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A philosophy of sport and reality: Rupert Spira
Episode 34

A philosophy of sport and reality: Rupert Spira

What the experience of flow in sport may reveal about the nature of reality

A New Way of Being · Simon Mundie

May 10, 20212h 3m

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Show Notes

What the experience of flow in sport may reveal about the nature of reality

One theme that has arisen time and again on this podcast is the experience of flow: when we lose ourselves in whatever it is that we are doing.

Several sportspeople have spoken about the experience of "me" not being there in such moments. But what is that "me" that seems to disappear?

That’s a big question and here to help address it is Rupert Spira, a philosopher interested in the nature of reality, and the nature of consciousness.

Nothing is more obvious and undeniable than the fact that we are conscious. Now in this case when we say conscious, we mean simply 'being aware'.

But, there is something called the hard problem of consciousness. It is our inability to explain how a lump of tissue or matter, in other words our brain, creates consciousness.

Rupert argues that we are looking in the wrong direction. This is a counterintuitive view, and we are not arguing that it’s true, but before you immediately dismiss it, here is a quote from one of the most important physicists of the 20th century – the Nobel prizewinner Max Planck.

"I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. We cannot get behind consciousness."


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**additional production by Frank McWeeny**


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