On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

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AshvinP
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On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

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The mythic heroes, such as Theseus when he navigated the Minoan labyrinth of convoluted perceptual content and tamed the Minotaur of animalistic passions, retracing his inner movements with Ariadne’s thread of living thinking, were always motivated by the highest virtues and ideals. It was implicit in all such mythic narratives that they could never accomplish their tasks without this virtuous context hovering ‘above’ all their imaginative states of being from Alpha to Omega. As we discussed in Part III, these narratives were recursive symbols for initiation through the ancient Mystery schools. It was a process of knowing beyond the neurosensory formatting of experience, i.e. across the threshold of physical death, thereby gaining comprehensive insight into the rhythmic movements of spiritual activity that brought about the human capacity to perceive, know, and creatively fashion the perceptual World. Initiation was not only a journey from the periphery of perceptual appearances to the Intuitive Center and back, but the process of experientially realizing the essential Unity of both poles. When motivated by the highest ideals, every journey of spiritual activity, whether into the heights of supersensible realities or the depths of sensory appearances, is experienced as a journey toward the Center which is everywhere and everywhen.

“In speaking of human things, we say that it is necessary to know them before we can love them.... the saints on the contrary say in speaking of divine things that it is necessary to love them in order to know them, and that we only enter truth through caritas.”(1)

The Center is the Heart of the Living Cosmos; it is pure Love that holds all perspectives and forms together in a harmoniously functioning Unity. What exists at the Center can only be freely incepted within human souls in its mirror image at the sensory Periphery, when these souls are in seeming isolation from one another. It is when our thoughts and feelings are not already experienced as united with the thoughts and feelings of others that we are invited to make a sacrificial cognitive effort to harmonize them through intimate inquiries and dialogue. We have to make an effort to render our respective soul ‘bubbles’ more porous and transparent to the inner experiences of others. At the Periphery, we dimly experience this highest Love when we have an enthusiastic interest in and empathy for the inner lives of our fellow beings - what pains them, what hinders them, and what might foster their higher potential.

“If you feel pain, you’re alive, if you feel other people’s pain, you’re a human being.”(2)

Love likewise views the inner joys, successes, and flourishing of others, not with frustration or envy, but as integral to its own flourishing over many iterations of rhythmic development. That means it asks us to renounce a myopic knowing perspective, i.e. thinking only about “my life” over hours, days, and years, and become receptive to a more holistic perspective that tracks the ‘footprints’ of many beings over multiple lifetimes. Love asks that we expand our interests beyond our personal destiny to coincide with the destinies of nations, civilizations, and kingdoms. We don’t worry only about what may befall us after death, but what Earthly tasks we have set out from before birth to accomplish for the benefit of humanity. Moreover, Love does not ask these wider spheres of beings to intellectually prove that they are worthy of our interest. The loving Center cannot be modeled, formulated, proven, etc. but can only be intuitively lived into and, only after that, artistically expressed through the imaginative conceptual life as the poets with their love poems.(3)

"I see you in a thousand pictures
Mary, to put it sweetly,
But none of them can describe you
How my soul beholds you.
I only know that the world is a tumult
Since gone away like a dream
And an unspeakably sweet sky
is in my mind forever.

I see you in a thousand pictures,
Maria, lovingly expressed,
But none of them can describe you
As my soul sees you.
I only know that since then it seems
the tumult of the world is blown away like dreams
And a heaven too sweet to name
Lives forever in my heart."


In ordinary life, it is felt like we need to see and conceptualize phenomena in clear outlines, i.e. encompass them with our mental pictures within the mind container, before we can understand and transform them. The surgeon needs to peer into the patient and see the heart before he can effectively operate on it. That inner disposition is habitually carried into the domain of ‘Divine things’ as well. Yet the situation is quite different for the moral organs of the superconscious organism. To cognitively perceive the moral constellation of creative forces that reside at the foundation of our spiritual, psychic, and physical capacities, we must imaginatively participate in them. We should try to conduct our spiritual activity artistically, honestly, courageously, and with charity, forgiveness, and love, no matter how little we know about the superconscious or how imperfect our initial attempts are to work with those virtues. Working intimately with these soul forces in our daily lives also sensitizes our consciousness to how they function in our individual and collective streams of experience.

Contemplate the following passage and try to intuitively feel how the rhythmic patterns of destiny through which our ordinary knowing capacity arises can be known by living into the virtues.

The golden rule is this, “Live your life as if reincarnation and karma were truths and they will become truths for you.” It appears as if this is to be achieved by a form of self-suggestion but this is not the case. The mystic symbol of the snake that bites its own tail is a familiar one. This symbol has several profound meanings but among the many interpretations it contains is the one expressed here in the golden rule.

It is evident that the supposition inherent in this golden rule negates itself in a sense in like manner as the snake that curls up around itself. How are we to understand this? If reincarnation is a fact, then certain efforts made by man that have an effect on his soul cannot be made in vain, but should become the soul's nature later on. One of the great laws of man that must be intimately tried out on his own self, is expressed in an ancient Indian text, “What you think today you will be tomorrow.” He who believes in reincarnation must realize that a quality that he develops within himself, a thought that he imprints in himself by constantly holding it in his mind, becomes something permanent in his soul that will emerge ever again. Therefore, a person seeking mystical development must first of all make the attempt to give up certain formerly held inclinations. Then, new inclinations must be acquired by constantly holding the thought of such inclinations, virtues or characteristics in one's mind. They must be so incorporated into one's being that a person becomes enabled to alter his soul by his own will-power. This must be tried as objectively as a chemical might be tested in an experiment. A person who has never endeavored to change his soul, who has never made the initial decision to develop the qualities of endurance, steadfastness and calm logical thinking, or a person who has such decisions but has given up because he did not succeed in a week, a month, a year or a decade, will never determine anything within himself about these truths.
(4)


What Steiner expresses above is also the case with sensory knowing, only the relationship between living into the soul forces and attaining knowledge of sensory relationships becomes evident over longer timeframes. The surgeon may be able to perform heart surgery on any given patient once he observes the heart, but if he stubbornly decides to perform the operations in a completely mechanical way, without paying attention to subtle intuitions that feedback on his efforts, he will never learn anything new about the best way to perform heart surgery. Likewise, if he doesn’t attend conferences, pay attention to research from diverse fields, work cooperatively with colleagues, etc., he won’t learn anything new about heart function. Eventually, only those surgeons who were simultaneously living into the virtues of humility, attentiveness, open-mindedness, cooperation with others, etc. will remain viable in the developing field of heart operations. That same principle can be applied across all domains of natural science and intellectual life in general. No advancement in knowledge has ever been made independently of its overarching virtuous context.

At the collective scale, the ability to know what is happening across the World through our thought-out technology only developed once thinking became more sensitive, at a very instinctive level, with the interests of broader spheres of beings. At the dawn of modernity, there was still a sense that philosophy and science should only be pursued for the collective welfare of a nation or kingdom and these broader spheres of interest should become the central locus of concern rather than the community or tribe. This also coincided with social, political, and economic ideals that fostered the dignity, equality, and freedom of human souls regardless of narrow natural or cultural characteristics. Our knowing perception extended its technological reach based on moral impulses that seeded scientific-mathematical methods of thinking many centuries before they bore their most mature fruits. That these impulses took a long time to manifest more fully only reinforces the point. Since this burgeoning state of global resonance is mediated through the mechanical element, it unfolds through a linear sequence of events over relatively long timeframes. That obscures its existence since our attention is continually diverted into indulging in our technological creations rather than truly understanding how they came about.

The spiritual influences which lead humanity need not work in such a way that man is always conscious of them. For example, they put Galileo in the cathedral of Pisa. Thousands had seen the old church lamp there, but they had not seen it as did Galileo. He saw the church lamp swinging; compared the time of its oscillation with the beat of his own pulse; found that the church lamp swung in a regular rhythm resembling his pulse-beat; and from this discovered the laws of the pendulum in the sense of modern physics. Anyone acquainted with contemporary physics knows that this science would not be possible without Galileo's principle. In this way the force was then working which is now appearing as spiritual science; Galileo was placed in the cathedral of Pisa before the oscillating church lamp, and modern physics gained its principles. In such a mysterious way do the guiding spiritual forces of humanity perform their work.
(5)


Thus, it is only our myopic temporal perspective that convinces us that a deeper understanding of sensory relationships can be gained in any other way than through the portal of moral virtues that guide our spiritual activity to look at the World in new ways. Imagine how we may rack our brains throughout the day with intellectual problems and then take a break to relax, walk through and contemplate nature, listen to music, engage in devotional activity, quietly meditate on the problems, listen to other souls about their problems and try to help them, prepare for a good night’s sleep, and so forth. Then a few days later we arrive at the creative solution we were seeking but fail to notice, or even suspect, that these aesthetic and moral activities in the meantime had anything to contribute. We take a snapshot of intellectual thinking experience and conclude that it alone must explain how the knowledge was attained. Again, it is a lack of careful attentiveness that obscured this reality.

As another example, consider the tragic story of Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis:

Postpartum infection, also known as puerperal fever or childbed fever, consists of any bacterial infection of the reproductive tract following birth and in the 19th century was common and often fatal. Semmelweis discovered that the incidence of infection could be drastically reduced by requiring healthcare workers in obstetrical clinics to disinfect their hands. In 1847, he proposed hand washing with chlorinated lime solutions at Vienna General Hospital's First Obstetrical Clinic, where doctors' wards had three times the mortality of midwives' wards.[3] The maternal mortality rate dropped from 18% to less than 2%, and he published a book of his findings, Etiology, Concept and Prophylaxis of Childbed Fever, in 1861.

Despite his research, Semmelweis's observations conflicted with the established scientific and medical opinions of the time and his ideas were rejected by the medical community. He could offer no theoretical explanation for his findings of reduced mortality due to hand-washing, and some doctors were offended at the suggestion that they should wash their hands and mocked him for it. In 1865, the increasingly outspoken Semmelweis allegedly suffered a nervous breakdown and was committed to an asylum by his colleagues. In the asylum, he was beaten by the guards. He died 14 days later from a gangrenous wound on his right hand that may have been caused by the beating.[4]

His findings earned widespread acceptance only years after his death, when Louis Pasteur confirmed the germ theory, giving Semmelweis' observations a theoretical explanation, and Joseph Lister, acting on Pasteur's research, practised and operated using hygienic methods with great success.

In this case, it was the absence of the virtues of humility, open-mindedness, generosity, and so forth that blocked the path to critical knowledge of sensory relationships for many years. “A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it.”(6) The new only appears when the old habits and contents of thinking die away and make room for the former. Artistically exploring and engaging the virtues is a means of attuning to what we are always doing in the process of knowing, thereby creating the possibility that we can advance new knowledge without waiting for all the old knowers to die. By becoming conscious of these deeper knowing movements that span temporally extended rhythms, we establish a recursive feedback process that continuously inspires more heartfelt virtuous activity, transforms old habits of thinking, and opens new unsuspected domains of cognitive experience.

The virtues, unlike isolated ‘facts’, always express themselves as temporally extended processes, as ongoing movements of experience. We can easily imagine the natural fact of gravity by picturing an apple falling from a tree, focusing only on the perceptual content, but to imagine the moral virtues of charity and forgiveness, for example, would require a more elaborate narrative sequence of emotionally valenced images. In this domain, our spiritual activity can no longer rest passively on static pictures drawn from easily accessible memory. For that reason, when our spiritual activity engages the virtues, it remains in a more fluid state and continually adapts to evolving inner conditions, becoming something different and something new as it interacts with recursively symbolic content. That fluidly adaptive process is the characteristic quality of superconscious-supersensible realities. Consider how children are practically in a state of flux for the first 3 years of life, remaining plastic and highly receptive to environmental influences. They are instinctively imbued with the virtues of reverence, awe, wonder, and admiration of their surroundings.

It is of vital importance, for this reason, that the adults surrounding young children conduct their activity with moral uprightness. It is not so much the content of their speech but the whole manner of their conduct that influences the child. Similarly, the reason why the flowing narratives of myth, art, literature, etc. speak to us so meaningfully is because they remind of us the fluid, airy, and fiery superconscious movements we directly participated in during childhood at an instinctive level. We are still participating in these movements at a deeply subconscious level, i.e. they still modulate our knowing perspective, but we are rarely selflessly attentive enough to raise them into the clear light of consciousness. Rather, they are merged into the the background of our knowing perspective. How many readers noticed the double use of “the” in the last sentence? If we didn’t notice it, we can use this fact, not as an example of some external “trick” of the brain, but to recursively point attention to our inattentive thinking movements. Moreover, we can intuitively feel how we are reorienting our perspective on the content by utilizing it as a symbolic pointer. What is the moral valence of this shift? We don’t need to clearly verbalize that valence but live into it, feeling its presence working deeply within us.

Image

Imagine you have a single sheet of paper in front of you. On the surface, it looks like a 2D plane, although you know there is also a paper-thin depth to the sheet that is difficult to perceive. To make that depth more noticeable, what do you do? You can repeatedly stack many more sheets of paper on top of one another, ending up with a thick three-dimensional rectangle. Now the depth of each particular sheet has also become evident in light of the overall thickness that has resulted from stacking them. Similarly, by repeatedly moving our spiritual activity in virtuous ways, we are stacking up instances of inner experience, rendering the ‘four-dimensional’ temporal depth of our inner movements more noticeable. The latter begins to shine through our knowing perspective and becomes evident in each piece of factual content we encounter, whereas otherwise, this content had remained paper-thin and difficult to notice, i.e. externalized and seemingly unrelated to our knowing perspective.

Every piece of perceptual content only comes into our knowing vicinity through various contextual factors that led us to be at a certain place, at a certain time, with a certain worldview, with certain interests, with certain knowledge, with certain preferences, and many more similar inner conditions. All such factors influence where we direct our attention and how we understand what our attention is directed to. After reading that last sentence, focus your vision on the letter - “a” - for a few seconds while simultaneously holding the meaning of that sentence in consciousness, without diverting your eyes. The superposition of the meaningful memory image on your perceptual state “a” is the inner contextual depth that we are trying to become more attentive to. The meaningful depth tinges this perceptual state with a background feeling and intuition that gives us an orientation to why our perceptual state is the way it is, but that intuition is entirely unlike the perceptual state of “a” and could never be derived from it alone.

It must be stressed that we will never become conscious of this inner depth in the same way as sensory events or concepts that we can encompass and easily survey in our mind’s eye, like the words on this page. Instead, they are the ‘riverbeds’ of meaningful experience through which all of our sensory perceptions and thoughts flow. Thus we can only intuit, from within, the way they shape, morph, constrain, and generally influence our perceptible thoughts, feelings, and sensory impressions. Living into the virtues thickens our intuitive sensitivity to these riverbeds of experience. The following discussion will briefly explore only three key virtues as living examples of these inner functions. A similar exploration would reveal the same functions underlying all the other virtues, such as patience, prudence, reverence, courage, hope, and so on. All such virtues are imbued with their deepest meaning through the Center of selfless Love weaving within our spiritual activity.


HUMILITY & GRATITUDE

Image
(Michelangelo, Pieta)

“An inflated consciousness is always egocentric and conscious of nothing but its own existence. It is incapable of learning from the past, incapable of understanding contemporary events, and incapable of drawing right conclusions about the future. It is hypnotised by itself and therefore cannot be argued with. It inevitably dooms itself to calamities that must strike it dead.” (7)

The virtues can’t be ranked in any simple way from least to most important, but nevertheless, without radical humility in our time, there is simply no chance of becoming receptive to higher cognitive perspectives that lift us beyond the sphere of our personal experience and knowledge. To put it simply, we can never experience what we think we have already experienced (or concluded it is impossible to experience) or learn what we think we already know. Our mind container perspective needs to shrink itself down to an infinitesimal point, which is its truthful size in relation to the superconscious media that contextualize its knowing experience. In that sense, our normal experience of being tiny physical beings surrounded by a sprawling civilization, vast kingdoms of Nature, and even vaster Cosmic expanses gives us an accurate picture of the inner situation. Our willed stream of thinking is all that we can truthfully claim responsibility for and this stream flows through the riverbeds of mostly autonomous psychic factors, biological factors, and physical factors.

As we touched on before, the ‘freedom’ of ordinary thoughts to modulate even the most proximate psychic constraints of beliefs, preferences, emotions, etc., is practically non-existent. At best, our thoughts can help us gain some cognitive distance from those constraints and ward off their influence for a few moments when engaging in disciplined intellectual activity. As soon as we return to the stream of normal sensory life, however, they are once again steering our thinking hither and thither, like a dog on a leash. When this reality is inwardly confessed, we don’t fall for the trap of using those same ineffectual thoughts to investigate the mysteries of existence. Becoming ‘poor in spirit’ is a precondition for understanding, at an intimate experiential level, how our modern thinking has only reached the starting point of acquiring true knowledge about ‘how reality works’.

Modern philosophy and natural science (now practically synonymous with mathematical thinking) have essentially been an exercise in deconditioning from personalized feelings and impulses that influence thinking. It has aided souls in deepening their cognitive experience of sensory relationships while also developing the strength and precision of logical thinking for the pursuit of ethical ideals. It has not, however, discovered the secrets of biology and psychology, the evolution of the Earth’s geological ages, the progression of human history, the impulses driving socio-economic life, the harmonic relationships of the Cosmic bodies, or anything related to those questions at either the individual or collective scales of existence. It’s not that modern thinking is slowly working its way to the answers, but it has been positively looking away from the only direction where all answers could possibly be found, its own real-time intuitive movements.

As we have seen from the spiritual Catch-22, modern thinking cannot even tell us how we put one foot in front of the other, combine one thought with another, distinguish one color from another, learn new skills, and so on. Consider the following split-brain experiment:

Cognitive neuroscience is still at an early stage in some ways, but emerging studies reveal that our brains are hard wired for storytelling. Michael Gazzaniga, a pioneer in this field, has studied people with ‘split brains,’ in which the right and left hemispheres can no longer communicate with each other, so normal sense-making is impaired. Taking advantage of the fact that information can only be fed to one side of the brain at a a time, Gazzaniga discerned that if the left brain is deprived of all of the information required to understand a situation, it will invent an explanation.

In his studies, people who have not seen an object placed in their hand, such as a coffee cup, will make up a reason even if they do not know. “Oh yes, I have not had coffee today and was going to get a cup.”
(8)


As we also saw in the example of a quantum mechanical experiment, the split-brain situation simply provides us an opportunity to ask new kinds of questions, develop new experimental setups, and thus heighten attention to what is always taking place. Our ‘left brain’ is always rationalizing its flow of experience after the fact, pretending that the flow is well understood. The content of modern intellectual theories and models is comparable to the imagery of dream life. Upon awakening, we realize that this imagery held some objective relationship to bodily or psychic experiences but we also know that there was no chance of figuring out those relations from within the dream itself. Our bodily and psychic processes don’t perceptually resemble the dream imagery whatsoever. Humility is when we become sensitive to how all our ordinary thoughts about the World state and its metamorphoses, within the frameworks of science, history, religion, etc., are in practically the same position as the dream imagery. They are mostly a means of rationalizing the state we have ended up in after the fact, like the person who awakens holding the coffee cup.

This analogy is simply another way of expressing the fundamental spiritual Catch-22 and how hopeless the prospect of awakening is from within the mind container perspective. We should feel, at a deep level, how little we already know about the sensory dreamscape and how much we need the Grace of more integrated perspectives beyond the dreamscape to fertilize our ignorant souls with their Knowing spirit. This cannot be any mere verbal statement but must become an inner disposition that we live with day in and day out. We should begin to feel the corpse-like nature of our thoughts and perceptions, along with our modern philosophical, scientific, and theological concepts by which we try to construct models of the World. That is like punching holes in a piece of paper with an image on it and trying to rebuild the image, not even with the round pieces of paper, but only with the empty holes. Or, again, like trying to reach the reality of the waking self through ever-more complex arrangments of dream images.

“What I cannot create, I do not understand.”(9)

In robotics research, for example, it was quickly discovered that simulating purely logical activities, like playing chess, was much easier than simulating basic human activities like cooking dinner. In other words, we are only intuitively familiar with the movements of our intellectual concepts, i.e. how they harmonize or clash with each other, while deeper movements of psychic and natural phenomena completely elude our normal intuition. Needless to say, nowhere in Nature do we find organisms playing chess or ‘go’. Only recently has mainstream science begun to realize, through recursive cognitive-perceptual research, that the Spirit concealed in Nature educates the human soul in ways that were previously unimaginable and certainly outside the comprehension of normal intellectual logic. What takes place for the human child to stand upright, speak, and think is born of profound Wisdom and cannot be replicated through any existing or even conceivable technology. Every time we engage in thoughtful activity in the World and communicate with others, we are drawing upon that mysterious Wisdom.

With growing sensitivity to this reality of our utter dependence on the superconscious in every act of movement, whether bodily movements or purely mental ones, we naturally find degrees of freedom to transform our emotional state from that of apathy, indifference, or a puffed-up sense of understanding into one of gratitude for all those experiences we normally feel to encompass within our mind container and take for granted. Such a grateful state naturally imbues us with childlike reverence, awe, and wonder, which in turn enhances our attentiveness to outer and inner phenomena and helps us notice aspects of experience that otherwise escape awareness. We become more intuitively receptive to the subtle movements of spiritual activity within sensory life that normally elude our attention. As a generalization of the title of Pierre Hadot’s high school thesis on Henri Bergson, “Knowing is not the construction of a system, but the resolution once made to look naively at the world in and around oneself…” Or as revealed through scripture, “Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.” (10)

Children cannot but help feel that when they observe phenomena they are looking at them for the first time because in many cases they are. Spiritual seekers should freely and consciously cultivate that same feeling to perceive the World phenomena, including our own thoughts and world outlooks, even though we have experienced them millions of times before. Unlike children, we should approach the not-yet-known domain of potential experience as humble visitors and guests without any presumption that what we experience there belongs to us or can be forced into our familiar templates of experience. We leave the superconscious, as our gracious host, in its native supersensible element and wait patiently for the insights that it deems are most helpful for our further development in coordination with the Whole. The superconscious is comprised of holistic perspectives that already know what we are seeking to know and have already become what we are seeking to be. Our task is to humbly and gratefully attune our intuitive consciousness to this reality.


FAITH


Image
(J.W. Turner, Angel Standing in the Sun)

“I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you. Yet a little while, and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall live also.”(11)

Image

Try to vividly imagine a scenario in which you are participating in the above exercise. We can even go to the edge of a couch or a bed, close our eyes, and fall backward, imagining as much as possible that there is nothing behind us but other living souls. Faith is when this profoundly meaningful gesture of trust can be translated into the cognitive life, where our thinking-gestures are entrusted to the Other-centered souls that are always ‘behind’ our cognitive perspective, modulating its becoming. We develop trust that what we seek to know is already known by these more integrated cognitive perspectives. These perspectives are always interested in helping us share in their holistic Wisdom, and in fact, their entire existence is in many ways centered around that noble task. They freely transduce their holistic knowing gestures into our conceptual life provided we align our personal will with the Divine Will, i.e. the Good of the Whole.

It is not a passive belief in external entities or forces, but an active display of trust that the Spirit of Truth can lead us into ever-new realms of supersensible experience from within. (12)

We have shown that intellect has detached itself from a vastly wider reality but that there has never been a clean cut between the two; all around conceptual thought there remains an indistinct fringe which recalls its origin. And further we compared the intellect to a solid nucleus formed by means of condensation. This nucleus does not differ radically from the fluid surrounding it. It can only be reabsorbed in it because it is made of the same substance. He who throws himself into the water, having known only the resistance of the solid earth, will immediately be drowned if he does not struggle against the fluidity of the new environment: he must perforce still cling to that solidity, so to speak, which even water presents. Only on this condition can he get used to the fluid’s fluidity. So of our thought, when it has decided to make the leap.

But leap it must, that is, leave its own environment. Reason, reasoning on its powers, will never succeed in extending them, though the extension would not appear at all unreasonable once it were accomplished. Thousands and thousands of variations on the theme of walking will never yield a rule for swimming: come, enter the water, and when you know how to swim, you will understand how the mechanism of swimming is connected with that of walking. Swimming is an extension of walking, but walking would never have pushed you on to swimming. So you may speculate as intelligently as you will on the mechanism of intelligence; you will never, by this method, succeed in going beyond it. You may get something more complex, but not something higher nor even something different. You must take things by storm: you must thrust intelligence outside itself by an act of will.
(13)


Faith is what extends reason beyond the content-level (walking) to the process-level (swimming) of its reasoning activity. It sensitizes us to how we reason, the inner movements we make to swim with our spiritual activity. Any good father or mother desires to help their child learn how to swim, not by getting in the pool and moving their arms and legs for them, micromanaging every little aspect of the swimming process, but by providing overarching guidelines and encouraging and inspiring the child’s efforts. Likewise, the Spirit of Truth desires to encourage and inspire humanity to learn how to creatively manage and employ the knowing movements that were previously managed for us. Because we don’t find these knowing movements as ready-made perceptual content within the mind container, we must live into the virtue of faith and, once we become more sensitive to those deeper movements, we will intuitively understand how they are the natural extension of our previous reasoning activity.

“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”(14)


Image

With your left eye closed, focus your right eye on the mouth of the cat in the above sketch. As you adjust your distance to the page, the mouse at the right will disappear at a certain point. To achieve this effect, you may also have to adjust the angle of vision by inclining your head to one side. The blind spot remains hidden until some detail in our field of vision loses itself within it.
(15)


This is a visual metaphor for the blind spot of our thinking consciousness where the deeper inner movements that structure our knowing perspective live and weave. First, we can notice it takes a certain level of faith to even engage in this exercise, trusting that it has some as-of-yet unknown relationship to elucidating the nature of our inner activity. We don’t know exactly why we are doing it or where it will lead us, but we also see there is no way to gain that knowledge except by taking the imaginative leap. Once we have leaped into the exercise, the imaginative effort makes us more inwardly sensitive to the very structure of our knowing perspective. We realize there is a visual blind spot, which was always there, but required some modulation of our perspective before we could become aware of it through the disappearance of the mouse.

Through visual experiments of this kind, our relationship to our own body changes. Our bodily organization becomes an external object. The more we come to see it as part of the world, the less we identify ourselves with it. Usually, we forget about our sense organs while we are using them. We remain unconscious of the very things which we identify ourselves with. It is a very unpleasant experience for some people when their unconscious identification with their own body is put in question.

We become conscious of our body by penetrating our bodily experience with our thinking. Each discovery that we make with our thinking presents us with an opportunity to realize that our thinking engages itself in the external world and not within the interior of our own self. Thus, step-by-step, the self - that with which we identify ourselves - retreats as more and more of what we initially and unconsciously considered to be part of that self is discovered to be part of the external world. To the extent that this occurs, however, we can focus more clearly on the center of our own initiative.

This exercise also ties in with the virtue of humility and the principle of ‘shrinking’ our knowing self down to its truthful size so that we can experience its willed movements in greater purity. Indeed, all the virtues overlap with one another and complement one another’s functions in various ways, just as the living and sentient processes of our biological organism. In the same exact manner as our sense organs, and as we discussed in previous parts, we usually forget about our thinking activity while we are directing its energy and attention to various aspects of the World. Moreover, we can’t directly catch hold of that activity by directing it back at its own movements, as is attempted by various forms of modern recursive research. That fact is at the core of the spiritual Catch-22. Faith, as we have intimated above, provides an imaginative avenue to intuit the movements from within, thereby transcending the Catch-22. We trust our thinking movements to the superconscious Spirit concealed within those movements and, before we know it, we are swimming with our spiritual activity.

CITATIONS:

(1) Blaise Pascal, ‘The Art of Persuasion’

(2) Leo Tolstoy

(3) Novalis, ‘I see you in a thousand pictures’

(4) Rudolf Steiner, GA 53

(5) Rudolf Steiner, GA 15 (III)

(6) Max Planck

(7) Carl Jung

(8) The Neuroscience Behind Strategic Narrative
https://prescient2050.com/the-neuroscie ... narrative/

(9) Richard Feynman (on his blackboard at the time of death)

(10) Matthew 18:3

(11) John 14:18

(12) John 14:26
”But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have said unto you.”

(13) Henri Bergson, Creative Evolution; trsl. A. Mitchell, London, 1964, pp. 202-204

(14) Hebrews 11:1

(15) George Maier, An Optics of Visual Experience (“The Blind Spot”, p.7)
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by Federica »

With this topic of the virtues from an experiential perspective, I believe you have ventured on especially difficult terrain. In comparison, composing resonant poetry (or music) is a more affordable task (which you recently said you deemed yourself not morally up to). I think poetry is a more accessible endeavor in comparison, because one “only” needs abundant faith in divine inspiration, and to attune one’s entire self to that flow, to become a messenger of witnessed harmony and beauty. And that message of harmony and beauty is at the same time a protection.
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by AshvinP »

Federica wrote: Sun Sep 01, 2024 9:08 pm With this topic of the virtues from an experiential perspective, I believe you have ventured on especially difficult terrain. In comparison, composing resonant poetry (or music) is a more affordable task (which you recently said you deemed yourself not morally up to). I think poetry is a more accessible endeavor in comparison, because one “only” needs abundant faith in divine inspiration, and to attune one’s entire self to that flow, to become a messenger of witnessed harmony and beauty. And that message of harmony and beauty is at the same time a protection.
Noted :)

To be clear, my previous characterization of why I don't write poetry right now probably wasn't a great one. Basically, I meant to say that I don't inwardly feel the Spirit inspiring me in that direction right now. I hope to establish a deeper resonance with spiritual poetry in the near future, and I trust all good things will come in due course. Right now I am inspired to explore the phenomenology of spiritual activity from various angles and I think some explicit discussion on the inner functions of moral virtues fits in there since they are always implicit in everything we do on the inner path (and the outer path, as I tried to show as well).

On the other hand, I know making the implicit explicit in this domain can be seen as moralizing and quickly become uncomfortable for many people, so I chose to speak about the topic very generally, with plenty of quotes from other respected thinkers, and briefly survey 3 key virtues. I think humility and faith are especially preconditions for any phenomenological explorations to bear fruit. We simply can't make any progress if we feel like we already know the answers to how our inner experience unfolds or if we are unwilling to take any leaps into imaginative exercises. So I thought would be helpful to recursively inquire into why that is the case.

As it so happens, Nicholas Smith from Spiritual Pilgrim also posted a relevant article on this theme today:

https://open.substack.com/pub/nasmith/p ... medium=web
A moral framework, in the sense we are discussing, is not just a set of explicit ethical guidelines. It is an unconscious, pre-ontological structure that lies in the background, shaping how we fundamentally view the world. This framework places us in a particular standpoint, orienting us toward certain goods while steering us away from contrary forms of life that prioritize different values. It opens up a horizon of possibilities, providing individuals with a foundational orientation toward the world and reality. This horizon forges one's form of life by assuming certain qualitative distinctions as basic and providing us with a set of possible goods or ends to pursue. These, in turn, allow us to find both a sense of identity and a place in the world, as well as a sense of meaning.

Moral frameworks are essential to identity formation because they provide the horizon within which individuals can make sense of their lives, enabling them to discern what is good, valuable, and worth pursuing. These frameworks are not rigid systems but are unconscious structures that shape our very perception of the world and ourselves. They frame our fundamental viewpoint and place us in a standpoint toward the world that orients us toward certain goods while distancing us from other forms of life. Without such a framework, individuals may find themselves lost, unable to define who they are or what their lives are about. The absence of a coherent moral framework can lead to what philosopher Charles Taylor calls an “identity crisis,” where individuals become unmoored from any stable sense of self.

Recognizing this crisis, Charles Taylor, in his seminal work Sources of the Self, argues that moral frameworks are essential for shaping our identities. He emphasizes that "the horizons within which we live our lives and which make sense of them have to include… strong qualitative distinctions." These distinctions are not merely helpful; they are necessary for human agency. According to Taylor, "living within such strongly qualified horizons is constitutive of human agency… stepping outside of these limits would be tantamount to stepping outside of what we would recognize as integral, that is, undamaged human personhood" (27). In other words, these pre-ontological moral frameworks are foundational to our ability to act, grow, and perceive ourselves as coherent, whole individuals.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by Federica »

AshvinP wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 12:11 am Noted :)

To be clear, my previous characterization of why I don't write poetry right now probably wasn't a great one. Basically, I meant to say that I don't inwardly feel the Spirit inspiring me in that direction right now.



So, Ashvin, when you wrote:

I don't think I have developed the deep moral (selfless) sensibility that would be needed to carry that task out properly

you meant that you didn’t feel the Spirit inspiring you.


Should one believe you, and then seriously doubt your ability to make yourself understood in words and posts?
Or should one think that, as an excellent writer, you mean now that you are not inspired, but on August 10 you meant something else?

It’s not up to me to answer this question, but I notice you have now created it for the reader.
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by Federica »

AshvinP wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 12:11 am On the other hand, I know making the implicit explicit in this domain can be seen as moralizing and quickly become uncomfortable for many people, so I chose to speak about the topic very generally, with plenty of quotes from other respected thinkers, and briefly survey 3 key virtues. I think humility and faith are especially preconditions for any phenomenological explorations to bear fruit. We simply can't make any progress if we feel like we already know the answers to how our inner experience unfolds or if we are unwilling to take any leaps into imaginative exercises. So I thought would be helpful to recursively inquire into why that is the case.

As it so happens, Nicholas Smith from Spiritual Pilgrim also posted a relevant article on this theme today:

You mention humility. Well, Ashvin, considering that you have repeatedly demonstrated, among other things, lacking humility in this forum, it appears indeed quite at odds with it that you now write not only of your experience “exploring the phenomenology of spiritual activity” and the moral quality of reality, but come up with all these “should”.
We should... spiritual seekers should...” that you feel entitled to direct to others, from the top of your understanding.

You often explain that, when you say "us/our" + something negative, you really mean that you are yourself included in the lack of virtue in question. And so it feels quite dystopian to read, in the same piece of text, things like:


it is only our myopic temporal perspective that convinces us that a deeper understanding of sensory relationships can be gained in any other way than through the portal of moral virtues


only to gather from the same piece that you actually don’t find yourself myopic in the least, standing here and now to tell us what that temporal perspective exactly yields and how, what spiritual seekers should do to figure the virtues out, what the virtues concretely mean, and how we “should” act, even in case we don’t understand much of it: “we should ……….. no matter how little we know about the superconscious”.


By the way, I think you illustrate a half-truth, when you elucidate the following:
At the collective scale, the ability to know what is happening across the World through our thought-out technology only developed once thinking became more sensitive, at a very instinctive level, with the interests of broader spheres of beings. At the dawn of modernity, there was still a sense that philosophy and science should only be pursued for the collective welfare of a nation or kingdom and these broader spheres of interest should become the central locus of concern rather than the community or tribe. This also coincided with social, political, and economic ideals that fostered the dignity, equality, and freedom of human souls regardless of narrow natural or cultural characteristics. Our knowing perception extended its technological reach based on moral impulses that seeded scientific-mathematical methods of thinking many centuries before they bore their most mature fruits.

In any case, yes, I find that you wrote innumerable much, much better and more inspiring essays and posts than this one, in which, by the way, the impressive range of citations did not help dilute the preaching (how could it have worked that way?)
I wish and hope you will make these things right going forward.


Lastly, regarding your Nicholas Smith quote - yes, I read that post when it was published. I found it well written, but also dogmatic, bound to a traditional vision of morality, coming to the individual from without, as an “unconscious framework”. Because of this, I was about to comment on the Substack post, with references to Steiner. Then I changed my mind, thinking of how my Steiner comment to one of his previous posts had apparently made him uncomfortable. So I thought I would let him be for now, with morality as an “unconscious framework”. Both words are concerning to me, but especially “unconscious”, and so I don't find his article "relevant" for the purpose of understanding morality.
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by AshvinP »

Federica wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 7:54 am
AshvinP wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 12:11 am On the other hand, I know making the implicit explicit in this domain can be seen as moralizing and quickly become uncomfortable for many people, so I chose to speak about the topic very generally, with plenty of quotes from other respected thinkers, and briefly survey 3 key virtues. I think humility and faith are especially preconditions for any phenomenological explorations to bear fruit. We simply can't make any progress if we feel like we already know the answers to how our inner experience unfolds or if we are unwilling to take any leaps into imaginative exercises. So I thought would be helpful to recursively inquire into why that is the case.

As it so happens, Nicholas Smith from Spiritual Pilgrim also posted a relevant article on this theme today:

You mention humility. Well, Ashvin, considering that you have repeatedly demonstrated, among other things, lacking humility in this forum, it appears indeed quite at odds with it that you now write not only of your experience “exploring the phenomenology of spiritual activity” and the moral quality of reality, but come up with all these “should”.
We should... spiritual seekers should...” that you feel entitled to direct to others, from the top of your understanding.

You often explain that, when you say "us/our" + something negative, you really mean that you are yourself included in the lack of virtue in question. And so it feels quite dystopian to read, in the same piece of text, things like:


it is only our myopic temporal perspective that convinces us that a deeper understanding of sensory relationships can be gained in any other way than through the portal of moral virtues


only to gather from the same piece that you actually don’t find yourself myopic in the least, standing here and now to tell us what that temporal perspective exactly yields and how, what spiritual seekers should do to figure the virtues out, what the virtues concretely mean, and how we “should” act, even in case we don’t understand much of it: “we should ……….. no matter how little we know about the superconscious”.


By the way, I think you illustrate a half-truth, when you elucidate the following:
At the collective scale, the ability to know what is happening across the World through our thought-out technology only developed once thinking became more sensitive, at a very instinctive level, with the interests of broader spheres of beings. At the dawn of modernity, there was still a sense that philosophy and science should only be pursued for the collective welfare of a nation or kingdom and these broader spheres of interest should become the central locus of concern rather than the community or tribe. This also coincided with social, political, and economic ideals that fostered the dignity, equality, and freedom of human souls regardless of narrow natural or cultural characteristics. Our knowing perception extended its technological reach based on moral impulses that seeded scientific-mathematical methods of thinking many centuries before they bore their most mature fruits.

In any case, yes, I find that you wrote innumerable much, much better and more inspiring essays and posts than this one, in which, by the way, the impressive range of citations did not help dilute the preaching (how could it have worked that way?)
I wish and hope you will make these things right going forward.


Lastly, regarding your Nicholas Smith quote - yes, I read that post when it was published. I found it well written, but also dogmatic, bound to a traditional vision of morality, coming to the individual from without, as an “unconscious framework”. Because of this, I was about to comment on the Substack post, with references to Steiner. Then I changed my mind, thinking of how my Steiner comment to one of his previous posts had apparently made him uncomfortable. So I thought I would let him be for now, with morality as an “unconscious framework”. Both words are concerning to me, but especially “unconscious”, and so I don't find his article "relevant" for the purpose of understanding morality.

Federica,

Since your post here does not contain a single substantive or logical attempt to explore the reasoning I presented in the essay, I can only conclude it is born of a feeling that the reasoning strikes too close to home. Perhaps you think the essay was specifically directed at you, which of course was not the intention. Perhaps it is putting up too much of a mirror and, instead of taking your antipathetic feelings and thoughts as symbolic testimonies to those inner movements, you externalize blame onto me for "preaching". Just two days ago, you wrote:

However, developing a spiritual perspective, rather than an opinion, in relation to the forces pressing on events in our present times is not only extremely useful but also extremely necessary, especially for those of us who are following a path of living thinking, and recognize the guidance manifested as the Mystery of Golgotha, subsequently perpetuated by various voices through history, and lastly renewed through the birth of Anthroposophia, a spiritual being created by Rudolf Steiner a century ago, within the cradle of a millenary stream of divine wisdom on Earth.

Truth is, it is impossible to recognize the truth of Anthroposophy today, and be non-controversial, and fully abide by our cultural world-leading institutions at the same time. Yes it is regrettable, but that is the sheer truth.

Whoever does not see it, whoever does not accept to see the extreme tension building up between nature and culture today, whoever hopes to join the being of Anthroposophy and at the same time be able to go along with anyone and everyone, and that brotherly love will just work by itself without us taking responsibility for identifing evil not only within, but also without ourselves, is at risk of dangerous attitudes and needs to work harder on themselves.

At this point, it is clear that you believe the above is NOT preaching/moralizing. You feel it is more preaching to carefully and methodically explore the inner functions of virtues with logical reasoning and illustrations, than to simply tell people flat out to "work harder on yourself". Anyone can see the projection going on here, if they are thinking clearly.

In any case, what I have written about the virtues has already been explored on this forum many times before in various ways (for ex. by Cleric here), and of course, is central to Knowledge of Higher Worlds. Again, you haven't provided any constructive feedback on what wasn't clear or what was mischaracterized (you declared something a "half-truth" without elaborating whatsoever), so I'm not going to bother continuing this discussion until you do.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by AshvinP »

Federica wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 5:55 am
AshvinP wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 12:11 am Noted :)

To be clear, my previous characterization of why I don't write poetry right now probably wasn't a great one. Basically, I meant to say that I don't inwardly feel the Spirit inspiring me in that direction right now.



So, Ashvin, when you wrote:

I don't think I have developed the deep moral (selfless) sensibility that would be needed to carry that task out properly

you meant that you didn’t feel the Spirit inspiring you.

It's the same thing. The inner cognitive feeling of inspiration in a certain direction is an Angelic indication of a karmic task, given from the higher contextual perspectives, that they have deemed I am morally prepared to undertake.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by AshvinP »

AshvinP wrote: Mon Sep 02, 2024 1:53 pm In any case, what I have written about the virtues has already been explored on this forum many times before in various ways (for ex. by Cleric here),

Actually, Cleric's post is so helpful on orienting to this topic that it's worth quoting in its entirety again here:

***

I would like to add something here because the way the question is posed can make us expect things in an incorrect way.

Such a question would make sense if a surgeon says: "I can't operate unless I see the organs. Once I see them this gives me the capacity to transform them." Habitually, we may imagine things in a similar way when it concerns spiritual development. We may imagine that we first need to see inner images of, say, the chakras, and then begin to rotate and attune them, as if we are tuning a musical instrument.

Please note the hidden indirection here. The surgeon wants to fix the body by augmenting its physical structure. The disciple may say "I want to develop my ability to love." Now if the latter imagines that first the soul organs must be experienced in inner images and then manipulate them such that our ability to love is somehow 'unlocked', this would still be a quite materialistic conception that we unknowingly transpose to the deeper soul life. However, in order to love we should tackle the task directly. We should try to love, no matter how imperfect the results may be. It is these imperfections that may indeed manifest in our expanded imagination and serve as feedback, giving us insights on how to perfect our love. So you see, the experiences in our inner soul life indeed help us to work on our transformation but the transformation itself happens by trying to work with the actual inner forces that we try to perfect.

Your question can make one believe that when the images of the inner currents are perceived, together with this the capacity for some completely new inner forces will manifest through which we'll work on our being. Such a person may say "You try to love but that is only because you are working on a level too low. When you reach the perception of the heart center you will no longer 'love' but will manipulate the rotations of the heart organ with completely different inner gestures you now can't even imagine. Thus 'looks like' love only when perceived in the sensory realm." Clearly, this is a very dangerous position. It is actually true that love is something far more extraordinary than a mere feeling. In the higher experiences, love is a cognitive, creative force, it is infinitely manifold, but it is completely false that we can reach the higher Love by looking at its manifestations in our normal consciousness as a mere shadow, and that on high we'll be doing something completely different. This implies that one may as well skip trying to love (as if not to waste time) and instead try to reach directly for these completely different soul forces. No. We can only reach the higher Love when we start from our present capacity to love, no matter how clumsy it might be. Higher Love will blossom from within these clumsy early attempts.

This also helps us realize how by following teachings like those of OMA and BD, who do not put emphasis on the development of higher cognition per se, but on the development of living skills and forces that flow in all aspects of life, we are still transforming our being in very powerful ways. The reason is that we are working directly with the inner degrees of freedom of our spiritual forces - the virtues. These act as deeper soul rotations (see the video feedback meditation) and our Earthly life's flow streams accordingly. Higher cognition allows us to recognize more holistically how this deeper spiritual activity manifests in our life (for example by encompassing whole scenes of our life and realizing how our forces have manifested or failed to manifest a certain result), but the virtues would have their harmonious contribution to our flow even if we don't encompass it at a higher order but still experience it more like an Earthly-life movie. This creates the most fertile conditions in which higher cognition can then awaken almost as a matter of course.
"They only can acquire the sacred power of self-intuition, who within themselves can interpret and understand the symbol... those only, who feel in their own spirits the same instinct, which impels the chrysalis of the horned fly to leave room in the involucrum for antennae yet to come."
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by Federica »

It’s sad to see how you are stuck in prejudices and recursive thoughts. When I say sad, I really mean it. I am saddened to see that you even ponder the thought that I may believe your essay was directed to me. That is at best risible, and at worst, well, a thought on the narcissistic spectrum. What it confirms, in any case, is that there is no room for any sincere and open discussion with someone who nurtures deviant prejudices and recursive thoughts such as the ones you have admitted here - and have actually been demonstrating for some time now, whenever I have dared to discuss your essays.

I agree that a large part of what you have presented on the nature of morality has been illustrated in this forum before. And it’s on purpose that I have not and will not elaborate on the original touches you have added here. Last time I questioned your points, specifically in part one of this series, using among other things Kühlewind’s words, and despite I explicitly said my tone was friendly and non polemical, you lied - in other words, you were untruthful - saying you only wanted to have a useful discussion. In truth, what you wanted, as it swiftly appeared, was to defend your opinions at all costs even if that meant to try and take me aback, by maliciously and iteratively distorting each of my statements, regardless of the propositions themselves (some of which I am lucky to share with Kühlewind). So I think it’s in none’s interest that I accept “invitations” to elaborate such as these.

As I said above, I wish and hope you will be able to make all these things right within yourself going forward, and I remain open to future discussions.
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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Re: On the Spiritual Essence of the Catch-22 (Part IV)

Post by Federica »

I have quoted this passage from Steiner in another thread, though the quote primarily belongs here.

"In the case of an esotericist, or one who seriously undertakes a theosophical development, who makes Theosophy part of his life, his astral body lives a separate life; in the case of an ordinary human being it is not so free, not so independent. The astral body of a student going through development becomes detached and independent to some extent. It does not pass unconsciously into a sort of sleep, but becomes independent, and detached, going through in a different way what a human being usually does in sleep. It thereby enters the condition suited to it. In an ordinary man who lives in the exoteric world, this astral body is connected with the other bodies, and each exercises its special influence upon it. The individually pronounced quality of this human principle does not then come into notice. But when this astral body is torn out its special peculiarities assert themselves. And what are the peculiarities of the astral body? Now, my dear friends, I have often referred to this quality—perhaps, to the disgust of many who are sitting here. The quality peculiar to the human astral body on earth is egotism. When the astral body, apart from the influences which come from the other principles of human nature, asserts its own peculiar quality, this is seen to be egotism, or the effort to live exclusively in itself and for itself. This belongs to the astral body. It would be wrong, it would be an imperfection in the astral body as such, if it could not permeate itself with the force of egotism, if it could not say to itself, ‘Fundamentally I will attain everything through myself alone, I will do all that I do for myself, I will devote every care to myself alone.’ That is the correct feeling for the astral body. If we bear this in mind we shall understand that esoteric training may produce certain dangers in this direction. Through esoteric development, for instance, because this esoteric development must necessarily make the astral body somewhat free, those persons who take up a kind of Theosophy that is not very serious, without paying attention to all that true Theosophy wishes to give, will in the course of it specially call forth this quality of the astral body, which is egotism. It can be observed in many theosophical and occult societies that while selflessness, universal human love, is preached as a moral principle and repeated again and again, yet through the natural separation of the astral body egotism flourishes. Moreover, to an observer of souls it seems quite justifiable, and yet at the same time suspicious, when universal human love is made into a much-talked of axiom—observe that I do not say it becomes a principle, but that it is always being spoken of; for under certain conditions of the soul-life a person prefers most frequently to speak of what he least possesses, of what he notices that he most lacks, and we can often observe that fundamental truths are most emphasized by those who are most in want of them.


Universal human love ought without this to become something in the development of humanity which completely rules the soul, something which lives in the soul as self-evident, and concerning which the feeling arises: ‘I ought not to mention it so often in vain, I ought not to have it so often on my lips in a superfluous manner.’ Just as a well-known commandment says: Thou shalt not take the Name of God in vain ... so might the following be a commandment to a true and noble humanity: you ought not to utter so often in vain the requirement of the universal human love which is to become the fundamental feature of your souls, for if silence is in many cases a much better means of developing a quality than speech, it is particularly the case in this matter; quietly cultivating it in the heart, and not talking about it, is a far, far better means of developing universal brotherly love than continually speaking about it."

https://rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA145/En ... 26p02.html
"On Earth the soul has a past, in the Cosmos it has a future. The seer must unite past and future into a true perception of the now." Dennis Klocek
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