home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- PARADIGM SHIFTS AND AEONICS, by Pete Carroll
-
- All the philosophies, creeds, dogmas and beliefs that humanity has
- evolved are variants of three great paradigms, the Transcendental,
- the Materialist and the Magical. In no human culture has any one of
- these paradigms been completely distinct from the others. For
- example in our own culture at the time of writing the Transcendental
- and Magical pradigms are frequently confused together.
-
- Transcendental philosophies are basically religious and manifest in
- a spectrum stretching from the fringes of primitive spiritism
- through pagan polytheism to the monotheism of the Judaeo-Christian-
- Islamic traditions and the theoretical non-theistic systems of
- Buddhism and Taoism. In each case it is believed that some form of
- consciousness or spirit created and maintains the universe and that
- humans, other living organisms, contain some fragment of this
- consciousness or spirit which underlies the veil or illusion of
- matter. The essence of Transcendentalism is belief in spiritual
- beings greater than oneself or states of spiritual being superior to
- that which currently one enjoys. Earthly life is frequently seen
- merely as a form of dialoque between oneself and one's deity or
- deities, or perhaps some impersonal form of higher force. The
- material world is a theatre for the spirit or soul or consciousness
- that created it. Spirit is the ultimate reality to the
- transcendentalist.
-
- In the Materialist paradigm the universe is believed to consist
- fundamentally and entirely of matter. Energy is but a form of matter
- and together they subtend space and time within which all change
- occurs strictly on the basis of cause and effect. Human behaviour is
- reducible to biology, biology is reducible to chemistry, chemistry
- is reducible to physics and physics is reducible to mathematics.
- Mind and consciousness are thus merely electrochemical events in
- the brain and spirit is a word without objective content. The causes
- of some events are likely to remain obscure perhaps indefinitely,
- but there is an underlying faith that sufficient material cause
- must exist for any event. All human acts can be categorized as
- serving some biological need or as expressions of previously applied
- conditioning or merely as malfunction. The goal of materialist who
- eschews suicide is the pursuit of personal satisfaction including
- altruistic satisfactions if desired.
-
- The main difficulty in recognizing and describing the pure Magical
- Paradigm is that of insufficient vocabulary. Magical philosophy is
- only recently recovering from a heavy adulteration with
- transcendental theory. The word aether will be used to describe the
- fundamental reality of the magical paradigm. It is more or less
- equivalent to the idea of Mana used in oceanic shamanism. Aether in
- materialistic descriptions is information which structures matter
- and which all matter is capable of emitting and receiving. In
- transcendental terms aether is a sort of "life force" present in
- some degree in all things. It carries both knowledge about events
- and the ability to influence similar or sympathetic events. Events
- either arise sponataneously out of themselves or are encouraged to
- follow certain paths by influence of patterns in the aether. As all
- things have an aetheric part they can be considered to be alive in
- some sense. Thus all things happen by magic, the large scale
- features of the universe have a very strong aetheric pattern which
- makes them fairly predictable but difficult to influence by the
- aetheric patterns created by thought. Magicians see themselves as
- participating in nature. Transcendentalists like to think they are
- somehow above it. Materialists like to try and manipulate it.
-
- Now this universe has the peculiarly accomodating property of
- tending to provide evidence for, and confirmation of, whatever
- paradigm one chooses to believe in. Presumably at some deep level
- there is a hidden symmetry between those things we call Matter,
- Aether and Spirit. Indeed, it is rare to find an individual or
- culture operating exclusively on a single one of these paradigms and
- none is ever entirely absent. Non dominant paradigms are always
- present as superstitions and fears. A subsequent section on Aeonics
- will attempt to untangle the influences of each of these great world
- views throughout history, to see how they have interacted with each
- other and to predict future trends. In the meantime an analysis of
- the radically differing concepts of time and self in each paradigm
- is offered to more fully distinguish the basic ideas.
-
-
- Transcendentalists conceive of time in millennial and apocalyptic
- terms. Time is regareded as having a definite beginning and ending,
- both initiated by the activities of spiritual beings or forces. The
- end of time on the personal and cosmic scale is regarded not so much
- as a cessation of being but as a change to a state of non material
- being. The beginning of personal and cosmic time is similarly
- regarded as a creative act by spiritual agencies. Thus reproductive
- activity usually becomes heavily controlled and hedged about with
- taboo and restriction in religious cultures, as it implies an
- usurpation of the powers of deities. Reproduction also implies that
- death has in some measure been overcome. How awesome the power of
- creation and how final must earthly death subconsciously loom to a
- celibate and sterile priesthood.
-
- All transcendentalisms embody elements of apocalyptism. Typically
- these are used to provoke revivals when business is slack or
- attention is drifting elsewhere. Thus it is suddenly revealed that
- the final days are at hand or that some earthly dispute is in fact a
- titanic battle against evil spiritual agencies.
-
- Materialist time is linear but unbounded. Ideally it can be extended
- arbitrarily far in either direction from the present. To the strict
- materialist it is self-evidently futile to speculate about a
- beginning or an end to time. Similarly the materialist is
- contemptuous of any speculations about any forms of personal
- existence before birth or after death. The materialist may well fear
- painful or premature death but can have no fears about being dead.
-
- The magical view is that time is cyclic and that all processes
- recur. Even cycles which appear to begin or end are actually parts
- of larger cycles. Thus all endings are beginnings and the end of
- time is synonymous with the beginning of time in another universe.
- The magical view that everything is recycled is reflected in the
- doctrine of reincarnation. The attractive idea of reincarnation has
- often persisted into the religious paradigm and many pagan and even
- some monotheist traditions have retained it. However religious
- theories invariably contaminate the original idea with beliefs about
- a personal soul. From a strictly magical viewpoint we are an accretion
- rather than an unfolded unity. The psyche has no particular centre,
- we are colonial beings, a rich collage of many selves. Thus as our
- bodies contain fragments from countless former beings, so does our
- psyche. However certain magical traditions retain techniques which
- allow the adept to transfer quite large amounts of his psyche in one
- piece should he consider this more useful than dispersing himself
- into humanity at large.
-
- Each of the paradigms take a different view of the self.
- Transcendentalists view self as spirit inserted into matter. As a
- fragment or figment of deity the self regards itself as somehow
- placed in the world in a non arbitrary manner and endowed with free
- will. The transcendental view of self is relatively stable and
- non-problematic if shared as a consensus with all significant
- others. However, transcendental theories about the placement and
- purpose of self and its relationship to deities are mutually
- exclusive. Conflicting transcendentalisms can rarely co-exist for
- they threaten to disconform the images of self. Encounters which are
- not decisive tend to be mutually negatory in the long run.
-
- Of the three views of self the purely materialistic one is the most
- problematical. If mind is an extension of matter it must obey
- material laws and the resulting deterministic view conflicts with
- the subjective experience of free will. On the other hand if mind
- and consciousness are assumed to be qualitatively different from
- matter then the self is incomprehensible to itself in material
- terms. Worse still perhaps, the materialist self must regard itself
- as a phenomenon of only temporary duration in contradiction of the
- subjective expectation of continuity of consciousness. Because a
- purely materialist view of self is so austere few are prepared to
- confront such naked existentialism. Consequently materialist
- cultures exhibit a frantic appetite for sensation, identification
- and more or less disposable irrational beliefs. Anything that will
- make the self seem less insubstantial.
-
- The magical view of self is that it is based on the same random
- capricious chaos which makes the universe exist and do what it does.
- The magical self has no centre, it is not a unity but an assemblage
- of parts, any number of which may temorarily club together and call
- themselves "I". This accords with the observation that our
- subjective experience consists of our various selves experiencing
- each other. Free will arises either as an outcome of a dispute
- between our various selves or as a sudden random creation of a new
- idea or option. In the magical view of self there is no
- spirit/matter or mind/body split and the paradoxes of free will and
- determinism disappear. Some of our acts arise from random choices
- between conditioned options and some from conditional choices
- between randomly created options. In practice most of our acts are
- based on rather complex hierarchical sequences of all four of these
- mechanisms. As soon as we have acted one of our selves proclaims
- "I did that!" so loudly that most of the other selves think they did
- it too.
-
- Each of the three views of self has something derogatory to say
- about the other two. From the standpoint of the transcendental self
- the materialist self has become prey to pride of intellect, the
- demon hubris, whilst the magical view of self is considered to be
- entirely demonic. The material self views the transcendentalist as
- obsessed with assumptions having no basis in fact, and the magical
- self as being childlike and incoherent. From the standpoint of the
- magical view, the assorted selves of the transcendendatilst have
- ascribed a grossly exaggerated importance to one or a few of the
- selves which they call God or gods, whilst the materialist has
- attempted to make all his selves subordinate to the self that does
- the rational thinking. Ultimately it's a matter of faith and taste.
- The transcedentalist has faith in his god self, the materialist has
- faith in his reasoning self and the selves of the magician have
- faith in each other. Naturally, all these forms of faith are subject
- to periods of doubt.
-
- ---
- * Origin: ChaosBox: Nothing is true -> all is permitted... (2:243/2)
-
-