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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Kevin Faulkner said...

Browne's humanity well worthy of imitation but we cannot simply return to his era. He strived to reconcile science with religion but hardly anyone reads his discourse 'The Garden of Cyrus' any more; its perhaps the earliest writing arguing for the existence of intelligent design, and 'proving' God's existence through the Platonic Forms in Nature. Browne's commonplace note-books include prayers which show how God was in his thought at all time, but even he recognised that Science and Religion were beginning to part ways. It remains the task of our age to somehow reconcile these two alienated spheres, science and religion, Man and God's wisdom.

6 February 2012 at 11:31

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Hydriotaphia

I haven't worked-through to Garden of Cyrus yet, but I will do so.

I don't think there is any possibility of returning to Browne's era, whatever that might mean - my fear is that we will return to a much simpler and more violent era than Browne's - even though he lived through the English Civil War.

6 February 2012 at 12:39

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Peter S. said…

This is the key issue: how to find or create a spiritual ‘modus vivendi’ that allows one to be ‘in the modern world but not of it’? This is the terrible spiritual position of the individual embedded in modernity, for, if a normative civilization quite naturally provides supports for the remembrance of God and the spiritual life, the modern world substitutes, in practical fact, these supports with impediments. In effect, instead of swimming with the spiritual current of a normative civilization, the individual must swim against the current of the modern world if he is to escape spiritual ruination.

As Don Colacho – whose aphorisms are available once again: http://don-colacho.blogspot.com –critically observes, “Today the individual must gradually reconstruct inside himself the civilized universe that is disappearing around him.” [http://don-colacho.blogspot.com/2010/10/2046.html]

There is a twofold effort that is required: intellectual, in that one must see through the errors of the modern conception, and build, for oneself at least, an understanding of things that relates back to the Transcendent and to spiritual realities; operative, in that one should try, in whatever partial and intermittent manner, to orient one’s daily life toward prayer and the remembrance of God. Modern life is inherently centrifugal, scattering one’s attention to the periphery; the task before one is to return, again and again, to the Center, to quite literally ‘re-collect’ oneself before God.

As Frithjof Schuon recommends, “In short, one must live ‘in a little garden of the Holy Virgin,’ without unhealthy curiosity and without ever losing sight of the essential content and goal of life. That is ‘holy poverty’ or ‘holy childlikeness’; it is also, so to speak, ‘holy monotony’.... dominated by the proximity of the sacred, and on the margin from the uproar of this lower world.... This seems obvious, but most believers take no account of it.”

6 February 2012 at 16:47

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@ Peter S - well expressed - and the DC aphorism is very suggestive.

6 February 2012 at 17:47

Anonymous Kristor said...

@ Peter S. - thanks for your recent contributions to orthospheric comboxes. I find your comments quite valuable.

6 February 2012 at 20:27

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Peter S. said…

Dear Dr. Charlton & Kristor,

Thank you for your very kind comments above – thanks also to Proph as well for the cross-posting. Best to you all.

7 February 2012 at 14:54