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from FractalEnlightenment Website
is like trying to bite your own teeth." Alan Watts
My advice, here at the outset of this article about the self, is to take less into consideration Descartes' dictum cogito ergo sum (I think, therefore I am) and take more into consideration the dictum dubito ergo sum (I doubt, therefore I am).
All we are ever doing in our pursuit of higher knowledge, of enlightenment, of understanding the self, is expanding the horizon of the unknown anyway. We are merely elevating ourselves to a "higher" level of not knowing, to a more erudite level of ignorance.
The more we know, the more we realize how much we don't know.
But not even that statement gets at the heart of the problem, because language is an exasperatingly imperfect tool. It just so happens to be the only tool we have to communicate our sense of self to each other (other than the more elusive "language older than words").
So healthy doubt seems to be the most reasonable course to follow, especially in regards to anything having to do with the all-too-precious concept of "I."
The problem of the self is a fascinatingly complex one. Somewhere between "I doubt" and "I am" is an enormous abyss. This abyss is infinitely deep and infinitely wide, and yet, as with Zeno's paradox, we can so easily leap from "I doubt" to "I am" and back again, as if the distance were nil.
The illusion is that there is no distance, no gap, no abyss, but there most definitely is.
It's what Slavoj Žižek refers to as the Parallax Gap:
Which he breaks down into three main modes of parallax:
I won't delve too deeply into these complex concepts, except to say that the ontological, scientific, and political parallax gap is the gaping abyss between "I doubt" and "I am."
All we have to do is become better at navigating this gap by building more robust bridges of communication. Easier said than done.
We have a multitude of evolutionary layers overlapping, like a giant onion in our skull. Each layer has an evolutionary importance of which we are just beginning to scratch the surface.
But we do know that each module, each part of this infinitely fascinating organ, is a prerequisite for our being here.
Every module, whether outdated or not (and some are), is necessary for there to be such a thing as homo sapien sapien: an epiphenomenal animal that has the capacity to live an examined life. Something has to make the jump across the abyss.
Something has to "do" the smelling/feeling/hearing/seeing/tasting/imagining.
Like Julian Baggini wrote,
Something has to be (verb) the being (noun) dressing/being (verb) itself (noun).
Something has to put it all together and say,
And that something is the arbitrary Self.
But that something is also an illusion, which is a tough pill to swallow for a creature that puts almost all its worth on being a self.
Our perception of the self is as much a construct of a construct as it is an abstraction of an abstraction. And that's okay.
As Henry Miller memorably put it,
We evolved this way for a reason: it has worked thus far.
We perceive the self the way we do because our evolution required an "aspect" that was capable of putting the entire psycho-physiological meat-spirit-package together into one single whole, into a kind of CEO of Mind Body & Soul Inc.
And like most CEOs, the self has a tendency to take all the credit of the multifaceted corporation.
But the self is not one single thing. It is not an essence, but a process. It is the side-effect of an organism having gone through the motions of evolving.
The sense of individuality that arises from this process is the illusion, but it is a most effective illusion. When we look in the mirror we perceive a single organism, which perpetuates the illusion.
Perceptually we are one single entity, but actually we are several. We are multifaceted, complete with a plethora of masks. This psycho-physiological unity of experience is who we are.
But that experience is forever in the throes of change, whether we are consciously aware of it or not. The more we embrace this change, the more we cycle and recycle through our many masks, the healthier we'll tend to be and the more courageous we will become with our own vulnerability.
The alternative, resisting change, just leads to furthering the illusion of the fixed self and perpetuating the illusion of invulnerability and false security.
Like Peter Matthiessen said,
We transcend the "cavern" by realizing and accepting the fact that the self is an illusion and is constantly in flux and being okay with the inevitability of change.
Defining ourselves may be like biting our own teeth, but it beats the alternative:
They were conditioned into us. They preceded our preconditioning.
With a robust sense of self we become capable of questioning our assumptions about the way the world works as well as the way the Self works.
Justin Bower 'In The Elusive Self I' wrote,
Indeed, the paradox isn't that we are part of an interdependent cosmos.
The paradox is our perception of being independent from that interdependent cosmos. And yet here we are: independent, at least perceptually. And that must be okay. The hypocrisy, the fallibility, the mistakes, and/or the false sense of 'whatever' that inevitably comes from such a paradoxical disposition must also be okay, because this is precisely our lot.
Contradictory Creature is both who and what we are. We just need to find healthier and better ways of being so.
An arduously Herculean task if ever there was one, but a task we must be able to embrace in order to become healthier versions of ourselves.
Like Alan Watts said,
The philosophers' maxim, "know thyself" may be impossible, but it's impossible in the same way that enlightenment is impossible.
We should neglect neither our pursuit of enlightenment nor the pursuit to know ourselves. We should instead strive toward both, while allowing the journey to be the thing.
The first step toward knowing our true self is questioning the conditioned self and then becoming our own self.
As long as we can avoid becoming what F.S. Michaels calls "a ready-to-wear self," or a conditioned self, we are free to proceed with our self-evolution in a healthier way.
We are free to become - through constant self-overcoming - our most authentic self.
And although, as Bruno Borges articulated,
...we become more ourselves by realizing that we are both intermittently individual-human and interdependent-star.
Indeed, there is only one thing faster than the speed of light:
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