Notes on The Paradigm Conspiracy by Denise
Breton and Christopher Largent
Paradigm: The word "paradigm" was originally one of those obscure academic terms
that has undergone many changes of meaning over the centuries. The classical
Greeks used it to refer to an original archetype or ideal. Later it came to
refer to a grammatical term. In the early 1960s Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996) wrote a
ground breaking book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, in which he
showed that science does not progress in an orderly fashion from lesser to
greater truth, but rather remains fixated on a particular dogma or explanation -
a paradigm - which is only overthrown with great difficulty and a new paradigm
established. Thus the Copernican system (the sun at the center of the universe)
overthrew the Ptolemaic (the earth at the center) one, and Newtonian physics was
replaced by Relativity and Quantum Physics. Science thus consists of periods of
conservativism ("Normal" Science) punctuated by periods of "Revolutionary"
Science.
Paradigm
Shift: When anomalies or inconsistencies arise within a given paradigm and
present problems that we are unable to solve within a given paradigm, our view
of reality must change, as must the way we perceive, think, and value the world.
We must take on new assumptions and expectations that will transform our
theories, traditions, rules, and standards of practice. We must create a new
paradigm in which we are able to solve the unsolvable problems of the old
paradigm.
Paradigm
Addiction: What occurs when a paradigm and its most ardent supporters are
addicted to the paradigm to the point where they lose the realization that they
are even in a paradigm at all? Ardent paradigm supporters have equated paradigm
survival with their own personal survival, and will manipulate and control a
society in order to prevent any social or cultural advancement out of the
existing paradigm, ignoring or suppressing public knowledge of anomalies,
equating perception of anomalies to "personal abnormality" in order to
intimidate populations to remain within the status quo control paradigm.
Addiction to a paradigm results in either paradigm death or death of those who
maintain the paradigm.
Paradigm Power
We're
concerned about where the culture is going, and what we can all do to change its
course. As we see it, our main power lies with philosophy and the force of
paradigm shifts. Shifting our mindset doesn't cost money, it's democratic (we
can all do it), it goes to the crux of problems, it's nonviolent, it's
effective, it's not stoppable from without, and it's our greatest power, though
largely untapped.
The
Problem
We see a
pervasive mindset of control and domination permeating our cultural
institutions, a mindset driven by the fear of anarchy. If someone-some authority
or power over us-doesn't control us, society will fall into chaos, or so we're
to believe.
But who
controls the controllers? What kind of order do those in positions of power have
in mind? Is power-over an order that works-i.e., that creates social harmony and
makes us happy? Or does it create wars, blind obedience, inner deadness,
Littleton, Colorado nightmares, injustices, epidemic substance and process
addictions, economic exploitation, cynicism, chronic stress, and unhappiness?
It doesn't
make sense, for example, that we control children morning to night with rewards
and punishments and then wonder why they grow up selfish manipulators: "What's
in it for me?" or "Just don't get caught!" That's how child-rearing and
schooling methods trained all of us to think. And if people grow up obsessed
with gaining power over others-the chance to be in the one-up position and to
control who's rewarded and who's punished-where's the surprise? This is the
logical extension of our cultural paradigm.
In other
words, is our culture built on a paradigm that's working for us as well as we
need it to? Is our consensus philosophy shaping our institutions to serve us, or
are we becoming servants to systems that warp our minds, consume our energies,
and turn us into people we never wanted to be? When more and more of us find
ourselves asking such core questions, it's time to start rethinking things from
the ground up. It's time to reclaim our powers.
The Global
Crisis of Addictions
Caught in
deadly processes. Recovery: it's not just for "addicts" anymore. It's not even
just for persons, not when addictive processes permeate every social system
we've got, from schools to churches to workplaces to governments.
The World
Is Managed Through Addiction-Based Dynamics
We're up
to our ears in addict-making processes, and we can't take two steps out of bed
without running into them.
Substance
addictions. Substance addictions-alcohol, drugs, nicotine, food, caffeine-are
just the surface, the outward and visible ways addictive processes come get us.
And they do get us. Drugs (legal and illegal), alcohol, and tobacco constitute
the world's biggest economic empire. Only the weapons industry rivals it. It
seems we can't afford not to be substance-dependent; our economies certainly
are.
Process
Addictions
Next in
the line of killers are process addictions, 'the ones society applauds':
addiction to working, winning, high-stress, fast-track jobs, perfectionism,
relationships, making money, spending and debting, gaining power, getting fame
or notoriety, living out family dramas, or-brace yourself-shopping. Sex can be
another process addiction, but it's not one society looks kindly on, however
much advertising promotes insatiable and manipulative sex as the solution to
life's challenges. Gambling is another old addiction, coming back now with a
vengeance with all the state lotteries, especially among young people.
Even the
most lauded activities-religion, science, academic inquiry, and government
service-may take on classic addictive patterns. Religion turns into obsession.
Science turns into dogma, as if collecting enough facts will make up for a
narrow worldview. Academic inquiry becomes an in-your-head addiction-quibbling
esoterica with rabid acrimony, fiddling while Rome burns. As for government
service, it's power addiction from the bureaucrats who throw around their
paper-pushing weight to the big-timers who become brokers for corporate
conglomerates.
Process
addictions are every bit as deadly, because they underlie substance
addictions-as well as just about every social and global ill we've got. They're
the invisible killers, the ones we don't suspect, but the ones that made
millionaire Ivan Boesky raid savings and loans to become a billionaire, leaving
in his wake thousands who saw their life-savings disappear. As Boesky was later
to admit, "It's a sickness I have in the face of which I am helpless." Nor was
Boesky alone in his sickness. Since the '80s, we've witnessed an army of
greed-addicted corporate raiders, who made the jobs and pension funds of
millions vanish overnight.
Process
addictions aren't limited to movers and shakers, though. Ordinary folks
following the right diet and taking the right exercise are dropping dead at age
thirty-five from workaholism, relationship addiction, anxiety, and stress. If
all these substance and process addictions don't afflict us, they nonetheless
affect us. While addictions to drugs, food, alcohol, sex, or work hit us one by
one, addictions to money, control, divisiveness, status, and official-think
oppress us together. We can't have power-addicts running the world and not
experience the consequences. Even when we try to claim it's business or
government as usual, we find ourselves suffering from global plagues made
invisible by their familiarity.
But a
familiar plague is no less deadly. As Anne Wilson Schaef points out, a deadly
virus is a deadly virus, even if the entire population has it. Alcoholics
Anonymous holds that addiction is a "progressive, fatal disease." Schaef
believes-and we agree-that this is true, no matter what form the addiction
takes. Our lungs may give out from tar and nicotine, or our hearts may give out
from stress. We may die from the greed that destroys the environment or from a
nuclear chain reaction set off by a someone's power play. Addiction-substance or
process, acted out privately or on the world stage-is a fatal illness that we
ignore at our peril. Not that this is news. We can't read the papers or watch TV
without wondering: What on earth is going on? We have the knowledge and
technology. We have the resources, human and natural. We even have the desire.
Why can't our social, economic, and environmental problems be solved? Why do we
live from crisis to crisis?
Addict-making systems. Neither substance nor process addictions are limited to
one race, sex, economic class, region, or occupation. Rich and poor,
conservative and liberal, male and female, Hispanic, European, African, Asian,
and Native Americans share the same disease.
When
something so deadly cuts across society, we have to look at what we share: our
social systems. In her 1987 ground-breaking book, When Society Becomes an
Addict, Schaef suggests family dynamics, school rules, workplace policies and
practices, corporate hierarchies, government workings, media messages, as well
as cultural and religious belief-structures all operate in ways that set us up
to behave addictively. In fact, society itself, Schaef writes, "is an addictive
system."
That's a
strong statement, yet the more we understand addiction, the more it seems like
an understatement. Award-winning teacher John Taylor Gatto, for instance, pulls
no punches about the messages schools send through their structure: "I began to
realize that the bells and the confinement, the crazy sequences, the
age-segregation, the lack of privacy, the constant surveillance, and all the
rest of the national curriculum of schooling were designed exactly as if someone
had set out to prevent children from learning how to think and act, to coax them
into addiction and dependent behavior."
In When
Money is the Drug, counselor and writer Donna Boundy sketches a similarly
addict-making picture for corporations. The level of thinking-distortion that
takes over people in these systems is astonishing.
The
Paradigm Conspiracy
What's
going on? Why are systems betraying their service to us? Instead of performing
their rightful functions of educating (schools), nurturing (families), promoting
public good (governments), managing the shared household (businesses), and
inspiring us to find and fulfill our life's purpose (religious institutions),
they're abusing us and turning us into people we never wanted to be. Why?
Enter
"paradigms." Back in 1962-so long ago John Kennedy was still alive-historian and
philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn gave an analysis of how systems change (or
don't) in his book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, that rocked the
intellectual world. He wasn't talking about addictive systems but about the
system of scientific research, which has its own brand of obsessive-compulsive
behavior.
Introducing the term "paradigm," Kuhn said that scientists operate from mental
models-paradigms-that shape everything they think, feel, and do. How scientists
perceive and interpret experience is shaped by their internal structure of
beliefs and concepts-their paradigm. If something is wrong, the paradigm is the
place to look to find out why.
To raise
paradigm issues is to reflect on the ideas or concepts we're using as our map of
reality-our world view, life perspective, philosophy, or mental model. Whatever
we call it, it's powerful stuff. To look at our paradigm is to look at the
blueprint we're using to build our worlds.
How do
paradigms start? They usually begin with some exemplary model-"Newtonian
science" or "Einsteinian relativity"-that weaves together theories, standards,
and methods in a way that makes better sense than anything else. To share a
paradigm is to share a commitment to rules that define how a scientist acts and
reacts. No part of scientific activity is outside the reach of the paradigm's
influence. It's as if scientists' energies get poured through the paradigm's
mold, and whatever comes out is stamped by that all-encompassing model.
In the
decades since, Kuhn's paradigm-concept has been applied to every discipline,
from the arts to business. And rightly so. We experience our lives the way we do
because of the paradigms we carry around. In computer terms, paradigms function
like the central operating system of consciousness-the supra-program that
transforms undefined perceptions into something we call our experience. They
give us the mental tools to make sense of life and survive in it. We may not be
able to summarize our paradigm in ten words or less, but our every thought is
paradigm connected, even paradigm created.
Development Within A Paradigm
Given the
power of paradigms, two kinds of development follow. The first occurs within the
paradigm's framework. The second chucks the paradigm and forges a new one.
"Normal
science," as Kuhn calls it, is the first kind of development. Practitioners
operate within their mental model and pursue its implications to the nth degree.
Working inside the prevailing paradigm is the secure, accepted, and
well-rewarded way to do science.
In fact,
the paradigm gets so comfortable that scientists forget that it's there; it
becomes functionally invisible. They way they see things is just the way things
are. For them, there is no paradigm between their ideas and reality. Applied to
life, the normal-science phase is business as usual, families as usual,
politics, churches, schools, and professions as usual. When we're ticking away
within a paradigm's framework, the norm is well defined, and we conform. Coping
skills mean finding ways to fit into the norm, whether it's healthy or not. In
fact, "healthy" is whatever the paradigm says it is. Becoming healthy means
adjusting to the paradigm's definition.
Paradigm
Shifts
The
revolutionary development comes when the paradigm reaches a crisis. It doesn't
solve problems the way it once did. Anomalies-things that the paradigm can't
explain-start accumulating. Paradigm-health starts making us sick. More and
more, the paradigm doesn't work. That's when scientists are challenged to shift
paradigms by moving into a phase Kuhn calls "extraordinary science."
But, "extraordinary science" isn't easy. In language suited to academia, Kuhn
describes how scientists freak out. Everything they ever learned is called into
question. During the revolutions in physics early in this century, even
Einstein, no slouch in forward-thinking, wrote, "It was as if the ground had
been pulled out from under one, with no firm foundation to be seen anywhere,
upon which one could have built."
The more
the paradigm fails to do its job, the more old-paradigm scientists try to make
it work. The paradigm is ripe for a revolution, but because they've forgotten
that they even have a paradigm, scientists conclude instead that their world is
falling apart. Solutions-alternative ways of doing science-don't exist. As far
as they're concerned, they've explored all the possibilities, and the only
options they see don't help. They're too paradigm-bound to notice that they're
stumbling over the limits of their own models.
The
Paradigm: Cause of Soul-Abusive Systems
"Extraordinary science" describes the situation we face today. We're not
experiencing paradigm-norms as healthy, either personally or globally. The
blueprint for our families, schools, businesses, and governments isn't working.
It's causing our shared social systems to function abusively and to make us sick
as a result. Happy people and healthy systems don't turn addictive,
life-destroying substances into the biggest growth industry on the planet.
We'd think
changing a paradigm that's not working would be easy, but it's not. As Kuhn
observed, the paradigm-cause of crises remains invisible to old-paradigm
practitioners. We don't need a new paradigm, they believe, we just need to make
the one we have work better. Nothing is wrong with our social systems, since
that would call the underlying paradigm into question. Instead, when things
don't work, something must be wrong with us. "Blame certain people and label
them as the troublemakers. We need more discipline, more restraints,"
old-paradigm experts advise us, "more tests and tougher grading systems, more
hard-nosed business-management practices, more God-fearing, sex-repressing
piety, and more laws with stricter enforcement."
In other
words, according to the prevailing paradigm, coming down hard on people isn't
abuse. It's how we create healthy families, schools, businesses, governments,
and churches, because it rids us of the sinful, ignorant, or otherwise unruly
souls that muck up the social machinery. If things don't work, the solution is
to take away more rights, stifle more creativity, intimidate more people, build
more prisons, and bring back the death penalty. More fear keeps people in
line.
This
paradigm touches every part of our lives-but invisibly. We don't realize that
the paradigm is there, which means we don't recognize its role in creating our
social institutions. As long as the paradigm remains hidden, we don't see what's
causing system-wide suffering, which means we can't stop it.
The
paradigm of control and power-over. What kind of paradigm requires that we blame
individuals, intimidate, and punish them in order to keep our social systems
"healthy"? Like a complex tapestry, the paradigm has many threads, but the
overall pattern has to do with control: Who has power over whom, and how is a
power-over relation maintained? Riane Eisler, in her pioneering work, The
Chalice and the Blade, calls this the "dominator model," contrasting it with
"the partnership way." Domination is the paradigm's driving issue, and for a
reason: in this world view, top-down control is necessary for social order.
According
to the power-over model-what we refer to as the control paradigm-if somebody
doesn't control us, our social systems will fall into chaos. Archaeologist John
Romer notes, for instance, that the Roman Emperor Diocletian, in an attempt to
hold "a ramshackle empire" together, "made a state where animals, land and
people were all tightly organized and controlled."ÉLike Diocletian, authorities
of today believe that nothing would work if we each did our own thing. To have
order, we must do what the authorities tell us to do.
Soul: the
big threat
Now come
the threads: to be controlled, we have to be unplugged from competing sources of
control. The major threat to external control is our internal guidance
system-our souls.
"Soul" refers to our deep presence. It's our inner connectedness to whatever we
take to be Being, God, the One, the whole, or the ground of creation (to
paraphrase theologian Paul Tillich). Physician Larry Dossey describes the soul
as "some aspect of ourselves that is infinite, beyond the limits of space and
time." It's our direct link to reality.
This
whole-connected core is the source of our talents and the wellspring of
creativity. It's also what gives us the conviction that our lives have meaning.
When we live from our souls, we feel alive and vital, and we take seriously the
idea that we're here for a purpose.
To us, our
souls are our best friends and most trusted guides. But to the control paradigm,
they're the enemy-what has to be removed in order for external control to work.
Only when we're sufficiently disconnected from our inner compass will we follow
outer demands.
"Get rid
of the troublemakers." For fear of chaos, social systems adopt the control
paradigm and run with it. Through all sorts of institutionalized policies, we
get the message that we're unacceptable as we are, but that if we surrender
ourselves to the social system (the family, school, business, profession, or
religion), we'll become acceptable. Our souls are sloppy and unmanageable
troublemakers; they clog the system's efficient workings, and we're better off
without them.
This isn't
'reality' talking; it's a paradigm-an old one. Maybe sometime in the dim, dark
recesses of human evolution a control-based paradigm may have served the
species-we're skeptical about that-but it's not serving us now. The more
power-over systems zap our inner lives, the less social order we have. It's a
paradigm in crisis, and it's creating neither personal nor global health.
Two
paradigm conspiracies. As long as the paradigm remains invisible, we're stuck.
The prevailing model stymies change. Every time we try to move in a new
direction, the old paradigm kicks in and intimidates us into doing the same old,
soul-diminishing stuff.
That's the
first paradigm conspiracy, the one that blocks our best efforts to confront
crises and change.
But one
paradigm conspiracy deserves another-the leap into "extraordinary-science."
True, paradigm shifts are full of uncertainties, trials and errors, hiccups and
false starts, not to mention soul-searching forays into the unknown. We never
know if we've come up with the "right" paradigm-or even if there is such a
thing. In extraordinary science, we let everything go into flux. Yet nothing
conspires to change our world so completely as doing precisely that.
The most
conspiratorial part of a paradigm shift is that it lies within the power of each
of us to do it. Paradigms aren't Godzilla monsters; they're ideas. Their power
comes from our shared commitment to them. The minute one person starts to
explore alternative models, the paradigm no longer holds the same power.
As Marilyn
Ferguson explained in The Aquarian Conspiracy, the word 'conspiracy' comes from
'conspirare,' which means 'to breathe together.' A new cultural paradigm begins
with each person stepping out of the old and daring to breathe something new.
The "movers and shakers" are powerless to prevent a paradigm shift, once we
together breathe a paradigm-revolution into being.
Walking
the Truth vs. Sleepwalking
We are not
walking the full truth of who we are because we're "sleepwalking", unconscious
of our immense abilities. Instead, we've come to believe that those abilities
don't exist for us. Even people educated at the best schools in this system
experience education as indoctrination. The advantage for power-over
institutions is obvious. People no longer indulge in big-picture thought.
Control paradigm systems want the human brain to be an obedient machine, not a
mind.
The
Control Paradigm Posing as a "Philosophy"
The
dumbing down - becoming less than who we are - brings us face to face with one
of the control paradigm's most powerful devices for achieving control. The
control paradigm presents itself as a "philosophy", as if it's innocently
telling us what's what. It even insists that its mechanistic, materialistic,
control-measured picture of reality depicts the "real world" and tells us how to
be practical in the world of facts and things, dogs eating dogs and sharks
eating whatever. The more our reality can be reduced to objects, this
"philosophy" tells us, and the less we trouble ourselves with ideas, values and
other intangibles, the more we understand the "realities" of the control
universe.
Adopting
this philosophy as "the most practical way to maximize our personal sphere of
control", we don't notice that we're made controllable in the process. To "buy
into" the "philosophy" is to become controllable by its "values" of external
rewards and suggested into a view of ourselves that is not true to our nature
and potential as True Human Beings. But, the control paradigm isn't philosophy.
It doesn't encourage free thought or dialogue. It doesn't develop our minds or
souls. It doesn't invite inquiry into its core assumptions, strategies,
responses and goals. Instead, it functions as a mind-control trance.
The
control paradigm comes across as "the one way" to experience reality, and it
doesn't make room for alternative perspectives. To do so would go against the
control agenda. As a result, the control paradigm in truth has little in common
with philosophy and much in common with propaganda and mind control methods -
trance inducers, the kind Hitler was skilled at using.
Trance
Guises
In order
to work, mind control methods must be hidden or pass as something seen as
socially acceptable. The trick to a manipulative trance - as opposed to a
therapeutic one - is that it remains unnoticed. The trance-inducers need a good
guise. Conditioning and manipulation of others are always weapons and
instruments in the hands of those in power, even if these weapons are disguised
with the terms "education" and "therapeutic treatment". The control paradigm
uses all of the above, but ultimately posing as a "philosophy" is its greatest
cover. Posing as a "philosophy" lends the control paradigm an "air of
authority". If we recognized mind-control methods, saw through their disguises,
and named them as such, they would lose their effectiveness.
Anatomy of
a Trance
Selective
focus that by-passes the critical faculty. A trance state is when our minds
voluntary choose to bypass their critical faculty and focus selectively, with
consciousness fixated and focused to a relatively narrow frame of attention
rather than being diffused over a broad area.
Suggestibility
Humans can
be highly suggestible, which allows the by-passing of the critical faculty. It
is a matter of record how subtle cues and suggestions can influence and even
control people's minds and behavior. But "I'm not in trance!" - Hypnosis is in
fact not so much a "state" but a process of selective focusing that we choose to
engage in, since many of the characteristics of the trance process apply to
other processes of consciousness as well. In fact, when people are in a trance
"state", many swear they're not. They have no sense of altered consciousness
when responding to suggestion and do not believe themselves to be in trance.
Trance as
a Tool of Oppression - The Dark Side of Trance
The very
power of the trance suggests its potential as a tool of oppression - for making
us less than who we are.
Although
there are positive uses for hypnosis, negative trance conditioning is very
different. The mind-control uses of the trance process are thousands of years
old and permeate control-paradigm institutions. Let's take a look how two master
oppressors, Hitler and Eichmann, used the process in the concentration camps:
Eliminating the critical faculty - Prisoners were taken from their homes,
deprived of all possessions, stripped naked, shaved head to toe, and mass
showered. They were treated as if they were sub-human. The impact of this was
that all the assumptions they had ever made no longer applied. Inmates went into
shock and their ability to think was shut down. The critical faculty was
gone.
Narrowed
focus on survival - The brutality of camp life made prisoners think only on the
barest survival level. Every thought focused on how to stay warm, get food and
avoid the wrath of the guards. Thinking became highly selective. No one could
form any reliable strategies.
Normal
emotions were removed and camp emotions implanted - Given the shock of the
experience, emotions shut down, including the emotions of disgust, horror and
pity. Apathy took over - the inability to care about anything. The prisoners
gave up their normal ways of responding. Instead, new responses were implanted
("suggested") - the desire to save one's life, not to antagonize the guards, to
submerge into the crowd, even to do "favors" for the guards in order to gain a
"favored position". The responses that the guards wanted from the prisoners were
unquestioning obedience, abject submission, and lack of personal will except for
what the guards permitted. Suggestions were also implanted to the effect that
human beings had no intrinsic worth, only extrinsic usefulness to
authorities.
Aware of
the trance or not? - Those who bought the trance didn't last long. Those who
allowed their inner hold on their moral and spiritual selves to subside
eventually fell victim to the camp's degenerating influences, and their bodies
soon followed suit. The trance of dehumanization overcame them without their
conscious awareness or resistance.
Coming out
of the Trance to Walk Our Truth
Philosophy
- Reawakening our critical faculties Prayer or mediation - Letting our minds
roam the big picture
Correcting
dehumanizing suggestions
De-suggesting cultural influences. We decide not to give dehumanizing trances
our assent or energies. The man who stood in front of the army tank in Tianenman
Square in China was not in a control paradigm, fear and submission trance. His
no-trance response apparently broke the trance of the driver of the tank.
Another example is when the Berlin Wall came down. The wall symbolized a
political control paradigm trance for almost 50 years, Once the control paradigm
trance broke, the wall came down almost overnight.
Expanding
awareness - Once we're awake, we're awake, and we have choices: trance or no
trance. Of course, waking up from the control-paradigm trance is not what
society encourages.
Closed-System Models Don't Work for Human Society
Preserving the "Norm"
Single
individuals don't create a society-wide climate where dialogue has no place.
That's the desire of the Control Paradigm, and it uses an effective device for
doing it. The Control Paradigm designs social structures to function as closed
systems. The rules, policies and structures of closed systems have one purpose -
to exclude input - outside, non-controllable factors - that could initiate
system change. The first response to any problem is to "return things to the way
they were". Closed social systems are not intentionally "evil" - they are simply
designed to maintain the status quo. Maintaining a pre-determined order is their
mandate, which closed systems carry out through strict rules of control. As long
as new energies can be either neutralized or made to conform, things continue on
as before. The lines of power are preserved, and control is assumed.
Controlling the Variables - The People
Closed
systems work to offset variables. That's how they maintain equilibrium. In
closed social systems, personal differences are the variables, and roles are the
way to offset them. For example, because nothing is more variable in marriages
than spouses, or in families than children, in schools than teachers and
students, i businesses than employees, in religions than spiritual seekers, or
in society than citizens, closed social systems devise countless techniques for
steering us back to role-governed equilibrium, called "family harmony", "family
values", "school discipline", "business as usual", "religious devotion", or
"social order". The most effective technique for doing this gets people to
internalize roles and act them out without question. People are manipulated to
meld with the roles, until they are the roles.
Given
that dialogue is really about thinking and questioning, it is no wonder that its
not generally welcome in closed social systems. It undermines a powerful tool of
control: a control device that reduces our "unpredictable" nature to predictable
boxes and persuades us that the boxes are who we are and that "we are nothing"
without them.
The
Control Paradigms "Claim to Legitimacy"
The aim of
closed social systems isn't to shut us down, although that's the effect. Closed
systems may behave like the evil Empire in Star Wars, but those "in charge"
honestly believe that "society would collapse" without their order-reinforcing,
power-concentrating, control-preserving responses. That is why dictatorships
often follow social upheaval; the "chaos" of transition is used to justify
closed-system methods. The greater the apparent "chaos", the more "absolute
rule" can be "justified". Current closed social systems welcome, and may even
create an appearance of "chaos", because according to their belief is
"validates" their "authority", and that "crack-down" methods "must be
necessary".
The Reason
Closed Social Systems Don't Work
Responding
to the need for balance in society doesn't work using closed-system thought
patterns, because the current systems:
Maintenance of a toxic order: First, if the system equilibrium is already toxic,
it gets reinforced. Bad "norms" are simply perpetuated, since closed systems
"run on automatic". They don't have the power of discernment. They don't
evaluate systems in light of personal needs, human evolution or planetary
health. Their one mandate is to "preserve the established order", even if that
"order" is toxic for the people and planet.
Put
systems above people: Achieving "social order" through closed-system methods put
systems above people - system needs over personal needs. Systems come first.
That's the message we hear in social systems, namely, preserving systems is more
important than nurturing people. Closed systems say to people, "You are part of
us, therefore we own you. Who you are is incidental. You must perform the roles
we assign you in the ways we require. We won't allow you to deviate. If you
changed, we'd have to change, and that we won't allow. Our 'social order' would
collapse". Putting the rigid structure of social systems first costs all of us.
People get "chewed up" by systems. The idea of "sacrificing ourselves for the
greater good" may be a laudable idea if the greater is good. But, what if it
isn't?
Control is
Abuse: Closed social systems don't work because they keep order through control
- force, punishment, and other power-over methods of enforcement. But, can
social harmony be forced? Is top-down control the way to achieve "social order"?
Threats and intimidation cannot be the fabric of healthy social systems. They do
too much violence to our inner lives, costing us our freedom. How healthy can
our social system be if the people are psychological wreaks? When we are
deprived of out essential powers as free, creative beings, our social systems
reflect our emptiness. When do we get in return for "submission"? Not security.
Being one-down in a control hierarchy isn't a secure place. When people get
deprived of freedom and security while at the same time they are bound by
control systems, they behave like caged animals. Intelligent beings don't do
well in cages.
The Nature
of Reality isn't closed: Another reason closed social systems don't bring social
order is that reality itself isn't a closed system. The old scientific belief
systems such as closed-entropy energy systems, also used to reinforce
closed-system social control patterns, are rapidly becoming transparently false
as scientific research has shown over the last few decades. No matter how much
closed systems try to control variables and shut out change, reality won't be
shut out. We can't make our social units into "islands of no-change", because
the greater reality (the context on which our systems depend) is dynamic.
Reality is
ever-shifting. It sweeps through our systems and impels change whether the
system controllers like it or not. Two shining examples of closed systems, the
Soviet Union and Communist China, tried to create "perfectly controlled, closed
societies". It didn't work. Their determination to establish closed-system
control exacted a terrible price from their people. Individuality, freedom and
creativity "had to be crushed". That's the reason closed social systems don't
work.
The
Spiritual Evolution of Society Won't Be Put Off: Human beings are every bit as
dynamic as reality because we are made up of reality, and we are constantly
evolving in response to it. In contrast to Westernized control-oriented systems,
including the systems "exported" to China, ancient Asian spiritual traditions
defined humans as profoundly open systems, involved in constant
self-transformation. Just as social systems can't ultimately ignore the dynamics
of reality, so too they cannot ultimately ignore our dynamics. No matter how
hard closed systems try to fit us into "boxed", we don't fit. The more systems
negate this quality, the more we react as if we're under siege. Our personal
reality as beings-in-progress fights back, whether through conflict, addiction,
social action ,recovery, spiritual awakening - or some combination thereof. Nor
is this bad news. If social systems could make us into static units of
conformity, what sort of societies would we create?
The
Awareness Gap: Another reason closed social systems don't work as a model for
social order is that closed systems operate blind to the people in them. Social
order is not built on an awareness of what people think and feel, but on
ignoring human needs and imposing system demands. That is why closed systems are
typically out-of-touch with the real thoughts, feelings, and abilities of their
members: they shut the door on this information. It's not deemed "relevant" to
"maintaining order".
Too many
tragedies, too little order: In the end, closed-system control doesn't work
because it creates more tragedies than order. Dysfunctional patterns destroy.
For example, the general approach to "health care" is a business. If health is a
business, which demands its existence in perpetuity, than there can by
definition be no health in society. The pattern also involves "killing disease"
while at the same time ignoring what it takes to create health. National
ill-health is just one example of closed-system tragedies. The Western political
systems are another example.
Breaking
Through Paradigm Defenses
We pay a
heavy price for filtering reality as we do. When paradigm filters obscure our
inner self to create an "outer self" that does the coping, the gap left inside
grows into a chasm. The trouble intensifies when we identify with our paradigm
filters. We begin to believe that to expose our filters is to expose ourselves,
and worse, we begin to believe that to lose our filters is to lose ourselves,
and that having "filters" is how we have survived. We fuse with them and believe
that they're all we've got.
The best
way to make our paradigm "armor" invulnerable is to make it invisible. What
can't be detected by the population can't be shot down. When invisible, our
paradigms avoid the risk of attack. We hide our paradigm's filtering processes
under acceptable cloaking devices - and many such covers will do the trick.
Staying
Within A Group
One way to
make paradigm filters invisible is to surround ourselves with people who share
our set. We align ourselves with groups who take the same paradigm for granted.
Surrounded by people whose filters are familiar, ours blend in. Paradigm filters
stay invisible, and we ask "What filters?" and "What paradigm?" Everyone shares
the same agenda of keeping the paradigm filters unchanged. When paradigm issues
do manage to surface, it's to reinforce how "successful" and "right" the group's
paradigm is. The official lines get repeated and the catchphrases echoed. Those
who question the paradigm and don't speak its "language" are out.
It is
because of this that cliques permeate paradigm-rigid societies, with each group
accusing the other of being "cultish". Paradigm dynamics, or dogmatics of each
group resemble what goes on in mainline churches, corporations, schools,
universities, governments, labor unions and non-profit organizations. The
strategy of keeping filters invisible under the cover of a group-shared paradigm
turns out not to be considered aberrational behavior, but the "required norm".
When
Groups Support Growth - There are groups that support growth and evolution, and
group-shared paradigms can be useful if they are exploring these areas involving
full potential. Working with people of like mind takes us forward by leaps and
bounds. As we work with others in this way, developments emerge greater than any
one person could produce. Whether group involvement supports "filter evolution"
or "filter fixedness", therefore, is a matter of paradigm development.
Compartmentalization of Paradigm Filters
Mechanism:
Another way to keep paradigms invisible is to split our lives into compartments
and to design paradigm filters for each "box". When we are convinced to split
our perceptive world into separate pieces, we protect the paradigm filters we
use for each piece. In a fixed area, certain paradigm filters don't apply, and
we don't mix them with filters we use for a different box. That way, we never
have to ask how it all adds up; it just doesn't, and no one expects it to add
up.
Social
Result: Lack of Consistency. We don't ask whether the values we use at work are
the values we'd like our children to live at home. If we adhere to one religion
or belief, we don't want to hear about the views of another. By putting walls
between our filters, we protect our overall filter arrangement. We avoid filter
comparisons which would inevitably bring our paradigm out into the open and
subject it to revision. Some of the greatest leaps in knowledge and art -
cultural paradigms - occurred when two or more societies interacted. Control
paradigm isolation of societies prevents these leaps. Box-category thinking,
valuable as it is for producing specialized knowledge, prevents this type of
exchange. It forbids us even to attempt to integrate our filters with wider
contexts - a process which paradigm evolution demands. "There's no overall
paradigm", we tell ourselves, which means our cultural paradigm stays
"offstage", invisible.
Openness
and Objectivity Issues
Another
way to keep paradigm filters hidden is to "appear to be filter-free", as if "we
have no paradigm, no filters, and no covers for them either. For decades,
scientists and social engineers hid filters behind claims of objectivity,
pretending to be "unbiased observers". Claiming to be "open" and "skeptical",
while rigidly adhering to paradigm dynamics, are other ways of hiding paradigms
we're not keen to question. Sometimes, claiming to be "open" is used as a
strategy to make us appear paradigm-free, which guarantees that neither we nor
anyone else has a chance to look at our filters. By appearing to be
"big-minded", we keep our paradigm close to the chest and off limits.
Use of
Covers to Block Paradigm Awareness
If we are
to evolve, we need to know what paradigm we're using, so we can change it.
Defensive covers block this awareness. How far are people willing to go to
protect their paradigm? History shows that people will kill to protect what they
"believe" to be the case. Changing paradigms, ways of thinking and perceiving
the universe based on new information, can be scary for some people. No wonder
the strategies for keeping paradigms in place are more developed than strategies
for changing them.
Use of
Social Taboos to Block Paradigm Awareness
One of the
most potent paradigm cloaking devices individuals and societies have is the
taboo. A taboo prevents the questions we dare not raise, the things we dare not
do, and the ways we dare not think. When members of a society obey taboos, they
pretend that aspects of their lives do not exist. Problems are not problems, and
obvious sources of trouble remain off-limits for discussion, and people are
manipulated into not speaking of them. People let the social system throw walls
of silence around them, so the system is not threatened by hearing the truth
about what we're experiencing. Most current social systems on the planet are
maintained in a status quo state in this way.
Taboos
About Sex - The actual function of the taboo on sexual matters in Western
countries, which paradoxically exists at the same time as the maintenance of a
strong focus on sexual matters, is to supplement and increase the focus on
sexual matters in society. The same principles holds for gender-specific taboos,
which also have the function of suppressing different factors relating to
wholeness of being and expression. Many of these taboos have the function of
introducing the socially complicating factors of "guilt" and "shame", and are
also included in some religious paradigms.
Taboos
About Feelings - There is also another taboo which exists that makes feelings
off-limits in some social system. People are programming "to be in control" of
emotions. Even the words "emotion" and "emotional" are cast in negative
connotations, and are often used to discredit a persons viewpoint. In fact, the
process of socially programming the factoring-out of emotions is highly
convenient for control paradigm systems, because if we cut ourselves off from
how we feel under a situation of domination, we tend to "tolerate" it more
readily, and we are programmed to disregard the pain when we witness
control-system abuse to others. Control system abuse is seen on television 24
hours a day and termed "entertainment", which goes to show how deeply some
paradigm elements are buried. Another phenomenon that arises is that the control
paradigm feeds people with rationalizations, judgments and the ultimate
ultimatum: "Things must be done this way or chaos will follow".
Science Taboos -Many of the social control taboos in our society have in fact
been inherited from science - what's "real" and what is not, what we can "talk
about intelligently" and what is considered "superstitious" or "pseudo-science".
In general, the rule is this - "if you can measure something, manipulate it,
predict its function and then replicate it (control the outcome of experiments
on it) - "it's scientific and real; if not, it's imagination or illusion."
People are programmed to accept this approach to science because it reinforces
the idea of control over the environment. Unfortunately, this strategy reduces
the idea of "knowledge" down to a matter of "control". We are led to believe
that "knowing something" means being able to "control" it -- which is the
control-paradigm epistemology. We are led to grant science this "authority" and
we are programmed not to question it, even if it stands in the face of mountains
of observed (but not reproducible, and therefore "anecdotal") evidence.
Science
Taboos - The Wider Impact
Defining
knowledge in terms of control raises questions. What kind of "control" does
science give us? Control paradigm science inevitably disregards wider contexts,
because wider contexts aren't easily "controlled". To "gain control", scientists
"eliminate variables" and "constrict the field". In fact, scientists learn early
in their programmed training to think in narrowly focused ways and to disregard
broader contexts, thus, the most defensible Ph.D. thesis is the most specialized
one. A result of this process is that using narrowed control thought processes,
we find ourselves faced with wider-context problems. For example, we are stuck
with nuclear waste with a half-life of 500,000 years and clouds of acid rain
that kill forests. If the same money went into researching new evolutionary
technologies, as the impression was given to the public in the early 1970's that
it "would be", we wouldn't have the problems we have today. But, a public
programmed to think along the same lines has simply ignored this simple idea.
Science
Taboos - Ethics and Values
A very
important point to make is that the taboos that insulate control-science from
its impact on society also hide its values. The directions that science and
technology take involve decisions based on values - control values. Nonetheless,
taboos place science above ethics. In other words, control-science taboos hide
its decision-making process and the values that guide them. These values and
decisions affect the course of science. The fact that some scientific research
gets screened out while other research receives both funding and publication is
attributed to "the natural course of scientific development", as if there is no
paradigm-based filtering going on. In fact, "there's a whole lot of filtering
going on". Various "experts" dominate each field of "inquiry" and also dominate
the direction and "limits" of research. They give their "positions" at
"conferences", where "reputations" may be "made" or "broken", and they edit the
journals. Even more telling is the funding of research by industry. There is an
unspoken but real incentive to present projects that support the agenda of work
being done in various industries. Combinations of industrial, academic, and
political interests influence, and even control, what should otherwise be open
scientific research, in many cases research that could potentially save lives.
The cancer and AIDS industries are good examples.
Science
Taboos - "Accepted Practices"
Control-science decisions affect not only the direction of research but how that
knowledge is applied. As long as some practice is labeled "scientific", people
are programmed to be hesitant to ask whether it's wise or cruel. The status of
"accepted scientific opinion" is often enough to put a theory, along with its
applications, "beyond moral question". A good example would be the painful tests
and surgery conducted on babies without anesthesia. Another would be that if you
cut someone's body part off while walking down the street, you'd go to jail. But
if an obstetrician does it, without anesthesia, he gets paid for it. No
consistency in this society. It sends a real message to baby boys about the
world they're entering. Female circumcision and genital mutilation, permitted in
some societies, sends an equally meaningful message to young girls.
Science
Taboos - Philosophy and Consciousness
Consciousness, certainly infant consciousness, is meant to have no place in the
official "world view' of science, and taboos keep it that way. Taboos hide how
control-paradigm science affect our overall philosophy. Because of taboos,
people don't ask whether control science is adequate for understanding the
universe. By making all non-controllable aspects of life off-limits - outside
the "domain" of "scientific inquiry" - the taboos of science make sure that the
general population ignores many realities, but most of all the subject of
consciousness itself. The dominant paradigm of knowledge places consciousness
research generally off-limits. Intuition, inner realities, synchronicity,
spiritual seeking, the quest for meaning, healing, personal and social
transformation, near-death experiences, out-of-body travel, and symbolic systems
associated with things like these, are termed by control-science to be "hokum"
and "non-sense". Never mind that most of these things are a vivid part of
reality for a significant part of the population. No "self-respecting" scientist
would be caught dead investigating them.
One of the
most powerful ways taboos shut down open inquiry is to ridicule those who step
outside official scientific opinion. If something doesn't fit control-paradigm
science, the phenomenon is dismissed as "non-existent", and the people who
persist in violating the taboos of silence are dismissed as "crackpots". The
subject of alien interaction with the planet is a good example.
Defensive
Routines
Defensive
routines are entrenched habits people use to protect themselves from the
embarrassment and threat that comes with the exposure of thought patterns they
wish to hide that underlie views and opinions. The perceived "threat from
exposing thought processes", or the programming which creates this dysfunctional
process, starts early in life and is steadily reinforced in the "educational"
system. Everyone can recall the stigma at having the "wrong answer" in
school.
Defensive
routines also block transformation, since they block access to the basic
paradigm filters. As a result defensive routines block learning and expanded
experience.
Defensive
routines also block communication. When one person seeks to hide the paradigm
upon which thought is based, very often the other person does it too. Defensive
routines are contagious. Defensive routines are also "self-sealing". Not only do
they hide paradigms, but they hide their own existence as well. To hide the
paradigm and be psychologically "correct", people fall back on the "openness"
cover, where people want to "seem" open an candid, so they work hard at
appearing that way.
Lies,
Secrets and Cover-ups - Trapped in Defense Mechanisms
By hiding
the paradigm that lies at the root of problems, defensive routines allow
situations to get worse. They do not let concerns or confusions surface, even if
these may be the key to a breakthrough. Instead of helping us deal with
realities, defensive covers divert energies into preserving masks and ego
images. They force people to live a lie - not to be honest about what's
happening. As long as we participate in a control system. we are not at liberty
to speak openly about what we are experiencing. When taboos forbid us to speak
the truth, our lives get "zippered shut with secrecy", leaving us vulnerable to
secrecy's chief weapon - propaganda. Everywhere people go they are lobbied into
believing the official line that justifies control-paradigm systems. People
begin to think "everything's fine, as long as we lock up and get rid of the
'bad' people, kill them or drug them until they 'fit the norm'. Then our system
would 'work'". But, our systems don't work, no matter how many people are
drugged, subject to mind-control, lock up or kill. Instead, a chasm of silence
comes between people and system realities.
Dialoguing
Our Way to Social Balance and Harmony
As a
response to the control-paradigm world around us, dialogue sends a liberating
message. Dialogue is the real source of order in human societies. It
communicates openness, trust, mutual respect, adventure and shared exploration.
It is a response that invites paradigm shift in precisely the direction we want
to make it, namely, toward soul-honoring interaction.
Discussion
vs. Dialogue
David
Bohm, the physicist, whose ideas on dialogue follow the Socratic tradition,
believed that dialogue is an art that's distinct from ordinary discussion.
Discussion works like ping-pong - opinions are tossed back and forth to set
whose views will win out. It's a competitive game of scoring points: one-up,
one-down, argument and rebuttal. But, discussion has its limits. In discussion,
our options are restricted to the starting point positions of each side.
Discussion is not designed to increase options, only to narrow options.
Discussion operates on a win-lose model.
Dialogue,
in contrast, has a different dynamic. It's purpose is not to establish a
"victor" or to prove a question, but to "love the truth" and pursue it. We let
truth be what it is, whether it happens to fit our paradigm agendas or not. We
let out pursuit of the truth spill over our current thought boundaries, drawing
us into areas we have not considered before. How does a dialogue response do
this? David Bohm mapped out three criteria - three rules of dialogue. These
rules cannot be imposed from without or faked. If inwardly we're stuck in a
one-up/one-down mode (a control paradigm response), we can try and create a
dialogue but it won't happen. The exercise lapses into ping-pong. Real dialogue
grows with soul connectedness. In paradigm terms, a dialogue response grows from
soul connectedness assumptions and strategies. We simply love the truth and want
to explore it in the same spirit with others. Bohm said, "the purpose of
dialogue is to go beyond any one individual's understanding. We are not trying
to win in a dialogue. We all wind if we are doing it right."
Bohm's
three criteria, listed below, will facilitate a dialogue response:
Suspending
Our Paradigms - First, since truth is greater than our concepts about it, loving
the truth means loving truth more than any one perspective. Even the best
paradigm falls short of reality, which is infinite and surpasses our most
advanced ideas. Both parties cannot respond in dialogue and be dogmatic about
their respective paradigms. In dialogue, we stay open to exploring our ideas and
perceptions from the ground up. Because reality is infinite, there is always
room for evolution. The first criterion for dialogue, then, is that participants
must "suspend their assumptions". This takes work, because most paradigm
assumptions lie in the shadows where we don't notice them. Dialogue begins as we
put our models on the table for consideration. A dialogue response doesn't trash
what we've assumed so far. It simply keeps our options open, so we can discover
the reality lying beyond them. Huxley once said, "Sit down before fact like a
child, and be prepared to give up every preconceived notion, follow humbly
wherever and to whatever abyss Nature leads, or you shall learn nothing."
Honoring
Each Other As Equals - Whereas the first criteria opens the window, the second
lets the breeze blow through. The second of Bohm's criteria tackles the control
paradigm's response directly, since the most common (and most internalized)
barrier to true dialogue is the one-up/one-down model of interaction. We can't
have an open dialogue with people who have power over us or whom we perceive as
superiors. Bohm observed that "Hierarchy is antithetical to dialogue". Those in
dialogue must treat each other as equal partners in the pursuit of truth,
working as a team. Responding as colleagues, we support each other and create a
space that's safe for exploring the truth - where loving the truth is allowed.
During the Challenger disasters in 1986, it was discovered that one of the
factors involved was the unwillingness of upper management to listen to the
concerns of the engineers who felt that the program was being rushed and
insufficient testing time was allowed. Those in charge didn't want to listen to
feedback that didn't fit their agenda and used their superior status to block
it. Naturally, the process of evolving awareness raises differences. Responding
to each other as equal partners does not mean we all must think alike.
Differences enrich the process. Instead of using differences to divide us,
dialogue uses them to expand the possibilities we're able to consider. According
to Bohm, "In dialogue, a group accesses a larger pool of common meaning which
cannot be accessed individually. Individuals gain insights that could not be
achieved individually. Defending one paradigm or another isn't the focus in
dialogue. Broadening our awareness is the focus. The jockeying that goes on in
hierarchies through win-lose discussion becomes irrelevant.
A Genuine
Spirit of Inquiry - Freeing ourselves from internalized ranking is easier said
than done. That is why dialogue needs a third criterion. We need to protect the
dialogue atmosphere from our own histories of being shamed. One way to do this
is through a facilitator who "holds the context" of dialogue and keeps the space
safe for exploration and risk taking. Because dialogue requires that we reveal
our deepest and most "unofficial" thoughts, it makes us vulnerable. Facilitators
keep the factors of shaming, one-upsmanship and official-think at bay. They
support the shift from discussion to dialogue by affirming differences and not
letting participants become polarized in win-lose contests. With a genuine
spirit of inquiry, we don't care who said what or which direction the dialogue
takes. We are all on the same side in dialogue, pursuing a common quest for
understanding.
One way of
responding that supports a dialogue atmosphere balances advocacy and inquiry.
Advocacy presents a position, while inquiry explores it. The more we each do
both, the more our responses stay fluid, true to a dialogue context. When we
advocate a paradigm perspective, for instance, we also open our thought
processes to inquiry. We explain how we arrived at an assumption, strategy,
response or goal, and why. We also keep the door open to rethinking our
positions from the ground up. We reflect on our own paradigm and invite others
to do the same. That way, we don't get stuck "defending one position". When
others present a paradigm perspective, we not only inquire into their thought
processes but also state our assumptions about what they are saying and
acknowledge them as assumptions on our part. "What I'm hearing you say is..."
Our assumptions may be preventing us from grasping what others truly mean. The
real message often lies behind the words and can by the opposite of what's
spoken.
What's
Normal or Possible for Consciousness?
Awareness
of paradigms and the possibilities that emerge with changing them carry enormous
implications for how we understand consciousness. Are the limits we experience
in perception, learning, and knowing absolute, or are they imposed by a
paradigm-one that we can choose to have or not?
Psychic
and paranormal experiences suggest that the limits imposed by materialist
philosophy are not absolute. Even one case of powers that defy physical limits
proves what's possible, whether these possibilities are commonplace in the
current paradigm or not. By challenging paradigms that put our mental powers in
straitjackets, we free ourselves to tap powers we've barely begun to
imagine.
Examples
of mental powers defying so-called laws of matter abound. In addition to the
volumes of literature on the subject, we've encountered many cases that we find
fascinating, and several come to mind:
One young
woman from Laos, a student of ours, endured several years of harrowing escapes
to reach America with her family. She experienced this journey between the ages
of 7 and 9. Along the way, she and her family spent many months in concentration
camps for refugees, where women and children were abused by soldiers. During
this period of constant fear and trauma, she developed the ability to leave her
body at will to guard herself and her family, especially when she was asleep.
Years later as a college student, she was able to report everything that was
said or done in her room or anywhere in the building while she was sleeping.
Hers is an interesting case of what is now widely known as out-of-body
experiences.
During the
late seventies, a Swiss colleague of ours told of a little girl in Zurich who
was having trouble in school because her vision did not stop with walls. She
couldn't see the blackboard because she was seeing through it into the next
room, where apparently things were more interesting. Her grades improved only
when she was taught to make her vision stop with walls. The story was carried in
the Zurich newspapers. Perhaps Mr. Swann or someone else reading this knows more
about this case.
Then of
course there's research begun by Georgi Lozanov in Bulgaria and reported by
Sheila Ostrander and Lynn Schroeder in their books Superlearning and
SuperMemory. According to learning studies going on all over the globe, our
minds are capable of vastly more than we ever imagined. If we have human brains,
we're geniuses, and the only reason we're not experiencing our minds' powers is
that they've been shut down by stress, negative programming, trauma, or
mind-numbing boredom. Clearly, there's more going on with consciousness and our
human potential than the official paradigm acknowledges. Again, the fact that
extraordinary powers occur at all proves the possibility of powers that may be
latent in all of us.
Seeking
Paradigms That Fit Us
Imagine,
for instance, a paradigm that describes us as free beings, moving in time,
space, and matter through the powers of consciousness, unconstrained by demands
for money and unconcerned by the quest for power or control. Imagine further a
paradigm that honors us for who we are, that treats human beings-as well as all
beings-as treasures of the universe, and that therefore places a priority on
nurturing and developing our potential. In the current world where humans are
"ownable", exploitable, controllable commodities-useful only insofar as they can
either command or generate capital-such models seem utter fantasy.
According
to spiritual teachings the world over, though, such models more closely fit what
they call "True Human Beings." Hindu philosophy, for instance, takes our
potential seriously enough to categorize liberation as the fourth basic desire
of human beings, the one that naturally arises in us after we've grown weary of
pursuing the desires for 1) pleasure, 2) success, and 3)
duty.
Liberation is the liberation to be who we are in the big picture, not to be
narrowed by models that aren't worthy of us. It's the freedom to live from the
inside out, to be guided by who we are in our essence, rather than to spend our
lives juggling family, social, financial, religious, or other cultural
expectations.
"Saving
the Paradigm"
If we
don't experience ourselves or each other as free and great beings, it's not
because we lack this potential but rather because the paradigm/cookie gadgets
our cultures pour us through aren't equal to our essence. We come out twisted,
grasping, angry, and insatiable because we know we're more, yet the cultural
paradigm has no room for us. The paradigm can't both acknowledge our innate
worth and treat us as objects to be subjugated-objects that must be coerced into
systems that violate our dignity and potential by their very structures.
Born into
the culture, what choice do we have but to be subjugated? Babies and children
don't have options but to submit. So we adapt ourselves accordingly. We conform
to social systems by adopting the roles that go with them, narrowing ourselves
to fit the cultural agenda. We become the competitive, insecure, obedient, brain
dead, soul-disconnected creature that our social systems require. If we didn't
comply, there'd be no place for social systems to hook into us and control our
behavior, which the paradigm says they must do in order to achieve social
order.
But
instead of social order, the paradigm generates violence and suffering-images of
which we see everyday on the news and feelings of which we experience as stress,
anxiety, depression, low self-esteem or even self-hate. These images and
feelings say nothing about which alternative paradigms might better serve human
beings or who we might be if we used less narrowing models. They simply give us
feedback about our cultural paradigm.
But
paradigm oblivious, we don't interpret culture-wide pain as paradigm related. We
don't trace personal and social suffering back to the cultural paradigm and so
set the stage for changing it. Instead, we save the paradigm by believing that
humans must be fatally flawed and we ourselves more than most. Accepting the
cultural paradigm that excludes what's most valuable about us, we view ourselves
in the mirror that social systems give us: a mirror of externals. Our paradigm
options go unexplored.
Life in a
Paradigm Controlled by External Reward Systems
In a
paradigm of externals, externals call the shots. Instead of allowing us to be
guided from the inside out (a formula for anarchy, the control paradigm claims),
the paradigm controls our behavior through rewards and punishments. We come to
think and act like Pavlov's dog, salivating over the next bonus, a bigger kennel
to call home, a fancier collar to sport, or a top dog position. The paradigm
isn't about developing our talents, abilities, or potential; it's about making
us controllable by giving or withholding external rewards.
To achieve
this control, the paradigm grades each "thing" in a hierarchy of externals. The
inner life means nothing compared to the outward characteristics indicated by
our species, race, gender, age, status, group affiliation, and income. If dogs
possessed the wealth of Bill Gates, for instance, they wouldn't suffer in
medical experiments, just as people who have money don't work in sweatshops or
sell their children into slavery.
That's the
problem with externals: they're fine until they become the means for
enslavement, which unfortunately they do almost immediately. When a paradigm
puts external values first, consciousness dimensions are dismissed out of hand.
Small wonder that the potentials of our minds and hearts-and all the values that
go with them, e.g., meaning, compassion, justice, or wisdom-go undeveloped. A
control paradigm has neither use nor place for them.
Closed Social External Control-Based Paradigms Don't Like Discussing This
Naming
paradigms and their power for good or ill isn't a new insight; it's as old as
philosophy. It is, however, an overlooked insight in an age that can't seem to
shake a materialistic, control-obsessed paradigm-and for good reason. Reflecting
on paradigms is the stuff of change, and changing paradigms is the most
fundamental and powerful change we can make.
To a
paradigm of control, that's not welcome. The sum total of our experience
contingent on something as invisible and changeable as a philosophy? Change by
paradigm shifts, which anyone can make? Powers of perception and creativity that
defy rigid material boundaries? Humans as beings of immense powers and
abilities? Once you let these cats out of the bag, there's no telling what
mindsets and institutions might be made obsolete.
Obsolete
is precisely what established institutions of power and control don't want to
be. They learned from the fate of carriage and buggy whip manufacturers when
cars came along. Established interests now make sure that questioning the
neanderthal paradigm of burning things for energy triggers "War-of-the-Worlds"
panic about destabilizing the world economy. Even the call for improved public
transit systems borders on subversive.
Stiff
challenges face a paradigm shift on the simple level of out-there technology,
frozen at a stage that Captain Picard sometimes finds among the more primitive
human civilizations he encounters. What challenges might we face if we embark on
a far deeper level of questioning-on redrawing the paradigms that sort out who
we are and why we're here?
Plenty. If
the cultural paradigm's purpose is not to honor human potential but rather to
make it an obedient servant to existing social structures, then nothing could be
more threatening to the established order than a paradigm shift regarding our
self-conceptions. We fit into society as it is now only as long as we don't
remember that we're more and here for more.
Examples of Control Paradigm Lack of Interest in Developing Human Potential
The agenda
for traditional psychoanalytic therapy, for instance, isn't to develop human
potential; it's to keep people functional in established social structures,
however miserable their lives may be and however abusive or wrong-headed the
social structures. "Well-adjusted" becomes a synonym for mental health.
But if
someone is well-adjusted to being an SS officer in Nazi concentration camps, is
that person mentally healthy? In Fire In The Soul, psychoneuroimmunologist Joan
Borysenko writes of this narrow aim of therapy: "Sigmund Freud...believed that
when a person was cured of neurosis the best outcome that could be expected was
return 'to an ordinary state of unhappiness.'" (New York: Warner, 1993, p.
54)
Psychotherapy's official job is mopping up the mess that social systems make of
our lives by convincing us that the mess is our fault, our failing, our
screwiness. If we don't conform, adjust, fit in, and measure up, something must
be wrong with us. And psychotherapy has its truth: we may well be frozen in
grief or shock and not functioning at our best, but don't the social systems
that shape us deserve equal scrutiny, equal critical analysis?
Thankfully
many therapists reject this paradigm and venture forth with their clients on the
forbidden territory of meaning and human potential as well as of critiquing
social structures, but it's no easy task persuading insurance companies to come
along. Control institutions pay insurance companies to pay health professionals
to keep people in their place, serving the established order.
The Agenda
for School Systems in a Control Paradigm
Nor are
school systems committed to developing the more that we are. Schools are an arm
of social structures, whether religious, governmental, or economic. According to
the paradigm-defined needs of those structures, tapping human potential doesn't
create enough Dilberts to ensure the "efficient" running of corporate,
governmental, religious, and educational hierarchies.
In this
century, business interests have dictated the structure of schools. Henry Ford
quickly noticed that creative genius and intuitive knowing aren't useful on
factory lines. So he pioneered the "modern" school system that inculcates values
and skills appropriate for 20th century work life: being punctual, obeying
orders, enduring hours, weeks, and years of boring, repetitive tasks, not
talking while working, not resting, keeping to the schedule at all costs. Our
minds become casualties of industrialization.
Our souls
end up casualties as well. Trusting our own judgment, thinking for ourselves,
adhering to our values, and having confidence in our innate worth don't make us
good foot soldiers for my-way-or-the-highway bosses. Only people with low
self-esteem are sufficiently insecure to tolerate abusive work environments.
Insofar as we believe we don't deserve better, we adjust, becoming the kind of
person that's required to "do the job."
Obligingly, school systems produce people with precisely the low self-esteem
that's needed for worker "flexibility." Fears of being wrong, of not making the
grade are fears confirmed for 90 percent of the population. That's the
percentage who are required not to get A's by the bell curve system,
guaranteeing that 90 percent of everyone coming out of school believe that
they're incapable of excellence. Schools mirror back to students the mass
message that "you're just not good enough, but if you do what you're told
without question, you may get better and be rewarded." That's a handy message to
have installed in the psyches of 90 percent of the population-handy for
perpetuating corporate, religious, governmental, and professional tyrannies,
that is.
All this
modern schooling goes against what we know about the human mind and how we
learn-and have known for decades. Studies in learning show that we learn best
when we're most relaxed, yet schools maximize stress through fear of failure.
Studies show that children learn most easily through cooperative learning, yet
schools impose a competitive model. Studies also indicate that students' beliefs
about their own learning abilities affect their performance-if they believe
they're good learners, they learn easily; if not, learning the simplest things
becomes difficult-yet schools systematically undermine students' confidence.
In these
and many other ways, school systems perform virtual lobotomies on our psyches,
producing graduates who've long since lost their joy in learning, who believe
they must be right all the time and "know it all" or be condemned to outer
darkness, and who experience post-traumatic stress symptoms at the thought of
having to learn new things on the job.
On
Cultural Non-Commitment to Human Potential
Alice
Miller, a champion of the potential we all possess from birth, pulls no punches
in her books-For Your Own Good in particular analyzes the social, cultural
agenda of shutting down our potential. As she explains, the traditional rules of
child-rearing passed down from generation to generation have nothing to do with
developing our potential, either emotionally, intuitively, psychologically, or
intellectually. Their one agenda is control: control the child as soon as
possible by any means, whether it's by punishment, humiliation, intimidation,
beatings, grading, whatever it takes to break the child's will and autonomy.
The
justification for this agenda is that children raised any other way won't fit
into society when they grow up. According to this cultural paradigm-expressed in
the rules of child-rearing-learning to forget who we are and to become what
others want and expect us to be is the most important survival skill. Our
potential as human beings is irrelevant, a side issue, compared to our ability
to
conform.
Of course we're supposed to believe that social systems have our best interests
at heart and that obeying them is indeed "for our own good." If we conform
properly, our potential will develop accordingly. But is this so? As we've seen,
schools and therapy-two systems that you'd think would be committed to
developing human potential-have no such commitment. In what system or area of
the culture might such a commitment exist?
Governments are fully occupied with who has power over whom, who has the biggest
budget, where money can be found, who wins which election or vote, etc.
Developing the human potential of its citizenry is not a priority. If anything,
it's not on the agenda at all. The insider's view that "the masses are asses" is
music to ambitious politicians' ears, who then believe it's their manifest
destiny to expand their personal power and become benevolent dictators. Dumb
masses are easy to manipulate with slogans and half-truths. For their purposes,
the less human potential the better.
As much as
we value spiritual teachings, we can't say that religious organizations have
much commitment to developing human potential either, though granted there are
exceptions. Adhering to fixed doctrines, building congregations, raising money,
meddling in the personal affairs of members, running down sectarian competitors,
and using fear and guilt to exact obedience and tithing keep them busy
enough.
Businesses
and corporations certainly don't concern themselves with human potential, even
though they sometimes pay lip service to it in the hopes of making employees
more "productive." The bottom line is the bottom line, and if human potential
comes up at all, it's considered a frill or luxury-"warm fuzzy stuff" that
doesn't count in the "real world" of business except to mollify disgruntled
workers or help them adjust to higher levels of stress.
Scanning
the culture, we frankly can't find any system that's consistently committed to
exploring human potential. If anything, our social systems regard human
potential as an impediment, an annoying feature of human beings that gums up the
systems' otherwise efficient workings. If people would just learn their roles
and stick to them, everything would work so much better.
If we
didn't know the paradigm behind these systems, we may find this lack of interest
in human potential odd. Developing human potential seems crucial to keeping
human civilizations vital and evolving, up to speed with the challenges that
continually arise. Technology per se can't save us, since we're not using the
alternative technology we already have to remedy social and environmental ills.
What we lack is the the wisdom and foresight, the honesty, the sense of meaning,
justice, integrity, and the good to manage human affairs well. These aren't
technology issues but paradigm ones. Wisdom and foresight are precisely the
potentials that a paradigm geared to domination and control factors out of
us.
Making
Some Changes
But no
paradigm, even one that's used to having the last word, is the last word. The
human spirit, being what it is, doesn't take kindly to soul-lobotomies and
develops all sorts of responses. One is to join the lobotomizing dominators: do
it to others before any more can be done to you. Another is to adopt roles and
play along, to accept one's lobotomized lot in life.
Addictions
make both responses easier. We can lay off 5,000 employees and numb the pain
with a 15 million dollar bonus. Or we can take drugs to make it through the day
in our Dilbertesque cubicles. Either way, numbing ourselves with addictions of
process (money and power) or of substance (drugs and alcohol) makes us forget
the pain of living in a control paradigm culture.
By numbing
us, addictions serve the established paradigm well: insofar as we forget pain,
we don't confront its causes. Lobotomizing systems go unchallenged, as long as
we find ways to cope with being lobotomized.
That's why
recovery from addictions begins with recognizing pain. Acknowledging what we
feel in social systems is the first subversive step toward a cultural paradigm
shift. A paradigm of control through externals unravels when we affirm the
importance of what's going on within. When pain counts with us-when we refuse to
ignore it, "to put up and shut up"-the days are numbered for the paradigm that's
causing us pain.
New World
Views Bring the Onset of New Worlds
From this
springboard begins the journey of transformation by paradigm shift. It took us
360 pages to explore this process in The Paradigm Conspiracy, so that's a pitch
both for whoever is reading this to get a copy and for us to close this
electronic
essay.
We'll just say that when we're too tired to explain the book to someone, we call
it our revenge on the control paradigm, both for us and on behalf of our
readers. But when we're feeling more peppy, we say that the book has a happy
ending, or at least holds the promise of one. Refusing to be trapped by
dominating institutions on one hand and on the other claiming our essence, who
we are in the big picture-what's called the "soul" until a better term comes
along-we foment revolution of the most constructive, effective, and powerful
sort. Each of us in our own ways participates in creating new worldviews, which
in turn create new worlds within and without.
We thank
you for taking the time to read our thoughts and reflections on this subject,
and should you read our book, we hope you enjoy it. We don't pretend to have the
answers or to give the "correct" paradigm. Our best hope is that the book gets
the philosophical, paradigm-shifting juices going. That's quite enough for us.
The rest we leave to the human potential emerging in all of us.
Material Focus vs. Whole-System Focus
Focusing on Things and Materialism
Factor
Focusing on Whole Systems
Mechanistic model in which observer & observed are seen separate,
unrelated and not connected in any way except by virtue of physical perception
in closed system entropy universe.
Physics
Taking into account more than a decade of discoveries in quantum physics, and
a model in which observer participates on a quantum consciousness level in
creating reality as we experience it; takes into account discoveries in science
which reveal that we live in an open system entropy universe which is expressed
through a definitive "holo-movement" - (Bohm), unfolding-enfolding
Control science based sychological system which perpetuates rigid outer
roles, social dysfunctionality; who has the power in the hierarchy?
Imposition of authoritarian concepts of emotional and mental health;
Dictating the healing process.
Understanding Mind and Behavior
Authentic self in dynamic relations; "learning organizations" (Senge);
Honoring each person's inner living process (Schaef); Healing as exploring each
person's own process in the context of spiritual growth
Inevitable conflict, Might makes Right; Carrot-Stick systems for
control; Justice as reward & punishment; Laws serve those in
power
"Politics, Law and Justice"
Partnerships in evolving systems; Soul-expression instead of brute force;
Developing individual potential; "Justice" as each one doing what's theirs to
do; Laws serve the spectrum of human development on a temporary basis as they
are replaced by self-responsibility, conscious focus and evolutionary,
growth-oriented intent, individually and as a civilization.
Authoritarian, domination-control institutions: "Leviathan" solutions;
institutions solve problems; the numbers game; institutions exist to preserve
their own existence.
Institutions
Philosophies (maps) make institutions what they are for better or worse; the
power of individuals to change institutions-to dance a new dance ; Institutions
exist on a temporary basis to solve problems, not to serve solutions.
Scarcity focus; economies are "out there," bound by impersonal, iron laws;
the game of "Monopoly" is the model for infinite business expansion, trashing
the environment and the population in the process.
Economies
Knowledge & creativity; economies reflect us and the maps we use; we
create our economies as evolving aspects of society which contribute toward the
evolution of both society and the planet as a whole; allows expansion of the
idea of "economy" into other levels.
"superstition of materialism" (Chopra), reductionism, value-free,
fact-only view of knowledge, etc.
Reality Model
Spiritual/holographic models; integrated systems including ideas and the
dynamics of consciousness itself.
Rethinking Assumptions, Strategies, Responses and Purposes
By Rethinking Our -
Material Mapping
Whole - System Mapping
Assumptions
Economic Reality
Scarcity: "unlimited desires" competing for "limited resources" Re: Monopoly
Model, Defunct Malthusian Model
Economic Reality
Know-how and Creativity: Managing creatively what we have and using order to
offset scarcity and evolve more efficient ways of doing things
Strategies
Economic Interaction
Maximizing Ownership of Things: Land, Labor, and Capital
What's Different: Who owns What or Whom
Hoarding Matter
One-Sided Gain
(Win-Lose)
Economic Interaction
Developing Systems of Exchange:
What's common: Knowledge and Creativity
What's different: How we Develop and Use Knowledge
Exchanging differences
Mutual Benefit (Win-Win)
Responses
Regulatory Response Shaped by Belief in:
A Dark End: human nature as inevitably self-destructive, apocalyptic
belief systems, a death-oriented cultural model
Self-interest as Selfishness
Competition, Bully Style
Domination of the many by the few; Suppression of knowledge, genocidal
action
Regulatory Response Shaped by Belief in:
The spectrum of human nature- in process and evolution of awareness and
capabilities of the planet.
Self-Betterment, enlightened by our relation to the collective good and the
spiritual continuum of the universe.
Cooperation
Liberty as an Ideal to approximate through Inner and Spiritual Growth
Purposes
Goal for acting is:
To maximize control/ownership of economies by :
Reducing them to fixed quantities of matter and Energy,
Controlling Information and Ignoring ideas and values
which turns economies into closed systems that run down and self destruct,
preserving an elite social class of profiteers which deliberately restrict the
evolution of society and the planet for personal gain. Goal for acting
is:
To evolve economic systems of exchange by expanding them from :
Matter to Energy
Energy to Information
Information to Consciousness and Ideas
which works as a method for breaking through limits & pursuing
unlimited possibilities in how we manage our "household" individually and as a
planet.
The Paradigm Web
The Paradigm
Conspiracy by Denise Breton and
Christopher Largent Paperback -
387 pages 1996 ISBN:
1-56838-208-1 (Paper) ISBN: 1-56838-106-9 (Cloth)
$13.95 Reprint edition (May 1998)
ISBN: 1568382081
Buy through Amazon.com or
order through your local book chain
A True Prescription for
Change
Well, as an individual I was the
publisher of The Paradigm Conspiracy, and it remains one of the proudest
accomplishments of my professional career. The Paradigm Conspiracy is a
brilliant, powerful, and tremendously successful synthesis of what is
essentially "wrong" with our culture and its institutions. The authors somehow
are able to cast away the ephemera of intellectualism or agenda and simply state
what so many of us dared not speak: that there is something essentially wrong
here, and that it is only with a completely new vision, accepted with courage,
that the wrong can be made right. I am proud to have been one of the champions
of this book during my tenure as publisher, and recommend all of Chris and
Denise's books to every reader. Only, only through this type of understanding
personally and culturally can our culture advance. Paradigm Conspiracy provides
both the understanding and the means for true transformation. Its reading is
required of each of us.