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A 'paradigm shift' is a radical discontinuity in the way in which we
humans structure our mental picture of reality. Perhaps the most
dramatic example was the impact of the new cosmologies of
Copernicus, Galileo and Newton upon the late 17th, but more
especially the 18th, century. The educated classes of Europe were by
then faced with the indisputable reality that the earth was not the
centre of the universe, and that universal laws of gravitation and
motion governed the relationships of all heavenly bodies. Writing
about 1730, Alexander Pope declared that before Newton:
Nature and nature's laws lay hid in night;
God said "Let Newton be!" and all was light.
But, as this quotation also illustrates, this particular paradigm
shift did far more than provide a new cosmology. It created both a
new intelligentsia, based upon secular scientific and technical
expertise, and a new interpretation of history. Christian
theologians and philosophers lost their pre-eminent intellectual
status, and 'salvation' ceased to be the dominant historical theme.
All at once the intellectual life of Europe became focused upon the
belief that history was not static or cyclical but linear - moving
especially from darkness into light, led not by the churches but by
secular science. The possibility of total enlightenment took hold of
the educated imagination, and the modern age had arrived.
Since then there has been a succession of lesser intellectual
'paradigm shifts'. The theory of evolution provided by Darwin in
1859 is one such, and Einstein's theories of Relativity in the early
20th century another. These revolutionised Biology and Physics
respectively. In the course of the same century, Freudian psychology
completely changed our perception of human sexuality. The impacts of
quantum physics and 'big bang' cosmology are ongoing. The process of
globalisation, begun by European voyages of exploration in the
1400s, has recently accelerated with the arrival of cheap air
travel, globally mobile capital, and the Internet. This process has
intermingled all cultures and faiths, laying siege to the certitudes
of the past.
However, the optimistic belief of the early Enlightenment that human
reason could easily construct a perfect world suffered a series of
shattering reverses. These began with 'The Terror', the orgy of
blood-letting that followed the French Revolution of 1789, giving us
the new and still indispensable word 'terrorism'. Two world wars and
the Holocaust had a similar impact in the 20th century. So did the
ignominious failure of the Soviet Marxist system in the recent past.
The possibility of total enlightenment has also receded for many
intellectuals. 'Post-modernism', born to some extent out of
disappointment that secular utopianism led more often to hell than
to heaven, now insists that we are fundamentally unable to escape
from our own subjectivity: all paradigms are purely mental and
therefore fictive, so (it is argued) we can never create solid
intellectual foundations for our own convictions. All we have is a
multiplicity of 'stories', no one of them capable of claiming
superiority to any other.
The question of what happens to God in all of this is of critical
importance for all religions. The notion that our perception of God
might also require a 'paradigm shift' has alarmed some and enthused
others. Among the latter, Anglican Bishop John Robinson of 'Honest
to God' fame in the 1960s stands out. Arguing that we can no longer
believe in a 'God out there' he has influenced many in a search for
'God within'. Among these in our own time are the Episcopalian
Bishop John Spong, who has in turn influenced, among many others,
Church of Ireland Canon Hilary Wakeman, whose book 'Saving
Christianity' I reviewed here recently.
Adrian B Smith's The God Shift is a continuation of the same
theme, but this time by a Catholic priest. Beginning with the
observation that many are now abandoning religion and embracing
'spirituality' he argues that a number of factors now tend towards a
profound shift in the human perception of God. This paragraph is
typical:
"It is my contention ... that ... for too long we have
overemphasised the transcendence of God at the expense of
appreciating God as immanent. The former causes us to think of God
as aloof from creation and ourselves as miserable sinners seeking to
placate a father-God or to win the love of a tolerant God. To
restore the balance by emphasising more the immanence of God will
enable us to appreciate that spark of divine life within all people
and cause us to treat the natural world not as a dead, soulless
machine existing purely for our use but as a reflection of its
creator. The lack of this sense of the Divine within ourselves
causes us to lack self-esteem and seek our self-worth instead in our
role in society, our possessions, our personal achievements and our
sense of superiority over others. Happily, we can recognise in some
current trends - the feminist, ecological and human rights movements
- a reawakening to the immanence of God."
He places approaches to Christology within a similar progressive
framework, arguing that there has been a shift from 'Top Down' to
'Bottom Up' approaches, presenting these as contrasting syllogisms:
(Christology from above: )
God is like this and this.
Jesus is God.
Therefore Jesus is like this and this.
(Christology from below: )
Jesus is like this and this.
Jesus is the icon of God.
Therefore God is like this and this.
For someone like myself, not well grounded in theology, but strongly
inclined towards a Christology from below, this sort of thing is
interesting and useful. So is the account of the new physics, in
which the conceptual frontiers between matter and energy tend to
dissipate. That matter appears to be - to put it crudely -
compressed energy - or rather energy behaving in a remarkable way to
provide the visible world with its apparently stable atoms and
molecules - is a profound shock to a simplistic perception of
reality. So is the revelation that it is the relationships between
sub-atomic particles that provide this stability, not the particles
themselves. Matter is not a hard and simple reality but a profound
mystery in itself.
Similarly, the book's account of the emergence of ecology,
establishing the interconnectedness of all life, is useful. So is
the summary of the collision between the world's great religions and
the discernment that all speak of love as the highest virtue.
I was particularly struck also by the author's perception that human
hierarchies are a barrier to spiritual development, and that Jesus
of Nazareth clearly lived within a non-hierarchical spiritual
paradigm. This I believe to be profoundly true, and the root source
of the attraction to Jesus that we find in the humblest people. It
is true also that people grow and learn far more easily in a
non-hierarchical context, and that this realisation appears to be a
significant feature of our era.
However, does all of this mean that we humans are undergoing some
kind of rapid and beneficent species evolution, an evolution in
consciousness? One gathers as much from the following:
"The development of our consciousness is precisely what is new. The
leap we took out of the mythical Eden from subconsciousness to
self-consciousness is now being followed by a further leap to
super-consciousness. We are evolving from a physical to a
metaphysical vision of reality. From viewing our world as purely
physical, as scientists and western religions have done, we are
beginning to appreciate the presence of consciousness in all matter.
The "Gaia Hypothesis" of James Lovelock that planet Earth is a
single, living, self-regulating organism - is witness to this. We
are moving beyond the limitations of our rational minds, beyond what
we learn through our five senses, beyond the boundaries of space and
time, to the exploration of inner, deeper realms. We are stretching
the boundaries of our consciousness. It is at this point in our
history that we are moving beyond our physical potential to explore
our spiritual potential."
In the week I first read this paragraph I learned also that suicide
bombers had taken a further toll in Iraq; that two teenagers in
every classroom in these islands may be self-harming due to loss of
self-esteem; that a fifteen-year-old had taken her own life in
Belfast, following the suicide of her boyfriend - which had in turn
been caused by the killing of his sister in a 'hit-and-run'
accident; that Arab militias in Darfur were still burning African
Sudanese alive - and that the consumption of fossil fuels had
reached levels that OPEC could not meet due to problems caused in
the Soviet Union by a struggle for power between the industrial
oligarchs and President Putin.
Most Russian young people (we learned in the same week) admire those
same moneyed oligarchs almost as much as rock stars, despite their
virtually certain involvement in the murder of at least fifteen
journalists in Russia since 2000 - journalists who have had the
temerity to investigate their links with political corruption and
organised crime.
Meanwhile the world's most powerful republic was focused upon a
different struggle for power between two highly moneyed patricians -
a struggle that seemed oblivious of the environmental catastrophe
that is already making densely populated but low-lying portions of
the earth's surface uninhabitable (e.g. the Maldives). This was
confirmed by news from Greenland in the previous week that the
arctic ice sheet is diminishing at an unprecedented rate.
And the news that many millions in China now aspire to an SUV (the
ubiquitous, ridiculous, dangerous and environmentally indefensible
'off road' vehicle now preferred for ferrying children everywhere)
was hardly cause for celebration either.
So who exactly, I wondered, are the 'we' who have leapt to
'super-consciousness'? Clearly it is not a majority of the human
population. And if it is only a small minority of intellectuals, is
the 'we' justified in anything other than self-congratulatory terms?
Is it anything more than a repetition of the New Age rhetorical
claim to era-superiority that we have been hearing, without any real
justification, for decades?
Certainly it is possible for individual humans to develop greater
insight and maturity - and a deep sense of God within - over a
lifetime - but this has been happening to individuals for thousands
of years. What characterised all of them was a realisation of the
futility of most human desires, and a valuing of simplicity. Three
distinctive marks of our age are, on the contrary, an elevation of
desire itself to the status of supreme cultural and economic good,
an infatuation with consumption and novelty, and an increasing
violence.
I say this not because I am out of sympathy with my own era, and
stuck in some mistakenly idealised past, but because I cannot ignore
the fact that the data I receive from news streams daily is
presenting me with an almost total contradiction to Adrian Smith's
optimistic claims. Humans in the aggregate are as far as ever from
the super-consciousness that he claims to be the distinctive feature
of the age. The pressure of an extremely doubtful future may be
forcing increasing numbers to seek a deeper spirituality - but this
has happened often in the past and simply cannot justify a claim
that 'we' (i.e. the race) are undergoing some kind of evolutionary
shift into 'super-consciousness'.
Although 'The God Shift' is therefore a useful overview of some
encouraging scientific and cultural developments, as well as a
highly readable example of its genre, it is lamentably superficial
in its understanding of the weaknesses that still afflict us. For
example, the author admits that he doesn't understand why humans
build hierarchies - wondering, without much conviction, if these
might originate in the need to overcome gravity!
This is especially telling in the context of his conviction that the
human arrival at self-consciousness, as recorded in Genesis, was an
unalloyed good. It was indeed an evolutionary event of enormous
importance - and inseparable from our human nature - but it had
profoundly problematic consequences. Self-consciousness involves a
critical awareness that others are conscious of us - and it is only
then that we develop a dangerous desire to be highly-regarded. That
is precisely why the self-conscious teen female is often currently
aspiring to a breast implant.
That kind of self-regarding desire explains everything from
conspicuous consumption to personality cults to mimetic rivalry,
celebrity, power-seeking and violence - and human hierarchy arises
easily out of all of these. Hyacinth Bucket (pronounced, of course,
'Bouquet') illustrates the point weekly on pop TV: it is precisely
because she is self-conscious that she wishes to collect prestige
china and rub shoulders with England's aristocracy. Tony Blair's
meritocratic makeover of the British Labour party bears a similar
explanation. (There is no more self-conscious politician on the
planet.)
For the same reason, self-consciousness explains the spiritual
problem identified by Thomas Merton as the construction of the
'false self' - the problem identified by Jesus as hypocrisy. The
original hypocrite was just a Greek actor, who, significantly, wore
a mask. Modern culture provides an unprecedented variety of masks
designed to flatter the wearer, and some of these are fashioned by a
New Age ideology that has yet to recognise that human culture is
still grounded not in super-consciousness but in mindless and deeply
destructive imitation of one another.
It is self-consciousness also that explains the individual's fear of
opposing the crowd, and thus the mindlessness and danger of the
crowd itself - and mob-violence, and, incidentally, the crucifixion.
It is remarkable that the 'super-consciousness' claimed in this book
does not include an understanding of the connections between human
self-consciousness, human vanity, human hierarchy, human hypocrisy
and human violence. Especially when some of the available literature
so well explains all of this.
Scanning the reading lists that followed each chapter of this book I
noticed a very striking absence of any reference to the work done on
mimetic desire, hierarchy and violence by the Girard school. As this
is profoundly illuminative of the Gospel texts, as well as modern
consumerist culture, and as Girard has been publishing since the
1970s, I am at a loss to understand it - especially because Girard's
work provides every reason for optimism in the project of making a
non-fundamentalist Christianity relevant to post-modernity.
The gathering human crisis will soon oblige people to grow rapidly
in spiritual wisdom if the species is not to destroy itself in
competition for declining fossil fuel resources. The message that
they have already reached 'super-consciousness' is, like the first
reports of Mark Twain's death, premature. It is also strikingly
similar to the flattery that this year's presidential contenders
feel obliged to heap upon 'the great American people'.
And it is therefore, like all flattery, a profound mistake. Every
one of us does indeed need to 'evolve' - but we must all begin with
a radical honesty about our current temptations and failings. These
are essentially identical to the spiritual shortcomings of our
species from the beginning. Nothing could be more spiritually
dangerous for an intellectual today than the conviction that he, or
she, has become 'super-conscious'. The correct name for this notion
is spiritual inflation.
Other paradigm shifts notwithstanding, so long as vanity remains a
human constant, we humans will remain trapped in that paradigm, and
in the negative consequences of self-consciousness. Our cosmologies
may change, but we will show-off nevertheless (perhaps with a
lecture on cosmology). Vanity in 2004 is as pervasive as the SUV,
the plasma-screen TV and the cosmetics industry, and global
terrorism is born of frustrated envy of those who can afford all of
these.
Super-consciousness, when it arrives, will be conscious of that to
begin with.
(© Doctrine & Life, April 2005)
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