Francis Berger
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The Loss of Primal Reality Via a Breach Between the Subjective and Objective

12/28/2023

7 Comments

 
Introversion and extroversion are not only Jung’s best-known psychological types but are also grounded in everyday language. Even those unfamiliar with Jung’s work know introverted means inward-turning and extroverted means outward-turning. Thus, an introverted person is more inclined to be shy, withdrawn, and reserved, while an extroverted individual is bold, outgoing, and sociable. As is the case with most classifications, the difference is relative, and it is quite common for an individual to be both introverted and extroverted at the same time.

From a Christian perspective, introversion could point to a Christian for whom the faith is largely a matter of delving into himself to explore spiritual depths, whereas extroversion denotes a believer who directs his faith into activity aimed at the world and man. I suppose the ideal Christian would be both introverted and extroverted – turned inward enough to be attuned to internal spiritual guidance but also turned outward enough to engage with the world and other people positively and creatively.

Nikolai Berdyaev was among those who believed that a blend of Christian introversion and extroversion was desirable. At the same time, he also discerned the danger of distorted introversion and extroversion. After acknowledging the positive characteristics of Christian introversion – turning within to plumb spiritual depths – and Christian extroversion – going out in creative activity to the world and man, Berdyaev highlighted two potential risks inherent within the two “turns.”

To what extent may introversion mean egocentricity and extroversion mean estrangement and exteriorization? 

For Berdyaev, egocentricity, estrangement, and exteriorization all stand as examples of objectivization (also translated as objectification), which he defined in the following way:

In objectification there are no primal realities, but only symbols. The objective spirit is merely a symbolism of spirit. Spirit is realistic while cultural and social life are symbolic. In the object there is never any reality, but only the symbol of reality. The subject alone always has reality. 

Therefore, in objectification and its product, the objective spirit, there can be no sacred reality, but only its symbolism. In the objective history of the world, nothing transpires but a conventional symbolism; the idea of sacredness is peculiar to the existential world, to existential subjects. 

The real depths of spirit are apprehensible only existentially in the personal experience of destiny, in its suffering, nostalgia, love, creation, freedom, and death.

Spiritual disconnection lies at the heart of all objectivization. A particular orienting tendency of the subject causes the disconnection, which occurs when Christians enslave themselves to symbols and shut themselves off from primal reality and spirit to which the symbols point. Symbols are objects but also intermediaries, bridges connecting a subject and primal reality. Objectivization occurs when a subject walks onto the bridge but does not cross. Or when the subject regards the bridge as the other side.

Concerning Christian introversion, egocentricity occurs when the individual turns away from the world within himself and becomes enclosed, engulfed by his ego, and focused only on himself without taking note of the world or other people. Within such an egocentric state, the inward turner fails to align with internal spiritual guidance or plumb spiritual depths.

In the end, he also turns away from the divine. He steps onto the bridge, encounters himself – his ego as an object – and mistakes this for the primal self, the core subject of his subjectivity. Confined to his ego, he also refuses to engage with subjects in the external world. Thus, he alienates himself from the divine within and estranges himself from the divine beyond him.

The other extreme – extroversion – involves Christians ejecting the spirit exclusively into the external world and regarding that exteriorization as the culmination and pinnacle of spirituality, thereby overpowering and enslaving human subjectivity. By refusing to turn inward, the subject remains fixated on religious objects, ceremonies, rites, social aspects, and traditions, not as intermediaries or symbols pointing toward primal reality but as primal realities within themselves. Authentic, spiritually creative activity in the world and with others is substituted with mindless obedience and “going through the motions” that pose as faith.

Berdyaev referred to these distortions of introversion and extroversion as “breaches between the subjective and the objective” whereby the objective either entirely washes out the subject and enslaves human subjectivity or arouses such repugnance and disgust within the subject as to imprison subjectivity within itself. Berdyaev considers both to be slaves. The subject consumed by his ego is a slave to himself, and the subject consumed by the world is a slave to the world. Both are examples of unformed or disintegrated personalities.

As mentioned earlier, the source of the breach lies in a “certain directing tendency of the subject” or, more simply, an orientation of consciousness. The directing tendencies of the subject outlined above worked in the past when man was at an earlier stage of consciousness development but neither serves to connect man to primal reality now, as Berdyaev outlines below:

In the primitive stages of civilization, the ejection of the subject into the object, the social group, into a horde, into a clan, predominates. At the summit of civilization, the engulfing of the subject by his ego prevails. But at the summit of civilization there takes place also a return to the primitive horde.

Free personality is a flower that blooms but rarely in the life of the world. The immense majority of people is not made up of persons. In this majority, personality is either potential or else already disintegrated. Individualism certainly does not mean that the personality is rising into prominence. Or it implies that only as the effect of an inaccurate use of language. Individualism is a naturalistic philosophy, whereas personalism is a philosophy of the spirit.

Berdyaev uses personalism and personality to define his belief in the subject as the ultimate center of primal reality. Objects (symbols) are meant to serve as intermediaries between subjects; a means through which one subject (a unit of primal reality) may approach, apprehend, and relate to another subject (another unit of primal reality).

Objects are not subjects within themselves. When they are treated as such, they become bridges to nowhere. The reality they are meant to identify is obscured, and a false or partial reality settles into its place, leaving the subject (as a primal unit of reality) disconnected from primal reality.

The withdrawn, egocentric Christian cannot connect to reality because he is too ensconced within his false self to approach primal reality. The outgoing, external Christian cannot connect because he has turned away from himself as a unit of primal reality in favor of religious objects, which he regards as the very epitomes of spiritual reality rather than merely as bridges to spiritual reality.

Neither approach works anymore. Some blend of the two seems to be required to attain Berdyaev's "philosophy of spirit", which addresses another question concerning the “crisis of symbolism” — Which has experienced the greater disintegration? The symbol serving as a bridge to primal reality or man’s consciousness of primal reality as primal reality, starting with himself as a unit of primal reality?
7 Comments
bruce g charlton
12/29/2023 08:18:28

"Some blend of the two seems to be required"

A middle way, or half-and-half is never the answer to these metaphysical problems.

The problem here is that we ourselves create the problem of the separation of subjective and objective, by using this as a fundamental and structuring assumption of analysis. Having injected the assumption, we then fail to overcome it!

But the right answer is not available off-the-shelf - in particular, this problem can't be solved by asserting the oneness of all things.

That's why I have felt for a while that fundamental metaphysical re-examination is necessary to escape from where we have trapped ourselves - much more fundamental than anything in mainstream culture.

And this is where I think William James was right about pluralism as the vast unexamined alternative to the entirety of Western Philosophy *and* Eastern Philosophy.

But actually doing it, thinking it - rather than just saying it - is not easy (and was not done by W James!).

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Francis Berger
12/29/2023 10:04:20

@ Bruce - The blend refers to a combination of extroverted and introverted spiritual traits in this mortal life. I don't think it's accurate to refer to this as a middle way.

I mean, what are the alternatives at the poles? Turn your back on the world and beings and spiritually submerge wholly into yourself? Or jettison your spirituality into externals and worship that?

In this mortal life, we should be both spiritually introverted and extroverted. Introverted enough to access spiritual guidance and find a spiritual center within ourselves -- extroverted enough to go out into the world and men in some form of creative activity. The extroversion need not extend beyond a close circle, but it's still spiritual extroversion.

Otherwise, I agree. I think the corner we have painted ourselves into revolves around our inability to really immerse ourselves in the primal reality of subjects (Beings) and the purpose of Creation as a place of relationships between subjects. This does indeed point to some kind of pluralism.

The whole subject-object dichotomy is partial/incomplete. I am beginning to think of it more in terms of subject-object-subject, with the object serving as a means of connection/exchange between subjects.

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Francis Berger
12/29/2023 10:09:02

Perhaps with the goal of dropping or diminishing the object altogether because it will become superfluous -- at least beyond this mortal life.

bruce g charlton
12/29/2023 18:31:43

I suppose I mean that something higher and more over-arching is needed, by way of explaining such a "combination" of traits. After all, some of the traits are apparent opposites, and the types of combination that are helpful rather than harmful need to be understood by reference to some encompassing concept.

In other words; I think what is needed is whatever lies above and beyond extraversion and introversion - because this is what can order and prioritize them - and if we don't have such an understanding, then the knowledge that a combination is needed can't usefully be put into action.

Francis Berger
12/29/2023 20:09:20

@ Bruce - Yes, you're right. As I mention at the end of the post, neither approach works anymore, some blend of the two seems to be required -- emphasis on seems -- at least to attain Berdyaev's "philosophy of spirit", which I don't completely subscribe to. But the blend would indeed need something overarching to complete it.

For Berdyaev, this overarching, higher thing was his own religious take on personalism, which combined subjective and objective. Though personalism offers many insights, it seems like more "painting oneself into the corner". It has been tackled from so many different and often contradictory angles by so many thinkers from varying backgrounds and periods that the whole concept has been reduced to "mush."

I suppose that's why I ended the post with the question, "Which has experienced the greater disintegration? The symbol serving as a bridge to primal reality or man’s consciousness of primal reality as primal reality, starting with himself as a unit of primal reality?"

I sense the something higher/overarching lies in the answer to that question, or at least in the pondering of that question.



Reply
Lucas
12/30/2023 14:45:53

I have a somewhat germane question. What's the difference between spirit and being in B.? I'm starting Spirit and Reality again, and his juxtaposition of spirit and being is creating a mental block for me, especially since he says spirit is existence. But he hasn't defined being yet and I don't remember if he did in Phil. of Freedom, which I don't have on hand at the moment.

Reply
Francis Berger
12/30/2023 18:38:29

@ Lucas - The more I delve into Berdyaev, the more I realize that his lines of thinking lead to what seem like veritable dead ends and/or contradictions.

Or perhaps more accurately, his heterodox thought succeeded in demonstrating the many gaps, wrong turns, and false claims inherent in traditional/mainstream Christian theologoy/metaphysics, but he did not always succeed in articulating viable alternatives, mostly because he was still "stuck" in the traditional frameworks he criticized. Of course, Berdyaev was the first to admit that his works contained contradictions and inconsistencies. He attributed this to his dynamic and creative approach to philosophy and his abhorrence of establishing doctrines.

Or maybe it's just going over my head sometimes.

Anyway, like the mystic Boehme, Berdyaev believes that freedom is fundamental and precedes all, even being. So being is already secondary to freedom. In this sense, Berdyaev views being as a starting point rather than an end state. Being can have many "states", so to speak.

I think it was in Spirit and Reality where B says, "Spirit is, as it were, the breath of God penetrating man's being and communicating a higher dignity, a higher quality of his existence, inner independence and unity."

Berdyaev rejected the view of beings as determined and determinable objects because at their essence all entities are free and active agencies. What we regard as being - thingness - is actually movements of spirit.

Long story short - spirit is free activity. Activity is prior to being. What we regard as being is the cooling of the free activity of spirit.

I don't know about you, but that still leaves mental blocks for me.

I've linked an article below: "Nikolai Berdyaev and His Ideas on the Fundamental Nature of All Entities." The parts about spirit and objectification may prove helpful.

https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/uram.2.2.109

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