FEELING AND AWARENESS
EDWIN: Since you are a self-proclaimed philosopher, what is the
distinction between awareness and will, as applying to the spirit?
TONY: The
distinction is between the negative and positive approach to and/or
application of spirit. When we use
spirit actively it becomes will. When,
on the other hand, we use it passively, which I interpret in a positive light,
it becomes awareness.
EDWIN: But
isn't will awareness?
TONY:
Yes. But it is awareness directed
towards practical ends and does not result in the direct cultivation of spirit.
Awareness directed towards no other end than greater awareness makes for Truth.
EDWIN: Then
what is spirit?
TONY: The awareness aspect of the most positive use of electrons,
as when they are in a majority over protons in any atomic integrity.
EDWIN: And when
or where do they exist in such a majority?
TONY: In
the new brain. Now the new brain is of
course a physiological entity, but, like all such entities, it has a psychic
aspect, which we call the superconscious. This is synonymous with spirit or, rather,
the superconscious is that part of the psyche in
which spirit exists, just as the subconscious is that part of it in which the
existence of soul is to be found.
EDWIN: What
is soul?
TONY: The
psychic aspect of proton-dominated regions of the body, which manifests in
emotions.
EDWIN: As
all emotions?
TONY: Yes,
good and bad, or positive and negative. The strong as well as the weak, the lasting as well as the
transient. Soul pertains to the
flesh and thus stems from the Diabolic Alpha, which is to say, from the cosmic
or natural roots of life. Spirit, though
lodged in a material entity, viz. the new brain, can be encouraged to reflect
an aspiration towards the Divine Omega, which is to say, pure spirit as totally
free electrons.
EDWIN: Thus
our spirit and our soul are alike impure?
TONY: Yes,
they are dependent on and connected with matter, which, as we both know, is
atomic. Pure soul, however, is subatomic
and manifests in the proton-proton reactions of flame. Pure spirit, by contrast, will be supra-atomic,
as manifesting in the electron-electron attractions of transcendence.
EDWIN: You
say soul is feeling, but would the sun, as a cosmic manifestation of pure soul,
be capable of feeling?
TONY: Not
in the conscious sense! The sun or, for
that matter, any subatomic absolute would be unconscious of itself as
feeling. So, incidentally, would mineral
formations, in which protons greatly preponderate. Consciousness of feeling only arises at that
point in evolutionary development when atomic formations are less radically
proton-dominated than with minerals - in other words, with plant life which,
although still proton-dominated, is capable of feeling pleasure or pain by dint
of a higher electron content than is to be found in stone. But so much does the proton content
preponderate over the electron content of this particular mode of life ... that
feeling is only registered subconsciously, never breaks into actual conscious
recognition, as with animals and men.
EDWIN: Thus
there is a difference between being unconscious of feeling because either
absolutely or near absolutely proton-constituted, and being subconsciously
conscious of it, as when the electron content increases slightly?
TONY: Yes,
a distinction, primarily, between the inorganic and the organic - the former
being beneath even subconscious receptivity, the latter on or above it.
EDWIN: If,
unlike a stone, a tree is capable of feeling pain or pleasure subconsciously,
would a dead tree or a log also be capable of doing so?
TONY: Of
course not! To be conscious of feeling,
on whatever level, one must be alive, and this applies no less to a tree or
plant than to an animal or a human being.
A dead tree would be closer to the inorganic than to the organic - indeed, it would literally become inorganic, as when wood
turns into coal, and accordingly be beneath the subconscious recognition of
emotions. A log would feel no pain from
an axe-blow, but a live tree certainly would, if subconsciously. We, too, feel pleasure and pain subconsciously
... in sleep, which is the nearest we can get to understanding what a tree
would feel. Plants are a life form that
sleeps all the time, though if they dream they would have no consciousness of
the fact, because there are too few electrons in their atomic constitution to
enable a separate or viewing mind to emerge.
EDWIN:
Would you describe positive emotions as good and negative ones as evil?
TONY: I am
no Platonist, but I will concede to positive emotions the status of a relative
good, that is to say, good in relation to negative emotions without, however,
being good in any absolute or literal sense.
EDWIN: So
still basically evil?
TONY: Yes,
because dependent on and clinging to the flesh.
Whatever appertains to soul, whether negatively (as pain) or positively
(as pleasure), is inherently evil because temporal. Pleasure may result from the electron content
of flesh responding to positive stimuli, but the fact that it has to do with
the electron aspect of the flesh doesn't make it good in any absolute
sense. It is certainly preferable to
pain, and we recognize as much. But it
remains sensual, quite distinct from any absolute good (of awareness) in the
spirit. Indeed, the spirit itself falls
short of Absolute Goodness by dint of the fact that it is impure, or dependent
on the new brain for physiological support.
We aspire, if virtuous, towards Absolute Good from the relative goodness
of spiritual awareness. But, by
comparison with positive emotions, even the lesser degree of awareness to which
I have just alluded, which appertains to the superconscious,
is closer to an absolute good, and we customarily regard it as such.
EDWIN:
Clearly, you are no aesthete! For, if I
understand you correctly, the contemplation of beauty would, to your mind, be
but a means to effecting the relative, or lesser, evil
of positive emotions.
TONY: Yes,
and therefore not a means to transcending soul, such as any genuine aspiration
towards the Divine must be all about.
Beauty in art is only practicable or acceptable for a given period of
evolutionary time - in other words, until such time as men turn away from
emotions towards the cultivation of awareness through one or another degree of
transcendentalism. Art then becomes a matter
of Truth, a mode of intimating of Absolute Truth in the interests of increased
awareness. We don't want positive
sensations from art in a developing transcendental age but, au
contraire, something that encourages us to transcend emotions through
passive contemplation, something, in short, that negates or stills emotions in
deference to the spirit.
EDWIN: Yet
not all twentieth-century art does so.
After all, there is a fair amount of ugly or anti-beauty art around,
while some of it still appeals to our aesthetic sense.
TONY:
That's true, and as far as the latter kind of art is concerned I have nothing
to say, preferring not to lose my cool!
But ugly art, as you call it, is certainly an important aspect of modern
art, reflecting the fact that contemporary man is at a further remove from the
Beautiful, regarded as an abstract virtue, than were the ancients or, for that
matter, his nineteenth-century predecessors, and is more disposed, in
consequence, either to interpret beauty in a relatively ugly way or to
consciously turn against it in a determined attempt to undermine and slander
it. I suspect that most petty-bourgeois
artists who create a relatively ugly art are really interpreting the Beautiful
in their own rather modernist way, and so extending the aesthetic tradition
into increasingly rarefied regions of Being which, in some people's minds, may
seem inseparable from ugliness. I don't
think we need criticize such artists for having a different concept of beauty
than the ancients or their bourgeois and/or aristocratic predecessors. Yet, regardless of their respective
intentions, the art they are producing will be on a lower level, in my opinion,
than that which is being produced in the realm of transcendentalism, or an art
exclusively concerned with Truth and, as a corollary of this, the cultivation
of greater degrees of awareness in the public at large.
EDWIN: So a
distinction exists between 'emotional art', irrespective of the quality or type
of emotions it encourages, and 'awareness art', which, by contrast, is the
truly modern art.
TONY:
'Feeling art' is never absolute, nor, for that matter, is most 'awareness art'
completely detached from feeling-engendering qualities, as we discover when we
respond to, say, a Neo-Plastic work as though it were intended to reflect a
higher concept of the Beautiful. But to
the extent that a distinction of sorts does in fact exist between them, then
yes - aesthetic art pertains, even when only tenuously beautiful, to the
tradition, whereas 'awareness art' pertains to what is truly modern, as
signifying a post-atomic bias for electron freedom. One could speak of materialistic art on the
one hand and of idealistic art on the other - a distinction extending across
the entire spectrum of petty-bourgeois creativity and even into the, by
comparison, nominally proletarian realms of light art and holography. From a proton/bound-electron distinction in
atomic art, we progress towards a quasi-electron/free-electron distinction on
the post-atomic levels of much twentieth-century art. From works in the former contexts that
directly appeal to the emotions and indirectly to awareness ... towards works
in the latter contexts that indirectly appeal to the emotions and directly to
awareness.
EDWIN: You
are alluding, I presume, to works, in the former contexts, of concrete beauty
and concrete truth respectively, but to works, in the latter contexts, of
abstract beauty and abstract truth respectively.
TONY: To be sure, and to works, in the latter contexts, of
abstract beauty that may well appear ugly and give rise, in consequence, to
less than positive emotions! Perhaps
they are a better incentive than more concrete works to our turning away from
emotions and embracing awareness instead?
I, at any rate, have always found so, which is why I prefer them to more
traditionally aesthetic works, despite the difference in quality of the
emotions engendered. Even a negative,
indirect incentive to awareness is preferable to no incentive at all!
EDWIN: Ah,
I'm almost afraid that I shall have to agree with you, incorrigible aesthete
that I am!