Freedom of choice does not make it easier to find one’s way in a labyrinth.
Wisdom and Lack Thereof
Motto
Saturday, May 1, 2021
Sunday, April 21, 2019
Orgueil
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Foi
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Religio Perennis — a Footnote from "Light on the Ancient Worlds"
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Life and Death
“And as Jesus passed by, he saw a man which was blind from his birth.
And his disciples asked him, saying, Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind?
Jesus answered, Neither hath this man sinned, nor his parents: but that the works of God should be made manifest in him”.
Friday, October 3, 2008
Une poésie en français par Schuon
Ni Copernic, ni Paracelse
Ni un philosophe plein d’idées —
Elle vient sans doute du monde féerique des enfants,
Tout en étant pleine de sagesse. Car elle montre
Comment une volée d’âmes montent au Ciel,
Ou comment les grâces en descendent sur nous,
Vivifiant de Lumière céleste le monde terrestre;
De même comment l’âme s’embrase en ses couleurs —
Chacune pour soi — et va son chemin."
Frithjof Schuon
Thursday, September 11, 2008
The Veil of Isis
Here is the opening paragraph from this inspired article:
"The explorers of substance, of energy, of the indefinitely small and of the indefinitely large, proceeding from discovery to discovery and from hypothesis to hypothesis, may well plunge into the mechanism of the physical world; they will undoubtedly meet with a variety of instructive insights into the structure of the physical categories, but in fact they will never reach the end of their trajectory; the foundations of existence have something indefinite to them and will not surrender themselves. Isis is 'all that has been, all that is, and all that shall be'; and 'no one hath ever lifted my veil'. It is useless to try to do so, all the more so since in this order of magnitude the useless coincides with the pernicious, as is shown by the myths of Prometheus, Icarus, the Titans, and Lucifer, and as is proven to excess by the experiences of the last two centuries.(1) [Roots of the Human Condition, p. 15]".
(1) It should not be forgotten in this context that modern science operates with instruments - in the broadest sense - that in a traditional civilization could not exist; this means that there are kinds of knowledge that, strictly speaking, have no right to exist.
Monday, September 8, 2008
Social Classes
Saturday, September 6, 2008
Worldly Distortions
Frithjof Schuon
In the Face of the Absolute—Preface
The Lord's Prayer
Hallowed be thy Name.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done,
On earth as it is in Heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our trespasses,
As we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation,
But deliver us from evil.
[For thine is the kingdom,
and the power, and the glory,
now, and for ever and ever.
Amen.]
Thursday, September 4, 2008
Religious Misdeeds
A Muslim Point of View
Science and Religion
[1] The church evidently preserved the right to teach its canons but could not prevent the apparition of these spurious parallel institutions which debase the essence of the sacred and trivialize its exoteric manifestations.
[2] Koans are the most representative expression of this idea, purposely meant to tax the understanding and ridicule reason.
Science and Reason
The scientific unrest, metaphorically called “critical thinking” can plastically be described as the struggle of the fish in an overpopulated fish tank and the phenomenon becomes even more obvious when the powerful support of empirical evidence cannot play a role as it is the case with abstract thinking in general and with philosophy in particular[1]—in these latter cases, ingenious but shallow fabrications provide a substitute for experimentation as the foundation of new intellectual buildups. It is not surprising that once the existence of the absolute truth or even the possibility of such truth came to be questioned, surrogates emerged: in this climate, myriads of ideas, ranging from simple opinions to sophisticated philosophical theories can compete with equal rights for the quality of truthfulness (the sacrosanct “freedom of expression” is just another metaphor for this diversity); in the absence of a normative intellectual framework, the world succumbed to intellectual chaos, euphemistically called “freethinking” and in this climate almost anything could be proven or disproved without too much pain if the premises (otherwise perfectly arbitrary) were carefully chosen.
[1] Although the methods of science and modern philosophy are different, their attitude regarding the ultimate reality are the same: a deep mistrust, aberrant distortions or complete denial.
The Scientistic Illusion
“Wanting to believe only what they see, scientists condemn themselves to seeing only what they believe; logic for them is their desire not to see what they do not want to believe. Scientism in fact is less interested in the real as such- which necessarily goes beyond our limitations—than in what is non-contradictory, therefore in what is logical, or more precisely, in what is empirically logical; thus in what is logical de facto according to a given experience, and not in what is logical de jure in accordance with the nature of things” [Frithjof Schuon-From the Divine to the Human].
With respect to truth, scientific knowledge is in most cases, an “unintentional” imposture. There are two types of imposture, although the quality as such always contains a certain measure of each: conscious imposture which is dishonest, deliberate and intrinsically immoral, and unconscious imposture which is “involuntary”, ignorant and sincere[1]. In its ignorance, unconscious imposture is always convinced of the paramount worth of its mission and so is science because “error creates the stage setting it requires to feel comfortable”. Not infrequently we encounter in the contemporary Western personality a bizarre cohabitation between an encyclopedic accumulation of scientific knowledge and factual information combined with a complete lack of intelligence and common sense. Such a person “…may be capable of the most extraordinary calculations and achievements but may at the same time be incapable of understanding the ultimate causality of things; this amounts to an illegitimate and monstrous disproportion, for the man who is intelligent enough to grasp nature in its deepest physical aspects, ought also to know that nature has a metaphysical Cause which transcends it, and that this Cause does not confine itself to determining the laws of sensory existence, as Spinoza claimed.”[Stations of Wisdom]. A complexion like this is innocuous and tolerable when complemented by a certain amount of compassion and decency and a “naïve” Paganel or an Einstein could be granted extenuating circumstances in spite of the dangers that their irresponsible play may bring to the very existence of mankind—however, an imagination (and especially collective imagination) rooted in absurdity and irreality and inspired by a mediocre or base moral character could lead to inhumane and appalling monstrosities: “nothing is worse than the mind, cut off from its roots”[The Transfiguration of Man].
[1] One should remark that blind religious dogmatism offers another example of “unintentional imposture”, with all its consequences.
Historical Downfalls
Interestingly, such processes already happened in the history: there were societies whose spiritual, intellectual and moral corruption reached a point where downfall and destruction became unavoidable; think only of the Greek or the Roman empire (to say nothing of the “legendary” Sodom and Gomorrah). Religious paganism, a cult of matter, frivolity, a hedonistic or perverse life style eroded those civilizations from within and lead to their destruction by what appeared to be a barbaric, inferior population which paradoxically, was spiritually, intellectually and morally healthier than the “civilized” one that it replaced and dissolved.
But in 500 A.D., most of the world and those “barbarians” in particular were still living under the reign of a relative normalcy, perpetuated through tradition since Creation. Starting from Renaissance however, spiritual disorientation, moral frivolity and the materialization and narrowing of the intellectual horizon took over the mentality of Western man, proliferated to the East, especially since the so called “enlightenment” (thanks to a Peter the Great and other “luminaries”), and today encroached on most of the populated world. This sentence may sound outrageous to the ears of modern man, because it usurps the very foundation of his culture and civilization, but it is true although it cannot be explain or qualified in just in a few words.
What distinguishes our age from all the others is not its moral decadence which is an inescapable manifestation of our fallen nature (its exacerbation being a consequence rather than the cause of our decline), but the extraordinary state of confusion left by the disappearance of the guiding light of tradition. I often encountered in the Western personality a bizarre cohabitation between an encyclopedic accumulation of scientific knowledge and factual information combined with a complete lack of intelligence and common sense. Such a complexion is innocuous and tolerable when complemented by a certain amount of compassion and decency — however, an imagination (and especially collective imagination) rooted in absurdity and irreality and inspired by a mediocre or base moral character could lead to inhumane and appalling monstrosities: “nothing is worse than the mind, cut off from its roots”.
Patriotism (paraphrasing Schuon)
The kingdom of God should take precedence over the kingdoms of men not because religions dictate so but because it is imperiously necessary for our happiness — here, and hereafter. “God cannot primarily ‘take an interest’ in the well-being of creatures, since He wants their soul and their imperishable good and not the transitory things of the material world. If God also wants our earthly well-being is not because He regards it as an end in itself but because a certain happiness is the normal condition of man who, however, is essentially created with a view to eternal values. God takes interest in our well-being to the extent that we may profit from it in view of Him, and not otherwise; but outside this ‘interest’ – if this word be permissible here in a provisional way – God ;sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust’” (Frithjof Schuon — The Transfiguration of Man).
Saturday, August 30, 2008
The Material Obstacle
Sunday, August 3, 2008
A Metaphysical View of the Divine
Frithjof Schuon
In the Face of the Absolute (The Decisive Intuition)
Monday, April 7, 2008
A Quotation from the Bible
Mathew 18:7
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Good and Evil
Alexandr Solzhenitsyn †
The Gulag Achipelago