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©
1994 P A S Q U A L E F R U S C
E L L A
Plasticity,
that is the ability to change shape, is one of the main characteristics
of matter. It makes it possible to adapt to new environmental
stimuli, and is a requirement for survival. In
his three-hundred-and-seventy-eighth Thought, Blaise Pascal
defined human beings as thinking reeds, warning us about our
material fragility, constantly jeopardised by the most insignificant
of external causes: "We are only an infinitesimal part
of the whole, a dot lost in the universe. A puff of steam,
a drop of water are enough to annihilate us" (1).
Human substance is at the mercy of events and has no alternative
but to bend when faced with stronger forces. Just as the reed
bends.
Pascal might have been referring to Arundo Donax, commonly found on the banks
of rivers, or to bamboo canes, Bambousa Aendinacea.
Both
species contain a considerable amount of silicon and
are used in herbal medicine as a reconstituent for the bones
and fragile hair and as a diuretic, galactofuge and emmenagogue
(2).
For physicists, mathematicians, philosophers and Jansenist
theologians the reed provides the ideal paragon of the flexible
and elastic material from which human beings are made; they
must learn to bend without breaking.
At
the time when Pascal was born, Cartesians rationalism was
at its height (Descartes died when Pascal was 23 years old).
Descartes defined matter as extensive substance and thought
as thinking substance. Pascal redeemed the precarious nature
of the material body with extensibility, the plasticity of
thought.
If the body is a dot lost in the universe, thought has the
same extension as infinite space. That dot lost in the universe
is capable of conceiving everything of which the universe
is made up: sun, moon, planets and galaxies, black holes,
matter and anti-matter.
The
nobility of the mind may be recognised by its infinite plasticity.
The body uses its
plasticity to defend itself from unfavourable events. Thought uses its plasticity
to embrace the whole, to mould itself on the whole.
Also
the neuron, the constituent cell of nerve tissues, is structurally
similar to a reed. It has a rhyzome: the cell body; it has
roots: the dendrites; and a stem: the axon. Its vitality is
apparent from its ability to change shape.
Depending on environmental
conditions, age, diet, medicines being taken, intellectual application, the neuron
prospers or withers, its roots grow or atrophy, its stem lengthens or shortens.
The
plastic processes of extension and retraction are not the
exclusive province of the body-mind, but also belong to space-time
that, according to the restricted theory of relativity, not
yet disproved, expands and contracts depending on our manner
of progress.
A neuron may be fertilised with growth factors (neurotrophic
proteins) and fed with learning (an abstract form of nourishment
or, at least, not at present measurable as matter (3), and
a muscle cell grows with plastic proteins (preferably those
that are legally permitted) and the instruction of a good
trainer.
Plasticity
and elasticity are therefore two units of measurement of the
body's well-being and its intellectual potential.
Plasticity,
which only allows our body to make a few jumps or do some
acrobatics, enables our awareness to extend on the multiple
levels of the knowable, thanks to its expansion force, which
some have claimed to measure: ten to the thirteenth bits of
memory capacity (just less than that of the elephant); ten
to the thirteenth bits per second for calculation power.
Mystics, on the contrary, say that the plastic potential of
the mind has an infinite value because, if cultivated methodically,
it enables us to enter the realm of the transcendental (4).
The
body that is capable of cultivating happiness is similar to
a fleshy fruit (the word fruit it derives from frui, to enjoy),
it is smooth and firm.
Ageing is distinguished
by a general process of psycho-physical retraction. The teguments become wrinkled,
the fruit shrivels.
The
many ways to develop the plastic potential of the body-mind
guide us towards a harmonious relationship with reality. The
correct balance, the right tone, achieved by our body, will
improve the surrounding environment due to a phenomenon that
is similar to acoustic resonance, which makes all bodies vibrate
with the same vibration period.
Every improvement
we achieve, in terms of our well-being and freedom, will increase the well-being
and freedom around us.
1.
Pascal, B.: Pensieri, Mondadori, 1968.
2.
Font Quer, P.: Plantas Medicinales, el Dioscoridés
renovado, Editorial Labor, Barcelona 1985.
3.
Mobley, W.C. e Coll.: Nerve growth factor increases
choline acetyltransferase activity in developing basal forebrain
neurons, Molecular Brain Research, 1:53-62, 1986.
4.
Barrow, J.D.: Theories of Everything,Oxford University
Press 1991.
5.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi:Science of being and art of
living, Signet, N.Y. 1968.
5.
Jagadis Chunder Bose:Response in the Living and
non Living, Longmans Green & Co, London-NewYork-Bombay
1902.
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