Yoga and Ecology: Why it is Better to Eat Carrots Rather Than Cows

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Oct 10, 2009, 6:08:58 PM10/10/09
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Yoga and Ecology: Why it is Better to Eat Carrots Rather Than Cows

By Roar Ramesh Bjonnes

 

To live a life according to the directives of ecology is the most urgent task for humanity

right now. But what does it mean? How can we develop a genuine environmental ethics?

And what will it look like?

 

For science, viruses represent the smallest accumulation and diversity of molecules which

is recognized as “life.” Maybe in the near future, when more advanced techniques are

employed, we will recognize the sentience of smaller aggregations of molecules. For now,

viruses personify the boundary between life and non-life.

 

According to the so-called Santiago theory, developed by Francisco Varela and Humberto

Maturana, the process of cognition is intimately linked to the process of life. Hence,

the brain is not necessary for the mind to exist. A worm, or a tree, has no brain but has

a mind. The simplest forms of life are capable of perception and thus cognition. For the

spiritual sages of India, it is impossible to draw a final line between animate and inanimate

beings. According to Yoga philosophy, there is “mind” even in the so-called inanimate

world of rocks. This type of “mind” is dormant, as if asleep, because there are no

nervous system rocks.

 

Native Americans certainly experienced this mind in the cosmos. In the international

best-seller, The Secret Life of Plants, Peter Thompkins and Christopher Bird report that,

when killing a tree, some Native Americans tribes have a heart-to-heart conservation

with the tree. In no uncertain terms would they let the tree know what was going to happen,

and finally they would ask for forgiveness for having to commit this unfortunate act

of violence.

 

In the same book, they also documented scientific experiments on plants with a modified

lie detector. The instrument would register when a plant’s leaves were cut or burnt. Not

only that, when a plant “understood” it was going to be killed, it went into a state of shock

or “numbness.” Thus, the scientists explained, possibly preventing it from undue suffering,

which again may explain the “warnings” given to trees by some tribal peoples.

 

Such laboratory tests, may sound outrageous to materialists, but not to the ancient, animist

peoples from all over the world, nor to Indian yogis or Westerns mystics. They have

for long informed us that we do not live in a dead and meaningless universe. But unfortunately,

nature cannot always express its grief when it is damaged or destroyed. To

protect it, we must therefore conserve and properly utilize all natural resources.

If nature — earth, trees, and water — truly experience a form of existential pain or grief,

at least when destroyed and polluted, our conservation efforts and our ecological outlook

must first and foremost acknowledge this innate suffering. And by acknowledging

it, nature becomes part of us. To paraphrase noted psychologist James Hillman — one

of the innovators in the new field of eco -psychology — our mind is enlarged to include

nature; the world becomes us. And if we destroy that world, out of ignorance or greed,

we destroy a part of ourselves.

 

Since mind or consciousness is part of all living beings and lies dormant, even in so- called

inanimate objects as rocks, sand or mud, there is an intrinsic, spiritual oneness in all of

creation. Thus in Tantric Yoga philospher P. R. Sarkar’s world view—whose ideas have

combined Yoga philosophy with an evolutionary understanding of the world we live

in—we grant existential rights or value to all beings, whether soil, plants, animals and

humans. He concedes that, in principle, all physical expressions of Cosmic Consciousness

has an equal right to exist and to express itself but also that some beings have higher

consciousness than others and thus “more rights”.

 

Evolution is irreversible — amoebas eventually evolve into apes, but apes never transform

into amoebas — thus Tantra and Yoga also acknowledges “higher” and “lower”

expressions of Consciousness. This differentiation is crucial, and it is on the basis of this

that Yoga and some ecologists differ. Deep-ecologists, for example, believe that no beings

are “high” or “low”, all are part of an “egalitarian web of life”.

 

The Tantric and Yogic ecological world-view, on the other hand, is both egalitarian and

hierarchical. According to Sarkar’s Tantra Yoga, for example, evolution proceeds by expressing

more and more complex beings that are able to express higher levels of consciousness.

On this evolutionary ladder, amoebas are at the “bottom” and humans are at

the “top.” Within this hierarchical system there are various levels of egalitarian cooperation,

but the system as a whole is hierarchical.

 

This notion is also supported by the new systems sciences, which proclaim that one cannot

have wholeness without hierarchy. As Ken Wilber explains, “’Hierarchy’ and ‘wholeness,’

in other words, are two names for the same thing, and if you destroy one, you completely

destroy the other.” Each hierarchy is composed of increasing orders of wholeness

— organisms include cells which include molecules, which include atoms.

 

In an evolutionary context, the new stage of development has extra value relative to the

previous stage. An oak sprout is more complex and therefore endowed with a fuller expression

of consciousness than an acorn. A monkey has a more evolved nervous system

and mind than an insect, and a human has a more evolved brain and intellect than an

ape.

 

This crucial definition of subsequent higher stages of consciousness, of a hierarchy of being,

is central to Tantra and Yoga. But this insight is often overlooked by many Greens

or deep-ecologists. They often equate hierarchy with the higher exploiting the lower by

transferring human pathological experiences of hierarchy—as fascism, for example — to

the study of nature. But the ecological universe of nature could not exist without hierarchy,

and humans, for good or for worse, are, as the most advanced expression of

consciousness in evolution, stewards of the natural world. Hence, according to Yoga, we

need to acknowledge both unity and oneness as well as high and low (or deep and shallow)

expressions of consciousness when developing an ecological world view.

 

We need to emulate nature in advancing what Riane Eisler calls “actualization hierarchies;”

we must learn to maximize our species’ potential, both in relation to ourselves

and to nature. In other words, a self-actualized humanity can learn to integrate itself in

relation to nature. Learn to realize our oneness with the “other.” Learn to recognize that

being on top of the evolutionary ladder does not give us the right to rob and exploit those

lower than ourselves.

 

Because of the many pathological expressions of hierarchy in human society — such as

fascism, Nazism, communism, or corporate capitalism — many so-called new paradigm

thinkers are suggesting a new and supposedly healthier model termed “heterarchy”.

In a heterarchy, rule is established by an egalitarian interplay of all parties. For example,

atoms may have a heterarchical relationship amongst themselves, but their relationship

to a cell is hierarchical. In other words, the various heterarchies are strands in the everevolving

web of hierarchies, and when functioning optimally, the relationship between

them is one of coordinated cooperation. By negating hierarchy and favoring heterarchy

only, we establish just another pathology, because the existence or validity of heterarchy

does not disprove the existence or importance of positive or actualized hierarchy. There

is, according to the evolutionary Yoga philosophy of Sarkar, an ongoing movement toward

greater complexity and higher consciousness in evolution, while at the same time

there is, on a deeper level, ecological cooperation and spiritual unity amongst all beings.

 

In other words, there are both heterarchy and hierarchy. To disprove the hierarchical

flow of evolution by saying that all of us — whether leaf, tree, monkey, or human — are

equal, heterarchical partners in the great web of life, is to impose on nature faulty and

limited concepts. It reduces the wondrous complexity of creation to a lowest common

denominator, and that serves neither nature nor humans well.

 

According to Yoga, there is unity of consciousness amongst all beings, because we all

come from, and are created by, the same Spirit, by the same Cosmic Consciousness. But

nature is also infinitely diverse, and thus consciousness is also expressed in various ways,

both “high” and “low”. Hence, a seedling is more complex and therefore more conscious

than an acorn, and an oak is more complex and conscious than a seedling.

 

Another way of expressing this is that a dog has more capacity for mental reflection and

self-consciousness than a fir tree. Both are conscious beings, both are manifestations of

Cosmic Consciousness, both have mind, and both have equal existential value — but

because of the difference in expression of depth and quality of consciousness, the dog is

higher on the natural hierarchy of being than the fir tree. So when we develop our ecological

ethics, both the “low” and the “high” expressions of nature must be valued and

accounted for.

 

Nonhuman creatures have the same existential value to themselves as human beings have

to themselves. Perhaps human beings can understand the value of their existence, while

an earth worm cannot. Even so, no one has delegated any authority to human beings to

kill those unfortunate creatures. But to survive, we cannot avoid killing other beings.

 

To solve this dilemma, the Yogi selects articles of food from amongst those beings where

development of consciousness is comparatively low. If vegetables, corn, bean and rice are

available, cows or pigs should not be slaughtered. As Ken Wilber maintains, it is better to

eat carrots rather than cows.

 

Secondly, before killing any animals with “developed or underdeveloped consciousness,”

a Yogi must consider deeply if it is possible to live a healthy life without taking

such lives.

 

Thus, in addition to existential value, various beings, based on their depth of consciousness,

have a variable degree of what is often termed “intrinsic value.” The more consciousness

a being has, the deeper the feelings, and the more potential for suffering. Eating

plants is therefore preferable to eating animals. As George Bernhard Shaw once said,

“Animals are my friends ... and I don’t eat my friends.”

 

It is also ecologically more sustainable to extract nourishment from entities lower down

on the food chain. Vast land areas are used to raise livestock for food. These areas could

be utilized far more productively if planted with grains, fruits, vegetables, and legumes

for human consumption. It is estimated that only 10 percent of the protein and calories

we feed to our livestock is recovered in the meat we eat. The other 90 percent goes literally

“down the drain.”

 

In addition to existential value, and intrinsic value, all beings have utility value. Throughout

history, human beings usually preserved those creatures which had an immediate

utility value. We are more inclined to preserve the lives of cows than of rats, for example.

But, because of all beings’ existential value, we cannot claim that only human beings have

the right to live, and not non-humans. All are the children of Mother Earth; all are the

offspring of Spirit or Cosmic Consciousness.

 

Sometimes it is difficult to know what the utilitarian value of an animal or a plant is;

therefore we may needlessly destroy the ecological balance by killing one species without

considering the consequences of its complex relationship or utility value to other species.

A forest’s utility value, for example, is more than just x number of board feet of lumber.

It serves as nesting and feeding ground for birds and animals; its roots and branches

protect the soil from erosion; its leaves or needles produce oxygen; and its pathways and

camp grounds provide nourishment for the human soul. As a whole, the forest ecosystem

has an abundance of ecological, aesthetic, and spiritual values which extends far beyond

its benefits in the form of tooth picks or plywood.

 

All of nature is endowed with existential, intrinsic, and utility value. This hierarchical,

and ultimately holistic understanding of evolution and ecology, formulates the basic

foundation for a new, and potentially groundbreaking ecological ethics deeply grounded

by the philosophy of Yoga.

 

If we embrace the divinity in all of creation, the expression of our ecological ethics will

become an act of sublime spirituality. Our conservation efforts and our sustainable resource

use will become sacred offerings to Mother Earth, and ultimately to Cosmic Consciousness,

the God and Goddess within and beyond nature.

 

 

 

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