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For me, this quote answers the question with a resounding negative: "In his article, "The Search for Meaning in a Global Civilization," V�clav Havel reports on the return to the archetype: "The relationship to the world that modern science fostered and shaped now appears to have exhausted its potential. . . . It fails to connect with the most intrinsic nature of reality, and with natural human experience. . . . It produces what amounts to a state of schizophrenia: Man as an observer is becoming completely alienated from himself as a being. Classical modern science described only the surface of things, a single dimension of reality. And the more dogmatically science created it as the only dimension, as the very essence of reality, the more misleading it became. Today, for instance, we may know immeasurably more about the universe than our ancestors did, and yet, it increasingly seems they knew something more essential about it than we do . . . . The same thing is true of nature and of ourselves. The more thoroughly all our organs and their functions, their internal structure and the biochemical reactions that take place within them are described, the more we seem to fail to grasp the spirit, purpose, and meaning of the system that they create together and that we experience as our unique ‘self.’ "What makes the Anthropic Principle [the concept that, from the countless possible courses of its evolution, the universe took the only one that enabled life to emerge] and the Gaia Hypothesis [the organic and inorganic portions of the earth’s surface form a single system, a mega-organism] so inspiring? One simple thing: Both remind us, in modern language, . . . of what we have long projected into our forgotten myths, and what perhaps has always lain dormant within us as archetypes. That is, the awareness of our being anchored in the Earth and the universe, the awareness that we are not here alone nor for ourselves alone, but that we are an integral part of higher, mysterious entities against whom it is not advisable to blaspheme. This forgotten awareness is encoded in all religions. . . . It is one of the things that forms the basis of man’s understanding of himself, of his place in the world, and ultimately of the world as such." Excerpt from: "Is Post-Modernism Pass�?" by Sally Morgenthaler, Rev. Magazine, September/October 2001 You can find the entire article at: http://www.onlinerev.com/revmag/0901/passe.html Bonnie Rev. Magazine, Rev Mag online | ||||
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