26 May 2014

Joseph Campbell broken down? Ethnic vs. World Religions


“Buddhism was the first of the world religions, as contrasted with the ethnic religions, the local religions into which one is born. One is born a Hindu; one is born a Jew; one chooses to profess Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam.” (J. Campbell: Myths of Light: Eastern Metaphors of the Eternal)
After being admonished myself by a contributor to Philosophy of Religion Community that there is no such thing as “ethnic religion”, I admitted that he might be right and that J. Campbell's distinction should pass some tests, since the respective contributor told me that he knows personally quite a few Hindu converts.
 I am always eager to experience new things. After getting myself auto-excommunicated recently from the Atheism Community, under the charges of posting on spiritual communities, which is a mortal sin and heresy in any respectable system of militant atheism, I decided to seek various public views whenever I come across such inciting ideas as “ethnic vs. world religions”, because this kind of public discussions are more able to enlarge my own perspectives an get a clearer picture than traditional scholarly works.
I think this is the new kind of scientific approach, not only from the perspective of a comparative History of Religions, so I decided to ask our readers and contributors to share their views on the subject, provided that the overall attitude is a moderate one and, whenever possible, academic references are provided.
The fruitful, rational and moderate dialogue on religion, art, philology and philosophy between the Occident and the Orient that had been enlivened by the European pioneering sanskritists and sinologists during the 18th century was followed by various cultural and religious exchanges throughout the following two centuries. These in turn have led to so many mutual influences upon the studied religious systems themselves and even to undeniable syncretism. This long and complex evolution makes a hard toil out of any 21th century attempt to write a coherent and systematic history of religions, because many distinctions and characteristics which were common-sense prerequisites to a proper religious interpretation and scientific methodology 100 years ago are now obsolete.
I arrived, therefore, to the conclusion that such distinctions as “East and West” and “Ethnic and Universal” are mere valuable tools for organizing the colossal amount of available material in the hands of those enthusiastic scholars preparing a new “History of Religion”-sort of analytical work in five volumes, which requires them to append the afferent bibliography to the book. The boundaries between East and West, ethnic and global, tend to be erased in our era dominated by internet and scientific discoveries.
Such a discussion on “ethnic vs. world” distinction in a comparative approach of religions is meant solely to provide some directions and signposts in this large and complex area of religious-related studies referred to in academic area as “History of Religion” discipline.
In order to arrive to fruitful conclusions we should focus on the following two central aspects that can lead to a possible answer. Please feel free to pick-up one of them, or address them collectively, or in whatever manner it might seem more convenient to you, or even try a different approach, from an original perspective.
1.      One’s ethnicity is or is it not essentially linked to one’s religious affiliation in the so-called “ethnic religions”?
If you tackle this item from a Hindu or Jewish perspective, please also address my additional queries, assuming that I am a Christian – a word that defines my religious orientation and I am also Romanian –a word that defines my ethnicity:
a)     Can I become a Hindu? Can I become a Jew? Can I chose to be a Hindu/Jew (as religion), but at the same time keep my declared ethnicity (Romanian)? 
b)     If yes, is this a wide-spread phenomenon and (for instance) can I show-up tomorrow along with 20.000 Romanians in Benares and ask to become Hindus, all of us? Will we get a green light for this?  
c)      If yes, can anyone trace back from at least three generations a significant amount of people who initially were, ethnically, non-Hindu/non-Jew, but their grandsons are now recognized, socially and religiously, as Hindu/Jews? Or is this kind of “Hindu converts” phenomenon just an isolated, recent, phenomenon that might be considered only as some sort of extravagance or cultural fashion by the mainstream Hinduism/Judaism?
2.      As a consequence to the above, if we want to point out some flaws to J. Campbell distinction, we will have to try to:
a)     provide scientific references that there is a Hindu/Judaism religion (but not an isolated cult) independent from any Hindu/Jewish ethnic group;
b)     deny the fact that there is an essential requirement to be born a Jew/Hindu or meet any other ethnicity-related requirement in order to be a Jew/Hindu;
c)     provide substantial evidence (references to public, secular sources are required) that for at least three generations there are Hindu converts and/or Jewish converts that are also recognized as Hindu/Jews by mainstream Hindu/Jewish communities, in order to avoid generalizing isolated cases or accidents;
d)     ascertain that there is such a group or a community of people that cumulatively and explicitly: a) declare themselves Christian/Buddhist and 2)when asked about their ethnicity they declare themselves Christians/Buddhists;
3.     Possible consistent arguments against Campbell’s distinction, but only when one reads his statement literally:
a)      one chooses to profess Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam” vs. “one is born a Hindu; one is born a Jew” is contradicted in practice, by the fact that one’s religion is usually handed-down from parents to children, so the statements “one is born a Hindu” and “one is born a Christian” are interchangeable, to some extent, unless we take into account that one can be born a Christian irrespective of his parents’ ethnicity; Usually, the individual is not expected to become an adult and only then asked to make his choice (“I chose to profess Buddhism” etc.).
b)      one chooses to profess Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam” kind of statement doesn’t cover religious practices in industrialized societies, wherein the majority of people who are, formally, Buddhist or Muslim or Christian are in fact non-practicing Christians etc. or even atheists and attend religious services just on such occasions as : when getting married, when being baptized, when dying etc.
When sharing your views, please take into account that this is not a debate on the universal value of this or that belief system, but an attempt to figure out to which extent one’s ethnicity is linked to one’s religious orientation. Likewise, the adjective “universal” in “universal religion” or “world religion” kind of wording doesn’t equate with “universal value”, but only with the ability to accept new followers without any ethnical requirements. I am myself a big admirer of the Bhagavad-Gītā, the big scripture of Hinduism, whose universal value has gained a huge recognition in the Western hemisphere – that is: in another cultural environment, different in many aspects from that in which Bhagavad-Gītā originated. And still, according to J. Campbell theory, which is raised for discussion here, Hinduism is an ethnical system of religious beliefs and practices. 
Any offensive statement will be ignored/deleted, as well as any political/harsh dogmatic attitude.

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11 April 2014

Life sucks, dude, I should kill myself!!


 We cannot cure the world of sorrows, but we can choose to live in joy”
(Joseph Campbell)
 A text message of a good friend of mine reads: “Dude, this life is miserable&meaningless! Nobody needs me, really! I fail all the time, my life is a mess, and everything I do is useless. What purpose do I serve? What do I exist for? Life sucks, dude, I should kill myself!!”



I replied that life is meaningless, indeed. And I don’t want fool you around and tell you that there is still somebody who needs you: your wife, your husband, your kids and the like. No, they could make it somehow, even without you, should you be dead by tomorrow. There is always a solution, a replacement of some kind: a new husband, a foster parent, a shrink, a dog, a cat, a bottle of booze. A substitute for the “late” Nick or Jack or whatever your name was.

And God doesn’t need you either because there are so many people out there, more optimistic and trustworthy, than you, a more enjoyable and amusing crowd. God might have lost the count by now. And God must have got bored of millions of depressed middle aged fellows like you and might as well be manifesting as something new: as this suffering, which is here in order to wake you up - and entertain Him.

So, life is meaningless, that is: it has no outer purpose, no external aim. There is no final conclusion beyond life itself. But why should we bother, why should we carry this burden of a purpose? What if there is no purpose…? Why can’t we still enjoy a total meaningless life?

However, the last thing a resentful guy wants to do is letting go of his anger, this is the last piece of advice that he wants to hear: “You don’t need to listen to these silly thoughts, let go of this horrid veil that covers your eyes! You are not your thoughts; you are not your worries! Wake up!” I always try to make them figure out how toxic this veil of thoughts that lie to them all the time is. But people are very much attached to their unhappiness; they always want to perpetuate it. People become appendixes of sorrow, because they let themselves ensnared by sorrow, they simply give up and become walking sorrow. They become addicts. This is a terrible drug; it teaches your brains that you cannot live without sadness. It sounds so funny but it is all true.

Don’t mess with a guy’s misery; it’s his gold, his ring of power, his own, his “precious”!
But I have this terrible habit: I can't and I won't let people dream, I don’t want to let them sleep on their illusions and sometimes my company is not very pleasant… I often come across unhappy friends that failed this or that project and I feel compelled by compassion to wake them up. I realize all of a sudden that I must tell them the truth, no matter what. So I usually go like this:

“Don’t get into this trap again! Life is neither good nor bad. Life is beautiful, with all its apparent hostility…, it just has two aspects: the fascinating and the terrifying. But you can see it like this: it’s just tragic beauty, all of this never ending cycle of happy and sad stories. And tragic beauty is more than beauty; tragic beauty can be your experience of the sublime. It has this potential. And yes, you are right, I must admit this:  it’s very likely that life serves no purpose. Take a closer look at this never ending, tragic wheel of endless births and deaths; it seems to have no noble goal, no logical sense. Will you be able to celebrate this mystery of a life that still can be beautiful despite lacking any purpose? I think you are, because joy and peace are fundamental to human nature. You don’t need any reason to be peaceful. No goal, no achievement is necessary. Be joyful, no matter what, because the barrier between you and true joy is your care for achievement and your care for prestige. Let them also come naturally, if and when they come, but do not fight for them, don’t accumulate more inner tensions and inner conflicts! Look at all so called reasons, meanings and purposes for what they are: they are meant to give you illusory motivations to cling further to your suffering!”

A question should be asked now: are you able to live simultaneously in two dimensions- the plane of the eternal and the plane of time? Are you able to feel, somehow, that ever motionless place in consciousness where the eternal touches the transient, where is the “hub of the wheel” of your life experiences? If you say yes, you say yes to a life that is in fact a slaughter house, as all life lives on killing, but it is also a splendid garden. Don’t ask me why I feel that the same life energy rejoices in a new born baby and in a decaying corpse. I just know it does. The same mystery of life manifests itself in both birth and death. And this life that makes possible the birth of a child is the same life that takes away the vital energy from a dying man.

And this Life never dies. You are one with this Life.

Our life experiences are mere cherry blossoms. But their evanescence doesn’t deprive them of beauty, but on the contrary, evanescence enhances it. And as I said earlier in other words, tragic beauty is more than just beauty: it is the experience of the sublime. Of course, all of this depends on our vision, and not on the specific context or life situation or the story that we apparently are part of.

I should warn you, in full confidence, that this kind of therapy with a friend that tries to overcome a bout of depression doesn’t work all the time. Even when you tell a healthy, balanced person that all life is just like the beauty of a sunset, that is: total useless and evanescent, the guy can go berserk! Because a sunset is total meaningless, its’ beauty doesn’t serve any purpose, any reason whatsoever! What’s the meaning of beauty, what is its aim? It has no meaning, it has no goal and it doesn’t have to. It just is. And so are you. You don’t need any purpose, drop-off the burden of meaning!

But, again: don’t try this type of spiritual exercise and psychological counselling at home. Stay indoors and keep this post secret. Keep it safe. Do not share!:)

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