TOWARD A RADICAL METAPHYSICS

 

In all eras, metaphysical thought is the driving force of civilization.
Today this force is largely unacknowledged. It is unacknowledged because
the metaphysical will to development has no place in the paradigms of
modern science. Yet all of the values, the aspirations, the ambitions
and compulsions powering societies have their basis in unacknowledged
metaphysical phenomena underlying human activity. The tendency to
neglect the metaphysical aspect of human life has always existed in the
history of mankind but no era has so depreciated and disparaged
metaphysics as the current one. Metaphysics is relegated to the realm of
scholarly study or traditional religions where it exists in a tethered,
tradition-bound form of little use to those seeking to develop their
position in the universe. Parenthetically, it should be noted that the
need for metaphysics is widely utilized by profit-seeking individuals
who take advantage of the yearning for something more than the limited
materialist approach to life. 

One does not have to look far to discover the reason for the absence of
influence of metaphysics in contemporary life. It can be found in the
dogmas of modern science that have pervaded all aspects of our culture.
Materialism is the foundation of life, any ideas lacking a material
basis are regarded as lacking reality. Scientific study of the brain has
replaced metaphysical study of the mind. If a concept is not based on
weights and measures it is thrown out of court. These statements are not
mere assertions, they represent the intellectual foundations of
"developed" societies in the world today. In these societies, the media
have grown to vast proportions, molding the tastes and values of the
society to a degree previously unimaginable. Finally, the computer has
become the central feature of modern life illustrating the powers and
reach of technologically-based science.

Today, any independent metaphysics is regarded as radical thinking, far
removed from the mainstream of modern thought. However, in spite of the
pervasive influence of the materialist dogmas, there is a need for
metaphysics, to utilize a phrase from Ortega y Gasset (one of the last
metaphysically minded philosophers of the twentieth century) that
continually emerges in individuals with an independent mentality.
Consciousness of the interior self is the principal factor developing
the mind in a metaphysical direction. Scientific knowledge is of no
value in this effort no matter how many studies of memory, language
functions or neuronal activity enter into the scientific literature. As
for Christianity, the principal source of metaphysics in the western
world, one may say its main virtue is that at least its ideas and values
are metaphysical ones, albeit suited more for those with a limited
intellectual conscience.

Paraphrasing Nietzsche's remark that there was only one Christian and he
died on the cross, we may say that Soren Kierkegaard was the first and
last absolute existentialist to achieve public recognition, albeit
occurring long after his death. Existentialism merely means that an
individual is committed to his metaphysical nature, i.e. his own
feelings, thoughts, values and desires, and gives them priority in his
philosophical expression. Kierkegaard's repeated statement that "truth
is subjectivity" contains the entire existential point of view and is
far more meaningful than Sartre's more famous sophism "existence
precedes essence". By 'truth' of course, Kierkegaard does not mean two
plus two is four or any form of factual knowledge but rather the
scriptural concept that Jesus must have had in mind when he said, "I am
the truth." Subjectivity is put forth as the supreme value in human
life. One has to remember that the word "subjective" has pejorative
implications in our culture indicating the vast divide separating the
scientific mind-set from the metaphysical one. There is no great
difficulty in grasping existential thought once one accepts the reality
of the metaphysical self and the necessity for human beings to cultivate
this aspect of their being.

"Truth is subjectivity" means that the essential feature in the life of
an individual is his valuation of his interior self, i.e. his subjective
self. There is no greater tragedy than the failure of an individual to
realize this value. What hinders this development, however, is the
modern view that there is no such thing as the self, that there is only
a complex arrangement of synapses and neurons in the brain, giving rise
to the illusion of self. Without a belief in the metaphysical self,
humans are at the mercy of their environment, which in the present age
cares little for the development of an interior self. Only a radical
metaphysics will save the individual from drowning in the swamps of the
materialist dogmas of contemporary society. There is a pressing
necessity for metaphysics for any individual in today's world who has
respect for himself as an independent being.

If there is a common denominator that the materialist viewpoint shares
with the metaphysical one, it is to be found in the "search for
reality." There is general agreement that reality is what is to be
valued and illusion is to be avoided. Henry David Throreau remarked that
the instrument the world is in need of is "realometer." that will locate
reality. All agree that the truth refers to what is real, falsity
indicates the presence of the unreal. If Kierkegaard claimed that truth
(reality) is subjectivity, the entire world of science and technology
has replied "No, truth is objectivity". The real world is the objective
world subject (sic) to measurement, analysis and control. Whatever one's
values and attitudes, it is the object world that in the end is what
counts.

Where then is the real world really to be found? This is the burning
issue confronting every individual, young or old, male or female,
white-skinned or colored-skinned, Jew or Christian, free-thinker or
traditionalist. Every self-respecting individual wants to participate in
the real world. How is one to know where it is to be found? In the
absence of a realometer, the individual has to make up his own mind as
to its characteristics. For the vast majority of people, this decision
is an unconscious one, framed by the culture and traditions in which
their minds developed. In the "progressive" world of science,
objectivity and material being represent the real world and the
successful life consists in obtaining the maximum of materia and power
available, utilizing the analytic objective techniques developed in
western societies. Possession and utilization of materia represent
participation in the real world. Tradition-bound societies have a
different approach; for them, reality is to be found in one's
connections with the members of one's family, race or religion, and the
successful life consists of strengthening and solidifying these bonds.
This is a metaphysical attitude toward life since it emphasizes social
continuity rather than material acquisitions. There is nothing concrete
about one's relationships with those to whom he is connected by
genetics, tradition or belief. The metaphysical self, however, is not
emphasized; rather it is one's connections to the extended group that
are valued above all else.


It needs to be recognized, however, that the dichotomy between
scientific and metaphysical is a false one because all values or
conscious orientations inescapably have a metaphysical basis. No matter
how objective or analytic one may be, his preferences in life are based
on personality factors that do not have a material basis. One cannot
demonstrate scientifically that the will to material success is a
desirable or undesirable trait. One can analyze the consequences of this
or that mental trait, one can perform correlations of outcomes with
attitudes, one can theorize about the causes of human behavior ad
infinitum, but in the end, the orientation of an individual is a
subjective phenomenon, not to be explained by objective analysis. The
distinction between various worldviews lies in the depths of the human
mind. These distinctions are greatly affected by one's culture and
upbringing, but ultimately turn out to hang upon the personal
temperament and strength of mind of the individual. At all times and in
all cultures there have been unregenerate materialists and unworldly
metaphysicians. It should be remembered, however, that humans are
deceptive creatures and materialists are prone to use metaphysics for
very worldly purposes.

What I mean by radical metaphysics is a turning away from materialist or
tradition-bound metaphysical values to an emphasis on the metaphysics of
self; the one area where an individual can be certain his efforts will
bear fruit. The metaphysical self is the domain of the individual, it is
where his responsibility for development lies, it is the locale where he
can be sure of his purposes. There is nothing really radical about
concentrating on the development of self, it is the most natural and
authentic arena for expression of one's energies. Kierkegaard's aphorism
"Subjectivity is truth" can serve as the slogan for approach to the task
of living, albeit minus his peculiar obsession with Christianity. The
reality of the metaphysical self is a reality that transcends all others
for the individual. Materia deteriorate and lose their value,
communication is uncertain, love is the frailest of feelings, charity is
usually misplaced. Social justice is almost always an illusion and
societal power corrupts the individual. Only the realm of the
metaphysical self offers a continuing source of fulfillment to the
individual in search of the real world.

 

Richard Schain
February 2002
 

source  http://rschain1.tripod.com/Essays.html

 

 

 

 

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