As usual, kw leaves one guessing as to who the author of the "invalid criticism" might be.
One does, however, find the following in Meyerhoff's
Bald Ambition:
If kw was referring to Meyerhoff's critique of the PTF, then, he found a barely relevant flaw in it,
and then very dishonestly used that to discount the entire argument as being an "invalid criticism."
But, the salient differences noted by
Meyerhoff between change vs. development obviously apply at least as well to stages as to states.
You would think Wilber would have the "altitude" to be able to see that, wouldn't ya?
And, of course, "you're either on the bus or off of it,"
i.e., either psychedelically "saved" ... or not. Hip or square.
Cool, or damned.
By the way, I'm no "Geoffrey come lately" with regard to Robbins' ideas:
I first read his Diet for a New America back around 1990 or so, after I
had already been vegetarian for three years.
Amen, Bertrand. You tell 'em.
What happened was, I had been toodling along quite happily doing the 101 things I'd rather
be doing, without keeping up-to-date
on the latest diuretic effusions of the Bald Bastard of Boulder. But then David Lane's remarkably
restrained response to Tom Floyd's pathetically unresearched, misrepresentation-filled and condescending
"analysis" (don't make me laugh) of Lane's criticisms of kw's misunderstandings of neo-Darwinian
evolution got posted on
Integral World.
And what that finally did, after more than a week of annoying the hell out of me over the
holidaysFloyd really
doesn't have a fucking clue, not that it stops him from pretending to be a "higher holonic" individual,
ostensibly above "adversarial" criticisms of kw's shithead "theories"is to convince me to
get "Norman Einstein" into hard-copy print, for sale to libraries and bookstores, etc.
So, in bringing that text more fully up-to-date,
I finally caved and ordered the new kw book from amazon. (The Toronto Public Library system, moving at
its usual sub-luminal speed, has a bunch of copies "in process," but I didn't feel like waiting.)
Of course, there's (predictably) very little information in the new "masterpiece"
that isn't already available elsewhere (esp. online).
Then, there's the Psych 101 drivel from kw about homophobia (p. 120-1):
(Just about from the beginning of kw's "compassionate meltdown," I've figured
that he had the
second installment of that inane
"Earpy" serieswhere he complains about his critics supposedly "hating" himessentially
completed well prior to even posting the first one. So, it wouldn't have mattered who blogged about the
initial "test," or
what tone they took in their responses; anything which wasn't simple "randy toadying," kissing his
pathetic ass, was all going to be "shadow-projection" in kw's addled
and manipulative mind, regardless. All of that being in accord with Chapter 6 of
Integral Spirituality, titled "The Shadow and the Disowned Self.")
Overall, it is kw, not his critics in general, who is obviously rampantly projecting his own fear
and hatred out into the world.
That, however, contrasts somewhat with kw's derogatory treatment, a mere few months
later, of "Cowan and friend," doesn't it?
Ken, you integral idiot: You've messed up Spiral Dynamics®
every which way from the beginnings of your published bumbling
oversimplifications and misunderstandings of it, to the point where
Cowan himself sternly admonished you for
"putting out impressive-sounding junk and nonsense that must be undone if the integrity of the model
is to be protected."
(He wasn't too impressed with your "Earpy" slings and arrows either, by the
sound of it.)
And then you want him to take the time to find the slippery truths in your theories, to incorporate
into SD? As Bugs Bunny would say, of you now, "Whadda maroon."
Page 203: As one of the nine modules of an "Integral Life Practice," under the Diet options, kw
lists: "Atkins, Ornish, the Zone." That's downright irresponsible:
Did the Bald Fool even bother to research what the (low-carbohydrate)
Atkins diet is.
How anyone could be so stupid as to recommend that diet
as part of a spiritual discipline is absolutely mind-boggling.
Did kw just hear the term in media, figure "Hey, it's a diet, it can be part of integral
practice," and not bother researching it even a whit beyond that?
Maybe Wilber just likes the "carbohydrate ladder" and its nine
rungs, in the Atkins diet?
No, wait: It's not really a ladder, it's more like a Nest. Yeah, a holonic/caloric Nest in the
Great Chain of Eating. Huston Smith wrote a classic book about it, didn't he?
So yeah: Carnivorous Atkins for the Body, reportedly
psychoses-inducing TM for the Spirit,
"Integral Ethics" ... in a few months, "you won't even recognize yourself."
(Actually, in looking over those nine ILP modules, I see that I've been practicing explicit elements
from most of them [i.e., from six of the nine, or seven of nine back when I was meditating]
on a very regular basis for all of my adult life so far.
You'd think, from all that, I might be more than just a "altitude-impaired, toxic green shit" by now, eh?
Conversely, though, if you want proof that Integral Life Practice doesn't work ...
well, since I've been [unintentionally]
practicing it for twenty years already, I would consider myself to be walking proof that it's a
load of second-tier shit. Aside, you know, from the obvious, common-sense benefits to body and mind
of living a balanced life, which no one should need a pandit or guru to outline to them.)
And, of course, there's always the old Wilberian standby (p. 137, 197), false though it may be:
[M]editation can help move you an average of two vertical stages in four years
[emphasis is in the original]....
No other single practice or techniquenot therapy, not breathwork, not transformative workshops,
not role-taking, not hatha yogahas been empirically demonstrated to do this. Meditation
alone has done so. For example, whereas around 2% of the adult population is at second tier, after
four years of meditation, that 2% goes to 38% in the meditation group [uh, in which 9 percent
were at second-tier to begin with]. This is truly staggering research.
Khrist, don't even get me started on that one. It's already well over a
year, now, since I showed that claim (based as it is on Skip Alexander's
ineptly performed "staggering research") to be utterly false. And, for the nth time,
it was eleven years of meditation, not four, that got 38 percent of Alexander's subjects to test at
the autonomous/integrated level. That is stated in goddamned black-and-white on pages 332-3 of Alexander's
Higher Stages of Human Development.
For Wilber to continue to the present day with his utterly dishonest/incompetent twisting of that
research is beyond despicable: His claim there is bald-faced bullshit.
Anyone who wants to check out the relevant pages in Alexander's book can easily verify that for him/herself.
(His own term for such deceptions, I believe, based on his paranoid, cult-leading response to
Jim Chamberlain, would be "lies." In this case, one is strongly
tempted to agree with that designation, given the repeated and unapologetic violations of truth
by Wilber on this particular point: Any honest person, even an utterly incompetent quack, could hardly
keep making that same mistake time after time, and still lay claim to any form of conscience.)
Likewise for another of the standard Wilberian deceits (p. 43):
[T]he Great Wisdom Traditions ... offered all the verifiable evidence one could want
within a remarkably modern paradigm.
Yeah, sure. Uh-huh. As long as you completely ignore the glaring problem,
pointed out by competent skeptics
more than half a dozen years ago, that
Wilber "implicitly accepts the reality of mystical experiences,
and it is sufficient for him that his scientific mystics test their internal experiences against nothing more
than each other's internal experiences. How this would eliminate group bias or error is not discussed."
But then, that's just typical of what passes for "verifiable evidence" in Wilber's World.
More, from page 297:
Rupert [Sheldrake's] ... use of Waddington's notion of morphogenic fields, or morphic fields,
... happens to be a completely viable scientific hypothesis.
"A completely viable scientific hypothesis."
Evidence, Kensho? I mean, you can hypothesize anything. And
hypotheses which are confirmed become
(components of)
theories, and theories which stand the test of time may come to be regarded as laws. But what the hell
is "viable scientific hypothesis" supposed to mean, in the absence of competently conducted experiments to confirm or
deny the educated guess? What purported facts of nature, as established by competent experimentation,
which can't be explained by known laws, are you even trying to explain? 'Cause simple coincidences,
ignorantly taken as if they were kosmically meaningful, don't require any new "viable scientific hypotheses."
All you need is Statistics 101.
(The skeptical, scientific view of Sheldrake's wilber-esque attempts at experimentation? Right
here, and
here.)
Page 169:
[L]et's understand the fundamental rule of any reality check: if I want to know if something is real,
I must get in the same state or stage from which the assertion was issued, and then look. If
I don't do that, then please, I shouldn't talk about things that are over my head.... [T]hat lets us
see why (as we have found out the hard way) doing more brain research for those who are not in the
corresponding state or stage convinces them of nothing....
Wrong Again, Ken:
Skeptics don't need to meditate or learn to see/imagine
auras or do (claimed)
Schlitz-like
astral traveling (in purported
remote viewing), for example. All they need to do is set up appropriate real-world
tests of the people making those claims, and apply elementary
statistics to the results. If those paranormal claims turn out, via those simple but devastating experiments,
to not be predictive at anything beyond a "chance" level, then the same skeptics are fully
qualifiedmuch moreso than kw will ever beto pronounce on the likely "reality" of the associated
interior experiences.
When those elementary tests invariably show that persons who are claiming to be able to see auras, etc.,
cannot actually do so in any better-than-guessing ways, and when real scientists then understandably
remain unconvinced of the even-wilder claims (as to the experience of Godhead, etc.) made by comparable
individuals, it ain't 'cause it's all "over their heads"even if the most basic principles
of high-school-level science may well be over your head, Kenny.
On the contrary, if your experience of any astral, causal or nondual state is "as real" as is your perception
of
subtle energies, too bad for you. 'Cause, until you muster the courage to actually have the latter
claimed sensing-abilities tested, those "subtle" experiences must be taken as being merely imagined,
given that that has been the result encountered by everyone else who has ever made comparable
claims and, unlike you, at least had guts enough to put them to the test in properly controlled studies.
If you can't even get subtle energies (with their easily testable, exterior correlates) right, yet you remain
convinced that your experience of them
is "real," why should anyone take seriously your vouching for the existence of higher states of consciousness
and levels of reality, based on your own
surely comparably deluded/imagined interior experiences of them?
(Simply put, they shouldn't: As a wise man once observed, if you can't
even get the testable stuff right, there is no reason why anyone should take your word for even more
rarefied "things unseen.")
Give Kensho credit for one thing, though:
Integral Spirituality is
written at such a high (i.e., general, non-detailed) level that it completely obscures all of the ways
in which the foundations of his half-baked notions simply don't fit together.
If you didn't know any better, you might well indeed think that Integral Spirituality was,
as
Dennis Genpo Merzel blurbs, "possibly the most important spiritual book in postmodern times." And next
thing you knew, you'd be throwing your money away on overpriced seminars in the hope of catching a glimpse
of the Great Wilber, semi-volunteering your time for the organization "for the good of all humankind," and
perhaps even (dare we dream?) working your way into the inner circle at I-I ... or IU ... or IN ... or ILP,
with no comprehension at all of what
sorrows you were setting yourself up for, should you fail to check
your (UR) brain and independence at the door to the "sanctuary."
"Integrate" all of the fairy tales you like; it still won't make them any more real
than are kw's own merely imagined experience of subtle energies and their relation to
Q-Links, or any other obvious quackery. Nor will it save you from
the utterly predictable, social-psychology-based abuses
inherent in any closed, hierarchical
society whose higher members crave respect and are conversely intolerant of disobedience and questioning.
That is so even if such a society is led and unthinkingly followed by people (esp. raging, authoritarian
narcissists such as kw himself)
who imagine themselves to be "second tier."
Wilber further updates his stance on neo-Darwinian evolution (p. 236, 241-2):
To say that the manifest universe is evolving is not necessarily to endorse all of the
neo-Darwinian view of evolution. I did my graduate work in the biochemistry and
biophysics of the visual process ("The photoisomerization of rhodopsin isolated
from bovine rod outer segments"), and what we don't understand about the mechanisms
of evolution could fill the Library of Congress several times over. I'm no fan
of Intelligent Design, either, which is just Creation Science in drag. But you don't
need an intelligent designer to realize that evolution seems to involve some sort of
"creative allure," or what Whitehead called "the creative advance into novelty."
That driveEros by any other nameseems a perfectly realistic conclusion, given
the facts of evolution as we understand them. [???] Let's just say there is plenty of room
for a Kosmos of Eros. But the whole point of a post-metaphysics is that it is the
strict application of Occam's razor, refusing to postulate more entities when fewer
will do the trick. It's just that Eros is one of those things that just doesn't seem to
go away....
Proponents of ID
have one truth on their side: scientific materialism cannot explain all of evolution (it
can explain pretty much everything except major holistic transformational leaps). [Which "leaps"
are these? The evolutionary development of eyes, or of wings? KW doesn't say.
But the latter, anyway, is the bad, bad example which he gives in
ABHOE of an evolutionary leap which neo-Darwinianism supposedly can't explain. If he has
better examples, why doesn't he give them? Answer: He has no better examples than those
long-discredited ones.]
With that, I quite agree. But all that is required to get and keep evolution moving
forward is a minimalist Eros (as an involutionary given). This force of creative
advance into novelty is one form of Spirit-in-action, and that Eros is all that is then
required for evolutionary theory to work just fine. That's why evolution shows so
many fits and starts; it's a creative artwork, not an intelligent engineering product
(because if so, that Engineer is an idiot). The proponents of ID parlay their one little
truth into the demand that the Jehovah of Genesis be that Eros, and there is not the
slightest evidence for that anywhere in heaven or on earth.
If you say so, Ken. Have you read any good books by ID-proponent
Michael Behe lately, that you might want to endorse,
as you've stupidly done in the past, showing your own ignorance of the field in which you not
only have formal training but claim to keep up with "religiously"?
And, as far as
Occam's razor goes: In the next breath
(or previous appendix, in this case), kw will be grandly
theorizing about the nature of subtle energiesanother one of the phenomena which he probably
thinks just "won't go away," in spite of there being zero properly vetted experimental evidence
for their existence. From
Occam's razor ... to Wilber's unduly shaved head.
The guy is veneer-ealy "scientific" only
as long as it suits him; when it doesn't, he's off again on his Magic Karpet Ride, multiplying entities
throughout the astral and causal levels, into infinity, with plenty of morphogenic fields
thrown in, as part of the same "integral parsimony."
That Wilber (p. 87) would criticize SD for being "bound up with the discredited notion of memes" while
simultaneously needing/touting morphogenic fields in his Wilber-5 in order for it to be a
"post-metaphysics" with evolving Kosmic "habits" and "grooves" rather than pregiven higher levels
of reality is downright funny. And then he spouts proudly about
his one little application of Occam's razor in an integral Sea of woo-woo phenomena whose exteriors by
all competent experimental indications simply don't exist, but are rather merely imagined?!
(And, if the exteriors don't exist, and if all four of kw's kwadrants tetra-manifest and tetra-evolve,
then the interiors don't exist either, in any ontologically real way.)
It's just as well that kw dropped out of his Ph.D. in evolutionary
biology: He would have never been even remotely competent as a scientist anyway ... though he might
well have managed to put himself in line for one of James Randi's
"Pigasus" awards, for
world-class quackery.
(Nominate him under the "Refusal to face reality" category ... while duly noting that I-I's
Gary Schwartz was the 2001 winner in the "Scientist" category, and that Wilber's transpersonal friend
Charles Tart [complimentary referenced in Integral Spirituality] took home the prize in 1981.)
And, as far as ID'ers allegedly demanding that "the Jehovah of Genesis be that Eros," I had already posted
the following
direct quote, back in May of 2005, on Integral Naked, in response to Wilber's
related anti-Darwinian driveling (and unresearched, fabricated "facts" about "Jehovah in a Hummer"), there:
Although the [Intelligent Design] movement is loosely allied with, and heavily funded by, various conservative
Christian groupsand although ID plainly maintains that life was createdit is generally silent
about the identity of the creator.
That Bald Bastard just can't get it right, can he? It's the same
attempted deceptions from him, over and over again. And you really think that Wilber-5 might have less
garbage like that in it than did Wilber-4, or any of his earlier attempts at bullshit-theorizing?
If you do still hope for that: How slowly do you learn? Or, alternatively, how much do you
enjoy being lied to? 'Cause you must really enjoy/need it, to keep coming back for more.
From p. 209 (take a deep breath, this is all one sentence):
In the relative world of finite manifestation, an AQAL map is a useful
guide to the dimensions of a human being-in-8-worlds, and if we include
all of those dimensions and methodologies in our maps of reality,
I honestly believe we will see Spirit shining fully in the premodern, modern,
and postmodern world, and see a way to bring them all together in a
gesture of easy embrace and graceful inclusion, like a full-course meal
and not just the appetizer, saturating our being with our Being, and thus
Being in the AQAL world with presence and delight, wonder and release,
recognition and surrender, humor and lightness, surprise and rightness,
justness and reliefit all somehow comes pouring through, drenching
us in Being and Consciousness and Duty and Bliss....
Which finds itself exploding in its own superabundance, unfolding
in its own evolutionary plenitude, a riotous development that is loving
envelopment, an evolution of Spirit that spins off Kosmic memories of
its own yesterday while laying down Kosmic habits as the foundation of
its own tomorrow (don't You remember?), so that with a Kosmic conveyor
belta great and grand and glorious Spiritual elevatorreligion
has found its place in the modern and postmodern world.
Egad, it's the
"Integral Tuna" piece all over again: KW really could have said
everything in that parody, as below. "Purple"-meme prose and all.
So Phase II will literally be the phenomenon of an integral wake, created by a 2nd tier ship, built by 2nd tier
pioneers and pilgrims, drawing up living, non-integral tuna, through lines, levels, states and stages in the vast
sea of emptiness and transforming them into canned tunawhich in my opinion, anyway, will do nothing short of
adding to the sublimity and nutritiousness of an already stout and exquisite integral salad. I mean, is this
cool or what?....
For in the suspension of disbelief, as we transcend and include, we re-absorb and re-integrate what can
only be looked at as a new and improved, always and already improving, pre/trans fallacy, fresh, formless and
wet from birth, molded integrally solid and purified in the crucible of integral kilns (the virtual
autoclaves of the future) with the fire of Spirit (which has been so horribly abused, misused, kicked around,
suffocated and oppressed for too long, but will nonetheless be revealed, healed, polished and preserved
by our undying mission to let Spirit have its rightful seat that the traditions teach us it should) and this
new improved pre/trans fallacy becomes the solid trans/phallic bow of our integral ship ever pioneering
onward with a heart full of courage and undying love and commitment to uplift all of those that thirst for
something more than what the tired old bloated belly of conventional,
modern, post-modern and pre-post-pseudo-meta integral thought can offer, for all that have had even just
a glimpse of the vast emptiness that is your true being, your true heart that reaches out to the infinite
corners of the Kosmos and says I love you, I love me and I am simply astonished and amazed and I know I have
something to give and to give it and to want to live from this space fully and artfully with the skillful
means and a body to match (we don't want to neglect the physical) and maybe even abundantly with something
to show for our own life for God's sake. This is what integral is and I don't know about you but I just
think that it is so cool.
Finally, even if all of Wilber's Integral Methodological Pluralism and recent post-metaphysical musings
were valid, he has presented not a shred of properly vetted, independently repeated experimental
evidence that his Integral
Life Practice (or any other spiritual practice, for that matter) is likely to induce psychological
stage-growth in its adherents. So, while he may well have avoided metaphysics in favor of
"injunctions" galore, his promises of stage-growth within "four years," etc.,
are utterly hollow: He is promising advancement for which he truly has no evidence.
(The "two stages in four years" claim is again a pure fabrication on his part, gotten from his
inept conflating of several different studies done by Alexander and others.)
So, whatever may remain standing, a decade from now, of the ideas in Wilber's latest theorizingsnot to
mention of his presentations of "integral history," or of various culture-wide dissociations, on which sort
of thing he is a notoriously and provably unreliable source of information (as
Meyerhoff, for one,
has shown)in terms of the practice, and of people's real lives, he is still selling kosmic snake oil,
suckering people in through utterly misrepresentative "advertising" in terms of his false claims for
its supposedly proven stage-growth benefits.
In the real, business world, companies get hit with class-action suits for making comparably unsubstantiated
claims for the supposed benefits of their products. (And yes, people are indeed paying for the integral
"product," in overpriced seminars, equally overpriced
ILP Starter Kits, and the like.)
P.S. Tom Floyd, thank you for not having even a glimmer of a clue. You, like
Elliot Benjamin flailing around before you,
have spurred me ("Earpy" pun not intended) to find the time and energy to
do the right thing, in getting NE into hard-copy,
and thus again into libraries and bookstores before the end of this year.
By all means "critique the critics." But if you're going to do so, you have the
obligation to get it right, rather than stupidly hiding behind obvious
misrepresentations, condescension, and utterly untenable feelings of superiority.
Same pattern as always, eh? Even when it involves trashing his most unduly respectful critics.
One of the primary impediments to leaving a cult, even for persons who have already
realized the detrimental effect of their continued residence there, is the lack of money and job prospects
facing one in leaving that environment. One may, quite literally, go from living in a psychological prison
to living in a shelter; or, in the hope of avoiding that fate, sign an agreement constraining one from
speaking against the organization, in exchange for just a few hundred dollars.