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DEATH AND DESIGN

Page 1

An E-Book for the Living

DESIGN

DEATH AND

b y A le x a n d e r W i n k el m a n n



Death and Design AN E-BOOK FOR THE LIVING

TEXT BY SEVERAL AUTHORS DESIGN BY ALEXANDER WINKELMANN


CHAPTERS 1. ANIMALS......................................................................1 2. THE BODY...................................................................15 3. TWO RESOURCES...................................................27 4. CULTURE....................................................................36 5. RITUAL ART MYTH RELIGION........................56 6. TRANSFERENCE......................................................77 7. HEROISM....................................................................90 8. EVIL.............................................................................107 9. POWER.......................................................................132 10. HISTORY....................................................................147 11. FREEDOM..................................................................156 12. BEYOND......................................................................171 13. SOCIAL THEORY....................................................190 14. DESIGN......................................................................220 15. notes........................................................................254


Chapter 1

ANIMALS


This is the basic human condition:

we are first and foremost animals moving about on a planet shining in the sun. Whatever else we are, is built on this.


The only certain thing we know about this planet is that it is a theater for

, c e r f a il

or fe, ga

n g i l li w

m nis ic

and at least we know what organisms are and what they are trying to do.


FECES

At its most elemental level the human organism, has a mouth, digestive tract, and anus, a skin to keep it intact, and appendages with which to acquire food.


Existence

for all organis­ mic life

d e e f o t e l g g u r t s t n a t s is a con

a struggle to incorporate whatever

ouths m ir e h t o t in ey can fit h t s m is n a g r other o an

d pr

es

s do w

n th

ei

r gu

ll

et

s w

it

ho

ut ch

ok

in

g.


Life cannot go on without the mutual devouring of organisms.

We are conscious of that fact.


What does it mean to be a self-conscious animal?

?

It means to know that we are food for worms. We are mortal animals who at the same time are conscious of our mortality.


This is THE TERROR

to , g in th o n m o fr d e rg e m e ve To ha , lf e s f o s s e n s u io c s n o c , e m a n have a g n ti ia c ru xc e n a , s g n li e fe r e n deep in is s re xp -e lf e s & fe li r fo g in rn a inner ye . ie d to t e y is th ll a h it w d n a on —


We, the animals who know we are not safe here, who need con­tinued affrmation of our powers, are the one animal who is im­placably driven to work beyond animal needs precisely because we experience creatureliness.


we want above all to endure and prosper, to achieve immortality in some way.

Because we know we are mortal, the thing we want most to deny is our mortality.


Mortality is connected to the natural, animal side of our existence; and so we reach beyond and ! y l e away from that side. mplet

So

h c u m

t e w t a th

e d o ry t

co t i ny


As soon as we reached new historical forms of power, we turned against the animals with whom we have pre­viously identified - with a vengeance, we now see, because the animals embodied what we feared most,

a nameless and faceless death.


The dynamic of our misery on this planet stems from us trying to be other than we are, trying to deny our animal nature. This is the cause of all psychic illness, sadism, and war. The guiding principles of the formation of all human ideology harp on the same monotonous tune:

“We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.”


“We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.” “We are not ani­mals.”


Chapter 2

THE BODY


People in al l cultures go to extraordinary lengths to deny that they are animals and to regulate activities that remind them of their corporeal nature.


We alter and adorn our bodies in accord with the latest fashions, exercise to approximate an idealized physique, and scrub ourselves to eradicate any scents except those emanating from bottles or spray cans.


We visit “rest” rooms to discreetly dispose of bodily excretions.


We recoil in horror, or convulse in sophomoric mirth, at the sight of animals copulating, while earnestly pursuing our own amorous adventures in the name of

love



and

O u r bodies

a ni

ma

are threatening reminders that we are physical creatures who will die.

lit y


A fundamental function of CULTURAL WORLDVIEWS

is to prevent our bodies from undermining our pretentions of meaning and significance.


So we transform our bodies into cultural symbols of beauty and power.


We hide bodily activities int

ht nr e m

int o

th rn em

u

or t r u t

C RITUALS RITUALS RITUALS RITUALS RITUALS RITUALS RITUALS


To distinguish ourselves from animals and nature in order to transcend death, we humans have, around the world and since time immemorial, responded in surprisingly similar ways.


WHEN WE ARE

D PIERCE

d e p D p E o P r ILATED c and

we’re not animals anymore. We’re ambulatory works of art using our bodies to assert our own cultural value.


Chapter 3

TWO RESOURCES


We humans all manage the problem of knowing we are mortal by calling on two basic psychological resources.


First, we need to sustain faith in our cultural worldview, which imbues our sense of reality with order, meaning, and permanence.


Although we typically take our cultural worldview for granted, it is actually a fragile human construction that people spend great energy creating, maintaining, and defending. Since we’re constantly on the brink of realizing that our existence is precarious, we cling to our culture’s governmental, educational, and religious institutions and rituals to buttress our view of human life as uniquely significant and eternal.


But we don’t just need to view life in general this way; we need to view our own life this way. The paths to literal and symbolic immortality laid out by our worldviews require us to feel that we are valuable members of our cultures. Hence, the second vital resource for managing terror is a feeling of personal significance, commonly known as self-esteem.


, y r a v s w e i v rld o w l a r u t l u ain t n i a m Just as c d n a ttain a e w s y a w so do the . self-esteem

For the Dinka o f Sudan the ma , n who o largest wns the herd of long-ho cattle is rned the mo st highl y regarde d.

, s d n a l s dI n a i r b o r ed r T u e s h a t e In sm i h t r o id w m s ’ a r n y a p e am h t f o e nt iz o s r f e h n i t by ds l i u b e nd sh a m e a s y u f o ho s ’ r e t s i of his s es to rot. leav

For the many his man w Canad puc stick t ho be ians, st u k o s s by m into lap ses rub net ask ber s con ed g u side opp ard o red nen ed an atio ts is her o. nal


ivess us drive m dr teem self-e lf-esstee forr se e fo desir The sire e de Th teem lf-es este Selfrd. Se hard s us ha drive and all, ives d dr l, an al ings of rumbllings the rumb stt the ds shiel agains s us again shield surface of the surfa ath the beneath drea that lie bene dread that rience. day experienc our ay expe ever yd our every


Self-esteem enables each of us to believe we are enduring, significant beings

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The twin motives of affirming the correctness of our worldviews and demonstrating our personal worth combine to protect us from the uniquely human fear of inevitable death. And these same impulses have driven much of what humans have achieved over the course of our history.


Chapter 4

CULTURE


Wanting nothing less than eternal prosperity,


we from the very beginning could not live


with the prospect of death.


We erected

c ul tur alSY MBOLS which do not age or decay to quiet our fear of our ultimate end - and of more im­mediate concern, to provide the promise of indefinite duration.


our culture gives us an alterorganism which is more durable and powerful than the one nature endowed us with.


We transcend death via culture not only in visions like a perfumed heaven full of angels

more more more more more more more

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and

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W e transcend d e a t h especially b y f i n d i n g a m e a n i n g f o r o u r l i f e s s o m e k i n d o f l a r g e r s c he m e i n t o w h i c h w e f i t


We may believe we have fulfilled God's purpose, or done our duty to our ancestors or family, or achieved something which has enriched mankind.


It is

ITSELF THAT EMBODIES THE

O F D E A T H

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There is really no basic distinction between sacred and profane in the symbolic affairs of men.

There is really no basic distincti on between sacred and profane in the symbolic affairs of men.


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∆s s∞n ∂s yøu hav¤ symbo£s ÿou håve artiƒicial sełf-transce∏­dence vîa ©ulture.


EVERY cultural is fabricated and given meaning by the mind,

THING


a meaning that was not given by physical nature.


Culture is in this sense supernatural, and all systematiza­tions of culture have in the end the same goal: To raise us above nature, to assure us that in some ways our lives count in the universe more than merely physical things count.


The supernatural cultural scheme of things that we humans embrace to manage existential terror is nevertheless ultimately a defensive distortion and obfuscation of reality to blot out the inevitability of death.


What we want in any epoch is a way of transcending our physical fate. We want to guarantee some kind of indefinite duration. Culture provides us with the necessary immortality symbols or ideologies.


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Chapter 5

RITUAL ART MYTH RELIGION


In the wake of our helplessness in the face of nature’s indifference, our ancestors had to do something to enhance their chances for survival.


but they also needed some tangible signs that the invisible world really existed


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Rituals art myth religion

By making the incredible By making the incredible credible we imagined that credible we imagined that we took firm control of we took firm control of the material world, which the material world, which raised us over and above raised us over and above material decay and death. material decay and death.

features of every known culture

together made it possible for us to construct, maintain, and concretize our supernatural conceptions of reality.


Very early.

Some combination of dance and song in turn likely formed the earliest rituals. Way later.


y e h T y . e s h T . lm s a lm b a b n n a a th h t re o e r m o re e m RRitituuaalslswwere d te d c e e t ir d c o e ls ir a d re e o w ls a e r e w

yy e h T . e s h T . lm s a lm b a b n n a a h th t re o e r mo em ls wweerre RRitituuaals e ir d g e in ir r d e g lt n ri a e lt d a r rd a a w w o to t d d te c e e t ir lsoo ddirec e aals wweerre msstta anncceess,, ccirirccuum y e h T . y e s h T . lm s a lm b a b n n a a h th t re e o r m o weerre em ls w Ritituuaals R ire d g in r e lt n ri a d r a rd w o to t d e werre e also directte ence s s e e h t th e s u a c b e , a nces circumstta ul of rriittu ual is w ishffu y e T . s h b lm a n a h th t re re mo re Rituals were e ir d g in r e lt n a ri d r rd a w to ted to were re also directe e c n e s s e h e t th e s u a tances, bec circumsta . n io t c . a n o ti in c a g in in g k in k in in h th t l ful ishhfu wis is w ooff ririttuuaall is . n e p p a . n h e p o p t a h t n to t a n a w ee w w w t a t h a w h t u w o t t c a u e o W t c a e W


Song, dance, and symbolic preenactments


seemed helpful in making wishes come true.


iR tuals HELP MANAGE

TERROR

NATURAL PROCESSES

THE

IILLUS I ONN

and

FOSTERING T

T HA

by

g n i d e s r e sup

WE

L O R T N CO

THEM.


Cave art in general (both the art and the caves in which it was painted) depicted the cosmos, consisting of supernatural, death-transcending dimensions and representing different states of human consciousness.


Our ancestors, d that e t o n o ls a , s u like es a cloud sometim

took the shape ird, of a horse, a b bit a bear, or a rab

.

and t

it n o e c a f a d a h hat the moon


ed ne w joy en

or

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, th

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,

of ritu ali sti c ist an ce

Wi th the as s

s n o i t a sens g

they experience d a kind of w ild euphoria. , ith W n tio the ingestion s u a hotropic c y s p f o h x e stances, b u s f o inated. c u t ll a h y e th n i

cin

an

dd

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in

h By m d t a k i n g t e l o ng a n o f e n j o u r n e nt c av e s c r i a nd u it ou s c y i o t s e a rr e h v ie w g i m ag es th er ing t e,

r s a o b y s p ss isted inging a h r pe o , chanting ur he ancestors invested t

s

i

s

i

ty a rnat r m a p e u i t a e l r u a l with nd s i ca l l g y; e s o l i c o e ly r m situ p os c i d t at e ng h at t ed it w i s n h s e o m x e t t a ot an d t h merely eopl ’ thoug p in s e

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Like ritual, art helped to make the incredible credible by offering concrete signs of a supernatural world.


Art depicting the supernatural, a feature of every known culture, is fundamental to constructing and maintaining supernatural deathtranscending conceptions of reality.


Myth, like art and ritual, lends form to abstract notions like the soul, or the idea of immortality. All human societies, even the most primitive and technologically impoverished ones, have sophisticated creation myths, ideas about the structure of the universe, and explanations for what happens after death.


provide the narrative justification for

and embellished by

form

religion which serves to regulate all aspects of social behavior.


GOOD LIFE

GOOD AFTERLIFE

?

Religions delineate how we should interact with and treat each other by providing a purposeful, moral conception of a life in which individuals’ souls can exist beyond their physical death.


And religion gave our ancestors — as it gives us — a sense of community and shared reality, a worldview, without which coordinated and cooperative activities in large groups of humans would be difficult, if not impossible, to sustain.


RITUA

ION G I L

YTH R

ART M

RT M A L

EL

UAL T I R

M

L ART

YTH R

RITUA

LIGIO

ART L A

H RE YT

IGION

N

G I L E IO

RE

T Y H M

N RITU

Rituals, art, myth, and religion likely developed more or less sequentially. But once in place, they all functioned, and still function, simultaneously and synergistically.


RITUA

ION G I L

YTH R

ART M

RT M A L

EL

UAL T I R

M

L ART

YTH R

RITUA

LIGIO

ART L A

H RE YT

IGION

N

G I L E IO

RE

T Y H M

N RITU

Myths provide narrative explanations of the supernatural; art and rituals serve to embody and enact the myths. Taken collectively, all of these were essential elements of the development of cultural worldviews and how they became central features of human life.


Chapter 6

TRANSFERENCE


w

v

o

i

t

i

a

R ea l i st c l l y h e u n v r s e c n t a i ns o e h e lm i n g e r


Beyond ourselves we sense chaos.


We can’t really do much about this unbelievable power, except for one thing:

We can endow certain persons with it. This phenomenon is called Transference.


The child takes natural awe and terror and focusses them on individual beings which allows her or him to find the power and horror all in one place instead of diffused throughout a chaotic universe.


The transference object, being endowed with the transcendent powers of the universe, now has in her- or himself the power to control, order, and combat them. The transference object comes to represent for the individual the great biological forces of nature, to which the ego binds itself emotionally and which then form the essence of the human and her / his fate.


THE OB J EC T BECO M ES H IS / H E R LOCUS OF SA F E OPE R A T ION .

As ultimately power means power over life and death, the child can now safely emerge in relation to the transference object.

All s/he has to do is conform to it in the ways that s/he learns; conciliate it if it becomes terrible; use it serenely for automatic daily activities.


Transference is the experience of the other as ones whole world

just as the home actually is, for the child, her / his whole world.


B

C

L

the more you people

your world with omnipotent

father-figures, extra-magical helpers. P

K

I


From earliest times we asked to be mystified, and right away there were those ready to We put on the chains imposed by the powers of dead ancestors, then shamans, priests, divine kings, heads of state.


Today we under­s tand the inner dynamics of this long history of self-abasement: WE need transference in order to be able to stand life.


Transference is a reflex of the fatality of the human condition.

Transference is a taming of terror.

Transference is the only ideality that we have.


The fundamental use of transference, of what we could better call “transference heroics�, is the practice of a safe heroism.


Chapter 7

HEROISM


We are always hungry for material for our own immortaliza­tion.

Groups need it too, which explains the constant hunger for heroes.


Every group, however small or great, has, as such, an “individual� impulse for etemalization, which manifests itself in the creation of and care for national, religious, and artistic

heroes

The individual paves the way for this collective eternity impulse.


We give our entire allegiance to our own group; and each group is a codified hero system.


Societies are standardized systems of death denial. They give structure to the formulas for

heroic transcendence

heroic heroic transcendence transcendence.

heroic transcendence heroic transcendence

heroic heroic transcendence transcendence.

heroic transcendence heroic transcendence

heroic heroic transcendence transcendence.


√ √ √

√ √ √

√ √

For primitive man, who practiced the ritual renewal of nature, each person could be a cosmic hero of a quite definite kind: S/He could contribute with her / his powers and observances to the replenishment of cosmic life.


Gradually, as societies became more complex and differentiated into classes, cosmic heroism became the property of special classes like divine kings and the military, who were charged with the renewal of nature and the protection of the group by means of their own special powers.


And so the situation developed where we (left) (right) could be (left) (right) heroic only (left) (right) by following (left) (right) orders.


We had given the mandate of power and expiation to our

­ r e d a e l s e o r e h and so salvation had to be mediated to us by these figures.


In a primitive hunting band or a tribe the leader cannot compel anyone to go to war.

in the kingship and the state

the subjects have no choice!

They now serve in warfare heroism for the divine king who provides his own power in victory and bathes the survivors in it.


With the rise of money coinage one could be a money hero and privately protect her- or himself and her / his offspring by the accumulation of visible gold-power.


With Christianity something new came into the world: The heroism of renunciation of this world and the satisfactions of this life, which is why the pagans thought Christianity was crazy. It was a sort of antiheroism by an animal who denied life in order to deny evil.


Buddhism did the same thing even more extremely, denying all possible worlds.


With the French Revolution another type of modern hero was codified:

The revolutionary hero who will bring an end to injustice and evil once and for all, by bringing into being a new utopian society perfect in its purity.


In modern times, with the Enlightenment, began again a new paganism of the exploitation and enjoyment of earthly life, partly as a reaction against the Christian renunciation of the world. Now a new type of productive and scientific hero came into prominence, and we are still living this today.


We are living the grotesque spectacle of the poisoning of the earth

by the nineteenth-century hero system of unrestrained material production.


We are fated to consider this earth as a theater for heroism, and our life as a vehicle for heroic acts which aim precisely to transcend evil.


Chapter 8

EVIL


All organisms want to perpetuate themselves, continue to ex­perience and to live. It is a great mystery that we don‘t under­stand but observe every day.

We are amazed, as we see cornered animals, how frantically they want to live.


c i t n a r f c i t s i n a r h f t e r a s l a m i n a l l A i All an

w ith ou t eeve ven k wit ho ut kno win now g ing

. s n a e . s n m h t a d e t a h w wh tth heeyy ppr ro ob baab bllyy o on nllyy sseen nssee . r e w o p g n i er. h w o s p g u in h r s c f ger o ng an da ed he th t



But we are truly sorry creatures because we have made death conscious.

We can see evil in anything that wounds us, causes ill health, or even deprives us of pleasure.


We have come, universally, to identify

D d i s e a s e A T H as the two principal evils of the human organismic condition. Disease defeats the joys of prosperity while one alive, and death cuts prosperity off coldly.


Con­sciousness means too that we have to be preoccupied with evil even in the absence of any immediate danger. Our lives become a meditation on evil and a planned venture for controlling it and forestalling it.


The result is one of the great tragedies of human existence.

the need to fetishize evil.

To locate the threat to life in some special places where it can be placated and controlled.


It is tragic precisely because it is sometimes ver y arb itrar y:

, l i v e t u o b a s e i s ta d n n a f a , e s k e a c a l p g We m n o r y w b e s r h t e h n ot d n a see it i s e v l e s r u o t. y u o o r b t a s e g d n i h s a r h t y l s s e l e us


A second result to death and our symbolic

of our animal vulnerability

consciousness of it is the struggle

to get power to fortify ourselves.

Other animals must simply use those powers that nature provided them with and the neural circuits that animate those powers. But we can invent and imagine powers, and we can invent ways to protect power.


As an organism we are fated to perpetuate ourselves.

KNIFE


As a conscious organism we are fated to identify evil as the threat to that perpetuation.

FOE

FRIEND


JOE THE HUNTER

In the same way, we are driven to in­dividuate ourselves as an organism, to develop our own peculiar talents and personality.


And what, then, would be the highest development and use of those talents?



Attila the Hun, Caligula, Ivan the Terrible, Peter the Cruel, Rasputin, Robespierre, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, François Duvalier, Idi Amin, Pol Pot, Saddam Hussein … the list goes on.

But demonic despots are never singularly responsible for virulent hatred and genocidal atrocities. It takes “normal” people — those who see themselves as doing “God’s work,” their patriotic duty, or “just following orders” — to stoke the gas chambers at Auschwitz, to sow the killing fields in Cambodia.


THS

THS

TRU

TRU

S H T TRU

HS TRUT

S H T

TRUTHS

TRU

s e m fla n i th r a u e o d le d i n n h o e W c d i s l r. n e a a h r t t s o p o t e h y e r c g k e a n v i . e s g s g o r d n t i n r i e lo a g h h t r n w t i l u f o t e c o O g e s e a r c n e y m n l a h e e b t l h m a o o c i it , o v s t v d l e a s a n f i re e ur i t d ” l l l s e u b c ta th f r u o r o t “ s m t r r i e u e s o t . th n n g e o r i n diffe owledgi o quest t n n k i c A rs u o calls

TRU

THS

HS

TRUT

S H T TRU

TRUTH S


We have to believe in our own

TRUTHS to sustain the precarious view that life is meaningful and that we are significant, enduring beings.


One culture e c ena m l tentia o p a s is alway to another

because it is a living example that life can go on heroically within a value framework totally alien to one’s own.


It is deeply disturbing to have one’s fundamental beliefs called into question. Take our meanings and purposes away, characterize them as juvenile, useless, or evil, and all we have left are the vulnerable physical creatures that we are.


pa e e k y t i l a e r of s n o i t p y e c c a n o m i c t i l g a r e l u t l the g n i g d e l w Because cu o y ckn r a e , v d e a h e t r d s l e a h as e l n u n w lid on mor t o r o ou t y r a r t n o c ll. e u q o t of beliefs e v r se s f e i l e b e s terror tho

So we must pa rr y the threat b y derogating an dehumanizing d those with alte rnative views o by forcing them f life, to adopt our be liefs and co-op aspects of their ting cultures into ou r own, or by obliterating the m entirely.


There is always residual death anxiety, a rumble of panic that is projected onto other groups of people designated as all-encompassing repositories of evil.

DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY DEATH ANXIETY


AndAnd whenwhen thosethose inin oneone groupgroup bolsterbolster theirtheir psychologicalpsychological securitysecurity byby imposingimposing theirtheir willwill andand ventingventing theirtheir animosityanimosity onon another,another, thisthis frequentlyfrequently producesproduces aa backlashbacklash byby thethe “others,”“others,” resultingresulting inin aa viciousvicious cyclecycle ofof bitterbitter acrimony.acrimony.


The greatest cause of evil includes all human motives in one giant paradox.

EVIL EVIL

EVIL

The paradox is that evil comes from our urge to heroic victory over evil.


In seeking to id evil, we are o avoievil are ,ilwe vavoid a to ing seek In o d t g e v n i k e , e w s eeare In responsibl r o m g n i g n i briging rbrin e b f e r mor o o for ble f onsi resp e l b n i s g n i n o g p s m e oilre r evil evil evil v e l i v e l i v e l i e veivevil evil evil l l evil i evil e evil v evil evil e v i l l i v e e v l i i l v l ielvil evielveil evil evil e vil evil evielveiv veilevil evil evil l evil i evil e v evil evil evil v e i l l i v e e v l i i l v e e veilve ilvil evil evi l i eve vil l i v e l i v e l l i e v v e evil evil l ilevil evil i evil e v evil evil v e evil i l l i v e e v l i i l v e e v l evei vil evil evil e vil evil evil ielveilvil v e evil i evil l l evil i evil evil e v evil evil v e evil i l l i v e e v l i i l v lie ie lveiv lil eveiv l evil evil ev evil evil eveiv l ilevil evil l evil evil i evil e v evil evil v e evil i l l i v e e v i l i l v e e vlilev l i eivlil evil evil e ev v i l i v e l i v e l i e v v e evil lilevil evil i evil e evil v evil evil v e evil i l l i v e e v i l i l v e e v l ileevvilil eevvi il evil evil e l i v e l i v e l vvi il evil vilileevil evil evil e evil v evil evil e evil l i v e e v i l i l v evviilleevviill eevviilleevil evil e e l i v eevil l i v v e i evil l l evil i evil e v evil evil v evil e evil i l l i v e e v i l l i v e e viil evil evil evil evil v e l i v e ill eevil e v v i evil l evil evil e evil evil v e evil evil i l i v e v i l l i v e e v iill eevviill eevviill evil evil v e l i v e l eevil viil eevil vviill eevil e evil evil evil v e evil evil l i v e v i l l i v e e v l i i l l eevvil evil evil i e v v e i l l i v e l i v e l i e v v e i l evil l evil i evil evil e v evil evil v e evil evil i l l i v e e v i l l i v e e vvilileevvilil eevvililevil evil e l i v e leevil i e v v e i l l evil i evil e evil v evil evil v e evil evil i l l i v e v i l l i v e e v ivlilev l ev i v eivlilevil evil e e i l e l i v e l ieevil v v e i l l evil i evil e evil v evil evil v e evil evil i l l i v e v i l l i v e e v l i i l eveiv il elveiv l evil evil ev l i v e l i v e l i eilv ev ilvielv evil evil evil evil evil evil e evil evil l i v e i l l i v e e veilvielveilvil eveilvielvil evil l i v e lvevil i e v v e i l l evil i evil e v evil evil v e evil evil evil i l l i v e e i l l i v e e v ielveilvielvil evielveilvil evil l i v e l ivevil eilvevil v e i l l evil i evil e v evil v e evil evil i evil l v e e i l l i v e e v l i i l evielvevil evil il eiv v e i l l v e l i v e l i e vevevil vlevil e i l l evil i evil e v evil v e evil evil i evil l i v e i l l i v e v. il evil evil e into d l r ewor ho etw into rwlo intthothe dld. .


Chapter 9

POWER


Power is the life pulse that sustains us in every epoch.


It is the basic category of our existence, as our organism's whole world is structured in terms of power.


We are characterized by a general inclination, a perpetual and restless desire of power after power, that ceaseth only in...


death.


All power is sacred power, because it begins in the hunger for immortality.

It ends in the absolute subjection to people and things which represent immortality power.


The thing that connects money with the domain of the sacred is its power.


gi

s

ve

po w

er ov er en

m

MONEY


MONEY ab

ol

is

he

s

on

e‘

s

li

ke

ne

ss

to

ot

he

rs


es

gi v

ee

fr do m fr om al

ci

so

ga ti on s

ob li

MONEY


Money creates comfortable distance between persons, easily satisfies their claims on each other without compromising them in any d i r e c t a n d p e r s o n a l w a y. On top of this it gives literally limitless ability to satisfy appetites of almost any material kind.


Power means power to increase oneself, to change one‘s natural situation from one of smallness, helplessness, finitude, to one of bigness, control, durability, importance.


conting ency and ac c identt


Money can be accumul

ated an

d pas

s ed

on!

And so radiates its powers even after one‘s death, giving one a semblance of immortality as s/he lives in the vicarious enjoyments of her/his heirs that her/ his money continues to buy, or in the magnificence of the art works that s/he commis­sioned, or in the statues of heror himself and the majesty of his or her own mausoleum.


Money is the human mode par excellence of coolly denying animal boundness, the determinism of nature.


Chapter 10

HISTORY


ryyy tttooorr HHHiisiss iisiss e ttthhhee ryyy tttooorr hhhiisiss ooofff


Immortality Striving is a universal principle firmly anchored in each individual person, no matter who s/he is; it is present in each culture, no matter how varied its beliefs might seem, or how much mankind itself seemed to change from epoch to epoch.


What was fixed was the principle of a dominant im­mortality-ideology.


In each historical period or social group, we thought that we lived absolute truth because our social life gave expression to our deepest innate hunger.


Every conflict over truth is in the last analysis the same old struggle over

immortality.


Each person nourishes her or his immortality in the ideology of self-perpetuation to which she or he gives her or his allegiance; this gives her or his life the only abiding significance it can have.


No wonder we go into a rage over fine

points of belief. If your adversary wins

the argument abou t truth, you die. if Your

immortality sy stem ha s been shown to

be fallible, your life become s fallible.


You can see histor y s n io s s e c c u s r o s e as stag ies. g lo o e id y t li a t r o m of im

All human ide ologies, then, are affairs that deal dire ctly with the sacredn the individual ­ ess of or the group life, whether it seems that way or not, wh ether they admit it or no t, whether the person knows it or not.


Chapter 11

FREEDOM


Most peo

ple would

agree tha

t the wor

d

n o i t a alien applie s t o mode man.rn

h ic h w ry to is h in d e n e p p a h g in th e Som on, rs e p ge ra e av e th d ile o sp e d lly a u grad e, iv ct a n a m o fr r e h r o im h d e rm o transf r... e m su n co c ti e th a p a to in g in e b e creat­iv


do

A„

wn

­ fa

ll“

of

ne pe ap

nh ma

t in

oin

ep

om

ts da

or

t his

y.


l a c i r o t s i H

MAN

LOST SOMETHING

AT TH

RLY

EA

MAN

HAD.


In it‘s „state o f

nature“

n a m

is

free

on

ly

and

es

m

la te

co

r

be

unfree

on.



Still today they trumpet this philosophy of history as


the fall of pure men into corrupt social structures.


The reason the philosophy is so attractive is that we need hopes and ideals to urge us on.

We need possibility, belief in ourselves in order to even try to make things better.


Up to a point, of course: the point at which the illusion lies about something very important, such as human nature. If it is false to that, then it becomes oppres­sive, because if you try falsely to make a new beginning you fail.


We have learned something from the vast collections of data on primitive man.

That if he was not in bondage to the authority of living persons, he was at the utter mercy of the power of spirits.


Because of man‘s fear of life and death, the tribe was in hock to the


Or, if in some tribes men did not seem to fear death, it was because they had transmuted this fear by immersing themselves in the group ideology, whatever it may have been.


In the state of nature the solitary individual is already unfree. Even before we get to society; we carry within ourselves the bondage that we need in order to live.


We are born in need of authority and we even create out of freedom, a prison.


Chapter 12

BEYOND


Redemption


Redemption can


Redemption can only


Redemption can only come


Redemption can only come FROM

outside the individual FROM

beyond FROM

our conceptualization of the ultimate source of things FROM

the perfection of creation It can only come when we lay down our individuality, give it up, admit our creatureliness and helplessness.


We cannot fashion an absolute from within our condition. Cosmic heroism must transcend human relationships. What is at stake in all this is of course, the question of freedom, the quality of ones life and ones individuality.


beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond beyond

beyond beyond beyond

beyond

beyond beyond

beyond

beyond

beyond beyond

beyond beyond

beyond

beyond

beyond

beyond beyond

beyond beyond

beyond beyond beyond

We need a “beyond,� but we reach first for the nearest one; this gives us the fulfillment we need but at the same time limits and enslaves us.


You can look at the whole problem of a human life in this way. You can ask the question:


Most people play it safe: they choose the beyond of standard transference objects like parents, the boss, or the leader; they accept the cultural definition of heroism and try to be a good provider or a solid citizen. In this way they earn their species immortality as an agent of procreation, or a collective or cultural immortality as part of a social group of some kind.


Most people live this way, and we are hardly implying that there is anything false or unheroic about the standard cultural solution to the problems of men. It represents both the truth and the tragedy of our condition: The problem of the con­secration of ones life, the meaning of it, the natural surrender to something larger — these driving needs that inevitably are resolved by what is nearest at hand.


We should not stop and circumscribe our life with beyonds that are near at hand, or a bit further out, or created by ourselves. We should reach for the highest beyond of religion: We should cultivate the passivity of renunciation to the highest powers no matter how difficult it is. Anything less is less than full development, even if it seems like weakness and compromise to the best thinkers.


The need for a truly religious ideology is inherent in

and its fulfillment is basic to any kind of social life.


Is that surrender to God masochistic? To empty oneself de­meaning?

It represents on the contrary the furthest reach of the self, the highest idealization we can achieve. Only by surrendering to the bigness of nature on the highest, least- fetishized level, can we conquer death.


And in order to get such centering we have to look beyond the “thou,� beyond the consolations of others and of the things of this world.


We are theological beings. We must always imagine and believe in a second reality or a better world than the one that is given us by nature.


By now it should be clear that this is not a weak surrender to ideology but a working-through of the problem of human character. at the very furthest reaches of scientific description, psychology has to give way to theology — that is, to a world-view that absorbs the individual conflicts and guilt and offers us the possibility for some kind of heroic apothe­osis. We cannot endure our own littleness unless we can translate it into meaningfulness on the largest possible level.


The reli­gious geniuses of history have argued that to be really submissive means to be submissive to the highest power, the true infinity and absolute — and not to any human substitutes, lovers, leaders, nation­states.


I n r e l igi o u s te r m s , t o

is t o die , b e c a u se the c r eat u r e is t o o s m a l l and f inite t o b e a b l e t o b ea r the highe r m eanings o f c r eati o n . Re l igi o n ta k es o nes v e r y

o ne ’ s

and m a k es it a c o nditi o n o f h o p e . F u l l t r ans c enden c e o f the h u m an c o nditi o n m eans l i m it l ess p o ssi b i l it y u ni m agina b l e t o u s .


Chapter 13

SOCIAL THEORY


some people say


But it is one thing to say that we are not human because we are vicious animals, and another

to say that it is because we are frightened creatures who try to secure a victory over our limitations.


If we kill out of animal fears, then conceivably fears can be examined and calmed

but if we kill out of lust, then butchery is a fatality for all time.


EVIL itself is now amenable to critical analysis and, conceivably, to the sway of reason.


It is possible that cultural developments might lie ahead which might make it possible even to renounce age-old instinctual satis­factions.

 etc.


It is even easier to speculate about cultural developments that might influence

the fear of death

&

the forms of heroism

and so blunt the terrible destructiveness that they have caused.


If each historical society is in some ways a lie or a mystification,

the study of society becomes the revelation of the lie.


The comparative study of society becomes the assessment of how high are the costs of this lie.

The comparative study of society becomes the assessment of how high are the costs of this lie.


Or, looked at from another way

cultures are fundamentally and basically styles of heroic death denial.


We can then ask empirically, what are the costs of such denials of death, because we know how these denials are structured into styles of life.


l enemies or „

In terms of the tyranny practiced within the society,

“ o u t

de si

it.

a n d

e

d agai e c i t ns c a ta pr

ns ie

the vic f o s tim m r ag e t

These costs can be tallied roughly in two ways:

in


Death is and has always been an ideology.



h t a

a

cu

De

is

u lt

a h ec

m

re

m s ni

tha t

was utilized

from

s e m i t

ies et ci so

by

primit

ive

on

as a

s n a e m of


CONTROLAND

,

REPRESSION

SOCIAL

TO

HELP

AN

ELITE

ENFORCE ITS WILL ON

A meek and compliant populace.


The definition of culture, after all, is that it continues the project of the transcendence of death; and so we see the fatality and naturalness of human slavishness :

the gods, because of by the tribe, the polis, the state, We help secure our own domination


How you talk about heroics that cost mountains of human life, you have to find out why such heroics are practiced in a given social system:

Who is scapegoating whom, what social classes are excluded from heroism, what there is in the social structure that drives the society to self-destructive heroics, etc.


We have to set up some kind of

liberating ideal 

SOME KIND OF

LIFE-GIVING ALTERNATIVE

to the thought­less & destructive heroism

We have to begin to scheme to give to us an

OPPORTUNITY FOR HEROIC VICTORY that is not a simple reflex of narcissistic scapegoating.


We have to conceive of the possibility of a

e ve ive tive ctive uc tive ruc tive tr u c t i v e s tr u c t i v e e s tr u c t i v e d e s tr u c t i v e n d e s tr u c t i v e o n d e s tr u c t i v e n o n d e s tr u c t i v e

t et yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet yet

s us ous ious rious orious torious c torious ic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious vic torious

l al ial cial ocial social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social social

m em tem stem ystem system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system system


Right now it is important to direct you in the quest for an agreed general theory of human nature to exactly what cripples the autonomy of the individual.


The Enlightenment hope for free and autonomous men was never born; and one reason is that we have not known until recently the precise dynamics that makes us so tragically slavish. With the knowledge we have we can build a new social theory.


The task of this social theory is not

to explain guilt away or to

absorb it unthinkingly in still another destructive ideology, but to

neutralize it and

GIVE IT EXPRESSION

in truly creative and

life-enhancing ideologies.


This social theo r y also consist s of critiques of false perc­ eptio ns, of ignoble hero systems.

osts c e h t f o , y r t la o id f o It will be a critique tion a iz t a m a r d e h t r fo us of a too narrow foc n. io t ­ ia p x e d n a r e w o of man‘s need for p


We cannot abandon the heroic.


But we can do what we have always done

Argue about heroism, assess the costs of it, show that it is self-defeating, a fantasy, a dangerous illusion and not one that is life-enhancing and ennobling.


    √ If illusions are needed, how can we have those that are capable of correction, and how can we have those that will not deteriorate into delusions?


If we live in myths and not absolutes, there is nothing we can do or say about that. But we can argue for nondestructive myths; this is the task of what would be

A

THEORY

SOCIAL

new


This Social theory is neither radical nor conservative, but scientific; and we should begin to get scientific agreement on its basic image of man and society.


If we have an agreed image in a science, there is nothing to prevent us from moving on to new kinds of social designs: designs for the possibility of nondestructive yet victorious types of social systems.


Chapter 14

DESIGN


We don't accept death. We resist it. We fight it. We spend enormous amount of energy and resources to delay it, to prolong life even under unbearable, "inhuman" conditions, and when it arrives, we honor it, we celebrate it. And again a huge amount of resources are deployed. Design is involved in every step, from the multiple elaborate inventions that have "saved" billions of lives to the myriad of rituals that every culture has developed to deal with death. One of the unique symptoms of the human species is the design of death. We are the species that buries its dead, and archeological traces of burial sites are treated as crucial evidence of humanity. Even more than 100,000 years ago in the Middle East, nomadic hunter-gatherers design burials and place designed objects on or beside the bodies. In the earliest permanent settlements, such as 10,500-year-old Boncuklu, in Turkey, bodies were buried under the floor of the oval mud-brick houses with stone tools and pieces of red ochre placed beside them. A thousand years later, in the earliest protocities like ÇatalhÜyßk, up to thirty bodies were buried beneath the floor of each rectangular house as an integral part of the architecture. The design of death constantly evolves.


What now follows are SOME REMARKS and conclusions for people who would like to come to terms with death.


e w h t u r t e r u c The only se e w h c i h w t a h t have is d n a e t a e r c s e ourselv o t s i e v i l o t dramatize; f o g n i n a e m play at the s s e n h s i l o o f e k life. Childli e r u t a m f o g n is the calli r o f d e e n e h wo/men. T A . s s e n h s i l o o f legitimate e p o h d n a t s u childlike tr n o i t i d n o c n a for the hum e h t n e p o s e v a that le . y r e t s y m f o realm


DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE …

OBJECTIVE HATRED We have a general theory of human nature that is entirely „naturalistic“, one that could theoretically „immunize" us to our „natural weakness“ - The scapegoating for our own fears and needs. A social ideal could be designed that takes into account our basest motives, but now an ideal not directly negated by those motives. In others words, a hate object need not be any special class or race or even human enemy, but could be things that take impersonal but real forms, like poverty, disease, oppression, natural disasters, etc. Or, if we know that evil takes human form in oppressors and hangmen, then we could at least try to make our hatreds of men intelligent and in­formed: we could work against the enemies of freedom, those who thrive on slavery, on the gullibilities and weaknesses of their fellow man. This raises more problems than it solves, since we hate and love according to our individual under­standings and personal needs. But we have to try to take things one step further; the whole thrust of the science of man since the Enlightenment has been after all a promise that objectivity about evil is possible. This objectivity about evil introduces what we might call the possibility of objective hatred. This clarification of hatred would allow us, to find a moral equivalent to natural sadism, to hope to translate our self-expansion into a furtherance of life instead of the destruc­tion of it. If we know that we ourselves hate because of the same needs and urges to heroic victory over evil as those we hate, there is perhaps no better way to begin to introduce milder justice into the affairs of men.

EATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP

DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … D

… DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP … DEATH TO … KILL ALL … NO MORE … DESTROY … END … BURN THE … STOP …


A E EPICUR NI SM

s For Epicurean s a the way out w . rd straightfor wa t First, we mus of e become awar th; a o ur f e a r o f d e t then, we mus it t recognize tha be o is irrational t . h afraid of deat n Bad things ca o only happen t of those capable d a sensation. De oid v people are de ns, of all sensatio

just as we a ll we were con were before c dead is thus eived. Being from never h no dif ferent a No one is te ving existed. r time before rified of the t so why fret a hey were born, since it is pr bout death, e same insens cisely the a prevailed for te state that our time? On eons before this, death a ce we realize n eliminated a xiety will be n longer yearn d we will no for immor tali ty.

" t he e k a m n r u t d, will in e s o ust p m o r s p u , f s o u r h u c ic a p E This, E yable." jo n e e r o grow," m y e a f li m f s o n y t io li t a a t r m or re gene u t u f ing t v a a h h t , " o e o r t u , s y n e e h die to rote. "T w s iu t e r c u tions L a r n e a n e e r G u . ic u p o E y t he follow l il w , s e v li l perish il ir w e h d t n t a u , o u d o y e v li just like d e h g f rom is r in e is p r a is p h t o t e s r r o bef will neve g in h t e , but is n y t o r s e u p h o r T p . e in t a a g a dy`s priv o b o n is e if L another. use." o t s ` e n o y r e v e


THE MOST UTOPIAN FANTASY A world-scientific body composed of leading minds in all fields, working under an agreed general theory of human unhappiness. They would reveal to mankind the reasons for its self-created unhappiness and self-induced defeat; they would explain how each society is a hero system which embodies in itself a dramatization of power and expiation; how this is at once its peculiar beauty and its destructive demonism; how we defeat ourselves by trying to bring absolute purity and goodness into the world. They would argue and propagandize for the nonabsoluteness of the many different hero systems in the family of nations, and make public a continuing assessment of the costs of mankind‘s im­possible aims and paradoxes: how a given society is trying too hard to get rid of guilt and the terror of death by laying its trip on a neighbor. Then we might struggle, even in anguish, to come to terms with ourselves and our world.


EVERY THING HAS CHANGED NOT HING HAS C HANGED With our portable cameras today, the two most popular typologies of image making are still the self-portrait and the still life. Vanitas and deathliness.


DY ON

In a club, the careworn self is smashed by e.g. beats, echoing guitars and elec­tronic shrieking, and its fragments are scattered even more finely by showering and splitting light effects. The narcotic drift will take you to spaces beyond time and death. This explains the massive attendance at music festivals. The festivals represent a joyful triumph over the flat emptiness of modern life, the mechanical succession of news events which carry everyone on willy-nilly, the ticking away of life in an absurd anarchy. The festival is the attempt to reawaken a sense of the awesome and the miraculous as we throb in full communion to the beating of the music. What we are seeking through this is a way to adequately express wonder, an expression that modern, secular, mechanistic society has denied us. This kind of communion in joy and in intensive experience is, we have to conclude, one of our heroic victories over human limitation. Yet it, too, is hardly a mod­ern invention despite the new technics which mediates it. It is a replay of the basic Dionysian expansiveness, the submergence and loss of identity in the transcending power of the pulsating "now" and the frenzied group of like-minded believers. That heroic expansiveness, joy, and wonder have an underside - finitude, guilt, and death - and we have to watch for its expression too. After you have melted your identity into transcending, pulsating power, what do you do to establish some kind of balance? What kind of forceful, instrumental attitude do you summon up to remarshal yourself and your grip on experience? One cannot live in the trembling smallness of awe, else s/he will melt away. Where is the object on which to focus one's new self-assertion - an object that is for most people a victim? This is what we have to be con­stantly on guard for. For the masochistic loss of self during th Dionysian festivals there was the corresponding sadistic affirmation of self: the Dionysian celebrators tore apart with their bare hands and ate raw a scape­goat or a bull to climax the ceremony.

A D

Y

AN I S

E C

Every heroic victory is two­ sided: it aims toward merger with an absolute "beyond" in a burst of life affirmation, but it carries within it the rotten core of death denial in a physical body here on earth. If culture is a lie about the possibilities of victory over death, then that lie must somehow take its toll of life, no matter how colorful and expansive the celebration of joyful victory may seem. We might say that modem heroism is some­ what out of joint compared with Dionysianism, where both aspects of transcendence took place on the spot.


HUNGER It is true, that most people will not usually kill unless it is under the banner of some kind of fight against evil; in which case one is tempted to blame the banner, the propaganda and artificial belief system, and not the people. But banners don't wrap themselves around us: We invent banners and clutch at them; we hunger for believable words that dress life in convincing meaning.

As Dostoevsky so well put it, men would die if they didn't have nice words to speak (to make sense out of their occasions). We would die, not because words are nice trimmings to life, but because without words action stops dead, and when action stops the gnawing realization of impotency and the dumb futility of animal life begins. Words abolish fear and embody hope in themselves. We need to realize that we will do anything for heroic belonging to a victorious cause if we are persuaded about the legitimacy of that cause. And we know no psychology, and so far no conditions on this earth, which would exempt us from fulfilling our urge to cosmic heroism, which means from identifying evil and moving against it.

FOR WORDS


REAPER URNS

NEW

BA TTERIES

GRIM THE TOMBSTONES body organs NO WI OWLS - FI

RS A T A AV VISITORS

LOW

BROKEN

OLD

SCREENS

NEW SYMBOLS OF DEATH

NO

HERMAPHRODITES

etc .

VULTURES ZOMBIES COMMENTS CADAVERS SEX NO ILS A CATS M NO CROWS DINOS NO FOLLOWERS BROKEN NO FRIENDS AURS BONES COFFINS SM ART PHONES BL ACK M S& COLOR THE MOTHS VAMPIRES THE NSVESTISM A THE PILLC DEVIL s l TR l AM sku c. et


THE OPTION FOR THE IRRATIONAL We can introduce the option for the “irrational” as the basis for life. There is a driving force behind a mystery that we cannot understand, and it in­cludes more than reason alone. The urge to cosmic heroism, then, is sacred and mysterious and not to be neatly ordered and ra­tionalized by science and secularism. Science, after all, is a credo that has attempted to absorb into itself and to deny the fear of life and death; and it is only one more competitor in the spectrum of roles for cosmic heroics. We are drinking and drugging ourselves out of awareness, or we spend our time shopping, which is the same thing. As awareness calls for types of heroic dedication that our culture no longer provides for us, society contrives to help us forget. Or alternatively, we bury ourselves in psychology in the belief that awareness all by itself will be some kind of magical cure for our problems. But psychology was born with the breakdown of shared social heroisms; it can only be gone beyond with the Creation of new heroisms that are basically matters of belief and will, dedication to a vision.

The only way to get beyond the natural contradictions of existence, was in time-worn religious way: to project one’s problems onto a god-figure, to be healed by an all-embracing and all-justifying beyond. To talk in these terms is not at all the same thing as to talk the language of the psychotherapeutic religionists or hipster-gurus. The orientation of men has to be always beyond their bodies, has to be grounded in healthy repressions, and toward explicit immortality-ideologies, myths of heroic trans­cendence. We can conclude that a project as grand as the scientific-mythical construction of victory over human limitation is not something that can be programmed by science.


, m st fro fir d e ry r de , th ve ve en to e s e . sc d to ha re de ate as t utu ly el ll ha f ct y r we e t the ire ntl as tur in ld e , a e al qu m re iv e e is c l l ar ns an ng il e co rg lli w W d o we or an ing -d ive liv r th al ea en be

W an hat d a at jo th y it e sa is f me or mo us me to b nt e a kn liv ow e, it!

N W of e c th us an e is re co a fle sm te ct ic mp on pr or th im al e al re fa fo pre ct rc s t h e. en at ta ea tiv c e h of

REFL ECT IO SHORT


On

what

level

With the truth, one cannot live. To be able to live one needs illusions, not only outer illusions such as art, religion, philosophy, science and love, but inner illusions which first condition the outer (i.e., a secure sense of ones active powers, and of being able to count on the powers of others). The more a person can take reality as truth, appearance as essence, the sounder, the better adjusted, the happier will s/he be . . . This con­stantly effective process of self-deceiving, pretending and blundering, is no psychopathological mechanism. . . Life is possible only with illusions.

of

illusion

does

one

live?

And so, the question must be­come a new one, yet one that re­flects the essence of the human condition: On what level of illusion does one live? It begins to look as though we cannot find our heroism in everyday life any more, as we did in traditional societies just by doing our daily duty of raising children, working, and worship­ping. We need revolutions and wars and “continuing‘ revolutions to last when the revolutions and wars end. That is the price we pay for the eclipse of the sacred dimension. When we de­throned the ideas of soul and God we were thrown back hopelessly on our own resources, on ourselves and those few around us. Even lovers and families trap and disillusion us because they are not sub­stitutes for absolute transcendence. We might say that they are poor illusions. What is the ‘‘best” illusion under which to live? Or, what is the most legitimate foolish­ness? We think the whole ques­tion would be answered in terms of how much freedom, dignity, and hope a given illusion provides. These three things absorb the problem of natural neurosis and turn it to creative living.


Biosocial Transcendence is derived from the literal connection to future generations by passing on one`s genes, history, values, and possessions, or by identification with an ancestral line or ethnic or national identity that perseveres indefinitely.

Creative Transcendence is obtained by contributing to future generations through innovations and teaching in art, science, and technology.

theological TRANSCENDENCE entails faith in a soul and the possibility of literal immortality; it can also be a more symbolic sense of spiritual connection to an ongoing life force.

Natural Transcendence is identifying with all life, nature, or even the universe.

These modes of death transcendence are all grounded within a culturally constructed scheme of things, and some cultural worldviews guide us toward more constructive paths of transcendence than others. The question then becomes „What are lifeenhancing illusions?“

Experiental Transcendence is characterized by a sense of timelessness accompanied by a heightened sense of awe and wonder. Certain drugs can foster this kind of experience, as can meditation, various cultural rituals, and activities that provide a sense of flow, of losing oneself in contemplation and enjoyment.

5 CORE MODES OF DEATH TRANSCENDENCE

And such experiential states are most fulfilling when they occur in the context of one of the four other modes: playing with your children, engaging in spiritual rituals, throwing yourself into creative activity, being immersed in the natural world.


PARADOX

shrinkage of experience.

shrinkage of experience.

We are animals who must fetishize in order to survive and to have „normal mental health.“ But this shrinkage of vision that permits us to survive also at the same time prevents us from having the overall understanding we need to plan for and control the effects of our

We are animals who must fetishize in order to survive and to have „normal mental health.“ But this shrinkage of vision that permits us to survive also at the same time prevents us from having the overall understanding we need to plan for and control the effects of our

PARADOX


Self-esteem does not ensure a successful life or great achievement; that requires innate abilities, excellent training, high levels of motivation and commitment, and persistent exertion. But self-esteem is a key to psychological security: it helps buffer anxiety, blunts defensive reactions to thoughts of death, makes people more resilient, and fosters physical, psychological, and interpersonal well-being. All of which raises the question: What can we do to acquire it? One tactic is to encourage individuals to cultivate diversified self-concepts. After all, each of us is multifaceted. Different aspects of our identity correspond to different social roles, each with its own associated standards. Some of these standards are more attainable for particular individuals than others. By placing our psychological eggs in many different baskets, we increase the odds that we’ll have durable ways to feel good about ourselves. Knowing which baskets are right for us is also important. You shouldn’t aspire to become a professional opera singer if you can’t carry a tune. Another approach is to foster the development of social roles and opportunities for people who would otherwise be marginalized or ostracized.

self-esteem


MOR . M . M

G N I T E E M TAL

DEATH CAFÉ

LIFE X

DEAT H . c et

DE

E T A D H AT

POPUP PL

ACE

Why not organize casual gatherings in coffee shops,restaurants or other places at which individuals talk about death in a comfortable environment hosted by e.g. social workers and chaplains?


L T A H E H

Health is not normal adjustment — anything but that. To be a “normal cultural person” is to be sick — whether one knows it or not. If health is not “cultural normality,” then it must refer to something else, must point beyond our usual situation, our habitual ideas. Mental health, in a word, is not typical, but ideal-typical. It is something far beyond us, something to be achieved, striven for, something that leads us beyond ourselves. The healthy person, the true individuals, the self-realized soul, the real person is the one who has transcended her- or himself. What is the ideal for mental health, then? A lived, compelling illusion that does not lie about life, death, and reality; one honest enough to follow its own commandments: Not to kill, not to take the lives of others to justify itself.

H

H

EALT


f o l a i n e d e h t f o t t s p o m c e t e t h a t e s i h What anscendence, of t ion? absolutebtrricate one’s own relig to fa When we fa existence f il to draw th cost to oruorm the highest seopuowers of our rce, what i selves and those arou s the nd us?

o t l l a t a e l b a l a Is the individcuept her- / himself affirm and acer- / himself? from h Only th e using h creative pers e o But eve r / his work n can do this a n powers the creative s a justificatio to some exte n / his tr than her- / hi type should id n for her / his t, by m a e reason nsference pro self. The cre ally sur­rende existence. a r f on her or her / his c jections back tive person ta to higher / r i leads t his own term eativity is tha nto her- / him kes her o t s individu a dangerous s and relies o s/he sees th elf. One n e a We nee l becomes to kind of megal her- / himse world o l d o depend some kind o full with her mania becau f. But this se the ency — f resolu / his o w tio ideally, n a freely n in a new a meanings. nd chosen depend greater ency.


The idea that death is taboo in modern culture or the idea that we are now witnessing the end of the death taboo fail both to deal with the complex ways in which death is invisible and highly visible in modern culture. While in the affluent cultures of the West death has become less visible, due to the decline in death rates and our new prudery around death, we are still exposed to death every day through the media. Despite the fact that there has not yet been a world war since 1945 we all live under the abstract threat of nuclear destruction, which threatens the survival of humanity. Also, advances in science may have reduced the risk of early death in the West but we still experience acute anxieties about ecological catastrophe, the emergence of new and untreatable epidemic diseases and the effects of pollution and waste on our environment. In modern culture death is not simply invisible or taboo but bound up with new structures that expose us to death. While it may be true that death has become invisible in certain ways in contemporary Western culture we also have to account for the reality and visibility of the threat of death on an industrial scale. After the Holocaust and during a century of genocides and mass exterminations, from Cambodia to Rwanda, it is difficult to claim that death is now ‘invisible’ or ‘forbidden’. Instead our exposure to death takes the form of being exposed to the possibility of death organised politically, through bureaucratic planning and governmental intervention. Not only that but there are the more banal ways in which we are exposed to death, such as through the car crash.


TAKE LIFE SERIOUS Taking life ser­iously means something such as this: That whatever we do on this planet has to be done in the lived truth of the terror of creation, of the grotesque, of the rumble of panic underneath everything. Otherwise it is false. Whatever is achieved must be achieved from within the subjective energies of creatures, without deadening, with the full exercise of passion, of vision, of pain, of fear, and of sorrow.


How do we get rid of the power to mystify? The talents and the processes of mesmeriza­tion and mystification have to be exposed. Which is another way of saying that we have to work against both structural and psycho­logical unfreedom in society. The task would be to expose both of these dimensions. How do we create new myths? We need the boldest creative myths, not only to urge us on but also and perhaps especially to help us see the reality of our condition. We have to be as hard-headed as possible about reality and possibility. From this point of view we can see that the therapeutic revolution raises two great problems. The first is how mature, critical, and sober these new liberated people will be. How much have they pushed in the direction of genuine freedom; how much have they avoided the real world and its problems, their own bitter paradoxes; how much have they hedged on their liberation by still holding on to others, to illusions, or to certainties?

& MYSTIFY


TWO APPROACHES WITH DEATH

First, we can become more aware and accepting of the reality of our mortality.

Second, we can strenghten our sense of death transcendence in nondestructive ways.


MORTAL REMINDERS We can learn a lo t from Japanese th oughts & aesthetics whe n it comes to the acc eptance of mor tality and th e design of ever yda y life.

物の哀れ

侘寂

WABI-SABI Three of the most obvious lessons gleaned fr om millenia of contac t with nature were incorporated into the wisdom of wabi-sa bi. 1. All things are im permanent. 2. All things are im perfect. 3. All things are in complete.

Wabi-sabi is an ac ceptance o f the inevitalbe. It MONO NO AWARE is an aesthetic apprecia tion of the e vanescence of life Literally "the path . The os of lu xuriant tree of sum things", and also mer is translatn ow only withered b ed as "an empath ranches y toward u nder a winter sky. things", or "a sen All that sitivity re mains of a splend to ephemera", is a id mansion is a crumbled founda Japanese term for tion the o v ergrown with weed awareness of imp s and ermam oss. Wabi-sabi im nence, or transien ages force ce of u s to contemplate ou things, and both a r own transient m ortality, and they e gentle sadness at voke an their e x istential lonelines passing as well as s and a te nder sadness. The longer, deeper gen y also tle s ti r a mingled bitters sadness about th weet is state c o mfort, since we kn being the reality o ow all f life. existence shares the same fate.


Spaces in which we are exposed to death are also spaces of power. We must understand the nature of modern power to understand the nature of modern death.

DEATH AND POWER

One space of our exposure to death, which seems to characterise modern death in particular, is the hospital room. Just think about the debates on life-support and transplant technology to raise the problems of how we decide on the time of death. Instead of seeing modern death being the result of the medicalisation of death we propose that medicine takes over the power to decide on life and death that had been the domain of the head of state. Doctors are in competition with other figures, such as lawyers, priests, philosophers and the relatives of the ill, for the power to decide on life and death.

The power over life and death is sovereign power, and sovereign power is exercised through a particular form of space. Power today is not about the relationship between the sovereign and his or her subjects but about the multiple effects of power that constitute different types of subject. These new forms of power are molecular and local; they do not exist in one space of power but range across different spaces of power, each with their own unique features.


DEATH What about art that knows about and deals with our denial of death?

I WAS HERE "I MADE MY MARK" PAINTING

ART

DEATH COLUMN

AWARE You may say that death has always been a sujet of art. But why not make it more transparent?

PEDESTAL FOR HEROES

Critical or non-critical? Aesthetic or conceptual? Material or dematerialized? So many options. Death is profane & banal. Why not produce art which reflects that fact?


C

T P A E N C C

OF MOR

TA

IME T R A E

E

S in c e antiquity, thelogians and philosophers have emphasized the importance of accepting our mortality as a means to diminish the destructive effects of unconsious death fears and to enhance appreciation of everyday life. Many approaches to facing death head on have been practiced in different times and places. Medieval monks kept a human skull on their desks. Tibetan lamas used a ceremonial bowl made from a human skull to remind them fo the impermanence of life. Eastern and Western sages slept near or in their coffins for the same purpose. "How-to" manuals, such as the Bardo Thodol and Artes Moriendi have also been commonly employed.

LITY O V


2 WORLD-VIEWS

THE EASY PLACE A black- and white scheme of things, with explicit prescriptions for attaining literal and symbolic immortality. Unfortunately, many people who subscribe to easy place views fervently proclaim their beliefs to be absolute truth, and they insist that they can unambiguously differentiate between good and evil. „Isms“ - fundamentalism, fascism, communism, and some forms of free-market capitalism - are easy place views. The fundamental problem with all „isms“ is confusing their way with THE WAY. Because easy place worldviews provide clear and simple bases of meaning, self-worth, and immortality, they afford seductive psychological security for those who sustain faith in, and feel valued within, them. The easy place worldview tends to foster an US VS. THEM tribal mentality that breeds hatred and inflames intergroup conflicts.

THE HARD PLACE Conceptions of life that accept ambiguity and acknowledge that all beliefs are held with some measure of uncertainty. Hard place worldviews are malleable. Although adherents of the hard place take their beliefs and values seriously, they are open to other ideas and refuse to claim sole ownership of the truth. They recognize that right and wrong, and good and evil, cannot always be disentangled. Consequently, they tend to be more tolerant of those who are different. The hard place means accepting that meaning and values are human creations.

The easy place provides psychological security but takes a terrible toll on those victimized by angry and self-righteous crusades to rid the world of evil. The hard place yields perhaps a more compassionate view of the world but is less effective at buffering death anxiety. Somehow we need to fashion worldviews that yield psychological security, like the easy place, but also promote tolerance and acceptance of ambiguity, like the hard place.


THE THE REALITY REALITY OF OF DEATH DEATH OR OR THE THE IMAGE IMAGE OF OF THE THE REALITY REALITY OF OF DEATH DEATH

We Weare arenot notso somuch muchexposed exposedtotothe thereality realityofofdeath deathbut buttotothe the image imageofofthe thereality realityofofdeath, death,and andthis thisimage imagemay maywell wellbe bethe the reality realityofofdeath deathtoday. today. This Thisisisthe theproblem problemthat thatconfronted confronted(post)modern (post)modernart. art.While Whileitit constantly constantlytried triedtotoprovide provideus uswith withaadirect directexperience experienceofofthe the real, real,through throughtransgressive transgressivedeath deathororthrough throughbodily bodilysuffering suffering (cosmetic (cosmeticsurgery, surgery,scarification, scarification,blood bloodletting, letting,S&M, S&M,etc.), etc.),itit only onlyever everprovided providedus uswith withmore moreimages. images.InInfact, fact,the thepassion passion for forthe thereal realinin(post)modern (post)modernart artmight mighthave havebeen beenaasymptom symptomofof its itsattempt attempttotoescape escapefrom fromthe thehold holdofofimages. images. (Post)modern (Post)modernartists artistshave haveoften oftentried triedtotoproduce produceworks worksthat that present presentviolence violenceliterally. literally.They Theyproceeded proceededtoto‘Aktionen’ ‘Aktionen’and and happenings happeningswith withreal realevents, events,that thatmay maybe betasted, tasted,smelt, smelt,seen, seen, heard It is is heardand andtouched. touched.This Thiswas wasthe thebreakthrough breakthroughtotoreality’. reality. It also alsoaabreakthrough breakthroughtotoreality realitythat thatchallenges challengesthe thelimits limitsofof artistic artisticforms formsand andexhibition exhibitionspaces. spaces. But, But,again, again,they theyturn turninto intoimages; images;even evenbreaking breakingout outofofthe the studio studioororgallery galleryand andinto intopublic publicspace spaceisisnot notenough, enough,as asthese these ceremonies ceremoniesstill stillremain remainspectacles. spectacles.


DON’T GET FASCINATED BY DEATH If we are exposed to death then we cannot avoid the question of death itself or take shelter in the desire to give a meaning to death. Instead, death appears as something that resists being treated as either meaningful or meaningless. In thinking through the culture of death in terms of our being exposed to death, new paths open for critical analysis and thinking. We should consider more generally how we might go about approaching death. In particular it is important to resist simply becoming fascinated by death. Our ongoing fascination with death is something to be analysed rather than celebrated.


We humans have a pretty good track record of solving seemingly intractable problems once we understand their underlying basis. Infectious diseases exterminated millions of people until we figured out that illness was caused by germs, not by evil spirits. This led to the discovery of antibiotics and the practice of modern medicine. Perhaps, once we fully recognize the central role that mortal terror plays in persistent strife, human ingenuity can also find ways of counteracting the destructive potential our fears can, and do, unleash.


THE END



NOTES All texts are taken without permission from these highly recommendable books. While Ernest Becker laid the groundwork in regards to our denial of death and proposed links, Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg and Tom Pyszczynski demonstrate Beckers´s theories empirically with their Terror Management Theory. Thank you. The Denial of Death by Ernest Becker (New York: Free Press, 1973) Escape from Evil by Ernest Becker (New York: Free Press, 1975) The Worm at the Core by S. Solomon, J. Greenberg & T. Pyszczynski (New York: Random House, 2015) The Culture of Death by Benjamin Noys (New York: Berg Publishers, 2005) are we human? by Beatriz Colomina & Mark Wigley (Zürich: Lars Müller Publishers, 2016) The font "Bluu Next" (the one you are reading right now) was kindly provided by the open source Velvetyne Type Foundry. All images are taken from the open source internet archive.


www.alexanderwinkelmann.com


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