Philosophers, Cynics, Dervishes: An Inquiry

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Philosophers, Cynics, Dervishes: An Inquiry Peter Wright, N.D. Abstract

While philosophical and mystical inquiries proceed in distinct and contrasting cultural and discursive settings, they address similar questions of fundamental human experience. The ostensible grounding of continental philosophy in a secularized European academic tradition belies deep thematic and historical connections with venerable streams of Eurasian spirituality. A personal exploration, documenting an attempt to bring these discourses into proximity through a lighthearted yet tendentious inner dialog, reveals recurring elements of both conflict and convergence. Main Text Inquirer: There wasn't one voice, but three or four, at least, who showed up for the invitation to pursue a bit of inquiry on matters of phenomenology and spirituality. Whose voices? Whose questions? Cynic: And who the hell cares about this kind of talk? Check out this crew here, for starters: Me: Phony sincerity, pretense, and show—that's the coin of the realm in what passes for mainstream culture, so naturally "cynical" is about the worst put-down you can lay on someone these days—or any other days, really, nothing new about that. To openly profess a stance of Cynicism, as I do, puts me and my kind well beyond the pale. Philosopher: Ordinary people consider philosophers pretty lame, as well: it's not science, it's not business, there's no money to be made, you can't prove anything, you can't understand what these people are saying most of the time—it hurts your head to try to read what they write. They keep coming up with their own ways to answer thousand-year-old questions, and inventing new ways to twist the language in order to mystify the poor reader enough to veil the fact that these are the same old problems that can't be solved. Jargon, headaches, confusion—no wonders your books don't sell! Dervish: Now we're really talking marginal! In the West, people just use this word very loosely for someone spinning more or less out of control, some kind of human whirlwind, a mindless frenzy of motion. In contemporary Muslim cultures, where there's more context for the label, dervishes are viewed with suspicion by many, as heretics, posers, outcasts, relics, deviants, parasites, and worse. All right, then. Set us around a table, stuck in a little room for a while somewhere, say, or inside some poor fool's head, to conduct some kind of inquiry, a dialog, trialog, tete-a-tete, whatever—I don't know if this notion is more like a wretched “no-exit” nightmare, or some kind of cosmic joke. The philosopher seems to imagine some kind of light might be shed in the process. Like I say, who all out there is listening or reading? Who cares? Philosopher: One is indeed hard-pressed to disagree convincingly that, however we may update our language, or attempt to reframe our discourse in the most up-to-date manner; the essential terms of the argument are little changed over time. Like it or not, however we may focus on our differences, we belong together, we are inseparable, stuck here like Beckett's damned Didi and Gogo.1 We talk to each other, and to the like-minded—let the rest ignore us, they always have.


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Philosophers, Cynics, Dervishes: An Inquiry by Existential Psychoanalytic Institute & Society - Issuu