The Psycho-Ontology of Genesis
Posted: Fri Jan 15, 2021 4:45 pm
Another long Peterson paper. The abstract gives enough of a metaphysical summary for discussion, though.
A Psycho-ontological Analysis of Genesis 2-6
Jordan B. Peterson
Department of Psychology
University of Toronto
Abstract
Individuals operating within the scientific paradigm presume that the world is made of matter. Although the perspective engendered by this presupposition is very powerful, it excludes value and subjective experience from its fundamental ontology. In addition, it provides very little guidance
with regards to the fundamentals of ethical action. Individuals within the religious paradigm, by contrast, presume that the world is made out of what matters. From such a perspective, the phenomenon of meaning is the primary reality. Th is meaning is revealed both subjectively and objectively, and serves—under the appropriate conditions—as an unerring guide to ethical action.
The ancient stories of Genesis cannot be properly understood without viewing them from within the religious paradigm. Genesis describes the primary categories of the world of meaning, as well as the eternal interactions of those categories. Order arises out of Chaos, through the creative intermediation of Logos, and man is manifested, in turn. Man, a constrained Logos, exists within a bounded state of being, Eden. Eden is a place where order and chaos, nature and culture, find their optimal state of balance. Because Eden is a walled garden, however—a bounded state of being—something is inevitably excluded. Unfortunately, what is excluded does not simply cease to exist. Every bounded paradise thus contains something forbidden and unknown. Man’s curiosity inevitably drives him to investigate what has been excluded. Th e knowledge thus generated perpetually destroys the presuppositions and boundaries that allow his temporary Edens to exist. Th us, man is eternally fallen. Th e existential pain generated by this endlessly fallen state can undermine man’s belief in the moral justifiability of being—and may turn him, like Cain, against brother and God.
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Perception and Conception are Axiomatic by Necessity
In 1962, the philosopher Th omas Kuhn brought into public consciousness an idea that has since proved very influential. He claimed that scientific data
could only be interpreted within a particular, bounded framework, which he termed a paradigm. He also believed that such paradigms were sometimes incommensurate (which meant that a person operating within one could not necessarily understand or evaluate the claims of a person operating within another). In recent years, we have come to understand more clearly both why paradigms are necessary and why they can be incommensurate. It also seems possible, now, to explain more fully why knowledge can genuinely progress, despite its paradigmatic limitations
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The mathematician Kurt Gödel generated a theorem (Gödel’s Theorem, 1931/1992), predicated on the idea that any axiomatic mathematical system
depends for its integrity on the existence of axioms that cannot be proved or disproved within the axioms of that system. Understanding of this theorem—which essentially states that some “truths” have to be accepted on faith (or at least as pragmatic preconditions for application of the system)—allows for some useful insight into how a world too complex for full apprehension might still be categorized and perceived. Gödel’s observation that something must still remain outside the system in question means, in principle, that it might be the complexity of the world, theoretically irrelevant to the present purposes of the perceptual act, that can be folded up invisibly outside that system, at least temporarily (and in a
particular locale), “inside the axioms”.
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Developmental stages became disequilibrated when a phenomenon emerged in the experience of the child that could not be accounted for or predicted by the theory typifying that stage. Such anomaly-induced disequilibration produces a state of “cognitive conflict” and motivates exploration, forcing “the subject to go beyond his current state and strike out in new directions” (Piaget, 1985, p. 10). Equilibration re-emerges when information generated by exploration alters the axioms of the previous state sufficiently so that the disequilibrating anomaly is now rendered predictable and controllable. This is a successful paradigm shift , in Kuhn’s terminology.
Under such circumstances, Piaget had a simple rule for judging progression: a subsequent stage or paradigm was “better” than its predecessor if it allowed for the representation or pragmatic utilization of everything the predecessor allowed for, and additionally accounted for the anomaly that brought that predecessor to its knees. Th is is essentially identical to the stance that Kuhn adopted in 1970. Piaget and Kuhn thus came to believe that high-quality axiomatic systems or paradigms were increasingly less likely to be brought down by the emergence of anomaly. So we know, for example, that there are aspects of experience that Newtonian physics (and Euclidean geometry) can neither represent nor control that Einsteinian physics (and Riemannian geometry) can encompass and account for.
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All systems of perception and conception are necessarily paradigmatic and incomplete. All necessarily incomplete paradigmatic systems employ axiomatic truths to protect their users from excess complexity, presuming stability where variability actually reigns. The axiomatic grounding of paradigmatic systems renders them prone to sudden and emotionally painful disruption. Despite this, some paradigmatic systems are more disruptible than others.