Confabulations
6
Edited by Adam Blatner, Imagination-ologist
(Part of Series on Textures of Reality---also known as:
the Journal of {Very} Speculative
Philosophy)
First posted, August 31, 2010, Revised May 12, 2011 (See Confabulations 1 2
3 4
5
(This
is
6) 7 8
You Want Proof?
You want hard evidence? How about the mathematical equation that
explains it all? Well, you're in luck: Here 'tis. Irrefutable, if I may
say so myself. Or, to quote a denizen of Through-the-Looking-Glass
Realm, Humpty Dumpty (Lewis Carroll was in touch with an alternative
reality): "There's glory for you!"
The rest of this particular interaction: 'I don't know what you
mean by "glory",' Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. 'Of course you don't — till I tell
you. I meant "there's a
nice knock- down argument for you!"'
'But "glory" doesn't mean "a nice knock-down argument",' Alice objected.
'When I use a word,' Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a
scornful tone, 'it means just what I choose
it to mean — neither more nor less.'
'The question is,' said Alice, 'whether you can make
words mean so many different things.'
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master — that's
all.'
I confess that this passage has significant meaning, in the light of
discoveries in the field of semantics---the study of the meanings of
words---especially the emotional coloring people feel about them. This
field was very influential in my development. So I dare play with words
and concepts in an effort to penetrate their deeper meanings (or
non-sense).
Reality
What we call reality is just the skin, so to speak. We've been
penetrating the skin of reality in many ways: Developing better
approaches to human and animal anatomy, astronomy, oceanography,
geology, mathematics, physics, chemistry, linguistics, history---just
about all human endeavors might be viewed as getting beyond that which
is obvious, that which is superficial. What we find is complexity and
beyond that, much greater complexity. For those with a spirit of
adventure, this is bracing, intriguing. It's as if we continue to be
challenged to the edges of our understanding and then just a little
further.
The proper response involves a complex mixture of humility yet
confidence to take it on. (That doesn't mean you're going to get it
all, soon, or even forever---but you are hopeful you'll get more.) One
needs to balance also ambition, a bit of wild presumption, with again
surrender. These qualities are not easy to balance, but then again, as
the sages say about true maturation of the soul, there is also a need
to balance qualities that once were thought to be either / or, either
masculine or feminine, either spiritual or secular---and of course the
art is to learn how to do both.
In art, too, there is a need for balancing. I have been influenced by
the philosopher Charles Hartshorne (1897-2000), whom I was privileged
to know. Among his diverse interests---not only philosophy, but also
ornithology, and especially the mystery of the at times remarkably
musically interesting songs of some species of birds---he developed a
theory of aesthetics, of what is beautiful. Basically, you can't pin it
down, it's a flow among seeming dualities, opposites, never being
stuck, moving between and among: novelty and sameness; loudness
and softness; dissonance and consonance; beauty and ugliness; fast and
slow; rhythmic and breaks in rhythm, or new types of rhythm; complexity
and simplicity; profundity and superficiality; different emotional
tones and mixtures; and so forth. This variation may apply to all the
creative and expressive arts and crafts.
Reality (2)
Reality is so we can really mess with this stuff, so we can sustain a
perception, keep a relationship going, satisfy the human instinct to
grasp, possess, settle down. Our dream world doesn't offer this, for
the most part. One could argue along with the fascinating character of
Pico della Mirandola" who said, in his Oration
on
the
Dignity of Man
(around 1490) that "Spiritual beings from the beginning become
what they are to be for all eternity. Man, when he entered life,
the Father gave the seeds of every kind and every way of life
possible. Whatever seeds each man sows and cultivates will grow
and bear him their proper fruit." People can use their minds, he
asserted, to lift themselves to be more spiritual or they could give in
to the temptations of laziness of mind and childish bodily desires and
be more like beasts. Humans are a great opportunity for God to
experience three-dimensional space plus one-way time in some
interesting ways.
But that doesn't mean that reality is confined to those dimensions. We
can glimpse at deeper pattens, though it hasn't been clear what they
mean: What, after all, is music, or mathematics, romance, the arts,
consciousness itself? These mysteries show little evidence of being
answered by the physical sciences. They operate on the "skin" of the
cosmos, the external or "explicate order" (in
contrast
to
what the physicist and theorist David Bohm called
"implicate order")..
Esoteric versus Exoteric
The exoteric is what is out there, plain as day. The esoteric is out
there, too, but not so readily perceived. It's more like what comes out
at dusk or twilight. (People have their own associations to the
meanings of twilight versus dusk or evening, have you noticed?) The
esoteric has to do with what you need to study for, but also use
intuition to understand. What's life about? The exoteric is generally
filled with platitudes and common sense. The esoteric is deeeper.
Exoteric religion involves showing up and being part of the
congregation. Esoteric religion involves those who want to stretch
their minds and hearts with a bit more discipline, to really connect.
It's more mystical.
Kabbalah
The aforementioned Pico Della Mirandola was a young man, brilliant, who
hung out with scholars from many backgrounds. He found depths in the
Jewish mystical tradition called Kabbalah---and I, too, have found this
tradition to be rich with implications. (I write about it more on other
websites.) (Indeed, it seems that Pico was the fellow who brought the
Kabbalistic tradition into Western Christian esoteric thought, which in
time became the root of some Rosicrucian, Theosophical, Magickal, and
Neo-Pagan trends.) Kabbalah seems to me to the epitome of
esoteric thinking, perhaps because, though rooted in a thick tradition,
it also speaks to principles that transcend any particular
religion---or that's the way I see it, anyway. (To the right is one of
my versions of "The Tree of Life." )-->
What is "underneath" ordinary material reality, the appearances, the
superficialities of role relations? I find another connection between
this question and Jungian psychology: Related vaguely to
psychoanalysis, Jung's analytical psychology includes a far broader
range of sources of motivations that he calls "the archetypes." (I
write about these elsewhere on this website, also.)
Thinking It
Dare it be thought? Can it even be imagined? Perhaps it may just be
dimly intuited? Then there are those few or those wacky enough to think
it but cannot find the words to express what is thought. What does that
say about our poor minds and its density---or destiny?
Nor is thought distinct. The concept of "complex" was one of the better
products of psychoanalytic theory: Our mind rarely thinks a clean
thought. Almost always there are associations that may be easily
accessed by consciousness, along with many that are not easily
accessible or perhaps not at all accessible to the powers of ordinary
awareness. The whole field of semantics speaks to the emotional tones
evoked by certain words, and how knowing that this dynamic
happens with words can help us to become more conscious. Developed by
Alfred Korzybski in the era in which psychoanalysis was becoming quite
the intellectual fashion (in the 1920s and 1930s), semantics offered
another way of insight---and in my thinking, at times equally or even
more useful than what was then and even now illuminated by depth
psychology!
Complexes also include memories of relationships, their tone, which in
turn may have involved mixed feelings. Complexes mix the individual's
ability to conceptualize, levels of maturity, willingness to engage,
tolerance for ambiguity, the degrees of pride needed to sustain a
valued sense of self, and many other variables.
Finally, there's the interesting problem that most thoughts might be
thought differently when run through the thinking filters of one with a
different background, world-view, historical era, motivational system,
set of priorities, and innumerable other things. This of course leads
to the next topic:
Different "Trips"
This term from the late 1960s referred not only to psychedelic
experiences, but in a broader sense, the idea that people have
different destinies, "dharma," journeys in life, challenges that fit
their particular blend of personal background, talents, temperament,
and preferred interests and imagery (see paper elsewhere on this
website about individuality). This picture on the right hints at the
variety of journeys operating in this world. There was a popular song
in the 1956 titled "Two Different Worlds," and many other observers
have noted the seeming incompatibility of class, race, age, or other
demographic variable. The older I grow the more I have come to sense
that in may ways most people live in different worlds, they are on
different trips. This is in line in a sense with that existential
philosophical rejection of any doctrine that pretends to generalize
about human nature (i.e., "existence precedes essence").
And yet what's amazing is that you out there in your other universe
really, really exist! I think Descartes' solipsistic thought
experiiment that led him to the logical conclusion that "cogito, ergo
sum," "I think, therefore I am," wasn't bad, but yet wasn't enough of a
stretch. What's also obviously true and ultimately mysterious is that
you exist as much as I do, and you're so different in subtle ways, and
what does that all mean? Whoa!
Dancing in the Flow
Here we are (on the left), in not only this dimension, our angels
shuffling and re-shuffling our pre-birth karmic factors, our destinies
yet to interact, but over time, it is the Dance of Shiva Nataraj, the
image of a god expressing the spirit of the cosmic play, "leela."
I'm not even sure which one is "me" when I do this dance, but when I do
folk dancing or square dancing, there are other times when what's up is
the dance, and it's not terribly important who is dancing, or whether
"I" am being noticed, or whether "I'm good enough." It is enough just
to be participating in making this complex communal gesture happen, and
it's actually fun to blend in with the we, in gentle ecstasy (in the
sense of the Latin word root, ex- outside of, and -stacy,
standing---standing outside of our egocentric perspective, surrendering
to the flow.
I'd like to see lots more community dancing. Not dancing in
crowds but it's still you making sexy moves; nor even the great fun of
ballroom dancing, which for me is another art form, but rather the
challenge of types of folk dancing (including square and round
dancing) in which what's up is the we-ness celebrating the
forces of holy making-nice-happen in interesting
spatial-body-music-combinations.
Textures of Reality
"Reality??? Ha! What a concept!" -- "Mork" as played by Robin Williams
in a 1970s science fiction sit-com. Mork was a visitor from the planet
Mongo or something like that. He obviously didn't take our concepts of
reality too seriously. I can get with that.
What we experience as reality is a compound, a composite, an aggregate
of billions of components. Mind can entertain such complexities, though
it isn't smart enough to figure it out. It can learn to see through the
illusory nature of what we take to be reality, and innumerable books by
South Asian philosophers and commentators also in the West in the last
half century and more have noted this dynamic. It is the essence of
Buddhism. Most people America and Europe still believe that reality is
out there and mostly made of stuff, whereas it is often more useful to
recognize that most of reality is mind-stuff, stories we make up about
what stuff is and what it's about.
Self as Illusion
Take the experience of being a separate individual, a self. In our own
lifetime it may become apparent that it's more useful to think of the
"self" not as a single "thing" but rather, another kind of illusion.
What we experience and/or tend to think of as self involves not only
the innumerable qualities, roles, thoughs, sensations, interpretations,
and other mind functions with which we identify---and identification is
the activity of in effect saying, "Yes, that is part of me, or like me,
or I'm part of it!"
On the right is a very diagrammatic example of how there's a kind of
thread that ties together many different dimensions or planes of
existence. Self-ing is an active process of constructing a sense of
continuity and cohesion among a variety of roles---even though this
sense is in great part influenced by the narrative or story we tell
ourselves about who we are and where we fit in this whole shebang.
As illustrated on the
right, these roles actually involve different dimensions---some played
out more in the realms of economics, or family life, play or religion,
and so forth. In those roles, the individual is actually somewhat
different in the subtle feelins of how one is, although at the same
time the differences of this state of mind and its associated behaviors
differ from other roles is blurred. One feels oneself to be the same
person.
I amplify this concept of constructing of a self as a process (rather
than believing that there "is" such a "thing" as a "self") in an essay
on another website. The
metaphysical elaboration of this picture hints at the intuition of
the virtual existence of many sub-"planes" of existence operating
within the larger dimensions accessible to and co-created by mind. This
co-creation is occasionally idiosyncratic, mainly created by an
individual, but most often to a greater or lesser extent co-created by
others and the family, community, and culture in general. That is to
say that we tend to think in lines that are consistent with world-views
and experiences that have been articulated as being at least somewhat
valid in this culture. There is yet room for innumerable variations but
there are also limits.Byeon those limits ideas are near- or literally
in-conceivable, impossible to conceptualize, imagine.
Many ideas and themes today were
inconceivable to people living two
centuries away, and at the edge of conceivability---but still more
science fiction---one century ago.
Journal Titles
What to call this series? Cosmic-comix? I thought of calling
this the Journal of
Speculative Philosophy---
sort of speculation as confabulation, just making stuff up, what if...
and all that. Then I discovered that this is really the title of a
respectable professional philosophy journal run by people and featuring
articles by people and read by people who take this stuff seriously, or
so I gather. Wow! So maybe I'd call what you're reading here "The
journal of VERY speculative philosophy?" or
fill-lots-of-fee? or take a turn towards the grandiose and call
it the Intergalactic Journal of Confabulology, or what other
titles? Also, let's use the nature of this medium to welcome
input. You can email me ideas, and if I like them I'll include them and
give you credit.
d