Peripatetic
Philosopher’s Conversation with Himself
FIRST
DIALECTIC - RELIGION
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
October 17, 2015
Peripatetic Philosopher (PP), “You’ve always
threatened to publish a conversation with yourself, am I correct?”
Himself (HS), “True.”
(PP) “Why haven’t you?”
(HS) “No one wants to know what I think, but what
they think that I know.”
(PP) “Isn’t that being a bit cynical?”
(HS) “I wish it were. People are afraid to be cynical, especially
Americans. Optimism floats our boat. Everything is milk and honey. Were we to get a dose of reality we’d go back
into our cave. It’s the American way.”
(PP) “Pardon me for correcting you, but you don’t mean
cave, you mean cage, right?”
(HS) “Cave, cage, what does it matter, you get the
point.”
(PP) “That is one of your critic’s criticisms. You dance around ideas as if walking on hot
coals, can’t wait to get off, and leave nothing behind.”
(HS) “If you say so.”
(PP) “It is not me that is saying so but…”
(HS) “Yes, I hear you; I leave people dangling, I
get the point, can we move on?
(PP) “If you insist.
Given your eclectic approach, and since I have no specific order to
these questions, I’ll just continue as the mood strikes me, is that okay?”
(HS) “Fine.”
(PP) “Let’s discuss your take on religion. I can’t decide if you’re for or against
religion. You must admit more than a
little ambivalence towards the subject, do you feel that is fair?”
(HS) “Tell me, how could religion be viewed
otherwise than ambivalent?”
(PP) “Now don’t get angry. No one is going to see this. I just want some honesty for once.”
(HS) “Now who is exercised? I see religion as necessary because man is an
intruder, interloper, alien, have it what you will. He doesn’t belong here. He’s never understood that he doesn’t fit
into the scheme of things.
"When it comes
to the planet, man’s not that important. It’s
not entirely his fault. Imagine one day he
wakes up and discovers he has a conscious mind.
Imagine the terror. One day he
wakes up and he’s aware of himself and everything around him.
"Can you imagine the shock, the fear? Suddenly, he is aware of this hostile planet he
finds himself, knowing if he doesn’t get his stuff together, it is curtains, if
he doesn’t find the wits and will to survive.
“Accidentally, with the ricocheting neurons in his
three pound instrument between his ears, he discovers fire and finds fire terrifies
the beast about him, and that awareness gives him one of his first tools of protection. Next, he develops rudimentary tools to deal
with these beasts, and to kill them for food, clothing, and shelter.
“The more clever among men, and there are always
those a bit more clever than others, who have the same fears and experience the
same terrors, but find a way to embrace that trauma, make it work for
them.
“Lightening, and thunder, torrential rains, floods
and mudslides, earthquakes and hurricanes, all manifestation of Nature without
a conscience, Nature that rules with a cruelty that knows no guilt or remorse,
is quickly used by the clever men to make Nature the first god.
“Those who describe that god become the first
priests, and in that way these clever men discover power and control and dominance
over other men, and so it has been since the beginning of man.
“Only one-tenth of one percent of men in the long
history of man have ever had the gumption to use that natural fear and terror exclusively
to their advantage while the other 99.99 percent coward in the grips of that
fear and terror.”
(PP) “So are you saying that religion was the first medium
of the dominance of the few over the many, therefore all religions are either bogus
or corrupt. I’m not sure I’m hearing what
you are saying.”
(HS) “No, I am not saying that at all.
"I’m just pointing out how it has always
been. My assessment is simply meant to
put religion in its proper context.
"Religion
was the first ideology to capture man’s attention when he had no interest in reality. That has never changed.
“Once man discovered consciousness with all its
terror, someone had to step outside this terror, while still in its grips, and
that first man was the priest.
"Man’s
terrors have changed with his circumstances.
New surrogates of a priestly bent have surfaced with the shifting
consciousness of reality. So, it has
been down to our present day.
“We wail about the one-tenth of one percent who
control the economy, but no one does anything about that reality. That is why the phenomenon has always been
with us.
“Once sin and guilt controlled our consciousness,
now it is safety and security.
"The god has
not changed, only the consciousness of that god has changed. It is the same old fear and terror wrapped in
a new suit of clothes. Man’s needs a new rationale to justify his existence whenever the aspects of his circumstances change. Consequently, only the costume changes, man doesn't.”
(PP) “There you go again, you’re not answering my
question. No wonder your readers get so annoyed
with you. I will ask again, do you think
religion is bogus?”
(HS) “You like metaphor, so I’ll answer that question in
metaphor.
“Imagine religion is an automobile, and it seems to
fill every fissure of our consciousness, that is, to be everywhere in existence, not
one religion, but hundreds even thousands of religions.
“Now imagine you lift up the hood of that automobile
to see what kind of magical system that is hidden under that hood.
"You envision mystical components beyond human
comprehension, only to discover all you see is ‘smoke and mirrors.’
"These obscuring embellishments purporting to
hold the key to the truth of our human existence are instead the repository of
irrelevant information. There is nothing
preternatural to this discovery at all.”
(PP) “Did I hear you correctly, ‘smoke and mirrors’?”
(HS) “Precisely, speaking in metaphor, ‘smoke and mirrors’ is used to explain the hold of the irrational on our reptilian brains. We have not departed too far from that
primitive man terrified by the lightning and thunder. We still live in terror. Yet, thanks to ‘smoke and mirrors,’ we have been propelled forward
in ways that nothing else could.
"What the irrational can achieve, the rational cannot comprehend much less achieve. We like to think our cognitive biases are the key when it is our emotions that drive us to overcome all matter of challenges."
(PP) “But that’s madness.”
(HS) “If you like, but man has always been a little
mad since his beginning.
"It is this
madness, after all, this ‘smoke and mirrors,’ that has propelled him to survive
on this hostile planet, which is not actually his home because he refuses to
treat it with the majesty and care of a home as the other plants and animals of
Nature do without the authority of man's consciousness.
"Plants and animals survive on instinct and
the evolutionary forces of Nature. Man
is not so wise, so lucky.”
(PP) “So you are saying that this ‘smoke and mirrors,’
this religion is bad, bogus?”
(HS) “On the contrary, I see religion as quite
necessary, even essential, that man cannot live without the allusion of connection to something beyond his conscious mind. It is the reason
the story man invented about Adam and Eve and the Garden of Eden has relevance. That story has never been understood, not
even by those who wrote it, for its true significance.”
(PP) “But, of course, you do!”
(HS) “It is quite obvious that once you look at the
importance of fear and terror in man’s consciousness, and his sudden awareness
that he is here on this hostile planet, but doesn’t sense that he belongs, that out of necessity, he had to invent a reason for finding himself here.
"The Adam and Even story explains it all perfectly.
"Man was driven out of the Garden of Paradise
for eating the forbidden fruit, and for that act of disobedience, he must suffer deprivation, sin
and guilt as his punishment.
"Now, the
‘forbidden fruit’ was simply his sudden consciousness; his sudden awareness that he was in Nature, and
misguidedly believed himself to be separate from Nature, which was a fatal error from the beginning.
"A mythology, again of necessity, had to be created for man to cope with this newly discovered reality. I have no trouble with the story, only with its general
interpretation and therefore its presumed meaning and relevance.
“Man has never been comfortable as man, not with
himself, not with his nature, which is part of Nature, not with this earthly
dwelling.
"Religion as ‘smoke and mirrors’ came to the rescue and gave man some sense of liberation from his doubt. In a
way, it saved him from himself and his free floating
anxiety.
"Man came to believe he was above
Nature, outside of Nature, and that it was his lot to control Nature to his will; to be Nature’s master, to dominate and submit Nature to man's needs, to his purposes, even if this meant the destruction of Nature, which we know has come to past.
"Thus ‘smoke and mirrors’ has saved man in one sense while destroying his
home and himself in another sense.”
(PP) “Hold on, you’re doing it again. You’re making a quantum leap and leaving me
still thinking about what you said previously about ‘smoke and mirrors’ and
‘religion,’ implying the Sacred Text of the Old and New Testament of the Bible are inventions of man. Now you’re sounding like an atheist. Are
you?”
(HS) “Now it is you who is making the quantum
leap.
"No, I’m not saying that at
all. I am a man like every other man,
subject to this ‘smoke and mirrors’ the same as everyone else, a person who
lives with the same terror, and realizes how hard religions, all religions work
in an attempt to reassure us when, if they could get beyond the ‘smoke and
mirrors,’ they would realize that every religion, barring none, is a total
invention of man, but a necessary one.
And therefore, all religions are the same.
"As for agnostics and atheists, they are
looking for something else under that hood.
Not finding it, they are very upset.
I’m talking again about only seeing ‘smoke and mirrors.’
"Atheists and agnostics have concluded that 'smoke and mirrors' has no legitimacy as it has no verifiable
components. The irony is that people of this persuasion are
more primitive than religious believers as they want religion to be what
it cannot be, and in their disappointment, have created a religion of
disappointment which is atheism.”
(PP) “So are you saying one religion has no more
legitimacy over another religion?”
(HS) “It is not a question of legitimacy, it is a
question of necessity.
"I am saying that the
‘smoke and mirrors’ under the hood has kept man’s madness in check, to a
point.
"When this had unprecedented
legitimacy, its arbitrary standards as desultory as they might be under close
inspection, kept man reasonably civilized.
"You might even say reasonably sane. But man has found science, and science has become
his new god. It is the same god, not a
different god, and like those first priests that could make up any kind of
story they could think of about thunder and lightning, and man acquiesced to
that authority, science does the same by revealing secrets of Nature for others
to exploit.
"Now, the authority is not
‘smoke and mirrors,’ per se, but ‘facts’ supported by hypotheses, theories and proofs of
Nature supposedly to man’s benefit, but more likely to his ultimate demise.”
(PP) “Wait!
Wait! You’re doing it again,
you’re leaping to another subject. Now, science is bad, and religion is
good? You cannot have it both ways.”
(HS) “When I say to 'man's ultimate demise,' I am simply referring to man's history. He seldom if ever thinks of unintended consequences to his discoveries. We see this with nuclear fission.
"Alas, I wish I was a better communicator. Science and religion are aspects of man, not
mutually exclusive to each other.
"They
are manifestations of man’s rambling roaming nomadic homeless mind nervously
replacing one anchor with another anchor, and always becoming obsessed with
whatever anchor is his current preference.
"Man's conscious mind is aware that he has turned
the earth into a dying planet, and that eventually he will have to move on or perish
with the likes of the dinosaurs. That is
the ‘smoke and mirrors’ of science. It is irrefutable that man is leaving the
earth a wasteland.
"So, scientists are
hell bent on finding another planet beyond our galaxy that can become man’s
home that they can dominate and one day destroy with equal unanimity.
"Man with his conscious mind cannot save
himself from himself. That is why we frantically
search the universe for a planet that will sustain life, sustain us. Science knows this planet is wearing out.”
(PP) “That is the most cynical thing you’ve said
thus far. I didn’t think you could top
your cynicism of religion, but this tops that.”
(HS) “You find me cynical? I don’t think so. I don’t feel cynical. I wish I were.
I wish others were.”
(PP) “Then are you trying to make like Charles
Darwin or Henry David Thoreau?”
(HS) “Neither.
Alexander von Humboldt comes more quickly to mind, the Prussian
naturalist.
"Humboldt died in 1859 at nearly 90
and seemingly saw this small planet in about every conceivable way. He concluded from his extensive work about the
world that the earth was a single unified organism.
Imagine that saying that nearly 200 years ago.
"He said, ‘Everything is interaction and reciprocal.’ Everything!
"Today ecologists talk about ‘the
web of life,’ but the invention is Humboldt’s. How many people know about this man?
"He said quite correctly, with regard to
Nature, ‘man is nothing in the larger
scheme of things,’ and he isn’t, when it comes to Nature.
"I experienced colonialism in South Africa
during apartheid, which exploited a black majority race, whereas Humboldt saw
colonialism exploiting the natural resources of a region without regard to the
indigenous people.
"In the late 18th century, he was writing of climatic excesses, such as industrialization, dam building,
deforestation, and the like. He could see that this would inevitably lead
to extinction of the human species on this planet. The only hope he could see in his day was for
man to see the wilderness as a spiritual and meditative refuge from the hustle
and bustle of modern life, and that …. What?”
(PP) “I not laughing at you. I’m laughing with you. You cannot help it, can you? You have to get up on your soap box and start
preaching. Once you get a head of steam
under you, your penultimate caveats start cascading out of your head. Alas, it is one stroke before midnight for
man, so what?”
(HS) “So you think I’m inhaling some of that ‘smoke’
from ‘smoke and mirrors’?”
(PP) “How would you describe it otherwise? You read, you ponder, you write. Do you know why? Do you have any real purpose? Or are you just ventilating for the hell of
it?”
(HS) “If you think I’m going to get defensive, I’m
not. I write because I am.”
(PP) “No explanation beyond that?”
(HS) “None!”
(PP) “Well, then, don’t you think you ought to go to
bed?”
(HS) “That’s the first intelligent question you’ve
asked. Good night.”
(PP) “Goodnight.
But before I go, I would like to discuss other topics with you in the
future in this format. Is that possible?
(HS) “We’ll see.”
(PP) “Couldn’t have it any other way.”
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