The first one was by Malcolm Gladwell—called Outliers: The Story of Success. It was a quick little read—I had it more than halfway devoured before I left the library and I finished the rest of it this morning once I got home.
It
provoked some new interesting thoughts which I will be exploring on my blog
this weekend. (I’ll fill you in once I
write the blog—if I go into it right now I’m afraid I’ll lose the juice needed
to turn it into a good blog entry.)
The
thing I had heard about it though was that it talked about how people without
exception need at least 10,000 hours of practice in a particular area of
interest before they become a master. It
made me think about all of the hours I’ve put into reading and learning about
global issues and (now) attempting to write about what I’m learning. It would seem like I’m working towards some
interesting level of mastery. I have to
be getting at least close to that 10,000 hour mark. It’s just exciting to be reminded that an
apprenticeship doesn’t go on forever. At
some point a critical mass of knowledge and understanding is reached and you
can begin contributing your own body of wisdom on the subject.
I’m
still reading a book about the evolution of language (the book I had allowed
myself to keep reading) and the other new book I took out of the library was The New Case Against Immigration: Both Legal
and Illegal. As I mentioned last
year when I read How Many Americans,
I’ve never believed in borders, so I’m interested in seeing if this guy can
make a compelling case for closing our borders.
But,
really, after these two books I’m going to take a break from reading for a
little while. I need to take time to
assimilate all of the ideas I’ve read recently and explore them through
writing.
Except
that…I forgot to mention one thing. A
few nights ago online I discovered that hundreds of thousands (if not maybe
over a million) of public domain books have been digitized and are available
free online. Ellsworth Huntington’s
early book (circa 1915) Civilization and
Climate is available, but Mainsprings
of Civilization was much later (the 1940’s I think) so it’s not
available. I started to read Civilization and Climate and have given
myself permission to finish it too if I wish before the moratorium begins. I’ve only gotten to page 17 but already his
methodology seems crude and his underlying assumptions extremely racist. I can see why environmental determinism got
such a bad rap. But I still want to plow
through it and seek out any nuggets worth keeping.
Every
Thursday after I drop Collin off at school in the morning I go get a cup of
coffee at a Burger King right near the library and then sit there and read and
write while I kill some time before the library opens at 10am .
Burger King is a great place for thinking (of all available options)
because of its very un-hipness. No one
else is ever in there except this one guy who has the exact same schedule as
me—he shows up at the same time and heads to the library from there. It’s rare for more than one or two other
people to drift through the doors while I’m there with my coffee, so it’s very
quiet.
Anyway,
while I was there yesterday I was free-writing about what the most recent spate
of books is teaching me. I’m going to
include the notes here (because I’m too lazy tonight to clean them up and
summarize them more coherently). Beware
all of the incomplete sentences and the way the ideas in the second half of the
writing contradict the ideas in the first half—it was evolving as I wrote.
Here
it is:
What
has my reading binge this week taught me?
It taught me just how recently in the history of our species we have
begun to move out of the mythic and unconscious into a rational, conscious
awareness. Still there are many vestiges
of our magical thinking—witchcraft and sorcery in recent centuries in European
cultures and still in many indigenous cultures today.
--address
the need for us as a species to take a longer view. We think we are these incredibly rational
beings but in fact we’re still in a phase where there’s a huge overlap between magical
and rational modes of being. The
rational mode of course isn’t superior, just different and fraught with its own
set of problems.
Our
rational brains make possible global solutions, but more often rationality is
used to promote destructive self-interest.
Magical unconsciousness was about self-interest as well, or
self-interest extended as far as the tribe but no farther. Rationality needs to take us beyond
self-interest, or at least extend it to global self-interest. Altruism would be another word for global
self-interest.
I
need to examine myself to see how often I’m governed by potentially magical
thinking versus rational thinking. Is my
experience of the energy of the land magical thinking, or is it something else?
How
can I deny the truth of many intuitions?
Am I seeing and projecting connections that don’t exist? For instance, my intuitions about J a few
weeks back? I dreamed repeatedly of her,
had her pop repeatedly to mind, had a dream about N, only to find out that J
had been in Phoenix
that week and had revisited the place where she lived when N was born. It would seem that intuitions are causally
related to real events. It can’t just be
chance. So where is the line drawn
between magical perception and intuition?
Is superstition and magical thinking actually a crude, early version of
rationality?
Maybe
intuition and direct perception is a ground—a true mode of perception. And maybe our crude early experiences with
rationality were to try to layer meaning onto intuition and direct
perception. So, magical thinking is
beginning to play with meaning and to try to attribute cause and effect to
events. As we began to separate out from
the events and places we were immersed in, to become conscious we became aware
of everything that was “Other” and needed to make sense of that. Our myths and superstitions were precursors
to science and other modes of “rationality”.
Magical
thinking is actually rational thinking, it just may not be accurate thinking, but then again scientific thought is frequently
inaccurate, too. What we’ve been up to
with all these modes of “rational” thought is to try to make sense of what is.
Magical thinking wouldn’t be possible if we were still unconscious. We need to have separated out from the matrix
into discrete dots of awareness in order to have magical thinking or scientific
thinking at all.
What
are we evolving towards? Direct
conscious awareness. Simple, direct knowing of what is. Expressing what is—being and knowing. Will the making of meaning be necessary
anymore? Will metaphor be
necessary? Probably not. Or maybe it will. It’s hard to imagine a world without
metaphor—no poetry, no art, no innovation.
Metaphor, I guess, is the language of manifestation.
I
need to expand on this line of thinking, plus there are other insights hovering
about from this latest group of books and I need to capture those insights
before they melt away.
Discovering
Civilization and Climate online this
week was a good thing because it let me see clearly how rational thinking has
been evolving. His crude scientific methodology seems to fall somewhere between
magical thinking and modern scientific approaches. He doesn’t seem to be aware
of the biases and faulty assumptions underlying his work, which makes it very
similar to the faulty logic of superstition, myth, and magical thinking. But
he’s also being methodical, and sincerely trying to eliminate bias (which is
impossible to do when the biases are still unconscious). Even present day
science is blind to what’s unconscious. I’m sure today we have just as many
inaccurate perceptions underlying our methodologies—and we won’t be able to see
them until we evolve past those inaccuracies. We need to enter a different
paradigm before we can see clearly the inherent inaccuracies and “magical
thinking” in this paradigm.