Sam Keen Interview

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14 Dec 2015 15:54 #213285 by Breeze el Tierno
Please give this interview a read. I'd like to hear your thoughts.

Warning: Spoiler!
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14 Dec 2015 16:50 #213297 by Loudzoo
Replied by Loudzoo on topic Sam Keen Interview
Thanks Cabur - I'd not heard of Sam Keen before. I liked much of what he had to say. However, he does seem to have quite a few myths in his worldview, that either remain unexamined, or worse that he has examined and has adopted anyway! I am probably being unnecessarily harsh here but some examples from the interview:

- he seems to believe that things are getting worse for people:

Keen: Yes, the idea that things are always getting better and better. It's interesting that the worse things get, the more we believe the next technological fix is going to get us out of it. But it's like being in quicksand: the more you struggle the deeper you sink.


- he thinks that human behaviour is unnatural, and that there is such a thing as a 'natural order':

In a way, human beings have never been part of the natural order; we're not biological in the normal sense. Normal biological animals stop eating when they're not hungry and stop breeding when there is no sense in breeding. By contrast, human beings are what I think of as "biomythic" animals: we're controlled largely by the stories we tell. When we get the story wrong, we get out of harmony with the rest of the natural order. For a long time, our unnatural beahvior didn't threaten the natural world, but now it does.


- he thinks that men have felt alienated for longer than women:

London: In Fire in the Belly you wrote of the "absence of an abiding sense of meaning" as the central source of men's alienation today. Isn't this equally true for women?

Keen: Yes, men have experienced this dilemma for a longer time, but as women have begun to define themselves increasingly according to the values of the marketplace, it has become a dilemma for them, as well.


I guess all I'm revealing here is that my myths disagree with these myths :)

Having said all of that I liked much of what he had to say: about questioning authority, about the spiritual journey being conducted "alone together", and about the dance between knowing and not-knowing.

Thanks for posting :)

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14 Dec 2015 17:19 #213300 by Breeze el Tierno
Replied by Breeze el Tierno on topic Sam Keen Interview
I'm actually inclined to agree with him on those three points, at least in the broad strokes. Specifically, with regard to the third, I think part of the idea is that the Patriarchal nature of our society is based, in large part, on trying to fill a void in mens' sense of meaning. I'm not 100% sold on the idea either, but it has some merit.

But, in general, I think he has a great deal of value to say. I don't really need to agree with him 100%.

Thanks for reading!
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14 Dec 2015 18:40 #213318 by Zenchi
Replied by Zenchi on topic Sam Keen Interview
This was a great read, Thanks for sharing it! I don't agree with everything Mr.Keen has discussed here, but there a few points worth touching on...

And the third force is what I call the spiritual revolution. Part of it is the old new-age movement — the searching, the transcendentalism, the explosion of different gurus, and so on. Look in any big-city newsweekly and you'll find hundreds of spiritual options advertised — everything from UFOs to crystals to Zen meditation to gurus who have all the answers. But the spiritual revolution is a lot more than just the new-age bandwagon. It also includes the new physics, the ecological movement, and "systems thinking." We now realize that we're not living in a piecemeal world, but a world where everything is linked together. If we don't preserve forest habitat for spotted owls, for instance, then soon we won't have trees to refresh the air we breathe. And we're realizing that this applies to social ecology, as well.


The New Age movement has in many ways, become a caricature of itself, a movement that once possessed the spark of hope for the future, now a massive joke now serving as a route of escapism for those who not only fit in within the parameters of society (not always a bad thing mind you) but also too lazy to fight for the change the movement was supposedly meant to create in the first place. Not everyone who follows this movement fits into this category, however more do than don't.

In a way, human beings have never been part of the natural order; we're not biological in the normal sense. Normal biological animals stop eating when they're not hungry and stop breeding when there is no sense in breeding. By contrast, human beings are what I think of as "biomythic" animals: we're controlled largely by the stories we tell. When we get the story wrong, we get out of harmony with the rest of the natural order. For a long time, our unnatural beahvior didn't threaten the natural world, but now it does.


Can't help but to agree with this entirely. We as a human race are so self absorbed, and are in no way in equilibrium with the planet. We fail to realize we as a race have and continue to this day, wage war on every life form alive simply for no better reason than the procreation of our race and a comfortable living

The great mistake of dogmatism is that it latches on to an idea of God and says, "That's it!" Now, if you believe in that idea, you have to conform to it, no matter what else you might learn or experience.


In all honesty I find this relative to so many different things, once man thinks or believes he as attained any such form of enlightenment, his mind then soon turns into a stagnant swamp, leaving him often in a much worse state than when he started searching.

The spiritual mind is always metaphorical. Spiritual thinking is poetic thinking. It's always trying to put a very diaphanous experience into words, realizing all the while that words are inadequate. So if you have an idea of God you think is adequate, it's not. I think we have to trust ourselves in the darkness of not knowing. The God out of which we came and into which we go is an unknown God. It's the luminosity of that darkness and that unknowing that is, I think, the most human — and the most sacred — place of all.


Very beautifully said...

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14 Dec 2015 19:21 #213326 by Breeze el Tierno
Replied by Breeze el Tierno on topic Sam Keen Interview
Thanks, Zenchi! That last point is huge. When we start taking our myths as literal fact, we open ourselves up to terrible distortion. I did a whole lesson on that idea during my apprenticeship. Many of us have trouble with the metaphorical elements of spirituality.

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