Evolutionism and Traditional Cosmology

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Vincit Omnia Veritas.

III,2

Evolutionism and Traditional Cosmology


Dr R. Blackhirst

While it is routine for writers from a traditionalist or perennialist perspective to


compose condemnations of Darwinism and to expose what Titus Burkhardt, in a
celebrated article, called the 'transformist illusion' it is rarely acknowledged that the
evolutionist doctrine is, in part at least, a corruption of a traditional doctrine. There is
nothing new under the Sun, as the Preacher sayeth, and the novelties and "discoveries" of
modernity are either misconstructions or negations of traditional ideas and forms.
Darwinism is no exception. We find it prefigured in traditional accounts by which the
human microcosm reflects - and is "coagulated" or "extracted" or "condensed" from - the
macrocosm. No less a representative of Tradition than Rumi gives a famous example of
an "evolutionary" perspective:

I was a stone and I died as a stone and was born a plant. I died as a plant and
was born an animal. Later I died as an animal and I was born as a man.

Those who attempt to marry modern science with traditional wisdom very often
quote this passage from Rumi as a way of saying that the sages of old had an intuitive
knowledge of truths that Darwin made concrete and scientific. In part - but only in part -
they are right to do so. Here Rumi reiterates a sequence of states that at least resembles
the Darwinian account of man, for by Darwin too man was once stone, and flower, and so
on, in a progressive sequence. Certainly, Rumi does not suggest "natural selection" as the
device by which he "dies" from one form after another, but he nevertheless understands
the human state as the fulfilment of a sequence of creatures, each more complex and
"evolved" than the previous. He was at first a stone - inert matter. Then vegetable. Then
animal. And at last human.

But the modernists are wrong to suppose that Rumi is entirely at one with Darwin
and that modern, quantitative science is the fulfilment of ancient wisdom traditions.
Rather, we must understand Rumi in the context of the traditional cosmological sciences

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and, in the case of this passage, realise that Rumi is giving expression to the cornerstone
of traditional cosmological thought, the microcosm/macrocosm doctrine. He is describing
the condensations of the macrocosm into the human microcosm which - by all Traditional
accounts, and by definition - contains, in essence or in tincture, the whole of the
macrocosm. Man has a nature that is stone, and vegetable, and animal, which is testimony
of his "extraction" from the macrocosm. The profane doctrines of evolutionism bear a
resemblance to this in so far as they propose that the human being has emerged and is
constituted from "the environment." Traditional sources more often describe this in terms
of an "involution", since the microcosm is an "interiorization", and without the
progressive and "evolutionary" sequence used by Rumi, but the crude notion that man has
emerged and is constituted from his external world need not be ruled anti-traditional in
itself, provided we understand that the modern doctrine is, all the same, a hopelessly
limited and partial view - of both man and the universe.

The traditional doctrine - in an admittedly simplified and incomplete rendering -


can be presented in the following few points:

1. A Metacosmic Principle - Pure Subject in contemplation of Its own Object,


Identity, at once Unique and Infinite.

2. The macrocosm is an "exteriorization" of the Principle (as Object) through the


microcosm.

3. The microcosm is - at the same time - an "interiorization" of the Principle (as


Subject) through the macrocosm.

This is leaving aside any account of "patterns" or "forms" or "archetypes" or any


further distinctions (hypostases) that reside in and are manifested from the Principle. It is
enough to say that there is a macrocosmic order and a microcosmic order and these are
complementary expressions of the same Principle which fact is the basis of their mutual
reflection. That is, they reflect each other as well as (and because of) reflecting the

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Principle - and this because of the very nature of the Principle Itself. Within the non-
manifest Principle there is neither an inside nor an outside, subject or object; it is beyond
but also the root of these dualities which dualities, therefore, are not final. Taoism, which
embodies and preserves the ancient "alchemical" perspective more explicitly than other
traditions (and is in some respects, we might say, the least theological and most
cosmological of religions) depicts this arrangement in the classical yin-yang symbol
where the yin is contained in the yang, and vice versa, and both have identity in a non-
manifest Principle (The Tao). In the occident, the cadeuseus of Hermes, and other
symbols with interwining serpents or dragons, represent aspects of the same thing. There
is an unfolding and an infolding at the cosmological level, but no movement at all at the
level of Principle.

For our present purposes the thing to note is that point 3. allows for the idea that
man is an extraction of the cosmos and a reorganisation of macrocosmic elements. The
organisation of man reflects the organisation of the cosmos, and this because he has been
constituted from the cosmos, or rather from the Principle through the cosmos, which
distinction is all-important. It will be seen that evolutionism is a specific misconstruction
of point 3. at the level of this distinction and is an overall misconstruction by being
ignorant of points 1. and 2. But in the first instance there is nothing altogether
illegitimate about the notion that man is constructed from and has within him the fire, air,
water and earth that are the constituent elements of his abode. It is not even necessary to
make the proviso that it is only his material frame that is so constituted, for even his
"consciousness" may be taken as an internalization of the light that illuminates his abode
and so his "consciousness" is in that sense derivative from his "environment." His waking
and sleeping are an internalization of Sun and Moon.

In such a perspective it is entirely possible to conceive of man as the culmination


of a succession of animal forms, each more completely internalized than the previous. It
is possible, then, to conceive of this internalization as the key to "survival of the fittest" -
fittedness being a measure of macrocosmic involution - and we may even hypothesize,
with Darwin, that chance mutation is the propelling device. That is, life "evolves" from

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inert matter by chance mutations, and those mutations which give rise to internalized
forms survive in so far as internalized faculties - because they are reflections - enable a
creature to respond successfully to its external circumstance. At length, a creature (homo
sapiens) "evolves" that is a virtual reflection of the whole cosmos. It is possible to
conceive of this as having taken place gradually with other less succesfully microcosmic
forms appearing along the way, the gradual and linear trajectory of the process being a
consequence of the temporal arena in which it occurs.

To adapt a traditional symbolism to this, the living entity and the universe that is
its environment are as mirrors to each other, and the fossil record appears as a process of
bringing the mirrors into alignment or into focus. The mirrors move by "chance" forces,
let us say, and are sometimes near to focus and at other times wide of focus, until - by
"chance" forces, let us say - they hit an alignment that finally yields a true or near-to-true
reflection, namely the human form. And let us also say, conceding further to Darwin,
that "focus", in this analogy, is the key to creaturely survival. Man won the race because
the human form is the better focus between the two mirrors; this is what it means when
we say he is adaptable; his internal resources correspond best to the requirements set by
his external world. But, let us remember, there is no "chance" at the level of Principle
and the appearance of "chance" at the cosmological level is an illusion. (The Greeks more
correctly called it "Necessity.")

And, more importantly, where these mirrors - entity and world - reach focus they
reveal the Principle that is responsible for their correspondence and the basis of the
"mirroring." The true reflection reveals the principle of reflection. This is the point at
which the subject/object duality is resolved; what is inside is outside and what is outside
is inside. The metacosmic Principle is beyond subject-object complementarism and
resides in its own Isness, having no complementary opposite, Pure Subject in eternal self-
contemplation, its own Object.

There is no need to say anything further about this Principle, for we are
considering its cosmological function and not its metaphysical content, and it is

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especially unnecessary at this level to introduce theological subtleties: the point is that
man is not only the summation of the macrocosm - the subject that answers to its object -
but he also embodies the Principle that resolves and transcends subject/object and so is a
spiritual or transcendent being. This means, precisely, that he is capable of grounding
his being in the Principle and make the "point of view" of the Principle his own, so to
speak. Darwinism, along with modern thinking generally, is guilty of the most appalling
underestimation of the ontological range of man, but so far as they go the general
propositions of evolutionism may not be entirely deviant.

Finally, we should note that traditional accounts tend to give priority to point 2.
because Subject is logically prior to Object. If it is true to say that man is an "extraction"
of the cosmos it is nevertheless more true to say the cosmos is a "casting off" or
"excresence" or "evaporation" or "filtration" of or "projection" from man - or rather
through man (and, if you like, from Man, i.e. Primordial Man, Adam Kadmon, Perusha.)
Darwinism, of course, has no notion of this and so is hopelessly partial in its perspective
and for that reason destructive to the wisdom traditions of the ages. It is entirely
understandable that those in whom a sense of the sapiental heritage of mankind is
preserved are hostile to Darwinism and to so-called "spiritual Darwinists" such as
Teilhard de Chardin. But like other heresies Darwinism is a perverted truth rather than a
complete falsehood. It would be helpful if this point were better appreciated in the on-
going debates about evolution and religion.

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