17 episodes

Think strategically to help put our locked-down world of today into perspective: COVID-19, global climate change, and other crises, prevent clarity and increase anxiety. Against these we apply psychology and history to gain insight into our current moment.

Join Chris, Dawson and Karambir, as they converse on these issues.

AfterThought CDK

    • Society & Culture

Think strategically to help put our locked-down world of today into perspective: COVID-19, global climate change, and other crises, prevent clarity and increase anxiety. Against these we apply psychology and history to gain insight into our current moment.

Join Chris, Dawson and Karambir, as they converse on these issues.

    16. Conclusion Part 2: Beyond Hope for the Future: Compassion and Resolve

    16. Conclusion Part 2: Beyond Hope for the Future: Compassion and Resolve

    We begin with where the podcast started: one of the characteristics of the contemporary world, which is both an active contributor to, as well as a passive reflection of, its being in crisis, is that in contrast to the modern worldview’s ideal of some magisterial overview, our current moment refuses any such overview. Such an overview appears now as impossible and implausible; part of the modern-Western-cum-ultramodern-global mythology we need to put behind us. Instead, we are all caught up inside this global moment, caught up in a plurality of incompatible worldviews and contradictory stories, incapable of escaping our inherence in this complex diversity and forced to make our way with great uncertainty. How to live in this moment, without resorting to either hopelessness or despair or inauthentic hope, with the courage, resolve,  and above all, the compassion, that is needed? And beyond living in this moment, how are we to transform ourselves in the midst of the ending of the world such that a new human being emerges, ready to live – viably, sustainably, resiliently - in the new world that will come after the ending of the old?

    (Note: many of the references made to hope and the psychology of climate change in this episode were already given in the notes accompanying Episode 5.)

    A couple further references on hope:

    Joanna Macy (who was mentioned in Episode 5 as well) remains a psychologist of global climate change par excellence: https://www.joannamacy.net/ .For some of her work on “active hope”, see https://www.activehope.info/joanna-macy.html

    Jonathan Lear’s analysis of hope for the Crow nation as it struggles to survive is rich, deep, and pertinent: Jonathan Lear. (2006). Radical hope: Ethics in the face of cultural devastation.

    Relative to references made to a non-ego actor invokes the work of Bruno Latour and “actor-network” theory, Donna Haraway, and others, that helpfully focus on breaking down nature-culture, passive mechanical natural subject vs active conscious human agent, dichotomies.

    For example:

    Latour, Bruno. (2017). Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the new climactic regime.

    Haraway, Donna. (2008). When species meet.

    • 31 min
    15. Conclusion Part 1: Strategies for Thinking the Present

    15. Conclusion Part 1: Strategies for Thinking the Present

    In this episode, (part one of our two-part conclusion), we aim to tie together – like a nice bow on a Christmas present, know what we mean? – a number of themes (“thoughtlines”) raised throughout the series that present a diverse number of strategies for thinking the present. We engage the notion of thinking strategically relative to scale, and compassionate readings as preferable to egocentric ones. We recur to the theme of “sitting with” rather than getting things done, a spiritual demand the ego resists. How to affirm community rather than technology; the importance of thinking in critical, two-sided terms rather than in polarized terms; and equally, the importance of identifying resources to deal with the present moment rather than a focus on solutions.

    • 29 min
    14. The Ego and its Discontents

    14. The Ego and its Discontents

    The identification of the ego with power structures greater than itself, raises a whole host of questions around ego identity as healthy vs unhealthy; around tribal identity and tribalism and its transformation with the emergence of civilization. What role does mythology play relative to this complex set of issues? What about the psychology activated when confronting civilizational collapse? Are there psychologies that recognize consciousness beyond that of the conventional ego?

    References

    Civilizational collapse gets named on a few occasions, explicitly citing Jared Diamond as best-known example.

    Joseph Tainter, 1988, “The collapse of complex societies”, is perhaps “the classic” that begins a subfield of study on the theme.

    Jared Diamond’s book is from 2005: “Collapse: how societies choose to fail or succeed”

    Reference is made in this episode to conventional psychologies of the ego wherein health means well-adapted to society, over against more radical or spiritual psychologies that see the ego itself as the problem and society as problematic enough such that being adapted to it is unhealthy. Arguably, the whole psychodynamic tradition, from Freud to Jung as its founders, right up the whole field of “transpersonal psychology”, plays on the conventional/spiritual distinction. (See, for example, Freud's "Civilization and its discontents" (1930) from which this episode derives its title. )

    Norman O. Brown brilliantly explored within psychoanalysis some of these themes in his works “Life against death: The psychoanalytical meaning of history” (1959) and “Love’s Body” (1966)

    An example of that distinction (overt in the title already) is by Daniel Brown, Jack Engler, and Ken Wilber, 1986, “Transformations of Consciousness: Conventional and Contemplative Perspectives on Development”

    A favorite psychologist of mine (i.e. Chris) who articulates the notion of being "positively maladjusted" to unhealthy society, alongside the theme of ego-death or “disintegration” as potentially positive is Kazimierz Dabrowski (“Positive disintegration”, 1964). See the website https://positivedisintegration.com/

    Terror-management theory also gets mentioned: for this theory, see Jeff Greenberg, Sheldon Solomon, and Tom Pyszczynski, 2015, “The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life”.  https://ernestbecker.org/resources/terror-management-theory/

    • 28 min
    13. Power in History

    13. Power in History

    Power manifests in a regularly recurring historical pattern: when there is a successful critique of the dominant power and its institutions and accompanying mythology, the critique in turn becomes institutionalized as the new center of power and new mythologizing and in that process falls into a corrupted form of the original.   This pattern emerges with civilization, disrupting the community basis that is normative for the human ego: as collective power structures scale up, the ego scales up its identification. Thus the origins of this recurring historical pattern are evolutionary and psychological: dating back to the emergence of homo sapiens sapiens around 200, 000 years ago, the individual ego identifies with collective power structures greater than itself in order to counter its weakness and anxiety over survival. Today collective power - modern highly industrialized technology supporting an economy of infinite growth - has attained a global scale of destructiveness, and we must divest from our identifications with it.

    • 30 min
    12. Opposing Scale: Spiritual Practices and Small Communities

    12. Opposing Scale: Spiritual Practices and Small Communities

    In this episode, our deep dive into the Axial Age meets the podcast theme of the importance of scale.  The themes of thinking at different time scales, our effort of following a "thoughtline" through changing historical scales, is provided its psychological underpinning: scaling up is an identity-project undertaken by the human ego.  To shift away from operating at global industrial scale, which operates above all through a consumptive appeal to the ego, towards instead thinking, living, and investing in our local communities, requires massive political reorienting premised on a deep economic transformation away from consumption. Beneath these massive changes, is a correspondingly powerful spiritual and psychological challenge to deny ourselves – a challenge which makes the inward turn of spiritual practice and its transformative potential indispensable.

    References:

    Alternative economic models were mentioned, Schumacher’s “Small is beautiful” explicitly:

    Schumacher, E. F. (1973) Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if people mattered. http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/

    A contemporary proposal is Kate Raworth’s “doughnut economics”:

    https://www.kateraworth.com/doughnut/

    Samuel Alexander has done a great amount of work on “degrowth” and “sufficiency economy”:

    http://samuelalexander.info/

    Helena Norbert-Hodge has articulated a powerful defense of “local futures” and a focus on the “economics of happiness” (along with a 2011 film of that name)

    https://www.localfutures.org/

    “Voluntary simplicity” is a theme that interweaves all of the above; see http://simplicitycollective.com/or the 1981 book of the same name by Duane Elgin.

    • 29 min
    11. Are we in a Second Axial Age?

    11. Are we in a Second Axial Age?

    We continue our discussion of the Axial Age begun in the previous episode, in terms of how our current time is (and is not!) a type of second Axial Age. Some key aspects of the Axial Age - as a highly self-conscious response to perceived crisis, as critique of existing power, as presenting an alternative spiritual vision of what could be, the marginality of its positioning relative to centers of power, and the crucial importance of living in small-scale communities and undertaking spiritual practices of meditation or contemplation aimed at transforming the self through overcoming the ego - are engaged and related to our current times.

    References: the following are some examples of discussion of  the present as a second Axial Age

    Ewert Cousins , 1992, Christ of the 21st Century (New York, NY: Continuum).

    Adam Bucko & Rory McEntee, 2015, New Monasticism: An Interspiritual Manifesto for Contemplative Living (New York: Orbis).

    Ilia Delio, 2020, Re-enchanting the Earth (New York: Orbis).

    • 29 min

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