Wednesday, April 29, 2020

MacroGenesis, Volume #1 Digital Edition

Dear Friends,

I haven't been here for quite a while, as my Time studies have evolved into a single project that the bulk of my spare time has been devoted to for the last three years: Jeve & Steve, a fictional narrative about the first Day of Spring and the first Night of fall. These personified "Homunculi" are children of the Year, whose father, in turn, is Kala, or Time.

MacroGenesis Part #1 details the cosmic marriage rite of Kala and his beloved, Mother Nature, and the subsequent generations born from them, and sets the stage for Jeve & Steve. Feel free to check out the digital edition as you like.

https://globalcomix.com/c/macrogenesis


Saturday, December 15, 2018

The Concept of Fate

Is wisdom forever foundational to philosophy? And if so, then what basic wisdom suffices to be called foundational to philosophy? Basic wisdom in turn depends on what we make of foundational facts. In what way might basic wisdom be called profound? Certainly it is profound if it merits singular attention as fundamental to philosophy.

Do the fates of all concepts lie with the Concept of Fate? Or else, does the fate of all concepts? But these are different questions, one aimed at the respective fates of concepts by themselves, the other at the Fate of Concepts as a whole. In one scenario, the Concepts as a whole survive sempiternally. In another, some concepts die off, others survive for the foreseeable future. In yet another, all concepts perish while life itself survives. But in this vein of thought, we are foremost concerned with two concepts in particular, both subject to this broader inquiry: God and Time.

The facticity or know-ability of the world, conventional wisdom holds, is founded upon basic truths. A truth, given or received as a basis, as a foundation, as a founding basis for knowledge—however such an abstraction of materiality might hold up to a critique of the concept of truth—facticity itself is abstractive as "a power for being known", this prominence of givenness from within a world-enclosure. This "givenness" and "power-for-such" are both semantically denoted datively, as "for-ness" or "being-for-such". It is as such that a confusion between the singular and the plural occurs, in the question of a God-given-world, versus the multiple sempeternities and/or mortalities of the individuals; the Sacred and the secular.

Yet as internality, the concepts of Time, Eternity, Fate all belong to a species of horologic-derived notions; the gods being the divinities, the heavenly beings, stars, astra and colonies of astra, heuristically conceived through narrative conventions, myths. Such abstractions of Time were necessary, in order to first think the heavenly order of being—the first incarnation of this being an early historical foundation of metaphysics and supernaturalism in Indo-European astrologies, as well as later astronomies, through which myths based upon constellations preserved their heuristic value. And thinking from afar, the astral or abstract body became narratively associated with the stars and the great ape, homo sapiens, did first conceive the horological.

This archeophilosophical inquiry into the founding concepts of mind sees in it a latent, nascent historical truth, one that turns on the earliest narrative interwovenness of temporality and eternity. Time and God both reside at the mental site of judging fates. Time appears like God, as a force that cannot be defeated from within life from within the world-disclosure which it avails, because as-such, as world-giving-Time, it is the power that drives birth and death, existence and fate, the universal event of life, though it is entirely possible that the fate of the afterlife and the eternal lie too, in its historical and hermeneutical operations.

If the universal event of life is a fact, if it is knowable-as-a-fact, then it is already a fact to be reckoned with. God-given-ness as an explanation for its facticity, for its knowability, does offer the appearance of an immediate buck-stops-here-styled premise, and for that, it recommends itself in a certain light as unquestionable, beyond criticism.

But if we think of the God who gives as one who gives in-and-through a medium, a prominent finitude or life who reveals as the prominence of the virtues in the thinking of the world as God-given-ness—then the question naturally arises as to how God gives the world to homo sapiens. 

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Internality and Dimension

Time and Eternity have in common that they both are constituted mentally as a kind of conceptual internality; yet as internalities, they differ, not just from spatial externality, but one as a concept pertaining to the external and limited,  to science and cause and effect, over and against a concept pertaining to the internal and unlimited or infinite. Yet in this self-reflexivity, in this apperception which is itself a reflection on the self as time, as being-historical, as enduring—there is a kind of inference which takes the temporal and the eternal as erzats options to be opined upon and judged between, as if the facts did not intrude here, in this remote place, so as to prevent some external, objective determination; to wit, a deathless soul enfleshed in time.

Yet it is just in this history of Time and Eternity that we are to locate the emergence of this peculiar, absurdly paradoxical species of religious consciousness, a consciousness that determines deathlessness for itself in the face of death!

To preserve the concept of the Eternal in the face of the Temporal concept of Death is to insist upon the superiority, ontologically speaking, of an internality which cannot be violated or diminished in any ways by the external; a pure internality which affords a pure reasoning. Kant attempted to unfold this situation, and yet we could never say that he was successful in establishing an immortal soul as a fact, insofar as this would arrogate itself to behave like some external determination on this unreachable place, placing the cart before the horse, so to speak.

What is essential and deathless in the conceptualizing framework which is this mental dimension of internality, must be the way in which the self as Time intrudes upon the world for a while and in a particular place. This insistence of the superiority of self over matter, of the I Myself over the whole of the World, of the narrative of self over the facts of life and death, leads to a retreat into the self as a place of repose and continuity in the face of rampant scheduling and never ending worries about yesterday, today, and tomorrow. The world draws us out from our repose and throws us into the fray of everlasting strife, the struggle for existence, the struggle for recognition, the struggle for freedom, the struggle for the good life.

Life gifts goodness in its own time, and we struggle to find safe haven in the ports between sea-going journeys between life-events, between anniversaries and holidays, between celebrations and parties, festivals; sacred moments, cherished and commemorated. Work that is akin to play makes this journey the more endurable; a life at sea, in pilgrimage, as journeymen and travellers, make and map our ways, seek sense in the larger picture, to join the small things in one harmonious and meaningful trip.

The sense of the Eternal endures, perhaps not least because it is endurance as such! Existence washes over us historically, until at last we relinquish our bodies to the grave. Will we then see ourselves in a new light? In any light at all? Yet endurance beyond life is already something external as historical. And as historical it is not immediately the eternal, but only the temporal.  

Thursday, November 22, 2018

Diwali, Rāma, and Astronomical Lore


The general problem of historicity in Hindu religious narrative can be seen in the differences of opinion that arise between etic (outsider) scholarship on a given narrative versus emic (insider) scholarship. The insider perspective, for example, of the Rāmāyaṇa, is that Rāma is an historical figure, while the outsider perspective tends to treat Rāma as a mythical character. How one judges this matter impacts the reception of scholarship in general in the context of a Hindu audience, though Hindus are not a monolith, and themselves express diverse opinions on the matter, from literal to figurative readings. Nevertheless, it is worth keeping in mind that much of the emic studies on traditional Hindu narratives turn on a recounting of emic/etic divides, so that an emic study is all too often framed as a defense of culture in the face of foreign interloping by crackpot scholars who dismiss concrete evidences pointing to the historical existence of such figures. The common defense of Rāma’s historicity claims that outsiders fail to recognize the concrete historical evidences and literary nuances which bolster this position. 

While I find myself in more recent work on the side of the etic thinking on this and many other HIndu tropes, I initially took the emic position up and defended it as a hermeneutic exercise, a practice Hindu philosophers and rhetoricians call ‘pūrva-pakṣa’. The idea of pūrva-pakṣa is that one cannot be expected to defeat a position if one is incapable of first articulating that position faithfully. Of course, Western academies already utilize such a method on occasion; a method referred to as “generous reading”. 

I myself exercised extreme generosity in my early readings of Hindu literature, to the point that I found myself attempting to defend the indefensible by mental gymnastics which would make even a seasoned yogin blush. I attempted, for example, to defend, in a graduate level essay, the extreme antiquity attributed to the narrative of Rāma’s life by emic scholars, a period of over a million years prior to the present.

My advisors were obviously perplexed at how to reign in my more ambitious and less wieldy enterprises, and on reflection, I think it did little to recommend my academic disposition to the weighty position afforded by a doctorate from a world-class university. Yet the sting of failure in my repeated attempts to enforce an emic vision of Hindu history nevertheless did far too little to correct the underlying problem, as I only later discovered. 

A methodological constant in my decades long studies of Hindu thought and history has centered on this concern over etic and emic divides. How does one explain the Hindu perspective of history to both practitioner and non-practitioner, while doing justice to both sides of the debate? Moreover, how does one unite the two communities in understanding, given the chasm of difference concerning their methodologies of reading history? Doubtless, emic scholarship frequently strives to dismiss any attempt which does not demonstrate a thorough familiarity with the traditional narratives. And the etic scholar will not countenance any rendering of history which falls far afield of the standard academic account, as the emic account often does, without a concomitant quantity and quality of concrete data to underscore its historicity. 

Another concern which has guided my studies may hold the key to this problem. One has to keep in mind the simple question of authorial intent. We would not fast accuse J. K. Rowling of intending the position that there is a literal historical school of Hogwarts where a young wizard named Harry Potter learned magic in such and such an historical period, and that she were doing the serious work of historical preservation. And nor would we accuse any other author of popular fiction of doing history when they were just trying to tell a compelling story. And of course, “doing history” can be reduced to a literary style, and it often is used in that way, even when its author chooses other ends as its aim, as exemplified in the classical novel, Don Quixote, by Miguel de Vasquez. 

I say, “other ends” here, because as scholars concerned with a critical reading of history, we have to read a work that purports to be historical (whether in fact or as a literary device), as not always giving such an end away on the face. The historical use of lemmata, uncited references to prior works is common enough to warn us against any rash judgments on ancient authorial intentions. One has to appreciate the varieties of concerns that form the impulse to writing and composition if one is to make a substantive literary critique of any single work, what to speak of a whole body of texts. 

Anyone sufficiently familiar with the ancient Vedic Saṁhitās has heard of the Vedāṅgas, the so-called Vedic limbs, which include Jyotīṣa, the study of the positions of stars and heavenly bodies in the heavens. This literary branch is a core feature of ancient civilizations, both East and West, and one that even the most “protestant” of Hindu thinkers would do well to familiarize themselves with, even if astrological thinking is itself justifiably held in scorn for its fantastical ways of reasoning. The imagery of astronomy and astrology figure centrally in the thinking of Hindu metaphysics, even for readers who are unable to recognize more than a couple constellations in the night sky. The vision of the heavens given in both the Vedic and Purāṇic literature can be quite elaborate, and this extreme detail offers us a bounty of historical references. As such, it is of central importance to the emic thinker who aims to provide concrete data on the question of historicity. But just as important, it provides an etic explanation for a secular student of Hinduism who wishes to render the often chimerical visions of gods and demons intelligible within a Postmodern world. Regarded in this light, astrology and astronomy should not be regarded as Hindu sideshows resulting from a lack of rational structure. They are the rational structure that illuminates the meaning of very many classical texts, and with that, an evidently important feature of the ancient authors’ hermeneutical intentions. 

We simply have to take a circumspect path of initiation into familiarity with the Vedic and post-Vedic works. We can do this by drawing attention to a simple historical fact, that the Vedic ritual mind had a deep and abiding concern with producing accurate calendars. Horology, the craft of time-telling, is frequently referenced in the Vedic and Purāṇic works, and is found in places even where one might not expect it. Sometimes this material appears abruptly, as a non sequitur within an ongoing discussion (cf., the 5th canto of the Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam). At other times, it forms an indispensible background condition, a kind of general lemmata, or narrative foundation. Recognizing how and why horology provides this foundation has the rather powerful impact of clearing up historical questions in ways that one might not have anticipated. 

Horology, as the art of time-telling, has to do with concrete, empirical references: the mathematical movements of heavenly bodies. But the heavenly bodies, whether those of satellites, planets, or stars, do not always present themselves in a straightforward fashion within narrative. For example, Rāma is referred to as an avatāra, which is often rendered as “incarnation of God”. Some scholars have further commented that the term simply means to “cross down” (tara being treated as a verb). But from a grammatical perspective, if we treat tara as a noun, the term could simply mean “descended-star”. Both interpretations fall within Sanskrit grammatical rules, so there is a kind of nascent polysemy. Nascent polysemy which affords horological readings is not uncommon to Hindu literature. Rūpa Goswāmin’s Bhakti-rasāmṛta-sindhu, for example, uses such horological polysemy in his opening remarks. This practice is apparent in many of the places where the emic scholar of history claims the historicity of Hindu deities. 

I accidentally discovered this practice some years ago. I was left with the impression that I had been little prepared by my prior studies to see it for what it was, and so it took me several years afterward to sufficiently familiarize myself with constellations and the movements of heavenly bodies. I practiced this art in simple observations I made of the phases of the moon, in contemplating the form of the year with its waxing and waning days and nights, in the passage of the Sun and the Moon through the 12 signs of the Zodiac. I also utilized newly discovered digital tools that enabled me to visualize constellations from different sites on the Earth, that enabled me to look back in Time to see the stars in the former positions as the ancients saw them. This enabled me to better visualize the precession of the Earth’s axis and equinoxes. Such tools further enabled me to quickly compare the constellations of different horological traditions, belonging to different ancient civilizations (specifically, Indo-European civilizations). 

This last feature proved to lead to my most important epiphany: That ancient navigators in traveling, far-reaching caravans of traders, explorers, and adventurers shared a common thread of understanding with the astrologers who predicted the fates of patron-kings, and who utilized the esoteric knowledge of the heavens to exercise enormous power over the various states in which they found themselves. The belief in the power of the heavenly bodies to influence the fate of mankind was bounded together with the power of the annual calendar to decide the cadence of the daily, weekly, monthly, seasonal, and annual events of the Indo-European civilizations, and these in turn, were interwoven by narrative processes that enriched the forms and structures of heuristic practices, teaching astrologers, astronomers, and ritual priests how to recognize the stars in the sky, how to render the cacophony of lights and shadows into a well-ordered orchestra of cause and effect. 

But in all this, a new player emerged, a monolithic deity which absorbed and coordinated the lesser, panentheistic, henotheistic deities: The all-encompassing Year, and its principle abstract background, Time. By developing the abstraction of Time through the complex interplay of horological deities, mythic placeholders, and moving heavenly bodies, history was founded on divine, or heavenly terms. Theism has many of its roots in this early play of Time and Fate, of human destiny and the destiny of the state, of the individual and the collective, all arranged and coordinated by the structure of Time, the calendar, the perennial flow of progress and decline. 

The Concept of Time is thus, in its earliest stages, closely akin to (and at places, perhaps indistinguishable from) the concept of God. And this can be, if not proven beyond all doubt, still indicated in a way that compels investigation: That the unreality of Time and the unreality of God are, as metaphysical questions, almost indistinguishable. The one behaves much like the other, though they have their peculiarities. Neither God nor Time are strictly empirical phenomena. Both of them assert primacy as a background condition for the possibility of existence. 

But to return these comments to the question of Rāma’s historicity, I must make a further assertion, that there are even now constellations in an annually visible segment of the night sky which coordinate variously (whether strictly or in ways that suggest gradual decalibrations of the calendar) with the Hindu festivals that commemorate his various life events. 

The annual Hindu festival of Diwali passed just recently, and as such, it behooves us to examine the stellar sky for signs of heavenly causation in association with the narrative. Diwali or Dipāvali, is the festival of lights, associated narratively with the return of Rāma to his kingdom of Ayodhya, after living as a hermit for 14 years in exile. Just a cursory examination of the constellations and heavenly bodies associated with illumination demonstrates a easy connection. The heavenly constellation Hercules comes into full view just as the sun is rising in the east. This association of the visibility of the Hercules constellation and the return of light offers us a fair and simple argument for the meaning of the Diwali festival. Of course, I had not made any previous mention of Hercules in this essay, though I have already written of numerous associations between Rāma and Hercules in other essays recorded elsewhere (see links below). Of course, rigorous scholars, whether etic or emic, are unlikely to find it necessary to accept this association on the mere instance I provide here, but I beg their patience and attention to those other references I have made elsewhere.

Concluding Remarks

While this brief essay does not close the question of Rāma’s historicity, it does provide us an opening to reflect on a potential authorial intention which we might not have guessed, had we not taken this unusual approach. Did the authors of Rāma’s return intend to express an esoteric relationship between the return of the Hercules constellation and the return of the sun? Did the authors see themselves as horologists, ritualizing Time when they composed this narrative? Does not this ritual itself express a longing for the return of the day, embodied in countless oil lamps, in the face of an encroaching winter solstice and the expanding domain of the night? Or is it designed to remind us of the cool season that arises in coordination with this cosmic conjunction of our star with those stars? Perhaps all of the above? 

And if so, if the author intended to act as a horologist in composing this cosmic poetry, does the historicity of Rāma recede? Or does it return its rightful, ancient place in the heavens? In the body of a constellation whose figure can only be drawn by a contemplative mind?  

For further readings on the various associations between Rāma-līla and Astronomical horology, I refer the reader to my online blog: visnuswheeloftime.blogspot.com

The below links can be read in no particular order, though the piece on Jagannatha perhaps the most immediately useful. 



Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Jeve & Steve: A Graphic Novel on Horological Myth

For some Time now, I've been focusing a large part of my creative energies on producing a Postmodern myth. It has been a huge undertaking, investing thousands of hours in developing a large cast of characters, a meaningful outline moving over 36 individual issues and through six chapters, a novel font called "Leaf", a new artistic style, and of course a syncretic narrative that borrows quite broadly from many of the world's ancient civilizations.

This novel serves many of my aims as an artist-creator, but above all, it sets forth some of my most basic theories on how the concept of Time came into being. Despite being a light-hearted fiction, it plies quite close to a rigorous examination of the hermeneutical operations that make for engaging and lasting myth, as well as a clarification of some of the strongest undercurrents of religious speculation. My hope is that reading this narrative will offer a fresh and illuminating perspective on the ancient role that horology played in laying the foundations of history, and will give us a broader sense of the drives that continue to bring religious thinking back into the fold of human societies. 

Just to give you a taste of what I'm up to, here's a detail from the first page of the Macrogenesis, the Cosmogonic Myth which describes the generations of horological deities leading up to Jeve & Steve's own birth: 

Father Time & Mother Nature combine to produce the form of Death. 

The mythical elements of this story have exploded into a form that I could never have anticipated. The system I'm using for writing this story is surpassing my every expectation, which in itself is suggestive of why so many authors in times past have utilized it. There is much still to come, and yet so much has already been accomplished here, that I'm quite hopeful for what still lay ahead. 

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Facebook's Contribution to Horology: the "Flick"

I haven't posted in a while, though that does not say anything about the time I spend contemplating Time's various human and natural dimensions. But every once in a while, I find something that looks to me like it should belong in my blog, and this article by ScienceAlert.com seems apt.

Essentially, Facebook solved a mathematical problem involving the use of cinematic frame-rates to produce a more elegant numerical value than the ones based on existing digital time-frames. In addition to this, Facebook released the documentation as open-source for gamers and film-makers, suggesting the possibility that the Flick may someday soon become almost as common used as the bit.

There you have it. All you have to do is own a multi-billion dollar media company, and you too might be able to introduce your own horological unit for public use. Good luck. 

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Is Time Reversal Possible?

In a recent PBS Article on Time Reversal, Allison Eck describes a new scientific experiment performed at the University of Erlangen-Nurnberg, Germany, in which the arrow of time had been reversed. This reversal occurred at the quantum scale, essentially, as the reversal of the law of thermodynamics which describes how heat loss occurs. Her article links another article from Science News by Emily Conover.

Whether or not Time reversal is possible in material systems larger than quantum scale objects remains to be seen. But the beginnings of such grand designs appears to necessitate starting small. Very small. In principle, the effects being studied were highly localized, as apparently between a very small number of atoms.

In effect, the team who performed the study coaxed warm atoms into getting hotter by robbing the thermal energy from cooler atoms. Performed on a large scale, this would tantamount to starting a fire by throwing ice-cubes on wood. If that sounds strange, well, so does Time reversal.

But Time reversal is so much more than simply the reverse of thermodynamic entropy. To get comprehensive Time reversal, one would have to reverse the trajectories of particles, and would only be able to go back as far as the particle's prior path interactions, all of which would have to be reversed. When examined in this light, Time reversal sounds possible only in the loosest sense of the term. To achieve human scale effects would seem to require near omniscient powers of observation and omnipotent powers of control, not just of the object one wished to send back, but of the very environment in which is was sent.

According to the study's coauthor, Eric Lutz, the result shows that "the arrow of time is not an absolute concept, but a relative concept." As a philosopher of concepts of time, I agree. But the pragmatic reality isn't really all that different for it. I remain unpersuaded that Time reversal will ever become a practical human reality, at least with the technology utilized here, as best as I understand it.