I'm not a therapist or a self-help guru or even a particularly well-adjusted person, but being in a state of war with myself "in my own head" as Pressfield puts it, sounds like a pretty miserable state of being and not a very helpful or healthy one.
-
-
"It's a short book, you can read it in an hour" - er. The Gita is a sub-unit of the much longer Mahabharata. And I am told while one can *read* the Gita quickly, to actually understand its full religious import takes much more serious study.
Näytä tämä ketju -
In part because there is a vast apparatus of commentaries and supporting texts, along with important religious practices which either comment on or contextualize the Gita.
Näytä tämä ketju -
Alright, he's giving the Spark Notes version of the Bhagavad Gita. I'm not really qualified to assess his reading of the Gita, but I don't have a lot of confidence given how badly he mauled the ancient texts I do have the expertise to assess.
Näytä tämä ketju -
And then he sets up the next episode where he's going to talk about how the Spartans (of course, ugh...) exemplify the...ideology and practice of the Gita? This I am more comfortable calling BS on.
Näytä tämä ketju -
J.E. Lendon's Soldier's and Ghosts really is the best starting point for understanding Greek martial values. They are not about harmonizing the person, or overcoming inner failings, etc. Greek martial values are all about the competitive demonstration of excellence.
Näytä tämä ketju -
Unlike the concepts of dharma and karma, the Greek concept of excellence (arete) is fundamentally amoral; the thread of connection to the 'selfless action' of the Gita is thin to the point of non-existence.
Näytä tämä ketju -
Now, obviously, the Greeks - and the Spartans - have an idea of the subservience or service of an individual to the community, but it is expressed as a obedience owed (and trained or enforced by violence) or a 'kratos' (power, strength) exerted by/to that community
Näytä tämä ketju -
Instead, the key focus is on the ἀγών ('Agon') - the contest, the competition, the struggle - the moment where two individuals, or two communities compete, with one proving its excellence (arete) over the other.
Näytä tämä ketju -
And the basic Greek assumption that comes out again and again in their writing is that all humans and all communities are continually seeking agones as opportunities to prove or demonstrate their excellence with the goal of being 'inferior to none.'
Näytä tämä ketju -
These are massive philosophical differences that Pressfield is just casually collapsing and pretending that the assumptions being made are universal and universally applicable. They very clearly are not!
Näytä tämä ketju -
Lendon's book is actually great for this, because he juxtaposes the development of Greek martial values - which have to undergo some changes as their warfare changes! - and Roman martial values. And they're really different, despite the two cultures being in conversation!
Näytä tämä ketju -
Roman virtus isn't Greek arete - the former is an impelling force, the later a quality of skill. Latin has 'discrimen' - the 'testing point' or 'point of decision' - as the nearest match for 'agon' but the 'discrimen' might not be a contest at all.
Näytä tämä ketju -
'Discrimen' means 'seperate' at its core (we get our word discriminate from it) so it has that sense of 'showing the difference' (like English 'proving one's quality'), but no contest is required. A firefighter battling a fire is experiencing a moment of discrimen.
Näytä tämä ketju -
So, to conclude this thread for tonight, I think Pressfield has been very badly served by his theoretical framework. He's shaving the corners off of square blocks to make them fit into a round hole which was never very well made in the first place.
Näytä tämä ketju -
And really what is going on here is that he is mobilizing a form of history, badly bent in order to try to fit his modern model of (unhealthy) masculinity (he thinks it is gender neutral, but it's not and Jung of all people would tell him that - as does the book he's citing)...
Näytä tämä ketju -
...and then present that model as timeless when it isn't! The one thing that emerges almost instantly with any serious cross-cultural study of masculinity is that it is often very different, culture to culture and period to period. There are some common elements to be sure...
Näytä tämä ketju -
...but not *these* elements or ideas or really anything so specific. He's taking Ideal Modern Marine Man and presenting it as equivalent to Ideal Roman Man, or Ideal Early Christian Man, or Ideal Greek Man. And it simply wasn't.
Näytä tämä ketju -
And what bothers me the most is I bet many viewers of these things will take both the badly mauled history *and* the distorted view of an 'eternal' masculine warrior-value-code as fact and try to structure their life around it.
Näytä tämä ketju -
But it's that age old historical error: carelessly retrojecting one's modern values back into the past and assuming that people in the past thought exactly as we do now. Alright, g'night everybody.
Näytä tämä ketju
Keskustelun loppu
Uusi keskustelu -
Lataaminen näyttää kestävän hetken.
Twitter saattaa olla ruuhkautunut tai ongelma on muuten hetkellinen. Yritä uudelleen tai käy Twitterin tilasivulla saadaksesi lisätietoja.