The Lord of Abundance is a warm and joyous card, which indicates a rare and precious type of love – a love which, once experienced, reminds us of the richness of shared emotion and commitment.
It is also a card which refers to the wellspring of fertility, whether spiritual or material. Here we see the first seeds sown of a bright and bountiful harvest. Accordingly, the card will sometimes come up to indicate high days of celebration – like weddings or other intimate celebrations of love.
The emotional quality represented by this card is deep and unusual – indicating the love felt not only by lovers, but also the love between close friends, or family. These relationships are gifts, which need to be cared for with great respect and gratitude.
The Lord of Abundance offers one word of warning – this type of love cannot be created, nor engineered. When it occurs in our lives we are lucky and blessed. Some people spend a lifetime looking for such depth of emotion. And sometimes, people try to pretend it exists where it does not. So when you raise this card in a reading be aware that you are fortunate indeed!
“How did you make your first million dollars and how can you repeat that process?”
This launched me into a deep rabbit hole.
I read through all the answers, and the answers to all the similar questions on Quora. And Reddit.
Overall, I was not surprised by what I found.
But I thought it would be interesting to share my notes with you.
Welcome to Dave’s Deep Dives. I write a weekly research report in Entrepreneurship Handbook where I get personally obsessed with a company, a founder, or an idea and hunt for the deeper insights and best takeaways to share with you. Subscribe to EH here to receive them on Thursdays.
6 Ways to Make Your First Million Dollars
According to people’s stories shared on Quora and Reddit (so take everything with a grain of salt).
Earn an above average salary while investing in mutual funds, living frugally, and waiting for 10 or more years of time to pass.This is the most common, boring, and low-risk way to make $1 million. If you can make six-figures in salary and as long as you don’t make any serious personal finance mistakes (e.g., credit card debt, over-concentrated risk exposure) and avoid unfortunate negative personal finance scenarios (e.g., divorce, medical complications), you’ll reach your first million. Slowly. The jobs that most people in this category fall into are an engineer, a lawyer, a trader, or a doctor. So if you have a good job, stay reasonably frugal, and invest safely over a decade or more, you’ll make a million dollars eventually.
Own stock in a startup.One person made their first million in their late 30s by negotiating a deal where they earned stock in lieu of part of their salary. When the company exited, the early employee’s stock became millions. So whenever you have the chance to earn stock over cash, and you’re in a safe enough position to support yourself, and you believe in the future of the company, take the risk. Founders make a far larger payout because they absorb more of the risk, but early employees who own stock options can make well into the millions in a favorable liquidity event (e.g., a secondary, IPO or acquisition). Another startup employee leaped from a $230,000 net worth to $3,000,000 liquid because their company filed for an IPO. No risk, no reward.
Pick a “winning” company stock at the right time. One person said they bought NVDA at 2011 at $17 a share. “The stock traded below my buy price for 2 years and 10 months,” the millionaire shared on Quora. At the time of this writing, NVDA trades at $596.54 a share. That is a 3,505.88% return. “I sold just enough shares to live on,” the person wrote. So if you can identify a market opportunity before a company “shoots off,” you can make a million dollars.
Family inheritance. First, this is not a repeatable process. Whether it’s lump sums of cash or paid off residences, inheriting assets from deceased relatives can catapult one’s net worth above a million in short time. Most recipients seemed to use the inheritance money to pay off debt and buy a house outright.
High commission sales jobs.One millionaire got into a sports and media agency at age 27 and became a sports agent working off commission. He took a base salary of $50,000. However, he makes a 7.5% commission on clients who pull in around $73 million from contracts alone. So if you’re good at sales (most entrepreneurs are), you can figure out a way to scale your net worth to seven figures.
Own a real estate portfolio. The millionaire who wrote the longest answer said he got his start in real estate, beginning with a $405k house he rented to his college friends and sold for $120,000 profit after graduation. This opened his eyes to real estate as a wealth building tool. He eventually accumulated 11 buildings worth $3.5 million… by raising $500,000 in cash from friends and family (almost none of it was his own money, he admits). So the lesson is real estate is a proven path to a net worth of a million dollars.
There are only three ways to build true wealth in America:
Ownership in a private business
Investing in the stock market
Owning real estate
That’s it. Everything else isn’t sustainable or repeatable, or could be lost instantly. Only these three build true wealth in the USA.
So ask yourself, do you have a plan to use one of these? Do you have a good understanding of how each of these assets work? If not, it’s time to start learning.
Fortunately, you’re already reading Entrepreneurship Handbook, a great resource to learn how to build wealth. But ultimately, it’s up to you to take ownership of the plan.
Do you have a story of how you made your first million? We’d love to publish it. Email me directly at editors@ehandbook.com to get started.
#2/VP Growth at Hopin. Bylines in CNBC, BI, Inc., Trends, Axios. Founder of Entrepreneurship Handbook (230k followers). Cofounder of Party Qs app. Dad of 3.
This article is a response to a certain fellow writer who wished me to “show that God is love”, an idea he evidently had some distain for. It got pretty long, but that is perhaps somewhat unavoidable given the scale of the subject, and it became less of a response and more of a plea to deconstruct many of the impediments to observing basic human intuitions as we find them, drawing together ideas I have written about elsewhere. I hope you find it worthwhile. You might want a cup of tea.
I — The Mind & Knowledge — How Do We Know?
There is an interesting evolutionary theory that suggests that rationality developed as a way to win arguments within a group as a kind of verbal tussle that creates orders of dominance without physically fighting. Like many such evolutionary ideas this is difficult to evidence and so inevitably speculative, but either way the idea that argument is often pretty useless as a tool for epistemology is evident almost everywhere in our society today, be it on Twitter, on comment threads, on TV debate panels: argument is everywhere and it isn’t helping us.
Indeed the idea that we have evolved a broad scale epistemological mind full of tools for knowing “truth” seems inherently unlikely unless such epistemology has a demonstrable evolutionary function, and as you can see with the way arguments often work, or the way for example the “culture wars” clearly manifest as attachment and identification with an in-group, our quest for knowledge is easily swerved off target if it benefits us in some other way.
However, “knowing” things in some form, even if only in a heuristic sense, is deeply important, and the mind seems to have evolved to generate knowledge through two avenues: tools and myths.
This knowledge is deeply related to the curious emergence of consciousness. Animals have many deep kinds of knowing, swallows know how to migrate from the lakes and rivers near where I live in the South of England to winter breeding grounds in sub saharan Africa, sea turtles make transoceanic migrations using the magnetic field of the earth. Yet we describe this not as “knowledge” but as “behaviour”, because without conscious self-representation, without the questions “how?” or “why?”, this is a knowledge as seamless as the flowing of a river or the flowering of a prairie.
But somewhere between this seamless biology and our present minds is a jump in evolution into what scholars describe as “behavioural modernity”, the emergence of particular tool use, music, dance, self-representation, abstract thought and language, everything upon which self-consciousness rests.
The emergence of consciousness then is the emergence of a mind that in some sense seeks to “know” as much as it knows it does not. A part of the mind separates out. Suddenly a human being finds themselves “thrown” in Heidegger’s terminology, (perhaps “flung” is better), into a reality in which the knower seems to emerge dewy eyed and blinking into reality, asking “how?” and “why?”.
Naturally, this stupefies us. Our current scientific conceptions of reality are not remotely close to understanding how this thing we call consciousness is drawn like groundwater from the bore-hole of evolution, nor even how to describe what it is. But the abstraction of consciousness aside our inner world of knowing and the way we share that with one another is defined primarily by representation, particularly by language. Our communal, collective epistemology is defined by our communal representation. In order to know we must say or show, to ourselves and to others, and that knowledge is then held in a collective storehouse and passed on in a para-genetic form of ideas that evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins would come to coin as “memes”.
Tools and myths then are aspects of language. Tool use correlates with a descriptive language use, one that relies little on object permanence or abstract thought, but relates to a functional intuition and problem solving. However along with this every human society that has ever existed up until the historically unique modern West has held this in tension with abstract metaphorical, mythic “knowledge”, a world of stories and beliefs, gods and spirits. “How?” and “why?” then are answered with different kinds of language, the literal and the metaphorical.
It may seem that this division has a relation to the bifurcation of our hemispheric brains. This is not a new evolutionary development, every creature that has a brain shows some form of bifurcation, and it may relate to a need for simultaneous forms of attention, the particular and the broad, the object of immediate grasping and the world around we must remain simultaneously vigilant too. However why exactly this division is so deep rooted we still do not fully understand.
While every part of the brain is to some degree involved in everything, it is becoming increasingly clear differentiation between the hemispheres is deeply important. While the left hemisphere has long been known as strongly involved with language, it seems the right deals with metaphor (I, II, III), and the emotional elements of music (IV, V), while the left interprets the structure of sound and is responsible for many of the motor skills involved in playing an instrument (VI). The right hemisphere then deals with broad, emotional, metaphorical perspective, the left with analytical structural thinking and particular motor action. In the terms of Psychiatrist Dr Iain McGilChrist the right hemisphere “presences” the world, the left “re-presences” the world, the left is the map, the right the territory (VII).
We have naturally come to see analytic or objective knowledge as the highest point of an epistemological staircase we can climb, a belief evidenced by the abundance of success science has had in flooding our world with technology. Be it healthcare, atomic weapons, aeroplanes, computers: science works. Our society depends upon it. Yet we have also come to see the knowledge spheres of tool and myth as deeply in competition. Science subordinates all knowledge beneath it, and believing myth has become inconceivable to us. There are stories that might have a quality as parables, metaphors that might have some vague serviceability, but metaphors and myths are always preceded by the word “just”. We live in a profoundly literalised world. The question then is whether this epistemological judo move that has largely occurred since the enlightenment (as I have written elsewhere, for reasons of historical contingency occuring on largely religious fault lines rather than the emergence of the light of “reason”, a myth of the enlightenment 1,2,3,4), in which our deepest forms of knowing are subordinated and rejected, is actually the best way of knowing what is true, or whether an imbalance has come to blind our world.
We can begin by looking not just at the literal/metaphorical distinction but looking at the importance of the distinction in language itself between vowels and consonants. Ancient sacred texts in languages such as Hebrew or Arabic both originally wrote using only consonants, and it wasn’t until later that scribes added the pointing system of vowels. Trying this with English shows how removing vowels takes away the emotional and temporal character of text, although little of the meaning. If you remove the vowels from a sentence you can reasonably easily make out its meaning, if you remove the consonants you get nothing. Try this sentence for a start:
Tr ths sntnc fr strt. — y i eae o a a.
Yet if you do the same thing with speech the opposite occurs in terms of feeling. You can read a sentence with vowels and you get the shape and feel of it like a kind of baby talk, or someone talking with their mouth taped, but the consonants can’t actually be read, you need vowels for them to have any articulate quality.
Consonants therefore bring semantic borders into the ambient, endless feeling of the vowel. This may well have something closely in common with how we discern objects in the world around us, for it is the actual borders that seem to give objects their significance. A game such as pictionary makes sense for this reason, and I can draw a circle with a stalk and an outline of a leaf, or a fluffy cloud with stick legs and you can guess I am drawing an apple or a sheep with very little actual information, like words without vowels.
Words though do not just evolve with an arbitrary denotative meaning like pure symbols, their significance is also as sounds. Their selection has a sonic as well as denotative relationship to how we use them. It is likely many words we use carry some sonic sense through their evolution however aspectual or vestigial they may be, and something of their feel likely has or had an unconsciously felt connection to their referent.
How we actually discern what objects are, and how our brains break down reality into what we perceive is still largely beyond our understanding. What exactly makes a chair a chair and how a brain draws objects “out” of reality is deeply mysterious. Yet it clearly relates in some way to this division of language, again mirrored by the bifurcated brain: there is the seamless, flowing, atemporal reality and there is the overlay of necessary divisions we make in order to create our world of objects. We can glimpse this distinction through the brain in patients who have injury or illness in a particular hemisphere, for example neuroscientist Jill Bolte Taylor who suffered a stroke in her left hemisphere and remained cogent enough to later describe the experience:
“Light burned my brain like wildfire and sounds were so loud and chaotic that I could not pick a voice out from the background noise and I just wanted to escape. Because I could not identify the position of my body in space, I felt enormous and expensive, like a genie just liberated from her bottle. And my spirit soared free like a great whale gliding through the sea of silent euphoria. Harmonic. I remember thinking there’s no way I would ever be able to squeeze the enormousness of myself back inside this tiny little body. But I realised “But I’m still alive! I’m still alive and I have found Nirvana. And if I have found Nirvana and I’m still alive, then everyone who is alive can find Nirvana.” I picture a world filled with beautiful, peaceful, compassionate, loving people who knew that they could come to this space at any time. And that they could purposely choose to step to the right of their left hemispheres and find this peace. And then I realised what a tremendous gift this experience could be, what a stroke of insight this could be to how we live our lives. And it motivated me to recover.” (VIII)
Perhaps I am getting ahead of myself. Before we get to where on earth “beautiful, peaceful, compassionate, loving people” comes from, first we might ask how “knowledge” crosses between these kinds of perception. Clearly objective and analytic language, the modes of science and to some degree philosophy, deal with the consonants of reality, hence a worldview extracted from science is one of reductionism that flounders at the shores of the “hard problem” of consciousness. This kind of language cannot “cross back” to a non-objective reality, not only this but it can go as far as denying it even exists. Cognitive scientist Daniel Dennett, for example, dismisses the idea of the hard problem of consciousness as renewed vitalism and calls consciousness “the minds user illusion”. (As McGilchrist has pointed out from various studies of patients with damage to the right hemisphere, this odd, insistent denial seems to be particularly characteristic of the isolated left hemisphere. (IX)) Philosophy is analytic and rational and although it does move away from the literal, framing ideas or concepts in sequence, it still falters at more comprehensive kinds of knowing, and seems to fall somewhere between the more denotative logic-language of science and mathematics, and the language of argument previously discussed. Can language go any further beyond itself?
In his landmark work The Poem, poet Don Paterson suggests that part of what poetry itself can do is enable us to relate to the form of our consciousness that emerges in early childhood, before language. As language develops the world is necessarily broken down into pieces, the differentiations that begin with self and other that allow us to represent, and so something of reality is lost from our grasp. Poetry allows us for a moment to take language to its very limits, find momentary glimpses of higher unity, of the universe as it is. Paterson, drawing on the word of Chilean psychoanalyst Ignacio Matte Blanco, describes this “atemporal and infinite connection” as something that still exists, “like an operating system upon which the more recently acquired software of perceptual category and language sits.”
Of course poetry itself is an organised form of a much deeper kind of language, the language of myth, song, and narrative that has always constituted the storehouse of cultural and religious understandings and orientation points all civilisations have held. And poetry, like religion, depends on a concept of “revelation”.
In his seminal essay A Defence of Poetry, the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley contrasts “those two classes of mental action, which are called reason and imagination”. He says that “Reason is to imagination as the instrument to the agent, as the body to the spirit, as the shadow to the substance.”
How is he able to say this? Shelley observes that something about imagination, or poetry in his broader sense, has a simultaneous relationship between our receptivity and the revelation of reality:
Man is an instrument over which a series of external and internal impressions are driven, like the alternations of an ever-changing wind over an Æolian lyre, which move it by their motion to ever-changing melody. But there is a principle within the human being, and perhaps within all sentient beings, which acts otherwise than in the lyre, and produces not melody alone, but harmony, by an internal adjustment of the sounds or motions thus excited to the impressions which excite them. It is as if the lyre could accommodate its chords to the motions of that which strikes them, in a determined proportion of sound; even as the musician can accommodate his voice to the sound of the lyre…
…Every man in the infancy of art observes an order which approximates more or less closely to that from which this highest delight results: but the diversity is not sufficiently marked, as that its gradations should be sensible, except in those instances where the predominance of this faculty of approximation to the beautiful (for so we may be permitted to name the relation between this highest pleasure and its cause) is very great. Those in whom it exists in excess are poets, in the most universal sense of the word; and the pleasure resulting from the manner in which they express the influence of society or nature upon their own minds, communicates itself to others, and gathers a sort of reduplication from that community. Their language is vitally metaphorical; that is, it marks the before unapprehended relations of things and perpetuates their apprehension, until the words which represent them, become, through time, signs for portions or classes of thoughts instead of pictures of integral thoughts; and then if no new poets should arise to create afresh the associations which have been thus disorganized, language will be dead to all the nobler purposes of human intercourse. (X)
Two centuries later, modernist poet T.S. Eliot would come to make a similar observation about the relation of poetry to “the nobler purposes of human intercourse”, its role in society, and the consequences of its decline:
If, finally, I am right in believing that poetry has a ‘social function’ for the whole of the people the poet’s language, whether they are aware of his existence or not, it follows that it matters to each people of Europe that the others should continue to have poetry. I cannot read Norwegian poetry, but if I were told that no more poetry was being written in the Norwegian language I should feel an alarm which would be much more than generous sympathy. I should regard it as a spot of malady which was likely to spread over the whole Continent; the beginning of a decline that people everywhere would cease to be able to express, and consequently to feel, the emotions of civilised beings. This of course might happen. Much has been said everywhere about the decline of religious belief; not so much about the decline of religious sensibility. The trouble of the modern age is not merely the inability to believe certain things about God and man which our forefathers believed, but the inability to feel towards God and man as they did. A belief in which you no longer believe is something which to some extent you can still understand; but when religious feeling disappears, the words in which men have struggled to express it become meaningless. (XI)
Here we are then. In a matter of decades, the words in which men have struggled to express it have become meaningless. The assumption that religion is a kind of pre-science, a primitive attempt at quasi-reason, that the dawning light of the enlightenment has broken over the horizon and liberated us, is simply a myth. A myth in the most modern sense of the word, just a myth, something that isn’t really true. The mind does not just apprehend reality through analytical chains of reason or the cold objective process of science. Even science itself shows this. Properly speaking, it seems much of what is worth knowing is to the “right” of this kind of knowledge. Intuition, imagination, experience, metaphor, poetry, myth, religion, are diving boards of epistemology. More is required, the kind of knowledge not subordinated to the will:
What were virtue, love, patriotism, friendship — what were the scenery of this beautiful universe which we inhabit; what were our consolations on this side of the grave — and what were our aspirations beyond it, if poetry did not ascend to bring light and fire from those eternal regions where the owl-winged faculty of calculation dare not ever soar? Poetry is not like reasoning, a power to be exerted according to the determination of the will… (X)
II —The Landscape of Experience and the Dividing of the Mind
I am aware I have said an awful lot without getting to God or Love. I hope if you have got this far it is clear that my view is that our way of apprehending the world in the dominant form in our time is skewed, and because of this we are obscuring basic realisations about the quality of reality itself. So with this in mind, let us turn to the landscape of experience.
Writer and philosopher Aldous Huxley, after experimenting with psychedelics, first mescaline and later LSD, wrote in a letter: “…what came through the open door was the realisation of Love as the primary and fundamental cosmic fact.”
Psychedelics and the range of experience they elicit are utterly mystifying. Studies of the brain on psilocybin aren’t exactly enlightening, it seems something occurs to the brain’s attention function, producing significant effects in a part of the brain known as the claustrum (XII), which regulates between kinds of attention, and in the words of one study “suggest(s) decreased activity and connectivity in the brain’s connector hubs, permitting an unconstrained style of cognition” (XIII).
Perhaps what the effects of a drug such as psilocybin provide is a thumping hit of Don Paterson’s previously mentioned “atemporal and infinite connection” as something that still exists, “like an operating system upon which the more recently acquired software of perceptual category and language sits.” This software seems to be lifted away for a moment, leaving something wide open underneath. One description of a psilocybin trip I found particularly moving is recounted from a Reddit philosophy user who was suicidal before a trip which saved him:
As we approached the skies began to darken and an enormous, I mean enormous, rain storm blew in. I felt the sting of the tiny drops and the weight of the heavy drops as the world around me exploded into technicolor ecstasy in spite of the darkening skies. I was inside of the moment. The moment that monks, and new age officianados chase after for years by way of meditation hoping to grasp a shadow of what I was now completely immersed within. I was swimming inside life for the first time in what felt like my entire existence.
We got to our seats on the mezzanine and the show was cranking. Ocelot, now one of my favorite jams, was blasting through the torrential downpour with Phishs’ always unmatched light work causing the entire scene to undulate in this orgasm of existence where the universe just took notice of itself because it had no choice. I danced sincerely for the first time in my life. I outstretched my arms to the skies as the universe poured down upon my body and in that instant(those instants, I suppose) I became so incredibly self aware and also so incredibly devoid of ego. Matter, sound, light, all energy, everything became the same thing expressing itself in its own unique way. I was the 13.7 billion year old cosmos. Everybody was. We were alive. We were together. In this chilly tempest dancing to express our love for self, our love for each other, and it was the most earth shattering concept that ever dared to enter my mind. I was crying tears of joy. (XIV)
Yet from an evolutionary perspective the existence of such states of the mind seems inexplicable. Why on earth do our brains contain this capacity for such experience? What is going on here? Sam Harris, atheist and philosopher took psilocybin mushrooms later in life having experimented with them when he was younger, and he also described this mystification with why the contents of experience seem adjacent to such expansiveness:
“the fact that there are landscapes of mind this vast lurking on the other side of a mushroom is simply preposterous. I mean how could that make any sense? The scale of the thing is all wrong. It violates every intuition you have about what it is to have a mind and a body in a world. It’s as though we’ve lived in a universe where if you just reached into your right pocket with your left hand, rather than pull out your wallet you’d pull out the Andromeda galaxy. So the experience is altogether too much, it’s like a reductio ad absurdum of one’s desire for experience itself. It’s as though the cosmos were saying “oh it’s experience you want, you want to see and feel and think? Ok how’s this”. And then what follows is a vision so blinding in it’s beauty and intensity that it shatters your mind. It just unmakes you. Again I have to admit the poverty of words here. We have a word for love, for instance, but what’s the word for all the love you can possibly feel, and all the love you recognise you have failed to feel at every moment in your life up until this moment. What do we call the experience of having that ocean of feeling invade you, and fill every empty space in your mind? There really are no words to describe this experience.” (XV)
Basing assumptions about the universe on the unique experience of drug induced psychedelic trips is naturally not completely justified. However it is important here to draw some implications. Firstly that peak experience we define as immensely transformatively meaningful is highly moral in character, deeply related to an apparent underlying feature of the apparatus of our brain and its receptivity to reality, and somehow simultaneously beyond the categories of language to grasp.
Psychopharmacologist Roland Griffiths led some of the first significant research into the benefits of a psilocybin trip, describing that volunteers experienced “a sense of unity, a feeling that all people and things are connected, accompanied by a sense of sacredness… love, joy, and a deeply felt sense of encountering ultimate reality. These experiences are felt to be more real and more true than everyday waking consciousness.” He also described these effects as “biologically normal”, not a bug in the brain but an inherent aspect, raising the question “why are we wired to have these salient, felt to be sacred experience encountering ultimate reality of the interconnectedness of all people and all things, experiences that arguably provide the basis for our moral and ethical codes, common to all the world’s religions”. (XVI)
Of course in the modern world the desire for such an all-at-once hit of experience is framed in an individualistic, therapeutic context and seems to constitute a kind of overcompensating desire for a rebalancing. Psychedelics may turn out to have some therapeutic benefit, even if said context seems to diminish their meaning, but they are not themselves the answer to the question which they raise. Why are we wired to have these experiences?
This is of course not limited to psychedelic trips. Jill Bolte Taylor’s description of the right hemisphere glimpsing “a world filled with beautiful, peaceful, compassionate, loving people” reflects a similar experience, and we can also find this within our most ordinary self-observation. The contemporary practice of “mindfulness”, derived loosely from introspective traditions involves the act of directing attention to the quality of experience, of inner witness as an inherent good, as atheist Sam Harris again put it in a discussion on spirituality for non-believers:
…merely witnessing experience, the fact that consciousness itself has an intrinsic quality of well-being, that that which is aware of sadness isn’t truly sad and that which is aware of joy is the same thing as that which is aware of sadness and so you can keep falling back into that position of merely witnessing and that can become very very expansive and that can become a context of a kind of self transcending love and happiness. (XVII)
Likewise, philosopher Thomas Nagel has observed in an essay on death that something about experience itself contains an inherent good: “There are elements which, if added to one’s experience, make life better; there are other elements which if added to one’s experience, make life worse. But what remains when these are set aside is not merely neutral: it is emphatically positive. … The additional positive weight is supplied by experience itself, rather than by any of its consequences.” (XVIII)
These are observations about human experience rather than about the universe itself, but it is a trend of modern epistemology to assume that all experience is arbitrary until it can be reduced to an objective set of propositions. But as I hope I have attempted to show, this is problematic at best.
But one objection to the valuing of the human desire for unity and intrinsic connection, or for an ethical ontology based around consciousness and selfhood, is that we are a spec of reality, and what is out there is vast and indifferent, as the physicist Lawrence Krauss put it:
“We now know that we are more insignificant than we ever imagined. If you get rid of everything we see, the universe is essentially the same. We constitute a one percent bit of pollution in a universe…we are completely irrelevant. Why such a universe in which we are so irrelevant would be made for us is beyond me.” (XIX)
The problems here are many. Relevance is, obviously, relative. And since as far as we know we are the only conscious creatures in the entire observable universe, and since we look out at its stars and nebulae coming to us down the light-years and respond with awe and curiosity at its beauty, it is no less fanciful to say that we are the universe being aware of itself, and thus could not be less significant.
Either way, insignificance is an interpretation. We are left with two choices. The first is to assume everything outside of our own reality cannot be described using anything other than facts that entirely resist value judgements, which is the ground of the scientific method as we know it, and what makes it so powerful as a tool. Science attempts to exclude value judgements and be as objective as conceivably possible, an approach which labours to lift it from dogma but one that naturally produces a highly aspectual kind of truth. Krauss’ statement is therefore ironically unscientific, the product of stretching the scientific approach into a worldview and forcing it to make value judgements it is not equipped to make. If indifference is framed in the approach then indifference is what you will get, it takes monumental arrogance to claim you have discovered it.
One could also observe that this approach seems akin to studying music without ever listening to it lest its beauty or subjective quality influence your understanding of its structure. As a heuristic approach this might be fine. Yet doing this solely would inevitably cause you to see music as something entirely different than what it is, something coldly structural and lifeless. A second approach, taking the music metaphor, is to recognise that beauty and harmony as they are met subjectively are as important to its reality as its structure, and objective separation does not give us a more true world but a less true one.
After all science, as objective as it has become, rests on a religious framework. It depends on the assumption that the universe is ordered, law-given, harmonious and intelligible — qualities that can not explain themselves any more than I can bite my own teeth.
These divisions between spheres of reality have significant consequences in society today. Our avenues of truth have become increasingly siloed in such a way that apparently simple concepts seem to divide us. What is a woman? Your choice is between insistent literalism: only a corollary of sex and nothing else, or else a literalised metaphor: if I feel like a woman on the inside or I like feminine things, I am a woman. These two sides seem to fight it out across social media on a daily basis, in arguments that look oddly similar to Dawkins vs Creationist debates about a literalist view of Genesis that Origen described 1700 years ago as “ignorant” (XX).
Yet many of our contemporary debates rest on strangely muddled Christian foundations. The entire of the ideology of gender muddles together a strange rejection of Christian categories with a quasi-appropriation of its moral ideas. Believing people have some particular value because they are marginalised or oppressed, and the emergence of competitive victimhood as a way of apparently re-ordering society is a limb pulled from Christian morality. Yanked from its foundations, recycled into a literalist world that denies the metaphysics in favour of an oddly incongruent individualism that is drifting towards transhumanism, these ideas circle back on themselves, and the constantly evolving morality of progressivism seems to mirror Caligula putting his laws so high up no one could read them and then enforcing them nonetheless. They are chaotic, self-contradictory and unmoored from any questions of why we believe them.
III — Morality and Metaphysics
This takes us to an important issue of our time. We cannot exist without moral beliefs, morality is our way of being, corporately and individually, but in order for us to not descend into relativism we have to accept that moral claims are metaphysical claims. To believe some person in a war torn part of the world is inherently valuable and possessing of rights is not different from believing a piece of land is holy, it is a belief, and one that for the most part in the West we actually believe.
Yet we must also hold this in tension with the fact that we don’t know if we do believe it. Author of popular book Sapiens Yuval Noah Harari said that “human rights are just like heaven and like God, it’s just a fictional story that we have invented and spread around. It may be a very nice story, it may be a very attractive story, but it’s just a story. It’s not a reality. It’s not a biological reality. Just as jellyfish and woodpeckers and ostriches have no rights, homosapiens have no rights also, take a human, cut him open, look inside, you find the blood and you find the heart and lungs and kidneys but you don’t find any rights.” (XXI)
You also don’t find consciousness. This quote might be read as a blunt description of what we call the “hard problem” of consciousness, and such an approach, I hope it is clear by now, represents the entire problem of the real “fiction” we have told ourselves: the idea that an objective epistemology can function as a total way of knowing, as a worldview.
Moral claims then are clearly metaphysical claims. While Herodotus might have observed that custom is king, our customs relate to how we see the world, and one of the characteristics of a moral worldview, especially in the West, however individualistic or multicultural we become, is the belief that certain moral truths are universal. You can’t attend a protest about injustice, violence or war crimes somewhere in the world, then come home to the belief that the idea on which such protestation is based is “just a fictional story that we have invented”. We believe our moral claims really are true, yet divorced from metaphysics they leave us with a deeply incongruous world.
So what if the world was the other way around? If you ask the question of whether you can maintain Christian morality we still hang on to deeply if you don’t really believe Christianity is true, in a strange way you are asking the wrong question. We already accept it as true, we have just fostered a mind that has unmoored truth from stories, traditions and metaphysical claims under the inane belief that what is really true is what you find when you break something down until, unsurprisingly, you don’t find very much. We still hear the music, but all we allow ourselves to believe in is the silent and soundless notation.
What Yuval Noah Harari is describing are “tropes” as much as they are stories: symbols, metaphors and metonymies that we used to orient our world. These parts of our world are ever-present and intuitive. If someone you love gives you a gift, for example, you don’t take it apart and analyze its molecular structure and conclude that it is nothing. But nor would you say that the meaning of a gift is an arbitrary story we make up and put about, thus making it kind of nothing apart from that we pretend it is something. The meaning is there, the stories we tell reveal our world because we cannot exist without them, we are them. They have a causal reality, they have a conscious reality. They may be mystifyingly emergent, but they are as real as electricity.
One could suggest then that our minds receive reality as much as they create it. We tend to think of the brain as a kind of light bulb that “emits” consciousness, rather than “permitting” or even “receiving”, a theory that posits a bottom up materialism that is to say the least, unproven, to say more, a category error. What we separate out as “consciousness”, if not fundamentally separate, reflects that reality is qualitative as much as it is quantitative, and that our reception of it may be subjective, but this does not make it arbitrary. Beauty or goodness then would not be stories we make up, but aspects of reality we encounter, meaning would be another.
Of course, one of the most important stories we tell ourselves, or have told ourselves, is about our very existence, about why there is anything, why it is beautiful or good, vast or terrifying. Here we are at last: ὁ Θεὸς ἀγάπη ἐστίν. God is love.
Latin inscription of Philippians 2:10, Church of the Gesù, Rome — Marie-Lan Nguyen
At some point, disappointing as it may be, this essay will end at a diving board. If my points so far have any validity then there is a shore beyond which reasoning can only point, and the conclusion is subjective in the most meaningful sense of the word. But that said, reason and objectivity must be signposts of truth, dismissing them only takes us to the liberal handed, quasi-reasoning and fundamentalist gullibility many people are afraid of when they think of the clichés of religion. It still matters, and we can go as far as we can.
Love is not the only epithet used for God in the Christian bible, nor does love as we often use it quite encompass the scale in which the love of God is illustrated in the bible or the history of theology and art. Love translates several words that are used in the bible, most notably the Hebrew Ḥeseḏ, and the Greek agapé, each carrying an aspect of elements we use the extremely flexible and clearly sentimentalised word for in modern English. Indeed, most visions of the presence of God in the bible strike not sentimental love but terror, in Isaiah 6 when the prophet has a vision of the throne room of God in which angels circle singing “Holy, Holy, Holy”, he falls on his face and responds “Woe is me! For I am lost!”. In the New Testament book of Revelation upon seeing the risen Jesus, John falls on his face “as though dead”. The shepherds who see angels above their flocks in Luke 2 are “terrified”, and the response of the angels not to be afraid reflects the commonest command given in the bible: “do not fear”. God’s love is then is not a sentimental platitude, but inconceivably awe striking, holy.
God’s moral nature is also one that grants us freedom and responsibility. A strange and paradoxical relationship is upheld in theology that is oddly upheld in our modern balancing of subjective reality and physicalism, a balance between sovereignty and the responsibility that comes with free choice. The early chapters of Genesis seem to equate the emergence of consciousness with “the knowledge of good and evil”, a merism that reflects not just dualism but a plunging into a moral world of self-awareness and freedom. Like our own instinctive morality today still clearly reflects, a moral standard of love is simultaneously a judge against those who violate it.
Of course the impediment of our own violation of this command to rule over sin seems oddly inevitable. Jill Bolte Taylor’s glimpse of a right hemisphere of “beautiful, peaceful, compassionate, loving people” is an obvious admittance of the fact that while we would all like the world to look like this, we more often do not find it does. In fact, it is rare that we do. The history of Christianity itself is a history of men appropriating and then egregiously violating their own commandments, and this history of hypocrisy understandably stands against many people’s belief in the real thing.
But this dim reflection of judgement upon Christianity itself carries in it part of what Christianity proposes. In the New Testament the Stoic concept of conscience is mirrored in the image of God that we bear, a sense that we carry within us both a self and a reflection of the standard against which and by which we are able to know ourselves. Perhaps one might argue that this is what language-defiant experiences of “sacredness… love, joy, and a deeply felt sense of encountering ultimate reality”(XVI), or that previously mentioned young man’s experience of “love for self, our love for each other…the most earth shattering concept that ever dared to enter my mind” are a reflection of. Such a reality is part of us, as well as being a standard we are held to. We bear the image we also violate.
The proposition of Christianity is that the fragments of the experience we encounter, and the moral intuitions we possess as well as their contradictions in the world, their mixing with suffering and struggle that characterise much of human reality, are brought together by a second kind of revelation, the revelation of the bible and most of all, universally, in the person of Jesus, around which all of these fragments resolve into integration.
Besides the world of inner, subjective experience, the New Testament makes clear that while the Kingdom of God begins in the inner place, it looks like something on the outside. While certain moral ideas are absorbed from various ideas circulating in the Roman world, nothing prepares for Jesus radical command to love even your enemies, nor the cross societal imperative of the apostolic mission to love with the self-sacrificing love of Jesus.
Writer and reluctant atheist Douglas Murray said in a discussion with the theologian N.T. Wright about the role of Christianity in a world of disbelief, that while he had deep criticisms of much the church in its present state, as well as a reluctance to believe certain things, he had been profoundly emotionally struck by member of a black church who had offered forgiveness to a young white supremacist who had walked into a service and shot several in the church as they worshipped. He was at the time doing speaking events with Cornel West, a Christian socialist who Murray disagrees with on almost everything, but Murray described being deeply moved by West referring to the white shooter as his “brother” (XXII).
In Matthew 11 when Jesus is asked by John the Baptist from prison if he is indeed “the one who is to come” and Jesus replied: “Go back and report to John what you hear and see: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is proclaimed to the poor.” Jesus teaches that these signs are the outward manifestation of a Kingdom that comes not in power but in humility and charity, and in Jesus claim that it is he himself that will judge the world on their treatment of “the least of these”.
Glimpses of harmony, higher unity, beauty and goodness may indeed fire us to seek inner experience. But the message of the New Testament is that this harmony emerges in the world as ordinary love for one another, love as you have been loved.
And so it is that the failures and hypocrocies of Christian history are mixed with the quiet and constant working out of this belief. So many of the intrinsic values we take for granted in Western society, be it concern for the marginalised, the emergent concepts of human rights or conceptions of healthcare emerging from Christian efforts in the fourth century, as Albert Jonsen, University of Washington historian of medicine describes while early medical history begun with the Greeks and the Romans who might care for slaves as a resource only:
“the second great sweep of medical history begins at the end of the fourth century, with the founding of the first Christian hospital at Caesarea in Cappadocia, and concludes at the end of the fourteenth century, with medicine well ensconced in the universities and in the public life of the emerging nations of Europe…“During these centuries the Christian faith . . . permeated all aspects of life in the West. The very conception of medicine, as well as its practice, was deeply touched by the doctrine and discipline of the Church. This theological and ecclesiastical influence manifestly shaped the ethics of medicine, but it even indirectly affected its science since, as its missionaries evangelized the peoples of Western and Northern Europe, the Church found itself in a constant battle against the use of magic and superstition in the work of healing. It championed rational medicine, along with prayer, to counter superstition.” (XXIII)
Yet in spite of its role in shaping our societies, Jesus message was not a political one. When Jesus was asked if we should pay taxes he asked whose image was on the coin, when they replied that it was Caesar he said “Give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s”. This statement, the undercurrent of which nonetheless leads Jesus to the cross, reflects a far deeper dynamic to the teaching of Jesus message. Perhaps it is political in that it offers to overturn the very dynamics of worldly power by proclaiming a radical concern for the lesser and an equality that dismisses temporal authority. Yet Jesus death represents these dynamics not as a game of social welfare but a bursting through of a moral reality itself through transformed individuals. While Christianity has been entangled with the empires of the world, attempts to politicise the moral dynamics of Christianity in forms such as Marxism without any of the myths or beliefs are blood soaked and disastrous. Jesus overturning of power commands a transformation of the inward self that makes itself known as a radical compassion for the lesser, an aligning of the will with the love of God.
In the culmination of Martin Luther King Jr’s ‘I have a dream speech’, he recites words “I have a dream that Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low: and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places plain, And the glory of the Lord will be revealed”.
These words rarely make popular quotations from this immensely powerful and history-altering speech, yet at the time they would have rung with familiar meaning to anyone in the Western world listening. They come from the old testament book of Isaiah, in a prophetic passage widely taken by Christians to foresee the coming of Jesus, and are preceded by the words that open Mark’s gospel with the introduction of John the Baptist: A voice of one calling: “In the wilderness prepare the way for the Lord; make straight in the desert a highway for our God”.
King, a preacher and deeply learned theologian, understood this as representing poetically the great message of the Old Testament prophets, that the redemption of the world looks like the equality civil rights is demanding, that the low are lifted up and the high are brought down. The song of Hannah in the book of Samuel says “The Lord makes poor and rich; He humbles, He also exalts. He raises the poor from the dust, He lifts the needy from the garbage heap”.
History to this day is still shaped by the quiet outworking of this Kingdom proclaimed by the person of Jesus. We recall its echos instinctively across culture wars and global outcries at values that come from we know not where. This intuition is found in our very minds, in the depths of moral experience we are capable of feeling, both in mind shattering immensity and in quiet and simple reflection. Love is not a platitude, it is the grounding of who we are. Julian of Norwich, a fourteenth century anchoress writing during the backdrop of the brutal hundred years war, the peasants revolt and the destruction of the black death, wrote:
Our faith comes from the natural love of our soul and from the bright light of reason and from the steadfast perception of God which we have when we are first made…the sensory being is grounded in nature, in mercy and grace, and this ground enables us to recieve gifts which lead us to eternal life…God is nearer to us than our own soul. (LT55–56)
Julian, the first woman recorded writing in the English language (that we know for certain is a woman), wrote that she received a series of visions aged thirty when she was near to death. Later she wrote these “showings” in a short text and a longer texts in which she considers more deeply the meanings. Throughout the visions of God’s love she wrestles with and asks questions of sin and of the contradictions of justice and love, returning to the vision of the compassion of God that will, as she comes back to, “make all manner of things well”.
She concludes the purpose of her visions: “Do you want to know what your Lord meant? Know well that love was what he meant. Who showed you this? Love. What did he show? Love. Why did he show it to you? For love…this is how I was taught that our Lord’s meaning is love.” (LT86), she also says: “I saw that for us he is everything that we find good and comforting. He is our clothing, wrapping us for love, embracing and enclosing us for tender love, so that he can never leave us, being himself everything that is good for us, as I understand it.” (LT- 5)
Here we are then, a diving board. Considering Christianity in the modern world is a reflection of how personal such things are, and we all have our own obstacles to overcome, not the least the embarrassment and discredit of those calling themselves Christians and acting otherwise. But history has been no different. When Julian was writing those words a lengthy war was being fought across Europe by knights and kings who also called themselves Christians, as piously as anyone today. But so too has the outworking of Jesus message gone on, and it permeates more of what we value than we are often willing to observe. Perhaps it is fitting I end this lengthy essay with a bible text. Reasoning will take us no further, as Thomas Aquinas said when towards the end of his life he ceased his writing, and being implored to continue he said: “All that I have written appears to be as so much straw after the things that have been revealed to me”.
So, from Isaiah 55:
“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,” declares the Lord. “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts. As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and do not return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flourish, so that it yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater, so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it. You will go out in joy and be led forth in peace; the mountains and hills will burst into song before you, and all the trees of the field will clap their hands. Instead of the thornbush will grow the juniper, and instead of briers the myrtle will grow. This will be for the Lord’s renown, for an everlasting sign, that will endure forever.”
There was a wealthy man who was bothered by severe eye pain. He consulted many physicians and was being treated by several. He consumed many drugs and underwent numerous injections. However, the ache persisted with more vigor than before.
At last, a monk who was an expert in treating such illness, was called by the suffering man. The monk understood his problem and said that for some time he should gaze upon only green colors and not let his eyes fall on any other colors. It was a strange prescription, but he was desperate and decided to try it.
The wealthy man got together a group of painters and purchased barrels of green paint, directing that every object his was likely to see be painted green, just as the monk had prescribed.
When the monk came to visit him after a few days, the man’s servants approached with buckets of green paint and poured it on him, since his robe was red, lest their master see another color prompting his eye ache to return.
Experiencing this, the monk laughed and said, “If only you had purchased a pair of green spectacles, costing just a few dollars, you could have saved these walls, trees, pots and other articles. And you could have saved a large share of your fortune. It is foolish to shape the world, let us change our vision and shape ourselves first.”
Author Unknown
AN OPPORTUNITY FOR DAILY REFLECTION BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE SCHOOL OF PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY
The man represented by the Knight of Wands will be a loving and open-hearted person, with a strong sense of morality and a great sense of humour. He will be active, energetic and willing to help. You often find these types of men in the healing professions, or in other areas where they are required to assist, guide and support others.He’s a man with a deep respect for life and all living things, attuned to Nature and to the creatures of the earth. He has a deep well of compassion which spills over readily to anyone who needs his help, but he also has the restraint to know when too much assistance is a bad thing. Then he will act to enable and empower, rather than to assisting.He’s a faithful, and dedicated family man, being fully engaged in the domestic situation. His life reflects his high ethical standards, though he is not given to sermonising, nor standing in judgement on others. He could be defined as an idealistic realist – accepting the frailties of the race, whilst doing his best to strengthen it.His faults spring from his good points – for instance, he dislikes causing pain, and will therefore delay when he needs to act if he thinks it will hurt other people. He will sometimes remain in limiting or painful circumstances because of this. His sense of rightness and duty is intense, and sometimes drives him to make foolish choices and decisions. He will shy away from conflict and unpleasant situations, especially when these arise as a result of his own needs, though he will never walk away from a struggle on behalf of somebody else.If you are regarding this card as a spiritual change, then see it as an indication that the warrior of right and light is required – you’ll need to stand up for something that matters, and which is unable to defend itself.
Power grabs, partisan stand-offs, propaganda, and riots make for tantalizing fiction, but what do we do when that drama becomes a reality all around us? For a country founded as an escape from British tyranny, the United States seems to have devolved into a land where tyrants rise to power, sycophants blindly follow, and the entire nation suffers. As ancient Greek philosophers warned us, chaotic tragedy unfolds in the absence of reason, and the only cure is a return to wisdom and virtue. America’s founding fathers knew this lesson all too well and dreamed of an enlightened citizenry guided by better-than-ideological dictators. Using contemporary events to illuminate universal human weaknesses, Andrew Fiala charts the perennial history of tyrannical takeovers and the masses who support them and ultimately suffer under their rule. Ultimately, Fiala also points to a solution. Knowing the cyclical nature of tyranny, we can build safeguards against our worst inclinations and keep alive the freedoms our founding fathers envisioned for this nation.
Andrew Fiala is professor of philosophy and Director of the Ethics Center at Fresno State. He writes a column on ethics, religion, and politics for the Fresno Bee: https://www.fresnobee.com/living/liv-…
Fiala has published books and articles on war, pacifism, political philosophy, and religion. He also writes about applied ethical issues such as euthanasia, abortion, the death penalty, and animal welfare.
Fiala loves the classroom, where he encourages students to think carefully about the tough issues of our day. He teaches courses in ethics, applied ethics, political philosophy, and the history of philosophy.
More information, including links to articles and interviews, can be found at www.andrewfiala.com.
Adi Da Samraj (born Franklin Albert Jones; November 3, 1939 – November 27, 2008)[1] was an American-born spiritual teacher, writer and artist.[3] He was the founder of a new religious movement known as Adidam.
Adi Da became known in the spiritual counterculture of the 1970s for his books and public talks and for the activities of his religious community. He authored more than 75 books, including those published posthumously, with key works including an autobiography, The Knee Of Listening, spiritual works such as The Aletheon and The Dawn Horse Testament, and social philosophy such as Not-Two Is Peace.[2]
Adi Da’s teaching is closely related to the Indian tradition of nondualism.[4]: 197 He taught that the ‘ego’—the presumption of a separate self—is an illusion, and that all efforts to “attain” enlightenment or unity with the divine from that point-of-view are necessarily futile.[5] Reality or Truth, he said, is “always already the case”:[4]: 198 it cannot be found through any form of seeking, it can only be “realized” through transcendence of the illusions of separate self in the devotional relationship to the already-realized being.[6] Distinguishing his teaching from other religious traditions, Adi Da declared that he was a uniquely historic avatar and that the practice of devotional recognition-response to him, in conjunction with most fundamental self-understanding, was the sole means of awakening to seventh stage spiritual enlightenment for others.[7]: 99
Adi Da founded a publishing house, the Dawn Horse Press, to print his books.[8] He was praised by authorities in spirituality, philosophy, sociology, literature, and art,[9][10][11][12] but was also criticized for what were perceived as his isolation[13][14] and controversial behavior.[15][16] In 1985, former followers made allegations of misconduct:[17][18] two lawsuits were filed, to which Adidam responded with threats of counter-litigation.[19] The principal lawsuit was dismissed and the other was settled out of court.
In his later years, Adi Da focused on creating works of art intended to enable viewers to enter into a “space” beyond limited “points of view”. He was invited to the 2007 Venice Biennale to participate through a collateral exhibition, and was later invited to exhibit his work in Florence, Italy, in the 15th century Cenacolo di Ognissanti and the Bargello museum.[20][21] His work was also shown in New York, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, Miami, and London.
Born in Queens, New York and raised on Long Island,[22] his father was a salesman and his mother a housewife. Adi Da claimed in his autobiography, The Knee Of Listening, that he “was born in a state of perfect freedom and awareness of ultimate reality”, which he called the “Bright”, and that he “sacrificed that reality at the age of two, so that he could completely identify with the limitations and mortality of suffering humanity” in order to discover ways to help others “awaken to the unlimited and deathless happiness of the Heart”.[23] A sister, Joanne, was born when he was eight years old. He served as an acolyte in the Lutheran church during his adolescence and aspired to be a minister, but after leaving for college in the autumn of 1957,[24] expressed doubts about the religion to his Lutheran pastor. Adi Da attended Columbia University where he graduated in 1961 with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy. He went on to complete a master’s degree in English literature at Stanford University in 1963, under the guidance of novelist and historian Wallace Stegner.[24][7]: 86–88 [25]: 80 [2] His master’s thesis was “a study of core issues in modernism, focused on Gertrude Stein and the leading painters of the same period”.[26]
During and after his postgraduate studies, Adi Da engaged in an experiment of exhaustive writing, a process in which he wrote continuously for eight or more hours daily, as a kind of “yoga” where every movement of conscious awareness, all experiences, internal or external, were monitored and recorded. In this exercise, he felt that he discovered a structure or “myth” that governed all human conscious awareness, a “schism in Reality” that was the “logic (or process) of separation itself, of enclosure and immunity, the source of all presumed self-identity”.[27]: 94 He understood this to be the same logic hidden in the ancient Greek myth of Narcissus, the adored child of the gods, who was condemned to the contemplation of his own image and suffered the fate of eternal separateness. He concluded that the “death of Narcissus” was required to fulfill what he felt was the guiding purpose of his life, which was to awaken to the “Spiritually ‘Bright’ Condition of Consciousness Itself” that was prior to Narcissus, and communicate this awakening to others.[27]: 94
In the context of this exploration of consciousness in 1963, Adi Da experimented with various hallucinogenic and other drugs.[28][29] For 6 weeks he was a paid test subject in drug trials of mescaline, LSD, and psilocybin conducted at a Veterans Administration hospital in California.[30] He wrote later that he found these experiences “self-validating” in that they mimicked ecstatic states of consciousness from his childhood, but problematic as they often resulted in paranoia, anxiety, or disassociation.[31][32][33] While living with the support of his girlfriend, Nina Davis, in the hills of Palo Alto,[34] he continued to write, meditated informally, and studied books by C.G. Jung, H.P. Blavatsky, and Edgar Cayce, in order to make sense of his experiences.[35][36]
Spiritual exploration (1964–1970)
In June 1964, Adi Da responded to an intuitive impulse to leave California in search of a spiritual teacher in New York City.[37] Settling in Greenwich Village, he became a student of Albert Rudolph, also known as “Rudi”, a dealer in Asian art who had been a disciple of the Indian guru Bhagavan Nityananda. When Nityananda died in 1961, Rudi became a student of Siddha Yoga‘s founder SwamiMuktananda, who gave him the name “Swami Rudrananda”. Having studied a number of spiritual traditions, including “The Work” of G.I. Gurdjieff and Subud, Rudi taught an eclectic blend of techniques he called “kundalini yoga”[38][39] (although it was not related to the Indian tradition by that name).[40]: 88 [15]: 81
Feeling that Adi Da needed better grounding, Rudi insisted that he marry Nina, find steady employment, improve his physical health, end his drug use, and begin preparatory studies to enter the seminary.[25]: 81 [41] As a student at Philadelphia’s Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1967, Adi Da described undergoing a terrifying breakdown. Taken to a hospital emergency room, a psychiatrist diagnosed it as an anxiety attack.[42] It was the first of a number of such episodes, each followed by what he described as profound awakenings or insights.[25]: 81 [43] He described the episodes as a kind of “death” or release from identity with the presumed separate persona, after which there was only “an Infinite Bliss of Being, an untouched, unborn Sublimity—without separation, without individuation. There was only Reality Itself … the unqualified living condition of the totality of conditionally manifested existence”. A comparable pre-awakening process had been described by the renowned Indian sage Ramana Maharshi.[44] Feeling none of his Lutheran professors understood this experience, Adi Da left and briefly attended St. Vladimir’s Russian Orthodox Seminary in Tuckahoe, New York.[45] Disillusioned, he moved back to New York City and found employment with Pan American Airlines, hoping this might help him fulfill his desire to visit Swami Muktananda’s ashram in India.
Swami Muktananda, a disciple of Bhagavan Nityananda, was a well-known guru who had brought his tradition of Kashmir Shaivism to the West, establishing meditation centers around the world. Adi Da received formal permission to visit the ashram for four days in April 1968. Muktananda encouraged him to end his studies with Rudi and study with himself directly.[7]: 85 In his autobiography, Adi Da related how he was granted shaktipat initiation, the awakening of the Kundalini Shakti that is said to reside at the base of the spine, which deepens the practice of Siddha Yoga meditation. Adi Da described experiencing an awakening to the Witness consciousness, beyond identification with the point of view of bodily consciousness. He began to study formally with Swami Muktananda.[46]
After returning to New York, Adi Da and Nina became members and then employees of the Church of Scientology,[47] leaving after a little more than a year of involvement. Adi Da returned to India for a month-long visit in early 1969, during which he received a handwritten (and formally translated) letter from Swami Muktananda, granting him the spiritual names Dhyanananda and Love-Ananda,[27]: 221–227 and authorizing him to initiate others into Siddha Yoga.[48][15]: 81–82 In May 1970, Adi Da, Nina, and a friend named Pat Morley traveled to India for what they believed would be an indefinite period living at Swami Muktananda’s ashram. However, Adi Da was disappointed by his experience there, especially by the institutionalization of the ashram and the large numbers of westerners who had arrived since his previous visit.[27]: 122, 264–267 Three weeks after arriving, he visited the burial place of Bhagavan Nityananda and, by his account, received an immense transmission of the Shakti-Force. According to his autobiography, he began—to his great surprise—to see visions of the Virgin Mary (which he interpreted as a personification of the divine feminine power, or shakti). The vision of Mary directed him to make a pilgrimage to Christian holy sites. After embarking on a two week pilgrimage to holy places in Europe and the Middle East, he, Nina and Pat returned to New York. In August 1970, they moved to Los Angeles.[24][15]: 82 [27]: 131
Becoming a spiritual teacher (1970–1973)
Adi Da in Los Angeles, 1973
Adi Da wrote in his autobiography that in September 1970, while sitting in the Vedanta Society Temple in Hollywood,[15]: 82 he awakened fully into the state of perfect spiritual enlightenment that he called “The Bright”.[15]: 82 [40]: 91 [49] He wrote that although he had been born with full awareness of “the Bright”, this awareness became obscured in childhood, and his subsequent spiritual journey had been a quest to recapture it, and share it with others.[50][51]: 146–147 The autobiography, entitled The Knee Of Listening, was published in 1972. It included a foreword by the well-known spiritual philosopher Alan Watts,[52] who on studying Adi Da’s teachings had reportedly said, “It looks like we have an avatar here. I’ve been waiting for such a one all my life”.[53] In the foreword, he wrote: “It is obvious, from all sorts of subtle details, that he knows what IT’s all about… a rare being”.
In The Knee Of Listening and subsequent books, Adi Da spoke of “Consciousness Itself” as the ultimate nature of Reality.[54] This Consciousness is “Transcendent and Radiant”, “the Source-Condition of everything that is”, “the uncaused immortal Self”, “a Conscious Light utterly beyond the limited perspective of any ego, any religion, or any culture.”[55] Everything in the physical universe, he claimed, is a modification of this Conscious Light. Expressed in more conventional language, Adi Da’s realization was that there is only God, and that everything arises within that One.[55] In later years this was summed up in the three “great sayings” of Adidam:
There is no ultimate “difference” between you and the Divine.
There is only the Divine.
Everything that exists is a “modification” of the One Divine Reality.[4]: 200
When Swami Muktananda stopped in California on a worldwide tour in October 1970, Adi Da visited him and related his experience the previous month of “The Bright”. He felt that the swami did not understand or properly acknowledge the full importance of his realization of “Consciousness Itself”, prior to visions and yogic phenomena and indeed all experiences in the context of the body-mind. During the visit Adi Da reconciled with Rudi.[27]: 101–102
In 1972, Adi Da opened Ashram Books (later Dawn Horse Books), a spiritual center and bookshop in Los Angeles. He began with a “simple and traditional” teaching method, sitting formally with a small group in the meditation hall and simply transmitting his state of “perfect Happiness” to them. He began giving discourses, soon attracting a small following due in part to his charismatic speaking style.[56][57] He taught in a traditional Indian style, speaking from a raised dais surrounded by flowers and oriental carpets, with listeners seated on the floor. He incorporated many elements of the guru-devotee relationship associated with the KashmirShaivite and Advaita Vedanta schools of Hinduism, but also expressed original insights and opinions about both spirituality and secular culture.[58][40]: 88–89 As the gathering grew, he introduced disciplines related to money, food, sex, and community living.[23] He was one of the first westerners to become well known as a teacher of meditation and eastern esoteric traditions at a time when these were of growing interest.[40]: 88 Some early participants stated that Adi Da demonstrated an ability to produce alterations in their consciousness, likening the effect to shaktipat of Indian yoga traditions.[59] In 1972, he began to teach “radical understanding”, described as “a combination of discriminative self-observation and guru-devotion”.[23] With the number of followers increasing, a formal religious community—”The Dawn Horse Communion”—was established.
In 1973, Adi Da traveled to India to meet a final time with Swami Muktananda. They disagreed on a series of questions which Adi Da had prepared, creating a rupture in their relationship. They later criticized each other’s approach to spiritual matters.[60] Adi Da nevertheless stated that he continued to appreciate and respect his former guru, and to express his “love and gratitude for the incomparable service” Muktananda had performed for him.[27]: ch. 13 [40]: 90–91 [61]
The Mountain of Attention Sanctuary in Lake County, California
Upon returning to Los Angeles, Adi Da (then Franklin Jones) assumed the name “Bubba Free John”, based on a nickname meaning “friend” combined with a rendering of “Franklin Jones”. He and Nina divorced, although she remained a follower.[15]: 87, 94 In January 1974, Adi Da told his followers that he was “the divine lord in human form”.[62] Later that year, the church obtained an aging hot springs resort in Lake County, California, renaming it “Persimmon” (it is now known as “The Mountain of Attention”). Adi Da and a group of selected followers moved there and experimented in communal living.[24][58][15]: 83 Most followers relocated from Los Angeles to San Francisco, where Dawn Horse Books also moved.
“Crazy Wisdom” (1973–1983)
Adi Da during the Garbage and the Goddess period, 1974
In 1973, Adi Da began to use more unconventional means of instruction, which he called “crazy wisdom“, comparing it to a tradition of yogic adepts who employed seemingly un-spiritual methods to awaken disciples.[63] Some followers reported having profound metaphysical experiences in Adi Da’s presence, attributing these phenomena to his spiritual power.[64] Others present remained skeptical, witnessing nothing supernatural.[16]
Adi Da initiated a series of teachings and activities that came to be known as the “Garbage and the Goddess” period, based on the title of his fourth book, Garbage and the Goddess: The Last Miracles and Final Spiritual Instructions of Bubba Free John. The text recounts a four-to-five-month “teaching demonstration” by Adi Da, in which he initiated and freely participated in a cycle of activities of a “celebratory” wild and ecstatic nature – an overturning of previous restrictions and conventional behaviours that was often accompanied by spontaneous displays of “spiritual power”.[65] Many of his devotees spoke of experiencing visionary states of consciousness, kundalini phenomena, blissful states and so forth. However, Adi Da constantly reiterated that such experiences were only manifestations of the Goddess and her phenomenal world: they were not spiritually auspicious and had no bearing on the realization of Consciousness itself.[4] The book’s central message, that true spiritual life has nothing to do with extraordinary experiences (hence the “garbage” reference in the title), did not stop people from showing up, looking for both such experiences and the extravagant parties and activities portrayed in the book. This was not the message Adi Da wanted to send. Despite the book’s commercial success, the community ultimately chose to withdraw it from the market.[4][66]
Over a period of years, Adi Da entered into what he called “emotional-sexual reality consideration” with his formal devotees. It included “sexual theater”, a form of psychodrama that sometimes involved the switching of partners, the making of pornographic movies, orgies and other intensified sexual practices, with the aim of revealing and releasing emotional and sexual neuroses.[67][68] Adi Da spoke of the cultish and contractual nature of conventional relationships, particularly marriage, as being a form of reinforcement of the ego-personality and an obstacle to spiritual life. Many couples were initially encouraged to switch partners and experiment sexually.[69][15]: 84 [70] Drug and alcohol use were sometimes encouraged, and earlier proscriptions against meat and “junk food” were no longer adhered to for periods of time.[15]: 90 Adi Da said that the emotional-sexual consideration was part of a radical overturning of conventional moral values and social contracts,[15]: 84–86, 89 [71] obliging devotees to confront their habitual patterns and emotional attachments. According to his teaching, little of spiritual value can be accomplished until the “emotional-sexual nature of the human being” is understood, incorporated into spiritual practice, and transcended.[72] Human sexuality, he said, always deeply encodes social practices, identity formation, and the most secret and important truths about individuals. He said that his present work in this area could not have been as effective without the earlier cultural and philosophical groundwork laid by Freud‘s depth psychoanalysis.[4]
After years of consideration about sexuality with students, Adi Da summarized his instruction about sexuality and spiritual practice. Contrary to various tantric practices aimed at the transformation of sexual energy into spiritual energy, Adi Da maintains that sex, like everything to do with the body, is “not causative” relative to spirituality; at most, sex and a disciplined practice of emotional-sexual intimacy, can be made compatible with the spiritual process. The spiritual process, he emphasized, involves transcendence of identification with the body-mind altogether.[73]
In 1979, Adi Da changed his name from “Bubba Free John” to “Da Free John” (“Da” being a Sanskrit syllable meaning “the One Who Gives”),[23] signifying to his devotees the divine nature of his revelation as guru. He also established a second ashram in Hawaii, now called Da Love-Ananda Mahal. Over the next decade, Adi Da changed his name several times, saying it reflected differences or changes in the nature of his message and relationship to followers. Subsequent names included Da Love-Ananda, Dau Loloma, Da Kalki, Hridaya-Samartha Sat-Guru Da, Santosha Da, Da Avadhoota, Da Avabhasa, and from 1994, Adi Da Love-Ananda Samraj, or Adi Da.[24][40]: 85, 105 [74]
“Divine Emergence” and final years (1983–2008)
Adi Da at The Mountain of Attention Sanctuary, 1986
Even before Adi Da opened the ashram bookstore in Los Angeles in 1972, he stated that people need holy places where Spiritual Force is alive. In 1983, having established such “empowered” places in Northern California and Hawaii, Adi Da moved with a group of about 40 followers to the Fijian island of Naitauba, purchased by a wealthy follower from the actor Raymond Burr.[75][76] His intention was to establish a “set-apart” hermitage for his spiritual work in the world.[76] Adi Da Samraj became a citizen of Fiji in 1993. It was his primary residence until the end of his life.[1]
On Naitauba Island on January 11, 1986, while expressing deep distress at what he felt was the futility of his work, Adi Da described the feeling of the life-force leaving his body, before collapsing, going into convulsions and losing consciousness. Doctors found his vital signs to be present, although his breathing was almost imperceptible. They eventually succeeded in resuscitating him. He later described the episode as a “literal death experience” with a special significance for his teaching work. His reassociation with the body was accompanied, he said, by a profound impulse of love and compassion for suffering beings. This impulse initiated a complete descent of the “Bright” into his human body, so that the divine became incarnated in human form in an unprecedented manner. The event became known in the Communion as his “Divine Emergence”.[77]
After this event, Adi Da expressed an impulse to enable people everywhere to meditate on his image or body in order to “participate in his enlightened state”.[78] He began a period of intensive fasting, before leaving Fiji for California. At The Mountain Of Attention Sanctuary he sat silently with over a thousand people, read from his book The Lion Sutra, and gave discourses calling on devotees to embrace the inherently renunciate, ego-transcending nature of the way he had given. He later traveled to New York City, London, Paris and Amsterdam, silently giving his blessing to all who came visibly into his sphere.[79]
Following the death of spiritual teacher Frederick Lenz (Zen Master Rama) in 1998, some followers of Lenz joined Adidam. Adi Da actively supported Lenz’s followers joining his organization; according to religious studies professor Eugene V. Gallagher, Adi Da claimed to have been Swami Vivekananda in a past life, with Lenz having been Vivekenanda’s disciple Rama Tirtha.[80]
In the late 1990s Adi Da often spoke of dark forces that were becoming increasingly powerful in the world, telling devotees of his constant engagement with these forces and his unarmoured receptivity to the pain and misery of the countless people suffering. These processes, he said, had a devastating effect on his body, and in April 2000, while traveling in Northern California under the care of devotees, he became almost completely physically incapacitated. On April 12, at Lopez Island, in the presence of a number of devotees, he again experienced a process of disassociation from the physical resembling death. In this event, he said, he became fully established as the “Bright” Itself, in a living demonstration of what he calls “Divine Translation”. Only the knowledge that his work in human form had not yet been completed, he said, maintained his connection to the world and drew him back into embodiment. Adidam later acquired the property on Lopez Island where this had taken place, renaming it “Ruchira Dham Hermitage”: the event itself, which Adi Da discusses in detail in part 19 of The Aletheon, is referred to as “The Ruchira Dham Event”.[81] He wrote that it marked the definitive end of his “active” teaching work: from now on he would simply transmit his state, requiring devotees to become responsible for their reception of that. He nonetheless continued to write books, make art, and give discourses, but with an increased emphasis on what he called “silent Darshan“.[40]: 96
In the last years of his life, Adi Da began to exhibit his digital art and photography.[40]: 96 Followers reported that he died of cardiac arrest on November 27, 2008, at his home in Fiji, while working on his art.[1][82]
Adi Da had four children: three biological daughters with three different women, and one adopted daughter.[83]
Since its first publication in two volumes between 1918-1923, The Decline of the West has ranked as one of the most widely read and most talked about books of our time. In all its various editions, it has sold nearly 100,000 copies. A twentieth-century Cassandra, Oswald Spengler thoroughly probed the origin and “fate” of our civilization, and the result can be (and has been) read as a prophesy of the Nazi regime. His challenging views have led to harsh criticism over the years, but the knowledge and eloquence that went into his sweeping study of Western culture have kept The Decline of the West alive. As the face of Germany and Europe as a whole continues to change each day, The Decline of the West cannot be ignored.
The abridgment, prepared by the German scholar Helmut Werner, with the blessing of the Spengler estate, consists of selections from the original (translated into English by Charles Francis Atkinson) linked by explanatory passages which have been put into English by Arthur Helps. H. Stuart Hughes has written a new introduction for this edition.
In this engrossing and highly controversial philosophy of history, Spengler describes how we have entered into a centuries-long “world-historical” phase comparable to late antiquity. Guided by the philosophies of Goethe and Nietzsche, he rejects linear progression, and instead presents a world view based on the cyclical rise and decline of civilizations. He argues that a culture blossoms from the soil of a definable landscape and dies when it has exhausted all of its possibilities.
Despite Spengler’s reputation today as an extreme pessimist, The Decline of the West remains essential reading for anyone interested in the history of civilization.
Oswald Spengler was born in 1880 in Blankenburg (then in the Duchy of Brunswick, German Empire) at the foot of the Harz mountains, the eldest of four children, and the only boy. His family was conservative German of the petite bourgeoisie. His father, originally a mining technician, who came from a long line of mineworkers, was a post office bureaucrat. His childhood home was emotionally reserved, and the young Spengler turned to books and the great cultural personalities for succor. He had imperfect health, and suffered throughout his life from migraine headaches and from an anxiety complex.
At the age of ten, his family moved to the university city of Halle. Here Spengler received a classical education at the local Gymnasium (academically oriented secondary school), studying Greek, Latin, mathematics and natural sciences. Here, too, he developed his affinity for the arts—especially poetry, drama, and music—and came under the influence of the ideas of Goethe and Nietzsche. He even experimented with a few artistic creations, some of which still survive.
After his father’s death in 1901 Spengler attended several universities (Munich, Berlin, and Halle) as a private scholar, taking courses in a wide range of subjects: history, philosophy, mathematics, natural science, literature, the classics, music, and fine arts. His private studies were undirected. In 1903, he failed his doctoral thesis on Heraclitus because of insufficient references, which effectively ended his chances of an academic career. In 1904 he received his Ph.D., and in 1905 suffered a nervous breakdown.
Scholars[which?] remark that his life seemed rather uneventful. He briefly served as a teacher in Saarbrücken and then in Düsseldorf. From 1908 to 1911 he worked at a grammar school (Realgymnasium) in Hamburg, where he taught science, German history, and mathematics.
In 1911, following his mother’s death, he moved to Munich, where he would live until his death in 1936. He lived as a cloistered scholar, supported by his modest inheritance. Spengler survived on very limited means and was marked by loneliness. He owned no books, and took jobs as a tutor or wrote for magazines to earn additional income.
He began work on the first volume of Decline of the West intending at first to focus on Germany within Europe, but the Agadir Crisis affected him deeply, and he widened the scope of his study. Spengler was inspired by Otto Seeck’s work The Decline of Antiquity in naming his own effort. The book was completed in 1914, but publishing was delayed by World War I. Due to a congenital heart problem, he was not called up for military service. During the war, however, his inheritance was largely useless because it was invested overseas; thus Spengler lived in genuine poverty for this period.
Seeing cars with no human inside move through San Francisco’s streets is eerie enough as a pedestrian, but when I’m on my bicycle I often find myself riding alongside them, and from that vantage point you catch the ghostly spectacle of a steering wheel turning without a hand. Since August, driverless cars have been available as taxis hailed through apps but I more often see empty cars than ones with backseat passengers. These robots in the shape of cars don’t move like those with human drivers. While I waited next to one at a busy intersection, the vehicle first halted at the yellow light, then rolled into the intersection, where it stopped when the light turned red, confounding the traffic around it.
Still, I’ve become somewhat used to driverless cars in the years they’ve been training on the city’s streets, first with back-up human drivers, and then without. They are here despite opposition from city officials, including the fire chief, and San Francisco recently sued the California state bureau that gave companies licence to use the streets as their laboratory. Firefighters have reported driverless cars attempting to park on firehoses; last June one such car prevented emergency vehicles from reaching victims of a shooting; the vehicles are apparently unequipped to assess these situations and respond by stopping. Direct communication isn’t an option: the only way to get a driverless car to do anything is to contact the company in charge of it.
In early October, a driverless car owned by Cruise, a subsidiary of General Motors, hit a woman who’d just been struck by another car, and in the course of performing what was described as a rote ‘pullover manoeuvre’ dragged her twenty feet, mangling her badly and leaving her trapped under its wheels. The device was unable to detect that it was on top of a human and would not respond to rescuers, who had to lift the car off her. Cruise withdrew its 950 driverless vehicles, but Waymo, a company launched by Google’s parent company, Alphabet, continues to send its cars onto the streets.
Driverless cars are often called autonomous vehicles – but driving isn’t an autonomous activity. It’s a co-operative social activity, in which part of the job of whoever’s behind the wheel is to communicate with others on the road. Whether on foot, on my bike or in a car, I engage in a lot of hand gestures – mostly meaning ‘wait!’ or ‘go ahead!’ – when I’m out and about, and look for others’ signals. San Francisco Airport has signs telling people to make eye contact before they cross the street outside the terminals. There’s no one in a driverless car to make eye contact with, to see you wave or hear you shout or signal back. The cars do use their turn signals – but they don’t always turn when they signal.
The rationales for the introduction of driverless cars include eliminating human error and allowing people with disabilities to get about without having to rely on other human beings. A more convincing rationale is that the corporations which own them can keep income that would otherwise have gone on drivers’ wages. Automation has, of course, been a way to increase owners’ profits since the Luddites protested against mechanical looms. Airports have self check-ins; supermarkets have self check-outs; roads and bridges have, in place of toll-takers, technology that reads your licence plate. Customer service phone numbers connect you to digital operatives and a host of other automated systems.
This takes a toll. Americans face a social pandemic of loneliness and isolation. The US surgeon general, Vivek Murthy, has declared it a crisis. His reports identify causes including the internet, smartphones and social media. None of these was created with this agenda, but all of them have advanced it. Some of the ‘examples of harm’ listed by Murthy include ‘technology that displaces in-person engagement, monopolises our attention, reduces the quality of our interactions and even diminishes our self-esteem’.
The Covid-19 pandemic worsened isolation, but tech had already made redundant many of the ways we used to congregate and mingle, while often portraying those ventures into the world as dangerous, unpleasant, inefficient and inconvenient. There is an underlying assumption that each of us aspires to be as productive as possible, and that stripping away everything seen to interfere with productivity is a good thing. This was the pitch made by many new companies in the 1990s, when online shopping and other digital financial transactions first became a big deal. The shift has reshaped cityscapes as well as psyches. The American Booksellers Association reported that in 2021 alone, ‘the movement of dollars to Amazon and away from retailers displaced 136,000 shops occupying 1.1 billion square feet of traditional commercial space.’ That’s a lot of local jobs and relationships both to places and people.
The small independent businesses that we’re losing sold goods, but they also gave away for free all sorts of things that are less tangible. There might be cheaper ways to buy shampoo or a better selection of envelopes online, but at an in-person store you can have a social interaction, even build a relationship with the proprietor and chat with other customers, or run into a friend or neighbour. That may happen in big chains such as Starbucks – but the employees aren’t likely to be around for long, the profit doesn’t go back into the community and the design of the place is generic, not reflecting its environment.
The San Francisco of my youth was full of small shops whose friendly eccentricity felt like part of the place. Some of them still exist but they’re rarer now. Many had old photographs of the business or the neighbourhood, some had artefacts of the past or pieces of the owner’s art. The little liquor and grocery store in my old neighbourhood had a wall of pictures of locals attending its annual barbecue and a ledger in which the proprietor recorded transactions with elderly locals who bought their groceries on credit and paid up at the end of the month. The exchanges between people who knew one another were non-commodities these small businesses offered along with whatever was for sale.
In her urbanist manifesto The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961), Jane Jacobs wrote about ‘eyes on the street’: about the way that pedestrian traffic, people moving around – or sitting around – in public, kept a place safe and more than safe: convivial, gregarious. I think of what has come to my city as ‘the great withdrawal’. People on the street often seem to have their eyes elsewhere, usually on their phones: they might video a crime, but they might also not notice it’s happening. Many seem to flinch at direct contact with strangers or pretend the apparent intrusion didn’t happen, so I’ve come to avoid the tiny interactions that seem much more welcome in New Orleans, even in New York City.
After a childhood nearby, I moved to San Francisco in 1980 when street life and bar life were vibrant, but cafés were rare outside North Beach’s Italian neighbourhood. They proliferated in the 1980s and 1990s as places to hang out, maybe read, maybe chat to whomever was around or just people-watch. In this millennium, in cafés frequented by young white people, every customer seems to be silently staring at an Apple product, so that the places look and feel like offices. Even this phase may be on the way out. The next phase – of trying to keep customers from sticking around – has arrived. A food industry magazine published a story in April last year with the headline ‘In 2023, San Francisco Coffee Shops Want You to Get the Hell Out. The Vibe Is to Leave. Like Right Now,’ explaining that cafés were removing tables and chairs and focusing exclusively on take-away products, in part because cafés were being used as free office space. Cultural, social and religious institutions have been displaced or run aground, film festivals and art centres have left the city, historic businesses, including the oldest Black-owned bookstore in the US, have been evicted, all while wealth continues to concentrate at the fastest rate ever seen.
San Francisco has been a contradictory place since its rebirth in the late 1840s, when the US seized Mexico’s northern half, including California, and renamed the port town of Yerba Buena after the Italian saint. It has always been populated by dreamers, eccentrics and bohemians as well as opportunists and profiteers; until recently there was room for all of them. The Big Four railroad barons were Sacramento merchants who made small fortunes equipping goldminers, then relocated to San Francisco and made outrageous fortunes building the western half of the transcontinental railroad, fleecing the government and monopolising long-distance transportation in the west. With this wealth, Leland Stanford founded Stanford University in 1885 on the site of his horse ranch 35 miles south of the city, and it was from Stanford’s loins that Silicon Valley sprang.
In 1959, the Buddhist priest Shunryu Suzuki was dispatched to San Francisco’s Japantown to serve the local Japanese American community. Young white people who had read or heard about Zen came to be taught by him, and their enthusiasm so exceeded that of his original congregation that he set up the San Francisco Zen Centre, which has ever since been an incubator for Zen practitioners and priests, who’ve founded daughter temples and zendos all over the western world. Zen, like the poetry performances in San Francisco’s little co-op galleries and bars, was about being present, being together, being in the moment, about learning how, as the psychedelic guru Ram Dass put it, to ‘be here now.’
The same year that Suzuki arrived, Ronald Davis founded the San Francisco Mime Troupe, which still stages free outdoor performances of raucously political theatre. The Sierra Club was expanding from its roots as a California-based mountaineering club with some achievements in conservation into a national force for environmental protection. Down the peninsula, the first semiconductor firms were growing, but tech remained a small part of the region’s economy, at least for the next few decades. Not far from the primordial tech companies, the CIA was testing LSD on paid test subjects; it would wend its way out of hospital settings and into the counterculture that flourished here in the 1960s.
The Daughters of Bilitis launched in San Francisco in 1955 to defend lesbian rights and build a lesbian community; its founders, Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon, were the first couple to get married when City Hall opened to same-sex weddings in 2004; and while the 1969 Stonewall Riots in New York City are justly famous, drag queens in San Francisco had demonstrated against police oppression three years earlier in the Compton’s Cafeteria Riot, and a number of cabaret drag shows and lesbian and leather bars flourished in the 1950s and 1960s.
Though much of the late 1990s dotcom boom – and crash – happened in San Francisco, until about a dozen years ago Silicon Valley was generally thought of as San Jose, the city anchoring the south end of the Bay Area, and the suburban sprawl up the San Francisco peninsula. The luxury shuttle buses that Facebook, Google and Apple launched for their employees around 2012, by easing the congested commute, encouraged large numbers of them to move to San Francisco, which has now been fully annexed by the Valley. The desire of tech workers to live in this dense, diverse place while their products create its opposite is an ongoing conundrum. Many tech workers think of themselves as edgy, as outsiders, as countercultural, even as they’re part of immense corporations that dominate culture, politics and the economy. The much-told story of Apple’s founding, in a garage near San Jose, doesn’t change the fact that, with a market cap of $3 trillion, it’s now the world’s most valuable company.
Though the city has survived a series of local and national recessions in recent decades, San Francisco is said to be in a ‘doom loop’ because so much office space and so many shops have been abandoned since the pandemic. Tech layoffs drove some of the shutdown, but the industry also enabled a mass white-collar withdrawal from the workplace – employees working from home, sometimes leaving the region to work remotely. More than the shrinkage of the population and the emptying out of downtown, the new mood of the city seems to be influenced by a kind of shrinking from human contact. The city remains the densely urban place it always was, but the way people inhabit it is increasingly suburban, looking to avoid strangers and surprises.
Over the past twenty years, ranks of glass towers have risen up just south of the city’s old downtown. The second tallest building west of the Mississippi River is San Francisco’s Salesforce Tower, whose resemblance, thanks to its curved sides and blunt edges, to a dildo or penis is often noted. It’s certainly a monument to hubris. It’s so tall that its isolated tip can be seen from many vantage points in the Bay Area – an Instagram account called @JustTheTipSF documents its intrusions. Completed in 2018, the tower has been half-empty since Salesforce, with the volatility typical of the tech industry, laid off many of its employees early last year (before hiring another few thousand in the autumn). Tech companies routinely push out other businesses only to flop or morph or migrate, leaving only emptiness in their wake. Salesforce – the city’s largest private employer – has also vacated Salesforce East, which stands next to yet another new high-rise, the mostly residential 58-storey Millennium Tower, which opened in 2009. The marketing brochure for Millennium Tower called it the first ‘ultra-luxury high-rise … a sophisticated oasis in the heart of SoMa’s tech capital’, though by 2015 its faulty construction had led to tilting and sinking. Following lawsuits from residents, $100 million was spent in an attempt to shore it up.
San Francisco is often described as a cauldron of crime and depravity, and held up as proof that progressive policies don’t work. I spent some time in New Mexico last summer and found that when people heard where I was from they were aghast: they wanted to know how I was surviving the mayhem. In recent years right-wing media have propagated stories about crime, homelessness and the city’s real (but hardly unique) fentanyl crisis. On a TV debate in November between former mayor Gavin Newsom (now governor of California) and Ron DeSantis (far-right governor of Florida and failed candidate for the Republican nomination), DeSantis brandished a (made-up) map of human excrement in San Francisco that was supposed to clinch his arguments. It’s a narrative that conservatives, including many tech barons, use to justify their demands for the kind of war on crime – more cops, harsher punishments, fewer civil liberties – that their predecessors pushed in the 1980s and 1990s.
Levels of violent crime are actually lower in San Francisco than in many American cities. Theft is a bigger problem, but like homelessness it has been exacerbated by the tech boom, which brought an influx of well-paid workers and a steep rise in housing prices over the past three decades, as well as by nationwide economic shifts and cuts in social services since the 1980s. Still, a video of an impoverished-looking Black guy in a San Francisco drugstore stuffing a trash bag full of goods and wheeling it away on his bicycle became an online sensation in 2021. The closures of several downtown chain stores were blamed by their parent corporations on theft, but when journalists looked into the stories, they found that in most cases outlets were closed because of low revenue and other more mundane problems.
Nevertheless, the idea that San Francisco is in the grip of lawlessness has become something everyone thinks they know. When the well-known tech executive Bob Lee (Google, Square, MobileCoin) was found fatally stabbed on the street in the early hours of 4 April 2023, many claimed that his murder was part of a crime wave by an out-of-control underclass. Elon Musk tweeted that ‘violent crime in SF is horrific and even if attackers are caught, they are often released immediately,’ implying that the culprit was a habitual criminal benefiting from lenient policies. The tech venture capitalist Matt Ocko raged: ‘Chesa Boudin [the former San Francisco district attorney] & the criminal-loving city council that enabled him and a lawless SF for years have Bob’s literal blood on their hands.’
But it turned out that the man charged with Lee’s murder, Nima Momeni, was a fellow tech entrepreneur who had been with Lee that evening. Lee died with cocaine and ketamine in his system; local news reported that the victim, the alleged murderer and the murderer’s sister had all been doing drugs that day. At least some of the drugs seem to have c0me from Jeremy Boivin, a friend of Lee’s, also previously in tech, who was arrested in 2021 with a kilo of cocaine and a kilo of methamphetamine, and again in 2022 for possession of cocaine, heroin and meth. In 2020 he was charged with giving the date-rape drug GHB to his housekeeper and sexually assaulting her (according to Rolling Stone, Lee paid his bail). On the afternoon of 3 April, according to reports, Lee was at Boivin’s home with Momeni’s sister and another woman; both women ingested GHB and passed out.
The district attorney who prosecuted Boivin, Chesa Boudin, noted that there is a belief ‘among conservatives in this city that it’s only scary poor people who are doing drugs. The reality is that the tech industry is deep in … drugs.’ The city’s main online news site, Mission Local, quoted a friend of Momeni’s who said that he had a cocaine problem of ‘the regular Bay Area executive sort’ and that his phone number ‘appears on a website commonly used by sex workers to warn one another of dangerous or problematic clients’. Momeni’s attorneys suggested the murderer might be a homeless man who was found sleeping near where Lee died, even though Momeni’s DNA was found on the handle of the murder weapon, a kitchen knife that matches a set in his sister’s kitchen. A security camera captured Lee and Momeni leaving the Millennium Tower, where Momeni’s sister lived with her plastic surgeon husband. They got into Momeni’s white BMW; another security camera caught them getting out of the car a few blocks away. For a moment they are hidden; then Momeni can be seen getting back into the car and driving away. Lee, staggering into view of yet another security camera, managed to call 911 to report that he’d been stabbed. He was found bleeding and unconscious on the sidewalk, and pronounced dead at the hospital.
Lee collapsed in front of a luxury apartment building at 403 Main Street. The address seemed familiar so I looked it up: it’s a block from the 301 Main Street Infinity Tower, in whose $7 million penthouse the tech mogul Gurbaksh Chahal was, a decade earlier, recorded on his own bedroom surveillance camera clobbering a woman 117 times and repeatedly threatening to kill her. He was dumped as CEO of his ad-tech firm and eventually did prison time for violating his probation with another round of violence against another woman. Chahal currently heads a startup whose actual functions are wreathed in the flowery vagueness – ‘cutting-edge AI seamlessly merges with global commerce … shifting from basic transactions to insightful exchanges’ – endemic to industry prose.
Crime in the San Francisco Bay Area can be described in many ways. But there are no dramatic videos showing Palo Alto native son turned crypto mogul Sam Bankman-Fried misappropriating $8.6 billion of clients’ money or of the scam run by ex-Stanford student Elizabeth Holmes, who raised $700 million for Theranos, a company whose sole product was a medical technology that didn’t exist. Holmes, who used to live in a $15 million mansion and fly in a private Theranos jet, is doing time in federal prison for defrauding investors. Bankman-Fried awaits sentencing. Those thefts were crimes in the most traditional sense, but the sheer wealth generated by Silicon Valley has given its pack of billionaires the belief that they are above or beyond the law. Most of them made their fortunes in finance or technology; those fortunes and the accompanying hubris and seclusion convinced them they were magnificent at everything and anything, including remaking society according to their lights.
In 2022 the billionaires William Oberndorf and David Sacks, former COO of PayPal, pumped money into a successful recall campaign against Boudin, shortly after his election as district attorney. A total of $7 million was donated to the effort, 80 per cent of it in amounts of $50,000 or more, $600,000 from Oberndorf alone; he has also spent extravagantly to back charter schools and fight the teachers’ union. Sacks, a friend of Musk’s, is a major backer of right-wing candidates for national office and seemingly obsessed with urban crime.
Another tech/venture capital billionaire and opponent of Boudin, Ron Conway, has long used his wealth to push San Francisco to the right. In 2010 he was a driving force behind an ordinance banning sitting on the sidewalk intended to criminalise those with nowhere else to go. In 2016, Conway and Oberndorf funded a ballot proposition to outlaw tent encampments, the homes of last resort for the unhoused. The tech elite tends to regard the homeless not as people with unmet needs, but as an intrusion or even assault on the sensibilities of others (though Mark Benioff, the founder of Salesforce, has made more benign donations, including $30 million to study the problem). If you equate your wealth with virtue, you tend to equate poverty with vice, and the enemies of the homeless routinely portray them as criminals. The assumption that Bob Lee was murdered by the underclass rather than one of his own speaks to this, as well as to the sense among tech leaders that they are the good guys, the people with solutions, sometimes the victims but never the perpetrators of problems.
In my own 44 years here, travelling on foot far more than most, I have never been menaced by a homeless person. Though a highly visible minority are mentally ill or suffering from substance abuse, many unhoused people are employed, are parents, are seniors, are students (including 2370 of the children enrolled in San Francisco public schools in 2022) or otherwise quotidian citizens. Illness and addiction are often the consequences, rather than the causes, of the devastating precarity, shame and stress of being unhoused. Market-rate housing is out of reach for a great many people, working or not, which has made finding employees for lower-wage jobs in retail, restaurants and vital services difficult for local employers. Here, too, San Francisco has an extreme version of a problem widespread in wealthy urban areas.
Perhaps the existence of the unhoused, stranded in an outside with no inside to retreat to, along with tech’s offerings and ideology, has encouraged people to stay indoors, or to venture into public spaces only with reluctance or trepidation. The proliferation of delivery services has made eating restaurant food at home common. ‘The exploitation economy is just as unhealthy and dehumanising for the customers as it is for the workers,’ Andrew Callaway, a San Francisco gig-worker, wrote in 2016. ‘You never even have to see the person who is cleaning your house or your clothes. Plenty of people requested that I drop off their food at the door. Customers grow to love apps that make the worker anonymous.’ In this system, the invisible hand of the market can actually bring you a burrito.
By producing such extremes of wealth, tech is returning us to a kind of feudalism, with a few powerful figures accountable to no one. Here’s Elon Musk, the world’s richest person, who – after buying Twitter for an inflated $44 billion – invited in misinformation, disinformation and hate, providing a platform for extreme right-wingers, racists and conspiracy theorists, while also using his Starlink satellite technology first for and then against the Ukrainian military in their conflict with Russia. ‘There is little precedent for a civilian’s becoming the arbiter of a war between nations,’ Ronan Farrow wrote in the New Yorker, ‘or for the degree of dependency that the US now has on Musk in a variety of fields, from the future of energy and transportation to the exploration of space.’ Farrow also reported that people who know Musk say his ketamine use ‘has escalated in recent years, and that the drug, along with his isolation and his increasingly embattled relationship with the press, might contribute to his tendency to make chaotic and impulsive statements and decisions’.
Here’s Mark Zuckerberg, the fifth richest, who has turned a blind eye to Facebook’s role in election corruption around the world and in the genocide in Myanmar, and to Instagram’s role in the teenage mental health crisis. His company recently lost $46 billion on the Metaverse, the virtual-reality venture he has earnestly promoted. ‘Pretty soon,’ he said last September, ‘we’re going to be at a point where you’re going to be there physically with some of your friends, and others will be there digitally as avatars or holograms, and they’ll feel just as present as everyone else.’ Like technocrats before him, Zuckerberg insists that online connection is a perfect substitute for human contact.
Here’s Peter Thiel, founder of PayPal, who put $10 million into the lawsuit that in 2016 bankrupted Gawker, which had outed him as gay. This might make you think he cared about privacy, but he also founded Palantir, which surveils immigrants for the Department of Homeland Security, assisted in Cambridge Analytica’s weaponisation of Facebook user data on Trump’s behalf and, according to the Intercept, ‘has helped expand and accelerate the NSA’s global spy network, which is jointly administered with allied foreign agencies around the world’. Big tech is ferociously protective of its own privacy while abusing ours. Frank Wilhoit’s claim that ‘conservatism consists of one proposition: there must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect’ applies precisely to the industry and its captains.
While Musk dreams of space travel and colonies on other planets, Thiel dreams of immortality. Many tech billionaires do not believe they should be bound by the laws of nations or biology, and apparently want to continue consuming an outsize amount of the world’s resources indefinitely. ‘I stand against confiscatory taxes, totalitarian collectives and the ideology of the inevitability of the death of every individual,’ Thiel wrote in an online libertarian journal in 2009. ‘I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.’ He didn’t choose democracy.
For a while, Thiel backed the libertarian wet dream known as seasteading, building artificial islands beyond government control. Thiel’s attempt to build a post-apocalyptic bunker in a remote part of New Zealand’s South Island was rejected, but Bill Gates, now only the world’s eighth richest person, has his own island in Belize. Oracle’s Larry Ellison, the world’s fourth richest person, owns 98 per cent of the Hawaiian island of Lanai, resort hotels and all, which he’s made an inhospitable place for anyone who’s not enormously wealthy. According to Wired, Zuckerberg’s private compound covering 1400 acres of the Hawaiian island of Kauai includes multiple mansions and luxury treehouses, plus an underground bunker. (Tech billionaires often seem more interested in surviving the apocalypse than preventing it.) Non-disclosure agreements bind the construction workers who built it, and a long wall shuts off outsiders from any view of the sea while making access to the public beach extremely difficult.
You can’t really be in favour of both democracy and billionaires, because democracy requires equal opportunity in order to participate, and extreme wealth gives its holders unfathomable advantages with little accountability. I’ve long believed that democracy depends in part on co-existing with strangers and people unlike you, on feeling that you have something in common with them. The internet has helped people withdraw from diverse communities and shared experiences to huddle in like-minded groups, including groups focused on hating those they see as unlike them, while encouraging the disinhibition of anonymity.
Sometimes disconnection is itself the business model, as with the San Francisco-based Airbnb, which has undermined neighbourhoods around the world, from major cities to rural communities, by turning long-term housing, where people had roots and relationships, into short-term rentals, often jacking up the price of housing at the same time. A friend of mine who lives in Joshua Tree, the semi-rural community in the desert east of Los Angeles, has found herself surrounded entirely by short-term rentals, so she no longer has neighbours in the usual sense of the word.
The choices tech titans make in their personal lives – gated communities, private schools, private jets, mega-yachts, private islands – show that a segregated, shrouded life is their ideal. But they profit off technologies which, while encouraging our own social withdrawal, are focused on capturing as much information about us as possible. That is, we are both more isolated and less private than we’ve ever been. I have never to my knowledge seen any of these billionaires, but by necessity I use their platforms and software and move among their employees. I live in a city and to some extent in a world that has been radically reshaped by their urges and ideals, which are not my urges and ideals.
When I use cash to buy something in a shop, I sometimes joke to the cashier that this stuff is more secretive than crypto. If you’re paying Bay Area bridge tolls, using parking meters (which often require you to punch in your licence plate and use a credit card), getting coffee or anything else with a credit or debit card, you’re creating a record of your activities. In the shops that use Square for card purchases, the devices already know your email address. (Bob Lee was chief technology officer for Square for a few years.) If you don’t adjust its settings, your smartphone is tracking your journeys for Google or Apple. Google and Meta are collecting and monetising all the data they can, and while you can opt out of some of their surveillance, and that of most of the websites you visit, the default setting of the commercial internet is the capture and commodification of your life.
Facial recognition software and DNA collection are undermining other kinds of privacy. China has demonstrated that the new technologies can create a surveillance state far beyond anything previously imagined. At the same time, cryptocurrency is being promoted as a means of escaping whatever control nation-states have over their residents’ financial transactions, a libertarian privacy currency with almost no safeguards. Some have grown rich on it; others have lost their life savings. Scams and lawsuits abound.
In an essay for the New Republic in 2022 about Sacks and his isolationist, new-right peers, Jacob Silverman wrote:
The symbolic epicentre of this movement is San Francisco, but really it’s the entire curdled utopian dream of California. In the eyes of rich techies who have seen their beloved metropolis fall into decay, vast inequality and social misery, the state is dead. Their disappointment and alienation has melded with traditional Republican disgust toward liberal cities (and their non-white residents) to paint a picture of irredeemable urban squalor. These frightened urbanites are echoing the Trumpist drumbeat that cities – particularly in California – are dangerous, dark places that must be tamed.
But they never really loved San Francisco, at least not as a place of diversity and free circulation, and they’ve never acknowledged their role in its dramatic economic divides, housing crises and desperate homeless population.
Agroup of these disgruntled tycoons has, however, decided to build a new city on the north-eastern outskirts of the Bay Area. Flannery Associates – a billionaires’ consortium whose members include Laurene Powell Jobs (Steve Jobs’s widow), Reid Hoffman (co-founder of LinkedIn) and the venture capitalists Marc Andreessen and Michael Moritz – quietly bought up 50,000 acres of farmland in Solano County at a cost of around $800 million. (By way of comparison, San Francisco covers about 30,000 acres.) The area’s representative in Congress, John Garamendi, told the Los Angeles Times that ‘Flannery Associates is using secrecy, bullying and mobster tactics to force generational farm families to sell.’ Last August the group revealed its hand, sending out a survey announcing its intention to build ‘a new city with tens of thousands of new homes, a large solar energy farm, orchards with over a million new trees, and over ten thousand acres of new parks and open space’. Its website doesn’t give real answers to questions about the environmental impact of such a massive development, about the governance of a new city founded and (presumably) owned by an elite, about the public services needed for this private enterprise. Instead, Flannery Associates has released sedate pastel-toned pictures of blank-faced children playing on tree-lined streets of quaint row houses and blank-faced adults with brown and black as well as white skin riding bikes and sitting in a plaza.
It seems unlikely that any of the associates want to live in those row houses themselves or send their children out to play on the street or sit on the train with the Black lady in the picture. In 2022, Andreessen and his wife inveighed against building multi-family housing in their swanky Peninsula hometown of Atherton – average annual income $539,000, median home price $7.9 million – with an email to city government that read: ‘Please immediately remove all multi-family overlay zoning projects from the Housing Element which will be submitted to the state in July. They will massively decrease our home values, the quality of life of ourselves and our neighbours and immensely increase the noise pollution and traffic.’ People who live in apartments, never mind tents, were scum they didn’t want around, housing crisis be damned.
In a way, rich people don’t live anywhere: they are nomads who circulate between multiple dwellings. Andreessen owns a $177 million compound in Malibu, and Jobs has three mansions there, along with palatial homes in San Francisco and Palo Alto, a rural retreat in Los Altos Hills near San Jose, an equestrian estate in Florida, a 15,000-square-foot home in Woodside (the rural district of choice for Silicon Valley’s richest) and part of Kona Village, a Hawaiian resort.
Local opposition to the Flannery Associates project has been ferocious, and the county government responded by declaring that it wouldn’t rezone farmland for urban development. I don’t know whether these billionaires know what a city is, but I do know that they have laid their hands on the city that’s been my home since 1980 and used their wealth to undermine its diversity and affordability, demonise its poor, turn its politicians into puppets and push its politics to the right. They have produced many kinds of dystopia without ever deviating from the line that they are bringing us all to a glorious utopia for which they deserve our admiration.
I used to be proud of being from the San Francisco Bay Area. I thought of this place in terms of liberation and protection; we were where the environmental movement was born; we were the land of experimental poetry and anti-war marches, of Harvey Milk and gay rights, of the occupation of Alcatraz Island that galvanised a nationwide Indigenous rights movement as well as Cesar Chavez’s farmworkers’ movement in San Jose and the Black Panthers in Oakland. We were the left edge of America, a refuge from some of its brutalities and conformities, a sanctuary for dissidents and misfits and a laboratory for new ideas. We’re still that lab, but we’re no longer an edge; we’re a global power centre, and what issues from here – including a new super-elite – shapes the world in increasingly disturbing ways.