Tuesday, April 16, 2013

6:50 am EST

"CHRISTIAN SEA CUCUMBERS"

"And every creature which is in heaven, and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing and honour, and glory, and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever." (Revelation 5:13)

What are we to make of this? What are we to deduce?

Even after my declaration of my Cincinnatian Catholicism in my letter to M___, this is just TOO GOOD! Less than a week ago I'm making an argument for spiritual egalitarianism I can't avoid; knowing deep and fully there's no such thing as an indivisible taxon -- and now tonight by providence I chance a verse with what appears to me to hold the same argument with no mention of taxonomy at all! Really? A horseshoe crab? An eel? A starfish? Confessing in unison the glory of the Lamb in language Saint John the Divine can hear and understand? In my catholic declaration I provided the examples of a leopard and an orang-utan, and the beaver as an architect; and added a gila monster in a follow-up comment. Those were the examples I used to argue for equal culture and character. But "all that are in the sea"? Speaking? We are talking here about constituents on the tree of life that are supremely primitive -- do you understand that? As asserted in the declaration: a single grain of sand with a soul; yes, indeed, certainly!

Revelation 5:13 makes probably countless other verses in the New Testament redundant if we are to deduce from it with faith and sincerity. Mark 5:30 is one example: "Who touched my clothes?" would indicate Jesus' virtue to be extracorporeal, and his force and love besides. Could any member of "Homo sapiens" evangelize a brainless, legless sea cucumber? I imagine John the Divine would say no, but that Jesus can, and always did, and always will. Ha! Is there really a "modern generation" of sea cucumbers? I've never researched how they reproduce, but regardless of my ignorance concerning that matter, I roughly appraise their entire natural history to be one continuous intenstine; the cucumber of 2013 is the same ghost of his forefathers incarnate. Thus, Jesus' self-description "I am the Alpha and Omega" (Revelation 1:11) finds itself recapitulated in 5:13 -- Christ's force is extracorporeal and extratemporal.

Frankly I am tempted to wonder if God's Son was ever born at all or ever died at all. If even a twinkle in God's eye when God said "Let there be light," (Genesis 1:3) Jesus was still there nevertheless.

What other "extras" are there in the Son's nature? Is he extrahistorical? The written history of the Jesus cult and the Church of Rome matter a great deal to scholars and evangelists, but is this vanity? Does empiricist scrutiny by either believers such as historian Paul Johnson or nonbelievers really have any bearing on faith -- or is this approach like some awkward adolescent phase? If "actuality" matters to a religious moderate in this universe, does that mean he's waiting to be reborn in a universe with a distinctly different set of physics laws? As in: "No, the conquest of Jericho in this universe would have, and did, absolutely require a battering ram or something to do the job, but if I jumped through a black hole and emerged on the other side, I could have blown the walls over with a feather and God's help." (cf. Joshua 6:20)

I still believe that Jesus self-actualized gradually. (cf. "Christ and Historicity", Smoke and Bounce, 8:28 am EST, Thursday, February 21, 2013) But after tonight, I will have to reexamine as best I can: To what degree?

Monday, April 15, 2013

12:27 am EST

"YES-MEN and NO-MEN"

[S&B fans, note that this email derives its purpose in part from what might be regrettable about the hotness of the tone of the exchange shared on Smoke and Bounce titled "YOUNG FOOL: HOW HUMILATION HELPS HIM" (11:22 pm EST, April 12, 2013). I suppose I am here trying to redeem what you all might see as a bit too much contrarianism in that exchange. I am attempting a redemption of it indeed, but I in no way apologize for it. Thank you.]

dear K____,

i've been discussing our exchange this past week to my father. i think it's appropriate that this be an email with a new subject line [a white flag], because i want to start fresh with you. there's a number of things i want to say to you to draw a truce, and it's not because i want to negate completely what either of us have already said, however right and wrong we think our-self and the other respectively is.

k____, every young man with your potential goes through a phase in development during which he wants to be free of error. i was the same way, and i still am desiring that; that's natural. but over the years i've come to learn that people in general around me tend to WANT to affirm me always whether i'm right or wrong. throughout my life, 99% of people have told me that i'm extraordinarily intelligent, and the very bad side of that is that they usually don't argue against me on account of their perception of that. i imagine that they probably believe i'm "on the right track" well enough already, and that they don't need to be part of the process of facilitating my personal development; maybe they believe God will affect me and challenge me all by himself, and not require their agency. but i look back now at my life and wish that there had been more adamant "no-men" and less charitable "yes-men" among the people i encountered. in fact, i count myself lucky to have you in my life, because you yourself are most definitely one of the former. believe me, i appreciate your participation in my development.

how would you REALLY wish me to be, k____? would you really WANT me to be a yes-man? i could tell you stories, man, about how evil people like that can be. true, some yes-men genuinely respect you, but other yes-men are charitable as a means of deceiving you until you are vulnerable and they can take advantage of you. a human predator, of any sort -- his primary weapon of murder and rape is insincerity. those sort of yes-men are indeed out there, and there are even entire businesses, institutions and industries who will readily supply you with a sociological model of that predation if you can critique them as a skeptic. you have repeatedly challenged my stance and perspectives, beliefs and conclusions as too cranky to be taken seriously. maybe you're giving me some very useful advice, k____, and i thank you, but if i do attempt to de-radicalize my mission, it will be a fairly glacial process, because my past afflictions besides my ego have induced me to be extremely protective of what integrity my spirit has left.

my MAIN POINT, k____: ask yourself if you trust a man who insults you, and maybe i have insulted you. do you trust that man to at least BE that man? what could you conclude that i "want" FROM YOU? i'll try to answer that; i'll take a stab at it, and you can take it or leave it, sir -- i want your EMPOWERMENT. that's what i've ALWAYS wanted, k____. SINCE THE VERY BEGINNING. and though i won't be so slimy as to discuss why i think you trust ME to be NEIL rather than a snake, i'll say that i don't have one bloody regret about this past exchange, and i'm going to continue to be a cocksure, "douche-baggish" no-man to you whenever the fuck it suits me, because i speak no other man's intentions or beliefs than my own. the reality of your having read this far in this email alone, would lead me to assume that you trust me LESS now -- guess what? YOU SHOULD TRUST ME LESS AT THIS VERY MOMENT! but i sure as hell hope that my open disdain of your flagrant immaturity compromises that distrust. and i'm ready to continue the war, because it's exactly what you need regardless of the trust factor.

go to hell. all the best.

Sunday, April 14, 2013

2:11 pm EST

"GENESIS PEDANTICS" (1:1-12)

cf.
Nelson's King James Version (1972)
David Attenborough's Life on Earth: a Natural History (1979)

1:1-10

The author (a biologist) forfeits interpretation to metaphysicians, physicists, cosmologists, chemists, geologists, and other theologians -- roughly in that order.

1:11

The bringing forth of "grass" is in 3 varieties: sugars, nucleic acids and amino acids. The formulation is achieved in an unknown planetary location, under ultraviolet rays, by lightning, in the midst of clouds of hydrogen, carbon monoxide, ammonia, methane -- with little to no oxygen -- swirling, with possible provision of additional ingredients of the same grass from meteorites. The bringing forth of the "seed" after his "kind" is the creation of proteins achieved through the progressive combination and complexifying unions of the grasses, likely taking place in close vicinity to hydrothermal vents on the sea floor and persisting there for a while. The interaction of the seeds marks the bringing forth of the "fruit" deoxyribonucleic acid on the physical "tree", or hydrothermal vent column ascending upon the "earth" (sea floor) in the midst of polar and communally stable dihydrogen monoxide, or water. The seed is indeed so now in the fruit...

1:12

... yielding seed after his kind: and God sees that it is good.

[more to come]

ASIDE

What is the psychology of pathological ignorance, in which so many individuals masturbate and delight? We might speculate on this mystery by affirming ignorance's pursuing in its healthy form. When is ignorance good in physical science and theology, or when does it produce good results? Maybe I should leave this question up to the rabid dogmatists to provide me with an answer, and by "rabidness" I mean reading English with the sole intention of negating or contradicting knowledge or fact in order that one may gratify himself. My personal disclosure for now is that what ignorance I have is good when it produces wonder, reverence and respect. And for the time being, I'll point out that satanic-corporatist-industrialist-fascist planet-murderers love "your" wasting of time and energy in dogmatistic wordplay, which I imagine that you exercise in an attempt to return to the genital stages of your childhoods.


Saturday, April 13, 2013

10:09 am EST

"MY ACCOUNT OF Job 38-41"

38

The Lord asserts the men present "darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge". He then plainly and inarguably proves man's supreme ignorance of nature and man's destiny to remain ignorant. This reader concludes that, however wonder may be exempted, man's so-called "knowledge" is purely and merely of a functional kind and no more.

39

The Lord proves the inescapability of struggle during the course of the individual's organic existence. He affirms the individual's right to freedom and independence from society as a being evolving unceasingly and continuously in ineffable wilderness. He indicates the utter confusion of blood and that all is vanity to and for a creature without fear.

40

Job perceives vileness in wordplay.

The Lord prescribes specific methodology for Job's achievement of empowerment posthaste. He then prescribes a plain, specific and purposeful agenda for Job. He then prescribes Job's religious awareness to the future and confesses Job's timeless symbol of salvation. He elaborates to provide Job with a model of bodily self-respect; the model is behemoth.

41

The Lord makes the case for His Own physical incontestability as an endlessly impenetrable, eternal, universal power. He provides insight as to the uselessness of technology and culture both if in sincere pursuit of a true contest. He boasts He has no fear.

FINE

P.S., Smoke and Bounce fans: for the record, this personal account of what has historically been my far and away favorite passage of The Holy Scriptures, Job 38-41, was realized via the reading of the 1972 King James Version by Thomas Nelson Inc.

Friday, April 12, 2013

11:22 pm EST

"YOUNG FOOL: HOW HUMILIATION HELPS HIM"

[Note that the following exchange, between a white male high-school senior from the suburbs and myself, concerns the 8:24 pm EST DECLARATION of CINCINNATIAN CATHOLICISM on Smoke and Bounce from Thursday, April 11, 2013.]

K____:  I can see where you're coming from with all this but I think the points are somewhat confused. As in I don't think someone could easily pick up on it and understand

{snip}

K____: Well I hope you don't mind if I extend the argument a bit... Some of this sounds kind of elitist. And some of it sounds pretty racist. Also I'm not sure where your source material is coming from. Biological taxonomy is intrinsic to evolution. All living things are classified the way they are because over millions of years we have separated into different forms, exactly the same way a family tree might branch out into different surnames. That's why lions and cats are considered related, the same way I'm related to my cousin though her surname differs from mine. So, in essence, yes, cheetahs are technically related to cacti, in the sense that they share the same origin of life which is the planet we call earth. But by those means an African and a Korean would be twin brothers as they're both human. There's my view on the biological aspect. From a cosmic aspect, consider that perhaps life itself functions on an infinite scale. Planets and galaxies, too, function just as a human body, but on scales far larger than our comprehension.

Neil: k____, no offense, but you either need to lay off the weed, or reread the essay more carefully and slowly to understand what i'm really saying, or get your education into high-gear so you can start thinking independently and take the poisonous officialism out of how you interpret language -- probably all 3.

K____: I took a break from smoking several weeks ago, so that's a non-issue. Don't underestimate the education of others. My points are just as valid as yours as I'm basing them on concrete knowledge--the points I make are simply built upon I've derived from the four AP courses I've taken this year. I think that qualifies as independent thinking. I interpret the English language as it's meant to be interpreted. I don't believe there's anything 'poisonous' about reading an author's words in the way an audience would read anything. If anyone is at fault for a misinterpretation, it's the author for not explaining himself more clearly. If anything, perhaps you need to explain more in-depth--on a level that someone aside from yourself can make sense of. I don't know where your source material is coming from. I've read the essay twice and things are still inconclusive. I am not asserting that you are incorrect, but a great deal of this sounds like a rejection of reality. Biological taxonomy is considered fact because there is an overwhelming amount of evidence supporting it. Again, I can't be blamed for being unable to make sense of any of this. I can come to believe and understand only what can be explained to me. If you can paraphrase your concept to a level that a normal intelligent person can understand, this may be simpler. Believe me, I would like to see where you are coming from, but I only sense a lack of acceptance for outside knowledge.

Neil: k____, there are so many philosophical errors in what you just emailed to me that only a pedant would try to catalogue them all. i am not going to split corkscrewed pubic hairs; that is below me. AP courses don't qualify or enable intellectual independence any more than some ghetto kindergarten class does, necessarily. you need to get over that. blaming the author? if the author is lying or confabulating, well, that is one thing, but there is certainly no duty of the author's to mince words no matter what -- not in a million years. you are treading on a slippery slope of encouraging the degeneration of america into functional illiteracy. you scare me. you scare me because you even RE-emphasize that you want to be taught like a baby by someone instead of taking the responsibility of challenging yourself. i'm not expecting you to be perfect, but that's not what reading and interpretation is all about, anyway. taxonomy is a legitimate TOOL in science, not an axiomatic fact, or even an inducable fact in any way. anyone who says otherwise is completely ignorant of some of the most basic elements of the biological sciences. if you are well-versed, k____, then you are insane. if you are normal, then you are uneducated.

K____: What? Are you serious right now? There is no such thing as a philosophical error. Philosophy doesn't work that way. You have yet to explain how or why you are right and I am erroneous. I know what you're going to say. Oh! There it is! A third time. Well I'm going to keep insisting, because it actually makes perfect sense to me as it probably would any other normal person. I honestly have no idea where you are drawing your logic from, but I'm absolutely baffled by it. Does your concept of 'intellectual independence' entail a complete rejection of reality? Because it seriously sounds like it does. And yes, actually, an author is quite responsible for ensuring that his readers understand, otherwise that author is just a rambling lunatic. You have some incredibly warped logic, to the point where I believe you should seek help... I think if you observed the intellectual tendencies of everyone on this planet, you would realize that everyone--EVERYONE--is just as 'uneducated' as you think that I am. I am an integrated member of society. I can confirm all of these things. Any psychologist would likely classify you as batshit insane long before they would say a word about me. It seems to me that your guiding principle is that you are right and everyone else is wrong: we call that stubbornness.

Neil: k____, that email you just sent me was even more freakish, grotesque, and perversely shrill and adolescent than the last. and you scared me a shitload more. i am very afraid that one day some fraudulent college will give you a degree and some idiotic employer will admit it as a qualification and thus empower you to have any sort of power. you should be put in a cage to purge yourself of your lunacy. it's disgusting; you're a white person and you have looks, and so some shit-head running an institution that has sociological consequences will probably give you a benefit of the doubt you absolutely do not deserve. what is wrong with you arrogant young people today? your idiotic teachers and parents raise you to believe that you've insight on the very day of your birth! jesus H christ. you ought to be humiliated in front of a classroom of pedophiles or something.

K____: Goddamn. You really are out of your fucking mind. You should try going outside. Do you even know how a normal human being behaves? And I'd prefer you don't insult my teachers and parents. Your age has made you no wiser than I am. I'm 18 years old and more cognitivey functional than you likely ever will be. A jury of ten thousand would confirm it. You're off you're rocker, and honestly, this should scare you, because it's not just me you've got to worry about. It's everyone. Welcome to reality, Neil. You're right, some 'fraudulent' college known as the Ohio State University is going to give me a degree along with over 6000 like-minded individuals. Did you even go to high school?

Neil: k____, reverse order: i'm not going to acknowledge names of institutions of "learning". it's all meaningless. you should go to a used bookstore if you sincerely want to learn something. now, as for your talk of "normal", and "6,000", and "jury of ten-thousand", and "everyone" [just look at your own words] it's obvious that you do not think independently or originally because you "discern" truth by means of a democratic method. that's just stupid. if you are committed to sheepdom, i can't stop you, but i advise against it if you want to live a full and satisfying life, and i also suggest you learn humility. sorry if i truly insulted your parents and teachers, who in your particular case may be some excellent people -- i'm not saying i know for sure, but sure as hell, to me, you are shaming them and representing them as fools. all the best.

K____: No... that's really not the case. If education were meaningless, our world would fall into complete and utter chaos. If I am not an independent thinker, then please, tell me what the fuck you think independent thinking is. If you think it's a complete dismissal of all that our past has taught us, then you are lost. The sheltered environment you have lived in has left you cognitively dysfunctional. Again I ask: did you even go to high school?

{snip}, {snip}

Neil: ok, k____, now that the humiliation is over with, let's back up to where this pissing match started -- you said, quote: "Well I hope you don't mind if I extend the argument a bit... Some of this sounds kind of elitist. And some of it sounds pretty racist. Also I'm not sure where your source material is coming from."

get it straight, k____: tones of "elitism" and "racism" [your charges of which, by the way, i take serious offense to], whether or not they are really in fact contained in an essay, have NO BEARING on the validity of the essay's substance. period, plain and simple. every self-respecting, educated man knows this, including -- and ESPECIALLY! -- in ARGUMENTS. you specifically called my essay an "argument" by claiming you were extending it. read your own words.

now, okay, you want source material? even though the relativity of taxonomy is widely accepted by genuine scientists, i will provide you with a source: John R Baker, 1974. i dare you to read it.

it seems to me that the major tap root of your aversion to my essay is your misunderstanding of what taxonomy is. taxonomy is a tool and/or method, not a factual claim. claims and methods may depend one upon the other in the physical sciences, but they are nouns of entirely different natures and etymological roots. that is a profound mix-up you have going on in your head, k____. i was astounded by it, yet at the same time i was bored by it, because 99% of people are morons, and when an intellectual gets older he may adopt a greater tendency toward dismissiveness toward the ignorant, even though they may be natively bright and have potential. if you are actually bright, then i apologize for my mistake.

still, like it or not, i've done you a big favour these past 2 days. but i also thank you for the opportunity to help a youth.

[end of exchange]

AFTERWORD

It should be clear to the S&B fan upon having read this transcript that it was I, Neil JW, who was essentially fair, accurate, and honest, and that it was K____ who underwent the said "humiliation". My wondering is that schools today may likely be overemploying the Socratic method in the classroom. The Socratic method has the potential to delude the immature, who might conclude that either their mistakenness is just another version of a relativistic truth, or that the insufficiency of their reasoning had always had the qualifications necessary to complete or validate them from the very beginning, when in fact the teacher's facilitation was absolutely needed to advance the indispensable developments toward the truths in circumstantial question. My personal conclusion is that sometimes a teacher ought to simply say that the student is basically just wrong, and explain using the knowledge and reasoning powers at his disposal just precisely why the student is wrong concerning the topic. What kind of "professional" teachers or professors are we training in 2013? Professional mollycoddlers? I ask this earnestly because the symptoms seem already manifest to me, coming from a damn SENIOR in high-school! Does anyone in the industry -- and it truly often is an industry in the most cynical sense -- have any words on this matter? -- nah, didn't think so...

Thursday, April 11, 2013

8:24 pm EST

DECLARATION of CINCINNNATIAN CATHOLICISM

dear m___,

after snipping the personal note of my last email to you, i published it on my blog, after realizing that it was a fairly comprehensive thing. but -- THIS email i will refuse to paste. why? because to me it is such a profound and dynamic revelation that i must call this an absolute pre-write. at this point i simply do not know where to start.

well, here's a start, as i begin my cigarette -- as of today i consider myself to be a "cincinnatian" catholic.

i'll explain "cincinnatian" first. i have lived virtually all my days in an urban milieu. i've visited other parts of america, and certain cities and national parks, and various suburbs, etc. but as a biologist -- yes, a biologist! -- it is yet in the urban setting that i have drawn an understanding of wilderness, order and chaos. yes, i see the steel, and the concrete, and the cars, all the people and people and people. but microscopically i understand that certain "species" will survive (e.g., flies, mosquitos, finches, squirrels, etc, living day to day). and in the people i've come to appreciate general racial differences in temperament among many other things. you can even make a behavioral analysis of human inhabitants of the city by examining the contents of a public garbage can, or your own garbage can. truly, what diversity, what wildly revolutionary biological phenomena and principles are at work in cincinnati, however i define the zone? it is easy for an observant man to argue that the ecology here is as complex and mysterious as the serengeti of africa or yellowstone park. cincinnati has shaped me, however few neighborhoods have influenced me since i stick tenaciously to my own familiar territories by and large. cincinnati is my model of both the occident and the entire earth; i have both deduced and inferred many, many convictions about nature by never calling an element of the city's landscape too mundane for earnest examination. i am a cincinnatian, and i will remain such.

now, "catholic" -- look up the word in webster's! the #1 definition does not in any way refer to the roman catholic church. it simply means "universal and all-inclusive". to me, again as a biologist, this means that my beliefs about anything from behavior to anatomy to culture must be fully integrated and intellectually consistent, and on an ethical level (and this is THE most difficult) constantly and unceasingly practicable to the best of my ability.

now, the question is: what is more all-inclusive? is it the darwinian concept of the great "tree of life" (said in those exact words in the origin of species), which is manifest under the biological law of evolution by means of natural selection? or is it christian humanism?

here's my way of putting it -- the former is usually pop-biology, and the latter is pop-christianity. darwin was correct in asserting that organic lineages undergo modification over successive generations. and yet believers in the most famous and influential naturalist's theory most conventionally define species (sometimes strictly!) as members of a taxon who have the capacity to produce fertile offspring. i have been studying this problem for years now. and verily i say to you, m___, that this definition of species is not only intellectually lazy but also outright scientifically fraudulent! reproductive capacity qualifies NOTHING AT ALL. i'll initiate this claim's argument with an audacious but perfectly logical point: saying that a Negro is of the same species as a Korean is as scientifically defensible as saying that a cheetah is of the same species as a cactus. no shit, m___ -- dead serious. the split branches on the great tree of life are in the biological sciences called "clades" or "taxa". and they are plainly used for expediency; they are in no way absolute -- EXCEPT in the DEGREE of relatedness of the lineages. biologists call chimps, gorillas, monkeys, orang-utans, and humans "primates". "primates" is a "genus" label -- officially -- which as a pure matter of expediency webster's ranks above "species" and below "family". but the utterly inarguable truth is that any serious scholar of biology KNOWS that there is no fundamental difference other than degree of encompassing-power among the terms "phylum", "order", "kingdom", "family", "class", "genus", "sub-species", "variety", "race", "species", "sub-race", "sub-variety", AD INFINITUM!!! there is no biological law whatsoever that affirms that 2 different kingdoms are necessarily less related than 2 "sub-varieties" of the same "race". indeed -- cheetah is to cactus as Negro is to Korean. who cares? who cares about reproductive capacity? examine your OWN life; is it REALLY all about procreation that will repeat your bloodline in future generations "successfully"? or is your life about LOVE? and what is "success"? what is it? will somebody tell me?

now, christian "humanism", as conventionally understood, draws the boundaries of humanity between 2 or more extremes of a racial continuum. it's as simple as that. but i've already destroyed the validity of the explicitness of the term "race". so, then: what on earth is a HUMAN? hence what is humanism, if the "-ism" is to imply advancement of the best interests of the race? we cannot answer this with silly, fallacious understandings of politically correct claptrap. to answer "what is human?" we must redefine "human"!

the best way to define human is contained plainly in the holy scriptures -- but NOT in genesis! adam and eve were essentially NOT biological entities. adam and eve were and are spiritual entities rather. paleoanthropologists often employ the metaphor "african eve" when they estimate the date and location of "our" most recent common ancestor -- but, you guessed it! -- that ain't good enough. life preexisted the separation of the south american continent from the african continent. "we" are a strain of intestine going far deeper back in geological time, indeed to Pangea, and then even to the bottomless depths of primeval oceans. is it beyond God's power to possess a mere bacteria with a soul? is it beyond His power to possess a single grain of sand with a soul? or an eruption of blazing magma? or a bolt of lightning; which since in creation's earliest hour preexisted the witnessing of an organic being with any sensory capacity (since no creatures or plants existed) might as well have been a bolt of lightning lasting a unique eternity beyond any mortal's power to comprehend? NO. nothing at all is beyond God's power, nor do we have a clue of His beginning inclinations.

i do not suggest that genesis is bankrupt of beauty, meaning, poetry, symbolism, or any good thing at all. Job 38-41 makes it clear that it is simply not our place to understand God's majesty in a substantial fashion: Jehovah says to Job "who has given me something first, that i ought to reward him? under the whole heavens it is mine. i shall not keep silent about its parts or the matter of its mightiness and the grace of its proportions." (Job 41:11-12) are scientists really the ones trying to "explain" creation? good question. but more significantly, aren't so-called creationists (as if that isn't an utterly vacuous label) stepping way out of bounds by calling the book of genesis a materialistic account of God's deliberacy and methodology both, and even more? how arrogant! how out of tune! what do they expect genesis to BE? a complete and unabridged textbook of natural history? that's not what genesis is about. genesis is a work of art meant to induce as many multifarious interpretations as there are men reading it, multiplied by the number of times a man rereads it. St Paul aptly pointed out that "the wisdom of man is the foolishness of God." (1 Corinthians 3:19) Thus, why would any reverent man expect or demand genesis to be more than a deadly important fable? and yet this ridiculous debate between "science" and "religion" finds its way time and time again back to this empty, stupid, noisy, disingenuous, mutually self-deceptive "argument". to call it an "argument" is an insult to the practice of philosophy. to say this is "science" versus "religion" is an insult to the intelligence of an earthworm.

so... FINALLY! what is a human? it is not a race, not a bloodline. i've made that clear. are we enlightened? do we already have an answer? the answer is indeed, yes, we do. and not only as a matter, i'll add, of mere spirituality but also on top of that it is a matter of historical self-actualization. the advent of the manifest human was a life. it was a life in accord with nature, however many times this living thing had to compromise with His environment and socio-polity, and however many guises and masks this living thing had to wear, and however many paradoxes He had to draw to make His meaning and message supremely symbolically effective, and however shamefully His work would come to be corrupted or adulterated or assaulted by strongmen as a miserable failure. Jesus Christ of Nazareth INAUGURATED man. he inaugurated the essence and truth of the HUMAN. at bottom, rock bottom, a human is a personality. a human is a friendliness. a human is a compassionateness. a human is a local dutifulness. a human is a generous trustfulness which commands righteousness and authority by this very seemingly impractical, unsustainable, perhaps somewhat gullible and anti-worldly trait.

we see men in clouds. we see a man's face on our moon. if we've lost a lot of sleep, or smoked a bit of weed, we've seen his face wiggling in the shadows when we turn off our bedroom lights. and what a variety of wonderful faces we see! we see quasi-men, pseudo-men, elvish men, long-bearded men, troll men, leprechauns, men we've never imagined, men of the strangest countenances of our wildest fantasies, faces out of the most gothic fairy tales we've never read!

is it too audacious, then, too generous, then, to qualify the leopard who nurses with her own milk an orphaned monkey as a human being? is it too generous to qualify the orang-utan who saves a drowning chick -- and not by picking it out of the water but instead additionally empowering it and educating it by offering it a twig to bite on and be lifted -- as a human being? is not a beaver's architecture more charming and humble than some ugly steel phallus standing thousands of feet high in the city of Dubai? there is not one cultural nobility not analogous to a calculus equation on a chalkboard that a human realizes that a naturally gifted, God-inspired "animal", somewhere, some time, has never matched. conversely, when we quote: "Lord, what fools these mortals be!" -- which "species" are we referring to?

my cat Sully is a human being. he may even be a Christian -- in fact, i strongly suspect it.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

6:42 pm EST

"EMAIL TO A COUSIN: ON HOW TO GO ABOUT MY CONSERVATIONIST AGENDA"

Dear M___,



i suppose this email is a sort of reflection or prewriting for a future blog entry. my blog is countercultural, anti-globalist and conservationist. i hope to do with it what i forfeited by dropping out of biology. i wonder if biologists even make very good conservationists in the first place; they admire and revere the wilderness, and they bring it into your home via books and videos, but they do not assault humanism since they tend to be very personable themselves. i am very friendly and personal; my love for people is so intense that i've faced many calamities by taking risks and making sacrifices on that account. but at the same time i associate humanism with anthropocentrism, racism and genocide. i employ darwinian science to take a very hands off approach and attack "development" and "wealth" out of an instinctual affinity for other forms of life outside our arguably indivisible human species.

time and again on my blog i size up the globalist marketplace as simply and utterly a manifestation of a corrupt world order, and even a satanic natural order. and i hope to maintain a consistency in this. if i'm a conservative it's because i'm a pessimist, and if i'm liberal it's because i think "work" should have an ethical imperative that does not necessarily "ease" the life of people because as it unfortunately stands now it kills their evolutionary heritage, and that goes for both the producers and the consumers.

anyway, there's a lot of religious symbolism in the articles, and i've come to grasp over the years that the church at its core is more wildly primitivist than it is technologically progressive, and thus very countercultural indeed and rather in my own tune. i appreciate that its charity is kept bare-bones, though i wish welfare programs weren't exploited for purposes of procreation that have now brought the human population to... what is it? 9 billion? (incidentally, my new pet cat Sully's food consumption has made me realize that i am a very massive mammal indeed, and that i demand loads of calories, putting pressure on our planet even though in other ways i leave a relatively soft ecological footprint.) of course, "legit" economic opportunity explains overpopulation as much as welfare does. very complicated, and of course i've never been outside my own nation, and seldom cincinnati, even.

moving right along, the sciences of anthropology only go so far to arm me with the reasoning i need to push the conservationist agenda. there are 2 ways of pushing it, by the way -- 1, primitivism, and 2, asceticism. the latter is clearly the more effective. as to why, well, it's best to address the former first, the anthropological one. the most effective document ever written in history that would agree best with my bias would be tacitus' "the germania", which records the ways of the aboriginals of northern europe before the roman conquest or the advent of armoured cavalry. germany, and presumably many other indo-european-populated areas, were virtual enviable utopias, something that might inspire a great feeling of rousseauian nostalgia. germans had good hygiene and healthy bodies. they were monogamous and family was taken very seriously, vice never laughed about. also, if a traveler came to your hut, you were a criminal if you were to turn him away. it was the universally understood law that hospitality was absolutely expected from any one. you were even expected not only to feed and shelter the stranger but to give over to him any possession which he asked for other than your weapons (which were the tokens of marriage); furthermore and lastly you were obliged once the visit was concluded to escort him to the next hut where he might stay and introduce him to your neighbor. so: why can't we return to this way of life? you probably already suspect it. it's the same reason that the environment was ecologically stable -- a quite high homicide rate due to constant endemic warfare. as tacitus puts it "they think it tame and stupid to acquire by their sweat what they can purchase by their blood"..."loving indolence and hating peace".

i honestly have no clue where the fearlessness of death has gone in today's global community by and large. we pay it some lip service to be sure, but the funerals of youths are seen generally as tragic occasions whether from combat or otherwise. it might be that war today in its mechanized form is so perverse, or it might be that we are taught to revel in the ecstasy of a beating heart and avoid thinking about our certain mortality in all the glitz and "sexiness" of our supposedly enlightened age.

but individualistic self-preservational mores have won out. so my best weapon is a tempered asceticism, tempered most definitely because only a rabid crank would say that slicing a watermelon on a summer day is a bad thing; happiness is quite sensual. thus the challenge from here on out is to find and flower the strain of religion that precedes the agricultural revolution. and i cannot do it using judeo-christianity alone, because genesis makes herding and agriculture look like technologies that have existed since the beginning of time, which simply isn't true and so won't work. i have to explore the problems of eden itself, rather. (and that will be eternally fun.) part of the challenge, to finish up, will be to mutually assimilate or reconcile the competing understandings of time itself; christ is christ because of historical advent. the far east by contrast asserts that chronological cause and consequence is an illusion, both in one person's lifetime and the life of a race -- that is, if my crude understanding of the east is basically accurate. finally, there's always native american animism to consider... thank's to the navajo scholars among others, the needed literature is already at arm's reach.

{snip}

to the fourth dimension!