IDEALISM
THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE
MATRIX
AND THE TRUE NATURE OF MATTER
TOTAL RECALL
In
the events of this film, as in Vanilla Sky, neither the lead
character nor the viewer knows reality from illusion. Douglas
Quaid is-in the life we presume to be his real one-a builder
whose biggest dream is to go to Mars.
The film portrays a future era where life
on Mars is not only possible, but where terrorist attacks
take place. Velos Cohageen, governor of the planet, states
that he is open to any offers of cooperation in order to end
the rebellion. Douglas daydreams about going to Mars and resolving
the conflict, but his wife is against this idea. Finally he
applies to a company named Recall, which markets realistic
virtual holidays. The company offers tailor-made holidays,
where-like a real holiday-the customer can specify every detail
of his trip, supposedly no different from the real experience,
but significantly cheaper. Customers even have the option
of "traveling" as a different person.
In return for a fee, Douglas agrees to have
15 days' worth of memories as a secret service agent on Mars
transferred to his mind, while his body rests on a chair.
During transfer, a problem occurs and it is discovered that
the data downloaded into his mind was tampered with beforehand.
Our hero begins to consider himself a secret agent, on duty
on Mars-in the life we presume to be his real one.
Throughout the film, never does it become
exactly clear which of Douglas Quaid's memories are real and
which are artificially created. In many sequences of the film,
the inseparability of illusion and reality is frequently brought
to our attention.
Someone Traveling in Reality,
Actually Covers the Miles in His Mind
Throughout
this book, we have pointed out various examples of how matter-our
bodies, objects around us, the ground we stand on, the Sun,
stars, and planets-is a perception. If you look into the sky,
you see the Sun far away. In reality, the Sun is merely a
vision formed within the darkness of your skull. Likewise
the planets we think to be millions of miles away are actually
perceptions in our the brain's visual center- in other words,
they are not far away, but inside us.
In Total Recall, a travel agency supplies
customers with artificially created experiences, indistinguishable
from real ones. People can experience distant places as if
they were really there, believing they're on holiday by means
of data transferred to their minds.
The TV ad for the Recall travel agency is
recaptured below:
Advertisement :Would you like to ski in the
Antarctic, but you are snowed-under with work? Do you dream
of a vacation at the bottom of the ocean, but you can't float
the bill? Have you always wanted to climb the mountains of
Mars, but now you are over the hill? Then come to RECALL,
where you can buy the memory of your ideal vacation cheaper
and better than the real thing. So don't let your life pass
you by. Call Recall, for the memory of a lifetime.
After seeing the TV ad, Douglas Quaid calls
up Recall to find out if he can realize his dream of going
to Mars and speaks to a company representative named Bob McClane.
In the following dialogue, they agree on the details of his
virtual holiday:
McClane
: Okay, you're the boss. Mars it is.... Let's see... The basic
Mars package will run you just eight hundred and ninety-nine
credits. That's for two full weeks of memories, complete in
every detail…
Douglas Quaid : What's
in the two week package?
McClane : First of
all, Doug, when you go Recall, you get nothing but first class
memories: private cabin on the shuttle; deluxe suite at the
Hilton; plus all the major sights: Mount Pyramid, the Grand
Canals…
Douglas Quaid : How
real does it seem?
McClane : As real as
any memory in your head.
Douglas Quaid : Come
on, don't go kidding me.
McClane : I'm telling
you, Doug, your brain won't know the difference. Guaranteed...
Along with the features
of the environment, Douglas can also choose the details of
his virtual personality. Learning this, he chooses to be a
secret agent during his stay on Mars.
Dr. Lull : Would you
like us to integrate some alien stuff?
Douglas Quaid : Sure,
why not?... I've just always been fascinated by Mars.
Assistant : All systems
go.
Dr. Lull : Ready for
dreamland?
As these examples show, there is technically
no difference between one's real-life experiences and those
in a dream or artificially created environment. We see them
all in our brains. Planets we believe to be far away, the
world we consider to be huge are in reality the sum total
of our perceptions. Some examples from our books on the subject:
Another point to be considered is the sense of distance.
The space between you and these pages is only a sensation
of emptiness formed in your brain. Objects seemingly distant
also exist in the brain. For instance, someone assumes
that stars in the sky are millions of light-years away.
Yet the stars he "sees" are really inside himself, in
his visual center. (The
Evolution Deceit, 7th edition, pp.222-223)
Eyesight cannot perceive
Him, but He perceives eyesight. He is the All-Penetrating,
the All-Aware. (Qur'an, 6: 103)
Everything that we see, hear and feel in our life occurs
within the brain. For example, someone sitting on an armchair
feels the hardness of the armchair and the fabric's slipperiness
in his brain. The smell of coffee occurs in the mind,
not in the kitchen some distance away. The view of the
sea, birds, and trees he sees through the window are all
images formed in the brain. The friend serving the coffee
and its taste also exist in the brain. In short, someone
sitting in his living room and looking out of the window
is in reality seeing his living room and the view on a
screen in his brain. What a human being might refer to
as "my life" is a collection of all perceptions being
put together in a meaningful way and watched from a screen
in the brain-and one can never leave one's own brain.
(Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, pp.45-46)
Virtual Worlds in our Brains
In technologically advanced
countries, computer software simulating virtual environments
is being used in education and entertainment.
It is no longer anything special for people
to experience non-existent environments with the aid of computers
and simulators that can create realistic 3-D images. High-tech
industries are manufacturing a number of devices for entertainment
and education. Many use special software, capable of creating
3-D images in their users' brains, which give a real-life
feel to the virtual environment by stimulating some, or all
of the user's five senses.
Everyone from astronauts in NASA to architects,
pilots to engineers, are all using simulators in a 3-D environment.
For instance, a pilot cannot distinguish climatic conditions
created in a flight-training simulator from the same real-life
conditions. Many science-fiction movies deal with the human
perception of life and its similarity to virtual reality worlds.
In this film, a highly developed application of this technology
is used for entertainment. Those on a virtual holiday can
go anywhere they like, spending as much time as they like
with whomever they want.
In Total Recall, during the data transfer
process of a 15-day Martian holiday and the loading of the
personality details, the unexpected occurs. Douglas Quaid
begins talking about Mars before the data has been transferred
successfully. Now he considers himself to be someone else,
even in real life. In this part of the film, Douglas is on
the travel agent's premises, but believes himself to be an
agent on the run.
In the flight simulator, a pilot
cannot distinguish the virtual climatic conditions created
by the computer from the real thing. The person in the
simulator can feel himself taking off and flying the
"aircraft," even though he knows that he is in a virtual
environment.
Dr. Lull : We hit a
memory cap.
Douglas Quaid : They'll
kill you all!
McClane : What's he
talking about?
Douglas Quaid : My
name's not Quaid.
Dr. Lull : Listen to
me! He's been going on and on about Mars. He's really been
there.
McClane : He's acting
out the secret agent role from his Ego Trip!
Douglas believes that the data transferred
to him is real. His believing a virtual world to be real is
comparable to those who believe that they are interacting
with matter itself and therefore crave material worldly things.
In reality, no one setting out from the images and perceptions
copied in his mind can prove that his experiences are real,
in a material world existing outside of him. The following
are quotations from our books:
… Take a look at the room in which you are sitting.
You see not the room outside of you, but a copy of the
room existing in your brain. With your sense organs, you'll
never be able to see the original room. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.24)
… This is not a philosophical speculation, but an empirical
fact proven by modern science. Today, when asked how and
where we see the world, any scientist specializing in
medicine, biology, neurology or any field related to brain
research would say that we view the whole world in the
visual center located in our brains. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.10)
The Data in Our Memory are
Memories of Our Illusions
You could say that a person's past consists
of information stored in his memory. If it were erased, there
would be nothing left of his past. The future, on the other
hand, is made up of people's speculations. People think about
the future and make plans for it. But were you to take away
their thoughts, there would be no future either. Take away
someone's past and future thoughts, and he has only the present
moment.
In Total Recall, it becomes evident that
the hero's memory has been tampered with. As a consequence,
he perceives time and his environment in a different way.
After some of Douglas's previously erased memories return
to him, his life changes. He is followed by his enemies, who
even make attempts on his life, but it isn't clear if their
attacks are real or whether they belong to the imaginary world
implanted into his mind.
In some of the film's later scenes, Douglas
escapes his pursuers and comes home. After he relates his
experiences to his wife, she tries to persuade him that they
weren't real.
Lori : Take it easy.
Tell me exactly what happened? Why would "spies" want to kill
you?
Douglas Quaid : I don't
know! It had something to do with Mars.
Lori : Mars? You've
never even been to Mars.
Douglas Quaid : I know
it sounds crazy, but I went to this Recall place after work,
and...
Lori
: You went to those brain butchers?! What did they do to you?
Tell me!
Douglas Quaid : I got
a trip to Mars... Forget Recall, will you! These men were
going to kill me...
Lori : Doug, nobody
tried to kill you.
Douglas Quaid :They did!
But I killed them!
Lori : Sweetheart,
listen to me. Those people at Recall have messed up your mind,
and you're having paranoid delusions.
Douglas Quaid : (Holding
up his hands, which are covered with blood). You call this
a paranoid delusion?!
Douglas
suspects his wife is part of some sort of conspiracy and pressurizes
her to tell the truth. As the following scenes reveal, we
understand that Douglas had been living out an imaginary identity
in the life that we, the audience, presumed to be his real
one. In reality, Douglas is someone else. But thanks to the
data transferred to his mind, he thinks that he is a builder
married for eight years. His wife, his friend-in short, his
life-all is artificial information put in his memory, and
until now, Douglas has lived believing it's all true.
Douglas Quaid : I said
TALK!!
Lori : I'm not your
wife.
Douglas Quaid : You're
not.
Lori : I never saw
you before six weeks ago! Our marriage is just a memory implant.
Douglas
Quaid : Remember our wedding?
Lori : It was implanted
by the Agency.
Douglas Quaid : Our
friends, my job, eight years together, I suppose all this
was implanted too?
Lori : The job's real.
But the Agency set it up. They erased your identity and implanted
a new one. I was written in as your wife so I could watch
you, make sure the erasure took. - Sorry, Quaid. Your whole
life is just a dream.
Douglas Quaid : O.K.
then. If I'm not me, then who am I?
Lori : Beats me. I
just work here.
This forces us to wonder: Do we act on the
presumption that the information in our memories reflects
the truth? Without the information in our memories, on the
other hand, we cannot know anything. Some quotes on the subject
from our books:
The past is composed of information given
to a person's memory. If a memory is erased, her past is also.
The future is composed of ideas. Without them, only the present
moment of experience remains. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.132)
A person's past is the sum total
of the information stored in his memory. If his
memory were erased, he'd have no past left. The
future is created by people's thoughts. For someone
whose memory and thoughts are taken away, only be
the present moment or "this" moment could exist.
In brief, time comes about as a result of
comparing a number of illusions stored in the brain. If man
had no memory, his brain would not have made such interpretations;
therefore, he would never have formed any perception of time.
One determines himself to be thirty years old only because
he has accumulated in his mind information pertaining to those
thirty years. If his memory did not exist, he could not think
of any preceding time, and would only experience the single
"moment" he was living in. (Timelessness
and the Reality of Fate, p.61)
You Can't Take Your Sense
of Touch as Evidence that You've Reached Matter Itself
From
both a scientific and logical point of view, there's no difference
between images in your dreams at night and those you see on
awakening. While you are dreaming, if someone came into your
dream to say, "Don't worry, you're dreaming. None of this
is real. Right now, you are in your bed, watching images forming
in your brain," you would not want to believe him, because
the feelings you have are so realistic.
There is a similar situation in the film.
Someone claiming to be a consultant in the virtual holiday
company Recall, visits Douglas in his hotel room on Mars to
tell him nothing he is experiencing is real. Also, he says,
in reality Quaid is still on the Recall's premises, not here.
But Douglas is convinced that his experiences are real and
cannot accept that it can all be an illusion:
Douglas Quaid : What
do you want?
Dr. Edgemar : This
is going to be very difficult for you at accept, Mr. Quaid.
Douglas
Quaid : I'm listening.
Dr. Edgemar : I'm afraid
you're not really standing here right now.
Douglas Quaid : Ya
know, Doc, you could have fooled me.
Dr. Edgemar : I'm quite
serious. You're not here, and neither am I.
Douglas Quaid : Amazing.
(Quaid squeezes Edgemar's shoulder, verifying its solidity)
Amazing. Where are we?
Dr. Edgemar : At Recall.
You're strapped into an implant chair, and I'm monitoring
you at a psycho-probe console.
Douglas Quaid : Oh,
I get it; I'm dreaming! And this is all part of that delightful
vacation your company sold me.
Dr. Edgemar : Not exactly.
What you're experiencing is a free-form delusion based on
our memory tapes. But you're inventing it yourself as you
go along.
Douglas Quaid : Well,
if this is my delusion, who invited you?
Dr. Edgemar : I've
been artificially implanted as an emergency measure. I'm sorry
to tell you this. Mr Quaid, but you've suffered a schizoid
embolism. We can't snap you out of your fantasy. I've been
sent in to try to talk you down.
Douglas Quaid : How
much is Cohaagen paying you for this?
Dr. Edgemar : Think
about it. Your dream started in the middle of the implant
procedure. Everything after that-the chases, the trip to Mars,
your suite here at the Hilton-these are all elements of your
Recall Holiday. And Ego Trip: You paid to be a secret agent.
Douglas Quaid : No,
It's all coincidence.
(Dr. .Edgemar reminds
him that he chose the person whom he wanted to be his friend
in Mars.)
Douglas Quaid : She's
real. I dreamed about her before I even went to Recall.
Dr. Edgemar : Mr. Quaid,
can you hear yourself? "She's real because you dreamed her?"
Douglas Quaid : That's
right.
As we have seen, Douglas tries to prove the
reality of what he sees by touching the company representative
on the shoulder. But like all our other senses, touch is part
of what we experience in our brain. When Douglas sees himself
reaching out to the person in front of him and feels the firmness
of his shoulder, all these are interpretations taking place
in his mind. Just as when someone touches a person's shoulder
in a dream, touching is no proof of dealing with matter itself.
Anyone seeking such evidence can have no proof other than
his own illusions. Below are some of our explanations for
this:
Someone who dreams he is dealing with the material
world can be very sure of himself. If a friend tells him,
"Matter is an image. It isn't possible to deal with the
original of the world," he can then ask, "Am I an image
now? Don't you feel my hand on your shoulder? If so, how
can you be an image? What makes you think in this way?
Explain to me why you believe this." In his deep sleep,
the dream he sees is so clear. But suppose his ringing
alarm clock wakes him just when he's getting ready to
tell his friend that what he's living at that moment can't
be a dream. Wouldn't he object in the same manner regardless
of whether he was asleep or awake? (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.63)
Some accept that images occur in the brain, yet they
claim that the images' originals are external. But they
can never prove this, because nobody can move out of the
perceptions that exist in the brain.
Everybody
lives in the chamber that is in the brain, and no one can
experience anything except what his perceptions show. Consequently,
one can never know what happens outside of his perceptions.
. . .
An observer will always deal with the images
formed in his brain. Consequently, people can never reach
the "material equivalents" that they suppose to exist.
. . . Scientific or technological developments
cannot change anything, because every such invention occurs
in people's minds and consequently, is of no help to them
in reaching the outside world. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.48)
Hologram Images Identical
to the Originals
More than once, scientists have proven a
virtual world can be created in the brain without any need
for an external world. With every passing day, it becomes
easier to encode the world into electrical signals that people
can experience as realistic effects. For example, computer
simulations can create 3-D images identical to their originals.
Encountering these images, people react in the same way as
they do to their originals.
In one scene of the film, hologram technology
points out the similarities between the original and the copied
images. The wristwatch-like device that Douglas puts on creates
holographic images of his body. His enemies, who are constantly
trying to capture him, never succeed because they are pursuing
copied images.
Adam :He's got a hologram.
Douglas Quaid :You
think this is the real Quaid? Well it is.
Have You Ever Thought that
One Day, You Could Wake Up from This Life as You Do from Dreams?
Dreaming
is a product of the brain and its activity, like all other
mental processes. Whether asleep or awake, the brain is always
active, always giving off electrical waves. During REM (Rapid
Eye Movement) sleep when most dreams occur, the pathways that
carry nerve impulses from the brain to the muscles are blocked.
During dreams, therefore, the body cannot move. Essentially,
though, asleep or awake, it is all the same. For instance,
when you look at yourself in a dream as you would now, you
see a body, complete with arms and legs, that walks and breathes.
You can be led to believe that you are living a real life.
In reality, the virtual body in dreams is
composed of perceptions in your mind, even though they feel
"outside" of your mind. In other words, dreams are the sum
total of the interpretation of stimuli reaching the relevant
areas of the brain, just as when we are awake.
As examples throughout this book show, events
in a dream can be so realistic that on waking, you need have
to ask yourself whether it was a dream or reality. Technically,
there is no difference between the two. Dreaming, you can
do anything you could when awake-talk, eat, breathe, run,
laugh, cry, get injured, or drive. Dreams often copy our everyday
lives, making everything in the dream seem familiar. This
is why we react to dream encounters as if they were real.
Sometimes we awaken with a scream; other times, we wish we
could never wake up.
In the following dialogue, Douglas reflects
on the possibility that everything he experienced might have
been a dream.
Melina : I can't believe
it... It's like a dream.
Douglas Quaid : I just
had a terrible thought...What is this-all a dream?
A person can vividly experience all five senses without
the presence of outside stimuli. Dreams are the most obvious
example of this...
Even though a person has his eyes closed
while dreaming, he senses many things he does in real life,
so realistically that he can't distinguish dreams from real-life
experience. Everyone reading this book can often bear witness
to this. For example, while asleep in a calm, quiet atmosphere,
you might dream of being in danger. Experiencing the event
as real, you flee in desperation and hide behind a wall. Moreover,
the images are so realistic that you feel fear as if you were
in real danger. Your heart in your mouth, you shake with fear,
your heart beats fast, and you demonstrate other physical
effects that the body undergoes in dangerous situations. However,
there is no external equivalent to this dream's events. (Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, pp.61-62)
You might be observing your life from somewhere else,
just as you do when observing your dreams...
A person dreaming of drinking coffee can
feel the exact taste of the coffee, when there is nothing
there. If someone were to tell him he is only dreaming, the
person would reject the idea that there is no coffee. How,
he might ask, could it be just a vision when he feels the
heat of the coffee on his tongue? How it could remove his
thirst if it wasn't real? Only after awakening does he understand
that the coffee he thinks he drank was just an image formed
in his brain; and that perceptions such as warmth and thirst,
which he felt while drinking the coffee, were also formed
in his brain.
Our experiences in dreams and in the real
world are based on the same logic. We experience both in our
minds. The only reason we believe that our dreams are imaginary
is that on awakening, we find ourselves in bed, and so believe
that we were actually sleeping and saw everything in our dreams.
(Matter:
The Other Name for Illusion, p.67)
THE SIMILARITY OF OUR DREAMS
AND REAL LIVES IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC
For
her show accompanying her 2001 gig in Las Vegas, pop star
Britney Spears chose a really thought-provoking theme. Throughout
the show, but especially in the opening, scenes suggested
that everything, even the concert her fans were watching,
happens only in the mind.
The theme of her show was the provocative
thought that what we deem to be reality could very well be
only an illusion. As an example from one scene, she dreamed
of giving a concert in front of a huge crowd-but then, this
also could have been a dream within a dream.
It was all in your
mind...
Is all I see or seeing
but a dream within a dream?
Have you ever had a
dream that felt so real?
You could barely tell
the difference between the real world and the dream world?
Which world are you
in now?
Last night I dreamt
of this very moment.
And I was here with
all of you.
Now my dreams come
true
It was all in your
mind.
These expressions remind us to question the
reality of the world we live in. We don't suppose that places
and events in our dreams exist somewhere as material counterparts
in another dimension, because we know that when we experienced
these realistic events, we were fast asleep in our beds. Likewise,
we can't claim that we are experiencing and interacting with
what we call real life. Just as with our dreams, we don't
require objects in the external world-and the body that perceives
them-to be the source for our experiences. Even if there were
a material world out there, still we are regarding an illusionary
world of replica images.
In your dreams, you see yourself in a wholly
imaginary world. There is no reality whatsoever to the objects
or people you see around yourself. Everything-the ground you
walk on, the sky above, trees, cars-all is just imagination,
with no material reality. All is inside your brain, or better,
inside of your mind and nowhere else. (Little Man in the Tower,
p.28)