Archive for the ‘Existentialism and Human Drama!’ Category

The Ignorance of Chicken, Part 2

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Continuing with my series, here’s Part 2 of my analysis, to go with Part 2 of the panel discussion. And here’s the video:

In this video, Zizek starts to explain his very confusing proposition – that we are surprised to find that a “believer” truly believes what they profess to believe. For instance, Zizek’s friend was surprised to realize that Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict) truly believed in the resurrection and divinity of Christ. He also points out a study where people self-identified as Christian but went on to say they did not really believe in the central dogma of Christianity – that the son of God was an itinerant rabbi in ancient Jerusalem.

He makes an important statement about the point he’s trying to make early in the video – he’s not saying these people don’t believe what they profess, but rather that skeptical belief is the construct of belief in our culture.

And here, I insert, “Why not?” Look back at history, at all those who came before us, and what we know first and foremost about them – they were all wrong. They believed in gods that we now call myths. They believed, supposedly, that the earth was flat, that the sun went around the earth, that the Caribbean was the West Indies, etc.

Further, if we look at the direction of science in the last 50 to 100 years, we see only more uncertainty. Quantum physics makes predictions that don’t make any sense to us, and yet it completely predicts observed phenomena. The universe we were finally getting a handle on turns out to be full of dark matter and dark energy that we can’t detect. Finally, physicists have come around to tell us that, given that all models that describe observed phenomena are valid, you can easily build a model where the sun does go around the earth and you’re not really wrong.

But I digress.

Modern people qualify belief with skepticism. “Well, no one really knows, do they?” We are, culturally and intellectually, agnostic.

And this is not the great problem of our time.

Zizek begins to touch on the real problem I identify – “My thesis,” he says, “Is not that nobody really believes today… I think belief is not really where we think it is.

In Part 2, he also makes an interesting point about how the effort to understand “the Other” can be undermined by how we look at beliefs. I think he has a point – by attributing fervent religious beliefs to those who are unlike ourselves, our description of them excludes immediately the possibility of rationality. I would say that by first acknowledging that the Other is entirely like us, we should try to understand the proclamations we make that seem, on the surface, ridiculous to understand the proclamations they make which seem to us to be ridiculous.

Zizek uses a literally unbelievable story of a Korean war hero (as told by Korean propoganda) and compares it (in Part 3) to an opera. I would compare it to urban legends. For a U.S. citizen, with little understanding of nationalism on the level of a religion, it can be hard to understand why the North Koreans might tell truly mythical stories about war heroes. For us, the mythical stories might involve Bigfoot, or the Virgin Mary appearing in toast. Those actually sound ridiculous to you, I’m sure, but there are stories you believe as factual that, if they were questioned by an outsider, would soon be full of holes you couldn’t plug. The problem is, I just don’t know that story for every reader (or even a majority – we’re a pretty diverse culture).

Anyway, this will be continued in Part 3!

The Ignorance of Chicken, Part 1

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Shit is about to get real.

This is the first in a series of posts examining a talk given by Slavoj Zizek at Princeton in 2005. Why in the world am I doing this? Because I think the talk exposes one of the most important problems in our time – the confusing nature of what we believe, how our subconscious gnaws at us with doubt, and how easily we are controlled by those things that we think we control.

Watching the videos is hopefully unnecessary, as I want to talk explicitly about what Zizek is saying in each one. Still, it can’t hurt. However, between his accent, his physical tics and his reference to philosophical concepts, some people might find the videos hard to decipher. The choice is yours. (In the first video, you can fast forward to about 3:15 to get to the good part.)

Zizek references “Sand Castles: Buddhism and Global Finance,” a documentary which combines economists and Tibetan Buddhists to attempt to compare the two, especially that the virtual capitalism of global finance is contrary to the Buddhist concept of the illusion of materialism because the capitalist invests himself into a wealth that is non-existent. Thus, the attachment to wealth is in a way the apex of the embrace of non-existent satisfaction.

And in this comparison, Zizek reveals a very strange conclusion one could reach instead. In plain language, Buddhism teaches that the material world is an illusion. What, then, is the evil of capitalism when the harm to individuals as a results of capitalist greed is as illusory as the capitalist attachment to wealth? If we live our life believing that the physical reality that surrounds us is the true reality and Buddhism teaches us we are wrong, then there is no harm in the global virtual economy ruining whole nations, causing poverty and starvation because that is rooted in the same false reality of the physical world.

Thus, Buddhism becomes the perfect metaphysical view of the universe for the capitalist.

But this is not the most important problem of our time. Rather, Zizek is introducing us to the idea of “skeptical belief” through the eyes of Western Buddhism.

The capitalist is invested in a system that is completely virtual, where commodity exchange is only an abstract description of the kind of business he’s doing. He knows the money changing hands is illusory, and at best, if he could gather currency that represented that money, he would still have slips of paper that represented a trust. If you have $100 in your pocket, you are aware that it is just paper, but you also know it represents the possibility of commodity exchange. This is two beliefs overlaying one another – 1) the money is just paper, 2) the money has virtual value that can be exchanged for goods much more valuable than the paper. How do these dual beliefs affect your behavior?

The financial system requires an absolute suspension of disbelief to sustain itself. In this way, it is like Buddhism – to know happiness, to be content, the Buddhist must eliminate desire entirely and dispose of attachments to material reality. To participate in global capitalism (and the random fluctuation of markets), the capitalist must detach himself from material wealth and desire, distance himself from the real world implications of collapse and embrace the markets as a game that is to be played (like the Buddhist views life as a meta-experience parallel – not intersecting – material reality).

Edit: This is a bit confusing. I could also say that, to participate in global capitalism, the capitalist must detach himself from the reality of commodity exchange and distance himself from real-world objects, instead focusing on a transcendent, abstract virtual currency of number games. You can imagine that these are almost two sides of the same coin – on one side, the global capitalist embraces a virtual world of currency over the material world of commodities. On the other side, the global capitalist distances himself from the material implications of the virtual market. I could go on and on about this, but uh… I won’t right now.

As a side effect, it calls into question the morality of Buddhism, which is difficult to derive directly from the metaphysics of Buddhism… but that’s another topic.

Join me again for Part 2!

Regarding the Soul

Monday, June 14th, 2010

A while ago, I wrote about being spiritual and talking about a belief in the soul. I promised that I would explain that someday. Today is that day!

The reason the concept of a soul exists is no doubt tied to the psychological need of a human being for a predictable, comprehensible universe. There is also the concept of the “immortality” of the soul, no doubt to help us with our ultimate existential enemy, death itself. It is sensible that humanity created the concept of the soul given our situation. But when we transition – individually or as a group – into a naturalistic, atheist worldview, what good is the concept of the soul?

Firstly, the soul seems existent as a big brother of the phenomena we call “identity.” People are mostly creatures of habit and repeated behavior. They are of persistent appearance and voice. People have speech patterns, behavior patterns and em0tional patterns. It is our intellectual nature to assume all of this is informed by a single source. We might call that source their mind or their identity or possibly their soul. I would call those three different and distinct things (each a subset of the next, actually).

However, people ultimately change many many times over their life (a thing that is too often looked at negatively when it can often be a positive thing). For instance, the entity that we call “Chuck” and who I call “me” was, at one time, a person of no confidence, wild depressive mood swings and poor social acumen. But I’ve changed drastically on those points. More simply, at one point, I was 3 feet tall and now I am six feet tall.

For the most part, we basically ignore those changes where it regards “identity” and we say that I am Chuck, and I am the same Chuck that was once 3 feet tall. And yet, a portion of my identity – what I consider are the important qualities that define who I am – is confidence, an even mood that tilts towards positivity and a great deal of skill in social situations. That describes a different person than who I was. While we can say, “Chuck as changed,” what does it mean to be Chuck? Who is Chuck? Which Chuck – past or present – was the better representative of Chuck-ness? These are ultimately questions of identity, and identity changes. But identity must then be a quality of a larger whole, and that whole is Chuck.

It sounds like whimsical banter, but I think it becomes a real question of concern when we speak about the dead. Some remember the dead in their youth, some remember the dead as a public persona, some remember the dead as a private persona… but ultimately, who can define their identity? No one was with them in the secret moments in their mind when private feelings were felt, and that represents a whole other equally (if not more) valid part of who they were.

People of my age can also see this in the groups of friends they’ve had or kept over the years. How would my high school friends describe me? How would my college friends describe me? How would my post-college friends describe me? And, perhaps most interesting of all, how would those friends who I have kept since high school compare and contrast me with the friends who have only known me a year?

Further, some people decide at certain points in their life that a stark change in identity is necessary. Some people will move to a new city, make new friends and try to redefine themselves, no doubt to varying degrees of success. Certain people feel that certain aspects of their identity – their gender identity, for instance – is not properly represented, and they initiate life-changing events – like gender reassignment surgery – as a way of making them more comfortable with how their identity matches their appearance, or vice-versa.

Through all of these changes, what remains constant? Are we simply assigning a name to a composition of constantly-changing animate molecules housing a roving intelligence? Is there more to it than that?

I propose that there is more to it than that, although not materially.

Certainly, dash the old definitions of the soul. Forget the immortality and the life after death. There is no evidence, there is no proof and that means there is no reason to believe in it.

Embrace a naturalistic worldview, and evolve the definition of the soul. The “soul” is that consistent element which defines the consistent concept of personhood – of being – from birth to death. It is not just the thoughts and feelings they have, though. It is the projections of all their friends and relations on that animated band of molecules housing that roving intelligence.

This “soul” has many identities attached to it, perhaps a continuous stream of them, but it only ever has one person attached to it. While Joe and Jane might see different sides of Jill, both of them can agree that all of those qualities belong to Jill. So, the “soul” becomes the gestalt of many qualities, many memories, many events and incidents and relationships, all of which orbit a single person.

Surely, when someone dies, then, the soul continues to exist immaterially (in the way that memories and concepts exist). It is not wispy trails of gray fog, nor a see-through apparition of their idealized self. It is nothing but the construct of them that continues to exist to everyone who thinks about them. Jill may die, but Joe and Jane can still talk about her. In fact, they might even talk to her, addressing the concept of her in their mind.  They might talk about what she would do if she were here, or who she would like or dislike. They might be wrong, surely, but the person never stops existing as a range of not only memories, but also possibilities.

Why bother with this term at all? Because there ought to be a term for it. We ought to understand that identity is a fleeting and subjective quality, that people ultimately change many times, but no matter how radically they change, they exist as a “super set” of all those things “that are themselves,” if you will. The “soul” is all of those things attached to the flesh and bone which house the phenomena of intelligence. And as surely as all the molecules of that flesh and bone are replaced time and time again, that “soul” never leaves the resulting organic matter.

There ought to be a term because abstraction is vital to our thinking and communicating.

Ultimately, those who embrace naturalism (which I do) must understand abstraction is still incredibly important to the human experience and our ability to preserve psychological well-being. Our great intellects have been built on a foundation of animal instincts and faulty logic, all of which is run by an organic machine that was developed but not designed. I find that abstraction is a great tool for addressing the resulting ghost in the machine.

The puzzling result for me is, ultimately, the “soul” would not be well-described by any words or notions. Rather, it can only be defined by all of the things which it encompasses, ultimately making it an indescribable mystery. I don’t really have a problem with that – it describes, somewhat, the enormous complexity of a human being. In that way, we can say “Brevity is the soul of wit,” but we’ll never quite have a word that defines the soul of Chuck, for instance.

Demystifying and Remystifying

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Recently I realized, as I get older and older, I spend more and more time demystifying things. When someone says they don’t understand how something works or how amazing something is, I jump in to explain it to them – how physics works, how the universe works, how the human body works. I have a personal project, and it is to demystify the world as much as possible.

Mystery is a property of the human experience. “Mystery” isn’t just something that is unknown. Mystery extends into the unknowable, the unbelievable and the incomprehensible. It is the feeling in our guts that something lies beyond us. It’s the feeling that our ancestors used to create all manners of tales about how the world around them worked.

But mystery is worse than that. It is an acceptance of ignorance. It is the label of our reluctance to comprehend.

I spent years studying psychology, for better or worse. I certainly am not a psychologist in the sense that it is not my career. I am certainly a psychologist in how I think and what I know. The same can be said of philosophy – I spent years studying it, but professionally, I am not a philosopher. But conceptually, I don’t think anyone who knows me could describe me for long before “philosophy” became one of the words they used.

Psychology taught me that the human brain is nothing if not lazy. Prejudice is a useful tool, but it causes a lot of error. Mystery is a similar tool. It’s very good that we have a filter which stops us from exploring every single unknown. But much like prejudice and experience lends itself to racism, mystery lends itself to willful ignorance.

I enjoy demystifying things quite a bit. But I have another hobby – remystifying things.

I am taken with how the world is simultaneously starkly credulous and strikingly incredible at the same time. I think everyone lives a bit of this, but they rarely put it together on the same object. A chef might make a delicious steak, but experience complete confusion when they consider for a moment how an mp3 player works. Meanwhile, the computer engineer who made the mp3 player has no clue why the steak he’s eating tastes so good.

But for me, I can speak in boring terms about how life has developed and progressed on Earth as if it doesn’t impress me. In the next breath, however, I can talk poetically about the overwhelming diversity of life, about the arms race of evolution, and about the amazing functionalities of various adaptations of species.

And both of these ideas represent my true feelings. The distinction is not a line of difference, but just a statement of a rotating perspective. If you see one side of a cube, you can’t actually be certain it’s a cube. Rotating it reveals a lot more information, and might confirm some of your suspicions about its shape.

Mystery can be a stance of ignorance. But once we remove that ignorance – once we have some knowledge and understanding of something, and dismiss our fear that it might be unknowable – we can reintroduce the feelings of awe. We can understand how something works but also recognize the sublime brilliance of it.

The real problem is when we see the mysterious as unknowable… and at the same time we see the known as unremarkable.