counter customizable free hit

November 12, 2006

How to Think: War

by Joshua Minton

War is the final divorce of humanity from reason and the spiritual aspirations of our highest ambitions.

War is the final three count of the human animal over the human spirit.

War is the moment of inception when the worms of hell finally burrow into the holy of holies in the human heart and begin to divide and replicate.

And war is totally necessary in the social evolution of mankind.

War is the agent of change--the white blood cells of society moving to attack the diseases which threaten to hinder our forward progress.

War serves an absolute and justified purpose but as with everything absolute; war has a beginning, an ending and a limit to its usefulness.

Greatness of human achievement is most visible in the act of war but it remains the greatness of the human animal engaged in teeth sneering murder to secure health, wealth, progeny and ideological lebensraum.

White blood cells die off once they complete their cleansing the blood of foreign and harmful particles as must the act of war once an equilibrium has been reached and the boundaries of future progress secured enough so that we may steer our ship of specie between the jagged rocks of time, decay and mortality.

The Cosmopolitan Citizen is the one whose paradigm surpasses the petty chains of nationalism and the superstitious metaphoric idol worship known as religion. The Cosmopolitan citizen is the one who thinks, not only in terms of their entire species or within the limited scope of all life on this planet but one who thinks in the absolute terms of existence itself. He or she feels themselves undulating in the peristalsis of life in the moment without tether to the ephemeral string of moments which came before or the rumor of the moment which is promised to come after this one.

We as Cosmopolitan citizens are imbued by destiny to define the scope of what an equilibrium with each other and the planet we inhabit both looks and feels like in every possible aspect, not just political and economic. We must deeply feel the interconnected web of all things and learn the beginnings and ends of each facet of our existence so that we may use the tool of war to its most effective end and put the tool away when that end becomes detrimental to the forward progression of our species.

The first step toward freedom is the only step in the process of true transformation and it can only take place within each individual's mind; anything beyond that is somebody trying to sell you something.

Naturally the common people don't want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist dictatorship. ...Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country.

--Hermann Göring, Leading member of the Nazi Party, Second in command of the Third Reich, and Commander of the Luftwaffe--



TAGS:

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. How to Think: War
  2. How To Think: Metaphors

Permalink

DIGG THIS | del.icio.us


Other Posts in the Category: Politics & Sociology, How to Think Series


November 7, 2006

How To Think: Metaphors

by Joshua Minton

The human mind is a funny thing--it works in metaphors. Metaphors are conceptual images that reference observable and unobservable phenomenon in the natural world and the metaphysical realm of human thought.

Normally, metaphors are very handy tools in the arsenal of human evolution. For example, in science--I can scratch the symbols: T-R-E-E onto a sheet of paper and immediately my mind conjures up an image of a large, green leafy thick stick growing out of the ground high into the sky. I can understand that the process of photosynthesis applies to this green life form and I can subdivide and classify the various species of this life form into several distinct categories which can be compared and contrasted.

But all of this, the image of the tree, the theory of photosynthesis and all the scientific classifications are all metaphors. They are all symbols. These particular symbols have reference to phenomena which can be observed in the natural world.

But what happens when a metaphor is referring to something which doesn't exist in the natural world, something which can't be observed?

What happens when we scratch the letters: G-O-D?

See, God is a metaphor which is supposed to point past itself into absolute transcendence of thought and experience. The very concept itself is supposed to bring a peaceful quiet to the mind, a death in the waking moment.

When the mind is not in movement, does the self exist? The mind is the storehouse of experience which is the byproduct of thought. When thought, which composes the content of the mind, is not in movement; the self ceases to exist and something entirely new comes about.

But what happens with most minds is that they encounter that word G-O-D and get stuck with it. Maybe it's because those minds are foolish enough to believe that they have substance like the tree and can be knocked on and make a sound. But they aren't. Our egos have no weight in the phenomenal world and the inability of the mind to reach silence when meditating upon the transcendence of the metaphor of God is a prime example.

Instead the mind sublimates itself in books, hymns, arcane rituals and pitiful projections of a savior who will deliver the soul into an immortal afterlife.

Doesn't it all seem so childish sometimes?

Why can't we sit with a fact? Why must we try to change it. Prod it. Poke it. Manipulate it until it looks like we want it to, sounds like we want it to? Until it whispers at us to drive those planes into the buildings or drop those bombs from three thousand miles away with the bravery of being out of range?

What happens to a mind which is emptied of its content of experience in the moment? That mind would be dead by all common definitions but in terms of spiritual awareness--this mind has come electrically alive in a way which is impossible to communicate in words.

When you can see beyond the metaphor and lose the shell of yourself as the observer becomes the observed, you will be approaching the sacred heart of what the metaphor G-O-D is referring us toward.

A sign can only point the way--it is up to each one of us to take the first and only step to absolute freedom.

TAGS:

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. How to Think: War
  2. How To Think: Metaphors

Permalink

DIGG THIS | del.icio.us


Other Posts in the Category: Religion/Spirituality, How to Think Series