The current news coverage of missing millions, in bonuses to executives, has the earmarks of classic misdirection. As someone else said, it is missing trillions that should worry us. But all that is a setup. Misdirection is a mainstay of the magician's craft. Decades ago, Jan Cox showed us magic tricks one evening--some of us never did figure out how he made coins appear out of nowhere.
At that time, decades ago, I had no idea of the extent to which life itself loves misdirection. To use current events again, the attention paid to a certain Ponzi schemster, has sucked up so much air time. And this functions to distract us from the uncomfortable sight of real economists, guys who made it out of grade, oh I mean grad, school, talking about how they did not anticipate the current fiscal crisis. Uncomfortable making because it is close to the ignorance we all want to avoid acknowledging on a personal level. How long can we stamp our feet at those expert economists without wondering how far this ignorance extends... could it extend to my awareness of my ....
And yet, another level, if you keep pushing, could words themselves be a kind of misdirection?
What if everything we KNOW is a setup.
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Monday, March 16, 2009
That's No Lady...
The following excerpt from a widely distributed story on scientology caught my attention:
"A Scientology spokesman has confirmed that Scientologists believe that mankind's problems stem from brainwashed alien soul remnants created millions of years ago by genocidal alien overlord Xenu. The admission follows years of attempts to dismiss the story, first leaked by defectors, as anti-church propaganda."
Of course at worst scientology is merely a religion, the significant thing is not what their beliefs are, but that they have beliefs. That puts them squarely in the middle of the rational, binary, mechanical mind, and at that level "there is nothing that cannot be proved," and "the opposite is always true". Those who have tried to grasp the thoughts of Jan Cox will recognize in my last sentence HIS thoughts on-----not religion necessarily, but his thoughts on "thoughts." The statements are his attempt to wrench the mechanical mind of those who sense there is something beyond the ordinary play of opinion, in another direction. I had first phrased that sentence with this wording...Those who have studied..., and then I realized, you really can't "study" the words of someone who actually has seen reality, you can only try to stay in the midst of his influences and hope some meteor hits you.
But we are straying here from the point I had in mind. Not that we aren't going to get to how, to use an example of Jan's, "Yale" does not exist, but like, the topic of ordinary feminine intelligence, this is something I have hesitated to bring up. But all in due time. And back to Hubbard. Gosh, his religion started like all religions, and if you gotta have a religion, his is nicely 20th century. Still the excerpt I quoted also shows how hard it is to really 'start fresh' in your thoughts. Apparently we still have good and bad guys. If you want to get beyond that, who else is there beside Gurdjieff and Jan Cox.
"A Scientology spokesman has confirmed that Scientologists believe that mankind's problems stem from brainwashed alien soul remnants created millions of years ago by genocidal alien overlord Xenu. The admission follows years of attempts to dismiss the story, first leaked by defectors, as anti-church propaganda."
Of course at worst scientology is merely a religion, the significant thing is not what their beliefs are, but that they have beliefs. That puts them squarely in the middle of the rational, binary, mechanical mind, and at that level "there is nothing that cannot be proved," and "the opposite is always true". Those who have tried to grasp the thoughts of Jan Cox will recognize in my last sentence HIS thoughts on-----not religion necessarily, but his thoughts on "thoughts." The statements are his attempt to wrench the mechanical mind of those who sense there is something beyond the ordinary play of opinion, in another direction. I had first phrased that sentence with this wording...Those who have studied..., and then I realized, you really can't "study" the words of someone who actually has seen reality, you can only try to stay in the midst of his influences and hope some meteor hits you.
But we are straying here from the point I had in mind. Not that we aren't going to get to how, to use an example of Jan's, "Yale" does not exist, but like, the topic of ordinary feminine intelligence, this is something I have hesitated to bring up. But all in due time. And back to Hubbard. Gosh, his religion started like all religions, and if you gotta have a religion, his is nicely 20th century. Still the excerpt I quoted also shows how hard it is to really 'start fresh' in your thoughts. Apparently we still have good and bad guys. If you want to get beyond that, who else is there beside Gurdjieff and Jan Cox.
Thursday, March 12, 2009
A Random Book Title
While I was browsing a shelf of books, a title caught my eye -- What We Owe Each Other. I was not interested enough to pull out the book and read further, but the title caused some thoughts on the whole weirdness of a kind of knowing which is beyond words and ultimate. It is the knowing that Jan Cox (unavoidably) "speaks" of, because he, one of the few forthright mystics of the last century, no more than anyone else, can capture reality in words. But what else is there to do, but try to point, especially for those, (if I say 'burdened' I am so guessing) burdened with a sense of responsibility (so not the words) to try to help others look in the direction he looked. And in the case of this title on a book spine, "What We Owe Others," it hit me that that topic cannot be answered in words, and one reason is that the "correct" answer to what we owe others, will vary from person to person and from moment to moment. It is NOT the point that there is NO answer, -- oh, there is an answer, -- but it cannot be put in words, and one reason it cannot be put in words, is its changeableness. This eternal changeableness does not infer that there is no absolute. No doubt philosophers would argue that you cannot have absolutes if eternal flux prevails. What to say to that: take a look.
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Freud as an example of the average intellectual
Freud is held up as an example of the blows to his ego man has received in western science. The thinking I assume is that the (so-called) discovery of the unconscious made man's rationality suspect. Freud's contributions have had the reverse effect. I am not the first person to wonder if something was unconscious how Freud could have specified it at all. The import of Freud's ideas is that the rational mind can specify and deal with everything in the world----there is nothing that cannot be labeled in words. Words will cover everything and so actually the rational mind is triumphant in a complete way --a claim which would have puzzled the serious thinkers of an earlier era. The picture that comes to mind from Freud's writing is of a closet, packed to the ceiling, and so overfull it spills out whenever the closet is opened. Interesting but hardly the unconscious. Words are the solution to a man of Freud's ambitions.
As it is, the empirical mystics of the modern, men like Georges Gurdjieff and Jan Cox, don't find Freud even worth mentioning. They notice that the silence of the hormones is a relevant arena for the sober quester to turn to. This attention though, is speechless comprehension which is beyond the purview of the average intellectual.
As it is, the empirical mystics of the modern, men like Georges Gurdjieff and Jan Cox, don't find Freud even worth mentioning. They notice that the silence of the hormones is a relevant arena for the sober quester to turn to. This attention though, is speechless comprehension which is beyond the purview of the average intellectual.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Hunting Historical Assumptions
The idea that man had endured a series of blows with modern discoveries is so silly as to need another elaboration. It may be a cliche to mention that Galileo displaced the earth from the center of the universe, that Darwin moved man from a special place in the natural world and that Freud rattled man's confidence in the rational mind. None of these takes on modern history is accurate and the persistence of this myth is so durable as to need an explanation. That explanation is not one I can imagine yet, but a few more thoughts about the general hypothesis sketched out here is fun. Galileo's ideas certainly did nothing to shake man's confidence, that confidence in the rational mind has in fact increased in the preceding centuries and this INCREASE is in part because of the scientific discoveries characteristic of modernity. The medieval period was an era when man experienced himself as a part of a greater whole, and this sense of being a part of something larger is a superior and lost parallel to the confidence of modern man.
Darwin's indeed exciting new idea was that species themselves could change, and that included man. The Darwinists though never think through logically the implications of Darwin's thought. If man the species can change, then the human mind itself is quite possibly a subject for evolution, man's very thinking ability, his rationality, may be in the middle of an evolutionary trek. This at least is the most consistent view of the human mind which is plausible based on Darwin's ideas. Yet the variability of human thought is something that is vigorously denied should this prospect even surface in some scientist's scope. And you can see why this thought is scary----the idea that human thought itself is not the measure and measurer of the world around it leaves the mechanical mind of man quaking (should the mind be forced somehow to consider this idea). Because----the confidence of mechanical thought has to assume the mind is complete. Otherwise any one thought would have to, wonder what a future thought would find inferior about it. Surely I can find a better way to express this. If the mind is incomplete that throws all its conclusions into confusion because the unknown element, being unknown, prevents that boxed edge from resting in thought, that completeness which is part of the nature of binary thought. The evolutionary nature of human thought, if recognised, mediates against the limitations of binary thought, and the idea that words can ever describe reality.
The infinity of detail that characterizes the present does also the past. So any conclusions claiming to be of an historical nature are like the constellation star pictures. Interesting, sometimes lovely, helping us to keep some things in mind, reflecting in our choice of subject our values, but not what they claim to be. "Orion" is just an accidental conjunction, the details of which overwhelm and do not even graze a hunter's reality. This may be what Jan Cox meant when he said "history is dreams." Any readers of this blog need to keep that in mind, for my purposes in playing with historical assertions have a personal use also. With an infinity of detail anything can be proved, or disproved. Next time we'll get to Freud.
Darwin's indeed exciting new idea was that species themselves could change, and that included man. The Darwinists though never think through logically the implications of Darwin's thought. If man the species can change, then the human mind itself is quite possibly a subject for evolution, man's very thinking ability, his rationality, may be in the middle of an evolutionary trek. This at least is the most consistent view of the human mind which is plausible based on Darwin's ideas. Yet the variability of human thought is something that is vigorously denied should this prospect even surface in some scientist's scope. And you can see why this thought is scary----the idea that human thought itself is not the measure and measurer of the world around it leaves the mechanical mind of man quaking (should the mind be forced somehow to consider this idea). Because----the confidence of mechanical thought has to assume the mind is complete. Otherwise any one thought would have to, wonder what a future thought would find inferior about it. Surely I can find a better way to express this. If the mind is incomplete that throws all its conclusions into confusion because the unknown element, being unknown, prevents that boxed edge from resting in thought, that completeness which is part of the nature of binary thought. The evolutionary nature of human thought, if recognised, mediates against the limitations of binary thought, and the idea that words can ever describe reality.
The infinity of detail that characterizes the present does also the past. So any conclusions claiming to be of an historical nature are like the constellation star pictures. Interesting, sometimes lovely, helping us to keep some things in mind, reflecting in our choice of subject our values, but not what they claim to be. "Orion" is just an accidental conjunction, the details of which overwhelm and do not even graze a hunter's reality. This may be what Jan Cox meant when he said "history is dreams." Any readers of this blog need to keep that in mind, for my purposes in playing with historical assertions have a personal use also. With an infinity of detail anything can be proved, or disproved. Next time we'll get to Freud.
Saturday, February 28, 2009
A woods of words
There is a comedian I find very funny. Jan Cox talked about comedians, and how indeed, they do come up with fresh thoughts----that special and wonderful technique for doing "this kind of stuff." There is for comedians a hazardous edge, but that is not why I brought this up. Bill Maher is who I mean now, and what struck me was how if he couldn't see that the problem with people who call themselves religious is that they are not, this inability in Maher's picturing of what is wrong with the world, then we have a fresh reminder of the difficulties of pursuing "this kind of stuff," using again, the phrase of Jan Cox. I do not expect ANY ordinary person to grasp that there IS nothing wrong, but to so utterly fail to notice this tiny thing----those who call themselves religious are, not necessarily so, lights up some of the path those seeking to persevere, are on. On one level, you would think someone who was hateful, who talked about hurting others, you might think, well no matter what those people say, they---are not religious. And yet they say they are, and the world says, yes, those are religious leaders, and so I guess it is not surprising a comedian is off. The path of words...
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Funny smells
There is no philosophical problem with mind and matter dualism since there is no mind separate from the material world. The world is all one at a basic level. What then accounts FOR 'mind.' I have no idea, but am trying to sketch pictures which perhaps could shed light on this amazing matter we find ourselves part of. "Mind" in the phrase of Jan Cox, is a 'parvenu,' a newcomer on the scene who is still insecure, so to speak. He drew this picture to account for certain features of what we loosely call mental awareness, for instance the massive self-justification which occupies so many of people's thoughts. He was not defining anything, but trying to turn the minds of his students in a certain direction so they could notice things about themselves, as a step towards greater awareness.
Likewise the previous paragraph is a build-up to a picture I had. What if what we call 'consciousness' is actually most similar to man's olfactory activity. Smell, after all, when noticed, seems to be everywhere we are, like our thoughts. And the facts of grammar may support this thesis, because there is an odd thing about the word smell. To say, "I smell," can be either active or passive as a verb. All the other sensory words are not ambiguous---You say, "I see", or "I hear" and no one wonders if you mean YOU are seen, or heard. But smell, biologically the earliest stratum of awareness, harbors a distinct confusion at its core. Perhaps this confusion is the parvenu's unwillingness to confront his own origins, and the weight of its attempt to fit in, in a new neighborhood. Perhaps consciousness reveals it's insecurity by trying to skip it's organic country.
Likewise the previous paragraph is a build-up to a picture I had. What if what we call 'consciousness' is actually most similar to man's olfactory activity. Smell, after all, when noticed, seems to be everywhere we are, like our thoughts. And the facts of grammar may support this thesis, because there is an odd thing about the word smell. To say, "I smell," can be either active or passive as a verb. All the other sensory words are not ambiguous---You say, "I see", or "I hear" and no one wonders if you mean YOU are seen, or heard. But smell, biologically the earliest stratum of awareness, harbors a distinct confusion at its core. Perhaps this confusion is the parvenu's unwillingness to confront his own origins, and the weight of its attempt to fit in, in a new neighborhood. Perhaps consciousness reveals it's insecurity by trying to skip it's organic country.
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