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Title: Jean Gebser


1
Jean Gebser
  • THE EVER-PRESENT
  • ORIGIN

Power Point Presentation for the Seminar on
Psychology of Social Development organized by the
University of Human Unity, Auroville
2
Structures of consciousness
  • Archaic ( Primal man, Protanthropos, Purusha of
    the Rig Veda, Adam Kadmon of the Cabbala, Osiris
    of the Egyptian-Gnostics)
  • Magic (here the primal man becomes the maker,
    vital impulse and instinct thus unfold and
    develop a consciousness in dealing with Nature
    witchcraft and sorcery, totem and taboo are the
    natural means of freeing himself from Nature)
    (appr. before 10 000 BC)
  • Mythical (brings the awareness of the inner life
    of the soul, its history and its origin, the
    primal Myth) (appr. before 2500 BC)
  • Mental (It individualizes man from his
    previously valid world, emphasizing his
    singularity and making his ego possible.(p.76)
    It introduces a perspectival perception of the
    world (1250-1500 AD) by spatializing time
    perception it represents life by conceptualizing
    it, distancing man from his own nature.)
  • Integral (freedom from all the structures by
    their transparent rearrangement into one integral
    oneness of being)

3
The structures of consciousness in the Mandukya
Upanishad
  • Turiya, the original state of identity of the
    pure transcendental consciousness and being,
    which somehow embodies all the three following
    stages and at the same time transcends them all.
  • Prajña, a dream without dreaming, pure
    perception, not marred by the dreams coming from
    the interaction with the outer or inner world.
  • Svapna, a dream like state with dreams being
    dreamed.
  • Jagrata , a wakeful state in the outer
    consciousness.

4
The Mental structure of consciousness
5
The transition from the Magic to the Mythical
and Mental structures with respect to the
faculties of consciousness
  • Feeling/Hearing
  • Speaking/Imagining
  • Thinking/Seeing
  • or we can paraphrase it as
  • perceiving inwardly the nature as part of oneself
    through feelings and emotions
  • expressing oneself as the inner soul by speech
    and imagination, already different from nature
    (from within to without)
  • perceiving outwardly oneself as a distinct part
    of nature by seeing objectively oneself and
    others and thinking about it.

6
Transition from Mythical to Mental thinking
  • The Greek word menis, meaning wrath and
    courage, comes from the same stem as the word
    menos, which means resolve, anger, courage
    and power it is related also to the Latin word
    mens, which has an unusually complex set of
    meanings intent, anger, thinking, thought,
    understanding, deliberation, disposition,
    mentality, imagination.
  • What is fundamental here is already evident in
    the substance of these words it is the first
    intimation of the emergence of directed or
    discursive thought. Whereas mythical thinking, to
    the extent that it could be called thinking,
    was a shaping or designing of images in the
    imagination which took place within the confines
    of the polar cycle, discursive thought is
    fundamentally different. It is no longer polar
    related, enclosed in and reflecting polarity from
    which it gains its energy, but rather directed
    toward objects and duality, creating and
    directing this duality, and drawing its energy
    from the individual ego. (p.75)

7
Some Sanskrit derivations
  • ma, to measure, create, make from here we have
    derivations like ma-t?, mother, creatrix,
    ma-ya, creative force of knowledge, power of
    illusion, etc.
  • man, to think, will, wish, understand, with
    derivations of manas, mind, intellect,
    will, etc., manu, thinking creature, man, the
    first Man manu?ya, manava, man etc., mati,
    thought, opinion etc.
  • manyu, high spirit or temper, ardour, zeal,
    passion rage, fury, wrath, anger, etc.

8
Man is the measure of all things.
  • The root (man), then, on which mental is based
    carries within itself the germ of an entire world
    which takes on form and shape, and becomes
    effective reality in the mental structuration it
    is the world of man, that is, a predominantly
    human world where man is the measure of all
    things (Protagoras), where man himself thinks
    and directs this thought. And the world which he
    measures, to which he aspires, is a material
    world a world of objects outside himself, with
    which he is confronted. Here lie the rudiments of
    the great formative concepts, the mental
    abstraction which take the place of the mythical
    images and are, in certain sense, formulae or
    patterns of gods, i.e., idols anthropomorphism,
    dualism, rationalism, finalism, utilitarianism,
    materialism in other words, the rational
    components of the perspectival world.
  • When compared to the mythical structure, with
    its temporal-psychic emphasis, the transition to
    the mental structure suggests a fall from time
    into space. Man steps out of the sheltering,
    two-dimensional circle and its confines into
    three-dimensional space. Here he no longer exists
    within polar complementarity here he is in
    confrontation with an alien world a dualism
    that must be bridged by a synthesis in thought, a
    mental form of trinity. Here we can no longer
    speak of unity, correspondence, or
    complementarity, not to mention integrity.
  • (p. 77)

9
Three distinct features of the Mental structure
in Art and Sculpture
  • First, there is an awakening sense of the human
    body expressed in this sculpture, which forms a
    precondition of the later conscious realisation
    of space.
  • Second, there is the so-called archaic smile, a
    mysterious smile remote from pain and joy, but
    reflecting the awakening and dawn of the emergent
    radiant human countenance.
  • And third, there is a gradual appearance of the
    free and clear forehead, which, in the earliest
    sculpture, is covered by artfully plaited hair
    almost downward to the eyebrows a protection,
    as it were, of the still dreaming forehead. Even
    today, this forehead, unawakened from dream with
    hair loosely combed over it, can be seen among
    male peasants

10
The emergence of the Mental structure in Drama
  • In Greek Drama (based on the ritual presentation
    to Dionysus) the chorus stood in opposition, as
    it were, to the individual performers,
    critisizing or explaining their actions. We have
    an individual who acts in contrast to common
    psyche and distinct from it, even if he acts in
    the name of the god the Etruscan word persona
    was most likely etymologically related to Greek
    prosopon, mask. the performer wearing the
    mask is placed in opposition to the chorus. The
    performer was called a Hypokrites, which meant
    essentially the responder and in the early
    Greek period he co-responds mythically, as the
    individual soul, to the common soul and forms its
    reciprocal pole. He re-sponds or reciprocates the
    words of the chorus, subsuming it and
    establishing the polar equilibrium and polar
    complement. Later in tragedy this process
    undergoes a change. The performer is no longer a
    responder in the mythical sense rather, as an
    individual (one becoming conscious), he
    represents the opposite or antithesis of the
    chorus (the unconscious). The mask as an
    expression of magic egolessness gives a way to
    the mask in our modern sense which depersonalizes
    or obstructs the true ego the ego concealed
    behind it in the newly acquired dimension of
    depth, which is as inaccessible to the magic
    structure as a spatial behind.

11
The emergence of the Mental structure in the
terms of social law
  • Indian Primal Man, the law-giver Manu
  • Cretan King Minos (son of Zeus and Europa)
  • The first historical Egyptian King Menes (3100
    BC), or the first human pharaoh, who inherited
    Egypt directly from God Horus.
  • Wherever the lawgiver appears, he upsets the
    old equilibrium (mythical polarity), and in order
    to re-establish it, laws must be fixed and
    established. Only a mental world requires laws
    the mythical world, secure in the polarity,
    neither knows nor needs them. (p.76)

12
Monotheistic Religions and the transition to the
Mental Structure
  • Moses introduces Ten Commandments to the people
    of Israel, who before only worshipped the powers
    of Nature in its magic structure. He gives them
    the Word, the Language, and the Mythical history,
    and the Law to obey and follow. (It is still
    based on the Matriarchic domination).
  • Jesus spoke of the realisation of the individual
    soul and its relation to the Universal Soul.
    Jesus was often called the Son of Man. Jesus is
    in the heart of every man, and it is through him
    only that one can come to His Father. (Equality
    of men and women).
  • Mahomet even stronger insists on the religious
    dogma, which is to be followed, legalizing the
    fear of punishment for the disobedience to the
    Social and Religious Law. (Patriarchal
    domination).

13
Transition to the natural philosophy
  • Philosophy itself is a prerequisite of Mental
    Structure. Parmenides and especially his pupil
    Zeno (450 BC) defines the comprehension of being
    as spatially extended being. But the decisive
    fact is that space assumes form in conceptual
    thought and philosophical statement and
    formulation. ... Which in turn lead via Socrates
    to logic just one generation later and with
    logic, we step out into the clarity of thought
    where we can breath freely after having been only
    too long devoted to magic darkness and mythical
    twilight. (p. 83)
  • Clarity is where there is not further search
    (according to Plato) yet it is precisely this
    search for truth which supplants truth itself
    that was characteristic of Socrates and even of
    Pythagoras.
  • Parmenides first made an attempt to place the
    new element, thought, and Being because it is
    identified with thought into opposition with
    Non-Being. And this Non-Being is definitely a
    reference to the mythical context whose
    spacelessness is henceforth mentally defined as
    Non-Being. (p.84)

14
The Word and the emergence of mental language
  • The difficulties against which conceptualization
    struggled are more intelligible if we recall the
    psychic and vital profusion inherent in every
    word at that time each word was the flaring up
    of an aspect of the psyche and the visible
    psychic reality which, undifferentiated, includes
    the one or the other aspect of the same word as a
    kind of sympathetic vibration. This wealth of
    connotation in each word, which to us appears
    like an irritating hyper-fertility where even the
    unspoken aspect is conveyed, posed nearly
    insurmountable difficulties of expression to
    early philosophical attempts.
  • The Parmenides theory of Being is an eloquent
    example of these difficulties. It required
    centuries to sufficiently devitalize and
    demythologize the word so that it was able to
    express distinct concepts freed from the wealth
    of imagery, as well as to reach the rationalistic
    extreme where the word, once a power and later an
    image, was degraded to a mere formula. (p.83)

15
Polarity and Duality of the Word
  • The duality of a mental structure differs in one
    essential aspect from the polarity of the
    mythical structure. In polarity correspondences
    are valid. Every correspondence is a complement,
    a completion of the whole. Whatever is spoken is
    corroborated by the invisible and latent unspoken
    to which it co-responds it the polar,
    unperspectival world of the mythical structure,
    both the voice and the muteness, appropriate to
    myth what is spoken and what is left unsaid
    are correspondences and complements to each
    other. They suspend and supersede the polarity,
    returning it to near-integrality, to an identity
    that nonetheless diminished, since its archaic
    authenticity seemed to be irrecoverable it is a
    re-completed, not a completed identity.
  • But with respect to duality we cannot speak of
    correspondence or complementarity as we could in
    the case of polarity in the mental realm we can
    never speak of something, but only determine
    something or conceive of it. (p. 86)

16
The directional character of time in the
Mental Structure
  • The temporicity of myth differs from the
    temporality of the mind. The temporistic movement
    of nature and the cosmos is unaware of the
    temporal phases of past, present and future it
    knows only the polar self-complementarity of
    coming and going which completely pervades it all
    the times. It is devoid of directionality,
    whereas the past and the future, viewed from the
    present of any given person, are temporal
    directions. It is this directional character of
    time which underscores its mental nature and
    therefore its constitutional difference from
    natural-cosmic temporistic movement which is
    mythical in nature. Or, we might say that time
    differs from temporicity because of its
    directness, and hence a retrogression into
    mythical movement can neither answer nor resolve
    the question as to the nature of our mental
    time. (p. 173)

17
Transition from Mythical to Mental thinking
  • Oceanic thinking could be described as oceanic
    circling, reminiscent of mythical image it is a
    form of thought closely tied to the mythical
    structure.
  • Pyramidal (logical) thinking is the efficient
    form of Mental-rational (conceptual) thinking of
    which the Perspectival (spatial) thinking is the
    deficient form.
  • Paradoxical thinking is like a residue of the
    Mythical and Magic in the Mental structure.

18
Oceanic thinking
  • In the beginning (A) was the Word (B) and the
    Word (B) was with God (C) and God (C) was the
    Word (B). The same Word (B) was in the
    beginning (A) with God
  • It is a process of self-contemplation, and the
    central concept - here circumscribed rather than
    described is God. (p.253)
  • AB/BC/CB/BA
  • The fact that oceanic thinking
    circumscribes something is a vivid demonstration
    that the mythical circular world has a content.
    By destroying the circle with directed thinking,
    man, to the extent that he is mental man, has
    lost this content for space is without content.
    The lack of content, which initially appears as
    openness, became obvious in the deficient
    rational phase (of the mental structure). This
    openness has been described as emptiness, and
    indeed since then it is emptiness. For that
    reason any mere description is today empty and
    noncommittal. In this sense, descriptions are
    rational, flattened, and quantified attributions
    that initially had a mental value and made our
    conceptual world possible."

19
Heraclites says For souls it is death to become
water for water it is death to become earth. But
from the earth comes water and from water soul.
(p. 252)
Soul A
A Soul
Death
B Water
Water B
Water B
B Water
Earth C
C Earth
20
Pyramidal Thinking
  • First premise All men are mortal.
    AB
  • Second premise Socrates is a man.
    CA
  • Conclusion Therefore, Socrates is mortal. CB

creatures
mortal
immortal
men
animals
Socrates
Plato
others
21
Deficiency of pyramidal logic
  • Reduced validity of perspectival thinking
    can be found in the logic from a particular to
    general, for instance
  • A man fell into the water.
  • We are all men.
  • Consequently, we will all fall into the water.
  • If Pyramidal logic of Plato made us visualize a
    vertically constructed world image and
    philosophical system. Kants dualism on the other
    hand, where appearances confront cognition and
    reason as their object and the thing in itself is
    to be sought behind the appearances, presupposes
    a horizontal arrangement of basic concepts and
    their content. There is surely a basic
    distinction between Platonic and Kantian
    philosophy inasmuch as Kants ideas no longer
    reside above man, but are points of orientation
    lying in the same plane with man.
  • But this has made thinking itself spatial and
    static, permitting the materialisation of
    spirit and even the spatialization of time
    (p. 259)

22
Paradoxical Thinking
  • The bond which diaresis has severed a bond
    which man dispenses with only at the peril of
    denying a part of himself (the irrational)
    cannot be restored either by pyramidal or, even
    less, by perspectival thought.
  • Yet it is possible to propose a previously
    unrecognized form of thought that reveals the
    co-validity of the irrational in a form
    reminiscent of a rational mode of formation. We
    have called this thought form paradoxical and
    described paradoxical statement as the
    pre-eminent form of religious utterance.
  • From the mental point of view, paradoxical
    thinking actually establishes the bond or religio
    to the irrationality and pre-rationality of the
    mythical and magic structures. It is a form that
    mediates between the oceanic and perspectival
    thinking and contains both rational and
    irrational elements. A good example of
    paradoxical expression is the well-known
    statement of Pascal You would not seek me if
    you had not found me. (p. 259)

23
Mirroring image in Paradoxical thinking
You would not find me B
A if you had not sought me.
You would not seek me, A
B if you had not found me.
  • Whatever lies beyond the
    spatial-perspectival point in infinity that
    is, in the immeasurable verifies in its image
    what is posited in rational terms as a result. In
    other words, a statement of irrational character
    in the rational sphere has in the irrational
    structure a rational character, that is, beyond
    and on the other side of the point behind the
    spatialising horison. This re-establishes in an
    anusually clever and effective manner the bond or
    religio to the past. (p. 260)

24
Three most familiar statements on thought and
thinking
  • Thinking and being is one and the same.
    (Parmenides) This statement equates, giving
    moderation and balance.
  • Thinking is calculation in words. (Hobbes) The
    measuring aspect of thinking, its quality, has
    been changed to a quantity via the pluralizing
    inherent in the statement as well as by the
    numerical calculation.
  • I think, therefore I am. (Descartes) Here the
    isolated thinking by an individual is alone
    valid, and the spatial Being of Parmenides comes
    to be identified, as a consequence of thinking,
    with the being of a person.

25
The formation of the Ego in the mental structure
  • Descartes with his cogito (I think), transposes
    the action or movement confirming or
    substantiating the existence of the ego
    essentially from the psychic-vital realm into the
    psychic-mental and this is merely a kind of
    hyper-gradation that does not eliminate ergo
    (therefore) sum, I am.
  • The fact that such varied interpretations are
    possible at all and remain at variance even if we
    take into account the particular definitions of
    each individual philosopher, can be explained if
    we remember that all such axioms are in part
    determined by the psyche. In the rarified air of
    abstraction, they regain a certain ambiguity and
    equivocation inherent in the psyche. How could
    this not be true also of Descartes who limits his
    inquiry in Discourse de la Methode to the
    rationalistic calculation of the verities, the
    truths alone? (p.97)

26
Deficient formations of the mental structure
  • Here we can discern the tragic aspect of the
    deficient mental structure Reason, reversing
    itself metabolistically to an exaggerated
    rationalism, becomes a kind of inferior plaything
    of the psyche, neither noticing nor even
    suspecting the connection. Although the convinced
    rationalist will be unwilling to admit it, there
    is after all the rational distorted image of the
    speculatio animae the speculatio rationis, a
    kind of shadow-boxing before a mirror whose
    reflection occurs against the blind surface. This
    negative link to the psyche, usurping the place
    of the genuine mental relation, destroys the very
    thing achieved by the authentic relation the
    ability to gain insight into the psyche.
  • In every extreme rationalisation there is not
    just a violation of the psyche by the ratio, that
    is, a negatively magic element, but also the
    graver danger, graver because of its avenging and
    incalculable nature the violation of the ratio
    by the psyche, where both become deficient. The
    authentic relation to the psyche, the mental, is
    perverted into its opposite, to the disadvantage
    of the ego that has become blind through
    isolation. (p. 97)

27
Space and Time Relationship
Structure a) Dimensioning b) Perspectivity c) Emphasis
Archaic Zero-dimensional None Identity (Integrality)
Magic One-dimensional Point Unity (Oneness)
Mythical Two-dimensional Circle Polarity (Ambivalence)
Mental Three-dimensional Triangle Duality (Opposition)
Integral Four-dimensional Sphere Diaphaneity (Transparency)
28
Space and Time Properties
Structure 2. Sign 3. Essence 4. Properties 5. Potentiality
Archaic Integral Integrality None Prespatial Pretemporal
Magic Non-directional unitary, interwoven-ness or fusion Unity by Unification, Hearing/Hearkening Pre- perspectival Spaceless Timeless
Mythical Circular and polar Complementarity Unification by Complementarity and Correspondence Unperspectival Spaceless Natural temporicity
Mental Directed dual oppositionality Unification by Synthesis and Reconciliation Perspectival Spatial Abstractly temporal
Integral Presentiating, Diaphanous rendering whole" Integrality by Integration and Presentiation Aperspectival Space-free Time-free
29
Properties of Consciousness
Structure 6. Emphasis a) Objective (external) b) Subjective (internal) 6. Emphasis a) Objective (external) b) Subjective (internal) 7. Consciousness a) Degree b) Relation 7. Consciousness a) Degree b) Relation
Archaic Unconscious Spirit None or Latency Deep sleep Universe-related Breathing-spell
Magic Nature Emotion Sleep Outer-related (Nature) Exhaling
Mythical Soul/Psyche Imagination Dream Inner-related (Psyche) Inhaling
Mental Space World Abstraction Wakefulness Outer-related (Spatial world) Exhaling
Integral (Conscious Spirit) (Concretion) (Transparency) (Inward-related Inhaling? or Breathing-Spell?)
30
Properties of Forms and Attitudes
Structure 8. Forms of Manifestation a) efficient b) deficient 8. Forms of Manifestation a) efficient b) deficient 9. Basic attitude and agency of energy 10. Organ emphasis
Archaic None Presentiment, foreboding Origin Wisdom -
Magic Spell-casting Witchcraft Instinct Vital Drive Emotion Viscera - Ear
Mythical Primal myth (envisioned myth) Mythology (spoken myth) Imagination Psychic Sensibility Disposition Heart Mouth
Mental Menos (directive, discursive thought) Ratio (divisive, immoderate hair-splitting) Reflection Cerebral Abstraction Will/Volition Brain - Eye
Integral Diaphainon (open, spiritual "verition") Void (atomizing dissolution) (Concretion) Integral (Rendering diaphanous) ("Verition") (Vertex)
31
Forms of Realisation and Thought I
Structure 11. Forms of realization and thought a) Basis b) Mode c) Process d) Expression 11. Forms of realization and thought a) Basis b) Mode c) Process d) Expression 11. Forms of realization and thought a) Basis b) Mode c) Process d) Expression 11. Forms of realization and thought a) Basis b) Mode c) Process d) Expression
Archaic Originary Presentiment Presentiment
Magic Empathy and Identification, Hearing Pre-rational, pre-causal, analogical Associative, analogizing, sympathetic interweaving Vital experience
Mythical Imagination and Utterance, Contemplation and Voicing Irrational non-causal, polar Internalized recollection, contemplation externalized utterance, expression Undergone experience
Mental Conceptualization and Reflection, Seeing and Measuring Rational causal, directed Projective speculation oceanic, paradoxical, then perspectival thinking Representation Conception, Ideation
Integral (Concretion and Integration, "Verition and Transparency) (Arational acausal, integral) Integrating, rendering diaphanous Verition
32
Forms of Realisation and Thought II
Structure 11. Forms of realization and thought e) Formulation f) Limits g) Valence 11. Forms of realization and thought e) Formulation f) Limits g) Valence 11. Forms of realization and thought e) Formulation f) Limits g) Valence
Archaic World-origin
Magic World-knowledge, the "recognized" world Conditioned Univalent
Mythical World-image the contemplated and interpreted world Temporally bound Ambivalent
Mental World-conception the thought and conceptualized world Limited Trivalent
Integral World-Verition the world perceived and imparted in truth Open, free Multivalent
33
Forms of Expression and Articulation
Structure 12. Forms of Expression 13. Forms of Assertion or Articulation
Archaic - -
Magic Magic Graven images Idol Ritual Petition (Prayer) being heard
Mythical Mythologeme Gods Symbol Mysteries Wishes (Ideals Fulfillment "wish dreams")
Mental Philosopheme God Dogma (Allegory, Creed) Method Volition attainment
Integral (Eteologeme) (Divinity) (Synairesis) (Diaphany) (Verition Present)
34
Forms of Relationships
Structure 14. Relationships a) temporal b) social c) general 14. Relationships a) temporal b) social c) general 14. Relationships a) temporal b) social c) general
Archaic _ _ Universal or ("cosmic)
Magic Undifferentiated Tribal world clan/kith and kin natural Egoless terrestrial
Mythical Predominantly past-oriented recollection, muse Parental world Ancestor-worship predominantly matriarchal Egoless "we"-oriented psychic
Mental Predominantly future-oriented purpose and goal World of the first-born son, individuality child-adulation predominantly patriarchal Egocentric materialistic
Integral (Presentiating) Mankind, neither matriarchy nor patriarchy but integrum Ego-free, amaterial, apsychic
35
Forms of Bond and Motto
Structure 15.Localization of the soul 16. Forms of bond or tie 17. Motto
Archaic (Universe) _ (All)
Magic Semen and blood Proligio (prolegere) emotive and point-like Pars pro toto
Mythical Diaphragm and heart Relegio (relegere) observing, internalizing (recollecting) and externalizing (expressing) Soul is identical to life (and death)
Mental Spinal cord and brain Religion religare) believing, knowing and deducing Thinking is Being
Integral Cerebral cortex, humoral Praeligio (praeligare) presentiating, concretizing, integrating Origin Present Perceiving and Imparting Truth
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