I have suggested in previous postings that the attempt to take language and
conceptualisation from a traditionalist culture (such as South Asian)
into a modernised and modernising one was more likely to obfuscate than
enlighten. On the other hand, I suggested that traditionalist cultures
had a great deal of a practical nature to teach us about techniques for
personal development.
The problem here is that the West’s tendency is either to dismiss
non-Western thinking entirely as non-scientific, or even dangerous if
mishandled, or to turn it into a fetish by adopting the forms of a
tradition but not investigate the deep meaning of the thinking involved with a
philosophical eye.
The classic case study is Neo-Tantra where the use of sexual
activity for personal transformation on an occasional and highly
disciplined basis linked to a very traditionalist vision of society has
been transformed into a sort of couple guidance therapy for confused
liberal adults. These ‘followers’ persist in using Sanskrit names, about which most
must have limited understanding, to act as cover and excuse for
something for which there should be no cover or excuse at all – good sex
between willing adults.
The sacralisation of sexuality is getting out of hand. One of the
reasons for this is that sexually healthy Westerners, especially women,
constantly have to make excuses in our prevailing culture for having a
perfectly healthy or business-like attitude to what is often a risky
(though less so today than at any time in history) but otherwise highly
pleasurable, amusing and very creative activity.
Having to engage in personal relations with a ‘blessed be’ or a
‘namaste’ in tow is a back-handed compliment to the dominant repressive
culture. It takes open attitudes to the body and sexuality (and to
transgression that harms no one) and puts them into a box that contains
the libido as far away from the ‘normal’ world as is possible in a free
society.
This containment process uses ritual and strange language forms in
order to make a high price of entry to anyone who wants to express
themselves openly but without the ritual baggage. It is self censorship
with sacral sub-cultures doing the system's work for it. ‘Conventional’ culture, outside these ‘sacred’ models to which we
might add Thelema and many others, then throws healthy sexuality into
two challenging pots – the ‘normal’ which avoids the subject altogether
and ‘swinger’ or ‘fetish’ sub-cultures where identity is sexual and
little more. True sexual normality is avoided in every way possible –
conventional, sacral or sub-cultural.
Those who lose themselves in ritualised separation are not to be
condemned or blamed for this at all. As we have seen from the sheer
effort required to expose something that was an ‘absolute wrong’
yet protected by conventional attitudes to the inconvenient truth (priestly
child abuse), those with a radical or free sexuality, having seen
previous waves of liberation crushed by material reality and cultural
conformity, have every reason to create closed self-protective
societies.
In this, they are like early Reformation reformers faced with the
sheer weight of Catholic cultural power. The excessive sacralisation of
sexuality in mock-traditional clothing liberates in one direction only
to create psychological bondage in another.
The Early Reformation analogy is a good one. The Reformers rebelled
against the Church but only within some of the same assumptions about
the existence of God on peculiarly Christian magical lines and men were
killed over transubstantiation in a way that now seems absurd. A genuine revolution against deist obscurantism only seriously took
hold in the eighteenth century and saw equal status for conventional
God-worshippers and more relaxed and indifferent others (and then only
in the most advanced communities in the world which still do not include those
of the American backwoods) in the last fifty or so years.
You still do not get much a choice in the matter across the bulk of
the Islamic world or, if you accept communism as a world religion, where
Communists rule.
Our current revolution in sexuality is still operating on
Judaeo-Christian assumptions redrafted in the forms of nature religion
and traditionalism. It has still to break free and become a
non-essentialist and humanist response to the scientific understanding
of the merging of brain and body.
Let us concentrate on just one concept that has migrated from the
East to the West – Kundalini, the coiled bodily energy allegedly
positioned at the base of the spine that is analogous to the source of
libido in the West, unconscious and instinctive.
This energy, which some of us feel more than others, was placed in
the Western brain by scientists at the beginning of the last century but is now seen
to be as much operative in the flow of chemicals throughout the body as
in some free-floating unconscious.
The South Asians literally embodied this force, with great
imagination, as a snake or as a goddess. The force is Shakti and it
comes into play when Shiva and her consort make love. We (as humans)
repeat with appropriate reverence this divine coupling when we make
love. It is an approach to 'spiritual experience' deliberately abandoned by the
Christian priesthood.
But this is not going to be a polemic against the New Age appropriation
of the idea of Kundalini or against the simplicities of Neo-Tantra. On
the contrary, the arrival of every new idea has to be seen in its
context – what purpose did it serve that made it attractive? The arrival of bastardised forms of South Asian thinking have proved
a powerful liberating half-way house between a previous state – in
which Judaeo-Christian mentality wholly disembodied libido – and a
future state in which (thanks more to the slow process of scientific
discovery than revelation) libido and embodiment require no special
rationale but are seen as two sides of the same coin of simple human
‘being’.
One of the great questions here, because Kundalini is described in
goddess and snake terms, is whether art or imagination hinders or helps
true understanding.
I would contend that, where there is no materialist or scientific
language for what we ‘know’ from introspection or experience (but which a
whole culture insists on denying), art and imagination have to come
into force to avoid total dessication of the soul.
But sometimes art or imagination can become neurotic, obfuscate and
cause us to avoid the truths that scientific investigation reveals. So
it is with sexuality and Kundalini. The reality of Kundalini is ignored
in one culture (the West) but then turned into a goddess or sleeping
serpent in the other (the East).
The latter is an improvement on the former but it is not ‘truth’ and
it gives excessive power to priests and gurus and teachers who
allegedly interpret the signs and symbols of the practice. The point
being that the central lesson of Kundalini thinking is that it must
be a release from signs and symbols.
In a traditional society, the language of signs and symbols are less
easy to escape than in a modern society precisely because we have so
many of them.
We have so much choice that we can be cavalier about their
importance and being cavalier about signs and symbols is the first step
towards rejecting them to ‘find oneself’. Simply replacing one set of
signs and symbols with another – as in Neo-Tantra – misses the point.
The truths in Kundalini are perhaps best understood in terms of
‘visualisation’ – the ability to master the body through the systematic
use of imagination (which involves focusing down on signs and symbols in
order to eliminate them) is analogous to the rational mental modelling
used to master one’s immediate social environment.
The self and society are interlocked through body. The body encases
the physical systems that underpin the emotion and instincts that
interpret perception and make the paradigms of thought. The body is also
the tool by which the mind communicates both directly and through social
signs to others.
The body, in short, is central to the flow from mind to society and
from society to mind. Social control of the body is a means of
controlling the mind and mental command of the body liberates one from
enslavement to others.
Disembodied mind (especially when infected by pure reason) is
useless in managing society effectively. The body in its animal state
cannot have any form of meaningful consciousness, let alone a
‘spiritual’ one.
The coil that is Kundalini sits at the core of the sacrum bone.
This, in itself, is significant. It is where our ‘gut’ meets the ground
when we sit, rested. Our feet connect to the ground, of course, but our
feet connect in action and action is our working on the world, our
social self.
When we think we sit - just as we lie down to sleep and lose
ourselves in our unconscious dreams at the other end of the awareness
spectrum. Sitting places the base of the spine close to the ground.
In the visualisation, we uncoil ourselves from our base in matter,
not accidentally closest to the point where we exude matter in
defecation, in a series of stages up to the highest experience of being
within the mind itself.
The process of unravelling self from ground to mind can presuppose
what that ground is (all matter is much the same at core) but cannot
presuppose how the expression of self will develop though to the final
state of alleged ‘pure consciousness’ which seems also to be much the
same at core whoever experiences it.
The variability of imaginative meanings for Kundalini matches the
variability in selves so that the libidinous truly represents only one
type of mind that is of equal value to the mind whose highest method is
thinking and another whose method already implies the sense of being
‘at one’ with all things as pure consciousness from the beginning.
The common denominator is that the highest state of possible being
is one where a person recognises themselves as integrated with matter as
matter-consciousness even if some are deluded into thinking that they
have become pure consciousness (as if the mind can ever actually detach
itself from the body).
Does pineal gland activation have some link to the
sense of heightened awareness associated with reality (confirming an intuition of Descartes)? The research is unclear but the scientific exploration of
‘spiritual states’ is still in its infancy - some of it indicates that
“the practice of meditation activates neural structures involved in
attention and control of the autonomic nervous system.” The physiological basis of spiritual states seems increasingly
likely to be demonstrated as biochemically connected without in the least diminishing the
importance and value of those states.
The self-awareness of matter-consciousness arises ultimately and
only from the manipulation of matter in stages - not always through
conscious mastery of the body but also (as in the tantric or shamanistic
approaches) through the employment of different aspects of the body,
moving stage by stage until that aspect of the body that is
mind-without-social-signs-and-symbols can come into play. A combination of visualisation and the awareness of the different
aspects of the body can become the means to experience the body-mind as far from
its social creation as is possible. The mind is not detached from
matter at all but only from the signification of the social which is
presumed to be matter because it is based on matter (which is not quite the same
thing).
Indeed, against all doctrine, it might be said that the final stage of awareness
is as much pure matter as pure consciousness. It is not a stance that we can hold for long without a large
peasantry servicing our needs or a very modern leisure economy – there
were good socio-economic reasons for the turning away from sacral ideas in modernity: they become inutile, unnecessary.
The full range of techniques to be desacralised are varied – meditation, breath control, physical movement, chanting. I
have privileged visualisation only because this is the technique that is
most conscious of the breadth of symbols that surround us and which
will detach us from our own matter-mind best, not by isolating the brain into
one set of symbols (such as sound or patterned image) but by developing a
narrative of symbols that shift and change to reduce phenomenal noise.
All techniques may have the ultimate effect of detaching us from a
world made up of signs and symbols and attuning us with our own inner
matter as refined ‘consciousness’. Both alchemical analogies of moving
from base lead to gold and various Gnostic formulations spring to mind.
The difficulty lies when we detach a convenient tradition from the
scientific basis to the process. The ‘shaktipat’ (blessing) of the
Siddha-Guru may be regarded as a signal of permission to begin but there
is no reason why, after a commitment arising from oneself, one might
not bless oneself, give oneself permission, if you like, to exist.
Injunctions on purification and strengthening of the body might
equally be seen as a discipline of detachment – a removal of
distractions in order to concentrate on the job at hand and it should
need no funny little rituals if the mind is aligned properly.
The aim is to ‘sense’ the energy move from sacral bone to crown of
the head and the metaphor of unification of the goddess with the Lord
Shiva of Creation is only a metaphor of apparent unity of personal
matter-consciousness. The profound illusion that the mind is one with the greater
matter-consciousness of the Absolute is a physiological one but the
illusion does not matter. The transformative power of the experience is
what matters.
Far from not being a physical matter (as Eastern adepts insist), the
final moment is the ultimate physical occurrence where we use
‘consciousness’ to describe only a state of a matter that we have not
described before.
It is not the world that is the illusion (except insofar as the
signs and symbols of social intercourse are an illusory shell over very
real matter) but our own pretensions. In gnosis, our mind is physically
enabled to see things and to make connections that mere rational thought
does not permit.
If this is gnosis’, it is gnosis of a higher state of matter that
embodies a consciousness of a more sophisticated nature, detached from
phenomenal distractions. The state of being that arises – repeated in
its attributes amongst people from many different cultures – is ‘gnosis’
of oneself and one’s place in the world and it tells us nothing about
an Absolute which remains unknowable.
To experience this state of being and to allow oneself to wallow in
its illusion is to misuse the experience. Its purpose is to re-ground us
in the world, giving us a more critical understanding of the reality of
the world that has been presented to us as real but is actually based on
perceptions of underlying reality that are so often given to us rather
than chosen by us.
Similarly, despite the fears of ‘experts’ at the dangers of this
sort of thinking, it is wonderfully democratic in its potential – once
the priests and gurus have been put in their feudal place, modern man
can make eclectic use of these techniques and others to develop a
critical stance to authority and the ‘given’ without becoming lawless.
The energy derived is natural (in the original culture, Shakti is
also Prakriti which is associated with the idea of nature) and as much a
part of the world of science as the building of an aeroplane. The base
of the experience is the formlessness of all of our past, including
forgotten things that make our habits what they are.
The start of the visualisation process requires an engagement with
the fact of the unconscious, the deep well of rubbish that is ourselves
as constructed by others. From that simple truth, the serpent uncoils,
forcing its away up - unless impeded by a fearful conscious will.
Even amongst the scientific papers, you can sometimes sense the fear
of the rational mind at what this thinking might do to their world of
signs and symbols.
The principle is also feminine for only accidental cultural reasons. It
is a principle in defiance of order and the order of society is
presented as a male principle. It suits the male who is an adept to see
the principle as operating against his given nature which is male and it
is no accident that the final stage has the principle of the feminine
uncoiling and then bumping against a masculinised Absolute.
This, in itself, should make us cautious about the tradition as it
is promoted in the West because the energy does have libidinous and
erotic aspects and does involve coupling of sorts and yet it might be
considered in other ways by other minds. The sexuality involved though is
'normal' - a means to an outcome.
Nor is there anything inevitable in nature about the process. The
normal mode of being in the world is actually to avoid questioning and
to embed one’s self in given signs and symbols.
Only a few people, often because of an edgy dissatisfaction about
the given world, feel obliged to start a search for ‘meaning’ (in itself
a futile search except in the performing). It requires much hard work
and some risk in terms of social benefits to pursue something that may
be a necessity for some (and so ‘natural’) but by no means for all.
There are no intrinsic impulses in nature, only in some persons.
The particular association of the sexual and spiritual, for example, is a private
one (even when such practices involve groups engaged in experimentation) but all
methods have in common a sense of increasing internal unification based
on a ‘working’ of the libido and the body. Jung seems to have grasped
this better than most in seeing the process as one, essentially, of
individuation.
Showing posts with label Tradition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tradition. Show all posts
Saturday, 20 June 2015
Sunday, 30 November 2014
For Discussion - Ten Preliminary Propositions for Living Decently
I have never liked commandments, never accepted the claims of authority but only those of evidence-based persuasion or my own assessment of the situation but, given that we are unconsciously fixed in our social condition by commandments created in the Iron Age for an Iron Age order, what alternative suggestions might we have.
These ten suggestions are here for discussion only - not provided on high by a charismatic man with horns on his head but simply as attempts at creating codes of common decency to challenge those of inherited traditionalist oppression whether by Popes or Kings.
1. Your rights exist only to the degree that you respect the rights of others. Rights are for all or for none. Otherwise, a demand for rights is no more than a tool or a weapon in a struggle for power. The primary right is always the right to autonomy and self-determination. The good society merely attempts to give meaning to the equalisation for all of that primary right.
2. Live beyond inherited or socially given constructions of identity based on gender, sexual orientation, claimed ethnicity, social status or class. It is not that all are equal or can be made equal within the commonwealth but the first choice of who you are should be yours and not others. To accept a fixed identity that was not freely chosen by yourself with full information to hand is to oppress oneself.
3. A child is your responsibility if you make one. This means their health, their education and their happiness. If you bring a child into your household by whatever means or join a household with children, you take on this duty for them as if they were your own. This duty extends to the maintenance of the household with others with the same duty of care but it does not mean submission to them.You have not abandoned the primary right and can withdraw if your good will is abused.
4. No-one is a burden to society. Everyone is society whether they like it or not. This does not mean society cannot have some practical expectations - that it does not pay for the free rider or expect that each person does his or her utmost to be a strong and free agent - but the starting point is that a person cannot be bullied into freedom but only encouraged or even, in hard cases, managed into freedom.
5. No belief justifies violating the rights of others and if it does, then you are an enemy of the commonwealth. This applies to every organised religion, ideology or personal opinion. Since the primary right is the right to autonomy and self determination, all authoritarians are enemies of the people. This is not an argument against freely chosen traditionalism within a free society but it is an argument against imposing traditionalism on others - including and especially children.
6. Live life to the full on this earth but with sincerity in words, deeds and love against the unwarranted claims of others so that heaven is made potential, if rarely actual, in each day of a life lived fully. Expect nothing after death.
7. Try and avoid becoming part of the mass unless for brief communal pleasures. The theatre, the football match and the orgy are one thing, immersion into movements, belief systems and totalising communities are another. Neither peers nor the deciders of fashion can tell you who you are and your uniqueness is your greatest contribution to the social.
8. Defend yourself and your property but leave justice and punishment to the commonwealth. If the commonwealth is unjust, make sure you participate in making it just by giving a strong opinion and organising to remove injustice when it becomes intolerable. The magistrates rule by no right other than our agreement to their administration of justice and may be disposed of if they fail at any time. This right of resistance is absolute no matter what the forms or claims of the governing class - the question is only whether resistance can succeed or not against often superior forces.
9. If you cannot treat the social with respect even if it is weak or inadequate, walk away from it but don't despise it. It has its reasons and its purposes - to maintain order without which freedom cannot exist, to defend against predators and so on. To despise the social is to despise humanity - which is fine except that none of us can escape being human ... tragically perhaps but that is how it is.
10. Do everything you desire but harm no-one in doing it. There is no need to be over-protective of others at one's own expense but any strategy that constrains their self-creation or takes no account of their vulnerabilities as much as your self creation and vulnerabilities is an evil strategy. All relationships are constant negotiations between free individuals so society's interest is limited to creating the conditions for freedom and restoring balance when an evident oppression takes place. Let love drive us but a love beholden to science, reason and respect for the unconscious animal within us all.
You might class this as a conservative libertarianism with social-radical characteristics in the implicit call for active social intervention to equalise the primary right to autonomy and explicit acceptance of the right of resistance to incompetent and malicious authority.
These ten suggestions are here for discussion only - not provided on high by a charismatic man with horns on his head but simply as attempts at creating codes of common decency to challenge those of inherited traditionalist oppression whether by Popes or Kings.
1. Your rights exist only to the degree that you respect the rights of others. Rights are for all or for none. Otherwise, a demand for rights is no more than a tool or a weapon in a struggle for power. The primary right is always the right to autonomy and self-determination. The good society merely attempts to give meaning to the equalisation for all of that primary right.
2. Live beyond inherited or socially given constructions of identity based on gender, sexual orientation, claimed ethnicity, social status or class. It is not that all are equal or can be made equal within the commonwealth but the first choice of who you are should be yours and not others. To accept a fixed identity that was not freely chosen by yourself with full information to hand is to oppress oneself.
3. A child is your responsibility if you make one. This means their health, their education and their happiness. If you bring a child into your household by whatever means or join a household with children, you take on this duty for them as if they were your own. This duty extends to the maintenance of the household with others with the same duty of care but it does not mean submission to them.You have not abandoned the primary right and can withdraw if your good will is abused.
4. No-one is a burden to society. Everyone is society whether they like it or not. This does not mean society cannot have some practical expectations - that it does not pay for the free rider or expect that each person does his or her utmost to be a strong and free agent - but the starting point is that a person cannot be bullied into freedom but only encouraged or even, in hard cases, managed into freedom.
5. No belief justifies violating the rights of others and if it does, then you are an enemy of the commonwealth. This applies to every organised religion, ideology or personal opinion. Since the primary right is the right to autonomy and self determination, all authoritarians are enemies of the people. This is not an argument against freely chosen traditionalism within a free society but it is an argument against imposing traditionalism on others - including and especially children.
6. Live life to the full on this earth but with sincerity in words, deeds and love against the unwarranted claims of others so that heaven is made potential, if rarely actual, in each day of a life lived fully. Expect nothing after death.
7. Try and avoid becoming part of the mass unless for brief communal pleasures. The theatre, the football match and the orgy are one thing, immersion into movements, belief systems and totalising communities are another. Neither peers nor the deciders of fashion can tell you who you are and your uniqueness is your greatest contribution to the social.
8. Defend yourself and your property but leave justice and punishment to the commonwealth. If the commonwealth is unjust, make sure you participate in making it just by giving a strong opinion and organising to remove injustice when it becomes intolerable. The magistrates rule by no right other than our agreement to their administration of justice and may be disposed of if they fail at any time. This right of resistance is absolute no matter what the forms or claims of the governing class - the question is only whether resistance can succeed or not against often superior forces.
9. If you cannot treat the social with respect even if it is weak or inadequate, walk away from it but don't despise it. It has its reasons and its purposes - to maintain order without which freedom cannot exist, to defend against predators and so on. To despise the social is to despise humanity - which is fine except that none of us can escape being human ... tragically perhaps but that is how it is.
10. Do everything you desire but harm no-one in doing it. There is no need to be over-protective of others at one's own expense but any strategy that constrains their self-creation or takes no account of their vulnerabilities as much as your self creation and vulnerabilities is an evil strategy. All relationships are constant negotiations between free individuals so society's interest is limited to creating the conditions for freedom and restoring balance when an evident oppression takes place. Let love drive us but a love beholden to science, reason and respect for the unconscious animal within us all.
You might class this as a conservative libertarianism with social-radical characteristics in the implicit call for active social intervention to equalise the primary right to autonomy and explicit acceptance of the right of resistance to incompetent and malicious authority.
Saturday, 6 September 2014
Against Words & Tradition -Ten Propositions for Discussion
1. Each person perceives the world marginally differently at each successive point in time and each generation of persons perceives the world collectively in a way different from other generations. To hold a truth from past experience as self-evident is absurd. New conditions create new truths and all conditions are, in some respect, new conditions.
2. Experience is more than language. All our senses and our sense of being are engaged in knowing the world. The word spoken is only a part of knowing and scarcely the most dominant or reliable part of it. The word written is more distant still from the word spoken in its representation of the true state of affairs in the world.
3. How we use a word and the context of the word is more important than the word itself. The text tells us nothing without the context in which the text is used. The text in itself is a false friend. Our use of the text is what matters.
4. Words can never capture the totality of human experience. Words are a simplification of experience and so of being in the world. To use a word is immediately to begin to tell a lie.
5. When we say that two things are the same, we are not able to say that they are the same, we are merely saying that it is convenient that we treat these two things as the same for our purposes and our purpose only derives from words if we choose to make words our purpose. Knowing our purpose beyond and behind words is a more valuable purpose than inventing a purpose from the words to hand.
6. The space that we exist in is a space in relation to our perception of that space. There are as many worlds as there are persons perceiving a world in which they perceive themselves as existing.
7. To define a thing is to remove it from its existence as experienced by a person in the world - definition is the begining of the process by which lies are told.
8. Existence is not logical. It merely exists.
9. Metaphysics cannot exist in words. It can only exist in experience, if it exists at all - which is to be doubted.
10. We are what we do in the world in the flow of time. We have no essence beyond our act in a moment of time and personality is an accumulation of such acts under conditions where the next act will not be precisely like any act ever done before.
2. Experience is more than language. All our senses and our sense of being are engaged in knowing the world. The word spoken is only a part of knowing and scarcely the most dominant or reliable part of it. The word written is more distant still from the word spoken in its representation of the true state of affairs in the world.
3. How we use a word and the context of the word is more important than the word itself. The text tells us nothing without the context in which the text is used. The text in itself is a false friend. Our use of the text is what matters.
4. Words can never capture the totality of human experience. Words are a simplification of experience and so of being in the world. To use a word is immediately to begin to tell a lie.
5. When we say that two things are the same, we are not able to say that they are the same, we are merely saying that it is convenient that we treat these two things as the same for our purposes and our purpose only derives from words if we choose to make words our purpose. Knowing our purpose beyond and behind words is a more valuable purpose than inventing a purpose from the words to hand.
6. The space that we exist in is a space in relation to our perception of that space. There are as many worlds as there are persons perceiving a world in which they perceive themselves as existing.
7. To define a thing is to remove it from its existence as experienced by a person in the world - definition is the begining of the process by which lies are told.
8. Existence is not logical. It merely exists.
9. Metaphysics cannot exist in words. It can only exist in experience, if it exists at all - which is to be doubted.
10. We are what we do in the world in the flow of time. We have no essence beyond our act in a moment of time and personality is an accumulation of such acts under conditions where the next act will not be precisely like any act ever done before.
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