An atheist finds God.

sunil mehrotra
3 min readAug 28, 2018

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I started as an atheist, and I now believe in God. Not a God that is in heaven but a God within me. Not a God of any religion but a presence within me. I do not believe in a divine being presiding over the affairs of man somewhere "out there." I now know that absolute Truth is within me. I am the Truth.

I am not my body. My body is made of matter; matter is made of atoms, which are made of subatomic particles. According to quantum theory, subatomic particles are not a "thing"; they are probability functions or waves. Therefore our bodies are not substantial. They only appear to our senses as such.

Neuroscientists such as Antonio Damasio and V.S. Ramachandran posit that the world we perceive, including our body, is a projection of our mind. Our senses gather information from the world outside us and transmit it as electrical signals to the brain, and the brain converts those signals into objects that we see, touch, and feel. The "objective" world is not objective; it is a reality constructed by our minds.

Prof. Damasio goes even further in his book, the Self Comes to Mind, explaining how the "I," our selfhood, is constructed in our mind. There is no cartesian "I" to be found in our brains; there is no homunculus in our brains. The "I" that we identify with is also a mental construct.

It gets curiouser and curiouser as Alice proclaimed in her adventure through Wonderland. I know I exist, but Prof. Damasio's work explains that "I" too am a figment of my imagination (mind). Who, then, is writing this sentence? Physics tells me that my body is nothing but emptiness; neuroscientists tell me that "I" and all that exists is a projection of my mind. But I know that I live. As Dr. Johnson famously refuted, Bishop Berkeley's views on immaterialism are kicking a stone to make the point that he exists.

The way out of this problem is the way in. Perhaps the greatest Indian sage of the twentieth century, Raman Maharishi, believed that the path to self-realization is to seek the answer to "Who am I?". The way in is the way out of the illusion. As the Heart Sutra in Buddhism teaches "Gate, Gate, Paragate, Parasamgate,"-one has to go deeper, deeper, and deeper still to discover one's Truth. One's Truth, in Hinduism, is known as Dharma.

Each of us has an essence that is unique to us. Our physical being is a manifestation of this essence. My essence is not a thing; our senses cannot detect it. It is pure consciousness. According to neuroscientist Donald Hoffman at the University of California, Irvine, consciousness's building block of existence. Each of us is a conscious agent. All that is there is consciousness. From consciousness arises our mind, which in turn creates our reality.

Spirit, soul, and atman are synonymous, in my world view, with the Truth in us, our Dharma, our essence, our true nature. It is who we are. Even atheists have their Dharma.

Most of us go through life without discovering our true nature. We identify almost exclusively with the physical and are not aware of our spiritual self. We are asleep to our true selves. This is why realizing our true nature is known as awakening.

"I searched for God and found only myself. I searched for myself and found only God" ~ Rumi

"This piece of food cannot be eaten,

Nor this piece of wisdom found by looking.

There is a secret core in everyone not

even Gabriel can know by trying to know" ~ Rumi

Amen!

Originally published at http://shivasdance.org on August 28, 2018.

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sunil mehrotra
sunil mehrotra

Written by sunil mehrotra

entrepreneur;CEO, strategist;thinker-doer;left brain/right brain;

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