Philosophy and The Flow of Presence
Philosophy and The Flow of Presence
Philosophy and The Flow of Presence
By
Stephen Costello
Philosophy and the Flow of Presence: Desire, Drama and the Divine Ground of Being
By Stephen Costello
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Preface ....................................................................................................... ix
This work is a philosophical study of desire, drama and the divine Ground
of being, that pays particular attention to Eric Voegelins symbol of the
flow of presence. The study does not pretend or presume to be a scholarly
work on the entire oeuvre of Eric Voegelin per se but focuses on particular
facets of his thought.
The fact of our being creatures of desire has been amply attested to and
argued for by philosophers from Plato through Spinoza and Hegel, to
contemporary formulations and accounts in Lacanian psychoanalysis.
Further, among the many things we desire is the desire for God, as
explanation of ultimate meaning and order in society and the soul,
according to philosophers as diverse as St. Thomas Aquinas and Voegelin.
I shall argue that not only are we indeed beings of desire, and that God is
the answer to our deepest desire but that God desires us too and, moreover,
He desires to communicate His will/desire to us. Furthermore, it is
possible to discern this divine desire with the help of St. Ignatius of
Loyola, whose Spiritual Exercises have, as one of their principal aims and
objectives, to aid us to discover Gods will for us as His spirit works
through the world. As such, we may speak of the drama of humanity, to
employ another Voegelinian term, meaning the record of the spiritual
experiences of human beings in their openness to the Ground1. It is to this
drama and divine desire that the philosophers, poets and mystics elected
below attest.
Poets such as Rilke, Rumi, Kavanagh, and T. S. Eliot, all of whom
feature in this reflection, represent a small handful of representatives who
have attested to this flow of divine presence. By Presence we mean a
search for the experience of timelessness in time, a spiritual search for the
never-ending One. This search is primarily an inner journey as one
confronts ones own self. It may, of course, involve an outward or external
journey to sacred places such as Glendalough in Ireland, which has been
described as a pilgrimage of flow2. And on this journey one inevitably
faces flow monsters (a symbol coined by Dutch philosopher Meins
1
See Voegelin, The Drama of Humanity and Other Miscellaneous Papers 1939-
1985, vol. 33.
2
See Meins Coetsier, The Flow of Presence Academy web-site, www.flowof
presence.be
x Preface
Introduction
It was Plato who, in ancient times, first eroticised mans search for
wisdom, otherwise known as philosophy, understood as the love of
wisdom. Desire takes central stage in dialogues like the Symposium and
the Phaedrus but it is a desire that springs from lack. St. Augustine
continues the tradition and existentialises desire in his Confessions. In
the Christian Middle Ages, St. Thomas Aquinas will speak of mans
natural desire for God but places the notion within a scholastic
metaphysics. In the Age of Enlightenment Spinoza will argue in his Ethics
(1677) that desire is the essence of man and constitutes us in our very
being. G. W. Hegel will take up the dialectic of desire and give it his own
2 Chapter One
Voegelin
The German-born American political philosopher Eric Voegelins (1901-
1985) work was oriented towards diagnosing the causes of the wars and
various crises of the twentieth-century, as well as recalling for human
consciousness the divine Ground of reality within which the search for
order is undertaken. He is a philosopher of history, a political philosopher
and mystic-philosopher all at once and this multifaceted dimension of the
man is reflected in the breadth and depth of his writings and vision, which
attempt to recapture and re-symbolise the reality of the Whole. Needless to
say, there are ethical and political consequences and outcomes of living
with rightly-directed desire and sustained mindfulness of the in-between
of the human condition that both Plato and Voegelin have ably articulated.
Platos trajectory is from the soul to society, from the personal (psyche) to
1
See Richard Kearney, Debates in Continental Philosophy, pp. 139-156, and After
God, pp. 301-317. John Caputo accuses Kearney of confusing undecidability with
indecision in his paper, Richard Kearneys Enthusiasm, After God, p. 316.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 3
the political (polis), though this will not be the primary concern in our
treatment of the topic, important as it is.
Voegelins conviction is that the philosophical and Christian life is
ordered through an Anselmian faith in search of understanding (fides
quaerens intellectum). Voegelin completes Aristotles opening sentence in
the Metaphysics all men by nature desire to know by the words the
divine Ground of being. But there is also a response from the divine
Reality. Desire is, thus, twofold. Both Plato and Aristotle recognised this
desirous dimension of reality, with their conceptualisation of an Unmoved
Mover who attracts men to himself. Plato and Aristotle recognised these
[moving] forces in the experiences of a human questioning (aporein) and
seeking (zetein) in response to a mysterious drawing (helkein) and moving
(kinein) from the divine side2. In the Laws X, Plato symbolised the
emergence of the pull (helkein) of the Word/God and the counter-pull
(anthelkein) of the world/man man is the puppet of the gods. Whether
man responds to the drawing/pull of the golden cord or surrenders to the
pull of the steely cords marks the dividing line between openness of soul
and closure3. In the second part of St. Anselms Proslogion, Anselm prays
thus: Speak to my desirous soul what you are, other than what it has seen,
that it may clearly see what it desires4. Desire, as St. Augustine noted,
does not rest until it discovers the object that dazzles it. This is the Logos
about which Heraclitus speaks (The Logos holds sway always) and St.
John: In the beginning was the Logos. The Logos has been operative in
the world from its creation but comes to its fulfilment in the Incarnation of
the Word in Christ.
Plato has given us the famous Parable of the Cave in the Republic to
denote this drawing of desire. In this allegory, prisoners are depicted as
men fettered with their faces to the wall and who are then dragged up by
force to the light. Plato depicts a pilgrimage, an ascent from the sensual to
the spiritual. This involves a re-orientation of desire, a conversion of
consciousness, a (Platonic) periagoge or turning around, a metanoia or
(Christian) conversion to the divine Ground of being. We experience the
sacred pull of reason (logos) that lifts us up to the Beyond (epekeina).
Existence is thus seen as a field of pulls and counter-pulls, of ascent to the
light and descent to the depths. The Gospel of St. John (12: 32) is in full
accord with classic philosophy but He is now named as the Christ who,
2
Eric Voegelin, Wisdom and the Magic of the Extreme, Published Essays 1966-
1985, vol. 12, p. 326.
3
See Plato, Laws, 644-45.
4
Cited by Voegelin, Quod Deus Dicitur, Published Essays 1966-1985, vol. 12,
p. 383.
4 Chapter One
when He is lifted up, will draw all men to Himself. He is the magnetic
pneumatic centre of attraction who exerts this pull of love and is the
source of all our eschatological expectations. John 6: 44: No one can
come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him. John thus
symbolises, in an avowedly Christian context, the pull of Platos golden
cord.
We are not apes but nor are we angels. For Voegelin, existence has the
structure of the Platonic metaxy, of the In-Between the In-Between of
immanence and transcendence, mortality and immortality, nature and the
divine. Existence has a noetic structure and so, for Voegelin, madness (in
the Aeschylean sense) is the refusal of reason, is the loss of personal and
social order through loss of contact with divine reality. Voegelin aims to
return to immediate experience, to the reality engendering and the symbols
engendered. And pneumopathologies are manifest in human systems of
thought, in dogmatism and in doctrinal metaphysics, in constructions of
second realities. The aim, therefore, of philosophy is to recapture reality,
to return to the engendering experiences to which symbols give rise.
According to Voegelin, reason (nous), which he describes as the
cognitively luminous force5, is the force and source of order in the
soul/psyche of man and in the cosmos. Order pertains, thus, to the
structure of reality as experienced and the attunement of man to such an
order results in joy. If soul connotes mans depths, spirit denotes mans
openness to this divine Logos. By spirit we understand the openness of
man to the divine ground of his existence: by estrangement from the spirit,
the closure and the revolt against the ground6. For Aristotle, this yearning,
desiring, longing, quest(ion)ing after the Ground is the beginning of all
philosophy. Platos philosophy sounds a more erotic note and envisages a
turning, in loving search, to the Ground, from spiritual desolation to the
spiritual consolation of the sun, which is his metaphor for the Good. The
choice: turning toward the Ground (epistrophe) or a turning away from the
Ground (apostrophe) perhaps a catastrophe. In so far as man participates
in the divine drama of being, in the dialectic of desire, truth (aletheia)
becomes luminous and existence too. Such symbols of open existence are
God, man, the divine origin of the cosmos and the divine Logos
permeating its order7.
5
Eric Voegelin, Reason: The Classic Experience, Published Essays 1966-1985,
vol. 12, p. 265.
6
Eric Voegelin, The German University and German Society, ibid., p. 7; see also
ibid., p. 21.
7
Eric Voegelin, On Henry Jamess Turn of the Screw, Published Essays 1966-
1985, vol. 12, p. 151.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 5
8
St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, Ia IIae q. 108 a.4; cited by Jean-Pierre
Torrell, O.P., Saint Thomas Aquinas, vol. 2, Spiritual Master, p. 249.
9
St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, Ia IIae q. 70 a.3; cited by Jean-Pierre
Torrell, O.P., Saint Thomas Aquinas, vol. 2, Spiritual Master, p. 219.
10
Paul Ricoeur, The Conflict of Interpretations, p. 110.
11
See Paul Ricoeur, The Conflict of Interpretations and Freud and Philosophy.
12
See Stephen J. Costello, Hermeneutics and the Psychoanalysis of Religion.
6 Chapter One
is moved by God to ask the questions that will lead him toward the cause
(arche) of being. The search itself is the evidence of existential unrest; in
the act of questioning, mans experience of his tension (tasis) toward the
divine ground breaks forth in the word of inquiry as a prayer for the Word
of the answer. Question and answer are intimately related one toward the
other; the search moves in the metaxy, as Plato has called it, in the In-
Between of poverty and wealth, of human and divine; the question is
knowing, but its knowledge is yet the trembling of a question that may
reach the true answer or miss it. This luminous search in which the finding
of the true answer depends on asking the true question, and the asking of
the true question on the spiritual apprehension of the true answer, is the life
of reason13.
13
Eric Voegelin, The Gospel and Culture, Published Essays 1966-1985, vol. 12,
p. 175.
14
Eric Voegelin, Anamnesis, p. xiv.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 7
attunement to the divine order of being, to what is enduring, and the soul is
thus open in the Bergsonian sense. Man is in search of this Ground, of
this God in Hellas (classic philosophy) just as God goes in search of man
in Israel. As one philosopher puts it: The pneumatic element is displayed
in the eroticism of the Socratic soul as it strives toward the divine Sophon
as the fulfilment of its limitless desire15.
This search for the Ground is conducted in the depths and heights of
consciousness; it seeks to uncover the ultimate reality of being. For both
Aristotle and Aquinas (albeit differently) we naturally desire the Ground.
And it is philosophy which illuminates with intelligence the loving search
of the divine Ground. In Order and History, Voegelin speaks of
philosophy as the love of being through love of the divine Being as the
source of its order16. The core and constitutive aspect of mans existence
is his immortalising participation through reason in the divine Nous. For
Aristotle, the Nous is the divine element shared by both God and man. We
have had thousands of years of the codification of mans experiences of
this divine Being. History is a trail of His absent presence; everywhere
there are traces of transcendence. Noetically, we experience this as the
actualising Nous, pneumatically we experience this as the
attracting/drawing Divinity. The Republic and the Laws and the Gospel of
John concur so. We tend and attend to the divine reality. We remain in the
flow, in the in between of the luminosity of existence, in which eternity
is, nonetheless, present. In the flow the trans-temporal eternal Being is felt
what Voegelin calls, in Anamnesis, the flowing present of the Eternal.
As Anaximander put it: The origin of things (arche) is the Aperion (the
depth)17.
There is no final or ultimate Answer to the Question other than the
Mystery all answers confront their limit in the Mystery of Reality whose
meaning becomes more luminous in the very act and art of questioning.
Voegelins main principles come from the inquiry itself and may be
summarised with Sandoz as follows18:
1: Participation: the principle of participation is central to noetic
existence. We participate in the reality of which we are but a part,
ontologically symbolised by man, God, world and society, which together
form a quarternarian structure of being. Participation is our perspective on
reality; Voegelin supplants the subject-object/ consciousness/world
dichotomy with the Platonic metaxological in-between participatory aspect
15
Ellis Sandoz, The Voegelinian Revolution, p. 153.
16
Eric Voegelin, Order and History, vol. I, p. xiv.
17
Ellis Sandoz, The Voegelinian Revolution, p. 193.
18
See ibid., pp. 204-16.
8 Chapter One
19
See E. F. Schumachers classic, A Guide for the Perplexed.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 9
22
Michael Morissey, Voegelin, Religious Experience, and Immortality, The
Politics of the Soul, p. 14.
23
See Miguel de Unamunos passionate poetic philosophy as summarising this
desire for personal immortality in his The Tragic Sense of Life.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 11
24
See Jean-Pierre Torrell, O.P., Saint Thomas Aquinas, vol. 2, Spiritual Master
and Robert Barron, Thomas Aquinas: Spiritual Master. Both books attempt to
engage with Thomas spirituality.
25
Eric Voegelin, Notes on T. S. Eliots Four Quartets, The Drama of Humanity
and Other Miscellaneous Papers 1939-1985, vol. 33, p. 34.
26
Eric Voegelin, The Drama of Humanity, ibid., p. 181.
27
Ibid., p. 212.
28
Ibid.
12 Chapter One
not have the mode of existence in time and space. To speak of this Being,
one has to draw on a different logic, for example, on the Thomistic
analogy of being (analogia entis). Aristotle had developed terms to
describe the searching part, the zetesis, that is, searching and being moved
toward the search and kinesis, coming from the divine side (in Christianity
it is called grace). And when consciousness is the site where transcendence
and immanence meet we speak of the metaxy, or the In-Between. We live
in this In-Between, and if we are open, we live in the flow of presence,
which is neither time nor the timeless, but the flow in which time and the
timeless meet. That is the time in which we exist. In this flow of presence,
in-between, that is where all the [concerns] of man are transacted29.
Reason attracts man (this is Aristotelian kinesis, without which nobody
would search for anything). Phronesis, as conceptualised by Aristotle, is
the virtue of practical wisdom, the virtue needed to persevere in the search.
We exist in a state of existential tension and unrest, in the flux and flow of
presence, from which springs the desire to know or, what Voegelin simply
calls the attraction30. The indelible presence of the divine31 is the
moving factor in the soul and world at large, which Plato calls the
parousia.
We have been saying that the notion of the in-between was first
articulated by Plato as the metaxy and re-interpreted by Voegelin for
modern times. But there have been other thinkers who have drawn on or
developed this concept philosophers such as Buber and the
psychoanalyst, Donald Winnicott. Let us briefly look at equivalent
concepts in Buber and Winnicott, by way of bringing the thought of
Voegelin into dialogue with other contemporary thinkers on this crucial
concept of the metaxy and, thus, into fuller focus.
29
Ibid., pp. 213-4.
30
Eric Voegelin, Conversations with Eric Voegelin, ibid., p. 264.
31
Eric Voegelin, Structures of Consciousness, ibid., p. 367.
32
Martin Buber, Between Man and Man, p. 151.
33
Ibid., p. 241.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 13
human beings neither in their solitary souls nor in the world but in between
them. He notes: Between is not an auxiliary construction, but the real
place and bearer of what happens between men34. It is where men meet
with one another; it is neither an outer event nor an inner impression it is
the space between beings which permits real dialogue to take place as
deep calls unto deep and the I-Thou relationship is formed and forged.
For man is the eternal meeting of the One with the Other35.
Buber places the locus of truth not in the subject nor in the object but
in the space or realm or category of the between what Plato had termed
the metaxy. For Buber, all authentic living is meeting in the metaxy. It is
not a centripetal movement to and from the self as source; it is, rather, a
centrifugal movement of exodus and expectation and only in the space
between does the I make contact with the Other as Thou. Dialogue
becomes the sine qua non of all human/personal existence.
34
Ibid.
35
Ibid., p. 244.
14 Chapter One
In Playing and Reality D. W. Winnicott offers the world the view that
true creativity and play takes place in the (potential) space between one
subject (person) and another one what he terms the transitional space.
This intermediate area or arena first found recognition in the work of the
philosophers36, according to Winnicott, though he does not cite whom he
has in mind, and in the so-called metaphysical poets (Donne, etc.)37. His
own work and distinctive approach to this phenomenon derives from his
study of babies and children, with whom he worked as a paediatrician first
and as a psychoanalyst later.
He introduces the terms transitional space and transitional
phenomena to designate these intermediate areas of experience, like the
babys cloth. The intermediate area is between what is subjectively and
objectively perceived; it is in direct continuity with the child lost in play.
Transitional objects and transitional phenomena belong to the realm of
illusion38. This intermediate area of experience constitutes the greater part
36
Donald Winnicott, Playing and Reality, p. xv.
37
Ibid., p. xvi.
38
Ibid., p. 19.
On Desire, the Divine and Being Drawn 15
39
Ibid.
40
Ibid., p. 68.
41
Ibid., p. 86.
42
Ibid., p. 143. For introductions to the thought of Voegelin, see the following:
Barry Cooper, Eric Voegelin and the Foundation of Modern Political Science,
Michael P. Federici, Eric Voegelin: The Restoration of Order, Thomas Heilke,
Eric Voegelin: In Quest of Reality, Glenn Hughes (ed.), The Politics of the Soul:
Eric Voegelin on Religious Experience, Peter Petrakis and Cecil Eubancks (eds.),
Eric Voegelins Dialogue with the Postmoderns, Ellis Sandoz, The Voegelinian
Revolution: A Biographical Introduction and Eric Voegelins Significance for the
Modern Mind, and Eugene Webb, Eric Voegelin: Philosopher of History. For a
philosophical account of the in-between and desire from a largely Platonic-
Augustinian perspective, see the pioneering work of the Irish philosopher, William
Desmond (1990, 1995, 2001 and 2008 in particular). For interesting parallels to the
16 Chapter One
Introduction
This chapter attempts, firstly, to set out succinctly the core beliefs of the
so-called New Age, which are proving to be culturally ubiquitous,
paying particular attention, in the debate, to the conflict between faith
versus gnosis or knowledge. I will argue that the New Age may be
regarded as a form of Gnosticism and will offer a robust critique of the
Gnostic New Age, drawing on some of the important contributions that
Voegelin made to this enquiry. We shall see how the popular pseudo-
psychologies have misappropriated and misused some of the central tenets
of the Classical school and of Christianity for their own particular
purposes. As we said in the preceding chapter, Voegelins critique of the
age of modernity is somewhat severe. There have been other less
censorious accounts which have attempted to balance the positive and
problematic aspects of modern philosophy, such as Charles Taylors A
Secular Age (2007) and David Walshs The Modern Philosophical
Revolution (2008). That said, the broad brushstrokes of Voegelins
analysis still stand.
Voegelin on Gnosticism
Voegelins critique of Gnosticism is, perhaps, the best known of his entire
oeuvre. Especially in his The New Science of Politics and Science, Politics
and Gnosticism, he offers a sustained philosophical critique of Gnosticism
in its myriad manifestations and modern guises.
Gnosticism is a symbolic form as old as the Christian era itself.
Joachim of Fiore, a twelfth-century Calabrian monk, gave civilisation a
three-stage periodisation of history; he divided history into the Ages of
Father, Son and Spirit. He was the forerunner of the Third Realms
constructions in Condorcet, Comte, Marx, Lenin, and Hitler. In The New
Science of Politics, Voegelin analyses modern Gnosticism, arguing that
that it has been dedicated to the hubristic attempt to overcome all earthly
anxieties by building a terrestrial, intra-mundane paradise. Voegelin
appeals to us to reorient our priorities and accomplish the periagoge urged
by Plato in his Parable of the Cave in the Republic. Philosophy, in the
Platonic sense, is the love of the divine sophon. The truth of the soul
would be achieved through its loving orientation toward the sophon1.
Platonic eros is oriented toward the kalon and sophon and the agathon and
dike the virtue of the right ordering of the forces of the soul. The life of
1
Eric Voegelin, The New Science of Politics, p. 63.