An interesting quote by Ernest Becker from 'The Great Awakening: A Buddhist 
Social Theory'  by David Loy:

   "The world of human aspiration is largely fictitious, and if we do not 
understand this we understand nothing about man.  It is a largely symbolic 
creation by an ego-controlled animal that permits actions in a psychological 
world, a symbolic-behavioral world removed from the boundaries of the present 
moment, from the immediate stimuli which enslave all lower organisms.  Man's 
freedom is a fabricated freedom, and he pays a price for it.  He must at all 
times _defend the utter fragility of his delicately constituted fiction, deny 
its artificiality._ That's why we can speak of 'joint theatrical staging,' 
'ritual formulas for social ceremonial,' and 'enhancing of cultural meaning,' 
with utmost seriousness.... 

   "The most astonishing thing of all, about man's fictions, is not that they 
have from prehistoric times hung like a flimsy canopy over his social world, 
but that he should have come to discover them at all.  It is one of the most 
remarkable achievements of thought, of self-scritiny, that the most 
anxiety-prone animal of all could come to _see through himself_ and discover 
the fictional nature of his action world.  Future historians will probably 
record it as one of the great, liberating breakthroughs of all time, and it 
happened in ours."

 

 
 


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