MarkD
Keeper of the Hounds & Garden
- Location
- San Francisco Bay Area
This might fit better in a philosophy sub forum but if there is one I missed it. So as a second choice I think it also relates to mental health and well being. Wendell Berry is a respected poet, novelist and environmentalist. Here is an extended excerpt from the essay "Two Minds" from a book he wrote in 2003 called Citizen Papers: Two Minds - by Wendell Berry I think what he writes is interesting and insightful and I believe it helps make the case for the value and continued relevance of religion, even if that is sometimes easily corrupted and turned to self serving purposes.
"It is often proposed, nowadays, that if we would only get rid of religion and other leftovers from our primitive past and become enlightened by scientific rationalism, we could invent the new values and ethics needed to preserve the natural world. This proposal is perfectly reasonable and perfectly doubtful. It supposes that we can empirically know and rationally understand everything involved, which is exactly the supposition that has underwritten our transgressions the natural world in the first place.
Obviously we need to use our intelligence. But how much intelligence have we got? And what sort of intelligence is it that we have? And how, at its best, does human intelligence work?
In order to try to answer these questions I am going to suppose for a while that there are two different kinds of human mind: the Rational Mind and another which, for want of a better term, I will call the Sympathetic Mind. I will say now, and try to keep myself reminded, that these terms are going to appear to be allegorical, too neat and too separate - though I need to say also that their separation was not invented by me.
The Rational Mind, without being anywhere perfectly embodied, is the mind we all are supposed to be trying to have. It is the mind that the most powerful and influential people think they have. Our schools exist mainly to educate and propagate and authorize the Rational Mind. The Rational Mind is objective, analytical, and empirical; it makes itself up only by considering facts; it pursues truth by experimentation; it is uncorrupted by preconception, received authority, religious belief, or feeling. Its ideal products are the proven fact, the accurate prediction, and the “informed decision.” It is, you might say, the official mind of science, industry, and government.
The Sympathetic Mind differs from the Rational Mind, not by being unreasonable, but by refusing to limit knowledge or reality to the scope of
reason or factuality or experimentation, and by making reason the servant of things it considers precedent and higher."
I think this may be of interest at least to @Gary O', @Nathan, @Paco Dennis and @PeppermintPatty
"It is often proposed, nowadays, that if we would only get rid of religion and other leftovers from our primitive past and become enlightened by scientific rationalism, we could invent the new values and ethics needed to preserve the natural world. This proposal is perfectly reasonable and perfectly doubtful. It supposes that we can empirically know and rationally understand everything involved, which is exactly the supposition that has underwritten our transgressions the natural world in the first place.
Obviously we need to use our intelligence. But how much intelligence have we got? And what sort of intelligence is it that we have? And how, at its best, does human intelligence work?
In order to try to answer these questions I am going to suppose for a while that there are two different kinds of human mind: the Rational Mind and another which, for want of a better term, I will call the Sympathetic Mind. I will say now, and try to keep myself reminded, that these terms are going to appear to be allegorical, too neat and too separate - though I need to say also that their separation was not invented by me.
The Rational Mind, without being anywhere perfectly embodied, is the mind we all are supposed to be trying to have. It is the mind that the most powerful and influential people think they have. Our schools exist mainly to educate and propagate and authorize the Rational Mind. The Rational Mind is objective, analytical, and empirical; it makes itself up only by considering facts; it pursues truth by experimentation; it is uncorrupted by preconception, received authority, religious belief, or feeling. Its ideal products are the proven fact, the accurate prediction, and the “informed decision.” It is, you might say, the official mind of science, industry, and government.
The Sympathetic Mind differs from the Rational Mind, not by being unreasonable, but by refusing to limit knowledge or reality to the scope of
reason or factuality or experimentation, and by making reason the servant of things it considers precedent and higher."
I think this may be of interest at least to @Gary O', @Nathan, @Paco Dennis and @PeppermintPatty
Last edited: