.”[5] One of these is that the fundamental nature
of reality in integral (and eastern) spirituality is nondual. Groothuis explains, “nondualism excludes any
development of the universe or cultures through time. If all is one and with distinction, there are
no parts of reality left to develop or change in history.”[6]
Yet Wilber repeatedly explains “the evolution of
consciousness,” while affirming that nonduality is both “the ground and the
goal” of the entire process. Hindu non
nondualists are at least consistent in rejecting history as illusory and
unimportant.[7]
Integral theory incorporates a framework for understanding
human psychology called AQAL, meaning all quadrants, all levels, which
undertakes to define categories of existence - quadrants, lines, levels, states and types – which supposedly explain
capacities and stages for growth. Progress in this system rests on certain
necessary conditions including these: a certain degree of physiological development
is necessary but not sufficient for cognitive development; a certain degree of
cognitive development is necessary for self-development; this for interpersonal
development; and this for moral development.
Isn’t this remarkable; the final level is moral. So it seems to me logical that integral theory
might come full circle to re-acknowledging the importance of the conscience in
determining right from wrong, that reality might not be nondual after all and
that integral could very well ‘evolve’ into something quite different from what
Wilber had in mind. Perhaps into
monotheism…
[1] Nancy
Pearcey, Saving Leonardo, B&H Publishing Group, 2010, p. 196.
[2] John
Randall, Philosophy after Darwin, p. 8.
[3] Pearcey,
p. 196-7.
[4] Diane
Musho Hamilton, “Exploring Integral Zen: The Sliding Scale of Enlightenment,”
Intgral Life+, 8 Mar 2008.
[5]Douglas
Groothuis, “A Critique of Ken Wilber,” The Constructive Curmudgeon blog, 3
March 2010
[6] Ibid.
[7] Ibid.