How can religion be seen as a tool for ‘articulating the noosphere’?
Today’s Post
Last week we saw how religion can be seen as an attempt to ‘articulate the noosphere’, in which the ‘laws’ of our personal and cultural evolution are sought and by which we can assure our continued personal and cultural growth. This week we will see at how such articulation at the level of religion can slowly inform our cultural standards.
From Articulating the Noosphere to Managing Human Evolution
Society has long struggled to both understand the principles which underlie a ‘successful’ society and to codify these principles into what we now understand as ‘laws’. As chronicled by Nick Spencer in his book, “The Evolution of the West”, religion’s role in this historic process has been dualistic. In many cases it has found itself trapped in the perpetuation of its financial, hierarchic, legalistic, and power scaffolding, and in other cases it has contributed to the fundamental concepts by which the delicate balance between personal and cultural civilization has successfully evolved.
Thomas Jefferson captured both arms of this dualism. While his approach was to discard the ‘otherworldly’ aspects of the “Stories of Jesus” and focus on Jesus as a secular moralist, he nonetheless drew the basis of his understanding of human nature and personal freedom from these teachings. The result, of course, was a cornerstone for a set of laws which has underpinned a truly ‘successful’ society.
Larry Siedentop, in his book, “Inventing the Individual’, traces the history of ideals that form the basis of Western values. It’s not so much that these ideals are absent in Eastern thinking, but do not enjoy the primacy seen in the West. He summarizes the ‘articulation of the noosphere’ as it has emerged in the West:
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- Each person exists with worth apart from their social position
- Everyone deserves equal status under secular law
- Religious belief cannot be compelled
- Individual conscience must be respected
As Teilhard (and many others) have noted, the Western evolution of understanding of the person and society is becoming a standard embraced elsewhere:
“…from one end of the world to the other, all the peoples, to remain human or to become more so, are inexorably led to formulate the hopes and problems of the modern earth in the very same terms in which the West has formulated them.”
Johan Norberg, in his book, “Progress” documents in detail how this formulation, initially rising in the West, has made its way into many ‘developing’ countries.
The Perennial Philosophy
While considerable diversity and frequent contradiction is paramount among the threads of thought seen in the evolution of religion, Aldous Huxley saw common elements in all of them. He defines the immemorial and universal ‘Perennial Philosophy’ which permeates all religions as:
“…the metaphysic that recognizes a divine Reality substantial to the world of things and lives and minds; the psychology that finds in the soul something similar to, or even identical with, divine Reality; the ethic that places man’s final end in the knowledge of the immanent and transcendent Ground of all being.”
Seeing this semi-theological assertion through Teilhard’s ‘lens’, we can see that this concept of the ‘Perennial Philosophy’ reflects the principle which powers the coming-to-be of the universe (the ‘world of things’) and that it is reflected in some way in the core of the human person.
Effectively, this ‘metaphysic’ points the way to the underlying activity by which we have come to be and the guidelines by which we successfully navigate our growth. The Perennial Philosophy recognizes that there are basic dynamics of human existence which, understood and managed properly, will lead to increased completeness. The religious and societal norms which have evolved, therefore, reflect our attempt to articulate these dynamics and the activities of understanding and management of them. By definition, as we evolve as persons and as societies we hope to evolve them in a direction which activates our potential.
Or, as Karen Armstrong puts it in her insights on the many streams of thinking which developed during the ‘Axial Age’:
“The fact that they all (the sages of the Axial Age) came up with such profoundly similar solutions by so many different routes suggests that they had indeed discovered something important about the way human beings worked”.
The theologian, Cynthia Bourgeault, puts it a little differently:
”I think it’s fair to say that all of the great spiritual paths lead toward the same center—the larger, nondual mind as the seat of personal consciousness—but they get there by different routes.”
What’s the Alternative?
Successfully negotiating the continuation of our evolution goes beyond fulfilling our potential. It is obvious today that human activity also has the potential of contributing to our extinction. Finding and understanding the ‘laws of the noosphere’ also requires us to adapt to our ever-increasing population and the effects it has on the planet. One example of the potential of such adaptation is acknowledged by John McHale in his book, “The Future of the Future”:
“At this point, then, where men’s affairs reach the scale of potential disruption of the global ecosystem, he invents precisely those conceptual and physical technologies that may enable him to deal with the magnitude of a complex planetary society.”
It’s not just that we are in danger of destroying our planet, but that even more danger lurks in our ever-increasing proximity to each other. As we increasingly compress, we are more and more at the mercy of our instincts to defend our space, to keep ‘the other’ at bay, to defend our territory and make sure we get our fair share. Inventing McHale’s ‘conceptual technologies’ means to develop evolutional strategies that overcome this strong resistance to closeness. Johan Norberg documents nine distinct examples of such strategy in his book, “Progress”.
In this area it’s essential to our continued evolution for us to develop tactics which “use our neo-cortex brain to modulate the instinctual stimuli of our reptilian and limbic brains.”
These ‘basic dynamics’ and ‘conceptual technologies’, therefore, are what is sought by humans in their attempts to ‘articulate the noosphere’. Culling them from the enormous and often contradictory cluster of statements of beliefs that have arisen over the long evolution of religion is the main goal of a ‘reinterpretation’ process.
Teilhard offers a concise description of the validity of a person’s belief:
“By definition, his religion, if true, can have no other effect than to perfect the humanity in him.”
The Next Post
So, if we believe that that all expressions of religious beliefs include some elements of the ‘Perennial Philosophy’, what remains is to address them in the light of the perspectives we have developed thus far, then reinterpret them to find such kernels. Next week we will begin to address the process of ‘reinterpreting religion’.