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MENTAL FURNITURE #11
The Last Scientist and ...
©1997 Dennis Leri
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"All the King's horses and
all the King's men could not put Humpty-Dumpty back together again."
In the Mental Furniture articles I've endeavored to portray Moshe as a
thinker as well as a doer. Our own studies of the Feldenkrais Method
can be furthered by some familiarity with those domains and disciplines
Moshe studied and mastered. In Moshe's writings and talks we find him
mixing together practical, concrete lessons with broad claims for their
benefits to humanity. Not mentioned are the strata sandwiched between
the practical lessons and the universal claims. In our investigations
into Moshe's professional and avocational pursuits, his "mental
furniture," we encounter the kinds of generalizations, abstractions,
logics of reasoning that are the "scaffolding" used to create "learning
how to learn" situations. We can only marvel at the leap of imagination
it took to go from what was known and believed about learning and human
functioning to the artifacts we now call ATM and FI lessons. In no way
will a thorough critical look at the underpinnings of the Feldenkrais
Method, at Moshe's influences, and at the work itself not reward the
person undertaking it. The path of inquiry is laid down by following
one's own interest.
We are poised to enter the next millennium. We can predict, with no
fear of being proved wrong, that whatever this century has seen in
terms of change will pale in comparison to what's in store for the next
hundred years. For our own tumultuous era, the image of an Einstein can
be taken to represent the personification of genius. In the future
maybe Moshe Feldenkrais will come to have a similar stature, not as a
scientist, but as the last of that breed and the first of another.
Before I make that case, I want to begin with the first scientist:
Galileo.
While many great thinkers preceded Galileo, he was the first modern
scientist. To Galileo, the book of Nature was written in the language
of mathematics. Many before him had used mathematics, especially
geometry, to investigate the natural world. Galileo made the unseen
world of mathematics the means of investigating, measuring and
interpreting the sensible world. He also brought something new and
different to the table: thought experiments. The elegance of his
thought experiments plus an ability to charm and persuade made him
compelling. Galileo convinced others of a way to organize thought and
perform experiments that yielded truths at once both universal and
amenable to change and further generalization. His persuasiveness got
him convicted of heresy while his charm kept him from getting executed.
The popular image of Galileo is of his dropping objects from the
Leaning Tower of Pisa to prove objects fall at the same rate of
acceleration. It probably never happened. His actual experimentation
was brilliantly conceived and executed. More important was his
utilization of thought experiment. Galileo, in a thought experiment,
imagined two objects falling through a vacuum at the same rate. No such
vacuum existed until some sixty to eighty years after Galileo thought
it into existence. And, of course, when put to the actual test objects
fell as Galileo imagined. By his own admission, the thought experiments
Einstein constructed to develop his notion of Relativity owe much to
Galileo.
In imagining objects falling through empty space Galileo had to
disregard the world as he and others knew and intuited it. Neither he,
nor anyone else, has ever experienced on this Earth a feather and a
cannonball falling at the same rate except in a carefully constructed
environment. Galileo had to factor out the persuasive evidence of his
senses which were part and parcel with the sensibilities of the then
prevalent world view. The doubting of appearances is the basis for the
notion that science is counter-intuitive. Color, temperature, smell,
taste and texture have no relationship to considerations of mass and
motion as mathematical and theoretical constructs. They are irrelevant.
After factoring out the evidence before us and by considering the laws
of motion, the motion of objects can be reconsidered. Knowing that
objects are drawn to the Earth (as an example of gravitational
attraction) at the same rate allows one to account for why in our
observations they do not: wind resistance, friction, etc. Newton
formalized Galileo ideas and actually to some degree limited them.
Einstein gives credit to Galileo for the idea of Relativity, a
possibility Newton missed. Galileo reduced the explanation of so much
of the phenomenal world to principles that the notion of reductionism
began with him and flourished with Newton.
Jump ahead a few hundred years and look in on a young Russian born Jew
-- Palestine emigrant, French university educated, Judo trained, lab
assistant to Joilet-Curie -- living in London working for the British
Admiralty during WWII. Picture Galileo as the bookend at the beginning
of science and Moshe the bookend at science's end. At the end, that is,
of a certain, pervasive, dominant reductionistic practice of science.
Moshe realized that for human life to come to life it must regain it's
senses. Moshe was fond of saying that any abstract thought deserving of
the name thought could be shown to have it's basis in the phenomenal
world. There should be 'instances,' that is, specific embodiments of
thoughts for every general notion. When he personally really needed it,
all his scientific understanding and all his practical experience in
Judo and other domains did not enable him to place himself fully in the
human world. Something else was needed.
Rene Thom, the mathematician, biologist and inventor of Catastrophe
Theory, has proposed that a Galilean world view is not appropriate to
biological organisms. In fact, he says, responsiveness to differentials
of heat and cold, light and dark, wet and dry, smooth and rough,
quickness and slowness, to name a few, are essential to understanding
how organisms work. Qualities are as essential to biology as quantities
are to physics. Qualities are potential and generic. That is, the
general possibility of experiencing hotness or coolness is actualized
in a particular incident of this coolness. What this coolness may mean
for me is how I use it to navigate my world. By again bringing in
qualities we situate the living being. Living beings, as they are
sentient and seem to want to remain so, require the ability to
discriminate between relevant and irrelevant qualities. Moshe used
thought experiment to reverse the hundreds of years of devaluation of
the senses. His thought experiments reveal the limitations of thought.
Those limitations can be lifted by using the senses to flesh out the
thought. To steer one's actions by using the senses paradoxically one
must first inhibit an action. To hold back from action, to rehearse, to
imagine, to do an experiment mentally and then to observe the
consequence in action: this is the Feldenkrais Method on many levels at
once.
How does one form an image of action to be performed? How does one
"remember" an action just done? How can one modify or alter the course
of an action while in it? How does an alterable action relate to or
impact our behavior? How can we question are own ignorance and not
simply add to it? Why bother? Knowing 'that' I do something is entirely
different than knowing 'how' I do something. Or is it? To know 'how'
implies that I know the 'what' that I am doing. How the 'what' is
implicated in the 'how' is at the heart of the clarifying the notion of
awareness. Feldenkrais deconstructs the order of scientific reasoning.
He uses the thought experiment to end thought. That is, he uses thought
experiments to link thought with action and action with thought.
Thought and action, both alterable, both linked, are put at the service
of constructing a life. Historically, much of the linking of scientific
thought to action has been in the service of warfare. Galileo helped
develop cannons. In Moshe's linking of thought with action we have the
means whereby we can stop waging war against ourselves.
In what Heinz von Foerster has called the shift from "observed systems"
to "observing systems" questions about the observer as well as the
thing observed get bumped into a whole new world of inquiry.
'Observing' is not a thing but a way of acting. And now, at the end of
the millennia, it is respectable to hypothesize enactment as knowing,
cognition as action. Moshe anticipated this development and left
hundreds of constructs, i.e., ATM lessons, to deconstruct 'observing.'
But, in the end Moshe Feldenkrais was undone and redone by his
realization that human behavior is not only action, only thought, only
feelings, or only sensations. The very idea and image of a self is,
when thoroughly reconnected to thought, action, sensation and feeling,
not a solid thing or an ephemeral nothing. It is but the realization
that, "In those moments when awareness succeeds... He grasps that his
small world and the great world around are but one and that in that
unity he is no longer alone." (pg. 54 Awareness Through Movement)
If there is to be any Grand Unified Theory of Everything then there
must be some way to test those theories. I suggest that the tests
already exist and that we are waiting for the theory. Top thinkers from
within science have asserted that the current paradigm of science is at
an end. When science turns the corner, transforms itself, gives itself
another name then perhaps the new Book of Nature will be written in the
language of sentient movement and enacted ways of knowing. The science
of "brute facts" discovered by a detached observer is giving way to
artifacts of knowing invented by the participation of engaged observers.
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