Monday, 30 March 2026

TA. A.

 There are many who think that Advaita and engaging in nonduality is simply using the no-self perspective as an escape from dealing with one’s problems, and misguided questions like these show why.

Non-duality, whether as an intellectual philosophy or as a ‘direct experience,’ is not an appliance to help anyone deal with their very dual self-image problems. It’s just a fact. There is only (one) Being, nothing ever arose, and every dual or multiple thing that seems to have arisen is just an illusory impression in Consciousness. You either ‘get that’ or you don’t. Truth doesn’t care either way.

It’s like air. It’s just (seemingly) there. It doesn’t help anyone with their life situations or self-image experiences. 
It’s like a large bowl holding 30 pieces of fruit. Some of the fruit is brightly colored and tasty, Some look & taste less appealing. If let uneaten in the bowl, all 30 pieces will eventually rot. 
Bowl don’t care
And bowl can’t stop any of that from happening.
If one of the fruits adopts non-duality - “I know there’s only One Bowl”- it still loses it’s color and rots. :-)

Sadly, many people do use non-duality as a way to escape problems and emotions held in the ‘individual self,’ or at least, they try to, and wind up more of an emotional mess than ever, or terribly disappointed, or living in an airy-fairy dream-world of denial.

All human issues - low self-worth, insufficient love or money, poor health, not enough ‘enlightenment,’ birth, troubled childhoods, and death - all exist in the Dream.
Non-duality has 
nothing to do with this dream and will not help you wake up or avoid whatever “you” have to go through.

It’s just What Is, and What Is can never be used by “you, although It may use “you.” 
“You” never know :-)

Honegger. There is no doubt that the first requirement for a composer is to be dead.

spent my life arguing how i mattered until it didn't matter Danez Smith

C POLLAN

 A

Here’s a chapter‑by‑chapter outline with key concepts, quotes/anecdotes, and a gist for A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness by Michael Pollan (based on available summaries and reviews):(Michael Pollan)


📘 CHAPTER‑BY‑CHAPTER GIST + QUOTES & ANECDOTES


1) Minds Before Brains

Gist:
Pollan begins his journey by challenging the common assumption that consciousness is rare or exclusive to brains. Instead, he suggests consciousness might emerge earlier in evolutionary history than neuroscience typically assumes, and that to understand sentience we must start at the very roots of life.(Insta.Page - Book Summaries)

Key Quote/Concept:

  • “It feels like something to be us” — Pollan’s core definition of consciousness as subjective experience.(Penguin)

Anecdote:
Pollan reflects on how Western science, starting with Galileo, systematically excised subjective experience from the study of nature, creating a blind spot that makes consciousness seem inexplicable.(Insta.Page - Book Summaries)


2) Sentience & Non‑Human Life

Gist:
This chapter expands the idea of sentience beyond humans. Pollan introduces research on “plant neurobiologists” and other biologists who study sophisticated plant responsiveness, learning, memory, and inter‑organism signaling — behaviors once thought unique to animals.(The Guardian)

Key Quote/Concept:

  • “Plants can learn and form memories, predict environmental changes and respond accordingly.” (Critics note this challenges simple material science assumptions about intelligence.)(The Guardian)

Anecdote:
Pollan recounts a personal psychedelic experience where he felt plants “returned his gaze”, a moment that deepened his interest in sentience and ultimately inspired parts of the book.(The Guardian)


3) The Hard Problem of Consciousness

Gist:
Here Pollan tackles the central philosophical puzzle: how subjective experience arises from physical brain matter (the “hard problem”). He surveys neuroscience, philosophy, literature, and contemplative traditions, showing that no single discipline has resolved it.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Key Quote/Concept:

  • Neuroscientists once hoped consciousness could be reduced to neural correlates—but decades later, no consensus theory fully explains subjective experience.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Anecdote:
Pollan describes experiments on attention, mind wandering, and the stream of consciousness that highlight how slippery and resistant to analysis our inner life is.(Washington Independent Review of Books)


4) Artificial Intelligence & Feeling Machines

Gist:
Pollan explores attempts to engineer consciousness in AI and critiques the dominant computational metaphor of mind. He argues machines may simulate cognition but lack embodied, felt subjective experience, which he considers essential to consciousness.(WIRED)

Key Quote/Concept:

  • AI may appear conscious, but registering information isn’t the same as feeling hunger, thirst, or emotion — hallmarks of subjective experience.(WIRED)

Anecdote:
He discusses controversial AI theories that claim no barriers to creating conscious machines, but suggests this view oversimplifies consciousness’s biological depth.(WIRED)


5) Self & Subjectivity

Gist:
Pollan delves into the human self — how memory, narrative, and self‑reflection shape our experienced reality. Building on philosophy, literature, and Buddhist thought, he shows that the self is both a lived experience and a mystery science struggles to explain.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Key Quote/Concept:

Anecdote:
Drawing from literary and contemplative traditions, Pollan illustrates how direct subjective exploration — including meditation and introspection — reveals the fluid, shifting nature of selfhood.(Washington Independent Review of Books)


6) Consciousness as a Practice

Gist:
In closing, Pollan shifts from analysis to application: consciousness is not only a scientific problem but a gift to be cultivated. Drawing on spiritual and psychological traditions, he suggests practices (mindfulness, attention training, contemplation) that help us bring awareness into daily life.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Key Quote/Concept:

Anecdote:
Pollan incorporates perspectives from Buddhist and contemplative traditions — showing how first‑person observation can illuminate what science alone cannot capture.(Washington Independent Review of Books)


OVERALL TAGLINE

“A World Appears: A panoramic journey into the mystery of subjective experience — from plants and AI to the human self.”(Michael Pollan)


A

Here are some memorable direct quotes and excerpts from A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness (Michael Pollan) to include in your notes, drawn from published snippets, reviews, and excerpts: (goodreads.com)

📌 Key Quotes from the Text

  1. On the nature of consciousness:
    “Consciousness is one of the few phenomena that haven’t surrendered to the sovereignty and stern rule of matter.” (goodreads.com)

  2. On metaphors for the mind:
    “Historically, brain metaphors have often drawn on the impressive machines of the day… clocks and mills… more recently… compared minds with looms… an enchanted loom where millions of flashing shuttles weave a dissolving pattern.” (goodreads.com)

  3. On narrative and perspective:
    “It's pretty much what novels do—take us into the minds of characters to satisfy our deep human curiosity to find out what, but also how, other people think.” (goodreads.com)

📌 Themes & Supporting Notes

  1. Consciousness feels like something to be someone:
    Pollan underscores that “it feels like something to be us,” which is the starting premise for his entire exploration of subjective experience. (Michael Pollan)

  2. The book probes the “hard problem” of consciousness:
    Pollan discusses how modern neuroscience and philosophy have not yet solved why subjective, qualitative experience arises from brain matter, exploring thoughts inspired by David Chalmers’s characterization of the hard problem. (Michael Pollan)

  3. Plants and sentience:
    Throughout the book Pollan touches on controversial research into plant responsiveness and complexity, broadening our sense of where sentience might be found in nature. (libraryjournal.com)

  4. First‑person awareness as both puzzle and experience:
    Pollan’s work blends science, philosophy, literature, spirituality, and psychedelic insight to show that consciousness is not fully captured by any single model, and yet it is the ground of all lived experience. (imhu.org)


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Sunday, 29 March 2026

C POLLAN

 A

Here’s a chapter‑wise gist with key quotes/anecdotes, based on A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness by Michael Pollan (released 2026):(Insta.Page - Book Summaries)


📘 CHAPTER‑WISE GIST & MEMORABLE QUOTES / ANECDOTES

1) Minds Before Brains?Sentience Emerges Early

Gist: Pollan challenges the assumption that consciousness begins with human or animal brains. He argues that to understand mind, we should start with the simplest forms of life and consider sentience before brains evolved. Western science’s historical split between objective phenomena and subjective experience has obscured consciousness from early scientific inquiry.(Insta.Page - Book Summaries)

Quote / Theme: “A world appears when we open our eyes” — a ground‑zero fact that consciousness is not just a by‑product of neurons but the very felt experience of being.(Financial Times)

Anecdote: Pollan shows how plants and simple organisms reveal rudimentary awareness—suggesting sentience predates complex brains.(Insta.Page - Book Summaries)


**2) Sentience, Feeling, and the Hard Problem

Gist: The book examines the “hard problem” of consciousness—how subjective experience arises from physical matter. Pollan introduces varied definitions of consciousness (scientific, philosophical, poetic) and highlights that despite decades of research, no theory fully explains how matter produces subjective “feeling.”(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Quote / Theme: “Consciousness… feels like something to be us” — the mystery at the core of the book.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Anecdote: Pollan recounts the early 1990s birth of neuroscience’s consciousness studies and how it hoped to reduce experience to neural mechanisms—an effort now faltering.(BookBrowse.com)


**3) Plants, Intelligence & Nonhuman Awareness

Gist: Pollan explores controversial research suggesting plants exhibit forms of learning, memory, and environmental responsiveness—raising questions about whether sentience is more widespread than assumed. Pollan remains cautious about calling plants “conscious,” but suggests sentience may be present in ways not tied to brains.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Quote / Theme: Plants may sense and respond to their environment in ways that resemble rudimentary awareness.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Anecdote: Inspired by his own psychedelic experience in his garden, Pollan writes how plants “returned his gaze”, a moment that sparked his deeper interest in sentience beyond humans.(The Guardian)


**4) Artificial Intelligence & Machine “Minds”

Gist: Pollan investigates efforts to engineer consciousness in AI, critiquing the dominant computational model of mind. He argues that machines simulating intelligence should not be equated with genuine subjective experience, which is deeply bound to embodiment and feeling.(WIRED)

Quote / Theme: “AI Will Never Be Conscious” — a conception drawn from the book’s argument that feeling and lived experience cannot be reduced to computation.(WIRED)


**5) Self, Subjectivity & the Human Inner Life

Gist: Pollan explores the human sense of self—its mystery, instability, and evolutionary value. He draws on philosophy, literature, and psychology to show how human consciousness differs from sentience alone, especially in its capacity for self‑reflection, memory, and narrative.(Washington Independent Review of Books)

Quote / Theme: “The self might indeed be an illusion—but real enough.” (reflecting on how subjective experience is constructed yet deeply felt.)(goodreads.com)


**6) The Practice of Awareness

Gist: The final chapters shift from mere explanation to cultivating consciousness. Pollan concludes that fully understanding why subjective experience exists may remain elusive, and what matters most is consciously living it—being present, receptive, and aware. This echoes contemplative traditions and aesthetic perspectives that value the first‑person experience itself.(imhu.org)

Quote / Theme: Consciousness is not just a puzzle to solve but a gift to be cultivated.(imhu.org)


🔖 OVERALL TAGLINE

“A World Appears: Consciousness isn’t just a problem to solve—it’s the felt mystery that makes life meaningful.”


A

C Consciousness and intelligence: alive in every form, not just in brains.”

 C

  • Consciousness and Subjectivity – Multiple sources (James on mystical experience, Nagel on perspective, Thompson on “the feeling of being alive”) explore the unique, subjective, and noetic qualities of consciousness, emphasizing that perception and awareness shape reality.
  • Plant Intelligence and Perception – Numerous studies (Darwin, Gagliano, Calvo, Trewavas, Pollan) show that plants exhibit sophisticated behaviors—learning, memory, anticipation, kin recognition, bioacoustic responses, and environmental interaction—suggesting a form of intelligence and responsiveness previously considered exclusive to animals.
  • Method and Observation – Sources highlight the empirical, experimental, and observational approaches used to reveal intelligence and consciousness across species, from meticulous studies of plant circumnutation and root competition to behavioral and bioelectrical responses (e.g., Venus flytrap, Drosophila), showing that complex adaptive behavior can emerge without a brain in the conventional sense.

  • A
  • Consciousness Shapes Reality – Human experience is subjective; perception and awareness give meaning to the world, making reality dependent on the observer.
  • Plant Intelligence – Plants exhibit learning, memory, anticipation, and environmental responsiveness, challenging the idea that intelligence requires a brain.
  • Empirical Evidence Across Life – Careful observation and experiments reveal sophisticated behaviors in organisms from plants to animals, showing adaptability and cognition are widespread.
  • C AWARENESS

     A

    For Halifax, practice outweighs theory. Real understanding comes from doing—sitting with suffering, tending to the dying, or sitting in meditation—where Buddhist ideas like impermanence and dependent arising become lived experience. On silent retreats at Upaya, students engage in zazen, a practice that emphasizes radical openness and presence rather than intellectual exercises. The structured routines create a supportive framework, yet the true transformation arises from simply being present, allowing uncertainty and “not-knowing” to deconstruct habitual perceptions of reality.

    In short: Zen isn’t learned through theory but through disciplined, open-ended practice that lets experience itself reshape the self.