25
.
An excellent example of this self-indulgence in the name of spirituality is depicted in the Netflix
original documentary
Wild Wild Country (2018), about the spiritual guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (aka
Osho) and his followers.
26
.
The best analysis I’ve seen of this tendency among twentieth-century spiritual movements to
mistake indulging one’s emotions for some greater spiritual awakening came from the brilliant author
Ken Wilber. He called it the Pre/Trans Fallacy and argued that because
emotions are pre-rational, and
spiritual awakenings are post-rational, people often mistake one for the other—because they’re both
nonrational. See Ken Wilber,
Eye to Eye: The Quest for a New Paradigm (Boston, MA: Shambhala,
Inc., 1983), pp. 180–221.
27
.
A. Aldao, S. Nolen-Hoeksema, and S.
Schweizer, “Emotion-Regulation Strategies Across
Psychopathology: A Meta-analytic Review,”
Clinical Psychology Review 30 (2010): 217–37.
28
.
Olga M. Slavin-Spenny, Jay L. Cohen, Lindsay M. Oberleitner, and Mark A. Lumley, “The
Effects
of Different Methods of Emotional Disclosure: Differentiating Post-traumatic Growth from Stress
Symptoms,”
Journal of Clinical Psychology 67, no. 10 (2011): 993–1007.
29
.
This technique is known as the Premack principle, after psychologist David Premack, to describe
the use of preferred behaviors as rewards. See Jon E. Roeckelein,
Dictionary of Theories, Laws, and
Concepts in Psychology (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998), p. 384.
30
.
For more about “starting small” with behavioral changes, see “The Do Something Principle,” from
my previous book,
The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good
Life (New York: HarperOne, 2016), pp. 158–63.
31
.
One way to think about “guardrails” for your Consciousness Car is to develop implementation
intentions, little if/then habits that can unconsciously direct your behavior. See P. M. Gollwitzer and V.
Brandstaetter, “Implementation Intentions and Effective Goal Pursuit,”
Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology 73 (1997): 186–99.
32
.
Damasio,
Descartes’ Error, pp. 173–200.
33
.
In
philosophy, this is known as Hume’s guillotine: you cannot derive an “ought” from an “is.” You
cannot derive values from facts. You cannot derive Feeling Brain knowledge from Thinking Brain
knowledge. Hume’s guillotine has had philosophers and scientists spinning in circles for centuries now.
Some thinkers such as Sam Harris try to rebut it by pointing out that you can have factual knowledge
about values—e.g., if a hundred people believe suffering is wrong, then there is factual evidence of their
physical brain state about their beliefs about suffering being wrong. But the decision to take that
physical representation as a serious proxy
for philosophical value,
is itself a value that cannot be
factually proven. Thus, the circle continues.
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