I don't know much about Ken Wilber. But I did watch a youtube video where he claimed to stop his brainwaves. I think people should be careful about making silly claims otherwise they will find themselves with quack status. — JupiterJess
First there were the fabled philosophers of the Enlightenment, leading the charge against priestly infamy and angels-on-a-pin theology; but none of them could envisage a world without God, even if they preferred to worship him in the guise of reason or science. Any damage they may have done to religion was repaired by the German idealists with their woolly notion of spirit, and by their followers the romantics, who reinvented God as either nature or culture. You might think that Marx made a better job of deicide, but on close examination the communist hypothesis turns out to have been a surrogate for the heavenly city. And poor old Nietzsche, for all his bluster and derring-do, ended up resurrecting Christ in the form of the Übermensch. The 20th-century modernists fell into the same trap, vainly appealing to art to plug "the gap where God has once been", and if a few freaky postmodernists have managed to break away from religion in recent years, it was at the price of a complete denial of hope and meaning, which no one else is willing to pay. "The Almighty," Eagleton concludes, "has proved remarkably difficult to dispose of." Rumours of his death have been greatly exaggerated: he has now put himself "back on the agenda", and "the irony is hard to overrate".
One perspective is that most of us will hold something in the highest esteem, and that is what we ‘worship’ - not necessarily literally, but metaphorically at least. Hence ‘the other’, those with radically different notions of the highest good, become the target. There’s a of this polarisation occurring, especially now. I don’t think I have a solution but I think Eagleton at least helps make the problem more clear. — Wayfarer
Is that why Ken Wilber is said to be a New Age quack? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Negative criticism. Defeatism. Pessimism. Ridicule. Condescension. Doomsaying. Etc.
One or more of those words characterize intellectual activity in the West, I would say. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
To be honest, the dominant ideas and debates, such as free will versus determinism, seem to invariably be parts of agendas. The agenda of people thinking about those ideas and carrying out those debates seems to be an agenda of trying to destroy certain thinking/worldviews, not expanding knowledge and wisdom, helping everybody live better lives, etc. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I would wager every dollar that I am worth that something far fetched could be found in the work of many mainstream intellectuals. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Ken Wilber seems no less of an intellectual to me than, oh, Sam Harris. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
wikipedia says that Herman is a proponent of the great men theory of history — Wosret
Interesting post. There's a book I've been eyeing for some time called The Idea of Decline in Western History by Arthur Herman, which treats of this general fixation of which you speak. You may find it relevant. — Thorongil
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