Monday, August 24, 2020

A World ≠ The World

No time for an all new post, but out of curiosity I scoured the hull of the arkive to find out what I wrote about For the Love of Wisdom the first time I read it back in 2007.

Think of what we do here as metaphysical mind jazz, i.e., spontaneous improvisations on certain chord changes. Yes, we repeat ourselves, but never the same way twice. I must have a dozen versions of Statesboro Blues by the Allman Brothers, and I love them all equally. Or at least that's what I tell them.

I'm not a bitter person, but I do still mildly resent that it took so long to deprogram my left wing brainwashing and soul-tainting to rearrive at where my philosophical endeavors should have started to begin with. All that wasted timelessness contemplating impossibilities and assimilating falsehoods!

So: what's it all about, Alfie? What in the world is the world?

Or, to put it another way, what kind of world is the world of man, and is it the same as the world? Ever since Kant, the grumpy answer has been: No! Our world -- the world we perceive -- is just a form of our sensibility, a kind of projection of our neurobiology. Therefore, it is not the world. Rather, the world -- whatever that is -- is radically inaccessible to man. (Which begs the question of how we can even posit it, but whatever.)

This question is addressed in an enjoyable book I'm currently reading, For Love of Wisdom: Essays on the Nature of Philosophy, by Josef Pieper. One of the themes Pieper develops is the idea that all other animals merely live in a world, whereas human beings are privileged to (potentially, at least) live in the world.

For example, people assume that all animals with eyes, when they look at an object, see the same thing, when this is demonstrably untrue.

Pieper cites the example of a certain bird that preys on grasshoppers but is incapable of seeing the grasshopper if it isn't moving. Only in leaping does the grasshopper become distinct from the background -- which is why many insects (and higher animals) "play dead."

In their resting form, it isn't so much that they are dead as literally invisible. It is as if they drop into a hole and no longer exist in the world of the predator. Even if the bird were starving, it could search and search, and yet, never find the unmoving grasshopper right under its beak.

What this means is that the animal cannot transcend its biological boundaries, even with an organ -- the eye -- seemingly equipped for just this task.

Pieper quotes the biologist Uexküll, who draws a distinction between the animal's environment and the actual world. As the latter writes, "The environments of animals are comparable in no way to open nature, but rather to a cramped, ill-furnished apartment."

Animals are confined to an environment to which they are adapted, and from which they can never escape. Most of the world is simply not perceived or even capable of being perceived. In fact, the world didn't come into view until human beings happened upon the scene. What a mess! To which the first human exclaimed: Not my fault! It was this way when I got here.

Given Darwinian principles -- which, by the way, we can only know about because we have transcended them -- how did mankind escape its own cramped apartment and open the door to an infinitely wider, deeper, and higher world?

Or did we? Are we as trapped in a narrow cross-section of reality as our tenured apes? If so, then neither science nor philosophy are possible. Like the bird looking for the immobile grasshopper, we couldn't locate reality despite the most diligent searching. Indeed, we wouldn't even know of the existence of the reality for which to search.

Pieper writes that the human spirit isn't so much defined by the property of immateriality as it is "by the ability to enter into relations with Being as a totality," in a way that transcends our mere animal-environmental boundaries.

Now, as Schuon always emphasizes, the intellect is not restricted to a particular environment. Rather, it is universal -- "relatively absolute" -- and therefore able to know the world. Similarly, as Pieper writes, "it belongs to the very nature of a spiritual being to rise above the environment and so transcend adaptation and confinement"; which in turn explains "the at once liberating and imperiling character with which the nature of spirit is immediately associated."

This is what we were driving at on p. 92 of the book:

Up to the threshold of the third singularity, biology was firmly in control of the hominids, and for most of evolution, mind (such as it was) existed to serve the needs of the primate body. Natural selection did not, and could not have, "programmed" us to know reality, only to survive in a narrow reality tunnel constructed within the dialectical space between the world and our evolved senses.

But then suddenly Darwin was cast aside and "mind crossed a boundary into a realm wholly its own, a multidimensional landscape unmappable by science and unexplainable by natural selection"; humans ventured out of biological necessity and "into a realm with a vastly greater degree of freedom, well beyond the confining prison walls of the senses."

Thus, natural selection is adequate to explain adaptation to an environment, but it cannot explain our discovery and comprehension of the world. As Aristotle recognized early on (which for him was actually well past bedtime), "the soul is in a way all existing things."

What does he mean by this? What he means is that the soul is able to put itself in relation to the totality of Being. While other animals have only their little slice of Being, the human is able to encounter Being as a whole.

Thus, to be in Spirit is "to exist amid reality as a whole, in the face of the totality of Being." Spirit encounters not a world, but the world. Or, to be precise, "spirit" and "world" are reciprocal concepts, the one being impossible in the absence of the other. Science itself is a spiritual world, or it is no world at all, only an environment. Usually an academic environment.

Bottom line: there is no naturalistic way to get from the restricted intelligence of animals to the open intelligence of humans.

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yay! I am first on the scene, ready to despoil a virgin comment section. Should I refrain? Should I spare her that violation?

Nah.

First off, dig the post. It is erudite, thought provoking, intellectual.

Now, animals. God spends time making animals, refining them, playing with them, etc. What is the deal with animals? Are they holy because He made them? Or just protein to harvest and cram down the gullet? One can contemplate the station of animals a long time and not grok everything. Just when you think you have them figured out, an animal will teach you something you didn't know, or display a quality like altruism higher than you yourself would be capable of. All pre-programmed? IDK. Hang with some gibbons, sport with dolphins, look in their eyes. What is in there? Does the eye reveal a cramped prison, or an elegant and simplified portal into eternity?

Now, the human brain is cutting edge. It is the current state of the art of material evolution and it fizzes, it warps time-space, it a buzzing/crackling bioelectric wonder. No wonder the soul mounts a human body, it is the best body available, it is the latest model and she is built for speed.....

Yeah Daisy, what I'm smoking you can't handle. Believe you me.

julie said...

"The environments of animals are comparable in no way to open nature, but rather to a cramped, ill-furnished apartment."

Funny, we don't usually realize it but most animals don't even live in open nature out in open nature. Rather, they have their particular niche and territory, within which they spend the entirety of their lives. Heck, for that matter a lot of humans live that way, too.

Daisy said...

Careful there, fella - you're starting to sound like you're a huff or two away from becoming Frank Booth, and really that's just sad.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous @ 8/24/2020 12:40:00 PM,

Interesting that you chose gibbons and dolphins. Two social species able to mix personal responsibility with social responsibility in such a way that they've been able to exist in a cruel world for millions of years longer than humans. Yet they wear no clothes!

But we are humans (assuming you're not a sentient bot from a Russian troll farm).

Personally, I prefer ants and cats. I prefer ants and cats because their ways are much closer to modern conservatism than what gibbons and dolphins have. Ants always know their station and work diligently to protect their queen. Cats will kill anything they can get their grubby little claws on, often for purely selfish sport (a wolfpack is more commie, and they always eat their kills). Combine those two together and you have modern conservatism.

Anonymous said...

A good many cats have a contemplative streak. You may catch your cat in a reverie, a meditation, laying in the sun or on your lap. A cat in meditation seems soporific with partially lidded eyes. The cat emits a low pitched "Ohhhhmmmmmm...." She is communing with Brahman during these times. The Egyptians revered the cat for its spiritual acumen and connection to Osiris, Ra, and all the heavies.

A human being may learn much from a cat if properly observant. Drop all preconceptions and go for raw unfiltered awareness of the cat, and over time the cat's holiness and the cat's spiritual methods will be revealed to you.

Then turn your attention to your dog. A good dog (80% of them) will do a very pure form of Bhakti yoga, the yoga of love and adoration. Usually centered on its owner, the dog can model for a human being how to love another unconditionally and without reservation. The vibration given off by a loyal dog tends to cleanse the atmosphere around its owner, promoting wholesome virtue and discouraging melancholy. It is for this that the temple dogs were ever on guard in the time of the Rishis.

Now then, regard your prized fish. The denizens of the aquarium have much to reveal. But perhaps another time.

You get the message. The animal as teacher, this is a thing. The ancients knew. Don't let the crass happenstance of the current age blind you to the innate spiritual significance of animals. Quiet the mind, and see with the inner eye.

Anonymous said...

Yes, animals are far more honest and there is little to be learned from humans, spiritually. We all know that scientists have taken to Youtube to poison our childrens minds with their “science”.

Take our very own Kellyanne Conway. Besides the thankless backbreaking task of supporting MAGA, she has to deal with a Marxist daughter and a weak husband (and possible traitor). So now she has to be spending more time with family. I hope it all goes well, and that she keeps the house shutters well closed. The prying eyes of the fake news media are everywhere. Plus exorcising a child can take some time.

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julie said...

What could possibly go wrong?

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Van Harvey said...

"In their resting form, it isn't so much that they are dead as literally invisible. It is as if they drop into a hole and no longer exist in the world of the predator. Even if the bird were starving, it could search and search, and yet, never find the unmoving grasshopper right under its beak."

Somewhat analogous to the perceptions of the antifa, blm, ismismist, when confronted with higher concepts of justice and individual rights - it's as if the conversation suddenly dropped up through a hole in the ceiling and no longer exists in their world - when speaking the truth, they can't see you, they can't hear you - like other birds of prey, they can only attack the physical object they 'see' before them.

julie said...

Van, I think you just described our ridiculous anonymous troll very well. Wait till you see the comments on yesterday’s post, there’s a level of stupid that has a similar effect when read to biting on tinfoil.

Van Harvey said...

Julie, I saw them, and yep.

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