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author | grr <grr@lo2.org> | 2024-05-08 19:43:11 -0400 |
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committer | grr <grr@lo2.org> | 2024-05-08 19:43:11 -0400 |
commit | e83b8620bc4cd159e6e34db2bc92160afbc7e87c (patch) | |
tree | ae263587c15095b808de7182b81ea73a1da8a89a /extra/radicalism_of_unbelief.tex | |
parent | 7775b5a970f50b2ae944f5efea794a8a2bf69de4 (diff) | |
download | blueprint-e83b8620bc4cd159e6e34db2bc92160afbc7e87c.tar.gz |
addition of several extra essays
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diff --git a/extra/radicalism_of_unbelief.tex b/extra/radicalism_of_unbelief.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..702faef --- /dev/null +++ b/extra/radicalism_of_unbelief.tex @@ -0,0 +1,374 @@ +112 + + +UNBELIEF “H + + +LISM OF +enry Flynt + + +If we are going to talk about enlightenment and deliverance, 1 do not see that +enlightenment and deliverance can come from anything as straightforward as an +individualistic search for happiness, or a mental hygiene of happiness. To me, the +life ] have now, which unfolds through ongoing interaction with other people —and +within this definite culture — is the arena that matters. In other words, | am located +in a shared basis of life. To me this circumstance is of outstanding importance. +While the medium of thought, the capabilities, the skills which are possible for me +are interior to me, at the same time they engage me with other people in cons- +ciousness—and | must regard other people as their source in most cases. (In other +words, | do not invent the English language, etc.) My consciousness and my +capabilities are, by and large, a fragment of a culture. The most worthy capabilities +in the culture become possible capabilities of mine. The most profound dilemmas +or failures in the culture, in the interpersonal arena, become my personal dilemmas. + + +What I have just said is not the same as the idolatry of “society.” I do not accept +the sociologists’ notion of reality, or conformism as a goal, or the obligation to pay +homage to societal abstractions like The Nation. Indeed, one of our culture's +extreme dilemmas and failures is its idolatry of society, an idolatry which aggres- +sively underestimates and devalues both the scope of the self and also the interper- +sonal arena. One of the most far-reaching questions posed by our contemporary +era is whether inter-subjectivity (community) will evolve beyond “society” as it is +defined by sociology (a sort of statistical mechanics applied to bodies). Here is an +outstanding reason why I do not see how enlightenment and deliverance can come +from an individualistic hygiene of happiness. The modalities necessary for enlight- +enment are novel and uncommon; and they are outside the scope of the ordinary +person's struggle for happiness in everyday existence. The necessary modalities +have to be achieved by dealing with dilemmas which arise from the culture as a +totality: enlightenment requires a “rotation” (transformation) of the entire culture. +Life is worthless unless I can inject whatever personal vision | have into the +ostensible, interpersonal arena, and seek to influence that arena so that it becomes +conducive to my sincerity and concern. + + +In order to express whatever sincerity and concern | have in the ostensible, +interpersonal arena, I must engage with the ostensible world; | must incur the risk +of realized choices; and I must “grant other people's right to exist.” + + +Whiekh + + +What I seek is a transformation of the ostensible world and of the shared basis of life. +This is to be accomplished on the basis of two enterprises which will eventually be +fused: a theory of palpable interrelations of the entirety of immediate constituents +of “my world” called “the personhood theory”; and a new instrumental modality +called “meta-technology.” In this introduction, I will focus on meta-technology +without bringing in the dimensions added to it by the personhood theory — largely +because the latter is as yet tentative. But I have another reason as well for under- +lining the contribution of meta-technology. There can be no genuine transformation +of the shared basis of life as long as the community's technological means is restricted to the +material technology we know today. The instrumental modality must come to embody the +takeover of technology by the psyche, by personhood. There is no genuine transformation +of the shared basis of life unless instrumental efficacy is at stake in that transformation, +unless the challenge to the prevailing basis of life is carried into the domain of material +technology. + +As of now, I have assembled many meta-technological elements or procedures. +These elements, however, are isolated and limited. What | have accomplished is +analogous to Becquerel's discovery that uranium fogs photographic film, My pro- +cedures are effective as curiosities. But they will not be any more than curiosities +until they are subjected to an entire phase of extension and interconnection —an +undertaking which requires collaborative effort on a wide scale. + +On the other hand, the analogy to Becquerel is misleading in that a meta- +technological procedure is of an entirely different species from Becquerel’s dis- +covery. Radioactivity occurs in the exterior realm of things (objectivities): it is an +effect of a thing on another thing. But generally speaking, a meta-technological +procedure is based not on a relation between things, but on an interdependency +between subjectivity and things. + +Because I am located in a shared basis of life, a culture, that culture is of +overwhelming importance both as a source of possible capabilities and as a source +of dilemmas and limitations. To respond to this state of affairs, the meta-technology +must accumulate information which is of more than personal significance. It must +address dilemmas which are shared and which are culture-wide. That is why | +investigate mathematics, “real-world” logic, etc. It is also why my interest in +dreamed experience relates to a proposal to modify the shared basis of life — rather +than to the familiar purposes of divination and psychiatry. + +I disregard all claims of sorcery or miraculous feats which inherently come as +reports by a second person about what a third person did (tall tales, fish stories, +legends). lam not interested in miracles which are always performed by somebody +else somewhere else. Indeed, my objections to occultism go much further than this. +But the principle which I want to emphasize now is that every meta-technological +procedure is required to be formulated as an instruction to be carried out first-hand. + +Below | will explain that a starting-point of meta-technology is an adver- +sary attitude towards credulity. One aspect of this phased unravelling of credulity +is a critical examination of claims of meaningfulness for reportage which intrinsically +precludes first-hand testing. + + +Weve ever + + +113 + + +114 + + +Whar then is my attitude to the immediate, overt, ostensible world? I have little +use for the doctrine that the ostensible world is a sham which conceals another, +perfect world behind it—a perfect world which can only be known by hypothesis. +In other words, I do not treat the ostensible world as a facade for something lying +behind it, as a front for another world which is unperceivable. And [ have little use +for the notion of a perfect world which is hypothetical and imaginary. This present +life, which unfolds through ongoing interaction with other people, and w ithin this definite +culture, is my arena of concern. Imaginary lives and gratification in fantasy are unim- +portant to me. | accept the ostensible world as the arena of my concern, and as one of the +raw materials of enlightenment and deliverance. + +The attitude I have just expressed does not imply that 1 admire whatever +ostensible world we inherit. Quite the opposite. Precisely because the ostensible world +matters to me, the arrival of enlightenment or deliverance has ta be demonstrated by a +transformation of the ostensible world and by a transformation of the shared basis of life. +Further, while I do not view the ostensible world as an illusion standing between +me and some perfect world which must be known by hypothesis, there is a sense in +which I view the ostensible world as a delusion. It is a delusion in that the very +perceptions which characterize it are palpably affected and sustained by emotions +of anticipation, by emotional dependence on other people, by morale, by esteem, +by knowing self-deception, etc etc. Everyday existence is the hallucination produced +by the so-called socialization process. Morale, esteem, etc. are co-determinate with +“perception.” + +Thus, again, the arrival of enlightenment or deliverance has to be demonstrated +by a transformation of the ostensible world and of the shared basis of life. But what +| propose is not to strip off the ostensible world to reveal a unique perfect world +behind it. Rather, | want the ability to consciously “mutate” or plasticize the +ostensible world itself. + + +Yevevew ye + + +Inasmuch as I demand that enlightenment and deliverance should be evinced +by transformation of the ostensible world, | am a kind of secular revolutionary. + +To me, the means of enlightenment and deliverance must begin with an adver- +sary attitude toward credulity and toward phenomena whose existence is solely a +product of credulity. In the Seventies, there was a rash of novels in the U.S. about +demonic possession. The protagonists in these novels were always Catholics. The +novelists knew that Catholics were protagonists who could plausibly be liable to +visitations by demons. If you do not want to see demons in your living room, +all you have to do to escape them is to stay outside the subculture that believes +in them. + +The lesson of this example, properly understood, is the starting point of enlight- +enment and deliverance for me. If it is obvious that a phenomenon can be +abolished by unbelief, then the “reality” of that phenomenon is of a very low order. +The phenomenon has only the reality of chimera or fantasy. (On the other hand, it +is obvious that a lor of people enjoy their chimeras, and do not want to escape +everything that can be abolished by unbelief.) | make it a principle to disregard +phenomena whose existence depends so obviously on credulity. The attitude + + +which is encouraged by all kinds of superstition and propaganda is “How many lies +can | (manage to) believe?" The question which | always ask is "How much of what +I am expected to believe is a lie?" + +On the other hand, the tssue of whether the existence of a phenomenon is +a product of cretlulity is not necessarily straightforward. In the first place, we have to +distinguish between getting rid of phenomena by unbelief and getting rid of them by +suppression or censorship. | often encounter situations in which scientists refuse the +opportunity to experience an anomalous phenomenon. Nobody denies that the +phenomenon is “real,” that is, accessible at first hand. The phenomenon is disre- +garded or suppressed because it is a nuisance, because it conflicts with the scien- +tist’s ideology. + +In the same vein, I am not asking anybody to deny his or her own experience just +because it is abnormal, anomalous, or singular. But | am asking that such exper- +iences not be misrepresented and inflated through knowing self-deception — +especially in reporting them to others. | have long speculated that reports of +so-called astral projection etc. might have an experiential basis in hypnagogic +hallucinations etc. Unfortunately, the sort of person who relishes reporting such +episodes is also prone to inflate them via culturally supplied hyperbole. Reports of +abnormal experiences could have serious uses if the reportage did not surround the +experiences with chimerical objectivities, and if it took a painstakingly critical +attitude toward the “ontological” assumptions built into descriptive language. + +Another consideration is that a thorough and ruthless effort to repudiate all pheno- +mena whose existence depends on credulity will begin to undermine phenomena which +our culture defines as legitimate and plausible. Unbelief does not just dissolve supersti- +tions and chimeras; it begins to affect phenomena which rational authority defines as +valid. At this point rational authority has to step in and disparage unbelief as a +social blunder. Here the role of community intimidation in sustaining the osten- +sible world comes to the surface. But I do not shrink from this consequence of +unbelief. Indeed, the radicalism of unbelief is a basis of my ability to obtain results which +are novel and astonishing relative to the established culture. + + +Yerevan de + + +Let me give some examples of meta-technological investigations: + +A priori neurocybernetics! deals most directly with interdependencies between +awareness and objectivity. As one example, it uses perceptually multistable fig- +ures? as logical notations. The result is to establish awareness-objectivity inter- +dependencies in language which are tangible and inescapable and can be analyzed +and potentiated. The technique can be applied to break the framework of scientific +objectivism in many ways. As another example, | note that our “perception of +objects” is actually a mental collation of visual and tactile apparitions. There are +many cases in which the normal intersensory correlations are disrupted (the per- + + +1 Neurocybernetics is an existing branch of neurophysiology which seeks to explain thought by investigating the brain +as a “bionic computer.” + + +2-eg the Necker Cube. + + +115 + + +116 + + +ceptual illusions). If we take the illusions as a paradigm and reinterpret “normal” +phenomena in accord with that paradigm we are in a different reality, disjoined +along the sight-touch frontier. Bode's Law that two material bodies cannot occupy +the same position in space at the same time ceases to be usable, because the +determination of what is a material bady is seen to involve a vicious circle. + +The evaluational processing of experience studies, as one example, the circumstance +that different levels of reality are attributed to waking experience and dreamed +experience even though both are equally vivid, equally palpable. What is at issue +here is the fabrication of an “impersonal order of nature”; the inter-subjective +character of reality; and the choice of rules for testing the objectivity of phenomena. +Again, once these elements are understood consciously, they can be consciously +altered. + +The logic of contradictions is a wide-ranging, umbrella discipline. The unifying +theme of the discipline is the recognition that inconsistent conceptualizations, sa +far from being vacuous mistakes which can be eliminated from thought, are +pervasive and inescapable in thought as we know it. Conscious control of this state +of affairs is an extremely powerful achievement. The investigation begins with the +interdependency between traditional logic and perceptual habits in the real-world +logic of consistency. It then considers perceptions or events which are faithfully +described by inconsistent descriptions, such as illusions and dreams. I characterize +these apparitions as contradictory because that is the characterization given them +by shared language and paradigmatic real-world logic —as all the perceptual psy- +chology textbooks agree. Then, | study contradictions which are cognitively im- +plicit in our most authoritative or obligatory propositional thought. (Paradoxes of +common sense; the meta-theoretic inconsistency of arithmetic and set theory.) +Finally, I study how the communal milieu and its influence on esteem enables +people to assent to openly inconsistent doctrine. (Mathematics’ co-optation of its +own inconsistencies; etc.) This research yields a very wide-ranging capacity to +produce anomalies or uncanny world-states. + +My recent investigations into personhood have shown that meta-technology can +be significantly widened and deepened by studying not only linkages of perception +and descriptive language, but their co-determination by morale, esteem, ete. +Studying the entire “vertical” organization of self or self-image could result in the +realm of perception being transformed. + + +Vee Het + + +Our civilization has long been characterized by the way it molds human faculties +to produce a cleavage between scientific functioning, on the one hand, and poetic, +emotional “human” functioning on the other. Meta-technology is beyond this + + +cleavage of faculties. Also, it is worth repeating that meta-technology does not + + +3 An example of an intemensory discorrelation ix Aristotle's tactile Husian: wuch the tips of crossed forefinger +and middle finger at the left hand te a projecting dowel while also looking at the dowel. You see ane dowel and feel +two The perceptions the wo fingersare notanly disjained. they are inverted The subjectaririhures tithe index finger +what ts touched by the middle finger and tuce versa, as cin be shown by applying two distinct stimult ns the finger - +a point and a ball, for example + +Even better: try the experiment first with eves claved, and then open the eyes. Sight captures ouch, and the fingers +are switvhed withoutany motion taking place. (Adapted from Merleau-Ponry, The Phenamenalagy of Perception, pg. 105.4 + + +consist of the sort of magic tricks attributed to pre-scientific religious figures. What +is a religious miracle like changing water into wine? It is — purportedly —an object- +ively consequential manipulation of the thing-world, a type of cause-and-effect +technology. It takes place “out there,” replacing a thing with another thing. + +Meta-technology does not appear as hearsay; and it does not make any special +appeal to credulity. Rather the contrary. Its primitive procedures are given as +instructions to be carried out at first-hand. Presupposing a conventionally indoc- +trinated individual, it achieves anomalies by a decrease of the conventional level of +credulity. It is not centered on thing-to-thing relationships or causation “out there.” +It is centered on the interdependencies between subjectivity (awareness, self- +image) and things. + +In addition, there is a third constituent important enough to be mentioned +separately: the communal milieu, and especially its influence on esteem—as when +intimidation by community authorities maintains the legitimacy of ridiculous +beliefs. It is at the juncture I have just sketched that “the world” is synthesized, that +the determination of reality occurs. Meta-technology attacks the credulities which are +elements of this juncture. It works with the linkages among ‘‘perception,” descriptive +language, and abstract cognition (logic, mathematics.) Currently | am extending the +research to include linkages to personhood —the high integrative level, the vertical" +organization of self or self-image. + +There is a big gap between the primitive meta-technological procedures which I +have already formulated, and the communally implemented, culturally imple- +mented meta-technology which | envision. The primitive procedures can be +carried out by an isolated individual (and yield a sort of insight of sensibility); butat +that level they are, in a sense, only curiosities. The whole point is that meta-technology +acts on the cultural determination of reality as such. Unlike a miracle or magic trick, +which wants to remain a one-shot event in an otherwise lawful everyday world, meta- +technology must be extended through a community and a culture to realize its promise. It +is not a one-shot event bura “rotation” of an entire culture. + + +What is more, to reach its full potential, meta-technology will probably have to be +tied into existing natural science. But meta-technology would give a shock to +natural science which must not be underestimated. Natural science would be con- +ceptually shattered, and reorganized so drastically as to become unrecognizable. + + +vane + + +If meta-technology were implemented at the level of an entire community, +that community would have the power to consciously modulate what is now +thought of as the objective world. To speak of walking through walls would not be a +mere joke, Both the physical universe and mental acts as its antithesis would +disappear, in the sense of becoming inapplicable concepts. It would be possible to +achieve sustained, composed uncanniness, to live in a state of consciously modu- +lated enchantment. In this regard, the impulse underlying meta-technolgy is an +impulse toward an ecstatic form of life. (It must be understood, however, that the +rational mentality produced by modern Western civilization might experience the +enchanted community as a nightmare.) + + +117 + + +118 + + +When meta-technology shifts the focus from the thing-world to the interdepen- +dencies between subjectivity and things, it leads us to our whole humanness. It +carries out a takeover of technology by the psyche or by personhood. For a +community to attain a consciously modulated uncanniness would tend toward an +ecstatic form of life —an achievement which the prevailing culture would classify as +esthetic or spiritual, not scientific. That is what must be conveyed: acceding to +one’s whole humanness is neither science nor poetry because it is beyond both. + + +Postscript: The foregoing is not meant to promise a salvation which is blind +to economics and politics. The present article is limited to giving a few rudiments +of the meta-technology: my proposed extension or replacement for the physical +and exact sciences. My views on the social context are at least as unusual as my +views on science and form an entire line of argument in their own right. The +transformation I speak of would clearly be in conflict with the capitalist formation. +On the other hand, I hold that historical experience has obsolesced Marx's original +timetable and game plan for the supersession of capitalism. + + +Readers seeking more information or exchange of ideas are invited to write the +author care of Ikon Magazine. + + |