I. Introduction
Complex systems theory shows that the more interacting elements there
are in a given process, the more complex the process's behavior. New rules evolve
that govern the behavior of the process, helping to coordinate activities and
make the process work in a better and more complex fashion. Further, when complex
processes contain different hierarchical levels, such processes act in even more
complex ways – fluid hierarchies increase complexity of behavior, while rigid
hierarchies and flattened hierarchies decrease the complexity of a process's
behavior. This is true in quantum processes giving rise to chemical/Newtonian
physical processes, to moecular processes giving rise to life, to neurons in the
brain giving rise to thought and intelligence in animals, including humans, and
even to the interactions of human societies.
Claire Graves, Don Beck, and
Christopher Cowan theorize that both human thought and human societies develop
in a particular way, and in a nested hierarchical fashion. Beck and Cowan in their book "Spiral Dynamics" lay out a
hierarchical theory of psycho-social development
that explains both the how each individual's psychology evolves by emerging into new levels of complexity and the consequences of this on the emergence of more complex social structures – and show that different people, and different societies,
have particular features in a particular order for particular reasons.
What they – and I, with
some modifications – propose is that human societies go through spiraling cycles
of new levels of complexity, switching between individualistic and collectivist
forms of social organization. This is often preceded by individuals who lay the
groundwork for the new social organization. And even when one form of social
organization is left behind, there are people who continue to think that way.
And, to make the situation even more complex, we continue to have aspects of the
lower levels holding up the new levels of complexity.
But that is all
very abstract. What we need are details. Basically, Beck and Cowan suggest
we start off in survivalist mode – what helps the individual survive is what we
do. This is really the level of purely animal survival: food, drink, sleep, and
sex. Next we develop into the roving bands/tribal mode – this is in the present
day both athletic teams and the family unit, and is the kind of thinking we mean
by "family values." This is the level of ritual, traditions and symbols. At its
worst, it is the level of racism, superstition, and fear of change. Once this
level becomes repressive, we develop into the powerful individual mode –
this is in the present day dominant in rock stars and rebellious teens in general, as
well as in gang members. In the past, this was ancient Greece during the Iliad
and the Odyssey, and Rome during the Roman Empire. This is the time of heroes
and strong leadership, storytellers and mythology.
The next level is the level of authority and order. People at this level believe the world gains meaning from doing your duty, respecting
traditions and heritage, and obeying the religious laws. Authoritative people believe
in good and evil, right and wrong, in sacrificing now for the future, love and
charity, and in patriotism. At their worst, they fear trespassing upon the
ordained order, are nationalistic and tend toward theocracy and
authoritarianism. Many are royalists and, in the United States, have Puritan
tendencies. Historically, this was medieval Christianity and the philosophies of
Plato and Aristotle.
Following this is the development of the capitalist and
scientific mode. There
is strong support for reason and science. Such people and societies are
optimistic and willing to take risks and are highly pragmatic in dealing with
the world. Such
people and societies support personal rights and liberties, and were responsible
for abolishing slavery. For example, Emerson,
whose thinking exemplifies this level of thinking, was a staunch abolitionist.
Other thinkers at this level include Adam Smith, John Locke, Lord Acton,
Voltaire, Kant, Machiavelli, and Descartes. At its worst, it promotes deterministic
thinking and results in alienation.
Next is the development of
egalitarian thinking, whic one could classify as post-capitalist collectivist thinking. Rousseau is a good example of an early egalitarian thinker. It was
first expressed at the social level in the French Revolution. At its best, egalitarianism emphasizes being socially responsible, caring
for all people, finding ourselves, and treating workers well. It promotes
pluralism and relativistic, postmodern, multidisciplinary thinking. At its
worst, it promotes feeling over reasoning. Having much of its thought based in Marx, it leads to welfare states,
socialism, communism, and even fascism, is anti-hierarchy, and is
redistributionist. The existentialists and postmodernists are egalitarian thinkers.
Now,
each of these levels in what Graveseans refer to the first tier tend to be exclusionary, rejecting each other. Those above
reject those below as being too simplistic, and those below are just plain
confused about what is going on at higher levels. But there is then a second tierabove the egalitarian level, in which there are two levels (so
far – more will emerge over time) – the
integrationist and the holistic.
The integrationist returns to
individualism, but also sees the values of each of the levels below.
People at this level attempt to create a society were all of these levels can
work together – both the individual psychologies and to develop a more
integrated society. Thus, it tries to promote environmentalism, capitalism,
religion, heroic individualism, and families simultaneously. Beauty, truth, and
ethics are united into one way of thinking. Knowledge and competency are
emphasized, as are fluid, nested hierarchies and interdisciplinary, chaotic,
fractal thinking. This level is the first truly self-aware level, and there is
no longer any fear of yourself or the world. Nietzsche may have been the
first of such thinkers.
Holistic thinking, which is only just
beginning to emerge, can be found in such thinkers as our own Frederick Turner. Everything is
understood to be connected to everything else, there is interest in wholeness of
existence, and patterns and living systems are emphasized. Such thinkers are
interested in bringing holistic order to the entire society – and thus supports
a kind of holistic hierarchy, or holarchy.
This is but a brief outline of
how the different forms of thinking evolved. I think if we come to understand
how different forms of thinking emerge, we can stop speaking at cross-purposes
to each other. The lower levels are all necessary parts of our thinking, and
each level is needed to help us develop a more complex and just society. But first tier thinkers won’t be able to do it. That is up to
the integrationist and holistic thinkers, whose thinking is more complex, and
who understand the value of each of the different levels.
Let us now look at this from a social point of view. If we start with animal
survivalism, we move into tribalism, and from tribalism into a heroic culture
(i.e. Achilles, and the Greek and Roman gods), from heroic culture into
aristocratic/theocratic culture, from aristocratic culture to
capitalist/scientific culture, from scientific culture into statist culture, and
even now a move from all of these into ideas of world confederacy, and even into
more complex, more holistic ideas. Thought also follows these patterns: mere
survivalism leading to tribalistic thinking leading to conquering, heroic
leaders leading to belief in order, law, regulations, and discipline to build
character (typically "religious" thinking) leading to belief in the virtue of
competition and progress and knowledge leading to egalitarian thinking leading
to time-bound, hierarchical, pluralistic thinking leading to holistic thinking.
The thinking always precedes the social development, but the thinking itself
cannot jump levels any more than can societies, or any more than biology can leap
suddenly out of quantum physics, skipping the molecular level. In other words, to
move from tribalism to a culture led by heroic conquering leaders, we have to
have people who begin to think in the new way while the culture itself remains
in the old form of organization. It is this phenomenon I wish to investigate
here, so we can understand why different thinkers were thinking as they were,
and what value they have for the present day, and in the future.
We have
to recognize, too, that each culture contains elements of the levels below,
including people who continue to think this way. The first thing we should
note is that to say a culture or a person is in one of the lower levels is not
to say that it or they are inferior to a higher level. We need the lower levels
to help hold up the higher levels – this is how nested hierarchies such as
emergent reality and evolving cultures can exist at all. If we take capitalist,
scientific culture, for example, we can see that it can and should continue to
have religious elements to it, that it will continue to have heroic people, such
as athletes, in it, and that it will continue to have tribalistic elements in it
– primarily as families, friends and clubs. This is most important to point out
to those levels that most tend toward communitarian thinking, including
tribalism, religious thinking, and secular egalitarian statism, which evolve in
reaction to the more individualistic levels (heroic, capitalist/scientific),
since the heroic and the capitalist levels consider the communitarian levels
below them to still be important. Further, higher level communitarian thinking
also tends to reject lower level communitarian thinking – secular egalitarian
thinking tends to consider religious thinking as ignorant and something that is
best done away with (consider the French attitude toward religion now, starting
with the French Revolution). In the worst cases, communitarian thinking is
racist and exclusionary – tribes exclude other tribes, religions exclude other
religions, communists must eliminate all non-communists or anyone else who does
not fit into the world they are trying to create. So it is important that we be
aware of this danger, and do what we can to avoid and prevent
it.
Overall, the communitarian forms of thinking and social organization
tend to be, regardless of the level of complexity, community-minded and, thus,
order-oriented, interested in stability, ethics, faith and truth; they are
fundamentally religious in outlook, centralized and rigidly hierarchical (today,
bureaucratic), and have a belief that time is circular, or eternal, and that it
will become this way at the end of history, where all progress will end. The
individualistic forms of thinking and social organization tend to be, regardless
of the level of complexity, individualistic, libertarian, able to deal with
change and chaos, pragmatic, fact- and science-oriented, decentralized, and
embracing time and change, having a fundamental belief in some sort of
continual progress. As stated above, the communitarians tend to dislike the
individualists, but the individualists tend to work to protect the immediately
lower level of communitarian thinking and society, while seeing emergent levels
of communitarianism as a threat.
We need to move beyond this way of
thinking, and into more complex ways of thinking. The way to do this is to
understand all the levels, what their values are, and integrate them. That will
get us into the next level of thinking and social organization. And from there,
we must next understand everything as being part of a single, dynamic system –
more than just pluralist, but unified as well, with unity in its variety. In
doing so, we must not forget that lower levels simply cannot understand the
ideas of higher levels – for example, someone who is a religious thinker would
find egalitarian thinking, especially late egalitarian thinking, like
postmodernism, to be completely incomprehensible – confusing nonsense in the
extreme. To get such a person to the level of the postmoderns, one would have to
get that person to first be thinking as a capitalist/scientific thinker, and
then move the person into early egalitarian thinking before moving them into
postmodernism. Part of the role of the integrationist and holistic thinkers is
to help to move all people and cultures into more complex levels, and to
integrate the elements of lower complexity into an even more complex
whole.
II. The Levels and their Thinkers
All of this is necessary
in order to understand the evolution of thought and the history of ideas in
their proper context – past and present. It seems that tribalism is associated
with pre-literate times, and that the first writing evolved during heroic
culture – the oldest story we have is Gilgamesh, and it is a story of heroism.
With Homer, we have a heroic thinker in a heroic time. Achilles is an
archetypical hero of this sort.
The movement from heroic culture into the
next level begins in the Greek culture with the pre-Socratics, who are beginning
to think in more orderly, purposeful ways while living in heroic culture – this
is typically seen as the beginnings of the movement from archaic into median
culture. We have with the Greek tragedies an art form designed to move Greek
culture safely and non-violently into the next level – each tragedy starts with
a heroic individual who must be destroyed in order for a new level of
organization to come into being. The Greek tragedies are art forms that indicate
that the culture is going through an emergence into a new level of complexity.
Tragedies are how a culture gets safely initiated into a new level of
complexity. This is why Nietzsche identified tragedy as being simultaneously
Dionysian and Apollonian – Socrates in Plato’s Phaedrus identifies Dionysus as
the god associated with the madness of initiation and Apollo as the god
associated with the madness of prophesy – and Greek tragedies aided in the
initiation ritual into a new level of complexity of thinking while prophesying
what that new level would be like. Sophocles prophesies the emergence of the
emergent median way of Greek thinking, while Shakespeare prophesies the
emergence of the scientific/capitalist age to come, though he was writing during
a time when Medieval/religious thinking was still going strong. After the
initiation into the new level of thinking in ancient Greece, we get both Plato
and Aristotle arising as the greatest thinkers within this level of
complexity.
But emergence into new levels of complexity is not certain.
In the West, we get a backward movement with the rise of the Romans – the Roman
Republic and Empire was a heroic culture, and was exemplified by people such as
Julius Caesar (consider how similar in character he is to Achilles). With the
rise of Christianity, we see the Roman Empire moving into the next level – Jesus
was a religious thinker during a heroic time. The Christian Romans and Christian
medieval Europe was clearly organized in a rigid religious hierarchy, with the
hierarchical Catholic Church and the hierarchical forms of government in
serfdom, monarchy, and aristocracy, all supported by the Church. The Christian
thinkers St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas found such a strong connection
with Plato and Aristotle, respectively, because they recognized in them thinkers
on the same level of complexity.
The Renaissance helped move Europe into
the next level of complexity – the capitalist/scientific level. We see in
Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo some of the first, transitionary scientific
thinkers. And the work of Machiavelli and Shakespeare both helped set the stage
for capitalism and science. Newton and Descartes moved the West even more into
this realm of complexity – and the height of such thinking occurs in people such
as Voltaire, John Locke, Adam Smith, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, G. W. F. Hegel,
and the American Transcendentalists such as Emerson and Thoreau. All material
and scientific progress occurred precisely when and because this level of thinking and
social organization arose. We also see the abolition of slavery for the first
time in human history precisely during this time (it is no coincidence that
slavery still exists in regions of the world that have yet to enter this level
of complexity). The United States’ form of government is the exemplary
form of government that arises in and through this way of thinking – which makes
it all the more ironic that it was the last of the Western countries to abolish
slavery. That is, until you realize that the American South was one of the last
places in the West where religious/authority thinking remained (and still
remains) strongest. Because the next level was forced on them, the South has
taken over a century to recover and get caught up with the rest of the United
States – becoming scientific/capitalist just as the Northeast has become
egalitarian in its world view. But the religious way of thinking is still strong
– which is why the creationism-evolution (and its latest variant, Intelligent
Deisgn) debate still goes strong in the United States, particularly in Southern
and Midwestern states.
With Rousseau, we get the first of the egalitarian
thinkers – and it is his ideas that led, more than anyone else’s, to the French
Revolution, which was the first example of the modern State (while it is true
that the idea of independent nations arose with the Enlightenment, after the
Renaissance, the peculiar institution of the modern State as typically found in
Europe arose with the French Revolution). It was based on secularism and
egalitarianism, and this example, along with the ideas of Marx, led to the rise
of the Soviet Union and other communist states, which combined this way of
thinking with religious/authority thinking, while tending to throw in a heroic
leader for good measure. Nazi Germany was yet another example of this kind of
state, though they combined it with tribalist ideas, leading to the atrocities
of WWII. Of course, the Soviet Union’s avoidance of tribalism did not prevent
them from killing even more people – the difference simply being that the
U.S.S.R was more personal in its murders, while the Nazis liked to kill people
in groups. But both are based on the same way of thinking, and were reactions
against Enlightenment thinking. This helps us to understand why people who think
this way tend to support communist and fascist dictatorships, and cannot see the
difference between them and democratic republics (in an egalitarian world, all
forms of government are equal – equally bad, and equally good). Further, the
tendency to see people of lower levels – especially those still stuck in tribal
or heroic thinking and societies – as victims, and modern-day environmentalism
are also based on this way of thinking, and the latter is distinguished by the
idea of nature as unchanging – notions of the eternal, the end of history, etc.
being part of communitarian thinking, both religious and secular. This is why
much secular communitarian thinking, like environmentalism and communism,
closely resemble religious thinking. But these are not the only forms of
egalitarian thinking. Darwin introduced an even more fundamental form of
egalitarianism when he suggested that humans evolved from apes, and that all
animals were fundamentally related to one another. Thus, humans and animals were
put on the same plane of existence – and it is this that creationists object to.
The hierarchy between humans and animals, placing humans in a place definitively
above animals, was flattened by Darwin’s theory of evolution.
Among the
more recent thinkers in this more recent egalitarian tradition include Heidegger
(who was, not coincidentally, a Nazi), Sartre (a communist), and various Marxist
and postmodern thinkers, including Derrida. Some of these latter, the
postmoderns, have come in toward the end of egalitarian, statist thinking, and
have thus begun the move into the next level of thinking. This is perhaps
because they claim a great deal of influence from Nietzsche, who was perhaps the
first thinker in this tradition, in reaction to the German State and socialism.
Since most of the philosophers and theorists influenced by Nietzsche have in
fact been egalitarian, statist thinkers, they have mostly misunderstood
Nietzsche’s ideas. One can understand clearly levels below oneself, but there is
difficulty in understanding levels above oneself, unless one is trying to move
into that next level oneself. As for societal organization, since this next
level of thinking is new, there seems to be but a few societies based on this
thinking, including the present-day United States and Great Britain, having gone
through a lot of statist thinking, while retaining the essential form of the
previous level, making it possible to be more pluralistic and hierarchical and
inclusive), with organizations like the U.N., the W.T.O., and the World Bank
acting to coordinate the world’s governments in a very loose confederacy.
Perhaps because the U.S. and Britain were more solidly democratic republics than
other Western countries, which attempted to create egalitarian States, this new
form of more complex thinking appears to be most common in these two places, and
less so in continental Europe. It is all-inclusive, and considers all the lower
levels to be important constituents of society as a whole. It believes that
there is a basic human nature, and that humans can nonetheless adapt and evolve
in extremely complex ways – that we have instincts, but also highly plastic
brains, which allow us to have highly complex ways of thinking. Further, this
new level of thinking has so far occurred less often among philosophers, and
more often among scientists, such as Victor Turner, E.O. Wilson, Steven Pinker,
Jeff Hawkins, Benoit Mandelbrot, and Ilya Prigogine.
The next level, the
holistic level, is very new, and includes very few thinkers in it – the only ones
I know of being the poet-philosopher Frederick Turner and, of course, Clare Graves, Don Beck, and Christoper Cowan, since they could not have discussed a level above the one they were in. We have yet to see what
possible form of social organization will come out of such thinking. Even though
we have learned that other communitarian forms of social and government
organization have been dictatorial every time, it seems likely, since this is a
much more complex level of thinking, that it will be some sort of world
federalist democratic republican form of government, where individuals are
encouraged to be communitarian thinkers, while the government does not get in
the way of people self-organizing into communities of their choice.
III.
Implications for Understanding Philosophy and Philosophers
As we can see,
there can end up some overlap in thinkers. Just because an egalitarian,
communitarian thinker comes along, that does not mean that capitalist/scientific
thinkers go away – and most scientists and businesspeople are in fact still
thinking this way. And not just the average person, but philosophers and
scholars as well. Most of the clergy of the Catholic Church are clearly thinkers
in the religious tradition – as well they should be. The Pope should only be a
religious thinker, and should not have moved into the capitalist/scientific way
of thinking (even if his thinking begins to play on the borderlands, his
thinking should mostly be firmly rooted in religious thinking). Do we really
want a Pope who is interested in profit? And certainly we should not have a Pope
who is a secular humanist. Yet, it has profited the Church considerably to
integrate in scientific understandings of the universe, rather than continuing
to oppose them. Thus, the Church performs its proper role in maintaining truly
religious thinking – and in maintaining it in its best traditions, rather than
its worst (which we should have learned from, and learned to avoid, by
now).
I am certain, in making these identifications, that I have stepped
on some toes regarding peoples’ favorite thinkers and philosophers. We do not
like to think that Plato and Aristotle are less complex thinkers than some
people are nowadays – or even are less complex thinkers than, say, Machiavelli.
Such objections will undoubtedly be made, but they are made precisely because of
two errors in thinking: 1) we project our own thinking on the thinkers of the
past, and read our own complexities into those past thinkers, and 2) there are
inevitably those who themselves think at the level of, say, Plato and Aristotle,
and thus consider, say, Machiavelli, to be a highly complex thinker, precisely
because their own thinking is only just now becoming as complex as Machiavelli’s
was. For these people, someone like Derrida is for all intents and purposes
incomprehensible.
The important
thing we must remember is this: Plato is not a thinker. Aristotle is not a
thinker. Machiavelli is not a thinker. They were thinkers. They were thinkers of
their time, place, and complexity. This does not mean they do not have their
values now, in our more complex times, because those levels of thinking still
exist, are still relevant, are the base on which higher levels of complexity are
built. Machiavelli could not have thought what he thought had Plato and
Aristotle not thought what they thought. Machiavelli could not have moved us
into a culture and society of capitalism and science from the
Platonic/Aristotlean world view without this world view to move from. And each
of these thinkers provide excellent basic models from which to build new, more
complex self-similar levels. But we must not mistake any of these thinkers from
the past for who they are not. They are not present-day thinkers, thinking in
present-day complexities – they are thinkers from the past, thinking in their
own levels of complexity. Oftentimes we forget this when we talk about them or
read them. When we read them, we must remember that, and we must remember that
we read into them, we don’t read them for what they meant at the times when they
were writing. We interpret them over and over (individually and socially) into
the present, making and keeping them relevant for today and the future. The same
must be remembered of present-day thinkers. Should I be read in the future, you
must remember not to mistake me for someone else. I am a thinker now; I will
have been a thinker at some future time. And my thoughts will be relevant for
the hierarchical level of thinking I am presently in, which will exist as a
lower level in the nested hierarchy of some future level of complexity. I will
seem relevant to future scholars who think at my present level of complexity; a
mere source and spur of thinking for future thinkers, who will recognize too the
relative simplicity of my thoughts compared to theirs, though it occurs as a
spur to each higher level that is self-similar to my own.
There are a few
things we must remember when considering the history of ideas in this way: 1)
each higher level of complexity necessarily needs the lower levels on which to
build and rest, while the lower levels do not need the higher levels in the
least (this does not mean, however, that within a person, the lower levels are
not affected by their own higher levels – family for a tribal thinker is
different than family for religious thinker, which is different than family for
a capitalist/scientific thinker, or even an egalitarian thinker, though the
family unit remains at the same level of complexity-thinking for each) , 2) each
level has its own values, benefits, and shortcomings, and 3) there is no upper
limit of complexity. Let us consider these in order.
In this model, each of
the levels must be traversed in order to reach upper levels. In this, Marx was
correct in identifying different levels societies go through, and in realizing
one must necessarily go through each lower level to reach upper levels. For
example, countries like Germany and France have extensive welfare states that
are based on the egalitarian world view. Since these welfare states were built
on a solid foundation of capitalism, they have lasted quite a long time without
extensive or severe human rights violations (though when Germany adopted a
different version of this level in Nazism, they clearly did commit severe human
rights violations, as has egalitarian France in is former colonies). If those
welfare states are currently on the decline, as they indeed are, it is because
those societies have for the most part rejected the levels below them – they are
knocking the foundation out from under themselves. But this is a different
problem from level-jumping. When the egalitarian/communitarian world view was
imposed on an aristocratic society in Russia, we got Soviet-style communism, and
thus a mixture of aristocracy and communitarianism, without a
capitalist/scientific level (the Soviet rejection of science can be most clearly
seen in their acceptance of Lysenko’s biological theories).
Thus, a true
egalitarian/communitarian society was not reached, while places like France and
Germany came closest to accomplishing such a goal. However, one of the problems
with each of these levels up to the egalitarian world view is that each also
tries to reject the other levels, and the egalitarian world view seems most keen
on getting rid of both the capitalist/scientific and religious world views
(mostly just capitalism and religion, since it does have its own brand of
science in systems science, relativism and probablistic science). When lower
levels are rejected, the effect is, as said above, to try to kick the foundation
out from under oneself. One of the benefits of those levels above the
communitarian level is the recognition of the value of each of the levels, and
even the holistic integration of them all. The reason we need the lower levels
is the same reason we need lower levels of reality. Atoms give rise to chemicals
which give rise to cells which give rise to complex organisms, one of which is
humans, with our complex thinking. We can destroy cells without destroying
chemicals, and we can destroy chemicals without destroying atoms, but we cannot
destroy an atom while keeping the chemical around. The atom, though at the
lowest level of complexity, is the vital foundation of each of the emergent
levels above it. In the same way, the noosphere, the sphere of emergent human
thought, contains the biosphere within it, since the biosphere can get along
just fine without humans or human thought, while humans cannot get along without
the biosphere (this idea is Ken Wilbur’s, from A Theory of Everything, 98).
The
relationship may in fact be a more complex feedback loop than even Wilbur
admits, since one could also point out that other organisms that are clearly
less complex than the biosphere as a whole could also be wiped out, without any
real effect on the biosphere as a whole. The important thing here is that human
thought is more complex than biology, including the entire biosphere. And more
complex levels contain less complex levels, not vice versa. Thus, nature is a
part of us even more than we are a part of nature. But I have gone through this
to point out that levels of human complexity are also nested hierarchies,
self-similar to the nested hierarchies of nature itself. Like atoms to
molecules, the higher levels require the lower levels to exist at
all.
Thus, we have to remember too that each level has its benefits – as
well as its shortcomings. The lowest level is the level of pure existence. We
cannot deny our needs for food, drink, sleep, and sex if we are to survive as a
species. But this is what animals do, and we are more than mere animals in our
cognitive abilities and social organization.
Thus, the first fully human level
is tribal. This is the level of family and family ritual and, in the present day
West, athletic teams. However, this level is fundamentally racist – anything
non-self is considered bad by those who stay in this level.
The next level, the
heroic, is associated with Homer’s heroes, the Greek and Roman gods, and Roman
emperors. Here we also find athletic superstars. However, this level is
extremely egocentric and can be very destructive (again, consider our athletic
superstars).
The next level is authoritarian and theocratic. What we now think
of as religion – exemplified by Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, etc. – with its
emphasis on giving life meaning, direction, and purpose, and a world that is
well-ordered by God. However, these codes are so strictly enforced that they
result in things like the Inquisition and the Salem Witch Trials.
The backlash
to such extreme measures gave rise to the next level, the capitalist/scientific
level, which "seeks truth and meaning in individualistic terms" (Wilbur, 10), is
rational, believes that the world is knowable through science, gave rise to
immense material gains through capitalism, abolished slavery, and developed
ideas of human rights. However, due to the fact that this level needed lots of
resources, there was perceived exploitation of lower classes both within and
without capitalist societies, and Newtonian physics was coming up against quite
a few contradictions, both of which led to the next level.
The
egalitarian/communitarian level insists on the equality of all people, sees the
world as a system, and encourages ecological thinking and pluralism. However,
this level, even more than the rest, seems determined to destroy every level
below it. This is in part due to its opposition to hierarchy and its extreme
form of equality.
As we can see, each of these levels comes with its own set of
benefits – benefits which we need to both acknowledge and embrace. We need
stronger families, a healthy sense of self, lives with meaning, direction, and
purpose, but with material well-being and a scientific understanding of the
world and how its works, and respect for all people regardless of religion,
race, or color. Family, heroism, religion, science, economic and ecological
thinking, and pluralism all have their place. And should.
Teleological
thinking is something humans commonly engage in. In fact, one could go so far as
to identify it as one of the human universals. Thus, we should not be surprised
if and when people use it with a model such as this. There is no highest level
in this model. The holistic level, the highest level of thinking we currently
have, is not the highest. Whatever the next level will look like will have to
wait until the integrative and even the holistic levels become realized more in
social organization. We cannot know exactly what it will look like, only that it
will have a family resemblance to the other individualistic levels, since it
comes after the communitarian level of holism. And there will be a communitarian
level after it, etc.
This is another reason why we should not mistake thinkers
from the past for being more complex thinkers than they were. It is unlikely
that a higher-level thinker will in fact mistake a lower-level thinker for
thinking as he or she does, but there are those who may be on the same level as
a past thinker, who may mistakenly think, just because he is in a more complex
culture, that his thinking is also necessarily of the most complex form, and
therefore think that a past thinker – say, Plato, who is an aristocratic thinker
– is, say, a holistic thinker. This is particularly true among those who think
that holism is necessarily the highest form of thinking possible (it is not – it
is only one more rung on the emergent ladder).
Thus, if we take the
integrative and holistic approaches, we can begin to see the importance of
knowing thinkers from each of the levels of complexity. Plato and Aristotle have
their places in helping to give our lives meaning and direction, and to provide
an ethical basis for action. They can inform the way we think these issues even
today – since it is a level that is necessary for us to live meaningful, ethical
lives. The next level, the capitalist/scientific level, allowed us to
individualize those ethics, to consider the origins of ethics and the
justification for them, and develop ideas of individual rights and personal
responsibility. At the same time, the pluralism of the egalitarian level allows
us to apply those ethics to more and more people in our ever-expanding tribe.
This is admittedly a utilitarian approach to understanding the great thinkers of
the past – but if we are honest with ourselves, we are already utilitarian with
them, studying them to write essays and to develop our own philosophies for our
own times.
In the latter case, we have to know where we’ve been in order to know
what’s already been done, and what still needs to be done. For the
integrationist and holistic world views, knowing each level is vital to
understanding how each level should relate to each other, and be used to develop
more complex levels of thinking and social organization. As we become more and
more self-aware (the dictum to "know yourself" applied in a larger and larger
sense), we will come to understand how important it is to integrate the levels
and to appreciate and affirm each level for the benefits they bestow – for both
the development of new levels, and scholarship to understand each of the levels,
particularly in how they relate to one another, and lead into new
levels.
Another way we can come to understand these levels is suggested
by Ken Wilbur: I-we-it-its. He talks about how we need to integrate all these
aspects together – but we can also come to understand each of the levels through
these four aspects. The tribalist level contains none of these in any real
sense. There is not yet a real sense of individual identity, or the difference
between individual and group – and technology is very primitive, and is not seen
as really separate from the tribe. With the development of heroic culture, we
get "I" culture. With the development of the authoritarian culture of Plato and
Aristotle, Christianity and Islam, we get "we" culture. With the development of
capitalist/scientific culture, we get "it" culture. And with the development of
egalitarian culture, we get "its" culture (with systems theory, etc.).
Wilbur
argues that I-we-it also corresponds to beauty(aesthetics)-ethics-truth. Thus we
can begin to understand what is happening when Aristotle says ethics aims at to
kalon, which can be translated as either "the beautiful" or "the good," since
Aristotle has an ethical "we" philosophy that is also strongly "I". Also, we can
begin to understand John Keats’ equation: "beauty is truth – truth, beauty,"
since Keats is an individualist living in scientific culture (romanticism was an
attempt to recover aspects of heroic culture). And we can also begin, with more
integrationist thinking, to understand that beauty, the good, and truth are all
one and the same thing – and with the systems science of "its," we can also
begin to really understand for the first time how deeply embedded all of these
are in time. And if we include the idea developed by J. T. Fraser of time as a
nested hierarchy, we can begin to understand more and more deeply how everything
is related.
IV. Conclusion
Obviously these ideas need to be
further expanded – but that is the topic of a full-length book, not an essay
introducing the idea. With the idea of emergent complexity that contains the
lower levels in a nested hierarchy, we can include too the I-we-it-its as well.
We get a new idea of "I" when we move into the "we" of the authoritarian level,
and a new idea of each as we move into both the "it" and "its" levels as well.
And each of these aspects will change as we move into the intregrationist and
holistic levels – change, while at the same time containing their original
meanings. The "I" investigated by Homer and Socrates influenced Freud, but the
"I" developed by Freud is clearly of a different kind, emergent and more
complex. And the "we" developed by Plato and Aristotle influenced Heidegger, but
the "we" of Heidegger is clearly of a different kind as well – influencing the
"we" of postmodernism, including its worst aspects, such as political
correctness. And while the ancient Greeks did have science and technology, it is
clear that the science and technology of the scientific culture is of a
different kind, emergent and more complex. And the highly complex systems
science that has since developed and become more dominant had its origins in
some of the thoughts of Goethe, and even Aristotle.
One might ask, "If
Aristotle were alive today, would he still be an authority thinker?" Naturally,
this is impossible to say. That may have been his natural disposition to such an
extent that it would still be his disposition today. However, it is also just as
likely that Aristotle, being the genius he was, and the most complex thinker of
his day, would be among the most complex thinkers of today. There is nothing in
Aristotle that makes him inherently incapable of our level of complex thinking –
what made him incapable of it was his living and thinking in the time and
culture in which he actually lived. In fact, every person living today, no
matter what level they may currently be in, can also think in each of these
levels – though if they are at a lower level, they would of course have to move
through each level, in order. Level jumps in complexity of thought are just as
impossible as atoms skipping molecules to create life.
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