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Glossary›Interconnection

Glossary

Interconnection

The principle that all phenomena—living beings, matter, and consciousness—exist in mutual dependence, with no entity arising or persisting in isolation.

What is Interconnection?

Interconnection refers to the fundamental principle that all phenomena in the universe exist in a state of mutual causality and interdependence. Rather than viewing reality as composed of discrete, independent entities, interconnection posits that every element—from subatomic particles to ecosystems to human consciousness—arises through and is sustained by relationships with other elements. In spiritual and contemplative traditions, this concept challenges the notion of separate selfhood and suggests that perceived boundaries between self and other, organism and environment, are conceptual constructs rather than ontological facts.

The principle operates on multiple scales: ecological (food webs, nutrient cycles), physical (quantum entanglement, gravitational fields), social (economic systems, cultural transmission), and phenomenological (the co-arising of consciousness and its objects). Interconnection is both descriptive—a claim about how reality actually functions—and prescriptive, implying ethical responsibilities that emerge from recognizing our embeddedness in larger systems.

Origins & Lineage

The explicit articulation of interconnection as a philosophical principle appears earliest in the Buddhist doctrine of pratītyasamutpāda (dependent origination), formulated in the teachings attributed to Siddhārtha Gautama in the 5th century BCE. The Pali Canon’s Nidāna-Saṃyutta outlines twelve links showing how suffering arises through chains of causation, each link conditioning the next. By the 2nd century CE, Nāgārjuna’s Mūlamadhyamakakārikā extended this into a full metaphysics: because all phenomena are dependently originated, nothing possesses inherent, independent existence (svabhāva).

Parallel formulations emerged in other traditions. Daoist texts from the 4th century BCE, particularly the Zhuangzi, describe reality as a seamless process where distinctions between things are pragmatic rather than absolute. In the Hindu Upaniṣads (800-400 BCE), the teaching that ātman (individual consciousness) and brahman (universal reality) are identical suggests a non-dual interconnection of all being. Indigenous cosmologies across cultures—from the Lakota concept of mitákuye oyás’iŋ (“all my relations”) to Australian Aboriginal songlines—have long encoded relational ontologies without sharp subject-object divisions.

The 20th century saw scientific validation of interconnection through ecology (Arthur Tansley’s ecosystem concept, 1935), quantum mechanics (EPR paradox and Bell’s theorem, 1960s), and systems theory (Ludwig von Bertalanffy, 1940s-60s). Physicist David Bohm’s implicate order (1980) and biologist Lynn Margulis’s symbiogenesis theory (1967) provided mechanistic models for how interconnection operates in physical and biological domains.

How It’s Practiced

Interconnection is cultivated through contemplative practices designed to directly perceive interdependence rather than merely conceptualize it. In Vipassanā meditation, practitioners observe how sensations, thoughts, and emotions arise in dependence on conditions and immediately dissolve, lacking any permanent core. Tonglen practice in Tibetan Buddhism involves visualizing the exchange of one’s well-being for others’ suffering, training the mind to dissolve perceived separation.

Indra’s Net visualizations—imagining reality as an infinite network of jewels, each reflecting all others—serve as contemplative tools in Huayan Buddhism. Modern adaptations include systems mapping exercises where participants trace the material and social origins of everyday objects (food, clothing, technology) to reveal hidden interdependencies. Nature-based practices like forest bathing (shinrin-yoku) or sit spot protocols encourage direct sensory awareness of ecological relationships.

Group practices include council circles where participants speak and listen from awareness of their interconnection, and collective rituals that enact kinship with non-human beings. Some teachers guide students through somatic exercises: feeling the breath as gift from photosynthesizing plants, sensing the body as colony of trillions of microbial symbionts.

Interconnection Today

Contemporary seekers encounter interconnection primarily through Buddhist meditation centers (Insight Meditation Society, Spirit Rock), which offer residential retreats focusing on interdependence as both philosophy and direct experience. The concept appears in ecopsychology workshops, biomimicry design courses, and climate grief circles where interconnection provides both explanatory framework and source of meaning.

Teachers like Thich Nhat Hanh popularized the term “interbeing” as English rendering of interconnection, spawning a global network of practice communities. Joanna Macy’s Work That Reconnects methodology explicitly uses interconnection as foundation for environmental activism. Academic programs in complexity science, systems thinking, and Indigenous studies examine interconnection through empirical and cultural lenses.

Online platforms offer guided meditations on interconnection, and documentaries like Symbiotic Earth (2019) explore scientific dimensions. Psychedelic-assisted therapy sessions frequently catalyze experiences described as “ego dissolution” or “unity consciousness,” interpreted as direct apprehension of interconnection.

Common Misconceptions

Interconnection does not claim that all things are literally identical or that individual boundaries have no pragmatic reality. Acknowledging interdependence does not require denying that organisms maintain homeostasis or that legal persons have distinct rights and responsibilities. It is an analysis of how entities arise and persist, not a mandate to erase all distinctions.

Interconnection is not inherently optimistic—recognizing mutual causality means acknowledging how harm propagates through systems as readily as benefit. It does not automatically generate compassion; sociopaths can understand interdependence intellectually without ethical transformation. The concept does not require mysticism or metaphysics; one can recognize ecological and economic interdependence on purely empirical grounds.

Some interpret interconnection as meaning “everything happens for a reason” in a teleological sense, but the classical formulation describes efficient causation, not cosmic purpose. Interconnection is not a recent New Age invention but draws on millennia-old philosophical traditions, though contemporary usage sometimes strips away the rigorous analysis present in source texts.

How to Begin

For intellectual grounding, Fritjof Capra’s The Web of Life (1996) surveys scientific perspectives on interconnection across physics, biology, and systems theory. Thich Nhat Hanh’s The Heart of Understanding (1988) offers accessible introduction to Buddhist interdependence through commentary on the Heart Sutra. Joanna Macy’s World as Lover, World as Self (1991) explores practical and psychological dimensions.

To explore through practice, seek introductory Vipassanā or Zen meditation instruction at established centers, where interconnection is taught experientially rather than theoretically. Many centers offer online or in-person day-long introductions before committing to longer retreats. Alternatively, locate a Work That Reconnects workshop in your region, which uses group exercises to explore interconnection’s ecological and social dimensions.

For direct observation, maintain a week-long journal tracing the origins of everything you consume—food, water, electricity, information—mapping the network of human and non-human contributors. This empirical investigation often makes abstract interconnection tangible and personal.

Related terms

interbeingdependent originationsystems thinkingnon dualitydeep ecologyemptiness
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