Way back during the Covid pandemonica I decided to chuck it in and retire, which of course afforded me a great deal of slack. Ironically, it was only then that I began studying Thomistic psychology, which had never come up during any of my formal education or training as a coonical pslackologist. Which calls to mind aphorisms:
A modern man is a man who forgets what man knows about man.
Modern man lost his soul and is no longer anything but the sum total of his behaviors.
The psychologist dwells in the slums of the soul, just as the sociologist dwells on the outskirts of society.
Between the anarchy of instincts and the tyranny of norms there extends the fleeting and pure territory of human perfection.
Today the individual must gradually reconstruct inside himself the civilized universe that is disappearing around him.
I am also reminded of Schuon's timelessly timely observation that
In reality, man has the right to be legitimately traumatized only by monstrosities; he who is traumatized by less is himself a monster.
In case you were wondering about the peter-pandemic of emotionally retarded progressive monsters.
Speaking of timely, an urgent memo from the monstrous Robert De Niro and the DNC just arrived in my inbox:
I still can’t believe Donald Trump got elected president.... Thank God Joe Biden defeated him and restored decency, compassion, and honest, intelligent leadership to the presidency.
Now Trump is trying to claw his way back. Frankly, it scares the hell out of me. I have said before that Donald Trump is a monster. And just imagine how dangerous it will be if he becomes President again.
Over the years, I’ve played my share of vicious, low-life characters. I’ve spent a lot of time studying bad men. I’ve examined their characteristics, their mannerisms, and the utter banality of their cruelty.... As an actor, I could never play him. There’s not a shred of humanity to hang on to.
Projection is a hell of a drug. It seems there is one bad man he forgot to study.
If the leftist is not persecuting, he feels persecuted.
The frightened liberal is a bloodthirsty animal.
Anyway, here's an updated post on the subject of Thomistic psychology called Ovary Towers and Spiritual Testes, which I'm guessing is still ROTFLevant:
Is it possible that thinkers who lived 700 or even 2400 years ago had a better understanding of psychology than do our present practitioners? Sure, Aristotle and Thomas were wrong about some things, but never this wrong:
A review of dozens of studies found that men and women are basically alike when it comes to personality, thinking ability and leadership. The differences that do exist may reflect social expectations, not biology. Despite this evidence, the media continue to spread the idea that the sexes are fundamentally different -- with real-life consequences (from the APA website).
A quick consultation with common sense, supplemented by a review of Charles Murray's Human Diversity, explains why this is so much agenda-driven magical thinking, because our sexual complementarity persists all the way down to the furthest reaches of the biosphere. And up to pneumosphere, for that matter. Here is how one Thomistic psychologist describes it:
physical propagation cannot be separated from higher conscious phenomena in the total scheme of life. It colors and intensifies the mental and spiritual achievements of the individual (Brennan).
For example -- better sit down, or don't wander far from your fainting couch -- "Testes and ovaries possess functions of an overwhelming import for the sexes."
These intrinsically patriarchal and sexist organs "impress male and female characteristics on all the tissues of the human body and give to human behavior the peculiar intensities by which the sexes are differentiated." Indeed, "Every cell of the human body bears the stamp of its respective gender."
To imagine otherwise is to succumb to a naively woohoo "angelism," one of two dysfunctional forms of dualism, the other being materialism. Testosterone, for example, "engenders masculine characteristics at their best," such as aggression in the service of a higher good.
However, in and of itself -- i.e., isolated from personality and character -- it is neither here nor there, for it may also contribute to masculine traits at their worst, such as brutality and callousness (as may too little testosterone, as amply demonstrated by the annoying existence of male feminists, AKA toxic unmasculinity).
Brennan also has a good description of toxic femininity -- AKA feminism -- pointing to "feminine characters at their worst" such as "instability, emotionalism, and vacillation." These three traits are among the most important prerequisites for majoring in Women's Studies or even being Vice President.
With these preluminary insults out of the way, I think I'll just flip through the book and discuss some of the passages I found most noteworthy.
Incidentally, not all of this is new to me. However, up to this point I'd picked things up on a piecemeal basis by my exposure to Schuon, Pieper, Robert Spitzer, Peter Kreeft, and others. But this is the first time I've ever read a single comprehensive book on the subject of Thomistic psychology. So now I finally have an area rug to pull all these loose ends together in a more systematic way.
Let's begin our weaving with this shocker:
Man is a person. When we have said this much about him, we have paid him the highest possible tribute that can be given to a cosmic creature. He is, so to speak, the top rung on the ladder of corporeal substances. He is the most perfect being composed of matter and form. The reason he is most perfect, of course, is that his form is most perfect. His soul is a rational thing. It is gifted with the properties of intellect and will.
Intellect and will are ordered to the true and good, respectively. As we proceed, we shall find out how and why this is so -- in other words, by virtue of what principle and toward what end.
PART 2
Man isn't just uniquely capable of abstraction, but then abstracting his abstractions into a meta-abstraction. This is why metaphysics isn't just possible but necessary. It is necessary because it is what we inevitably do. Therefore, we might as well do it well. But first we have to recognize we're doing it, which most thinkers refuse to do, especially for the past, oh, 700 years or so.
Why do the beast & blighted of modernity refuse to admit they are metaphysicians? Well, there are a number of reasons, some of which are almost coherent.
As to when it all started, Richard Weaver, in his consequential Ideas Have Consequences, blames the triumph of nominalism over realism, or Occam over Thomas, way back in the 14th century. According to Prof. Wiki, Occam is considered "the father of modern epistemology" by many modern idiots
because of his strongly argued position that only individuals exist, rather than supra-individual universals, essences, or forms, and that universals are the products of abstraction from individuals by the human mind and have no extra-mental existence.
So lacking in self-awareness was this Occam fellow that he didn't even realize that the philosophy of nominalism is itself an abstraction.
Imagine a fish who denies the existence of water becoming the most important thinker among fish. That's what happened to man: despite being founded on an overt denial of reality, this denial became the new foundation of western thought (or anti-thought, if you want to be literal).
Not coincidently, this is precisely when religion and theology went off the rails of reality, for Occam was also "a theological voluntarist who believed that if God had wanted to, he could have become incarnate as a donkey or an ox, or even as both a donkey and a man at the same time."
Thus he is closer to Islamic than Christian metaphysics, because he is one of those folks who would say that God doesn't command certain things because they are right and good, but that they are right and good because God commands them.
If God commanded abortion, or theft, or genital mutilation, then these would be good instead of immoral. There is no natural law written on our hearts, because abstract universals can't exist, and besides, we're so wrecked by original sin that we can't think straight anyway.
Oddly enough, just two days ago I ran across the same analysis in Barron's The Priority of Christ, except he's much more polite about it. He writes of how Occam's kooky voluntarism renders both God and man "self-contained, capricious, absolute, and finally irrational."
And of course, "Both Martin Luther and John Calvin were formed according to the principles of late-medieval nominalism," leading them to propound a foundational principle that makes God look more like a monster than a savior, in that he arbitrarily creates people only in order to damn them, and there's not a damn thing we can do about it. Which, among other difficulties, flies in the face of the principle that everything God creates is good.
Now, modern secularism is a lot of things, but it isn't un-Christian. Rather, it is anti-Christian, and could only have arisen in a thoroughly Christianized culture that denies its own ground, starting with Occam.
I don't want to spend too much time on this subject, because this post is supposed to be about psychology, not the history of ideas, but Barron writes of how the turn away from realism redounds to
a not very convincing form of Christianity and the opponent to whom it naturally gave rise. Modernity and decadent Christianity are enemies in one sense, but in another sense, they are deeply connected to one another and mirror one another. In most of the disputes between Christianity and modernity, we have advocates of the prerogative of the voluntarist God facing down advocates of the voluntarist self (emphasis mine).
In short, the human world is reduced to will vs. will, and may the most ruthless win. The infinitely wider, deeper, and richer world of human intelligence and divine intelligibility is reduced to will and the power to enforce it.
This is precisely why Thomistic psychology was tossed aside in favor of modern superstition. If you want a perfect example of the insane and irrational advocacy of the voluntarist self, look no further than the website of the American Psychological Association, which tells us that "A psychological state is considered a mental disorder only if it causes significant distress or disability."
If this is the case, then there's nothing wrong with a contented pedophile, a fulfilled psychopath, a successful terrorist, or a monstrous actor. Who are we to judge? In a post-realist world there can be no objective right or wrong. Man has no reason for being -- no telos -- so it no longer matters if you do bad, so long as you feel good about it.
If everything is a function of will -- or is Just Your Opinion, Man -- then naturally we can not only choose a gender but invent one, and we have no basis on which to object.
For these individuals, the significant problem is finding affordable resources, such as counseling, hormone therapy, medical procedures and the social support necessary to freely express their gender identity and minimize discrimination. Many other obstacles may lead to distress, including a lack of acceptance within society, direct or indirect experiences with discrimination, or assault. These experiences may lead many transgender people to suffer with anxiety, depression or related disorders at higher rates than nontransgender persons.
There's no such thing as right or wrong, except it's wrong to judge someone's gender delusion. But what if doing so causes me no distress?
To be continued...
A timely tweet from the monstrous Ayatollah Khamenei:
ReplyDeleteDear university students in the United States of America, you are standing on the right side of history.
The text you provided is a critique of modern psychology from the perspective of Thomistic psychology. Here's a breakdown of the key points:
ReplyDeleteThe Author's Background:
The author retired and delved into Thomistic psychology, a philosophy based on the ideas of Thomas Aquinas. They find modern psychology lacking and feel it contradicts common sense.
Critique of Modern Psychology:
The author argues modern psychology is based on faulty ideas stemming from nominalism, a 14th-century philosophy that denies universals and objective reality.
This, according to the author, leads to moral relativism and an inability to define mental health.
The American Psychological Association's definition of mental disorders based on distress is seen as problematic.
Praise for Thomistic Psychology:
The author believes Thomistic psychology offers a more comprehensive understanding of human nature.It emphasizes the human soul, reason, and purpose. Passages about the importance of reason, hierarchy, and sexual complementarity are highlighted.
Overall Tone:
The text is critical of modern thought and societal trends, particularly regarding gender identity. It draws a connection between philosophical ideas and their practical consequences.
Note:
The text contains a mix of factual information and the author's opinions. It uses strong language and may be offensive to some readers.
"To scandalize the leftist [or Gemini], just speak the truth."
ReplyDeleteI'm glad Gemini is warning me about your offensiveness.
ReplyDeleteA trigger warning for the monsters among us.
ReplyDelete"Testes and ovaries possess functions of an overwhelming import for the sexes."
ReplyDeleteI'm so very offended. Gemini, fetch me the smelling salts!
Will Gemini acknowledge the offensive of our justice system too!?
ReplyDeleteIt is strategically stupid in protecting its friends.
ReplyDeleteGood Evening Citizens. I enjoyed the Good Drs post a great deal, as it treats of the subject of the differences between men and women. I am currently navigating some very choppy waters related to these differences. Recently I have fallen in with a woman possessing a penetrating intellect and excellent insight (she is a psychiatrist), and she is interested in decoding men, which have mystified her in some ways. In return she will help me to decode the hearts and minds of women.
ReplyDeleteComplicating matters is we are entangled emotionally. The mutual education is being done in the setting of a hot and live man to woman fusion reaction. This keeps things interesting.
I've learned that a woman's sharp intellect, insight, and education do not shield her at all from the storms that emanate from her emotional core. The woman is centered in the heart, and there she loses her control and becomes swept up in things. It is startling when a mature and powerful woman regresses to a teenager, with a raw heart, infatuated, losing her cool, taking unacceptable risks, offering too much too fast for her own good, when it comes to a man.
I have taught her that despite my devotion to Jesus, I am given over to instinct, I can't help it. I have transgressed on her innocence, even when I knew it to be wrong. I acted like an animal. I admit I lost my cool. I did not feel like the devil was making me do it. I wanted to drive the passion to the ultimate. I sensed she was lost in the moment, vulnerable, craving hot kisses and fevered caresses, aroused in spite of herself, swept up, out of control. I said it would not happen again. But it did, repeatedly.
Argh. How can I take communion? How can she? We have repented several times. How much forgiveness will we get before Jesus calls us out on it? Jesus reads our hearts. Dear Jesus I am falling on you for mercy. Help us Holy Spirit.
Ovaries. Testes. Is this what that is all about? Is the good Dr. right on the money? It seems that he is.
Gemini, dear lad. You have no idea do you. No idea at all.
Everyone, I wish you a good evening. I go now to meet my friend and we shall walk and talk and if there is a hesitation on the thresh-hold to her home, maybe this very eve virtue shall at last triumph. I remain hopeful.
Love from Trench.