Friday, September 19, 2008

Fantasy

What is fantasy?

In the previous post I wrote about a preliminary definition of Man, or at least three components of Man. To recap, the Instinct is the drive that pushes man to preserve himself. The Intellect is the drive that pushes him to see universal categories of existance. The Imagination is the tool that takes all collected data and categorizes it into essences and accidents for intellectual and instinctual uses.

Fantasy is a result of the three components that we already mentioned.

When Man uses his senses and comes to the Intellectual realization that he has a natural place in the Universe, he is immediately thrown into conflict. This conflict arises from the fact that the Intellect percieves that he is quite literally a very small fish in a tremendously large pond.This intellectual recognition poses a threat to the instinct, the part of Man that is concerned with self preservation. The instinct cannot abide by the fact that Man is not in control of his surroundings.In order to remove this pain the Man constructs scenarios and acts in such a way that will prove he is in control. The fantasy is a defense mechanism. The man cannot accept that he is vulnerable so he constructs an alternative view of the Natural order in which he is supreme.

This was best described by my friend Sean in a post at Matt's blog which can be accessed here:
http://kankanchadash.blogspot.com/2008/08/sean-on-architecture-and-fantasy.html

Man percieves that he is weak. He is vulnerable to the forces of Nature, a mere chill can layway him forever. What is man's response? He builds shelter. Shelter is necessary for him to survive the elements. How though does man relate to the shelter.Instead of viewing the house as a testament to his own weakness, he places the house in an alternative reality. The house is the fortress that protects Man from all harm. It is a testament not to weakness but to strength. My what a strong and beautiful bulding this is, surely it bears witness to the power and glory of its owner. This is fantasy at its clearest. The man has seen his weakness and responded to it by creating a monument to his strength, something that allows him to deny he ever was weak.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Man- Intellect, Instinct, Imagination

I have the tremendous bracha to have just started a new chavrusah with my friend Jonny. The topic of our study is Mitzvos and the Mishneh Torah. Our first hour of study brought out some amazing ideas and I thought it would be appropriate to share them , perhaps as the first in a series of posts resulting from this new endeavor.


Since our chavrusah is to focus on the area of Mitzvos as a system, we thought it would be beneficial to start out by defining some basic ideas that are relevant to mitzvos. Today we took on the concept of " Man".


What is Man?


This is a question that is all to hastily answered by most people. The immediate answer could be, "man is an animal". This is flawed because it fails to capture man's essence. Another answer could be " Man is intellect", this is flawed because man is not purely intellect. A more subtle approach would be the synthesis of these two catchphrases into " Man is a rational animal".This answer is also flawed but for a different reason than the two previous. This answer is flawed because the term " rational animal" is so in need of definition as to be practically meaningless.


In order to properly formulate the definition we first examined "Animal".


When an animal, say a cougar wakes up in the morning, it has immediate instinctual drives.The cougar is hungry so it goes out to the field and spots antelope.The cougars instinct tells him that this antelope is a food source. The cougar pounces on its prey , kills it, eats it and satisfies its instinctual need for food. When the cougar needs to mate, it again goes to the field spots a female cougar utilizes it to his procreative need and satisfies his instinct. When the cougar needs shade it finds a tree and rests beneath it allowing the boughs to keep the sun's rays from causing harm.The animal is capable of seeing good for himself. The cougar can see a shady spot and instinct will guide it to rest, a plump antelope to eat, and a young female to sport with.


How does the instinctual gratification of the Cougar compare to that of Man?


When Man wakes up in the morning he is also hungry. He can gather food, he understands what is and is not food. Similarly he needs to procreate so he looks for and finds a mate. He relates to the instinctual needs similarly to the cougar. He needs to eat, he needs to procreate, he needs shelter. Man also has another element though. When he gazes on an apple tree, he does not just see food, he does not just see shade. There is something beyond the immediate instinct that Man has the ability to comprehend. Man can see the apple tree recognizes it as a source of physical good and then can make a breakthrough. All of a sudden he can see the tree and place it into a general category of "Plant" and can fit that into part of the overall ecosystem. He can perceive the tree as both food and as part of a universal category.



This ability to see the world both in terms of immediate instinct and universal categories is our working definition for " intellect". When the cougar wakes up he immediately starts collecting data and uses it to satisfy his instinctual needs. When Man wakes up he collects data for his instinctual needs and also uses that data and fits it into universal categories. He sees the world as both individual circumstances for fulfilling his instinct and a unified order of nature.



We now have a clear distinction between Man and Animal.The question now is how does the Man take the data that he has collected and use said data?

As the sensory data is collected it is acted on by the " imagination". The Imagination is the part of man that collects the sensory data and orders it into essences and accidents based on the frameworks of either the Instinct or the Intellect.For instance the Man can see a bone lying on the ground. His imagination will then categorize this bone as " essentially a weapon with which I can fend off predators"( an example of the Imagination viewing instinctual essences and accidents), or he can see this bone and view it as " essentially a part of the skeleton of an antelope" and intellectually fit it into the universal system of nature.

To recap we have three aspects, Instinct- the part of man that tells him he is hungry,he needs shade, he needs reproduction.Intellect- the part that puts the data that his senses collect into categorical terms, views everything he comes in contact with as part of a universal. Imagination- the part that takes the data and views it in terms of essences and accidents of both the Instinctual and Intellectual.

To be continued....