The Trapped Self, Simulation Worlds and Transparency

Give me a stable point and I’ll dislodge the world.

Socrates.

And we have that point.

The Trapped Self

Bela Hamvas was extraordinary. As a librarian he had access to old ancient knowledge. He understood all and translated to us the world from starting from  involution through Hermes Trismegistus to current times.

We are living in simulacrum.  We need to be deceived and the world around deceives us. Our inner self feels that and it is continuously looking for answers. Ancient science was aware of simulacra and the nature of the soul, they found a way, that distant point outside of the known world where one can clearly look around and understand everything.

Ancient leaders were born twice; on becoming leaders of society a ceremony took them to that distant point, where the self completely leaves this experience called life, and then they were reborn taking back the clairvoyance necessary to be a leader.

A leader who controls society without obscure personal interests.

Simulation Worlds

Steve Yegge started it’s last essaying odyssey with the story of a Siamese fighting fish trapped into and died in it’s own tank. Trapped into an universe which borders were all known and not extendable by imagination, simulated worlds.

Next, he takes us to another simulation, Super Mario Kart’s computer world and wonders where is that point when Mario will stand up from his kart, and will look straight to you, the one holding the controls, pullings the strings of its — simulated — world and life.

I am thinked.

Arthur Rimbaud

Yes, you are — your existence is — thinked by someone else. You are nothing than soemone else’s idea. The one who names you, who is calling on your name is controlling you totally. If you are not aware of this you are like Super Mario.

And the list of quotations flows, flows away:

“Our environment seems less like matter and more like an extension of the mind that controls it”

“Simulation, the ultimate imitation of life, becomes a wall that stands between us and the true experience of life.”

“Symbolic arenas are acts of self- and world-repair: they allow us to face and overcome simulated dangers and problems, which are a more exciting version of what we face in everyday life. In these characteristics, they are similar to daydreams, in which we convert our defeats into victories and our losses into gains to bolster the sense of safety and self-esteem.”

“Consumer culture now mass produces simulations that are used as substitutes for desired goods we can’t have or can’t have without paying some price.”

“We have created a society in which much of the culture and politics, as well as the economy, is geared toward mass producing, and consuming, simulations.”

“We now routinely experience simulation confusion, in which we mistake realism for reality and think some of these fakes and simulations really are what they imitate”

“Our conscious and unconscious thoughts about controlling real and virtual worlds are only a part of what is inside us that is relevant to these changes. Our minds also include an acute awareness of the various possibilities for good and bad as they relate to ourselves, society and nature. They include an awareness that we are fallen selves, trapped in our own psychodynamics and narcissism; that we live in fallen societies, permeated by the misuse of power and by deception, which is a product of our fallen nature as it is caught up in the world of scarcity and necessity we find in nature. And our minds include the awareness that we live amid a fallen world of nature that limits us at every turn, and that we have turned into a product of our own fallen selves. Of course, we are also aware of the good we have achieved — our fallen selves and societies have still managed to build civilization; we live lives with considerable fulfillment; we bring up new generations; and have turned nature into a source of material riches, for many.”

Source: transparencynow.com. Snippets available at the Flow.

Transparency

Until we, all of us will find our true nature, the reason why we are living in this world — we will be trapped by our self, ego and narcissism, and, living blindly in a simulacra.

We must first die and reborn as the ancient leaders; we must find that stable point to dislodge the simulated worlds around.

The most immediate method is to assure transparency around us, in our societies and governing power structures. The Control of our Culture and Civilisation must be transparent.

Until then we must practice involution: evolving ourselves inside, to that stable point of dislodgement — instead of building the outside, the simulacra around us.

A good, and immediately available starting point is to discover the nearest simulacra we can touch: our dreams. Welcome to Lucid Dreaming! Do yourself a favor and take a reality check.

One Comment

  1. Polprav says:

    Hello from Russia!
    Can I quote a post in your blog with the link to you?

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