In the sphere of perceptual knowing there is a space where
everything is happening. It is a single arena fluctuating to include anything
that triggers sensation. If you close your eyes and listen, every sound takes
place somewhere in this field of consciousness from the boom of a faraway
explosion to an insect buzzing nearby. So the first meaning is where something
is in relation to us, closer having more urgency. Even when we’re talking about
sound we create a space and what’s in it is located somewhere in visual
consciousness. Thinking coexists with sensations in the space of what’s known
to perception but it’s just a trail through infinite space like the vapor
behind a plane.
Scientists have shown
repeatedly that action between neurons involved with a decision precedes
conscious awareness of making the decision. Though some claim this means the
machine/brain is the agent and not individual free will, that doesn’t consider
the key role of the overall visual assessment that directs conscious attention.
Perhaps you never even thought you were making a decision as your eyes zeroed
in on one part of your surroundings, but spatial understanding adjusts to the
needs of the scene whatever you consider the scene to be, physical or mental. Feeling
is the awareness of that adjustment. Attention is moved by visual
consciousness. We know what fits and doesn’t fit and where things are out of
proportion. This capacity is essential to our reasoning in all areas. Since
visual consciousness sees the implications of the whole, cultivating response
to visual form tunes pre-analytic assessment. Having art you love around you
reinforces something particular in the feelings most valued.
Looking at art trains visual consciousness, reinforcing our
sensitivity to nuance and essence. This is particularly important in such an
information saturated global culture. Having so few words, “feelings, emotions,
intuition,” for highly intricate judgments of proportion, most people don’t credit the vast level of intelligence
that goes on before what they consider thinking even starts. As I say to my
students, we react to a scene before we recognize what we’re seeing. The meaning
of its structure has already been registered. This predisposes where we look
and how we take what we eventually identify. Becoming aware of that level of
thinking is an important step toward the wisdom of visual consciousness.
When Alan Watts advises us to think of the thoughts that
arrive while meditating like waves swirling around the rocks, going as quickly
as they arrived, our feelings would be the character of the waves. Whether they
are gentle or rough carries a more important meaning for how we behave. Feeling
represents an overall assessment by the whole mind, a prediction of what may
unfold and how to respond to it. Looking at art educates the sensitivity to
significant pattern, to harmony of proportion. Visual consciousness sees excess
and absence and how to address an unfolding condition, giving us tools to
tackle global problems that interpenetrate many areas and can only be solved by
seeing the whole picture. Having skills to present information as visual
relationships helps people understand at a glance the relationships and what
they mean to the whole.
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