The Archetypology of Adolescence Part 2

I did say that in the next post in this series we would be looking at the broader meanings around the phase of life called adolescence (aka the Orphan archetype in archetypology). However, it occurred to me that I wasn’t clear enough in the last post about the reason why the Netflix TV series Adolescence represents an inversion of the literary tradition of Western culture. That literary tradition also has strong connections to the Christian theology. Thus, it’s not a surprise to find that both the literary tradition and the theological tradition came under attack in the 19th century as the state set out to disintermediate the church. That process was completed during the two world wars. As part of it, the state finally achieved independence from the church in the creation of propaganda.

While entertainment and literature were still part of the private sector/market, the propaganda of the state was largely confined to overtly political matters. But the line between propaganda and the “arts” has become well and truly blurred in recent decades with ideology and propaganda increasingly being inserted into nominally free market works. The TV series Adolescence belongs to a relatively new trend that’s been picking up steam in the last decade for nominally artistic works to be nothing more than vehicles for ideology. The result is “literature” and “art” that no longer resembles the Western canon. In fact, it is the inversion of that canon. In order to understand this, we first need to be clear about what the Western literary tradition is.

The seminal text on understanding the underlying structure of stories, and therefore the basis of literature, is still Joseph Campbell’s The Hero With a Thousand Faces. Campbell gave the structure of stories the name of the hero’s journey. Every story can be thought of as a cycle where the hero returns to the same state in which they started. Campbell was inspired by the work of Carl Jung, and so he used the Jungian categories of consciousness and unconsciousness to describe that state change. A story begins with the hero living in their normal, everyday life where they are fully conscious of what is going on. They must then go on a journey that requires them to leave a world they understand and step into one they don’t; hence, a journey into the unconscious.

This is a perfectly valid way to look at it, but there’s a higher-level concept that better captures the meaning of the hero’s journey. Stories are about sacrifice. The reason why we care about the hero is because they are laying something on the line, something that is important to them. Our empathy with the hero rests on this fact.

However, neither the hero nor the audience can know the true meaning of the sacrifice in advance. Thus, the hero’s journey is also a journey of understanding. Every story involves the hero agreeing to a sacrifice they do not fully understand and then learning what it means as they live through the consequences.

We can diagram this as follows:-

It follows from these considerations that the first and most important question to ask about any story is, “What is the hero sacrificing, and what do they think they are getting in return?” For example, in the movie The Matrix, the character of Neo must leave the matrix. Clearly, it’s not going to be an easy journey to leave the only world he has ever known and step into one he is barely aware of. The sacrifice in this case is potentially his own sanity and maybe even his life. He is willing to make that sacrifice in order to learn the truth about reality. But he can’t fully understand what that means until he has actually taken the journey. Again, that is why we say that the hero can only be partly conscious of the nature of the sacrifice they are making. Full consciousness only comes at the end of the story.

It’s important to understand that this dynamic is not just about fiction; it is very much a part of what it is to be human. Our lives are full of stories, which is another way to say that our lives are full of sacrifices. Let’s say you have a job you are more or less happy with, and then you get offered another job. Maybe the other job seems more interesting. Maybe it pays more. But there’s still an element of risk involved in accepting the other job, because you can’t really know whether you’ll like it till you try. Furthermore, the only way to find out is to sacrifice your existing job.

Thus, the acceptance of a new job is a hero’s journey. You are the hero of the story and if we ask the question of you, “What are you sacrificing, and what do you think you are getting in return?”, the answer will be that you are sacrificing your existing job, and you are hoping to get a more interesting or better-paying job. The story of your transition into the new job begins with the sacrifice of your existing job and ends when the ramifications of the change are fully worked out and you understand them, i.e., when you fully understand the nature of the sacrifice you made.

What often happens in such cases is that you learn there were things about your old job that you really liked but you weren’t fully conscious of. To quote a Phil Collins lyric, “You don’t know what you’ve got till you lose it.” Put into our terminology, you don’t know what you’ve got until you sacrifice it. This is why the hero’s journey has a lot in common with the grieving process where you have to come to terms with the sacrifice and the fact that it’s gone forever.

In summary, to understand the meaning of any story, we must know what the sacrifice is and why the hero is making it. This is true of an everyday story like getting a new job. It is also true of the greatest stories ever told.

Probably still the most important story in Western culture is the story of Jesus. In this case, the answer to our question, “What is the hero sacrificing, and what do they think they are getting in return?”, has millennia of theological argument behind it. Jesus sacrifices himself, and what he gets in return is the redemption of humanity. We already know the answer, but let’s walk through an analysis of the crucifixion part of the story because it contains some crucial facts that have shaped the tradition of Western literature and theology.

Even if we take a purely secular reading and forget that Jesus is supposed to be the son of God, the crucifixion story still makes clear that Jesus is sacrificing himself. Jesus had gone round making many enemies among the Jewish religious authorities of the time. He had also developed a close relationship with his disciples. If we assume Jesus was a good read of character, it is perfectly possible that he intuited that Judas would betray him to his enemies and that Peter would renounce him afterwards. Even though he knew these things, Jesus did nothing to stop events from proceeding. In that way, he made a decision to sacrifice himself and that forms of the basis of the crucifixion story.

Note also that this is a perfect hero’s journey pattern. Jesus may know what’s going to happen, but we as the readers do not. From our point of view, he is stepping into the unknown. What happens after his arrest is uncertain (even though Jesus has already said he’s going to die).

As most people would know, what actually happens is that the Jewish religious authorities hand Jesus over to Pontius Pilate and demand that he be executed. The crucifixion story, therefore, sets up a dichotomy between the personal sacrifice that Jesus makes and the fact that he is subsequently offered up as a sacrifice by the Jewish authorities.

Here we must note a crucial point about how justice works. The convicted criminal is themselves a sacrifice in the name of the law. In most societies throughout history, the “law” is religious law. Therefore, the criminal is a sacrifice to the gods. But even in a secular reading, the punishment meted out to the criminal is “holy” to the extent that it extinguishes the crime and returns everything to equilibrium. We can see that this process is identical to the hero’s journey and that is why stories involving a crime (or a moral transgression) appear in almost all great literature.

In the case of Jesus, the crime he had committed under Jewish religious law was to proclaim himself the son of God. The priests insist that he be punished (sacrificed) to restore the holy order. That is fair enough. However, the story takes a dramatic twist when the priests hand Jesus over to the Romans to try and have him found guilty under Roman law. They do this because they want Jesus executed, and Roman law forbids execution except by Roman authorities. That is why Jesus is hauled in front of Pontius Pilate with the mob screeching for him to be crucified.

The problem is that Jesus has not committed any offense under Roman law. That’s what Pilate tells the mob. After a few attempts to avoid a wrongful conviction, Pilate literally washes his hands of the affair and sends Jesus off to be crucified.

What that means is the punishment (sacrifice) of Jesus was invalid within the terms of both Jewish and Roman traditions. Jesus was sentenced to Roman punishment even though he had committed no crime in Roman law. Moreover, we can see that both the Jewish priests and the mob were not really concerned with justice but with vengeance. Therefore, they tarnished their own beliefs and their god with a murder.

All of this serves to amplify the dichotomy that the crucifixion story sets up between personal and collective sacrifice. The crucifixion story, perhaps more than any other story at that time or since, makes crystal clear the difference between the personal sacrifice of the hero (Jesus) and the invalid sacrifice to abstract notions of the sacred committed by both the Roman and the Jewish authorities.

This theme of personal sacrifice rightly became a core component of Christian theology and then Western culture more generally. Jesus’ conscious sacrifice of his own life is a symbol that all our lives are sacrifices. Since we all make sacrifices anyway, the only question is whether we do it, like Jesus does, in full consciousness of what we are doing. The crucifixion story is about consciously becoming your own sacrifice and taking full responsibility for it. That’s why it is arguably the ultimate hero’s journey.

The juxtaposition of Jesus against both the mob and the Jewish and Roman authorities also reinforces this meaning. The Jewish priests and the mob do not want to take the responsibility of trying Jesus under Jewish law. They try to fob him off on Pilate. Pilate doesn’t want to take the responsibility either, and he washes his hands of the case. The result is that nobody takes responsibility. The whole thing is a sham. The broader question raised by the crucifixion story is whether any mob or any system of authority can ever really take responsibility or whether in fact such systems are always about avoiding responsibility. If that’s true, then the sacrifice of the individual is always invalid.

In any case, there is only person in the crucifixion story who really takes responsibility, and that is Jesus. The dichotomy is between the lone individual who sacrifices themselves in full consciousness of what they are doing and the baying mob and the authorities who sacrifice other human beings for base motives of which they themselves are not even conscious.

It is sometimes said that all of Western philosophy is just footnotes to Plato. We might make the same claim for Western literature as being footnotes to the crucifixion story. All of the great stories in the Western canon follow the pattern of foregrounding the individual and the sacrifice that they make over and above the societal and collective perspectives. In other words, they’re all hero’s journeys. For that reason, we can begin to understand any classic story in the Western canon by asking the question, “What is the hero sacrificing, and what do they think they are getting in return?”

In relation to stories involving murder (of which Adolescence is theoretically an example), the murder victim is usually the sacrifice. For example, Macbeth is going to sacrifice the life of Duncan. What does he get in return? Well, he gets to become king. Unlike Jesus, however, Macbeth is not fully conscious of what he is doing, and that’s how it is with any hero’s journey where the hero is not God. Thus, the story of Macbeth is largely the story of the competing drives and desires swirling around in Macbeth’s mind, including his revulsion at the idea of murder. Macbeth is only partially conscious of the sacrifice he is making at the start of the story, and it is not until the end that the full horror of what he has done becomes clear to him.

The same applies to the story of Othello, although there is an interesting twist here because Othello is actually the sacrifice and Iago is the protagonist (Shakespeare pulls the same trick in Julius Caesar, where Caesar is the sacrifice and Brutus the hero). In Iago’s case, the sacrifice of Othello is not even made to attain some ulterior goal but simply out of pure resentment at the fact that Othello had overlooked him for promotion. Iago does not challenge his master directly but manipulates others to do his dirty work for him. Eventually, it all spirals out of control, and the final sacrifice includes Desdemona, as well as Iago and his wife.

To take just one more example, the sacrifice that motivates Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment is the murder of the pawnbroker by Raskolnikov. What distinguishes this story is the sophistication of rational argumentation that Raskolnikov employs. As an ex-uni student, he takes a highly intellectual approach to the justification for murder. (Modern uni students still do. See the recent murder of the health insurance CEO in the USA as an example). Dostoevsky’s point is that you can rationalise a murder all you like, but facing its consequences is a completely different matter.

But the Raskolnikov example is valuable for a second reason, because he begins the story by playing the role of the authorities in the story of Jesus. That is, for him, the sacrifice is a purely intellectual exercise in weighing up abstract arguments. The priests in the crucifixion story also had abstract, rational grounds for wanting Jesus punished, i.e., the fact that he had blasphemed. However, they had no grounds for having him killed. Their reason and logic may have been sound, but they had to deceive themselves about their true motives in order to push for crucifixion. That’s how it is for Raskolnikov, too. He has all kinds of ingenious arguments for why he should kill the pawnbroker, but none that actually justify the murder.

This raises another common thread in all the stories we have looked at: the victim is never fully innocent. Therefore, an argument can always be made that they did somehow deserve what they got.

In Othello, Desdemona has kept her marriage to the general secret from her father. This betrayal of familial confidence is what allows Iago to stir up trouble in the first place and sets in train the events which lead to Desdemona’s death. In Macbeth, Duncan seems like a wise and noble king. Yet, he is clearly a bad judge of character who has not seen the unchecked ambition that lies in Macbeth’s heart. Duncan’s lack of judgement and lax security measures bring about his downfall. Meanwhile, in Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov’s victim is a pawnbroker, a person who profits from the misfortune of others. They are a sinner by default.

Even in the Bible, Jesus is at fault because he really has broken the religious laws of his people. What’s more, he is at fault in a larger sense since he is a god who has manifested in human form. This goes against the entire theological beliefs of the ancients, who saw material manifestation as inherently corrupt. The whole point of being a god was that you didn’t sully yourself in such a way.

Once again, the difference is that Jesus was acting in full consciousness and therefore he fully intends what he does. That’s why we can say that Christianity really did have the effect of redeeming human life in the eyes of the ancients. But that redemption could only come at the end of the story, hence we say, again, that the crucifixion follows the hero’s journey pattern, since the full meaning of Jesus’ sacrifice only becomes clear at the end.

With this rapid overview, we can see some of the main themes that have formed the literary and theological tradition of Western culture, which actually begins before the story of Christ, since we can find some of the same ideas in Greek tragedy. The focus has always been on the hero’s journey, which means the sacrifice made by an individual who must then live through the consequences. The Western tradition has always foregrounded this individual perspective, and this is certainly the main reason why Western culture has always had a far more individualistic disposition compared to other cultures.

The broader point of this tradition is that society can only ever view a murder or a moral transgression from the objective point of view. When the justice system sacrifices the criminal to its abstract notions of the sacred, it must always do so objectively. The law can uphold abstract principles only. More generally, society can only ever sacrifice to such abstractions, whether those be religious and theological (God) or ideological (justice). Society can never take the subjective view in the way that the hero’s journey does. Therefore, full responsibility can only ever attain in the individual.

That is the theological and literary tradition of Western society. All through the medieval period and up until the 19th century, there was a finely tuned balance in Western society with the church as the custodian of the subjective, hero’s journey perspective and the kings of Europe as the custodians of the societal, collective perspective. While the kings were officially servants to the theological tradition, we can say that they implicitly upheld the individualist tenets of the culture.

But all that began to change in the 19th century as the power of the state grew. The state duly used that power to disintermediate the church altogether, and the collectivist mentality took over the culture. That collectivist mentality took different forms, socialism and fascism being the two most notable, but ultimately what was pushed to the side was the traditional foregrounding of individual responsibility as exemplified by the hero’s journey.

And that brings us back to the Netflix series Adolescence, which takes a collectivist approach to what has traditionally been a core subject of theology and literature i.e. murder and moral transgression. After our discussion above, it should not be a surprise to find that Adolescence does this by foregoing the hero’s journey pattern altogether. It is not a story that takes the individual perspective.

If Adolescence was a hero’s journey, it would feature the 13-year-old boy, Jamie, as the protagonist. The story would revolve around the question, “What is the hero sacrificing, and what do they think they are getting in return?” In the same way that Macbeth, Iago, and Raskolnikov have motives for their murders, we would want to know Jamie’s motives. What does he think he’s getting out of it? Is he just out for revenge like Iago? Is he, like Raskolnikov, the over-intellectual incel loner who lashes out through unconscious resentment and shame? Those would be the foundational elements of the story. But any hero’s journey is concerned not just with these facts but also with the way the hero deals with the sacrifice they have made. It is concerned with the consequences to the hero as an individual endowed with a conscience who is capable of redemption. That is what the Western literary tradition would be concerned with.

But the storywriters of Adolescence are not concerned with that at all. To say it again, Adolescence is not a hero’s journey. It is not concerned with Jamie as a subject but with Jamie as the object in a legal proceeding. It is not a question of what Jamie is sacrificing because Jamie is the sacrifice. He is the sacrifice in the same way that Jesus is the sacrifice from the point of view of the authorities in the crucifixion story. Thus, when we say that Adolescence is not a hero’s journey, we can be even more specific and say that it is a story told from the point of view of the collective. That is why it is alternately filtered through the lens of Jamie’s parents, his friends, the police, and the psychologist. The story is concerned with Jamie as object from these various perspectives.

Just as in the crucifixion story, the priests and the mob want to sacrifice Jesus in the name of their abstract notions of the sacred; that is also the sole concern of the storywriters of Adolescence, who manage to insert seemingly all the latest ideological fads into the story. These are the abstract notions of the sacred according to the ideology of modern liberalism. In that ideology, it is the technocrats, the high priests of liberalism, who must find solutions to the various social ills that are preventing the creation of utopia. Jamie is nothing more than the carrier of those social ills, and his sacrifice is meant to appease the liberal gods.

Thus, Adolescence inverts the paradigm of Western theology and literature. It does so by inverting the hero’s journey pattern. It is like telling the story of Jesus’ crucifixion from the point of view of the mob or Pontius Pilate. The only thing that they care about is that Jesus admit his guilt and receive his punishment. And that is really the only thing that the main characters in Adolescence care about. Jamie’s refusal to admit guilt is not a question of personal conscience and a journey towards redemption, such as it would be in a Dostoevsky story; it is a trivial annoyance standing in the way of “justice” being served, such as it is when Pilate gets annoyed that Jesus won’t confess.

That is why we could say that Adolescence belongs more broadly to the age of the Antichrist (both in the Jungian sense and in the sense of being an inversion of the crucifixion story). It’s also why the high priests of liberalism, whether they be in the universities, the public service, or the government itself, are so concerned with problematising the Western canon and “decolonialising” the curriculum in schools. Young men like Jamie might accidentally read Shakespeare or the King James Bible. Hence, Keir Starmer sees it as his number one priority to jam Adolescence down their throats instead.

The Archetypology of Adolescence Part 1

One of the fun things about blogging is how often the real world throws up synchronicities related to something you just wrote about. This week’s synchronicity was not just related to blog posts but entire books. My latest work on Archetypology continues the last four years of writing that began with the Devouring Mother concept. One of the main archetypes I have returned to time and again during that period is the Orphan. Even the Devouring Mother is related to the Orphan because the Devouring Mother’s goal is to prevent her Child from growing up, i.e., entering the Orphan phase of life. The Orphan archetype was also at the centre of my most recent book, Archetypology Volume 1, where I analysed difficulties during the Orphan phase of life as being at the centre of the life stories of Martin Luther, the philosopher Nietzsche, and most of the patients that Freud and Jung treated in the early days of psychoanalysis.

So, it’s quite literally the case that I’ve spent much of the last four years thinking about the Orphan archetype, which maps directly to the time of life we call adolescence in the general culture. What a coincidence then that just as I released my latest book, which contains long sections on the Orphan, a new Netflix TV series called Adolescence should hit the news. Much of my analysis of the Orphan has centred on its appearance in literature and film, so the arrival of a new TV series couldn’t have been bettered timed. As I looked at it, however, I could see that this was no ordinary Orphan story. The 13-year-old boy at the centre of events has committed a murder. Given the age of the protagonist, I had assumed that the story would center around questions of guilt and responsibility. That’s true, but not in the way we might expect.

Adolescence is the growth phase between childhood and adulthood. The growth that occurs during this time is not just biological but also socio-cultural, psychological, and what would once upon a time have been called spiritual. In medieval times, adolescence was called the age of reason. It was the time when the higher reasoning faculties began to develop. As a result, it was also the time that individuals became morally and criminally liable for their actions. This appears to be a universal of human culture. All societies treat children as unable to be responsible. It is usually at puberty where that changes. Since 13 years is right on the borderline between childhood and adolescence, it sets up the obvious theme of exploring whether the boy in the story could be held both legally and morally responsible for the murder.

But Adolescence is completely uninterested in this question. That’s the first mysterious thing about it, but certainly not the last. In any case, the actual story itself has been overshadowed by the adulation it has received from the “elites” of the West, especially in the UK where the story takes place. No less a public figure than Keir Starmer decided its message was so important that it needed to be shown in every British school. Just this week, Starmer held some kind of summit to discuss the themes of the show.

This got me cynically thinking that the series was just another in the long line of ideological fantasy stories beloved by our modern aristocracy for pushing their social engineering goals; in other words, propaganda. That is certainly true. But as I started to analyse what was going on with Adolescence, it struck me that something far more interesting is at play. Even propaganda can have deeper meanings that its creators are not fully aware of. It’s going to take a few posts to unpack those meanings, so let’s get to work.

We can begin by asking what type of story Adolescence is. There are two obvious paradigms that we can compare it to. Since the plot revolves around a murder, Adolescence could be an examination of the motives and circumstances around the murder. That is a very common kind of theme in the history of storytelling, and it includes some of the greatest stories ever told. We’ll look at that option shortly.

The second option is the one suggested by the name of the story. The coming-of-age story as a genre began in modern times with Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister. But the concept is much older than that. In fact, stories where the hero comes of age have certainly been around in every culture since time immemorial. Since the Netflix series was given the name Adolescence, and since the protagonist is 13 years old, we could conclude that it is coming-of-age story.

As it happens, there was a film released just over ten years ago about a young man going through adolescence. I’m talking about Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, which won no less than six Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Linklater’s brilliant idea was to film over an entire decade. Every summer for eleven years, he got the actors together and shot part of the movie. As a result, the movie itself spans a period of eleven years in the life of a young boy, and the audience gets to watch the characters age in real time. The hero of the story begins the film in pre-pubescence, goes through puberty and ends up in adulthood. Boyhood touches on all the main themes of modern adolescence, including peer pressure, schoolyard bullying, the beginning of romantic and sexual relationships, dealing with your parents, etc. In fact, Boyhood should really have been called Adolescence since that’s what it is: an overview of the whole phase of life, filmed while the actor playing the hero of the story was actually going through it.

Boyhood, therefore, makes a perfect comparison with the new Netflix series which has given itself almost the same name, which features a young man as the nominal protagonist, and which raises a very similar set of themes. The huge difference, of course, is that the nominal protagonist in Adolescence has just committed murder. Since he is only 13 years old and therefore just at the beginning of adolescence, it’s pretty clear that he’s not going to have an adolescence at all. Why name a film Adolescence and then show us a hero who is not going to have one? Of course, the story of Adolescence is not really about the young man at all; not as an individual.

In Linklater’s movie, like any good story, we are encouraged to identify with the hero. In the case of men watching the movie, we identify with him by default since we all went through the same phase of life ourselves and we can relate to many of the scenes. But how are we going to identify with a young man who is a murderer? That would be a problem for the writers of Adolescence if they were following the format of the second kind of story that they could have told: an exploration of the motives and circumstances around a murder.

Think of Shakespeare’s Macbeth. The story revolves around the great warrior’s treachery in murdering an honest and noble king who has done him no wrong. But the murder of Duncan isn’t even shown at all. The entire story is about the lead-up to the murder and the consequences afterwards. The whole story is, in fact, about Macbeth’s motivations for the murder, which centres on his lust for power. But Macbeth is barely conscious of his own desires, and he wrestles with them throughout the story. Eventually, he has to be goaded into the deed by his wife.

Another of Shakespeare’s stories featuring the murder of a good and noble person is Othello. In this case, the entire story is the lead-up to the murder, which comes right at the end. Only after a long, sustained, and calculating deception by Iago, which is expertly designed to play to his master’s weaknesses, is Othello so overcome by emotion that he kills his wife. By the time of the murder, we know in great detail why Othello did it, which of his personal character failings were mainly responsible, and which evil bastard set the whole thing up (Iago). Thus, both Macbeth and Othello are explorations of the psychology of murders carried out by heroes overcome by emotions and motivations of which they are barely conscious.

Of more relevance to the subject of adolescence is the story of Romeo and Juliet. Romeo becomes a murderer unwillingly about halfway through the play. What is at stake this time is the question of honour, which, in 17th-century Italy, was a big deal for young men. Tybalt challenges Romeo to a duel, but Romeo has been secretly married to Juliet. From Romeo’s point of view, Tybalt is now a family relation. He declines the duel, but his friend, Mercutio, who doesn’t know that Romeo and Juliet have been married, will not allow the slight on his friend’s honour. When Tybalt kills Mercutio in the duel which follows, Romeo avenges his friend. Once again, the murders happen in a fit of passion.

This psychological exploration of murder was pursued in even greater depth in many of Dostoevsky’s great stories, including and especially Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov. Once again, Dostoevsky shows us the extended lead-up to the murder and ramifications which follow. These are intricate and detailed explorations of the moral and psychological issues at play. What especially interested Dostoevsky was the idea of cold, premeditated murder, done in a calculating fashion rather than in a frenzy of emotion. This fits with one of the main threads of Dostoevsky’s work, which is that reason and logic can be used as an excuse for killing people.

There’s one final story about murder that’s worth mentioning, and that is Camus’ The Stranger. Camus set out to overturn the accepted conventions by providing a story in which the reasons for the murder are unclear and where the protagonist doesn’t feel any guilt afterwards. The reason why that’s relevant to Adolescence is because the protagonist in that story, the 13-year-old boy, also shows no remorse. This fact is apparently what fans of the show have highlighted as one of its most poignant aspects.

But there is a crucial difference between Adolescence and the stories about murder we have just mentioned. Even in Camus’ story, the primary focus is on the inner state of the hero as he comes to grips with the murder he has committed. In tragedy, the hero is thrust into a situation where they lose control of themselves and events. They must learn to bear responsibility for what they have done and, in Dostoevsky at least, to seek redemption. Such stories invite us to go through a similar process, to imagine what we might have done in the same situation, and how we could reconcile such actions with our conscience. Tragedy, and great literature more generally, is inherently subjective in this fashion. It is concerned with the inward journey of the hero and it invites us to share that journey.

Adolescence is not a story that is concerned with the redemption of the murderer. The story goes out of its way to leave out the subjective perspective of the young boy. That’s why it’s correct to say that he is not really the hero of the story at all. The story is treats him as an object, not as a subject. We are not shown his inner state and invited to empathise with him. We are only allowed to infer things about him from external, objective evidence. The real “heroes” of the story are the people who view him in this fashion: his parents, the police, and the psychologist. These are all representatives of the audience, aka general public. The reason why Adolescence has the form of propaganda is because of these collectivist ideological assumptions. Like all socialist or fascist literature, it has zero concern with the individual.

There are four episodes in the series. The first episode begins with the police kicking down the door of the family home where the boy lives. It shows his arrest, strip search, fingerprinting and initial interrogation. The main emotional content of this part of the story is the shame and anguish felt by his parents, especially his father, who must accompany his son throughout the ordeal as his legal guardian. The climax of the episode comes as CCTV footage establishes that the son is the murderer. Again, the emphasis here is on the father’s realisation that his son is a killer. Thus, Adolescence begins, not as all other classic explorations of murder do, with a long build-up that establishes the motives and circumstances. At this point, we don’t know anything about why it happened. We just know that the young man did it. We are invited to process that fact not through his eyes but the eyes of his father. This is also how the series ends in episode four, which is yet again about the shame and guilt of the father, not the young man himself.

The second episode begins the process of trying to figure out why the young man did it. But, again, it doesn’t do that in a subjective sense by showing the young man himself. Rather, it’s about the police investigation of his school. We learn that he had been interested in a young girl who did not reciprocate his affections. The episode also shows that the killer’s friend was an accomplice who gave him the murder weapon, a knife. Once again, the episode ends by establishing the guilt of another young boy without any real exploration of his motives. Once again, we don’t see any of this through the eyes of the school kids but primarily through the police officers who are doing their job of investigating a murder. It’s an objective exploration of the subject, not a subjective one.

That leaves the third episode, and it is here where we might nominally expect to finally get some insight into the motivations of the killer since the episode consists of one long interview between him and a psychologist in the detention facility where he has been for seven months after the murder. But here again, we are not living this through the eyes of the young man but observing him through the eyes of the adult psychologist. Thus, the entire series of Adolescence completely avoids dealing with the murderer on his own terms. Everything we learn about him is through the perspective of other people. Adolescence is not a tragic murder story requiring the hero to take responsibility and seek redemption.

If we think about it, this fact is not in the least bit surprising. The point of tragedy is that the hero must take responsibility. In all of the classic stories about murder mentioned above, the murderer is an adult, or as good as one. Even Romeo is in his late teens. Yes, he is an impetuous youth, but he is old enough to know what he is doing and to take responsibility for his actions. What Adolescence purports to show us is a murderer who is only 13 years old. Since 13 is right on the age at which almost every culture assumes that legal and moral responsibility can be assigned to an individual, the core question of the story should have been whether this particular young man is capable of knowing what he has done and of taking responsibility for it in terms of his own conscience. But Adolescence completely avoids that question.

To say it again, the whole point of a tragic story is that the hero must bear responsibility. But that responsibility comes after the fact. Tragedy shows us heroes who are thrust into situations where they are not fully in control of themselves or of events but who then must come to terms with the guilt and remorse that follow from what they did as a result. Dostoevsky provides the ideal example here because the epic nature of his storytelling makes clear that coming to terms with murder takes years. In fact, arguably, you never come to terms with murder. It is just an open wound you carry for the rest of your life. At the end of Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov has not found redemption. He has only begun the process of trying to find it. The entire story before that is about his attempts to avoid facing up to his actions and in his conscience. Dostoevsky explores all the ways that an individual can try to avoid taking moral responsibility for their actions. Even then, Raskolnikov relies on the assistance of Sonya, a fellow sinner.

In Adolescence, the young killer is not assisted by anybody. He is thrown into detention. The one person who could help him find the road to redemption is not a fellow sinner but a psychologist, a technocrat with a job and an agenda. She does her job well by tricking him into an accidental confession of the murder. The entire scene is about gamesmanship; only we are expected to empathise with the psychologist, since she is the good person in the story and the young boy is, by definition, the bad person. This kind of garbage would have Dostoevsky turning in his grave.

Apparently, others who watched the psychologist scene found it “chilling”. They did so because we’re expected to believe that the young boy is a cold, calculating killer who refuses to show remorse. But herein lies the absurdity of the scene. On the one hand, the psychologist treats the young boy as if he is a fully grown adult capable of taking responsibility for his actions. On the other hand, the actor they chose for the role doesn’t even look like he’s hit puberty yet.

Sometimes 13-year-old boys are already physically men. Sometimes, they’re still children. The difference is at what age they start puberty, and that’s different for different people. In this respect, I have some personal experience, as I didn’t begin puberty until 14 years of age. Since my birthday was right near the end of the cutoff date for the purposes of determining which year level in school I was assigned to, I was also about the youngest in my class. The combination of these two meant that I was a skinny, scrawny boy while most of the others in my year level were one, two, or even three years into puberty. As a young man in the first couple of years of high school, these issues make a big difference to your life on the playground.

In Adolescence, we already have the problem of a 13-year-old killer whose maturity should be the main focus of the story. They then chose to make that problem even worse choosing an actor to play the role who looks like he has not yet reached puberty. This leads into some genuine absurdities during the interview scene with the psychologist treating a 13-year-old as if he were a grown man. For example, she asks him, “Do you find women attractive?“ and “Do you think women find you attractive?” Do grown women find prepubescent boys attractive? Do prepubescent boys get upset when grown women do not find them attractive? The answer to both these questions is no. Yet the story hinges on the fact that this 13-year-old was so sexually frustrated that he committed murder.

This leads to the other main reason why the whole interrogation scene doesn’t work. There are several parts of the scene where the young boy is agitated and raises his voice a little. We’re expected to believe that he somehow scares the psychologist. But because he’s a skinny and seemingly prepubescent boy, he has no physical or psychological presence to speak of. His “threat” has all the credibility of a childhood tantrum. The only reason it works at all is because the story has already told us that he’s a murderer. In any other circumstance, we would see nothing more than a bratty young boy who’s got a lot of growing up to do.

In short, Adolescence has no interest whatsoever in investigating the motivations of the murderer. The entire story is not about him as a subject but as an object. He is the object of a police investigation. He is the object of the psychologist’s assessment. He is the object of his parents shame and guilt. Since the story is told primarily through these other characters, we as the audience are also asked to view him solely as an object. For these reasons, the story is an anti-tragedy. It fits well within the genre of modern propaganda, which couldn’t care less about the individual but is concerned only with “social issues”. No doubt, that’s why Keir Starmer and the rest of the Western elites have been falling over themselves to praise it.

If that’s all it was, if Adolescence was just another collectivist circle jerk, it wouldn’t be particularly interesting. All of the weird choices made by the storytellers could just be written off as the brain-dead fever dreams of our senile elites. Such ideological nonsense shows up so often in films these days that it’s become passe. What makes Adolescence worth talking about is that the weird choices made by the screenwriters actually reveal something very important. The final scene of the third episode really is chilling, just not for the reasons that the ideologues who made the show think.

The psychologist has successfully tricked the young boy into confessing to the murder. Having done her job, she informs him that they won’t see each other again. His final outburst is to ask whether she likes him. Because of all the ridiculous questions about his sexuality earlier in the interview, the young boy actually has the presence of mind to make it clear that he is not asking whether she finds him sexually attractive. He wants to know if she likes him as a person. She tells him that her role has been that of a professional and that whether she likes him is irrelevant. The young boy, who is now quite hysterical, is being physically removed from the room by one of the attendants while screaming the question again, “Don’t you even like me a bit?”

Apparently, what most viewers saw in this scene was a hostile and narcissistic young man who refuses to show remorse. What I saw was a young boy who had just been tricked and betrayed by an adult who really doesn’t have any interest in him as a person. That’s what the psychologist herself admits. Her job is done, and her involvement with the boy has ended. Thanks for playing, kid. Better luck next time.

Thus, the young boy has correctly concluded that this woman really couldn’t care less about him. That is the world in which the young man has found himself. The police, the attendants in the facility, and especially the psychologist have no interest in him as an individual. They have no interest in helping him on a pathway to redemption. They are just doing their jobs. The only reason they care about his failure to confess to the crime is because it makes their jobs harder. Now that the psychologist has tricked him into confessing, her involvement in the case is over.

This scene reminded me very much of a different kind of story. In One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Randle McMurphy plays the role of the troublesome patient who causes trouble for Nurse Ratched. That story is a satire, and because both Ratched and McMurphy are grown-up arseholes, we don’t really care much about who wins their little battle. In fact, we kind of hope they both take each other out.

But in Adolescence you have a young man trapped in a heartless institution who is not rebelling because he’s an arsehole but because he correctly realises that nobody gives a damn about him. Since he is physically indistinguishable from a child, that’s exactly what it looked like to me: a child being manipulated by a bunch of adults. It’s a horrifying scene, but not for the reasons that the people who made it think. In fact, the whole scene is made ten times worse by the fact that the people who made it did so with the sincere belief that they are the good guys. And that’s made ten times worse by the fact that the Prime Minister of Great Britain thinks it’s something worth showing to every teenager in the country. Here you go, kids. This is what the future holds for you. Do exactly what we say, or we’ll lobotomise you. Government by Nurse Ratched. Which is exactly how Great Britain and most other Western nations are run these days.

So, I wonder whether the reason why this final scene of the psychologist’s interview has struck a chord is because it inadvertently shows the truth. The story is cathartic because what it shows is the sacrifice of a young man to “the system”. That’s what it means for him to be an object and not a subject. The real protagonist are the adults who sacrifice him to the system: the police, his parents, and especially the psychologist. That is why their grief is actually quite genuine. And that is why it makes sense to choose a 13 year old prepubescent boy for the role. He is not a man at all. He is a child who cannot take responsibility. The responsibility is with the adults. The point of Adolescence is that it’s a collective guilt trip. Apparently, the entire nation of Britain feels the need for this guilt trip, and so they should, looking at the sorry state of that country.

Still, in order to really understand these issues, we first need to go back to basics and ask the question of what the period of life known as adolescence (aka the Orphan archetype) is really about and why it has become so problematic in the post-war West. We’ll do that in next week’s post.

Archetypology, Volume 1 Now Available

As always seems to be the case when I write non-fiction, it ended up taking a lot longer than I thought to finish, but I have finally dotted all the i’s and crossed all the t’s on the introductory volume to what has unexpectedly ended up becoming a framework of human growth and development. Long-term readers would know that this all began with my foray into Jungian archetypes, which produced the Devouring Mother concept. Archetypology represents the distillation of that idea into its core components. It borrows a bit from Jungian psychology, a bit from humanist psychology (Maslow), a bit from Jean Gebser, Jan Smuts, Ken Wilber, and a number of others.

For the introductory volume, I tried to strike a balance between presenting the model in itself and also showing to what purposes it can be used. Thus, the book contains an extended case study of the early life of Martin Luther, the rise of modern feminism, and the loss of the Elder archetype in the 20th century. These may seem like unrelated topics, yet viewed within the archetypology framework, they all revolve around problems during the Orphan phase of life (adolescence). Accordingly, the book does feature the Orphan and Elder archetypes most heavily as these are the most problematic ones for us in the modern West. In short, Volume 1 is both an introduction to archetypology and an analysis of modern Western culture.

The book should now be available at most online retailers, including Booktopia (AUS), Barnes and Noble (USA), AbeBooks, Amazon, Amazon Kindle (ebook), Kobo (ebook), Everand (ebook), and more.

For Australian readers, Booktopia actually has the book available at a non-gouging price of $25. This is a nice change from past books of mine which opened at double the listed price. I assume the $25 is exclusive of postage. If any Australian readers would like to buy a copy direct from me, I can do it for $25 including postage. Shoot me an email if you’d like to do it that way and cut out the middlemen (my email address is on the home page of this website).

For those who’d like to read more on archetypology, I’ve given a more detailed introduction to the concept here. You can also read the sample chapter of the book on the Amazon page here. These are the main themes of the book:-

Now that I have finally presented the model in full, I’ll be moving on to Volume 2 which applies the idea of the Orphan-Elder relationship to the relationship between the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and the composer Richard Wagner. Working title is Archetypology, Volume 2: The Initiation of Nietzsche.

Science, Politics, and Religion: An Archetypology Perspective – Part 4

Let’s begin another post with our table that maps the levels of being against the exoteric-esoteric aspects of existence:- 

ExotericEsoteric
Higher esotericHigher esoteric
Socio-culturalSocio-cultural
BiologicalBiological

In past posts, we have focused on how these categories can be used to analyse our identities as individuals. But no individual is an island unto themselves. We are born into a society, and certainly in the first decades of life, we get our identity from that society. That’s why we can use this same set of categories to define the institutions of culture (the ones which bestow our identity on us). For each level of being, we can ask the question: which institution of society represents this?

For the biological domain, the answer is: the family. The family is concerned with the preparation of meals, the provision of shelter, and most of our other basic biological needs. But the family is also an institution predicated on biological relationships of genetic inheritance. While there can be families where the members are not biologically related (e.g., adoption), this is the exception which proves the rule. This doesn’t mean that the family doesn’t have other functions, including economic, political, and even religious, just that the biological ones are fundamental.

Moving to the socio-cultural level, there are three related institutions at play: the political, the economic, and the military. How formal and distinct such institutions are is usually a function of the size and complexity of the society. The bigger and more complex the society, the more we find that the sub-specialities operate relatively independently of each other. This is in contrast with smaller societies where at least the political and military functions are usually combined (think King Arthur and the knights of the round table).

This leaves the higher esoteric. What institution is responsible for the guardianship and propagation of the highest beliefs of a culture? In most societies, this is a straightforward question to answer, but it has become highly problematic for us in the modern West, and this is a big part of the reason why we now hear things like how science or politics has become religion. Religion, of course, would be the simple answer to the question. But at the same time we’re told that science has become religion, we’re also told that religion is on the decline. Thus, in order to answer the question, we need to dig into the history of religion and the twists and turns it has taken in Western culture.

If we think about this issue anthropologically, a question we might ask at a broad level is, how does a culture initiate members into its primary belief structure? There are two main forms of initiation: rites of passage and myths/stories. While there can be all kinds of rites and stories used in everyday life, every culture has its primary rites and stories that communicate its highest beliefs. A tribal initiate goes through a variety of ceremonies and rites whose purpose is not just to test their skills but to teach them the beliefs of the tribe. Such rites are reinforced by the main stories of the culture, which are almost always about past heroes who went through the same thing.

This may sound rather exotic, and yet it is exactly the same thing we see with the Catholic Church. Every Catholic rite of passage, such as Mass, Communion, Confirmation, etc., has its meaning tightly integrated with the story of Jesus and the Bible more broadly. Consider the rite of the Eucharist, where the initiate receives the body of Christ in the form of bread and wine. The meaning of this is directly related to the Bible passage: “Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life.” (John 6:54). This is in turn related to the idea of salvation and redemption through Christ. The symbolism of the rite of passage and the story that goes along with it are tightly interwoven. That’s the way it is in most cultures.

It follows from this that to find the core beliefs of any culture, you can look for both the main rites of passage and the main myths, especially where these are combined. If we take ancient Rome as an example, we find that one of the main myths was related to the founding brothers, Romulus and Remus, both sons of the god Mars and the virgin Rhea Silvia, and both raised by a she-wolf. The brothers wanted to found a city but couldn’t agree on the location. In the ensuing argument, Romulus killed Remus and chose the site of what is still Rome. That is the mythical aspect.

That myth is then reinforced by the rites of passage, including temples, holidays (holy days), and feasts dedicated to Romulus. In early Rome, religion was quite decentralised and so it wouldn’t have a universal thing to pay homage to Romulus. Later, during the imperial period, things changed. The cult of Caesar had a very similar form to the cult of Romulus, but it was far more widely recognised. Caesar largely wrote his own mythology, claiming descent from Venus. He was deified after his death, and a number of temples were built with various rituals and ceremonies. His birthday was also marked as a holiday.

We can see from this example that the Romans freely mixed religion and politics. However, that is merely our modern Western bias on the matter. The reality is that most cultures make no hard distinction between these domains. This division of ours began in the medieval era when the Catholic Church managed to unite the various barbarian groups of Europe into a unified entity under the Pope in Rome. Right from the beginning, there was a rather weird and also very fuzzy split between the religious and political. The Catholic Church had its origins in Roman culture but with a heavy dose of monastic theology thrown in for good measure. It couldn’t really decide whether it was a political or a religious entity. But that was a question that never would have occurred to the earlier Romans, who recognised no distinction between politics and religion.

In any case, what we see from the medieval period onwards is a kind of separation of church and state via the truce between the church and the kings of Europe known as the divine right of kings. In theory, the church would concern itself with spiritual affairs, and the kings would take care of politics. Julius Caesar could declare himself a god. But the kings of medieval Europe had to make do with having the Pope give them God’s blessing. In practice, the Pope and the kings were often at loggerheads, but the uneasy partnership held firm all the way until the Reformation when the Protestants realised that the church had strayed from what they believed was its purely spiritual mission and demanded that there really should be a separation of the church and state. The kings of Europe saw their opportunity to ride the wave of popular resentment to get what they had always wanted: more power. Eventually, the separation of church and state became a kind of official doctrine in northern Europe, but not until a great deal of blood had been spilled.

But, to say it again, the separation was already there from the start, as can be seen in the fact that there were separate rites of passage and separate myths for the political and religious domains. A peasant swore allegiance to the local lord, and that was their initiation in an economic, political, and military sense. Meanwhile, the religious rites of passage were run through the church. In theory, these were separate, but then things like the crusades or the church’s function as a propagandist on behalf of the kings muddied the waters. Ultimately, the divine right of kings was the unifying concept that linked the political and religious realms together.

Then we get to the Reformation.

Now, the first thing to note here is that the Protestants wanted to all but get rid of the rites of passage as methods of religious initiation. That was related to the idea of deprecating the role of priest, bishop, and pope. All that was, in turn, predicated on the notion that a believer should aim to have a direct connection with the divine. That direct connection was tied with an increased emphasis on the Bible. Since the Bible contains what we are calling the primary myths of the religion, what the Protestants were doing was tilting the focus of initiation towards the mythology and away from the rites of passage.

Closely tied to this was the desire to get rid of the Catholic Church’s hierarchy and all its pomp and ceremony. That is what led to much of the violence that followed the Reformation, including the English Civil War. In England, Henry VIII had liquidated the monasteries and established the Church of England. But that was really just his own personal version of the Catholic Church, one that would do whatever he wanted. It was a harbinger of the fact that the kings of Europe were slowly getting the upper hand over the church in Rome.

The Puritan reformers later objected to this, not because the church had become a servant of the state, but because it still had the old Catholic hierarchy with too much of a focus on rites of passage, etc. Cromwell and his men gutted the church only for the Restoration to bring the inevitable backlash. A number of thinkers, such as John Locke, started to wonder out loud whether it wouldn’t be better if politics and religion really should just be kept separate. As with so many of Locke’s ideas, this one was eagerly adopted by the American colonists who added it to their constitution. In Britain, there was more of a pragmatic truce which amounted to the Church of England becoming a kind of moral policeman on behalf of the state. In reality, true religious belief was already waning and being replaced by Enlightenment theories of reason.

The upshot of all this was that religion became a mostly private matter in accordance with the Protestant idea of a direct connection with the divine. By allowing direct access to the Bible and therefore opening up its interpretation, the Reformation eventually gave birth to numerous Protestant denominations, each with a slightly different take on the holy book. Religion had ended up transitioning away from the exoteric world of deeds and actions and into the esoteric world of ideology.

Now, if we think back again to Rome, the Romans were almost the inversion of the Protestants in that they emphasised the rites of passage as the markers of religious identity. Literacy rates in Roman times were in single digit percentages, so reading a holy book was not an option for most people anyway. A Roman solidified their religious identity by carrying out the rites of passage required of them. Romans couldn’t care less what you thought about the rites, only that you did them. Thus, the marker of religious identity in Roman times was exoteric, based on external actions. By contrast, the marker of religious identity in the modern West after the Reformation came to be ideologically based. It mattered not that you carried out the rites of the church but that you believed such and such an interpretation of the Bible, or at least professed to believe it.

And this has come to be true of politics too. Modern political parties are made up of factions of people unified not by any rite of passage or formal criteria but by professed allegiance to a set of ideological positions. The same is true for our economic identities too. When we join a new company as employees, there are some things that might loosely be called rites of passage that take place, but largely our membership is based on the fact that we will contribute to the professed mission of the company.

The initial shift towards esoteric forms of religious identity has now given birth to a world where ideology is main marker of identity more generally. That is true of us as individuals and it is true of the institutions of society. Now we’re ready to join the dots and see why politics and science have become religion. We’ll explore that more in next week’s post.

Science, Politics, and Religion: An Archetypology Perspective – Part 3

Let’s begin by recalling our table that maps the esoteric-exoteric distinction against the levels of being:

ExotericEsoteric
Higher esotericHigher esoteric
Socio-culturalSocio-cultural
BiologicalBiological

Each of these distinctions can be thought of as a component of our identity. That is, our identity has an exoteric, outward-facing aspect and an esoteric, inward-facing aspect. We can think about identity creation as a continuous feedback loop that not only moves back and forth between the rows but can also jump up to other levels of being. Driven by some inner desire, we act in the world, and then the consequences of those actions may trigger new esoteric states.

For example, let’s say there’s a person who is addicted to eating but who knows they have a problem. They feel the need to eat (not because of hunger, but addiction) and then eat to excess. This makes them feel ashamed and having yet again been unable to control themselves. If that loop repeats itself enough, shame may turn into despair, and despair may motivate more extreme actions in the outer world. (This is less likely with food addictions but definitely relevant to more dangerous addictions).

When we model identity creation in this fashion as a set of relationships between different aspects of our character, some important insights become apparent. For example, consider each row in the table and then ask the question, Which scholarly discipline is dedicated to it? For the biological row, this is straightforward. Biology is the discipline in question. But note that biology is only concerned with the exoteric side of the equation. It studies what can be known from outward appearance. It is not concerned with the subjective experience of biological processes like hunger, thirst, cold, etc. The inner aspects our biological identity have been left out of scope of the discipline of biology.

The same is true of our socio-cultural identity, which includes the disciplines of economics, political science, anthropology, and sociology. But all of these are concerned with outward behaviours and not with inward states. An economist wants to know how resources are allocated and tries to measure economic variables such as production, inflation, and unemployment. The other disciplines in question are also concerned with what can be measured and, therefore, with the exoteric column and not the esoteric.

Modern economics is particularly interesting in this respect since it not only ignores the esoteric aspect; it builds a theoretical framework based on an assumption about the esoteric that makes no sense. Economics recognises that economic activity is driven by human needs and wants (esoteric), and yet it assumes those needs and wants are infinite. But human life is finite. How can we have infinite wants in a finite life? The economic doctrine of scarcity is born out of this assumption, since if wants are infinite, there can never be enough time or money to satisfy them. Modern economics also fails to recognise the hierarchy of wants implied by the levels of being and therefore does not account for the fact that the desire for self-actualisation may require no resources at all and therefore be infinitely attainable. It requires no resources to fall in love, for example.

But economics is not alone in this ignorance of the esoteric dimension of existence. We see the exact same problem in political science, anthropology, and sociology. All of these pay no attention to the esoteric side of the equation since that would make their discipline subjective, and science is supposed to be objective. As a result, there is no science of the esoteric aspects of our biological, economic, political, or even military identities. These are ruled out a priori by the assumptions of modern science.

As a result, in modern Western culture, the esoteric parts of existence have been left to the artists, writers, and philosophers to deal with. Since biology has not been a traditional subject matter of the arts, we have almost no representation of inner biological states in either science or art. This includes things like hunger and thirst but, more interestingly, feelings of ill health.

There are all kinds of interesting questions to ask here. What does it feel like to be sick? What symptoms are common across illnesses? Is there any difference in the severity or quality of those symptoms? Another relatively unexplored area is the nature of sensation. How do the tastes of things differ, or the smells of them? What are the qualities of vision or hearing? What differences exist in the sensory experience of touch? Within our schema, all of these belong to the esoteric aspect of the biological level of being.

Although the biological has been ignored, the esoteric aspects of the socio-cultural level of being have been a primary subject matter for art, literature, and philosophy since these equate to important matters of politics, economics, and war. But even then, there is a huge split between the exoteric and esoteric investigations. Historians, economists, and political scientists focus on objective representations of external events. Such-and-such a war happened. Such-and-such a battle swung the war this way or that. Such-and-such a ruler was defeated and removed from power. These all belong to the exoteric side of the equation.

The esoteric side of the equation is left to the artists and writers, who explore the motivations behind war and other political disputes. Why did the war start in the first place? What were the motivations of the rulers? Why were the public so enthusiastic about it, or why did they not want to fight? These are questions that could be asked and yet never really get answered. Political disputes are treated much like illness in that their subjective aspects are presumed to be not amenable to explanation. Is that actually true, or has nobody ever tried?

We might expect more attention to be paid to the esoteric motivations of the ruling class, since they play a disproportionate role in political matters and are easier to study. Shakespeare explores such themes numerous times in his plays, especially in Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, and Richard III. Richard III is the true psychopath that will do whatever it takes to gain power and feels not the slightest remorse. Hamlet is almost his opposite. He is a young man who should take power but lacks the decisiveness to do so. Othello applies the logic of power to his marriage, and it ends up destroying both himself and Desdemona. Macbeth is perhaps the most interesting because he has honourably served his king Duncan, but cannot resist the temptation to take power when the opportunity presents itself. Nevertheless, Shakespeare shows us that Macbeth is hesitant before the act and then suffers afterwards.

As magnificent as Shakespeare’s plays are as an exploration of the attainment of power, they don’t really explore the interaction between the esoteric and exoteric aspects of politics or war. The plots of his stories don’t revolve around any specific political issues. Thus, there is no real connection between the exoteric and the esoteric in his stories. They are first and foremost psychological investigations.

Thus, we have ended up in a situation where science explores the exoteric side of life, while art and literature explores the esoteric side, and never the twain shall meet. We don’t have a model of the feedback loop that occurs between the exoteric and esoteric aspects of human existence.

But, more broadly, there is still a big imbalance between the exoteric and esoteric. Science is still the dominant source of “truth” and science is focused on the exoteric. There were signs in the 19th and 20th centuries that this imbalance might begin to be corrected. The arrival of psychoanalysis was one. In my opinion, Freud and Jung’s more speculative work in anthropology (Freud) and even theology (Jung) was their most interesting. Although he drank way too much of the Wagnerian kool-aid, Spengler’s work provided an example of esoteric historical scholarship. There was Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology, which was interested in some of the issues we discussed earlier, such as the subjective feelings of illness. Meanwhile, anthropology and sociology toyed with what was called “qualitative analysis,” which, in our terms, meant esoteric investigation.

All of these were positive developments that occurred prior to WW2 and then were snuffed out afterwards. Even psychoanalysis, which started off so positively, has turned into modern psychology, which now models every mental issue as a bio-chemical problem to be addressed by the administration of medication. All that esoteric stuff took too long, so now we just jab people with needles to get the result we want more quickly.

We see much the same pattern in the recent developments around the trans debate, especially as it relates to the surgical and pharmaceutical interventions required for people to change gender. Using our exoteric-esoteric distinction, we can see that the gender change concept is all about the exoteric side of the equation. This includes innocuous things like the application of make-up and hairstyling, but has more recently incorporated interventions such as implants, injections, and other surgical procedures. Together with the correct application of socio-cultural identity markers like clothing, these enable a change of gender in the exoteric sense.

But much like modern economists write off the esoteric side of their discipline by simply assuming that humans have infinite wants, so too is the esoteric side of the trans issue almost completely ignored. The assertion is that an individual simply feels like a man or a woman, and that is enough justification to have medical professionals running for the scalpel and the syringe. The question that never gets addressed is, “What does it actually feel like to be a man/woman?”

There’s a song whose title indicates it might provide an answer to exactly this question. It’s called “Man, I feel like a woman,” and was a big hit for Shania Twain about twenty years ago. Could we find an answer here to the question of what it feels like to be a woman? Well, not really.

The best thing about bein’ a woman
Is the prerogative to have a little fun and
Oh, oh, oh, go totally crazy, forget I’m a lady
Men’s shirts, short skirts
Oh, oh, oh, really go wild, yeah, doin’ it in style
Oh, oh, oh, get in the action, feel the attraction
Color my hair, do what I dare
Oh, oh, oh, I wanna be free, yeah, to feel the way I feel
Man, I feel like a woman (hey!)

Now, we shouldn’t expect much from a pop song, but the absence of even a single definitive esoteric quality of womanhood in the lyrics is indicative of a larger problem. How could we know what it feels like to be a woman, or a man for that matter? If we can’t answer that question, how could we ever verify when somebody says that they feel like one or the other? How could anybody know for themselves what they feel like?

The reality is, we are living in a culture which simply doesn’t care about the esoteric side of life. The economist states that gender surgery is just another of the infinite number of humans needs that contributes to the GDP. The medical professional is more concerned with performing the operation correctly than whether its esoteric motivation is justified. There’s a giant black hole where the esoteric aspects of existence should be. To make things even worse, the existential consequences of this absence of esoteric understanding are then weaponised by politicians who pretend to care. That’s why we end up with identity politics and all the variations on wokeness, which has increasingly amounted to nothing more than the insistence that anybody should get whatever they want just because they want it.

This is the unholy alliance between capitalism and liberalism that has dominated our culture in the post-war years, and which has reached new heights of absurdity in the last few decades. Both have ended up in a position of assuming infinite wants which are qualitatively indistinguishable. Economics assumes it because it enables things to be measured monetarily. A dollar spent on one thing is the same as a dollar spent on any other thing. Liberalism assumes infinite wants because for somebody to assert that there really are qualitative differences would be “authoritarianism”. Both of these are predicated on a wilful ignorance of the esoteric side of life.

Now, still we haven’t really addressed the topic which motivated this series of posts in the first place, which is why economics and politics have become a religion. But this post has started to hint at the answer. It lies in the disconnection between the esoteric and exoteric aspects of existence. Whatever one wants to say about Christianity, it had an explicit model that accounted for both body and soul. Thomas Aquinas, for example, emphasised the harmonious relation between the esoteric and exoteric. The decline in Christianity as an active force in the culture has left science in charge. But science has no integral or holistic approach to the esoteric-exoteric distinction. In fact, as we have seen, science all but ignores the esoteric. Without any notion of esoteric truth, the esoteric side of our culture has become increasingly hysterical.

We’ll explore these themes more in next week’s post.