Myatt: A Desire To Know
Myatt: A Desire To Know
Myatt: A Desire To Know
However, my life - until a few years ago - has also been subsumed with a
certain arrogance, a certain hubris. For I have striven, for decades, to
implement, to propagate, what I now understand are suffering-causing,
un-empathic, causal abstractions.
Thus, in some ways, one could with some justification describe my life until
recently as a kind of dialectic, between that quest - ἕνωσις - and my desire to
change the world for the better, or what, at the time, I mistakenly considered
was better.
Many people - perhaps the majority - who have commented on your life seem to
think that your have flitted from one ideology, from one religion, to another,
and that therefore whatever you write is rubbish because you will have some
new opinion tomorrow. How do you respond to this?
Thus, the term πάθει μάθος in many ways describes what I have been doing for
almost ten years: learning from experience; learning from the suffering I
realized I have inflicted upon others; learning from the suffering I have
inflicted upon myself because of my acceptance of my mistakes, my errors -
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Hence, in many ways, The Numinous Way represents what I have learnt from
my own life-long quest for knowledge, understanding, and wisdom.
Would you say then that The Numinous Way is a new philosophy?
Yes - in respect of some such Ways, some such experiences. For I have always,
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since a quite early age, felt that practical experience was the better way to
know, to understand things.
Or, expressed another way, my personal nature, my character, was such that I
preferred, I enjoyed, I saught, practical experience over and above theoretical
study, as I mentioned in an earlier dialogue, A Question of Empathy, quod vide.
Would you care to say anything particular concerning your learning from your
practical experience of Islam, National Socialism, Christianity, and Buddhism?
There is thus, for me, in this personal motivation, something lacking - and
what is lacking is what I have described as the Cosmic perspective: that
knowing of ourselves as but one nexion, one connexion, to Nature, to Life, to
the Cosmos itself. There is thus, by knowing ourselves as a nexion, a moving-
beyond the self; an appreciation, through empathy, of how we affect and can
affect other Life, human and otherwise. There is also an appreciation of how
we can and should further develope our empathy. However, and in particular,
in such a Way as that of the Nazarene, there is little or no awareness of the
immediacy of the moment, and thus a lack of knowing how all abstractions are
or can be the cause of or contribute to suffering. A lack of knowing, in brief,
of how empathy, honour, compassion - and thus ethics and law - cannot be
abstracted out from the immediacy of the moment, from a personal interaction
between human beings.
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Islam.
For what applies to the Nazarene Way also applies to Islam. In respect of such
matters as dogma, ethics, empathy, and so on.
Furthermore, in both Islam and in the Nazarene Way one has a reliance upon
certain texts, which are open to interpretation and mis-interpretation, and
thus there develops, and has developed, various schisms, and various conflicts,
where certain individuals, and even particular groups, are considered to be
heretics, or apostates, or wrong, and where certain very un-empathic things,
and much suffering, human and otherwise, comes to be considered "justified".
In both of these Ways of Living - for both are, correctly understand and
correctly appreciated and correctly implemented, Ways of Living rather than
just a personal faith - there is thus a certain lack of personal empathy, a
particular lack of the Cosmic dimension, for both Ways are Earth-centric,
concentrating on human beings as having been created, and capable of being
saved by, a supra-personal, perfect, creator-being.
Thus, and for example, I had a problem with the notion of Jesus of Nazareth
being born and crucified on Earth in order to redeem us and show us the Way,
for what of other planets, in the causal Cosmos, where sentient life most
probably exists? Would there be, for them, a Saviour, a similar crucifixion and
resurrection? In the same way, would other sentient life in the Cosmos receive
a revelation similar to the Quran, from Allah? Would there thus be the
equivalent of Catholics, Protestants, Sunni and Shia Muslims, on other worlds?
All of this is not to say or even suggest that these two Ways have not presenced
something of the numen, and have not contributed to positive change, among
human beings. That they certainly have done, through the actions of many of
their adherents, over centuries, and through - for example - the Tridentine
Mass, the plainchant Latin office of certain religious orders, and the Namaz of
the Muslims. But they have also and indisputably contributed to suffering, to
conflict, personal and otherwise, and will, in my view, continue to do so, given,
for instance, their ontology, their basal reliance on certain texts, their lack of
the Cosmic perspective, and their lack of cultivation of empathy.
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Thus, I moved far away from any and all supra-personal authority - to conclude
that small, local, communities are the only social structures compatible with
the virtues of empathy, compassion and personal honour, and that nations and
States, and all governments, contribute to or cause, or can cause and can
contribute to, suffering and, in particular, negate by their very abstract,
supra-personal, nature both empathy and personal honour.
In respect of Buddhism, I concluded that while it was a noble Way, it also did
not, for me, provide sufficient answers to particular questions. In particular,
and as I saught to explain in my essay Buddhism and The Numinous Way,
there is the matter of personal honour, the matter of re-birth, the question of
empathy and its cultivation, and the matter of letting-be, of there being no
specific way, such as meditation, for us as individuals to achieve
enlightenment, to presence the numen.
How do you react when people call you a mage, or a mad mage?
I suppose it depends on whether they use, and understand, the words in its
exoteric or its esoteric sense.
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If those who use the term mage mean, and/or imply, the latter, then it is
pleasing, if perhaps undeserved if having found wisdom is additionally meant
or implied. For, as I mentioned, all I have expressed, in The Numinous Way, in
various letters, in some poems, and in my personal writings, are my own
conclusions, deriving from my own learning from experience.
As for mad, well perhaps wild might be apt, for some of my life, at least!
Given all your experiences, your learning from such diverse experiences, is
there one thing in particular that you have come to value?
Yes, and it is empathy - our human, our undeveloped, faculty of empathy. For
it is empathy which, as I said, I have come to understand is the essence of our
humanity, and it is by and though and because of empathy that we can
express and develope that humanity in our personal and social relationships,
and which humanity is especially evident in a mutual, honourable, personal
love.
David Myatt
2455295.313
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