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by Charles Carreon
Preface
The purpose of this writing, that was begun, continued and completed at
the insistence of my lifelong companion Tara Carreon, is to establish a
new religion for a new time and a new place. It was she who insisted on
many of the humanizing elements expressed in the philosophy, including
the avoidance of solipsism and affirmation of the self and the world.
The word “religion” comes from the Latin root “ligare,” a verb meaning
“to bind.” Usually this is interpreted to mean that religion binds us to
“God,” but this new religion will bind its adherents to the planet, all
life, and ourselves.
Everything requires a name, and this religion has the name “Oestia,”
because it is a religion born in the West, and the “west” is “oeste” in
Spanish, the predominant language of the western hemisphere. The
religion of Oestia is called The Oestian Way.
In the past, humans have embraced religions based on revelation.
Revelations are discovered by, or bestowed upon, one human being by a
supernatural power. A revelation is often depicted as a light dawning in
the head or heart of the person receiving the revelation. Revelations
bring with them the warrant of certainty, a sense of confidence in the
revealed truth that is communicated to the minds of the revelators.
Revelations are translated into human speech by the revelators. Once
recorded, revelations receive the status of holy writ, and thereafter,
cannot be questioned. All statements made regarding holy writ are
considered a debasement of the original revelation, a diminution of the
original illumination – commentaries that are necessary, even desirable,
but nevertheless, something less than the original fire of revelation.
Although the revelators never doubt their revelations, those who hear
the revelations may have doubts. In order to overcome those doubts,
religions have adjured their adherents to adopt a doctrine called
“faith.” Faith was aptly described by Paul the Apostle, Aka Saul the
Prosecutor, as “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of
things not seen.”
The Oestian Way is not based on revelation. The Oestian Way is based
only on a clear statement of things that can be known by everyone in an
ordinary state of awareness.
The Preciousness of Human Life
When we begin, we ask of each student whether they can accept certain
basic principles, and each student may take the path as far as they wish
to go. As to the preciousness of human life, there are three fundamental
principles:
1. Life is a self-evident good.
2. Each person wishes to retain
his or her own life.
3. Each person is bound to
respect the right to life of others.
These principles are discussed briefly below.
First Principle: Life Is A Self-Evident Good
It is only because you are alive that you are able to cognize this
statement, that “life is a self-evident good.” What is meant by this?
Let us first consider what we mean by “good.”
Something is good if we are disposed to retain it. Garbage we discard.
Food we conserve. We keep our loved ones close. Those we find inimical
are gladly removed from our presence.
Among likes and dislikes, nothing is more liked than life itself. No one
discards life lightly, even those who end their lives because the pain
of living has become too much to bear. Therefore, life is a self-evident
good.
Second Principle: Each Person Wishes To Retain His or Her Own Life
The second principle is an inference from the first. Everyone recognizes
that they, personally, do not wish to die or have their life taken from
them. Yet it is an everyday circumstance to hear that one person has
intentionally killed another. This can only occur because the killer has
ignored his victim’s desire to live. The decision to kill another person
is routinely redefined as an incident of duty: “I was only following
orders.” But in every case, the killer has ignored the victim’s desire
to live, a desire that lives within his or her own heart as well, a
desire of which they cannot claim actual ignorance.
Acceptance of the Second Principle means that the practitioner of the
Oestian Way will always maintain an awareness that all humans love their
lives and wish to continue living in precisely the same way. By
accepting the Second Principle, we place ourselves on the same level as
other humans.
Third Principle: Each Person Is Bound To Respect the Life of Others
We began by noting that the word religion contains the root of the verb
“to bind.” The Third Principle does in fact bind us to respect the life
of other humans. In the First Principle, we have recognized that our own
life is precious to us. In the Second Principle, we recognize that all
other people are equally attached to their own continued existence. In
the Third Principle, we recognize that we may not take the lives of
other humans without negating our own right to life.
The Vow To Always Preserve Human Life
If you accept the first Three Principles, then you are ready to take the
vow to always preserve human life. You may ask why this is not simply a
vow to never take human life. The reason is simply that it is not the
purpose of the path of Oestia to create a group of believers incapable
of defending themselves against aggression. Rather, it is to establish a
path that eliminates all grounds for killing other human beings for
purposes of personal or political advantage – conduct that cannot be
justified on any moral scale. The possibility remains that Oestians may
engage in lethal combat to protect themselves or others from aggression.
Oestians are not required, on grounds of religion, to surrender their
own lives to aggressors who have displayed no regard for the Third
Principle. To formalize the vow to always preserve life, it is
sufficient for the follower of the Oestian Path to simply affirm, with
presence of mind, “I shall always act in a manner that will preserve
human life.”
The Corollary of the First Vow: To Refuse Military Service and Conscription
The Tao Teh Ching of Lao Tzu states:
"A brave and passionate person will kill or be killed. A brave and calm
person will always preserve life.”
Bravery serves the prime evolutionary imperative to preserve one's own
life, and that of others. Calmness is necessary to bring that
imperative into harmony with the life-impulse of all living beings. The
calm person realizes, even in the moment when their life is threatened,
that the lives of other beings are equal in value to their own. Thus, it
is not through cowardice, but through calmness and reverence for life,
that the follower of the Oestian Path rejects the path of war.
For countless generations, humanity has engaged in warfare. War kills
and injures people, wounds families, tribes, and nations, and destroys
our planet, our property, and all of its living residents. Although political leaders
decry the purported necessity of war with their talk, they keep on
making war. The apologists for our warmaking leaders have gone so far as
to award the Nobel "Peace" Prize to a head of state who orders the death
of large numbers of innocent people. Scientists claim to be leading us to progress, but thousands
of them work in weapons design and manufacturing. Through biowarfare,
life itself has been conscripted. It is up to us, individually, to end
the cycle of violence.
Examples from all of known history up to the present day simply
reiterate the point that since time immemorial old men have armed young
men and sent them to fight each other. There are two reasons for war --
one true and secret, the other false and widely disseminated. The true
reason for war is to spread and put into effect an atavistic philosophy
that promulgates murder as the way to resolve human disagreements, and
legitimates mass murder as a necessary means to acquire property and territory, and
assert power over citizens and foreign peoples. Warmaking
serves these purposes so well that today every country, from America to
Zaire, is ruled by its conquerors, and the conquered live in hereditary
subjugation and second-class citizenship. The false reason for war is
self-defense. Hydrogen bombs are said to be defensive weapons, even
though they are actually merely devices for planetary suicide, vehicles
of the ultimate terrorist threat, not even true armaments at all, since
armaments by definition destroy only the enemy.
Of all the issues we face as humans, preserving life and the
habitability of the planet are the greatest. These issues transcend our
individual fate, and therefore give meaning to it. The threat of
universal annihilation invoked by the nuclear terrorists has lead to a
nihilistic, depressed mood among humans in developed nations, who are
well aware that all life hangs by an electronic spider's thread, that
the winds of chance have repeatedly threatened to sever while men with
red phones debated the wisdom of first strikes with their advisors. To
decisively reject killing as a self-defeating strategy for individual
and group survival is thus fundamental to the Oestian Path.
If killing continues to be accepted as a way to solve human problems, we
will very likely end the process of human evolution. If we do that, all
philosophical endeavors will be moot. Rejecting killing as a survival
strategy is not difficult once we reject the notion that humans can be
divided into groups of enemies and allies divided along racial, national
or religious lines. Each generation of old,
greedy men invokes this lie to motivate young, inexperienced men to
engage in mortal combat. The munitions makers and their public relations
outfits make killing easier by demonizing the enemy and developing
weapons that kill efficiently, remotely, and without messy, hands-on
involvement. Drone warfare is the latest innovation in this progressive
process of turning men into warbots.
To inoculate oneself and others against this mental virus of dividing
people into classes of allies and enemies, the Oestian Path declares
first that its followers shall never invoke Oestia as a banner of
aggression, and second that its followers shall refuse conscription in
national armies.
Real Existence of Self and the World: The Fourth And Fifth Principles
The Fourth and Fifth Principles are:
4. Each person has a genuine identity.
5. The world genuinely exists.
The Fourth Principle: Each Person Has A Genuine Identity
By "genuine identity," we mean something that is undeniable and yet
ultimately indefinable. We know we exist, and when we "look at the
looker," we experience a peculiar sensation of presence without
articulation. What is true of ourselves individually must be true of all
human beings, for surely our experience of self-existence is not unique.
Let that person who denies his or her own existence demonstrate their
non-existence by some proof. Little more need be said.
The Fifth Principle: The World Genuinely Exists
There may appear to be a vast gulf between our genuine identity and the
world around us, but without mind we would know as little about the
world as a rock, and be equally unable to formulate ideas about it. Mind
reflects the light, sound, and other stimuli arising outside and within
our body, and creates an image of the world in our mind that we call the
world.
The reflective capacity of the mind is its "tautological nature." The
“tautological nature of the mind” is a term derived from the language of
logic, that defines a tautology as a statement that is always true, like
"A=A." Similarly, the mind reflects what is delivered to the senses and
recomposes an image of the world inside our awareness. Our senses are
portals into this inner theatre, and our experience of the world is a
marvelous composition, an intricate reflection, of our surroundings.
Because the mind creates a reflection, and this is our only contact with
the world around us, some people question whether the world is not in
fact an illusion that arises from the mind itself. Often called
“solipsism,” this notion is rejected by the Oestian Path, because it
requires belief in something for which there is no evidence – a mind
separate from the world itself, in which the “illusion of the world”
could appear.
The Oestian Path takes a common-sense approach to the world – we all see
it, therefore, it exists. The world is reflected in our mind with
variable accuracy, and subject to our experience. Infants, for example,
are unaware of the existence of separate objects. When an object is
removed from an infant's field of vision, she does not seek to discover
its whereabouts – she accepts its disappearance as a natural process in
a world of changing shapes and colors.
Once a child conceives of the world as a gathering of separate objects,
she will identify and give them names. She sees a silvery disk high in
the sky and learns it is called the moon. As the years pass, she adds
concepts to that name as we learn why it changes from a crescent to a
circle and back again, and then we learn about the solar system and so
forth and so on, until gradually, a whole system of astronomical
concepts comes to envelop us, and we can speak of galaxies, metagalaxies,
black holes, and the Big Bang. Our knowledge expands exponentially, and
yet it is a type of knowledge of which Chuang Tzu said, "Great knowledge
makes all into one. Small knowledge breaks things into parts. When there
are parts, they must have names. There are enough names. One must know
when to stop."
It is not difficult to take a rest from the activity of naming, the
endless pairing of perceptions with concepts, and the interactions of
concepts with each other. There are many practices for loosening the net
of conceptual thinking, and a practitioner can find lots of help and
advice in developing this ability. What is most helpful, however, is to
remember that the pre-verbal, pre-conceptual awareness is present at all
times, a few moments of mental activity before the arising of names and
notions. By remaining at the level of pre-verbal awareness, and watching
as names and notions arise and dissolve, one will lose the sense of
separation from genuine identity and taste direct knowledge.
We must, of course, allow
ourselves to use names and notions to describe our world to ourselves
and each other. A world of speechless beings is not our goal, but the
experience of wordless awareness is necessary to self-knowledge and
seeing the world and other people in true perspective. With an
understanding of the distinction between objects and the names we
associate with them, and the distinction between our genuine identity
and the self-description we call our self-image, we are prepared to use
the tautological nature of the conceptual mind creatively. We can
understand that what we call things, and how we describe ourselves and
other people determines how we experience life and choose to act. The
tautological nature of conceptual mind dictates that things become more
like what we think and say they are.
Because things come to resemble what we say they are, we must be
attentive to the names we give things, and be certain those names are
accurate. We are all prophets of our own destiny in a very substantial
degree. Thus, in order to keep a firm ground for wholesome growth under
our own feet, we must affirm, first, last and always, that we possess
genuine identity. The source of this affirmation is as near as your own
existence. No one can deny his or her own existence, and the very
expression of the idea, "I do not exist," negates its truth. If you do
not exist, who is making the statement?
The tautological functioning of our minds makes us vulnerable to
believing lies, accepting superstitions, and granting superior status to
those who wear badges of authority. A considerable volume of speech and
imagery is directed at us daily, directed at destroying our belief in
our genuine identity. Appeals to nihilistic sentiment abound, in
high-flown, scientific, philosophical and artistic forms, and in crude,
depressing expressions common in popular culture. Thus, we must actively
repel self-denying, nihilistic beliefs, and like removing poison darts
that would leak toxins into our bloodstream, discard these bad ideas
before they take root tautologically in our own thinking. We should
clear the mirror of the mind so it reflects the genuine existence of the
world and the genuine identity of our fellow living beings.
The Sixth Principle: Be Your Own Guide
"It is necessary to the happiness of man that he be mentally faithful to
himself." -- Thomas Paine.
It is a postulate of this
Western Path that all practitioners are capable of understanding and
developing the path, and that no one is uniquely qualified or divinely
appointed for that purpose. These words are not the product of
revelation. They have not been passed down from guru to disciple. They
are not secrets to be shared only among the few. To paraphrase
Descartes, who saw further because he stood on the shoulders of giants,
these words have been written thanks to the efforts of generations of
thinkers. These words will be best used by being debated, discussed,
tested and applied.
If these words do, in fact, add
to human understanding, they will become the foundation for further
insights, and will be used to develop future structures of
understanding. This is the test of genuine thinking -- that it leads to
new discoveries, which lead to further discoveries. By contrast,
mistaken ideas lead to conceptual dead ends that thinkers have to break
out of in order to develop a valid world-view. For example, so long as
astronomers believed the sun, moon, planets and stars, orbited the
earth, their observations and calculations led only to a finely
articulated view of a universe that existed only in their minds. Their
ability to predict astronomical movements improved, but they entirely
misunderstood the relations between and among the sun, the moon, earth,
and its sister planets. Once the sun was put in its proper place at the
center of our solar system, innumerable other valid scientific
discoveries followed, and humanity's view of its place in the universe
was brought into clearer focus. Now that we can glimpse the
inconceivably vast expanse of trans-galactic space revealed by the
deep-field photographs from the Hubble space telescope, that view is
even clearer.
Words are the building-blocks
of thought. In order to be sure that we are not building illusory
castles, we must examine each word to be sure it corresponds to
something real. We often make the mistake of thinking that, simply
because a word exists, that the thing it stands for equally exists.
Words like God, Satan, Soul, eternity, goodness and evil are instantly
confirmed by many people as referring to real things. But when people
declare explicitly what these words actually refer to, conflict
immediately breaks out, because they have no concrete,
publicly-verifiable referent. Polls suggest that many people in the
United States believe God to be a white, bearded male, while many Hindus
believe quite differently, depicting a diverse variety of gods of both
sexes and many colors. Believers in Islam claim God cannot be depicted.
And Buddhists, while ostensibly not believing in any God, venerate
images of a man made of gold who can do godlike things. All of this is
possible because "God" is a word with only an imputed referent. This is
a bad use of language. We should not adopt a word first, and then append
a meaning to it. We should give names only to things that actually
exist, and before we start using a word, we should ask ourselves if we
actually know that the thing it represents really exists.
The tendency to construct an
illusory world is especially strong in what is often called the
"metaphysical" realm. Indeed, the very idea of "metaphysics" has enabled
charlatans to spin webs of illusion that have ensnared vast numbers of
people. In the realm of speculation, something called "belief"
substitutes for knowledge, but it would be better to call it imputation,
because by saying that one believes in the existence of something, they
establish its existence by imputation, and use belief only to hold it in
place.
By using the word "imputation,"
we remind ourselves that we are the creators of these things we claim to
believe in. Then we can ask ourselves why we would do such a thing. And
there is no good answer to this question.
Returning to the previous
example, we can see that the Church's opposition to the heliocentric
model of the solar system was based on an understandably mistaken notion
-- that the sun and moon orbited the earth. To the Pope and the
Inquisition, it seemed that only a fool would assert that the sun
remained still, when it obviously moved across the sky each day. But
what made the Church scholars so confident in their mistaken
understanding was a theory of the heavens that precisely, and
erroneously, described the movements of the heavenly bodies around a
static earth. According to this system, planets moved in "epicycles"
about the earth, to account for their observed tendency to move across
the sky in two different directions. These "epicycles" are nonexistent
things, but once given a name and depicted in astronomical charts, they
became so convincing that people who denied their existence were put to
death.
To be your own guide, you must
see clearly, penetratingly, looking through what seems to be true to see
what actually exists. Ready-made belief-systems are virtually useless,
whether clever and current or freighted with hoary wisdom, unless you
have scrutinized them for real substance. Oestia is not a belief system.
Oestia asserts only that you can see as well as the next human being,
and indeed, only you can see with your eyes, and believing in the
visions of others cannot substitute for seeing yourself.
The Seventh Principle: Show One Face to All the World
Your face communicates your thoughts, feelings and intentions. The way
we’re using it here, you “face” includes your posture and gestures, your
words and your tone of voice. It encompasses how you drive, how you act
in a grocery line, and how you deal with everyone you meet. To reflect
on the range of responses that might show in our face when dealing with
others, consider these eight different categories of people: (1) people
we like, (2) people we dislike, (3) people with whom we feel safe, (4)
people we fear, (5) people to whom we feel superior, (6) people to whom
we feel inferior, (7) people over whom we have power, and (8) people who
have power over us.
As long as we have such a wide
variety of responses to people, it’s very difficult to show them all the
same face. So when we say that the Oestian will “show one face to all
the world,” it’s clearly going to be a challenge, but it’s not
impossible. There are two ways to practice showing one face to all the
world – through active imagination and in direct interactions. To
practice the first way, imagine people to whom you have different
reactions. See them appear before you, and experience the familiar
reactions boiling up inside you. As those feelings become clear in your
mind, think to yourself: “You and I are equal beings. I respect you and
I deserve your respect. I will be honest with you to the fullest extent
you will allow.” To practice in direct interactions, you simply
eliminate the imaginative activity. When the person appears in front of
you, take note of the feelings that arise, and remind yourself, in the
same way as you did during your imaginative practice, that you are equal
to the person before you, and will be as honest with them as they will
allow.
What do we mean by being as
honest as the other person will allow? Sometimes people will react with
extreme behavior, even violence, if we speak the truth to them. In those
cases, we may not be able to voice our thoughts to the fullest extent
without risking injury to ourselves or others. Then again, there may be
times when we must risk injury to ourselves by speaking the truth, and
at times like that, showing one face means taking that risk. Usually,
however, showing one face to all the world presents no risk, and assures
us of receiving the respect of others.
Showing one face to all the
world strengthens our sense of self-worth. If we treat someone who is
our superior with fawning obsequiousness, then lord it over another
person, it destroys our sense of integrity. It causes psychic fractures
that undermine our sense of wholeness, because when we look up to one
person and look down on another, our feelings about ourselves go up and
down like a teeter-totter. We lose our sense of independent self-worth,
and are constantly reduced to seeking approval. When we don’t get it, we
get angry, depressed, frustrated, and all for nothing, because the
approval of others doesn’t change our own nature. Being dependent on the
approval of others is like begging in the street when you have a wallet
full of cash.
People often are unable to show
one face to all the world because they believe they have to tell someone
a lie in order to obtain their cooperation. But inducing cooperation by
lying is simply fraud. Cooperation induced by fraud evaporates as soon
as the truth is revealed, and is replaced by outrage. Relationships
based on lies are therefore inherently unstable, and have to be
fortified with additional lies to prevent collapse. Relationships that
start with lies often end up as nothing more than that – edifices of
deception, like decrepit old buildings propped up by massive buttresses
of rotten wood, in need of a cleansing blaze. It is far better not to
even start building such pathetic structures.
By showing one face to all the
world, we build relationships that are truly voluntary, based on equal
knowledge of the truth. Relationships built on equal knowledge of the
truth are strong, and worthy of trust. Inwardly, people who show one
face to all the world feel open and transparent. They are also brave,
and can speak the truth even to people who don’t want to hear it. Such
candor repels all types of undesirable companions, attracts those who
love truth, and wins the respect of worthy people. Thus, the inward and
outward benefits of showing one face to all the world make this
practice, that seems so difficult at the outset, extremely pleasant,
once mastered.
Eighth Principle: Be Neither a Beggar Nor a Tyrant
Each person is born with their own will, which quickly becomes the
target of other wills. Parents, siblings, playmates, and an endless
parade of people soon appear to confront the will of the developing
child with challenges, demands, directives, and most unfortunately,
threats. Will, which by nature is straightforward, soon becomes bent,
twisted, and convoluted as it attempts to cope with all of this
counter-pressure. Some develop habits of servility, and others adopt
bullying tactics. Most of us adopt a mix of the two strategies, exerting
our authority whenever we can, and knuckling under whenever we must. The
net result is we actually have no spine whatsoever, and are potentially
petty dictators and bootlickers, depending which way the winds of
fortune blow.
As it happens, circumstances in a single life will vary greatly, such
that a man who eats crow from a nasty boss comes home and browbeats his
wife and children. A cop whose father treated him cruelly abuses
citizens he encounters on the job. Thus, if you meet a person whose
manner is extremely subservient in one situation, it should not surprise
you to see that, when the tables are turned and they get the opportunity
to lord it over others, they take full advantage. Thus, cravenness and
cruelty often coincide in one character.
You can cure the defects of both arrogance and slavishness by
cultivating genuine self-respect and moral uprightness. Give more weight
to how you feel about yourself than to how others view you. Abandon
equally the habits of making demands and of begging for favors. Ask
yourself, before you seek to enlist others to do your will, whether you
can do it yourself. If your purposes require the aid of others, assume
that they have their own uses for their time and energy, and plan on
requesting their assistance in exchange for your own. Avoid threatening
harsh consequences, and never make a threat you lack the means or will
to accomplish. Refrain from forcing others into submission, because the
victory will be temporary and the resentment long-lasting. When an issue
must be decided by force, and you prevail, always accept your
adversary's surrender graciously, never humiliate the defeated, and
return relations to normalcy as quickly as possible. Do not relish the
status of a dominator, for it is the most precarious of all. Do not
adopt a posture of submission, for that will undermine your integrity.
Ninth Principle: Act with Clear Intent and Awareness of Consequence
We act with our bodies and words in a world of form, peopled with
persons like ourselves. What is done cannot be undone, and although
errors can be corrected, it is usually best to accomplish one's goal the
first time we make the attempt. Words, once spoken, are impossible to
retract, and while an apology may be accepted, more than once an unwise
expression or foolish remark has led to the loss of fortune, life, and
honor.
We are blessed with minds that allow us to reflect upon what we intend,
and to consider the likely consequences of our acts before we do them.
Impulses arise without warning, and often our bodies are propelled into
action without even the opportunity to exercise this power of
reflection. Thus, to act with clear intent and awareness of consequence,
we must observe our mind and consider how our actions will bear fruit,
before taking action. By reflecting in this way, we learn to draw a
distinction between ourselves and our notions, impulses, fancies and
predilections. Even when we are under great time pressure, a deliberate
approach is necessary to make the best use of the small time available
for action. Often, when in danger, doing nothing is the best of all
possible choices, but it requires great clarity to see this option.
When considering an appropriate course of action, consider as many of
the factors as are applicable -- the place, the time, the people and
other living beings, the intended effects, and the incidental effects.
The place refers to the physical setting, which may be vast, like the
entire planet, a country, or a city, or a smaller place, like a home,
school, or office. The time includes the time during which you will be
able to take action, the time in which others will respond, and the time
over which the consequences will be felt. The people and other living
beings includes all of those acting and affected by the actions you
intend to take. The intended effects are the purposes you wish to
accomplish, like building a house in the woods, the incidental effects
of which would be cutting down trees, building a road, driving to town
to buy supplies, and seeing fewer people on a daily basis.
By taking the time to consider all of these factors, you will be able to
make decisions about who to involve in your project, how to take their
interests into account, how to avoid harm to people and living
creatures, how to elicit cooperation of others, and many other factors
essential to achieving your goals. You can make your actions more
efficient and productive by thinking about the order in which things
should be done, which acts must precede which others, which actions are
appropriate for which season, etc.
Because we live in a world of finite resources, and because our own
lifetime is relatively short, using our time on earth to accomplish
beneficial actions should be one of our main concerns. Satisfaction in
life is born of meaningful action, and we will best achieve our goals if
we act with clear intent and awareness of consequence.
Tenth Principle: Improve Our World
Each of us enters this world in a helpless condition, and during infancy
and childhood we fare only as well as our environment permits. During
old age and sickness we are similarly compelled to seek the aid of
others. Disabled people require assistance every day of their life. And
even in our strongest years, we depend on other people to provide
virtually every one of life's necessaries -- food, water, shelter,
clothing, and so forth. All of these necessaries are generated solely
from the productive capacity of the earth, the sun, the wind and rain,
in a phrase -- from the planetary environment.
We can, if we choose, do nothing but take from this planetary
environment. The rewards from this approach are dubious. While one
individual can amass impressive wealth, he or she can only wear a few
clothes, a few jewels, and can only occupy one house, airplane or
automobile at a time. They can hear only one symphony or opera at a
time. They can eat only one mouthful of food at a time, and howsoever
many drugs they take, they have only one brain to drench in intoxicants.
And as they intensify their efforts to encompass more pleasures, the
frustration builds, because the power of desire far exceeds our capacity
for fulfillment, and focusing on the single sensory network contained
within one human body actually narrows and reduces the scope of
perception and experience.
The avenue of fulfillment goes in the other direction -- outward, along
the vector of expanding benefit. A creative person is like a tree, that
grows larger and larger, sheltering ever more creatures in its branches,
casting shade and preserving water in the earth, purifying the air, and
dropping fruit that is eaten by creatures that transport the seeds far
and wide, growing more trees in other places.
We may wonder what such generosity will bring us in return, on a
personal level. No one can answer that with predictive precision, but
when good deeds are done, someone benefits, and when bad deeds are done,
someone suffers. Nor can we predict who that someone will be. People
build fire stations so their houses will be safe, and hospitals so they
can have medical care. We share a common fate and labor in common to
improve it. Not one of us can say why or how they came to be born of
their parents, in their homeland, in the year and season when it all
came to pass. And since none of us can say that their awareness, having
once emerged in this world, might not emerge again, somewhere else, then
even ordinary self-regard suggests that we should strive to improve this
world during our present stay upon the planet.
True generosity is environmental, and a generous actor does not really
care whether the benefit comes back to them or not. They are focused on
making a better situation for whoever happens along. When we help sick
people to recover from a contagious disease, we reduce the likelihood
that we will get sick. When we educate a child, we increase the
likelihood that some good ideas will be developed that will make life
better for everyone. And in the meantime, we are surrounded by positive
developments, people doing better, the planet getting cleaner, the
future getting brighter. And if, as it happens, we turn up to inhabit
that future, we will benefit very directly from our own past actions.
Eleventh Principle: Feel Safe
The eleventh principle is to feel safe. You may ask how we can feel safe
in a world full of dangers to our person and loved ones. Feeling safe
might seem to depend on faith in some mystical explanation of our
existence, because it flies in the face of many bodily instincts, and is
challenged by our fear of death. Accordingly, most religions urge us to
affirm faith in our eternal, indestructible nature. However, except for
the rare person who experiences a subjective perception of their own
deathless nature, the belief in one’s eternal, indestructible nature
remains a mere conceptual notion that we dogmatically resolve to affirm.
Experience shows that affirming the eternity or indestructibility of the
soul alternates with doubt, and leaves our ultimate position uncertain.
The sense of safety thus eludes the dogmatic believer.
By contrast, the eleventh principle invokes the feeling of confidence
that allows us to walk across an abyss without fear, on a
well-constructed bridge. We are simply urged to feel safe, to allow
ourselves to rest. Feelings are distinct from ideas, and can be invoked
even in the absence of justifying notions.
Some physiological knowledge may help us here. The feeling of safety
actually has a physical root in our sense of balance, movement,
stillness, and postural self-awareness. We have two subtle sensing
organs in our inner ear, located behind the heavy mastoid bones you can
feel aft of your ears on either side of your skull. These fluid-filled
chambers are lined with touch-sensitive neurons that feel the position
of the fluid inside the chamber and also perceive the settling activity
of tiny crystals suspended in the slightly viscous fluid. As these
crystals settle on the floor of these chambers, the neurons receive the
message of stillness. Scientific research shows that this feeling of
stillness, mediated through what is called the vestibular system, is
essential to our sense of security. Those tiny, falling crystals make us
feel safe. Stillness stimulates the feeling of security.
Thanks to our vestibular system, which has a unique characteristic among
the neural receptors of the brain – it does not stop transmitting a
signal when stimulation ceases, but rather transmits an “at rest” signal
after all stimulative motion has ceased – we can feel safe. By actively
embracing our capacity to feel safe, something that might be called a
psycho-physical gift of nature, we can draw strength from our inner
resources to pursue the peaceful western path. Feeling safe obliterates
a thousand false fears and trivial anxieties in the first instance, and
helps us relate creatively with justified fears.
Being still leads to feeling safe, calm and clear. Still water reflects
like a mirror, and in the calm mind the tautological functioning of
awareness is restored to its original purity. The mind, capable of
endless movement, fluid and reflective, reveals its clarity and
mirrorlike qualities to us when we allow stillness to suffuse our body
and mind. In this clarity, understanding arises naturally, and all of
the articulated principles are known intuitively, directly.
OESTIA
Principles & Practice
Of
The Western Path
OESTIA
Oestia – the name derives from the word “oeste,” meaning “the west” in
Spanish, the language most spoken by people of the Western hemisphere.
The world's best-known religions have their roots in the east, and are
thus basically imports that came with the colonists from Europe, and
were imposed at least initially, by fire and the sword. But the most
unique characteristic of Oestia is its rejection of revelation as the
source of knowledge.
The essential Oestian Principle is that each person sees only by virtue
of their power of understanding. All education depends on engaging this
power, and all learning can go no farther than the aptitude of the pupil
will permit.
There are many obstacles to engaging the power of understanding, and the
first of these is a lack of faith. We speak not of a lack of faith in
anything other than ourselves. She who turns away from learning, calling
herself ignorant, or he who turns aside from reflection, saying such
tasks are for persons of greater wit, may as well blindfold their own
eyes and stuff wax in their ears, for they will gain the same result.
Their knowledge of life will be limited to what others tell them, and if
they find themselves guided to destruction, they may blame their errant
guides, but the fault is truly their own.
In Oestia, you will find no revelation but the revelation that your mind
is the source of the light by which you steer your way through the
abysses and precipices of your daily existence. It is not the purpose of
Oestia to spread a doctrine or inculcate beliefs, but rather to empower
each one who hears to have faith in him or herself, and to put their
understanding into action.
A thousand church fathers would tear such a statement out of their holy
works, if indeed it had ever been found therein, or would so coat it
with slavish notions that its meaning would disappear. Therefore, be
ever alert for compromise notions that turn warnings like these into
dead formulas, and enjoin listeners to belief. For belief is not a
virtue in this path, and faith in the formulations of others is a denial
of faith in oneself.
All of these warnings against faith in others, however, will not make
this Oestian path a perch for libertines, solipsists, nihilists, and
other self-idolizing fools who believe that whatever notion suffuses
their brain-tissue is the light of self-understanding. “Do what thou
wilt” shall not be the whole of the law, or the smallest fragment of it.
If there is a symbol for “Beware, Begone, and Do Not Dare,” it is
directed toward those who would make Oestia a banner under which to
proclaim a license to act without consequence. Let them cleanse their
intentions, and come again with a pure heart.
If this Western Path does not arise from revelation or from unfettered
subjectivism, whence does it arise? From common sense. By common sense
is not meant the judgment of the herd, that mooing that we hear arising
from the masses as they are moved from the feed-pen to the abattoir, but
rather what Thomas Paine meant by common sense – the application of
reason to the questions of existence without resort to revelations,
nostrums, or willful ignorance.
Wherefore, then, is it “common” sense? It is “common” because we test
our individual knowledge and discoveries in the crucible of public
conversation, because we confine our discussion to subjects that can be
comprehended by people of ordinary wit, and because we admit as evidence
that testimony that can be confirmed by others, without resort to
belief, dogma, revelation, or supernatural aid.
The objection is heard, however, that while such methods of inquiry may
be suitable to discover the genetic composition of humanity, the
structure of the atom, the orbital characteristics of the planets, and
the distance from here to the farthest galaxies, they are not sufficient
to answer questions regarding the nature of the soul, its disposition
after death, and how justice is accorded among those of disparate
virtue. It is high time this notion was put to rest, which lives on only
because it has not been put to an honest test, and is ever being coddled
like the only child of a noble family, who while afflicted with
ill-health, is yet the only hope for the continuation of the line.
The simple test is this – if you would not rely upon an authority for
the preservation of your body, do not rely upon it for the preservation
of your soul. If you do not make haste to the temple door when the body
of your newborn infant is assailed by a fever that is visibly consuming
her life as the seconds pass, but instead race to the hospital, then why
would you do so when the health of your spirit is at issue? For while
the hospitals often return the sick to health, what temple displays in
its pews all those of the faithful who have turned death aside with a
prayer? The best that can be said is that some of the believers assert
that they comport themselves somewhat more decently than would be the
case if they abandoned their beliefs. At recovery meetings they declare
themselves helpless, fall down begging for aid from a Higher Power, then
strut with pride at being the servants of a Living God. They may as well
have twirled themselves about twice and claim to no longer be
themselves, for the truth is, having conceived themselves to be trapped
in a hole, they have imagined a rope to climb out with, and with great
satisfaction declare that the problem has been solved – at least so long
as they do not question the cause of their recovery, and ceaselessly
declaim, “not by my power, but thine, O Lord.”
Consider how little basis the average believer has for his choice of a
religious faith. Billions default to the beliefs of their parents, who
surely knew no better than they whether Allah, Buddha, Christ or Krishna
was most worthy to be deified. This is but inherited ignorance,
masquerading as wisdom. But then consider the case of the person who
studies religions like a shopper, tasting this one and that one, until
at last she settles upon her choice, casts aside doubt, and resolves to
believe. If there was reason to the choosing process, why must reason be
abandoned once the choice is made? One might as well stake one’s worldly
future in a casino on the roll of a single die or the placement of a
single chip on an expanse marked with odd and even numbers. Surely this
is no way to dispose of your most precious possession, your own
identity. Since it is, after all, your own identity, should you not keep
hold of it, take responsibility for its destiny, and do all you can to
understand how that destiny can be shaped for the best?
Do you tremble at the thought of being your own refuge? Does loneliness
assail? Does darkness threaten? Perhaps it does, and if so that is
evidence that whatever comfort you have obtained from doctrines and
beliefs, you are still a shivering child, naked in the world but for
borrowed notions.
To those who remain bereft despite the spiritual assurances disseminated
by believers of various faiths, the Western Path offers the following
assurance. There is knowledge that is objectively verifiable, subject to
questioning and discussion, available for our consideration, acceptance,
or rejection. There is a path that you can follow that is neither your
own, lonely trail through the wilderness, nor the broad, domesticated
highway paved with conventional notions. It is a path where you will be
presented with postulates, principles, and practices for your
consideration, examination, and adoption, according to your own
decision. If you find, as many honest people have, that you are capable
of standing on your own, you may well regard the doctrines of
established religions as a pile of crutches, canes, and prosthetic limbs
for which you have no need.
What then is the purpose of calling this path the Western Path? What is
the need of this finger pointing at the moon when the moon is there for
all to see? Why set up Oestia in the marketplace of faiths to compete
with other religions like Coke, Dr. Pepper and Pepsi? Because you have
the right. Because no one has done it. Because, if it has been done, it
has been covered over again, and requires a renewed declaration.
Because, if you are asked, “Have you a religious belief?” You can say,
knowing exactly what you mean, “Yes, I am a follower of the Western
Path.”
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