SPIRITUAL LEADERS
'At one
time,' he said, turning to face us (the better, I dare say, to instil his
knowledge into our heads), 'peace was the exception and war the rule. Nowadays, however, it's the other way round,
and so the role of the army as a war-making institution has declined in
proportion that the role of the police as a peace-keeping one has
developed. In point of fact, the police
are to the modern world what armies were to the ancient one - a reflection of
the times. It's theoretically preferable
to live in a police state than in an army state, though no state is, as yet,
completely absolute in that respect. We
live with a kind of army/police compromise, though while the army is trained to
make war ... it occasionally finds itself having to assist the police in
keeping the peace. Nevertheless, a day
will come, I can assure you, when there'll be no armies!'
Yes, I respect that opinion, as do most of
my fellow cadets at the Police Training Centre.
We like to think of ourselves as a cut above the army, a truly
contemporary body of men with a steady and, hopefully, peaceful future ahead of
us, once we get out of here.
Superintendent O'Brien encourages us in this belief. He has never been anything but a cop and sees
no reason why any of us should ever be anything else either, least of all a soldier,
which to him would amount to a cop-out!
For to him soldiers are a dying breed, likened, in his imagination, to
wolves. We, by contrast, he likens to
sheepdogs, whose business it is to keep the flock, or masses, in order. We take our orders from the shepherds, or
leaders of the flock. Leaders in the
best sense of the word, who are themselves to a significant extent dependent on
the Word, the Way, as proclaimed by the philosopher-kings, as they used to be
called, though perhaps philosopher-commissars would now be a more appropriate
terminology in view of the post-atomic nature of the age?
Smiling to himself on reading this
paradoxical entry in his late-brother's journal, the politician Shane Brady
reflected that O'Brien's metaphors for human society were fairly apposite, if a
shade over-simplified and even arrogant.
The fact that in an absolute society, such as the one he lived in, the
'shepherds' were derived from the 'flock' ... meant that they formed a relative
distinction vis-à-vis those whom they led, not to mention those who kept the
peace in the interests of law and order.
The 'sheepdogs', as O'Brien called them, had come to supplant the
'wolves' in the course of time; though one could quibble with that metaphor as
regards its applicability to the army, if one so desired. For armies tended, more often than not, to
make war on other armies than to attack civilian populations, after the fashion
of a wolf attacking a flock of sheep! At
least that used to be the case prior to the twentieth century.
Still, there was a world of difference
between soldiers and police. The heyday
of armies had long since passed, because the emphasis in the modern world was
on keeping the peace internally, within any given country, rather than on
making war externally, vis-à-vis other countries - evolution having progressed
from the apparent to the essential in the course of its spiritual striving
towards a maximum internal goal. Modern
armies tended to be kept in reserve, pending hostilities from without, more often
than they were actually used in fighting a war.
Theirs was an indirect mode of keeping the peace, involving preparation
for war. They were not police, but at
times they could almost be taken for police, as O'Brien had hinted in his
straightforward way. Certainly they were
no longer the out-and-out warmongers of earlier times! Their continual presence in the world could
be described as a necessary evil, whereas the police were essentially a force
for good, concerned with keeping the peace.
There was a difference of quality between the two vocations, a greater
degree of prestige accruing to the peace-keeping body than to the - potentially
if not literally - war-making one.
Virtually anyone could become a soldier, particularly in times of war;
but not everyone could become a policeman!
Yet the modern army should not be
belittled on that or other accounts, since it was perfectly capable of adapting
to a variety of tasks and employments.
Compared with ancient war-like armies, it was only nominally an army,
which was just as well, even in countries that professed a greater respect for
soldiering, like those with expansionist interests of one sort or another. Even their armies were relatively cautious
and had long been such. Perhaps that was
because they no longer had much work to do?
Certainly the army in Shane Brady's country had done a fair amount of
peace-keeping work in recent years, and now existed on a stand-by and
relatively peaceful basis.
"Had enough of your reading?"
Gavin Howe asked, having noticed that his colleague had the expression of a man
lost in thought when he glanced-up from his own reading-matter, which, after
more than an hour, was now becoming somewhat tiresome to him.
"Ah, so you perceive my
self-absorption!" Brady responded with surprising alacrity. "I had gravitated from reading to
thinking, as is my customary habit.
Would you recommend such a tendency?"
Howe smiled guardedly, as if to justify
his position, and replied: "No, not as a rule."
Brady's face accommodated itself to a look
of surprise mixed with self-doubt.
"But why ever not?" he wanted to know.
"I would define it as a relapse from
passive intellectuality into active intellectuality, from a relatively passive
use of the will to its absolutely active use," Howe declared.
"Oh, come now!" Brady protested,
in what appeared to be a mildly face-saving exercise. "Such distinctions are trivial. In point of fact, you'd probably be more correct
to distinguish between a relatively active use of the will and an absolutely
active use of it. After all, reading
does require an exertion of the will, both in terms of following the words and
simultaneously making some sense out of them.
Awareness is being applied to something other than itself, i.e. to words
on a printed page, which are akin to external thoughts. In reading, we absorb other people's thoughts
through the medium of print, which is mind objectivized,
as it were."
Gavin Howe chuckled softly and commented
that, if one were a writer oneself, one could end-up reading one's own thoughts
fairly regularly - a comment which Brady was obliged to swallow with a
reluctant admission of its truth, whilst also admitting that it wasn't very
often that he found himself reading any of his own objectivized
thoughts, not being a writer.
"Nevertheless, you'll have to agree with me that reading signifies
a morally superior use of the will than thinking," Howe in due course
retorted.
"Perhaps it does," Brady
reluctantly conceded. "Though from
what I gather from certain knowledgeable sources, hardly the most morally
superior use of it!"
"I'm not so sure," Howe
confessed, shrugging faintly. "You
see, will is awareness, or spirit, directed to some objective outside itself,
like thinking or reading. When, however,
awareness isn't directed beyond its spiritual confines but exists for itself, as in meditation, then will is transcended, because
awareness reflecting upon itself corresponds to an absolute use of the
spirit. When spirit is used in
conjunction with soul it becomes will, which signifies its relative use. Now if meditation is morally superior to
reading, it isn't because it signifies a less relative use of the spirit but,
on the contrary, because it transcends relativity ... in the absolute. There is no will in meditation, and so one
can't talk, as you approximately did, of a morally more superior use of the
will than in reading - as implying meditation.
As far as I'm aware, reading is morally
the most superior use of the will, since it involves more passivity or, as you
seemed to imply, less activity than thinking.
Thought leads, on the highest levels, to writing, which, when read,
brings us a step closer to meditation.
We think in order to write, we write in order to read, and we read in
order to meditate - even if only indirectly."
Brady smiled in admiration of this
philosophical conundrum and admitted that, though confusing on the surface,
there was probably some truth in it underneath, so to speak, in its
metaphysical depths. "An
approximation, in essence, to Schopenhauer's metaphysics," he
averred. "Though that good
philosopher would probably have had more respect for thought-for-thought's sake
than you."
Gavin Howe half-agreed, via an affirmative
grunt, with the probability of that assertion and remarked: "To my mind,
thinking unconnected with any purpose outside itself, like writing, is a kind
of madness, particularly when taken to extremes. After all, there's only a difference of
degree between a person who habitually thinks to himself and one who habitually
talks to himself, the former being a more introverted version of the latter -
one might almost say a better class of madman.
The only reason we recognize the self-talker as mad and overlook the
self-thinker, is that the one is more conspicuous, because audible, than the
other. The one advertises his madness to
all-and-sundry, whereas the other keeps it to himself. Though neither of them realizes he's mad,
which, of course, is usually the way of things with lunatics."
"How
enlightening!" Brady exclaimed, intrigued by the prospect that the
world harboured numerous secretive madmen.
"I'd never considered private thought in that light
before." He chuckled faintly,
before adding: "Perhaps that explains why you interrupted my, er, brown study earlier, fearing for my sanity?"
Gavin Howe refrained from directly
answering Brady's suggestion, but contented himself by saying that some books
gave rise to fruitful reflections which, providing they didn't get out-of-hand,
were nothing to worry about, particularly if destined to lead to fruitful
writing in due course.
"As, no doubt, did some of
Schopenhauer's reflections," Brady commented.
"Especially those paradoxically
treating of denial of the will in the interests of spiritual quiescence,"
Howe confirmed.
"Which the intelligent reader would
doubtless have been impressed by," Brady rejoined, chuckling anew.
"Perhaps even to the point of
giving-up reading in the interests of meditation," Howe concluded. For, thereafter, both men gave-up thinking
aloud and reverted or, rather, gravitated to reading their respective books.
* * *
The Leader
slowly paced backwards and forwards behind his desk, as was his habit when
reflecting on imparted information and, with a sudden tensing of his brow,
which others might have called a frown, he said: "A pity Howe is becoming
what you say he is - a kind of absolute spiritual teacher. I'd always thought of him as an able
politician, which, frankly, he still is in my eyes; though if, in future, he
decides to become something else, I should have nothing against the fact."
Shane Brady fidgeted ostentatiously in his
chair, since he was of the opinion that Howe ought already to have quit
politics and gone on to something else.
Yet he kept silent.
"The emphasis in politics, as in
science, is always on changing the world or, at least, one's own bit of it for
the better," the Leader continued, tensing anew, "and so it must be
for us. Of course, there are people who
abjure the politically active approach to life in loyalty to a religiously
passive approach to it, who turn their back on the world in the interests of
spiritual advancement. Such people are
usually deluded, since they imagine that the spiritual approach is alone right
and that, if they keep at it long enough, it will eventually take them to
Heaven. Unfortunately that isn't the
case, and anyone who realizes as much is unlikely to remain an absolute upholder
of the spiritual approach for long!
Rather, he'll come, in some fashion, to understand the importance of the
active approach accompanying the passive one, not as an absolute alternative,
contrary to what some people still think, but as a means to a higher end, a
subsidiary approach to bringing into effect our eventual salvation in spiritual
absolutism. In short, the political
approach must be harnessed to the religious one, in order to create a new
synthesis in which technology serves the spirit in the interests of
transcendence."
Shane Brady nodded his aching head and
smiled the smile of a man who only half-understood what the Leader was getting
at. The latter, however, had no
intentions of letting-up, but went on:-
"Was it not Marx who wrote: 'Hitherto
philosophers have only interpreted the world; the point is to change it'? Well, change it we shall, though not for the
mere sake of change but - and this is the crux of the matter - in order to make
salvation possible. Of course, the act
of changing the world devolves upon politicians and scientists rather than
philosophers, since philosophy can only draw attention to what changes need to
be made and why. The philosopher
necessarily interprets the world and draws what conclusions he can from it, and
then the politicians and scientists come along and actually affect change. Some philosophers, like Marx, appeal more to
those materialistic changers than others; some, like Schopenhauer, primarily
appeal to the idealistic changers - the priests and artists; and some, like
Hegel, strive to establish a balance between the two categories in an attempt
to reconcile them, appealing now to the one, now to the other. I, myself, wrote in the vein of a
synthesizing philosopher, which is why I adopted a political stance not wholly
materialist but embracing a concern for the spiritual life, primarily in terms
of transcendentalism and the correlative building and staffing of meditation
centres. If we are politicians, we're
politicians with a difference; men who are opposed to purely materialist values
and seek to further the spiritual life through our actions, working indirectly,
via politics, for a higher religion. It
is we who safeguard the spirit! Indeed,
we're so concerned with the spiritual life that an impartial observer would be
justified, I think, in regarding us as priests in disguise, transcendentalists
who take the responsibility of government upon ourselves not only in the
interests of spiritual progress, but from a grave concern, more particularly,
that it should ever get into wholly materialist hands whose money-grubbing
instincts would thwart spiritual development and deny the validity of a
transcendental approach to the world."
Shane Brady nodded understandingly and
admitted to himself that, although Howe had probably veered a little too
radically towards spiritual quietism, his was only an
extreme manifestation of what, essentially, they were all concerned with and,
as transcendentalists, sought to uphold - namely religious progress.
"Yes, we should regard ourselves
primarily as transcendentalists," the Leader continued apace, as was his
custom when addressing subordinates, "and so consider our political duties
as of secondary importance. Before that
atomic dichotomy between politicians and priests, or state and church, arose,
religious matters were largely in the hands of politicians who, as in ancient
Greece, served in the temple on a part-time basis, a subsidiary obligation to
their principal responsibilities as political rulers. Religion, at that time, was predominantly
materialist. Well, now that we've
evolved beyond the church/state dichotomy, we find ourselves in the converse
situation ... of being spiritual leaders who take political responsibility upon
ourselves without, however, regarding politics as our principal concern, but
solely in order to keep power out of the hands of materialists, who, as already
said, would impede further spiritual progress.
We are spiritual leaders with a subsidiary obligation to politics."
Shane Brady raised sceptical brows
slightly, since he was becoming a trifle confused by the apparent discrepancy
that still existed between theory and practice in his country.
Divining as much, the Leader went on:
"Admittedly, we're still in early days and therefore can't claim to have
taken our spiritual leadership to the point where politics, and hence the state, ceases to exist.
We often see ourselves as politicians, and, to be sure, some amongst us
are more genuinely political than others."
Here Brady smiled in gratified recognition
of the fact, even though there was an undercurrent of derision in the Leader's
voice and he ought really to have known better.
"But eventually we, or our future
successors, will treat our religious obligations to the people more
seriously," continued the Leader, "we shall go down to them more
often in our capacity as meditation leaders, until we get to the stage where
politics is only a very part-time concern of ours in relation to spiritual
leadership. As yet, the people meditate
in public for no longer than an hour on Sunday mornings, and so we don't have
to exert ourselves in a spiritual capacity to them very often or for very
long. But a time will come, comrade,
when they'll be meditating for a number of hours every day, and then we, or our
future successors, will be obliged to set them a spiritual example by being
on-hand for much longer periods of time.
At that more fortunate juncture in time, politics will indeed be a very
subsidiary concern of ours, as 'the church' takes over from 'the state' to such
an extent ... as to presage the complete eclipse of the latter in the absolute
spirituality of the post-human millennium, when only religious concerns will
prevail as, first, the collectivized brains of the Supermen and, then, the
collectivized new-brains of the Superbeings bring
life on earth closer to transcendence, and thus to the attainment of pure
spirit to the post-millennial Beyond. In
the meantime, however, government will remain firmly in the hands of spiritual
leaders, like me, and so a continuity of religious progress will be
guaranteed. It is we who stand firm
against undue materialism and have the means to ensure the dissemination of
spiritual truth when the time comes for the world at large to embrace
civilization on the highest post-human level - namely, that of
transcendentalism. And we are not alone
in this matter."
Shane Brady nodded affirmative agreement
and emitted the sigh of a man who was both relieved of doubts by the Leader's
confidence and anxious not to detain him any longer than was strictly necessary.
Perceiving this, the latter concluded:
"As for Howe, I shall have a personal word with him and decide whether he
should perhaps modify his spiritual commitment to suit our short-term
requirements or, if that cannot be done, take a different post in the
administration - possibly as Commissar for Spiritual Development, or Commissar
for the Arts." So saying, he
extended his hand and bid Brady a friendly good-day.
As usual, the Commissar for Internal
Security departed the Leader's presence reassured that things were under
control and gradually working out for the better. He, too, was a member of this
spiritually-biased administration and had a right to uphold religious progress
in the face of materialist concerns.
Indeed, it was an integral part of his job to ensure that no-one
threatened the spiritual integrity of a country which, as a socially
transcendent one, signified a transition, as it were, between 'state' and
'church', or politics and religion - the former socialist, the latter transcendentalist. Except for a few cases, the leaders in the
current administration were indeed spiritual men, priests in disguise, as the
Leader had called them, who were intent upon furthering the evolution of 'the
church' at the expense of traditional concepts of the state, so that the
state's gradual withering depended, as much as anything, on their volition,
since not connected with a dualistic antagonism between political and religious
leaders.
Back in his office, Brady turned to his
late-brother's journal, which he was still reading, and opened it where he had
left off. Smiling, he read: Another day
O'Brien said to us, 'What you have to realize is that you're a force for good
in this world and have a duty to uphold the integrity of the police. You're not there to make war on the people
but to keep the peace, and thus to serve the cause of evolutionary progress
towards the post-human millennium, when, in all probability, you'll cease to
exist, having fulfilled your destiny as peace-keepers within the human context. Your origins were in atomic society, with the
growth of a dualistic distinction between proton equivalents and bound-neutron
equivalents, which is to say, between army and police. But you came into your own in the post-atomic
context of the police state, and increasingly function as free-neutron
equivalents within such a context. Your
loyalty, as protectors of the peace, is to the leaders who, as
transcendentalists, function as free-electron equivalents in the people's
interests. You may not wear black
uniforms, but the navy-blue uniform you do wear symbolizes both your good
intentions and honour as policemen. It
contrasts sharply with the bright-red tunics formerly worn by certain armies
prior to the day when proton equivalents became quasi-electron equivalents and
increasingly took on a role in society subsidiary to
your own. One day, as I've already said,
such protons-in-disguise will cease to exist, as society arrives at a
completely absolute orientation favouring free-neutron equivalents alone. Which country is destined, I wonder, to
become the first absolute police state?'
Still smiling, Brady closed the journal
and put it away in the right-hand draw of his desk. Probably it would be safer if they all became
absolute police states in conjunction, he mused. Assuming 'state' was really the appropriate
term?