In 1969, R. Buckminster Fuller (1895-1983), the pre-eminent 20th
Century engineer for the United States, and perhaps the World,
threw out a very personal challenge. It was in the form of a book
entitled Utopia or Oblivion daring the earth to make the choice.
Reading now as both a futuristic and nostalgic tract, it appeared
in 1969 like a literary barn-burner manifesto of the 1920’s
Classical Modernist variety.
Agreeing with
the spirit of his message, I believe that not enough time has
elapsed for the world to both absorb and accept the impact of
his dare and to transform the soul of it into a completed cultural
artifact. We must do it now utilizing whatever means we can. There
have been, however, a few groups of Futurists who over the past
32 years have heeded Fuller’s message, and have attempted
a convergence of as many aspects of human knowledge as possible
within their limits.
The goal of our present endeavor is to produce a transdisciplinary
world-view which will sustain human existence into a continuous
future. This, of course, was the basic message of Fuller’s
book.
Time
moves swiftly, and Fuller’s kairos
(or crisis point) is now upon us.
Decisions that will influence everyone
are now inevitable and unavoidable.
They must and will be made.
As a practical example, from the study of contemporary demographics
have come projections that by the 2050 the population of the world
may rise to the unbelievable height of 18 billion souls. This
is even within the circumstances of the so-called ‘population
controls’. More "conservative" estimates have
placed the figure at double what it is now (12 billion). The image
provided by United Nations statisticians, in order to mentally
flesh out such monstrous declarations, is that we should expect
to see the phantasmata of several continents rise from the floor
of the ocean. A la Atlantis ready to receive these teeming throngs.
Such
an impending scenario I feel is motivation enough to change the
world
into a culture that no one throughout history has yet fully anticipated.
During
these same 32 years, my own work has been
an attempt to anticipate this new cultural artifact into form
of
both a new world view conceived intellectually and a felt sensibility
which has been the source of my artwork.
This combination has always been my way of entering into the process
of living within Utopic Space. This is a space which I believe
no longer deserves to be characterized as something vague or literary,
at base having no reality beyond the imaginative and chimerical.
Instead we will begin to discover, as Fuller claimed, it is necessary
in order for humanity to survive.
As
a felt and lived sensibility, Utopic space has a generic religious
base because the concept of "Utopia" as Saint Thomas
(1478-1535) said in his book of 1516, (who coined the term) Utopia
means "Heaven on Earth". This is an ontic state distinct
from both heaven and earth, a situation that states that which
has not history connects directly with that which has only history.
What Saint Thomas Moore is describing is a reference to the major
portal between eternity and time that the Ancient Greek philosopher
Plato (428-347 BC) immortalized in one of his last dialogues,
the pythagoreau cosmology of Timaeus.
Space (or
the nurse of becoming) provides the matrix for the platonic forms
from eternity to impress themselves into the multifarious copies
of the forms which we experience in time. For humanity, whether
at the collective or the individual realm, Utopic Space expresses
itself on the day-to-day basis as a total compassionate love for
all living things including oneself.
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As
a new form of space for the world,
Utopic Space has been hinted at all through history.
In the late 19th century, this space began to take on a higher
degree of ontic specificity as the result of the work of artists
and scientists of the International Symbolist Movement. Eventually
Utopic Space became defined as a multiplenum of an octave of spatiality
and temporality in the form of total continuity. While one can
perceive distinctions, the plena ultimately merge into oneness.
Utopic
Space presents, from an objective point of view,
absolutely no aspects of internal structure
(no holiarchies, no hierarchies, and no heteroarchies).
Only
a few metaphors of Utopic Space come to mind
and they center about the possibility of one’s
instantaneous immersion into this space:
1.
Consider the physical space close to the earth but extending up
to a distance of about 20,000 feet above the surface;
free falling through it evokes the sense of freedom and danger
one would expect upon entering Utopic Space
2.
Much further out into interstellar space is the condition of total
anti-gravity in which there is no fear of falling, but
there is the possibility of entering a space in which you are
totally helpless and on the verge of a condition of unimaginable
loneliness and, of course, imminent death.
A less subjectivity
poignant, but nevertheless more accurate metaphor is the spatial
energy of the Wheatstone Electric Bridge. In 1872, Sir Charles
Wheatstone, an English Physicist and inventor developed an electrical
bridge for measuring resistances that consist of a conductor joining
two branches of a circuit. One of the functions of the bridge,
the most mundane, is to test the ohm rating of electrical resistance
of an unknown resistor in relation to three that are known. Across
the diamond shaped bridge is placed a simple galvometer. At a
right angle to the galvometer is a power supply connected to opposite
corners of the bridge. If it turns out that all four resistors
are of equal ohms, the galvometer will read zero no matter how
much energy is introduced into the system. In like manner, the
energy of Utopic Space (which can only be imagined from the world
of traditional spaces) is known only by entering Utopic Space
in a condition of total immersion. There exist no external clues
as to the actual intensity of that appropriate designation at
all. While, for instance, the concept of the power of the Holy
Spirit from Christianity is often associated with the secular
concept of energy in terms of nomenclature, with theologically
it is not.
Since
Utopic Space has no natural directions
such as those associated with Cartesian coordinates,
it can receive information of any kind and any amount without
organization.
This situation allows a complete merger of content without any
loss of noetic integrity. This is the true transdisciplinary process
of knowledge similar to the child’s mind that faces the
cosmos with an eagerness for the authentically new and makes no
distinction of time, values, or survival logic. In fact, logic
is something not directly desired within Utopic Space, but something
that emerges as a by-product of the structure of this space. Those
who have entered Utopic Space have reported a state that they
describe as tantamount to a sense of absolute freedom. Such spontaneous
entries into Utopic Space leave in doubt the larger question of
how social groups or conventicles enter or depart from this space
which is the clue as to how to express to the world the advantages
of Utopic Space in relation to all other spaces. My personal mission
as an artist has always been to explore Utopic Space in terms
of both sensibility (that is how I react to it emotionally) and
it’s ontic status (the analysis of its natural invariances.
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Page
three
I
have developed this task by means of symbols,
perhaps the only way an individual can approach such a project.
Real symbols move the mind up to and through metaphor and finally
beyond to a semiotic state that has never been successfully named.
In other words, through a true epistemic portal. Symbols are different
than signs, much different. On the one hand, a sign refers the
human mind back to the space in which it now exists and becomes
the basis of a closed and finished structure which shuffles meanings
in a completely lateral manner. This is the basis of a code. On
one hand the symbol creates a suggestion which moves one through
imaginative projections to something beyond itself (a new reality,
a new ontic status). Utopic Space, which is this new reality,
has been waiting for humanity since the beginning of time. It
is the source of all mystical traditions from the East to the
West. Since Utopic Space is completely at one with itself, it
can merge all theological positions that appear contradictory
in traditional spaces such as: theism, atheism and agnosticism
(both dogmatic and methodological). In Utopic Space, it is possible
to have a real religious syncretism combined with a personal faith
commitment.
An attempt
in this direction has already begun. The end of the 19th century
witnessed the formation of two proto-utopic styled religions:
First,
Theosophy, which was created in New York City in 1875, attempted
to integrate the findings of contemporary science with traditional
Buddhist and Hindu theories of Pantheistic evolution.
Second,
in 1889, a new religious movement began in Iran which emphasized
the spiritual unity of all Human kind that described itself as
glory on earth, The Baha!
Due to this
situation, religious visual symbols that involve the mandalic
structure, which have been observed in all cultures (not just
in the east) and at all times, have often been wrongly interpreted
as inherently as past-oriented and not concerned with the future.
Utopic Space is waiting to be entered, as it is always the focus
of human kind's hopes and dreams. Symbols which often appear as
diagrams describing an image of a universe or a pluriverse are,
in my opinion, the best first entry points towards a real understanding
of Utopic Space, and our true future as opposed to such false
futures which have befallen the world.
The Current false future, which has been long in formation, is
the Christian description of the outskirts of Hell-Limbo. This
is the adobe of souls that live in perfect comfort and physical
immortality, but without the experience of the beatific vision
of God as a result of dying and not first receiving a Christian
baptism. Because these souls feel no pain from the direct loss
of God’s presence, there is no anxiety, desire, or loneliness.
The secular
science fiction world of the present, that has spread slowly but
surely around the whole earth like run away molasses, is the first
physical incarnation of limbo. Over the past 150 years,this "earth
limbo" has grown as much in its internal conviction as it
has moved away from the spirit of Utopic Space. If this secular
space continues to proliferate, as the forces of nature are eschewed
or overly manicured, and while the population rises, it could
become the case that the entirety of our municipal infrastructures
will resemble hospitals, as our private homes become intensive
care units, accompanied by the almost silent hum of medical instrumentality.
Political leaders and functionaries will assume the white coats
of doctors as our physical lives are cared for from the womb to
the tomb as we become gradually passive, infantilized, and controlled
as we pass through the soft but vicious nightmare scenarios first
put forth by such 20th century writers such as Henry Miller (1891-1980),
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) or George Orwell (1903-1950).
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Page Four
No wonder
the Catholic Church has now abandoned limbo (this vision of horror
is too close to everyday) and some like it. There has been one
20th century writer who, to my mind, made a noble attempt at describing
the true vision of Utopic Space. This was Father Pierre Teilhard
de Chardin (1881-1955), philosopher, priest, and paleontologist.
Le Phenomene Humain (1955), his magnum opus, which was published
immediately after his death, combined the history of biological
evolution with a revival of teleology, which moved directly to
telelonomy (the quality of apparent purposefulness in living organisms
that derives from their evolutionary adaptation). The fact that
Teilhard was able to so successfully converge theology with science,
his supporters declared that he offered the best vision of the
future of human kind. In fact, they designated his work a contemporary
exegesis (a true objective exposition of his case). The sheer
power of his concepts and his neologisms have carried the day
and no longer is his work ignored. In fact, Teilhard for the past
forty years has been placed in the Pantheon of Modern Thinkers.
Teilhard’s two best constructs are:
1.
The Noosphere-
the sphere of human consciousness or mental activity that grows
out of the biosphere of the various species of creatures that
exist on the surface of the earth, especially in relation to the
force of evolution
2.
The Omega Point -
the convergence of evolution with the revelation of the godhead
yielding the true definition of vitalism which is the realization
that the processes of life are not explicable by the laws of physics
and chemistry, and that life is in some part self-determining.
Both ideas depend upon a topology of mysticism that uses a dynamic
sphere as its basis in a manner similar to the way Plotinus (204-274
AD), the neo-platonic philosopher, described the nature of absolute
oneness.
In
a certain sense, therefore, Teilhard is the modern spiritual heir
to Plotinus because he is interested in the principle of continuity
(one of the hallmarks of Utopic Space). In this case, the continuity
he proposed is between the unique and immiscible self of human
individuals, and the potential for total union of all those who
enter Omega through The Noosphere. His phrase to indicate this
fusion was simply "Union Differentiates". By this seeming
paradox, Teilhard avoids the deadening position of solipsism (the
self is considered the only existent entity) as well as the deadly
interpretation of pantheism (the doctrine of The Great All in
which God and his or her creatures are equated with the forces
and laws of the universe).
For many years in my reading of Teilhard’s works, I could
find no flaws in his version of Utopic Space. One day, however,
I noticed an obscure footnote which described a conversation with
one of Teilhard’s friends, the gist of which declared that
The Noosphere and The Omega Point were for the earth only. Any
reference to intelligent life in the rest of universe was considered
by Teilhard irrelevant, if not non-existent.
I believe it is obvious to almost everyone today that the universe
beyond our immediate locale will be as important to our personal
futures as it will be to the collective future of the human species.
As the Futurist
Michael G. Zey has warned, unless we utilize our growing presence
in outer space in a humanizing fashion, we can not hope to discover
those positive ways to revitalize and retrofit the earth. Existing
in interstellar space has both physical and metaphysical aspects
which blend together without destroying the integrity of each
aspect. Entering a more comprehensive dimensional realm does not
mean simply rising up.
UTOPIC
SPACE
Page Five
The
final problem about Utopic Space is not to use the concept as
a method of criticizing various visions of the future, but more
as a
neutral sounding board for all attempts at plumbing or prophesying
the future.
The history of science-fiction has aptly demonstrated
that its purpose is not to determine the absolute future, but
to render an indication of the extent of the cultural lag to which
any present world view is subject. Utopic Space, therefore, is
the proper repository and the goal of all future-visions. Our
survival as a species is directly related to the quality of these
visions and which are convergent with others and which are divergent.
Achieving Utopic Space is like trying for the summit of the highest
mountain in the universe. The convergence of visions is like arriving
at various base camps and a sense of security. The divergence
of visions represents that bold striking out on your own onward
and upward, climbing toward Utopic Space and the final realization
that when the terminus is reached we will all experience the end
of the future.
Copyright © Paul Laffoley May, 2001
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