Sunday 1 July 2018

The Demon is a Liar





"Jung was a student of Nietzsche’s, and he was also a very astute critic of Nietzsche. He was educated by Freud. Freud started to collate the information that we had pertaining to the notion that people lived inside a dream. 

It was Freud that really popularized the idea of the unconscious mind. We take this for granted to such a degree, today, that we don’t understand how revolutionary the idea was. 

What’s happened with Freud is that we’ve taken all the marrow out of his bones and left the husk behind. Now, when we think about Freud, we just think about the husk, because that’s everything that’s been discarded. 

But so much of what he discovered is part of our popular conception, now—including the idea that your perceptions, your actions, and your thoughts are all informed and shaped by unconscious motivations that are not part of your voluntary control. 

That’s a very, very strange thing. It’s one of the most unsettling things about the psychoanalytic theories. The psychoanalytic theories are something like, ‘you’re a loose collection of living subpersonalities, each with its own set of motivations, perceptions, emotions, and rationales, and you have limited control over that.’ 

You’re like a plurality of internal personalities that’s loosely linked into a unity. 


You know that, because you can’t control yourself very well—which is one of Jung’s objections to Nietzsche's idea that we can create our own values. 

Jung didn’t believe that—especially not after interacting with Freud—because he saw that human beings were deeply, deeply affected by things that were beyond their conscious control. No one really knows how to conceptualize those things. 

The cognitive psychologists think of them as computational machines. 

The ancient people thought of them as gods, although it’s more complicated than that. 

Mars would be the God of rage; that’s the thing that possesses you when you’re angry. It has a viewpoint, and it says what it wants to say, and that might have very little to do with what you want to say, when you’re being sensible. 

It doesn’t just inhabit you: it inhabits everyone, and it lives forever, and it even inhabits animals. 
  
It’s this transcendent psychological entity that inhabits the body politic, like a thought inhabiting the brain. That’s one way of thinking about it. It’s a very strange way of thinking, but it certainly has its merits. Those things, in some sense, are deities. But it’s not that simple. 

Jung got very interested in dreams, and he started to understand the relationship between dreams and myths. 

He was deeply read in mythology, and he would see, in his client’s dreams, echoes of stories that he knew. He started to believe that the dream was the birthplace of the myth and that there was a continual interaction between the two processes: the dream and the story, and storytelling. You can tell your dreams as stories, when you remember them, and some people remember dreams all the time—two or three, at night. I’ve had clients like that. They often have archetypal dreams that have very clear mythological structures. I think that’s more the case with people who are creative—especially if they’re a bit unstable at the time—because the dream tends to occupy the space of uncertainty, and to concentrate on fleshing out the unknown reality, before you get a real grip on it. So the dream is the birthplace of thinking. That’s a good way of thinking about it, because it’s not that clear. It’s doing its best to formulate something. That was Jung’s notion, as of post-Freud, who believed that there were internal censors that were hiding the dream’s true message. That’s not what Jung believed. He believed the dream was doing its best to express a reality that was still outside of fully articulated, conscious comprehension. 

A thought appears in your head, right? That’s obvious. Bang—it’s nothing you ever asked about. What the hell does that mean? A thought appears in your head. What kind of ridiculous explanation is that? It just doesn't help with anything. ‘Where does it come from?’ ‘Well, nowhere. It just appears in my head.’ That’s not a very sophisticated explanation, as it turns out. You might think that those thoughts that you think...Well, where do they come from? They’re often someone else’s thoughts—someone long dead. That might be part of it—just like the words you use to think are utterances of people who have been long dead. You’re informed by the spirit of your ancestors. That’s one way of looking at it. 

Your motivations speak to; your emotions speak to you; your body speaks to you, and it does all that, at least in part, through the dream. The dream is the birthplace of the fully articulated idea. They don’t just come from nowhere fully-fledged. They have a developmental origin, and God only knows how lengthy that origin is. Even to say, ‘I am conscious…’ Chimpanzees don’t say that. It’s been something like 3 million years since we broke from chimpanzees—from the common ancestor. They have no articulated knowledge, very little self-representation, and very little self-consciousness. That’s not the case with us, at all. We had to painstakingly figure all of this out during that 7 million year voyage. I think some of that’s represented and captured in these ancient stories—especially the oldest stories, in Genesis, which are the stories we’re going to start with. Some of the archaic nature of the human being is encapsulated in those stories. It’s very, very instructive, as far as I can tell. 

I’ll give you just a quick example. There’s an idea of sacrifice in the Old Testament, and it’s pretty barbaric. The story of Abraham and Isaac is a good example. Abraham was called on to actually sacrifice his own son, which doesn’t really seem like something that a reasonable God would ask you to do. God, in the Old Testament, is frequently cruel, arbitrary, demanding, and paradoxical, which is one of the things that really gives the book life. It wasn’t edited by a committee that was concerned with not offending anyone. That’s for sure. 

So Jung believed that the dream was the birthplace of thought. I’ve been extending that idea, because one of the things I wondered about deeply—you have a dream, and then someone interprets it. 

You can argue about whether or not an interpretation is valid, just like you can argue about whether your interpretation of a novel or a movie is valid.  

It’s a very difficult thing to determine with any degree of accuracy—which accounts, in part, for the postmodern critique. But my observation has been that people will present a dream and, sometimes, we can extract out real, useful information from it that the person didn’t appear to know, and they get a flash of insight. That’s a marker that we stumbled on something that unites part of that person that wasn’t united before. It pulls things together, which is often what a good story will do, or, sometimes, a good theory. Things snap together for you, and a little light goes on. That’s one of the markers that I’ve used for accuracy and dreams, in my own family. 

When I was first married, I’d have fights with my wife—arguments about this and that. I’m fairly hot-headed, and I’d get all puffed up and agitated about whatever we were arguing about. She’d go to sleep, which was really annoying. It was so annoying, because I couldn’t sleep. I’d be chewing off my fingernails, and she’d be sleeping peacefully beside me. 

Maddening. 

But, often, she’d have a dream, and she’d discuss it with me the next morning. We’d unravel what was at the bottom of our argument. That was unbelievably useful, even though it was extraordinary aggravating. I was convinced by Jung. 

His ideas about the relationship between dreams, mythology, drama, and literature made sense to me, and his ideas about the relationship between man and art. 


What happens in Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment is that the main character, whose name is Raskolnikov, decides that there’s no intrinsic value to other people and that, as a consequence, he can do whatever he wants. It’s only cowardice that stops him from acting. Why would it be anything else if value of other people is just an arbitrary superstition? Well, then why can’t I do exactly what I want, when I want? Which is the psychopath’s viewpoint. Well, so Raskolnikov does: he kills someone who’s a very horrible person, and he has very good reasons for killing her. He’s half-starved, and a little bit insane, and possessed by this ideology—it’s a brilliant, brilliant layout—and he finds out something after he kills her, which is that the post-killing Raskolnikov and the pre-killing Raskolnikov are not the same person, even a little bit, because he’s broken a rule. 


He’s broken a serious rule and there’s no going back. 

Crime and Punishment is the best investigation, I know, of what happens if you take the notion that there’s nothing divine about the individual seriously. Most of the people I know who are deeply atheistic — and I understand why they’re deeply atheistic — haven’t contended with people like Dostoevsky

Not as far as I can tell, because I don’t see logical flaws in Crime and Punishment. 

I think he got the psychology exactly right. Dostoevsky’s amazing for this. In one of his books, The Devils, he describes a political scenario that's not much different than the one we find ourselves in, now. 

There’s these people who are possessed by Rationalistic, Utopian, Atheistic ideas, and they’re very powerful.

They give rise to The Communist Revolution. 
They’re Powerful Ideas. 

His character, Stavrogin, also acts out the presupposition that human beings have no intrinsic nature and no intrinsic value. It’s another brilliant investigation. Dostoevsky prophesized what will happen to a society if it goes down that road, and he was dead, exactly accurate. It’s uncanny to read Dostoevsky's The Possessed — or The Devils, depending on the translation — and to read Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago. One is 'Fiction' and Prophecy, and the second is, ‘Hey, look — it turned out exactly the way Dostoevsky said it would, for exactly the same reasons.’ 

It’s quite remarkable. So the question is, do you contend seriously with the idea that, A, There’s something cosmically constitutive about consciousness? and B, that that might well be considered divine? and C, That that is instantiated in every person? 

And then ask yourself — if you’re not a Criminal — if you don’t act it out? And then ask yourself What That Means

Is that Reflective of a Reality? Is it a metaphor? Maybe it’s a complex metaphor that we have to use to organize our societies. It could well be. 

But even as a metaphor, it’s True Enough so that we mess with it at our peril

It also took people a very long time to figure out.

Sacred and Untouchable




When coming into contact with image of The Ideal, even those of your enemies, The Foreign Gods, from the perspective of any visitor to the Temples, Sacred Groves and other such consecrated ground --

When approaching  
Usual Vault Rules Apply :

When in ThePressence  or Approaching The Divinity,

TOUCH-NOT, Lest Thee Be TOUCHED


 But what the story was designed to indicate, in my opinion, is that  

There are certain things that 
you touch at your peril 
regardless of your intentions. 

LIKE STAR WARS



And those things that you touch at your peril, regardless of your intentions, most cultures regard as 

Sacred

and

Untouchable.



"We Know Your DARKEST SECRET. And Therefore, You're Part of US."



"You don't invent technology and then decide what to do with it - you come up with an artistic problem, and then you have to invent the technology in order to accomplish it.

So, it is the opposite to what everyone thinks it is, and any Artist will tell you that.

And Art  - on ALL levels - is just Technology.

Which why - people will say 'Monkeys can do paintings'

Well, they can't, really.

They can do scribbling, they can do, like my 2 year old does -but if you want to say ' I want to convey an emotion, to another Human Being', that's something only Human  Beings can do.

Animals can do it by roaring in your face or biting your hand off (that usually has an effect).

But to do it in a painting; to do it in a play, or a story, in poetry - or anything that's in The Arts - you have to be a Human Being.




The Patron creates The Propaganda - and what I wanted to do was go back to some of the Older Propaganda, which was consistant through ALL of The Societies, Mythology -

Which is to say "What Do They ALL Believe..?"

Because all of this propaganda was created INDEPENDENTLY.

And what are these things which they ALL believe,  which is, Relationships with your Father, Relationships with your Society, Relationships with Your History, Relationships with The Gods - all of this stuff, it's old, but there were psychological motiffs that were created, through storytelling, primarily ORAL storytelling, that explained WHAT they believed in and WHO they believed in.

So what I wanted to do was go back and find the psychological motiffs that underlie that - those grow out of Popularism.

And to say that - not all - but a majority of people, BOYS, have a certain psychological relationship with Their Father -

And that's been going on through History, and trying to explain that to say :

"We Know Your DARKEST SECRET. And Therefore, You're Part of US.

Because We All Know The SAME THINGS  -

We Know What You're Thinking About Your Mother; We Know What You Think About Your Bother; We Know What You Think  About Your Father REALLY -"



- George Lucas

Words







Fight Club - Get Off My Porch







WM: What were the names of the two great Pillars which were placed at the porchway or entrance of King Solomon's Temple?
Candidate: That on the left was called Boaz, and that on the right Jachin.
WM: What are their separate and conjoint significations?
Candidate: The former denotes in strength, the latter, to establish; and when conjoined, stability, for God said, ‘In strength I will establish this Mine house to stand firm for ever.’


"The Blue Degrees are but the outer court or portico of the Temple. Part of
the symbols are displayed there to the Initiate, but he is intentionally
misled by false interpretations. 

It is not intended that he shall understand
them; but it is intended that he shall imagine he understands them

Their true explication is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of Masonry."




The Widow's Son


"The Blue Degrees are but the outer court or portico of the Temple. Part of
the symbols are displayed there to the Initiate, but he is intentionally
misled by false interpretations. 

It is not intended that he shall understand
them; but it is intended that he shall imagine he understands them

Their
true explication is reserved for the Adepts, the Princes of Masonry.

Saturday 30 June 2018

Self-Censoring Will Get You Nowhere




"Don't underestimate the Power of Your Speech

Now, y'know,
Western Culture is Phallogocentric 
let's say it - so lets just say 
"Yeah, alright, that's just fine - " :

That's exactly what it is, it's predicated on the idea of 
The Logos

The Logos is The Sacred Element of Western Culture

and what does that mean...?

It means that -

Your Capacity for Speech is
DIVINE

It's 
The Thing That Generates Order Order Out of Chaos

and then 
(sometimes)

Turns Pathological Order into Chaos
When It Has To


DON'T UNDERESTIMATE THE POWER OF 
TRUTH

There's nothing more Power-full


Now, in order speak what you regard as The Truth,

You Have to Let Go of The Outcome

You have to think,
"Alright, I am going to Say What I Think

Stupid as I am
Biased as I am
Ignorant as I am

I am going to State What I Think, 
as clearly as I can,
and I am going to 
Live With the Consequences

NO MATTER 
WHAT THEY ARE  

NOTHING BRINGS A BETTER WORLD INTO BEING THAN THE STATED TRUTH



"What Jordan Peterson Lacks"









The Horizon



" Dr. Peterson, you appeared in one of my Ayahuasca visions. "

It might account for why I’ve been rather fatigued lately. 


"Dr. Peterson, you appeared in one of my Ayahuasca visions, and I asked her, 

Who is Jordan Peterson? 
What is He Doing?" 

 ( Which is something I’d really like to know, as well. ) 


And she responded with crystalline clarity: 

" He is here to Invoke and Initiate 
The Divine Masculine Principle 
on Earth at This Time."

 So, I’m up here to thank you deeply and profoundly on behalf of The Great Mother Herself, 
The Goddess, 
The Divine Feminine Principle, 
who has been eagerly awaiting 
The Awakening of The Masculine Principle 
into 
Divinity and Service. '

So…You don’t get a letter like that every day. 

Actually, I get a letter or two like that every day. 



"So, there is a scene in Pinocchio where 
Gepetto Wishes On a Star -

And what that means is, that 
He lifts up his eyes beyond The Horizon 
to see something Transcendent -

Something Ultimate, because that's What a Star is
it's part of The Eternity of The Night Sky.

And so he lifts his eyes up 
above his daily concerns, and he says :

"What I Want More Than Anything Else is that 
My Creation Will Become a Genuine Individual."

Right, it's a Heroic Gesture, 
because it's so unlikely.

And that catalyses The Puppet's 
transformation  into 
A Real Being.

And we start as puppets.

And so, The Trick is, to 
get rid of your 
goddamn strings.

Sovereignty




" I’m going to go over some of the attributes of this abstracted ideal that we’ve formalized as God, but that’s the first hypothesis: a philosophical or moral ideal manifests itself first as a concrete pattern of behavior that’s characteristic of a single individual. 

And then it’s a set of individuals, and then it’s an abstraction from that set, and then you have the abstraction, and it’s so important. 

Here’s a political implication: One of the debates, we might say, between early Christianity and the late Roman Empire was whether or not an emperor could be God, literally to be deified and put into a temple. 

You can see why that might happen because that’s someone at the pinnacle of a very steep hierarchy who has a tremendous amount of power and influence.

The Christian response to that was, 

Never confuse the specific Sovereign with the principle of Sovereignty itself. 

It’s brilliant. 

You can see how difficult it is to come up with an idea like that, so that even the person who has the power is actually subordinate to a divine principle, for lack of a better word. 

Even the king himself is subordinate to the principle. 

We still believe that because we believe our Prime Minister is subordinate to the damn law.

Whatever the body of law, there's a principle inside that even the leader is subordinate to. 

Without that, you could argue you can’t even have a civilized society, because your leader immediately turns into something that’s transcendent and all-powerful. 

That's certainly what happened in the Soviet Union, and what happened in Maoist China, and what happened in Nazi Germany. There was nothing for the powerful to subordinate themselves to.

You’re supposed to be subordinate to God. 

What does that mean

We’re going to tear that idea apart, but partly what that means is that you’re subordinate—even if you’re sovereign—to the principles of sovereignty itself. And then the question is, what the hell is the principles of sovereignty? 

I would say we have been working that out for a very long period of time. That’s one of the things that we’ll talk about. "




Before The Law, there stands a Guard. 

A Man comes from the country, begging admittance to The Law. 

But The Guard cannot admit him. 

May he hope to enter at a later time? 

That is possible, said The Guard. 

The man tries to peer through the entrance. 

He'd been taught that The Law was to be accessible to every man. 

"Do not attempt to enter without my permission", says the guard. "I am very powerful. Yet I am the least of all the guards. From hall to hall, door after door, each guard is more powerful than the last."

By the guard's permission, the man sits by the side of the door, and there he waits. 

For years, he waits. 

Everything he has, he gives away in the hope of bribing the guard, who never fails to say to him "I take what you give me only so that you will not feel that you left something undone." 

Keeping his watch during the long years, the man has come to know even the fleas on The Guard's fur collar. 

Growing childish in old age, he begs the fleas to persuade The Guard to change his mind and allow him to enter. 

His sight has dimmed, but in the darkness he perceives a radiance streaming immortally from the door of the law. 

And now, before he dies, all he's experienced condenses into one question, a question he's never asked. He beckons the guard. 

Says the guard, "You are insatiable! What is it now?" 

Says the man, "Every man strives to attain the law. How is it then that in all these years, no one else has ever come here, seeking admittance?"

 His hearing has failed, so the guard yells into his ear. "Nobody else but you could ever have obtained admittance. No one else could enter this door! This door was intended only for you! And now, I'm going to close it." 

This tale is told during the story called "The Trial". 

It's been said that the logic of this story is the logic of a dream... a nightmare.




The notion that every single human being, regardless of their peculiarities, strangenesses, sins, crimes, and all of that, has something divine in them that needs to be regarded with respect, plays an integral role, at least an analogous role, in the creation of habitable order out of chaos. That’s a magnificent, remarkable, crazy idea. And yet we developed it, and I do firmly believe that it sits at the base of our legal system.

I think it is the cornerstone of our legal system. 


That’s the notion that everyone is equal before God, which is, of course, such a strange idea. It’s very difficult to understand how anybody could have ever come up with that idea, because the manifold differences between people are so obvious and so evident that you could say that the natural way of viewing human being is in this extreme hierarchical manner, where some people are contemptible and easily brushed off as pointless and pathological and without value, and all the power accrues to a certain tiny aristocratic minority at the top.


But if you look at the way that the idea of the individual Sovereign developed, it’s clear that it unfolded over thousands and perhaps tens of thousands of years before it became something firmly fixed in the imagination.

Each individual has something of transcendent value about them. 

Man, I tell you, we dispense with that idea at our serious peril

If you’re gonna take that idea seriously—which you do because you act it out, because otherwise you wouldn’t be law-abiding citizens—then you act that idea out. It’s firmly shared by everyone who acts in a civilized manner. The question is, why in the world do you believe it?

Assuming that you believe what you act out, which I think is a really good way of fundamentally defining beliefs.

You’re The Spirit That Gives The Dead Structure Life




" All right, I guess we’ll start. Last week I talked to you about a line in the New Testament that was from John. It was a line that was designed to parallel the opening of Genesis. It’s a really important line. I thought I would reemphasize it, because the Bible is a book that’s been written forward and backwards in time—like most books, because if you write a book, of course, when you get to the end, if you’re a writer, you can adjust the beginning, and so on. It has this odd appearance of linearity, but it isn’t linear. It’s like you’re God, standing outside of time. That’s your book, and you can play with time anywhere along it. The people who put the book together—or the books together—took full advantage of that. It gives the story odd parallels in many, many places and this is one of the major parallels—at least from the perspective of the Christian interpretation of the Bible, which, of course, includes the New Testament.

So there’s this strange idea that Christ was the same factor, or force, that God used at the beginning of time to speak habitable order into being. That’s a very, very strange idea. It’s not something that can be just easily dismissed as superstition, partly because it’s so strange. It doesn’t even fit the definition of a superstitious belief. It’s a dream-like belief, and what I see in many of the ideas in the Bible is these dream-like ideas that underlie our normative cognition and that constitute the ground from which our more articulated and explicit ideas have emerged.

This idea’s so complicated that it’s still mostly embedded in dream-like form, but it seems to have something to do with the primacy of consciousness. This is one of the biggest issues regarding the structure of reality, as far as I can tell, because everyone from physicists to neurobiologists debate this. The stumbling block for a purely objective view of the world seems, to me, to be consciousness.

Consciousness has all sorts of strange properties. For example, it isn’t obvious what constitutes 'Time', or at least duration, in the absence of consciousness. 

It isn’t also easy to understand what constituted 'Being' in the absence of consciousness, because it seems to be the case—well, if a movie is running and there’s no one to watch it…

I know it sounds like the tree in the forest idea, but it’s not that idea at all. 


If a movie is running and no one’s watching it, in what sense can you say that there’s even a movie running? Because the movie seems to be the experience of the movie, not the objective elements of the movie. There’s something about the world—at least insofar as we’re in it as human beings—that is dependent on conscious experience of the world.

Now, of course, you can take consciousness out of the world and say, well, if none of us were here, if there was no such thing as consciousness, then the cosmos would continue running the way it is running.

But it depends on what, exactly, you mean by 'The Cosmos' when you make a statement like that. There’s something about the subjective experience of reality that gives it reality, and since we’re all pretty enamoured at our own consciousnesses—although they’re painful, because they define our being—it’s not unreasonable to give consciousness a kind of metaphysical primacy.

It’s a deeper idea than that because there’s physicists—and they’re not trivial physicists—like John Wheeler, who believes that consciousness plays a constitutive role in transforming the chaotic potential of being into the actuality of being. He’s not alive anymore, but he actually thought about it as playing a constitutive role. Then, from the neurobiological perspective, from the scientific perspective, consciousness is not something that we understand. I don’t think we understand it at all. It’s something we can’t get a handle on with our fundamental, materialist philosophy, and I don’t know why that is. It’s quite frustrating, if you’re a scientist, but it isn’t clear to me that we’ve made any progress whatsoever in understanding consciousness, even though, well, we’ve been trying to understand it for hundreds of years, and even though psychologists and neurobiologists and so forth have really put a lot of effort into understanding consciousness from a scientific perspective in the last 50 years.

Anyways, what it seems to me is the idea that God used the word to extract habitable order out of chaos at the beginning of time, which is roughly the right way of thinking about it. It seems to me deeply allied with the idea that what it is that we do as human beings is encounter something like the formless and potential chaos. I mean, we’re not omniscient and we can’t just do whatever we want. That’s always what we’re grappling with, and somehow we use our consciousness to give that form. This is how people act. If you look at how they regard themselves, it’s how they act, because you say things to people like, you should live up to your potential, and you make a case that there’s something about a person that’s more than what is that yet could be if only they’d participate in the process properly. Everyone knows what that means, and no one acts like a mystery has been uttered when you say that.

You can see a situation in your own life that’s full of potential. You’re often extremely excited when you encounter something that’s full of potential, because what you see is something that could be. You see a future beckoning for you that could be if only you interacted with it properly, and it activates your nervous system in a very basic way. We even understand how that happens to the degree that we understand how the nervous system works. The systems that mediate positive emotion are governed, roughly, by neurochemical dopamine, which have their roots way down in the ancient hypothalamus, a very, very archaic and fundamental part of the brain that responds to potential, or the possibility of accruing something new and valuable. It responds to potential with active movement forward and engagement. And so we’re engaged in the world as potential, and it looks like consciousness does that.

This is the main idea that it think has been put forth in Genesis 1. From what I gather, there’s always three causal elements that make up being at the bottom of world mythology. One is the formless potential that makes up being once it’s interacted with, and that’s generally given a feminine nature. I think that’s because it’s like the source from which all things emerge and rise. It’s more complicated than that, but then there’s some kind of interpretive structure that has to grapple with that formless potential.


I think that’s the sort of thing that’s alluded to by Immanuel Kant when he was criticizing the notion that all of information comes from sense data, which would be the pure empirical perspective. When you encounter the world, you encounter it with a cognitive structure that already has shape. It’s already in you, this structure.

Without that a priori structure, you wouldn’t be able to take the formless potential and give it structure. 

It’s akin, in some way, to the idea of God the Father, and I’ll try to develop that idea more. It’s the notion that there’s something in all of us that transcends all of us, that’s deeply structural, that’s part of this ancient evolutionary and cultural process, that enables us to grapple with the formless potential and bring forth reality, roughly speaking.

And then there’s the final element, and that element seems to be something like consciousness that actually inheres in the individual.

So it’s not only that you have the structure: it’s that the structure has the capacity for action in the world.  

It’s like you’re this spirit that gives the dead structure life.  

As far as I can tell, the Trinitarian notion that characterizes Christianity is something like formless potential—which is never given a status of a deity in Christianity—and then the notion that there’s an a priori interpretive structure that’s a consequence of our ancient existence as beings. The notion of a structure goes back as far in time as you can go. Then there is the idea of a consciousness that is the tool of that structure. It interacts with the world and gives it reality. That’s the word, as far as I can tell.

The notion is that there’s a Father, and that’s the structure, and there’s a Son that’s transcendent and characterizes consciousness itself. 

It’s the Son, the speaking of the Son, that is the active principle that turns chaos into order. 

It’s such a sophisticated idea. 

There’s something about it that’s, at least, phenomenologically accurate

You do have an interpretive structure and you couldn’t understand anything without it. 

Your very body is an interpretive structure. 

It’s been crafted over, let’s say, three billion years of evolution. 

Without that, you wouldn’t be able to perceive anything, and it’s taken a lot of death and struggle and tragedy to produce you, the thing that’s capable of encountering this immense chaos that surrounds us and transforming it into habitable order.  
There’s the idea, too, of course, that’s deeply embedded in the first chapters of Genesis, which is a staggering idea and certainly not one that’s likely, that human beings, both male and female, were made in the image of God. That’s a very difficult thing to understand, partly because the God that’s referred to in those chapters has a polytheistic element, although it’s an element that's moving rapidly towards a unified monotheism. But it’s not also obvious to me why people would come up with that concept. I don’t really think that, when we think about each other, we immediately think God-like.


The notion that every single human being, regardless of their peculiarities, strangenesses, sins, crimes, and all of that, has something divine in them that needs to be regarded with respect, plays an integral role, at least an analogous role, in the creation of habitable order out of chaos. That’s a magnificent, remarkable, crazy idea. And yet we developed it, and I do firmly believe that it sits at the base of our legal system. "

Friday 29 June 2018

That's The Tyler


The Mouth of Sauron 
 is what emerges from The Black Gate
when you approach, 
To Talk You Out of Coming in.






"That's Not Your Opinion."

"You Don't Really Believe That."

"You Don’t Really Know What You’re Talking About."

"That Isn't True."


I started to pay very careful attention to what I was saying

I don’t know if that happened voluntarily or involuntarily, but I could feel a sort of split developing in my psyche. 

I’ve actually had students tell me that the same thing has happened to them after they’ve listened to some of the material that I’ve been describing to all of you. 

But I split into two, let’s say. 

One part was the old me that was talking a lot, that liked to argue, and that liked ideas. 

There was another part that was watching that part, just with its eyes opened, and neutrally judging. 

The Part that was Neutrally Judging was watching The Part That was Talking, and going,

that wasn’t your idea; 
you don’t really believe that; 

You Don’t really know what you’re talking about; 

That Isn’t True. 

I thought, 
"Hm! That’s really interesting!" 

That was happening to like 95 percent of what I was saying, and then I didn’t really know What to Do. 

I thought, 
"Okay, This is Strange. Maybe I fragmented, and that’s just Not a Good Thing, at all." 

It’s not like I was hearing voices, or anything like that. 

It wasn’t like that. 

People have multiple parts. 

So then I had this weird conundrum: 

"Which of These Two Things are Me?
Is it The Part That’s Listening and Saying --

'No, that’s rubbish'
'That’s a lie'
'You’re doing that to impress People'
'You’re just trying to Win The Argument.' 

Was that me?

Or was I the part that was going about its normal, verbal business? 

I didn’t know, but I decided that 
I would go with The Critic. 

And then what I tried to do 
— what I learned to do, I think — 
was to 
Stop Saying Things that Made Me Weak.

 I mean, I’m still trying to do that. 

I’m always feeling, when I talk, whether or not the words that I am saying are making me align or making me come apart. 

I really do think that the alignment is the right way to conceptualize it, because if you say things as true as you can say them, then they come out of The Depths inside of you. 

We don’t know where thoughts come from. 

We don’t know how far down into your substructure the thoughts emerge. 

We don’t know what process of physiological alignment is necessary for you to speak from the core of your being. 
We don’t understand any of that — we don’t even conceptualize that. 

But I believe that you can feel that. 

I learned some of that by reading Carl Rogers, who’s a great clinician. 

He talked about mental health, in part, as the coherence between the spiritual —
or the abstract — and the physical —
that the two things were aligned

There’s a lot of ideas of alignment in Psychoanalytic and Clinical Thinking. 

But, anyways, I decided that I would start practicing not saying things that would make me weak. 

What happened was that I had to stop saying almost everything that I was saying —
95 percent of it. 

That’s a hell of a shock — this was over a few months — to wake up and realize that you’re mostly DEAD WOOD. 

It’s a shock. 

You might think, well, 
"Do You Really Want All of That to Burn Off? 

Well, there’s nothing left but a little husk — 5 percent of you.

Well, if that 5 percent is SOLID, then maybe that’s exactly what you want to have happen.



Men Don't Struggle for Power




Men Don't Struggle for Power
That isn't What Men Do. 

Not if They're Civilised. 


They size each other up
and 
Elect The Most Competent.



“[he was] not naturally wicked but, on the contrary, as guileless as any man that ever lived. 

His great simplicity, however, together with his cowardice, made him the slave of his companions, and it was through them that he at first, out of ignorance, missed the better life and then was led on into lustful and cruel habits, which soon became second nature.


And this, I think, Marcus clearly perceived beforehand. Commodus was nineteen years old when his father died, leaving him many guardians, among whom were numbered the best men of the senate. 

But their suggestions and counsels Commodus rejected, and after making a truce with the barbarians he rushed to Rome; for he hated all exertion and craved the comfortable life of the city. 

Cassius Dio




Terminator X Speaks with His Hands




There's been a lot of death as a prerequisite to the embodied form that you take. 

It’s taken all that trial and error to produce something, like you, that can interact with the complexity of the world well enough to last the relatively paltry 80 or so years that you can last.

This may be wrong, but I think, at least, it’s a useful hypothesis: I think the idea of God the Father is something like the birth of the idea that there has to be an internal structure, out of which consciousness itself rises, that gives form to things.

If that's the case—and perhaps it’s not—it’s certainly a reflection of the kind of factual truth that I’ve been describing. 

I also mentioned that I see the idea of both the Holy Spirit, and most specifically of Christ, in the form of The Word, as the active consciousness that that structure produces and uses, not only to formulate The World—because we formulate The World, at least The World that we experience—but also to change and modify That World.

There’s absolutely no doubt that we do that.


We do that partly with our bodies, which are optimally evolved to do that, and that is why we have hands, unlike dolphins, that have very large brains, like us, but can't really change the world.

We’re adapted and evolved to change the world. Our speech is really an extension of our ability to use our hands. 

The speech systems that we use are a very well-developed motor skill and, generally speaking, your dominant linguistic hemisphere is the same as your dominant hand.

People talk with their hands—like me, as you may have noticed—and we use sign language. There’s a tight relationship between the use of the hand and the use of language. 

That’s partly because language is a productive force, and the hand is part of what changes the world. 

All those things are tied together in a very, very complex way with this a priori structure, and also with the embodied structure.

I also think that's part of the reason why classical Christianity put such an emphasis not only on the divinity of the spirit, but also on the divinity of the body, which is a harder thing to grapple with. 

It’s easier for people to think—if you think in religious terms, at all—that you have some sort of transcendent spirit that is somehow detached from the body, and that it might have some life after death. 

But Christianity, in particular, really insists on the divinity of the body.