• Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k
    I wanted to lay out a critique I pulled together from a grab bag of sources from Alasdair MacIntyre's After Virtue, Philip Reif's classicThe Triumph of the Therapeutic: Uses of Faith after Freud, to Ronald Purser's McMindfulness, and Eva Illouz's Saving the Modern Soul: Therapy, Emotions, and the Culture of Self-Help.

    Modern self-help culture, mindfulness programs, positive psychology, and to a lesser extent outdoor education, present themselves as the heirs of ancient, medieval, and Eastern wisdom traditions (i.e., to philosophy and spirituality). They borrow their vocabulary from these sources, speaking to "character development," virtue, flourishing, balance, discipline, detachment, etc., yet sever these practices from the original anthropology that supported them. In turn, the switch towards a "thin" anthropology, and the liberal phobia of strong ethical claims tends to unmoor them from any strong commitment to an ordering telos that structures the "self-development" they intend to promote. Everything becomes about the individual, about getting us what we want.

    For instance, I was just reading a piece from Michael P. Krom on how Kurt Hahn's original vision for Outward Bound, which was grounded in his reading of Plato and Cistercian traditions, was flattened out after his death. For instance, the focus on "community" becomes instrumentalized. It becomes about how community helps me grow, "discover myself," or enjoy the experience. Talk of the Good was likewise first secularized (via the progressive education movement, and more typical progressive liberalism), and then replaced by talk of “your good” or “finding your authentic self.”

    I would say that this rings true from my experience (although I would also allow that outdoor education programs are, in general, still a great influence; it's just that they might be better).

    In the Western tradition ascetic/spiritual exercises were meant to re-order the soul toward truth, goodness, and the divine. In Buddhism, mindfulness is embedded in the Eightfold Path and oriented towards liberation. By contrast, modern adaptations tend to treat these disciplines as mere tools for the self-interested individual, e.g., a means of coping, maximizing productivity, reducing stress, or achieving “authenticity.” I have seen this particularly in some pieces on Stoicism I've read that seem to be largely aimed at the "tech-bro" crowd. A commitment to truth gets shoved aside for a view of philosophy as a sort of "life hack."

    There is a sort of "managerial" outlook here, where praxis reduced to a sort of tool. In a similar vein, I have seen the critique that modern therapy/self-help largely focuses on helping us "get what we want," but not so much on "what we ought to do" or the question of if "what we want" is what will ultimately lead to flourishing and happiness. That is not seen as the purpose of therapy or self-help. That might be fair enough, but then it also not seen as the purpose of education either. So, what does fulfill that function? It seems to me that nothing does, except for perhaps wholly voluntary associations that one must "choose" (where such a choice is necessarily without much guidance). Aside from "self-development," this seems problematic for collective self-rule and social cohesion.

    The Manosphere as an Example:

    At first glance, the online "Manosphere" (Andrew Tate, Roosh, and the like) and the wellness/positive-psychology world seem like polar opposites. One is a common target of abuse in outlets like The Guardian, the other often praised in that sort of left-leaning managerial space. However, I'd argue that they share a similar anthropological deficit.

    The Manosphere exalts self-discipline and self-improvement, but in the service of epithumia (bodily pleasures) and thymos (status, honor, recognition). The man encountering the Manosphere is sold on becoming an "alpha male," without any nod towards questioning if achieving power, or sexual conquests, will actually bring fulfillment, or if it is actually good. Indeed, I'd argue that sex in particular is fetishized precisely because it is one of the last things to be fully commodified and marketized and so remains a source of "validation" (thymos). Yet this sort of "self-development" would, at best, satisfy (in a maladaptive way) the needs of thymos (and epithumia), but not logos (the rational appetite for goodness and truth).

    The Manosphere (and female-oriented dating advice) very often discuss romantic relationships in economic terms, e.g., “sexual marketplace value,” “high-value men,” “trading up,” “SMV curves," etc. Likewise, one actually finds this quite a bit in the wellness/managerial culture space as well, with references to "returns on investment," for mindfulness, "productivity," "optimization," etc. The wellness/managerial culture promotes mindfulness and resilience, but primarily in the service of comfort and social recognition. The self gets treated like a portfolio to be optimized and protected.

    Anyhow, it seems to me like both incorporate fragments of older ascetic traditions that have been hollowed out by modern ideologies. One plays at being a warrior, the other at being the sage, but both collapse into marketable techniques for the (suffering) autonomous individual, and both neglect the desires of logos.

    Conclusion:

    Philosophy itself has been thoroughly academicatized and professionalized. Outdoor education and similar areas might have a better claim to its ancient mantel at this point (that is, they come much closer to how it was practiced). Meanwhile, outside the realm of political activism, it has tended to be therapy, self-help, wellness, the "New Age" movement, and of course traditional religious organizations that took over the entire "praxis" side of philosophy. I guess my point here would be that this divorce seems to lead towards some serious issues. There is an analogous issue with education as well. You get a philosophically hollow praxis, and a philosophy divorced from the practical.
  • Wayfarer
    25.3k
    In Buddhism, mindfulness is embedded in the Eightfold Path and oriented towards liberation. By contrast, modern adaptations tend to treat these disciplines as mere tools for the self-interested individual, e.g., a means of coping, maximizing productivity, reducing stress, or achieving “authenticity.” I have seen this particularly in some pieces on Stoicism I've read that seem to be largely aimed at the "tech-bro" crowd. A commitment to truth gets shoved aside for a view of philosophy as a sort of "life hack."Count Timothy von Icarus

    :100: Schopenhauer said that ‘money is happiness in the abstract’. Popularised versions of Buddhist meditation are similar - ‘enlightenment’ as the ultimate problem solver and even means of fulfilment of your aims and wishes by clearing away ‘obstructive habits’.

    Consider this contrast between traditional and ‘secular’ Buddhism, from scholar-monk Bhikkhu Bodhi:

    Classical Buddhism sees human existence as embedded in the condition called samsāra, understood literally as the beginningless chain of rebirths. From this standpoint, humans are just one class of living beings in a vast multidimensional cosmos. Through time without beginning all beings have been roaming from life to life in the five realms of existence, rising and falling in accordance with their karma, their volitional deeds. Life in all these realms, being impermanent and fraught with pain, is inherently unsatisfactory—dukkha. Thus the final goal, the end of dukkha, is release from the round of rebirths, the attainment of an unconditioned dimension of spiritual freedom called nibbāna. The practice of the path is intended to eradicate the bonds tying us to the round of rebirths and thereby bring liberation from repeated birth, aging and death.

    Secular Buddhism, in contrast, starts from our immediate existential situation, understood without bringing in non-naturalistic assumptions. Secular Buddhism therefore does not endorse the idea of literal rebirth. Some Secular Buddhists regard rebirth as a symbol for changing states of mind, some as an analogy for biological evolution, some simply as part of the dispensable baggage that Buddhism drags along from Asia. But Secular Buddhists generally do not regard rebirth as the problem the Dharma is intended to resolve. Accordingly, they interpret the idea of samsāra as a metaphor depicting our ordinary condition of bewilderment and addictive pursuits. The secular program thus reenvisions the goal of Buddhist practice, rejecting the ideal of irreversible liberation from the cycle of rebirths in favor of a tentative, ever-fragile freedom from distress in this present life itself.
    Facing the Great Divide

    The implicit problem is that naturalism of all stripes is incompatible with ‘liberation’ as understood in Eastern traditions (mokṣa, Nirvāṇa), as nature is part of what liberation is from. But in modernity, nature is esteemed as representing purity and authenticity, as opposed to the artificial, the manufactured, the polluted. Liberation, if such a thing is contemplated, is invariably in terms of ‘oneness with nature’ (see another critique by a scholarly monk, Bhikkhu Bodhi, in Buddhist Romanticism. ) Hence meditation as optimised coping, dealing better with stress, and so on.

    The ‘message’ of all the classical religions is not one of worldly well-being or technological flourishing, but extirpation of the roots of suffering that lie deep in the human condition. Not something we much want to hear in our day and age.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k


    That's an interesting article. I had been reading Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche's book on Lojong practice, and I recall thinking that the key "preliminaries" to practice had some elements that I didn't think would sail in contemporary mindfulness.

    I don't think there is anything wrong in syncretism per se, or borrowing practices. Actually, because disparate practices that seem to have evolved in relative isolation are so similar, I think it suggests some elements being more universal (e.g., Orthodox breathing practices and "dwelling on death," seem quite similar to some Eastern practices, along with the repetition of mantras being akin to the "Jesus prayer" or other repeated prayers). But I do think there is differences between good and bad philosophy, or a robust versus "thin" anthropology. There might be many adequate ways to describe man, useful for different purposes, but some seem clearly to be inadequate for a sort of broader "philosophical praxis."
  • apokrisis
    7.4k
    In the Western tradition ascetic/spiritual exercises were meant to re-order the soul toward truth, goodness, and the divine. In Buddhism, mindfulness is embedded in the Eightfold Path and oriented towards liberation. By contrast, modern adaptations tend to treat these disciplines as mere tools for the self-interested individual, e.g., a means of coping, maximizing productivity, reducing stress, or achieving “authenticity.”Count Timothy von Icarus

    You are making an argument premised on the belief that there is actually something more than just pragmatism when it comes to living life. You name these higher facts as truth, goodness, and the divine. You want to put these at the centre of our attention and efforts, and advocate for practices that are self-denying, self-effacing, oddly self focused in being self-rejecting. A life built around rejecting the everyday stress and pleasure of being a social self and aimed at becoming this notion of some more perfected state of being. A godly creature barely existing in the world as it generally is, and generally must be, for an organism pragmatically dependent on its socially-constructed environment.

    So what supports this metaphysics as a factual argument? Where is the evidence that this ought to be any kind of project for us humans?

    What you dismiss as modern watering downs of real therapeutic strategies – positive psychology, outward bound courses, and the like – I instead see as useful turns towards the recognition that the human lot is a social co-constructed one. It actually applies the theory by highlighting the rules of the game that is becoming a self within the context of a society. Positive psychology draws people's attention to the fact that they are socially embedded and the little nagging voice in their head may be a cultural programming speaking scripts that they have some possibility of changing.

    These kinds of life lessons can be worked into the educational curriculum from a young age so that children start off properly equipped with an understanding of how their real world works, and the possibilities for improvement – of the self and its society – that flow from there.

    You then say that this pragmatic realism then finds its distorted reflections in toxic developments like the Manosphere. Well yes. Society has been run too long on romantic notions of truth, goodness, and the divine. And of power, domination, and all that seems "other" to those wishy-washy principles.

    So it is not positive psychology or pragmatism that produces the Manosphere. It is the celebration of humanity as bestial rather than celestial. And that is just another way of by-passing the real facts of what it is to be human – which is to be socially constructed as a self fit to live in the kind of society that that self will in turn tend to re-construct by their actions. The organismic view of what humans are. The view which finds us placed somewhere more everyday practical between the bounding caricatured extremes of the selfish beast and the selfless divine.

    In summary, your assumptions need questioning. And the counter-argument is that all the evidence supports the fact that the human self is socially-constructed. So any therapeutic technology would have to be based on that understanding. The starting point is the relation we might individually form with the community we live in.

    And "you" might not even be the problem. Your society might be what is fucked up – particularly in ways illustrated by the Manosphere. Or even by some of its hair-shirt, ascetisim preaching, cults run by dodgy gurus.

    The issue at this level isn't even philosophical. You will get no solutions from examining ideologies. Ideologies of any stripe become the problem when they are marketed as the absolutes that must rule our lives rather than some possible wisdom about how best to play the game that is being a useful member of a flourishing community.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    Philosophy itself has been thoroughly academicatized and professionalized. Outdoor education and similar areas might have a better claim to its ancient mantel at this point (that is, they come much closer to how it was practiced). Meanwhile, outside the realm of political activism, it has tended to be therapy, self-help, wellness, the "New Age" movement, and of course traditional religious organizations that took over the entire "praxis" side of philosophy. I guess my point here would be that this divorce seems to lead towards some serious issues. There is an analogous issue with education as well. You get a philosophically hollow praxis, and a philosophy divorced from the practical.Count Timothy von Icarus

    Maybe tangential, but when I see people chasing forms of self-improvement (including certain strands of management theory), I often see nostalgia projects: heirs to the Romantic movement and the current era's obsession with the aesthetic as an expression of authenticity. Isn’t the hallmark of capitalism the marketing of lifestyles premised on “you are incomplete,” some cloaked in tradition, others in radicalism? Some lean right, some lean left, but all flog in the same promise of contentment and meaning.
  • Leontiskos
    5.1k
    The self gets treated like a portfolio to be optimized and protected.Count Timothy von Icarus

    Lots of good thoughts. :up:

    The classical object of the common good seems mostly invisible to liberalism. The idea of a telos that transcends self is a non-starter, and a beleaguered institutional landscape is icing on the cake. The modern cosmos revolves around the passions of the individual. Alternatives have become inconceivable.
  • 180 Proof
    16.1k
    Afaik, as per Plato ..., know thyself =/= "self-help".
  • Janus
    17.5k
    Modern self-help programs often seem to be excessively self-focused. But I would argue that the same is true of many traditional spiritual practices. What is it that motivates a search for "salvation" or "liberation" or "enlightenment" if not a concern for one's own well-being or life project?

    People speak about great enlightened sages such as Gautama saying that such greats do not seem to be around these days, and yet all we know of Gautama's life is contained in writings produced fairly long and some very long, after his death. How do we know he was not a pedophile, or that he didn't exploit his position of power to have sex with some of his young nubile followers?

    People who acknowledge that they do not think of themselves as enlightened (or are they merely being falsely modest?) nonetheless take it as read that enlightened ones did exist, and may exist even today (however rare that might be) but how can this be shown to be more than merely a personal belief?

    I think there is a puritanical elitist element in the idea that modern self-help programs are merely watered down caricatures of the ancient "true" practices. I mean, if these programs really do help people to live better, more fulfilled and useful lives, then what is the problem? Is it because they don't really renounce this life in favour of gaining Karmic benefit or entrance to heaven? Is the most important thing we can do in this life to deny its value in favour of an afterlife, an afterlife which can never be known to be more than a conjecture at best, and a fantasy at worst? There seems to be a certain snobbishness, a certain classism, at play in these kinds of attitudes.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k


    Some are like that, although the "life-hacking" stuff tends to lean more "cutting edge." Then there was the Human Potential Movement too, and things of that nature.

    I didn't mention the military, but that's still a strong allure. Everyone I knew before they enlisted primarily enlisted because of the self-development, community, challenge, purpose elements. I assume that's common because they lean very hard into that in their advertising.

    Likewise, the "elite school" motif is popular enough that it's basically it's own sub-genre in fantasy and sci-fi, and particularly in fiction aimed at young adults.
  • T Clark
    15.2k
    I think there is a puritanical elitist element in the idea that modern self-help programs are merely watered down caricatures of the ancient "true" practices. I mean, if these programs really do help people to live better, more fulfilled and useful lives, then what is the problem? Is it because they don't really renounce this life in favour of gaining Karmic benefit or entrance to heaven? Is the most important thing we can do in this life to deny its value in favour of an afterlife, an afterlife which can never be known to be more than a conjecture at best, and a fantasy at worst? There seems to be a certain snobbishness, a certain classism, at play in these kinds of attitudes.Janus

    This makes sense to me. I don’t know much about Buddhism. The only Asian philosophy I have experience with is Taoism. That has always struck me as a reasonably practical and down home philosophy. As I understand it, there isn’t much talk about inevitable suffering, self renunciation, or esoteric practice. God has always struck me as an afterthought. I never felt any conflict between how I knew the world as an engineer versus how I knew it as a reader of Lao Tzu.

    My attitude towards all philosophies, eastern or western is that their primary purpose is to encourage self-awareness. That’s certainly true of Taoism.
  • Wayfarer
    25.3k
    You are making an argument premised on the belief that there is actually something more than just pragmatism when it comes to living life. You name these higher facts as truth, goodness, and the divine.apokrisis

    That might be because this topic is philosophy of religion.

    Josiah Royce: ...the need for salvation, for those who feel it, is paramount among human needs. The need for salvation depends on two simpler ideas:

    a) There is a paramount end or aim of human life relative to which other aims are vain.

    b) Man as he now is, or naturally is, is in danger of missing his highest aim, his highest good.

    To hold that man needs salvation is to hold both of (a) and (b). I would put it like this. The religious person perceives our present life, or our natural life, as radically deficient, deficient from the root (radix) up, as fundamentally unsatisfactory; he feels it to be, not a mere condition, but a predicament; it strikes him as vain or empty if taken as an end in itself; he sees himself as homo viator, as a wayfarer ( :yikes: ) or pilgrim treading a via dolorosa (path of sorrows) through a vale that cannot possibly be a final and fitting resting place; he senses or glimpses from time to time the possibility of a Higher Life; he feels himself in danger of missing out on this Higher Life of true happiness. If this doesn't strike a chord in you, then I suggest you do not have a religious disposition. Some people don't, and it cannot be helped. One cannot discuss religion with them, for it cannot be real to them.
    Josiah Royce and the Paradox of Revelation
  • T Clark
    15.2k
    That might be because this topic is philosophy of religion.Wayfarer

    There is very little about religion in the OP. The sources identified in the first paragraph of the OP are social commentary. Philosophies that don’t focus on truth, virtue, or purpose are not somehow a sign of decadence.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k


    There is a Taoist monastic tradition; the lifestyle is similar to Buddhist monks in broad outline, obviously with a different set of traditions. They embrace celibacy, etc. Hermetic life is also part of the tradition, obviously with Lao Tzu himself.

    The role of the daoshi priests would be "esoteric practice" though, no?
  • Janus
    17.5k
    This makes sense to me. I don’t know much about Buddhism. The only Asian philosophy I have experience with is Taoism. That has always struck me as a reasonably practical and down home philosophy. As I understand it, there isn’t much talk about inevitable suffering, self renunciation, or esoteric practice. God has always struck me as an afterthought. I never felt any conflict between how I knew the world as an engineer versus how I knew it as a reader of Lao Tzu.

    My attitude towards all philosophies, eastern or western is that their primary purpose is to encourage self-awareness. That’s certainly true of Taoism.
    T Clark

    I agree. I love the Dao De Ching myself (although I bet I haven't read as many different translations as you have). Speaking of Buddhism, I was intensely attracted to Zen from the age of about 17 until I was about mid-twenties, and I've had other reading forays throughout the intervening years. I read everything I could find about Zen: D T Suzuki, the other Suzuki (Zen Mind, Beginners Mind) Alan Watts, Dogen and many many others that don't come to mind right now. Another text I got a lot out of is the Bhagavad Gita.

    I never thought of any of it in terms of an afterlife, but rather in terms of living this live with clarity, equanimity and freedom, which of course also means, as you say, with self-awareness or perhaps more importantly, awareness of others. Anything that really helps people with that I would count as a good thing.

    I quite like the old chestnut "the unexamined life is not worth living" and I also really resonate with the flipping of that: "the unlived life is not worth examining", and really I think the latter is the more important insight. There may be many people who live very good, yet largely unexamined, lives.
  • T Clark
    15.2k
    There is a Taoist monastic tradition; the lifestyle is similar to Buddhist monks in broad outline, obviously with a different set of traditions. They embrace celibacy, etc. Hermetic life is also part of the tradition, obviously with Lao Tzu himself.

    The role of the daoshi priests would be "esoteric practice" though, no?
    Count Timothy von Icarus

    This is true, and my experience and understanding of those traditions is not very deep. But if you go back to the source - the Tao Te Ching and Chuang Tzu - you find very little of that.
  • apokrisis
    7.4k
    That might be because this topic is philosophy of religion.Wayfarer

    So why is it filed under General Philosophy then?

    If you want the grounding assumptions of the argument to go unchallenged, perhaps you ought get it shifted pretty quick.
  • T Clark
    15.2k
    There may be many people who live very good, yet largely unexamined, lives.Janus

    There are, and any philosophy that doesn’t acknowledge that is fundamentally flawed as I see it.
  • Janus
    17.5k
    :up: Yep, philosophy can easily become a fetish.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k


    Wellness retreats, access to outdoor education, etc. all skew towards the high end of the income distribution, so I'm not really sure what you're talking about. There aren't a lot of yoga studios or mindfulness retreats in depressed inner cities and rural areas. The self-help literature I had in mind tends to be rather explicitly oriented at "yuppies" and the like.

    A lot of people within the Manosphere give testimonials about how it awakened them to the true (transactional/power-centric) nature of human relations (and the "real nature of women"). They say it radically improved their lives. Is it thus beyond criticism?

    The Manosphere is actually a space that probably does draw more from the lower class, or at least downwardly mobile.
  • Wayfarer
    25.3k
    The ‘original anthropology’ the OP refers to was associated with spiritual movements. For that matter, the original ‘therapeutae’, from whence comes the word ‘therapy’, was a severely ascetic religious sect concentrated around Egypt and Judea. They were highly ascetic: they renounced wealth, lived celibately, ate only the simplest foods, devoted themselves to study of the Torah and allegorical interpretation, and practiced prayer and meditation.
  • Janus
    17.5k
    Wellness retreats, access to outdoor education, etc. all skew towards the high end of the income distribution, so I'm not really sure what you're talking about.Count Timothy von Icarus

    I haven't studied the demographics of such things. I used to attend the Sydney Gurdjieff Foundation meditation nights and weekend workshops, and the people there represented a fairly even distribution of professions, trades and jobs.

    In any case I wasn't referring to literal classes, but to a kind of intellectual snobbishness and classism shown in thinking that the old ways and practices were more pure, more "real' when the reality is we know nothing about what those ancient cults were really like. It seems to be just unfounded "Golden Age" thinking, and I think it more likely that all the same kinds of abuses were practiced in the old days as they have been in the modern age and are today.

    Anyway, that aside, the presumption is that there was genuine enlightenment to be found then which is not to be found in the modern settings, and I think this betrays unfounded assumptions about knowing what is the reality of transcendent knowledge and wisdom. It's that puritanism that I referred to as "a certain kind of snobbishness and classism". The idea is that esoteric understanding is not for the uneducated masses. And I am not saying there are not such "schools" alive today either.

    I am saying that the whole idea of such esoteric knowledge is bogus. Real wisdom is always pragmatically centered on this life― like Aristotle's notion of phronesis or practical wisdom. The only wisdom that matters is the wisdom that enables one to live happily and harmoniously and usefully with others. Focusing on seeking personal salvation cannot but be a self-obsessed "cult of the individual". And I've been there and seen it in action, so I'm not merely theorizing.

    They were highly ascetic: they renounced wealth, lived celibately, ate only the simplest foods, devoted themselves to study of the Torah and allegorical interpretation, and practiced prayer and meditation.Wayfarer

    Of course such renunciate organizations were probably always supported financially by their communities. These sad, life-denying fools were essentially parasites living only on account of the good will of those who had to work hard to survive.
  • Tom Storm
    10.2k
    I am saying that the whole idea of such esoteric knowledge is bogus. Real wisdom is always pragmatically centered on this life― like Aristotle's notion of phronesis or practical wisdom. The only wisdom that matters is the wisdom that enables one to live happily and harmoniously and usefully with others. Focusing on seeking personal salvation cannot but be a self-obsessed "cult of the individual". And I've been there and seen it in action, so I'm not merely theorizing.Janus



    You’re probably phrasing this a little bit more strongly that I would but I think this frame resonates with me too. When I was hanging around New Age and Theosophy circles it was extraordinary how much of the activity was narcissistic and virtue signalling- “I’m more aware/developed/higher than you.” And yet everyone concerned was immature, materialistic and competitive in ways at odds with higher consciousness goals. The people who were most sound actually volunteered in homelessness services and focused on solidarity and improving life for others rather than jerking off about their spiritual journeys.
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    4.2k


    Ok, so then it wasn't supposed to be relevant to what I wrote? I didn't write anything about "esoteric knowledge," nor any necessary preference for the older over the newer for that matter.

    There is a sort of "managerial" outlook here, where praxis reduced to a sort of tool. In a similar vein, I have seen the critique that modern therapy/self-help largely focuses on helping us "get what we want," but not so much on "what we ought to do" or the question of if "what we want" is what will ultimately lead to flourishing and happiness. That is not seen as the purpose of therapy or self-help. That might be fair enough, but then it also not seen as the purpose of education either. So, what does fulfill that function? It seems to me that nothing does, except for perhaps wholly voluntary associations that one must "choose" (where such a choice is necessarily without much guidance). Aside from "self-development," this seems problematic for collective self-rule and social cohesion.Count Timothy von Icarus
  • T Clark
    15.2k
    jerking off about their spiritual journeys.Tom Storm

    What would the forum be about if it weren’t for our jerking off about our spiritual journeys?
  • T Clark
    15.2k
    The ‘original anthropology’ the OP refers to was associated with spiritual movements. For that matter, the original ‘therapeutae’, from whence comes the word ‘therapy’, was a severely ascetic religious sect concentrated around Egypt and Judea. They were highly ascetic: they renounced wealth, lived celibately, ate only the simplest foods, devoted themselves to study of the Torah and allegorical interpretation, and practiced prayer and meditation.Wayfarer

    Maybe my statement was too strong, but I still think philosophies and spiritual practices that don’t focus on those issues and be of value.
  • 180 Proof
    16.1k
    My attitude towards all philosophies, eastern or western is that their primary purpose is to encourage self-awareness. That’s certainly true of Taoism.T Clark
    :up: :up:

    I am saying that the whole idea of such esoteric knowledge is bogus. Real wisdom is always pragmatically centered on this life ― like Aristotle's notion of phronesis or practical wisdom. The only wisdom that matters is the wisdom that enables one to live happily and harmoniously and usefully with others. Focusing on seeking personal salvation cannot but be a self-obsessed "cult of the individual". And I've been there and seen it in action, so I'm not merely theorizing.Janus
    :fire:

    ... rather than jerking off about their spiritual journeys.Tom Storm
    :smirk:
  • Wayfarer
    25.3k
    I perfectly agree, but the point of the original post, as I interpret it, was the consequences of adapting those kinds of therapeutic philosophies, which were originally associated with spirituality, to completely different ends.
  • Outlander
    2.6k
    Beautiful post, Tim. If I may call you that. If not, blame @Banno for encouraging the inevitable.

    Though a bit over my head, unfortunately. It's easily enjoyable by even the most novice of intellects, per your unique and concise spirit of wording. It's like you "get us" normal folk. :wink:

    Very cool. Do post more. If you would?
  • Janus
    17.5k
    :up:

    You’re probably phrasing this a little bit more strongly that I would but I think this frame resonates with me too.Tom Storm

    I like to be less than diplomatic at times―only for the sake of emphasis, mind...:wink:

    In the Western tradition ascetic/spiritual exercises were meant to re-order the soul toward truth, goodness, and the divine. In Buddhism, mindfulness is embedded in the Eightfold Path and oriented towards liberation. By contrast, modern adaptations tend to treat these disciplines as mere tools for the self-interested individual, e.g., a means of coping, maximizing productivity, reducing stress, or achieving “authenticity.” I have seen this particularly in some pieces on Stoicism I've read that seem to be largely aimed at the "tech-bro" crowd. A commitment to truth gets shoved aside for a view of philosophy as a sort of "life hack."Count Timothy von Icarus

    The above was what I had in mind. What could knowledge of "(spiritual) truth, goodness and the divine" be but "esoteric knowledge" if not merely a matter of understanding ordinary truth and goodness as commonly conceived?

    What could seeking liberation be but an esoteric pursuit if it is thought to consist in more than merely being and feeling free to be yourself without fear of the opinions of others? As soon as it becomes concerned with purported transcendental knowledge of course it is esoteric. Many of the so-called 'wisdom schools" were quite explicit about the difference between esoteric and exoteric religion. Whether or not people are community-minded is a separate issue.

    The point I was objecting to is that you are denigrating modern self-help practices for their superficiality compared to the purported profundity of the genuine traditional spiritual schools, and I think the comparison is underdetermined, most particularly because we were not there to see what they were really like and also because claims to transcendental knowledge and wisdom cannot but be pretentious, whereas practical wisdom is shown in one's actions.

    Ok, so then it wasn't supposed to be relevant to what I wrote? I didn't write anything about "esoteric knowledge," nor any necessary preference for the older over the newer for that matter.

    There is a sort of "managerial" outlook here, where praxis reduced to a sort of tool. In a similar vein, I have seen the critique that modern therapy/self-help largely focuses on helping us "get what we want," but not so much on "what we ought to do" or the question of if "what we want" is what will ultimately lead to flourishing and happiness. That is not seen as the purpose of therapy or self-help. That might be fair enough, but then it also not seen as the purpose of education either. So, what does fulfill that function? It seems to me that nothing does, except for perhaps wholly voluntary associations that one must "choose" (where such a choice is necessarily without much guidance). Aside from "self-development," this seems problematic for collective self-rule and social cohesion.
    Count Timothy von Icarus

    Self-help teachings and practices, if they are effective, should help people to live better lives. Of course I realize some of them are all about how to achieve financial success, but is that really such a bad aim for someone if it doesn't degenerate into acquisitive greed, especially if they aspire to be a householder and parent?

    "What we ought to do" is of course important too. In Australia, several years ago there was a move to teach ethics in school, but the kibosh was put on that idea when religious organizations objected that ethics could not be effectively taught without God. :roll:
  • Astorre
    155


    A very interesting topic. I would also add numerologists, astrologers, tarot readers and other palmists who have become popular recently to the group of esoteric lovers.
    I absolutely do not like how these guys exploit philosophical concepts, tearing out the parts they like, mixing completely contradictory ideas and ideas, forgetting what their original message was. All for the sake of successful success!
    But I also cannot but agree with : how do we know in which direction it is "correct" to philosophize? It follows that for any statement, some starting axiom is needed, which can be different for everyone.

    On the other hand, I have not come across literature on esoteric topics that would be worked out at least to the level of the absence of internal contradictions. Not to mention some academic value. (If there is such, share the link). Academic philosophy is always about "directing the soul to truth, goodness or the divine." Even the vile (in my opinion) Schopenhauer writes about alleviating suffering.

    An interesting point is that philosophers reflect on esotericism. Maybe this is not the area that should be taken into account at all?
  • NOS4A2
    10k


    Good read, thanks for writing

    Modern self-help culture, mindfulness programs, positive psychology, and to a lesser extent outdoor education, present themselves as the heirs of ancient, medieval, and Eastern wisdom traditions (i.e., to philosophy and spirituality). They borrow their vocabulary from these sources, speaking to "character development," virtue, flourishing, balance, discipline, detachment, etc., yet sever these practices from the original anthropology that supported them. In turn, the switch towards a "thin" anthropology, and the liberal phobia of strong ethical claims tends to unmoor them from any strong commitment to an ordering telos that structures the "self-development" they intend to promote. Everything becomes about the individual, about getting us what we want.

    Just a couple questions.

    What is the “original anthropology” that supported these practices?

    Do you believe pre-modern philosophers were acting without self-interest, and that their philosophical activity had no telos towards their own self-development, but towards something else?
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