“Closed canon” equals a “closed mind/heart”

n the “closed canon” reflects a refusal to venture beyond the confines of one rational consciousness, or even to consider the possibility that such an enterprise is possible. Emily Dickinson beautifully described this encapsulated, endungeoned mind/heart in the mid-nineteenth century with the following poem:

The Soul selects her own society,

Then — shuts the Door —
To her divine Majority —
Present no more —

Unmoved — she notes the Chariots — pausing —
At her low Gate —
Unmoved — an Emperor be kneeling
Upon her Mat —

I’ve known her — from an ample nation —
Choose One —
Then — close the Valves of her attention —
Like Stone —

Her choice of words describing selective attention– “closing the valves of attention like stone”— is intensely vivid and cold. This is the quintessential person that Eric Hoffer had in mind when he wrote, “The True Believer.” These people live in a hermetically-sealed prison and will probably gravitate toward a social/denominational group in which people of a similar persuasion are similarly ensconced on “the heath of the agreeable, where we bask, agreed upon what we will not ask, bland, sunny, and adjusted by the light of the collected lie.”  (W.H. Auden) This is the “group lie” or “group think” which sometimes is described as “epistemic closure.”

This rigid certainty has infiltrated to conservative right of the American political spectrum which is replete with hyper-conservative religiosity. This close mindedness gave rise to the ludicrous phenomena in 2012 of running a presidential campaign whose slogan, upon close scrutiny, was simply, “We hate Obama.” In in the budget battle of last fall, more than one of them were quoted saying, “We are right” on the issue and in a key Republican committee meeting on the issue they concluded with prayer and a spontaneous singing of the hymn, “Amazing Grace.” And it is no accident that this wing of the party is vehemently against scientists’ warning of global warming and are anti-science in general. They might well be saying, “God said,I believe it, that settles it.”

Life is uncertain. No matter how much we try to deny it, we are extremely vulnerable little critters whose biblically assured “threescore and ten” might prove considerably shorter at any moment. But it is this vulnerability that makes us alive, that reflects a “quickened” spirit, which is what Jesus had in mind with his observation that to find our life we must lose it.  As Norman Brown put it, “To be is to be vulnerable.”

 

 

 

 

2 thoughts on ““Closed canon” equals a “closed mind/heart”

  1. Anne-Marie's avatarAnne-Marie

    At the risk of posting too many comments, I just want to say I love it again. My friendships are deepening because I am daring to be vulnerable. When I am trying to be secure and to be safe, my words are awkward and there is little communication. “The Spirit is the relationship subsisting between all that exists and so holds all in being. She makes everything whole (and holy). Nothing real can be outside relationship. The Spirit is essential relationship and makes all relationships holy. Spirit is communication: the self-revelation and self-giving of one to another which unites and transcends both ‘I’ and ‘Thou’. Spirit is not only the I-Thou of relationship but the we as well. We cannot see communication. We feel its consequences. One of the characteristics of Spirit is that her form and content are one. She discloses herself within the very person who is trying to observe her. She is always present, but cannot be pinned down,” from Jesus: The Teacher Within by Laurence Freeman.

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    1. literarylew's avatar21stcenturyxstian Post author

      Wow! Oh, my dear friend, do not ever hesitate to
      “comment.” I need the affirmation. I am very vulnerable. I am venturing beyond the pale. I am not surprised that you know about Buber and “I-Thou.”.

      Thank you, thank you, thank you.

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