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Friday, March 04, 2011

A Message from the Academy of Farts and Sinuses

Did I just hear the distant bleating of a rump trumpet? Then we must be in hell or among the tenured, where the two ends of the digestive tract are routinely reversed -- where pompous gasbags talk trash and pull facts from their behind. The technical term is zonal confusion. The colloquial term is bullshit.

But first had each of them stuck out his tongue
Between his teeth, as signal to their leader,
And he made a trumpet of his rump
. --Canto XXI

Upton notes that Inferno, Purgatory and Paradise all correspond to states of being. Although it certainly smells like something crawled up and died here, if it's too much of a leap, you needn't regard them as postmortem, since their odor is readily detectable in this world.

The "higher states of being" -- those associated with Purgatory and Paradise -- "are higher in every sense: they are closer to Reality" (Upton). Thus, as we travel further hellward, we drift further and further from the Principle, but draw closer to Hell's principle. The former is O, or the "Sovereign Good," while the latter is....

Well, first of all it is Ø, which means that it is not something positive, but rather, the negation of O, whatever that might mean.

As we venture down into the lower vertical, O at first becomes blurry and out of focus. But eventually we cross a threshold, in which its inverse -- Ø -- begins to acquire a kind of "solidity."

However, unlike O, it is not a translucent solidity but a dark and dense one. The darkness and density then become a kind of pseudo-reality, and it is this reality to which the materialist fleedom flighter clings and calls "courage" or "clarity." It is the false sobriety of someone who lives in a dry county in which no grog is available anyway. Suffice it to say that someone who is drunk on God is infinitely closer to reality than someone who is sober on matter.

Ironically, nothing is as it appears to be in Hell, which is why deconstruction -- or absolute relativism -- is such an adequate symbol of it. For the deconstructionist, there is no stable reality, only the interpretation they give it.

This elevates deconstruction above construction -- or, let us just say destruction above creativity. In practical terms, it elevates an ordinary feminist nag above the Bible or Shakespeare by revealing the "patriarchy" or "oppression" of these texts. But what the feminist actually demonstrates is her virtuosity on the rump trumpet.

Since the lower realms are only pale reflections of reality, we might think of them as existing in a negative space. If Heaven is +12, then Hell is -12. Importantly, the downward descent is in one sense a "dissipation" and loss of substance and (truth) force.

But in another sense, the further away from O, the more it becomes a kind of persecutory presence or shadowy recollection. Thus, as Upton describes it, the closer one gets to the "most hideous, most hellish parts [of Hell], the areas where existence is the most unbearable, the nearer one has come to letting the good break through."

This is why it is a truism in psychotherapy that a crisis can be an extremely fruitful opportunity. During a crisis, the psyche is "laid open," much like a body opened up by the surgeon's knife. The superficiality of mere coping or "bumbling along" is effaced, and the "unreality" beneath it all is exposed.

And in being exposed, it evokes a longing for the Light, for healing and wholeness. Truly, the darker the night, the brighter the day. Although this is not a hard and fast rule, since the spirit "blows where it will," countless saints will attest to this pattern.

If God is "completely Himself" -- or, in Thomist terms, pure act -- I wonder if this means that Hell might be thought of as pure motion, or a kind of infinite potential that never attains itself? It remind me of what economists used to say about Brazil: it is the country of the future, and always will be.

This suggests that Hell is a place of "false infinity," again analogous to the auto-cannibalistic deconstructionist who must eventually dine on himself, the only thing left standing after everything else has been deconstructed.

Thus, the deconstructionist is both "omniscient," in that he can trump all knowledge, but "omnipotent," in that his single intellectual tool can reduce anything to dust. Again, if nothing is what it is, then everything is what it is not, which is to say, nothing. That would be Hell.

Upton is on the same page, where she notes that "a destructive psychological complex ends by destroying itself." Here again, this is an inverted image of the "creative destruction" involved in ego transcendence. Taking a wrecking ball to a structure in order to build a new one is not the same as flying an airplane into it just to please one's dictatorial mind parasites.

Note that one -- and only one -- civilization created human flight in order to facilitate further creation. But the other culture -- which, left alone, couldn't have invented the toaster -- can only parasitize ours, and use its creativity for destructive ends. The Arab world as presently constituted is a symphony of rump trumpets.

Another orthoparadoxical fact is that "as deeper levels of Hell are reached, the damned have more character -- understandably, since the more grievous sins are the more deliberate ones, which are worse than simple passions or weaknesses" -- the latter of which are more contingent to the central self.

But for the true evil-doer, the condensed nothingness of evil has become central, which is why an Osama, or Arafat, or Ahmadinejad, or Hitler, have such character. For truly, they are incorrigible but also incorruptible, in the sense that they will not deviate from their anti-principles, so no Light reaches them.

No, I will not pull your tail again!

28 comments:

  1. Shat Al Arab, yes...3/04/2011 08:28:00 AM

    The Arabs came up with Al Jabr, or algebra. Arguably they helped create human flight by facilitating the development of calculus.

    The Arabs look like hopeless boobies when it comes to self government and the advancement of wealth and security, and indeed it is possible that only people of Saxon heritage knows how to govern properly.

    Still, the past shows the Arab is not a complete basket case.

    One might find things to admire in the Arab culture, such as their anti-crime efforts which do result in a low per capita murder rate. We would do well to study up on how this is accomplished.

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  2. We would do well to study up on how this is accomplished.

    Easy. They changed the definition of "murderer" to "state." The algebra canard is not worth refuting.

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  3. Well, first of all it is Ø, which means that it is not something positive, but rather, the negation of O, whatever that might mean.


    Speaking of which, in regard to Arab/ Muslim culture, it's notable that wherever they take control they don't simply erect their own mosques and leave pre-existing churches, synagogues, temples and works of art alone. Rather, they either destroy them entirely (as in the Bamyan Buddhas), or symbolically by transforming them into Muslim places of worship (for instance, Hagia Sophia). Remaking the world in the image of Ø is their explicit goal.

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  4. Along similar lines in reference to the West, and referring to Mizze's post this morning (on yesterday's thread) about the Northwestern class demonstration involving things that would dump me in the spam file again, DC has this to say:

    "It fell to the modern era to have the privilege of corrupting the humble."

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  5. Man! The deep-er you go in this, the clear-er you get. So much is revealed by these posts!

    Happy anniversary, btw.

    Thanks!

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  6. March Forth! I completely forgot.

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  7. >>the closer one gets to the "most hideous, most hellish parts [of Hell], the areas where existence is the most unbearable, the nearer one has come to letting the good break through."<<

    To paraphrase J Campbell - the closer one gets to the sacred, the closer one gets to the profane. (and visa versa)

    >> . . . in being exposed, it evokes a longing for the Light, for healing and wholeness<<

    Which is why I tend to see Dante's Hell as being a lower Purgatorial realm, save for those figures, if there are any, who fully embrace the nothingness.

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  8. >>>>I wonder if this means that Hell might be thought of as pure motion, or a kind of infinite potential that never attains itself<<

    Yes, restlessness, eternal restlessness would be Hell. Always dreaming of greener pastures and never finding them, a thirst that can never be sated.

    This would certainly be true of those I have encountered who have pronounced mental/emotional "issues".

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  9. Shat Al Arab, yes...3/04/2011 11:04:00 AM

    We Arabs don't have problems with feminists or deconstructionists.

    You Westerners are soft and can't control your women or effete wine-sipping snobs. Where are your stones?

    Shrunken and lost within your underpants.

    You call that superiourity? I sneer on your so-called enlightened society. It is a joke and everyone here laughs at you and your women running around and getting it with anyone they want.

    We get your women too. We like them but then we give them back to you...

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  10. spirit of fergus the cat3/04/2011 11:41:00 AM

    >>Truly, the darker the night, the brighter the day.<<

    Old Jewish saying: "The Messiah will arrive only after we despair of His coming."

    Makes sense to those who have good sense. Now if you will excuse me, Booger and I have some serious hunting to do . . .

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  11. Another little thing makes sense. So deconstruction is basically a virtue when you are in Hell, since Hell is the realm of false constructs.

    The vertically inverted - the upside down people - will then seek to deconstruct reality and hold on to unreality, in the mirror image of the seeker of eternity who must deconstruct illusion and hold on to the eternally real.

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  12. The negation, if negative enough, can expose the illusion.

    I'm just now catching up on this entire week of totipotent posts. As a side benefit I may have finally perfected the art of troll scrolling, i.e., blowing right past the troll to the next comment.

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  13. Happy March Forth!

    I needed a good excuse for a party tonight.

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  14. "The Arab world as presently constituted is a symphony of rump trumpets."

    And I thought their untuning up was bad, but now that they're actually beginning to play... ugh... I just hope the conducter stays away.

    "The algebra canard is not worth refuting."

    So true.

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  15. (What Mushroom secondly said)

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  16. Arab culture is in general pretty messed up. Nonetheless that says nothing about individuals. Just as America's cultural superiority (in most ways) in no way precludes the existence of many Bill Mahers, Arab culture in no way precludes the existence of people like my friend A., who is an Arab Maronite and as fine a person as I've met anywhere.

    I know the above is self-evident to raccoons, but I always feel the need to throw those two cents in anyhow.

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  17. NB,
    Well put. I often say the same of African-Americans. As individuals they can be fine, but in a group....

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  18. Over on Facebook, Prager posted a link to the recent example of dissipation at Northwestern University. Here's one of the comments. (It has 20 'likes'.)

    Cheryl: I earned my B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees, then completed two post-doctoral fellowships at Ivy League medical schools.

    What is my profession now? Professional PHOTOGRAPHER (with no formal training) and I am happier than I've ever been in my life!

    Although we have savings accounts set up for our childrens' formal education (ages 6 and 10) I am already pushing trade schools as an option...become a chef, for example...learn a SKILL.

    I look back and see how I was indoctrinated into liberalism (and anti-religion) during my years as a scientist, and I was absolutely miserable. I voted Democrat and followed the "liberal party line" and denounced spirituality as I was "supposed" to do.

    Then I had enough, joined the U.S. Navy (at age 32!) and I praise God every day for showing me a way out of the darkness of liberalism.

    I hope I can steer our children from being sucked into the liberal abyss I had no idea I had descended into before it was too late.

    Thank God I found the LIGHT!

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  19. Shat al Arab, yes...3/05/2011 07:49:00 PM

    A mistake was committed sometime in the past when some idiots told women they were able to make money like men and could equal men in most ways.

    Women took it as the truth and behaved accordingly. They are weak-minded so if you tell them to go out and make money, then they will without question. Tell them they do not need a man, and they will believe that too.

    So, be careful what you tell women. They are gullible and lack common sense. They do not know their place but must be reminded constantly what the boundaries are.

    The same with college students. They think they matter somehow. Parents must cut off the funding when they because dissident.

    The adult male is dominant and must take care to assert that dominance so that society remains properly ordered.

    And for you women reading this blog, for shame. This is men's stuff here. Go look at something else.

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  20. It works so well in the Muslim world, I'm sure it would make western civilization just as successful.

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  21. dame edith waterfowl3/06/2011 05:48:00 AM

    Oh dear, where is my fern-scented aerosol spray?

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  22. ...someone who is drunk on God is infinitely closer to reality than someone who is sober on matter.

    Suitable for immediate engraving in Bob's Big Book O'Sayin's.

    Damn. I completely missed March Forth. And Fifth. And half of Sixth. Too busy marching to notice...

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  23. Robin! I've been thinking about you. Marching? Color me impressed.

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I cannot talk about anything without talking about everything. --Chesterton

Fundamentally there are only three miracles: existence, life, intelligence; with intelligence, the curve springing from God closes on itself like a ring that in reality has never been parted from the Infinite. --Schuon

The quest, thus, has no external 'object,' but is reality itself becoming luminous for its movement from the ineffable, through the Cosmos, to the ineffable. --Voegelin

A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes. --Wittgenstein