by Gary 'Z' McGee
August 13,
2023
from
Self-InflictedPhilosophy Website
Gary
'Z' McGee,
a
former Navy Intelligence Specialist turned philosopher,
is the author of 'Birthday Suit of God'
and
'The Looking Glass Man'.
His
works are inspired by the great philosophers of the ages
and his wide-awake view of the modern world. |
"You have
to take seriously
the notion that
understanding the universe
is your
responsibility,
because the only
understanding of the universe
that will be
useful to you
is your own
understanding."
Terence McKenna
You are a pivot with
a point of view.
You are a wave
crashing onto the shores of eternity.
You are a unique
independent soul-signature emerging from a universal
interdependent spirit molecule.
You are the cosmos
becoming aware of itself.
And you are vital for
the progressive evolution of the interconnectedness of all
things, whether you realize it or not.
But you must overcome
yourself to understand this.
Codependence must be
overcome by independence which must be overcome by interdependence.
You must be able to transcend your uninitiated ego to engage your
self-actualized ego.
In short:
you must
philosophically crush out…
Forget 'know
thyself'
"To attain knowledge,
add things every day.
To attain wisdom,
remove things every day."
Lao
Tzu
Embrace,
'question thyself,'
'humble thyself,' and 'rebirth thyself' instead.
On the surface, the
Ancient Greek aphorism "know thyself" seems like pretty good advice.
But the deeper you dig into it, you will see how impossible that
task truly is.
You can never really know yourself.
You can question
yourself.
You can deconstruct
yourself.
You can transform
yourself.
But knowing yourself is
like trying to know running water...
It's constantly
changing.
It's always moving,
transforming, and adapting.
It's never the same
thing in any given moment.
The best you can ever do
is loosely understand yourself.
So, in order to come to a
greater understanding of yourself,
embrace 'question
thyself,' 'humble thyself,' and 'rebirth thyself' instead...
These aphorisms are
philosophical kick-starters.
They shove you out of
your comfort zone.
They launch you
outside the tiny box of thought.
They push you past
the stifling envelope of "rules."
This is where philosophy
becomes self-inflicted, imposed, exacted, wreaked, and meted out.
This is where a
philosophy as unique as your own fingerprint is fertilized and
begins to gestate.
Without questioning, humbling, and rebirthing there can be no
fertilization.
There is merely what has
come before:
the typical, the
standard, the mainstream, the conventional, the orthodoxy, and
the predictable...
But with questioning,
humbling, and rebirthing there can be fertilization.
There is potential for
creativity and novelty:
for the atypical, for
the unorthodox, for the uncommon, for the extraordinary, for the
never-before-seen to reveal itself...
'Self-inflicted' has a
ruthlessness about it that propels you past your fears.
It gets you out of
your own way.
It goes for the
jugular.
The term "inflicted" has
shock-value.
It's just ruthless
enough, and has just the right amount of bite, to turn away the
rigid, the close-minded, and the certain, and to welcome in the
flexible, the open-minded, and the curious.
But "giants" are needed to see both further than we can alone. The
more the merrier.
Lucky for you, it's the
age of information, and there are giants galore...
The power of
standing (but not remaining) on the shoulders of giants
"Having a personal
philosophy is like having a pet marmoset, because it may be very
attractive when you acquire it, but there may be situations when
it will not come in handy at all."
Lemony Snicket
Proactively questioning,
humbling, and rebirthing yourself is about discovering a path of
your own.
Striking out on your own
path is no easy task.
It requires brutal
self-honesty and a unique flavor of rebellious courage
that most people lack.
That's why it's
called self-inflicted and not self-induced or
self-discovered.
That's why it's
called a leap of courage and not a stroke of comfort.
Here's the thing:
If you don't have a
personal philosophy, life happens to you.
But if you have a
personal philosophy, you happen to life.
But nothing happens in a
vacuum, including philosophizing.
There must be fodder.
There must be
substance.
There must be vital
ingredients.
There must be dynamic
ideas.
There must be other
philosophies connected to other philosophies upon which we can
build the foundation of our own philosophy.
Everything is connected,
after all...
We generally don't have a choice of what these foundational
philosophies will be. They are typically whatever religion or
ideology we were raised with. Whatever knowledge was handed down by
our forefathers.
Some of these
philosophies are healthy (in accordance with universal laws)
and some of them are unhealthy (not in accordance with
universal laws), but all of them (religious and scientific alike)
must be faced with intense incredulity and deep
questioning.
They must be questioned, deconstructed, and re-birthed into our own
words, lest they stagnate and merely become stale bi-products of our
ancestor's parochial reasoning.
The shoulders of
giants were meant to be stood upon, but not planted on.
Without the leap of courage between one giant's shoulder to the
next, there can be no progressive philosophy.
While philosophy dies inside answers; it thrives inside questions.
Questioning is the original leap of courage. It's the
foremost philosophy. Without it, all further philosophy is dead. So,
the would-be self-inflicted philosopher must question –always.
But,
the first act of
questioning (so called sacrilege) is the most important.
The first giant's
shoulder must be questioned most of all.
The first mask must
be broken in order to understand that it's masks all the way
down.
For example:
if the first giant's
shoulder was Jesus, you must question him.
Question everything
about him and his philosophy.
Absorb all you can
from the lessons he taught, then subsume it all in a kind of
philosophical muscle memory and then leap onto the next giant's
shoulder.
Having taken the boon of
his knowledge into deep consideration and then surrendering it to
deep questioning, the next leap of courage is onto another giant's
shoulder.
This is not blasphemy; this is providence.
The same goes for,
Buddha, Muhammad,
Nietzsche, Darwin, Thoreau, Rumi, and all the giants of
history...
No matter who was the
first giant's shoulder you stood upon, whether secular or religious,
take their knowledge
into deep consideration, weigh the probabilities using logic and
reasoning, weigh the morality of it using universal law, and
then move on to the next giant's shoulder with your humility
intact.
Then keep jumping. Keep
taking the leap of courage, the leap into the unknown. Master what
you can...
Then be diligent about
embracing Beginner's Mind, lest the Master's Complex turn you into a
dogmatic basket-clinger clinging so tight to your basket that you
crush all your precious eggs.
If philosophy is a razor, then Self-inflicted philosophy is a
double-edged sword that the philosopher stabs him/herself with in
order to achieve continual rebirth and absolute
self-overcoming.
It's self-improvement
over comfort.
It's self-mastery
over self-preservation.
It's progressive
evolution over regressive stagnation.
It's existential
calisthenics...
Discover your
own philosophy through recycled mastery
"There is a kind of
quiet violence in philosophy's work.
Philosophical
thinking that doesn't do violence to one's settled mind is no
philosophical thinking at all."
Rebecca Goldstein
The first key to
creating your own unique philosophy is understanding the
concept of recycled mastery.
If you master someone's
philosophy - say Nietzsche's, for example - then you have merely
become a Nietzschean.
But if you master his
philosophy and then cast it off to engage the Buddha, then you've
just added another vital ingredient that can get you out of the
one-dimensional trap of belief.
Then, if you can manage another leap of courage out of Buddha's
philosophy, there is nothing stopping you from doing the same with,
Jesus' philosophy, or
Kierkegaard's, Plato's, Aristotle's, Kant's, Sartre's, Camus',
Gandhi's, and Rumi's.
The list is endless...
There's a veritable
forest of giants out there just waiting for you to take the next
leap of courage onto their shoulder. There's always more to learn.
And anyone can be a giant if you have the eyes for it.
The second key to creating your own unique philosophy
is cultivating imagination.
So, you've got all
this knowledge.
You have all these
philosophical ingredients.
You have all these
vital dots just waiting to be connected into a dynamic matrix of
unique thought.
Now,
it's time to get down
to the creative process.
It's time to be
imaginative.
It's time to take the
best (in your opinion) from Nietzsche's philosophy and mix it
with the best from Buddha's and then put your own creative spin
on it, in your own words.
No plagiarizing...
Then,
do the same with
George Cantor and Eckart Tolle.
Keep doing it.
Do it with three
philosophers, five, twenty-five, one-hundred-and-five.
Borrow; transform;
gift.
Birth; death;
rebirth.
Learn; unlearn;
relearn.
Master; recycle;
remaster.
Condition;
uncondition; recondition.
Thesis; antithesis;
synthesis; meta-synthesis.
Keep questioning all the
way.
Keep recycling yourself.
Keep reinventing
yourself.
As Scott Adams
said,
"Awareness is about
unlearning.
It is the recognition
that you don't know as much as you thought you knew."
It's all yours for the
taking...
You're the artist and
these are your pallet of paints. You're the chef and these are your
tasty ingredients. You're the philosopher and these are your vital
ideas.
So, paint something
original. Color outside the lines. Cook something that's never been
tasted before. Philosophize like nobody else has philosophized
before.
Dare to create
something that will add to the progressive evolution of our
species...
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