Saturday 7 December 2019

Pictorial 77


I was on a bus near Hythe and overheard a conversation between a local and a couple from London. The guy was obviously quite historical, and was saying things like, “That’s the Royal Military Canal..it was built as a defence against Napoleon.. There are Martello towers..fortified with heavy pounders.. It was strengthened in WWII.. Up there’s St Leonard’s church.. It has an ossuary with 500 skulls.. The knights rested there before going to Canterbury to murder Thomas A’Beckett.”
It was a bit of a monologue and I just got to thinking that everything – bar nothing – that you hear or see is information. Usually that’s ok as the information is interesting enough. A stained glass of Thomas A’Beckett’s murder, say.
Even if everything is information, that’s almost a negative comment since there are various aspects or tonalities such as the sensual, the virile, the feminine, These aspects can be likened to Plato’s idealism ().
From that comes storytelling, the psychic content of the story (the what), and the style it’s told in (the how). Idealism almost implies there is something a priori, which is the shape that things have. None of the information obtained from DNA has anything to say on shape. So, to be positive, shape and power and the use made of plants and animals by humans has to be much more than information.
What I really mean is that, to say that the shape and power of things is not as important as DNA is to be negative. It’s a pessimistic, defeatist attitude to say that the power of our own limbs is not sufficient unto itself, and that it needs to be subordinated to “information”.
In fact, power and use and shape are far superior and have inherent storytelling. They have line and movement, content and style. What Man has done through history is differentiate these various aspects because a culture is so much more than information.
To say that everything is information is actually to do without this process of differentiation, which says exactly the opposite: that there is something a priori and archetypal. In
 a way it’s laziness to reduce everything to one monologous trait, as Dawkins does in The Selfish Gene, missing out all the shapes of power and presence in the universe. What it does is confuse data with physical reality – movement and line.

To take a concrete example: Elizabeth Taylor had beauty, power and presence. You can be told, “ET is beautiful”, and that can be classified as data. However, some things don’t have to be told; they are a priori.
 
So, a society of information is really saying something like: information is not something else, it is just information. We’re being told everything is information, even though some things DON’T need to be told!
The effect of this is tautologous – a vicious circle. You are effectively being told – by the organs of the media – that “information is information” in all sorts of different ways. Of course, this is attractive to the ego.
Outside of the ego is the creative-unconscious, or basically the inspiration we gain from the cosmos at large. Well, this is really the cultural history of Man, from Homer to the Bible! I know a lot of this sounds like it’s nothing to do with heroic fantasy and Howard, but fantasy is not as different from reality as “they” would have us believe.
There is a mundane reality which has no fantasy, that is cut-off from the cosmic experience. But Egyptians and Greeks weren’t cut-off from this experience, they were inspired to invention and philosophy by the heavens.
This is why I say the cosmic experience is a type of fantasy-land, not unlike our unconscious pathways (tracing back to ages lost). Life is only mundane if you’re told these are all different types of information, instead of powerful and fascinating stories, myths.
But a human figure, when it forms in the womb, is writing an age-old story of bone and flesh. It’s all story, narrative sequence of interlocking rhythms, and that is the cosmic reality a mundane world denies with its facts.
Bone and flesh are strong. What “they” want to know is how these events happen (the story), but the answer is some things just happen. It’s called naivety, or just living in the instant. It’s partly order and partly freedom; the sublime balance.
If – as the ancient Greeks attested – the universe is very finely balanced and all things are proportionate, all that is a priori. A society of information is simply a denial of these ancient truths. Flesh and bone are strong, the underlying health of organic matter. They are part of physical cycles that are strong and pure.
So, in other words, a world of data is weak – in the head – and outside of the physical cycles of destruction and creation that are emblemised by a serpent. The undulating spine is our link to this ancient, ancestral reptilian unconscious.
She had a strange feeling, in Mexico, of the old prehistoric humanity, the dark-eyed humanity of the days, perhaps, before the glacial period. When the world was colder, and the seas emptier, and all the land-formation was different. When the waters of the world were piled in stupendous glaciers on the high places, and high, high upon the poles. When great plains stretched away to the oceans, like Atlantis, and the lost continents of Polynesia, so that seas were only great lakes, and the soft, dark-eyed people of that world could walk around the globe. Then there was a mysterious, hot-blooded, soft-footed humanity with a strange civilization of its own.. (The Plumed Serpent Hyborian Bridge 81)
The hero steals knowledge from the dragon and slays it with his will. A world of power has a fantastical aspect since the strong lines and shapes have storytelling potential.
The storytelling potential is really proof against data (DNA,AI) and it is strong , virile, feminine. The negative, nihilistic, pessimism of the likes of Dawkins can be defeated by these aspects. To be made of bone and flesh at least is tangible exposure to honesty and moral truthfulness.
Bone and flesh die and become immersed in creative/destructive forces; the dream of the universe. This sense of destiny that is both gay and melancholy has a meaning that is manifested in story. Howard’s writing, with its naturalistic descriptions of dainty fronds, savage events of blood and mayhem, take us into the dream of the universe. It is a dream which is denied by the spokespeople of mundanity because they choose to ignore the powerful manifestation of cosmic forces – the crags that are bones; the earth that is flesh; the seas that are blood; destiny.