Thursday, December 24, 2009


Carl Jung On A More Mature Faith

Carl Jung, Life Magazine Image, Knusnacht, Switzerland,
September 05, 1949, Dmitri Kessel photograph

"Our blight is ideologies-they are the long expected Antichrist!" -Carl Jung

...we have held fast to the religious belief that the organ of faith enables man to know God. The West thus developed a new disease: the conflict between science and religion. The critical philosophy of science became as it were negatively metaphysical- in other words, materialistic- on the basis of an error in judgment; matter was assumed to be a tangible and recognizable reality. Yet this is a thoroughly metaphysical concept hypostatized by uncritical minds. Matter is an hypothesis. When you say "matter," you are really creating a symbol for something unknown, which may just as well be "spirit" or anything else; it may even be God. Religious faith, on the other hand, refuses to give up its pre-critical Weltanschauung [world view]. In contradiction to the saying of Christ, the faithful try to remain children instead of becoming as children. They cling to the world of childhood. A famous modern theologian confesses in his autobiography that Jesus has been his good friend "from childhood on." Jesus is the perfect example of a man who preached something different from the religion of his forefathers. But the imitatio Christi [imitator of Christ] does not appear to include the mental and spiritual sacrifice which He had to undergo at the beginning of his career and without which He would never have become a saviour.

The conflict between science and religion is in reality a misunderstanding of both. Scientific materialism has merely introduced a new hypostasis[the substance, essence, or underlying reality], and that is an intellectual sin. It has given another name to the supreme principle of reality and has assumed that this created a new thing and destroyed an old thing. Whether you call the principle of existence 'God', 'matter', 'energy', or anything else you like, you have created nothing; you have simply changed a symbol. The materialist is a metaphysician malgré lui [in spite of himself]. Faith, on the other hand, tries to retain a primitive mental condition on merely sentimental grounds. It is unwilling to give up the primitive, childlike relationship to mind-created and hypostatized figures; it wants to go on enjoying the security and confidence of a world still presided over by powerful, responsible, and kindly parents. Faith may include a sacrificium intellectus [Lat. sacrifice of the intellect](provided there is an intellect to sacrifice), but certainly not a sacrifice of feeling. In this way the faithful remain children instead of becoming as children, and they do not gain their life because they have not lost it. Furthermore, faith collides with science and thus gets its deserts, for it refuses to share in the spiritual adventure of our age.
-excerpt, Psychological Commentary, Carl Jung,
The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation, ed. W.Y. Evans-Wentz

It is always helpful to be reminded that we are as children and our knowledge is as nothing compared to what it might and must be. Michael Jackson tried to remain a beautiful child, but instead turned himself into a sleepless, tortured, surgically altered freak attempting to be a child rather than live as a child. As wonderful as we may think we are and as ultimate as we believe in the Truth we hold; it is just a whiff of the Truth. We must grow and adapt if we are to perfect our Truth. The Lord told Moses that he might not look on the His face and live. (He did tell him he could look at his Hindquarters, which tells me the Lord has a sense of humor. Exodus 33:17-23) The Lord did not tell Moses he could never see his Face. So, Faith must be Vital; it must grow and adapt to altered realities and potentialities of the Believer. Faith is a Verb, not a noun. It must look far beyond the Known or the Believer will find himself in permanent Stasis, which is nothing more than a fancy term for Death.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Ever-vigilant Chutney attempts to get in the Holiday Spirit. Photo by Beth Bonanno
A CG World

"One grows used to anything, he thought, even to one’s death. You could probably chop off a man’s head three times a day for twenty years and he’d grow used to it, and cry like a baby if you stopped." —Robert Sheckley, Immortality, Inc. (1958)

"Death is merely a matter of definition. Once the definition was very simple: you were dead when you stopped moving for a long time. But now the scientists have examined this antiquated notion more carefully, and have done considerable research on the entire subject. They have found out that you can be dead in all important respects, but still go on walking and talking."
—Robert Sheckley, Journey beyond Tomorrow (1962)
Walt Disney Supports Our Troops, the best he can.
from "Dispatch From Disney's" Vol. 1, No. 1 1943 "Published For Employees In The Services By Employees At Walt Disney Productions."
Fold out poster with a more than a suggestion of pedophilia and incest.

"The towels were so thick there I could hardly close my suitcase."-Lawrence Peter "Yogi" Berra
"You can't think and hit at the same time."- Yogi Berra
"If the world was perfect, it wouldn't be."-Yogi again