Featured Post

Click HERE to learn about Kristy's Massage Therapy Services

Greetings Everyone! Here is the general scoop on the services I offer as a massage therapist.  I live by the motto of simplicity so I will...

Monday, March 26, 2018

A response to Teilhard de Chardin's "The Phenomenon of Man"


Teilhard de Chardin offers a strong case for the process of evolution selecting for and favoring consciousness. He establishes his point that evidence for evolution of consciousness which can be seen by evaluating the varying levels of perception in animals. Here he says there is “order”, and “mechanism selecting for consciousness”, which is the nervous system. (p. 144) He later goes on to say that as instincts grow, the “phenomena of socialization appears.” (p. 145) It is here where I began to question what aspects of social behavior might contribute to the development of greater concentration of nerve ganglion in the brain.  Teilhard refers to this as (cerebralisation), which indicates there has been evolutionary progress in animals.
            It is known that there are groups of humans living in the remote depths of places like the Amazon basin that have established limited but effective social structures that facilitate their survival. The question is, do they have any more or less brain (nerve ganglion development) than say, an introverted young adult plugging away at some complicated video game in his basement?  One could say that the young gamer has far less socialization, and need for social dependence for survival than those of the primitive Amazon tribe. Yet, it could be assumed that the ganglion development in the tribe member are less developed.  In this model what social factors would Teilhard say contribute to the evolution of consciousness and how do they play out in the real world?  Shouldn’t the gamers consciousness be stunted due to lack of socialization, and the tribe more advanced? If it is true that as instincts grow cerebralisation advances, then shouldn’t society be regressing on the evolutionary scale as we delve further into the realm of technology and less interaction with nature?
            After speaking of the “phenomena of socialization”, which we can presume to be random and relatively unpredictable, Teilhard states that the overall process of cerebralisation is a result of a determined process. (p. 146) While one can understand that it seems apparent that various animals have a certain level of consciousness, in humans, consciousness has the ability to evolve in a multitude of directions. If the evolution of consciousness were determined as he suggests, we should not be endowed with “free will” or “choice”.
            If socialization, which is random and unpredictable, is necessary for the development of advanced progress in ganglion development, how can he justify that there is absolute order to this process? If he is set on his position that the evolution of consciousness does not occur by chance, then how can he explain individual autonomy since humans are not “paralyzed with single directed functions” (p. 155) as other organisms are? What is his measure of an evolved state of consciousness? As we look around our world today, humans are developing things such as human like robots with artificial intelligence.  These creations are programmed to learn from the particulars of their environment in order to respond and develop new opinions and reactions as they evolve from the “inwardness” of their perceptions. Teilhard’s argument for a determined evolution toward consciousness would suggest that as these creations evolve their “digital ganglion”, their “instincts” would grow more complex. Should these creations be considered to have consciousness and are they evolving?
            Teilhard opens his book with a in depth description of the natural elements of the universe. He explains his idea of a radial energy that forces outward from its natural starting point. If all things are expanding outward (evolving) from a set point, and as it were, evolutionary pressures would cause some branches to dead end at extinction, then it is possible that our specialized consciousness could one day evolve beyond our ability to respond to the natural forces we once were united with. This means we would become so specialized using technology on our branch of the evolutionary tree, that we would parish due to our inability to respond to the decay of our natural environment. If the stuff of the universe in its most primitive form is energy, then perhaps the radial nature of our existence in Teilhard’s system will contradict our ability to become a universal consciousness. As our technological developments advance, and our ability to co-exist in nature diminishes we will go extinct. If Teilhard believed his evolutionary idea was pre-determined, it seems consciousness cannot continually evolve and should end with our extinction. This would be a complete transformation, as nothing ceases to exist, it ultimately changes form altogether.


 Teilhard de Chardin, P. (1965). The phenomenon of man. With an introduction by Julian Huxley. [Translation by Bernard Wall]. New York, NY: Harper.