But again, depth isn't necessarily covariant with truth. I suppose Heidegger is deep, but that doesn't make him any less wrong. And in a certain sense, truth is actually quite simple, simplicity being not at all synonymous with superficiality. "God's essence is to exist." Doesn't get more simple or true than that.
Nevertheless, Often the simpler a truth is the more difficult it is to understand (NGD).
Some people are drawn to depth, while it appears that most people are indifferent to it at best, but often repelled by it. In the past, I've written about the psychological reasons for this, in that -- in my opinion -- just as people have psychological defense mechanisms that repress, deny, project and otherwise transform the lower vertical, they also have "pneumatic" defense mechanisms that allow them to do the same with the upper vertical. Which is how leftism becomes a religion.
To say lower is to say higher, and it makes no sense to affirm that the human ego is the highest entity in all of creation. Rather, it is always situated on a vertical spectrum between... best to leave this undefined -- or unsaturated with preconceptions -- since the unKnown is at both ends; let's just say that man is suspended between O and Ø.
With this in mind, we now have a way to conceptualize depth: the deeply true is in the direction of O, while the deeply false is in the direction of Ø. Looked at in this way, reductionistic Darwinism is deeply false, as is Marxism, or feminism, or positivism (giving adherents the benefit of the doubt that these isms are deep to begin with).
Now, what can it mean to be "in the direction of O"? How can we tell? Let's leave aside aesthetics and focus on thought. One critical point is that while Ø necessarily excludes O, O must encompass and account for Ø -- which is precisely what makes it the more deep. For depth implies comprehensiveness, and a system that accounts for the cosmic Subject is obviously more comprehensive than one that pretends to deny it at the outset (and it can only pretend to do so, on pain of saying nothing with no one to say it).
Conversely, O doesn't deny Ø, least of all in the Christian tradition. Indeed, we could even think of Incarnation as O becoming Ø; or, to tweak the old patristic gag, "O became Ø that Ø might become O."
In contrast, think of Eastern traditions for which Ø is pure illusion. Their goal is to attain O, but it must be a less comprehensive O, since it excludes Ø. A western representative of the same approach is Plotinus, whom St. Augustine rejected for precisely this reason. With neoplatonism you can experience the One, only you can't be there to experience it. D'O!
Backing up a bit, it was the work of millennia to first discover that God is one: "A religious-minded Greek felt himself the passive battlefield of overpowering and too often mutually conflicting divine influences. His will was at their mercy" (Gilson, God and Philosophy).
This testifies to a fragmented psyche that is both the cause and consequence of inability to know the One. This was a world "where everything came to men from without, including their feelings and passions, their virtues and their vices..." (ibid.).
And guess what? That world most assuredly still exists. As a clinical psychologist, I see it all the time -- not just in patients but (especially!) in politics, which is the widest field for externalizing various psychic fragments.
For example, the existence of people who cannot tolerate free speech isn't really a political problem but a psychological crisis. To even discuss it on the plane of politics is to obscure and displace its location and depth. In other words, there can be no deep political reason to eliminate free speech. However, there are certainly deep psychological reasons to do so! But that's between you and your psychologist.
Back to the gradual discovery of the One: "What makes Aristotle's metaphysics an epoch-making event in the history of natural theology is that in it the long delayed conjunction of the first philosophical principle with the notion of god became at last an accomplished fact" (ibid). In short, God is no longer the fragmented and un-integrated experience described above, but its synthesis: "At the summit of the Aristotelian universe is not an Idea, but a self-subsisting and eternal Act of thinking": an eternally one-ing one, so to speak.
Coming at it from a different angle -- revelation as opposed to natural theology -- "any follower of the Jewish God would know at once that, whatever the nature of reality itself may be said to be, its religious principle must of necessity coincide with its philosophical principle" -- each is one, but unified in an even higher Oneness: I AM and IT IS are not two, so to speak.
Gilson mentions in passing a key principle in understanding depth, that "Whereas Thomas Aquinas distinguished in order to unite, Descartes divided in order to separate." In the case of the latter, there is no way to put the cosmic egg back together after the initial division of thought and being -- thus, there can be no recovery of the depth of reality.
But what makes a thing deep is precisely the complementary oneness in the many and manyness of the One. "A world," writes Schuon, "is not a simple and inert block, but an infinitely variegated play of antinomies and combinations" which nevertheless possess a "homogeneous character," otherwise they would be different worlds. "Existence crystallizes, divides, and disperses; Intelligence on the contrary brings back to unity." The two are complementary:
we must distinguish between a perspective that is intellectual and unitive and another that is existential and separative; the first envisions everything in relation to unity, even Existence..., whereas the second sees everything in relation to separativity, even Intelligence...
Theology and science, respectively. Which are not two. Anything short of this is in the shallow end of the gene pool. For "there is no true synthesis without discernment." And vice versa.
Aphorisms, which is to say, maximum depth with minimum words:
All truths converge upon one truth, but the routes have been barricaded.
Thought can avoid the idea of God as long as it limits itself to meditating on minor problems.
In order for a multitude of diverse terms to coexist, it is necessary to place them on different levels. A hierarchical ordering is the only one that neither expels nor suppresses them. --Dávila
20 comments:
A hierarchical ordering is the only one that neither expels nor suppresses them.
As true of people as it is of a multitude of diverse terms. Any system that claims to destroy hierarchy is false from its un-foundations; of course, everybody knows this, it's just that most people assume they themselves will be at the top of the rubble heap.
"There is no top, and I am it."
Along those lines, interesting today that a report came out that Pope F claimed there is no hell, saying that the unrepentant simply cease to exist (or something along those lines). Considering the implications of such a statement, not to mention the fact that it directly contradicts the Catechism, the Vatican quickly dubbed it fake news. Somehow, this is not very reassuring.
Memo to the Pope: You had one job.
Hell is problematic for a number of reasons.
First, if one accepts Unity to the fullest, God would be masochistically tormenting Himself in the eternal flames. Parents tell children prior to the spanking: "this will hurt me as much as it will you." There is a lot of truth to that.
Hell ostensibly serves as a deterrent for would-be miscreants. However, the mere threat of Hell would be as effective, as no body can check to see if its really there. It stands to reason it would save a lot of effort to just make it up.
Reincarnation, widely thought to be 30- 50% likely true, renders Hell not very productive; if you're stuck in there you can't do business. Looked at in economic analogy, it would not turn a profit. God would probably just axe the Hell department and say "Let's cut the dead wood."
If one accepts full Unity, the Devil, Boss of Hell, would be one of God's creations, and if God let's him run amok within His cosmic innards, it would be like taking too much Sriracha sauce; heartburn or worse. Another masochistic deal.
And Heaven; our conception of it as perfect comes with an unavoidable double helping of boredom. Do you really want everything to be peachy 24/7 for eternity? C'mon.
Common sense. That's all it takes to figure these things out.
If I can imagine it, it is neither heaven nor hell. Certainly my puny conception of happily ever hereafter is wholly inadequate to the reality, as is any thought I might give toward the alternative. Thus, I must trust in what the Lord had to say on the matter, and be assured that seeking Him is far preferable to the alternative.
There goes the punchline Is the Pope Catholic?
On another note, I saw that Jordan Peterson was coming to Boston for a book tour. So I thought why not check him out. And then I found out tickets are $100-$250! Okay, I am happy for his success, but when in our lifetime have we seen an academic get such rockstar treatment? And what does this say about culture at this time?
And no, I refuse to pay that much to see someone say the same things I can find on a youtube video. I'm not sure I'd pay that much to see a Beatles reunion, assuming all were alive.
That's insanely expensive. Sounds like his tours have been selling out, though; for a lot of people it seems to be worth it.
Truth is free. Why would anyone pay for it?
For example, back in around 1990 I saw Noam Chomsky speak at a high school gym, and it was free. I remember it well, because he predicted that Bush 1 was about to invade Cuba.
Hi Guys:
Well, I like the Pope. A lot. For one thing, he is a Catholic. By definition, a disciple of Christ. Denigrating the Pope is an attack on the body of Christ and should not be undertaken lightly. Popes are allowed to deviate from Doctrine to some extent, because they are among the few who can productively suggest changes to Doctrine, which is historically not a static thing.
The Pope displays evidence of clear, common sense thinking, not overawed or enthralled by Scripture. The top priest should also be a mystic and a yogin, evidence of direct communication with God, and the Pope evinces such qualities.
Julie wrote of trusting the Word of God, and this Word is best read in your own heart, as well as on the pages of Scripture. Scripture is a fabulous guide to God's Word, but can never be fully trusted because of human contamination in its translation to print. I think the blog author would agree on this point.
A hearty Hurray for the Pope, a good Pope, and doing his job despite the surrounding jaybirds who police Scriptural Correctness.
So you sat through Chomsky's distorted speculations. Maybe he should have paid you.
Interesting, because even then I could tell that These People Aren't Like Me. The crowd, which back then was fringe left, is now the mainstream left. It was like a preview of the craziness to come.
So, in that sense they were "progressive": like the Joker, not insane, just ahead of the curve!
I think you are being a little unfair on Plotinus. 'Experiencing the One' is described the way it is precisely because it is not an experience of the ego. Plotinus never says that Ø is 'pure illusion' so he is not comparable to the Vedantists or Buddhists in that respect. In fact, he sees 'traces' of the One all the way down to the realm of matter and was very critical of the Gnostics who maligned the world of the senses. He has a far more integrated view of the cosmos than even many Christian thinkers (who often do disparage Ø) but whose 'sapiential' tradition neverheless he has influenced deeply. Schuon is also clearly indebted to his metaphysical insights (much more than he is to Aristotle).
Plotinus, the philosopher our contemporary, seemed ashamed of being in the body.
Henosis for Plotinus was defined in his works as a reversing of the ontological process of consciousness via meditation toward no thought and no division within the individual. As is specified in the writings of Plotinus on Henology, one can reach a tabula rasa, a blank state where the individual may grasp or merge with The One. This absolute simplicity means that the nous or the person is then dissolved, completely absorbed back into the Monad.
I was absorbed back into the Monad back in the 1972, and reemerged in 1998 with no memory in the interval. All I remember was a sensation of being enveloped in laundry straight from the dryer (if you've ever tried that), and when I returned there was Internet and all kinds of other things.
There was an investigation for a missing person, but nothing came of it. Witnesses stated I walked away from a bonfire at a beach party and was never seen again. On my return I was on that same beach, about waist deep in the water. Odd. My body had not aged in the interval. They should have studied me for that, but did not. Nobody has time for such things.
Something similar happened to Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, who disappeared in 1967 while sitting at his piano with his feet in a specially constructed sandbox in his living room, only to reappear in 1992. However, his body definitely aged in the interim.
"Gilson mentions in passing a key principle in understanding depth, that "Whereas Thomas Aquinas distinguished in order to unite, Descartes divided in order to separate." In the case of the latter, there is no way to put the cosmic egg back together after the initial division of thought and being -- thus, there can be no recovery of the depth of reality."
Boom.
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