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Beyond the Matrix -- A Buddhist Approach

Posted: 01/02/12 04:22 PM ET

"To be, or not to be: that is the question."
--Hamlet

"Psychopaths are capable of taking the perspective of somebody else, but only to take better advantage of you. They're able to play the empathy game, but without the feelings involved. It's like an empty shell. The core of empathy -- being in tune with the feelings of somebody else -- seems to be completely lacking. They are like aliens among us."
--Frans de Waal

The Believing Brain

The human brain often functions as a "believing organ." Our beliefs develop for many different subjective and psychological reasons, and according to various contexts (family, relationships, culture, media, advertising). There is evidence that many beliefs are largely subconscious in nature. That does not stop us inventing conscious explanations for them. We rationalize, defend and fight for our beliefs -- often as if our identity depended upon it. And often it does.

If some new reality challenges our mental map, our understanding of it will usually be limited by our old beliefs. Evidently human ideologies provided some evolutionary advantage in the past. But the enormous evolutionary crisis we are now facing requires rapid creative adaptation to unprecedented realities. The believing organ is being challenged as never before.

Democracy or Corporatocracy?

At the outset of the 21st century, the dominant institution is not government but business corporations, which have learned how to manipulate the democratic process. These legal entities have an insatiable appetite for profit and work to undermine any limitations on their power to pursue it. A prime example was the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision to permit unlimited corporate cash donations to political campaigns. Big Carbon companies responded to this new legalization of corruption by financing lavish advertising to capture a majority in the House of Representatives. Defying the unprecedented frequency of extreme weather events occurring worldwide -- including a record 12 events imposing aggregate damages of $52 billion on the U.S. itself -- their "representatives" blocked any attempts to address the climate crisis. They attacked environmental regulations across the board and cut the budget of the Environmental Protection Agency (which they also threatened to abolish). They organized witch-hunts of eminent climate scientists, reminiscent of the McCarthy hearings in the 1950s.

With this act of political "shock and awe," Big Carbon forced its agenda down the throat of the world's most powerful country. Although climate science shows clearly that extracting and burning the remaining fossil fuels will make global warming irreversible within a decade, such corporations are still determined to direct all political discourse and decisions to bolster their own record profits. How can they get away with making our world un-liveable? Because the top 200 oil, coal and gas companies have a combined value of $7.4 trillion, based on proven fossil fuel reserves that "the market" expects to burn.

Many people say they cannot understand how the corporate executives concerned can ignore the ecological tragedy that is unfolding for their own children and grandchildren. They are sacrificing the future of the biosphere for short-term profit. "Are they inhuman?" we ask. Like de Waal's psychopaths, they seem to lack the core of empathy that 99 percent of us take for granted. This suggests an obvious question: Does lack of empathy make it easier to climb to the top of the corporate ladder?

Zero Empathy, Institutionalized

Over a decade ago, the psychiatrist Robert Hare evaluated corporate behaviour toward society and the world by applying standard diagnostic criteria to the business practices of these so-called "legal persons." The diagnosis that fitted best was antisocial personality disorder -- in other words, psychopathy. This finding came a few years after evolutionary biologist Edward Wilson wrote an insightful essay on the global ecological crisis, titled "Is Humanity Suicidal?"

Research by Simon Baron-Cohen and colleagues has more recently identified the circuit in our brain that generates spontaneous empathy for others' feelings. Unsurprisingly, it is underactive in individuals who commit acts of cruelty. Unfeeling cruelty toward others has traditionally been called "evil." Now we have a precise neurogenetic definition: "zero-empathy" is the root of all evil.

As the power of corporate institutions has increased, so has that of its ideology -- economic theory, which continues to exalt the beneficial nature of "the free market." Market forces must be allowed to wreak unregulated "creative destruction" on ecosystems, cultures, democracy and globalized society alike. Empathy erosion toward future human generations has become an acceptable norm. Today carbon emissions are permitted to increase at reckless rates by governments in thrall to a failed energy paradigm and its catastrophic infrastructure. An upsurge in extreme weather events is now treated as the "new normal," while the mainstream media -- themselves powerful corporations -- ignore the fact that such disasters have been repeatedly predicted by climate science.

Wilson asked whether our species has a suicidal tendency. The jury is still out on that question. History does clearly show, however, that war, genocide and other man-made disasters can be orchestrated by zero-empathy individuals in positions of power. How much more so, then, by zero-empathy institutions seeking "full-spectrum dominance"?

Breakout From the Matrix

Film and television are technologies that have the potential to be genuine art forms. Today, however, they are predominantly used by media corporations to create and maintain a simulated reality: the matrix of consumer capitalism. The ideology perpetuated by this all-pervasive matrix insists that happiness exists in direct proportion to consumption, "because you're worth it." Saturation advertising, which exploits the latest research into psychological manipulation, alternates with selective news, soap operas, thrillers, game shows, so-called reality shows and other disempowering trance-inductions.

The medium is also the message: virtual reality is the new norm. As we disconnect from the immediate biological world of interpersonal relationships and interdependent species, we adapt to an artificial one, where climate breakdown disappears when we don't believe in it.

"Frozen Planet" is an excellent seven-part BBC television series wherein Sir David Attenborough celebrates the extraordinary ecology and wildlife of Earth's polar regions. British viewers saw all seven episodes, the last addressing the momentous effects of climate change on the Arctic and Antarctic. Thirty worldwide TV networks purchased this series. A third of them (including Discovery Channel in the U.S.) elected to do without the "optional extra" of the final episode. In the real world, the Arctic sea ice continues its precipitous decline. While the climate models of global warming that predicted this have been ignored by governments, a comprehensive collapse has happened faster than any model could predict.

In the real world we do not get to avoid the final episode. It's time to break out of our unsustainable zero-empathy matrix. To be or not to be is now the pressing spiritual question before us -- as individuals, as citizens, as a civilization and as a species.

John Stanley & David Loy are part of the Ecobuddhism project

 
"To be, or not to be: that is the question." --Hamlet "Psychopaths are capable of taking the perspective of somebody else, but only to take better advantage of you. They're able to play the empathy g...
"To be, or not to be: that is the question." --Hamlet "Psychopaths are capable of taking the perspective of somebody else, but only to take better advantage of you. They're able to play the empathy g...
 
 
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11:35 PM on 02/18/2012
Excellent article!
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Tricia W
Living Life with Passion, Purpose & Laughter!
03:04 AM on 02/13/2012
The only thing in the world I can change is myself ~
and that has made all the difference
in the world.

.
Namaste'
(~_~)
_/|\_

.
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C Karen Stopford
07:25 AM on 02/08/2012
This article doesn't really talk about Buddhism, does it? As far as I can tell, all of the world's great religions are at polar opposites with the way the world is going. If the author wanted to talk about interdependent origination or emptiness in relation to what was happening, or how one might reconcile the view of the Buddha with the actual behavior of corporations, well, it might have been more apropos.
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jonainpdx
Religion is Faith in People
03:29 PM on 01/27/2012
While I agree everything this author says about corporations. But in this type of discussion one glaring fact always seems to get glossed over. Like it or not, we the people are the corporations. If you have a 401k an IRA, day trade what ever. If you buy any thing or service not made in your neiberhood, your apart of the corporations. We hate unfair labor practices, then buy an iPad made by Foxcon. You drive your car or ride the bus to a global warming protest. So on and so forth. If you think energy saver bulbs and a Prius is going to save the planet, think again. The only solution to climate change is a massive leap forward in how humans harness energy and do so cheaper than the prepackaged (carbon) ready to burn fossil fuels. Solar panels just arn't going to cut it, neither is wind. Neither are reliable enough for the energy demands of the human race. The best options are super clean Nuclear Fusion (Not dirty Fission) and massive Geothermal. This planet is a great big ball of molten rock. Like 95% by volume molten. Very hot, and on most parts of the earth's crust, miles deep, but we can do it, if we have the engeneering talent focused on these issues. This to me is not only what will save our species in the next 200 years. But will save our species for 100,000 years and take us to the other star systems.
03:08 PM on 01/21/2012
Substitue "Big Carbon companies" with "Big War companies" and you'll see the analogies, only these date back to the Cold War and before.
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EdwinRutsch
Founder Center for Building a Culture of Empathy &
12:28 PM on 01/12/2012
May I suggest a further resource to learn more about empathy and compassion.
The Center for Building a Culture of Empathy
The Culture of Empathy website is the largest internet portal for resources and information about the values of empathy and compassion. It contains articles, conferences, definitions, experts, history, interviews,  videos, science and much more about empathy and compassion.
http://CultureOfEmpathy.com

I posted a link to your article in our
Empathy and Compassion Magazine
The latest news about empathy and compassion from around the world
http://bit.ly/dSXjfF

I'd like to invite you to lead an empathy panel in our:
International Online Conference on:
How Can We Build a Culture of Empathy and Compassion?
http://bit.ly/nU0NXB
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Jarhead65
Writer, teacher, Marine Vet, Dog Lover
10:29 AM on 01/09/2012
Some buddhist "catchwords" in here, but empathy isn't just a buddhist quality. I agree with the points they make, but using buddhism as another catchword in the title wasn't necessary.
06:48 PM on 01/26/2012
Thank you, that is what I'm saying. Good points on an important subject, but they end up doing exactly what they are preaching against; using manipulative catchwords and impulse psychology to lure more readers (consumers) towards their article (product). Insincere at best, down right exploitative at worst.

Oh and p.s., this comment is a Jesus Christ approach, thought you should know just in case you didn't understand how important it is.
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09:36 AM on 02/01/2012
Indeed, I've noticed a lot of Christian thought in American Buddhism generally, with a lot of notional abstraction and word-play rhetoric coupled with agreed conclusions.
Silence is golden.
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belladio
Not in the mood to suffer fools
11:17 PM on 01/07/2012
"...they are predominantly used by media corporations to create and maintain a simulated reality: the matrix of consumer capitalism. "

I couldn't agree more.
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H P
Citizen
09:00 PM on 01/07/2012
Very good article, NO buddhism here though, good logic, and I can see, in our 2011 reality, even though you don't spell out the 'matrix' analogy.
We as a culture need to take the red pill and wake up, turn off the Wii, the Xbox, 50 inch LED HD TV, etc... and be present in OUR reality... get outside and walk in the woods, listen to birds, see animal tracks, just be present in YOUR individual reality WITHOUT earbuds, with out iphones, with out internet connection.. LIVE your life....
01:54 PM on 01/07/2012
i have mixed emotions about the global warming issue but the psychological aspect is very interesting. a lot of politicians and business owners are all about money, profit, and things. basically an inability to see outside of a self-serving nature and no empathy for anyone but themself. they'd put their own mother on a raft and push her up a raging river if it makes them an extra million. in todays narcisstic culture, it seems like individuals like these who stomp all over other people and treat them as dispensable are the ones who get ahead. they have no concept of what it's like to not have the priviledge of being shat out by some rich mother and father who gives them everything and act as though the world is their personal dumping ground for their personal pleasures. i get so irritated with politicians who are so out of touch with what the average man or woman endures on a daily basis. they have no real worries, therefore they simply aren't to fathom what it's like to not have things handed to you automatically. as our culture becomes increasily materialistic and competitve, it seems like basic human compassion has become eroded and fantasies of 16 yachts, 8 mansions, 4 private jets, and designer clothes have replaced it. is it ever enough for these people?
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H P
Citizen
08:56 PM on 01/07/2012
You have mixed emotions about the global warming "issue"

Global warming is NOT an ISSUE it is a FACT.. I admit I didn't get past your first sentence because... global warming is a FACT.... just do your own research, I don't need to leave links you seem intelligent enough to do your own research... you have eyes to see
04:17 PM on 01/06/2012
I looked at this article thinking that I'd see comparisons between the film "
the matrix" and buddhism. but nope. just politics.
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new 10 ole ole
07:23 AM on 01/05/2012
Where were all these purists when "potus Eisenhower , IKE" riddled the USA with Interstates. The Interstates have killed and maimed so many that each state has "actual state patrols" that are needed. Corporate interests have absolutely destroyed the USA since the Interstates have invaded our country.
11:03 AM on 01/05/2012
come on please. what is more destructive than Big stupid government? Nothing. they such us dry. and guess who delivers the products and services - yup the corporate interests you hate - take them away and we would have what?
02:53 AM on 01/05/2012
How is this about "Buddhism"? You seem to see a complex universe in very simplistic ways and are way too ready to point fingers at the 'evil people' 'out there'. That ain't dharma.
11:23 PM on 01/04/2012
Very good article. We have plenty of examples from history on how zero-empathy states behave, and we must recognize that zero-empathy corporations have acted and will act no different, and the more power they have the more blatant they will be.
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Cecelia Nunn Haack
Art saves lives
10:21 PM on 01/04/2012
Interesting writing.