March 09, 2007

The magical thinking of Westerners

Magical ThinkingThere’s a rich irony, in other words, in my reader’s insistence that magical thinking is less useful than the technical thinking he champions, because magical thinking is exactly the form of human thought that deals with the realm of motivations, values, and goals that technical thinking handles so poorly. Americans dream of living in suburbs not because suburbs have any particular virtue-–most of them lack the amenities of city and countryside alike, while sharing the worst features of both--but because the suburban house, surrounded by its protective moat of grass, is a magical symbol brimfull of potent cultural meanings. Americans drive preposterously oversized and overpowered cars, not because these are better than smaller and more sensible vehicles in any objective way, but because they magically symbolize the freedom and power most Americans long ago surrendered to the machinery of a mass society. For that matter, the hallucinated wealth that keeps our mostly fictional economy churning away consists of sheer enchantment, with even less tangible substance behind it than the moonbeams and fairy dust of a child’s wonder tale.

To speak of these issues in terms of magic is not, by the way, just a metaphor. Dion Fortune, one of the premier magical theorists of the 20th century, defined magic as the art and science of causing changes in consciousness in accordance with will. It’s predictable that a society fixated on seeing its own technology as the be-all and end-all of human achievement would misunderstand magic as a kind of failed physical technology, but that predictability makes modern attitudes about magic no less misleading. This is hardly the place for a detailed discussion of magic, but for our present purposes it can be seen as the use of psychologically potent symbolism to influence consciousness and, through consciousness, the universe as we experience it. The advertising campaigns that seduce so many people into buying, say, fizzy brown sugar water, by associating this product with symbols of happiness, self-esteem, or love, are good examples of magic at work--a debased magic, force-fitted into the manipulative mold of physical technology, but magic nonetheless.

4 comments:

BPEC said...

Ah, its not so poorly written. Besides, the author has a good point; though I think 'magic' is simply a synonym for false consciousness and/or commodity fetishism.

writerfella said...

Writerfella here --
Oh, writerfella gets it! It's Hayden Christensen, who was the young Anakin Skywalker! What do you hear from George these days?
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'

writerfella said...

Writerfella here --
In actual point of fact, analyze writerfella's four word question. Who... wrote... this... mess...? 'Who...' is this "ArchDruid"? - 'wrote...' asks the why and how that someone actually thinks human intellectual advancement is paramount but only if accompanied by similar advancements in social, political, and economic thinking - as though the mind totally has replaced the human hand as humanity's most principal tool? - 'this...' asks after the theses that human thought somehow is "mythic" and thus also is "magical" only if it makes obeisance to the poetries powering and empowering human society, politics, and economics, while failing to see that the poetry depends more on faith than it does human realities? - and "mess..." asks just how someone can hope to solve or at least to stave off human world collapse while lamenting that the pursuit of science has advanced without similar advances in social, political, and economic pursuits. In 1972, writerfella published the short story, "A Modest Proposal", wherein worldwide human catastrophe is recognized by one man and one man alone, naturally with his solution completely rejected: "...kill people...kill them in numbers that will guarantee a future for the human race. Either we do it for ourselves or nature will do it for us." All around and worldwide, human conception and birth has broken down, almost completely stopped, but this man also knows it more is a failure of reincarnation, that the number of humans alive finally has outstripped the supply of human souls. He is no Hitler, no Ghandi, no one, and so, in defense of his own unborn child, he sets out to prove his principle: kill people, kill them in numbers that will guarantee a future for the human race. It is terrorism vs. overpopulation, one man against an entire world, and he wins by losing...
All Best
Russ Bates
'writerfella'

Rob said...

The author's name is prominent on his blog. His authorship of 12 books suggests a proven ability to write:

John Michael Greer
Location: Ashland, Oregon, US

The Grand Archdruid of the Ancient Order of Druids in America (AODA), John Michael Greer has been active in the alternative spirituality movement for more than 25 years, and is the author of a dozen books, including "The Druidry Handbook" (Weiser, 2006). He lives in Ashland, Oregon.