“The problem with introspection is that it has no end.”
―
Cosmos
Although we easily recognize that life on planet Earth, and perhaps elsewhere, is possible because of the regularity witnessed within the solar system and beyond, dare we call fate that which influences the individual by a similar ordering principle? If not, then why?
cos·mos1/ˈkäzməs,ˈkäzˌmōs,ˈkäzˌmäs/noun
It may be easy to intellectually separate the idea that life depends on order to sustain the planet and every living being, from the idea that our lives are also ordered, and therefore, to a certain extent, fated, but in what way does fate provide order?
We pride ourselves on the ability to make conscious choices as we become more aware and responsive to the constraints that bind us, and because the more we can make choices, the less fated and more free the act of choosing makes us feel. But, how do we distinguish between a free choice and a fated one? There must be something in which we measure and compare possible outcomes against in order to categorize our actions as free or fated.
In the study of astrology, these questions of power, forces of fate and will, naturally arise. And so they should if we are to afford ourselves an opportunity to wrestle with their distinctions and correspondence within our practice and understanding of astrology’s purpose.
Where the ancients found the ideas of fate and fortune usefully aligned to the constraints more naturally severe and apparent, and where choices that were contrary to the order of the state or tribe were often punished either by human or natural law, modernity, with its technological advances, allows us the luxury of seemingly going it alone through choices that may not always benefit the tribe. We are much less dependent on the tribe for our survival. We are also much more distanced from exactly what it is that we are dependent upon. To the ancients, many of our choices would seem frivolous, extravagant and self-destructive as we increasingly lose sight of the importance of our choices and the victims of their consequences.
Qualities of Time
Scholars of the myth contrast two kinds of time, secular and sacred, rational and mystical, forward-moving time and timeless circularity.
Hillman, James. The Force of Character: And the Lasting Life. Random House Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
The idea of eternal time also carries with it the sense of infinitude, that reality, the cosmos, even with its orderliness, has no bounds, no separations, no limits, no beginning and no end. Does this idea of the eternal contradict the notion of a cosmic order? Are order and chaos then, secret allies? It’s fascinating to both imagine and come to a fuller acceptance that from the seemingly finite state of human existence, it’s only through the mind and the nature of our experiences that we can envision eternity and finite qualities of time.
Perhaps it is the emphasis on secular time, the 9-5 habits where attention of the things of the world seduce and enslave us, that have left us with less and less capacity for the experience of eternal time. The more distant these time qualities become, the more the impulse to choose the fast-food of technology that keeps the clock-a-ticking, cutting us off from any experience of the eternal. Precious and few are those timeless states granted to us.
“The notion of a separate organism is clearly an abstraction, as is also its boundary. Underlying all this is unbroken wholeness even though our civilization has developed in such a way as to strongly emphasize the separation into parts.”
― The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory
Everyday experience is bound by the limits of our senses, language, thought, culture and the limits of our place within the cosmos, all of which do more to suggest a real separation of experience into discrete parts known as days, hours and moments. We can however, accept that this form of orderliness, through the constancy of the seasons, planetary and stellar motions, and observed through the delicacy of their finely tuned parameters are necessary to sustain life as we know it. Our linear observations about the cosmos, are perhaps, through the very suggestion of limits and boundaries, the very thing, that ironically, give way to the idea of the eternal.
“I’m so tired… I was up all night trying to round off infinity.”
―
How then, do we get at the idea of the eternal, let alone an experience of something both sacred and eternal?
Within the seeming limits of human experience, there are for each of us, moments of discovery, insights, and understanding that bring coherence along with a sense of an expanding wholeness that we participate in; something transcendent, bigger and beyond the narrow confines of “me” and “you.” The more expansive one’s experience becomes, the less it seems to be only inside me, and the more it seems that we are all participants in something much, much grander than previously imagined.
My little ego, even if only now and then, may burst open, giving way to an expanded sense of self and other, transcending the time-bound constraints and acknowledge its smallness in comparison to a greater unbound whole. To the ancients, this feeling, or realization of a greater intelligence has been referred to by many names: One, Anima Mundi, Infinite, God, Cosmos, Eternal, Self, Divine. No matter how imagined, or expressed, this unbounded sensation is perhaps one of the most mysterious experiences of all, and yet impossible to share, and especially, to define. Language, we see, remains the map, not the territory.
How then, throughout the long trail of human existence, does this idea of the eternal persist, especially as it seems so fleeting?
“Cosmos” indicates a world formed by aesthetics. “Cosmetics,” derived from kosmos, gives the clue to the early meanings of the Greek word, when it was linked with the dress of women, with decoration and embellishment, with all things fitting, in order, furnished, and arranged, and with ethical implications of appropriateness, decency, honor. The aesthetic imagination is the primary mode of knowing the cosmos, and aesthetic language the most fitting way to formulate the world.
Hillman, James. The Force of Character: And the Lasting Life. Random House Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
The aesthetic imagination, rather than seeking to quantify the cosmos, mapping it, saving it for later, for time, permits the immediacy of its ordering and thereby participates through a knowing of the senses that also permits the transcending of time and orderliness, all the while accepting the imposition of limits on all creation, human and otherwise. It is then, the persistence, the constancy of our experience that gives us faith that the sun will rise again, but also that I will one day cease to exist. The coming and going is indeed a fated participation of the cosmos; the ordering ways of the universe. Cosmic ordering itself provides the necessary ground of our being; as a place for transcendence into eternal time.
(To be continued…)
I think an interesting distinction for the concept of eternity is in many esoteric traditions, there is dimension of sacred being that is ontologically separate from the phenomenal world, but nonetheless is still inextricably linked to ours. This can be distilled I think to say that for these conceptions, eternity is not the infinite duration of sequential events in linear time, but rather the absence of time altogether. In Henry Corbin’s work on esoteric islam a term used for this “place” is Na-koja-abad. It means quite literally “No where” which I understand to be somewhat similar to Bohm’s Implicate Order. A dimension of being that is the ground matrix for our world, that the phenomenal and corporeal “being” of our world is really an unfolded “reflection” of this other order of being. If I understand it correctly, a realm of pure information or energy that holographically emanates and coagulates into the energy forms we see making up our world, and that the harmonic elegance of the material world, is a symptom of the existence of a realm of “eternal” information underlying the universe we are familiar with? Obviously I can only convey these intuitions clumsily but I have been thinking alot about the topic of this post, does any of this resonate with you?
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Absolutely, Tim! It very much resonates with me. I well understand the difficulty in trying to convey these ideas and images that come at us intuitively, and yet are still in some way related to the world, or dimension we live in. Kairos time as compared to kronos? A symptom and an expression, scaled down, or what seems like a slowing down into kronos time for the corporeal senses to perceive. The eternal then, is a dimensionless non-dual All, or perhaps whatever the speed of light is, which at the very least would be imperceptible to the kind and nature of beings fit for planet earth.
I appreciate your note!
Debra
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Looking forward to your post,Brigido! It’s an enduring topic perhaps because of who you say, “there’s many ways to see it…”
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Ah, the illusion of ego, the Maya of the Hindus, can only be obliterated when the Realization Oneness, its overwhelmingly experienced by Self within ourselves.
There’s many ways to see it accordingly with their particular Tradition, you may see it, on one of my next blogs, I am working on it yet.
Great posts Debra, blessings. 🙂
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