RELIGION, SUPERSTITION, AND SPIRITUALITY (Written 27 September 1993)
by John David Garcia, School of Experimental Ecology, Box 10851,
Eugene, OR 97440 503/9373437
Superstition has been defined as "other people's religious
beliefs". Similarly a "cult" may be defined as
"other people's organized religion". A more precise
way of defining "superstition" is "a belief in
cause and effect relationships which leads to systematic, repetitive
behavior which is totally ineffective in accomplishing what it
claims it can accomplish, but this system of belief and behavior
is never subjected to scientific scrutiny by those who believe,
and repeatedly practice, it". This is "superstition".
It is the basis of organized religion.
Organized religions usually have "authority" figures
who claim to know what is right and what is wrong within the religion
and what kinds of behavior should be condemned or lauded. These
notions, usually have to do with institutionalized superstition,
which, apparently is a characteristic of almost all organized
religions, and is usually called "ritual". Those who
practice popular ritual are often considered "spiritual".
In organized religions, the nonobservance, or the defiling of
ritual is almost always regarded as the greatest sin. That is
why in many Christian religions the devil and his worshipers
are almost always portrayed as defiling some sacred ritual. The
worst thing that happens in ritualized religions is that superstitious
ritual, "spirituality", comes to replace ethical
action. This tends to destroy creativity among the adherents
of that religion. As a general rule it can be stated that the
more concerned a religion is with ritual, the less concerned it
will be with creativity, and the less creative its adherents will
be. "Fundamentalists" are militant superstitionists;
they are the least creative humans.
Superstition and ritual are practiced because they make their
practitioners happy by conforming to the prejudices and unquestioning
beliefs of a tightly knit group which approves of this behavior;
they then have a very strong sense of belonging and community.
Loneliness seems to be the greatest source of human unhappiness.
To be highly ethical in a superstitious society is to be a creative,
unbelieving member of a tiny minority, which is condemned, and
often persecuted and even killed, by the vast superstitious majority.
The ethical persons are a minute, unorganized minority, which
is sparsely distributed among the superstitious majority in all
nations; this is a very lonely type of existence. Those who see
the contradictions and the hypocrisy of the majority religions,
often compensate for it by forming new, quasi religions of their
own, such as the organized militant atheists under Madelyn Murray,
the socialists under Marxist ideology, or the many, so called,
"cults" of the minority religions such as the Moonies,
the Hare Krishnas, the Scientologists, and all minor sects
of mainstream religions. All of these persons have substituted
one set of superstitions for another, but they have compensated
for their loneliness by forming another religion which gives them
a sense of belonging, community and "spirituality".
True spirituality, or what Constantin Brunner might have called
Geistigkeit in lieu of Geistlichkeit,
is based on dedication to truth and creativity, independently
of how lonely or unhappy it might make us. The true spiritual,
or Esprital, as Henri Lurie might say, is prepared to stand alone
all his life rather than subscribe to any form of superstition
in order to find fellowship and acceptance in a group.
Because of this uncompromising attitude, Espritals are extremely
rare and can rarely organize themselves into a cohesive group,
because they lack a com mon system of belief. The Esprital
acts without believing. The Esprital does the best he can knowing
that he may be wrong. The only common belief that true Espritals
might share is the belief in the notion that the greatest
good is to maximize creativity, and that we should all act and
interact with one another on the basis of what maximizes our common
creativity, without the reduction of the creativity of single
person. However, almost all Espritals will differ on how they
should maximize creativity. The last 24 years of my life have
been spent in learning how to identify Espritals and organize
them in such a way that they can all maximize their creativity
through 100% mutual consensus. My findings are that this will
occur only in small groups of 810, ethical, cooperative,
free men and women, as described in my last book, CREATIVE TRANSFORMATION,
which supports this and other unusual conclusions in this essay.
It is extremely difficult to find and organize the Espritals,
because they are less than .001%, and possibly less than .0001%,
of the human species. Furthermore they are not concentrated in
any part of the earth. They are a tiny minority because, although
almost all humans may be born ethical, almost all aspects of every
culture destroy ethics by punishing creative, ethical behavior
and rewarding unethical, destructive, superstitious behavior.
A very small minority of humanity has the innate courage
and ethics, as well as the fortunate environment, to remain ethical
in the face of constant punishment, threats, and loneliness. Almost
everyone ultimately succumbs to superstitious conformity
and surrenders to their own fear. Once this happens, these persons
have irreversible entropy, and cannot be remade ethical by any
means.
The real problems are, how to best find, concentrate, and then integrate the very few Espritals.
Because there are so few Espritals, conventional means, such as
advertising in the mass media, are inadequate ways of locating
the Espritals at any reasonable cost. Writing books of relevance
to the Espritals, are also inadequate, since the mass media will
ignore books they are ethically incompetent to understand. Therefore,
the Espritals do not know about their mutual existence. They
only know that they do not seem to fit in very well anywhere,
and that they have met few or no persons who seem to fully share
their values or their ethical courage.
The only common feature of Espritals, at every stage of their
development, is that they lead creative lives. Because creativity
is an interaction of intelligence and ethics, not all creative
persons are Espritals, although all such persons are ethical.
It takes a very high level of ethics to be an Esprital. The critical
level of ethics, for an Esprital, seems to be the level at which
someone is ready to die, or greatly suffer, before decreasing
anyone's creativity, including one's own. Therefore, persons
who are highly intelligent, but only marginally ethical, may be
highly creative, without being Espritals. What every Esprital
does, perhaps unconsciously, is to courageously search out
the most creative community that can be found a holy
grail.
Because of the bureaucratization of organizations and communities
that are supposed to be creative, such as schools, universities,
notforprofit foundations, businesses, and the agencies
of the federal, state, and local governments, the Espritals usually
become dissatisfied with these organizations and leave. They
eventually discover that the only way that they can live a purely
creative life without ethical compromises is to be selfemployed
in some creative endeavor as varied as medicine, engineering,
carpentry, machining, mechanics, art, music, farming, and many
other fields, although not even a small minority of the people
in these fields are likely to be Espritals. Similarly, Espritals
are not likely to be lawyers, bureaucrats, politicians, or people
who live parasitically off of other people's creativity, without
creating something of their own, equal in value to the resources
that they are consuming. This knowledge enables us to know something
about where to look for Espritals, and where not to look for them.
Espritals will usually find that earning substantial amounts of
money will require ethical compromises, such as nurturing totally
uncreative parasites, who are normally those who traffic in money,
without in anyway being creative themselves, and are often biased
against financing Espritals, because they can usually earn more
money financing marginally ethical persons who take few or no
risks, and earn most of their money by buying low and selling
high, which, for Espritals, is a trivial form of commerce. Espritals,
once they are fully developed, from less ethical but still creative
children and young adults, always courageously choose to work
in the environment which maximizes creativity, rather in the environment
which maximizes income, or even gives them minimum security.
This does not, necessarily, mean that Espritals are poor.
Since Espritals are creative, and creativity is the basis of all
wealth, Espritals will always have all the resources they need
to maximize their creativity and that of those they most love,
although they may not have any surpluses. This situation becomes
even more pronounced when the Esprital discovers that he or she
is better off economically by not making any ethical compromises
and refusing to cooperate with any persons who are systematically
destructive to themselves or others, directly or indirectly.
As a consequence eventually all Espritals, who survive, will
try to make themselves, and all those they love, as selfsufficient
as possible.
Therefore, the best place to search for Espritals is in a community which is highly ethical and creative in many fields and simultaneously promotes selfsufficiency for itself and others. At one time I thought that the Libertarian party in the United States might be such a community. However, I soon found that the Libertarians, who have the only political philosophy that is ethically compatible with that of the Espritals, include many persons who are Libertarians primarily out of desire for using drugs, maximizing their discretionary income, hatred of govern
ment bureaucrats, or simply a love of liberty, which are not primary motivations of Espritals.
A love of liberty is fully compatible with Esprital values, since
liberty is a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for maximizing
creativity, which is the only end goal for Espritals.
As a means of finding and integrating Espritals and their children, I have continued to interact with Libertarians, as a minor effort, and create, as a major effort, a new organization, The Creativity Center, which is designed to eventually attract Espritals from all over the world.
A description of a Creativity Center, with minimum critical mass, is attached. More follows.