Opinion
Science Diplomacy as a powerful tool for national unity and friendship among nations – II
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by Emeritus Professor Ranjith Senaratne,
Chairman, National Science Foundation and former General President, Sri Lanka Association for the Advancement of Science
(First part of this article appeared yesterday
(05 Feb. 2024)
Importance and relevance of SD:
From a state’s perspective, SD is a subset of national foreign policy and a strategy for advancing its interests and needs. From a global perspective, SD is perceived as a potential solution for tackling common global problems. SD clearly falls within the scope of public policy. It is primarily a lever for action.
Developing economies, mainly in the Southern hemisphere, are home to approximately 80% of the world’s population. However, they started introducing SD only relatively recently, i.e. S. Africa in 2012, India in 2018, Pakistan, 2019 and Columbia 2020. Researchers in the Global South are under-represented as leading authors in research journals, with the result that research produced and scientific methods and techniques developed in the Global South receive lower visibility and are not fully included and well-integrated into “Global Science”. Therefore, SD may provide a framework to acknowledge and address this imbalance in scientific collaboration between regions.
However, unlike countries in the global North, countries in the Global South, barring China and Brazil, find it difficult to post a science attaché in their foreign missions, Hence, the foreign ministry could have a Science Diplomacy Division which liaises between national S&T stakeholders and international partners. It can also call on the services of diaspora and alumni of foreign universities at home and abroad for advancing the national scientific ecosystem.
SD has the potential to play a role in addressing imbalance and global inequalities, i.e. between North and South, through capacity building in scientifically disadvantaged countries, uniting efforts and infrastructure to address global challenges, promoting more inclusive and socially responsible scientific practices across cultures, and promoting science from the “periphery” to the centre of discussions on policy.
Science diplomacy is becoming an important tool by which states can more effectively promote and secure their foreign policy agendas. Recognizing the role science plays at national and international levels and identifying a state’s national diplomatic style can help to construct a ‘national style’ in science diplomacy. SD, therefore, has the potential to influence national audiences in ways that traditional public diplomacy cannot. Thus, SD can be deployed for the following purposes:
Science diplomacy by the government to advance country’s national interests and development
Science diplomacy involving stakeholders to address their real-life issues effectively
Science diplomacy to improve foreign relations and collaborations and to address global challenges
SD to contribute to reducing disparities and inequalities between counties.
SD is neither an all-powerful tool nor a miracle remedy, but it can potentially mitigate conflicts and foster harmony and amity among different communities in a country, and promote friendship among nations. While it has its own limitations, its balanced and inclusive use in international relations could usher in a better tomorrow, making the planet a better place to live in. For all this to happen SD has to be institutionalized and it should also be essentially combined with morality and ethics in order it to be acceptable and effective. History is already replete with examples where SD has been deployed effectively to address global challenges. A few striking examples are given below:
Despite arch rivalry between North Korea and USA, American and British scientists were able to visit even the remotest villages close to the volcano Mount Paektu in N. Korea, following a catastrophic volcanic eruption in 2011, in order to collect rock samples and deploy seismometers. This led to an unprecedented scientific collaboration resulting in joint publications between North Korean and American and British scientists. It was a real boon, showing the potency and power of SD in bringing even archrivals to work together, making the seemingly impossible happen though S&T. It is an example of how technical collaborations can morph into powerful peace and friendship building initiatives. (Figure 1)
Nuclear non-proliferation talks between Iran and USA came to a standstill in 2015 with the atmosphere becoming tense and electrifying. Then Iran nominated Dr. Ali Akbar Salehi, Head, Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, to lead the Iranian team, who in turn requested USA to nominate Ernest J. Moniz, Energy Secretary to President Barack Obama, as his counterpart. Both were alumni of the MIT, USA where they studied nuclear physics. When they came to the negotiating table, politics were put behind and they discussed physics instead, which enabled them to make steady progress. The intervention of science made a huge difference that would otherwise have been next to impossible. Suitably, they were nominated for Nobel Prize in Peace in 2016. (Figure 2)
At the height of the Second World War when fierce fighting was going on between the German troops and British & American troops, German and American scientists and German and British scientists continued to work together not letting the war drive a wedge between them. It shows the profound bonding power of scientific cooperation.
Potential applications of SD to address national issues and regional and global concerns relevant to Sri Lanka
There has been a profound transformation of the Indian Ocean from a mere maritime trade route into a global nexus encompassing security, economic and environmental concerns, social issues and strategic interests. Moreover, international and regional policy discourses on the Indian Ocean regional order, Indo-Pacific dynamics and the Belt-Road Initiative are often sensitive and complex given the intensity of strategic interests and aspirations of some countries in and beyond the region. Here, smaller member-states, particularly when they are economically vulnerable, have no parity when dealing with bigger states that bully them into submission, so that the agenda on cooperation gets submerged by prevailing geopolitical tensions in the Indian Ocean and beyond. Here, SD can be an effective tool to cope with such issues.
Sri Lanka presently occupies the Chair of IORA from 2023 to 2025. Besides, it is a member of BIMSTEC and SAARC. The nature and scope of IORA centre round economic cooperation and on achieving sustained growth and balanced development in the region. Economic cooperation extends to areas such as trade facilitation and liberalisation, promotion of foreign investment, management of marine resources, maritime security, blue economic opportunities, disaster resilience, scientific and technological exchanges, tourism and movement of natural persons and service providers. Therefore, Sri Lanka’s diplomacy needs to rise to the challenge, demonstrating its fullest strength during such discourses in order to navigate the complexities and intricacies involved.
In addition, when bilateral and transborder shared resources such as gas fields, marine resources, fish stocks, rivers and watershed exist, diplomatic efforts without adequate scientific understanding can be ill-directed and counter-productive. This is also applicable to the claimed extended Exclusive Economic Zone of Sri Lanka as per the law of the Sea of Convention. Therefore, a cogent multilateral vision, underpinned by inclusive, coherent policies and combined with a commendable grasp of science diplomacy and consummate skills will be of paramount importance.
Some major issues and concerns to Sri Lanka are briefly outlined below:
Debt restructuring and Climate Change
Sixty one countries in the world face severe debt problems and these debt-distressed countries are unable to make progress towards climate resilience and sustainable development amidst cascading crises and inequalities. “This has not happened because of the bad behavior of one country. This has happened because of systemic shocks that have hit many countries at the same time,” said Rebeca Grynspan, Secretary-General, UNCTAD. With interest rates rising sharply, the debt crisis is putting enormous strain on public finances, especially in developing countries that need to invest in education, health care and their economies, and to adapt to climate change. “To resolve these issues equitably, this needs to be done in a manner that maintains the debtor countries’ ability to grow and meet its current and future debt obligations, while also fulfilling its commitments to the SDGs,” said Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe. Debt cannot and must not become an obstacle for achieving the 2030 Agenda and the climate transition that the world desperately needs.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, “Nobody was safe until everybody was safe”. Similarly, unless fair debt relief is provided to debt-distressed countries through interventions such as climate financing, all the countries and peoples in the world, both developed and developing, will be at the receiving end and become victims of climate change. S&T both investigates the underlying causes of climate change and offers remedies for it and other global challenges stemming from human impact. Hence, SD can be applied in an objective and dispassionate manner to address not only climate change, but also other global issues such as pandemics, poverty, water, food and energy insecurity, inequalities, conflicts, pollution etc. which have far-reaching social, political and economic implications and ramifications on humanity as a whole.
National unity
As a result of protracted internecine conflict, the performance of all sectors of the economy of the Northern and Eastern Provinces, including agriculture, fisheries, tourism, cottage industries and SMES were drastically affected. Concomitant with this was loss of livelihood, and means of sustenance of millions of people in those provinces. Therefore, in order to rebuild and resuscitate the regions, it is imperative to revitalize the key sectors affected so as to restore their livelihoods and raise socio-economic standards.
Jaffna has been a Mecca of culture and scholarship as well as a cradle of intellectuals, scholars, scientists and professionals who have made an immense contribution to national development. Similarly, the Eastern Province with a lot of natural endowments and cultural heritage sites possesses immense potentialities for economic growth. The Universities of Jaffna, Vavuniya, Eastern and South-Eastern constitute the brains trust and intellectual pulse of the respective regions. Hence, the universities and R&D institutions in other regions should join forces with them to promote regional development. For instance, with the advent of tsunami in 2004, the University of Ruhuna, with support from CIDA, embarked upon a programme in collaboration with the Eastern University and South-Eastern University in the Eastern province to rebuild and reconstruct the tsunami-affected villages through livelihood development by means of S&T interventions which were quite successful. That led to development of lasting organic linkages among staff of the three universitates which are still robust and vibrant.
Therefore, identification of critical issues in the North in agriculture, fisheries, tourism, etc. and addressing them through such scientific cooperation with the South could contribute to fostering social cohesion, harmony and national unity in the country.
Claim for extended Exclusive Economic Zone
Sri Lanka possesses a territorial sea of 21,500 km2 and an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of up to 200 nautical miles (370 km) from the coastal line with an extent of 517,000 km2. Sri Lanka has the rights to the resources in the water column, seabed and subsurface in the EEZ. Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), Sri Lanka is entitled to claim for an extended area of seabed where the thickness of the sediment layer exceeds one km. This claim has been made and, if accepted, Sri Lanka could gain an additional seabed area. Therefore, the EEZ is likely to expand further with the delimitation of the outer edge of the continental margin of the country, which would permit Sri Lanka to own an EEZ equivalent to 23 times (approximately 1,400,000 km2) its land mass. Apart from living resources, this Zone contains a variety of exploitable minerals and hydrocarbons (oil and natural gas).
However, given the geo-political and geo-economic interests in the Indian Ocean, when this arbitration claim is taken up by the UN, other nations could also lodge a claim for part of the area claimed by Sri Lanka. Here, not only a profound scientific knowledge of the sediment dynamics in coastal and marine environments, but also consummate skills in SD are required to succeed in the arbitration process.
Potential threats stemming from growing water conflicts in the region
Climate change and the ever-increasing population, combined with growing economic and social imperatives and needs will create competition for water This can lead not only to social unrest and regional conflicts, but also to hydro-political issues, triggering “water wars”. Water insecurity can be weaponized and exacerbate tension and friction within and between countries. Today water is a growing source of global conflict in nearly 50 countries. In Asia, while Sri Lanka is blessed with abundant perennial water resources, many countries are already facing moderate to severe water scarcities.
Water being the lifeblood, its scarcities can trigger conflicts not only between, but also within countries. The historic Mavil Aru battle in 2006 is a telling case in point. Therefore, SD will be of great relevance in coping with potential conflicts emanating from water scarcities in the region. (To be concluded)
(This article is based on the address delivered at the inaugural ceremony of the annual sessions of the Sri Lanka Association for the Advancement of Science as its General President in 2023)
Opinion
Child food poverty: A prowling menace
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by Dr B.J.C.Perera
MBBS(Cey), DCH(Cey), DCH(Eng), MD(Paed), MRCP(UK), FRCP(Edin),
FRCP(Lon), FRCPCH(UK), FSLCPaed, FCCP, Hony FRCPCH(UK), Hony. FCGP(SL)
Specialist Consultant Paediatrician and Honorary Senior Fellow,
Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Joint Editor, Sri Lanka Journal of Child Health
In an age of unprecedented global development, technological advancements, universal connectivity, and improvements in living standards in many areas of the world, it is a very dark irony that child food poverty remains a pressing issue. UNICEF defines child food poverty as children’s inability to access and consume a nutritious and diverse diet in early childhood. Despite the planet Earth’s undisputed capacity to produce enough food to nourish everyone, millions of children still go hungry each day. We desperately need to explore the multifaceted deleterious effects of child food poverty, on physical health, cognitive development, emotional well-being, and societal impacts and then try to formulate a road map to alleviate its deleterious effects.
Every day, right across the world, millions of parents and families are struggling to provide nutritious and diverse foods that young children desperately need to reach their full potential. Growing inequities, conflict, and climate crises, combined with rising food prices, the overabundance of unhealthy foods, harmful food marketing strategies and poor child-feeding practices, are condemning millions of children to child food poverty.
In a communique dated 06th June 2024, UNICEF reports that globally, 1 in 4 children; approximately 181 million under the age of five, live in severe child food poverty, defined as consuming at most, two of eight food groups in early childhood. These children are up to 50 per cent more likely to suffer from life-threatening malnutrition. Child Food Poverty: Nutrition Deprivation in Early Childhood – the third issue of UNICEF’s flagship Child Nutrition Report – highlights that millions of young children are unable to access and consume the nutritious and diverse diets that are essential for their growth and development in early childhood and beyond.
It is highlighted in the report that four out of five children experiencing severe child food poverty are fed only breastmilk or just some other milk and/or a starchy staple, such as maize, rice or wheat. Less than 10 per cent of these children are fed fruits and vegetables and less than 5 per cent are fed nutrient-dense foods such as eggs, fish, poultry, or meat. These are horrendous statistics that should pull at the heartstrings of the discerning populace of this world.
The report also identifies the drivers of child food poverty. Strikingly, though 46 per cent of all cases of severe child food poverty are among poor households where income poverty is likely to be a major driver, 54 per cent live in relatively wealthier households, among whom poor food environments and feeding practices are the main drivers of food poverty in early childhood.
One of the most immediate and visible effects of child food poverty is its detrimental impact on physical health. Malnutrition, which can result from both insufficient calorie intake and lack of essential nutrients, is a prevalent consequence. Chronic undernourishment during formative years leads to stunted growth, weakened immune systems, and increased susceptibility to infections and diseases. Children who do not receive adequate nutrition are more likely to suffer from conditions such as anaemia, rickets, and developmental delays.
Moreover, the lack of proper nutrition can have long-term health consequences. Malnourished children are at a higher risk of developing chronic illnesses such as heart disease, diabetes, and obesity later in life. The paradox of child food poverty is that it can lead to both undernutrition and overnutrition, with children in food-insecure households often consuming calorie-dense but nutrient-poor foods due to economic constraints. This dietary pattern increases the risk of obesity, creating a vicious cycle of poor health outcomes.
The impacts of child food poverty extend beyond physical health, severely affecting cognitive development and educational attainment. Adequate nutrition is crucial for brain development, particularly in the early years of life. Malnutrition can impair cognitive functions such as attention, memory, and problem-solving skills. Studies have consistently shown that malnourished children perform worse academically compared to their well-nourished peers. Inadequate nutrition during early childhood can lead to reduced school readiness and lower IQ scores. These children often struggle to concentrate in school, miss more days due to illness, and have lower overall academic performance. This educational disadvantage perpetuates the cycle of poverty, as lower educational attainment reduces future employment opportunities and earning potential.
The emotional and psychological effects of child food poverty are profound and are often overlooked. Food insecurity creates a constant state of stress and anxiety for both children and their families. The uncertainty of not knowing when or where the next meal will come from can lead to feelings of helplessness and despair. Children in food-insecure households are more likely to experience behavioural problems, including hyperactivity, aggression, and withdrawal. The stigma associated with poverty and hunger can further exacerbate these emotional challenges. Children who experience food poverty may feel shame and embarrassment, leading to social isolation and reduced self-esteem. This psychological toll can have lasting effects, contributing to mental health issues such as depression and anxiety in adolescence and adulthood.
Child food poverty also perpetuates cycles of poverty and inequality. Children who grow up in food-insecure households are more likely to remain in poverty as adults, continuing the intergenerational transmission of disadvantage. This cycle of poverty exacerbates social disparities, contributing to increased crime rates, reduced social cohesion, and greater reliance on social welfare programmes. The repercussions of child food poverty ripple through society, creating economic and social challenges that affect everyone. The healthcare costs associated with treating malnutrition-related illnesses and chronic diseases are substantial. Additionally, the educational deficits linked to child food poverty result in a less skilled workforce, which hampers economic growth and productivity.
Addressing child food poverty requires a multi-faceted approach that tackles both immediate needs and underlying causes. Policy interventions are crucial in ensuring that all children have access to adequate nutrition. This can include expanding social safety nets, such as food assistance programmes and school meal initiatives, as well as targeted manoeuvres to reach more vulnerable families. Ensuring that these programmes are adequately funded and effectively implemented is essential for their success.
In addition to direct food assistance, broader economic and social policies are needed to address the root causes of poverty. This includes efforts to increase household incomes through living wage policies, job training programs, and economic development initiatives. Supporting families with affordable childcare, healthcare, and housing can also alleviate some of the financial pressures that contribute to food insecurity.
Community-based initiatives play a vital role in combating child food poverty. Local food banks, community gardens, and nutrition education programmes can help provide immediate relief and promote long-term food security. Collaborative efforts between government, non-profits, and the private sector are necessary to create sustainable solutions.
Child food poverty is a profound and inescapable issue with far-reaching consequences. Its deleterious effects on physical health, cognitive development, emotional well-being, and societal stability underscore the urgent need for comprehensive action. As we strive for a more equitable and just world, addressing child food poverty must be a priority. By ensuring that all children have access to adequate nutrition, we can lay the foundation for a healthier, more prosperous future for individuals and society as a whole. The fight against child food poverty is not just a moral imperative but an investment in our collective future. Healthy, well-nourished children are more likely to grow into productive, contributing members of society. The benefits of addressing this issue extend beyond individual well-being, enhancing economic stability and social harmony. It is incumbent upon us all to recognize and act upon the understanding that every child deserves the right to adequate nutrition and the opportunity to thrive.
Despite all of these existent challenges, it is very definitely possible to end child food poverty. The world needs targeted interventions to transform food, health, and social protection systems, and also take steps to strengthen data systems to track progress in reducing child food poverty. All these manoeuvres must comprise a concerted effort towards making nutritious and diverse diets accessible and affordable to all. We need to call for child food poverty reduction to be recognized as a metric of success towards achieving global and national nutrition and development goals.
Material from UNICEF reports and AI assistance are acknowledged.
Opinion
Do opinion polls matter?
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By Dr Upul Wijayawardhana
The colossal failure of not a single opinion poll predicting accurately the result of the Indian parliamentary election, the greatest exercise in democracy in the world, raises the question whether the importance of opinion polls is vastly exaggerated. During elections two types of opinion polls are conducted; one based on intentions to vote, published during or before the campaign, often being not very accurate as these are subject to many variables but exit polls, done after the voting where a sample tally of how the voters actually voted, are mostly accurate. However, of the 15 exit polls published soon after all the votes were cast in the massive Indian election, 13 vastly overpredicted the number of seats Modi’s BJP led coalition NDA would obtain, some giving a figure as high as 400, the number Modi claimed he is aiming for. The other two polls grossly underestimated predicting a hung parliament. The actual result is that NDA passed the threshold of 272 comfortably, there being no landslide. BJP by itself was not able to cross the threshold, a significant setback for an overconfident Mody! Whether this would result in less excesses on the part of Modi, like Muslim-bashing, remains to be seen. Anyway, the statement issued by BJP that they would be investigating the reasons for failure rather than blaming the process speaks very highly of the maturity of the democratic process in India.
I was intrigued by this failure of opinion polls as this differs dramatically from opinion polls in the UK. I never failed to watch ‘Election night specials’ on BBC; as the Big Ben strikes ‘ten’ (In the UK polls close at 10pm} the anchor comes out with “Exit polls predict that …” and the actual outcome is often almost as predicted. However, many a time opinion polls conducted during the campaign have got the predictions wrong. There are many explanations for this.
An opinion poll is defined as a research survey of public opinion from a particular sample, the origin of which can be traced back to the 1824 US presidential election, when two local newspapers in North Carolina and Delaware predicted the victory of Andrew Jackson but the sample was local. First national survey was done in 1916 by the magazine, Literary Digest, partly for circulation-raising, by mailing millions of postcards and counting the returns. Of course, this was not very scientific though it accurately predicted the election of Woodrow Wilson.
Since then, opinion polls have grown in extent and complexity with scientific methodology improving the outcome of predictions not only in elections but also in market research. As a result, some of these organisations have become big businesses. For instance, YouGov, an internet-based organisation co-founded by the Iraqi-born British politician Nadim Zahawi, based in London had a revenue of 258 million GBP in 2023.
In Sri Lanka, opinion polls seem to be conducted by only one organisation which, by itself, is a disadvantage, as pooled data from surveys conducted by many are more likely to reflect the true situation. Irrespective of the degree of accuracy, politicians seem to be dependent on the available data which lend explanations to the behaviour of some.
The Institute for Health Policy’s (IHP) Sri Lanka Opinion Tracker Survey has been tracking the voting intentions for the likely candidates for the Presidential election. At one stage the NPP/JVP leader AKD was getting a figure over 50%. This together with some degree of international acceptance made the JVP behave as if they are already in power, leading to some incidents where their true colour was showing.
The comments made by a prominent member of the JVP who claimed that the JVP killed only the riff-raff, raised many questions, in addition to being a total insult to many innocents killed by them including my uncle. Do they have the authority to do so? Do extra-judicial killings continue to be JVP policy? Do they consider anyone who disagrees with them riff-raff? Will they kill them simply because they do not comply like one of my admired teachers, Dr Gladys Jayawardena who was considered riff-raff because she, as the Chairman of the State Pharmaceutical Corporation, arranged to buy drugs cheaper from India? Is it not the height of hypocrisy that AKD is now boasting of his ties to India?
Another big-wig comes with the grand idea of devolving law and order to village level. As stated very strongly, in the editorial “Pledges and reality” (The Island, 20 May) is this what they intend to do: Have JVP kangaroo-courts!
Perhaps, as a result of these incidents AKD’s ratings has dropped to 39%, according to the IHP survey done in April, and Sajith Premadasa’s ratings have increased gradually to match that. Whilst they are level pegging Ranil is far behind at 13%. Is this the reason why Ranil is getting his acolytes to propagate the idea that the best for the country is to extend his tenure by a referendum? He forced the postponement of Local Governments elections by refusing to release funds but he cannot do so for the presidential election for constitutional reasons. He is now looking for loopholes. Has he considered the distinct possibility that the referendum to extend the life of the presidency and the parliament if lost, would double the expenditure?
Unfortunately, this has been an exercise in futility and it would not be surprising if the next survey shows Ranil’s chances dropping even further! Perhaps, the best option available to Ranil is to retire gracefully, taking credit for steadying the economy and saving the country from an anarchic invasion of the parliament, rather than to leave politics in disgrace by coming third in the presidential election. Unless, of course, he is convinced that opinion polls do not matter and what matters is the ballots in the box!
Opinion
Thoughtfulness or mindfulness?
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By Prof. Kirthi Tennakone
ktenna@yahoo.co.uk
Thoughtfulness is the quality of being conscious of issues that arise and considering action while seeking explanations. It facilitates finding solutions to problems and judging experiences.
Almost all human accomplishments are consequences of thoughtfulness.
Can you perform day-to-day work efficiently and effectively without being thoughtful? Obviously, no. Are there any major advancements attained without thought and contemplation? Not a single example!
Science and technology, art, music and literary compositions and religion stand conspicuously as products of thought.
Thought could have sinister motives and the only way to eliminate them is through thought itself. Thought could distinguish right from wrong.
Empathy, love, amusement, and expression of sorrow are reflections of thought.
Thought relieves worries by understanding or taking decisive action.
Despite the universal virtue of thoughtfulness, some advocate an idea termed mindfulness, claiming the benefits of nurturing this quality to shape mental wellbeing. The concept is defined as focusing attention to the present moment without judgment. A way of forgetting the worries and calming the mind – a form of meditation. A definition coined in the West to decouple the concept from religion. The attitude could have a temporary advantage as a method of softening negative feelings such as sorrow and anger. However, no man or woman can afford to be non-judgmental all the time. It is incompatible with indispensable thoughtfulness! What is the advantage of diverting attention to one thing without discernment during a few tens of minute’s meditation? The instructors of mindfulness meditation tell you to focus attention on trivial things. Whereas in thoughtfulness, you concentrate the mind on challenging issues. Sometimes arriving at groundbreaking scientific discoveries, solution of mathematical problems or the creation of masterpieces in engineering, art, or literature.
The concept of meditation and mindfulness originated in ancient India around 1000 BCE. Vedic ascetics believed the practice would lead to supernatural powers enabling disclosure of the truth. Failing to meet the said aspiration, notwithstanding so many stories in scripture, is discernable. Otherwise, the world would have been awakened to advancement by ancient Indians before the Greeks. The latter culture emphasized thoughtfulness!
In India, Buddha was the first to deviate from the Vedic philosophy. His teachers, Alara Kalama and Uddaka Ramaputra, were adherents of meditation. Unconvinced of their approach, Buddha concluded a thoughtful analysis of the actualities of life should be the path to realisation. However, in an environment dominated by Vedic tradition, meditation residually persisted when Buddha’s teachings transformed into a religion.
In the early 1970s, a few in the West picked up meditation and mindfulness. We Easterners, who criticize Western ideas all the time, got exalted after seeing something Eastern accepted in the Western circles. Thereafter, Easterners took up the subject more seriously, in the spirit of its definition in the West.
Today, mindfulness has become a marketable commodity – a thriving business spreading worldwide, fueled largely by advertising. There are practice centres, lessons onsite and online, and apps for purchase. Articles written by gurus of the field appear on the web.
What attracts people to mindfulness programmes? Many assume them being stressed and depressed needs to improve their mental capacity. In most instances, these are minor complaints and for understandable reasons, they do not seek mainstream medical interventions but go for exaggeratedly advertised alternatives. Mainstream medical treatments are based on rigorous science and spell out both the pros and cons of the procedure, avoiding overstatement. Whereas the alternative sector makes unsubstantiated claims about the efficacy and effectiveness of the treatment.
Advocates of mindfulness claim the benefits of their prescriptions have been proven scientifically. There are reports (mostly in open-access journals which charge a fee for publication) indicating that authors have found positive aspects of mindfulness or identified reasons correlating the efficacy of such activities. However, they rarely meet standards normally required for unequivocal acceptance. The gold standard of scientific scrutiny is the statistically significant reproducibility of claims.
If a mindfulness guru claims his prescription of meditation cures hypertension, he must record the blood pressure of participants before and after completion of the activity and show the blood pressure of a large percentage has stably dropped and repeat the experiment with different clients. He must also conduct sessions where he adopts another prescription (a placebo) under the same conditions and compares the results. This is not enough, he must request someone else to conduct sessions following his prescription, to rule out the influence of the personality of the instructor.
The laity unaware of the above rigid requirements, accede to purported claims of mindfulness proponents.
A few years ago, an article published and widely cited stated that the practice of mindfulness increases the gray matter density of the brain. A more recent study found there is no such correlation. Popular expositions on the subject do not refer to the latter report. Most mindfulness research published seems to have been conducted intending to prove the benefits of the practice. The hard science demands doing the opposite as well-experiments carried out intending to disprove the claims. You need to be skeptical until things are firmly established.
Despite many efforts diverted to disprove Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity, no contradictions have been found in vain to date, strengthening the validity of the theory. Regarding mindfulness, as it stands, benefits can neither be proved nor disproved, to the gold standard of scientific scrutiny.
Some schools in foreign lands have accommodated mindfulness training programs hoping to develop the mental facility of students and Sri Lanka plans to follow. However, studies also reveal these exercises are ineffective or do more harm than good. Have we investigated this issue before imitation?
Should we force our children to focus attention on one single goal without judgment, even for a moment?
Why not allow young minds to roam wild in their deepest imagination and build castles in the air and encourage them to turn these fantasies into realities by nurturing their thoughtfulness?
Be more thoughtful than mindful?