A bit of a random tangent on the spirituality/science debate, but I read this and wanted to share it. The quote comes from Simon Buxton, head of the Sacred Trust here in the UK, that teaches shamanic practinioners based on core methods adapted by Dr Micheal Harner from shamanic methods used across cultures all over the world.
He is also an initiated Bee Shaman, and author of The Shamanic Way of the Bee, that details his extremely intense initiation into this very ancient European shamanic path.
I have been in contact with him for a while, and did a shamanic drumming weekend workshop with him in London a few months ago. He is a very focused, rational, dedicated individual, and a very genuine, decent man.
"What is it, this life?
I know, I know, that between the investigations, the calculations, the quantifications, and the rationalizations of the scientist, there is a gap, like the white spaces between words or the pause in a sentence that gives meaning to the spoken word."
Burnt I really value your contribution to the Nexus...I think this place would be much worse off without your intelligent, objective, rational and grounded contribution, and I consistently agree with at least 95% of what you say, probably more actually...as a species we could do with more people with minds like yours.
I think, as a species, we have so much more to learn about the universe we inhabit...I think we are very much in our infancy. There are some Bristlecone pines in the US that are around 5,000 years old...the oldest living things on Earth. One single tree has been around for the vast majority of our important developmental history as a species. Science is an ever expanding frontier, but only the highly arrogant or highly naive (I'm not having a dig at anyone here) would state that science has everything plotted, and all the answers to all the mysteries slotted away in our journals...of course I'm not saying that science couldn't reach this culmination one day in the future, but I think that day is some way off yet. I say this as a guy undertaking a science degree myself, and I would like to think I am a rational, open minded yet skeptical individual.