| 11.09.04 |
Worldviews
No news on
the film, but there is some good news. Our brilliant composer Juan Cruz
Masotta has placed the soundtrack for the film on sale at cdbaby.com.
I encourage you to check it out. You can listen to a couple of the pieces
from the film in the trailer section
and selections from the CD at cdbaby.com.
Since the
film is about worldviews, it seems only fitting that I write about worldviews
in this blog. The idea of the blog was originally to write about the experience
of trying to sell the film, but since there isn't much to write about
until we get into a festival or two, I'll use this space to try and clarify
some of the ideas behind the film. There are also essays and excerpts
from The Chrysalis Age in the Ideas section, but these blogs will try
to deal with things in a slightly less technical manner.
Toward that
end I thought I might try to fulfill a request my wife, Tsufit made. She
was trying to explain the film to someone, and explain what I had been
saying about the nation not being divided into two factions, but really
being divided into at least three: Traditional, Modern, and Postmodern.
Her request was that I write down an easy to understand set of examples
to explain what I mean by these terms, so that she should explain it to
someone else without using the language of developmental psychology or
Spiral Dynamics. If you are interested in Spiral Dynamics you can check
our these sites:
Don Beck's Spiral Dynamics Site
Christopher Cowen's Spiral Dynamics
Site
And an overview
of Spiral Dynamics as a PDF
In Spiral
Dynamics terms Traditional would be Blue, Modern would be Orange, Postmodern
would be Orange, and Integral would be Yellow and Turquoise.
So here's
a sort of quick checklist that you can either apply to your self, or use
to explain to others. None of these are hard and fast descriptions. Many
people are in a transitional phase between one of the worldview stages,
and these transitions generally take at least five years.
Moreover,
I advise caution in two respects. The first is to attempt to avoid being
judgmental of any of the stages. This is our natural reaction. If we have
a Modern worldview we will take a pejorative attitude towards those with
Traditional worldviews. It's pointless. There's always someone with a
wider worldview. About 25% of the US population has Traditional worldview,
about 50% has a Modern worldview, around 20-25% has a Postmodern worldview,
probably less that %2 has an Integral worldview, and much less than 1%
is at any of the four stages of Spiritual worldview.
This leads
to the second caution, which is not to over estimate the depth and breadth
of your worldview. If anything, you are better off under estimating it.
Myself, I'm struggling to integrate a Postmodern worldview into an Integral
worldview and I'm well aware that I don't have but the first inklings
of a truly Spiritual worldview.
The Five
Main Worldviews
You probably
have a Traditional worldview if:
- You believe
in a literal interpretation of your particular religious text (whether
it is the Christian Bible, the Jewish Torah, the Muslim Koran, or any
other ancient text).
- You believe
that faith is more important that science.
- If you
believe that abortion should be illegal.
- If you
believe that homosexuality is a sin and should be illegal, or at the
very least that gays and lesbians should not be afforded the same rights
as others, particularly that they should not be allowed to marry.
- You believe
that sex is something that should be reserved for marriage and you may
not believe in contraception.
- You believe
that moral issues are black and white, right and wrong.
- You long
for a return to a less complicated way of life with clear and easy to
understand social structures. Depending on your ideal, this could be
a longing for a return to the 1950's, 1900, or even the 1800's.
- You believe
in a return to a "traditional" family structure with a stay
at home mother and a father who is the source of decision making.
- You believe
in a "creationism" explanation for the origins of life and
the universe over the Theory of Evolution.
- You prefer
more authoritarian forms of government and justice (i.e. the death penalty
and longer prison sentences for repeat offenders of non-violent crimes).
- You believe
that the individual will must submit to the will of a higher power.
- You believe
that life and human social structures are naturally hierarchical.
- You prefer
a more isolationist approach to economic and cultural globalization.
- You would
feel uncomfortable if someone described you as modern or postmodern.
You probably
have a Modern worldview if:
- You believe
that science has disproved most if not all of the basic tenets of religious
beliefs.
- You believe
that religious texts must be interpreted in the light if science, and
that the best interpretation is metaphorical.
- You tend
to reject faith for rationality.
- You tend
to reject religion and prefer secularism, or at least a more secular
version of your religion.
o You believe that moral issues can be more than simply black and white,
right and wrong.
- You don't
"understand" homosexuality, but you prefer not to take rights
away from people.
- You feel
that sex is something that individuals should decide on their own and
believe in the use of contraceptives.
- You believe
in the Theory of Evolution over a "creationism" explanation
for the origins of life and the universe.
- You believe
that abortion should be legal.
- You believe
in individual agency and that individual will and desire should be constrained
a little as possible by the government or society.
- You believe
in the equality of women but it isn't a priority for you.
- You believe
the consumer life-style of the Unites States and other Western countries
is the way to live and structure our society.
- You don't
mind hierarchies as long as they don't get in the way of what you want
to do.
- You prefer
an expansionist approach to economic and cultural globalization.
- You would
feel uncomfortable if someone described you as traditional or postmodern.
You probably
have a Postmodern worldview if:
- You are
searching for a spiritual path that incorporates religious beliefs but
that does not deny science.
- You prefer
a secularism that embraces the spiritual aspects of religion.
- If you
believe that moral issues can be not just black and white, right and
wrong, but gray and dependent upon context.
- You do
not support the death penalty.
- You do
not want to see any laws passed making abortion illegal.
- You see
sex and something natural and human in all of its expressions and believe
in contraception.
- You believe
in the equality of women in all aspects if life; work, family, religion,
and government.
- You believe
in a pluralistic and egalitarian society that embraces all people of
all races, ethnicities, religions, and sexual orientations.
- You see
nothing wrong with homosexuality or marriage between gays and lesbians.
- You believe
in giving equal value to all cultures and see Western culture as part
of a rainbow of cultural possibilities and not its supreme expression.
- You tend
to dislike hierarchies of various kinds.
- You believe
that everyone's perspective should be honored.
- You like
to try to "see" the world from different perspectives.
- You reject
the consumer way of life and are searching for an alternative.
- You are
very concerned with the ecological state of the Earth and the impact
of humanity upon the natural world.
- You are
critical of the current expansionist mode of economic and cultural globalization
and see it as detrimental to non-Western nations.
- You would
feel uncomfortable if someone described you as traditional or modern.
You probably
have an Integral worldview if:
- You can
see the difference between the different worldviews clearly and see
how each successive stage embraces more truth than the previous stage.
- You seek
to take the truths of each worldview and abandon their falsehoods.
- You acknowledge
the conflict between science and religion but see not need for conflict
between science and spirituality.
- You seek
to see how to supply the needs of each worldview and help people transition
between the different stages.
- If you
see hierarchies as necessary but potentially pathological.
- If your
understanding of moral issues rests not in religious rules, social laws,
or cultural customs, but in a direct understanding of the interconnectedness
of all people.
- You understand
the various roles of religion in society and seek to elevate and integrate
the spiritual traditions within and between the various religions.
- You actively
seek to understand how the different aspects of our world are connected
including the ecological, economic, social, cultural, and personal.
- You seek
to find a global holistic or systems view of the world.
- You are
concerned with the individual and collective health of the entire human
world as well living and non-living systems of the natural world.
- You believe
that economic and cultural globalization can be a great benefit to humanity
if pursued in a manner that reflects natural complex systems such as
ecosystems, and which engender a bottom up, rather than top down, approach
to integration of social and cultural systems.
- You would
be amused if someone described you as traditional, modern, or postmodern.
You probably
have a Spiritual worldview if:
- Your first
response to hatred is universal love.
- Your first
response to anger is universal compassion.
You are concerned with the suffering of all living beings.
- You recognize
the interconnectedness of all living beings and the entire manifest
universe.
- You are
less concerned with the wants and desires of your individual ego-self
and more concerned with the needs of all other living beings.
- You rely
not upon a literal interpretation of your religious texts, but upon
a direct experience of the Divine for your faith and beliefs.
- Your understanding
of moral values is not grounded in religious rules, but in a direct
experience of the interconnectedness of all things and in universal
love and compassion for all suffering beings.
- You see
the Divine in all people and all things.
- You are
unconcerned with what people call you, because you have found that you
identify less and less with the ego-self that people usually cling to
and the ground of their being, because you have begun to realize a greater
ground of all being that is all people and all things.
Again, these
are just general description and this is not a test. However, hopefully
it will be clearer what I mean when referring to the main worldviews.
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