ChatteringMonkey
Right, but it is not as though religion, as opposed to theocracy, has been "done away with" (in the West). — Janus
I think that what the OP complains about...the disenchantment of Nature due to a supposed decline of reverence for nature is a furphy, a strawman.
There is a tendency in all transcendence-based eschatalogically motivated religions to disvalue this world as the source of suffering, the veil of illusion or the vale of tears in favour of an imagined perfect realm.
So it is not really a case of the disenchantment of Nature, but of the disenchantment of the transcendent accompanying a return to nature. This begins with Aristotle...think of Rafael's painting 'The School of Athens'...Plato points to the heavens and Aristotle points to the ground — Janus
Count Timothy von Icarus
Sure, but a crippled bird still knows precisely where freedom lies
Been on a 3 hour Vervaeke kick. — Tom Storm
I can see the appeal but I don't personally feel a need for it. — Tom Storm
You’re seriously going to try and pin MAGA on ‘post-modernism’? — Joshs
There were a few comments that I wanted to make but, until I can find the time to do so, I just wanted to say that this whole post of yours, and not just the part where you respond to me, is one of the most enlightening ones I've read on TPF in the last 20 years. — Pierre-Normand
Punshhh
-David Bentley Heart.Hence the mind, rather than an anomalous tenant of an alien universe, was instead the most concentrated and luminous expression of nature’s deepest essence. This is why it could pass with such wanton liberty through the “veil of Isis” and ever deeper into nature’s inner mysteries.
Joshs
I think it's obviously false that 99.99% of Trump's influential supporters are "traditionalists" however, since many in the camp I am referring to are outspoken transhumanists or post-humanists, who see custom and tradition simply as tools, and who want to move beyond humanity itself. Likewise, "tradition" in the American context normally refers to Protestantism, or at least Christianity, and yet these folks tend to refer to Christians as "Christcucks" or Christ as a "Jew on a stick" (if they are even that polite). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Fire Ologist
The “meaning crisis” I’m referring to isn’t about a loss of morality or piety; it’s about the underlying ontology of modernity — the way the scientific worldview, as inherited from Galileo and Descartes, implicitly defines reality as value-free and mindless.
So the crisis isn’t a call to religion, but a call to re-examine the metaphysical assumptions we’ve inherited. — Wayfarer
Tom Storm
I can see the appeal but I don't personally feel a need for it.
— Tom Storm
Right, but I would ask if to approach this primarily as a matter of "appeal," enjoyment, or usefulness, etc. is to simply refuse to step into the opposing frame, since it normally includes epistemic and metaphysical claims, and not merely claims about enjoyment or aesthetics. As a contrast, if one was told that one's brake pads had worn out, or that one's air conditioner was destroying the ozone layer, one should hardly reply: "I see the appeal of those claims, but I feel drawn to think otherwise." Or likewise, "I see the appeal of treating people of all races equally, but I find holding to stereotypes to be more illuminating for myself." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Wayfarer
Hell of an interesting article you wrote my friend, indeed. As i understood the general idea of your idealism idea is that ideas (i'll stop) you are in agreement with an empirical, "self evident truth" -to call it something- that the physical reality does exist, but that the mind has "created" a reality or, rather, interpreted the physical reality to something arbitrary. — Oppida
Saint-Simon’s idea of a technocratic elite managing production and social welfare was revived almost verbatim by the 1930s technocracy movement. — Joshs
praxis
This leads to a question: is it possible to believe that religions are all not wrong, without believing that they are all right? Or is the idea that they are neither wrong not right, but are merely helpful or unhelpful stories? Then we might ask how a religion could be helpful or unhelpful. — Janus
I think most religion is more about feeling connected to the possibility of an afterlife than about feeling connected to life. — Janus
Wayfarer
Metaphysics was at one time discovered. It wasn’t merely invented. Maybe it was partly that we discovered ‘that we invent’. We reflected on knowing/sensing. — Fire Ologist
This is not meant to refute Nietzsche or Buddha, but to recognize what they added to metaphysics and epistemology and ontology. — Fire Ologist
But if there is any such thing as the absolute at all, like the paradox, how could it truly be dismissed? The answer is, the same way it could be embraced - by an act of the subject. — Fire Ologist
the good news is, we can truly be right, but the bad news is, we can truly be wrong — Fire Ologist
Tom Storm
I would tend to agree with Charles Taylor though that the epistemic and metaphysical presuppositions that leave people "spun" open or closed to "transcendence" are themselves largely aesthetic (which is not to say unimportant; the idea that Beauty is of secondary importance is of course merely the presupposition of a particular sort of Enlightenment "world-view.") I think you can see this clearest in people from a solidly materialist atheist frame who nonetheless recoil from the difficulties of the "sheer mechanism" doctrines of the eliminativists and epiphenomenalists, and find themselves open to the notions of God in Spinoza, deflated versions of Hegel, or—most interesting to me—a sort of bizzaro-world reading of Neoplatonism where the One is a sort of "abstract principle" in the same sense that the law of gravity might be (suffice to say, I don't think this reading survives contact with the sources in question, which is why it is interesting that it arises at all, or why the material must be transformed as it is). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Joshs
I'm mostly familiar with the notion of a "meaning crisis" through the usual suspects, Nietzsche and his successors, Dostoevsky and later Russian writers like Pelevin, Charles Taylor, Alasdair MacIntyre (the slide into emotivism in ethics and aesthetics being a sort of special case of the meaning crisis thesis), William Stace, Bertrand Russell, the New Athiests, etc.
Pierre Hadot's approach to "spiritual exercises" and his focus on Epicureanism and Stoicism as more accessible to moderns, as well as the neo-stoic renaissance in the world of "tech culture" are also good concrete examples of the phenomena.
I would tend to agree with Charles Taylor though that the epistemic and metaphysical presuppositions that leave people "spun" open or closed to "transcendence" are themselves largely aesthetic (which is not to say unimportant; the idea that Beauty is of secondary importance is of course merely the presupposition of a particular sort of Enlightenment "world-view.") I think you can see this clearest in people from a solidly materialist atheist frame who nonetheless recoil from the difficulties of the "sheer mechanism" doctrines of the eliminativists and epiphenomenalists, and find themselves open to the notions of God in Spinoza, deflated versions of Hegel, or—most interesting to me—a sort of bizzaro-world reading of Neoplatonism where the One is a sort of "abstract principle" in the same sense that the law of gravity might be (suffice to say, I don't think this reading survives contact with the sources in question, which is why it is interesting that it arises at all, or why the material must be transformed as it is). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Wayfarer
You have most likely encountered people who say: "I’m spiritual but not religious."
But if you ask them for a precise distinction between spirituality and religion, the responses are something like:
• "I believe in something bigger, but I don’t like labels."
• "All religions are basically the same, so I just take what resonates."
• "God is within me, I don’t need a middleman."
Taken together, these statements form a pattern:
• It is basically a “Religion of the Self.”
• By the Self, for the Self and in terms of the Self.
Please understand I am criticizing the underlying presuppositions of such a claim, not any persons who make this claim. I’ll qualify my criticism…
• By the self: The path is self-initiated and self-designed. It is separate from a lineage, a tradition, or a community of practice that carries epistemic or existential weight.
• For the self: The orientation is primarily inward (personal healing, empowerment, self-actualization). Others may benefit, but they are not the axis of concern.
• In terms of the self: The criteria for what is meaningful, true, or sacred are internal (intuition, resonance, felt-sense). There is nothing that contradicts, challenges, or exceeds the framework.
It is a religion reorganized around “me”.
So when someone identifies as "spiritual but not religious," they are often (though not always) enacting a spirituality that lacks any real other(s).
It bottoms out as being an isolated self attempting to be its own source of authority, value, and transformation.
And when that fails (which it inevitably does) people think they are the problem.
• "I didn’t meditate enough."
• "I wasn’t aligned with my truth."
• "I didn’t manifest properly."
But the failure is not individual.
It is structural.
The real question is whether your worldview is structurally open to Otherness:
To be shaped by something you did not and could not author on your own.
Here is where 4E cognitive science can help us:
Our brains are not cameras passively recording reality. It is a prediction engine.
It is constantly anticipating what matters, what commands attention and what deserves attention.
This machinery of anticipation is what constructs our world (and in doing so) it also constructs our sense of self.
But left alone, this engine becomes self-reinforcing.
The more our brains predict a certain pattern…
• “I am a certain kind of person.”
• “This is how the world works.”
• “This is what matters.”
…the more we notice things that confirm that pattern.
Our brains will continue to confirm what it already expects if left to its own devices.
This is called confirmation bias.
We start tuning our awareness toward only what fits the model.
This is how our salience landscape (the field of what “stands out” to you) narrows.
Our sense of what is important, meaningful (or even real) can only collapse inward.
Without enough disruption, we become trapped in a predictive loop, because our brain is doing its job too well.
The only way to reconfigure this predictive machinery is through error:
When prediction fails (when something doesn’t fit our expectations) we experience that as surprise or confusion. This happens naturally through contact with information, perspectives, and practices that we could not have generated on our own.
This is why other people, other perspectives, other practices, are crucial for error correction.
They allow you to see what you could not see, precisely because they aren’t you.
And if your spirituality is…
• Designed by you.
• Filtered through your preferences.
• Evaluated only in terms of how it makes you feel
…then it is a closed system.
Your brain will predict what you expect to be meaningful and then interpret your experience accordingly.
You can only be confirmed, not confronted.
Moved, not changed.
Comforted, not transformed.
You’d be alienating yourself from undergoing the disruption required for growth.
This is why participation is structurally necessary for transformation:
It brings you into contact with perspectives, insights, and patterns of meaning that you cannot reduce to your preferences.
And in that contact your frame begins to shift.
You start to say things like:
• “I thought I was being authentic, but I was just reinforcing my own comfort.”
• “I realize now how much I’ve been avoiding the hard questions.”
• “I thought I was being rigorous, but I was just defensive."
These moments might hurt. But they are also the necessary preconditions for growth.
For better or for worse, transformation requires the self to be re-shaped by something that exceeds it.
Ultimately your brain is not static, it is adaptive.
But it only adapts when its predictions are challenged.
And those challenges cannot come from within your own preferences.
They must come from participation.
From otherness.
Best regards,
John Vervaeke, Ethan Hsieh & David Kemper
Tom Storm
Right, but I would ask if to approach this primarily as a matter of "appeal," enjoyment, or usefulness, etc. is to simply refuse to step into the opposing frame, since it normally includes epistemic and metaphysical claims, and not merely claims about enjoyment or aesthetics. As a contrast, if one was told that one's brake pads had worn out, or that one's air conditioner was destroying the ozone layer, one should hardly reply: "I see the appeal of those claims, but I feel drawn to think otherwise." — Count Timothy von Icarus
praxis
As it happens, as a subscriber to Vervaeke's mailing list, his most recent missive was about 'spiritual but not religious'. — Wayfarer
javra
Taken together, these statements form a pattern:
• It is basically a “Religion of the Self.”
• By the Self, for the Self and in terms of the Self.
Please understand I am criticizing the underlying presuppositions of such a claim, not any persons who make this claim. I’ll qualify my criticism…
• By the self: The path is self-initiated and self-designed. It is separate from a lineage, a tradition, or a community of practice that carries epistemic or existential weight.
• For the self: The orientation is primarily inward (personal healing, empowerment, self-actualization). Others may benefit, but they are not the axis of concern.
• In terms of the self: The criteria for what is meaningful, true, or sacred are internal (intuition, resonance, felt-sense). There is nothing that contradicts, challenges, or exceeds the framework.
It is a religion reorganized around “me”.
So when someone identifies as "spiritual but not religious," they are often (though not always) enacting a spirituality that lacks any real other(s).
It bottoms out as being an isolated self attempting to be its own source of authority, value, and transformation.
Wayfarer
Am I missing something in Vervaeke's perspectives on the matter? — javra
Pierre-Normand
Am I right to surmise that for you the history of Western philosophy since at least Descartes amounts to little more than a reshuffling of older theological concepts, and that you would not feel particularly intellectually or spiritually deprived if you had not been exposed to modern philosophy? — Joshs
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.