by Gary Z McGee
March 03, 2024
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.
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Cathedral Halls
by Stuz0r
"Socrates created
a tyrant out of reason."
Nietzsche
Before Socratic reasoning there was the amoral and Machiavellian realpolitik, which did not follow any ethical or idealistic rules.
There was only the strong defeating the weak for no other
"reason"
than that it could and should...
As Thucydides said, speaking of the Peloponnesian War,
"The strong do what they can, and the weak
suffer what they must."
Tyranny was the rule.
The strong held it over the weak.
The rich
held it over the poor.
The healthy held it over the unhealthy.
The
smartest held it over the dumbest.
Morality was not a reason outside
the realm of "because I can," but fully lodged within it.
But then came Socratic reasoning.
Socrates' turned the tables on
realpolitik.
He flipped the script of might makes right.
He put the
strong man's foot to the fire.
He burned a hole through the rich
man's coin.
But in doing so, he inadvertently made a tyrant of
reason.
When reasoning becomes tyrannical,
dogmas reign, dogmas clash, dogmas
have us all chasing our own tails.
We become rats caught in the cage
of our own "higher" reasoning.
Our reasoning becomes something "other than," something outside of us, something
"out there," or
something only found in another world, or in another life.
We become
divorced from truth.
Reality becomes a burden we must toss off for
the placation of our "higher reasoning."
Though it is vital, reason is not the only path to truth.
Reason
necessarily should poke a hole in pride and power.
But what pokes a
hole is reason?
In order for reason not to become a tyrant one must
take it upon oneself to poke a hole in reason so that it does not
fail and become dogmatic.
Realpolitik,
politics based on practical objectives rather than on
ideals, morals, or ethics, must be clipped by reason lest unbridled
pride reign over a dog-eat-dog world.
But then reason must be
clipped by humor lest bridled egos reign in a dogma vis-à-vis dogma
world.
The
Overman is above the ordinary man because he is neither a slave
to reason nor a slave to realpolitik.
He is beyond "good" and "evil."
He is neither a beast caught up in the throes of mindless
instinct, nor a God caught up in the throes of high-minded
reasoning.
He is a man - the pinnacle of man - caught up only in being
and becoming the best version of himself.
Engrossed in post Socratic higher reasoning, Immanuel Kant said,
"All our knowledge begins with the senses, proceeds then to
understanding, and ends with reason. There is nothing higher than
reason."
But that is patently false.
There are (at least) two things
higher than reason:
humor and imagination...!
An Overman strategically uses humor and imagination to keep reason
and realpolitik in check.
A strategic will to humor
"The law of levity
is allowed
to supersede
the law of
gravity."
R.A. Lafferty
Regarding realpolitik, an Overman uses his will to humor to get
power over power itself.
Nietzsche's
Will to Power was a groundbreaking moment in philosophy.
It paved the way for the future of self-empowerment and earth-based
thinking.
It built a bridge upon which we can at least begin the
journey toward the ideal of the Overman (Übermensch).
But there's a fly in Nietzsche's ointment. It takes itself too
seriously.
It's too rigid and attached to raw power.
It's too
prideful and oriented with the bloodiness of realpolitik.
It's
heavy-handed and heavy-hearted.
Otherwise, it's brilliant.
Otherwise, it's perhaps the most important idea in philosophy since Socrates' higher reasoning.
But,
What if there was a way to take the fly out of the ointment?
What if there was a way to take all the glorious empowerment of
Nietzsche's will to power but then leave all the self-serious
attachment to pride and power behind?
What if there was a way to
practice self-empowerment with a good sense of humor?
And what if we
could use this heightened sense of humor as a launchpad for even
higher humor, and even greater power?
That's where the Will to Humor comes in.
The will to humor gives us power over power (realpolitik) because it
keeps humility ahead of hubris.
It is a way to resolve the dilemma
of power - both the power of the authority that outflanks us and our
own power to do what we feel like "because we can."
It turns the
tables on might makes right with the realization that might is a
joke at best, in the grand scheme of things, and that there is
neither right nor wrong for the same reason.
Through the will to humor we discover our vital contribution to
Cosmos:
Presence...
The will to humor engenders presence by prompting
us to search for inner meaning.
Not in a codependent way, rigid and
clinging to some higher reasoning.
Nor in an independent way, fierce
and overwhelming the world "because we can."
But in a detached way,
open and flowing.
Meaning becomes an act of lighthearted creation
rather than an act of raw power.
The will to humor is radicalized virtue.
It radicalizes courage,
moderation, wisdom, justice, curiosity, and honor.
Through
radicalized virtue comes a heightened state of lightheartedness, a
sense of play so powerful it gains power over Power itself.
With this power over power, those practicing the will to humor are
compelled to turn their power outward.
First as laughter, second as
expiation, and third as prestige...
A strategic will to imagine
"All are lunatics,
but he who
can analyze his delusion
is called
a philosopher."
Ambrose Bierce
Regarding reason, an Overman uses his will to imagine to get power
over reason itself.
Reason is important. But it will never be more important than
imagination. For reason without imagination has the tendency to fall
in upon itself.
It eats itself in the maw of its own perceived
"truth."
Given enough rope, reason will hang itself in the shadow of
its own unwavering ideal. Reason will drown in its own reasoning.
That is, unless imagination can regain the upper hand and pull it
out of deep water.
The will to imagine gives us power over reason because it is a way
to transcend the dogmatic trap of our ideas and ideals.
It's a way
to rise above the confusion of the religious blender.
It is a way to
detach ourselves from the cosmic joke.
A way to rise above our
mortal dread by assimilating it into our mortality.
It's a way to go
meta over our self-seriousness, our higher reasoning, and our
propensity to put all our eggs into one basket.
The will to imagine is a way of stretching reality beyond might or
reason.
It's a way of transcending the human condition by fully
immersing ourselves in it.
Dipping our conceptual toes into the
uncharted waters of ideas, some find a vast ocean of knowledge while
others fall into the endless pit of fantasies (dogma).
An Overman uses a good Dionysian imagination as a lifeline out of
the Apollonian pit of ideals.
So as not to remain blinded by the
light.
So as not to get lost in the abyss of a thousand and one
clashing dogmas.
So as not to fall victim to the tyranny of reason.
Through a deep and curious imagination, he gets above it all
- all the
pettiness, the placation, the woe-is-me pity party, the codependent
expectation - he becomes enigmatic, otherworldly, heroic.
He's able to
untie Gordian Knot, flip scripts, turn tables, ditch dogma, reinvent
God, and reimagine Imagination itself.
Through the will to imagination, he's able to stay ahead of the
curve.
Bias is squashed.
Circular reasoning is straightened.
Cognitive dissonance is curtailed. Ideologies are flattened.
The
mind opens, and he is free to fly into the Mecca of going Meta.
If imagination is superior to reason, only a good sense of humor is
superior to imagination.
He who is flexible in imagination and humor
molds the world to himself.
He becomes an Overman.
And he does so
despite either the realpolitik or reasoning of other men.
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