Post Spam 3: New Age
Sep. 7th, 2006 12:03 pmI've gotten really fed up with "New Age Spirituality" lately. Perhaps it began when
rfmcdpei posted about Nazi Germany's affinity with such beliefs, perhaps it began when our Marketing Director kept having to miss days because her daughter still had pink eye a week after starting homeopathic treatment and couldn't go to day care.
The child has an infection in her eye that isn't clearing up. Give her topical anti-biotics already.
An interesting perspective came to me by way of Michel Houllebecq in his novel The Elementary Particles (also lent to me by Randy). The last section of the book is written from the point of view of the future and the commentator writes the following about Dzerzinski, one of the main characters:
I'll buy that.
The child has an infection in her eye that isn't clearing up. Give her topical anti-biotics already.
An interesting perspective came to me by way of Michel Houllebecq in his novel The Elementary Particles (also lent to me by Randy). The last section of the book is written from the point of view of the future and the commentator writes the following about Dzerzinski, one of the main characters:
He was the first of his generation to see beyond the ridiculous,
contradictory and outmoded superstitions it adopted to the fact that
New Age thought appealed to a very real suffering symptomatic of
psychological. ontological and social breakdown. Beyond the repellent
mix of fundamentalist eco-babble, attraction to tradition and the
"sacred" which they inherited from their spiritual forebears, the
Esalen commune and the hippie movement, New Agers had a genuine
desire to break with the twentieth century, its immorality, its
individualism and its libertarian and antisocial aspects. It
testified to the anguished awareness that a society cannot function
without the unifying axis of some kind religion; it was, in effect, a
call for a new paradigm.
I'll buy that.