ConsciousnessIsOurOxygenChallengeDoes SentienceIsOurOxygenChallenge? make more sense? Or should i let it go since it's been three years that i've had it named this way? I have no idea where i wrote about why consiousness rather than sentience, if i wrote anything at all. --JohnAbbe
First, the literary approach:
Power JohnAbbe And then, gradually, a planetary disaster occurred The composition of the atmosphere was changed, radically, by their own actions Countless billions died Of those who survived, a few channelled the new abundance of fuel in the atmosphere: oxygen They thrived, and built larger than their ancestors. (who continued on in their own way, and are the aliens with us today)
Some hundreds of millions of years ago, some single-celled life forms started cranking out oxygen, enough to change the composition of the atmosphere. Oxygen is a chemically powerful substance, and it was poison to many life forms. Many died off. Other forms of life harnessed the power of oxygen, successfully meeting its challenge, and that is where all animals come from.
Some tens-hundreds of thousands of years ago, human beings started to think in a new and different way from other animals, enough to change our own physical and social/spiritual context. Our intelligence, or sentience, is analogous to oxygen: it is powerful, and can be poisonous or creative depending on what we do with it.
Making creativity rather than poison out of our individual and social consciousnesses is our challenge. To the extent we succeed, we will last longer as a species and enjoy ourselves more, and more fairly. Many believe that we will even transcend in some way (TheNextSingularity).
The consciousness/oxygen metaphor, or simile, came to me in 2000. I really got convinced of the importance of attention to personal/interpersonal practices through (in order, from 1990-1992):
This doesn't seem quite right, but it's a start:
And then one day, we began looking up at the stars in a new way "We could go there" we heard, we said For the next tens of thousands of years, in our confusion we argued, "Is that voice God or the Devil?" Eventually, enough of us realized that the answer was yes.
The BlogStickers approach:
A few references for the oxygen part: