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Review of What is Soul? Geigerich, very helpful! The crux of it starts in bold below, six parapgraphs from the end.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Preparation for Reading this Book
By John C. Woodcock on July 15, 2012
REVIEW: WHAT IS SOUL by Wolfgang Giegerich (2012)
by
John C. Woodcock Ph. D.
In this review I would like to share some thoughts regarding preparation for engagement with this ground-breaking book. Yes, I think some preparation is necessary! This is not an easy-to-read book for beginners. It is not a self-help book. It is not designed to give the reader some convenient ideas to make life more understandable or manageable today. With adequate preparation however I believe this book can make a very big difference to how you will comprehend the modern world and your place in it today. The author's intention is not to persuade or offer consolation or an ideology. His intent is simply to explore the nature of the soul but as he does so, I think you will find, as I did, your eyes getting opened to the real situation of modern life, in which we are each inescapably embedded, for better or worse.
The first point I want to make in preparation to read this book is the common knowledge that today, "soul" does not have any currency in the "official narrative" of the major disciplines that are shaping our modern world culture--physics, biology, economics, evolution, neuro-science, philosophy, technology, politics and so on. Religion, yes, theology yes and at the same time churches are emptying as people seem to be saying that they can get on fine today without considering the fate of their eternal soul. So although soul obviously still is spoken of in some quarters the engines driving our culture are doing fine without the need to invoke soul at all. In fact `soul' or "god" is known derisively as `God of the Gaps' meaning that `soul' is thought to be conveniently invoked whenever we have a current and undoubtedly temporary gap in our knowledge.
So, ok, most people get on without any well-thought out notion of the soul at all but for those that do still believe in such a thing, the most common idea of soul today is that of an `eternal' substance that may `show up' at various times of our lives (e.g. extreme situations) and which endures beyond our mortal death. This idea satisfies on two counts: we can draw comfort from the soul's presence at times when we feel utterly alone and we can go towards our death with some sense that it is not all over, which for many is a frightening prospect.
Giegerich's book arrives then in a time of "soullessness" and a time where the idea of a soul as a eternal `help-mate' or `angel' still works for some, even if as a simple belief. These two facts of modern existence must be addressed by any author who discusses soul. They are the two facts, perhaps the only facts about soul that inform our existence today.
Wolfgang Giegerich does address these facts and addresses them in a way that could astound you, if you are not prepared. With regards to the soullessness that characterizes our modern existence, he does not bemoan this reality or seek to console us, or compensate for it. In a far more radical move, Giegerich demonstrates that this modern condition of soullessness is still soul! This means that even though we feel ourselves to be in a world without soul, in reality we are still within soul, that this modern reality is the work of soul.
This brings me to the second point of the `eternal soul'. Giegerich demonstrates that this concept of soul was indeed true, i.e. at another time (the time of metaphysical philosophy) but is no longer true for us. Two issues emerge from these astounding responses to the "facts of life" today: how can a concept of soul be true in one age and not another and what is the true concept of soul today? Both issues are raised and answered in this remarkable book. All I can do here is to give a brief summary of Giegerich's brilliant and to my mind conclusive arguments.
Giegerich throughout his book includes a scholarly review of the concept of soul from former ages, leading to the present. This may seem quite ordinary, quite in keeping with other forms of historical research where ideas about things (e.g. planets and their motion) and the way these ideas change are reviewed. But what Giegerich is implicitly proposing throughout his review is much more radical and I believe that readers must grasp what he is saying here in order even to make sense of his arguments and conclusions. So let's unpack it a bit here.
Historical research is most commonly rooted in an assumption that history is a study of ideas about the world. Our ideas get refined but the world stays the same as it always was. We just get better at matching our concepts to the reality of the given world.
In order to come to terms with this book, you must throw out this assumption!
The soul is not an object of historical research the same way as other things in the world. Giegerich's starting point (his a priori) is that the soul is not a thing at all, it is what determines both our ideas and the world. From this startling a priori comes the corollary that when the soul changes or transforms, both our ideas (our philosophies) and the world i.e. the form of the world and our mode-of-existence in it transform. Not how does the soul change down through history but how does the soul change as reflected in historical movement--a totally different and radical view of history--soul as history, soul as historical movement itself, soul as determinative of our existence in the world, soul not as abstract concept conforming with some object in the world, but soul as living concept, just as Life is a living concept, not conforming to any one thing in the world but playing through and determining the life of each living thing.
So we can see here that Giegerich also answers the question of the `eternal' soul. Yes that idea was historically true, i.e. the truth belonging to a period of history. He demonstrates that the soul has once again transformed taking us and the world with it. The reason that we all feel the stunning absence of soul in the world today is that the living concept soul has transformed once again (roughly from the 19th century on), only this time it no longer reflects its life in any aspect of the substantial world as it once did (e.g. Medieval Philosophy regarded nature as text which could be read in order to discover truths of the soul etc.). Instead the soul has now entered and become the very form of consciousness that we are today--a radically new situation.
We have become in our depths, what we vainly seek in the world. The present "soulless" world is still ensouled because our present world and the form of consciousness that correlates with it are both products of the soul's latest transformation out of metaphysics and into positive-factuality.
To get anywhere near Giegerich's arguments I therefore believe the reader must throw overboard the universally accepted conception of history as a study over time of our human ideas about an unchanging world and also the reader must relativise the notion of an `eternal soul' to its appropriate historical context. If you can achieve these two acts of `kenosis', then I think you will find that What is Soul will indeed open up for you and become a living text that will inform you of the soul's truths, those of the past and those of today's modern existence.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Preparation for Reading this Book
By John C. Woodcock on July 15, 2012
REVIEW: WHAT IS SOUL by Wolfgang Giegerich (2012)
by
John C. Woodcock Ph. D.
In this review I would like to share some thoughts regarding preparation for engagement with this ground-breaking book. Yes, I think some preparation is necessary! This is not an easy-to-read book for beginners. It is not a self-help book. It is not designed to give the reader some convenient ideas to make life more understandable or manageable today. With adequate preparation however I believe this book can make a very big difference to how you will comprehend the modern world and your place in it today. The author's intention is not to persuade or offer consolation or an ideology. His intent is simply to explore the nature of the soul but as he does so, I think you will find, as I did, your eyes getting opened to the real situation of modern life, in which we are each inescapably embedded, for better or worse.
The first point I want to make in preparation to read this book is the common knowledge that today, "soul" does not have any currency in the "official narrative" of the major disciplines that are shaping our modern world culture--physics, biology, economics, evolution, neuro-science, philosophy, technology, politics and so on. Religion, yes, theology yes and at the same time churches are emptying as people seem to be saying that they can get on fine today without considering the fate of their eternal soul. So although soul obviously still is spoken of in some quarters the engines driving our culture are doing fine without the need to invoke soul at all. In fact `soul' or "god" is known derisively as `God of the Gaps' meaning that `soul' is thought to be conveniently invoked whenever we have a current and undoubtedly temporary gap in our knowledge.
So, ok, most people get on without any well-thought out notion of the soul at all but for those that do still believe in such a thing, the most common idea of soul today is that of an `eternal' substance that may `show up' at various times of our lives (e.g. extreme situations) and which endures beyond our mortal death. This idea satisfies on two counts: we can draw comfort from the soul's presence at times when we feel utterly alone and we can go towards our death with some sense that it is not all over, which for many is a frightening prospect.
Giegerich's book arrives then in a time of "soullessness" and a time where the idea of a soul as a eternal `help-mate' or `angel' still works for some, even if as a simple belief. These two facts of modern existence must be addressed by any author who discusses soul. They are the two facts, perhaps the only facts about soul that inform our existence today.
Wolfgang Giegerich does address these facts and addresses them in a way that could astound you, if you are not prepared. With regards to the soullessness that characterizes our modern existence, he does not bemoan this reality or seek to console us, or compensate for it. In a far more radical move, Giegerich demonstrates that this modern condition of soullessness is still soul! This means that even though we feel ourselves to be in a world without soul, in reality we are still within soul, that this modern reality is the work of soul.
This brings me to the second point of the `eternal soul'. Giegerich demonstrates that this concept of soul was indeed true, i.e. at another time (the time of metaphysical philosophy) but is no longer true for us. Two issues emerge from these astounding responses to the "facts of life" today: how can a concept of soul be true in one age and not another and what is the true concept of soul today? Both issues are raised and answered in this remarkable book. All I can do here is to give a brief summary of Giegerich's brilliant and to my mind conclusive arguments.
Giegerich throughout his book includes a scholarly review of the concept of soul from former ages, leading to the present. This may seem quite ordinary, quite in keeping with other forms of historical research where ideas about things (e.g. planets and their motion) and the way these ideas change are reviewed. But what Giegerich is implicitly proposing throughout his review is much more radical and I believe that readers must grasp what he is saying here in order even to make sense of his arguments and conclusions. So let's unpack it a bit here.
Historical research is most commonly rooted in an assumption that history is a study of ideas about the world. Our ideas get refined but the world stays the same as it always was. We just get better at matching our concepts to the reality of the given world.
In order to come to terms with this book, you must throw out this assumption!
The soul is not an object of historical research the same way as other things in the world. Giegerich's starting point (his a priori) is that the soul is not a thing at all, it is what determines both our ideas and the world. From this startling a priori comes the corollary that when the soul changes or transforms, both our ideas (our philosophies) and the world i.e. the form of the world and our mode-of-existence in it transform. Not how does the soul change down through history but how does the soul change as reflected in historical movement--a totally different and radical view of history--soul as history, soul as historical movement itself, soul as determinative of our existence in the world, soul not as abstract concept conforming with some object in the world, but soul as living concept, just as Life is a living concept, not conforming to any one thing in the world but playing through and determining the life of each living thing.
So we can see here that Giegerich also answers the question of the `eternal' soul. Yes that idea was historically true, i.e. the truth belonging to a period of history. He demonstrates that the soul has once again transformed taking us and the world with it. The reason that we all feel the stunning absence of soul in the world today is that the living concept soul has transformed once again (roughly from the 19th century on), only this time it no longer reflects its life in any aspect of the substantial world as it once did (e.g. Medieval Philosophy regarded nature as text which could be read in order to discover truths of the soul etc.). Instead the soul has now entered and become the very form of consciousness that we are today--a radically new situation.
We have become in our depths, what we vainly seek in the world. The present "soulless" world is still ensouled because our present world and the form of consciousness that correlates with it are both products of the soul's latest transformation out of metaphysics and into positive-factuality.
To get anywhere near Giegerich's arguments I therefore believe the reader must throw overboard the universally accepted conception of history as a study over time of our human ideas about an unchanging world and also the reader must relativise the notion of an `eternal soul' to its appropriate historical context. If you can achieve these two acts of `kenosis', then I think you will find that What is Soul will indeed open up for you and become a living text that will inform you of the soul's truths, those of the past and those of today's modern existence.