Archive for the ‘Sympathetic Magic’ Category

Entheogens ‘n’ Such

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Paullinia Cupana (Guarana):

The fruit’s eyelike shape is interpreted as a kind of signature for a mystical vision. Because of this, the plant has certain significance as a shamanic plant and is ingested when diagnosing diseases. For this reason, the Indians do not pick the guarana berries until the first “eye” has opened. Some Amazonian Indians also use guarana for ritual fasts.

Kanna:

The South African Bushmen (San) use the same name for sceletium tortuosum as they do for the eland antelope: Kanna. The eland is regarded as the “trance animal” par excellence, since prehistoric times, it has played a central role as a magical ally in many ceremonies and was closely associated both with the rain-makers and with divination, healing, and the communal trance dances. Kanna appears to have been used as a part of these rituals.

Mandrake:

The most important source about the use of mandrake in the Orient is the Old Testament, where the fruits (love apples) are mentioned numerous times under the Old Hebrew name dûdû’îm and namely as an aphrodisiac. It is possible that the mandrake, which according to kabalistic principles is a symbol for becoming one, may have been used in secret mystical rites in ancient Israel.

Syrian Rue:

In Baluchistan (Pakistan), the seeds are used to neutralize the enchantments of a jin and to banish all evil spirits in general. A person who has fallen under the spell of or has been possessed by a jin is urged to inhale as mush as possible of the smoke rising from the crackling seeds on the charcoals…. Harmel is also used as a fumigant in Turkey to counteract the effects of the evil eye.

In North Africa, Syrian rue has been regarded as a magical and medicinal panacea since ancient times. The seeds are used as incense, both alone and in combination with other plants. The seeds are scattered over charcoal to dispel evil spirits. The smoke is inhaled to treat headaches, the consequences of the evil eye, and venereal diseases. In Morocco, an incense of Syrian rue seeds, alum, and olibanum is burned during the wedding night to fan the flames of desire.

In the Himalayas and neighboring regions, shamans use the seeds as magical incense. The shamans of the Hunza, who live in what is now Pakistan, inhale the smoke to enter a clairvoyant trance. The shamans (bitaiyo) then enter into a close, lusty, sexual contact with the divining fairies, who give them important information and the ability to heal.

And this text describing the Sacred White Lotus put a smile on my face:

Often used as an example of divine beauty, Vishnu is often described as the ‘Lotus-Eyed One.’ Its unfolding petals suggest the expansion of the soul. The growth of its pure beauty from the mud of its origin holds a benign spiritual promise….

[I]n Buddhist symbolism the lotus again represents purity of the body, speech, and mind as if floating above the muddy waters of attachment and desire. It is also to be noted that most Buddhist, Chinese, Hindu, Japanese, amongst other Asian deities are often are depicted as seated on a lotus flower.

If those phrases sound familiar, it’s because they’re copied from Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi:

The lotus flower is an ancient divine symbol in India; its unfolding petals suggest the expansion of the soul; the growth of its pure beauty from the mud of its origin holds a benign spiritual promise.

Amazing where that book turns up, eh?

In Canada, harmala [is] listed under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act as a schedule III substance, but the vine is not. (Note that Canadian scheduling laws are very different from their United States counterparts.)

Hmm, good to know….

Clang Association

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Stumbled on this:

In psychology and psychiatry, clanging or clang association refers to a mode of speech and logical association to two or more words primarily based upon word sounds when no logical association between the words exists. For example, rhyming or alliteration may lead to the appearance of logical connections where none in fact exists. This, just one manifestation amongst a more general spectrum of thought disorders, is associated with the irregular thinking apparent in psychotic mental illnesses (e.g. schizophrenia).

In sympathetic-magical thinking, we create associations between phenomena based on similarities in pattern, e.g., sticking needles into a voodoo doll is believed to cause needle-like pains in the person whom the doll resembles. Or plants which look like a particular body part (e.g., the lungs) are taken as having a medical influence over that body part. (Cf. the “law of similars” in homeopathy.)

This is obviously the same thing, just based on the sound of words, rather than on visual patterns (or natural sounds). That is, a “thought disorder” which arises from hypersensitive pattern-finding, on the same neurological basis as all of our other pattern-recognition.

The same thing could/should happen with natural sounds, of course. That is, if meditation or drug-induced tinnitus causes you to hear a sound like an ocean’s roar, it would only be “sensible” to see a logical/mystical connection between that inner sound, and the real ocean.

The Faith Instinct (Review)

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Turns out I was basically spot-on in my “pre-view” of Nicholas Wade’s The Faith Instinct. So I won’t bother covering that same ground again, with quotes from his book to demonstrate how I had generally “guessed right” about its perspective. But there’s other stuff in it that’s worth preserving … or worth debunking.

First, there’s this excellent summary of where our holidays (i.e., “holy days”) came from:

The most important religious ritual of the Christian church is Easter, which celebrates the resurrection of Jesus. How surprising, therefore, that the word Easter should derive from Eostre, an Anglo-Saxon goddess of the dawn. The Anglo-Saxon word for April was Eostur-monath, a month which probably then started on March 25, a date that falls close to the vernal equinox. Spring festivals are ancient rituals, probably observed in all religions that have existed since the birth of agriculture….

Several festivals of the Israelite and Jewish liturgical calendar are adaptations of Canaanite agricultural festivals. Rosh Ha-Shanah marks the onset of the fall rains, heralded in Canaanite mythology by the resurrection of the storm god Ba’al. Sukkot is the Canaanite fall harvest festival, adapted in Judaism to commemorate the wandering in the desert after the exodus from Egypt. Pesach was a Canaanite spring feast [marking the beginning of the barley harvest] at which young lambs, born the previous fall, were sacrificed; in Judaism Pesach has become Passover and historicized to mark the [fictional] exodus from Egypt, with the lambs’ blood translated for the Israelites into a rite commemorating the sparing of their first-born children from the tenth plague sent against the pharoah. Shavu’ot, 50 days after Passover, is a late spring festival that marks the conclusion of the wheat harvest. (p. 146, 149-50)

This, too, is a good summary:

In the view of nineteenth-century anthropologists such as Edward Tylor, people assumed that the figures seen in dreams were spirits. Speculating about the nature of death, they inferred that after the body was dead, its spirit essence lived on in another world. In dreams, the appearance of particular spirits known to the dreamer proved that this was so….

Our ancestors extended this idea to the natural world, imputing spirits to animals and plants, and then assuming the existence of especially powerful spirits whom they considered to be gods….

[T]he concept of regular, controllable access to the supernatural realm was perhaps suggested by trances. Trances would have been attained, accidentally at first, during the prolonged dance sessions of early ritual. (p. 53, 119)

But, trances attained accidentally, from dances that were happening anyway, as randomly-evolved memes which happened to produce social cohesion and thus helped the group survive and propagate? Uh, no.

Think about Joan of Arc. Her trances were induced by hearing (rhythmic) church bells. Similar epileptic seizures can also be induced by flickering lights—e.g., by sunlight seen through tree leaves on wind-swayed branches, or even (IIRC) by flickering firelight. (Epilepsy correlates highly with religiousness and religious feelings, both today and historically: “In the past, epilepsy was associated with religious experiences and even demonic possession. In ancient times, epilepsy was known as the ‘Sacred Disease’ because people thought that epileptic seizures were a form of attack by demons, or that the visions experienced by persons with epilepsy were sent by the gods. Among animist Hmong families, for example, epilepsy was understood as an attack by an evil spirit, but the affected person could become revered as a shaman through these otherworldly experiences.”) There are also many suggestions floating around (from people concerned more with shamanism than with the communal dancing which accompanied it) that shamans beat their drums specifically to assist with trance-induction. (Rainforest shamans, IIRC, didn’t have drums, just because everything rots in that humidity. They had/have ayahuasca instead, for their Leary-esque “tripping through the cosmos.”)

If you want to trace that causal chain, there, it’s more likely that early peoples discovered that trances can be induced by rhythmic sounds/lights. The communal dancing followed after that, possibly as a sympathetic-magical imitation of the “divine experience-inducing” rhythms, which just happens, by dumb luck and human neurology, to have the same effect. From that point onward, you could even have group selection effects; but the point is that these weren’t just memes which evolved randomly, and then propagated because they produced social cohesion, giving the tribe(s) in which they evolved an evolutionary/survival advantage over tribes which lacked them. Rather, even trances originated as spandrels—i.e., unintended by-products of our nervous system’s basic construction, shared by all members of our species. That is, they would exist and have been discovered even if no communal dancing had ever “evolved.”

Early people had many needs, for fertility, health, good hunting, success in warfare, all of which were assumed to lie in the ancestors’ power to grant…. Special forms of respect—prayer and worship—were developed for the ancestors’ benefit. (p. 75-6)

Well, Alison Gopnik suggests, in one of her books about “theory theory”—i.e., about babies being little scientists—that belief in telepathy is an entirely natural thing, not even based in magical thinking as such:

As scientists we think that everything is mediated by physical causality of some sort, including our interactions with other people. There are, in fact, light and sound waves that go from one person to another even if we can’t see them with the naked eye. But from our everyday point of view, it appears we are able to influence people without any direct physical contact at all. (It’s probably that fact that makes telepathy seem plausible to so many people.) After all, just looking at someone across a crowded room can set quite a drmatic chain of events in motion. We influence people psychologically by communicating, talking, gesturing, and making faces—we don’t have to touch them…. Psychological causality is often our most powerful tool.

Prayer is just “telepathy with God,” rather than with another human being receiving our thoughts directly. As such, it didn’t need to be specifically “developed for the ancestors’ benefit”—rather, it is (or at least appears to be) a natural activity of the human mind. Plus, if you can communicate with dead ancestors in dreams, then why not also in imagination/visualization/prayer?

Little by little, the ancestral religion was suppressed in the settled societies that began to emerge 15,000 years ago and has survived only among the handful of hunter gatherer tribes that endured into the modern era. The new settled societies adopted a structured form of religious practice, one in which priests controlled the ritual and monopolized interaction with the supernatural. The communal dances ceased. The songs were silence. The shamans were marginalized as witch doctors or sorcerers. (p. 79)

Are you sure about that? The shamans were the existing religious specialists in those societies. If you were trying to consolidate religious power into an early agrarian government, would you be better off marginalizing them, or co-opting them? Wade’s own book gives a good hint, for that:

In bringing heathen tribes into the fold, the early church found it expedient to co-opt their temples and festivals rather than force them to embrace an alien faith outright. An explicit statement of this policy occurs in a letter written by Pope Gregory the Great in 601 to the Abbot Mallitus who was en route to visit Bishop Augustine in Canterbury. (p. 146-7)

And this next thing is surprisingly related, if you just know how to look at it:

In coronation rites, whether by anointment or the placement of a crown or diadem on his head, a man becomes a king. Religions are powerful creators of social fact. (p. 11)

Of course, Wade doesn’t make the connection, there. But the fact is that the very symbolism of coronation by the placing of a crown on the new king’s head—i.e., over the fontanelle, cf. crown chakra (the doorway to transcendence in the human body, by analogy with the North Star as the “door in the sky” to other worlds)—strongly suggests a spiritual and shamanic basis for kingship. So don’t be surprised if it turns out that early kings and priests were the (Chopra-esque) shamans who wanted power or at least could be bought, as tribes were consolidated under early agrarian governments.

When egalitarian societies stratify into hierarchical ones, who are the people most likely to wind up in positions of leadership? Why, the ones who were already widely respected, not merely for having exhibited political/warrior abilities within the tribe but also for their “spiritual abilities.” Who would make a better king, in societies which had depended on shamans for their very health, than the best shaman in the region?

Compare not merely the “divine right of kings” but also the “healing touch of kings.” Do you really think it’s just coincidence that kings shared those characteristics with shamans? Do you really think that early agrarian societies could have fabricated such things out of whole cloth, without a history and continuity for the ideas? Do you really think that, when they were consolidating tribes, they would have dared to marginalize the only source of healing of their new citizens, and their only source of protection against the curses placed on them by other tribes (which warriors were powerless against), etc.?

Shamans have always had a “divine right” and a “healing touch.” And as Pope Gregory knew, rather than creating a parallel institution to that, the easier thing to do would be to simply co-opt the existing “institutions,” i.e., give their tribal-leading members high places in the new government-religion. It never required any cunning, political manipulations to join religion and government at the hip: they were born that way.

Unlike our view of it today (e.g., in California), primitive shamanism was never a “personal spiritual development” path. Rather, it was done as the only source of healing, for the good of the members of the community. The early priesthood, for all the ways in which it’s vilified, was simply taking over the responsibility for the most important activities of the community: the rituals which had to be performed absolutely correctly in order for the land to produce food. And since any increase in the productivity of the land meant a comparable increase in the population, these early agrarian communities were always on the verge of starvation—an excellent recipe for invoking runaway superstitions/rituals in the people.

Elsewhere, I’ve seen the suggestion made that it was exactly the formation of settled villages and larger towns that caused shamans to stop disturbing their close neighbors with drumming, and internalize their formerly acted-out-in-public shamanic journeys into techniques of content/kundalini meditation. Could very well be true.

Primitive religions have no priests or ecclesiastical hierarchy. They are practiced by the community as a whole, with no distinctions of rank….

In the ancestral religion people communed directly with the supernatural world through dreams and trances, not through the mediation of priests. They asked their gods for practical help, such as good hunting, children, or health. (p. 101, 126-7)

Yeeaaaah, but again, not everyone bangs the shaman’s drum, or climbs the pole to the hole in the sky. Much less is everyone a shamanic healer, tasked with either healing by sucking invading spirits out of others’ bodies into “spirit darts,” or traveling in trance to retrieve the wandering souls whose absence is causing the illness. Wade doesn’t even mention those specifics, and consistently downplays the role of individual shamans in primitive societies. After all, doing so serves his thesis wonderfully, so therefore….

Many of the depictions [on Oaxaca Valley pottery] show people dancing in circles, a practice Garfinkel believes held great symbolism for early agriculturalists struggling to march to the rhythm of the seasons and, on pain of starvation, to plant and harvest their crops at the right time. (p. 132)

Such rituals originated as sympathetic-magical, voodoo-like imitations of natural processes. They were performed not to generate social cohesion (even if they had that side-effect) but rather because, at the very least, imitating such cycles brought the people into harmony with the cosmos—and at the most, because without the rituals being performed properly, down to the letter, the world literally wouldn’t keep turning:

“The imperial cosmology held that the Mexica must relentlessly take captives in warfare and sacrifice them,” write the anthropologists Geoffrey Conrad and Arthur Demarest. “The spiritual strength of the sacrificed enemy warriors would strengthen the sun and stave off its inevitable by the forces of darkness. Thus, it was specifically the Mexicas’ sacred duty to preserve the universe from the daily threat of annihilation.” (p.242)

When you have no pre-scientific idea how planetary rotation works, there’s really no reason to feel confident that the sun will keeping rising. Especially if (via excessive agency-detection) that golden orb is seen as a living being. Best to “keep it happy,” then.

A symbol of royalty throughout the Mayan lowlands was the water lily, a plant that grows only in clean, still water and affirmed by its presence that the rulers were keeping the stored water drinkable. (p. 225)

They also look very similar to (chakra-symbol) lotuses. Coincidence? You know, with Om being the “sound of rushing waters,” and all. Flowers have also long been symbols of transition—that being the reason why we associate them with funerals (and probably with weddings, too). So “conscious death in samadhi,” etc.

There is some (yet-undiscovered) esoteric meaning, there, where Wade is just doing a one-dimension, sociological reading.

It was presumably in order to control population numbers that societies chose to extend the iron discipline of religion into reproductive behavior. (p. 214)

Uh, no. Fertility was always the #1 concern (cf. muelos) of even hunter-gatherer societies, as of agrarian ones. Warriors going off to war have observed sexual taboos since the dawn of human culture. The idea that any of that began to limit population numbers, even as an unintended by-product, is beyond ignorant.

If you want to summarize what’s wrong with Wade’s over-reaching book in a single quote, this is it:

Few human bonds are stronger than those of family, but the prophet’s [i.e., Warren Jeffs'] dictates induced parents to abandon and exile their teenage children. Once the innate susceptibility to fear supernatural justice is triggered, people will go to almost any lengths to obey what priests or rulers tell them is the gods’ will. (p. 219)

There, we’re into religious cults. And the principles by which religious cults form are, without question, exactly the same as those which cause political and psychological cults to form, even down to Zimbardo’s prison study. It’s not necessary to have a “priest or ruler” convey god’s will; it’s enough to have a fraudulent pandit expounding a four-quadrant view of the Kosmos, or even just a psychologist who is the sole source of validation for your self-worth.

The point being that while fear of supernatural justice is indeed probably the strongest way of binding people into a closed community (cult, tribe, etc.), “totalitarian justice” (whether secular/communist, integral, or anything in between) is close behind: In all cases, basic human psychology is enough to ensure that many people who have joined will not be (psychologically) able to leave the group.

All of that is based in simple in-group/out-grouping, with varying group-entrance and group-exit costs. None of it—even when applied to religion itself—has anything inherently to do with “religion” as such, much less with a genetic, evolved “religion module” in the brain. Rather, in/out-grouping is a basic capacity even of animal minds; and the ability to evaluate entrance- and exit-costs from the group must also exist in every animal which depends on its herd for survival.

There’s also some semi-interesting stuff on p. 218 about monasticism as an inadvertent means of population control; and on p. 165-71, regarding the early days of Christianity. This is the best part of the latter:

Not only was the culture of early Christianity Greek but several of its central beliefs have little or no counterpart in Jewish thought. They were, however, perfectly familiar in the Greco-Roman world of the first two centuries A.D. One is the worship of a mother and child, as in the ancient cult of the Egyptian goddess Isis. She is often shown as suckling her infant son Horus, who was conceived by a virgin birth. The Isis cult was popular throughout the empire, particularly in Rome during the first century B.C. The church in Egypt co-opted the cult, plagiarizing its iconography to depict mother and child in the now familiar image of the virgin and Jesus….

The figure of Isis and Horus “is so like that of the Madonna and child that it has sometimes received the adoration of ignorant Christians,” noted the anthropologist James Frazer.

A prominent feature of several popular mystery cults of the time was the theme of a god who dies and is later resurrected, as in the cults of Dionysus or of Attis and Cybele. The common idea, presumably inherited from the dawn of agriculture, was of a vegetation god who dies in autumn and must be resurrected in the spring with appropriate ritual. Followers of Dionysus, the god of wine, would tear apart a live bull—or occasionally a person—and eat the flesh raw, in commemoration of the killing and resurrection of the god. As for Attis, he was born of a virgin—his mother conceived by placing a ripe pomegranate in her bosom—and his death and resurrection were celebrated at a spring festival at which his followers shed copious amounts of blood through self-mutilation.

Mithraism, a religion with a large following among Roman army officers, included among its rites “sacred meals not unlike the Christian eucharist and offers souls a way through the seven planetary spirits which bar the ascent to the Milky Way after death,” writes Chadwick.

A follower of any of these mystery cults, whether of Adonis, Isis, Mithras, Dionysis or Attis, would have recognized many familiar elements in Christianity, such as the virgin birth, the death of the god, the springtime resurrection festival, and the symbolism of the eucharist in which celebrants consumed bread and wine that were taken as representing the body and blood of the sacrificial god. [Bread and wine are both products of the action of yeast, on grains and fruits, respectively; that is, they are living foods, produced from non-living ones.]

Given that Jews are strictly forbidden to taste blood, which must be drained away before an animal can be eaten, it would have been strange indeed for Jesus, an observant Jew, to recommend that his disciples should drink his blood, even symbolically. Indeed in a very early description of the eucharist, that of the Didache, also known as “The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles,” no such symbolism is indicated nor is any conneciton made with Passover or the resurrection…

Sunday is a day of rest in Christian countries because in 321 the emperor Constantine himself declared it should be so—in honor of Sol Invictus…. The Christian Holy Week and Easter resembled the Attis cult’s Day of Blood and the Hilaria, days marking the death and the resurrection of Attis. Both festivals had an all-night vigil with lights and were so similar that pagan critics of the fourth century accused the church of plagiarism.

The book’s worth reading, even just for stuff like that; it’s just that Wade way overplays the sociological aspects of religion. So like most books in this field, he really only accounts for around 5% of religion, completely overlooking its esoteric aspects and the origins of its symbols.

There are some other reviews of Wade’s book floating around out there, FYI. Predictably, they’re woefully uninsightful; but what did you expect? Wade’s in far over his head on this subject … but so are one-dimensional, know-it-all pretenders like Razib and Derbyshire.

The Faith Instinct

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

John Derbyshire:

Nick Wade’s new book The Faith Instinct comes out next week. I’ve been reading it for review, and it’s excellent. He seems (I’m only 60 pages in) to plant himself firmly in the religion-is-adaptive camp. This puts him in a minority among people who write about the natural history of religion. Most take religion to be an accidental by-product of cognitive processes—hair-trigger “agency detection” modules etc. Nice to see the other point of view (and group selection, too) get an airing.

I’ve got that book on order from amazon, and am quite looking forward to reading it, given the caliber of Wade’s previous writings.

But, religion is (evolutionarily) adaptive? In the sense that the belief that an Imaginary Friend in the Sky is watching you and can reward or punish you for your behaviors, no doubt it will usually result in people treating each other better than they otherwise would. And that would indeed provide a survival advantage for members of the group, and provide a converse out-group of sinners/infidels, which will further bind the in-group community together, in both war and peace. That is, there is indeed probably something to the “group selection” side of that—where the culture establishes firm group boundaries for gene flow and selection for particular traits, with marriage/reproduction happening primarily within the group—especially if it encourages women to be baby machines (cf. Catholicism, Islam). But of course that doesn’t mean that it’s an environment which anyone should be brainwashed into living in, even if, when you’re looking just at the widely-embraced, watered-down versions of “religion,” it can be “adaptive” in the sense of producing more surviving offspring.

None of that negates the by-product view, but it does provide a valid “other half” which has previously been missing from these one-sided analyses.

And yet, those two halves do not make a whole. Not even half a one. Because, what about esoteric spirituality? What about all mainstream religions beginning as Scientology-like cults, generally with a charismatic leader? (Of course, the fact that Jesus probably never even lived, but was still the “charismatic founder” of Christianity, pretty much blows the whole “charismatic founder” necessity out of the water.) What about yogis retiring to the Himalayas to live their lives in silent meditation, producing no offspring? Is that behavior also “adaptive”? If not, how do you get from a maladaptive, isolating cult, to an adaptive, community-cohesioning religion?

‘Cause Yogananda (et. al.) was right about one thing: Exoteric religions are degenerate, popularized, misunderstood (i.e., symbols being taken literally) versions of esoteric, meditative experiences. What he and others like him didn’t understand is that those experiences themselves are a product of human neurology, and get connected with the natural world via sympathetic-magical similarities in patterns—e.g., the migraine scotoma looks like a jagged lightning strike, or (in its closed-circle form) a snake about to swallow its own tail.

(I hadn’t known this before, but migraine auras can also look a lot like the Northern Lights—e.g., the souls of one’s ancestors, dancing around the North Star. ["The Cree people call this phenomenon the 'Dance of the Spirits.'"] There are some other amazing animations here—all of which are glimpses into the “other world.” That is, there are tribes [e.g., the Jivaro, IIRC] which, quite “reasonably,” take these forms and form constants as being the archetypes upon which the physical world is based.)

You can’t explain where exoteric religion comes from without understanding esoteric spirituality, with techniques of content meditation originating as internalized shamanic rituals (e.g., the believed path of souls along the Milky Way to the North Star—the “still point of the turning celestial world,” and “doorway” to the world beyond—being sympatically imitated in the climbing and descent of a pole, which was then internalized as the simply visualized climbing and descent of the spine to a point/bindu in the brain and the escape of consciousness through the brahmarandhra, cf. in kundalini meditation). And neither the by-product viewpoint nor the adaptive one can begin to account for the specific, widespread symbols which form the core of all religions. For that you need neurology and sympathetic-magical thinking. And I’d bet dollars to donuts that the latter, in particular, gets barely a mention in Wade’s book.

Like this:

Don’t try and tell me that any (esp.) agrarian culture wouldn’t have seen that as an attempt by the spirit of the crescent moon to communicate with the person experiencing the aura.

On Fertility Goddesses

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

On Fertility Goddesses:

Fertility “goddess” figurines seem to be more in the nature of prayerful offerings to conceive children. Through sympathetic magic a supplicant hopes to get a child; rather like the offerings made at pilgrimage sites. Offer a small knee figurine to get relief from joint pain, or something similar. Neolithic man was at the mercy of the elements and wild animals. To carry a humungous wife around have been a liabilty in the struggle for existence.

Toilet Water

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

At the end of the movie Idiocracy, after it worked to put toilet water on the crops, the rabble also thought that they might be able to fix a leaking nuclear reactor … by putting toilet water on it. That’s pretty much the mentality that shamanistic and agrarian religion grew out of, in the paleolithic and neolithic eras: people trying desperately to figure out causes and effects in the world around them, without any notion of how to isolate independent variables, and thus of how the world actually works, in its laws of physics, chemistry, biology, etc.

Further, postulated cause-effect chains where the cause resembles the effect are easier to remember, repeat, and transmit (especially in early societies without writing) than are ones where the cause and effect are dissimilar. (Relate that to memes, if you wish.)

So you can easily see, from that, why sympathetic magic would predominate in those early societies. There’s simply less items of information to have to remember, when the cause reminds you of the effect. (Cf. voodoo, where inserting pins into a doll that resembles the target would supposedly cause similar pains in the living person associated with the doll.)

So, those kind of explanations will be the ones that will naturally propagate or reproduce themselves throughout any population. Not just on our planet, but anywhere that intelligent life may exist: you can’t get rid of sympathetic-magical thinking, simply because its notions replicate more easily through a population than do real causes with dissimilar effects, in legitimate scientific explanations of the world around us.

You can’t get rid of primitive, shamanistic religions, for exactly the same reasons. For example, early humans (like ourselves) would feel better after vomiting out, say, a poisonous plant they had previous ingested (i.e., taken into their mouths, and swallowed). That is, the act of vomiting, after eating, seemed to “heal” them from their discomfort. From that, they evolved whole “healing” rituals based on the idea of sucking out—i.e., taking into their mouths—the unseen, illness-producing spirits from others, and either catching those in “darts” in their mouths that (by sympathetic magic) “resembled” the spirits, or vomiting them out afterwards:

In The Way of the Shaman, Michael Harner gives the basics of the “sucking” technique. After locating the place on the client’s body where the intrusive spirit is, the practitioner proceeds to physically suck the skin (pulling open clothing at that spot)—pulling out the spirit, being careful to dry-vomit after each bout of sucking. Harner recommends that one should dry-vomit the intrusive spirit into a container of some kind, for later disposal.

And so goes the “toilet water” that is religion. (On a personal note, I have been regularly reminded of how much better one feels after vomiting … whenever I’ve made the mistake of drinking more than three pints in an evening. If you wonder where my ideas on the origins of religion come from … kneeling at the throne of the Porcelain God has not been irrelevant.)

You read it here first. Literally: I’ve looked for explanations of why sympathetic-magical thinking would be so widespread both among primitive societies and even today, or of what its evolutionary basis would be, and no one has even tried to figure it out. So I had to figure it out. Same thing for the sucking-and-vomiting ritual: Everyone who’s written on shamanism knows about it, but I’ve never seen an explanation for why they’d be doing it.

Planting Sticks

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Early agrarian societies universally used a “planting stick” in sowing their crops—just a long, straight branch, used to scratch a furrow into the ground for the seed, and then cover it back up with earth.

Any teenage boy would recognize the phallic nature of such a stick, particularly when it was coupled with a literal impregnation-of-the-earth process. But that stick is also the same general shape as the shaman’s pole, providing a natural vehicle to bring forward the shamanistic (hunter-gatherer) mythologies into a later, agrarian religion. (There’s a common motif in shamanistic ritual, of climbing a pole to reach the Center of the Universe.)

What’s the first lesson that agrarian societies learn? They learn that, if they eat all their seed stock over the winter, they’ll have nothing to plant next year. (Comparably, attempts to convert contemporary hunter-gatherers into nomadic herders frequently fail when the “herders,” having no experience with delayed gratification, eat all their goats before they’ve had a chance to reproduce at replacement level.) Even if they’re literally starving during the winter, they have to leave some food/seed for planting next spring.

That’s a situation which teaches a lot of self-denial in the present, for a future reward. But it’s also a situation where what is being denied (the seed/food) has not only a phallic/sexual association (by the shape of the planting stick) but religious associations also (per the shaman’s pole, and its path to the heavens where dwell the ancestors’ souls, etc.).

So how would you expect that to translate into early-agrarian religion, e.g., the second-millennium B.C. fertility myths that form the origins of Christianity? Is not conserving seed over the winters, to grow it in the following summer via the use of the planting stick, intriguingly similar in structure (and so establishing a “causal” connection in sympathetic-magical thinking) to conserving the male seed, in celibacy, for a future “spiritual harvest”?

Consider: Kundalini yoga “works” by raising that energy from the base of the spine, up the cerebrospinal “pole,” to the bindu/point in the center of the brain—the human head being the “center of the world” (thus sympathetic-magically connected with the North/Pole Star as the comparable center of the heavens) through which we experience its sights, sounds, smells, and tastes. Kriya yoga actually explicitly involves a visualization of one’s subtle energies alternately ascending and then descending the astral spine.

The mental climbing and descending of that spinal pole is a clear internalization of earlier shamanic ritual activities, into the “internal ritual” called meditation. And along with all of the other associations of ecstatic kundalini-raising as being “internalized sex with the Goddess,” it’s hardly surprising to find it emphasizing a conservation of the seed at the base of the “planting stick” of the spine.

That ecstasy, by the way, really probably does come down to just a self-stimulation of one’s pleasure centers and other regions of the brain, in a way every bit as physical as when Robert Heath’s injection of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine into a woman’s (septal region) brain caused her to experience multiple orgasms.

Grapes

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

From Mark Stavish’s The Path of Alchemy (p. 62-3):

[O]ne thing that is strongly encouraged is that each alchemist create his or her own “philosophic” mercury for use in spagyric [i.e., plant alchemy] products through the distillation of alcohol from red wine. According to the doctrines of sympathetic and natural magic, only red wine will do….

Red grapes are considered solar in nature, or having a powerful relationship to the Sun, and they have the ability to convey its life-giving energies more directly than a non-solar plant. The symbolic relationship between red wine and the energies of life is well known in rituals, particularly that of the Christian Mass.

Why would grapes be “solar in nature”? Well, they’re roughly testicle-shaped, for one, and only men have testicles; and the sun is regarded as masculine compared to the feminine moon. So if you have a natural object that’s obviously testicle-shaped, it’s no surprise that it would be taken as “having a powerful relationship to the sun.”

Why red grapes/wine in particular? As the passage indicates, it’s from sympathetic-magical considerations, i.e., the red liquid wine resembles life-giving blood. And of course, in the Mass, the red wine is specifically the blood of Christ. Further, some writers have seen the Christ figure as deriving from earlier sun gods.

Page 80:

Traditional German folk magic encourages walking barefoot on the morning dew to keep the aura healthy and strong. In fact, in the Medieval and Renaissance traditions, any water that fell from heaven was considered exceptionally beneficial. Where it landed or how it was collected only added to its uniqueness. Water, snow, or even hail collected during the holy seasons, on holy ground, such as a churchyard or cemetery, or inside the hollow of an old oak were highly sought…. Because of its sacramental nature and use, baptismal water also gained favor in folk practices. It was also believed that you could make holy water by placing written pieces of scripture inside previously unblessed or unconsecrated water that had been collected in the above fashions.

Invisible Agents

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Why People Believe Invisible Agents Control the World:

There is now substantial evidence from cognitive neuroscience that humans readily find patterns and impart agency to them…. Examples: children believe that the sun can think and follows them around; because of such beliefs, they often add smiley faces on sketched suns. Adults typically refuse to wear a mass murderer’s sweater, believing that “evil” is a supernatural force that imparts its negative agency to the wearer (and, alternatively, that donning Mr. Rogers’s cardigan will make you a better person). A third of transplant patients believe that the donor’s personality is transplanted with the organ. Genital-shaped foods (bananas, oysters) are often believed to enhance sexual potency. [This is the type of pattern-finding which underlies sympathetic magic (e.g., voodoo), where the cause resembles the effect.] Subjects watching geometric shapes with eye spots interacting on a computer screen conclude that they represent agents with moral intentions.

Just a (Astrological) Theory

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

From Georg Feuerstein, et al., In Search of the Cradle of Civilization (p. 211):

Astrology is traditionally considered to be effective not because of any actual physical influence of the planets or stars upon the human individual or collectively, but because of the preestablished harmony between macrocosm and microcosm. In other words, astrology is deemed an expression of the inherent generative mechanism of Nature, which we can grasp, to some extent, through the theory of correspondences or equivalences [i.e., through sympathetic-magical thinking].

From Moti Ben-Ari’s Just A Theory: Exploring the Nature of Science (p. 85-8):

The word “planet” means “wanderer,” because these apparently star-like objects were observed to move relative to the immense number of other stars, which just rose and set together. Once upon a time, it was believed that there were only five such planets—Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn—because only these can be discerned by the unaided eye….

As for the constellations, they have no physical meaning whatsoever. A constellation is simply a two-dimensional projection of a subset of the bright stars in a three-dimensional sector of the sky. Individual stars in a constellation may be thousands or tens of thousands of light years distant from each other, and they may be of widely differing sizes and temperatures, because a small, weakly radiating star may appear bright and thus significant simply because it is relatively nearer….

From a vantage point in the universe “off to the right” of our position [on Earth, observing the Musca Borealis constellation in Aries, i.e., the Ram], you might still be able to see Sheratan and Hamal, but the other two stars would be out of your field of view. Ascribing “Ram-ness” to these four unrelated stars is totally arbitrary and meaningless, unless you believe that the Earth is a privileged vantage point. But that puts you back into the pre-Copernican dark ages.

The number of constellations and their boundaries is totally arbitrary. The arbitrariness is reinforced when we note that people of other civilizations (for example, the Chinese) saw a different number of constellations and gave them entirely different forms and meanings….

The definition of a constellation is based upon ancient observations performed with the unaided eye; now that telescopes have been invented, the projection of the region of space attributed to a constellation will contain hundreds or thousands of other stars that could not have been observed before its invention. There is no a priori reason to assume that these stars have less influence on our lives than the ones that are interpreted as forming the constellations simply because they were easy for the Greeks and Babylonians to see.

Since the stars are moving with tremendous velocities, the two-dimensional projection changes over time, so the constellations are not an “eternal” characteristic of the universe….

And that, you see, is why the claim that astrology “works” through sympathetic-magical “correspondences” rings even more of a death-knell for the validity of that art, than if known or yet-to-be-discovered forces were involved. (Ben-Ari successfully debunks those other possibilities, on p. 89-92.) Because, if the positions of the stars (and thus the shapes of the constellations) are changing, there cannot be a constant set of “correspondences” in pattern between any constellation or zodiacal sign, and the traits or behaviors of human beings supposedly being influenced by that sign.

The most basic and central concepts of astrology turn out to be a remnant of the Earth-centered worldview that was demolished by Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo hundreds of years ago, yet the “theory” of astrology does not take this new knowledge into account.

Of course, the seeming predictive validity of astrology is all just the Forer effect anyway….

The five planets mentioned above, plus the sun and moon, constitute the seven heavenly bodies, each of which gives its name, directly or indirectly, to one of our days of the week: Sunday is the day of the sun, Monday the day of the moon, and Tuesday the day of Tiw (the Anglo-Saxon counterpart of the Roman god of war, Mars). Wednesday, then, is Wotan’s day (a corrupted form of the day of Mercury), while Thursday is Thor’s day. (Thor was the Norse god of thunder and the sky, akin to the Roman god of the sky and of rain, Jupiter. In German, Thursday is “Donnerstag,” or “Thunder Day.”) Friday is the day of Freya (she being the Norse goddess of love, cf. Venus), and Saturday, finally, is Saturn’s day.

There are also seven stars in the Big Dipper, which itself circles rather magically around the North Star, while even pointing to the latter (in a line along the two stars in its ladle).

If you wonder where the “magical” nature of the number seven came from, and why it is so prevalent in religion and mythology, those two natural phenomena (i.e., the visible planets, and the stars of the Big Dipper), visible to everyone in the northern hemisphere regardless of their latitude, are more than sufficient to account for that. (There is no “South Pole” star; but there is, conveniently and not coincidentally, the Coalsack Nebula in the same position, which appears as a starless “hole” in the southern sky. So, although people in the southern hemisphere didn’t have the seven stars of the Big Dipper to find magical “correspondences” with, they still had the seven heavenly bodies.)

Even with no knowledge at all of anatomy, it’s easy to pick out the following major regions of sensation in the body: one’s sexual organs, a full bladder, an empty stomach, the beating of one’s heart, the vibrations of one’s voice, the eyes which are our primary means of gathering information about the world, and the fontanelle opening at the crown of the head, observed in newborn children (and associated in sympathetic magic with the North-Star “hole” in the hemispheric “cranium” of the sky).

Those easily discernable regions correspond closely with the seven chakras. And indeed, there have been numerous attempts in recent centuries to locate the chakras at the endocrine glands, and/or centers of the nerve plexuses along the spine:

It is noted by many that there is a marked similarity between the positions and roles described for chakras, and the positions and roles of the glands in the endocrine system, and also by the positions of the nerve ganglia (also known as “plexuses”) along the spinal cord (branching to plexuses by endocrine glands or organs), opening the possibility that two vastly different systems of conceptualization have been brought to bear to systemize insights about the same phenomenon. By some, chakras are thought of as having their physical manifestation in the body as these glands and their subjective manifestation as the associated emotional, mental, and spiritual experiences. (Wikipedia)

And since the axis of the (serpent/tree/river/spinal-symbol) Milky Way always passes close to the North Star (in exact line with the literal World Axis) which the seven stars of the Big Dipper point to, it would have been very natural, by the “theory of correspondences,” for the spiritualities of pre-scientific societies (esp. in the northern hemisphere) to associate seven “stars” or chakras with the human cerebrospinal axis.

Of course, pre-scientific people had no idea why the North Star was stationary in the sky, while all of the fixed stars rotated like clockwork around it. (Literally like clockwork, completing a revolution in 24 hours, so that the Big Dipper’s rotation around the Pole Star can be used to tell time.) On the contrary, since even the most complex ancient Grecian models saw the universe as being composed of concentric crystal spheres revolving around a stationary Earth, they had no idea that North Star appeared to be stationary in the night sky precisely because of the Earth. But, would that not have made that “still point” all the more magical? To be singled out in the sky for no apparent reason … while being so near to the serpentine Milky Way.