Conspiratorial Psychology
Dec. 20th, 2022 11:46 amWell, this random internet comment explains a lot, doesn't it?
It seems that we see this fundamental mentality shows up on all sides/stripes of the political spectrum here in the US. I'd say it's rooted in the human condition, but this tendency was greatly amplified by the spread and mass adoption of dualistic religions. Get rid of the big centralizing institution (the Catholic Church) that mostly kept these behaviors under wraps, and all of a sudden watch the phenomena of "holiness spiraling" and blaming all misfortune on a personified "big bad" become facts of everyday life.
The execution of Charles I was at the hands of the same Calvinist/Puritan/Manichean dichotomy of good/evil that runs through American history and motivates elites and populace alike. It is so ingrained in the American psyche, if we can generalize here, that any attempt to analyze a situation and find root causes, such as group narcissism or profit motive, is overlooked if it doesn’t yield evil geniuses with the conscious intent to do harm. The dichotomy is alive and well in group narcissism, for which innocence and purity require an absolute, metaphysical evil beseiging them--unified and conspiring against them.
It seems that we see this fundamental mentality shows up on all sides/stripes of the political spectrum here in the US. I'd say it's rooted in the human condition, but this tendency was greatly amplified by the spread and mass adoption of dualistic religions. Get rid of the big centralizing institution (the Catholic Church) that mostly kept these behaviors under wraps, and all of a sudden watch the phenomena of "holiness spiraling" and blaming all misfortune on a personified "big bad" become facts of everyday life.
(no subject)
Date: 2022-12-21 03:12 pm (UTC)I suppose this is all a good lesson on the concept of Chesterton's Fences. In this case, removing the ritual protocols that were in place for many centuries tends to unleash one form or another of progressive madness. Which brings up another theory of mine; that Progressivism is baked into all Magian religions. The reason why these religions tend to go in a very totalitarian-theocratic direction once they become established and hegemonic is to contain those innate progressive tendencies due to the linear conception of time and history (and "end of history" eschatology) that is within the very nucleus of this civilizational worldview. The "Prophetic Revelation -to- Apocalyptic Communism" pipeline is so very Magian. Too bad we're stuck dealing with this right now, though with a strong Faustian technocratic flavor to our version of this.
In light of all this madness, the old Indo-European worldview of cyclical time seems so comforting and serene right about now.
(no subject)
Date: 2022-12-26 07:19 pm (UTC)Hmm, that's interesting. I think you might be onto something. I have to wonder as well whether the Faustian adoption of Magian religion might be especially madness-prone. The Magian worldview sees all of time (creation to apocalypse) as "contained", and outside of it is "the real thing". The Faustian obsession with infinite extension takes the moral-flavored linearity of the Magian religions and once it has discarded the ritual and the codes of law and other restraints, all that's left is an unshakeable moral conviction that the direction you're going is right. Scary enough as is, but even worse when the civilization's age of reason takes all of that pure, undiluted righteousness and confines it to a secular worldview, where heaven (or hell) will be found in the material world. Witness the 20th century.
As for the comfort in cyclical time, I'm agreeing with you with my whole mind as hard as I can right now.