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First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” Ghandhi



Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Entropy and spiritual growth

In his book The Road Less Travelled, M. Scott Peck interprets evil as pure "entropy"- the natural tendency in all systems towards a reduction in energy over time. However, most of us are not evil but are still subject to an element of entropy. When we fail to apply effort against this entropic force, what Peck defines as plain "laziness", we commit "sin". In contrast, when we resist  entropy, through love,("the will to extend one's self for the purpose of nurturing our own or another's spititual growth") we grow spiritually. This novel way of representing otherwise rather nebulous phenomena I find rather interesting. Peck is contributing to bridging that increasingly flimsy divide between science and spirituality.
Jung carried off a similar exercise when he compared the relation between the unconscious and the conscious to that of a rhizome and its fledgling sprout, the latter appearing temporarily in the spring, only to die, the rhizome (the unconscious) remaining. "Life has always seemed to me like a plant that lives on its rhizome . Its true life is invisible, hidden in the rhizome. The part that appears above ground lasts only a single summer. Then it withers away, an ephemeral apparition."
Peck, however goes further and suggests that the unconscious is God. He can then suggest that mental illness occurs when the individual's conscious will deviates from that of his unconscious (God). This makes sense to me, since I understand that one needs to be "tuned in" to one's intuition (our subconscious/unconscious) and not be tempted to follow our inner ego-voice. Many of us, by contrast, take that "gut feeling" as meaningless or primitive- I suggest it is the very opposite. The usual pattern is for us to dismiss that initial "gut feeling" or intuition and allow the conscious mind to weave its logical tentacles in a deathly embrace.
Of course God can also be seen as "truth" or reality and as such our aim should be to live "in truth" or "in reality". Hence the oft repeated injunction to live in the here and now- to be truly present. To achieve this state is a continual battle and whether we see it as a struggle against entropy or a fight with our ego- the result is the same. No surprise then to hear the shaman talk of the "path of the warrior", because a spiritual person has to be a peaceful "warrior"

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