Prozak is the new hemlock.
Oh, wait, no: Prozak is soma. “Better a gram than a damn.”
Prozak is the new hemlock.
Oh, wait, no: Prozak is soma. “Better a gram than a damn.”
A surgeon was considering the purchase of a very expensive scalpel, and decided to test it before buying.
He started with general-purpose knife functions. “This scalpel might be a special kind of knife, but it is a knife, after all, and it should function as a knife.”
So the surgeon sliced up an apple with it. Then he used it to whittle a stick into a tiny toy soldier. Then he made a wood engraving with it, tapping on it its handle with a small hammer, using its tip as a fine chisel. Then he used it to pry open a paint can.
The scalpel really did make an adequate all-purpose knife.
Then he tried to operate on a patient’s heart. He found it rough and imprecise. “I might as well be using a jack-knife. This confirms what I always suspected. Why pay for an expensive scalpel when a jack-knife works just as well?”
(“Besides,” he said to the nurse, wheeling the dead patient out of his operating room, “our surgery business has really been slowing down.”)
From Ecce Homo:
In all these matters — in the choice of nutrition, of place and climate, of recreation — an instinct of self-preservation issues its commandments, and it gains its most unambiguous expression as an instinct of self-defense. Not to see many things, not to hear many things, not to permit many things to come close — first imperative of prudence, first proof that one is no mere accident but a necessity. The usual word for this instinct of self-defense is taste. It commands us not only to say No when Yes would be “selfless” but also to say No as rarely as possible. To detach oneself, to separate oneself from anything that would make it necessary to keep saying No. The reason in this is that when defensive expenditures, be they ever so small, become the rule and a habit, they entail an extraordinary and entirely superfluous impoverishment. Our great expenses are composed of the most frequent small ones. Warding off, not letting things come close, involves an expenditure — let nobody deceive himself about it this — energy wasted on negative ends. Merely through the constant need to ward off, one can become weak enough to be unable to defend oneself any longer.
Dialogue is the mode of relation between people. It is the sharing of meaning through speech. Acting upon (manipulation) is the mode of relation between a person and an object.
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Issuing a command (or obeying a command) might involve use of words but it is the furthest thing from dialogue. It is a verbal form of acting upon (or being acted upon).
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Regardless of the benevolence of one’s intentions, to act upon another person in the absence dialogue is to relate to a person as a thing.
To break off dialogue with another person while continuing to relate in other modes (however benevolently) is dehumanizing.
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Someone breaks off communication, but continues to acts upon us from a distance, but does not speak with us. We feel that something is deeply wrong. The answer we are given: Have faith that the other’s intentions are good and that you will eventually benefit.
The popular ethic only understands interests: 1) Does this silent person intend to help or harm, and 2) will he successfully actualize his intentions? The popular ethic knows no objection to benevolent dehumanization.
Who cares about malevolence and benevolence? I’d rather be hated as a fellow-human than be loved as a tool or possession or mirror.
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Someone might take loving care of his property, but do we want to be someone’s property?
Was slavery wrong only because some slaves were mistreated? If all slaves were well-fed, well-clothed, well-housed and not physically abused, would it make slavery acceptable?
What if slaves could opt to change owners? Would slavery then become acceptable?
What if a slave is permitted to change owners at will and is also given a generous allowance?
At what point does the slave become a free person?
What is essentially unacceptable about slavery?
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Before an infant has come to identify things as things, she has learned to expect a response when she cries, and she has learned to respond to the response she receives.
Dialogue is the first relationship to emerge from the chaos of birth.
Relationship with things and self come later.
(Each relationship threatens to eclipse that which came before.)
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It is not enough for an organization to benefit its employees, partners and customers.
Similarly, it is not enough for a parent to be only a provider.
The Objective is a kind of being which I observe and act upon.
The Subjective is a kind of being with whom I converse.
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The Objectivity provides me knowledge about things. I stand back and apart.
The Subjective shows me a different world. In seeing it, my world — self and all — is transfigured.
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If I view another person objectively, there’s no need to speak with him. I have expectations and what I observe will fall into place.
If I engage another person subjectively that means he is speaking with me and my expectations are in flux. In hearing him, things that have fallen into place before might shift, might open up new space, might make room for things that have never belonged anywhere before. In doing so, we make room for one another in the world. We share the world.
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To already know what another person is going to say… to believe you understand despite protests that you do not… to ignore pleas to listen, to declare that further conversation is unnecessary — this is the luxury of the invulnerable.
To make use of another person without needing to speak to him… to subjugate him and render him an object to observe, act upon and to utilize — this is the luxury of the powerful.
Luxury makes a person complacent and soft. He relaxes into obliviousness of everything beyond his domain of mastery. At the height of his complacency, at the apex of his power, he innocently believes subjectivity is an attribute of a certain species of object, a person. The fall is near.
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The convection current of history:
Being vulnerable makes a person deeper.
Being deeper gives a person intellectual force.
Intellectual force wins power.
Power permits the luxury of deafness.
Deafness makes a person unteachable and ignorant.
Ignorance makes a person lose power.
Loss of power makes a person vulnerable.
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To be a silenced, silent tool of another… whether escape or resistance is truly impossible or only unchosen… what sort of person are you if you believe you are obligated to cooperate?
What do you call a man who was born with such intelligence and innate intuitive wisdom that he’s never been able to find a teacher who could show him anything that he did not already know?
An arrogant dumbass.
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Do you realize how many people are walking around thinking they’re blessed with this sort of natural insight?
Do any of them grasp how commonplace this conceit is? … and worse how unoriginal and artificial the ideal underlying that conceit is?
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Many people in the world see intelligence as a matter of “who already knows”…
They might let you finish speaking out of politeness, but in their head they’re thinking “yada yada yada” or they’re preparing their condescending retort that shows they already knew what you were going to say.
Can we please start calling these people out? They — most of all have something to learn — starting with their deeply ignorant ideal of intelligence.
After they’ve mastered that fact, we can introduce them to the concept of wisdom, the inverse of knowledge-as-mastery.
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This modern ideal of intelligence is bound up in what the Greeks called episteme and techne — of mastery of fact and method.
The Greeks considered these modes of knowledge to be common — easily mastered by anybody who puts forth the effort.
But what else is there, really, besides these? Subjective opinion and feeling — that is, “wisdom”?
Exactly. There’s more, and it’s up to each of us to find it.
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The most original thing a person can do is to recognize the value of non-originality, of being open and able to learn from another, to learn to value precisely what we are not in the Other, to wish to exceed oneself through participation in the supra-individual. But first, you need to have some idea of what supra-individual is and means and how it is experienced — and that means you’ve got to overcome romanticism.
Once more: Most of us are complacently content with the romanticism we’ve passively and unreflectively absorbed and so we do not question the importance of being independently “enlightened” through our own intuition and intelligence.
Thesis: The sensus communis is unreflectively conventional, morally mechanical, ethically irresponsible and intellectually unjust — but this is just how life is, so like it or not one ought to accept it and work according to it.
Antithesis: The sensus communis is unreflectively conventional, morally mechanical, ethically irresponsible and intellectually unjust — and therefore the sensus communis ought to be disregarded, renounced, or even explicitly critiqued or combated by those who see through it. One should ignore the sensus communis and “think for himself.”
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As always, an unconscious commonality underlies this thesis and antithesis. What they share is the conceit that when we embrace or reject the sensus communis, that we’re somehow doing so from a perspective outside the sphere of the sensus communis.
Fact is, it is just as uncritically conventional to “drop out” and zen yourself into some sort of beatific indifference to the rest of the world as it is to conform. To stop participating because you do not love it is to succumb to the love-it-or-leave-it false dilemma that sustains it and keeps it on its brainless course.
Romantic asceticism is a mechanism of our culture’s immune system. We self-exile, self-quarantine and prevent ourselves from corrupting our culture with alien meanings.
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Synthesis: The sensus communis is currently outlived and needs to be changed and made habitable through philosophical activism. We need to stay inside the system, preserving our own radical otherness, and seek opportunities to effect deep changes. The ideal: Be a committed and responsible subversive.
To say it as simply as possible, everything dreads its eventual nonexistence.
The most concrete example of this fear is fear of biological death, but everything that has consciousness fears its end and wishes to preserve itself forever.
This includes nations, religions, social institutions of all kinds, integrated philosophical systems, individual beliefs, notions — even moods.
I’ve come to regard all anxiety as a signal that something I am associated with, either some psychic element of myself or some collective form of being I belong to as a participant is feeling impending nonexistence.
From Gadamer’s essay, “Hermeneutics And Historicism”:
Let us then consider Strauss’ defense of classical philosophy from a hermeneutic point of view. We will consider one example. Strauss shows very well that the I-Thou-We relation, as it is called in modern thinking, is known in classical political philosophy by a quite different name: friendship. He sees correctly that the modern way of talking about the “problem of the Thou” is based on the fundamental primacy of the Cartesian ego cogito. Strauss now thinks he sees why the ancient concept of friendship is correct and the modern formulation false. It is quite legitimate for someone who is attempting to discover the nature of the state and society to consider the role of friendship. But he cannot talk with the same legitimacy about the “Thou.” The Thou is not something about which one speaks but that to which one speaks. By taking the function of the Thou as a basis, instead of the role of friendship, one is missing the objective communicative nature of the state and society.
What is completely absent in the business environment, and what causes it to suffer akrasia (moral incontinence) and what prevents us from holding collectivities to the same standards as we hold individual persons (despite the fact that corporations are extended legal personhood!) — is that we do not grasp the fundamental difference between an I-It relationship (also known as the “ontic”) and an I-Thou relationship.
Heidegger saw angst as Dasein’s response to the certainty of death, conceived existentially but corresponding to biological death. That is certainly the surest of deaths, but it is not the only possible death that Dasein can undergo. Dasein feels angst in the face of every possibility of deep change.
All things wish for perpetual life, even a mood. Even a mood fears its own death.
The more subject you are to change the more acute your angst.
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Ideologies are attempts at artificial existential immortality.
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I could see where the most intellectually impoverished, expired and pointless mode of consciousness could recognize its plight in Terri Schaivo.
“Even a human vegetable with no consciousness or hope of recovery deserves an iron-lung. Keep the biological mechanism alive even if it knows not what it does,” shrieks the collective intellectual vegetable with no consciousness or hope of recovery, in a desperate attempt to inhale some spirit from artificial controversy — and it has no idea at all what it is doing or why… it wants to postpone death. “Not yet!”
Come on, Republicans… give up the ghost. Open your hand and let go. It is ok. As Nietzsche said: “Only where there are graves are there resurrections.”
I need to go back and read Buber and see if he denied the validity of the I-It relationship.
If he did, I disagree with him. As important as I-Thou is, I-It cannot be reduced to a mere corruption of I-Thou.
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I-It is what mediates our I-Thou relationships.
In my view I-Thou deepens in the permanently expanding transfiguration of I-It to We-It. That transfiguration is synesis.
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I-Thou is the relationship I have with one who speaks.
I-It is that which I speak about.
If that which I speak about speaks, I must permit him to speak to me.
I must hear him and see for myself what he says about the world.
When he tells me about the world, much of what he shows me is I-It.
I must hear him as one who says something valid that may change my world.
If I accept the validity of his words, his I-It and my I-It gives way to We-It. More and more we speak out of a shared understanding and my world is drawn beyond itself.
If I deny his words validity, I withhold I-Thou from him. He is a talking, behaving object wholly contained in my world.
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Business wishes to establish an order where leadership has no reason to hear. It already knows.
Business wants I-It resources, not human beings. It wants the predictability of physics, not the insight of conversation.
Why the dehumanizing language? Resources, utilization, overhead… At minimum it is suspicious.
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At Auschwitz the Jews were not permitted to refer to Jewish corpses as “bodies”. They were to call them “puppets” or “shit”.
The Khmer Rouge taught the children to say to the urbanite New People: “To keep you is no benefit. To destroy you is no loss.”
And don’t forget Rwanda:
The director of the human rights organization, African Rights, Rakiya Omaar, was following the events from northern Rwanda.
“In Rwanda they referred to Tutsis as cockroaches,” explains Omaar. “They were not human beings. This is very important to understand, [there are] very close parallels to what happened in Hitler’s Germany. [They said,] ‘Don’t worry, you’re not killing humans like you. You are killing some vermin that belongs under your shoe. You’re killing cockroaches.'”
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If you believe Nietzsche, there is also a “benevolent” form of dehumanization.
Think about the people who love the helpless and seek them out in order to serve them… Are they connecting with them as people or as objects of benevolent feeling?
Much “service” in politics, business, education, religion, charity is just another form of reduction of human beings to I-It: helpless, mute, beloved objects. Neither love nor hate affects the fact that I-It is not I-Thou.
This is why Nietzsche had no respect for pity. Often, it is just one more mode of dehumanization, but one that allows the benefactor to have his cake and eat it, too. You can exercise power over a thing, but feel like you are doing something wonderful for a “person”.
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If you worship a man as God, proclaim the truth of his words, love him as your savior, but you don’t try to see his words as valid to you, in this time and place, within this everyday reality that you know as real haven’t you reduced him to I-It? To expect some magical end-time or after-life where the words become valid… isn’t that just a way to postpone understanding and applying until it is too late?
Worship dehumanizes. Superhumanizing deprives the object of affection of human meaning.
Exaltation is a defense against relationship.
As far as I am concerned the world divides into that which speaks and that which does not.
The spiral is the synthesis of closed circularity and open nothingness.
It has a containing form, but it can move beyond its limits without losing its form.
It overcomes limits and it preserves.
My new favorite shape: the outspiral.
Modernity over-ripens into post-modernity and starts rotting as anti-modernity.
The most virulent forms of anti-modernity pose as pre-modernity: fundamentalism.
Fundamentalism is a form of mass-relativism. It originates in breakdown of tradition. Every fundamentalism is founded on radical, alienated skepticism which dissolves all obligation to maintain ties with the dominant tradition. It no longer wishes to reach agreement with anyone outside of itself. It then invents a fictional past and believes in it. It exploits the helplessness of the past, by projecting itself over the past and making the past the history of itself. It does this in order to attain the credibility that comes from having a history. And all those who join up agree with one another, and never tire of agreeing with one another, and most of all on the fact that people outside of the group are not worth talking to because they will never understand, and don’t want to understand, etc. for various despicable reasons.
Perennialism is esoteric fundamentalism.
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The Perennialists steal from modernity, project it onto ancient religious forms — then reject modernity ad hominem. Modernity is ignorant. Modernity doesn’t recognize that it’s discovered nothing new. It hasn’t innovated anything. We need to stop trying to innovate, and get back to the root of wisdom.
They’ve got intellection. If you disagree with them you lack intellection. If you lack intellection, there’s nothing to discuss. If there’s no discussion, there’s no way for anyone to show them their error. But there is no error, because intellection protects them from error. If you already had intellection you would know this.
There’s nothing more postmodern than rejecting contemporary conceptions of truth and returning to ancient traditions. What is truth? Go skeptical — then find your own circular system and excuse yourself from further discussion. Sit alone, wiser than hell. Postmodernism is about fragmentation of culture into a zillion little perspectives, each thinking it contains all the others.
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The crux:
Is it that modernity hasn’t discovered anything new?
Or is it that Perennialism hasn’t discovered anything old?
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Postmodernity is hard to define because it is not a belief one adopts but rather a cultural condition within which thinking is done, whether one accepts postmodernity as its condition or not. Postmodernists are those who believe in this condition, and they are enraging because, rightly or wrongly, they reserve the right to see postmodernity especially where postmodernity is denied.
I do believe in postmodernity, and I see Perennialism as a consequence of postmodernity. It preys specifically on those who suffer most from postmodernity and wish it to not exist.
Adam-in-Eden reached out and grasped knowledge as something that is grasped. At that moment he became simply: Adam.
He was Adam who lived in a place called Eden. He could live somewhere else, too. He could be Adam in another garden or in a desert or in a jungle or in a city. “Listen, I could live on the motherfucking moon,” said Adam.
He was as a god, mastering this new world full of objects with his new explaining, predicting, controlling knowledge.
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Adam forgot who he wasn’t, and so he forgot who he was.
He wasn’t exactly wrong about anything he thought, but he was never right enough.
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“Dude, I have knowledge of God. Don’t fuck with me. Me n’ God’ll smite thee. Just saying.”
Magic was the first technology. It wasn’t too good, but the rush was addictive.
It’s not a matter of vanity. It’s not a matter of “being too good” for something.
Some activities help you develop toward your own ideal.
Some activities lead you away from your own ideal. Too much of these activities can make you forget your ideal altogether.
The former is “edifying”. The latter is “degrading”.
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Some people have no ideal. They have likes and dislikes and map everything they hear about “destinies” and such back to mere preference for this or that.
Such people cannot understand why everyone shouldn’t just do what’s most useful.
Useful for what? Useful why? What’s being perpetuated?
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An esoteric maxim: “Lucky is the lion that the human will eat, so that the lion becomes human. And foul is the human that the lion will eat, and the lion still will become human.”
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It’s a shame that we’re too tired or degraded or busy to think — because if we were to think things out, we’d take thinking more seriously and refuse to be degraded to the point where thinking is no longer possible. “Indecent haste,” Nietzsche called it.
From within this haste only haste makes sense.
That does it. I’m going to memorize James Dickey’s “For the Last Wolverine”.
In judging cultural movements, permanence is a bad standard. Precisely the best things become the worst. That does not mean they were never good.
Endurance does matter, but endurance is relative. Culture is a kind of life, and living things are born, they mature, and they die.
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Babies are not adults in a more perfect form. They may be purer, but purity is negative perfection. (To have no other standard is not merely stunted, but outright dangerous. The Myth of the Fall that underlies the most reactionary and toxic forms of modern/post-modern “conservatism” — the notion that an embryonic natural humanity lost its value/innocence as it became cultural — is spiritually and practically harmful. Brainless faith in progress is little better. Rather than hellish catastrophes, it leads to hellish, colorless flatness. Meliorism is the transcendent synthesis: hearing the divine “quiet voice” with our all-too-human ears and owning responsibility for what one learns.)
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Infancy is negative perfection. Maturity is positive perfection.
Potential is cheap.
Successful actualization is rare and precious.
Let’s not overvalue the embryonic, especially not as a means to deny the value of maturity.
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The being specific to human being is self-creative: our nature is perpetual reinvention of ourselves through the medium of cultural tradition. Consider the meaning of the term “Son of Man”. Man, by its own process, produces the next way for human beings to be. And the child someday parents a child, and that child parents a child, and so on. If you are a nerd, you’ll be interested in the fact that this is a nonlinear process, which means it is all orderly and inevitable but utterly unpredictable.
Conservatism perpetually ensures there is never a place for the new to lay its head.
(Maybe this is exactly as it ought to be.)
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Each human being emerges from embryonic oblivion.
Humanity as a whole emerged from simian oblivion.
Our hopes always belong to now and are oriented toward the future. As we approach the future, now and the future and the past retransfigure themselves. TIME IS WEIRD.
We should have learned by now: We can not and should not go back.
It hurts like a bitch to be a human being, but it is good to be human. Let’s not try to escape being human. Let’s live it out.
Let’s decide how we want to be. We can do this. We are allowed to do this. Or, if you prefer, why not?: we are supposed to do this.
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Embryo songs:
Erik Satie – “Embryons desséchés”
My most valuable ideas have always come to me in a flash. Once they come, they almost self-execute. The dialogue between concept and execution suggests what to do next.
My very worst ideas have limped into existence and have required considerably more effort to execute.
If someone measures the value of what I do in terms of how long it takes me to produce an outcome they will judge my worst work most valuable and my best work nearly worthless.
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In order to measure value, you have to actually understand the value you are measuring. People buy results, not time.
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An excellent article on billing by the project or by the hour: http://www.1099.com/c/ar/ta/HowToCharge_t042.html