Post-Vital Prajnaparamita

Trey Conner, Richard Doyle

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

This chapter stalks the posthuman as capable of post-material gnosis, an experience of such exaltation and grandeur that can and does occur as an “imperience” beyond thought, sometimes labeled the  prajnaparamita  in the Buddhist tradition. In this imperience – the apparent non-egoic enchanted happening of an order of consciousness beyond “I” pointed to by writers as diverse as the Gitane smoking Gilles Deleuze and the beedie burning Sri Nisargadatta – the posthuman can become uncannily post-vital, beyond the opposition of life and death, as well as post-material, beyond even the most vibrant matter, or, simply, non-dual. The chapter takes “The Hard Problem” rediscovered by philosopher David Chalmers – the apparently enigmatic “emergence of a rich inner life” – and makes it very simple through the practiced direct inspection of consciousness counseled by these traditions. That is, if the Hard Problem asks us to fathom the emergence of consciousness from matter – “Why should physical processing give rise to a rich inner life at all?” – the thinking explored herein responds quite simply: “It doesn’t!” As the Kena Upanishad puts it eponymously, “Kena? Who?” Who experiences an “inner life” as “emerging from physical processing”?
Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationPalgrave Handbook of Critical Posthumanism
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 26 2022

Keywords

  • non-duality
  • evolution of consciousness
  • Rube Goldberg
  • attention

Disciplines

  • Arts and Humanities

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