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Tauriq Moosa - October 12th, 2008 in Feature 0 votes Vote Up! Vote Down!

Let me begin by observing: What a stupid question to ask. In my subsequent and continuing re-appraisals of the consciousness-raising polemics against organised religion, I’ve been hoping to show that atheism is neither a movement, a set of ideals, nor a thing in actual existence. A-theism is classified alongside a-goblinists and a-fairyiests as been redundantly unhelpful in defining oneself. No one defines themselves by what they do not believe or have (I do not define myself as a man “without three arms”, for example), so to set this question out with atheism as a noun, should set you on your guard.

Yet, I feel a need to begin answering this question: Where is the so-called “spiritual side” in nonbelief?

I believe ourselves, as a species, to be in the position of Captain Ahab pursuing an ever-evading white whale of gratification. Says Ahab: “Some unknown but still reasoning thing puts forth the mouldings of its features from behind the unreasoning mask.” No matter the mask or form it takes, it still may be treated as the longing it is.

But domination has also been a prevention for us. Yet, it seems to be changing.

I do not accept the dominion of organised religion over the numinous and transcendent; I do not accept any celestial dictatorship from up-high, yet from so low a time in our past, to command the moments which should belong to me, and me alone; I do not accept that these utterly human moments, ill-defined as “spiritual”, are, too, the targets of New Age tom-foolery. We remain, then, stranded on our own Pequod, poised between the organised religion we reject and the New Age Nonsense we appall. What then, Captains, do we pursue?

Because the rush of reality continues to set our minds ablaze, we know the journey has not ended. We yet continue our search for the white-whale of transcendental posturing.

Paul Heelas, Professor of Religious Studies at Lancaster, has written a beautiful piece on just this question. He asks us to take a look at the secularist variety of spirituality in existence, which he states ‘refer to the collection of practices, beliefs and activities known as “New Age”.’  I am weary of the claims myself, and am very sceptical due to my research in psychology. The point he raises, however, is an intriguing one: Are we not, as secularists and humanists, rejecting the very thing that could lead to a better world? Namely: the offer to those who see humanistic ethics as “cold” toward spirituality is retracted, as we embrace all the beauty on offer from the varieties of religious experience1.

It is an important point and one I don’t think taken seriously enough. But, for this, we must understand why: Why do so many nonbelievers reject what Heelas notes as probable alternatives for reaching numinous, “spiritual” life-styles? To some degree, it lies in our constant search for evidence and validation. The “New Age” market has teeth marks from where flimflam farrago has laid waste to human sensibility. Reiki, crystal-healing, psychics, acupuncturists, and others are all lumped together in a category of Tom-Foolery for a lot of us, best avoided and to be the recipients of neither our time nor money.

Yet again, Heelas asks us to question our outright rejection of it. ‘New Age spiritualities are routinely dismissed more or less in toto. The customary mode is scorn.’ But wait, he says, ‘What is the basis of the secular humanist ethic if not the quest for a good life, to live in a way consistent with an evolved sense of the universe and humanity? Why then do humanists rush so quickly to dismiss those who seek precisely these things in New Age?’

Throughout this article, Heelas forgets our utter abandoning of all things group-orientated, dictating how we should achieve what should be completely personal, beautiful and unstigmatised. Too long has humanity slunk in the shadow of a church steeple, as the bell for Sunday prayer told us what was the path to the numinous. Too often did we don our hats, bathe our feet and slink toward the Arabic a’thaan (call to prayer)- bending and creaking as we supplicated before a tyrannical overlord. Yes these domains exist for everyone, as he highlights, but he forgets our utter distrust of all who lay claim to know how to get there. And for forming groups centered around such things.

Consider the varieties of terms2 located within the monotheisms catering for just these transcendent notions.

Baqa (Arabic): The return of the mystic to his enhanced and enlarged self after ‘fana

Batini (Arabic): One who devotes himself to the esoteric, mystical understanding of the faith of Islam.

Brahman: The Hindu term for the sacred power that sustains all existing things; the inner meaning of existence.

En Sof (Hebrew: ‘without end’) The inscrutable, inaccessible and unknowable essence of God in the Jewish mystical theology of Kabbalah.

‘Fana (Arabic) Annihilation. The ecstatic absorption in God of the Sufi mystic.

Hesychasm (from the Greek hesychia: ‘interior silence’) The silent contemplation cultivated by Greek Orthrodox mystics with eschewed words and concepts.

Ouisa (Greek) Essence, nature. That which makes a thing what it is. A person or object as seen from within. Applied to the monotheist god, the term denotes that divine essence which eludes human understanding and experience.

This list not so much is the tip of the iceberg, as the tip of another continent. One will find many such terms, usually applied to different theologians and philosophers, in one’s investigations into the so-called deeper aspects of religious faith.

The last term should give us pause. Did you spot the white blubber roll beneath the sea of words? Did you spot the burst of sudden awareness from its distant blow-hole? We may have found our whale. We are in pursuit – that we can not deny. But our rejection comes not so much from knee-jerk reactions as from our investigations into the damages done by those who claim to know how to take us to a level so personal it has a million different names.

Faust states, in the beginning of Goethe’s masterpiece, that after studying all of human knowledge, he has nothing to show for it. “You’re no wiser than you were before!” he yells at himself. He continues to lament:

There’s no joy in self-delusion

Your search for truth ends in confusion.

Don’t imagine your teaching will ever raise

The minds of men or change their ways.

But I do not use morbid Germans as inspiration. No one should. However, it raises this speculation: What do we have to show for it? Where is the numinous if we are forever seeking and fulfilling our need for the numinous and trascendent?

Acupuncture has its needles; religions have their songs, art and beautiful mosques and cathedrals; and there in the darkly-lit corner are the nonbelievers. Are we to take Heelas’ advice? I believe many people, those I consider co-thinkers, would find gratification in the balanced expression of the “New Age” for good ideals: The promotion of happiness, gratitude and serenity. Some of us can not.

Heelas also correctly agrees that secularists and humanists have a most powerful tool, which I believe need not preclude the numinous: Reason. Indeed, the use of reason to promote secularism is perhaps the best for modern society, as AC Grayling highlights – and colleagues here at Edger naturally. Reason is the best tool we have, and we must protect it. We can let it lead us to the moments long dominated by religious dogmatists, proclaiming to be metatrons for their god. Reason might stand on the shores of an island we pass, as we traverse the chaotic waters after our white whale. Yet, it may still be our guide if we are to stop, listen and understand.

As Andre Comte-Sponville says: “What frightens us is our own imagination. What reassures us is our reason.” Comte-Sponville’s book on this very subject, The Book of Atheist Spirituality, is very enlightening (pun intended).

Nothing prevents us from reaching the numinous through art, music, literature and theatre; gazing through telescopes at the macrocosms and microscopes at the microcosms – teeming universes filled with beauty which make talking burning bushes and virgin births somewhat uninteresting. Nothing stops us from creating or appreciating those things long paid for by the Church and now called on by apologists as foundations for faith-defence. No nonbeliever rejects these with his previous faith, that would be baby-bathwater stupidity. Even if you tried, I doubt that as a human you could. We are all programmed to need this dimension of the numinous in our lives. We have all been designated a white whale to pursue.

I only say this: The harpoons and arrows from religions may perch out from the skin of your white whale, but is not yet dominated by them. Your own whale is forever evading you. Not as a trial, but as a journey. It is time to follow and pursue, but not with god-given knowledge, not with the hope of capture, but with the hope that the journey with reason can be fulfilling.

NOTES

1. William James has a book by this same title, worthy of any solid investigation by those interested in understanding humanity.

2. Source: A History of God by Karen Armstrong.

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  1. Wall says:

    >Where is the so-called “spiritual side” in nonbelief?

    D3wd! That’s the exact same thing as asking, “have you stopped beating your wife?” There is no spiritual side to atheism. The very essence of atheism is the denial of all aspects of supernatural, not just the concept of gods.

    The reason you need gods & spirits is because you’re so egotistical and emotionally needy that you just can’t stand the thought of your true nature: corporeal existence & short fleeting lifespan that leads to an eternity of nothingness. You’re not going to be a spirit, you’re not going to transcend this existence, you’re not even getting off this planet…. all you’re going to do is turn back into the dust from when you came. For you don’t own the dust, the dust owns you.

    There’s no heaven, no hell, no gods, no spirits, no supernatural of any kind… nothing but the sack of flesh in which you live, a prisoner peering out through 2 holes of that prison cell. You wish you could get out, but there is no way out, your sentence is life and the punishment is slavery. Slave to your biology, slave to your society, slave to your family and friends who manipulate you for their own needs. Which brings me to the point of my atheism, the spirited (not spiritual) side: fuck them all, this life is mine and I owe none of them anything… I own myself.

    How’s that for spirit!

    Can I have an “amen” brothas and sistas?
    AMEN

    The sermon is over, back to your torture chamber, where you peer out thru deceiving eyes, limited by your fragile stature, and mocked by your delusional mind.

  2. Tauriq Moosa says:

    How can you compare a legitmate question to “beating your wife”? That is utterly disgusting.

    The essence of it has nothing to do with the spiritual supernatural dimensions but an utterly human need. You’ve missed the entire point if you think i endorse new age mysticism or supernatural explanations of the kind. But that does not preclude the searching for it.

    I’m also not sure who you are talking to. Your points seem emotional, unstructured and ranting. It is completely unhelpful to write something like this. You’re not impressing anyone. Please don’t mess my writing with your drivel in future, unless you actually have something to say. Thank you.

  3. feign says:

    Tauriq,

    I thought your post was quite interesting. This is a subject on which I have done a lot of thinking myself. I thought before I shared my thoughts I’d give a brief bit of constructive criticism. Your tone at times takes on a somewhat forced academic form, and there are places where I think your clarity is sacrificed because of it. I’d like to see this written a little more accessibly, if only because I think it’s too important to be glanced over or misunderstood, and I already see people here and on Digg doing just that.

    As for your ideas themselves, I am with you completely. As human beings, it is clear that the “spiritual” (whatever that is) is a “real” part of our experience, inasmuch as any part of our experience is “real”, and it is accessible through a number of techniques from meditation, to sensory isolation, and perhaps even psychedelic drugs. As you point out, however, the non-believer, in his skepticism, goes too far and ends up making a similar metaphysical error to the believer. At any rate, both of them fail to see the one-sidedness of their answer to the question, which is what I think leads to the situation you describe, in which non-believers reject any and all ideas that have anything to do with the “spiritual”, despite almost certainly having a very narrow understanding of what is even meant by the word.

    Now, you talked about identifying with a certain skepticism of all proposed methods of catching our “white whale”, and it is here that I think we may differ in our thinking some. I mentioned just three techniques above which I think show great promise in providing access to the transcendent realms of human consciousness. But I don’t want you to just believe me on that. To quiet your skepticism some, I propose that the whole process of questing after our white whale be put in terms of scientific exploration and experimentation. Rather than coming down on the side of the belief/disbelief matter, I suggest suspending the question altogether, and building your understanding based on actual experience.

    But there’s more to a scientific approach than mere blind experimentation. It’s not enough to just make a laundry list of religious practices and run through them one-by-one, crossing them off your list each time nothing happens. Science is a dialectic of theory and practice, each of which is the ground of the other, such that their real truth is nothing but the movement of one into another, that is, the progress of science itself. What this means is that it’s simply not enough to test out religious practices, we also have to understand religious theory (theology), or be armed with a philosophical system capable of accounting for the Absolute. Our exploration, then, consists in trying to make our experience match up with our theory, that is, performing experiments, and then using the results of those experiments to update the form and content of our theoretical/philosophical understanding.

    It is important to explore theoretical frameworks that are most useful, and to keep in mind that much religious theory is metaphorical and esoteric in nature. Personally I find Buddhist philosophy, and the work of Hegel to shed the most light on these questions, and I feel that they are solid starting points from which to work and explore. But it’s likely that all religions have something to offer to this discussion, we just have to pick through them carefully for the buried pearls of wisdom and test them ourselves. A particularly fruitful place to look is in the mystical branches of the major world religions, which are oftentimes based on this same idea of personal experience and exploration, with the goal of attaining liberation in this life.

    People really do throw the baby out with the bathwater on this issue. It’s good to see someone else having similar thoughts.

  4. Tauriq Moosa says:

    Thank you for your reply. Your constructive crit is very constructive and for a change one I actually will endorse. I am glad we agree! I wrote a piece about the need for wonder and how science is a tool for just that. So even here I do not think we disagree.

  5. Mike says:

    I recommend this book: The Little Book of Atheist Spirituality [Hardcover] by Comte-Sponville, Andre

    From Publishers Weekly
    Starred Review. At first blush atheist spirituality may sound like a contradiction in terms, but French philosopher Comte-Sponville makes a compelling argument for a profound dimension of experience that is god-free. His idea of spirituality also bears no small resemblance to Eastern spirituality, and the philosopher-author does not hesitate to cite great Eastern thinkers in this catalogue of references to great minds grappling with important questions. We can do without religion and without God, the author argues, but we can’t do without fidelity and community. Comte-Sponville’s humanism is deeply traditional, but the red flag atheist will undoubtedly affront religious traditionalists. That’s unfortunate, because the author’s style of arguing is civil and witty, unlike a lot of public discourse on this subject. He draws deeply on the history of philosophers who have pronounced on the subject of God’s existence, disposing of the everything-is-permitted nihilism often associated with atheism. Nor does he argue that religion is dangerous, a stance in vogue among today’s bestselling atheists. God just isn’t logically necessary, but we can still have love, ethical behavior and even the experience of eternity. Formerly a Sorbonne professor, Comte-Sponville presents big ideas with masterful and witty clarity.

  6. Mike says:

    You quoted the book in your post. Thought I would post the review.

  7. Tauriq Moosa says:

    oh cheers. Im writing a review myself for Skeptic, at least now I have another review to back me up. thanks!

  8. Dafydd says:

    This is not bad advice, unlike a lot I have come across.



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