Saturday, October 29, 2016

QUESTIONING THE ORACLE

Strange as it may seem, I pray. The gods as well as the God exist for me and in me, for I am part and parcel of my fate and my faith and everything. I have choice. I think. I can see life from true or at least truer perspectives. I do not have to relinquish the view from the soul and from the spirit just because the prevailing and dominant societal and cultural view is absent soul and spirit, seeing from a technological, robotic, scientific lens seemingly without the danger of superstition or bias but which throws out the baby (faith and essence) with the bathwater. The ability to discern or discriminate is simply too taxing (though it has caused great upheavals over whose god should dominate). The robotic cyborg god fights the lowly god of flesh at this time. It would even seem that the world disintegrates.

[As a fifty-year student of Daoism and the Yijing (I Ching), I am familiar enough with it to pose a question (which follows). Of course, the challenge with any two thousand year old oracle is to be able to comprehend and interpret. For that one must be able to step into “primordial mind,” as it were. “Modern mind” does not suffice in itself, though it is altogether necessary. Briefly, read the initial hexagram (32 Constancy) as the “current situation,” then the “moving” lines as what is occurring or needs to be occurring chronologically in the current situation. The second hexagram (41 Reduction) reveals the outcome of the current situation with its attendant moving events/changing lines. The response is a mix of actual quoted as well as paraphrased text from The Taoist I Ching translated by Thomas Cleary. I will comment on it at a later time, and ask that you interpret it as you will in the meantime. If held in the mind, it does bring a kind of understanding. There probably will be sections that particularly "speak to" the reader.]

What is happening in the world at this juncture in time? 

32 Constancy. Long persistence. Thunder, active, above, wind, penetrating, below. Acting gently as the breeze, active yet serene, neither identifying nor detaching, the mind steadfast and the will far-reaching, therefore constancy. This is genuine application in real practice. Following upon the previous hexagram fire, or illuminating the inward and the outward, aiming at profound attainment of personal realization, so that illumination if all-pervasive. But this is not possible without a constant mind, which means single-mindedly applying the will, the longer the stronger, not slacking off. Thereby one may comprehend essence and life, revealing a path of development. However, constancy must be correct; abandoning the real and entering into the false is not developmental and is faulty. Blind practitioners in the world go into deviant paths, taking what is wrong to be right, aggrandizing themselves, boasting of their practices and cultivating vain reputations, striving all their lives without ever awakening; most assuredly capable of constancy but constant in aberrated paths, not in the right path. To seek eternal life in this way hastens death; when your time is up, you will have no way out and cannot escape the blame. Therefore correctness is necessary. Even correctness is only possible through constant practice of what is correct. What is correct is the true principle, which is the Tao of body and mind, essence and life. This path appropriates yin and yang (or negative and positive), takes over creation, sheds birth and death, escapes compulsive routine. It requires flexible, gentle, gradual advance, ascending from low to high, going from shallow to deep, step by step treading in the realm of reality; only then can it be effective. A great affair which endures long unchanging requires great work that endures long unceasing before it can be achieved. The constancy that is beneficial is correct is the constancy that is beneficial if it is going somewhere. But if you want to practice what is right, first you must know what is right, investigating truth, reaching the basis of essence, thereby arriving at the universal order. The work of comprehending essence and arriving at the universal order of life is all a matter of thoroughly penetrating truth.

Moving Line 1. Deep constancy; fidelity brings misfortune. If one does not distinguish right from wrong, one enters deeply into false ideas so that they persist extensively. If one plunges in deeply without clearly understanding true principle, even if one wants to seek what is right, on the contrary one will bring on misfortune.
Moving Line 3. If one is not constant in virtue, one may be shamed; even if right, one is humiliated. One may be strong and correct and determined in practice of the Tao, but if strength is not balanced and one is in a hurry to achieve attainment, one may advance keenly yet regress rapidly, thus not being constant in virtue, and shaming oneself. What is the shame? It is the shame of setting the heart on virtue but not being able to be constant in virtue, setting the will on right yet being unable to constantly practice what is right. Following the path in practice yet giving up, even though one is correctly oriented, one is humiliated.
Moving Line 4. No field, no game. When strength is in the body of action, the time is for doing, like having fields to plow. If one dwells in a position of weakness, the will inactive, constantly embracing the Tao but unable to put it into practice, is like empty fields. This is constancy without action.
Moving Line 6. Constancy of excitement is bad. Thinking one has what one lacks, that one is fulfilled when one is really empty and aggrandizing oneself, concerned with oneself and ignoring others, is called constancy of excitement. With constant excitement, the culmination of aggrandizement is inevitably followed by ruin, the culmination of elevation is inevitably followed by a fall. Ultimately one winds up being destroyed. This is constancy fooling oneself and bringing on misfortune. The proper way was never taken.


41 Reduction. Diminishing excess. Above, still, mountain; below, joyous, lake. Having something to rejoice over, yet immediately stilling it; by stilling the joy there is no errant thought. Strength and flexibility are balanced, emptiness and fullness are in accord; strength does not become rambunctious, flexibility does not become weakness. Reduction is therefore diminishing what is excessive, adding to what is insufficient. This is the existence of increase within reduction. Previous to this is halting, in which one can stop where there is danger, preserving the primordial Tao in the midst of the temporal, which requires the removal of acquired conditioning, i.e., traveling the path of reduction. Reduction as a path means not following desires but stopping desires; many people cannot be sincere in it, and if one is not sincere, one cannot finish what is started, will fail, and will also bring on blame. Whereas if one can be sincere, every thought is true; sincerity of mind naturally shows in action. Good fortune comes even though one does not try to bring it about. However, such sincerity must be correct, such reduction must be correct. People in the world who contemplate voidness, stick to quietude, forget about people, forget about their own bodies, and go on like this all their lives without change, are certainly sincere about reduction, but they are faithful to what they should not be faithful to, and reduce what they should not reduce—thus there is decrease with increase, which is still faulty. So if one can be correct in sincerity in reduction, discern whether it is right or wrong, whether it is false or true, understand it in the mind and prove it in actual events to the benefit of all. Actual practice in real life is most important, to finish what has been started. As long as one has not yet reached the serene, equanimous realm of the middle way, work cannot be stopped; one must daily reduce for the sake of the Tao, daily increasing one’s accomplishment. When strength and flexibility are balanced, there is flexibility in strength and strength in flexibility; strength and flexibility are as one. One has gone back to the origin; the spiritual embryo takes on form, and from this one receives the bliss of freedom and nonstriving. One’s fate now depends on oneself, not on heaven. Be sincere in reduction, and within reduction there is increase. This is no small matter.

[After reading it is best to not force any particular interpretation but to let it settle, receiving whatever you receive. I asked a question that could be taken to be personal or collective but which I posed on a collective level, therefore I shared the response with you, with the world. I believe it can be quite understood by just about anyone--as he or she may interpret it. There are not "right or wrong" perceptions, however, it is possible that one can understand it "properly" and act with both constancy and reduction, coming closer to one's "original nature," and thus affecting the world accordingly.]


Tuesday, October 18, 2016

HOLDING THE CENTER

[The top of this blog is in very light but still readable print for some strange reason which I have been unable to correct. After the ad, however, the print is fine. So read on and enjoy.]

I received this invitation from Chiron Publications to a Jungian webinar recently. It immediately jogged my memory of the poem by William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming, which is shown here below the webinar ad. Having spent the last few months reading and absorbing many of the original Gnostic sources and texts from the first through the third centuries CE, I realized that I had a response to the overall questions of “what is happening and why”? I also realized that Yeats, who wrote this poem after the end of World War 1, is making particular references to the ominous consequences of a devolved Gnosticism being reborn in our postmodern world. A historical perspective of the effects of the original Gnostic cultural wave is valuable if not vital to the understanding of our current world situation. It seems that there is a new, dark, dualistic, puritanical, Gnostic current flooding the world now and that conscious choices must be made now to stem the tide. I touch on these matters following the Chiron Publications webinar ad and the above-noted poem. I do hope that the presenters in the webinar, the “six blind Jungian monks,” take the time to consider this “food for thought” offered here.



  
 
Featuring: Thomas Singer, Murray Stein, Warren Colman, Betty Sue Flowers, Joerg Rasche, and Steve Buser   
Live Next Wednesday
October 19, 2016; 
11:30AM to 2:30PM ET 


Six Blind Jungian Monks Tackle  Questions of The Psyche, Politics and Culture of the Western World in the Era of Brexit, Trump, Immigration and other turbulent social/political events.

The Western world is besieged by rapid and frightening economic and social changes that are leaving many of its citizens feeling overwhelmed, confused and left behind.  In addition, the influx of immigrants from other parts of the world (from Syria and other countries of  the Middle East to Europe and from Mexico and other countries of Central America to the United States) raises vulnerabilities about basic safety, economic threat, and the clash of cultures.  In both America and Europe, these forces are deeply unsettling to those least able to adapt to change and most threatened by the loss of the world as they have known it.  Brexit in England and Trump in America are political examples of how disruptive these forces can be to the status quo.  For example, "Make America Great Again" is a perfect slogan to mobilize the yearnings and fears of many in America. This webinar will offer a  wide ranging discussion of our contemporary psyche(s) and the political/social/cultural/economic/ shifts that are profoundly disruptive to all citizens.  With the American Presidential election about to take place, this is a perfect time to both dive into what is happening right now and to step back and reflect on its cause as well as on its destructive and perhaps less visible, its creative potentials.
_____________________

Many questions emerge in such turbulent times and the panel includes representatives from the United States, Great Britain, Switzerland and Germany. some of the questions that will be explored in this wide ranging discussion include:

·       What is happening in the psyche (s) of the Western World?
·       'How does the US Presidential Election look from the perspective of the UK vote in favour of Brexit?'
·       What is the difference between healthy and unhealthy narcissism in world leader?
·       Are there limits to inclusiveness with regard to both personal and group identities within any given nation?
·       What does it mean for America and the world that such a revelation of shadow has been generated by this election campaign? Can this be useful for our country's and the human world's further individuation?
·       Does the Donald Trump phenomenon represent an American cultural complex (s)?
·       To what extent are the political conflicts embodied in Trump and Clinton manifestations of underlying cultural complexes in the group psyche with their own long histories of conflict around issues of race, gender, ethnicity, social and economic class?
·       How has the immigration of Muslim peoples into Europe effected the psyches of different European populations?
·       With regard to gender, how are the figures of Trump and Hillary Clinton paired and polarized in terms of our notions about masculinity and femininity?
Presenters

Warren Colman is a Jungian analyst in London, UK. He is Consultant Editor of the Journal of Analytical Psychology and the author of a recently published book on The Emergence of Symbolic Imagination in which he explores the role of culture as the medium for symbolic thought and suggests that symbols create the realities they represent. Through this work he has become interested in how social and economic changes impact on the symbolic life of a culture. The advent of Brexit and the potential election of Donald Trump as US President are illustrative of the dangers that arise when a yawning gap arises between a culture's dominant ideology and the lived experience of large sections of its population. Warren Colman is particularly interested in the disappearance of truth as an arbiter of political decision making and the emotional background to increasing fears about immigration.
  
Betty Sue Flowers, Ph.D., is a professor emeritus and former director of the Johnson Presidential Library. She has moderated executive seminars at the Aspen Institute, consulted for NASA, CIA, and the US Navy. Her publications include four television tie-in books in collaboration with Bill Moyers, among them, the best-selling Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth. In addition to two collections of poetry, her books include Browning and the Modern Tradition; Presence: Human Purpose and the Field of the Future; and, as editor, Christina Rossetti: The Complete Poems in the Penguin English Poets series.

Dr. Joerg Rasche is the co-editor of the recently published Europes' Many Souls: Exploring Cultural Complexes and Identities. He is Jungian analyst following his training in Berlin and Zurich where he studied sandplay therapy with Dora Kalff. Dr. Rasche is a child psychiatrist,working in private practice in Berlin. He served for many years as president of the German Jungian Association (DGAP) and was vice-president of IAAP.Currently he is president of the German Association for Sandplay Therapy (DGST). Also a trained musician, he has published many papers and some books on mythology, music, sandplay therapy, and analytical psychology,Dr. Rasche has taught in Central European countries for many years and is a training analyst for IAAP. Dr. Rasche was honored for his work on reconciliation between the Polish and German people by the Polish President who presented him with the Golden Cross of Merit. He gives concerts and lectures around the world.  

Thomas Singer, M.D. is a psychiatrist and Jungian analyst who has co-edited several books on cultural complexes in various parts of the world, including North America, Australia, Latin American and is currently preparing a volume on Asian Cultural Complexes. In this series, he recently co-edited Europe's Many Souls with Joerg Rasche.He has explored the relationship between cultural complexes and politics in several conferences during Presidential Election years at the San Francisco Jung Institute. Other interests include his work on Ancient Greece/Modern Psyche that has grown out of conferences in Santorini, Greece. In addition, Dr. Singer currently serves as President of National ARAS, the Archives for Research into Archetypal Symbolism.

Murray Stein, Ph.D. is a past president of the International Association for Analytical Psychology (IAAP) and also of The International School of Analytical Psychology in Zurich (ISAPZurich). He is the author of (among others) Jung's Map of the Soul, Minding the Self, and Soul - Retrieval and Treatment as well of numerous articles on analytical psychology and Jungian psychoanalysis. He lives in Switzerland and is a Training and Supervising Analyst with ISAPZurich.

Steven Buser, M.D.  trained in medicine at Duke University and served 12 years as a physician in the US Air Force.  He is a graduate of a two-year Clinical Training Program at the CG Jung Institute of Chicago and is the co-founder of the Asheville Jung Center.  In addition to a busy psychiatric private practice, he serves as Publisher of Chiron Publications

This webinar adds onto the discussion from the recent book by Chiron Publications titled A Clear and Present Danger: Narcissism in the Era of Donald Trump. Authors Steve Buser and Thomas Singer continue the discussion of the issues raised in the book.


       THE SECOND COMING
    Turning and turning in the widening gyre
    The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
    Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
    Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
    The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst
    Are full of passionate intensity.
    Surely some revelation is at hand;
    Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
    The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
    When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
    Troubles my sight: a waste of desert sand;
    A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
    A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
    Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
    Wind shadows of the indignant desert birds.
    The darkness drops again but now I know
    That twenty centuries of stony sleep
    Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
    And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
    Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
                                                             William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)


When the Gnostic mind reigns, the center does not hold; the God of this world, this cosmos, and nature itself, is not to be trusted and no longer exists as unifying force. The unified universe of Platonism and Christianity (with counterparts in Buddhism and Hinduism and many Indigenous religions) is gone. That which was seen as a revelation or a reflection of divine beauty and order within all nature and all matter throughout the cosmos, no longer makes sense, and is no longer understood or accepted. The glue of society, culture and civilization is weakened. Nothing makes sense except to those who have lost hope in humanity and the world, have lost their senses, their connections with nature and themselves as “parts of nature,” instead, seeing existence as revolving around only themselves or, conversely, are no longer able to even see themselves but can only give credence to visions of unknown saviors; visions put forth in manipulative lies of hope and salvation. People lose their own vision, having given up their own minds and souls, their own ability to understand, and their own willingness to think for themselves. They lose common identity except that defined by fear and its unbalanced elements: hatred of and violence towards any imagined enemy, any “other,” which have been made real through absolute loneliness, alienation and despair. They gather then as hateful predators to insure their own survival even as they consume what is left of their souls and the world itself as if it were meat. For their God whom they had worshipped and held as sacred has become the Devil himself; they have been thrown into the world unawares and then out of the Garden to survive as dumb animals, but animals who are unnatural and do not belong in this landscape of earth, much less in their own physical bodies. In their state of darkness, ignorance and sleep, they are unable to see any goodness, any divinity within themselves, within nature or within their world, seeing only the dark images of their own thoughts and imaginations. And they see their lives only in and within the power of the great beast, the Demiurge, their Creator, rather than in any loving, merciful, universal Father.

When we can no longer see the beauty of nature or find ourselves in nature, when we can no longer trust nature and ourselves as the reflection, order and goodness of the “Divine,” that is, a principle of essence or ground of being, we lose hope, understanding and direction. For, from the perspective of the first Gnostic cultural wave in the first to the third centuries CE, the whole universe was created in error by Error, and we ourselves cannot escape imprisonment in such a world of ignorance and evil. Yet, as social beings, there is an innate need, or at least tendency, to find “divine essence” within ourselves and others. The ignorance that comes to possess human minds and souls devolves into the form of anti-social actions, to the point of “evil” itself. But, at that moment, does the Truth then finally arise within us? Within humanity itself? Are we suddenly somehow “made aware” and able to “see the light” of understanding? Do we become aware of the great goodness and love that exists within and among us? Or, do we fail as a species, never fulfilling the potential of our “spiritual destiny,” destined to fade away or otherwise destroy ourselves?

I see that this as a choice we must make. Though it may seem to be the other way around, being in the world is far more challenging than avoiding the world; the via positiva is far more difficult than the via negativa, the kataphatic far more harsh than the apophatic. This a choice which requires that we sacrifice such pleasures as avoidance of the world’s helter-skelter and learn to find peace and quiet in the very midst of frenetic, distracting existence. It requires that we come together, cease our endless judgment and division, and be willing to trust others and ourselves. It is our purpose to create a “center to hold” if human life is to be able to continue in love, goodness, reason, and heartfulness.

Gnosis has devolved into dark division and separateness; the “elect” judge and condemn those who do not “know the secrets of God” but are simply of kind and good heart. Living is not a mental exercise, no matter how erudite or impressive. Rather, it is an act of love and faith in that love of all that lives. If we cannot act lovingly towards others, ourselves, and the planet itself, we are doomed. If the split way of seeing continues, we will continue to split ourselves, to disconnect and destroy ourselves. The Gnostic vision of cosmic duality must by choice and understanding be replaced with an evolved Platonic vision and version of existence in which we are able to experience and recognize a “center that holds,” a center that exists throughout the cosmos and that is one of love and awareness of others as ourselves, in which we treat each other as we would like to be treated.

*       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *       *

Gnosticism, so far presented here, has historical substance and reality, however, Gnosticism is also an archetype, a set of aspects ever-present, manifesting anew as powerful cultural and epic waves in the currents of history, often as seemingly necessary and worthy purging social movements but resulting in chaos and the destruction of order, including any sense of “center.” Yeats, well-versed in Gnosticism, Hermeticism and Theosophy, in The Second Coming, recognizes the “widening gyre” of the cosmic spheres meant to both define and contain the differing cosmic elements, as becoming unbalanced and unable to “hold its center.” We “falconers” who had once been able to merge and find ourselves within the “falcon” and act as part of and in accordance with nature, have lost this ability as we have accepted the Gnostic tenets of the essential “error” of our being, nature, and all creation, in which we reject the material world, including our own flesh, as anathema to our “true divine being.” In the Gnostic view, we are prisoners of ignorance and evil in this universe of matter: there is no virtue, no trust, no innocence, no “conviction,” no consciousness (for we have been created by a lesser god of pride and ignorance, who is compelled to imprison us in his world and maintain darkness so that the other-worldly light within us may not be revealed to us). And those minions, called Archons, of this mind come to dominate and to infect and enthuse humans to the point of “passionate intensity” in the creation of a world of even greater loss and depravity. Yeats recognizes this “Spiritus Mundi,” this Spirit (God) of the World as Evil personified, perhaps as the Antichrist, as Ialdabaoth, the Creator of the cosmos, the Demiurge, in the form of the Sphinx (with human head and lion’s body) arising from the desert, the realm of the dead and the remote past. These images are Gnostic ones. Has the “rough beast” been born into the world?

Commentators on Yeats’s poem note that this was the world he had witnessed during the First World War and was now observing—and experiencing—as the devastation of the civilization he had known. Perhaps what is occurring in the world now is simply an extension of that process, made here and now through the immediacy and strange intimacy of the internet. Perhaps it is quite similar to the “Gnostic revolution” that occurred twenty centuries ago and brought down the “pagan” Platonic and Christian “universal orders” held in place by “divine powers.” But then, Gnostic duality (with its Manichean-Iranian version deriving from the dual and independently “good” and “evil” gods of Zoroastrianism, Ahura Mazda and Ahriman, and the Syrian version of Valentinus, deriving from Greek philosophy itself, perhaps Egyptianized) has remained quite alive throughout history to our current time. Sts. Paul and Augustine carried it into Roman Catholicism and Calvin and Luther into Protestantism. Existentialism and Marxism hold much of Gnostic archetypes, if not actual beliefs. And now it surely appears that “things fall apart” and “the center cannot hold.”

I would be remiss if I did not elaborate a bit more on “original Gnostic tradition,” since this is, as I see it, the archetypal and metaphysical force that has come into play in a most powerful way in our world. In his Preface to The Gnostic Religion, Hans Jonas summarizes the “Gnostic epic,” so to speak, as follows:

Almost all the action would be in the heights, in the divine or angelic or daimonic realm, a drama of pre-cosmic persons… And yet that transcendental drama before all time, depicted in the actions and passions of manlike figures, would be of intense human appeal: divinity tempted, unrest stirring among the blessed Aeons, God’s erring Wisdom, the Sophia, falling prey to her folly, wandering in the void and darkness of her own making, endlessly searching, lamenting suffering, repenting, laboring her passion into matter, her yearning into soul; a blind and arrogant Creator believing himself the Most High and lording it over the creation, the product, like himself, of fault and ignorance; the Soul, trapped and lost in the labyrinth of the world, seeking to escape and frightened back by the gatekeepers of the cosmic prison, the terrible archons; a Savior from the Light beyond venturing into the nether world, illumining the darkness, opening a path, healing the divine breach. (xiii)

Let us briefly compare what might be called “classical Greek Platonism” and “classical Gnosticism,” as presented by Jonas:

Plotinus maintains the unity of all being in the universe, with no essential separation of the human and the non-human realm. Man is in his essence kindred to the whole cosmos … [and he is endowed with] the best in him, namely reason… He actualizes his kinship with the cosmic powers, that is, … he increases the original generic community of his being and that of the total cosmos [when he utilizes reason].

Gnosticism, on the contrary, removes man, in virtue of his essential belonging to another realm, from all sameness with the world, which now is nothing but bare “world,” and confronts him with its totality as the absolutely different. Apart from his accessory outer layers contributed by the world, man by his inner nature is acosmic; to such a one, all the world is indifferently alien. Where there is ultimate otherness of origin, there can be kinship neither with the whole nor with any part of the universe. (263)

I quote Jonas on Gnosticism’s historical and culture influence and effect in the first few centuries CE and ask the reader to compare the Gnostic archetype and historical reality as it affected that world to its seeming affect in our current one:

The gnostic movement—such we must call it—was a widespread phenomenon in the critical centuries indicated, feeding like Christianity on the impulses of a widely prevalent human situation, and therefore erupting in many places, many forms, and many languages. First among the features … is the radically dualistic mood which underlies the gnostic attitude as a whole and unifies its widely diversified, more or less systematic expressions. It is on this primary human foundation of a passionately felt experience of self and world, that the formulated dualistic doctrines rest. The dualism is between man and the world, and concurrently between the world and God. … In this three-term configuration—man, world, God—man and God belong together in contraposition to the world, but are, in spite of this essential belonging-together, in fact separated precisely by the world. To the Gnostic, this fact is the subject of revealed knowledge, and it determines gnostic eschatology: we may see in it the projection of his basic experience, which thus created for itself its own revelatory truth [my emphasis]. Primary would then be the feeling of an absolute rift between man and that in which he finds himself lodged—the world. It is this feeling which explicates itself in the forms of objective doctrine. In its theological aspect this doctrine states that the Divine is alien to the world and has neither part nor concern in the physical universe; that the true god, strictly transmundane, is not revealed or even indicated by the world, and is therefore the Unknown, the totally Other, unknowable in terms of any worldly analogies. Correspondingly, in its cosmological aspect it states that the world is the creation not of God but of some inferior principle whose law it executes; and, in it anthropological aspect, that man’s inner self, the pneuma (“spirit” in contrast to “soul” or psyche) is not part of the world, of nature’s creation and domain… . (326-327)

… whoever has created the world, man does not owe him allegiance, nor respect to his work. His work, though incomprehensibly encompassing man, does not offer the stars by which he can set his course, and neither does his proclaimed wish and will. Since not the true God can be the creator of that to which selfhood feels so utterly a stranger, nature merely manifests its lowly demiurge: as a power deep beneath the Supreme God, upon which even man can look down from the height of his god-kindred spirit, this perversion of the Divine has retained of it only the power to act, but to act blindly, without knowledge and benevolence. Thus did the demiurge create the world out of ignorance and passion. (327)

The world, then, is the product, and even the embodiment, of the negative of knowledge. What it reveals is unenlightened and therefore malignant force, proceeding from the spirit of self-assertive power, from the will to rule and coerce. The mindlessness of this will is the spirit of the world, which bears no relation to understanding and love. … Power thus becomes the chief aspect of the cosmos, and its inner essence is ignorance. To this, the positive complement is that the essence of man is knowledge—knowledge of self and of God: this determines his situation as that of the potentially knowing in the midst of the unknowing, of light in the midst of darkness, and this relation is at the bottom of his being alien, without companionship in the dark vastness of the universe. (327-328)

What sticks in my mind is our “situation as that of the potentially knowing in the midst of the unknowing, of light in the midst of darkness.” As I previously noted, this is precisely the choice that must be made by those who “possess knowledge,” specifically, “knowledge of God.” Jonas notes the presence of “understanding and love” as, in my estimation, our proper and true ground of being. I do not wish to present Gnosticism as inherently wrong-minded or “evil”; it is a creation of dualistic perspectives with their own mythology and cosmology that took root in the minds of many at a juncture in history. It is nihilistic, anarchic, and even anti-social in scope and practice. I would submit that my criticism of Gnosticism may be more of a criticism of a most diminished human condition. Historically, those who “possess gnosis” of the transcendent, believe that they possess such knowledge or are the “elect of God,” have tended to see themselves as “superior” to others, and conveying this “superiority” to their impressionable and “passionate” followers. Even if they did not impose their beliefs upon others, their belief in their exclusivity was socially and culturally separative and divisive. They often chose to no longer operate within the common law and only recognized their own. Society broke down: the center could not hold. This is not to say that they did not possess true knowledge or even transcendent gnosis; they very well may. But, in the world of human beings, such gnosis “goes to the head but not the heart,” feeding their sense of separateness—and paranoia. When fear for survival takes over, there is no gnosis, no matter how right or how true; there is only catastrophe.

There are a number of other “Gnostic sources” I have consulted, including Forerunners and Rivals of Christianity from 330 BC to 330 AD by Francis Legge, Pagans and Christians: Religion and the Religious Life from the Second to the Fourth Century by Robin Lane Fox, The Other Bible edited by Willis Barnstone, The Confessions of St. Augustine (which is quite Manichean) translated and edited by Albert Cook Outler, and others. So far, Jonas seems to have the deepest understanding and the most thorough research. As a philosopher himself, he is familiar with both ancient and modern philosophers as well as both “pagan” classical Greek and early Christian apologists who understood Gnostic teachings well in order to be able to provide persuasive arguments against them. These apologists and critics of Gnosticism include Plotinus, Augustine, Irenaeus, Origen, and Tertullian. Jonas realizes that Gnosticism is informed by Christianity and Classical Greek thought and vice-versa. The threads of each are interwoven and Jonas is quite careful when separating them in order to reveal how Gnosticism is much the opposite of the other two, which are quite similar in many ways. Finding the “right” quotes from Jonas in order to display the various essential Gnostic teachings and their applications has been a most difficult process, for Gnosticism has many different threads. This one, by Jonas pertaining “gnostic dualism” and the consequent view of the psyche, also in light of the fact that Jung himself claimed to be “gnostic,” provides food for thought:

Gnostic dualism … regards the “soul” itself, the spiritual organ of man’s belonging to the world, as no less than his body an effluence of the cosmic powers and therefore as an instrument of their dominion over his true but submerged self. As the “terrestrial envelopment of the pneuma,” the “soul” is the exponent of the world within man—the world is in the soul. A profound distrust, therefore, of one’s own inwardness, the suspicion of demonic trickery, the fear of being betrayed into bondage inspire gnostic psychology. The alienating forces are located in man himself as composed of flesh, soul, and spirit. The contempt of the cosmos radically understood includes the contempt of the psyche [my emphasis]. Therefore what is of the psyche is incapable of being elevated to the condition of virtue. It is either to be left to itself, to the play of its forces and appetite, or to be reduced by mortification, or sometimes even extinguished in ecstatic experience. [This] indicates that the negative attitude to the world, or the negative quality of the world itself, though it does not give room to virtue in the Greek sense, still leaves open the choice between several modes of conduct in which the negativity is turned into a principle of praxis. (269)

The praxis may therefore be that of the libertine, the ascetic or puritan, of the loss of self in fantasy or altered reality (which is not so different than the first two).

I introduced “Gnosticism” as a major, if not the major, influence of change that has occurred in civilization in our present time. I believe it affects the whole world at this point. In Gnostic cosmology (of the Valentinian-Syrian school), the realm of Light is attacked by the powers of Darkness, which have each so far existed separately and independently of each other. Light sacrifices a part of itself, seemingly losing the battle to Darkness, believing that the devouring (and consequent absorption) of Light by Darkness will bring imbalance and disorganization to the Dark, thus halting its invasion of Heaven, the Pleroma. This is how the Light-Dark polarity works out in the West. In the East, the Daoists of two thousand years ago were able to maintain “Heaven” and “Earth,” “Light” and “Dark” separately but equally and in relationship to each other, each in its proper place and, in that respect, keeping the other in its place. But now it seems there is no longer any safety from the loss of the “center that holds all together.” I believe the “Gnostic” archetype and historical image is an effective and perhaps true representation of a force now both loose and loosed upon the world. It is insane, without any center at all, and it spreads itself like an infection of fear, loss of self, and extreme, passionate, and violent quest for this lost self. We who claim and believe ourselves to know point righteous fingers at “those others” who are “ignorant, irresponsible, inferior.” Each individual believes himself or herself to be “right.” We may have reached a crisis of individuality in which the pursuit of the “rights of the individual” destroy the cohesiveness of the whole. Or separate, warring groups of people destroy the cohesiveness of the whole.

To me, as noted earlier here, it seems that the answer begins with each of us choosing to be with others rather than against them. To do that we must be able to recognize ourselves as the other. This is most difficult for those with the Gnostic temperament of distrust of the world-as-ignorance. The world we see is the world we have created through our beliefs. If we loved one another, the world would be a loving place. If we forgave one another, the world would be forgiving; we would have another chance. This requires profound sacrifice from each of us who may actually “possess gnosis,” but also possess an inherent fear for our own survival and see ourselves as quite separate from the person next to us or from the group of others who seem so different from us. It has to start somewhere. What comes to my mind are the Irish women, Catholic and Protestant, who chose to stand in between the Irish men, Catholic and Protestant, who were all ready to start firing at each other towards the end of “The Troubles” in Northern Ireland. Our lives may not be so immediate or dramatic as that, but it does become a matter of “turning the other cheek” (which is a “Lighting of the Dark”) in a world of intolerance, fear, and blame. How do we change what people think, much less how they think? By changing what we think, how we think—of ourselves, others, the world, and life itself. Kindness, love, forgiveness, understanding, appreciation, trust have to start with ourselves. We bring a calmness and then a peace; a sanity and a sense of safety and acceptance. I think this is how the world changes. This is how we bring about “Heaven on Earth.”

I have thus far avoided using Jungian terms since this essay is meant also for the general public. Of course I am speaking of individuation and how to get there. The process of individuation itself can make us too separative in our individuality. Daryl Sharp, paraphrasing Jung, in The Jung Lexicon, writes:

The aim is not to overcome one’s personal psychology, to become perfect, but to become familiar with it. … Individuation involves an increasing awareness of one’s unique psychological reality, including personal strengths and limitations, and at the same time a deeper appreciation of humanity in general [my emphasis]. (68)

Jung’s own thoughts regarding the pitfalls in the process of individuation, as noted in his Collected Works, also come to the fore:

As the individual is not just a single, separate being, but by his very existence presupposes a collective relationship, it follows that the process of individuation must lead to more intense and broader collective relationships and not to isolation [my emphasis]. (“Definitions,” CW6, par. 758)

Individuation does not shut one out from the world, but gathers the world to itself. (“On the Nature of the Psyche,” CW8, par. 432)

Individuation has two principal aspects: in the first place it is an internal and subjective process of integration, and in the second it is an equally indispensable process of objective relationship. Neither can exist without the other … [my emphasis]. (“The Psychology of the Transference,” CW16, par. 448)

Sharp interprets the split that can occur in the process of individuation, according to Jung, and Jung more specifically presents the consequences if there is not adequate “production of values” to the collective world in which one lives:

Individuation and a life lived by collective values are nevertheless two divergent destinies. In Jung’s view they are related to one another by guilt. Whoever embarks on the personal path becomes to some extent estranged from collective values, but does not thereby lose those aspects of the psyche which are inherently collective. To atone for this “desertion,” the individual is obliged to create something of worth for the benefit of society [my emphasis]. (68)

Individuation cuts one off from personal conformity and hence from collectivity. That is the guilt which the individuant leaves behind him for the world, that is the guilt he must endeavor to redeem. He must offer a ransom in place of himself, that is, he must bring forth values which are an equivalent substitute for his absence in the collective personal sphere. Without this production of values, final individuation is immoral and—more than that—suicidal [my emphasis]….
The individuant has no a priori claim to any kind of esteem. He has to be content with whatever esteem flows to him from outside by virtue of the values he creates. Not only has society a right, it also has a duty to condemn the individuant if he fails to create equivalent values. (“Adaptation, Individuation, Collectivity,” CW18, pars. 1095f)

What I refer to as “devolved Gnosticism” is a description of the “negative values” that derive from it and draw one into oneself and out of the world and being in and connected with the world, with others. Jung recognizes this as well and says, to paraphrase, that there must be a “balancing out,” as it were, between that which one takes from the world and that which one gives back to the world, the collective. He pointedly notes, “Without this production of values, final individuation is immoral and—more than that—suicidal.” It seems that there has been much taken and not enough production of values in service and contribution to the world, that the movement inward of those modern-day Gnostics has metaphysically and literally “sucked the world dry,” that the negative, hopeless mind-set of too many people of influence has become a self-fulfilling prophecy spreading throughout the world. And so, those of us who may and can, must now make the choice to change the way we think, the way we see, and what we think and what we see. It is up to us to “turn the tide.”