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Adam Collyer's avatar

I am not so sure that these people are simply guilty of the wrong kind of thinking. Actually it is worse than that. They have abandoned the notion, which used to be accepted by everyone, that the earth's purpose is the good of humanity. That God "did not make it in vain; he made it to be lived in" as one of the Psalms says.

Those people live in cities. When they visit "the countryside" they fail to appreciate that it is just as much a built environment as are the cities. The countryside has been built by British farmers for the purpose of growing food.

The green "charities" see it, by contrast, as a Britain that is closer to how it naturally would be, or even should be, without the blight of mankind (sorry, humankind). That is why they champion "rewilding". In their hearts they would love to rewild the entire country. Their philosophy is fundamentally anti-human.

Of course, Britain was naturally a forested green hell, packed with wolves, bears and boars that were quite keen to rip humans to pieces. For details, see Little Red Riding Hood.

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Asa Boxer's avatar

This essay belongs in analogy magazine, David. May I cross-post?

I'm overjoyed to see this idea presented so articulately. We must do our best to spread the word on this insight. You have, without a doubt, put your finger on the very root of the trouble.

I'd like to call your attention to the issue of metaphor. You write:

"McGilchrist concedes at the end of his book that his account might be wrong and indeed may be entirely metaphorical, but even as metaphor, it is one of great power and insight."

Metaphor, etymologically and literalistically, refers to "carrying across": it bridges between the notion intended and the physical world. In other words, metaphor bridges between two worlds, the inner and the outer. So far, in communicating this idea to you, for example, I've used a continuous string of metaphors, in part because language is all metaphor, and the written word is further metaphor for the spoken word, but also because I've leveraged obvious metaphors like *bridges,* *worlds,* *inner and outer,* and *string.*

Despite the world of metaphors and conceits we each of us inhabit, we are unaware of the circumstances of our consciousness. In other words, we have no idea that our perception of the world is mediated by our imaginations. As Ted Hughes pointed out, this is why we must educate the imagination. At least then, as I see it, we might have a better chance of distinguishing phantasy from reality. As a consequence of the phenomena you mentioned in your article, folks are walking around in a dream, all the while thinking they're grounded in reality. (VR comes to mind as a decent analogy. Total Recall perhaps.)

What I'm getting at is that we ought to push back against this perception that something is "just a metaphor." Natural selection for instance is an amazing metaphor and a very productive conceit, but our society sees it as fact, final revelation, and true reality. When we understand language, we understand that metaphor is its life force and indeed the life force of all creativity.

As Jeffery Donaldson explains, another way of looking at metaphor is as one thing "put for" another. And in his book Missing Link he demonstrates how this same activity takes place in chemical bonds and in DNA replication. Each time we apply a new metaphor to explain metaphor, we learn something more about it, or we hit upon new avenues of research and experimentation. However, if we say some metaphors are just metaphors, and some ARE the One True Truth--we've lost sight of what metaphors are all about. . . their usefulness and productivity, as well as their limitations. Science in particular needs to come to grips with this problem. I believe that if this issue were taken seriously, it could have an enormous healing effect. Metaphor has the potential to reconcile the inner and outer worlds. It would also lead to great new scientific insights and advances.

I can't seem to quote this enough:

“The inner world, separated from the outer world, is a place of demons. The outer world, separated from the inner world, is a place of meaningless objects and machines. The faculty that makes the human being out of these two worlds is called divine.” - Ted Hughes "Myth and Education"

You might find this interesting:

https://analogymagazine.substack.com/p/a-bridge-is-a-lie-how-metaphor-does

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