I
heard John Davies tell this story at a conference last fall. But as
heartening as the story is and as startling the implications, it’s only
one of many in Davies’ repertoire of heartening and startling stories;
and it is only a footnote in a career spent studying the effect of
meditation on political and criminal violence.
Until
I met Davies I hadn’t given much thought to the notion that a
meditation practice might have an effect beyond our personal lives.
Sure, it would be great if more people meditated, and sure, if more
people meditated we would be better off as a society. Most of us can
list the benefits of meditation—cheerfulness, creativity, emotional
resilience, and reduced stress, to name a few—but these apply to
individuals. Davies and his colleagues have been thinking bigger—much
bigger.
Dr. Davies is an internationally recognized expert in conflict management at the University of Maryland, and his concerns are large-scale violent conflicts, wars, and the collective consciousness. As a young man in Australia
interested in psychology, science, and spiritual practice, Dr. Davies
took the claims of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the colorful guru of the
1960s, seriously. Davies’ first studies on the individual and
collective impact of meditation were promising and led to work at Harvard University during the war in the Middle East.
He recently spoke at the Sacred Link “Freedom from Fear” conference at
the Himalayan Institute, where I had the opportunity to question him
further about his work.
____
I was intrigued by your story of the village in Lebanon
that stayed safe through violent times because a physician had taught
his patients to meditate. Can you tell us more about it? How do you
explain such a phenomenon?
That
was a wonderful little study we did with a Lebanese medical doctor in a
village in the Chouf mountains. This was a village of over 12,000
people, previously subjected to the continuous violence that plagued
the whole area. But when one percent of the population of that village
began meditating, the violence stopped. There were no more bombs in
that village, even though the level of violence continued or even
increased all around it for years afterward. None of the residents were
able to explain it, nor could those who were independently responsible
for tracking the bombings.
In
the 1970s, Maharishi started to talk about the practical value of
having a critical mass of the population practicing meditation. He said
that one percent would have an impact—not just on themselves and the
people immediately around them, but also on the collective
consciousness of the society. His prediction was that practicing
Transcendental Meditation techniques would result in reduced violence
in the community and enhance positive, cooperative behaviors.
I
thought, “Okay, here’s a guy who’s making a claim that is extremely
radical, with enormous implications for peacemaking, and he’s
standardized a meditation technique and made it accessible to research.
There’s a serious challenge here.” He even gave us numbers: one percent
of a population (of more than 10,000) meditating would be sufficient,
or even the square root of one percent of a large population (more than
about a million) if they practice the more advanced meditation
techniques together in a group.
The
idea is that once you have a number of people coming together in a
group, you intensify the impact of changes in consciousness that happen
during meditation when the body, brain, mind, and heart are all aligned
and integrated. In that state we can also align or attune much more
readily with each other. And because we attune more with those close to
us, that amplifies the effect of meditating together. There’s literally
a coherence in consciousness that is reflected in brain wave patterns,
for example.
With
a large group you can have constructive interference. It’s a common
phenomenon in physics with waves of any type. A laser is a good
example. If you have a cluster of light-wave emitting diodes that emit
the same frequency, they’ll all fall into synchrony with each other. So
you get an exponentially more powerful wave, proportional to the square
of the number of diodes. That could explain why the square root of one
percent is all you need if people are meditating in a group.
My initial studies in the small town in Australia
where I did my master’s degree supported Maharishi’s claims: crime
dropped once one percent of the population was meditating. Then,
working with leading researchers at Harvard, I had a chance to test his
claims on a bigger scale under tougher conditions: could meditation
help to mitigate violence and promote peace even in conditions of
protracted war?
By 1983, Israel was deeply enmeshed in the civil war in Lebanon. Beirut
and the surrounding Chouf mountains were the main areas of fighting, in
what was regarded as an intractable conflict. With external funding we
were able to bring a group of more than 200 experienced meditators to Jerusalem
from all over the world who were trained in the Transcendental
Meditation tradition. This group, along with individual meditators
already in Israel and Lebanon,
was enough of a critical mass to create a significant impact, according
to Maharishi’s assertions, in the occupied southern half of Lebanon where the fighting was, as well as in Israel.
Lebanon was a great place to do research. You couldn’t do it in the Congo or Sudan, for example, because in most war zones there’s no one who can say how many people were killed on a given day. But in Lebanon,
the police were trained to keep careful statistics on how many were
killed or injured each day, and the local and international media were
free to report on daily developments. So there were reliable data
available, and we were able to conduct a tightly controlled, critical
study. We made public, precise predictions in advance to the
international press and to a panel of independent scientists about what
would happen while the meditators were in the area and what would
happen when they left.
The
timing of the experiment was dictated by the funding as well as by when
people were available. It had nothing to do with whether or not things
looked favorable in Lebanon.
We were able to control statistically for changes in the weather that
might affect levels of violence. We were able to control for
holidays—Jewish holidays, Lebanese holidays, Muslim holidays. We were
able to control for weekly cycles over the two months the group was in
place, and for fluctuations in group size. As it turned out, there was
nothing in the Lebanese press about our advance predictions, and there
was not a big splash in the Israeli press, either. So there was no way
the press created expectations.
Were the meditators concentrating on Lebanon? Was it their intention to change conditions in Lebanon and bring peace?
No. During the group practice they were not thinking about Lebanon.
Just doing their stuff, primarily for their own benefit. Just
practicing their meditation program together, since the experience
tends to be deeper with the support of a group. They practiced a mantra
meditation—Transcendental Meditation—and advanced TM-Sidhi techniques,
both derived from the Vedic tradition. They might be thinking nice
thoughts, but not focusing on Lebanon or peace or on any other potential outcome.
Did those 200+ meditators make a difference in the war?
Yes,
absolutely. After the first few weeks, the results were obvious. Then
the experimental and statistical controls and the multiple replications
made it clear beyond the shadow of a doubt. The level of violence in Lebanon
was significantly less during the course of the study, down by 40 to 80
percent on average, depending on the measure used. We replicated this
result seven times from 1983 to 1985 with seven different meditating
groups. On average, twelve people were killed every day as a result of
the war during the two-year period of the study. During the time the
groups were in Israel,
fatalities dropped to two per day, on average. Over all seven
experimental periods, average fatalities were closer to three per day.
That’s more than a 70 percent drop. Each of the seven interventions was
highly significant. The probability that these results could have been
due to chance was less than one in a hundred billion.
It wasn’t just acts of war in Lebanon that were affected. The level of violence in Israel
was also affected, with crime, car accidents, and fires all dropping
significantly when the group of meditators was in place. A similar
pattern showed up with the measure for conflict intensity, which
dropped by about 50 percent.
If
one measure, such as the intensity of the war, changes direction as
predicted, that’s significant. When other measures like cooperation,
violent crime in Israel, and the number of deaths from auto accidents
and fires—which ordinarily have no correlation at all with the level of
violence in Lebanon—also shift in the same positive direction at the
same time, over and over again, then something very broad and
fundamental must be happening.
The
results of the study showed a broad societal impact that only has one
reference point that makes sense—the meditation intervention. The
implication is that when you have coherence in the collective
consciousness, it creates an environment that allows people to approach
issues differently. It provides an enabling environment. People not
only tend to stop killing each other, but are able to come together and
perceive new possibilities for cooperative work and partnership, even
with their enemies. In terms of quantitative measures, the increase in
the cooperation parameter across the seven assemblies of meditators was
66 percent. But that hides the richness of what was actually happening
on the ground. War deaths are war deaths, but conflict and cooperation
between the major parties are more qualitative phenomena.
Translating
the quantitative 66 percent increase in cooperation into real-world
terms indicates a huge change, resulting in major breakthroughs for
peace. For example, during one of the assemblies of meditators, the
Lebanese government and all major opposition groups finally agreed on a
security plan for all of Lebanon and were able to obtain the support of Syria and Israel. During another assembly, Syria agreed to a gradual withdrawal of its forces from Lebanon,
and opposition leaders agreed to a cease-fire and dropped their demand
that the president resign. In another, substantial progress was made in
finally implementing a security plan for Beirut.
Unfortunately, without the continued support of the coherent collective
consciousness sustained by the meditation groups, they couldn’t sustain
progress. You can see in the data how the momentum for each of these
breakthroughs fell apart once the group disbanded. Once the group ended
or their numbers dropped significantly below the threshold size, we
observed a return to the low-cooperation, high-conflict pattern.
With
evidence that strong, it seems as if there would be a motivation to
continue this kind of work. On the other hand, it does sound a bit
fantastic to the ordinary person. Was your study well received?
In
1988, we were able to get the results of the first group published in a
leading journal, The Journal of Conflict Resolution, but it created
such a brouhaha that it took another 15 years to get the other six
replications published in a refereed journal. The results were
challenging to many people, including scientists who mistakenly think
the validity of science is somehow exclusively tied up with the
objective and behavioral world, that science and spirituality are
totally separate. The success of this research seemed threatening to
people with such worldviews.
How
do you explain the results? How can a group of meditators, completely
unknown to the perpetrators of violence, influence their
behavior—without leaving the comfort of their meditation cushion?
ell
there are ways to explain it, just not within the conventional
materialistic worldview in which everything else is dismissed as sort
of flaky. In that worldview, the whole province of consciousness,
spirit, meditation, and prayer, as anything more than local
epiphenomena of the brain, is separated out and left to religions and
the yogis. When we are able to take the best tools of science and say
that meditation has a more profound and reliable impact in reducing
violence than anything recognized in the conventional, behavioral
paradigm, that challenges those who mistake the conventional paradigm
as exclusively defining our reality.
So
what could explain this dynamic? We spent some time delving into the
best scientific theories to understand action at a distance, which is
how conventional science would frame this process. And the most
profound scientific theories of science do transcend distance. Once you
are talking about quantum fields, the essential nature of distance
changes. In a unified quantum field theory, such as string theory or
flipped SU5 theories or supergravity theories, distance is not primary.
In fact, even the gravitational and electromagnetic fields allow action
at a distance. That’s how we get on the Web and how we get television
and radio and wi-fi. We’re used to action at a distance. It’s no big
mystery any more.
This
electromagnetic level is one quantum field. Deeper quantum fields
emerge at more fundamental levels of time and space than the
electromagnetic and are responsible for the strong and weak nuclear
forces. More profound still is the gravitational field. You can’t
define space and gravity except in relation to each other: they both
emerge at the same moment the symmetry of the underlying unified field
is broken. We just need to understand the dynamics of space as it
relates to our experience. When the unified field from which all
phenomenal fields emerge is in its ground state, by definition, there
is no distance between observer and observed.
Sounds like meditation.
Exactly.
It’s a fundamental unity (or yoga) transcending the duality of the
observer and observed. It can only be observed by being it. The unified
quantum field is both a field of subjective consciousness and the
underlying infinite (or infinitesimal) reality of which the objective
universe is an expression or an interpretation. Classical Newtonian
physics, which explains the physics of many everyday objects and
behaviors, is simply a limited interpretation of much deeper and more
pervasive quantum field dynamics through which we are profoundly
connected with the universe, both objectively and in terms of our inner
or subjective experience.
In
meditation, awareness settles below that Newtonian, external behavioral
level of separation and objectivity. It settles down to subtler levels
of experience, which correspond to much subtler time and space levels,
where we are more awake and more integrated within ourselves and also
more intimately connected with our environment. You can measure this in
terms of brain activity with greater coherence in EEG patterns
integrating the whole cortex in meditation, for example, opening the
way to subtler connections and perceptions. A simple example of the
latter is that when we react to a sudden stimulus, the first
interactions reflected in the brain activity are completely
preconscious. They have to do with our overall feeling tone—to alert us
whether this is a good thing or a bad thing.
Like your hand jerking away from a hot plate before you realized that it was hot?
Exactly.
So if you flash words like love, happiness, or friendliness, meditators
will pick those up much faster (or at shorter exposure times) than they
will pick up words like hate and kill, with which they don’t resonate
as easily. Their ability to pick up the negative words is the same as
the rest of the population. What happens with people who are
meditating—and I assume this is true no matter what vehicle you are
using for transcendence—is that their ability to pick up and attune to
the finer and more uplifting qualities around them is much enhanced.
In other words, whatever you cultivate within yourself is what you most easily relate to outside.
Yes, especially if you are cultivating finer levels
of experience that are inherently attractive. The qualities we are more
alert to through meditating are the ones that attune us to a coherent,
harmonious relationship with the people around us; they are the ones
that allow us to give to others, to uplift people around us rather than
fight with them. The significance of the research on the impact of
meditating groups is that it provides critical evidence that we can
have this positive effect, immediately and reliably, even at
substantial distances and with people we have never met.
It
would take a month—or a book—for us to get a grip on this. I’m just
giving you a taste of our reasoning as we sought to understand the
results. During meditation we’re awake and active and functioning
coherently at a much more profound level than we normally are. As a
result, we have an impact on our surroundings at a much more profound
level than we do if we’re operating at a conscious, surface level.
Quantum
field theory is one way of reminding us that when we’re talking about
the effects of meditation, we’re not stepping outside science. We’re
stepping outside of conventional “scientism.” And there is a
difference. Too often, people misuse science as a way of saying, “Oh,
we can ignore all this internal subtle stuff. It’s not scientific.”
Well, guess what? Turns out it is scientific—it just requires us to
recognize that there are several paradigms simultaneously validated
through science that take us far beyond the narrow behaviorism and
materialism of scientism. Scientists have a responsibility to look at
this “internal subtle” stuff because its potential implications for
peace are more profound than anything we have found by focusing
exclusively on the level of power dynamics and realpolitik, or even on
democracy and human rights.
Would more studies help establish the credibility of this work? What do you see as the most important thing to be done now?
More
studies will always be welcome but this should not become an excuse for
avoiding our responsibility for acting on what we know. What is needed
now is to recognize and include the spiritual, coherence-creating
approach along with more conventional peacemaking work. We need to
recognize the enormous value of people already employing such
approaches either individually or collectively. In my work in southern
Africa and Asia, for example, the
ability of groups to pray or sing together was invaluable in helping
them to find agreement on steps for building peace. On a larger scale,
we not only need critical masses of people meditating according to Raja
Yoga or Vedanta, but we need to encourage meditation and prayer groups
for peace in all traditions so that the impact can be both global and
sustained.
In Lebanon
we had Muslims and Christians meditating together even in war
conditions. Today, we need more Muslims using traditional dhikr
(remembrance) practices, for example, to experience the tawhid (unity).
We need Christians using traditional contemplative practices such as
St. Teresa’s prayers of quiet and of unity. We need Buddhists
practicing the meditation of the heart, and so on within all of the
different spiritual traditions. It will bring them together and take
them to that level of what the Sufis call “the unity” and to peace in
their own tradition. Instead, all of these major traditions are caught
up in fighting wars in the name of their religion.
We
need to promote the idea that even a small proportion—just one percent
of people on the planet, or the square root of that if we practice in
groups—living from this transcendent level of unity will make a huge
global difference. The word transcendence, however, doesn’t translate
for everyone. A lot of spiritual traditions don’t understand
transcendence. They prefer to talk about immanence, or opening the
heart, or surrender to God. But the inner reality is ultimately the
same.
I
work across religious lines in the conflict transformation and
peacebuilding work I am doing now. The first challenge for me is to
allow my life to be an expression of that unity, and not to buy into
outwardly oriented viewpoints that paint spiritual traditions as
mutually exclusive. We have to recognize the integrity of each
tradition—to completely support what is happening within the Vedic and
Yogic traditions, and also within the Islamic world, the Christian and
Jewish worlds, and the Buddhist, Taoist, and other traditions. I keep
coming to the same realization: There is no difference on the inside at
the deep level. There’s one truth. If you
want to use the G-word, that’s fine. If you don’t want to use the
G-word that’s fine, too, but the reality is the same. Words get us
caught. Words are relative to our culture and our time. But on the
inside it’s one reality, and it’s one percent for the society or for
the whole planet. The more people meditating, the more impact we have.
At
the same time, there are critical transitions where things shift
significantly. The one percent level for a society seems to be one of
them, as is the square root of one percent for larger populations. One
percent is not something that just came out of Maharishi’s head. The
societal impact of prayer, meditation, or obedience to God’s law is
mentioned in other traditions, both Eastern and Western, with or
without specific thresholds. I’m sure there are other transition points
I don’t know about. There are two that I’ve been able to test, which
hold up under very tough conditions, but there are plenty of stories
where a few or even one enlightened, God-realized person seems to have
been enough.
It makes you want to go out and teach that one percent to meditate.
People
in all traditions need to recognize that it is the responsibility of
all of us to create peace. It doesn’t fall on any one group. We all
have to do our part, and it has to be sustained at all levels. If more
people can do research on the value of meditation and prayer for peace
in different traditions, that would be great. The risks are very high
in the world right now. The United States is in an impossible situation in Iraq;
Iraqis are caught in an impossible situation. We have to move beyond
that type of morass, which intensifies cynicism and draws recruits for
terrorism even in the name of God. Not to mention the continuation of
deadly conflicts going on in Nepal, Sudan, the Congo, and a dozen other countries around the world.
The
Vedic maxim says that in the vicinity of the enlightened—those
experiencing unity (yoga)—there’s no violence. That’s the core
principle. If we create enough coherence in the collective
consciousness as a whole, 9/11 won’t happen again. That’s what we need
as our war on terror. It needs to be fought from the inside.
The
real jihad is not fought with weapons. The real jihad is to create
inner peace, to create an inner unity, and slay the inner demons that
hold us in separation from ourselves and one another. That’s the real
war on terror. Then we slay terror literally instead of getting caught
in the trap of going after “terrorists” and thinking it’s those “bad
people” that are the problem. That is a complete fantasy and a tragic
waste of lives and resources, blinding us to what needs to change in
ourselves. We need to be able to speak plainly and not blame anyone,
because people at every level of responsibility are using the best
techniques they understand. So it’s our responsibility to share what we
know. It’s a big jump for many. We’re not going to change the foreign
policy of the United States
on the basis of this series of studies—not until there’s a broad enough
understanding of the dynamics of collective consciousness in the
country. Politicians here and elsewhere are rational people. They’re
not going to do something which immediately gets them voted out of
office because their constituents don’t understand what they’re doing
and feel frightened. So there’s no blame there. Nevertheless, if we
follow our present course of relying too much on military action to
combat terrorism, there will be a massive waste of lives and resources
compared to what could be done through more of us joining the real war
on terror. That’s the challenge for us now.•
Want to Know More?
Dr. Davies/ studies are available in reference libraries around the world. You can read about his work in Lebanon
in The Journal of Conflict Resolution, 1988, vol. 32, no. 4, pp.
776–812, and The Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 2004, pp.
285–338.
For
reactions to these studies, see also The Journal of Conflict
Resolution, 1990, vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 745–768, and The Journal of
Social Behavior and Personality, 2004, pp. 489–554.
John
Davies is co-director of the Partners in Conflict and Partners in
Peacebuilding at the Center for International Development and Conflict
Management at the University of Maryland.
He can be reached at jdavies@cidcm.umd.edu. His lecture, “The Role of
Science and Spirituality in Conflict Resolution and Reclaiming Peace,”
at the 2004 Sacred Link “Freedom from Fear” conference, can be ordered
online at www.HimalayanInstitute.org/sltv.