65 avsnitt • Längd: 80 min • Månadsvis
Brendan Graham Dempsey interviews leading thinkers in the metamodernism, integral, syntheist, GameB, and other communities about topics related to meaning-making and spirituality in today’s world.
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
The podcast Metamodern Spirituality is created by Brendan Graham Dempsey. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
Rafe Kelley and I discuss his recent transformational experiences with Christianity, then consider the best sense-making frames for such life-altering religious experiences. What are the role of Christianity's traditional propositional claims relative to direct experiential encounters with the Christ archetype? Can the activation of transformational memetic archetypes actually require acting "as if" some false claims are true?
0:00 Introduction
2:06 Character: Who Do You Want to Be?
7:08 Rafe's Background
30:35 The Christian Lure in the West
49:56 Mythos and Logos
1:03:25 Rafe's Conversion
1:16:45 Experience vs. Theology
1:26:17 Faith and the Transhistorical
1:39:22 Toggling into the Christ Archetype
1:47:17 Metamemes, Consciousness, and Believing "As If"
1:57:18 Building the Cathedral
2:03:58 Conclusion
Neil Theise joins me to talk about his book Notes on Complexity: A Scientific Theory of Connection, Consciousness, and Being. As a liver pathologist gazing daily through his microscope, Neil lives in an ongoing liminal state between scales: the micro cellular and the macro organismic. How is it, he asks, that any given "thing" seems to disappear when you zoom in or out? Neil brings a complexity science lens to this issue of lensing, which he synthesizes with his longterm practice of Zen meditation to interesting conclusions. Is this processual "no-thing-ness" what the Buddhists speak of as "emptiness"? What is the "I" if it can be similarly deconstructed? What insights can meditation add to the metaphysical picture once we appreciate the limits of other ways of knowing?
0:00 Introduction
0:57 Spark-'Notes on Complexity'
4:30 Neil's Interdisciplinary Background
14:33 Body or Cells? Scale, Process, and (Relative) No-Thing-ness
40:29 "Self" and Complimentarity
50:03 Self and the Limits of Science: Consciousness and Quantum Physics
56:24 Self and the Limits of Mathematics: Incompleteness and Intuition
1:08:45 Can Meditative Practice Reveal Metaphysical Realities?
1:26:51 No Separation
Philosopher and author Tim Freke joins me to talk about his conceptions of an "emergent spirituality." We discuss his 2017 book Soul Story, in which he lays out a vision for a developing cosmos leading to deeper self-realization. From there we discuss his thinking about the continuation of imaginal phenomena after the biological death of the individual.
0:00 Introduction
1:22 Soul Story and Emergent Spirituality
8:56 Is Consciousness Fundamental? Tim's Recent Move to Emergentism 9:25 card to Tim's video on emergentism of consciousness
19:59 The Profound Meaning within Emergentism
26:02 Psyche after Death?
36:11 Imaginal Information in an Inforverse
48:52 God as Real Dream: Temporal Holonic Emergence
56:57 Soul and the Redemption of Suffering
1:01:34 A New Understanding
1:05:57 Praxis: "Why Your Life Really Matters"
1:11:30 Conclusion
Layman Pascal joins me to discuss his new book, Gurdjieff for a Time Between Worlds. Who was G. I. Gurdjieff and why is he keenly relevant to our present metamodern moment? In what ways can we see in his work anticipations of contemporary spiritual modalities, such as sincere irony, integration of pluralities, immanent transcendence, and the mythopoeic construction of new imaginal narratives gesturing beyond modernity? With classic flare and verbal acuity, Layman unpacks his "hyperpersonal essays for the grandfather of metamodern spirituality."
0:00 Introduction
1:38 Who was G. I. Gurdjieff?
5:21 Gurdjieff and Metamodernity
9:29 "The Sly Man": Serious Play, Sincere Irony, Crazy Wisdom
20:04 Integrating Pluralities
31:04 Gurdjieff the Shamanoid
36:51 Real vs. Imaginal Mythos
51:35 Eso-, Meso-, Exo-teric
56:31 Pascal's Imaginal Gurdjieff?
1:05:25 Transcendent Immanence
Get the book here: https://www.skymeadowinstitute.org/press
Catechism has meant "religious education," especially as a coming-of-age initiation into the fullness of spiritual community and engagement with its mysteries. It has to do with what sort of support and instruction young people and converts receive about their faith as they move into deeper spiritual relationship with God and church. Here I ask, What would a supportive catechism look like for Christians on the path towards a metamodern form of faith? How might religious learning unfold in healthy and sustainable ways such as would foster a kind of Christianity that is truly metamodern in outlook? What are the right developmental moments for literalism, doubt, even atheism, and conviction?
0:00 An Education for Faith
1:55 Grades or Phases of Spiritual Learning
4:32 Age 0-7*: Childhood Enchantment
9:20 Age 7-10: Mythic Literalism
15:12 Age 10-13: Symbolic Belief
21:03 Age 13-15: Reflective Religion
26:24 Age 15-18: Rational Meaning-Making
29:28 Age 18-23: Deconstructive Questioning
41:33 Age 23-27: Integrative Wisdom
50:13 What's Missing?
54:13 Invitation to Keep Learning
*All ages are just rough approximations
Who is the Christ of faith? What if he is the telos of existence itself? the direction to which all of thought and action tend? What if Christ Consciousness is the goal of a more comprehensive, open, de-centered, contextualized, and other-sensitive perspective? What if we (you and me) actually participate in the unfolding of God in the world?...
0:00 "After Deconstruction Must Come Reconstruction"
6:34 Metamodernism and Relating to the Christ of Faith
9:18 Moving Beyond Postmodern Relativistic Perspectivalism
19:43 Metamodernism: Seeing the Pattern of Perspectives
34:28 Christ as the Aim of Sacred History
48:13 "Christ" as Expanding Consciousness
54:10 Idols vs. Icons: The Death and Resurrection of "God"
1:00:19 Metamodern Informed Naivete
1:03:07 Forking the Lightning of God
To get beyond the enduring impasse of the "science vs. religion" debate, let's give science its due—and then leave it in the dust! There's no need to affirm the historical basis of the Christian story to relate to the Christ of faith. If we can accept that the Gospels are prehistorical materials, we can get beyond the classic hangups and begin to see how "it's all made up" AND "it's all real!" are both true simultaneously. Here I frame the current debates around history and religion in light of the "pre/trans fallacy" so well described by integral theory. This framing, I think, helps position us to appreciate what a truly metamodern Christianity can look like. By accepting the historical Jesus account, we are freed to embrace the Christ of faith and tradition—not in spite of the facts, but because we have transcended them.
0:00 Introduction
2:01 Moving Beyond History
4:20 The Pre/Trans Fallacy
8:31 "Trans-" Demonstrates Capacity and Transformation
13:56 The Gospels and the History of History
21:05 Christianity and the Fallacy of Origins
24:38 Transcending the Claims History Makes on Us
39:11 Cultural Metamodernism and the Transhistorical
46:41 Owning Deconstruction without Equivocation
54:41 The Growth Edge of Christianity
56:31 Conclusion
Does the modern historical-critical lens on the Bible reject miracles on principle and thereby exclude in advance what it presupposes not to be true? Here I counter this critique by explaining how the miracles in the Gospels are problematized not by metaphysical prejudice but historical analysis. Taking the miracles in the Gospels at face value as historical events is problematic even if we work within a metaphysical frame that allows for miracles. Ultimately, it's a matter of historical reconstruction, not worldview, that forces us to rethink how much of the materials can be taken as reliable accounts of "what happened."
0:00 Does Modern Historical-Critical Scholarship Preclude Miracles on Principle?
2:23 A Metamodern Christianity Needs the Modern
3:59 Anti-Miracle Modernism: Steelmanning that Argument (Even Though It's Not Mine)
9:37 The Argument I Am Making: More Information Problematizes Naive Readings
13:09 Setting the Stage: Messianic Expectation and Prophecy Fulfilment
Assessing Miracle Accounts in Light of the Historical Context
17:07 1. Jesus' Birth
29:15 2. Jesus' Calming of the Storm
36:00 3. Jesus' Crucifixion
39:38 4. Jesus' Resurrection
41:38 5. Jesus' Ascension
44:15 Other Historical Considerations
53:50 "Liar, Lunatic, or Lord?" Misses the Point Entirely
58:10 Meta-Naturalism: Appreciating an Incomplete Scientific Paradigm
1:03:28 Metamodern Christianity Should Be Robust and Include the Modern Lens
1:06:38 Metamodern Christianity: Informed Naivete and Truth in Development
1:09:50 Conclusion
In this episode, I offer my own take on the "God Pivot" towards Christianity in the Intellectual Dark Web and adjacent communities (e.g., the liminal web, "This Corner of the Internet," and beyond). Reflecting on my recent interview with Jordan Hall, I see something glaringly absent from the broader conversation: the modern historical-critical perspective. Therefore, I ask: 1) How does the Traditional-Devotional perspective differ from the Modern Historical-Critical one with regard to the Old and New Testaments? 2) What might a metamodern Christianity look like that could successfully and syngergistically toggle between these different lenses to yield something progressive and robust?
0:00 Introduction
4:40 Hermeneutic Lenses: The Traditional-Devotional and Modern Historical-Critical Perspectives
7:46 Old Testament: Traditional-Devotional
13:13 Old Testament: Modern Historical-Critical
32:01 New Testament: Traditional-Devotional
37:53 New Testament: Modern Historical-Critical
47:58 Implications and Synthesis
Complexity scientist David Wolpert joins me to consider the idea of meaning at its most fundamental level. Historically, information theory has helped us quantify information (e.g., bits), but says nothing about the ways information might be useful, significant, relevant, or meaningful. Recently, however, Wolpert and colleagues have filled in what's missing from that account, offering a theory of "semantic" or "meaningful" information by showing how some information actually has causal power to influence the well-being and viability of systems in context. Here we explore this idea and a number of its implications for what's "meaningful" across the complexity stack, from a whirlpool to a bacterium all the way up to us.
0:00 Introduction
0:46 Meaning and Semantic Information
2:17 Background Context: Information Theory, Utility Functions, and Statistical Thermodynamics
14:03 Meaning FOR a System: What Information Helps One Stay Far from Equilibrium
21:54 Meaning: Mutual Information with Causal Power for Viability
27:57 Meaning and Meaurement up the Complexity Stack
33:42 Indirect Meaning, Chains of Significance, and Intelligence
37:20 A Semantic Information Theory of Individuality?
42:03 Relative vs. Absolute Semantic Information Metrics
49:52 The Complexification of Meaningful Information through Evolutionary Transitions
52:30 Layered Meaning through Evolution
Philosopher Zak Stein joins me to discuss the "the great post-postmodern project, the reconstruction of value itself," and get into the nuances of what his framework looks like as presented in his new co-authored book First Principles & First Values. What does it mean to say that value is both fundamental and relational? How does a metaphysics of value avoid premodern pitfalls (e.g., the myth of the given, a God's-eye view/view from nowhere, etc.)? What are the challenges posed by language when trying to track value across discontinuities in the complexity stack? Here we compare notes on our respective projects and try to clarify key points.
0:00 Introduction
1:58 Summary Overview of First Principles & First Values
7:35 The Project: A Post-Postmodern Reconstruction of Value
12:44 Is Positing Value as Fundamental a Premodern Move?
32:24 "Value": Avoiding Reification
39:11 Languaging the Reconstruction: Difficulties and Diversity
48:29 The Challenge and Importance of Modern Critique of Value
52:39 "Intimacy" or "Complexity"? Seeking Normative Terminology without Anthropomorphizing
1:03:07 Shifting the Paradigm: Translation or Equivocation?
1:06:25 Panpsychist vs. Emergentist Framings
1:10:26 Shifting Telos across Scales: E.g., Dissipative Structures
1:17:56 Value and Anti-Value
1:22:04 New God: Moving towards the Infinite Intimate
1:27:21 Building the Cathedral/Temple: Living with Sacred Purpose
Process thinker Jared Morningstar joins me to discuss the relationship of metamodernism to traditional forms of religion. How can engaging the traditional frame be done without losing hard-won gains in complexity and perspective-taking? Here Jared advocates for an open, flexible, and epistemically humble form of experimentation and participation in different religious modalities. We consider the role of 'causal opacity' in religious functionality and whether reflection is inherently harmful to generating emergent potential in religious contexts. We also explore the ways traditional faiths may be genuinely engaging with hyper-complex phenomena and how tradition-specific language can be helpful in extending faith into metamodernity. Finally, we discuss the role of plurality and singularity, the general and the particular, in what it means to engage religion from a metamodern perspective.
0:00 Introduction
1:34 Reaction vs. Reconstruction: Which Direction Is Calling?
10:50 Unseen Causes: Participatory Experimentation and Epistemic Humility
17:43 Breaking the Frame: Causation, Disenchantment, and Etic vs. Emic Perspectives
24:25 Moving In and Out of Tradition: Looking Back or Going Back?
35:24 Superstition or Super-Complexity? Parsing Tradition's Relationship with Hyperobjects
50:03 Beyond Perennialism: Religious Pluralism and Traditional Particularity
1:03:09 Living the Openness
1:10:59 Orienting Value in the Uncertainty
1:18:46 Integrating the General and the Particular: Heading Out and Coming Home
1:23:33 Conclusion
Integrative thinker Layman Pascal joins me to talk about the meaning of "God" from a metamodern perspective. How does thinking in terms of "surplus cohesion" point us to a helpful way of relating to all the meanings of the term? Why and when is a 2nd person relationship with Reality warranted? Who is this Face in the Universe summoning us to greater communion and transcendence? How do we communicate about all this across the various memetic sensemaking structures of culture (traditional, modern, postmodern metamodern)? Finally, what can folks expect about the upcoming metamodern spirituality gathering on the topic, which will be hosted at Sky Meadow in May and led by Layman?
0:00 Introduction
1:21 Layman's "Surplus Cohesion" Framework
4:48 God as Ultimate Reality in the 2nd Person
9:52 The Face of the Universe: Seeking the 2nd Person in the Complexity Stack
16:27 Some Framing: Reality as Dynamic Becoming, Not Static Being
21:36 Reflecting on the Alpha and the Omega: Problematizing the "Creator" Image
27:46 But Is This Still God? Communicating across Memetic Tribes
37:22 "Real in What Way?" across Levels of Memetic Complexity
45:05 Summarizing a Metamodern Sort of God
47:06 "God" in Quotation Marks: Moving beyond Totality
52:10 The God Encounter
1:08:12 The Divine Other
1:13:33 Praxis: Courting Visio Divina
1:16:41 Pluralistic Mysticism
1:23:10 Trinity as Dynamic Architectonic Plurality
1:27:08 Naturalism and Metaphysics
1:30:46 God is Love
1:37:20 Talking about "The G Word"
1:39:40 The Upcoming Metamodern Spirituality Lab on "God" at Sky Meadow (May 24-26)
More on the metamodern spirituality lab at www.skymeadowinstitute.org
Process theologian Jay McDaniel joins me to discuss the contributions of process thought to the Christian tradition. What points of similarity and dissimilarity are there between process thinking and traditional, modern, and postmodern lenses?
0:00 Introduction
1:06 What Does Theology Look Like from a "Process" Lens?
Relationship with Traditional Faith
5:44 A Feeling, Responding God
8:40 Not All-Powerful
14:40 A Dynamic, Living Whole
Relationship with Modern Thought
19:41 The Naturalistic Paradigm and (the) Beyond
24:30 A Theology of Organism and Complexity
29:30 "God" as Counter-Entropic Lure and Preserver of Good
39:33 A Modern Gestalt for Christianity?
49:31 Looking Forward, Not Back
54:52 The Pathos of God
Relationship with Postmodern Thought
1:04:38 Play, Beauty, Reality
Relationship with Metamodernism
1:10:33 Lineages, Legacies, and Futures
1:14:40 Conclusion
Here I lay out my conception of what a metamodern version of Christianity looks like. Drawing on the insights of all the previous cultural paradigms, the revelation of God's nature and the deepening quality of the relationship between God and man can be understood as progressing through a series of covenants/dispensations that map to a learning process unfolding through time. Such a perspective helps us non-arbitrarily coordinate tribal, imperial, traditional, modern, and postmodern conceptions of God that have manifested across sacred history. All of these are necessary and contribute to a coherent story of deepening understanding about and relationship with the ever-transcendent Divine.
0:00 Introduction
0:56 "Metamodern"
5:50 "Christianity"
9:00 Sacred History as Learning and Expansion
11:43 Dynamics of Learning: Assimilation and Accomodation
16:47 Learning as Complexification of Thought
18:04 The Revelation of God as a Learning Process
24:34 1. The Sacred Relationship in the Tribal Epoch
26:12 2. Relationship with God in the Monarchy
29:02 3. Deepening Divine Relationship in the Prophets and Gospels
31:10 Recap: The Arc of Learning God Better
33:41 4. Revelation in the Modern Era
40:05 5. The Way of Jesus in Postmodernity
42:09 6. Metamodern Christianity: Embracing All Stages of Revelation
53:37 Conclusion
In this episode, I assume the modern historical-critical perspective with pastor and 'This Little Corner of the Internet' thinker Paul VanderKlay to explore the tension points it has with the traditional-devotional lens--and to consider if and how these impasses might be transcended. Does history matter to faith and to the faithful? If so, how, when, and why? Can we avoid equivocating discussions around the "reality" of Christianity? How crucial is the nonrational? Overall, we rehearse what challenges the traditional approach to Christianity faces as it develops into modern expressions and interpretations on the way towards a metamodern instantiation.
0:00 Introduction
0:55 The "God Pivot" and Metamodernism: The Missing Modern
7:39 How Does Faith Relate to Modern & Postmodern Critical Approaches?
24:30 The Reality of Religion in Different Psycho-Social Contexts
36:18 Reality vs. History: Language as Metaphor or Fact
52:38 Worldview, Rationality, and Projection
1:04:28 "Spirit": False Substance Reification vs. Real Transjective Relationality
1:07:22 Avoiding Equivocation and Taking Modern Science Seriously
1:20:59 Pragmatic and Developmental Hermeneutics
1:44:16 Nonrationality and the Meaning Crisis
1:59:15 Different Metamodern Spiritual Arcs: The Theological is Personal
2:16:00 Conclusion
In this episode, I offer my own take on the "God Pivot" towards Christianity in the Intellectual Dark Web and adjacent communities (e.g., the liminal web, "This Corner of the Internet," and beyond). Reflecting on my recent interview with Jordan Hall, I see something glaringly absent from the broader conversation: the modern historical-critical perspective. Therefore, I ask: 1) How does the Traditional-Devotional perspective differ from the Modern Historical-Critical one with regard to the Old and New Testaments? 2) What might a metamodern Christianity look like that could successfully and syngergistically toggle between these different lenses to yield something progressive and robust?
0:00 Introduction
4:40 Hermeneutic Lenses: The Traditional-Devotional and Modern Historical-Critical Perspectives
7:46 Old Testament: Traditional-Devotional
13:13 Old Testament: Modern Historical-Critical
32:01 New Testament: Traditional-Devotional
37:53 New Testament: Modern Historical-Critical
47:58 Implications and Synthesis
Following a recent conversion to Christianity, Jordan Hall offers his perspective on the Christian worldview, its orienting beliefs and how they inform (and affirm) ways of being in the world. Brendan brings his own background of being raised in and and leaving the church to the conversation, trying to gain deeper understanding about how one can affirm Christian doctrine in the context of a metamodern world.
0:00 Introduction
2:47 Faith and Understanding: Christian Propositional vs. Participatory Knowing
15:36 Beyond a "Religion vs. Reason" Debate
20:26 Jordan's Reasons to Believe: Scripture, History, 1st Person Experience*
30:36 Jordan Not Impressed by Naturalistic Challenge to the Resurrection
35:56 Notions of Gospel and Sin: Faith Changing Behavior --- For Good or Ill
41:53 Jordan's Rejection of Naturalism and His Faith in Christian Historicity and Ontology
52:21 (Brendan Has a Lot of Responses He Won't Get Into in This Context)
53:07 Self-Confirming Faith: Reciprocal Opening in Other Faiths?
1:02:32 Excursus: Historicity and Hermeneutics of the Doctrine of the Trinity
1:08:52 Self-Confirming Faith: Pathologies in Self-Justifying Beliefs
1:16:20 Self-Confirming Faith: Participatory Knowing and Confirmation Bias
1:27:53 Conclusion
Patrick Barry joins me to continue our discussion about the emerging contours of a metamodern wisdom school and the secular spirituality beginning to fill in the "missing tradition" between and beyond science and religion. 0:00 Introduction
0:34 Towards a Secular Spirituality
5:01 Awe and Mystery in Both Religion and Science
10:25 "Faith" in What Is
17:18 Being Naturally At Home in the Universe
27:08 Past Church and Academia: Forging a New Kind of Wisdom Institution
46:21 A New Story: A Self-Appreciating Cosmos
58:40 Meaning as Awe as Learning
1:04:18 Significance vs. Scale
1:09:58 Speculating on God and Telos: Finding Ourselves in the Depths of Being
1:24:23 Conclusion
Stephen Hicks, a professor of philosophy and author of Explaining Postmodernism, joins me to discuss the transformation of worldviews from the premodern to the modern and from the modern to the postmodern. After his incisive overview of these dramatic shifts, we discuss what it might look like to integrate the genuinely positive contributions of postmodern thought, and consider where we are headed in a post-postmodern world. 0:00 Introduction 1:58 How to Trace Philosophical History 4:15 From Premodern to Modern 15:56 From Modern to Postmodern 34:07 How Do We Move Beyond the Modern and Postmodern while Integrating Their Strengths? 43:28 Relativizing the Critique 51:14 Living After Postmodernism
Patrick Barry, a former science journalist and current coder for the popular Waking Up meditation app, joins me to talk about building wisdom communities and Stoas for secular spirituality. As those who claim no affiliation with organized religion (the "nones") are now the most populous religious identity in America, what institutions of meaning, virtue, and self-reflection might we see appear that can properly meet the needs of metamodern seekers? 0:00 Introduction 4:13 Stoicism, Empiricism, and Secular Spirituality: Towards a Sacred Naturalism 12:55 Science and the Sublime: Finding Significance in the Known 22:52 The Missing Tradition 27:02 Wisdom Gyms for Lived Philosophy: Adding 1st- and 2nd-Person Truths to 3rd-Person Fact 51:30 Know Thyself: A Second Curriculum 57:44 "Broicism"?: Shadow and the Developmental Conveyor Belt 1:03:27 Integrating Tradition and Myth 1:12:02 Stoicism in Metamodernity 1:15:15 Conclusion
I'm joined by Integral thinker, theorist, teacher, writer, and community elder Bruce Alderman to talk about the ongoing love/hate relationship between metamodernism and Integral Theory, especially as the debate has been stirred up anew by the publication of my new book Metamodernism: Or, The Cultural Logic of Cultural Logics. Here we tackle some of the ongoing controversies that continue to swirl in some parts of the metamodern discourse, especially around the degree to which Ken Wilber and his formulation of the post-postmodern does/does not, should/should not inform our understanding of theories of the metamodern. Given the relationship that does exist, how do we best acknowledge and utilize it in pragmatic and integrous ways? How do we properly parse and distinguish these post-postmodern paradigms? What are the genuine fault lines and distinguishing characteristics of each framework, and what's just meme fluff?
0:00 Introduction (1:16, 3:30 Bruce card)
1:55 Bruce's Integral Context/Background
5:06 Brendan's Metamodern Context/Background
8:07 Did Hanzi Just Rip Off Wilber?
13:03 Did Hanzi Just Steal the Term "Metamodern" for an Integral Framework?
25:26 Has the Ship Sailed? Could Metamodernism Be the Future of Integral?
42:48 Did Brendan Just Excise/Ignore Wilber?
51:33 Does Metamodernism Offer a Workable Social Science Where Integral Doesn't?
1:01:03 The "Woo" Factor
1:14:15 Conclusion
Embodiment practitioner and teacher Ēlen Awalom joins me to talk about the promise and necessity of bringing more embodied wisdom into our world and, especially, our online spaces. We consider some approaches one can use in the context of triggering or polarizing engagements in digital forums in an attempt to return the focus back to the body and lived emotional experience in very disembodied contexts. Finally, we talk in broad terms about the importance of increasing our somatic intelligence in all areas of life, whether that's in response to the meta-crisis or our own interpersonal relationships.
0:00 Introduction
2:00 Bringing More Embodiment to Metamodern Discourse
9:13 Responding with Somatic Intelligence: Step 1. Center Yourself and Feel the Emotion
16:47 Step 2. Respond with Open Questions
20:00 Step 3. Use "I Statements"
23:15 Step 4. Know When to Step Back
31:20 The Challenge of Bypassing
36:19 Intentions for Embodied Leadership
50:19 Conclusion
Whitehead scholar and process thinker Matt Segall joins me to deepen our conversation about responses to the meaning crisis as it relates to reconnecting cosmos, consciousness, and value. In this discussion, we dive into the topic of "prehension," an idea from Whitehead that posits an experiential component to all phenomena in the universe.
0:00 Introduction
5:08 Prehension: Not Interior, but the Interior/Exterior Bridge
12:06 Prehension and Panpsychism
16:27 Identifying Basal Experience: Subjectivity and Time
25:52 Experience and Complexity
33:40 Attempting to Describe Fundamental Experience
47:06 Is Time Subjective?
54:36 Metaphysics and Novelty: Evolving Laws?
1:00:16 The Spectrum of Consciousness
1:04:22 Whitehead vs. Anthroposophy?
1:10:28 Philosophy's Role in a Scientific Age
1:21:43 Next Steps
Matt Segall joins me to debate the relative merits of "anthroposophical" aproaches to addressing the meaning crisis, such as those adopted in the works of Steiner, Stein and Gafni, and, to some degree, Whitehead.
0:00 Introduction
4:15 Revisiting the Image of Nature: Revitalizing Romanticism?
12:00 Humans in a Cosmos or a Cosmos Known by Humans?
21:17 Is Mechanism Just a Part of the Process? Emergence All the Way Down
30:05 Advance or Regression? Thinking in Terms of Assimilation and Accomodation
38:13 Defining a "Mechanistic" Approach: The Minimal Need for Causality
41:17 Retrojecting Novelty into Primals? Positing "Prehension"
57:01 Upshot: So...Is the Universe Expanding or Not?
1:11:52 Against a Model--or ...Models?
1:17:13 What Does an "Emodied" Knowledge Entail?
1:25:25 Conclusion
Dr. Michael Mascolo is a developmental psychologist who has written on hierarchical complexity as well as "moral relationalism." In this conversation, we discuss the Dynamic Skill Theory of cognitive complexification before considering what it might mean for moral reasoning. We debate the normative implications of complexification itself, navigating the polar extremes of moral absolutism and moral relativism using a transjective framing. What value is there in tracing value itself down the evolutionary stack? What does this suggest about agency and free will? 0:00 Introduction
0:46 Hierarchical Complexity: Dynamic Skill Theory vs. MHC
9:48 Domains of Development: Particulars and Generalizations
16:00 The Moral Domain
19:47 What is a "Skill"? What is...Anything?
23:33 Is Complexity Normative?
32:48 Moral Relativism vs. Moral Relationalism
43:04 Ontological Normativity
55:30 Where Does "Morality" Emerge in the Complexification Process?
1:04:16 Agency, Emergent Causation, and Free Will
1:11:43 Conclusion
Jared Morningstar discusses the nexus of metamodernism and the Islamic tradition with me, using his recent essay for Emerge (linked below) as a way into the topic. We explore multi-perspectival approaches to traditionalism, and what it means to integrate its insights in a metamodern context. Jared also brings to bear his knowledge of process thought to the topic.
0:00 Introduction
1:43 Washing the Heel
12:06 Insight from the Past, or Salvaging from the Future?
15:45 Attractions to Different Religiosities Based on Biography
29:52 Pluralism and Dogma
37:10 The Dialectic of Autonomy and Constraint
34:52 Ritual and Ontology: Angels
46:42 Islam and Process Theology
57:23 From Traditional (+ Anti-Modern) to Modern to Postmodern
1:12:36 Towards a Metamodern Islam
1:18:30 Follow Jared's Work
Bonnitta Roy and I explore the meaning of complexification and the evolutionary narrative. After some introductory context on Bonnie's prior engagement in the "scene" of integrative metatheory, we find our way to the topic of teleology (i.e., the apparent goal-directedness of nature). From there Bonnie outlines some of the pivotal mutations in the evolutionary narrative that have increased organism's capacity for abstraction. We discuss whether the directionality of these processes is captured in models of hierarchical complexity, or if other sorts of maps are needed to appreciate the evolution of mind.
0:00 Introduction
1:37 Bonnie's Background in Integrative Metatheory
12:30 On Integral vs. Metamodern: Problems with Stage Theories
17:53 On (Apparent) Teleology
21:00 The Story of Pivotal Mutations Up the Evolutionary Stack
31:22 Teleology* towards Increasing Causal Power
41:09 Getting Beyond Thoughts: Pure Abstractions vs. Categorical Abstractions
45:30 Information and Pure Abstractions: Direct Perception of the Causal Manifold
49:55 Is Increasing Hierarchical Complexity Getting Closer to the Causal Manifold?
1:03:27 Complexification as Recursively Finding New Vantage Points
1:12:38 Increasing Degrees of Freedom without Increasing Complexity?
1:15:22 Intimations and Afterthoughts: Directions for Further Discussion
Could AI become conscious? Is it already? Everyone seems to be talking about this, yet little of the discussion is actually informed by grounded theories of consciousness and mind. In this episode, I'm joined by Dr. Gregg Henriques, professor of psychology at James Madison University, originator of the unified theory of knowledge framework, and the author of 'A New Synthesis for Solving the Problem of Psychology' to talk about the prospect of consciousness in AI. After zeroing in on just what we mean by "consciousness" in this sense (to get past the endless equivocation commonly found in these discussions), Gregg and I get to the heart of the matter.
0:00 Introduction
2:00 The Question: Can AI Be(come) Conscious?
4:40 (Context: Gregg's Work to Address Confusions about Mind)
Part I: What Do We Mean By "Consciousness"?
8:33 Three Definitions:
9:07 (1) Cognition
18:08 (2) Subjective Conscious Experience (The One I Mean)
19:57 (3) Egoic Self-Consciousness
Part II: AI and Consciousness
23:08 Could AI Have (2) Subjective Conscious Experience?
29:00 Beyond the Turing Test Standard
33:10 Panpsychist and Idealist Challenges?
35:46 Functional Parallels Are Not Equivalence
37:50 Approaching the Fifth Joint Point
50:17 What Should We Value: Intelligence or Sentience?
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm discusses conceptions of value after postmodernism. Is postmodernism a nihilistic relativism or an activist moralism? Critics have accused it of both. What values pervade the postmodern academic paradigm? How do value conceptions shift when the postmodern paradigm gets diffused in popular culture? Is the "is-ought distinction" actually valid? What would a positive value project look like, and what are its benefits? Finally, what comes next for metamodernism and Storm's work?
0:00 Introduction
0:52 Postmodernism: Relativist or Activist? Nihilist or Moralist?
9:11 Value vs. Critique
17:07 Politics and Academia
22:17 Postmodern Diffusions
31:04 Is vs. Ought: Who's Afraid of Normativity?
38:04 Systematic Metamodern Philosophy
43:08 Imagining a Positive Future: Ethics and Wisdom
55:55 How Can Academia Reincorporate Wisdom?
59:42:21 Towards a Paradigm Shift: The Future of Metamodernism
1:09:35 Paradigm Projects
1:14:49 What's Next?
Psychology professor and cognitive scientist John Vervaeke (@johnvervaeke) joins me to talk about how Neoplatonism (which has provided the worldview "grammar" of Western mysticism) is being revisioned in light of contemporary advances in philosophy, cognitive science, and cross-cultural exchange.
0:00 Introduction
1:21 Updating the Perennial Tradition
6:19 A Post-Two-Worlds Neoplatonism
12:20 "The One" according to 4E Cognitive Science
20:16 Ascent and Descent
26:05 Complexification as Narrative? Creating a Psycho-Ontology
36:01 Nonduality, Meaning, and Nihilism
44:30 Death and (Re-)Incarnation
53:11 After Life
Metamodern sociologist Daniel Görtz joins Brendan Graham Dempsey to dig deeper into the nuances of developmental theory and how it can be applied at the individual and collective levels. Are individuals "at" a stage of development, or do they occupy a range of complexity? With all the distributional ranges involved in individual development, how can we make assessments about entire cultural worldviews? Daniel digs into the nuances of the Model of Hierarchical Complexity, exploring unpublished theories and ideas of Michael Commons and himself as they relate to thinking about conceptual complexification for people and societies.
0:00 Introduction
Part I: Individual Development
2:28 Are People "at" a Stage or Thinking/Behaving Across a Distribution?
5:12 The MHC vs. Holistic, Whole-Person Models
10:11 Transjective Behavioral Complexity: Context and Scaffolding
25:17 Cognitive Ranges, Cognitive Ceilings
30:22 Piaget and Beyond
Part II: Cultural Development
33:04 Are Ideas "at" a Stage?
42:16 Are Cultural Worldviews "at" a Stage?
56:44 The Dynamics of Cultural Evolution
1:20:36 Pattern and Medium
1:32:16 Problems and Progress: Nothing for Granted
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm is an historian and philosopher, Professor of Religion and Chair of Science & Technology Studies at Williams College. He returns to continue our conversation about his book Metamodernism: The Future of Theory, a bold proposal for a post-postmodern paradigm.
0:00 Introduction
1:46 Is Postmodernism a Paradigm or an Episteme?
17:15 Hylosemiotics (Cont.): Matter and Meaning
29:41 From Realism vs. Anti-Realism to Metarealism
59:46 Zetetic Knowledge vs. Skepticism
Raymond de Oliveira joins Brendan to discuss the value in the Universe, whether it emerges from the logic of reality itself or is arbitrarily chosen, whether existence is inherently of value, nihilism and Buddhism, the QRI grand narrative of replicators vs. consciousness, the role of suffering in wisdom, and the "Three Realms" of conscious experience.
0:00 Introduction
1:43 From Is to Ought?
9:17 Is Life a Net Negative? Utilitarianism, Gnosticism, Transhumanism
22:30 Dual-Aspect Monism and Suffering
25:52 Is Consciousness Worth It?
31:00 Teleology and Agency
32:58 Fighting a Meme War against Potential Gods
36:50 Values and Vows
40:03 The Law of Choice
42:36 Is Wisdom Earned by Suffering?
Nihilism and the Truth of Silenus?
Science Fiction critic, storyteller, and writer Damiel Walter joins Brendan to talk about 'Big Myth' and the culture industry's relationship to contemporary mythopoeia. What are the new stories of our time, what depth and "nutrients" do they contain (if any), and how does myth get transformed through the cultural codes? More than that, what myths do we live by, and why? What sorts of mythic archetypes does our cultural moment particularly need to better navigate the difficulties and challenges of the time?
0:00 Introduction
0:51 Franchise Myth
6:20 The Mythic-Industrial Complex vs. Modern Folklore
13:02 Stories vs. Myths
16:47 Mytho-Pathos, Values, and Metamodernism
26:22 Multiplicity, Mythos, Meaning, and "Me"
37:37 Hallmarks of Metamodern Myth: Embodiment, Ethics, Affect
45:44 The Hero, Masculinity, and Development
50:34 The Creator Archetype
Social imaginarian Ellie Hain joins me to talk about her new project, Rebuilding Meaning, a multi-layered endeavor to rethink meaning, value, and the sacred in a way that can help bring color and vibrancy back to existence and cut through the proliferation of bullshit in modern life. We talk about moving from paradigm thinking to the crafting of ideology, the nature and reality of the meaning crisis, what is meant by "the sacred," the idea of "the void," social norms vs. emergent value, and what it looks like to architect new cultural realities for the future.
0:00 Introduction
0:58 From Mapping Social Imaginaries to Articulating Ideologies
7:36 New Myths
10:30 Is There Actually a Meaning Crisis?
17:01 The Sacred, the Profane, and the Meaningful
22:46 The Void: Chaos and Possibility
28:34 Rigid Social Norms vs. Emergent Autonomy
35:10 Creating New Systems
41:37 Follow-Through
46:32 Imagining a Beautiful Future
55:25 A Values-Driven Pluralism
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm is an historian and philosopher, Professor of Religion and Chair of Science & Technology Studies at Williams College. He received his PhD from Stanford University and his MA from Harvard University. He joins Brendan to discuss his work of systematic metamodern philosophy, 'Metamodernism: The Future of Theory.'
0:00 Introduction
2:34 What "Metamodernism"?
7:55 A Metamodern Attractor
9:40 The Postmodern Paradigm
15:58 Deconstructing Deconstruction: The Anarchist's Cookbook to Destroy Concepts
26:33 Reconstructing from the Pieces
29:40 Going Meta
36:57 After Deconstruction: From Objects to Processes
45:21 Development as Identity? Contingency and the Genetic Fallacy
59:34 Meaning after the "Linguistic Turn": Hylosemiotics + a World
Jonathan Rowson of Perspectiva joins Brendan for a conversation about the nature of spirituality in the contemporary public square, the boundaries of the social imaginary, the thirst for spiritual conversation and community in a secular world, religion and epistemic justification, the religious impulse of submission vs. the modern ego, what taking the meta view on a multi-perspectival religious landscape might mean, the divine contribution of the individual/individuating will, and much else.
0:00 Introduction
2:04 Exploring (the Absence of) Spirituality in Public Space Today
9:47 Defining Spirituality
14:22 The Elephant in the Room
20:24 A More Justified Worldview? Modernity vs. Traditional Religion
31:26 Truth and Value in the Public Domain
36:02 Transrational Submission or Individuation?
44:50 Both Both/And and Either/Or: Religion, Committment, and Multi-Perspectival Awareness
53:32 Mystery, Reality, Plurality, and Transcendence
57:35 Pluralism, Committment, and the Creative Will of the Metamodern Self
1:08:43 Metamodernity as Spirituality
1:14:38 Closing Remarks
In their first-ever conversation on the topic together, Daniel Görtz and Nora Bateson join Brendan to talk about stage theory. Since Nora's social media post declaring developmental stage theories "BS" and "colonial as hell," the value and legitimacy of stage models has been a fervent topic of debate within the liminal web. In this conversation, Daniel and Nora are given space to more completely express their opinions on the topic before engaging with one another directly in discussion/debate in an attempt to gain a deeper appreciation and integration of one another's views.
0:00 Introduction
2:57 Daniel's Opening Remarks
17:42 Nora's Opening Remarks
35:27 Discussion
1:17:59 Parting Remarks
Bobby Azarian joins Brendan to discuss his new book The Romance of Reality: How the Universe Organizes Itself to Create Life, Consciousness, and Cosmic Complexity. In the first half of their conversation, Bobby presents the new cosmic narrative offered by the complexity sciences. Unlike the older, reductionist account, this is a story in which life is inevitable and part of a broader cosmic design towards greater and greater knowledge creation. Beginning with the laws of thermodynamics, Bobby recounts the emergence of order out of (and by means of) chaos; the emergence of life out of ordered structures; and the emergence of consciousness out of life. In the second part of the conversation, the two speculate on the broader significance and meaning of this new cosmic narrative. Have we only seen the beginning of the Universe's waking up? Why does the Universe appear fine-tuned for its own coming to consciousness? How do these ideas relate to religion and purpose?
0:00 Introduction
PART I: The Narrative
5:40 Entropy, Energy, and Order out of Chaos
11:47 Order for Entropy, or Entropy for Order?
18:15 The Inevitability of Life
23:00 Reductionism or Creationism? A Third Option
40:40 Evolution, (Self-)Knowledge, and Consciousness
PART II: Implications & Speculations
1:00:11 The Emergence of a Cosmic Mind
1:08:36 Modernist Transhumanism or Metamodernist Spirituality?
1:18:18 What Set Up a Self-Organizing Universe?
--- 1:21:07 A Multiverse Explanation?
--- 1:24:34 Cosmological Natural Selection?
--- 1:29:00 An Intelligent Programmer (AKA "God")?
--- 1:44:48 Cosmic Mind Creating Cosmic Mind?
--- 1:47:21 The Fall of Consciousness into Unconsciousness, and Its Return to Self-Knowledge
1:51:28 Final Thoughts
More on Bobby's work:
The book: https://www.theromanceofreality.com/
Application to society: https://roadtoomega.com/
James Cussen, creator of the @The Living Philosophy YouTube channel, talks to Brendan about metamodernism within the context of intellectual history, the relationship of philosophy to academia, the need for wisdom schools, and much else.
Nish Dubashia joins Brendan to discuss the topic of evolutionary spirituality, using the Spiral Dynamics framework to consider how religious conceptions evolve through the different value memes. Beginning with a synopsis of the basic structure of the religious narrative, Nish then shows how this story takes different forms as it finds expression through the different developmental stages. The progression charted, some important ideas are then considered: What is the relationship of self and spirit along this evolution? Does the spiral of development lead to some kind of non-dual awareness? If so, how do we understand this? What role might evolutionary spirituality play in our broader culture?
0:00 Introduction 0:54 The Structure of the Story of Religion
The Story at Different Levels:
8:11 The Story at PURPLE (Animist) 9:43 The Story at RED (Faustian) 12:04 The Story at BLUE (Post-Faustian) 15:10 The Story at ORANGE (Modern) 17:44 The Story at GREEN (Postmodern) 22:50 The Story at YELLOW (Metamodern) 26:21 The Story at TURQOISE (forthcoming?)
28:47 Religion and Development: A Universal Experience 31:20 The Evolution of Religious Narrative AS a Religious Narrative? 35:10 The Coevolution of Self and Spirit 38:02 Spirit as a Subject? Reification, Projection, and Myth 44:00 The End of the Story: Non-Duality? 50:08 Emptiness/Form: On the Evolution of Consciousness towards Ultimate Consciousness 1:03:00 Development and the Study of Religion 1:06:08 Evolutionary Spirituality and the Meaning Crisis 1:14:15 'Dancing with Angels': Nish's Book on Developing beyond Unhealthy Blue 1:21:39 More on Nish's Work/Upcoming Events
Nish's Presentation: The Evolution of Religion https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3X20WGbMAw
Nish's Website https://integraldream.com/
Andrés Gómez Emilsson of the Qualia Research Institute joins Brendan to discuss "the universal plot": what's it all about and what matters most? Andrés says the big story is one of consciousness vs. pure replicators, the struggle to resist brute, value-neutral replication processes and maximize instead the positive valence possibilities of universal consciousness. Andrés considers how this narrative emerges as the most nuanced and developmentally advanced of the various ethical stories of the past (compared to "Good vs. Evil," for instance), and considers some of the theoretical/philosophical axioms on which it's based. What then is the relationship between consciousness and replication? How do we ensure we privilege positive conscious states over parasitic replication? How does it relate to the evolution of consciousness, and avoid the pitfalls of asceticism?
0:00 Introduction 2:21 The Universal Plot at Different Levels 16:17 What is the Relationship of Consciousness to Replication? 24:07 What is the Source of Valence if not the Replication Impulse? 26:55 What is the Telos of the Evolution of Consciousness? 30:44 Integrating Replication with Consciousness 36:48 Towards Omega: How do We Engineer Paradise? 48:13 Critique 1: Evolutionary Complexity vs. Human Intellectual Hubris 54:00 Critique 2: Is this Just Gnosticism 2.0? 57:18 A Developmental Metanarrative
"A Universal Plot - Consciousness vs. Pure Replicators: Gene Servants or Blissful Autopoietic Beings?" video mentioned in the podcast: https://youtu.be/nGmETz-wDMc
"The Universal Plot: Consciousness vs. Pure Replicators" blog post mentioned in the podcast: https://www.qualiaresearchinstitute.org/blog/universal-plot
Matt Segall joins Brendan to talk about the relationship of process philosophy and the thinking of A. N. Whitehead to the formulation of an emerging metanarrative in metamodernity. In the context of our 13.7 billion years of emergent complexification, how does the story of consciousness evolution relate to issues such as dualism and the hard problem of consciousness, panpsychism, divine creativity, and mystical union? Matt Segall's faculty bio: Matthew D. Segall, PhD, received his doctoral degree in 2016 from the Philosophy, Cosmology, and Consciousness program at CIIS. His dissertation was titled Cosmotheanthropic Imagination in the Post-Kantian Process Philosophy of Schelling and Whitehead. It grapples with the limits to knowledge of reality imposed by Kant's transcendental form of philosophy and argues that Schelling and Whitehead's process-oriented approach (described in his dissertation as a "descendental" form of philosophy) shows the way across the Kantian threshold to renewed experiential contact with reality. He teaches courses on German Idealism and process philosophy for the Philosophy, Cosmology, and Consciousness program at CIIS. He blogs regularly at footnotes2plato.com.
Layman Pascal returns to discuss the relationship of Nietzsche's thought to integral and metamodern frameworks in light of recent debates with the "Dark Renaissance." Is there a pre/trans fallacy in Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morals? What's the connection between the Will to Power and Whitehead's "Creativity" or Wilber's "Eros"? How does the meaning of "power" change across the metamemes and up the stack of complexity?
Brendan Graham Dempsey talks to Julyan Davey about his immensely prescient and rich essay, "Towards a Metamodern Spirituality," a must-read for anyone interested in the topic of religion and spirituality in metamodernity: https://medium.com/the-phoenix-project/towards-a-metamodern-spirituality-6d71f958a2e0.
Theory and ritual artist Scoutleader Wiley talks to Brendan about metamodern magick, a post-postmodern psychotechnology of re-enchantment that utilizes ironic sincerity and informed naivete to (re)connect us with meaning and the Earth. How can we engage with ritual and mythos beyond superstition and gullibility? What ends does ritual accomplish that a purely rational and objective stance to experience cannot? How can laughing at ourselves help us take the sacred seriously?
0:00 Introduction
1:36 A Need for New Rituals: Personal and Communal Meaning-Making
9:05 Magic vs. Magick: Objective vs. Transjective Transformation
15:26 Acausal-Representational Systems (ARS)
18:52 Regenerative Reverence: An "As If" Spirituality
35:09 "Make Coffee Like You Give a Fuck": Creating Ritual and Living Mindfully
44:23 Spiritual Vulnerability and Ironic Sincerity
47:51 Necessary Subversion
Dr. Gregg Henriques talks to Brendan about his Unified Theory of Knowledge (UTOK) framework and how it promisingly contributes to the effort of articulating a sciency-friendly post-postmodern grand narrative for our confused and meaning-hungry times. Gregg helps clarify points of overlap as well as distinction between other post-postmodern maps, while zeroing in on the specific existential challenge of our day, which UTOK clarifies and contextualizes. Finally, the two consider how we might, through ironic sincerity, co-create a set of living symbols that can help teach the full "wisdom stack" we'll need to not only survive but thrive beyond the imminent transformations of the metaverse and the "digital identity problem."
0:00 Introduction
1:31 Overview of the Unified Theory of Knowledge (UTOK)
7:18 UTOK and Metamodernism
15:46 UTOK and Integral Theory
28:08 Mapping the Complexification Domains
38:09 Brendan: How the Metanarrative Answers the Crisis of Psychological Studies
39:17 UTOK and the Integrated Information Theory of Consciousness
49:57 The "God" Question
58:06 A Spiritual Omega Point or Posthumanist Singularity? The Need for a Wisdom Stack
1:03:44 The Need for a New Mythology: A New Meaning amidst the Meaning Crisis
Joe Lightfoot talks to Brendan about the "Liminal Web," a term he coined for an emerging online community of metatheorists, systems poets, and sensemakers. Discussion quickly moves from mapping this online subculture to exploring its possible futures for deepening connection and embodiment. What are the potentials of purely virtual communitas? Are there in-person communal structures into which this online momentum might be transferred? What are the ingredients of successful communities more generally? What makes this loose network different than other would-be changemakers of the past? Where is it all going, and what is its significance?
0:00 Introduction
2:01 The Liminal Web
4:55 Mapping Mapmakers: A Perspective on the Perspective-Takers
7:48 A Certain Kind of Engagement
9:45 Materializing the Meta-Tribe IRL
25:38 Charitability, Development, and Exclusion
35:57 Post-Postmodern Systems Change
42:22 The Importance of Being Earnest: Heroic Humility and the Dao of Service
56:26 Dancing Dialecticians and the Ever-Receding Absolute
1:01:25 Sacred Simplicity Beyond Complexity
Feeling stuck in his meditation practice and looking for guidance from a 4th Path adept, Brendan talks again to Roger Thisdell, someone who has attained a new default experience of mind as permanently centerless and without the sense of a singly, positioned epistemic agent (i.e., what in traditional language might be called "enlightenment"). Both thought it might be helpful to explore some instructional guidance in a podcast setting, where the process could be shared for others' benefit. In this context, Roger asks some probing questions and offers some helpful tips and suggestions for cultivating awakening.
0:00 Introduction
2:54 Brendan Describes His Path and Motivation towards Waking Up
9:12 (Clarifying Nonduality)
12:22 Brendan Tries to Describe His Phenomenological Sense of Self
16:47 Shifting Perspective through Thought
21:50 Symbolizing Awakened Consciousness 29:45 Beyond Equanimity: Zeroing in on the "Self"
40:54 The Uses of Conception to Change Perception
42:39 Building Motivation
48:07 Fire Kasina
50:45 Being vs. Striving
54:52 Building Metacognition
59:11 Naming Our Motivations
Brendan talks to Henry Andrews about the legacy of Clare Graves's work, which formed the basis of the Spiral Dynamics framework, which has in turn highly influenced the articulation of integral theory. After going over some of the history, the discussion then turns to the "Great Stage Theory Debate" (Henry's coinage) initiated by a comment by Nora Bateson on social media that re-ignited debate over long-standing critiques of stage theories in general.
0:00 Introduction
2:53 Stage 1: The Research of Clare Graves
12:53 Stage 2: Don Beck, Christopher Cowan, and Spiral Dynamics
20:01 Stage 3: Ken Wilber and SDi
24:46 Stage 4: Hanzi Freinacht and Political Metamodernism
28:11 The "Great Stage Theory Debate": Seeking a "Both/And" Approach
46:04 Debate in the Social Media Landscape
47:59 Transcending the Stage of Stage Theorization: Practice for Playing Jazz
Zak Stein is a writer and educator with a doctorate in human development and education from Harvard University. Working with Kurt Fischer, he helped further hone and nuance developmental stage theories as part of the neo-Piagetian consensus. Deeply influenced by integral philosophy, he has also articulated many crucial critiques of the movement in an attempt to emphasize the dynamical and contextual nature of stage assessments. Here Zak and Brendan discuss just what the science tells us about the reality of stages; the problems around their simplification, reification, and misapplication; the question of how well they map onto socio-cultural development; the importance of processual vs. categorical thinking; and what development can and can't do as part of a metamodern spiritual metanarrative.
0:00 Introduction
1:12 Static Stages or Dynamic Processes? A Metapsychological Clarification
10:18 Being "at" a Stage? Development as an Ecology of Skillsets
19:23 Non-Linear Growth and Ranges of Operation: Fractal Skill-Chunking across Domains
24:05 The Car Mechanic and the Quantum Mechanic: Transferable Skills and the Importance of Embodiment
28:55 Roots of Cognitive Complexity
1:57 The Recapitulation Theory: Does Phylogeny Map Ontogeny?
36:50 The Growth to Goodness Issue: Complexification and Pathology
41:31 Better Heuristics than Stages? Learning Processes, Capacity Asymmetries, and Dynamics of Teacherly Authority
48:18 Theory vs. (Mis)Application: Are Stage Theories Just "B.S. and Colonial as Hell"?
59:41 Generalizing Developmental Space
1:05:30 Development as Metanarrative? Stage Theories and the Religion that's not a Religion
This is Part 2 of the series (Part 3 will be on Layman's channel), in which the three of us wrestle deeply within dialogos about how to implement the religion that is not a religion in a way that is both viable and honourable.
0:00 Introduction
6:14 Stages of Faith? Development, Adjacency, and Trustworthiness
11:36 Mechanisms of Change vs. Maps of Change: Problematizing the Narrative Uses of Development
17:15 Traditional (concrete) vs. Modern (formal) Signs of Trustworthiness
20:35 Sequence, Movement, and Attraction: Trusting One's Future Self
24:38 The Normativity Problem
30:39 Complexification as Mechanism: Ecologies of Practice Give us Perspective
34:34 Religious Levels as Relevance Realization at the Scale of Distributed Cognition
49:39 Trust the Process: Organizing by Models of Successful Processing, not Pre-Determined Plan
LINKS
Part 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAnLbaFHYWQ
Writer Sophie Strand talks to Brendan about re-enchantment, the animist revival, ecological storytelling, and the meaning of death and change.
0:00 Introduction
1:55 A Messy Re-Enchantment
7:11 No Purity: Towards a Compost Gospel
16:52 Ecological Storytelling: Our Role in a More-Than-Human Story
25:23 The Sacred Local in a Digital Diaspora
31:31 Transcendence as the Cycle of Descending and Ascending
36:07 Not Your (Great-Great-Great...) Grandfather's Animism
44:39 Reading: "The Animate Everything"
52:03 "God" Won't Do: Holism and Generative Breakdown
56:09 Adaptive Storytelling
1:03:28 Death and Ferment: Becoming Good Soil
1:11:11 Reading: "Confessions of a Compost Heap"
"The smallest sprout shows there is really no death;
And if ever there was, it led forward life, and does not wait at the end to arrest it,
And ceas'd the moment life appear'd." ---Walt Whitman
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Daniel Thorson and Brendan discuss the work of John Vervaeke, creator of the "Awakening from the Meaning Crisis" series, comparing and contrasting it to Daniel's own pioneering efforts to develop a framework and set of practices for training agents of healing and transformation in our disintegrating world. They also reflect on both the importance and the problem of creating "ontologically neutral" practices stripped of highly context-bound terminology and ideas, whether that be for a "religion that's not a religion" or the kind of framework Daniel is developing.
0:00 Introduction
1:50 On Entering Vervaekeland
5:49 Transformation: Virtue as a Leverage Point for Meaning
10:44 Vervaeke's Perennial Problems and His Proposed Ecology of Practices
18:35 Thorson's Framework of Five Aspects (1. Energy System, 2. Psyche, 3. Relationship, 4. Ethics, 5. Perception)
30:10 Thorson's Ecology of Practices: 1. Samadhi and Healthy Living; 2. "Focusing," Bio-Emotive Work, Internal Family Systems; 3. Circling and Intentional Community; 4. Human Systems; 5. Emptiness Insight
36:29 A Vervaeke-Thorson Synthesis?
39:12 Disenchanting Ecologies of Practice? The Challenge and Promise of Sacred Containers
46:44 A Missing Metanarrative? Connecting Myth and Praxis
50:39 An Ecology of Ecologies of Practices: Modular Methods, Local Color?
54:27 Wisdom's Scaling Constraints: Seeking Integration in a Disintegrating World
Emerge podcast:
https://www.whatisemerging.com/emergepodcast
The Monastic Academy:
https://www.monasticacademy.com/
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
After detailing the twists and turns of his rich spiritual journey through numerous religious traditions, Bruce Alderman discusses the many promises and challenges of trans-religious engagement. Bruce and Brendan discuss the difficulty of bridging divides, not just between different religious traditions, but also between different worldviews and value systems that appear within those traditions. Bruce talks about some of the promising groundwork he's helped lay to establish new interlineage institutions, and reflects on what remains to be done in the field of integral pluralism and the articulation of a meta-religious framework.
0:00 Introduction
1:46 Bruce's Journey through Multiple Spiritual Lineages
20:47 Seeking the Thread that Binds
25:40 Picking up the Pieces: Reconciling across Traditions and Worldviews
37:25 Relating across Worldviews: Strategies for Integrating
44:16 Building an Infrastructure for Integral, Interlineage Spirituality
53:51 Translineage Spirituality or Meta-Religion?
1:10:52 A Translineage Lineage: Adepts and Initates Doing the Work
The Integral Stage podcast:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaA4...
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Raoul Eshelman talks to Brendan about "performatism," the post-postmodern artistic epoch characterized by a return of transcendence. But what sort of "transcendence"? And how does it relate to history, religion, and metaphysics? Eshelman navigates these various lines of inquiry, while also pointing out some important distinctions between his work and other cultural theorists currently exploring these topics. Finally, what lies ahead for performatist theory, and for theories of the post-postmodern more generally?
0:00 Introduction
1:29 The Return of Transcendence: Postmodernism, Post-Postmodernism, and Historical Dialectic
16:41 Performatist Art and Post-Metaphysics
21:26 A Second Naivete? When Beautiful Belief Overpowers Banal Skepticism
29:50 Performatist Spirituality?
31:49 Debates within Post-Postmodernist Theory
43:42 Performatist Transcendence: A Response to Postmodern Disenchantment
58:24 A Cultural Studies Emphasis
1:05:32 Horizons: An Emerging Post-Postmodern Discourse
Raoul Eshelman's website can be found here:
https://performatism.de/
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Roger Thisdell talks to Brendan about jhana meditation and the transformational experience born of such high state cultivation which suddenly left him with "a mind which represents itself as permanently centreless and without the sense of a singly, positioned epistemic agent."
0:00 Introduction
3:40 Jhana Meditation: An Overview
13:09 The Phenomenology of No "Self"
18:36 The Epistemology and Ontology of No "Self"
24:01 Roger's Story
31:16 Suffering and No "Self"
34:44 The Web vs. the Spider
41:33 Navigating States
49:33 Development: States vs. Stages
53:57 Nonduality
56:00 Jhana: The Ladder That You Throw Away
58:24 The God beyond "God": Beyond I AM
1:09:16 Cessation: Is There Awareness beyond Experience?
"Right Concentration: A Practical Guide to the Jhanas" by Leigh Brasington: https://www.amazon.com/Right-Concentr...
Graph source: https://www.suttavada.foundation/brai...
Comparison of Christian and Buddhist cosmological systems with consideration of their relationship to jhanas (mentioned at 58:24) available here: https://www.brendangrahamdempsey.com/...
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Daniel Görtz, one of the authors behind the Hanzi Freinacht works, explores the topic of metamodern spirituality with Brendan Graham Dempsey in a rich and illuminating discussion. After some initial exposition highlighting important distinctions between the metamodern and integral paradigms, Görtz and Dempsey dive into considering the implications of metamodern developmental thought for religion and theology, tracking the evolution of "God" into metamodernity. Meta-religious frameworks, as well as the relationship of the Model of Hierarchical Complexity to theories of "consciousness evolution," are also considered. The conversation concludes with a look towards metamodern mythopoetic and praxipoetic possibilities on the horizon, and the challenge to shape new containers for spiritual expression in metamodernity.
0:00 Introduction
1:02 Metamodernism vs. Integral: In Search of Post-Postmodern Social Transformation
19:09 Millenarian Woo vs. Gradual Spiritualization
28:08 Towards a Metamodern God: Teleology, Oscillation, and the Development of Religion
43:34 The Headless God: The Relentless Murder and Resurrection of Spirit
48:32 Meta-Religion? A Stage-Model Metanarrative for the Evolution of God
1:00:40 Cognitive Development or Consciousness Evolution?
1:12:00 Metamodern Prophets and Sincerely Ironic Saints
1:26:55 A Challenge to Co-Create New Religious Praxis
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Timotheus Vermeulen talks with Brendan Graham Dempsey about the development of "metamodernism," a paradigm for understanding art and culture after postmodernism. After discussing the original impetus for and formation of the idea, he reflects on the continued relevance of the paradigm today, more than a decade after he and colleague Robin van den Akker first proposed it in their seminal 2010 article, "Notes on Metamodernism." More recent applications and deployments of the term "metamodernism" outside cultural studies proper (e.g., by Hanzi Freinacht, Lene Rachel Andersen, Tomas Björkman, Jonathan Rowson and Layman Pascal) are also considered. The conversation concludes with a look to the future of metamodernism, and a consideration of how it is playing out in the realm of contemporary spirituality.
00:00 Introduction
01:56 Beginnings: Coining "Metamodernism" for a New Cultural Sensibility
09:25 Is Metamodernism the "Dominant Structure of Feeling"? An Uneven Distribution
17:57 Roots: The Meta-Crisis, Internet 2.0, and a New Generation
27:23 Manifestations: Pragmatic Idealism on Left and Right: Informed Naivete and Relativist Absolutism
38:41 On Recent Developments: Cultural Metamodernism vs. Political/Developmental Metamodernism
56:19 Currents and Horizons: Depthiness and Metamodern Spirituality: 'Truth,' 'Transcendence,' and the Search for Meaning after Postmodernism
1:09:52 Political Metamodernism as Metamodern Cultural Production
1:15:36 Where Are We Going? Metamodernism as a Time Between Worlds
Alexander Bard talks with Brendan Graham Dempsey about syntheism, a movement exploring the "creation of God in the internet age." Envisioning "God" not as the creator at the beginning of time, but rather as the networked Event in the future to which we all are tending, Bard's syntheist philosophy challenges us to consider the coming Sensocracy, which is even now emerging in both pluralist and totalitarian guises. Taking issue with "evolution of consciousness" models and the idea of developmental spirituality, Bard argues rather for technology's development as the core dynamism in a world that knows only Process and Event.
0:00 Introduction
1:22 Contextualizing Syntheism: Religion and Technology Since the Bronze Age
7:40 Cultural Code Development: Process and Event---and Technology
13:30 Metamodernism vs. Syntheism: Human Development or Technological Development?
29:48 Metamodernism vs. Syntheism: The Development of God and the Ultimate Event
40:17 The Barred Absolute: God as Relative Utopia (Syntheos)
45:20 Creating Syntheos: The Coming Sensocracy (Totalitarian or Pluralistic?)
54:31 Development vs. Novelty vs. Event
1:04:27 Humanism, Metamodernism, Syntheism and Religion
1:19:39 Dividual Co-Creation: Living Archetypally
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
How do we talk about metamodern spirituality, especially when traditional religious terminology is so fraught with baggage from the past? Do we rename our terms, or reclaim them? In this conversation with Brendan Graham Dempsey, Layman Pascal defends the reclamation of religious language, offering his own definitions of words like "God," "spirit," "heaven and hell," and more. With this reformulation of familiar ideas, we can glimpse a vital and viable framework for a truly metamodern spirituality, one that retains its connection to the traditions of our ancestors and their age-old explorations of matters of ultimate concern.
0:00 Introduction
3:30 Defending Conservation: The Right in the Right/Left Polarity of Metamodern Spirituality
5:24 Redefining: "Spirituality"
7:36 "Spirit"
8:51 "Numinous"
12:10 "God"
26:38 "Telos," the "Will of God," and "Sin"
34:31 (On Mingling Symbol Sets)
38:35 "Sacred Geometry"
46:05 "Religion"
54:35 "Myth," "Pantheon," and "Divinities/gods"
1:17:44 "Heaven" and "Hell"
1:21:09 "Afterlife," nihilistic vs. life-affirming Transcendence
1:32:23 Meta-Praxis or Meta-Narrative? The Primacy of Experience over Theory
1:42:52 Navigating Different Terminological Contexts
1:51:33 Spiritual Timidity vs. Spiritual Trauma
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Brendan talks to Layman Pascal about how to live embodied, multi-perspectival religion, as well as a novel framework for thinking about it.
0:00 Introduction
1:40 Q: What Is "Metamodern Spirituality"?
I. Embodying the Multi-Perspectival Sacred: Metamodern Spirituality Gets Physical
5:22 Metamodern Spirituality and "Sacred Naturalism"
9:44 Naturalizing the Sacred, or Sacralizing the Natural?
18:37 How Do We Engage Traditional Literalism?
26:06 Transform the Old, or Invent the New?
35:47 Limits of Pluralism
44:12 An Urgent Spirituality: What Does the Moment Require of Us?
59:11 Lived Religion: (Knowingly) Embodying the Sacred Style
II. Theorizing the Multi-Perspectival Sacred: Metamodern Spirituality Gets Metaphysical
1:16:16 A Metaphysics of Adjacency
1:27:14 The Principle of Difference
1:35:25 The Validity (and Challenge) of Different Lenses
Layman's writings can be found at:
https://laymanpascal.substack.com/
The Integral Stage podcast:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaA4...
More on metamodern spirituality at:
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Brendan Graham Dempsey talks to Jeremy Johnson about structures of consciousness, mapping the whole, and metamodern spirituality.
0:00 Introduction
2:32 A Trans-Disciplinary Approach
4:17 Seeking the Whole: Gebser
7:39 Seeking the Whole: Gebser vs. Wilber?
10:27 Modern Totalizing: The Limits of Developmental Maps
15:37 Our Meta Moment between Worlds
20:20 Living the Between: A Non-Totalizing Meta-Narrative?
25:47 The Meta-Crisis, The Meaning Crisis, and the Narrative of the In-Between
36:03 A Felt Sense of the Whole: Metamodern Reclaiming of the Non-Modern
48:28 Approaches to Modern Systems Transformation
58:47 Meta Spirituality: Being Present to the Whole
1:15:40 Concretizing Presence: Practices for Meta Living
1:23:24 Living Out Our Composite Natures: Concretizing Multiple Structures of Consciousness
1:38:48 The Whole Beyond Everything
1:41:24 A Myth of the Whole: "God" as Originary Presence?
More on Jeremy at mutations.blog
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
Brendan Graham Dempsey talks to Lene Rachel Andersen, author of Metamodernity: Meaning and Hope in a Complex World, about navigating different cultural codes, updating traditions, and sense-making in today's world.
0:00 Introduction
3:20 Metamodern-ism vs. Metamodern-ity
5:34 Seeing All Four Previous Cultural Codes
11:15 Updating through Addition
13:01 Metamodern Oscillation between Postmodern and Pre-postmodern (Indigenous, Classical, Modern)
18:08 Cultural Code-Switching
27:02 Code Antagonism and Limits
23:29 Code Pluralism and Sense-Making
34:44 A Corner of the Iron Age in 2021
39:03 Premodern Beliefs in a Metamodern World?
47:07 Invention and Religion/Inventing Religion
57:53 Transcendence in the Cultural Codes
1:04:11 Making Meaning, Sense, and Identity after Postmodernism
More on Lene's work at:
www.NordicBildung.org
www.BrendanGrahamDempsey.com
En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.