read also
The Occult Roots of the
Russian Revolution
(from
New Dawn Magazine
- look at
Links page)
read also
NOTES FROM THE GNOSTIC UNDERGROUND
Sanity, Madness and the Call of German Mysticism
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
back to top
|
"This spiritual and political essence of socialism is not
collectivism but individualism fulfilled through relation – the recognition
that by freeing human relations from the alienation created by their
practical social relations, conditions could be created for a communist
society as Marx defined it – one in which "the free development of each is
the condition for the free development of all." The ideal of a communist
society will forever remain a utopian one unless soul is put back
into ‘socialism’. Only by recognising the reality of the soul world
(‘in heaven’), can soul communities attain reality in the social world
(‘on earth’) as social communities. The sole means by which this can happen
is through a Relational Revolution which shows each individual how to sense
and realise their inner soul relationships with others through bodily
relational practices – practices which break down the illusory bodily
boundaries of personal identity itself." (extract) ... continue to read
more.
- Peter Wilberg -

Two Men Gazing at the Moon
- Caspar David Friedrich -
Preface: New
Gnostic Politics as Relational Revolution
1. Theses of the
Relational Revolution
2. The Message of
The Relational Revolution
3. Identity as
Private Property
4. Practical
Relations and Relational Practices
5. Back to Marxist
Basics
6. Relational
Revolution in Practice
7. Communication as
a Bodily Relational Practice
8. The Fundamental
Sickness of Relation
9. Religion as
Relational Revolution
10. Changing the
World?
11. Activism or
Reactionism?
12. The Politics of
the Body
13. Health and Human
Relations
14. The Relational
Revolution in Science
15. Relational
Revolution and Education
16. Bodily
Relational Education
Postscript:
Socialism with Soul
Bibliography
Preface: New
Gnostic Politics as Relational Revolution
The term ‘gnosis’ refers to that inner knowing, free of
symbols, from which all historic religions and their symbols have sprung.
The following paper presents an outline of the revolutionary ‘political’
dimensions of gnosis. Its central thesis is that revolutionary
political change cannot, paradoxically, be achieved through political action
alone. Instead the true source of lasting political change lies in
Relational Revolution – a revolution in the realm of immediate relations
between one human being and another that Martin Buber called ‘the interhuman’.
Religion has always placed a greater emphasis on relational or ‘ethical’
practices than political ones – and for good reason, but it has also ignored
or denigrated the role of the body in human relations. The medium of
Relational Revolution is a new ‘yoga’ of revolution - relational practices
that can give each human being a bodily awareness of their whole self
or soul, show them also how to embody this awareness in everyday
relations with other human beings, and offer them a tangible sensuous
experience of deep inner soul-connectedness with others. It is through such
‘bodily relational practices’ that individuals can change their world, the
world of others, and the social world as we know it. How? By overthrowing
the foundations of capitalist social relations in their own souls. To do so
means ceasing to experience their own personal identity as private
property, recognising instead that their true spiritual individuality –
their whole self or soul - is itself an inner society of selves. None
of these selves is the private property of the ego. Rather each of them is a
bridge of identity linking them with others in soul families, groups and
communities. All religious revolutions have aimed not just at a renewal of
each human being’s relationship to the divine but at a revolutionary
transformation of their relationship to one another. The Relational
Revolution is the vehicle of a new Religious Revolution in the form of a
revolutionary spiritual socialism – a ‘socialism with soul’. It recognises
the already existing reality of ‘communism’ - not in the social world but in
those soul groups and communities that make up the soul world. Its aim is
the formation of groups and communities with ‘gnosis’ – social
groups and communities that know themselves as the embodiment of
soul groups and communities, and in this bring the ‘heavenly’ kingdom
of soul ‘down to earth’.
1. Theses of the Relational
Revolution
"The individual is a fact of existence in so far as
he steps into a living relation with other individuals. The aggregate is
a fact of existence in so far as it is built up of living units of
relation."
Martin Buber
When we think of ‘revolution’ most people think of mass
demonstrations or armed revolts involving large groups or masses of people.
For without collective action, how can the world – society - possibly be
changed? But if the aim of social revolution is, as Marx understood it, a
change in social, political and economic relations then the real question is
not how ‘society’ in the abstract can be changed but how those relations can
be changed? A true revolution is a revolution in human relations.
What follows from this is the basic thesis of the
Relational Revolution: namely that that the true locus of revolutionary
practice is therefore neither the individual alone nor society as a whole
but a third realm. This is the realm of immediate one-to-one relations
between individuals in society that form its basic dyadic "units of
relation". A realm that Martin Buber called ‘the between’ or ‘the interhuman’
(das Zwischenmenschliche).
The starting point for a worldwide revolutionary
transformation of human relations can only lie in those one-to-one
"units of relation" that shape the reality of both individuals and social
groups.
Human relations on a group, institutional, social or
international scale can only be changed by changing the way in which
individuals relate to one another within those dyadic, one-to-one units of
relation.
No social or political changes, however dramatic, can
bring about any fundamental revolution in human relations unless those
social and political changes are themselves the expression of a
revolutionary transformation of human relations in those units.
No purely individual or collective, spiritual or
political practices can bring about that Relational Revolution. The only
practices capable of bringing it about must, by definition, be relational
practices of a new and revolutionary character.
2. The
Message of The Relational Revolution
"The sicknesses of the soul are sicknesses of relation."
Martin Buber
We live in a sick world and a world of sicknesses –
social and political, economic and ecological – sicknesses which threaten
the very survival of humanity. All these sicknesses are essentially
"sicknesses of relation" - but how many of them are understood as such?
When will Martin’s Buber’s central message get through?
That sickness and health, therapy and healing, are not about how people
‘are’ – their ‘well-being’ but how they relate to other beings. That human
being is itself the activity through which we body a particular inner
bearing or relation to other beings, and in doing so also ‘bear back’ or
‘relate’ a message to them. We live in a world of ‘relationships’ – social
and economic, political and legal, personal and professional, family and
communal, matrimonial and sexual, formal and informal, close or distant -
but in how many of these relationships is relating understood as
something we do, as a practice.
Relationships are seen as some ‘thing’. As for one’s
actual way of relating, that is reduced to a vagary of ‘personality’ or a
type of ‘behaviour’. Thus there is the practice of medicine - requiring of
course a physician-patient ‘relationship’ - and the individual
physician’s actual way of relating, or not relating, to their patients.
There is the practice of psychotherapy - in which great importance is
attached to the subtleties of the ‘therapeutic relationship’ - and
the individual therapist’s way of actually and actively relating to a client
as a unique human being. Similarly there are ‘customer relationships’,
highly ‘valued’ of course - and there is the actual way in which a
specific customer is related to as a human being not merely as ‘a customer’.
People have their own individual religious, political and
ethical principles, their own dilemmas and problems, hopes and ambitions,
and above all their own individual potentials and values that seek
fulfilment.
AND they have relationships, more or less fulfilling.
People engage in all sort of relational activities with
others, and for all sorts of purposes - educational, political,
recreational, therapeutic, and spiritual.
AND those practices involve relationships with others.
People have practical relationships with others.
AND they have specific relational practices –
specific ways of relating to others within those relationships that
create a greater or lesser degree of relational fulfilment.
The aim of The Relational Revolution is to bring an
end to this ‘AND’ - to show that individuals can only achieve deep
spiritual fulfilment and a deepened spiritual relationship to God through a
revolutionary transformation of the ordinary, everyday practices
through which they relate to others.
3. Identity as Private Property
Those who simply rail against the political conservatives
or the ravages wrought by global capitalism fail to even consider why it is
that human beings should fear change. Is it only that the ruling
corporate oligarchies fear loss of wealth and power? Or does the very
attachment to wealth and power conceal a far more primordial fear that
permeates all classes and strata of capitalist society?
What this fear fears above all is not essentially loss of
wealth or power, but loss of identity. So long as identity itself is
treated as the private property of the individual or group, both will fear
anything that threatens to alter or transform that identity. Individuals and
groups resist change because they cling on in fear to the identifications
that constitute their sense of identity – whether identifications with
wealth or power, economic class or professional status, gender or sexuality,
ideology or religion, ethnicity or race. All genuine relating between
different individuals, groups and cultures is feared precisely because it
cannot but alter and transform both individual and group identity.
When asked what it was that led him to his profound
philosophy of dialogue and authentic relating, Martin Buber spoke both of
his own innate inclination or will to relate, and of fundamental ethical
bearing he adopted towards others in all his human relations.
"It was just a certain inclination to meet people.
And as far as possible, just to change if possible something in the
other, but also to let me be changed by him. At any event, I had
not resistance…put no resistance to it. I began as a young man. I felt I
had not the right to want to change another if I am not open to being
changed by him…I cannot be, so to say, above him and say, ‘No,
I’m out of the picture. You are mad."
Buber emphasises that he was open to being changed not
just by specific individuals but by large-scale international political
events - such as the first world war - involving masses of individuals. He
also describes how he felt this openness as a bodily openness,
involving a type of bodily imagination of the reality experienced by
others. He called this bodily imagination "imagining the real". That people
today can remain inwardly unmoved and unchanged by broadcast images of war
victims, poverty and starvation, does not imply a lack of basic human
empathy or its suppression by media overkill. This being unmoved and
remaining unchanged in the face of media images shows precisely a lacking
bodily capacity to "imagine the real" in Buber’s sense.
This lacking bodily imagination is a form of
psychopathology – a sickness of the soul. But the essence of this sickness
is that it is a sickness of relation – an inability to feel or ‘imagine’ the
inner reality of the other in a bodily way. If a corporate executive
is so mentally detached from their own body how can they begin to feel in a
bodily way the pain of exploited ‘third world’ employees unable to feed or
provide healthcare for their children, let alone the pain of an entire tribe
or community decimated by ecological or economic ruination, or all but wiped
out by ethnic cleansing and genocide? Certainly it would be quite
inconceivable for such an individual to even conceive of feeling the pain of
an animal reared for profit in an industrial concentration camp, let alone
that of an ancient tree felled for profit.
Changing the world is impossible unless we ourselves
possess the relational will and capacity to feel not only the pain of others
– not only the evident pain of exploited masses but the pain hidden in the
very pathology of those who exploit them, the pain hidden in their numb
incapacity to feel the pain of others in a bodily way. Without this will
and capacity not only to change but to be changed by another, to come
off the high horse that says ‘No, I’m out of the play. You are mad –
or bad, or evil’ - and instead be moved by that ‘madness’ and ‘badness’ it
is meaningless to speak of revolutionary change. A true change is relational
and reciprocal. It is not reducible to political revolution in the ordinary
sense – simply reversing the poles of a reciprocal power relation.
Politicising human relations is one of many defences
against a Relational Revolution. So too is psychologising human
relations, for as Buber pointed out, psychologising is "the attempt at a
complete detachment of the soul from its basic character as relationship."
"‘Soul’ is the realm of relation between self and
world and other human beings. ‘Spirit’ the realm of relation between the
human being and ‘the Being that does not manifest in the world’."
Martin Buber
Spiritualising the self is yet another defence
against the Relational Revolution, reducing both ‘spirit’ to a thing rather
than to a reciprocally transformative relation. Neither old-fashioned
political protest and activism, nor individual psychotherapy or New Age
spirituality, have so far succeeded in bringing about revolutionary change.
For the very essence of revolutionary change is a
revolutionary transformation of human relations that can only come about by
changing the way in which we ourselves relate to the real human being before
us – whether friend or foe, comrade or conservative, co-worker or corporate
manager. For whilst it is the ruthless exerted power of the global
corporations that are ruining our world, their power rests on the
delusion that they themselves are but efficiently organised aggregates
of individuals. In fact – and as any corporate manager will freely admit
when he or she is not mouthing company speak – the corporation is built from
units of relation – dyadic units. The same is true of all social
organisations and institutions, economic or party political, religious or
ideological, conservative or revolutionary.
The real front line of ‘revolutionary struggle’ is not
the ideological ‘stand’, ‘position’ or political practices they seek to
promote. It is the actual position and practices they adopt in relating to
each and all of the individuals with whom they stand in relation.
Whether and in what manner each of us is capable of fully sensing and
receiving, facing and if need be confronting others in living encounters is
what counts – not political programmes, protests, or policies - which are
invariably directed at everyone and no-one, and will therefore always fail
to touch the majority as individuals.
‘Great Dictators’ at all levels of society from the state
to the local party committee or council, have always appealed directly to
the group, party or general public because on a one-to-one level they
are relational cripples - never having been able, through their own
relational practices, to initiate, maintain and sustain even a single
reciprocally satisfying and fulfilling relationship. In today’s world,
people seek alleviation from contact starvation and lack of relational
fulfilment through self-elevation to the status of political ‘leaders’,
‘idols’ or ‘stars’. In today’s world, pop-idolhood and celebrity, whether
political or cultural, have become a drunken celebration of a generalised
relational immaturity and incapacity - promoted for commercial profit by the
corporate media barons and brand-designers of the day.
4. Practical Relations and
Relational Practices
What exactly does it mean then, to ‘change the world’? Or
more specifically, what is it that constitutes our or any ‘world’? The
question is important because for all its seemingly irreconcilable
differences, conflicts and divisions of wealth and power – our world is
essentially a consensual reality reinforced by the virtual
reality of the corporate media. It is not a reality fundamentally shaped by
the media but by the practical relations human beings establish with
one another and by the ritualised practices through which they enact
these relations. Thus ‘being a Christian’ or ‘being a Muslim’ means
commitment to an established set of religious practices and practical
relations with others (e.g. attending Church on a Sunday or the mosque on a
Friday). Conversely however, the whole religious significance of
these practices lies in their defining what it means to ‘be a Christian’ or
‘be a Muslim’. Religious ‘meaning’ or ‘significance’ is thus established in
a circular way.
Just as ‘being a Christian’ is reduced to Church-going,
so is ‘being a parent’ reduced to producing children. Being someone’s lover
is reduced to having sex with them. ‘Being a revolutionary’ is reduced to
engaging in political activism. In all cases a sphere of intimate inner
relation, whether to God or to other human beings, is reduced to an
external, practical relation. This is also true of our relation with the
‘things’ that make up our everyday world. We think that ‘the world’, at its
most basic consists of a collection of existing things, natural or man-made,
that lie around for us to ‘perceive’ as objects. In fact we only perceive
that thing we call ‘a kettle’ in the way we do – as ‘a kettle’ - because of
our practical relation to it. What makes the kettle a kettle is the
practical relation we have to it – the practical use we make of it, and the
practical place it has in a set of routinised or ritualised practices such
as ‘making a cup of tea’.
Ritualised or routinised practices shape not only the
practical relations between human beings and the world of things, but
between one human being and another. Thus the practical relation between
physician and patient is shaped by the routinised practice of asking a few
questions, examining the patient’s body, taking measurements or doing tests
etc. The entire significance of the patient’s symptoms is reduced to what
can be determined by a ritualised set of diagnostic practices. The practical
relation of physician and patient too, is shaped by these professional
practices and has nothing essentially to do with their relation as human
beings. A recently bereaved patient, still heartbroken, feels the pain of
her loss in the region of her heart and reports chest pains at night, when
she feels most alone. For the physician, the heartfelt pain of the human
being is of no significance. His practical professional relation to the
human being is only as ‘patient’ with symptoms demanding diagnosis through
routinised practices.
The relation of physician and patient could be enacted
differently – not simply as a practical relation but as a relational
practice – a practice of being with and relating to the patient as a
human being - rather than relating to the human being only as a ‘patient’.
Indeed in the past the very idea of disease as a thing-in-itself or disease
entity was rejected by physicians and what we now take for granted as
diagnostic practices were professionally frowned upon.
Listening – something that physicians rarely have time to
do – is a prime example of a relational practice rather than a
practical relation. If medicine were understood as a relational
practice, the physician would indeed take time to listen to the
patient. If it were understood as a bodily relational practice, the
physician would not simply rest content with observing or examining the body
of the patient from the outside – they would listen not just with their
medical mind but with their whole body - using it to sense the patient’s own
inwardly felt body and inwardly felt dis-ease. The world of medicine and the
physician-patient relation is but one example of the way in which what we
call ‘the world’ is shaped by practical relations which leave no room
for relational practices.
Just as the physician-patient relationship is approached
only with the practical purpose of producing a diagnosis and recommending a
treatment plan, so can the teacher-student relationship be dominated
entirely by the project of setting and completing assignments and passing
exams. Study itself ceases to be experienced as an activity by which the
student deepens their inner relationship to a subject matter, but is
reduced instead to the purely practical project of exam preparation or the
production of passable essays.
We live in a world of practices – scientific and
technical practices, professional and vocational practices, commercial and
economic practices, medical and therapeutic practices, spiritual and
meditational practices, political and religious practices. All these
practices are also relational practices, yet how many understand
themselves as such? For whilst lip service is paid to ‘human relations’ in
these practices, their nature as relational practices – and the
nature of such practices – is rarely considered. How and in what manner
one actually and actively relates to other human beings is instead
reduced to the application of a set of professional skills, respect for a
professional code of conduct, or the organisation of practical activities.
By relational practices I mean modes of relating
to other human beings in general - not just in the context of specific
‘relationships’ or practices. Relational practices are so much a part of
other relationships and practices that we barely consider them worthy of
examination as practices. They are either reduced to individual
‘behaviours’ or taught as practical communication ‘skills’. But the practice
of such ‘skills’ is seen merely as an add-on to all the other practices they
are applied to – as a means to an end and not an end in itself. Practical
skills – even those supposedly to do with interpersonal relationships –
replace relational practices as such.
Anyone can transform their ordinary practical relations
with others into aware and bodily relational practices. In this way they
‘change the world’ in a revolutionary manner, subverting a consensual
reality or world in which practical relations have hitherto squeezed the
life out of human relations, and breathing fresh life into those relations
through their relational practices.
5. Back to Marxist Basics
For Marx, the ‘natural’ relations of one human being to
another (for example of man to woman, or parent to child) are nothing purely
biological. Instead they are shaped by a specifically human relationship
to nature – a relationship which takes the form of creative human labour
or ‘industry’. Labour itself is not essentially ‘physical’ or ‘mental’
activity but sensuous activity – the necessary activity of labour that
brings the senses to life both physically and in consciousness. According to
Marx, therefore, human psychology is not the study of invisible processes in
the human brain, the human genome or human soul. Instead human industry
itself is the "open book of man’s essential powers", "the exposure of human
psychology to the senses." In property-less tribal communities, the world of
nature is "owned" by the human senses and through human sensuous activity –
by seeing and hearing, touching and shaping things - without any need for
private property in the modern sense. Marx saw it as a modern myth that we
"own" something – that it becomes "ours" only by possessing it as private
property for our own personal use and consumption. The history of human
society shows that when the relationship of human beings to nature becomes
one of ownership in this sense, so do relationships to other human
beings – wives as well as slaves, for example, becoming the private property
of their husbands.
The artisans and craftsmen of the past owned their own
labour as a creative human power. They also owned the products of that
labour, which they exchanged for the things they needed or sold for money to
buy them. The feudal serf owned no property in the form of land. He
forfeited a part of his labour and its products to his landlord. Marx
recognized that the modern worker or employee owns neither their own labour
power nor its products. They do not sell the products of their work to their
employer but sell their labour power itself. In doing so they also forfeit
ownership both of their own labour and of its products. This ‘alienation’ or
‘estrangement’ of labour, as Marx called it, "makes man’s life activity, his
essential being, a mere means to his existence." "Life itself appears only
as a means to life".
"What then constitutes the alienation of labour? First,
the fact that labour is external to the worker, i.e., it does not belong to
his essential being; that in his work therefore, he does not affirm himself
but denies himself, does not feel content but unhappy, does not develop
freely his physical and mental energy but mortifies his body and ruins his
mind. The worker therefore only feels himself outside his work, and in his
work feels outside himself. He is at home when he is not working and when he
is working he is not at home. His labour is therefore not voluntary but
coerced; it is forced labour. It is therefore not the satisfaction of a
need; it is merely a means to satisfy needs external to it. Its alien
character emerges clearly in the fact that as soon as no physical or other
compulsion exists, labour is shunned like the plague. External labour,
labour in which man alienates himself, is a labour of self-sacrifice, of
mortification."
"The worker becomes an ever cheaper commodity the more
commodities he creates. The increasing value of the world of things proceeds
in direct proportion to the devaluation of the world of people. Labour not
only produces commodities: it produces itself and the worker as a commodity
– and does so in the proportion in which it produces commodities."
The grossest forms of this cheapening and commodification
of labour, reserved for the less ‘developed’ world, are expressions of the
more universal alienation of labour as analysed by Marx. This
alienation is in turn a fundamental alienation of the human being from
his own body. By selling his body’s labour power, manual or
mental, to the owners of capital, the employee effectively prostitutes
his own body - which becomes a mere object of use to be taken to work
each day like a piece of serviceable equipment. Its function is solely to
serve as a means of production – yet one whose creative products are
no sooner delivered than torn from the worker (whether labourer or
executive) like babies from the womb, passed over into the ownership of
corporate shareholders. The double alienation of the employee - from his
labour power and its products - is a double alienation from his own body.
Human labour, instead of serving to body forth the individual’s creative
potentials of being, becomes a mere means of ‘employment’ – a selective
exploitation of these potentials for profit which leaves the vast bank of
creative human potentials latent within each employee largely unfulfilled
and disembodied – whether the individual be formally employed or unemployed.
Purely quantitative ‘employment figures’, however positive, disguise not
only the cynical exploitation of low-wage labour in the ‘affluent’ West, or
the export of this exploitation to less developed countries. They also a
disguise a vast and hidden qualitative unemployment – the unemployment of
human creative potentials.
As Marx pointed out, one consequence of the capitalist
alienation of labour is that it is in their most human function - that of
productive social activity - that human beings feel most ‘animal’ in their
mutual relations: driven by what seems to be the most competitive, predatory
and territorial of instincts and behaviours. ‘Status’ – and with it
‘self-worth’ or ‘self-esteem’ - are not seen as a human being’s natural
biological heritage but as something to be inherited, earned or bought.
No animal questions its self-worth. Ideas of ‘animalistic’ instincts and
behaviour are largely projections onto the animal world of these human
competitive behaviours - one that allows the latter to be seen as
biologically determined and a necessary part of ‘evolution’. Examined more
closely, nature and animal life can be seen as an ecological miracle of
cooperative behaviour.
Just as people become caricatures of predatory ‘animals’
in the exercise of their most human capacities, so they feel most human
only in their most basic of animal functions…eating, drinking,
sex etc. What the employee sacrifices as a producer - his own sensuous and
bodily creative potentials – he is driven to buy back and reclaim as
a consumer. Alcohol, drug-use or the consumption or mere
possession of commodities become the only way for the human being to
feel their bodies or to feel themselves to 'be somebody’. Those parts of
their being devalued in the workplace are sold back to the employee
piecemeal as ‘values’ artificially added to consumer commodities. A bodily
sense of well-being is offered back as a brand of bio-yoghurt. ‘Real
feeling’ is identified with ‘real chocolate’. Untrammeled autonomy is
identified with the automobile, and the enjoyment of spontaneity with
the consumption of alcoholic spirits. Another consequence of the alienation
of labour is the alienation of human relations as such: "one man is
estranged from another, as each of them is from man’s essential nature."
To make up for the alienation that is built in to their
working relations (however superficially friendly and amicable) people seek
to recover their humanness in their personal relations. But the alienation
of working relations has alienating effects on people’s personal relations
too (a) turning them into a mere means by which people seek to assuage a
huge deficit of needs unmet in their working relations. It is the inability
of people to truly body their own being or ‘spirit’ in their working lives
that leads them to polymorphous perversions in their personal lives through
which they seek to refind their own felt body – either by indulging
their own bodies or by possessing, abusing or causing pain to the bodies of
others. The scale of domestic violence and abuse is testament not to the
innate ‘evil’ or ‘baseness’ of ‘unconscious’ bodily instincts but to this
spiritual desperation. Capitalism knows nothing of the felt body. The
only body it knows is the economically functional or dysfunctional body, the
usable and abusable body, the profitable or prostituted body, the clinical
or cosmeticised body, the pharmaceutically or genetically manipulable body,
the saleable or disposable body.
Going back to Marxist basics means going back to the real
‘ABC’ of Marxist theory – Alienation, Bodyhood and Capitalism.
Capitalism alienates human beings from one another and from their own
bodies, preventing them from fully bodying their being in their mutual
relations. That is why the ABC of revolution is the overcoming of the
individual’s alienation from their own felt body in their everyday relations
with other human beings and their bodies. Under capitalism a
dissociative, instrumentalising, narcissistic, masochistic or pathologising
relation to one’s own body replaces an embodied relation to others.
What I call ‘bodily relational practices’ are fully embodied modes of
relating to other human beings. All of them hinge on a ceasing to think the
body as a mere object or ‘thing’ and instead feeling our own bodyhood as
realm of spiritual activity – the activity of bodying our
innermost being or soul.
6. Relational Revolution in
Practice
A secretary is unable either to verbally express or
emotionally repress feelings of anger and rage aroused by a bullying boss.
Instead she develops an ‘angry’ red skin rash, one which she finds
embarrassing and shameful. For the physician she goes to see, such symptoms
are merely the expression of some somatic disorder – an ‘It’ which needs
only to be diagnosed, treated and cured. He takes no interest in their
symbolic significance, in the patient’s bodily self or in the her world
- the relational context in which her symptoms first emerged. Despite his
diagnostic expertise does not ask the most basic of diagnostic questions –
what had been going on in her life and relationships in the period before
the symptoms first emerged? A psychotherapist who did venture such questions
of this sort would probably regard our secretary’s symptoms only as a form
of ‘somatisation’ - a substitution of somatic symbols (the ‘angry’ rash) for
a verbal expression of ‘anger’. For the ruling dogma is that emotions can
either be consciously expressed or repressed and relegated to the
‘unconscious’. There is no suggestion of a third alternative – that instead
of either expressing or mentally repressing emotions one can simply
give oneself permission to fully feel them in a bodily way. Emotions
are seen as private property of the self, some ‘thing’ to mentally
recognise and cognise. They are not understood as the surface of inner
cognitions – a bodily and feeling cognition of the world and other
people.
The secretary finds herself in the bind of being unable
to express her feelings verbally, fearing (and with good reason) that that
would be ‘rash’, risking her job or arousing an even more powerful rage from
her boss to which she would be emotionally vulnerable. Yet as her
unexpressed feelings build up within her she becomes ever more afraid of
reacting to her boss with a rash and emotive verbal outburst. Unable to do
so, her feelings surface instead on her actual body surface – as an angry
rash or skin ‘irritation’. Lacking a way to face her boss, let alone
‘whack him one’, the rash may appear on her face, her arms or both. Itching
to do so nevertheless, she may be plagued by itching and scratch her skin
until it blisters and bleeds – an activity that provides some substitute
satisfaction in releasing her ‘bad blood’. What however would happen if,
instead of either expressing her feelings or repressing the urge to do so,
she allowed herself to ‘body’ them - to simply and fully feel those
feelings in a bodily way? Were she to do so, those feelings would begin to
change her and not just her body - transforming her bodily sense of
self. Instead of just coming to the surface through a rash outburst or
outward rash, she could feel those fully felt feelings of anger filling her
felt body and in this way giving her a sense of substantiality and strength
rather than fragile vulnerability. What before was merely an emotion felt or
made manifest in a particular part or parts of her body would be transformed
into a new and stronger sense of her body and self as a whole. From
this whole-body sense of inner strength she would then be in a position to
see her boss’s bullying behaviour as an expression of his inner
weakness, his inability to feel that weakness and his
consequent need to make other people – perhaps women in particular -
feel weak instead. She would cease not only to see but to feel his bullying
behaviour as an expression of masculine strength or managerial power over
her. She would not only ‘see through it’ but know it as the
behavioural enactment of his own disembodied sense of impotent weakness.
By bodying what she had first felt only as her ‘own’
private, personal feelings she would then transformed those feelings into a
bodily feeling cognition of another. Such inner bodily knowing of
another communicates instantaneously – requiring no words or actions.
Knowing that it does so is the basis of embodied relating. In this case
for example the secretary could now body not her anger but the inner
strength and inner knowing it has given her - letting herself silently
emanate this feeling of inner strength and knowing through a subtle change
in her bodily demeanour and comportment or resound in her tone of voice.
Knowing her boss’s inner weakness and bodying her own inner strength would
in this way bring about a real political revolution in this single
dyadic relationship. For knowing that he was ‘known’ by his secretary in
this way and feeling the strength she now bodied would make it impossible to
any longer exercise any power over her, or even to feel his own bullying as
an expression of power. The revolution would be accomplished not because a
power struggle had been acted out, nor because a reversal of
roles or power relationships had taken place (the secretary becoming boss or
bully) but purely through bodily relational practices - practices of bodying
and of embodied relating. This is but one of countless possible ‘examples’
of the way in which a Relational Revolution can be accomplished in the
context of dyadic or one-to-one relationships – such relationships being the
basic dyadic units of relation from which all groups and organisations are
built. Bodying our felt state of being – letting it fully permeate
our inwardly felt body – is the basis of all ‘bodily relational practices’.
It is what allows us to transform a deepened relation to our own body into a
more embodied way of relating to others. Chronic sickness is just the
reverse – for here a relation to one’s own body states replaces an
embodied relation to others.
7.
Communication as a Bodily Relational Practice
Of course most ordinary human activities and relations,
personal and professional, are bodily relations. People face and interact
with others in the flesh not as disembodied minds but as some-body. But to
what degree do they sense, take in and respond to each other with and from
their whole being and whole body? Communication in the form of speaking and
listening are both bodily practices through which people relate. But as
practical relations their purposes invariably narrow our awareness to their
own focus on some specific ‘thing’ – a project, plan or purpose. In this way
they also limit human relations to what Martin Buber called an ‘I-It’
relation – a mutual relation to that thing, whatever ‘It’ is. Even a
dialogue about deeply ‘personal’ or even ‘spiritual’ matters is easily
reduced to a purely practical relation - one in which the focus of
awareness is not actually on our relation to the other as a human being or
‘You’ but on some matter or ‘thing’, whether personal or impersonal,
technical or spiritual that is being talked about.
"In our age the I-It relation, gigantically swollen,
has usurped, practically uncontested, the mastery and the rule. The I of
this relation, an I that possesses all, makes all, succeeds with all,
that is unable to say Thou, unable to meet a being essentially, is lord
of the hour."
Martin Buber
Next time you have the opportunity to observe a
conversation between two or more people, notice how much time they give
themselves to take in, digest and metabolise the other person’s words, to
sense and absorb their undertones and resonances, to silently take in
what the other person has said — and to take them in — before
responding with their own words. Notice too, what it is that they
each take in and respond to. Do they respond only to whatever ‘thing’ it is
that is being talked about — or do they respond to the human being
addressing them? Do they take each other’s words "at face value" or do they
also respond to the face that the other person is showing them
through these words? In a word: do they simply exchange words and opinions
or do they engage in a genuine dia-logue; listening and responding
not only to what is expressed in words but also to what is
communicated dia-logos, ‘through the word’? Last but
not least, do they attend to the body and being of the other as a whole –
listening with and from their whole being and their whole body? Or do they
merely relate as talking heads, regarding the body of the other as an object
or ‘It’ and relegating their own bodies to the status of another ‘It’ - a
sealed container of their own private thoughts and feelings?
All scientific evidence pointing to the overwhelming
unconscious significance of ‘body language’ and so-called ‘non-verbal’ forms
of communication notwithstanding, the way people actually engage in
conversation as a relational activity shows just how little conscious
attention they give to its bodily dimensions – to their own bodily
awareness of others and their own bodily responses to others. If they attend
to the body of the other at all it is only as some sort of animate object.
They may notice each other’s ‘body signals’ or ‘body language’ but the
primary focus of attention is on the spoken word and what it relays. And yet
however emotionally or gesturally animated this conversation may be, they
themselves listen and respond to one another primarily as ‘talking heads’.
Their attention is certainly not on the body of the other as a whole.
Nor do they listen to each other with and from their own body as a
whole. The more people feel their own heads and bodies as sealed-off private
containers of their own personal thoughts and feelings the more they feel
bound to rely on words and gestures to express those thoughts and feelings.
Indeed, the more outwardly animated people’s bodies get in a conversation,
the more they may be betraying how inwardly closed off from others they
actually feel inside their bodies – and/or how incapable those others are of
sensing the felt insides of their bodies without prompting through outwardly
animated gestures or ‘body language’.
The mere fact that speech and body language, ‘verbal’ and
‘non-verbal’ communication are counterposed to one another is testament to a
most fundamental misunderstanding of the body’s role in communication
between human beings. We do not just ‘have’ a body. We body. And this
activity of bodying is itself a relational activity, the embodiment
of our inner bearing or comportment towards the world and other people. The
body itself is no ‘thing’ but a relational activity akin to speech.
We are constantly uttering our bodies in a way that our speech itself only
echoes. The human body does not merely ‘have’ a language. It is a
language. Without any movement or gesture it speaks. As for speech
itself, far from being merely a bodily instrument of ‘verbal communication’
it is itself a form of non-verbal communication.
It was Rudolf Steiner who pointed out that just as bodily
gestures are a form of visible speech so is speech itself a form of
invisible gesture - an embodied gesturing of the soul.
‘Gesture’ is not merely something that may or may not accompany a person’s
speech – an optional add-on. An individual’s whole manner of speaking - of
vocal and verbal articulation – is a form of gestural activity. Their very
words have a felt bodily sense which derives from this subtle
gestural articulation, and lends them their suggestive character.
Movement, like speech, is always an articulation of our body as a whole. The
suggestive character of the word lies in the fact that each word in an
utterance is the oral articulation of a specific ‘sub-gesture’ of our body
as a whole. Speech is not the indirect representation of a meaning ‘in’
words, but the direct suggestion of a meaning through the word. Felt
bodily sense or meaning, communicated and sensed ‘through the word’ (dia-logos)
is the essential meaning of what we call dialogue.
8. The Fundamental Sickness of
Relation
"The sicknesses of the soul are sicknesses of relation."
That is to say, the sicknesses of the soul – and the consequent sicknesses
of our world as a whole - do not have their cause ‘in’ the individual soul
or in society but in a third realm – the relations between individuals
within society. Here the fundamental "sickness of relation" that causes
sickness of soul and of our world as a whole lies in the dominance of
totally disembodied modes of relating between individuals. The
prevalence of disembodied modes of relating is shown by the way in which
people engage in the most elementary relational activities – above
all communication in the form of conversing, speaking, and listening. A
relational activity based on a practical relation to some ‘thing’ is one
thing. An aware relational practice is another. An aware and bodily
relational practice is something else again. Relational activities become
aware relational practices only to the extent that they are experienced with
bodily awareness and as bodily practices.
In everyday conversational activity however, people
listen to one another as if meaning were something purely mental that is
represented ‘in’ words. Speaking is perceived as ‘speaking our minds’ - the
expression of a purely mental activity going on in our heads and brains.
This way of understanding human communication reflects an understanding of
the human mind itself that is truly mad or ‘psychotic’.
If a so-called ‘schizophrenic’ hears voices in their head
they are regarded as mad or psychotic. Yet what is the ‘mind’ except a
voice heard in the head ? The only difference between the so-called
‘schizophrenics’ and ‘sane’ people is that in everyday conversation ‘normal’
people either do not hear or listen less to the voices in their own
heads. Instead they immediately translate these voices into a chattering of
the tongue – into their own speech. It is said that the schizophrenic hears
their own thoughts as alien voices speaking in their head. It could
equally be said that the normal person immediately voices their thoughts
instead of listening to them as they would to the voice of another.
They do so because were they to listen to their thoughts in this way they
would hear any given train of thought as but one voice of their being - one
voice among others. As a result they would be forced to stop identifying
their whole being with their mind and thought processes. They would be
forced to recognise their own ‘mind’ for what it really is – a voice in the
head that gives voice to something felt in their body.
The madness of our times lies in not recognising
that what we call 'the mind' is but a mirror and echo-chamber of the
inwardly felt body – that which we call ‘the soul’. The madness
is a profound sickness of the soul - one that expresses a fundamental mis-relation
to its bodily character. Both ‘reason’ and ‘emotion’ are voices of
our being arising from our soul. Neither the highly rational or highly
emotive individual is capable of listening to and hearing the voice of
‘reason’ or of their ‘emotions’ as voices. Instead they identify with these
voices. This is the ‘sane’ person’s equivalent to a ‘schizophrenic’
identifying with the supposed source of the voice or voices they hear in
their head – whether good or evil, human or non-human, angelic or demonic,
rational or emotive. In most cases however, the psychotic - unlike
the psychiatrist - does not identify with the voice in their
head – let alone express it as if it were the voice of sanity in the
form of sober reason or ‘scientific’ objectivity.
Why does this need to be said? Because if the sane cannot
‘think before they speak’ - cannot listen to themselves - how can they
possibly listen to others, sane or ‘insane’? If they cannot hear their own
thoughts as voices in their heads and understand them as a mental mirror and
echo-chamber of their inwardly felt body – their soul - how can they
possibly hear the soul of another resounding in their speech? To do so would
require that we listen to others not just with our minds but with our body
as a whole. That we hear the other not just as a talking head but as a soul
speaking itself through their body as a whole. This would transform our
listening into a bodily relational practice – a mode of embodied relating to
the very soul of the other.
"The sicknesses of the soul are sicknesses of relation."
The fundamental sickness of relation stems from an inability to be with and
relate to others whilst staying in touch with our inwardly felt body as a
whole, and not just the inner mind-space of our heads. As a result we cannot
relate to the other as ‘some body’ – and not just a talking head. For to do
so requires the ability not just to regard someone’s body as a more or less
animated or attractive object but to feel it as a sensory image of their own
subjective awareness or soul.
Only by feeling our body as a whole can we feel our self
as a whole – our soul. Only by sensing the body of the other as a whole can
we feel their self as a whole - their soul. If we cannot feel our body as a
whole from within, we have no way of feeling what goes on in our minds as
something occurring in but one part of our inwardly felt body - our
head - and mirroring but one aspect of the whole, of our soul. If we cannot
feel our own body as a whole from within, then neither can we sense the
inwardly felt body of the other as a whole – their soul. Only the body of
the other as a whole gives us a sensory image of their soul. Only our
own body as a whole can function as a sense organ of our soul. Only
through proprioceptive awareness of our own body as a whole can we transform
it into a sense organ of our soul - enabling us to not only perceive
another person’s body with our body’s senses but proprioceive the other
– to sense their own inwardly felt body or soul. Disembodied relating is
also soulless relating. The essence of The Relational Revolution as a
religious revolution however, consists precisely in becoming aware of the
bodily character of all relational practices and thus re-ensouling our
relations to other human beings and to the world itself.
9. Religion as Relational
Revolution
The Relational Revolution is a truly Religious
Revolution, for like all other religious revolutions it aims at a
spiritual transformation of human relations and with it, the
sicknesses of those relations.
Only in religion do we see any understanding that
relational practices belong to the very essence of ethics. Every new
religion has brought with it a new set of relational practices designed to
bring about a revolutionary transformation in the individual’s relation both
to God and to other human beings. "Love thy neighbour as thyself" is a
famous example. Yet these religiously proclaimed relational practices tended
to be codified as positive or prohibitory ethical laws such as the 10
commandments. Practice of religious law however, both symbolises and at the
same time obscures the true essence of relational practices. For following a
relational practice has nothing to do with obeying a law but rather with
authentically embodying a value.
‘Love’ is not an obligation, commandment, law that can be
obeyed or broken. It is a quality of soul that we do or do not embody
as a relational practice – in our whole way of relating to other human
beings. The same applies to other religious ‘values’ – goodness, compassion,
forgiveness, reverence, devotion etc. Such values cannot be taught as laws
or principles to be obeyed or disregarded. They can only be embodied
in different ways and to different degrees.
A relational practice is a method or means by which to
authentically embody a spiritual value in our whole way of being with
and relating to others – it is a means to that end. But just as following
enforced moral codes became an end in itself in Western religions, so
did the meditational disciplines and practices of the Eastern religions.
Religious practices such as meditation, contemplation, study or prayer, are
indeed intended to renew or consummate an inner relationship with God. Yet
their essence as relational practices – and the essential nature of such
practices - has not been examined.
As relational practices aimed at a revolutionary
spiritual transformation of human relations, past religious practices
have failed ignominiously. They have not created a race of human beings
capable of truly embodying the spiritual values they espouse. That is
because, as bearers of self-proclaimed ‘spiritual’ principles and practices,
they have ignored or vilified the essential medium of all human relations
and all relational practice – the human body. Or worse, they have treated
human relations and the human body as an obstacle to a spiritual relation
with God.
10. Changing the World?
"How far is the truth capable of embodiment? That is the
question. That is the experiment."
Nietzsche
The Relational Revolution is no mere philosophy or set of
moral or religious principles but a revolutionary set of bodily
relational practices. Together these constitute a new ‘yoga’ – not a
yoga of ‘health’ or ‘self-realisation’, but a yoga of embodied relating.
This revolutionary New Yoga offers each individual a practical path to
relational fulfilment – new ways to realise themselves through their
embodied relation to others. By embodying the relational practices of The
New Yoga each individual can become a Relational Revolutionary - furthering
a revolutionary transformation of all human relations - the Relational
Revolution.
What has a new ‘yoga’ of bodily relational practices and
the Relational Revolution it can bring about have do to with all the evident
things that need changing in this world, and with all its evident sicknesses
– economic and ecological? Is not revolutionary change, after all, a
political matter, demanding political protest, action and power? Because it
is precisely in the realm of political practice that we see a complete
eclipse of relational awareness and a complete absence of revolutionary
relational practices.
Mass political apathy reflects the profound awareness of
the masses that political discourse has become a mere preaching to the
converted or a debate of the deaf, founded on a fundamental incapacity to
engage in listening dialogue. Listening is not something we do with
our ears or minds alone. It is something we can do with our whole body and
whole being. Listening in this way we become ‘all ear’. Our listening is
transformed into a bodily relational practice that allows us to hear
through the word of the other and heed the whole human being that
addresses us.
A group of left-wing activists meet to plan a protest,
organise a campaign of political ‘action’, or participate in such action.
Whilst their practical project may have the purpose of raising important
issues that affect other human beings, even before they meet it has the
result of reducing their own relation to one another as human beings to a
purely practical or pragmatic one. Even though their common aim is to
‘change the world’, each departs from the meeting with their own world
unchanged. For though they have met and engaged with one another as a group
they have by no means genuinely met as individuals – for to do so would mean
allowing their own way of being-in-the-world to be changed by one
another – even if only one other. Despite wishing to change the world
their own world remains totally unchanged - because for all the group
‘meetings’ that are organised no authentic meeting of two human beings ever
occurs.
All who attend such ‘meetings’ remain bound to their own
unchanged way of being-in-the-world and relating to others. Their own
being-in-the-world not having changed, they are each left with a strangely
ambivalent sense of ‘longing’ – feeling on the one hand a renewed sense of
‘belonging’ to a larger group or whole on the one hand, and on the
other hand a lingering sense of existential hollowness on the other.
The ‘existential’ hollowness is a felt lack of relational fulfilment and
change that no group accomplishments and no sense of group solidarity can
substitute for. For no purely practical relations with others – even those
motivated by the desire to help other human beings - can replace the
relational practices aimed at genuinely meeting the other as a human being
and not just as the representative voice of a political passion or position.
The political actions that our activists plan and
implement as a group are a way of ‘acting out’ the personal empathy they
feel with other groups of human beings who suffer exploitation or
persecution. In reality, however, it is not groups that feel and suffer from
persecution or exploitation but individual human beings. No two Jews
experienced the concentration camps in the same way, for by virtue of their
irreducibly different ways of being-in-the-world they each experienced that
world in a different way and embodied a different bearing or relation
towards it.
Thus to politically act out a felt relation to
groups of other human beings – through group meetings or mass protests - is
by no means the same thing as to actively relate to those others – or to any
other – as an individual. That is also why a single intimate dialogue with a
single individual to whom one’s political sympathies are directed – whether
a striking worker or asylum seeker – can do more to change the world than a
whole series of political campaigns. Why? Because through that dialogue the
world of that individual can be changed. Similarly, a single intimate
dialogue with an individual towards whom one feels great political antipathy
can do more to change the world than a whole series of ‘actions’ directed at
the social group or political party to which that individual belongs. Why?
Because only in this way can that individual’s mode of being-in-the-world
and relating to others be touched and changed by one’s own. This assumes of
course, that one can fully embody one’s own way of being-in-the-world
through a fully embodied relation to the other - a relation in which one is
fully present with the other in a bodily way and fully receptive to the
other as some-body.
"The propagandist…is not in the least concerned
with the person whom he desires to influence, as a
person.."
Martin Buber
Two talking heads, discoursing, debating or seeking to
score intellectual points off one another do not constitute a true and
meaningful meeting of human beings.
11. Activism or Reactionism?
The way we perceive another person communicates to them,
whether or not we express it in word or deed. Personal and political
perception is a form direct action – for each individual’s
awareness of other people and the world automatically communicates -
working on the psyche of others and spreading out like a ripple in the
mass psyche. Political activism on the other hand, is founded on the belief
that political awareness is powerless unless translated into
energetic ‘work’ or ‘action’. This belief often leads not to effective
political action but rather to emotionally driven re-actions
to political events. Political activism of this form is, in the most literal
sense, ‘re-actionary’. Reacting emotionally to political beliefs or
behaviour of others prevents us from seeing and feeling the emotions behind
those beliefs and that behaviour. It is like reacting to a child’s
‘outrageous’ behaviour with rage rather than understanding the rage behind
that behaviour – the rage of the other. What political activists remain
ignorant of is the fact that not all knowledge needs to be translated
into action or even communication. For there is knowledge of a different
sort – an inner bodily knowing that is already and in itself a form of
communicative action.
Left-wing thinking in general still bears the trace of a
naïve enlightenment rationalism that opposes itself to the supposed
‘irrationalism’ of the political Right. The naivety is the belief that the
world can be changed by rational cognition and argument alone. But rational
argument and cognition without feeling understanding cognition can no more
change the political world than it can change the behaviour of an infant,
child or adolescent. Reason itself – including political reasoning - is
nothing but a more or less distorted articulation of inner knowing or gnosis
- an intuitive and bodily knowing. The rational articulation of this inner
knowing however, is easily distorted into a mere ‘rationalisation’ of
emotions. The degeneration of rational argumentation into a mere means of
rationalising intense personal feelings only occurs because those
feelings have not yet themselves been felt and explored sufficiently to
understand their own intrinsic rationality. There is nothing innately
‘irrational’ about feelings – for there are always good reasons why
people feel the way they do. Emotional feelings are the surface of an inner
feeling cognition of the world and other people that is far deeper than
purely intellectual cognition - and therefore also the potential source of
far deeper intellectual or ‘rational’ understandings. A true and consistent
rationalism would not oppose reason to feeling or treat the latter as
‘irrational’ but affirm the intrinsic rationality of feelings. Only
in this way can reason prevent itself from becoming a mere
rationalisation of feelings whose true ground or reason has not
yet been fully felt and understood.
It is the remaining imprint of naïve enlightenment
rationalism that makes socialists impermeable to inner knowing or ‘gnosis’ –
indeed to any profound spiritual traditions or philosophies associated with
‘irrationalism’ and/or with the political Right. Do they not recognise that
Marxism would not exist had not Marx himself studied, learned and drawn from
the major philosopher of the political Right of his time – Hegel.
Twentieth-century ‘Marxists’ on the other hand refuse to even consider the
profoundly revolutionary thoughts that could be drawn from the thinking of a
Nietzsche or Heidegger, merely brandishing them as proto-Nazi or Nazi
philosophers not worthy of any consideration at all. It would be as if Marx
had refused to even study Hegel on account of his political beliefs.
Again, were he to have done so we would not have any Marxism at all – no
Capital, no Communist Manifesto. We would also have no politically correct
‘Marxists’ of the sort who continue to remain proudly ignorant of
every profound philosophy except that of Marx. Yet as they well know, it was
Marx himself who first declared that he was not a ‘Marxist’.
The irrational Righteousness and false ‘rationalism’ of
the Left is the biggest obstacle to a radical rethinking of revolutionary
socialism and the creation of an even more deeply rational or ‘scientific’
socialism. It runs contrary to Marx’s own rejection of enlightenment
rationalism with its lacking dialectical concept of logic and reason. Marx’s
profound study of the dialectics of human social and economic relations did
not, as we know from his biographies, endow him with any great capacity to
relate to other human beings as individuals. Nor was Heidegger’s profound
study of the nature of human being as such matched by his capacity to study
individual human beings. It was through his intense interest in and ‘study’
of the individual human beings he encountered – his willingness to learn and
be changed by them - that Martin Buber was able to transform Marxist
theoretical dialectics into a practice of authentic dialogue.
In socialist political groupings, as in the parliamentary
debating clubs of the Western democracies, diction and contradiction replace
authentic dialogue. We know that parliamentary democracies are sham, since
they allow the implementation of no political decisions - however ethical
and rational - that go against corporate economic interests and global
finance capital. Decision-making is based neither on rational debate nor on
genuine meeting or dialogue, but rests on a push-and-pull of competing
economic interests on the one hand, and party-political elites and cliques
on the other. National political parliaments have proved themselves impotent
in the face of the global economic interests, and the global military and
economic hegemony of the United States. But where decision-making on any
level - whether that of the individual, dyad, group, institution or state -
is based fundamentally on a push-and-pull of competing ideas, impulses,
emotions or interests, ‘reason’ can serve only the entirely subordinate role
of rationalising ineffectual compromises and giving them a superficial
veneer of ethical respectability. Decisions are taken ‘democratically’ by
the individual or group mind but these are decisions that in no way
embody the true will of the individual or group. For true will or
intent knows no mental compromise – it is the uncompromising embodiment of
inner knowing, inner values and inner truth.
12. The
Politics of the Body
Real political history does not consist of a series of
political events – wars and conquests, the creation of states and empires
etc. Real history is rooted in the emotions that gave rise to and
fuelled historic events. It is individually felt e-motions that motivate and
move people and that also create mass movements. It is the fear people have
of feeling those emotions in a bodily way, or the difficulty they have in
expressing them in a bodily way, that leads both to the formation of
organised political ‘bodies’ and to struggles between such bodies.
Organised political bodies seem to offer people an opportunity to express
the gut feelings aroused by their exploitation, but political action is all
too often just a way of ‘venting’ feelings, thereby simply evacuating
them from our bodies rather than finding ways of embodying those
feelings in our way of relating to others. Chanting a political slogan or
putting together a political policy may both appear to be ways of
‘expressing’ a gut feeling and communicating a political message. But
expression is not communication, as we know from art that ‘expresses’ the
artist’s feelings but totally fails to communicate. Communication is a
relational act that bears back or relates a message to a specific other.
A political act that is not a relational act is also not a communicative act
in this sense. Instead political activism is a form of ‘acting out’ – one
whose true purpose is not so much to express the gut feeling as to evacuate
it from one’s body or vaporise it in words. Only by feeling our feelings in
a bodily way can we embody them through a new way of being-in-the-world and
relating to other human beings - not as a group but as individuals. It is
only by letting our feelings first of all change us that we can
change the world for others, doing so through our own way of relating to
them as individuals.
Can we change the world simply by the way we are – our
being? Only if we first of all understand that ‘being’ is not a noun but a
verb, not a state but a relational activity - the bodying
of a definite inner bearing or comportment in relation to the world and
other people. The bodying of this bearing constitutes their particular way
of ‘being-in-the-world’. We can each change the world through the way we
are, because our very way of ‘being-in-the-world’ is a bodily relational
activity, one which bears or ‘relates’ a message to others through our whole
bodily comportment and demeanour.
Changing the world is made possible only by a basic
bodily relational practice – the ability to not only put ourselves in
another person’s shoes but in their bodies themselves, feeling from within
our own bodies the unique inner bearing that they embody, their way of
being-in-the-world. This bodily identification with the inner bearing of
another human being enables us to feel in our own bodies their whole
way of being-in-the-world - and with it the ‘world’ that they are ‘in’. If
we can do this not only with friends and those we love but with foes and
those we hate, not only with the victims of exploitation and racism,
tyranny and abuse, but with their perpetrators, then and only then do we
empower ourselves to change the world. Only by allowing ourselves to be
changed by those we would change do we empower ourselves to change them
- for it is only our capacity to identify with and be changed by another
human being that can make them receptive to being changed by us.
Those who seem to cause the most pain and suffering to other human
beings and thus to be the most fearful and ‘evil’ of human beings – the
Stalins and Hitlers of this world – are precisely those whose own suffering,
hurt and pain others most fear to see and feel. Left isolated in this
way, such ‘evil’ individuals then feel no way out except to try and make
others feel their own pain, hurt and suffering – often doing so in the most
violent and brutal of ways.
All violent action not only makes the victim feel pain.
It also expresses the unfelt pain of the perpetrator. If the victims then
express their pain by causing pain to others and becoming perpetrators in
turn, the vicious circle is complete. It could be broken by a simple
relational principle - ‘Love thy neighbour as thyself’ – but only if
understood in its deeper sense. Loving thy neighbour, friend or foe, ‘as
thyself’ does not mean merely loving another to the same degree as
one loves one’s own self. It means lovingly identifying with their
self and world as if it were ours. To embody this relational principle
requires a bodily relational practice – that of bodily identification with
the soul of the other in all its depths and all its felt and still unfelt
pain. Each of us is in the world in a bodily way. Thus it is that we
can only inwardly feel and identify with another person’s way of
being-in-the-world in a bodily way, through a relational practice of bodily
identification with the other. The practice of bodily identification is not
simply empathy with another person’s emotions. For it hinges on a bodily
sensitivity and responsiveness to the gestural and suggestive dimension of
all communication - mental or emotional, ‘verbal’ or ‘non-verbal’.
"Empathy with the souls of others is…a physiological
susceptibility to suggestion….One never communicates thoughts: one
communicates movements, mimic signs, which we then trace back to
thoughts."
Friedrich Nietzsche
Organised political bodies have long stood in the way
of an organismic politics of the body. Such a politics would be based
on the recognition that to every mental and emotional ‘attitude’, every
intellectual and political ‘position’ or ‘standpoint’, belongs an inwardly
felt bodily bearing and posture. An undefended openness to being
intellectually persuaded or emotionally moved by others is no mere mental
attitude or emotional state. It goes together with an inner bodily bearing -
a felt bodily sense of openness to the other. Similarly, receiving
another person’s body with an open-armed welcoming embrace is an authentic
gesture only if it is the embodiment of an inner bearing that is already
felt in a bodily way. That is why as much if not more can be read in the
eyes, face and whole bodily bearing of a politician than in the political
standpoint they adopt, the ‘positions’ they espouse, the political parties
or programmes of action they participate in and the policy statements they
put their name to. The look on a person’s face, the way they look at you and
meet or do not meet your gaze show and say more about their way of
looking out at the world and other people – their inner world outlook - than
any ideology they espouse. Similarly, their bodily posture says more about
their inner bearing towards the world and other people than any political
position or ‘posture’ they adopt.
The general public knows this better than any political
pollster or activist. They seek out politicians whose overall ‘look’ and
bearing embody an inner bearing and world outlook resembling theirs – and do
so independently of its practical or party-political expression. The German
left were naively shocked that a Hitler could find support amongst the
working classes, despite his courting and being abetted by industrial
bosses. That is because what counted was not his political policies but his
political bearing and physiognomy – one which embodied
intense felt impulses, values and conflicts in their own soul. Alone among
the left-wing thinkers of the time, only the Marxist psychoanalyst Wilhelm
Reich understood "the mass psychology of fascism" as the expression of an
inner bearing that had become muscularly rigidified and took the form of a
rigid bodily "character structure" - one whose visible expression was a type
of militaristic rigidity of posture.
13. Health
and Human Relations
The Relational Revolution is founded on the understanding
that the health of both the individual and society is determined by the
health of human relations, and that sicknesses of all sorts are the
result of a fundamental pathology of human relations. This understanding has
its historic roots in Marx’s analysis of ‘alienation’ – the alienation of
human beings from one another, from nature and from their own essential
human nature. It stands in direct opposition to the current commercial
fetishism of wellness – an ideal of ‘well-being’ which ignores its
foundation in our relation to other beings. Marx’s analysis of capitalist
economies showed how relationships between people come to be dominated by
relationships between things – prices, exchange rates, share values etc
– and by one vast impersonal ‘thing’ in particular, that which we call "The
Market". Marx recognized this as a great paradox, since in the last analysis
relationships between things are actually an expression of relationships
between people: ‘how things go’, and ‘how things are’ depends on how people
relate – on their relational practices. That is why only through their
relational practices can human beings free themselves from the grip of those
reigning practical relations that reign over and impoverish human relations
in capitalist society. The key to a relational understanding of revolution
was provided by Martin Buber. For it was he who first identified two primary
modes of being with and relating to others – the one governed by purely
practical relations, the other being a practice of authentic relating and
therefore also an authentic relational practice. In what Buber called
the ‘I-It’ mode, the human being relates to both things and people only as
objects of observation and analysis, need and desire. In what he called the
‘I-You’ mode the human being relates to both things and people in a quite
different way – as one being to another, an ‘I’ to a ‘You’. For Buber, this
was the true Realm of Relation for it was the realm of true or authentic
relating.
The I-It mode dominates wherever other people serve
primarily as means to an end, fulfilling each other’s physical, emotional or
practical needs and desires. But it also dominates wherever any sphere of
human practical relations is not transformed by relational practices which
transform the ‘I-It’ or ‘We-It’ relation into an ‘I-You’ relation. Even the
supposedly ‘best companies to work for’ still essentially relate to their
employees in an I-It mode, using all their personal qualities and
interpersonal skills to cultivate a ‘good’ relationship to the employees –
but doing so only as a means to the end of enhanced productivity and
profitability. They define their goals and objectives solely in terms of a
‘We-It’ relation focused on efficiency, costs, productivity, sales,
shareholder value etc. The I-It relation also dominates professional
relationships of all sorts - not only when the relationship to the client or
partner is seen primarily as a source of income or fees, but also where it
serves only as a means to other less obvious ends: for example that of
‘proving’ how knowledgeable, skillful or successful the professional is,
confirming or boosting the latter’s image or self-image, helping their
career advancement etc. As for the realm of professional medicine, before
the patient even enters the consulting room the relationship of physician to
patient has primarily the character of an I-It relation. For the primary
professional role of the physician is precisely to separate the
patient as a human being or ‘You’ from "It" – their own body and felt
symptoms. However much personal interest he has in the patient, his
professional focus is entirely on this It, and on "its" causes and cures,
diagnosis and treatment.
The ‘I-It’ relation, as Martin Buber understood it,
included all modes of third person relating, including the ‘I-he’ or ‘I-she’
relation. For in our minds, just as in any meeting with others, there is a
part of us that takes the role of onlooker and observer of the other(s). For
this ‘I’, the other is not a ‘You’ but exists for us only in the third
person: as a ‘he’ or ‘she’, a ‘him’ or ‘her’. Our very thoughts about
another person take the form of thoughts about ‘him’ or ‘her’ and not a
direct felt relation to a ‘You’. Buber did not explicitly discuss the
‘We-It’ relation, though this is precisely the relation that most
characterises those practical relations between people that dominate human
relations in general and leave no room for relational practices. The We-It
mode of relatedness is characteristic of most business and working
relationships, relations in which human beings collectively concern
themselves with a third thing, whatever ‘It’ is, or relations between things
and between people – relations which are also turned into an ‘It’, an object
of scrutiny or analysis. It is through the We-It relation that the relation
of human beings to one another becomes preoccupied by their common practical
relation to things and becomes in turn subservient to those things and their
relations.
14. The Relational Revolution in
Science
Marx’s great insight was to recognise how relations
between human beings have hitherto been determined by their mutual practical
relation to nature and to the ‘things’ of this world. That this relation has
the character of a ‘We-It’ relation is what defines the character of modern
industry and technology, which reduce both human beings and nature to a set
of commercially exploitable ‘resources’. The fact that the term ‘human
relations’ is treated as synonymous with something called ‘human resources
management’ is testament to this. The Relational Revolution has a bearing
not only on the relation of human beings to one another but also on their
mutual relation to nature and to their ‘scientific’ understanding of nature.
For what we call ‘science’ is an understanding of relations between natural
phenomena that is entirely governed by the ‘We-It’ relation, and stands
entirely in the service of the commercial exploitation of nature - including
human nature itself in the form of the human genome.
Science is an attempt to ‘make sense’ of reality – it is
essentially a sense-making or ‘semiotic’ activity. This sense that modern
science makes of the world however, is one that has become far removed from
our immediate bodily relation to nature and our immediate sensory experience
of natural phenomena. The idea of water as a molecule composed of two parts
hydrogen and one part oxygen bears no relation whatsoever to the qualities
of water as we experience them in a sensory way. Yet for the modern
scientist, the ‘reality’ of what we experience as water is nothing more than
a molecular structure. That is because of what science itself essentially
has become - a set of routinised and institutionalized social practices
shaped by a purely practical relation to nature. This purely practical
relation to nature leaves no room for practices which deepen our felt,
bodily relation to nature and in this way allow us to experience its reality
in a wholly different way.
What is missing from our current understanding of
‘science’ is the simple fact that our ‘scientific’ understanding of the
relationships between things or between people is shaped by our relation to
them. If that relation is a purely external one determined by practical
purposes then nature, along with human nature will inevitably be perceived
as an ‘It’ – reduced to a set of energies or genes, of quantum-mathematical
relationships or biomolecular relationships. Conversely however, along with
the revolutionary transformation of human relations will come a new ‘We-You’
relation between human beings and nature. This new relation to nature will
entirely transform our understanding of relations between natural phenomena.
Scientific research will be refounded in our immediate, sensuous and bodily
experience of nature - becoming a set of ‘bodily relational practices’. This
will allow human beings to once again understand all bodies, microcosmic and
macrocosmic, as embodiments of their own aware inwardness or soul - as a
living bodily language of that divine soul or ‘You’ that is also our
innermost self or ‘I’.
What the ‘normal’ person generally takes as the real
‘world’ is a normative and consensual reality in which being is reduced to
having and doing, health to economic functionality as part of a global
labour force, and ‘reality’ as such to every and any ‘thing’ but living
relationship. The essential reality of the human being is a complex of
relationships. How they experience their reality is determined by the inner
bearing they adopt to and within those relationships – their way of being in
the ‘world’ that these relationships constitute. Any break in the normal
pattern of relating, dominated as it is by everyday practical relations,
brings about a break with normal consensual reality - but by no means with
reality as such. For the ‘normal’ person their practical relations and
purposes are what constitute the world they take as real - however
superficial or unreal the relationships that make up that world. The
Relational Revolution is a break with the entire non-relational concept of
reality that underlies the world of normality, and the ‘normal’ modes of
relating that maintain and reinforce it. Other realities do exist than the
physical universe we take as the benchmark of reality as such. The
Relational Revolution is also a doorway into those realities, but one we can
only open and enter through a revolutionary transformation of our own
relation to the sensory world around us. That relation must cease to be one
in which thinking turns all sensory phenomena of that world into
intellectual abstractions. Instead it must become a relation in which we
think with our bodies themselves, using them to sense the aware inwardness
or ‘soul’ of all natural bodies – not least the human body itself, which is
both a sense organ of the soul, and as Wittgenstein recognized, a sensory
image of the soul – its "best picture". Then we will begin to experience
another ‘world’ or ‘reality’ – a world more fundamentally real than all the
fundamental realities postulated by relativity and quantum science. That is
the world of soul and of inner soul qualities that find expression in all
the sensory qualities of the natural world. This is a world as closed to
conventional scientific thinking as it is to conventional political thinking
- for both are ultimately founded on a totally outmoded and disembodied
understanding of thinking as such. How then, can we truly revolutionise our
thinking – for surely that is the first step in any revolution?
"We must simply give our thought to the body. We must
take our thinking ‘down’ into the body. We must learn to think through
the body. We must learn to think with the body…For once we should listen
in silence to our bodily, felt experience. Thinking needs to learn by
feeling, by just being with our bodily being."
David Michael Levin
15. Relational Revolution and
Education
Still today however, politicians and activists of the
Left persist in the delusion that ‘the world’ can be changed without
changing human beings – not just in general but as individuals, and
changing not just their minds but their whole bodily way of being. Similarly
seekers of knowledge persist in the delusion that it is enough to study the
human world, its history, its religious and political philosophies and
practices or to study the nature of the human being in general. The study of
our own individual being and of the individuality of other human beings is
not seen as an intrinsic part of life. Instead it is pursued only in
psychotherapy - and only then if forced upon people by extremes of suffering
that they cannot understand without the help of a professional psychologist.
That it is foreign to everyday language to even speak of ‘studying’
individual human beings - except in a detached, clinical way - arises from
the fact that we associate ‘study’ with the investigation of some subject or
thing, an ‘It’ rather than a ‘You’. Thus it is that we also associate
knowledge with knowledge ‘of’ or ‘about’ something or someone. We can study
a subject by reading about it or a person by reading their biography, but we
can only study living human beings, ourselves included, through a different
sort of biography – a biography that is etched in their bodies, echoed in
their speech and that unfolds through our own lived relation to them.
It is in the area of study and education that capitalism
first indoctrinates people in disembodied modes of relating and a
disembodied understanding of knowledge - one stripped of all individual,
sensory and bodily dimensions. This was recognised by the American
philosopher John Dewey: "…the pupil has a body, and brings it to school
along with his mind. And the body is of necessity a well-spring of energy;
it has to do something." But in conventional education "a premium is put on
physical quietude, on rigid uniformity of posture and movement, upon a
machine-like simulation of the attitude of intelligent interest." From this
arise all the so-called problems of ‘discipline’ in schools, for the result
is that "the neglected body, having no organised fruitful channels of
activity, breaks forth, without knowing why or how, into meaningless
boisterousness, or settles into equally meaningless fooling." The essence of
education is a view of learning in which "the sense and muscles are not used
as organic participants in having an instructive experience but as external
inlets and outlets of the mind." The body is reduced to an instrumental
channel for such educational inputs and outputs, the brain to a computer
into which the student must download information from a teacher or textbook.
The very ‘subject’ of study is invariably a class of objects and
never a true subject – a being of any sort. Plants and animals are
treated in the classroom as they are in mechanised agriculture and factory
farming – as mere classes of living or animate objects. The knowledge thus
imparted does indeed serve to ‘change the world’ but only in the narrow
sense required by capitalism – learning the mental and manual practices
necessary to transform both things and beings into commodities. Relational
practices and relational knowledge do not fit into the frame. Even
‘religious’ education is reduced to knowledge ‘of’ or ‘about’ world
religions and their diverse ritualistic practices - practices whose
relational character has no individual dimension whatsoever but is
equated with adherence to a universal moral code. Education of a new and
revolutionary sort - education in bodily knowing and relating - can only be
achieved through the teacher’s own bodily knowing and relating. The
true teacher - academic, political or spiritual - is the most dedicated
student. In particular the true teacher is the most dedicated student
of their own students – not as learning machines but as individual human
beings.
16. Bodily
Relational Education
The aim of The Relational Revolution is not to do away
with our ordinary practical relations with others, but rather to recognise
and engage in them as relational practices. The revolution consists in
reversing the dominance of practical relations over relational practices, a
dominance which prevents individuals from achieving a sense of relational
fulfilment in their practical relations with other human beings. Only
through bodily relational education – education in bodily
relational awareness can our responses to others become bodily
relational practices. The first step in becoming a Relational
Revolutionary is cultivating bodily relational awareness. The rule is
to ‘be-ware’ – to be aware of oneself and others in a bodily way:
To be aware of the ways in which, at any time and in
any interaction with other human beings, the purposes of that interaction
and the routinised or ritualised forms it takes can prevent us from relating
to others in a ‘holistic’ manner - with and from our whole body and our
whole being.
To be aware of how, at any time and in any
interaction with other human beings, our relation to them can reduce itself
to a ‘We-It’ relation, one in which the two or more individuals who
constitute this ‘We’ lose a full bodily awareness of themselves and each
other and instead get drawn into an exclusive focus on whatever ‘It’ is that
they are concerning themselves with.
To be aware of how, at any time and in any
interaction with other human beings, we can lose awareness of our whole
being or self by losing awareness of our body as a whole. Above all, to
be aware of how, through losing awareness of our own body and being as a
whole, we also lose awareness of the whole body and whole being of the
other.
To be aware of how, at any time and in any
interaction with other human beings, a disembodied mode of relating can set
in - one in which people relate to one another only as talking heads, in
which they may freely speak their minds and talk about some thing or other,
but in which they do not sense one another with their bodies, or say
anything to one another through their words.
To be aware that saying something to someone
means more than just speaking about something with them. It
means responding to their whole bodily presence and addressing their whole
being. It means not just conveying a message to them ‘in’ words but doing so
through the word – with our whole body and from our whole being. Only
in that realm in which the wordless messages convey themselves through the
word (dia-logos) is real dialogue established.
To be aware of the way in which our every word is an
embodiment of our whole way of being-in-the-world - and a
response to another person’s whole way of being-in-the world. For without
this awareness we can neither change nor be changed by the other person’s
way of being-in-the-world. Our words and those of the other therefore cease
to be a medium of relation at all. Communication becomes an alternation of
monologues which are a response to no one in particular, are
addressed to no-one in particular, and which change no one at all.
To be aware that ‘the mind’ is a mirror and an echo
chamber of our inwardly felt body as a whole – our soul. That the less
inwardly aware we are of our body as a whole, the less we can feel our own
inner depths of soul – or those of others – and the less depth there will be
to our thoughts and words.
To be aware that the thoughts that pass through
people’s minds, like the words and voice tones with which they express them,
can both echo a more or less deep and resonant voice of their being.
To be aware that just as a full and resonant voice
can only be produced by someone who speaks from their inwardly felt body as
a whole - and not just their head, throat or chest - so can full and
resonant words only be uttered by one who speaks from a bodily
fullness of soul.
To be aware that in listening to others speak, we
hear not only their audible words and tone of voice, but can hear through to
the inner soul voices - more or less deep, full or resonant – that resound
in their bodies and echo in their speaking voice.
To be aware at all times that the ‘person’ we
encounter is not the whole human being but just that voice or those
voices of their soul that they currently identify with and per-sonify,
permitting them to ‘sound through’ their body and its facial mask or
persona.
Postscript:
Socialism with Soul
The soul dimension of socialism has to do with the
intrinsically social character of the individual soul as such. We have not
one personal identity but many. Our soul identity is itself a group
identity. The soul is itself a family group or community of selves. The
personal self we know and identify with is but one part and one expression
of this inner society of selves. As souls we are multi-persons.
In the social world, each person is the hub of a
wheel of dyadic relationships with others. Part of the meaning of these
relationships lies in the way in which each person we relate to in our
social world symbolises and links us to another self of our own – to a
specific part of that group or society of selves that makes up our whole
self or soul. In the social world, we are taught to feel our personal
identity as the private property of our ego. In the soul world on the
other hand, personal identities can mix, merge, meld and overlap with those
of others, without any loss of essential spiritual individuality, which has
to do with the group nature of our whole self or soul.
If two individuals linked in a dyadic relationship can
sense the specific aspects of their own souls linking them with the other,
and feel the ways in which their own identity overlaps with that of the
other, then that relationship becomes a link to their whole self or soul. It
ceases to be a mere ‘interpersonal relationship’ - one in which each person
treats their own identity as private property, and rigidifies the boundary
of identity separating them from the other person. Instead they become
conscious of their interpersonal relationship as a soul relationship, and
become aware of its reality in the soul world.
A social group is a group of persons. A soul
group is a group of souls. But since each individual, as a soul, is
themselves a group or society of selves, a soul group has a ‘holarchical’
character. It is a group of groups in which each member is part of every
other, and is linked to each other member through a particular
aspect of their own soul. If each member of a social group is able to
feel the specific inner soul-connection uniting them with each other member
of the group, then the social group can come to consciousness of
itself as a soul group, and become aware of its own living reality in
the soul world.
It is only through a highly specific sense of our inner
soul connection with a specific other that both interpersonal and group
relationships can be transformed into soul relationships - awakening a
social consciousness of our own whole self or soul, of soul groups and
communities, and of the soul world as such.
Most accounts of society and social history are based
purely on studies of social practices and the social world as such.
They entirely ignore the social influence and reality of soul
relationships, soul groups and the soul world. The
natural world is a world that surrounds us all the time. It is not
‘another world’ but one we are a part of, even though, as urban dwellers, we
may only be conscious of it through changes in the weather. The same is true
of the soul world. We are part of that world too and have never left
it. It surrounds us all the time and in the same way that the natural world
does, making its influence felt through constant changes in the psychical
atmosphere, mood or climate that permeates social groups and the social
world as a whole.
We know what it feels like when the atmosphere in an
interpersonal relationship or social gathering cools or gets overheated.
Soul relationships and soul group do not necessarily find expression in
interpersonal relationships and social groups. Yet individuals who do form
part of the same soul group can feel changes in the climate or atmosphere of
that group even though they may rarely or never meet as a social group, or
live thousands of miles from one another in totally different natural
climates. Because of the hold exerted by the notion of personal identity as
private property however, individuals tend to both personalise
and privatise their experience of changes occurring in the psychical
climate and atmosphere of their soul group and soul world – often to the
extent that they treat them only as the result of their own unpredictable
personal ‘mood swings’.
Natural weather patterns and climatic changes are only
‘unpredictable’ in a conventional scientific sense. From a soul-scientific
perspective they are themselves a manifestations of local, regional and
global changes in the psychic atmosphere of the mass psyche. Dangerous and
life-threatening global climate changes are a result of humanity adopting a
soul-less and purely practical relation to nature – turning the
planet into a stock of exploitable mineral, vegetative and animal resources.
It is because social relationships, social groups and the
social world are primarily formed on the basis of common practical relations
and purposes rather than shared inner soul connections that the whole
climate of the soul world can also be damaged, affecting every soul group
within it and each of the individuals within those groups.
The foundation of religious groups and communities,
religious cults and cultures, was driven by the ideal of giving social and
communal reality to the soul world - to soul groups and communities.
Unfortunately, like other social groups and organisations, religious groups
and communities too, have often been built up solely on the basis of
practical relations between their members, albeit ones based on codified
ethical principles and religious practices.
Socialist groups and communities too, however spiritual
in orientiation, offer no guarantee of giving social and communal reality to
soul groups and communities, founded as they most often are on purely
political principles and practices rather than intimate inner soul
connections between their members. What unites religion and socialism
however, is precisely the ‘utopian’ spiritual ideal of creating ‘heaven on
earth’, realising the innate soul-brotherhood and soul-sisterhood of all
humanity in a way free of distortions and inequalities created by human
practical relations.
This spiritual and political essence of socialism is not
collectivism but individualism fulfilled through relation – the recognition
that by freeing human relations from the alienation created by their
practical social relations, conditions could be created for a communist
society as Marx defined it – one in which "the free development of each is
the condition for the free development of all." The ideal of a communist
society will forever remain a utopian one unless soul is put back
into ‘socialism’. Only by recognising the reality of the soul world
(‘in heaven’), can soul communities attain reality in the social world
(‘on earth’) as social communities. The sole means by which this can happen
is through a Relational Revolution which shows each individual how to sense
and realise their inner soul relationships with others through bodily
relational practices – practices which break down the illusory bodily
boundaries of personal identity itself.
We know that in reality all social groups, organisations
and communities flounder or fragment through breakdowns in the interpersonal
relationships among their members – the basic dyadic units of relation on
which they are built. We know too, that the basic reason why individuals
join or leave political and religious groups, organisations and communities
has to do with the degree of inner soul connection they feel with them and
the degree of relational fulfilment that they do or do not find within them.
This in turn has to do not only with the practical relations that
govern those groups, organisations and communities but rather with the
relational practices that do or do not flourish within them – practices
necessary in order to not only nourish the interpersonal relations that are
their very life, but to transform those relations into intimate soul
relationships.
John Buchan, the American author who wrote a graphic
description of the Communist Revolution, predicted the future emergence of a
"Four-dimensional Communism" uniting socialism with psychism - a new science
of the soul. We know from the erstwhile Soviet Union what a mechanical and
soul-less socialism looks like. The peoples of the Soviet Union now know
from their own sordid experience about the no less soul-less nature of
global capitalism.
Why ‘4-dimensional communism’? As bodies we are
three-dimensional. But our three-dimensional bodies conceal a fourth
dimension of space itself – for the inwardly felt body is not filled with
tissues and organs but is an inner soul-space (the fourth dimension of
space), one that links us through a 5th dimension with the aware
inwardness or soul of all other bodies, human and cosmic. That fifth
dimension is the soul world itself. The fourth dimension – that of the
inwardly felt body and its inner soul space - is the dimension that can be
opened up by a New Yoga of bodily relational practices. For this Yoga and
these practices allow us to sense the souls of others with and within our
own bodies, to feel our soul-connections with others in a bodily way, and
thus also to embody those connections in our relations with others.
Will ‘4D-Communism’ remain just another utopian ‘dream’?
That is up to us. But what the very nature of our dream life itself tells us
is that we are all parts of one another’s souls - for how else could we each
create and animate three-dimensional bodily images of one another. We do so
in a 4-dimensional soul space. For entering a dream we do not leave our
bodies. Instead we inwardly expand the soul-space of our inwardly felt
bodies and dwell fully in that space. Within that soul-space, identities can
meld and merge as they do in the figures of our dreams. The New Yoga of
bodily relational practices allows us to experience a melding of identity
and a communion of soul in our waking life and relationships too. Such
bodily experience of soul communion is the sole foundation of communism,
being the sole way in which we can become aware of the reality of
communism – the already existing reality of soul communities in the
‘heavenly’ soul world. The bodily experience of soul communion is what will
make it possible to truly re-ensoul our social world – to form
social groups and communities ‘on earth’ which know themselves as
soul groups and communities, not just as aggregates of atomised and
otherwise isolated individuals.
Peter Wilberg
Bibliography
Martin Buber I and Thou
Martin Buber Between Man and Man
David Michael Levin The Body’s Recollection of Being
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels The Communist Manifesto
Karl Marx Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts
Jane Roberts The Individual and the Nature of Mass
Events
Wilhelm Reich The Mass Psychology of Fascism
Kenneth Joel Shapiro Bodily Reflective Modes
Rudolf Steiner Eurythmy
Peter Wilberg Deep Socialism
Peter Wilberg From New Age to New Gnosis
Peter Wilberg Dimensions of Health and Human Relations
Peter Wilberg The New Yoga – Tantra Reborn
see also
www.thenewsocialism.org
NOTES FROM THE GNOSTIC UNDERGROUND
Sanity, Madness and the Call of German Mysticism
We
all know that we live in a mad world. Yet this is a madness that many
take as normal Taking psychosis for normality defines what Bollas has called
“normosis”. The totalitarian characteristics of this ‘normal psychosis’ are:
·
The total commodification of all real human values, and their
conversion into purely symbolic values which then serve as tools of
commercial brand advertising. Thus the value of intimate and authentic
one-to-one relations between human beings is reduced to a corporate
slogan for the telecoms industry.
·
The total divestment of meaning from the world – reducing world
events to media images, inner world-views to camera views, world pictures to
picture worlds.
·
The total domination of human communication by standardized idioms
and languages - divesting all inner meaning from the word and turning
social, scientific and even so-called ‘spiritual’ discourse into a hollow
shell.
·
The total disembodiment of ‘knowledge’ – divorcing it from the body’s
own wordless inner knowing, and leaving people wordless and speechless in
the face of what they know deep inside themselves.
·
The total denial of death as an intrinsic part of life, and as the
second great adventure of human life, leading us not into oblivion but into
larger dimensions of meaning and being.
·
The total devaluation of all deep and meditative thinking, the
sacrifice of genuine mindfulness of being to doing and having, planning and
calculation.
·
The total deprivation of the human being’s most basic need – the need
for spiritual intimacy with themselves and others, with God and nature,
their own inner being and other beings.
·
The total scientific divorce of health and human relations, denying
the intrinsic link between individual health and the spiritual health of
human relations in society.
·
The total scientific reduction of the human being to the human body
and its genes, turning humanity itself into a manipulable objects of its own
biotechnology.
·
The total medicalisation of all human suffering and distress, aimed
at the elimination of ‘disease’ i.e., the elimination of all bodily and
behavioural expressions of the inner dis-ease people feel in a sick and
sickening society.
·
The total sacrifice of all genuine spiritual depth - depth of
awareness and thought, of human relations and communication – to
superficiality in the service of day-to-day ‘survival’.
The German word for madness is Verücktheit – dislocation. The
dislocation of millions of wandering refugees from their homelands is a mass
expression of a deeper, more fundamental dislocation. That is the total
dislocation of human beings from their inner ground – their inner being
and their inner connectedness to other beings. This mad dislocation has its
origins in a fundamental delusion – the delusion that the human being
is a consciousness mysteriously generated by the physical body, bounded by
it, and surrounded by an unbounded physical universe. That human ‘life’
consists purely and simply in a calculated conquest of this universe,
beginning with the earth and ending with outer space.
But do we really want to know the madness of the world, for knowing brings
us face to face with the totalitarian character of this madness, and brings
with it responsibilities that can only be fulfilled by a decisive turn
inwards towards our own inner ground – our inner being. We need to relocate
ourselves in the world, not by focusing our attention on this or that
problem in a superficial manner but by first of all find a deeper and more
grounded locus of awareness within ourselves. We need to dislocate ourselves
from our own homelessness, and come home to ourselves and our own embodied
inner knowing or ‘gnosis’.
“The dislocation of man back into his ground has to be carried out in the
first place by those few, solitary and uncanny ones, who in various ways as
poets, thinkers, as builders and artists, as doers and actors, ground and
shelter the truth of Being in beings through the transformation of beings.”
Martin Heidegger
Starting from the few “solitary and uncanny
ones”, we can build the cells of a new civilization – a new and healthier
social organism based not purely on the physical health of individuals but
on the spiritual health of human relations. This new social organism can
only grow on the foundations of each individual’s own inner knowing or
gnosis – that knowing awareness which resides in the very atoms and cells of
our own bodies, all of which are expressions of our inner body – the
human organism. The human organism is not our physical body but our body of
awareness. It is not made up of atoms, cells and molecules but of
organising patterns of atomic, molecular and cellular awareness. It survives
the death of the physical body, reconstituting these patterns in new forms.
It is the organism and not the physical body that links us inwardly
with All That Is and All Who Are, with the Being of beings and all other
beings, with the innermost core of our own being and with the inner core of
other human beings.
“We
should study the organism in all its immortality.”
“Through the long succession of millennia, man has not known himself
physiologically; he does not know himself even today.”
“Put briefly, perhaps the entire evolution of the spirit is a question of
the body; it is the history of the emergence of a higher body that emerges
into our sensibility.”
Nietzsche
This ‘higher
body’ is the human organism. The basic principle of the human organism is
The Cycle. The Cycle is a respiratory cycle, a metabolic cycle and a
metamorphic cycle. As human beings, it is our lungs that serve us as organs
of respiration. But whilst bodily organs possess functions, it is only
beings that possess capacities. A pen functions as an instrument of writing
but it cannot itself write. The human organism is the vehicle with which we
embody our innate capacities as beings, transforming them into organic
functions. Our capacity to breath is not our body’s ability to draw in air
and extract oxygen and exhale the remnants. That is only the respiratory
function of our organs. Our respiratory capacity is our capacity, as beings,
to breathe in our awareness of ourselves and the world, draw meaning from
it, and in turn exhale or emanate that meaning in a bodily way, whether
through speech or silence. The organism, as our body of awareness, is the
instrument of our essential respiration, metabolism as beings – our capacity
to breathe in, absorb and metabolise our experience of the world, allowing
it to bring about a meaningful change or metamorphosis in our
self-experience. All organic functions and physiological cycles are
expressions of the respiratory, metabolic and metamorphic cycles of the
human organism -The Cycle.
Just as the individual human organism is something quite distinct from the
physical body, so is a social organism something quite distinct from
any collective, communal or corporate body. Its basic principle is
The Circle. Each of us is the centre of a circle of social
relationships, comparable to the hub of a wheel with many spokes, each spoke
being a particular relationship to a person we know. Each person in our own
social circle is also the centre of his or her own social circle. Any given
circle is therefore also a circle of circles. Furthermore, each of us also
belongs to many circles – of friends, family, colleagues etc. Because of
this we each unite different circles, we are each hubs of a specific circle
of circles. Organisations have boundaries and divisions, separating
‘in-groups’ and ‘out-groups’, those who belong from those who don’t. The
Circle has no boundaries and no one centre - it is an indivisible and
unbounded circle of circles. Every individual is a centre, not only
of their own circle, but through it, of The Circle. The Circle cuts across
all corporate and collective boundaries, linking people of all races and
religions, ages and genders, nationalities and ethnic groups. The Circle
is not my circle or yours – it is the property of no one and belongs to all.
Within The Circle, each individual is both a centre of their own
social circle, a point on the periphery of many other social circles, and,
most importantly, a circle in themselves. For the outer social circle that
links us with others is the expression of an inner circle of selves.
These selves are the aspects of ourselves linking us with others. They are
comparable to the electrons circling the nucleus of an atom, through which
bonds are formed with other atoms. They can be understood as particles or
waves, for they are also the wavelengths of attunement linking us to
different people in our social circle. The self we know is itself
only a part of our whole self or circle of selves – comparable to a group of
electrons. It combines those parts of our inner circle of selves that link
us with the people in our outer social circle. It is the centre of a social
circle and of a circle of such circles. But it is also a point on the
periphery of a circle of selves with its own centre – our nuclear self or
‘core self’. The Circle is not just the complex network of outer
social circles linking everybody on the planet. It includes also the inner
circles of selves that constitute who we are– selves that may find or
not find expression in our social relationships and social circles.
The Circle is what links our inner circle of selves and the outer social
circle. It links them not just through the relationships we already have and
the aspects of ourselves we give expression to in them, but also to as-yet
unrecognised aspects of ourselves and others, unrecognised relationships
between ourselves and others. A revolution in human relations can come about
only when we recognise that each individual is more than just the face or
faces of themselves that they reveal to us – and that we are more than the
face or faces we reveal to others. Each of us is part of a circle of selves
with its own nucleus or core self. Learning to make contact with our
own core self and communicate with others from it will bring about a
complete transformation of social relations. Why? Firstly, because core
contact and communication - intimate spiritual contact and communication
with others - is the basis of authentic human relations on all levels
and in all spheres of life. Secondly, because our core self is what links
us, not only with the aspects of ourselves and others that we know and
relate to but aspects of ourselves and others we don’t know and have not yet
learned to relate to. Through learning to contact our own core, and through
learning to contact and communicate with others from that core, we inwardly
expand our own identity and inwardly expand The Circle.
The core self is the innermost, spiritual core of our being. But
one of the
characteristics of our times is that amid all superficial talk of
‘spirituality’ no one any longer questions what is it that we call ‘spirit’?
Is it a being or hierarchy of beings? Is it ‘God’, understood as a supreme
Being? If such a being exists, what constitutes its beingness or is-ness?
What is more primordial – the being we call God’s being or its beingness as
such - Being? Is God perhaps Being – the isness of things? And what
is that? Such were the fundamental questions that Martin Heidegger began
with – questions that were also central to Meister Eckhart, the German
Christian mystic. Heidegger’s philosophy is called ‘fundamental ontology’
because it deals with the most fundamental question of all – the meaning and
truth of Being. What if spirit is not a supreme being, a world or hierarchy
of beings but a relation to Being and to the beingness of each and
every being?
“Spirit is a fundamentally tuned, knowing resolve towards the essence of
Being”.
Martin Heidegger
For Heidegger, ‘thinking’ did not mean planning and calculation in the
service of a goal, objective or end. Just as relating is always the
expression of a particular comportment or bearing so is thinking always
essentially the expression of a fundamental mood or ‘attunement’.
Fundamental questioning is the awakening of certain fundamental moods or
attunements, moods which resonate through us, tuning and toning our inner
bearing or comportment so that it becomes a relation of knowing resolve
towards the essence of Being.
Later, he understood Being not only as a relation but as an event of
relation – what he called Das Ereignis – the ‘enowning’ or ‘event of
appropriation’. By this he did not mean, like Marx, the material
reappropriation of corporate wealth. Nor did he mean the reappropriation of
our own inner being or inner knowing, our own ‘lost’ soul or spirit. He
meant our own re-appropriation by Being and by our own inner being and inner
knowing. Fundamental questions are not questions we have and that we get to
grips with but questions that, unknowingly, have us in their grip.
Fundamental moods are not moods that rise and fall within us but moods that
we find ourselves in – if and only if we surrender to the distress that is
the first and necessary stages of genuine dis-illusionment and thus
of releasement from illusion and entrapment in our own world of
beliefs.
Releasement
is one of the guiding words of German Gnostic spirituality, a
tradition that found expression in the thinking of the German Christian
mystic Meister Eckhart, the ‘anti-Christ’ Friedrich Nietzsche and the
philosopher Martin Heidegger – a tradition, which is no longer centred
in Germany or the German-speaking world, and that speaks many languages.
The Guiding Words of German Mysticism
Distress
– the same word in German as profound need or ‘emergency’ (Not).
Without the experience of a fundamental distress deeper than any temporary
disappointment, grief or stress, we cannot experience the fundamental need
that drives all fundamental questioning – the need and quest to experience a
direct knowing relation to our own being and other beings. Distress includes
the disquiet that accompanies fundamental questioning
Restraint and Resolve
- restraint of the impulse to fight of flee, medicate or minimise inner dis-ease,
and resolve to feel and follow it, hearing it as the disquiet of a
fundamental questioning, and as the call of a fundamental distress echoing
from the core of our inner being and leading us back to it.
Dis-illusionment
–
the disintegration and letting go of all that we hold true – a letting go
that we experience first of all as a collapse of belief and loss of meaning
– as a going under.
Going under
– the necessary condition for an under-standing that is truly
grounded in the depths of our inner being and inner knowing, and that
takes its stand in that being and in that knowing.
Releasement
– the release of inner knowing and of our own inner being from illusion:
engagement in standardized languages as belief systems, in existing social
systems and patterns of social behaviour, and in empty communal symbols
of deep values such as goodness, beauty and truth.
The Gnostic tradition has always been a spiritual underground and a thorn in
the side, firstly of religious and later of scientific orthodoxies. It is
not a set of heretical ‘Gospels’ but the understanding that ‘holy
scriptures’ are verbal translations, usually distorted of an inner
knowing that can only be freed through the piety of a radical and profound
questioning. Fundamental questioning is the opposite of all forms of
religious fundamentalism. It means holding oneself within the truth of one’s
inner knowing, not holding fast to the truth of some knowledge of or
about something or someone. It means experiencing the uneasy gap between
language and being, scientific ‘knowledge’ about reality and the inner
knowing that vibrates through our very being.
“Knowing is a relation in which we ourselves are related, and in which this
relation resonates through our basic comportment.”
Martin Heidegger
Who then are the few and solitary ‘Gnostics’ who abide in their inner
knowing?
What Heidegger referred to as The Ones to Come – those reside
in “masterful knowing” that comes from going under, who therefore
constitute the true spiritual underground – one whose inner knowing
or gnosis undermines all idols and icons of modernity and
post-modernity.
“Those who are going under in the essential sense…those who are suffused
with what is coming (the futural) and sacrifice themselves to it as its
future invisible ground…The epoch of going under is knowable only to those
who belong. All others must fear the going under and therefore deny and
repudiate it. For to them, going under is only weakness and a
termination. Those who truly go under do not know gloomy ‘resignation’…Those
who go under are the ones that constantly question. Disquiet of questioning
is not an empty insecurity but the enopening and fostering of that
stillness, which, as gathering unto the most question worthy, awaits the
simple intimacy of the call and withstands the utmost fury of the
abandonment of Being.”
The
Call
rings out through The Circle and The Cycle. That is why
the essential guiding word of the German mystical tradition is The Ring
– understood as the soundless ringing of The Call in the stillness of
silence. The Call is a call which both encircles and gathers to a
centre, which speaks not only to individual human beings, but
speaks through them as the voice of The Circle – the unbounded
and seamless Continuum of Being linking all beings in silent,
resonant and ringing Communion.
Peter
Wilberg (2005) |
|