Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Imagine There's No Imaginaton

It's pretty hard to do.

The imagination is the only place in the world where one can dwell.

Certainly it is where I like to dwell, and thanks to retirement, it is where I spend most of my timelessness. This blog is a kind of journal of that timelessness, because someone has to do it. I'm not an artist, but then again, I like to think I provide a service. Like any other artist. 

Appearance is not the veil, but the vehicle, of reality.

Now, vehicles are for movement, in this case, the vertical kind. Unless I'm missing something.

In the beginning is the Word: it seems that the world is made of language -- or that language is the bridge between immanence and transcendence. Conversely, the senses cannot make that leap, and can only register horizontal, surface-to-surface sensations on the immanent plane.

On the one hand, even before the appearance of Homo sapiens, transcendence is always here. But it must await humanity in order for it to be entered, articulated, and mapped herebelow. 

Imagination takes place in the great In Between, or what Voegelin needlessly calls the metaxy -- needless because it's just a Greek word for the same thing. In any event, we can imaginatively open ourselves to the Beyond, or be enclosed in immanence, in which case we drive our vehicle into an ontological ditch of non-being:

CLOSED EXISTENCE or CLOSURE: Voegelin's term for the mode of existence in which there are internal impediments [AKA roadblocks] to a free flow of truth into consciousness and to the pull of the transcendental (Webb).

The pull of the transcendental. No need to push. In that case, beam me up!   

Given this ubiquitous vertical pull, it seems that we aren't like a ship in the doldrums, as it were, waiting for the wind to propel us. 

Come to think of it, in the new universe discovered by Einstein, what we call gravity is a curvature in spacetime. Used to be that the shortest distance between two points was a straight line. But nowadays it's also the longest distance, since if you proceed in the opposite direction you'll eventually wind up at the same point.  

So there's a kind of gravitational attraction -- the Pull -- but there's actually a mutual attraction. It seems that the big O depicted below is attracted to us as much as we are to it, tracing the arc of a great circle route or something: 

[T]he presence of a massive body curves space-time, as if a bowling ball were placed on the rubber sheet to create a cuplike depression. In the analogy, a marble placed near the depression rolls down the slope toward the bowling ball as if pulled by a force. In addition, if the marble is given a sideways push, it will describe an orbit around the bowling ball, as if a steady pull toward the ball is swinging the marble into a closed path.

And here we are.

About bridges, the Aphorist says that

The bridge between nature and man is not science, but myth.

And that 

The world is only interesting when it is mirrored in man's imagination.

Which is what we call Art, I suppose.

Imagination is the capacity to perceive through the senses the attributes of the object that the senses do not perceive.

Music, for example, is an "object" that is perceived through the senses. But the senses do not reveal its transcendent nature; hearing is not listening, just as touching is not grasping or seeing perceiving.

Man is spirit incarnate.... But the object of his existence is to be in the middle: it is to transcend matter while being situated there, and to realize the light, the Sky, starting from this intermediary level. 

It is true that the other creatures also participate in life, but man synthesizes them: he carries all life within himself and thus becomes the spokesman for all life, the vertical axis where life opens onto the spirit and where it becomes spirit (Schuon).

So, here we are, situated in matter while transcending it, and there's not a thing we can do about it. Indeed, not to boast, but

The very word “man” implies “God,” the very word “relative” implies “Absolute” (ibid.).

The Aphorist reminds us that  

Values are not citizens of this world, but pilgrims from other heavens.

Or hells. To which people are also attracted, or rather, which exert their own annoying pull.

Perhaps transcendence could be doubted, if error, ugliness and evil were not its incontrovertible shadow.

Ultimately,

The vulgar epistemology of the natural sciences is a burlesque idealism in which the brain plays the role of "I."

It's vulgar because it is like imagination imagining there is no imagination, when in fact -- and principle -- it's the only place to really be, or to be real, precisely. 

How is it that there is such a thing as the self, the I that knows and loves and finds fulfillment in communion with other I's (Varghese)?

For in reality, immanence and transcendence are but bipolar "directions" or pointers, and we can never (in this life) arrive at the place where they point. Although C.S. Lewis was not wrong in wishing to find the place where all the beauty comes from, i.e., "my country, the place where I ought to have been born." 

Suppose we go there, it is a going to or going back

Gosh. It's all very trinitarian when you think about it, isn't it? And faith isn't a leap in the dark, but rather, a leap into its Light:

[T]he doctrine of the Trinity is the breathtaking truth that makes sense of all other truths, the luminous mystery that illuminates all other mysteries, the dazzling sun that allows us to see all things except itself (and this is not because of darkness but its excess of light) (Varghese).

All other mysteries?

Yes, because "Every time we think..., we manifest, however imperfectly, the beginningless-endless act of knowing," of "generating and spirating that is the Trinity." 

And 

Only a consciousness and an intelligence free of any limitation whatsoever could serve as an explanation for the existence of any consciousness and intelligence in this world (ibid.).

Imagine that!

The meanings are the reality; their material vehicles are the appearance.

9 comments:

julie said...

[T]he presence of a massive body curves space-time...

Along those lines, much as we aren't the sun but also aren't not the sun, we aren't the earth but aren't not the earth. Everything we are is made from some combination of matter and light, and even as we are drawn into the earth's gravitational pull we are also contributors to it, from an astronomical point of view. At least, I don't see how it could be otherwise, unless one were to count, say, clouds, gravel, sand or dust - particles not directly attached to the globe - as not earth.

Gagdad Bob said...

And along those lines, I just ordered another book by this Varghese fellow that looks intriguing, Metaverse of Mind: The Cosmic Social Network.

julie said...

Looks interesting, and only $.99 on Kindle (at least for now)...

Gagdad Bob said...

It may turn out to be a lotta Deepakin, but maybe my kind of Deepakin.

Open Trench said...

Hey Mr. Dude are you still playing bass? How about imbedding a link to some of your music either past or present?

Or how about a father-son jam? You got any groove like that laying around?

Sprecken Sie Gnawa? Give us the vibe of the tribe make us feel alive.


Poppop said...

If one finds one's vehicle stuck in an ontological ditch might one call for a Tao truck?

There is something about that stretched rubber grid sheet that rubs me wrong along the nature of a tautology. It explains gravity by a metaphor dependent on ... gravity? Huh?

Gagdad Bob said...

The best we can manage in such matters are points of reference that vault the mind into a higher perspective, thus escaping taotaology.

Open Trench said...

Popop, I read you. I thought the same thing about that illustration.

I now recollect the bed-sheet metaphor was not put forward to explain gravity. The model instead illustrates the bending of space associated with gravity. This bending produces the ubiquitous orbital behavior of masses. There have been also discoveries of measurable optical effects and measurable differences the rate at which time transpires. These effects have been shown to be dependent on proximity to gravity or, in the case of time distortion, high velocities.

The explanation for gravity itself is still under debate, currently thought to be caused by massless particles called gravitons.

Poppop said...

"the bed-sheet metaphor was not put forward to explain gravity"

Ah, so we are short-sheeted metaphorically once again.

The gravitons have been crowded out of the 21st century by the flippantons, I am pretty sure. Present company excluded, of curse.

"thus escaping taotaology"

Well I have just been gifted early for Christmas with the title for my soon-to-be blog. Move over, _Also Sprach_ ...

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