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June 29, 2007

Reasonable Minds ?

 

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The Policy Think Site: http://www.jaygaskill.com

All contents, unless otherwise indicated are

Copyright © 2005, 2006 and 2007 by Jay B. Gaskill

Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article (except for personal use) is needed. [Permission for use in group discussions is almost always routinely given.]

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REASONABLE MINDS …

 

The Reasonable Mind Chronicles Begin… 

This is just a teaser.

 

We lawyers tend to talk in terms of issues about which “reasonable minds can disagree”.  This is probably the single most valuable insight that the “second profession” has ever contributed to the human condition. 

 

I’ve spent a great deal of time and thought to this issue.  Here is a teaser:

 

Reason in the abstract sense is the cognitive suite that is capable of rigorous differentiation and correlation; it includes all of the formal logical disciplines, including mathematics.  Reason, in this sense, is capable of algorithmic simulation. 

 

Reasonableness is the decision making property or operating state of any real world intelligence that utilizes reason as an instrument for optimizing conflicting or intersecting agendas in the context of a dynamic in which the destructive pursuit of absolute perfection gives way to the pursuit of the flawed, but acceptable optimum.

 

THE REASONABLE MIND

A Working Definition

 

The reasonable mind is the executive decision maker of cognitively advanced, social intelligence as it functions as a self-correcting guide for life in the fluid, dynamic realm of exchange reality.*  It is distinguished from the “totally rational” evaluation regime in that it integrates several additional elements: the in-the-moment existence and accommodation – in an exchange relationships context – of other motivated minds and their agendas; the adoption of optimization as a goal; the recognition that optimum exchange outcomes aren’t perfect; the understanding that the information on which decisions must be made in “real time” is inherently complete; and that one’s personal positions cannot be considered as immutable.

 

*

Otherwise known as the “real world”, exchange reality is the realm of events, all of which is dominated by the action-reaction principle and composed of the suite of exchange processes that form the architecture of system interactions.  The entire biosphere and all its organisms (in general), and all human life in the context of its civilizations are most fully and aptly described in terms of their constituent exchange processes and relationships.  I believe that this core insight has major implications for our species’ understanding of ethics.

 

Reasonable Faith

 

Ultimately, those of us who believe in the essential unity and integration of all reality share an a priori faith stance in common with the scientific enterprise itself. As a result, we tend to we arrive at the end of incomplete explanations still convinced in the essential unity of things. We therefore accept the remainder as unity-in-mystery. This is a natural leap of faith, one that I understand as the reasonable faith of the reasonable mind.

 

Ethical principles are objectively real, and universally relevant to the human condition.

 

This means that our core reservoir of ethical wisdom is encoded in discrete discoverable principles, rather than consisting of a fragile and transient construct of invented rules or culturally determined mores. The fact that all major world religious traditions and the underlying ethical assumptions of major world civilizations converge around the seven ethical ideas listed below is highly corroborative of the objective status of core normative principles.

 

Here are the seven special ethical propositions common to all major human religions and civilizations:

  1. Stealing is wrong.
  2. Lying is wrong.
  3. Assault is wrong.
  4. Murder is wrong.
  5. Honest and necessary self defense is a general exception to these prohibitions.
  6. Integrity is an essential virtue.
  7. Promise fidelity is an essential virtue.

 

This short list of seven special proscriptions and prescriptions represent an operative human moral consensus that is the outcome of six thousand years of “field testing.” On deeper analysis, these rules represent a policy of respect for the volitional integrity (i.e., human dignity) of individuals. No civilization of sentient, intelligent beings could long survive without incorporation of these core principles into its “normative architecture.” The perennial arguments about moral differences are issues of scope and circumstance of application. Such disputes typically represent confusion about the scope of the ethical principles, their selective application to the “in group” and the “out group”, coupled with various attempts to define away the humanity (and therefore the protected status) of various members of the human species on parochial religious, tribal, gender, cultural, cabal-membership or other arbitrary grounds.

 

Reasonable Agreement on Fundamentals

 

Reasonable minds can share the conviction that there is a universal good that transcends our sectarian perspectives. Beneath the seven special ethical proscriptions that form the human consensus, and the deeper underlying value of human dignity, we can recognize three universals that form the very root affirmations for all authentic ethics: They are life affirmation, respect for the nature and value of conscious being, and reverence for creation. In the context of human experience, life affirmation, leads to affirmation of conscious being, and proceeds to reverence for all creation. Conscious being intrinsically represents the gift of at least three powerful, life enhancing capabilities: compassionate empathy; foresight, and creative innovation. Life affirming consciousness necessarily leads to creation affirmation, through the deep understanding of the universality of the processes of creation, of the roots of life and consciousness in those processes, and of the incarnation of ongoing creation in the human mind. As a matter of simple development, human conscious being starts out by serving the life interests of an individual within the context of exchange relationships with others, then serves the interests of life in the context of civilization, (its most important technology). At the most developed level, conscious being achieves the capacity for value universalization, the extrapolation of the root affirmations, extensions of the common proscriptions and prescriptions as ethical principles that reach beyond tribe and other arbitrary boundaries, and govern the powerful and powerless alike.

 

In this way, consciousness gives rise to justice.

 

JBG

 

 

 

June 21, 2007

Building a Bridge over Secular Canyon

As Published On
The Bridge to Being Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog2
The Policy Think Site: http://www.jaygaskill.com
All contents, unless otherwise indicated are
Copyright © 2005, 2006 and 2007 by Jay B. Gaskill
Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article (except for personal use) is needed. [Permission for use in group discussions is almost always routinely given.]
Please contact Jay B. Gaskill, attorney at law, via e mail at law@jaygaskill.com

 

Building a Bridge over Secular Canyon

By

Jay B. Gaskill

 

 

secularbridge

 

 

The religious – secular divide in the West is just one social fracture among many that need to be healed as we all face the challenge of the Islamist jihad against liberal civilization. 

 

Sectarian differences between the religious sub-communities of the West (think of the “culture wars” between so called “fundamentalists” and “liberals”) are every bit as debilitating as the divide between the rigidly religious and militant secular. These social/political fractures have sometimes been conflated to a ridiculous extent.  For example, I have heard secular and religious liberals accuse “fundamentalists” of being the “American Taliban”.  In almost every case, this is a case of rhetorical excess clouding perception of reality.  We don’t read a lot about the Pentecostal beheadings of Episcopalians lately.   

 

The looming existential challenge posed by the jihad will continue to damage us directly and indirectly.  It will grow in intensity and danger until we choose to crush it. A threat of this scope and substance demands much more active and heartfelt cooperation than the bickering classes appear to be ready to give. 

 

Yet, our gay and lesbian brothers and sisters, those who disapprove of them, the New Age spiritual hedonists, and those who disapprove of them, the leftists, classic liberals, our fervently fundamentalist Christians and our most secular neocons, paleoliberals, and conservatives, and the moderate Muslim refugees among us … really, all of us are in jeopardy. 

 

It seems that our shared interest in survival isn’t yet deep and wide enough to fuel a robust, long-term countermovement to save and protect Western civilization. The situation sometimes to me is like one of those prison break movies, where the escaping convicts briefly unify for that fleeting moment when the walls are brought down, but their momentary cooperation almost immediately breaks down into that every prisoner for Number One ethos.

 

Alliances of convenience tend to fracture under extreme duress or when that doesn’t happen right away, they erode over time.  Especially when we are faced by a long term threat like the jihad, our civilization needs more than a utilitarian, any-port-in-a-storm defense. If we humans are to accomplish the things necessary to avert the next Dark Age, we’ll need to close ranks and fight for the light. Alliances of convenience need to be replaced by patterns of cooperation founded in deeply shared values

 

Clearly, we need a robust, deeply held common ethos that supports the maintenance and fierce defense of liberal democracy.  I believe that this project is both necessary and realistically possible, provided we are able to elevate the status of the values and moral precepts that we share, and to sharply diminish the status of the issues over which we differ.  This will require many of us to think about the “accommodation” issues differently, many of us much to think about them more clearly, and others to simply stop bickering.

 

I am now persuaded that the necessary bridge between the secular and religious ethics of civilized life can be located in a common understanding of evil. 

 

Without an understanding and acceptance of the reality and significance of evil, and without a definition of evil sufficiently narrow for us to hone in on the real threats, our species is going to be in for a very hard time indeed. We need a unifying conception so deep and clear that we can reach substantial agreement on the core good and set aside the rest as minor differences.  And we need it yesterday.

 

Even without the jihad, we were facing unprecedented technological challenges calling us to preserve our essential humanity or face human “obsolescence”.  In that limited sense, the jihad’s challenge to our values may prove to be a good thing, provided we can rise to the challenge.

 

But this discourse isn’t about evil as such; it is about finding and repairing the common foundations of the good.   I believe that any confrontation with large scale evil is capable of initiating moral insight though a process of catastrophic clarification.  And I am persuaded that we are able to arrive at a common vision of the good by "reverse engineering" from a common understanding of evil.

 

Just a few months after eleven searing and transformative days in Manhattan near Ground Zero on and after 9-11-01, I was asked to participate in a panel discussion about evil.  The panel included a Superior Court Judge, a Buddhist monk and a prominent Christian theologian.  

 

It was an opportunity for me to reexamine two world views – that secular humanism and religion -- and to reflect on the larger lessons pf 9-11.  It quickly became apparent to me that the project of finding a bridge between the secular and religious world views will prove vitally important for the future of our species.

Here are some excerpts from my part of that discussion.

 

In the current issue of Scientific American, Richard Dawkins makes this observation: “The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.” 

 

Perfectly stated, professor D.  An attitude of value neutrality – Dawkins writ large - still prevails in the academy, permeated by various forms of moral relativism.  The fact that nihilism is afoot in the larger culture is not unrelated.  To battle nihilism from a platform teetering on a foundation of moral relativism is awkward at best.  It’s like trying to swat flies while balanced on the back of a chair. 

St. Paul's

There was a sea change for most Americans on September 11th last year.  The sudden appearance of massive, purposeful evil on one’s doorstep pierces denial and moral ambiguity; it cuts through the fog of cultural and moral relativism like a flare on a night battlefield. The events in Manhattan of 9-11 revealed an important truth.  Evil’s appearance illuminates and calls forth the good in us because our ability to recognize and identify evil illuminates and informs our ability to recognize and identify the good.

 

… [A] common human vision of what is truly evil, a vision of the universal evil, if you will, at the same time, can expose a common vision of the good.… When purposeful human malevolence looms, we are threatened on the immediate physical level, but we are also attacked on the level of our deepest values. The confrontation with true evil calls us back to our core values. 

 

I share the conviction of those humanists and religionists alike who believe that there is a universal good that transcends our sectarian perspectives. For me it begins with life affirmation, leads to affirmation of conscious being, and proceeds to reverence for all creation. Conscious being presents at least three powerful, life enhancing capabilities: compassionate empathy, creative innovation, and foresight. This suggests the moral purpose of conscious being as well as its provenance.

 

In this way, consciousness and life affirmation necessarily lead to creation affirmation, though the deep understanding of the universality of the processes of creation, of the roots of life and consciousness in those processes, and of the incarnation of ongoing creation in the human mind.  Life affirmation, respect for conscious being and reverence for creation are the innate affirmations of the enlightened being. 

 

For the theistic religions, these three affirmations combine to form the heart of the human -- deity relationship.  For humanists, they make up the foundation stones of the core human agenda.

 

Our universal values are protected within almost any civilized enclave more than in a brutal state of nature, [and] not all social conditions and regimes support these values equally. We require the robust infrastructure of a civilization dedicated to protect life, consciousness, and creation.

 

The classic evil mindset is characterized by an active opposition to life affirmation, opposition to the affirmation of then integrity of conscious being (i.e., individual human dignity) and indifference to any reverence of creation, especially in human creative expression.  Evil action rises to a major threat in any serious, purposeful challenge to civilization and the core values that civilization is designed to protect.  [At its best, civilization promotes life, human dignity and the creative enterprise; it is no coincidence that the current atavistic jihad is aimed at just these “Western” values.]

 

It is my hope and prediction that the spiritual significance of creation by human agency in all its forms, the innate holiness of the human creative enterprise as it serves and enhances life and conscious being, will be at center stage in the spiritual practice and ethics of the 21st century. For now, human creation seems to be the forgotten stepchild of many traditional religious communities.

 

The takeaway points can be summarized this way:

 

Where moral relativism is common, real evil is frequently missed in the social cacophony. It tends to be denied by the relativists, yet over-identified by fundamentalists. Evil represents a purposeful, realistic threat to the core goodness of the human enterprise, as broadly defined. The elements goodness at the most general level are captured in the affirmation and integration of three universal values: life affirmation (especially human life), respect for conscious intelligence (especially ours and its ethical, esthetic and creative capabilities), and reverence for creation (including those human activities, avocations and creative accomplishments that affirm life and conscious intelligence).  So the opposite of good is not evil.  The opposite of good is the bad. The opposite of evil is the holy in the most inclusive sense of that term.  I have come to believe that our species’ life-and-intelligence-affirming creative acts are inherently holy.  This is why the creative ones are among the first to flee an evil regime. Their flight is diagnostic.  And I believe that the term holy can be understood a special sense (as that which is worthy of the highest human reverence), a sense that transcends secular and religious world views. 

 

Building a Bridge Requires Dialogue

 

I know that making sweeping generalizations about religious and secular cultures are problematic.

It can’t be helped. 

 

Secular ethics tend to assign a high value of creativity and creative achievement as an inherent good, yet religions tend not to do so as much, except perhaps within the confines of the needs of religious institutions (cathedral art and liturgical music, for example).  This is a key area in which religions can and should be enriched by the secular-spiritual dialogue.  

 

Religions tend to be suspicious of heroic self assertion, often opting to reject the heroic altogether (particularly in the modern and post modern eras) except in the limited context of heroic moral sacrifice. But the secular traditions, especially the older ones, are much more comfortable rejoicing in the heroic accomplishments of the entrepreneur, the inventor or explorer, and yes, even the successful warrior.  Again, both cultural perspectives will gain from a fruitful dialogue.

 

In its most dogmatic forms, religion tends to disparage science while, in its most dogmatic forms secularist thinking tends to disparage transcendence in all its forms. 

I am  predicting a secular religious convergence with these features:  

A renewed universalized humanism that is able to integrate the transcendent to the extent needed to anchor and support ethics;

A new religious mindset that is better able to incorporate the  great and valuable insights into the human condition that secularism has been able to produce.  

My hope is that the two together will form a robust - even fierce - common cause against true evil whenever (as it inevitably must) it revisits the human condition...

 

JBG

June 16, 2007

On Not Ignoring Father

As Published On
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The Policy Think Site: http://www.jaygaskill.com
All contents, unless otherwise indicated are
Copyright © 2005, 2006 and 2007 by Jay B. Gaskill
Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article (except for personal use) is needed. [Permission for use in group discussions is almost always routinely given.]
Please contact Jay B. Gaskill, attorney at law, via e mail at law@jaygaskill.com
June 16 / 17, 2007
On Not Ignoring Father

By

Jay B. Gaskill

 

Today and tomorrow, I will honor my father, John. 

 MandD

My Parents in 1940

 

 

I could not have been more than 14 months when a vivid memory was indelibly imprinted on my little brain.  It was very early, just before dawn.  I toddled out of the bedroom in the gloom.  An electric heater glowed in the chilly shadows. There next to the warm coils towered Dad. [Twenty years later I would tower over him, but only in the gawky physical sense.]

 

I looked up at my father, crisply dressed in his khakis.  I distinctly remember asking him the following question:

 

“Where are you going?” 

 

And I remember his answer: “To the war.” 

 

Mom was still sleeping. I didn’t see my father again for almost four years.  But he came back, jolly, kind, life-loving and unscarred.  He modeled Fatherhood for me.  I am eternally grateful for the decades he shared with mother, my brother and me.

 

You can spend a lot of time reviewing last year’s Father’s Day sermons (June 18, 2006) in the mainline Christian churches. 

 

If you’re looking for a great Father’s Day homily or sermon, you will find that “many are called but few are chosen”.  My own internet search turned up a lot of discussions of the “mustard seed” parable last year, but precious little about fathers and fatherhood.

 

I fear we’ll see little more this Sunday (June 17, also Father’s Day).

 

The shared Gospel reading in most churches for this Father’s Day (tomorrow June 17, 2007) is from Luke 9:18-24 

 

 Once when Jesus was praying in private and his disciples were with him, he asked them, “Who do the crowds say I am?”

 

They replied, “Some say John the Baptist; others say Elijah; and still others, that one of the prophets of long ago has come back to life.”

 

“But what about you?” he asked. “Who do you say I am?”

 

Peter answered, “The Christ of God.”

 

Jesus strictly warned them not to tell this to anyone….

 

One of the “canons’ of Christian homiletic tradition is “Don’t ignore the gospel reading!” I would also humbly add another heartfelt injunction, “Don’t ignore the Dads!”

 

Surely the world’s most famous and revered first Century Rabbi, the “Son of Man”, who is recognized as the Messiah by not fewer than one billion people, has modeled for us the perfect father. 

 

And surely it is impossible to ignore the fact that most of the world’s current travails can be traced to a catastrophic failure of fatherhood.

 

 

 

 

Vernon Foster is an exemplary man.  He is an African American leader in Oakland, California.  In 2003, he wrote an Op Ed in the Oakland Tribune (linked to my website with his permission). Here is part of that he said:

 

“…African Americans must also address the issues of fatherlessness in their community or little will change. Alameda County represents more than 30 percent of the state’s welfare population, including individuals identified as non-custodial parents, the majority of whom live in Oakland. Fatherlessness is the engine that drives our most pressing social problems. Consider the following:

 

“Fatherlessness is the most important predictor of crime -- a greater predictor than either race orr income. More than 70 percent of juveniles in long-term correctional facilities grew up without their fathers. More than 78 percent of the hardened criminals are from fatherless households. More than 70 percent of men in prison come from fatherless households.

 

‘… Oakland is not only losing fathers, it is also losing the idea of fatherhood.

 

“What we face is not simply a physical loss affecting some households; we face a cultural loss affecting every home. … Many in the hip-hop generation believe that being uneducated is “keeping it real,” that a man’s responsibility to his child is the sperm he donated to the mother, and that prison is a right of passage. No school system, no political will and no amount of money can handle that charge. The schools are just a part of the inner city chaos.”

 

Vernon Foster is founder and CEO of the Charles P. Foster Foundation. In 2004, the Charles P. Foster Foundation began assisting disenfranchised fathers by providing them with a renewed position in society, improved economic opportunities and strengthened family ties.

 

To find an appropriate homily for tomorrow, the one I won’t be able to hear in person, I located an African priest, educated in Canada.  His name is Ernest Munachi Ezeogu. His website is http://www.munachi.com/munachi.htm .  His ministry is in Nigeria. His full homily is at http://www.munachi.com/z/fathersday.htm .

 

This is a generous excerpt.

 

Who Needs Fathers These Days?

 

“It is hard to talk about fathers and their roles in the family these days without sounding old fashioned. In a society where many of the icons and celebrities of society are single mothers, in a society where a woman could walk across the block to the fertility clinic and buy herself a child, … one could as well ask, “Who needs fathers these days?”

 

“Today, Father’s Day, it would not be out of place for us to remind ourselves that in spite of all the changes in society, the father remains a very essential figure in the ideal Christian family. This is not a global condemnation of single motherhood since we know that many women are forced into single motherhood by circumstances beyond their control. But we would like to remind ourselves today that the ideal Christian family remains that of father, mother and child.

 

‘… Kids need fathers just as they need mothers. They need their fathers as role models as much as they need their mothers. A father’s love is different than a mother’s love, and the child needs both in the same way that our bodies need both proteins and carbohydrates in order to achieve a balanced growth.

 

“The crisis of fatherhood in the family contributes to the crisis of faith in our society today. Even though God is pure spirit and therefore cannot be male or female, the Bible usually presents God to us in the image of father. Jesus teaches us in the Lord’s Prayer to call God “Our Father.” Since we go from the known to the unknown, it stands to reason to say that the experience we have of our earthly fathers affects how we visualize our heavenly father. The crisis of faith in many young people today could be related to early life experiences in which the experience of a good and loving father figure was missing.

 

“Let us pray for all fathers today that they may be more faithful to their duties in the family. Let us pray God to give them the moral strength and the economic wherewithal they need to become good role models that their children can always look up to. And for all kids who lost their fathers through divorce or death, let us pray that the heavenly Father of us all may show Himself to be their father in such a tangible way so as to fill the vacuum left by the absence of a visible father.”

 

To this I can only add: Amen.

 

JBG

June 08, 2007

THE CORE HUMAN DISCOVERY

As Published On
The Bridge to Being Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog2
The Policy Think Site: http://www.jaygaskill.com
All contents, unless otherwise indicated are
Copyright © 2005, 2006 and 2007 by Jay B. Gaskill
Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article (except for personal use) is needed. [Permission for use in group discussions is almost always routinely given.]
Please contact Jay B. Gaskill, attorney at law, via e mail at law@jaygaskill.com

 A Bridge

June 8, 2007

THE CORE HUMAN DISCOVERY 
There is a deeper world view underlying the traditional world religions.


The moral order does not automatically self-perpetuate itself.  If you doubt this, I invite you to reread the bloody history of the 20th century during which otherwise morally intelligent populations in Europe and Asia succumbed to three mass bloody movements that ran on quasi-religious, but profoundly warped ideologies (Nazi, Stalinist and Maoist totalitarianism). During this terrible period, thousands of religious leaders were imprisoned and millions of ordinary people murdered, while other intelligent and well meaning people stood by stupefied. We were reminded by Dostoevsky, speaking though a character in the Brother’s Karamazov, that “without God, everything is permitted”. [I believe this is Sartre’s paraphrase of a longer dialog.]  

 

More accurately, the point might be put this way: Without a well supported moral order, things quickly go to hell.

 

As the 21st century dawns, we still rely on the intergenerational transmission belt to maintain the moral order.  That belt is broken in many places in urban America, and the “broken belt” problem is growing among our comfortable intelligentsia among whom all religions tend to be disparaged as retrograde fundamentalism or as mindlessly anti-scientific, or both.

 

The means by which we preserve and transmit our species’ collective moral memory constitutes the social capital of the moral order. That social capital is made up of a core underlying belief system and a cadre of adults who are committed to its perpetuation in the culture. 

 

All parents are at least minimally responsible to prepare their children for the challenges of the world.  As part of that preparation, the parent generation needs to impart a robust moral code to those who follow. That crucial intergenerational moral transfer is not taking place in the post-modern family setting because of the decline of religious observance among our most educated populations.  These are the people who otherwise would be our cultural, political and commercial leaders.  I am not making an apology for any particular religion or pattern of observance.  I am issuing an invitation for the intelligent, but spiritually disconnected among us to look deeper.

 

There is a deeper metaphysical model that underlies the great religious traditions.  I call it the Core Human Discovery.  It is not my goal to simplify this world view in order to make it directly accessible to children.  That task has already been accomplished in large part by the orthodox religions, many of which have incorporated its main elements or have appropriated a moral schema that was built on its broad morphological features, without always understanding that they are standing on deep inter-religious common ground.

 

When I say the orthodox religions are built on the Core Human Discovery and that its common morphological features are visible, say, in Christianity, Buddhism and Judaism, I mean “common morphology” in the following sense: Fish, dolphins and sea lions are different species that share a common morphology, a shared engineering solution to the problem of moving smoothly and efficiently while submerged in water.  That streamlined, tear-shaped form and those tails and fins are close to the optimum transportation solution for each species, given its travel medium.  Buddhists, Jews and Christians may not swim in the same sea, but they all swim somewhere in the larger ocean of humanity; and they all share a common spiritual-ethical morphology that includes similar models of exemplary moral behavior and several common moral prohibitions.  In each tradition, we find the same injunctions against murder, theft and mendacity, and that these moral precepts are anchored on deeper terrain than the shifting sands of fashion. They are part of a “norm set” that is close to the optimum group survival solution for all who swim among other humans.

 

A WORD ABOUT CIVILIZATION

 

Civilization is the critically necessary social technology by which the human species has managed to achieve planetary dominance (recalling that in the beginning we were weak and lived in constant fear of other predators); and civilization represents the sole social technology capable of sustaining our species over long spans of time.  Civilization crucially depends on the widespread acceptance of and general adherence to a set of norms. This norm set constitutes the normative architecture of civilization. 

 

To flourish, our children need to inherit a robust, liberty friendly creative civilization.  Our legacy to them must include the inculcation of the essential values and operating principles upon which such a civilization depends, and to instill in them a willingness to fight for its preservation.  This latter point takes us beyond mere utility; we need to access the deeper motivations.

 

THE UTILITARIAN PREMISE AND ITS LIMITS

 

Part of any child’s preparation for adulthood is the transmission, teaching or encouragement of the suite of faculties, skills and knowledge needed to function successfully in a then exchange milieu that constitutes modern life.  But the child needs that which the civilization also requires: A moral anchor. 

 

All the purely utilitarian arguments in favor of moral behavior can go only so far.  This is not to disparage the wisdom of the utilitarian concerns, but it does suggest a caution for those who try to relay on utility alone.  I am reminded of the British men and women who shed “blood, sweat and tears” against the Nazi onslaught.  Clearly they were motivated by something more than the “greatest good for the greatest number”. That ethos, brainchild of the British utilitarian moral philosopher, Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832), rings hollow when heroic resistance is called for.  

 

I’ll return to this point soon, noting that a traditional anchor can prevent drift but it cannot drive a boat through troubled waters.

 

Any civilization worthy of the name requires modalities of social control aimed at restraining predators and otherwise supporting an expectation of rational predictability in all dealings.  For this system to work at all (let alone well), the modalities of social control need to be linked to a normative architecture that is crafted to enable, support and protect the interactions of peaceful civil exchange. 

 

For the modalities of social control to enjoy wide support within a civilization, the moral precepts and principles upon which they are based must be generally understood to have an objective authority, i.e., they need to be understood as more than mere tribal constructs, but as derived from the very fundamental normative underpinnings of the human enterprise itself.  Ideally the moral structure of a civilization will be understood to represent the application of a few, well understood principles. 

AN ANCHOR THAT MOVES THE BOAT –
THE SEARCH FOR RELEVANT TRANSCENDENCE


The successful intergenerational transmission of our species normative architecture over more than two or three generations requires an anchor outside social convention, secure from the whims and currents of fashion.  But – and this is where my seagoing metaphor breaks down – the anchor (as it operates in each mind) must not only rectify, reassure and reveal the moral realm, it must motivate us to act.  For reasons that should be evident as this discussion progresses, I believe we are necessarily talking about a transcendental anchor, located in effect beyond our immediate reach, but tethered to our deepest longings and motivations.  To date, only the major world religions have provided that transcendent moral anchor on a sufficiently large scale to be effective. 

 

The decline of religious affiliation and adherence among the Western intelligentsia is a troublesome development for this very reason.

 

The post-modern condition has given rise to outbreaks of spiritual hedonism. These are part of the “crystals and aroma” New Age ethos that flourishes because it feeds the need for spiritual reassurance and comfort while it starves the equally strong need for connection to a robust and occasionally demanding moral order.  We enjoy transcendence but we need morally relevant transcendence.

 

Relevant transcendence, in the sense used here, means an accessible non-mundane, non-transitory reality such that the transcendent connection exists and is potentially available to every thinking, potentially moral agent, and has at least these three properties:

 

  • Immanence;
  • Imminence (in the sense that ethical knowledge is always a “mental click” away);
  • Relevance to the imperatives and demands of the moral life in the “real world”.

 

So, moral relevance is the key.  To be relevant, any transcendent moral anchor must have authority.  Its credibility must be internal as well as external. 

 

Our species’ religions have succeeded in helping sustain civilization the last few millennia because they have provided a linkage (however imperfect) between one’s own internal evaluative/value-assigning faculty and that to which transcendence points: the ultimate common source of all value.

 

Relevant transcendence must continue to provide our primary value-supporting connection, one that opens up our access to a universal repository of value.

 

By necessary implication, this calls for or implies a relationship with ultimate personality. Whether ultimate personality is seen concretely, virtually, or symbolically, the ultimate relationship that is implied by moral transcendence leads us to a common center of caring.  The capacity for caring is so central to personhood that, frankly, it is impossible to imagine caring as a disconnected, disembodied, impersonal force. I believe that this holds true even for Buddhism in the sense that there are really no impersonal values.  We may from time to time be propelled by inertia, discipline, or external authority into obedience to a moral precept, but the underlying values that give that precept life are driven by caring.  Put another way, the transcendent moral anchor is and must remain the primary authority for our “post-mortal caring”.  Think about it carefully:  The question, “Why should I care about the world or any part of it after I’m gone?” can be answered with real authority only via access to the experience of moral transcendence.

 

THE CORE HUMAN DISCOVERY IN OUTLINE

 

(1)   Transcendence is a common human experience, more often than not accompanied by a life altering moral insight.
(2)   There is a common moral realm, whether seen as universal conscience, natural moral law, or a core set of universal moral precepts derived from transcendent moral values.
(3)   Exemplary moral individuals arise (as a gift to us) who personify or incarnate (1) and (2), and whose lives generate, validate and give force to our ongoing moral traditions.
(4)   The moral Truths of the Core Human Discovery are Truths with a capital “T’; they transcend and stand over the mundane truths (with a lower case “t’) of day-to-day reality (including the theories and experimental outcomes of science).

 

Our species’ mainline orthodox religions have operated effectively in deploying the Core Human Discovery on four levels:

 

(1)   Top down literalism, something akin to the simple, but effective strategies of a good dog trainer;
(2)   Sophisticated allusion using metaphor and allegory;
(3)   Teaching by moral example; 
(4)   Employing liturgy, ritual and the disciplines of meditation and prayer to facilitate individual reconnections with the Core Human Discovery

 

I believe that these four strategies have worked over the centuries because the Core Human Discovery is actually true, both on the deep psychological level and on the (now discredited) metaphysical level. It is a simple, pragmatic reality that religions in general have been (and may remain) the single most effective means for the intergenerational transmission of the moral knowledge that we humans need to sustain our working civilizations. A possible competing model, one not-inconsistent with universal religion, might be termed transcendent humanism. But the major competing model is materialistic scientism.  This model denies the possibility of transcendence altogether and by extension it denies the Core Human Discovery.

 

EMERGENT PURPOSE = SOFT TELEOLOGY

 

Assume for the sake of this discussion that the eventual development of civilization is “programmed” into the sub-architecture that governs development paths in this universe.  This is not a great stretch for science because most practicing scientists are willing to seriously entertain - even adopt as a working model - the general idea that this universe was so constructed that the eventual emergence of life was virtually assured.  A plurality of working scientists would also concede that the emergence of intelligence within a robust ecology of living creatures is almost inevitable, given sufficient time for natural selection to operate, because of the competitive advantage reason confers.

 

The logic that leads us to expect the emergence of intelligence whenever local conditions in the universe permit also leads us to expect to foresee the self-organization of intelligent beings into social modalities that foster group survival.  These modalities are forms of “civilization.”

 

The Core Human Discovery continues to integrate all these insights, including the many reported experiences of transcendence as discovery (as opposed to illusion). Through the Core Human Discovery we humans have found and continue to find purpose in this universe instead of meaningless accident.

 

The Core Human Discovery therefore is teleological (because it tells us how the world is imbued with purpose and direction) but I hasten to add the recent implications drawn of chaos theory and quantum physics: The course of the world is not fully pre-deterministic.  This is why I used the term virtually assured above.

 

Purpose and value make their appearance in the physical universe gradually but almost inevitably because they are inherent design features of the robust, fecund life-forms that emerge opportunistically through “natural” selection, but become dominant through “self assertion”. 

 

Our starting point is the growing realization that the eventual development of civilization is virtually programmed into the sub-architecture of the natural world; that the rules, regularities and conditions that tend to govern development paths in this universe, combined with random chance and the passage of time, virtually assure civilization’s eventual appearance.  Once that happens, creative intelligence (as it operates in the service of the life forms that gave it a platform) is amplified greatly within the interactive context of a civilization. 

 

Think of civilization’s educational institutions, the communities of thinkers, the creative teams, the inventors at the head (or at the service) of supportive organizations, the dramatic creative synergies in Silicone Valley, and the creative surge in the arts in Renaissance Florence.  Human intelligence becomes a creative force on its own when supported by civilization; it becomes a force that works much faster than the gradual evolutionary processes that, by giving an ecological venue for early humans, provided us with that “first chance”.  Consider that it took mammals several million years through the slow mechanisms of natural selection to achieve the rudimentary technology of flight but that it took human civilization only a few thousand years to get human from treetops the to the lunar surface using creative intelligence.

 

We can also allow ourselves to realize (as should by now be obvious) that several key norms are necessary for the emergence and continuity of civilizations because the social arrangements of civilization need to support peaceful exchange relationships among semi-autonomous intelligent actors. We can even expect that, over time, these norms would have become “soft-wired” via natural selection into the sub-architecture of volitional consciousness itself. Therefore we should not have been surprised by the recent findings that, within proto-intelligent animals capable of at least minimal social cooperation, there are early signs of the emergence of social norms. [Certain proto-ethical behaviors among the great apes have been detected. Whether and to what extent these are inherited weak tendencies combined with learned behaviors, or something more, is a pending issue.]

 

Life does benefit from intelligence and intelligence benefits from civilization; and the social technology of civilization actually requires a robust moral (or normative) architecture.  So here is the takeaway point:  Not all individuals are perfect; not all moral systems work perfectly; and not all civilizations are equally well constructed; but, over time, things gradually improve.  This is because both the so called “blind” evolutionary processes (I note that natural selection operates as if it were a proto-intelligence at work) and actual thinking beings (working both individually and collectively) tend to learn from their mistakes: The better planners and adapters in this universe enjoy a survival advantage. Therefore, there is a very long term tendency toward improvement. It is more clearly visible at a remove.  It operates because intelligence and creative innovation, and yes, a moral context for these attributes, collectively confer a marginal survival advantage.  Of course, success is never guaranteed.

 

STRICT MATERIALISM AND ITS LIMITATIONS

 

Daniel Dennett and Richard Dawkins are members of the anti- religious, anti-transcendence intelligentsia. [See Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon, by Daniel C. Dennett (Penguin) and The God Delusion, by Richard Dawkins (Houghton Mifflin) and the review by Michael Novak referenced below.]

 

These and the other God-hostile intellectuals must necessarily work overtime to avoid the teleological implications of the general pro-life, pro-intelligence, pro-creative adaptation tendencies that nature has exhibited over the last several billion years. I suspect that teleology must be strongly denied by these authors because to admit that a pervasive purpose is at work in the universe implies that there is a meta-being somewhere in the mix with the capacity for purpose and a will to exercise it in favor of living creative moral beings.

 

The ultimate metaphysical ground upon which scientism rests is the doctrine of strict materialism, the strikingly arrogant claim that the primary subject of the physical sciences, the realm of matter and energy, represents all that is and ever was real.  This view empowers the arch-materialists’ claims that purpose is nothing more than a human invention; that God cannot exist because there is no experimentally verifiable evidence for a deity having “caused” any event; and that everything is “explained” by purely physical/material processes.  In other words, the scientific study of mere “stuff” - matter and energy in all its forms - provides our species with all the guidance it will ever need. Scientism claims to hold the sole explanation of Life, the Universe, and Everything.

 

The Core Human Discovery is durable for a reason.  An embedded “soft” teleology is clearly at work in the universe.  As we begin the 21st century, this is as the heart of the Core Human Discovery: 

 

The tendency/soft teleology that has become increasingly evident in this universe is civilization-friendly. This simple fact strongly implies the central presence of deity – or an equivalent self-organizing tendency, as the core animating, organizing principle of development. 

 

Why speak of a Caring Deity instead of some impersonal “force”? 

 

(1)   Because consciousness and conscience cannot be separated in the real world;
(2)   Because conscience cannot be divorced from caring;
(3)   Because the tendencies for the emergence of consciousness and conscience are encoded in the warp and woof of the universe;
(4)   Because the Ur-source of consciousness and conscience cannot be adequately apprehended or described as a purely impersonal mechanism.

 

I propose that esthetics, empathy, ethics and the experience of transcendence are all deeply linked to each other in that they are aspects of a common faculty (or bundle of faculties) enjoyed by healthy conscious intelligence.  They are part of a suite of special cognitive abilities that include our capacity to recognize other thinking, feeling beings as real persons, and to grasp in a meaningful way what is actually going on his or her “head and heart”.  

 

The striking inability of Dr. Dennett to “explain” consciousness (“Consciousness Explained” Little, Brown & Co. 1991) except within the impoverished context of arch-materialism should have been a clue to the bankruptcy of scientism as the grand explanation of all significance. 

 

Recently, I was struck by the revelation that the last century’s most famous atheist, Sigmund Freud (1836-1939), hated music. [This and other insights are captured in “The Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud Debate God, Love, Sex, and the Meaning of Life by Armand M. Nicholi Jr. (Free Press, 2002, 2003).] I wonder whether Dr. Dennett and the other materialist atheists might accept the description of Bach’s “B Minor Mass” or Beethoven’s “Eroica”, or Johnny Cash’s “Walk The Line”, or Dave Brubeck”s “Elementals’, or Duke Ellington’s “Take The A train” as fluctuations of air pressure that produce characteristic electrical activity in the brain? In a special sense, the exercise of rigorous materialism by those who profess the faux religion of scientism has a disturbing resemblance to the mindset of the autistic.

 

I am personally persuaded that the saints, bodhisattvas, seers, mavens and mystics who have been able to record their intimate and awesome experience of the Presence of an ultimate, caring Being (sometimes reported as a “beingness” or simply as an encounter with the numinous – a truly life-changing experience when not denied) were telling the Truth.  And I am personally persuaded that they were employing the same suite of cognitive abilities that all healthy humans can potentially access. Through this suite of abilities we humans are gifted to be able to recognize, know and love each other and to enjoy and be moved by art, music and humor.  In this sense what we sometimes call faith is nothing less than self-confidence in the veracity of our apperception of the numinous. The sense that a “great veil has been stripped away” to reveal that which is a wonder to behold” is so common in human history and has so often been coupled with great moral insight that to deny its reality and significance seems to me to hint of pathology. In this sense, the intense work of an intellectual, like Dr. Dennett who purports to “explain” (read “explain away’) consciousness, resembles the remarkable feats of memory and mathematical calculations of an autistic savant who cannot stand to be touched. 

Of course Daniel Dennett is by all accounts a normal, civilized fellow. I suspect therefore that the strict materialism upon which most of his work is based is more of a rhetorical construct than an operating life principle.  Then there is the possibility that he is living in genteel denial.  Like the other great doubters (I think of the billiard playing David Hume – 1711-1776), the comfortable, prosperous, well protected atheists of our era have taken the blessings of civilization for granted and seem to think that drawing room civility is an exportable product in its own right.

 Elevator


I want you to think of Dennett and Hume occupying an elegantly decorated, large elevator, equipped with the comforts of a study room at Oxford. 

Then consider the two “elevator thought experiments” first posed by Albert Einstein.  Someone is isolated from the rest of the world and is set up in a pressurized elevator.  In (a), the elevator is being towed in space at a steady acceleration of one gravity.  In (b), the elevator is being allowed to fall from a great height. The observer in each is not able to tell the difference between: being situated safely on the earth (a) or being safely adrift near some earth satellite in orbit (b).  Note that Einstein stops the story here to make his famous point about inertial frames of reference, but each observer faces a possible disastrous reckoning.  In Hume’s and Dennett’s case, that reckoning is to be visited on a future generation.  Each atheistic “parent” who cannot communicate the elements of the Core Human Discovery has to rely on the power of imitation without the power of renewal.  This kind of cultural transmission belt is subject to decay over time just as in the whispered message in a parlor game where a sentence is quietly told ear-to-ear around the table, only to end up garbled at the end.

 

JBG
 

Re Novak
I recommend Michael Novak’s review of “Letter to a Christian Nation, by Sam Harris; Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon, by Daniel C. Dennett; The God Delusion, by Richard Dawkins”. I believe his review, Lonely Atheists of the Global Village, is still available on line at >>>> http://www.aei.org/publications/filter.all,pubID.25770/pub_detail.asp  . 

 

Mr. Novak is the George Frederick Jewett scholar of religion, philosophy, and public policy at the American Enterprise Institute.

 

One Quote:

 

“Why does atheism persuade so few? Our authors never ask. I particularly wanted to like the book by Richard Dawkins. I had heard that his is a well-furnished and well-rounded mind, and that he writes with the music and wit of an elegant literary stylist. His fans present him as the very model of a reasonable man. Dawkins, too, expressly presents himself and other atheists as “Brights,” distinguished by their “healthy” and “vigorous” minds. Poor believers — he openly complains — are by contrast with him trapped in delusion, unquestioning, mentally dead. He makes not a gesture of seeking to learn from them. …. Throughout the West, it appears that neither scientist nor pop star takes time to consider contemporary religious experience in the light of some of its most sophisticated and heroic practitioners. For instance, never before our own time have so many millions of persons of Biblical faith been thrown into concentration camps, tortured, and murdered, as they have been under recent self-described atheist regimes. It would have been wonderful if any of our three authors had measured their vision of religion against the hard-won Biblical faith of the originally atheist scientist Anatoly Sharansky, who served nine years in the Soviet Gulag simply for vindicating the rights of Soviet citizens who were Jews. Sharansky has written the record of his suffering in a brilliant autobiography, Fear No Evil. I think I have never read of a braver moral man, determined to live as a free man, courageously showing nothing but moral contempt for the morals of KGB officials, under whose total power he had to live.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

June 05, 2007

Religions Universal or Parochial, Self-Refreshing or Soon Forgotten

JUNE 5, 2007 

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Copyright © 2005, 2006 and 2007 by Jay B. Gaskill

 

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RELIGIONS UNIVERSAL or PAROCHIAL,
SELF-REFRESHING or SOON FORGOTTEN

By

Jay B. Gaskill

 

 Bridge

 

 

 

One of the most important developing social conditions in the 21st century is the ongoing weakening of hereditary-based coercion and other social pressures supporting religious affiliation. 

 

A free market in religion has arrived. And not all religions will survive in the new environment.

 

Here I use the term “religions” broadly to include all morally grounded metaphysical systems of belief that are linked to and supported by practicing belief communities.

 

Drifters & Rebels

 

Our culture is teeming with people who have given up on religion or who are just barely hanging on.  Most of these people are “moral” in a traditional, baseline way. While they may pursue one of more of the popular virtues (think of “thrift” or “niceness”), these pursuits are more like competing avocations (think of “shopping” or “working out”) rather than the natural outcome of  deeply felt ethical inclinations. 

 

Among the overall group, I find the subset of angry ones the most interesting…and promising.

 

Many of these belong to that cohort of fiercely moral people who really haven’t given up on religion as a subject so much as they have turned their backs on or more of its most deeply flawed institutions. Potentially they are among the best of the best.  The fiercely moral ones are potential leaders without a following.  They may not be part of the problem, but neither are they the solution. Not yet…

 

There is a third group, also promising, consisting of the ethically grounded, secular humanists who are currently operating in the “as if” mode.  As a friend of mine who probably still belongs in this category once said, “Really, I would like to believe, but…”

 

The good news is that this “I gave up on church because I doubted” group has pretty much stayed out of jail. They are clearly among the cohort of decent people among us, the ones who are not pillaging and shooting up their neighborhoods.  The less good news is that too many of them are having difficulty demonstrating and defending morality to the next generation in terms that transcend the mere “get along and get ahead” strategies. To say to a child, “X is moral and Y is not moral for me, but of course we can’t really speak for someone outside our culture”, falls short of the mark. 

 

Unless and until we can learn how to convey moral truth and wisdom in terms that cut through the sophistries of relativism and moral ennui, we are in for a few centuries of trouble.

 

Two “Parables”

 

When I was a teenager, I started keeping my first “Great Idea” journal.  One entry (I may have been 19 at the time) has stayed with me over the decades and its various reiterations. Technically, it’s an extended metaphor, rather than a parable.

 

Imagine, I suggested, that the entire set of human moral beliefs and their supporting fundamental principles are a few gallons of water held securely inside a bucket. The sides and bottom of the container make up the bulwark of religiously supported and informed moral precepts and principles; these support the walls and boundaries that sustain civil society.  Then imagine that container suddenly stripped away.  There is a pregnant instant when everyone might go on in the “as if” mode.  Imagine the water hanging in midair, mirroring the bucket’s shape. Next, the whole glistening thing begins to quiver.  Finally, gravity (I was thinking of cultural entropy) begins to take hold. 

 

“Without God” (i.e., religion or at least without deity or an equivalent universal moral authority) “everything is permitted”. Sartre, that cynical atheist, attributed this aphorism to Dostoevsky. I’ve located the likely source in a passage from The Brothers Karamazov, in Book X, at Chapter 4, where Mitya Karamazov is in jail awaiting trial for killing his father. He’s speaking to his brother, Alyosha, the novitiate. Mitya has just said that he is “sorry for God” because, “Your Reverence, you must move over a little, chemistry is coming!” Then Mitya says: “How...is man to fare after that? Without God and a life to come? After all, that would mean that now all things are lawful, that one may do anything that one likes.”  [P 753 Penguin Edition 1880, 1993 trans. Reissued 2003 w/ revisions.]

 

We can be pretty sure that Mitya was speaking for Dostoevsky, and that Fydor was on to something.

 

I owe the second parable to the Right Rev. Mark MacDonald, Episcopal Bishop of Alaska, a charismatic, spiritual leader with Native American roots in Minnesota, and a fine gift for story telling. Bishop Mark tells the story of his visit to a cranberry farm in his home state of Minnesota.

 

The cultivated cranberry plants, he was told, are extremely fragile, requiring constant careful nurturing. “What are those?” he asked, pointed to a patch of very hardy looking growth outside the cultivated area.  “Oh those are cranberry plants too.  Those uncultivated ones are hard to kill.”

 

He goes on to explain (in good humor) how the Christian message is much like those cranberry plants, struggling within the cultivated domain of the church, but flourishing and hardy outside the tender care of …he smiled… the clergy. 

 

He talks about the power, vitality and hardy growth of Christian models that flourish outside any church.  His example is the vitality and growth of the Twelve Step recovery programs as a form of Christian engagement without benefit of clergy. These recovery programs have proliferated, driven by the need for recovery from the bondage of addiction, even as many formal congregations have declined. 

 

Go figure…

 

Lure of the Cults

 

I suspect that the secular world has trouble identifying “cults” because it is approaching the problem from outside, and therefore it lacks an adequate definition of religion itself.  Or to put it differently: to the anti-religious skeptic, they’re all cults. 

 

Of course there are the easy cases: Think of the cult of the Reverend Jim Jones whose followers joined him in an infamous mass suicide/homicide. Jones was a California guru whose followers joined the “Peoples Temple”, helped found “Jonestown” in Guyana, then were induced to commit mass suicide and homicide at their leader’s demand in 1978. Among the 911 to 914 dead were children whose parents fed them poison punch.

 

But there are more difficult cases: What are we so say about the accounts that some well meaning parents, adherents of Christian Science (an otherwise benign variation of Christianity), have denied their minor children antibiotics with sometimes fatal results?

 

One working definition of a cult or cultish sect is any religion or proto-religious movement that lacks a recognizable thematic connection to the great underlying ethical traditions, or both. 

 

This definition requires us to identify the elements of the “great underlying ethical traditions” in a way that bridges the secular-religious divide.  This is exactly why I believe that it is a useful exercise. This is a topic to which we will soon return.

 

Challenge of Adaptation

 

Another definition involves obsolescence.  A cult or cultish sect can be defined as any religion (or proto-religion) that withers after its first impulse is spent (often when its founders are discredited or die without a vital living legacy of followers).  In most cases, this is really a failure of adaptation, a fatal lapse of relevance.

 

Few religions can survive the changing social conditions without adapting to some extent. But frequent or dramatic change is not always necessary, as the endurance of the Roman Catholic Church attests.  After all, morality is based on a few enduring principles.

 

But the moral applications can change, and the social conditions, problems and needs that make up the context of applied morality are in constant flux.  In fact, modernity has accelerated the processes of change, and has independently presented new challenges to traditional religions based on the truth claims of science.

 

Therefore any a religious or quasi religious movement is at continuing risk of becoming a socially irrelevant cult because of the failure to adapt to changing conditions.

 

There are two extreme versions of this:

 

(a)    Any sufficiently parochial religion can become trapped in its particularity and remain increasingly vulnerable to the destabilizing arrival of dramatic, unambiguous contradiction. 

 

How would Islamists, for example, deal with the arrival of civilized, technologically superior non-Islamist space aliens?  After learning to communicate with these hi-tech guests, our Muslim fellow humans would no doubt quickly conclude that Mohammed had never visited Aldebran V.  Eventually, I suppose, the little purple ones from space would become just one more set of unconvertible infidels to be dispatched.  These hypothetical Islamists could only hope (when frustrated in their attempts to behead the little interstellar visitors) that their own human children would not find the alien way of life “cool”. 

 

[Of course, we Americans are the real aliens in this story, and we come equipped with a dangerously subversive adolescent culture.  But I digress.]

 

(b)   At the other extreme, any historically disconnected religion, lacking deep and impressive roots in the common human past, is vulnerable to obsolescence, in effect to “fading fad syndrome”, because of a lack if historical particularity. Without the anchor of deep human tradition, a history of acts of heroic moral integrity or of saints whose holiness, exemplary goodness (or both) transcend time, place and culture, religion fades into dry philosophy, vulnerable to the airhead/brain-in-the-clouds critique: “You just invented that!”

 

Glimpse of a Future

 

I’m tempted to invoke Dickens’ Christmas ghosts, here, by imagining a world coming apart at the seams without its great religions, and then pointing out that it’s not too late.  But this discussion is not about one religion, one curmudgeon or one simple choice.  

 

Again, in later posts, I will argue that every world religion has something that our species’ needs, and that no religious institution can properly claim to “own” its valuable universal insights any more than any particular religious figure can claim to “own” God,  or enjoy the exclusive custody of the path to the good life.

 

I believe that we can be reasonably optimistic because of the necessity principle.  It can be stated this way:

  • If civilization requires a vital substrate of moral belief for its continued survival (and I believe it does);
  • If that moral substrate is best maintained by locating it outside the shifting currents of human fashion - as in a developed metaphysical system;
  • If the vitality of that moral substrate depends on effectively linking it to supporting belief communities,
  • Then we humans are going to need religions - or a close facsimile thereof - for the foreseeable future.

 


As we can rule out the cults and sects as the “wave of the future”, the saviors of civilization, we can imagine two competing scenarios:

 

1.      Civilization is adequately supported by the subset of traditional religions that learn work in the vital center, between the extremes identified in (a) and (b) above, and remain capable of continuing to inspire and instruct us.

Or

2.      Civilization finds sufficient support in some new, but similar social construct that is able to acquire the necessary moral credibility without degrading into cult or sect. [A 20th century caution:  Those of us who are familiar with the brilliant insights of Eric Hoffer, the longshoreman autodidact who wrote “The True Believer”, are entitled to shudder at the prospect of another invented secular religion, given the records of Marxist-Leninism and Hitler’s National socialism. The last century’s two “scientific secular religions” murdered many times more innocents than all of the religious repressions and wars combined.  

 

In other words I submit that it’s going to be religion or religion by another name.

 

 

This Is Why I Think Religion Will Be Relevant for Another Thousand Years

 

It seems likely that the religions that survive and thrive into the late 21st century will still originate in a particular history (or deep tradition that reaches before formal history) but (to remain a vital part of the human story) they will have succeeded in carefully uniting and integrating their particular histories with universal values and ethical principles. And conversely, they will be able to show how a particular tradition originated in (and operated as an expression of) universal moral precepts.  The religions in the vital center (as defined here) are more resilient that (a) and more vital than (b).  They will probably make it for these five reasons:

 

  1. They are reconcilable to the principles of universalism, the first of which is the maxim that: the more you plumb a particular aspect of the world, the more you discover the embedded universals in operation.
  2. And to the second maxim, to wit: The more you explicate, spin out and connect a universal to real events, the more particulars you are able to sweep into the context you have just created.
  3. They will profit from two deep psychological aspects of the human condition: (1) We humans carry around a deep, God shaped hole or spiritual vacuum in our chests; (2) but we have learned to be suspicious of religious charlatans. This is no trivial insight: We humans tend to know that true holiness is real, but that it is very rare; we tend to see holiness as connecting to a universal moral sense.  Therefore, we find that the inability to inspire good followers is suspect, and that the ability to inspire bad followers is even more suspect.
  4. Our species just doesn’t have the time to reinvent authentic, historically deep religions from scratch.  The social function of religious institutions are so essential to the survival of civilization that if humanity didn’t have something vital filling the “religion niche’, we’d be forced to find something equally effective.  The existing religions that have authentic roots and good hearted spiritual leaders are far more likely to evolve into the vital center than something that just springs up in the cultural desert, Kwanza-like, as an academic invention.
  5. All flaws accounted for, religions function as the primary supporting communities that hold, support and propagate the species’ institutional memory of the moral and moral law; they hold up the normative infrastructure of civilization itself.  But without the anchor of deep human tradition, a history of acts of heroic moral integrity or of saints whose holiness, exemplary goodness or both transcend time, place and culture” any religion lacks real traction. Because that deep history can’t easily be invented, I predict that on New Year’s eve, 2999, we will still be working with the existing set.

 

Looking For the Creative Center

 

So….I find myself looking for the convergences connections and integrations, as if it were really true, a priori, that if something good must happen, then something good will happen. 

 

As I’ve begun to notice emerging patterns, it occurs to me that the trend towards creative convergence will benefit greatly when we can find a language to express our deeper spiritual and moral aspirations and insights that can bridge the secular and religious subcultures.  That process is part of the “mission” of the Bridge to Being” Blog.

 

As it happens, recently a diverse group convened in a Berkeley bookstore to hear Professor Jacob Needleman talk about his new book, “Why Can’t We Be Good?” (Penguin 2007).  Professor Needleman has taken some giant steps in honing ordinary language so that it speaks meaningfully and simultaneously to our culture’s religious and secular ethical sensibilities. And, inter alia, he also has just released a very persuasive case for an innate human conscience, the capacity of which to become a real world force of moral agency has been impaired by our crippled and cramped understanding of the human body.  I can’t do his latest work justice here (it’s accessible, insightful and deserves careful study), but here is a flavor of his contribution.

 

The famous story about Hillel the Elder is central to Needleman’s account. Some of us Judeo Christians are familiar (in one form or other) with the account in which Hillel was confronted by a young man (presumably he was seeking the Cliff notes version of the Law) who challenged the great teacher to summarize the Torah while standing on one foot.  Hillel recited a version of the biblical injunction (from Leviticus) to love one’s neighbor (“don’t do to another that which is hateful to yourself”) as a summary of the entire corpus of the law. “All the rest is commentary. Go and study!” [I note that a few years later, another rabbi (Jesuah, AKA Jesus) said much the same thing, after reciting the shema, the injunction to love G-d.]

 

Dr. Needleman (a self described “Jewish boy”) was by far the “oldest” soul in the standing-room-only book talk area, but he quietly and lucidly demonstrated the supple mind of someone four decades younger.  It was refreshing to encounter a professional philosopher (Dr. Needleman still teaches at San Francisco State) for whom the grand old subject represents the integration of real life lessons. His was the kind of discourse in which one hears insights from Plato, Socrates, the Stoics, Meister Eckhart, Paul the Apostle, and Hillel the Elder.  And more deeply impressive still, was his transparent moral authenticity. When Dr. Needleman talked about conscience as a faculty, as something far deeper and more important than Freud’s “superego”, he was sharing a secret lost on the post-modern culture, and he was revealing his own life journey.

 

The following brief excerpt from his latest book, “Why Can’t We Be Good?” should be accompanied by a caution: His thesis obviously distills a lifetime of living, study, reflection and applied interaction with the world and his own internal self. The book is more than ideas. I’d stamp the inner fly leaf: INNER WORK REQUIRED.

 

“Twist and turn as we may, explain it or deconstruct it as we may, we know that though we may be animals, we are ethical animals. In everyone, in every place, in every occasion of our lives and culture we see that we are failing what we are meant to be – and we suffer from that, we run from one answer to another – religion, relativism, psychology, medical drugs, psychotropic drugs, mass movements, charismatic leaders, fundamentalisms of all kinds from the religious to the atheistic to the scientistic; we run here and there looking for our moral power, trying to exercise it even though all evidence screams out to us that we do not have this power, that we cannot be the moral beings we know, down deep, that we are meant to be.” (p 244)

 

There is much more to say, of course. So stay tuned….

 

JBG

 

 

 

 

 

 

June 04, 2007

The Very First Post - Jay B. Gaskill

The Bridge 

Developments in the 21st century will determine the future of major religious institutions for a thousand years. Specific institutions and practices will wither, but spiritual practices and beliefs will always endure in some form, because they are driven by needs central to the human condition.

 

Institutional religion itself will arrive at a critical moment when its very survival is at risk. Our species’ religious institutions remain relevant and robust only to the extent that they continue to serve their primary functions. Religions exist to provide safe and vital places for the sacred, authoritative centers of moral wisdom, and vital supporting communities united in common spiritual practices.  If they do that well in the new millennium, they will thrive. If not….

 

Increasingly, there is a free market in religion. That trend will accelerate. Most European have already voted with their feet. Chapels, churches, cathedrals, and temples, largely empty of worshipers, have become de facto museums.

 

We can hope to see a powerful convergence of two currents. A humanism of renewed depth and reach, grounded in ultimate authority (which may or may not be understood or expressed in theistic terms) that will join those branches of religious and spiritual practice which are equally universal in depth and reach. This convergence will take place – if it does – because our species desperately needs secure moral foundations, the kind of moral authority that transcends mere human conventions. We need the large scale critical morality of the prophets: the kind that applies with equal force to ruler and ruled.   

 

I can spot hopeful outlines of this convergence-in-the-making already. But we can also see the shape of the countertrend in the attraction of superficial secular hedonism and spiritual hedonism.

 

A New Age narcissism may temporarily fill the God shaped hole in the human psyche, but the moral ground then turns into thin ice.  

 

The competing trends will eventually resolve. The catalyst for resolution may prove to be the latest common threat, militant Islam.

 

JBG

As Published On
The Bridge to Being Blog: http://www.jaygaskill.com/blog2
The Policy Think Site: http://www.jaygaskill.com
All contents, unless otherwise indicated are
Copyright © 2005, 2006 and 2007 by Jay B. Gaskill
Permission to publish, distribute or print all or part of this article (except for personal use) is needed. [Permission for use in group discussions is almost always routinely given.]
Please contact Jay B. Gaskill, attorney at law, via e mail at law@jaygaskill.com

 

June 4, 2007

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