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The Condition

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Title: The Condition


1
Chapter 2
  • The Condition the Odyssey

2
The Predicament
  • All philosophizing is rooted in one simple fact
    of our existence each of us is trapped in an
    egocentric predicament that sets limits on the
    way we perceive the world and relate to others.
  • Can we overcome such a deep-rooted and troubling
    condition?

3
The Coherent Worldview
  • A worldview is a more or less coherent,
    all-inclusive frame of reference through which
    one sees the world it is a subjective attempt to
    provide unity and consistency to the totality of
    ones experience
  • It is one purpose of philosophy to help the
    individual build a worldview that is functional
  • The ideal worldview will be internally
    consistent, pragmatically realistic, and
    personally fulfilling

4
The Egocentric Predicament
  • 1910, Ralph Barton Perry
  • To know what any real object/event is, we have to
    perceive it.
  • How then can we know whether our perception of an
    object/event changes it?
  • I am the center of MY universe, but not THE
    universe

5
Blaise Pascal
  • It is pitiful to see so many Turks, heretics,
    and infidels following in their fathers track,
    for the sole reason that each has been
    conditioned to believe that this track is best.
    This accident of birth is also what decides
    everyones condition in life, making one man a
    locksmith, another man a soldier, et cetera.

6
Aristocentric Claims
  • Whenever any creature fails to correct for his
    egocentric illusion and begins to feel that he
    really is the center of the universe, and
    further, if he feels that he should be treated by
    others as though he were the center, then he has
    taken a giant step beyond the illusion itself.
  • He is making an aristocentric claim.

7
Egocentric Illusions in Time Space
  • Time our lifetimes are short in the perspective
    of geological time or human history, yet we tend
    to think of all existence in terms of our
    allotted span
  • Space our life-space becomes the center of all
    things good, and more distant regions somehow
    lack the reality of our vicinity

8
We Live in Two Worlds
  • From birth till death each of us is locked into
    a physical organism from which there is no
    escape. This condition is known as
    encapsulation.
  • We confuse the world in here and the world out
    there
  • Reification

9
Albert CamusMan the Absurd
  • The problem lies in the individuals relationship
    to the world. Man is not absurd, and the world is
    not absurd. Its at the interface between man and
    the world that the Absurd is encountered.

10
Reflections
  • The story of the Three Christs of Ypsilanti is
    more than a case study. It is a metaphor. As a
    metaphor, what does the account say to you about
    the claims and rationalizations that universally
    characterize the human species?

11
Self
  • Not a few philosophers have argued that the
    development of an authentic self is the central
    lifelong project for each of us
  • What does it mean to be a self?
  • Is the self something we can know and
    understand?

12
From the Movie Cleopatra
  • Mark Antony to Cleopatra, as he lay dying speaks
    of his impending death as the ultimate
    separation of my self from myself
  • What does he mean?

13
News Item
  • A man is indicted for embezzlement, but he is
    never caught, and lives under an assumed name in
    another state for twenty-six years. Then, in a
    freak move, a relative turns him in. Yes, he
    confesses, I did it.
  • But did he?

14
From The Sixth Sense (ABC-TV)
  • Where are you?
  • I am sitting on a rock by the lake
  • What do you see?
  • I am not really at the lake. I am in the large
    mansion looking at the man I am about to kill
  • But you were not in the mansion were you?
  • No, I was sitting at the lake
  • Yes, I know, because I was sitting beside you

15
A Sense of Self
  • What each of us can become during our lifetime is
    determined by two fundamental conditions (1) the
    degree to which we experience a more or less
    consistent sense of self or identity, and (2)
    whether the feelings we have developed about that
    self are predominantly good

16
A Sense of Worth
  • How we feel about our selves strongly reflects
    how others felt about us during our earliest
    years
  • If we are loved then we feel lovable we can
    love ourselves
  • Most of us never move beyond self-consciousness

17
The Autonomous Self
  • Autonomy refers to ones ability to function
    independently in terms of an authentic self
  • The ability to make autonomous decisions 1)
    courage to be 2) courage of self-affirmation 3)
    understanding of culture-patterns

18
Ayn RandThe Productive Life
  • Who is John Galt?
  • Ayn Rand was for rationality, individuality,
    living life as an end in itself, courage,
    happiness, success, life, pleasure, joy, freedom,
    Aristotle, Aquinas, atheism, love, friendship
  • Ayn Rand was against the irrational,
    self-sacrifice, martyrdom, belief, anything that
    erodes self-esteem, sheep, suffering, failure,
    death, pain, hedonism, Kant
  • Three cardinal virtues reason, purpose,
    self-esteem

19
Reflections
  • Have you ever made a list of the things you are
    for and the things you are against? How much of
    Ayn Rands fors and againsts can you agree
    with? Now clarify (to yourself) why you are for
    or against these things

20
Growth
  • What happens when we remove our masks if we
    can?
  • What do we then become?
  • We are what we pretend to be, so we must be
    careful about what we pretend to be. --Kurt
    Vonnegut, Mother Night

21
When Things Go Wrong
  • Harlows and the young monkeys
  • Human psychological development 1)
    reassurance/security/trust 2) courage/aggression/
    exploration 3) self/autonomy/maturity
  • We know that something has gone wrong (when
    things go wrong)and we wonder why

22
The Masks We Wear
  • When things go wrong, the feeling that one does
    not know who he is may be intuited by ourselves
    and inferred by others, but it is perhaps the
    last thing we will confess. The pain of unmasking
    is too great. We cant risk being open. We are
    ever fearful that someone might see beneath our
    masks and discovernothing.
  • It is easy to become lost in the other when we
    have no real sense of self. --Richard Moss

23
I Will Not Stop Till I Know
  • To be innocent is to not know
  • Therefore, to be innocent is to be dependent
  • Dependence requires trust and faith
  • Dependence requires obedience
  • Innocence is an instrument of control

24
Growth Insecurity
  • Neophobia we are afraid of new objects,
    unfamiliar behavioral patterns in others, strange
    feelings in ourselves, or any other new and
    threatening elements of life that we do not
    understand
  • Neophilia if we have enough security when we
    need it, then we can explore more and more of the
    unknowns, assimilate them, explore some more,
    widen our horizons, and grow

25
The Answer-Givers
  • The actual fact is that answer-givers have a need
    to persuade. One of their goals is to contain us
    within a state of innocence and thereby establish
    control over us.
  • Their true motivation is disguised by perhaps the
    commonest of human rationalizations that they
    are really helping us

26
Crisis of Authority
  • One of the major roadblocks to autonomy is
    failure to achieve separation from authority

27
Developing Self-Awareness
  • When we are open to experiencing our selves
    precisely as they are rather than expending
    energy feeling anxious or guilty over what they
    are not a change in feeling can take place

28
The Law of Pathei Mathos
  • It is a painful insight to discover that one
    holds a belief because one needs the belief, and
    not because the belief is true. This is the sort
    of insight one would like to make go away, like a
    bad dream or clouds on a rainy day

29
Sigmund FreudHumanity is Blocked by Our Pain
  • We are blocked from being human by our own
    repressed pain and seeing the truth about
    ourselves could release enormous stores of
    bound-up energy for rich and responsible living
  • Id
  • Superego
  • Ego

30
Reflections
  • Zero in on the problem of dealing with those who
    would provide us with the answers before we
    have asked the questions. Do you agree with the
    problem as stated in this chapter? How would you
    suggest that we confront such answer-givers?

31
Life Time
  • Direction?
  • Is life then goal-directed?
  • Are we driven, deeply and perhaps unconsciously,
    toward something or away from something? Is life
    inherently meaningful, carrying us toward a
    telos, or is it meaning-less?

32
All the Worlds a Stage
  • All the worlds a stage
  • And all the men and women merely players
  • They have their exits and their entrances
  • And one man in his time plays many parts.

33
Mapping a Lifetime
  • The four ashramas
  • Japanese fivefold division of the human lifespan
  • Freuds five distinct stages in the development
    of a young human being from age zero to about
    eighteen
  • Shakespeares seven ages

34
The Ground Plan
  • Scientific studies have discovered that there
    exists within us a psychophysiological timetable
    that provides a plot for each individual human
    drams
  • The unfolding of this ground plan gives our lives
    a predictable structure and allows us to achieve
    a general overview of a full human life from
    birth to death

35
Infancy to Childhood
  • Infancy
  • Early Childhood
  • Middle Childhood
  • Late Childhood

36
The Adolescent Years
  • Early Adolescence
  • Midadolescence
  • Late Adolescence

37
The Maturing Years
  • Early Adulthood
  • Intermediate Adulthood
  • Middle Adulthood
  • Later Adulthood

38
The Final Phase
  • It begins when we must face that fact that our
    own death is imminent
  • Reliving our past
  • An attempt to see the life/time drama in
    perspective, and to write a good completion

39
The Shriek of Ivan Ilytch
  • Tolstoys Death of Ivan IIytch
  • As Ivan reflects upon the meaningless of his
    death, what hits him so forcefully is the
    meaninglessness of his life

40
The Heros Journey
  • Joseph Campbell
  • The Importance of Myth
  • There is a single formula, a single plot, to the
    heros adventure

41
VoltaireThe Laughing Philosopher
  • Crush the infamy!
  • My baffled curiosity continues to be
    insatiable.
  • He had an abiding faith in the intelligence and
    rationality of man
  • This century begins to see the triumph of
    reason
  • If God did not exist, it would be necessary to
    invent him.

42
Reflections
  • If you think of life metaphorically as a path
    or road, can you locate yourself with some
    accuracy (somewhere) along that path? Did you
    personally go through the earlier challenges as
    described in this chapter?
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