There has been a transformation of consciousness, but it hasn't been of the kind that was so optimistically envisaged.
People are not more spiritual; alienation, egoism, and awareness of separateness are stronger than ever. There is not a spontaneous sense of oneness, nor of attunement with the universe.
The change did not make us better people, nor has it made us happier, nor has it led to a kinder human society with diminished suffering.
Neither do people in general have either a closer relationship with nature, or a closer sense of personal involvement with ultimate reality.
So much for what didn't happen - but if I believe there was a millennial transformation, then what did happen; and why did it go so wrong? Or at least, so very differently from what was envisaged?
What happened was pretty much as predicted by Rudolf Steiner and confirmed by Owen Barfield - in that the changes of the past several centuries reached a threshold after which we were each required consciously to choose the basic assumptions on the basis of which we would understand our lives.
The residues of innate, unconscious, spontaneous spirituality; that had been dwindling for centuries, finally became so weak and feeble that they ceased to operate. The progressive "disenchantment" became so extreme that social life ceased to be humanized, personalized and sweetened by it.
Everything became materialistic and mundane; explicit, procedural, bureaucratic. Experience divided into the subjective and the objective - and the objective was impersonal - a realm of entertainment and exploitation, and exploitative entertainment - it became "politicized" and systemic.
And - because we are alienated, nowadays we all know this; and insofar as we regard the public/ institutional, social realm as objectively real - then this is the reality we have chosen.
Meanwhile, everything else, is regarded as subjective hence arbitrary - and relevant only to our private emotions*.
21st century Man has chosen his assumptions, then chosen to assert that these assumptions are inescapable reality; and painted himself into this corner of purposelessness, meaninglessness and hopelessness.
That is the nature of the millennial threshold and the New Age.
Yet... if this can be understood, and if we choose to take ultimate and personal responsibility for what we regard as the nature of ultimate reality - instead of assuming that this is "a given" to which we can only submit passively...
Then we may consciously choose another path by which we each-and-all may individually participate in divine creation; and each bring to it something unique and irreplaceable.
And that would be the threshold to a New Age, a new consciousness, which is worth living.
**
* Note: I should also record that there is also an assertion of subjectivism - that because it is only in the subjective and personal that we can find purpose, meaning and enchantment, we ought therefore to regard the subjective as reality. Well, this is "easy to say" - but I have never come across anybody who remotely does it: either in their speech, or observable actions! Such a recommendation is (whatever its merits in an ideal sense) un-real and un-motivating, even to those who most vehemently espouse it.
The self-chosen false dilemma of 21st century Man is therefore between an objective public discourse that is death and despair; and a subjective personal world that is experienced as unreal and unmotivating.
The (obvious?) conclusion is apparently a case of "back to the drawing board" to discover on what basis these (supposedly exclusive) alternatives were formulated.
And, it turns-out, that means going back a very long way down - deeper than almost anybody else has been or is prepared to go...
Which is, in a nutshell, the reason for our current situation.
1 comment:
Hello Dr. Charlton,
Just wanted to say how much I enjoy your blog. I’ve been reading you for years - but have not commented. I’m a rancher out here in the Intermountain Rockies. I live in a remote area (about 4500 souls in a 5000 square mile area).
Most of my days are centered around making sure our herd is fed, watered and in the pastures they are supposed to be in vs the ones they’d rather be in.
Most of our work out here is solitary in nature, so giving the mind something to work through while the hands are doing their thing is a blessing indeed.
Your posts help challenge and sharpen my world view. I want to thank you for all the work you put into this blog (and Notions!).
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