Word of the day: rawdoggin'. The term
has been hilariously repurposed by the internet to describe submitting to grueling life experiences without the benefit of modern distractions, luxuries, technology, and conveniences.
The meme seems to have been popularized by a fellow
who posted TikToks of himself on 15-hour flights doing nothing but staring straight ahead at the flight map on the screen in front of him; no headphones, earbuds, phone, laptop, movies, music, books, or magazine. Not even a crossword puzzle.
"Extreme rawdoggers will even forgo food and water during the flight."
I guess I like to think of these posts as a form of vertical rawdoggin': just staring straight ahead at the screen and seeing what kind of religion the Almighty & me works out betwixt us this morning.
Aw, who am I kidding? I'm usually interacting with another text, while real vertical rawdoggin' is Abraham dropping everything and taking off for parts unknown, or Moses going alone up the mountain, or Jesus in the desert, or the apostles lighting out for the territories with nothing but a pair of flip flops, or the desert fathers leaving everything behind....
Then again,
We all have a key to the door that opens to the luminous and noble peace of the desert.
And Schuon says that "man's vocation and duty is to become what he is, precisely by freeing himself, inwardly, from the encroaching shadows of this contingent, imperfect, and transitory world."
Therefore, the luminous and noble peace of the desert must have something to do with leaving the contingent, imperfect, and transitory for the necessary, perfect, and permanent. A reminder that
The Church's function is not to adapt Christianity to the world, nor even adapt the world to Christianity; her function is to maintain a counterworld to the world.
This counterworld needn't be a literal desert. Rather, as mentioned in a different context in yesterday's post, "I suppose it's the direction from which you look at these things that determines almost everything." Thus, according to Schuon,
If one looks at the universe exclusively with the eyes of relativity, one will see only relative things and the universe will be reduced in the final analysis to an inextricable absurdity.
This follows necessarily from the bottom-up perspective. But if we look from the top down, or if "one sees it with the eyes of absoluteness," then "one will essentially see manifestations of the Supreme Principle," which you could say is the very ground of the counterworld.
About the bottom-up perspective, AKA materialism, Schuon says that
nothing is more contradictory than to deny the spirit, or even simply the psychic element, in favor of matter alone, for it is the spirit that denies, whereas matter remains inert and unconscious. The fact that matter can be conceptualized proves that materialism contradicts itself at its starting point...
The same is true of the claim that man cannot know truth, or that all is relative except for relativism, or that subjects could arise from objects. Nevertheless, that's the horizontal world for which we need the vertical counterworld mentioned above:
Contingency on the one hand and presence of the Absolute on the other; these are the two poles of our existence.
Which goes precisely to the top-down / bottom-up dispute in All Things are Full of Gods.
One problem with the bottom-up perspective is that in it there can't actually be an "up." Calling it "up" is just in a manner of speaking, because any up is reducible without remainder to the lower level.
Not so for the top-down approach, which doesn't dismiss matter as an epiphenomenal illusion. True, in Vedanta it is regarded as mere appearance, but nevertheless an appearance of reality. As Schuon describes it,
Atma is conceivable without Maya, whereas Maya is intelligible only through the notion of Atma.
In other words, there can be reality without appearances, but no appearances without reality. "Relativity is a projection of the Absolute, or it is nothing." But it's not nothing. It's just not everything.
Back to Hart, the next chapter is called Spirit in Nature, which expresses the same top-down argument that
the mind pervades all things, and expresses itself in countless degrees and in endlessly differing but kindred modes...
In this vertical counterworld, "we all belong to a vast community of spiritual beings," and why not? The spiritual is ontologically prior to the material, so "Nervous systems appeared in evolutionary history not as fortuitous vehicles for a new organic power; they were fashioned by a prior operative disposition."
I'm talking about a pervasive reality of organic life, at every level.
Yes, but are you just deepaking the chopra? No, because
The issue remains: which narrative is logically consistent, the bottom-up story that says mindless matter somehow became mind or the top-down story that says mind operates as formal and final causality on the whole material realm?
"I believe that nature is already mind," which seems indisputable given the infinite intelligibility of the world, which is just the shadow of intelligence.
Again, it's a matter of the direction from which we look: "I stake myself to the top-down causal narrative," of "mind 'descending' into matter and raising matter up into itself as life and thought."
There is "an essential creative impulse within the very structure of nature, quickening it from within itself, driving it into ever more diverse and more complex forms."
This is beginning to sound like the Evolutionary Paradigm of the new age vulgarians.
Yes, perhaps a word of caution is in order before we proceed any further:
We do not deny that evolution exists within certain limits, as is indeed evident enough, but we do deny that it is a universal principle, and hence a law which affects and determines all things, including the immutable....
[W]hat has to be categorically rejected is the idea that truth evolves, or that revealed doctrines are the product of an evolution (Schuon).
Evolution is one thing, but evolutionism
is the very negation of the archetypes and consequently of the divine Intellect; it is therefore the negation of an entire dimension of the real, namely that of form, of the static, of the immutable; concretely speaking, it is as if one wished to make a fabric of the wefts only, omitting the warps (ibid.).
And we're back to the nature of the cosmic area rug, which is woven from strands of verticality and horizontality -- or immanence and transcendence, absolute and relative, stasis and change, appearance and reality, world and counterworld, etc., depending on the direction from which we look.
In any event, that's the end of the chapter.
Ha - that's a title I never would have expected to see here.
ReplyDeleteWeirdly, it does fit with the spiritual life; how can God be closer than our own skin if there are barriers, artificial or otherwise?
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ReplyDeleteGood morning, Dr. Godwin, Julie, and all readers near and far.
ReplyDeleteFrom your excellent post: " About the bottom-up perspective, AKA materialism, Schuon says that...The fact that matter can be conceptualized proves that materialism contradicts itself at its starting point..."
I think there may have been rush to judgment on this point. Schuon concluded matter could never have achieved consciousness, as evidenced by the conceptualizing mind, without spirit involvement. PRECISELY how this conclusion was reached is never fleshed out. Dr. Godwin has also made the same leap of faith many times in his writing also.
What exactly is the exclusionary factor(s) to matter becoming conscious solely within the bounds of physics as we know it, and without a higher power involved? I don't see it.
When we fold "deep" time into the equation, we see there was eons upon eons allotted for chemical reactions to occur using solar and geothermal energy, acting upon the table of elements present on Earth.
The counter-entropic formulae which led to rise of life occurred when extremely complex organization of matter arrived on the scene, simply because it was possible and immense durations were available.
Happenstance is a b*tch, and when you give it all the time in the world, sh*t happens, to put it crudely.
Life eventually gave rise to the staggeringly complex human brain, with its trillions of snapping synpses, producing the epiphenom of consciousness and subjectivity, which led to it conceptualizing matter. And the loop is closed.
Where is any of the above not plausible? The epiphenom part? Undoubtedly the shakiest element.
I think the materialists have a fairly strong argument, in short.
THAT BEING SAID:
It is easy for a single individual to refute materialism, because the intuitive functions of the mind give the individual direct access to spirit reality, which often takes the form of Jesus and the Holy Spirit, God the Father, and the Adversary. We all feel it, we all know it.
ReplyDeleteBut, there is no inter-subjectivity of the spirit. We can point to a cat on a mat, and ask "Is there a cat on the mat?" And others will say, "why yes there is."
Matter is very inter-subjective.
But spirit? Can you point to your soul and ask "Does my soul now wear a brilliant magenta robe?" And other will say, "why I don't know, I can't see your soul." Spirit is not inter-subjective via senses, you have to make it into words.
By dint of this the materialist seems to get the upper hand, but of course...God just laughs. And so do we.
Love from Trenchy Trench Trench on a park Bench.