From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Sat Jul 20 2002 - 14:59:23 MDT
TOWARDS A VIRION ETHICS
by Joe E. Dees
THE ANTHROPOMORPHIC GOD AND THE UNIVERSAL 
HUMAN	
        There are three schemas for the human creation of Deity as an 
idea in the mind.  This is not to assert either that such a deity does or 
does not in fact exist; it is simply to show that such a Deity's existence 
is not an a priori for the presence of a God-concept in the human mind.  
God's existence or nonexistence is independent of the presence or 
absence of these beliefs.  These three schemas are (1) psychological 
projection, (2) confusion of apprehension with imposition, and (3) social 
ground for elevated communication.
        Psychological projection - The self-conscious individual projects 
this self-consciousness directly into the world as an anthropomorphi- 
zation.  This is a projection into immanent perception (animism) which is 
later transcendentalized.  The necessary and sufficient conditions for 
this to occur are a world to be perceived and a self-referential 
perceiver.
        Confusion of apprehension with perception - this is the belief 
that order is apprehended within a designed universe rather than 
imposed categorically by the ordering mind of the believer.  Either or 
both may be the case, but neither absolutely (with the exception of 
microphysics - see Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle).  The assumed 
Deific imposition of such an order leads the believer to further assume a 
self-conscious Deity; this is an unwarranted anthromorphic limitation of 
the concept.
        Social ground for elevated communication - this schema 
requires the presence of an other; it is thus social and a suppot for T. S. 
Eliot's discernment of religio-cultural symbiosis.  Heidegger states that 
objects are related to each other through the subject (as tools); reverse 
this and it may be seen that subjects may be related through objects in 
their shared perceptual field (as imposers/apprehenders of meaning).  
The subject is also object, however (mind manifests by means of body), 
and humans seem to equate their bodies with objects as the "lower" 
part of their presence in the world.  Thus, communication occurs 
mediated by a "lower" ground (and a subjectively inadequate-seeming 
one).  A pure subjectivity is therefore intersubjectively postulated to 
satisfy the desire to communicate on a "higher" ground.  The moment 
such abilities and attributes are ascribed to Deity, however, it also 
becomes an object.
        The basic misconception is that of an anthropomorphic God.  
We both observe and are participatory parts of the universe - it is not 
subsumed in us.  The whole is not a reflection of the part; it is vice-
versa.
        Infinite regress is possible both spatially and temporally within 
the "known" universe.  The universe may be seen as spatially infinite or 
temporally eternal if we see ourselves as the same and admit infinite 
regress.  It may also be seen as spatially finite and temporally bounded 
if we see ourselves as the same and deny infinite regress.  The choice 
is at this moment arbitrary, but in either case, the universe is 
spatiotemporally finite in relation to ourselves.
        We can also choose to believe in eternal pre- and afterlives if 
they are transcendent.  Immanent organized eternity is contradicted by 
a periodicity of universal collapse.  The undifferentiated aesthetic of 
F.S.C. Northrup survives this; specific differentiations do not if they are 
immanent.  We here have the choice of accepting human finitude or of 
asserting human infinitude by means of transcendence.
        We must continue to make distinctions between knowledge, 
belief and untruth.  Knowledge is probable and statistical; it is 
demonstrable by example.  Belief is possible and astatistical, and 
should not be assumed in either the case of possible example (this 
makes it knowledge) or of possible counterexample ( this makes it 
untruth).
        Either God is or God is not.  In either case, we cannot say what 
God is without limiting the concept.  Therefore, we should not try to tell 
each other what God is, for we cannot; we may merely assert our belief 
in God or lack of same, and describe the form this belief takes for us.  It 
is up to the other whether or not to accept such an assertion in whole or 
in part.
BELIEF IN OURSELVES
        We are part of the universe and our apprehension of it is 
equivalent to the universe perceiving itself, a la "self-thinking thought."  
We give meaning to the universe as our home and the universe gives 
us meaning as its beholders.  Our meaning is to be found within this 
interrelationship of ourselves with each other, within our common home.  
We give each other meaning through our interrelationships - humans 
are as symbiotic as humanity and cosmos.
        Rather than depend upon transient myth to ground and 
perpetuate us, we must recognize the values of human dignity, 
community and industry directly.
        (1) Human dignity - (Self/universe)-consciousness is a rare 
thing in the universe, as far as we know.  Regardless of whether or not 
there was a conscious giver, such a gift is to be prized in ourselves and 
respected in others.
        (2) Human community - We are all different people, but we are 
also all people.  McLuhan's global village and Sagan's giant terrarium 
are facts; we are all in this together, and should act accordingly.
        (3) Human industry - We become ourselves and care for others 
through our actions.  The human experience is our life-project, and we 
should act in the service of human dignity and community.  Whether or 
not we survive physical death, this opportunity is not to be exactly 
repeated - we should, to be in good faith with ourselves and others, say 
yes to life.  Our means must justify any end we decide to choose.
        But - what about the future of society?  Where is our young 
culture heading and what is civilization evolving into?
THE ABSOLUTE EVOLUTION OF HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS
        My contention is that consciousness evolves in absolutes.  0 = 
unconsciousness (matter), 1 = consciousness (life), and we, the 
recursively self-conscious, have the (ideal) possibility of infinity before 
us.  this contention is mathematically proveable.
        Self-consciousness is consciousness of consciousness (2).  
However, if we are self-conscios, we are conscious of this fact (3).  This 
may be expressed as "if 2 then 3".  But it is obvious that we would be 
conscious of our consciousness of such a fact (if 3 then 4), and in fact, 
for any state achieved, awareness of (and therefore transition to) the 
next state is (ideally) possible.  I have therefore proven "if N then N+1.  
These two premises together (if 2 then 3 and if N then N+1) lead to the 
logical conclusion that if 2 then oo (infinity).  Thus the evolution of 
consciousness (ideally) proceeds in absolutes; 0>1>oo.Ego would 
occlude one level, for one can only view a level of consciousness from 
an ego-position outside that level; Zennists maintain, however, that one 
might be able to egolessly experience the multilayered totality.  Why 
would such a thing be difficult or impossible in reality when ideally it is 
feasible?  For three reasons: the finitude of the brain, the anchoring of 
perception, and the ego-epistemology of partial knowing.
        (1) The finitude of the brain - there are a vast number of 
neurons and synaptic/dendritic connections in the human brain, but 
nevertheless this number is finite.  To assert that such a finite 
mechanism is capable of grasping an infinite number of states is to 
commit a caegory error.  Our self-conscious awareness is necessarily 
both existent and partial; the recursive snake of self-consciousness 
must bite its own tail, but cannot swallow its own jaws.
        (2) The anchoring of perception - our conceptions are grounded 
in our perceptions, and recurse to inform them.  The farther away we 
get , in levels of consciousness, from our perceptions, the more tenuous 
this connection becomes, and the more sterile and less referential the 
resulting cognizance.
        (3) The ego-epistemolgy of partial knowing - we are trapped in 
the ego-epistemology between egoless apprehension of nothing 
(matter) and egoless apprehension of all (omniscience).  In other 
words, we are always on the way to omniscience, but can never arrive.  
        Our path, therefore, is clear; we must discover as much about 
the universe as we can (and this includes about ourselves), while 
adhering to two rules:
        (a) All should be permitted to possess all freedoms they care to 
enjoy so long as they do not interfere with any of the same freedoms 
possessed by others; when these freedoms inevitably come into 
conflict, such conflicts should be resolved by equal and proportional 
compromise.
        (b) The universe is to be experienced and understood rather 
than defaced or destroyed.
        
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