My question then was that when 'meaning' is removed from the picture (by Existentialism, for example), what is left? Can we call it society anymore? Or would a term like 'post-social' (I think I just made that up

u.
Moderator: Fist and Faith
NO.ussusimiel wrote:If rus was around (can we get him to come back?!)
It's not so much that society will fragment and degenerate into anarchy, it's more that the bonds between people will become so attenuated that 'society' as thing no longer really exists. This is why I use the phrase, 'post-social world'. Religion/ideology was/is a kind of glue that binds people tightly together (e.g. Durkheim's Suicide). It does this by providing a 'meaning' for society, or by implying that society is 'meaning'.aliantha wrote:I still think, though, that you're giving religion too much credit.I gather that what you're worried about is that society without religion will fragment and anarchy will result. Yes/no? But morality isn't dependent on religion -- it's a thing apart. Just because we've designated religion as the watchdog of society's mores, it doesn't mean those mores don't, or can't, exist when the watchdog's gone.
As I see it, since society imposes restrictions on us at all times, what would a societyless humanity look like? (I have my own ideas/intuitions and I'd like to see if others' ideas chime with those or are at odds with them before I talk about them.)One of the things that I have noticed about the artists and poets that I know is that there is a constant tension between their creative work and society. It's as if their efforts to see reality as clearly as possible leads them to perceive the layers of power and control that society imposes on us at all times.
I think we're already there, to some extent. Did you ever read Bowling Alone? Sometime between the Greatest Generation and today, not just voting, but other forms of civic participation have dropped markedly in America. That book is 14 years old now, and things have degenerated since then -- to the point where civic engagement today, for a lot of people, amounts to "liking" a political statement on Facebook and/or electronically signing a petition at Change.org.ussusimiel wrote:It's not so much that society will fragment and degenerate into anarchy, it's more that the bonds between people will become so attenuated that 'society' as thing no longer really exists.
I'd be thrilled to death if we could view artistic endeavors on their merits, without somebody getting outraged over some perceived insult to their religion. This goes back to the thing I said about getting rid of organized religion because of all the trouble it causes....ussusimiel wrote:And in this, I am not necessarily seeing the demise of society as a bad thing. As I said in my OP:As I see it, since society imposes restrictions on us at all times, what would a societyless humanity look like? (I have my own ideas/intuitions and I'd like to see if others' ideas chime with those or are at odds with them before I talk about them.)One of the things that I have noticed about the artists and poets that I know is that there is a constant tension between their creative work and society. It's as if their efforts to see reality as clearly as possible leads them to perceive the layers of power and control that society imposes on us at all times.
u.
This may be due to the looseness of my initial speculations in the OP. When I am talking about 'meaning' I am talking about externally provided meaning. (On an SRD site we know about internally created meaning, as highlighted by your sig.) Both religion and 'society' I am suggesting have been (and still are) sources of externally generated 'meaning'. My thrust is that Existentialism has undermined that source and replaced it with another, internal one. However, a huge number of people still look outside themselves for 'meaning'.Zarathustra wrote:It seems that the question presupposes that there is no meaning without religion. That's demonstrably false.
I would describe meaning exactly opposite as you've described it here. Since humans invent religion, any meaning of a religion is entirely internal, not relating to anything real in the world, especially to the extent that it purportedly derives its meaning in things beyond this reality. It is the existential turn that causes us to abandon internal fictions and start basing meaning on external, objective (or at least inter-subjective) truths, such as our plight on this earth, in this body. This is what it means to bring one's virtue back to the earth, as my sig suggests.ussusimiel wrote:This may be due to the looseness of my initial speculations in the OP. When I am talking about 'meaning' I am talking about externally provided meaning. (On an SRD site we know about internally created meaning, as highlighted by your sig.) Both religion and 'society' I am suggesting have been (and still are) sources of externally generated 'meaning'. My thrust is that Existentialism has undermined that source and replaced it with another, internal one. However, a huge number of people still look outside themselves for 'meaning'.Zarathustra wrote:It seems that the question presupposes that there is no meaning without religion. That's demonstrably false.
The aim of my thinking on the issue is what will 'society' look like when it is no longer shaped by 'meaning' provided by itself or religion?
Thinking a bit further on it, I have started asking myself the question,'are human beings (as we are constituted now) suitable for living in 'society' at all?' If, in the absence of an external source of meaning, we generate meaning individually, then family, friends, community and tribe seem the much more natural resulting modes of association than 'society'. And mass 'society' starts to become something that is much more suitable to economic and commercial interactions than social ones. It is this change that I am interested in tracking and investigating.
u.
The wiki on existentialism is pretty good, particularly on the over-all features/concepts. Though like "post-modern" there really isn't much of a hard, definite, center. Not really an "essence." That's kinda the point. [and it's also, in ways, not quite true and/or is paradoxical.]peter wrote: used the term 'some forms of existentialism' rather than 'existentialism' full stop. Is this possible to render down into laymans terms.
I'm no expert on Existentialism, peter, and it was more a bit of CMA (covering my a*&e) than any real analysis of the differences (turns out I was right. A general avoidance of generalisation generally works for me (though not all the timepeter wrote:Interesting U. that in the o.p. you used the term 'some forms of existentialism' rather than 'existentialism' full stop. Is this possible to render down into laymans terms. Existentialism is a hard one to grasp in it's basic form and I hadn't even realised there were different forms of it [though in hindsight name me one philosophical belief system that doesn't have 100 interpretations.
'Meaning' may be being created internally, Z, but it is being projected out onto something intuited or imagined, and so is perceived and experienced as externally produced.Zarathustra wrote:I would describe meaning exactly opposite as you've described it here. Since humans invent religion, any meaning of a religion is entirely internal, not relating to anything real in the world, especially to the extent that it purportedly derives its meaning in things beyond this reality. It is the existential turn that causes us to abandon internal fictions and start basing meaning on external, objective (or at least inter-subjective) truths, such as our plight on this earth, in this body. This is what it means to bring one's virtue back to the earth, as my sig suggests.
Religion is only "external" if you assume it's real.
I sorta agree on the distinction you're drawing between facts and meaning as folk commonly think of it. Close enough for now, anyway.ussusimiel wrote: The existential 'meaning' that you are describing is closer to 'facts' and description than 'meaning' as it is generally taken. The 'Meaning of Life' as against the 'Facts of life' and this is what a huge number of people have immense difficulty accepting. The facts of life are very stark and uncomfortable: we're born, we live, we die; no eternal soul, no spirit that lives on (as the poet Philip Larkin says, 'nothing to love or link with'). For me, it is here that existential angst and despair have their origin.
I agree with this, and part of the reason for this is (as I said in the post) the very large amount of energy, time and effort that is required to create meaning. People are often lazy and so will plump for the easy option (religion or ideology) or, rather than do the work required, they will sink into and indulge in despair. (Part of the problem (as we spoke about in the Automation thread) maybe how we educate people, what skills we give them and what personal characteristics and qualities we value.)Vraith wrote:...people aren't despairing and angsting over the fact that there is no meaning [or wanting a deity to show there is]...they're despairing and angsting about their personal inability to create anything meaningful.
I think that, although this is related to creativity, it is a different thing. Gerorge Steiner's book, Real Presences addresses this and names it as the intense need to be a primary creator. If God exists, it is the primary creator. Steiner sees the angst of certain artists arising from the sense that they are secondary, that everything they create is made with the material they has been created already. From this angst comes the intense (sometimes insane) drive to create something primary and so, in a sense, become God-like.Vraith wrote:[[there is, I think, SOME sliver of truth in that...but just a taste. Cuz a large proportion of the best/greatest meaning-makers are also very despairy/angsty]]