Thursday, February 03, 2022

Once Upon Every Time

The previous post wondered into the question of whether man, upon becoming man, was somehow given the operating instructions or just left to his own devices to make sense of himself, his faculties, and his purpose in being here. 

In one sense the question is idiotic but typical of the low and lurid standards of this blog. But in another sense it invites us to imaginatively drill down to the bottom of the psyche and see what we can see there. Is it really a blank slate shaped by the ups and downs, strikes and gutters, of environmental contingency? 

Ah, no. We know that much. We're not historicists. Man isn't born a nobody to be shaped any which way by external influences, but is a definite somebody -- a particular person -- right out of the gate. 

Well then, is it full of Jungian archetypes and other woowoo-ery that determine identity, behavior, and culture?

Ah, no. We're not Platonists, idealists, or rationalists.

Well, what then? An operating manual presupposes some kind of nonlocal constraint on human potential. 

Be patient. We'll get there.   

More generally, just because our answers may be idiotic, it doesn't mean the questions are, and there are three questions to which every man at every time would like the answers, please: 1) where did we come from, 2) what are we doing here, and 3) where are we going; in other words, origin, being, and destiny. 

You can pretend you don't wonder about these things, but they're nevertheless implicitly present in everything we think and do. They're in the very structure of time itself. Unless you are psychotic, a cause and consequence of which is a kind of violent dismemberment of time. 

Come to think of it, even garden variety neuroses do damage to time's flow; for example, a compulsion creates a kind of temporal eddy, while impulsivity short circuits the path to the future, and trauma freezes one in the past. 

There is actually a "wrong side of history," e.g., presentism, anachronism, progressivism, etc. 

In fact, I was just reading about these historical fallacies in a book of essays by Gordon Wood called The Purpose of the Past. I wasn't planning on blogging about it, but perhaps it has a point or two we can misuse for our own lurid purposes. He's especially hard on our postmodern deconstructionists, and although he's far too polite to call them frankly psychotic, the diagnostic shoe fits:

If historians began doubting that there was an objective past reality that they were trying to recover and began thinking that what they did was simply make up the past and write something that was akin to fiction, then... they were actually undermining the ground for any sort of historical reconstruction at all.

The result is that history "has become fragmented -- all pieces, all flashes of experience, no wholes." They "cannot see the forest for the trees" because "there are no forests." 

Yes, crazy. But this is the underlying philosophy of Critical Race Theory and all those other epistemological diseases. And as mentioned above, they surely do violence to time, for they are "tantamount to using a nuclear weapon that could be subsequently used against" themselves.  

I was thinking about this yesterday, when I heard a story about the editors of the UCSB student newspaper, who have vowed to censor any story that might hurt, trigger, or alienate a single snowflake. Well, hold on a second: since I am an enthusiastic proponent of the first amendment, what if I am triggered by their assault on free speech? 

Anyway, the purpose of the past isn't to ransack it in order to find something useful to one's present political wishes. Rather, 

To understand the past in all its complexity is to acquire historical wisdom and humility and indeed a tragic sense of life. A tragic sense does not mean a sad or pessimistic sense of life; it means a sense of the limitations of life.... 

[H]istory tends to inculcate skepticism about our ability to manipulate purposefully our destinies.

Well, no wonder the left hates it! But guess what, he whispered creepily: doesn't Genesis 3 convey this same pessimessage, only implicitly, via myth? To understand history -- and the Fall of man -- is to know that "few things work out the way we intend."

But in order for a progressive to get things done, he needs to forget the past entirely, which is why Brandon is their ideal leader.

So, let's go back, way back, to "Eden" and suppose our man in nirvana was handed the One True Philosophy upon crossing the threshold from biology to prehistory some 100,000 years ago. Indeed, this seems only sporting, considering what we were up against: the elements, other animals, and especially other people, for it seems there were assouls from the start, or within moments of it, anyway. 

With regard to the missing operating manual, Maritain asks whether it was "possible that this knowledge, together with the primitive religion in which it was incorporated, could be transmitted in its integrity by the human race?"

Recall that the edge of history is myth, and that myth didn't just happen once upon a time, but happens every time. Here's one: 

Once upon a timeless the world had one language, one philosophy, and one religion. But people will be people, and it can't get worse than that, so they decided to build an ivory tower that reached up to the heavens in order to make tenure for themselves. 

In his commentary on Genesis 11, Dennis Prager notes a couple of ironies, but I gotta transport my son to a class, so to be continued...

9 comments:

julie said...

But guess what, he whispered creepily

*shudder* Who let Joe in here?

julie said...

Yes, crazy. But this is the underlying philosophy of Critical Race Theory and all those other epistemological diseases. And as mentioned above, they surely do violence to time, for they are "tantamount to using a nuclear weapon that could be subsequently used against" themselves.

For some reason, this reminds me of the video that made the rounds a week or so ago, of the shrieking harpies attacking a black man in an elevator while shouting “Black Lives Matter” as if it were a talisman protecting them from censure for their acts. Yes, they’re white ladies slapping a black man who was in the elevator first, but it’s okay because they’re attacking him for being maskless, not for being black (or so they must believe).

John Venlet said...

The Fall of man. I know this is not, exactly, pertinent to the post, with the exception of the reference to the Fall of man in the post, but, sitting on my back porch the other evening, with a bourbon and a cigar, I was thinking about why the word "fall" is used to describe man's severance, relationship wise, from God. I mean it's not like Adam and Eve tripped over a rock,or stumbled down a hill and fell. I suppose, because the word fall is typically spelled with a capital F, it has achieved noun status, but that alone does not seem to adequately explain why the use of the word Fall to describe our severed relationship to God. Dictionary definitions of the word fall in large part indicate an accidental event, and even a perusal of a thesaurus or two seem to indicate the word fall as an accidental event, that is until one looks in the thesaurus at the word "fallen," where the synonyms for the word fallen include dishonored, immoral, collapsed, unchaste, and a number of other seemingly more accurate descriptions of man's severed relationship to God. I do not know the answer, and maybe my musings about this were the extra pour of bourbon, in conjunction with the cigar, caused me to have too much to think.

Gagdad Bob said...

It certainly implies a verticality without which it is impossible to think about man -- or about anything else for that matter.

John Venlet said...

It certainly implies a verticality without which it is impossible to think about man -- or about anything else for that matter.

Yes it does, Gagdad, yes it does.

Anonymous said...

Ya so what about hybridization of humans with archaic humans? Consider Man was actually more complete and better in the past, but "fell" due to cosmic catastrophe of an instable solar system and interbred with archaic humans, or "mortals.". Angels, aka, the original cro magnon were cast out of heaven and lusted after archaic humans. They gave birth to the giants who were the bloodthirsty demon kings of the past, and were born with atrophied spiritual eyes and have existential issues due to genetics. Hence the feeling of being half Man and half animal.

Cro Magnon had a larger stature and larger brain capacity than the average 5'7" and 1200 cc now. Some of the largest and most advanced stone work in the world are also the most ancient, and could possibly be way older than people think, as new temples are built on old temples.

So "man" isn't a single thing that exist or has always existed. There were advanced humans and also very archaic humans all existing at the same time on earth in ancient times. These were the original "creations" of the original star that created us. As the "creator god" is just a star. Actually the oldest symbol for god is literally a star symbol. These species merged together b/c earth was shaken to the core, and like sediment that had been separated out before, was then blended together in cosmic catastrophe. And we are the result.

One of the big issues with religion is blaming "mankind" for things that have happened in the past. Just read the old testament. The truth is that it was the Macro environment and changes in earth all along. It's hard for anything to survive and thrive when earths magnetosphere collapses and it's bombarded with space weather and plasma storms like we see on other planets. And our own guilt and self blame is actually the disease. As above so below. The macro conditions the micro.

Unless you think we've lived in a stable solar system forever. Then you live in your own bubble, and will blame mankind and sin on ourselves, b/c everything above could only be "good." If it was all stable all along it could only be us.

But that's nonsense and not supported at all by mythology. It was the "gods" that did violence to earth and humans. The "gods" are the original objects in the "shadow of the object" concept. Jungian archetypes are just the residue of these original impingement from above. Most of metaphysics, religion, and mysticism are just shadows of the original religion, which was about recording cosmic and supernatural occurrences on earth. Without this knowledge, it's all a bunch of nonsense, b/c it's not actually grounded in physics, biology, anthropology, genetics, or astrotheology of the past. Things that are real.

So original sin was all about sex and the misuse of sexual force (the snake, aka, kundalini). Interspecies sex led us to the diminished condition we're in. And the gods conditioned earth the way it, not ourselves. Therefore, the only way out is starting above, and working back down to the below.

I'm not really convinced we are evolving. We're just separating out slowly as we're now in a stable solar system again with a strong tropism of light above our heads. In ancient times, that was NOT the case.

Daisy said...

Nobody expects the ... *checks notes* ... hybridization of ancient hominids!

Gagdad Bob said...

"When human beings began to increase in number on the earth and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of humans were beautiful, and they married any of them they chose."

Boris Mouravieff thought this implied two different strands of humans, and I've sometimes wondered if the murder of brother Abel isn't a kind of screen memory of the genocide of our Neanderthal brothers...

In any event, it doesn't matter what kind of human you are, so long as you're ashamed of it.

Van Harvey said...

"Come to think of it, even garden variety neuroses do damage to time's flow; for example, a compulsion creates a kind of temporal eddy, while impulsivity short circuits the path to the future, and trauma freezes one in the past."

Rings the bell, sounds the gong... and does so rhythmically, which helps get time flowing again.

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