REALITY
Is
it the Reality of the Imagination, the Imagination of Reality, or What?
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© November 30, 2018
Looking at our situation nakedly, blind evolution sanctions no particular purpose or advantage in the birth of the individual man or woman. Equally true, there are no such things as rights in biology. Yet, Egyptians built giant pyramids to the gods as if there were gods, while Europeans built massive cathedrals to a religion that was founded in myth. Nor is there any certainty that those in a democracy are free and those in a dictatorship are less free. It is a matter of perspective and cultural bias. We do not want to hear that political ideologies are founded in the imagination or that the rights of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” are myths supported by our imagination and emotional desire to believe. Yet, if human rights exist only in our imagination, what is the promise of a stable society? If order is mainly imagined, is it not always in danger of collapse? (If people) imagine the order of things depends upon myths, when people no longer believe in these myths (will) that order collapse? Look at the American and European political climate of today, is it not essentially controlled by chameleons?
That said, Christianity would not have lasted 2,000 years if
the majority of bishops and priests failed to believe in Christ as the
Redeemer. This brings us to the cage and
the imprisoning walls within which we all live.
Our cage is a collection of suppositions based on an imagined order that
has Americans espousing belief in Christianity, democracy and capitalism.
Before you withdraw from this discussion, imagined order is
embedded in the material world; that that imagined order shapes our desires;
and that that imagined order is inter-subjective. What then of the high
priests of this imagined order who are the media using the platform of money,
the law, our gods, and our sense of a protective nation?
James R. Fisher, Jr., Near Journey’s End: Can the Planet Earth
Survive Self-Indulgent America?(2018)
Leon Festinger (1919 –
1989) studied at the University of Iowa under the eminent German American
social psychologist Kurt Lewin (1890 – 1947), where he developed the theory of cognitive dissonance. Festinger found that the individual seeks consistency
among his beliefs (his cognitions), and when there are inconsistencies between these
attitudes and his behavior (dissonance), something must give to eliminate the conflict. Counterintuitively, the reality he imagines
and the imagined reality of his fixation find his mind playing a game on
him. A smoker may know smoking is
dangerous to his health but continue to smoke in defiance of the evidence to
the contrary.
Not
only individuals but groups, indeed, even societies form bridges between the
reality of their imagination and the imagination of their reality.
In these times where a drift
has occurred between realism and reality while technology goes blindly forward into
the future with all jets firing, analytical philosophy has entered the breach. It attempts to explain the unexplainable and
to justify that which is beyond the pale.
My brother-in-law completed the course work at the University of California at Berkeley for a Ph.D. in this discipline, only to fail to satisfy his dissertation adviser with his proposal and therefore remains to this day an ABD (all but dissertation) without this credential, and I can see why.
My brother-in-law completed the course work at the University of California at Berkeley for a Ph.D. in this discipline, only to fail to satisfy his dissertation adviser with his proposal and therefore remains to this day an ABD (all but dissertation) without this credential, and I can see why.
Analytical
philosophy has been around for about one hundred years, or
largely during the rise and cresting of the United States espousing the wisdom
of the Enlightenment, and the works of Immanuel Kant, Jean Jacques Rousseau,
Thomas Hobbes and Voltaire, among others.
It sees itself as a conceptual investigation of language, history, religion,
logical structures and forms that has guided human behavior in this and the last
century. In other words, it is a
philosophy largely reliant on the wits of past thinkers.
Realism has replaced
pragmatism says analytical philosopher Susan Neiman in Moral Clarity (2008) which has less to do with reflection than
upping the ante on rhetoric (Subsequently, I will be reviewing this book).
Socrates claimed that
philosophy begins in the marketplace and not the university. If that is the case, then we are in a heap
of trouble because cognitive dissonance
dominates the market. Read the New York Times, the Washington Post, or tune into CNN
or MSNBC or Fox Cable News and what once was purported to be journalism is now
entertainment with a view.
Good and evil, rights
and justice, thinking and reason are all slipping down the same slippery slope to
prove indistinguishable from each other.
What we call good always has our friends in mind, never our enemies;
what we call evil focuses only on our enemies, never our friends; and what we
call justice is always the victors’ justice, never the collateral damage of the
losers.
Unconditional loyalty
to a cause, an ideal, a theology or a friend has nothing to do with justice
much less reality. Indeed, it may clash
with reality.
Experience of the
things we hold most dear have been pounded into our psyches (souls) over time
to influence and control our choices and actions over which we have no control
as if we were only a body of shadows.
Philosophers may make
nice with words but there is no substance to the sizzle and therefore little
nourishment for the soul. A philosopher
may write that George W. Bush was the worst president in American history, and
believe it to be true, if American history only went back to the 20th
century. Otherwise, this is a display of
cognitive dissonance and of little value to one’s thinking.
Morality
in the Mind of the Times
Morality is concerned
with goodness; politics with power. We
find with morality that we make morality fit our cognitive dissonance so that
we can say, “Water boarding terrorist
combatants is not only right but necessary because….” then insert our social
and political justification.
We gravitate to people
who think as we do, and who hold the same beliefs and biases. Robert Bellah (1927 – 2013) writes in Habits of the Heart (1985) that the
moral assumptions of middleclass Americans indicate a discernible gap between
behavior and moral principles:
The
primary American language of self-understanding limits the ways in which people
think.
Lacking a moral
vocabulary, people act out of habit while thinking they are acting out of
conviction, failing to see that they treat justice as doing good for their
friends without showing equal regard for their enemies. Complicating the matter further, they see the
poor and uneducated as acting despicably but fail to see the rich and famous are
equally inclined to act as shabbily and perhaps even more egregiously so.
A nation is a mythical construct as is a corporation as is a government as is the New York Stock Exchange as is the family and the community, as is the state and the church. Trust and the reality of our imagination has given these entities providence over our destiny although a case could be made that they are simply the imaginings of what we deem reality.
Think about the stock market! It is a convention. We decide to let our anxieties and dreams and thoughts about the future set the price of a given commodity on the stock exchange. The price of a stock can soar or plummet on uplifting or scary news, information based largely on rumor, not on any substantive performing data.
Much of what matters in our lives, such as our cultural heritage and institutions such as the church, school, family, government, and nation are mere creations out of our human imagination.
And so, too, is money. We have faith in the system the way we once had faith in God. Modern man is suspect of God and religion. In the future, will the god of the capitalistic economy and scientific technology suffer a similar disinclination of the faithful? If so, what then?
These days our banks and savings accounts are simply numbers on a computer screen and possibly as whimsical as the tenets of many great religions. These bank accounts are constantly shifting along with frantic and often erratic movement in the marketplace. Yet, we rely on these numbers on a computer screen as being irrevocably valid and reliably true.
Imagine if we start to worry that these quotations are not accurate, and could be erased like numbers on a slate, what then? Our society would be shaken to its foundation. That is why the terrorists of today are the computer hackers of tomorrow who could erase our financial security in an instant.
Algorithms and data already control our lives. In every phase of our existence, markets are self-reflective of our interests, predicting our buy and sell orders. In political campaigns, tens of millions of dollars are spent gauging our psychological patterns and beliefs knowing we are more influenced on who will win than who is the best qualified candidate.
British economist John Maynard Keynes (1883 – 1946) claimed we are all perfect patsies for manipulation as our moral beliefs are like judging a beauty contest: we don’t select the most beautiful but the person we think will win.
Elaborate symbols, rites of passage, ceremonies and belief systems are all inventions in support of our sacred notions and are crucially dependent on our manifest trusts. These could disappear in a moment should convention, conformity, dependence or fear suddenly dissolve these constructions into the myths that they are.
People weave a web of belief and meaning with all their hearts. Eventually, over time, these inevitably unravel, and then, we can hardly imagine how anyone could have thought that way. Israeli scholar Yuval Noah Harari (born 1976) writes in Homo Deus (2017):
A hundred years hence, our belief in democracy and human rights might look equally incomprehensible to our descendants . . . Sapiens rule the world because only they can weave an intersubjective web of meaning: a web of laws, forces, entities and places that exist purely in their common imagination.
Reality & Corpocracy
As egregious as the reality of our imagination, and the imagination of reality is apparent in our individual and group cognitive dissonance, less apparent but more pressing are the practices of the American corporation. A German publication (Wirtschaft Woche, January 1987) called it “Amerikas Krankheit” (the American Disease of Corpocracy):
Management is insensitive to its employees while claiming sensitivity.
Management is consumed with company policy at the expense of productivity.
Secrecy is the measure of communications while feigning transparency.
Obsessive data collection is time consuming, data that is seldom reviewed much less read.
Endless meetings are the way when often the principles send substitutes and substitutes of substitutes to eventually attend these scheduled meetings.
There is an internal jockeying for clout and influence while potential markets are ignored.
Short-term planning is preferred to embracing long term challenges.
Individual initiative is advocated but never supported for you never know where it might lead.
Management confines itself to mahogany row making decisions that have little to do with the reality or status of operations.
Innovation and initiative is overtly acclaimed while covertly discouraged.
When crises develop, as they inevitably do, and the organization is spinning in place, and no one has any idea why, the ship of state enters the potential cycle of its demise.
The United States came out of World War II victorious, and management quickly came forward to take credit for its justifiably laudatory performance during the war. The peace that followed with The Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan, rebuilding Europe and Asia, management quietly asserted itself as being indispensable, creating a management class so top heavy in most organizations that today many are falling like a house-of-cards.
With few if any constrains, and believing totally in their cognitive dissonance, corporate management convinced the public that it deserved huge salaries and entitlements that became multiples of workers in the trenches.
Corporate position power was unquestioned and moved forward with reckless abandon. Now, position power is anachronistic and managers are atavistic as knowledge power of academically trained professionals has come to the fore.
But, alas, the expression "never the twain shall meet" is dated as work is no longer brute force but brain power and managing is no longer a position but a strategy.
The reality of the imagination and the imagination of reality have been reduced to realism.