Nor did the previous post get very far into our ignorance before the clock cut us off.
Again -- to pick up the main thread -- man is less unique for what he knows than for what he doesn't know; or, more precisely, for what he is able to unKnow. After all, every animal, even a single celled one, knows something. But that's all they know. Unlike human beings, they don't know that they know, and they certainly don't wonder about what they don't know.
If you could represent the situation in a Venn diagram thingy, there would be a complete overlap between "the world" of the single cell, and what it knows of the world.
Conversely, think of how different the situation is for a human being. You have to be very naive or very stupid to imagine that what you know exhausts what there is to know, or that your knowledge of the world is a complete map of the world. Even on the most concrete level, they say that dark matter -- whatever that is -- accounts for some 80% of the matter in the universe. Thus, we know that we don't know, but we have no idea what it is. That's not simple stupidity or unalloyed ignorance, but proper unKnowing.
It's certainly the same way with the human mind. You could compare it to an executive on top and a swamp below, very similar to the situation Trump is confronting. In my training, it was taken for granted that the great majority of the mind is unconscious. This is obvious when we wonder how creativity works, or how dreams are formed, or even where thoughts come from. Who knows? We can no more (consciously) dream a dream than we can beat our heart or make more insulin.
I've read a number of works by Hayek before, but nothing as dense and evocative as the Law, Legislation, and Liberty trilogy, and I think I know why: it's because it's resonating with everything I already believe to be fundamentally true of the world. In a way, it's reminding me of all the ideas that first caused (or at least coincided with) my brain to come on line back in my mid to late 20s.
I especially see a lot of Polanyi and Bion in Hayek. Or, to put it the other way around, I first discovered Hayekian principles in Bion. I'm getting the same explosive feeling now that I got back then. Let me see if I can provide a concrete example.
By the way, they say that most intellectual types discover a few ideas, and then spend the rest of their lives rediscovering and repeating them in various guises. Indeed, sometimes it's just one Big Idea, from natural selection to white privilege.
By the way, Not Knowing is associated with frustration, which, in a healthy person, is tolerated. But many people -- we call then liberals -- cannot tolerate this frustration, so they paper over the gaps with a projection of mastery or completeness. This is how they know Brett Kavanaugh is a sexual predator, or that every man is an abuser, or that All Women Must be Believed. It's also how they know socialism works, AGW is true, and the sexes are identical.
Often -- perhaps even more often than not -- "knowledge" is simply a defense agains intolerable ignorance; what we think we know defends us against what we don't actually know. At the extreme end, this morphs into paranoia, conspiracy mongering, psychosis, and the DNC.
Why do so many people pretend to know what they not only do not know, but cannot possibly know? Not knowing is hard, I guess. A professional not-knower is what we call a mystic, more or less. Or, every mystic is a not-knower in some sense. Apophatic theology is the last word in wordlessness. One could cite thousands of examples, but Eckhart is always close at hand:
The final goal of being is the darkness and the unknowability of the hidden divinity, which is that light which shines "but the darkness cannot comprehend it."
Or The most beautiful thing which a person can say about God would be for that person to remain silent from the wisdom of an inner wealth. For God is not found in the soul by adding anything, but by a process of subtraction.
All "in a manner of speaking," of course, and taking account of irony, playfulness, and paradox.
For the intellect to be free, it must become naked and empty and by letting go return to its prime origin.... We become a pure nothing by an unknowing knowledge....
I should hasten to add that Hayek, as far as I know, never associated himself with apophatic theology. Which is what makes it s'durned innarestin'. Conversely, toward the end of his life, Bion clearly began sliding off the psychoanalytic map and into mysticism. Some of his colleagues suspected him of madness, but he was simply following the absence of evidence where it didn't lead.
Bion associates a common type of thinking with the manufacture of graven images, which then beguile the one who manufactured them. This extends "psychoanalytic theory to cover the views of mystics from the Bhagavad Gita to the present.... The central postulate is that atonement with ultimate reality, or O, is essential to harmonious mental growth." And -- emphasis mine -- "Disturbance in capacity for atonement is associated with megalomanic attitudes."
Crazy! But what's he talking about? Well, there is reality -- O -- and our thoughts about it. A state of "mental health," or harmony, occurs when there is at-onement between thought and O, bearing in mind that O is prior to our thinking, and that it can never be contained by thought. If you think you can contain O with thought, then you, my friend, are a megalomaniac. Like Marx, for example.
And this is precisely what Hayek says about the left: in order to justify their dreams, memes, schemes, scams, and shams, they assume a kind of knowledge that is literally impossible for any finite mind to contain (a subject to which we will return).
Meanwhile, another relevant passage from Bion: in reference to the paradoxes of modern physics, "It would be ironical if an idea which the physicist is tending to discard should be taken up by the psychoanalyst.... The discovery of a 'cause' relates more to the peace of mind of the discoverer than to the object of his research."
Again, even if you were to figure it all out, where would this leave you? Right back where you started, just as the Poet told us ("And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started").
For Natural laws are irreducible to explanation, like any mystery. So Science, when it finishes explaining everything, but being unable to explain the consciousness that creates it, will not have explained anything (Dávila).
10 comments:
But many people -- we call then liberals -- cannot tolerate this frustration, so they paper over the gaps with a projection of mastery or completeness. This is how they know Brett Kavanaugh is a sexual predator, or that every man is an abuser, or that All Women Must be Believed.
Perhaps I'm too cynical these days, but I think you're being overly generous.
They know perfectly well that Kavanaugh is innocent; in fact, it is likely his very innocence that drives them insane. If only he were actually guilty of abusing women, then they might have some common ground, some leverage; he'd be a fellow traveler, or at least someone who could be bought.
I think we need to be careful, when stressing the importance of 'Not Knowing', to avoid giving ammunition to our secular adversaries who may claim that we should equally apply this principle to our claims about spiritual reality. In other words, we need to retain the traditional notion of our capacity to know the Absolute (what Eckhart and Schuon call the 'Intellect') while being quite resigned to the fact of remaining ignorant about a host of matters pertaining to the everyday world of contingency.
This book -- The Infernal Library: On Dictators, the Books They Wrote, and Other Catastrophes of Literacy -- is very informative, funny, and well-written, and, oddly enough, goes to the subject of today's post.
Lenin, for example, assumed "he had the power to overwrite the world, to author the conditions demanded by his theory into existence." I imagine Obama was the same way. In fact, Kalder notes "the major drawback of putting a professional revolutionary/writer in charge of a country. Lenin had never had a proper job.... he had no idea what it was actually like outside the insular world of radical politics."
Maybe it's why these same people are obsessed with things Trump says, as opposed to what he actually does.
Also related, the Zinnification of history:
"A search through A People’s History for qualifiers mostly comes up short. Instead, the seams of history are concealed by the presence of an author who speaks with thunderous certainty.
"A history of unalloyed certainties is dangerous because it invites a slide into intellectual torpor."
Hi Byron:
No need to be careful about mentioning what we don't know. One must especially admit to massive ignorance in the spiritual area, in order to get anywhere.
Do not take scriptures, dogma, or enlightened interpretive texts as knowledge. Hinduism, for example, a beautiful set of beliefs, rituals, interpretive scriptures, and practices, is all very functional and based on spiritual on strong hunches and intuition. But is it spiritual knowledge? No, it is inspired guesswork. Like all religions.
Surrender! It cannot be overemphasized. Surrender to Divine Providence is key,and a huge chunk of surrender is being properly aware of your own monolithic and insurmountable ignorance.
That being said, and switching gears, the Leftists do not treat women well at all. Leftist males with very high victim status can ask for favors from Leftist women, and due to the rules of PC cannot be turned down lightly. So these poor girls are constantly embroiled with unwanted attentions.
Likewise, the powerful Leftist woman expects to be expertly serviced whenever she wants and with whomever she chooses. Males who are singled out for this "honor" can become exhausted from trying to please these doms.
Such is the sordid world of the Leftist, but they'll never dish about that.
Just ordered another book that looks fascinating, The Philosophy of Hebrew Scripture. I'll let y'all know how it turns out.
I agree that scriptures and dogma do not constitute or ensure direct knowledge of spiritual reality but 'massive ignorance' is not the same as total ignorance, otherwise any kind of communion with God would be impossible. Even 'surrendering to divine providence' presupposes a certain degree of knowledge - both immediate and intuitive - of that reality in which one has sought spiritual refuge.
Byron:
I agree with your comment 1:47. Not-knowing is always subsequent to knowing, and most people are content to stick with the knowing, which is perfectly fine. It's like mountain climbing: few people feel compelled to trek all the way the the peak of Everest.
Also, I wish I were named Byron. Classy name.
Hi Byron: Regarding your comment, I agree and stand corrected about my presumption of full ignorance. You mention immediate and intuitive knowledge, which is how God guides/leads a person. Intuitions can be said to be preliminary, but once corroborated by sensory information, it is confirmed knowledge.
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