archiv.ethlife.ethz.ch |
Rubrik: Campus Life The Dalai Lama at the ETH symposium "Fear and anxiety" Ocean of wisdom meets science |
Published: 11.08.2005 06:00 Modified: 11.08.2005 14:16 |
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A big day at ETH: In the presence of the 14th Dalai Lama and Federal Councillor Pascal Couchepin a symposium on "Fear and Anxiety" took place last week. The aim of the event was to combine scientific with Buddhistic approaches and tease out what they have in common. Over 3,000 people followed the proceedings in the main building of ETH and thousands more the transmission on the internet. By Peter Rüegg and Jakob Lindenmeyer Immediately following the arrival of the Dalai Lama, ETH President Olaf Kübler and Federal Councillor Pascal Couchepin had a 40-minute conversation with His Holiness behind closed doors. According to a press communiqué from the Federal Department of Home Affairs (1) the meeting between the councillor and the Dalai Lama took place in a friendly and relaxed atmosphere. Councillor Couchepin welcomed the Dalai Lama in the name of the whole Federal Council as the spiritual leader of the Tibetan Buddhist community in Switzerland. The meeting had no official political character. Nevertheless, the councillor and the Dalai Lama talked about the current situation in the autonomous region of Tibet. Furthermore they discussed questions of religious and cultural freedom as well as about current negotiations between representatives of the Chinese government and the Dalai Lama. Crowded symposiumExcitement was high leading up to the symposium "Fear and Anxiety". In his opening address, Olaf Kübler described the symposium as one of the very special events in ETH's 150th Jubilee year celebrations. Issues of fear and anxiety were dominant in today's world. Should these two negative sentiments govern our lives, then our societal system had failed. We were searching for role models that would help us overcome fear and anxiety. The Dalai Lama was just such a role model. Federal Councillor Couchepin, too talked of a wide-ranging and highly complex theme. The thoughts of the Dalai Lama had touched him deeply, he said. Meetings like this one led to a mutual enrichment of the spiritual traditions of the represented cultures. For his part, in his address the Dalai Lama explained why, from a Buddhist point of view, fear and anxiety arose: from an erroneous understanding and a mistaken interpretation of reality. Knowledge, said his holiness, could lead to freedom and happiness. Another way to overcome negative emotions was presage, "but this," added the Tibetan dignitary with a laugh, "is not scientific."
In his address "The fearful brain", Hanns Möhler, emeritus professor from the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich, concentrated on the scientific aspect and explained the neurobiological basics of fear. Fear and anxiety, said the neurobiologist, played an important role for the survival of the human race. Everyone feels anxiety and fear from time to time. By measuring brain waves and activity science had succeeded in locating this negative emotion in the brain. A specific area of the brain, the so-called amygdala, played a central role. It processes fear experiences, transmits them but also stores them. Owing to the interaction of genetic and environmental factors, normal, more or less natural fear could turn into a pathological anxiety disorder.
But how should one deal with fear? As an example, Möhler recounts the story of Perseus from Greek mythology when he was charged with fighting the snake-headed gorgon Medusa whose victim was turned to stone if he met her gaze. In order to avoid direct eye contact, Perseus used his shield as a mirror. By avoiding direct confrontation with fear, Perseus succeeded in cutting off Medusa's head. Möhler concluded his talk by saying that he hoped that everyone listening would have a shield at hand if they had to confront fear, in order to overcome it–even if not as violently as Perseus. Environment needs more sympathyThe next speaker, the German theologian Eugen Drewermann, (2) tried to illustrate fear against a Christian backdrop. The French Buddhist and molecular biologist Matthieu Ricard linked the theme to Buddhism. Professor Arno Gruen took up the psychological point of view. The clinical diagnosis of anxiety conditions and possible treatments was expounded by Jürgen Margraf from the University of Basle. And Gret Haller, former OSCE Ombudsman for Human Rights for Bosnia nad Herzegovina, concluded this series of addresses by considering fear from a political and modern point of view. The lively moderation of the symposium was assured by Nobel laureate, Richard Ernst, who also initiated the symposium. In the afternoon Richard Ernst was replaced by the co-initiator of the symposium, Pier Luigi Luisi, retired ETH-Professor for Macromolecular Chemistry. Shortly before 4 p.m. the Dalai Lama summed up the symposium. He hoped that this kind of discussion would contribute to a situation where individuals, families and, finally, society would become happier. Among other reasons, he named one of the main problems of our times the lack of sympathy and compassion. "If we develop more sympathy the whole of society will become more honest," said the Dalai Lama. Human beings themselves had the potential to solve existing problems. He directed a special appeal to ETH as an academic institution. It had a special position in the solving of problems; words, to which moderator Richard Ernst could only add his voice. He was hoping for a more joyous and better future, he said, one to which everyone, no matter in what measure, could contribute.
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