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The Atheist Perversion of Reality
April 5, 2009 | Jean F. Drew

Posted on 04/05/2009 8:10:35 PM PDT by betty boop

The Atheist Perversion of Reality
By Jean F. Drew

Atheism we have always had with us it seems. Going back in time, what was formerly a mere trickle of a stream has in the modern era become a raging torrent. Karl Marx’s gnostic revolt, a paradigm and methodology of atheism, has arguably been the main source feeding that stream in post-modern times.

What do we mean by “gnostic revolt?” Following Eric Voëgelin’s suggestions, our definition here will be: a refusal to accept the human condition, manifesting as a revolt against the Great Hierarchy of Being, the most basic description of the spiritual order of universal reality.

The Great Hierarchy is comprised of four partners: God–Man–World–Society, in their mutually dynamic relations. Arguably all the great world religions incorporate the idea of this hierarchy. It is particularly evident in Judaism and Christianity. One might even say that God’s great revelation to us in the Holy Bible takes this hierarchy and the relations of its partners as its main subject matter. It has also been of great interest to philosophers going back to pre-Socratic times — and evidently even to “anti-philosophers” such as Karl Marx.

In effect, Marx’s anti-philosophy abolishes the Great Hierarchy of Being by focusing attention mainly on the God and Man partners. The World and Society partners are subsidiary to that, and strangely fused: World is simply the total field of human social action, which in turn translates into historical societal forms.

Our principal source regarding the Marxist atheist position is Marx’s doctoral dissertation of 1840–1841. From it, we can deduce his thinking about the Man partner as follows:

(1) The movement of the intellect in man’s consciousness is the ultimate source of all knowledge of the universe. A human self-consciousness is the supreme divinity.

(2) “Faith and the life of the spirit are expressly excluded as an independent source of order in the soul.”

(3) There must be a revolt against “religion,” because it recognizes the existence of a realissimum beyond human consciousness. Marx cannot make man’s self-consciousness “ultimate” if this condition exists.

(4) The logos is not a transcendental spirit descending into man, but the true essence of man that can only be developed and expressed by means of social action in the process of world history. That is, the logos is “immanent” in man himself. Indeed, it must be, if God is abolished. And with God, reason itself is abolished as well: To place the logos in man is to make man the measure of all things. To do so ineluctably leads to the relativization of truth, and to a distorted picture of reality.

(5) “The true essence of man, his divine self-consciousness, is present in the world as the ferment that drives history forward in a meaningful manner.” God is not Lord of history, the Alpha and Omega; man is.

As Voëgelin concluded, “The Marxian spiritual disease … consists in the self-divinization and self-salvation of man; the intramundane logos of human consciousness is substituted for the transcendental logos…. [This] must be understood as the revolt of immanent consciousness against the spiritual order of the world.”

How Marx Bumps Off God
So much for Marx’s revolt. As you can see, it requires the death of God. Marx’s point of theocidal departure takes its further impetus from Ludwig von Feuerbach’s theory that God is an imaginary construction of the human mind, to which is attributed man’s highest values, “his highest thoughts and purest feelings.”

In short, Feuerbach inverts the very idea of the imago Dei — that man is created in the image of God. God is, rather, created by man, in man’s own image — God is only the illusory projection of a subjective human consciousness, a mere reflection of that consciousness and nothing more.

From this Feuerbach deduced that God is really only the projected “essence of man”; and from this, Feuerbach concluded that “the great turning point of history will come when ‘man becomes conscious that the only God of man is man himself.’”

For Marx, so far so good. But Marx didn’t stop there: For Feuerbach said that the “isolated” individual is the creator of the religious illusion, while Marx insisted that the individual has no particular “human essence” by which he could be identified as an isolated individual in the first place. For Marx, the individual in reality is only the sum total of his social actions and relationships: Human subjectivity has been “objectified.” Not only God is gone, but man as a spiritual center, as a soul, is gone, too.

Marx believed that God and all gods have existed only in the measure that they are experienced as “a real force” in the life of man. If gods are imagined as real, then they can be effective as such a force — despite the “fact” that they are not really real. For Marx, it is only in terms of this imaginary efficacy that God or gods can be said to “exist” at all.

Here’s the beautiful thing from Marx’s point of view: Deny that God or the gods can be efficacious as real forces in the life of man — on the grounds that they are the fictitious products of human imagination and nothing more — and you have effectively killed God.

This insight goes to the heart of atheism. In effect, Marx’s prescription boils down to the idea that the atheist can rid himself and the world at large of God simply by denying His efficacy, the only possible “real” basis of His existence. Evidently the atheist expects that, by his subjective act of will, he somehow actually makes God objectively unreal. It’s a kind of magic trick: The “Presto-Changeo!” that makes God “disappear.”

Note that, if God can be gotten rid of by a stratagem like this, so can any other aspect of reality that the atheist dislikes. In effect, the cognitive center which — strangely — has no “human essence” has the power of eliminating whatever sectors of objective reality it wants to, evidently in full expectation that reality itself will allow itself to be “reduced” and “edited down” to the “size” of the atheist’s distorted — and may we add relentlessly imaginary? — conception.

To agree with Marx on this — that the movement of the intellect in man’s “divine” consciousness is the ultimate source of all knowledge of the universe — is to agree that human thought determines the actual structure of reality.

Instead of being a part of and participant in reality, the atheist claims the power to create it as if he himself were transcendent to, or standing outside or “beyond” reality. As if he himself were the creator god.

This type of selective operation goes a long way towards explaining the fanatical hostility of many Darwinists today regarding any idea of design or hierarchy in Nature — which, by the way, have always been directly observable by human beings who have their eyes (and minds) open. What it all boils down to seems to be: If we don’t like something, then it simply doesn’t exist.

We call the products of such selective operations second realities. They are called this because they are attempts to displace and finally eliminate the First Reality of which the Great Hierarchy of Being — God–Man–World–Society — is the paradigmatic core.

First Reality has served as the unifying conceptual foundation of Western culture and civilization for the past two millennia at least. What better way to destroy that culture and civilization than an all-out attack on the Great Hierarchy of Being?

Thus we see how the gnosis (“wisdom”) of the atheist — in this particular case, Marx — becomes the new criterion by which all operations in (the severely reduced and deformed) external reality are to be conducted, understood, and judged.

Conclusion
Marx is the self-proclaimed Paraclete of an a-borning utopia in which man will be “saved” by being reduced to essentially nothing. With God “gone,” man, as we denizens of First Reality know him, disappears also.

But whatever is left of him becomes a tool for social action. He becomes putty in the hands of whatever self-selected, self-proclaimed Paraclete seeking to promote his favored Second Reality du jour (usually for his own personal benefit) manages to stride onto the public stage and command an audience.

Such a charmed person blesses himself with the power to change human society and history forever, to bring about man’s self-salvation in a New Eden — an earthly utopia— by purely human means.

Of course, there’s a catch: As that great denizen of First Reality, Sir Thomas More, eminently recognized, the translation into English of the New Latin word “utopia” is: No-place.

In short, human beings can conjure up alternative realities all day long. But that doesn't mean that they can make them “stick.” Reality proceeds according to its own laws, which are divine in origin, and so cannot be displaced by human desire or volition, individually or collectively.

And yet the Marxian expectation argues otherwise.

Out of such fantastic, idiotic, specifically Marxian/atheist foolishness have great revolutions been made. And probably will continue to be made — so long as psychopaths hold the keys to the asylum.

Note:
All quotations from Eric Voëgelin’s article, “Gnostic Socialism: Marx,” in: The Collected Works of Eric Voëgelin, Volume 26 — History of Political Ideas: Crisis and the Apocalypse of Man. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 1999.

©2009 Jean F. Drew

April 4, 2009


TOPICS: Current Events; General Discusssion; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: atheism; atheists; culture; jeandrew; jeanfdrew; marx; reality; voegelin
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To: MissTickly
No doubt I have been touched by it and even internalized it, but it is not the source. My parents LOVE is the source.

Where does "love" come from?

161 posted on 04/06/2009 12:27:38 PM PDT by betty boop (All truthful knowledge begins and ends in experience. — Albert Einstein)
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To: CottShop
our new president is also too blind to recognize that he is playing right into the hands of hte evil one.

Jeepers, CottShop, I thought he was consciously, deliberately working for that guy. I do not think our new president is "blind" at all.

162 posted on 04/06/2009 12:30:30 PM PDT by betty boop (All truthful knowledge begins and ends in experience. — Albert Einstein)
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To: Alamo-Girl
Nor could you receive it even in the face of signs. Nor could you receive it by reasoning alone. It is a gift.

You are absolutely correct. Your belief is based on faith. Good for you. Some of us though, prefer do deal with reality : )

163 posted on 04/06/2009 12:36:26 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: B-Chan
Of course it is. Any attempt to demonstrate the existence of the reality you are perceiving with your senses fails due to a lack of objective evidence. What if this is all a dream? How do you know it isn't? You don't. You, like the rest of us, must assume for the sake of argument that the world we perceive with our senses is Real. And that's true whether you admit it or not.

LOL If I smash your finger with a hammer, I guarantee that you will 'know' that hammer exists : ) You may believe that you are a dream of Vishnu's, but that doesn't cut it in the real world.

164 posted on 04/06/2009 12:40:49 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: xzins
That is not the best prophecy that Christians have by any stretch. The word is “maiden” and maidens who weren’t virgins didn’t survive very long.

Then provide a clear accurate prophecy that only Christ could have fulfilled. That should be as easy as falling off a log : )

165 posted on 04/06/2009 12:43:16 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: P-Marlowe
So why do they hate each other?

They have differing beliefs and the easiest way to unify people is to provide an external enemy.

166 posted on 04/06/2009 12:45:54 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: betty boop
Aha! But I DON'T DO THAT. That is not my method at all. I have to reason things through for myself. Faith and reason are not mutually-exclusive terms.

Then how do you reconcile stories in the Bible that are obviously not true with reality as we know it? Do you take them as allegories or parables? I can understand that line of reasoning, but then you can't take the Bible literally.

That is where the cognitive dissonance comes in : )

167 posted on 04/06/2009 12:51:59 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: LeGrande
If I smash your finger with a hammer, I guarantee that you will 'know' that hammer exists

Why? Because your senses perceive pain and that is somehow more valid than any other senses?

You make the assumptions that there exists an objective reality by which our senses give us generally valid information. Even "I think therefore I am" Descartes had to invoke God in order to justify an external reality.

168 posted on 04/06/2009 12:56:56 PM PDT by dan1123 (Liberals sell it as "speech which is hateful" but it's really "speech I hate".)
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To: betty boop
I wonder why LeGrande invests so much time and energy in debunking Christianity. What's it to him if we Christians believe in God? We acknowledge his right to disbelieve, though we think he's wrong to do it. Why can't he simply return the favor?

Hmm, you post an article attacking atheists and then have the audacity to ask me to refrain from attacking Christian beliefs? LOL The hypocrisy around here is amazing.

169 posted on 04/06/2009 12:58:49 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: betty boop; Gondring; Ahithophel; MissTickly; B-Chan; dan1123; Alamo-Girl
If man can grant rights to non-human entities, e.g., apes (as recently happened in Italy I believe), then what do rights actually mean? What is a "right?"

Quite so, boop. The inflation of rights destroys the value of human rights just as monetary inflation destroys the value of money. One can’t believe the cause/effect is either accidental or incidental.

So it is that the idea (inflation) has more than one kind of application in more than one field (as in, economics, cosmology, and, now it seems, in human rights). Maybe that is why we should insist that the idea of ‘rights’ must continue to be modified by the idea ‘human.’

170 posted on 04/06/2009 1:02:25 PM PDT by YHAOS
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To: Diamond

Did I say I was more significant than a fish? No. In fact, I think all life is pretty significant. I am not keeping score for the humans.

“how you account on atheist terms for your groundless assumption of significance and objective purpose for your existence. “


171 posted on 04/06/2009 1:03:15 PM PDT by MissTickly
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To: betty boop

Instinct and the abilty to feel.

“Where does “love” come from?”


172 posted on 04/06/2009 1:07:48 PM PDT by MissTickly
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To: dan1123
You make the assumptions that there exists an objective reality by which our senses give us generally valid information. Even "I think therefore I am" Descartes had to invoke God in order to justify an external reality.

You are confusing logic and mental constructs with reality. I will grant you that my mental construct of reality is not reality, but my senses and mental constructs are robust enough to determine that an objective reality exists.

I am reminded of the story of Moses healing the sick with the serpent around the staff. I see it with a twist. All we have to do to be saved is to open our eyes and see reality for what it actually is. Where God asks you to deny reality and believe in faith.

173 posted on 04/06/2009 1:12:34 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: MissTickly
Instinct and the abilty to feel.

Where does the instinct come from?

174 posted on 04/06/2009 1:17:54 PM PDT by betty boop (All truthful knowledge begins and ends in experience. — Albert Einstein)
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To: LeGrande
my senses and mental constructs are robust enough to determine that an objective reality exists.

Based on your assumptions that your senses or your perception of them aren't deceiving you. Is there any other reason in your mind for the existence of external reality? Or, why is there an external reality in the first place?

175 posted on 04/06/2009 1:18:52 PM PDT by dan1123 (Liberals sell it as "speech which is hateful" but it's really "speech I hate".)
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To: LeGrande
Hmm, you post an article attacking atheists....

The article doesn't "attack" atheists; it merely explains them. Or rather one of them, the paradigmatic atheist, Karl Marx.

You, on the other hand, are just bashing Christians.

176 posted on 04/06/2009 1:21:11 PM PDT by betty boop (All truthful knowledge begins and ends in experience. — Albert Einstein)
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To: LeGrande

I’m not a biblical “literalist.” I’m not any kind of “ist” at all as far as I can tell.


177 posted on 04/06/2009 1:22:42 PM PDT by betty boop (All truthful knowledge begins and ends in experience. — Albert Einstein)
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To: YHAOS; Alamo-Girl; Gondring; Ahithophel; MissTickly; B-Chan; dan1123
The inflation of rights destroys the value of human rights just as monetary inflation destroys the value of money.

Indeed. Well-said, dear YHAOS!

Thank you ever so much for sharing your thoughts!

178 posted on 04/06/2009 1:25:36 PM PDT by betty boop (All truthful knowledge begins and ends in experience. — Albert Einstein)
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To: dan1123
Based on your assumptions that your senses or your perception of them aren't deceiving you. Is there any other reason in your mind for the existence of external reality? Or, why is there an external reality in the first place?

No to the first question and there is no why to the second question. The really fascinating question though is how. Answering that question is my life's quest, the process of discovering reality and truth is my goal, that might make me a Taoist.

179 posted on 04/06/2009 1:29:09 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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To: betty boop
You, on the other hand, are just bashing Christians.

Pointing out that Christians don't have any true prophecies is 'bashing Christians?" I can play all innocent too : )

180 posted on 04/06/2009 1:32:28 PM PDT by LeGrande (I once heard a smart man say that you canÂ’t reason someone out of something that they didnÂ’t reaso)
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