The killings in Norway force us to recognize that a global religious war is gathering momentum. Efforts to persuade people to respect other religions fall on deaf ears because they partake of a linear, if then, tit for tat mindset.
In my book A Taoist Politics: The Case for Sacredness , I show that the basis of morality is not God, but nature as a system of which humans are a part. As fundamentalists insist, this implies that morality must form the basis of politics. It does not imply that this or that religion must dictate politics, but rather that humans cannot escape their place within a self-organizing whole.
The attraction of Nazism lies in its claim of racial superiority, which denies the systemic nature of reality. The advantage of a Taoist mindset is that it is borne out by science. Fritjof Capra was one of the first to point out the similarities between ancient wisdom and modern physics, and over the last forty years, many scientists have acknowledged them. The similarities between Protestant and Islamic fundamentalism are beginning to dawn on political observers, but in a culture predicated on linear thinking, this does not suggest an alternative to the wars we are told we must fight.
Systems thinking and self-organization illustrate the circular character of the natural world. The idea of an all-powerful deity, above and therefore outside the natural world, is a linear concept, which leads to tit for tat thinking and actions. Even a superficial look at the three religions of the book shows that they are all based on the linear notion of punishment, or tit for tat. Moses' God gave men rules, and punished without mercy any failure to respect them. Jesus' God also gave rules, but forgave transgressions in return for repen-tance. As for Mohammed's God, though he could also forgive, he ordered three prayers a day to ensure that believers would not forget the rules. (Later, zealots raised the number of prayers to five.)
The Tao te Ching, only 5000 characters long, still has meaning for us after 2,500 years:
The Tao that can be expressed
Is not the eternal Tao.
The Tao is nowhere to be found
Yet it nourishes and completes all things.
All things are born from Being
Being is born from non-Being.
Familiarity with the notion of a self-generating whole, rather than polemics that oppose rationality to belief, would appear to be the only way to conjure killing in the name of God.
Your book mentioned in this post is amazing, as are you. Thank you for this profound post....for all of your posts that enlighten and engage me.
ReplyDelete(I have been spreading the word on Facebook about your e-book; so exciting.)
Thank you for being my most faithful reader, Lydia. Now, if only we could solve my facebook problem!
ReplyDeleteHello Deena! I learned about you and your work only a few moments ago on a popular website, www.reddit.com. Your article was posted up and voted by hundreds of members of the site. You can find it on page 5 or 6.
ReplyDeleteI also share the same intuitions regarding the state of our species. We must now, more then ever, acknowledge the basic truths of existence. The only way for survival is to co-exist with true reality, and not the reality that was created by our false identities. I am truly looking forward to reading your book!
Stay blessed and lets fight the good fight!
Actually, you can find it here! Front page . http://www.reddit.com/r/worldnews
ReplyDeleteOkay, I got it! You're referring to A Taoist Politics. You can get it on Amazon.
ReplyDeleteYour comments will be most welcome.
Deena
Appreciation for this inrfoamtoin is over 9000thank you!
ReplyDeleteYou are very welcome. Can you send me the link to your site?
ReplyDeleteDeena