About Truth & Bias
                                                             ABOUT TRUTH AND BIAS
                                                                     Robert Campbell, 2007
                                                                 www.cosmic-mindreach.com

Introduction to the Nature of Truth:

When we speak of truth we imply that there is a transcending reality that somehow embraces all possible
varieties of phenomenal experience. We imply that there is a truth that is valid for all people for all time. Even if
we believe that there is no such truth, that truth is a completely arbitrary affair that the individual alone is free to
decide as they wish, we implicitly believe that this is true for all people for all time. Even if we believe that when
we die it is the absolute end of sentient experience of any kind, then we believe that everyone who has ever
lived faces this same psychic annihilation at death. We believe this is true for any intelligent creature living
anywhere in the universe. There is an inescapable contradiction in terms involved here, because the denial of
a transcending truth is implicitly claimed as universally true. No reasonable person chooses to believe that they
alone face utter extinction. We all believe in a cosmic reality, even if it is absurd.

There is a fundamentally important point here. There is a both a universal and a particular aspect to the very
nature of truth. This has been a prevailing theme throughout the history of both Eastern and Western
philosophy. Although it may be expressed in different words - One and Many, Self and Other, Unity in Diversity,
Universal and Particular - the same prevalent theme applies. We share in a universally common world of
sensory experience that is not uniquely closed unto ourselves, even though the qualities of experience may be
focused through us and interpreted in uniquely particular ways. Each human being is both the same and
different. We are One and Many.

Truth Requires Confirmation in Phenomenal Experience:

We generally agree that truth must allow of confirmation in phenomenal experience of some kind, whether
privately or publicly perceived. We are free to believe that the moon is made of cheese but the phenomenal
experience of moon missions proves otherwise. The phenomenal experience may itself be private and
transient, even unique in quality, but if it reveals some facet of truth it must have universal aspects that are
enduring. It must have a capacity to enhance one's perceptions with respect to better integrating one's overall
experience of living. It must find validation in phenomenal experience.

Truth Must Have Integrative Power by Spanning Space and Time:

Spiritual, religious, humanist, and scientific endeavors all seek to better integrate our experience of living. They
seek to enhance the quality of life, to make it better by finding a more unified perspective in some way. They
seek to integrate our history, to span space and time, in anticipation of a better socially, emotionally and
spiritually integrated future. All our various efforts at understanding phenomena seek a unified perspective,
despite our cultural diversity and our widely disparate personal abilities. We all seek this feeling of unity, this
feeling of being integrated - this feeling of being whole. We seek it in our identification with our culture, with our
religion or lack of it, with our personal beliefs, with our faith in science, with our life style. We seek it in love by
bridging the separation between Self and Other. We long for union. In general we seek it in our framework of
understanding.

The Dark Side:

There is a dark side to all this of course. We can also seek that feeling of unity in hate. We can find it in being
united against a common enemy. We can seek unity in pursuing the supremacy of Self to the exclusion of
Other than Self. The tragedies of our human history attest to this. We can find that glorious feeling of unity in
many ways. Some of them move us toward a more universally valid framework of understanding. Some of them
move us in the opposite direction, toward separation and fragmentation. We can see the negative tendencies
in others more easily than in ourselves and this perception is generally in polar contrast to our own implicitly
accepted framework of understanding. Our views and opinions are easily biased without our being aware of it.

Biases and Value Judgments:

Whatever the circumstances, we are continually required to choose between alternatives and accept, modify,
or reject a variety of
Other influences on us. We have to make value judgments all the time to live. This puts us
in quite a fix. Can we be sure that the
Other is the One who is biased? The influences may seem foreign and
may threaten our sense of unity that we see as proper. Can we be sure that
We are not the One who is
biased? Is our framework of understanding and our associated feeling of
Unity better? Or can we be sure that
both are biased, that one is not more right than the other? Or can we be sure that there is not a more
fundamental framework in which neither is completely biased? And if the other is biased in a way that
oppresses or threatens us how are we to respond? How are we to expose bias without implicating an alternate
bias? Is anyone omniscient? Can anyone claim to be all-knowing about anything? Or can anyone really claim
they are not omniscient when whatever we believe we believe it to be universally true? Even if we say that no
one is omniscient we believe this to be a universal truth. And we can not get along with believing nothing.
Universal qualities keep intruding into particular beliefs.     

Language, Reason & Intuitive Insight:

We all depend upon personal intuitive insights, whether they are socially conditioned or not, to integrate and
guide our behavior in some coherent way. And we are social creatures who are largely dependent upon
language to mutually communicate and understand. With language comes a related capacity for left brain
reason. We can deal with experience in abstraction to integrate past and future into a coherent plan of
behavior or thought. And there are several thousand languages in the world offering a variety of ways to do
this. Our mute right brain intuitive capacities tend to be influenced accordingly, either enhanced or restricted,
by our personal history. Our right intuitive hemisphere is characterized by holistic perceptions, aesthetics,
propriety, integrating themes, that sort of thing. It tends to seek Unity but is limited by a left hemisphere need to
find a degree of social consistency. We tend to become subject to biases, both behaviorally and intuitively,
according to our cultural conditioning.

In a larger sense language has brought with it the bipolar organization of the right and left hemispheres of our
brain. It allows us to span space and time seemingly without limit, but it has also opened us to intuitively wonder
about the nature of beginnings and ends. We are faced with an intuitive quest into the nature of the creation
itself. Every culture has reflected on this and has derived its own story of creation.   

Assessing Biases and a Universal Framework of Understanding:

So what is the measure of assessing biases in a global arena. How can we identify them? Is one person's social
conditioning better than that of another? Can biases even be determined relative to our terrestrial
circumstance without taking account of the cosmic context within which our planet, solar system and galaxy
exists? Is there a way to open perceptions to a truly universal perspective that allows of unlimited diversity of
unbiased expression? Is a universal framework of understanding possible that can redeem the biases of
cultural conditioning without eroding the historic foundations and wealth of our cultural diversity?

If we all behaved in a kind of socially conditioned lockstep we would be robots. So there can be no acceptable
behavioral model that will work for all. If there is an answer, it is not to be found in idealized behavioral models
or blind belief systems incorporating assumptions implicit in the use of language. There may be any number of
generally acceptable behavioral responses to any given situation.

This leaves us presented with only one other possible avenue to explore if we hope to find universally
acceptable solutions. This avenue requires direct intuitive insight into the structural dynamics of the creative
process as it universally applies in any situation. The creative process is the cosmic order at work. The cosmic
order is a dynamic evolving process. So we need to gain insight into how it is at work within us as we relate to
the world around us and learn.  

To be an acceptable insight it must be universally valid. It must be able to find confirmation in every facet of
phenomenal experience, both in the private and public domains. It must relate to the structure and related
dynamics of the cosmic order and to all creation. This means that there must be a common structure to the
creative process that recurs in every area of phenomenal experience. It is a tall order. We are talking about
direct insight into the cosmic order in a way that transcends our own birth and death. It must also transcend
and subsume the use of language. It must prescribe the roots of meaning implicit in any language.  

The Cosmic Order, Integrating History, Religious and Scientific Bias:

The cosmic order must transcend and subsume the whole of space and time, the whole of history. Traditional
religions have found answers in creation myths handed down from antiquity. We have always been bound by
this need to integrate history in order to formulate an acceptable framework of understanding. Generally
speaking creation myths draw upon a creator God who created the universe. They start with an omnipotent and
omniscient Unity that created the diversity of experience through miracle. These beliefs do not worry too much
about the mechanics of the creative process. Is this a bias? Was the world really created in six days? Can this
be confirmed in phenomenal experience of any kind? How could there be days before there was a sun that our
planet could rotate its face toward? It may have helped to get us over some rough spots but blind belief is
clearly a kind of bias.

Modern science has reached in the opposite direction. It reaches back into the past by drawing upon the
accumulated complexity of empirical evidence. It confirms its assumed truths by relying upon this evidence in an
effort to integrate all the pieces of the puzzle to establish a singular Unified beginning. As with religious creation
myths, there is a contradiction about the nature of time here. How can time have a beginning in time? Science
shares with religion the need for Unity but it denies that the Unity of creation is intelligent in any way. The clock
of time was only wound up in the initial Big Bang and it has been running down ever since. There was nothing
before that. This entire vast universe sprang into existence from absolutely nothing. That singular event has
predetermined the spatial evolution of galaxies, stars and planets ever since. And it follows that biological
evolution on the planet is a random process without intelligent planning and utterly without purpose. There is
no transcending basis to reality or truth apart from blind fortuitous chance.

That being the case no creature in this vast universe has any reason to hope for any kind of psychic continuity
beyond the grave. This universal truth is claimed for all brings for all time. Anyone who may believe to the
contrary is afflicted with a religious bias. But if that is so then this truth constitutes a transcending reality that a
scientist can know. It is a claim of omniscient insight into the cosmic order based on extrapolating empirical
evidence back to a beginning of time and space. This belief clearly transcends one's own birth and death. The
whole argument constitutes a contradiction in terms. Empirical evidence drawn from phenomenal experience is
extrapolated to explain the origins of phenomenal experience from nothing. The origin negates the evidence it
is based upon. It is a kind of bootstrapping ad absurdium. It can never find direct confirmation in phenomenal
experience. It too can only be a blind belief. It too is a bias.  

Objective Science and Subjective Religion:

Are we to be forever impaled on the cross of one perspective opposed to the other? Are we to be forever faced
with irreconcilable biases about the nature of Unity? Science musters powerful arguments based on solid
empirical facts. It may be shaky about the interpretation of those facts when it comes to Grand Unified Theories
of Everything, but it is certainly successful in providing us with cars, airplanes, TV sets, and other technological
advances. It has shrunk the world into a common arena of discourse through advances in transport and
communications. It has made us all aware that we live in a common global community and in doing so has
brought our diverse biases to the fore.

Religions on the other hand have traditionally provided us with a moral basis of social behavior, albeit culturally
biased to various degrees. This is absent in the physical and biological sciences. Science has traditionally
rejected subjectivity in its realm. Science claims to be morally neutral in its material pursuits. This tends to make
it an amoral belief system subject to being hijacked into any perverse cause.

Some curious observations can be made here. Religions generally deal with the subjective or private domain
that we experience inside. Science generally deals with the objective public domain of our common experience
outside. Since we are implicitly required to make value judgments, we can not avoid moral considerations
implicit in the way experience is presented to us. If we are to avoid blind religious bias that may get off track,
and if science provides no moral guidance, where are we to turn? We may have innate subjective intuitive
feelings about the nature of right and wrong but history confirms that these can be subverted by identification
with this or that biased cause. Identification with explicit material objectives can suppress or color subjective
human conscience. Is a universal bridge possible that can Unify these two arenas of phenomenal experience,
one subjective and the other objective? Is there a way that we can be loosed from the bonds of bias?

Unity and Universal Wholeness:

Let us take a closer look at the concept of Unity. Can there be such thing as undifferentiated Unity? There
would be no phenomena in experience to differentiate so obviously there is more to it. Oneness must allow of
Many-ness.

Science seeks to unify the observed complexity of many-ness by causal processes of various kinds. There are
structures and there are processes that together can be consistent with a unified perspective, at least to some
practical degree. We can understand how a ball moves in reaction to being hit by a bat. The structures require
a presumption of a spatial context. The processes require a presumption of a temporal context. So space and
time are prerequisites for science.

Can there be a Unity to the Universe in space and time? This implies a boundary in either space or time or
both. If there is a boundary in space then the question arises what is beyond that. We are faced with a
contradiction, a two-ness, not oneness. And if space is infinite we can not find knowable Unity either. If there is
a beginning or end in time then the question arises what is before or after that? The same contradictions arise.
And if space and time together form a continuum as general relativity theory assumes, then we are back to the
contradictions implicit in Big Bang Theory, that spacetime itself began from nothing. It is noteworthy that
Einstein questioned the spacetime continuum foundations of his own work late in life.

So looking objectively outside at the universe does not resolve the question of Unity. Can looking subjectively
inside do any better? Religious disciplines, or rather spiritual pursuits in general, offer the advantage that it is
possible for an individual to find a transcending sense of Unity in their private experience that need not be in
conflict with the objective world of our common experience. The knowing of Unity must be universal to be
complete. And it need not require the conversion of others if it is a mute realization that is not dependent upon
the objective assumptions of language.

This however is not consistent with the scientific basis of the technologies we have come to depend upon. The
most fundamental assumptions of science must be privately renounced, ignored, or else regarded as deficient
in some way that may be correctable in future. One can become a forest monk and withdraw from social
participation in our technological age. And there may be some merit in this for rare individuals who may be able
to provide a light in the forest. Otherwise, the individual concerned remains embroiled in worldly affairs and is
faced with a schism in their subjective experience of Unity. Consequently for most of us there are certain
boundary conditions implicit in the nature of Unity that need to be resolved from both an objective perspective
and a subjective perspective. That word BOTH indicates an avenue of investigation that has never been
properly explored before.

Boundary Conditions Between Inside and Outside:

There is a boundary that we experience between our private subjective experience and objective sensory
experience accessible to all. We are implicitly aware of having an inside distinct from an outside. Moreover we
are aware that all things have an inside distinct from an outside, all the way down to atoms. This boundary
cannot be rigidly closed without communication of some kind across it or Unity would not be possible.
Everything would forever be isolated from everything else and thus unknowable. We would be doomed to an
infinitely fragmented world without possibility of coherent meaning. This is the opposite end of the spectrum
from undifferentiated Oneness that also does not allow of recognizing different phenomena. Between these two
extremes we can find a new approach to understanding the structural dynamics of the cosmic order and the
Unifying perspective that we seek. We seek to know universal wholeness in phenomenal experience.  

The Characteristics of Universal Wholeness and the System of Representation:

The basic characteristics of Universal Wholeness can be summarized in brief. Everything must share a
universal inside as well as a universal outside. It is generally acknowledged that we share a universal outside in
what we call objective reality. The universal inside is intuitively sensed. It is a prerequisite for the self-similar
perception of wholeness. The universal inside constitutes a universal Center. The universal outside constitutes
a universal Periphery. Neither the inside nor the outside can be known to the exclusion of the other. They are
mutually defined by active processes occurring across the boundary or interface between them. The universal
inside thus has an active relationship to the universal outside across one or more active interfaces between
them.

There is a way to develop a comprehensive System of exploring all possible relationships of inside to outside
between a specific number of active interfaces between them. This One System results in an open ended set of
nested sub-Systems within it that progressively elaborate on the nature of universal wholeness. It is called
simply the System. This works in such a way that the lower Systems, with a lower number of active interfaces,  
transcend and subsume the higher sub-Systems that elaborate on them. In this way it remains One System of
representing universal wholeness. Even each sub-System, numbered as System 2, 3, or 4, etc., is holistic and
complete unto itself. It is a structural approach that embraces all possible structural varieties of phenomena. It
prescribes the structures and processes of how the cosmic order works as a dynamic whole. More details of the
System are introduced on the website.

This System of representing the cosmic order is not dependent upon language, but rather vice versa. There is
meaning implicit in the way that it works. This allows meanings in language to be fine tuned to more accurately
relate to phenomena when the System is applied as a method of investigation. The System enhances intuitive
insight into how the creative process works in any circumstance.

The System as an Expression of the Cosmic Order Free from Bias:

This method of delineating the creative process can find confirmation in phenomenal experience. It is a new
methodology that complements traditional scientific methods.  It has greater integrative power since it begins by
acknowledging the requirements of universal wholeness. Traditional science tries to integrate a holistic
worldview from the complex array of fragmented evidence by employing methods that invariably make
unfounded assumptions that require a swamp of ad hoc modifications.

It is only in recent decades that enough empirical evidence has been accumulated to allow comprehensive
efforts in this direction. The System can find confirmation in the physical, biological and social sciences,
consistent with the empirical evidence of traditional science. It can do this more meaningfully than traditional
methods can ever hope to do unaided. It places those methods in a more fundamentally coherent context that
expands the horizons and methods of science. This is demonstrated in a number of articles on the website.

This new methodology is not religion. It is also not inconsistent with the central essence of the world’s spiritual
traditions, apart from their cultural biases. Science and religion can be complementary. Each can provide
perspective and balance to the other. The System can facilitate a bridge between these complementary
subjective and objective perspectives without imposing a blind belief system. The System is not a belief system.
It can only be understood through exhaustive question. It requires and facilitates direct intuitive insight into the
structural dynamics of the cosmic order.

The realization of Truth comes through an open quest, not through belief. It is significant that the primary focus
of this new methodology must be on the sciences. Science requires a new mandate that can save it from the
biases that threaten to undermine its overall value to us as human beings. This requires reexamination of the
empirical evidence as it relates to the structural requirements implicit in the nature of universal wholeness.
Deficiencies in current theories of science can be weeded out to make way for more a comprehensive and
meaningful worldview.  

Left brain language and right brain intuition are both fueled by our ancient emotional apparatus. Our autonomic
nervous system reaches back throughout the quadruped vertebrate lineage. Our emotional roots go back 400
million years, while the left and right hemispheres of our neo-cortex are relatively recent, expanding with the
higher mammals and hominid species that preceded the appearance of modern humans only 100,000 years
ago or less. We are faced with a need to find a sustainable balance between these three integrating focal
points of our everyday experience that span and integrate a vast reach of natural history. We are faced with a
need to do this in a way that is in accord with the cosmic order through which we have evolved. This entails
accord with our natural environment.  

Two Conflicting Variants of the Cosmic Order:

The material advances of objective science must be tempered by unbiased insight into moral propriety in our
collective social endeavors. In searching for some guidance in this regard two variants of the creative process
present themselves. The variant of the cosmic order that integrates phenomenal experience is called the
evolutionary variant. Involutionary variants to the creative process appear in Systems 3 and higher. These
variants lose contextual propriety. They are degenerate. In Systems 4 and higher they become very relevant to
biological evolution. The evolutionary and involutionary variants share common referents in the way that the
cosmic order works so that value judgments implicitly come into play. In the involutionary variant, conditioned
routines become ends in themselves. They lose living contextual relevance that leads to fragmentation and
decay.

There is a bi-polar moral disparity at the roots of perception where one variant feeds on the other. The
involutionary variant feeds on the fruits of the evolutionary variant. And the evolutionary variant can redeem
the energies of the involutionary variant since they share common referents. Both variants have expressive
and regenerative modes and the expressive mode of one is the regenerative mode of the other. It takes careful
study of the System dynamics to understand this well.

This moral tug of war is always there waiting to be resolved in the overall integration of phenomenal
experience. It works in many ways at different biological levels of sentience. It is also there in the integration of
our personal experience and in our socio-economic endeavors. Routines of behavior tend to become ends in
themselves. We eat to live. If we eat for the sake of eating there will be a price to pay. And we don’t
manufacture products for their own sake. They must find contextual relevance in the market place of social and
environmental needs. Identification with vested interests of many kinds can implicate ulterior motives that
subvert a balanced perspective in various ways.

Weeding Out Biases:

An insight into how the two variants work can bring us to terms with weeding out biases. This is especially
important in our sciences because traditional approaches to science do not distinguish between evolutionary
and involutionary tendencies in how they are developed and used. There are frequently involutionary seeds
implicit in the premises upon which theories are based. For example space and time are generally assumed as
a priori realities in our physical sciences. This may be fine in understanding how to generate electricity or build
a car, but it leads to contradictions when it comes to cosmology. Space-time concepts derived from creation
can hardly be used to postulate their own origin in space-time terms. This places us outside creation, divorced
from our own understanding. And all cultural traditions have established that we need a framework of
understanding. We need a worldview that integrates history. We can not function without one. We need a
context to relate to, both personally and culturally. Science can not dispense with this need either.  

Traditional scientific methods are very limited in understanding how living biological systems grow and evolve.
They can decipher certain isolated pieces of the puzzle and certain causal connections, but they have proved
sterile at understanding how living systems are integrated as a whole. This is essential information if we are
ever to achieve a sustainable balance with one another and with our natural environment.

Given the pragmatic advantages of a new scientific methodology offered by the System, a much more coherent
world view can emerge. It can be a world view substantiated by direct confirmation with phenomenal experience.
Since it is not dependent upon the linguistic assumptions of language it does not impose specific ideologies.
However it does reveal underlying creative dynamics associated with the requirements of universal wholeness.
In a global social context this can provide more responsible guidance for the world’s religious traditions to weed
out conflicting cultural biases, as well as in traditional science. It can do this without negating the essential core
of these traditions as they have historically evolved. We can not change our history, and we can not discard
our culture, but we can learn to see it in more constructive ways. We can redeem the errors of bias. Our
cultures can become more effective vehicles through which to make a positive contribution to the world.