Paradigm
Shifts And Aeonics
by Pete Carroll
All
the philosophies, creeds, dogmas and beliefs that humanity has evolved are
variants of three great paradigms, the Transcendental, the Materialist and the
Magical. In no human culture has any one of these paradigms been completely
distinct from the others. For example in our own culture at the time of
writing the Transcendental and Magical paradigms are frequently confused
together.
Transcendental
philosophies are basically religious and manifest in a spectrum stretching
from the fringes of primitive spiritism through pagan polytheism to the
monotheism of the Judaeo-Christian-Islamic traditions and the theoretical
non-theistic systems of Buddhism and Taoism. In each case it is believed that
some form of consciousness or spirit created and maintains the universe and
that humans, other living organisms, contain some fragment of this
consciousness or spirit which underlies the veil or illusion of matter. The
essence of Transcendentalism is belief in spiritual beings greater than
oneself or states of spiritual being superior to that which currently one
enjoys. Earthly life is frequently seen merely as a form of dialogue between
oneself and one's deity or deities, or perhaps some impersonal form of higher
force. The material world is a theatre for the spirit or soul or consciousness
that created it. Spirit is the ultimate reality to the transcendentalist.
In
the Materialist paradigm the universe is believed to consist fundamentally and
entirely of matter. Energy is but a form of matter and together they subtend
space and time within which all change occurs strictly on the basis of cause
and effect. Human behaviour is reducible to biology, biology is reducible to
chemistry, chemistry is reducible to physics and physics is reducible to
mathematics.
Mind
and consciousness are thus merely electrochemical events in the brain and
spirit is a word without objective content. The causes of some events are
likely to remain obscure perhaps indefinitely, but there is an underlying
faith that sufficient material cause must exist for any event. All human acts
can be categorised as serving some biological need or as expressions of
previously applied conditioning or merely as malfunction. The goal of
materialist who schews suicide is the pursuit of personal satisfaction
including altruistic satisfactions if desired.
The
main difficulty in recognising and describing the pure Magical Paradigm is
that of insufficient vocabulary. Magical philosophy is only recently
recovering from a heavy adulteration with transcendental theory. The word
aether will be used to describe the fundamental reality of the magical
paradigm. It is more or less equivalent to the idea of Mana used in oceanic
shamanism. Aether in materialistic descriptions is information which
structures matter and which all matter is capable of emitting and receiving.
In transcendental terms aether is a sort of "life force" present in
some degree in all things. It
carries both knowledge about events and the ability to influence similar or
sympathetic events. Events either arise spontaneously out of themselves or are
encouraged to follow certain paths by influence of patterns in the aether. As
all things have an aetheric part they can be considered to be alive in some
sense. Thus all things happen by magic, the large scale features of the
universe have a very strong aetheric pattern which makes them fairly
predictable but difficult to influence by the aetheric patterns created by
thought. Magicians see themselves as participating in nature.
Transcendentalists like to think they are somehow above it. Materialists like
to try and manipulate it.
Now
this universe has the peculiarly accommodating property of tending to provide
evidence for, and confirmation of, whatever paradigm one chooses to believe
in. Presumably at some deep level there is a hidden symmetry between those
things we call Matter, Aether and Spirit. Indeed, it is rare to find an
individual or culture operating exclusively on a single one of these paradigms
and none is ever entirely absent. Non dominant paradigms are always present as
superstitions and fears. A subsequent section on Aeonics will attempt to
untangle the influences of each of these great world views throughout history,
to see how they have interacted with each other and to predict future trends.
In the meantime an analysis of the radically differing concepts of time and
self in each paradigm is offered to more fully distinguish the basic ideas.
Transcendentalists
conceive of time in millennial and apocalyptic terms. Time is regarded as
having a definite beginning and ending, both initiated by the activities of
spiritual beings or forces. The end of time on the personal and cosmic scale
is regarded not so much as a cessation of being but as a change to a state of
non material being. The beginning of personal and cosmic time is similarly
regarded as a creative act by spiritual agencies. Thus reproductive activity
usually becomes heavily controlled and hedged about with taboo and restriction
in religious cultures, as it implies an usurpation of the powers of deities.
Reproduction also implies that death has in some measure been overcome. How
awesome the power of creation and how final
must earthly death subconsciously loom to a celibate and sterile priesthood.
All
transcendentalisms embody elements of apocalyptism. Typically these are used
to provoke revivals when business is slack or attention is drifting elsewhere.
Thus it is suddenly revealed that the final days are at hand or that some
earthly dispute is in fact a titanic battle against evil spiritual agencies.
Materialist
time is linear but unbounded. Ideally it can be extended arbitrarily far in
either direction from the present. To the strict materialist it is
self-evidently futile to speculate about a beginning or an end to time.
Similarly the materialist is contemptuous of any speculations about any forms
of personal existence before birth or after death. The materialist may well
fear painful or premature death but can have no fears about being dead.
The
magical view is that time is cyclic and that all processes recur. Even cycles
which appear to begin or end are actually parts of larger cycles. Thus all
endings are beginnings and the end of time is synonymous with the beginning of
time in another universe. The magical view that everything is recycled is
reflected in the doctrine of reincarnation. The attractive idea of
reincarnation has often persisted into the religious paradigm and many pagan
and even some monotheist traditions have retained it. However religious
theories invariably contaminate the original idea with beliefs about a
personal soul. From a strictly magical viewpoint we are an accretion rather
than an unfolded unity. The psyche has no particular centre, we are colonial
beings, a rich collage of many selves. Thus as our bodies contain fragments
from countless former beings, so does our psyche. However certain magical
traditions retain techniques which allow the adept to transfer quite large
amounts of his psyche in one piece should he consider this more useful than
dispersing himself into humanity at large.
Each
of the paradigms take a different view of the self. Transcendentalists view
self as spirit inserted into matter. As a fragment or figment of deity the
self regards itself as somehow placed in the world in a non arbitrary manner
and endowed with free will. The transcendental view of self is relatively
stable and non-problematic if shared as a consensus with all significant
others. However, transcendental theories about the placement and purpose of
self and its relationship to deities are mutually exclusive. Conflicting
transcendentalisms can rarely co-exist for they threaten to disconform the
images of self. Encounters which are not decisive tend to be mutually negatory
in the long run.
Of
the three views of self the purely materialistic one is the most
problematical. If mind is an extension of matter it must obey material laws
and the resulting deterministic view conflicts with the subjective experience
of free will. On the other hand if mind and consciousness are assumed to be
qualitatively different from matter then the self is incomprehensible to
itself in material terms. Worse still perhaps, the materialist self must
regard itself as a phenomenon of only temporary duration in contradiction of
the subjective expectation of continuity of consciousness. Because a purely
materialist view of self is so austere few are prepared to confront such naked
existentialism. Consequently materialist cultures exhibit a frantic appetite
for sensation, identification and more or less disposable irrational beliefs.
Anything that will make the self seem less insubstantial.
The
magical view of self is that it is based on the same random capricious chaos
which makes the universe exist and do what it does. The magical self has no
centre, it is not a unity but an assemblage of parts, any number of which may
temporarily club together and call themselves "I". This accords with
the observation that our subjective experience consists of our various selves
experiencing each other. Free will arises either as an outcome of a dispute
between our various selves or as a sudden random creation of a new idea or
option. In the magical view of self there is no spirit/matter or mind/body
split and the paradoxes of free will and determinism disappear. Some of our
acts arise from random choices between conditioned options and some from
conditional choices between randomly created options. In practice most of our
acts are based on rather complex hierarchical sequences of all four of these
mechanisms. As soon as we have acted one of our selves proclaims "I did
that!" so loudly that most of the other selves think they did it too.
Each
of the three views of self has something derogatory to say about the other
two. From the standpoint of the transcendental self the materialist self has
become prey to pride of intellect, the demon hubris, whilst the magical view
of self is considered to be entirely demonic. The material self views the
transcendentalist as obsessed with assumptions having no basis in fact, and
the magical self as being childlike and incoherent. From the standpoint of the
magical view, the assorted selves of the transcendendatilst have ascribed a
grossly exaggerated importance to one or a few of the selves which they call
God or gods, whilst the materialist has attempted to make all his selves
subordinate to the self that does the rational thinking. Ultimately it's a
matter of faith and taste.
The
transcedentalist has faith in his god self, the materialist has faith in his
reasoning self and the selves of the magician have faith in each other.
Naturally, all these forms of faith are subject to periods of doubt.
*
Origin: ChaosBox: Nothing is true -> all is permitted... (2:243/2)