A marriage of paradigms: autonomy - heteronomy; Mind
– mind
John Heron
From
Heron, J., Paradigm Papers, published by British Postgraduate Medical
Federation, University of London, in association with Human Potential
Research Project, University of Surrey, December 1981.
I use the terms autonomy-heteronomy in a very
updated, very neo-Kantian sense. Autonomy is a concept I apply to a
person acting outside the compulsive constraints of denied distress
feelings. The person is functioning freely and flexibly, sensitive
to and aware of what is going on in the present situation, and
making choices appropriate to what is going on. Feelings are
positive, they don't pressurize behaviour; there is intelligent
discrimination of what is actually happening; creative, imaginative
and adaptive choices are made. The person is acting rationally and
sensitively, expressing norms and values to which he or she is
internally committed in a way that is fitting to the present
situation.
Heteronomy is a concept I apply to a person who is
unawarely acting out old denied distress feelings. The behaviour is
maladaptive and compulsive, driven by hidden distress and
interrupted, frozen needs; the situation is seen stereotypically in
terms of old inhibiting conditioning without aware discrimination of
what is actually happening and what the possibilities of the
situation are. The person is acting irrationally and insensitively,
expressing distorted norms and values that have been scripted in
from outside and that are not fitting to the real needs of the
situation. Heteronomous behaviour covers not simply actions which
our culture would call neurotic, deviant, disturbed, maladjusted; it
also covers a good deal of conventionally legitimated behaviour:-
what goes on in committees, meetings and conferences: a lot of
standard teaching and educational practice; some research activity;
how parents and other adults relate to children; how the sexes
relate to each other; political activity; and so on, and so on. In
my view, we live in a mixed autonomous-heteronomous society, but one
which is in so many areas cripplingly heteronomous.
I think it is important to compare, at this point,
the autonomy-heteronomy paradigm just defined with the enormously
influential (in the East and increasingly nowadays in the West)
Mind-mind paradigm of the East, especially in the Hindu and Buddhist
traditions. "Mind" with a capital "M" is consciousness as such, not
the consciousness of this or that person or entity, but that
universal awareness that transcends any particular local eddy or
focus within in. Whereas "mind" with a small "m" is the everyday,
idiosyncratic consciousness of the individual: the apparent
empirical ego with its ideas, images, feelings, moods, wishes,
wants, goals, choices, and so on.
The classic doctrine, e.g.: in Nyingma Buddhism, in
Tantra, is that mind by its very nature, antecedent to any human
intention or action, is a confusion and distraction, precipitating
deluded pursuits. The fundamental delusion of the human condition is
inappropriately and blindly to seek through mind and its restless
goal-oriented activity what can only be known through openness to
Mind and the transcendence of mind. The mind, desiring this or that,
finds only subtle dissatisfaction in its achievements and
fulfilments, as long as it is unaware that its pursuits are a
misbegotten attempt to achieve through its own activity the bliss of
Mind that transcends and is other than such activity. The Mind-mind
model, then, points to unfinished business not of the past but of
the present.
What is displaced into mental activity now is not
past distress, but the unacknowledged discomfort of present
alienation from Mind.
The classic oriental route for transcendence, for
the consciousness shift from mind to Mind, is self-remembering,
disidentification, noticing, witnessing, satipatthana,
Mindfulness: never being fully engrossed in the pursuits of mind,
but whatever one is thinking; feeling or doing, having an extra
margin of awareness that is wider than and embraces these pursuits.
In this way the activities of mind become transformed and
transcended by openness to Mind.
There are certain tensions between the Mind-mind
paradigm and the autonomy-heteronomy paradigm. The Mind-mind
paradigm is traditionally associated with what in Buddhism is called
the doctrine of anatta or no-self: the view that there is no
permanent or detectable or actual centre of everyday consciousness,
no self that is the focus or reference point for thought, imagery,
desire, choice and so on. The perturbations of mind become
hypostatized as the experience of a self: but this on the ancient
Buddhist analysis is a delusion - no such self exists. To imagine
that it does exist and does have legitimate aspirations, needs and
interests, is only to get further locked into the illusions of mind.
For the doctrine of anatta, illusory selves become addicted
to looking back with longing, pain or regret and to looking forward
with fear, hope or expectation, and thus simply miss out on the ever
presence of Mind.
By contrast, the autonomy-heteronomy paradigm is
very much associated with a philosophy of the person. It presupposes
there is a distinctive entity, the person, with real human
capacities, the frustration of which can lead to hurt and behaviour
distortion. On this view, the autonomous person is not an illusion
but a being who makes authentic choices and exercises intelligent
discrimination. The person is significantly self-determining and
self-creating: coming into being in every situation through the
exercise of choice here and now; and in relation with other persons.
The person has fundamental human rights, has responsibility, is
accountable to self and others. And the person is enquiring,
creative, expressive, celebratory, delighting in unique,
idiosyncratic ways of symbolizing his or her experience. This
philosophy of the person that underlies the autonomy-heteronomy
paradigm is clearly at odds with the doctrine of anatta that
underlies the Mind-mind paradigm. For the doctrine of anatta
is also the doctrine of no person.
But the two basic paradigms, of autonomy-heteronomy
and Mind-mind, are not themselves incompatible. The difficulty lies
with the ancient doctrine of anatta or no self: it fails to
make a crucial distinction between separateness of being and
distinctness of being. To say that from the standpoint of the
reality of Mind there is no separate self, is not also to say that
from this standpoint there is no distinct person. What is separate,
cut off, closed on itself, certainly cannot interact with and be
part of a greater whole. But what is distinct can interact with and
be part of a greater whole: like the distinct colours and forms
simultaneously apprehended by someone appreciating a painting; or
like the different distinct sounds simultaneously experienced by
some one enjoying a moment of orchestration. As Plotinus brings out
magnificently in the eighth book of the Enneads, distinctness of
individual beings and unity of Being are mutually enhancing. In
stressing the via negativa, the transcendence of mind and
openness to Mind, through the doctrine of anatta, no
separate self, Eastern approaches have lost sight of the
complementary pole: the via expressiva, the immanence of Mind
within mind, the philosophy of distinctness of personal being within
an orchestrated whole.
A person caught up in the perturbations of mind can
at the same time suffer the illusion of being a separate self cut
off from Mind.
By contrast, a person can be open to Mind and
achieve distinctness of being without the illusion of separateness
of being, moreover a distinctness that is unfolding and developing.
Reality is One and Many. To see only the Many as innumerable
separates and discount the One is an illusion. To see only the One
and discount the Many as phantasms is also an illusion. To act
within a bipolar reality we may ofttimes need a disjunctive,
unipolar logic that stresses one pole or the other, this or that,
part or whole, one or many, here or there. To comprehend a
bipolar reality we need a conjunctive, bipolar logic, which replaces
analytic disjunction with synthetic conjunction: One and Many. We
need to think in simultaneous bipolar terms.
The human relationship that has been the vehicle for
transmitting the doctrine of no-self has been the ancient
hierarchical one of master-disciple, guru-chela. The master's role,
through the alchemy of his presence and teaching and prescriptions,
is lovingly to break up the disciple's empirical ego, to dismantle
the illusory parameters of the everyday self, so that the disciple
can enter the heritage that has always been there unnoticed - Mind
as bliss. The method is that of surrender, obedience, satsang,
meditative transcendence. It is the passive, quietest path, the
via negativa, the flight to God from the works of God:
the disciple, through attunement to the master, simply transcends,
dissociates from tension, distress and the phenomenal world.
Moksha, release, is the goal. It is not a method of inquiry but
a method of salvation and the master is the infallible guide. The
master already knows all that counts as real knowledge: what is
called for is surrender to him, not the spirit of autonomous inquiry
which considers him the subject of appropriate sorts of inquiry as
much as anyone or anything else.
The human relationship which in my view is the best
vehicle for developing the via expressiva and
increasing distinctness of personal being is the peer relation:
persons in reciprocal and co-operating interaction, emerging from
heteronomy to autonomy. The approach is that of cooperative inquiry,
of personal growth through mutual aid, of social and political
self-determination. The human condition is fully owned, entered into
and worked through. Humanity is celebrated, affirmed. The phenomenal
world is a field of inquiry, expression and creation. Persons
through processes of parity and mutuality generate a culture which
has overtones of the transcendental, yet which is an autonomous
creation in its own right.
If in the oriental master-disciple arrangements
there is no complementary and polar emphasis on parity, autonomy,
inquiry, expressiveness and distinctness of personal being, then the
result is likely to be a very subtle oppression of persons, leading
to spiritual conformity and pseudo or induced enlightenment,
contingent upon sustained proximity and subordination to the master.
Conversely, in purely peer interactions for emerging from heteronomy
to autonomy, there may be only minimal openness to Mind. For no
human presence or activity may be representative of that
transcendent Presence to which the master traditionally bears
witness.
Again, there is no ultimate incompatibility between
these two ostensibly very different models of a facilitating
relationship. For those who are in a peer relationship system can
rotate amongst themselves the symbolic role of Transcendental
Witness. Such a Transcendental Witness would have a range of
symbolic and ritual functions, bearing witness for and on behalf of
others to the presence of Mind. In such a relationship system,
persons are concerned both with emergence from heteronomy and with
openness to Mind. They seek to explore distinctness of being,
without separateness of being.
The following diagram brings the autonomy-heteronomy
and the Mind-mind paradigms to bear upon each other: Mind is the top
row, mind the bottom row; autonomy is the left column and heteronomy
the right column.
peer
relationship rotating the role of
Transcendental Witness; peer rituals
learning from co-operative inquiry into
altered states of consciousness
encounter with the transpersonal
philosophy of the person
taking creative awareness into life
VIA EXPRESSIVA
(bipolar)
|
traditional master-disciple relationship
surrender, obedience, satsang
learning from authorities
moksha: release, salvation
anatta: no self
living with non-attachment
VIA NEGATIVA
(unipolar) |
research on persons through cooperative
inquiry
physical science
personal growth
human rights and political
self-determination
self-generating culture
organizational development
exercise of aware intelligent judgment
and discrimination
autonomous norms and values
|
 conventionalism,
rigid society
socialization
distress-determined behaviour and norms
conformity
emotional trauma of infancy and birth
innate distracting perturbations of mind |
The shift from heteronomy to autonomy is a shift
from dependence on teachers, inspirers, spiritual directors,
masters (at the level of Mind), and on parents, socialisers,
teachers, educators (at the level of mind), and on the
associated hierarchical concept of knowledge (and of routes to
knowledge) imparted by an authority, to independent co-operative
inquiry and the associated concept of knowledge acquired by a
method evolved among peers. It is also a shift from simply
trying to rise above the distresses of mind, to evolving a
method for dealing with them and resolving them in part at their
own level, e.g. through personal growth and organizational
change.
The heteronomous approach to Mind disregards the
claims of human autonomy. It is not concerned to deal with human
distress at the human level by appropriate human means in order
to achieve a truly distinct style of personal being.
It is a transcendental approach still under the
sway of unresolved human distress. It sidesteps the claims of
inquiry, of personal growth at the human level, of political and
organizational restructuring. It has a one-sided
distress-determined doctrine of anatta or no self thus
suppressing the possibility of distinct and developing personal
expression. And it has an associated distress-determined
doctrine of moksha or release: the sole direction is
toward salvation, bliss, enlightenment, delivery from the wheel
of rebirth - for the achievement of which the whole process of
inquiry becomes redundant. But where there is no autonomous
inquiry into Mind and the routes to Mind, the result is a
chronic distress-determined dependence on and undiscriminating
allegiance to a master, the pathological nature of which it is
difficult to spot precisely because the master seems to give so
much in the way of subtle energy, uplift, challenge and
spiritual release. Human beings in so many cultures have always
been uncritically susceptible to a combination of charismatic
domination and uplift. But the charge remains: "enlightenment",
spiritualization, attained by abandoning exercise of that
inalienable human endowment of intelligent, discriminating
inquiry, is but pseudo-enlightenment. Charismatic influence is
not self-justifying. Its very potent ability to penetrate,
dominate, refine, energize and sway souls is the very reason why
the filter of suitably defined discriminating inquiry is so
important.
The use of the doctrines of anatta, no
self, inevitably leads to the attempt, unwittingly, to suppress
the inalienable reality of distinctness of personal being. As in
all such endeavours, what is denied reasserts itself in
distorted form. So in no self ashrams, the self reappears,
subtly aggrandized as the deus inflatus of the guru, a
pseudo-divinity feeding off the suppressed distinctness and
autonomy of the devotee. Since the devotees are repaid for the
sacrifice of their projected autonomy by a flood of energizing,
refining and conscious-raising charisma, the whole dynamic
becomes self-locking and apparently self-justifying - and
remarkably impervious to accurate diagnosis.
But the pathology is not difficult to spot:
- The exclusive and special claims made for each master,
without regard for similar claims made for other masters.
- The resultant tacit but clear competition in the market
place between masters for potential devotees.
- The implied or often quite explicit dismissal by one master
of the claims, status and validity of other masters.
- The almost complete isolation of one master and his devotees
from all
other masters and their devotees. There is no ecumenical
movement
among masters: each rules a totally separatist spiritual
kingdom.
- The primitive, autocratic model of decision-making made
within the ashram and the outposts of the kingdom; the absence
of open, consultative and participative government; the internal
inhibition of inquiry into how the organization runs, both
politically in terms of decision-making and economically in
terms of finance.
- The internal proscription of discriminating inquiry into
gurudom as a deluded preoccupation of the illusory separate
self. And a similar dismissal of the whole idea of peer inquiry
into altered states of consciousness.
- The often chaotic, contradictory statements, teachings,
prescriptions given by the master, always rationalized out and
explained away by devotees as special aids to enlightenment.
- The continuous, subtle invalidation by the master of his
devotees as being lost in the illusion of a separate self.
- The oppressive and necessary exclusion of devotees from
enlightenment since there is only room for one master at a time.
The absolute hierarchical, spiritual dominance of the master
guarantees that the very enlightenment which the master purports
to offer his devotees will never be attained by them. The
devotees thus sell their souls to the master to sustain his
"enlightenment" at the expense of achieving their own.
- The subtle, coercive pressure exercised by devotees on
visitors to the kingdom to surrender, join, follow the master.
- The patriarchal, sexist norms sometimes found operative in
the internal arrangements of the kingdom. And so on.
There is of course a profound, creative tension
between charismatic potency and discriminating inquiry. The
former tends to disperse and scatter the sort of conceptual
coherence that is necessary for the latter. A lot of charismatic
energy empties the mind. A lot of close conceptual concentration
shuts off charismatic input. The challenge is not to be unipolar
and make a great virtue of a charismatically emptied mind; but
to be bipolar and create a balance between true charismatic
openness and a suitably subtle grid or mesh of concepts. This
needs working at. The balance is between Mind and mind; between
the transpersonal and the discriminating, distinctive person.
The autonomous approach to Mind is the
approach of co-operative inquiry among peers into the
transpersonal and altered states of consciousness.
Transcendental aspiration, openness, commitment and encounter
are balanced by the exercise of a suitably subtle discriminatory
intelligence and inquiry. The focus for such inquiry is
distinctness of personal being achieved through autonomous
development within the domain of mind. Such development involves
personal growth and unfoldment including the human resolution of
distress-determined attitudes and behaviour. It involves the
creation of appropriate paradigms of inquiry for the domains of
both mind and Mind. And it involves creating appropriate
decision-making procedures, social structures and processes so
that persons can work with and for each other: a society
clarified in mind and open to Mind.
Whereas the heteronomous approach to Mind tends
to put down mind, invalidate it, see it only as something to get
out of and be delivered from, the autonomous approach to Mind
sees mind as potentially artefactual, as that which can
be shaped into a domain of beauty in its own right, and as that
which can become a highly tuned instrument for inquiry into
Mind. Persons can emerge distinctly and autonomously within mind
and then shine resplendently within Mind. The via expressiva
is bipolar, conjunctive, distinguishing poles only to have them
enhance each other with ever greater brilliance.
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