Showing posts with label C. G. Jung. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C. G. Jung. Show all posts

Sunday, November 18, 2012

#133. Beyond Religion and Psychology-- To Nature


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ARCHIVE. For a list of all my published posts: 
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Blog entries beginning with #101 are not essays but minimally-edited notes and reviews from the files I've collected over the last few decades. I no longer have the time and energy needed to sort out and put together into decent essay-form the many varied ideas in these files, but I would like to share them with all who are interested.

If you have questions and think I might help, you're welcome to send me a note: sam@macspeno.com

Post #133 is a collection of notes and comments on a 1990 book by Robert Aziz, "C.G. Jung's Psychology of Religion and Synchronicity."

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In his 1937 lectures at Yale, C. G. Jung talked about the “need to move beyond established religion and accept the challenge of immediate experience.”

As Aziz puts it, we need “to enter into a ritual with the sacred circle of the psyche.” By “ritual” here Aziz does not mean a ceremony but rather what we would call today a religious practice or a spiritual discipline.

His main point is extremely significant: that while Jung in 1937 saw the “ritual of immediate experience” taking place via direct encounter with the unconscious, today we see it as taking place via direct encounter with the external world as well, "with nature as a whole, in its entirety.”

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Aziz says that Jung’s own inner journey was the means for opening up a new route to the outer world and that this is his deepest personal meaning. It is what Jung himself did “on behalf of all and for all.”

Jung's work with archetypes and his discovery of the active imagination process, for example, are obviously important. But what is of the greatest significance, says Aziz, is that Jung discovered how we can be, once again-- since the beginnings, thousands of years ago, of patriarchal dualism at the end of the Neolithic age-- rightly related to the external world of matter.

Aziz quotes Marie-Louise von Franz, with regard to philosophical and religious dualism, to the effect that the synchronistic phenomena uncovered by Jung provide empirical evidence for the non-duality of body and soul.

Aziz notes that we get this full picture of Jung’s life and work not from his formal writings so much as in letters, comments, and activities with his clients.

What it comes down to is that each of us must be a facilitator of the unfoldment of the events in nature.

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For a religious person in the 20th century, the transition from institutional religiousness to ritual attention to the contents of the unconscious has been a big step.

Yet we need to go further: we must learn as well to be always and everywhere attentive to the flow of nature in the external world. As von Franz puts it, "to be attentive to the Tao in all its wholeness."

This is a real breakthrough.

It clearly ties Jungian perspectives with ecological consciousness and environmental awareness, and it verifies the tribal and specifically Native American perception of our need to be one with all nature, with “All my relations.”

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A second important point Aziz makes is that Jung is able to provide an explanation of the mechanism by which an individual, being faithful to the individuation process in himself, is in fact able to have an effect for good on the whole of reality.

Jung says, "When an archetype, which is universal-- i.e., identical with itself always and anywhere-- is properly dealt with in one place only, it is influenced as a whole-- i.e., simultaneously and everywhere.”

Jung is saying that once changed in any one place, via the individuation process in a single individual, an archetype is changed permanently "always and everywhere." (And so there would seem to be a kind of natural selection mechanism at work for the evolution of archetypes!)

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From Aziz's work, all that Jung has said about the significance of the individual for the salvation of the world is even more clear. And Aziz takes us further.

While the section dealing with the solitary individual's effects the whole, for example, is especially fruitful, it also helps us understand how a small group like a drumming group, or a larger group like an Orthodox Church parish-- groups which seemingly have no effect whatsoever on the mindset of Western culture as a whole-- can, by faithfully doing their thing, indeed “make a difference” in the renewal of society.

Aziz's point here is that we are not alone in our individuation process. We become who and what we are only with the aid of what he calls our "soul family," that gathering of kindred spirits around us which, he says, "is not created by accident or mere ego-motivation,” yet is “one of the great mysteries of the individuation process.”

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Another major point in the book is that Aziz identifies individuation and the shamanic vocation.

He quotes von Franz to the effect that “The shaman is the most individuated, i.e., most conscious person of the group to which he belongs.”

Aziz describes the shaman as being distinguished by two main traits: an intense intuitive capacity for ecstatic states, and the ability to guide others.

He says that “the shaman suffers from the plight of his people” and that the individuating individual, like a shaman, deals with the archetypal spirit powers that the community needs.

It's not a surprise to see shamanism and the individuation process equated, but it's nice to have it spelled out so clearly.

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With regard to this shamanic ritual "of immediate experience,” which today must take place via direct encounter with both the unconscious and "with nature as a whole," Aziz quotes von Franz again. She describes a contemporary religious person as one who is constantly trying to get a feeling for the rightness of whatever he/she is doing.

Such persons are constantly “looking for some sign from the Self," constantly "paying constant attention to the Tao."

He notes that prayer is efficacious "only when one is 'in the Tao.'”

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As Karl Rahner says, “The great question of our day is not whether God exists but whether we are willing to make the effort to be sensitive and responsive to the Mystery which is always and everywhere giving itself to us.”

Von Franz’s words help us to see that it is precisely by constantly paying attention, by constantly looking at our feelings and constantly watching for external signs, that we can “always and everywhere" be "sensitive and responsive” to the Great Mystery.

Such attentiveness is what defines a contemporary “religious person.”

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The religious person in the 20th century has been called to make the transition from institutional religiousness to ritual attention to the contents of the unconscious. A big step, indeed!

And now there is a need to go further: we must learn as well to be always and everywhere attentive to the flow of nature in the external world around us.

And beyond that, says Aziz, there is one more thing to take into account: we especially must be attentive to the compensatory contents of both the unconscious and of external nature. Only by such a sensitivity to the compensatory contents of the "within" and the "without" of things will we be able to live in balance and harmony with all things.

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Aziz notes that we are “in harmony with the forces of nature only when we consciously give up the ambition to be in control of them.”

This is precisely the same point Allan Chinen makes in Beyond the Hero with regard to the need for an adult male to be in right relation with the feminine. If a man is to move beyond the hero stage of patriarchy, he must give up his need, based on fear, to intimidate and control women.

It probably works the same way with all those things, besides women, usually considered evil by patriarchal dualism: matter, nature and the body-- and of course the unconscious.

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“Harmony” means not needing to dominate them, precisely because one doesn't fear them. This seems to be a major insight because, I think, it is so simple.

To be "in harmony” means having such self-regard that you can treat others-- whether women and children, or your own body, or the natural world of matter, and even the unconscious-- with equality.

We can only be in balance with something if we are not afraid of it. Once again, what it seems to come down to is the gospel counsel, "Fear not."

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Personal reflections

1. For several years now I have understood my present stage of development to be one of "not doing, but being."

Not, especially, writing or teaching in those areas that I gave a dozen years of my life to, starting back in the 80's. I am only to guard the center and keep the sacred fire. (More recently I have added the phrase “fast, abstain and exercise;” meaning daily exercise, little wine, and nothing to eat in the evenings.)

It is extremely difficult not to be concerned with doing, probably the most difficult thing I've yet been called to do in my life. Aziz’s explanations make it all somewhat easier to take.

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2. Aziz says that just as "the shaman suffers from the plight of his people," so the individuating individual has to deal with the archetypal spirit powers that his community needs. Clearly my focus has been on living an authentic spiritual life independently of the confines of the religious institution. And dealing with a major related issue, the loss of sacred manhood and its healing recovery and affirmation.

I understand sacred manhood to be the embodiment of that masculine principle at the heart of the universe which is co-eternal-with-the-feminine and with which it unites in a harmonious balance of opposites for the fullness of epiphany of the Great Mystery.
      
For me, the deep masculine is especially imaged and personified as the Holy Male Ancestors, and in a less personal form, as the sacred fire.

I understand that when the archetype of the sacred masculine is embraced and ‘owned’ by me, it is permanently affected "always and anywhere," and that this is my uniquely personal contribution to the renewal and transfiguration of the world.

All this seems to be extremely important and healthy stuff.

I note that my present earth name, Hoc'oka, does not name myself as a safe place, but honors the whole cosmos as the hoc'oka of transformation.

While it doesn't fit anywhere, I need to record a quote from Jung on page 169-170 of Aziz's book that grabbed me: "Whether we are talking about doctor and patient, shaman and petitioner, analyst and client, teacher and student, you can exert no influence if you are not susceptible to influence.”

Note that, here, as ever the concern is with being "of influence."(!)

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3. Another book I read recently, Mitakuye Oyasin: "We Are All Related" by A. C. Ross (1989, Bear [Kyle, SD]), is said to be "a holistic approach toward white and native American cultures," and an exploration "of the similarities between Jungian psychology and thought."

It is described by the publishers as "A controversial and original treatment of comparative culture studies.” That puts it mildly. It is, in fact, for the most part pretty goofy New Age stuff.

But the author keeps saying, “and that’s what Native Americans think, too.” And I'm thinking that for the most part, he’s right.
      
An insight from the book: the author talks a lot about Atlantis and Wu (the Pacific Ocean counterpart of Atlantis); I can see that to many people this would not sound any sillier than my talking about a vision quest or the sweat lodge rites.
      
What stayed with me most is Ross' comment that "the "best way to help the world be in balance is to help people who have the same kind of problems you do."

I keep asking, what kind of problem(s) do I have? And keep coming up with the same answer as above: How is "being, not doing" of use? And how, especially, am I to contribute to the healing recovery and affirmation of sacred manhood-- without doing?

Aziz's book really is helpful.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

#124. The Only Way to Avoid War


++++++++++++++++++++++++++
ARCHIVE. For a list of all my published posts: 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Blog entries beginning with #101 are not essays but minimally-edited notes and reviews from the files I've collected over the last few decades. I no longer have the time and energy needed to sort out and put together into decent essay-form the many varied ideas in these files, but I would like to share them with all who are interested.

If you have questions and think I might help, you're welcome to send me a note: sam@macspeno.com

Post #124 is some rough notes about an essay/talk by Jung's long-time assistance and collaborator, Marie-Louise von Franz; it profoundly grabbed my attention back around the same time (1996) as the Klaus Theweleit material I shared in the previous post. The topics of the two posts-- the berserk and the berserk transformed-- obviously go together.

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These are notes on an especially significant essay by Marie-Louise von Franz I found in a collection of talks and essays from the 1980s entitled Human Survival and Consciousness Evolution. [Edited by Stanislav Grof with the assistance of Marjorie Livingston Valier. (State University of New York Press, 1988).]

The essays are disturbing; there is much focus on nuclear war. But the essay by Marie-Louise von Franz stands out.

It was originally a talk, “The Transformed Berserk: Unification of Psychic Opposites,” which she gave at a 1983 conference on "Individual Transformation and Universal Responsibility."

The focus of her essay is C. G. Jung's understanding of a vision experienced by the little known 15th century Swiss figure, Nicholas von Flue. Referred to as "Brother Klaus," he was a patriot and is patron saint of Switzerland. I found it an amazingly profound essay and highly relevant to our contemporary situation.


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Summary. Jung says there will always be leaders of society who like the media lime-light (and who may or may not be responsible persons) and those who are leaders of individuals (of souls, of inner work).

In 15th c Europe, there was much political dissension and the church was falling apart, all of which constellated a great need for inner guidance.

Nicholas von Flue had led an active life involved in military and political activities and was married with 10 kids; at the age of 50 he was called to become a religious hermit, and at the age of 64 he politically saved Switzerland from internal destruction and external extinction.

In his vision, a pilgrim appeared to him. He “comes from the place where things dawn on us.” The pilgrim changes first into a nobleman dressed in grey/blue, "where Truth and people’s selfish dislike of it are manifest."

Then the pilgrim becomes a bear with shining fur who, on departure, bows deeply and humbly, manifesting great love, which Nicholas von Flue experiences as the fulfillment of all satisfaction (“honey”).

Thus does the Self appear, says Marie-Louise von Franz.

It comes from where new-ness arises from the unconscious. Here, she says, the pilgrim is Wotan, understood to mean Truth, absolute knowledge, objective love, the interconnectedness of all reality, "honey."

The bear is the dangerous, animal aspect of the Self. Her whole point is that the inner union of this Christ (Wotan) Self and the shadow Bear allowed Nicholas von Flue to influence external reality as well, thus making peace at a time of crisis and saving Switzerland.

“To work on oneself is also to have invisible and imperceptible influence on others.” “If the sage, abiding in his room, speaks well, he meets with assent a thousand miles away.”

These ideas are accompanied by a diagram which tries to show how conscious events and the personal unconscious are connected to larger psychic units such as the family group, tribe, nation and ultimately the whole human race.

The integrated Man (Self) in Nicholas von Flue’s vision is a version of the Whole Christ image which according to Jung is a 2,000 year old unofficial development in Christianity.

The official image, as we know, incarnates only the light side of God. But a more whole image is needed, which is why the anti-Christ image arose, says Jung. He thinks that the image of the monstrous lamb in Revelations 5 and 6 indicates a rebirth of a more complete Christ image; he also notes that the alchemists were especially interested in it.
      
This anti-Christ image, representing the animal, dark side and opposite of the light, indicates aggression. When it is autonomous, i.e., unintegrated, it produces world events like WW II.

Our job, then (the job of contemporary humanity) says Jung, is to integrate it (the dark side) “in our depression, in our hermitage.” Von Franz notes that if “we” means personal consciousness, then it can't be done. “We” can’t do it. But the Self can.

The best “we” can do, she says, is to integrate our personal shadow. But we can be a place where the divine opposites come together, “by enduring to absolute extreme and accepting it within ourselves.”

In alchemy, the dark/dangerous animal brings forth rose-hued blood, which she interprets as the "honey" of cosmic love and the interrelatedness of All.

When integrated, the dark/dangerous animal no longer acts brutally or without insight and enlightenment (not “behind their backs” or "unconsciously").

Western culture, says von Franz, needs to differentiate the Feeling function. Even our Intuition function, she says, isn’t as undifferentiated as Feeling is in Western society.

We have to take back our projections (that what is true for me is also necessarily true for you), especially between groups (“them” and "us"), and most especially between male and female. Only then are relationships possible.

Relationships require an optimal distance: closeness, but not so much as to intrude. Also required: a profound respect for the “otherness” of the others.

Beyond all this, there is yet something else: a personal link with selected others via the Self: relating to the Self in others. This is a primal, spiritual, immediate presence. Jung calls it an “eternal secret” and laments, “How shall I ever speak of it?” (When have we ever seen Jung nearly speechless!)

Relationships are the only compensation for the fragmentation of modern society. One unique being relating to another... with warmth, humor, a twinkle in the eye.
      
The I Ching says that a person can either be an external hero or a holy sage in the hermitage. Thus, says Marie-Louise, people felt Brother Klaus’ “honey” aspect and did not think him mad.

In the Great [i.e., "together"] Person, aggression is integrated and transformed into a clearly defined separateness and firmness which does not succumb to general paranoiac emotion. And this, says Jung, is “the only way to avoid war.”

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Some personal reflections. An antiphon at Vespers for the First Sunday of Advent has had immense numinosity for me for four decades. Only with my reading of this essay have I understood why. "In that day, the mountains shall drop down sweetness and the hills shall flow with milk and honey. Alleluia."

That our personal development has cosmic implications is certainly not a new idea, but this essay helps make more sense of it. As Jung says, “in my depression, in my hermitage,” the dangerous, animal aspect must be integrated with the light. “By enduring to absolute extreme and accepting it [the darkness] within myself,” I can become a sacred place, a kiva, where the light and dark can come together.

The result is interrelatedness.

So a major problem of our day is differentiation of the Feeling function: taking back our projections, especially between ethnic groups and most especially between male and female, and having a profound respect for the otherness of others: “right relationship” with “all my relations.”

By enduring opposites within myself, I become a place from which lac et mel come forth, specifically the sweetness and honey of profound mutual respect for the otherness of the opposite sex.

The break with nature is healed and sacred manhood recovered via my enduring alone in my sadness, tears and grief, and accepting within myself, the absolute extreme of the other. Not the dark, dangerous animal but the dark, dangerous feminine/earth/unconscious.

As the antiphon says, "In that day, the mountains shall drop down sweetness and the hills shall flow with milk and honey. Alleluia!"

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Thursday, September 1, 2011

#95. Science's Best: Matter, Time and Space



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In this home stretch of my blog efforts it seems like a good idea to share some thoughts about Science's Best to parallel the thoughts in my previous post, #94, about Religion "At Its Best."


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Just as the Western religious tradition has come a long way in the 20th century, so has science.

When I started working as a science teacher back in 1959, the popular image of a scientist, for example, was still very much that of the "mad scientist" from the movies of the 50's. (If you're too young to remember, he was seeking to take over the world-- with the help of his hunchback assistant, Igor.) Even at its best in those days, what "science" meant for most people was kids launching rockets in back of the high school.

I have a more personal example, from a decade earlier. When I was in my last month of eighth grade and signing up for high school courses, I was given the choice of one elective: either Latin or science. It wasn't much of a choice for me; it felt like choosing between the past or the future, the old or the new. I think I was the only one in the class who elected to take science instead of Latin; my eighth grade teacher did not approve.

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But science itself-- not just the popular view of it-- has come a long way in the last sixty or seventy years. While religion was working its way out of its old Medieval worldview during the 20th century, science was working its way up from its position on the bottom rung of the Great Ladder of Beings.

I've used the Great Ladder image frequently in these posts; I first became aware of it in Ken Wilbur's book, The Marriage of Sense and Soul: Integrating Science and Religion (Random House, 1998).

I know that "ladder" isn't a helpful image for everyone. Another image, which works better for many, is to say that science is learning to "look more deeply into things." John Haught's book, Deeper Than Darwin (Westview Press, 2003), is an excellent example of that imagery.

But while "higher" and "deeper" are good images, what works best for me is the mandala. With its simultaneous attention to all four directions-- considering them all to be of equal importance-- it is an image of our own four-fold "looking" process itself.

I don't need to remind long-time readers that I've referred repeatedly in these posts to this quaternary understanding of consciousness. The main idea is that our minds have a four-fold way of operating and that if we use only one or two of those ways, our experience and awareness of the world is severely limited.

We miss a lot, for example, if we focus only on facts and logic-- as Western culture has done in recent centuries.

We owe the modern expression of the quaternary understanding of human awareness to the depth psychologist C. G. Jung, but older expressions of it are found in many non-patriarchal traditions. The rituals of Wicca and the animal images on the Native American Medicine Wheel are good examples; so are the sacred sand paintings of Tibet and the numerous mandalas found on the walls of temples and homes in India.

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These are all expressions of the four-fold view of the human mind. Using Jungian words, I can summarize it briefly. I wouldn't repeat these ideas again here-- except for the fact that I think the quaternary understanding of our conscious awareness is an especially helpful tool to use for appreciating "Science's Best."

My brief sum: We experience the details of the world via Sensing, the relationships between parts of the world via Feeling, the cause-and-effect sequence of things via Thinking, and we see the whole picture-- without getting lost in the details-- via Intuition.

Western culture, unfortunately, got lost in the details. Patriarchy ignores the big picture of how all thing are inter-related and focuses only on the cause-and-effect connections between the details. So if we understand the world exclusively by our functions of Sensing and Thinking we have only a materialistic view. And from that perspective the world looks like a machine; for a while it was even called the "clockwork universe."

Science wasn't always mechanistic and materialistic, however. When early scientists such as Galileo, Copernicus and Newton began their work, their intention was not only to give us a more accurate picture of the world, but also to improve human life. And at that, science has been extremely successful.

But, as patriarchal attitudes took over in science-- just as they did in religion-- the Earth became seriously damaged and its peoples horribly exploited. The result was today's political, economic and environmental crisis.

This global crisis is only gradually dawning on the people of the Earth as we slowly come to have a bigger picture. But as we better understand how our minds work-- as we learn to look more deeply into things or to see our world from higher up than the bottom rung of the Great Ladder-- we are in fact moving away from the patriarchal attitudes of the past.

And just as religion has been working its way out of its dualistic and static perspectives, so contemporary science has moved far beyond its materialistic and mechanistic views.

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In my previous post I offered three Greek words which, in addition to evolution, help us to see the Western religious tradition at its best: eschaton, eucharist and ecclesia.

I don't need Greek words to describe Science's Best. We have four English words, familiar to everyone, which work fine: time, space, matter and energy.

You may be thinking that those terms seem a bit too basic to be helpful. 

But I can say from my experience that once we see how well they serve as tags for the ways our minds work, they become as enriching for our understanding of the modern scientific worldview as are evolution, eschaton, eucharist and ecclesia for a contemporary understanding of religion.

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The connections between those four words-- time, space, matter and energy-- and the four functions of our conscious minds-- Thinking, Feeling, Sensing and Intuition-- are not obvious, to be sure. In everyday life we hardly ever associate time with the Thinking function or space with our Feeling function, but some examples can help to make those connections clearer.

We use space-related terms like "near" and "next to" or "far" and "distant" when we want to express our Feeling-function awareness of the connections between ourselves and others. Saying "I feel close to you," for example, expresses a strong positive relationship just as "Keep away from me!" unambiguously expresses a negative one.

The correspondence between time and our Thinking-function awareness is even clearer. We always express cause-and-effect reasoning, for example, in words that presume a temporal sequence: there's an assumed "before" and "after" whenever we say "if this, then that" and especially when we say that something "follows from" something else. Thinking is an awareness of the sequential flow of time.

A good example of both time-awareness and space-awareness together is a comment we might make about a past relationship when we say something like, "He and I used to be close, but we've drifted apart." When we say that, we're combining "then and now" Thinking with "near and far" Feeling.

The idea that Sensing is our awareness of matter (that we are conscious of the world outside ourselves via sight, taste, touch, smell, hearing) isn't a problem for anyone. But many feel uncomfortable with the association of Feeling and space; and the idea that there's a correspondence between energy and Intuition (our big-picture consciousness) is a problem for almost everyone.

It's a problem because of the still-lingering effects on our patriarchy culture's disdain for relationships and the consequent refusal to look at the over-all picture of the world. We just can't see too much if we refuse to look more deeply into things; or, to say it the other way: our worldview is limited if we remain at the bottom rung of the Great Ladder.

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I'll be sharing my thoughts about Science's Best in terms of matter, time and space in this post, and my thoughts about the energy-Intuition correspondence in the next. Both posts will be called "Science's Best," but #96 will have "Cosmic Energy" added to it, just as this post's title includes the words "Matter, Time and Space."

My point in having such similar names is to emphasize that that just as Sensing, Thinking, Feeling and Intuition form a mandala of our conscious understanding, so matter, time, space and energy also form a mandala-- in this case, of tags for our understanding Science's Best.

The two posts go together, but because of our patriarchal culture's disdain for relationships and its consequent refusal to look at the over-all picture of the world, the connections between energy and Intuition are far less familiar and need to be spelled out in more detail. So I'm making it a separate post.

I'd really like to publish #95 and #96 together, as I've said, but if I did, the one big post would just be too long. No one would want to read it. Even separately, each of these posts is longer than usual, so you will probably want to take an occasional break while reading them. And once again, my thanks for your patience!

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TIME. I said above that the idea of Sensing as our awareness of matter isn't a problem for anyone; the correspondence, once we see it, between time and our Thinking-function awareness is just as acceptable to almost everyone.

As I also said above, we always express cause-and-effect reasoning, for example, in words that presume a temporal sequence: there's an assumed "first" ("if this") and "second" ("then that") whenever we say that something "follows from" something else. The Thinking function is our awareness of time's sequential flow.

Science's Best in terms of our Thinking function and time is the understanding that the world is dynamic. It had been presumed to be static for many thousands of years, but from the work of geologists, biologists and astronomers in the last two centuries, we know today that the material world came into existence gradually over a very long period of time.

We are aware now that the various physical parts of the world-- galaxies, stars, planets, rocks, plants, animals, human beings-- emerged in a series of events, very much like the way any living thing grows and develops.

When we plant a seed, for example, it first puts out roots and then a pair of special leaves. Only later do a stem and the ordinary leaves develop, and only later still are they followed by buds, flowers and fruit. 

In the same way, all the material parts of the universe-- from galaxies and stars to primates and persons-- also appeared sequentially.

It's such an ordinary thing-- when we see the sprouting of seeds or watch a baby developing-- that we take it for granted. "That's the way things work," we say.

But the idea here is that that's the way the whole universe works.
Not just plants, not just babies, but everything-- the entire cosmos-- acts like one big living organism. And this understanding of the sequential growth and development of the universe is new for all of us.

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A few examples can help us appreciate just how all-inclusive this understanding is of the world which we have via our Thinking function's awareness of the flow of time.

Galaxies. We've known about galaxies for less than a century. And we know now that there was a time when there were no galaxies at all-- and that once they came into existence, that was the end of their phase of the cosmos' growth and development. No new galaxies have appeared since. It's something like those first special leaves that appear when seeds spout. Once they emerge, that's it. That stage in the plant's development is done.

Stars. While humans have known about stars since there first were humans, the understanding that even stars get born and go through a developmental cycle is only about fifty or sixty years old. And the fact that at one time in the world's history there weren't any stars, and that many that once existed now no longer exist... well, it's very difficult for many of us to be comfortable with such thoughts.

Atoms. The earliest elementary kinds of matter were sub-atomic particles: leptons and quarks. Some of them bonded to form the simplest atoms, hydrogen and helium, and some of those atoms were gradually pulled together by gravity to form clumps of matter which eventually became the galaxies and stars.

Elements. Chemical elements are formed in the hearts of stars, where the increasing density from gravitational attraction results in the fusion of the simpler atoms of hydrogen and helium into atoms of the more complex elements such as carbon and nitrogen. The heaviest and most complex elements-- radon and uranium, for example-- are formed when a star reaches the end of its life-cycle and explodes as a super-nova-- scattering its remains into space. Some of that stardust eventually forms into planets.

Molecules. At the lower temperatures on the surface of planets, the chemical elements can bond into small molecules such as water, ammonia and carbon dioxide, and these simple molecules can bond further to become the more complex compounds like proteins, carbohydrates and nucleic acids found in all living things.

Cells. Some of the larger and more complex biochemical molecules can bond to form living cells, and some cells can eventually unite to form many-celled plants and animals.

Brains. Out of this long temporal sequence, some animals develop a nervous system and brain. And some of the most complex brains allow for reflective self-awareness. (That's us!)

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Yes, each of us results from the process of growth and development of the universe over 14 billion years. But it's the sequential nature of the process that I want to emphasize here.

The universe isn't just a place but an event. Or better, it's an on-going series of events, a developmental sequence of continuous transformations.

This isn't easy for our minds to take in. Some people still refuse to believe that there really was a time when there were no human beings on Earth. But, in fact, there was once a time when there wasn't any Earth at all. Even harder to imagine is that there once was a time when the stars had not yet come into existence.

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To appreciate Science's Best in terms of time and the Thinking function, it's important for us to understand this over-all developmental sequence. When we look at it, we see that the pattern is very clear:

There were no human beings on Earth before there were earlier primates.

There were no primates before there were earlier mammals with brains.

There were no animals of any kind without earlier living cells.

There were no single-celled life-forms without earlier macro-molecules.

There were no large molecules without earlier simple atoms.

There were no atoms of the more complex elements without earlier stars.

There were no stars without the elementary atoms of hydrogen and helium.

There were no elementary atoms without the earlier leptons and quarks.

And there were no sub-atomic quarks and leptons before the initial flaring forth of matter at the Big Bang.

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It's only in the 20th century that this pattern of cosmic growth and development has become clear to us. The fact that we live in a dynamic, evolutionary world is Science's Best understanding in terms of the Sensing function's awareness of matter and our Thinking function's consciousness of time.

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SPACE. In the same way that the Thinking function gives us our awareness of the temporal sequence of events which make up our universe, so the Feeling function makes us conscious of the relationships between those things which have emerged.

As we are aware that events can happen "before" or "after" other events happen, so we also are aware that things can found be "here" or "there," and "near by" or "far away." Space is the context for our realization of how things relate to other things.

But because patriarchal attitudes dismiss relationships as unimportant, Western people tend to feel much less comfortable with the spatial relationships between the various parts of the cosmos than with the temporal sequence of those parts' emergence.

However, just as we know today that things emerge sequentially, scientists have discovered that the temporal sequence also has a space-linked characteristic. They call it "nesting."

Everyone knows what a nest is, so "a nesting sequence" is a good image. And even though this is a feature of the universe which earlier generations experienced but which they weren't explicitly aware of, its meaning is obvious when we give our attention on it.

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The main idea here is that the more complex forms of matter always appear spatially within the "nest" of less complex material forms.

We don't expect, for example, that a baby bird will hatch from an egg in a nest before there is an egg-- or even before there is a nest. It sounds silly just to say it. My point is that we so take for granted this nesting aspect of the universe's development that at first we can hardly see why it even needs to be mentioned.

But it's a major aspect of the cosmic process. Although it wasn't clearly understood for most of humanity's existence, we know today that it holds true for everything which has ever emerged in the long history of the universe.

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I've learned from my teaching experience that it's far easier to say the words "nesting sequence" than to express well what they mean. It's important to me that I try, however. So while what follows may seem at first to be just a string of sentences, it's an attempt to describe just what's meant by "nesting sequence" when we're talking about the development of cosmic matter over 14 billion years:

When the first quarks and leptons appeared after the Big Bang, not all of them became hydrogen and helium atoms. (Leptons and quarks still exist today.)

Once there were the elementary atoms of hydrogen and helium, not all of them were pulled together by gravity to form galaxies. (The universe is still filled with clouds of hydrogen atoms.)

Once galaxies came into existence, not all of them produced stars. (Stars are formed only in those galaxies which have the familiar spiral shape.)

Once stars are formed in galaxies, not all of them generate atoms of the complex elements like sulfur and oxygen.

Once stars reach the end of their life-cycle, not all of them explode; that is, not all of them create the more complex heavy elements like uranium which gets splattered into space.

Once the stardust from exploded stars is scattered into space, not all of it gets pulled together by gravity into clumps which eventually form planets.

Once there are planets, not all of them have conditions favorable for the emergence of single-celled life-forms.

Once there were living cells on the Earth, not all of them joined to form multi-cellular plants and animals.

Once there were animals, not all animal species developed a nervous system and brain.

And once there were animals with a nervous system and brain, not all them had brains complex enough to allow them to become, as we humans are, reflectively self-aware.

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The point of it all is that you and I-- as the universe become conscious of itself-- exist within a nest within a nest within a nest... within a nest within a nest within a nest... of cosmic matter. The flow of time results in a nesting sequence of galaxies, stars, planets, living things and human persons. Every new thing emerges out of previously existing things.

This understanding of the spatial relationships between things and the nesting sequence in which they emerge is a major aspect of Science's Best in our day.

A significant consequence of understanding the concepts of "nesting sequence" and "spatial relationships" is the realization that the idea of human beings as isolated solitary individuals is an obvious mistake. A more accurate evaluation of our consciousness of space in terms of our Feeling-function awareness is the familiar Native American expression, "All things are my relations!"

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For many, a question which immediately comes to mind when we use our Sensing, Thinking and Feeling functions to understand the matter, time and space of the cosmos is one which you have probably often asked yourself: "How does all that work?"

We want to know why it is that matter emerges through space and time in a nesting sequence. We want to know why the flow of time results in the temporal sequence of galaxies, stars, planets, living things and ourselves. And why do we find ourselves existing spatially-- "in a nest within a nest within a nest..."?

To round out the fourth corner of this mandala of Science's Best we need the understanding of energy which our Intuitive awareness offers us. It's Intuition that puts it all together.

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