Deepak Chopra may be what Julia Sweeney says, but one thing he is not: Stupid. He knows exactly what he is doing.
I suspect that this is correct. The man is not an idiot, but he still might be a fool.
Or, as George Carlin has described them, people can be stupid, full of $#!+, or f***ing nuts. In particular, some highly intelligent people can be incredibly full of $#!+. Thus, while Chopra is not stupid, his position might be untenable for other reasons. Further, it is important that one conclude that Chopra is full of $#!+ based upon the merit (or lack thereof) of his arguments,
rather than say that Chopra is full of $#!+, so therefore his arguments must lack merit.
What seems most unusual is who Chopra is trying to persuade. His argument seems to be in favor of a deity that is not accepted by the majority of theists. It would be odd for Bible-believers to come out in support of his position, as he views the Almighty in a manner at odds with their theology.
Which is, of course, perfectly all right. To suggest that either Dawkins is right or that Bible-believing fundamentalists are right would be yet another false choice. Chopra is at liberty to try to show that both are wrong.
And yet, it is troubling in the extreme that, to make his case, Chopra mischaracterizes Dawkins's position, to the point of being deliberately misleading.
That said, I expect Chopra is probably being fairly accurate in part 4 of his essay, saying:
This brings us to another of Dawkins' [sic] major points.
4. The universe is neither intelligent nor conscious. Science doesn't need those ingredients to explain Nature and its workings. Starting with atoms and molecules governed by strict physical laws, we will eventually explain everything.
There may be some disagreement with this summary of Dawkins's position, perhaps quibbling, perhaps not. But having heard Dawkins speak and having read at least some of his work, I expect that he would agree that there is no evidence that the universe is intelligent or conscious, and that such propositions are not necessary to science in any event.
But what is Chopra's rebuttal? It is hardly scientific, and appears designed to appeal only to the uninformed:
Common sense finds it hard to take this argument seriously, because it leads to nonsense. The brain contains an enormous amount of water and salt. Are we to assume that water is intelligent, or salt is conscious? If they aren't, then we must assume that throwing water and salt together--along with about six other basic building blocks of organic chemicals--suddenly makes them intelligent. The bald fact is that Dawkins defends an absurd position because he can't make the leap to a different set of assumptions.
--Consciousness is part of existence. It wasn't created by molecules.
--Intelligence is an aspect of consciousness.
--Intelligence grows as life grows. Both evolve from within.
--The universe evolved along intelligent lines.
A basic course in biology (likely at the high school level, and certainly at the college level) involves a discussions of emergent properties, reductionist analysis, and scientific assumptions. Chopra apparently scorns them all. If a brain is conscious and intelligent, by Chopra's analysis, then the molecules that make up that brain must be conscious and intelligent as well. (It should then follow that the atoms that make up the molecules are conscious and intelligent, as are the protons and neutrons and electrons that make up the atoms, and the quarks that make up the sub-atomic particles, ad infinitum.)
Chopra labels this "common sense." But is it really?
Daily, matter is destroyed by conversion to energy. If this matter is conscious and intelligent, is this conversion tantamount to murder? Do nuclear power plants kill quadrillions upon quadrillions of conscious, intelligent beings every second by converting their mass to energy??
Leaving that metaphysical morass aside, why on earth should Dawkins--or any other scientist--"make the leap to a different set of assumptions" (Chopra's own words) in the absence of evidence supporting such a leap?
Here Chopra wants a free ride. With no evidence at all, he asserts that universal consciousness must exist because "There's no other way to account for it." Although he is careful to distance himself from "Intelligent Design" proponents, Chopra enjoys adopting one of their tactics: identify a real or imagined mystery, then baldly assert that there is no scientific explanation for it. Then claim victory by default.
I expect that if the universe were conscious and intelligent everywhere, this is a scientific assertion that could be tested. I have taken the liberty of trying to evoke some sort of conscious or intelligent response from a pebble lodged in my shoe, but by all the tests I've applied, the pebble is neither conscious nor intelligent. Similar tests could be devised, I expect, for bacteria and plants, and it would be up to the data to demonstrate consciousness or intelligence. In the absence of such data, there is no reason--whether denoted "common sense" or something else--to assume consciousness and intelligence are literally universal.