hypothetical questions in religion & politics

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http://richardrohr.wordpress.com/2012/03/16/hypothetical-questions/ #comment-1369 re: Hypothetical Questions in Religion and Politics Great observation! I was scratching my head about this the other day. I was trying to figure out why political coalitions sometimes form between groups of people who may otherwise be quite antagonistic, for example, fundamentalistic evangelical protestants and traditionalistic roman catholics, the so-called theocons and social conservatives who have coalesced behind Rick Santorum. Beyond the more obvious shared political goals or moral agenda, there seems to be something else going on. What brings them together may well be – not so much WHAT they think, but – HOW they think, or what one might call their epistemology. The extreme conservatives seem to share – not necessarily their conclusions, but – ways of processing reality in that they are typically naive realists, who, as infallibilists, don’t find access to the truth to be at all problematical. This dynamic seems to play out among liberal extremists, too, who also share an epistemology. In their case, what they share is a radical skepticism, rejecting our classical understanding of truth itself, indeed embracing moral relativism and denying our ability to reason from “an IS to an OUGHT.” Political and religious extremists are all epistemologically bankrupt in their own way. On the far right, their theory of knowledge is flawed. On the far left, their theory of truth is incoherent. A few years ago, Fr Richard wrote a book during Lent while staying in Merton’s hermitage at the Abbey of Gethsemani. He taught us about Third Eye Seeing or seeing as the mystics see. This nondual approach does not gift us with conclusions but with practices and a way of approaching reality. It critiques radical skepticism because it embraces our common sense understanding of the realities of truth, beauty and goodness. It critiques the naive realism of radical fundamentalism because its theory of knowledge goes beyond (but not without) the empirical, logical, practical and even moral to embrace the robustly relational, where neither God nor love nor other people are syllogisms (or hypotheticals) to be solved but gifts to be accepted. This “nondual critique” is thus a form of critical realism that sees relationship 1

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Transcript of hypothetical questions in religion & politics

Page 1: hypothetical questions in religion & politics

http://richardrohr.wordpress.com/2012/03/16/hypothetical-questions/

#comment-1369

re: Hypothetical Questions in Religion and Politics

Great observation! I was scratching my head about this the other day. I was trying

to figure out why political coalitions sometimes form between groups of people

who may otherwise be quite antagonistic, for example, fundamentalistic

evangelical protestants and traditionalistic roman catholics, the so-called

theocons and social conservatives who have coalesced behind Rick Santorum.

Beyond the more obvious shared political goals or moral agenda, there seems to

be something else going on.

What brings them together may well be – not so much WHAT they think, but –

HOW they think, or what one might call their epistemology. The extreme

conservatives seem to share – not necessarily their conclusions, but – ways of

processing reality in that they are typically naive realists, who, as infallibilists,

don’t find access to the truth to be at all problematical. This dynamic seems to

play out among liberal extremists, too, who also share an epistemology. In their

case, what they share is a radical skepticism, rejecting our classical

understanding of truth itself, indeed embracing moral relativism and denying our

ability to reason from “an IS to an OUGHT.”

Political and religious extremists are all epistemologically bankrupt in their own

way. On the far right, their theory of knowledge is flawed. On the far left, their

theory of truth is incoherent.

A few years ago, Fr Richard wrote a book during Lent while staying in Merton’s

hermitage at the Abbey of Gethsemani. He taught us about Third Eye Seeing or

seeing as the mystics see. This nondual approach does not gift us with

conclusions but with practices and a way of approaching reality. It critiques

radical skepticism because it embraces our common sense understanding of the

realities of truth, beauty and goodness. It critiques the naive realism of radical

fundamentalism because its theory of knowledge goes beyond (but not without)

the empirical, logical, practical and even moral to embrace the robustly

relational, where neither God nor love nor other people are syllogisms (or

hypotheticals) to be solved but gifts to be accepted.

This “nondual critique” is thus a form of critical realism that sees relationship

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values as our proper ends and relegates all else to mere means and this includes

such as institutions, denominations, laws, dogmas, theologies, morals, politics

and such. Hypotheticals, in and of themselves, are okay; the way to spot one that

is not okay is to look for those where the answer is already embedded in its

premise, where such an answer places means before ends, subjugates

relationship values to other values (which may very well be important just not as

important), such as when dogma deteriorates into dogmatism, law into legalism,

morality into moralism, liturgy into ritualism, institutions into institutionalism,

hierarchy into hierarchicalism, reasoning into rationalism, fundamentals into

fundamentalism and so on.

I am really looking forward to Fr Richard’s next book as it emerges from yet

another fruitful lenten journey. I join all in prayer for his grand success in going

with the (most often, not always) gentle force of the Spirit!

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