So, late at night I have been reading through this essay by Jacques Lacarriere suggested by Silenus.
I can see where some of the views are similar to my own. I notice how much my reading style has transformed over a lifetime. I appreciate that those who the author describes as "the Gnostics" were against the idea of procreation.
Still, as I mentioned, my reading-style has changed a great deal since the age of 19 or so.
I find myself almost irritated when there is mention of the true God. I have no problem with the pointing out that the God of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam is a demiurge - a "Cosmic Police Force" punishing humanity for simply being born into this slop. In fact, that kind of heresy and truth telling must have been what made me feel a certain identity as a Gnostic.
As I have aged, I have become less and less patient with mythologies which formed in the Mediterranean. I almost wish I had never heard of them. It annoys me that so much is tainted by the influences of that area of the world. I do appreciate that the author seems very cognizant of the mythological nature of the terminology. And, yes, I certainly do appreciate our ability to interpret these mythologies in a manner similar to the way the Gnostic sects did. This is why I mentioned Hermann Hesse's novel, Demian. The main thing which impressed me while reading that novel as a young man was the radical way the one character would take the liberty of interpreting Hebrew mythology his own way, suggesting that Cain was heroic and that Abel and his descendants were a tribe of authority worshipping conformists who were intimidated by a certain look of intelligence in the eyes of Cain's "type," and so vicious lies were spread against him.
To this day, I still have a certain contempt for the values of the masses, or contempt and disdain about who and what I am supposed to see as evil versus who and what I am supposed to see as Good.
It would appear that Evil and Good are relative terms, that Life itself (including Nature and the ideas of gods created by our species) is Pure Evil.
One thing I don't like is the total Anthropomorphic view of the universe, that the entire cosmos is somehow a reflection of man, and that man is a reflection of the cosmos. I am suspicious of any "philosophy of everything," any worldview that attempts to explain everything in absolute terms.
I am at a point where I much more prefer a kind of thinking suggested by these words (of Holden, the thorn in the side of Northern India), "We have only confused and fragmentary knowledge of ourselves, of our own bodies and of outside bodies. There is no personal immortality."
I'm still reading through it, but, as I said, only very late at night, after midnight that is. For whatever reasons, I devote my days and most of the evening to studying mathematics. I know it must be quite a bore to read me state this again and again.
It has something to do with my desire to stay focused on a specific discipline of the mind, a discipline devoted to gnosis, to Scientia perhaps, something I have referred to as TechGnosis in my diaries. I have been compelled to "start over", and I have gotten a few years into my 10-year plan.
So I have become more attracted to technical explanations and most enjoy the process of slowing down to a snail's pace, slow enough to gain some understanding about something very specific; that is, "technical" - hence, TechGnosis.
On the other hand, I have grown to dislike the "ultra-intellectual" academics who are so very impressed with their ability to explain Heidegger, even if they would be challenged by some basic problems in Trigonometry.
I have a secret side of me which is very mean-spirited and hateful. Supposedly this is the part that ought to be encouraged to write, since it transcends the politeness of the False Self, that image of who we think we are in order to avoid facing how we really feel. The mean-spiritedness is directed against certain others who may feel "very educated" in, say "Theology", or certain scriptures. They feel compelled to preach about Revelations and what not. I have come to realize that individuals are permitted to think they have it all figured out, and I can do nothing to persuade them that they might exist in the moment more honestly and genuinely if they nurtured doubt about their most cherished beliefs. But alas, to each his or her own, I suppose, and we are each condemned to getting through each day as best we can.
I rebel against all those who have propped themselves up as significant by ignoring them, by focusing on "School Mathematics". It's quite liberating, actually, to consider the possibility that the world is overflowing with bullsShit, lies, self-deception, and ILLUSION.
I just wanted to acknowledge that I am reading through the essay you mentioned at the start of this thread (in its entirety); but, as I have explained, such reading is limited to the twilight hours, and so even a short book may take some time. From early morning, and however much time throughout the day and throughout the evening, I really am committed to far more tedious and non-poetic studies. This kind of "study project" is so time consuming that it really is a benefit that I don't fit into the work force society. There's no way I could devote the necessary time and attention to my personal self-education if I had a "normal structured life with many *responsibilities*.
Needless to say, I am an extremely frustrated man, and so I may go out of my way to be kind to others knowing that each must be similarly frustrated by the discrepancies between what we would like to understand versus the raw brute fact of our creaturely existence. I can't help but feel like one of the monstrosities on the Island of Dr. Moreau, one of the Beast People who might be inclined to worship that which it does not fully understand. Do I think there is going to be some sudden or even gradual transformation of my understanding? Holden has suggested the possibility that the idea of "making progress" may be a great disappointment. There is such a thing as "degrees of mathematical maturity," but I am beginning to doubt such maturity occurs in leaps and bounds. Maybe there is a definite limit to how mathematically mature any one of us will become in our lifetime. So I am trying to fill in many gaps so that at least I know, when I feel I have reached my particular limit, to stop, and to stick to a certain level. I proceed in this manner because I hate the idea of self-deception or being deluded into thinking I understand more than I actually do.
Perhaps institutions of higher learning are in the business of selling false confidence, and it takes the solitary pursuit of knowledge to practice a high degree of intellectual honesty (with oneself).
I sympathize with the torments experienced by adolescents. In fact, what I am involved in, this "Ten Year Plan" is a total rebellion against the whole "Learn Such-and-Such in 24 Days" phenomenon in the book marketplace.
I'm not a happy camper, that's for sure.
And so I lock myself in a room and suspect so many others of being full of sShit.
Both Raul and Holden appear to be very patient with my honesty, and I would ask that, when reading my responses, you try to get a feel for what I am trying to express, and not take offense should I come off as someone on the verge of a temper tantrum.
It is not you. As I say, I am continually frustrated by my mere existence.