Saturday, November 22, 2014

OPM 279(280), November 22st (2004 & 2014) Meditation, Being and Learning, pp. 281-282

Examples of Paul on koinonia:

The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be with you all. 2nd Corinthians 13:14

Is not the cup of blessing which we bless a sharing in the blood of Christ? Is not the bread which we break a sharing in the body of Christ? 1st Corinthians 10:16

…that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death. Phillipians 3:10

Therefore if there is any encouragement in Christ, if there is any consolation of love, if there is any fellowship of the Spirit, if any affection and compassion, 2make my joy complete by being of the same mind, maintaining the same love, united in spirit, intent on one purpose.… Phillipians 2:1


In yesterday’s commentary I postponed the inevitable confrontation between Nietzsche and Paul.  Today I have to address it without placing myself within the place where that confrontation is happening.  It may turn out in the end that I am already in that place, but, again, that remains to be taken up on another day.  Today, however, in light of the ongoing engagement with Zarathustra speech on the love that is higher than the love of the neighbor, I want to address at minimum the inevitable.

The confrontation between Nietzsche and Paul that produces much tension for my project, happens around the organization of the learning community, and the gathering force of koinonia.  Indeed, the confrontation is not so much that the learning community is gathered by this spirit of fellowship, but the character and quality of the koinonia, which is another way of saying the character and quality of the learning community. 

Again, today is not the day to go full throttle with a comparative analysis; today’s commentary is meant first to revisit the meditation from 11/22/04, and second to write myself promissory notes for future work.   Before revisiting the writing from today I read the pages on koinonia from Guiterrez A Theology of Liberation that Rocha had recently called my attention to.   Again, only a promissory note to take up Guiterrez, especially in relation to Freire and the project that has so greatly influenced my own.  But Guiterrez in a few pages is revealing on this matter of koinonia and the gathering of the learning community.   First and foremost Guiterrez reminds us that the koinonia gathering Paul’s communities is the fellowship that “celebrates the action of the Lord which establishes a profound community among men.”(264)  Ultimately, as he shows, this celebration of the Eucharist as the radical act of ‘breaking bread and sharing wine’ as the praxis of solidarity and justice.   This community, he tells us by citing Camilo Torres, “cannot offer the sacrifice in an authentic form if it has not first fulfilled in an effective manner the precept of ‘love of thy neighbor.’”(264)  Now, I want that citation of Torres to hang in the air a bit and resonate (via a feedback loop), and I’ll come back to it in a moment.   First, however, further context for Guiterrez on the koinonia of the Pauline congregation, which is to say, more on the spiritual work or praxis (a form of the celebration via technē that I describe as dialogic music-making philosophy) that is moved by ‘love of thy neighbor’.  Guiterrez emphasizes that Paul was emphatic that the Eucharistic celebration was always an expression of that love of neighbor as a form of service.  Celebration is a praxis  of servitude.  I would add (in light of the recent study of Bernard) that this celebration, like the monastic cycle of spiritual life that had no fixed beginning, middle or end but was ongoing and cyclical, was ongoing.  The community is always in the process of being repaired and renewed.  An example of this what Guiterrez calls “the necessary precondition if the participation in the Eucharist…fraternal charity…”(264)  Citing Paul’s reproach to the Corinthians,  but before that Matthew (5:23-24) “First go and make your peace with your brother, and only then come back and offer your gift.”   The disclosure of koinonia happens episodically, and for Guiterrez there is a trinitarian structure to the episodes.  He appropriates Yves Congar’s description of the tripartite manifestation of koinonia.   The first, which is the fundamental ontological condition of the ground, Heraclitus’ ‘thinking is common to all, is the koinon (common) of shared earthly existence: Guiterrez, “the common ownership of the goods necessary for earthly existence,” which I read not as ‘dominion’ but as fellowship with the earth that demands an economy of sustainability.  Here Thoreau’s twofold community the Nature (first in the forests, rivers, mountains of Maine, second at Walden) are exemplary demonstrations of the koinonia that gathers us into an economia of ‘common ownership.’  Koinonia is a concrete gesture of fraternal charity…Paul uses this word to designate the collection…”(264)   In the second sense, “koinonia designates the union of the faithful with Christ through the Eucharist…”(264).   This is the celebration that literally brings together a community that is of one body and one blood.  And this is the force of koinonia as the gathering force of agape, because the celebration is one of the fellowship itself, the love of friendship.  What remains to be understood from the meditation written this day is the distinction between this love and the love of the neighbor.  The fulfillment of the first two culminates in the third, which is the realization of the community’s faith in one another, a realization that happens with the affirmation of the presencing of the Holy Spirit (‘here too the gods are present’).    The celebration culminates in the shared recognition of the excess that has granted a time and space, a place, that is always already outside the hegemonic, always already outside the state and market economy. But, as I have noted in recent commentaries, this place places a clear demand on those who are granted its time and space.  Guiterrez offers a succinct summary: “Without a real commitment against exploitation and alienation and for a society of solidarity and justice, the Eucharistic celebration is an empty action, lacking any genuine endorsement by those who participate in it.”(265)

The preceding is the context for revisiting the meditation from 11/22/04 that begins with the following citation of a speech from Nietzsche’s Zarathustra: “Higher than the love of the neighbor is love of the farthest and the future.”(BL 281)  The question I posed in response: “Why does Zarathustra point in this direction and to whom is he pointing?”  My response, as I read today ten years later, is to keep company with Nietzsche who offers what I take to be a critique of bad faith and false generosity, the kind that Guiterrez calls attention to when he speaks of ‘empty actions’.  For that is higher that ‘love of the neighbor’ is love of what is beyond in space and time, which is all that is granted in the place of excess; and such love appears the commitment against what is happening today in the name of what will come tomorrow.  This may be called  both ‘the struggle’ and ‘the movement’.  Love of neighbor is necessary but not sufficient.  And if it constitutes the ‘peace making’ with ‘the wrong’ that is the required pre-condition for entering into the making of ‘the right,’ then I take this as the charity that one offers to those one is intent on vanquishing.   This is Grace appearing in the form of Mercy towards ones enemies in the form that one will reserve the right to destroy the ideology under the maxim that the ‘pen is mightier than the sword.’  Love of thy neighbor is the precondition of a commitment to waging a non-violent revolution, a war of ideas, a struggle of hearts and minds.  “When Zarathustra points to ‘the love of the future and the farthest’ and ‘recommends flight from the neighbor,’ he is indicating the irruption of the ordinary…”(BL 282) 


The irruption spoken of here is the one happening by via the strange music made by the learning community in its struggle against the “white noise” of the neighborhood, “within the ‘safe’ confines of the domestic…”(11/22/04 BL 282) It is an meditation that is an expression of unease, especially at the logic of the ‘neighborhood’ that controls the polite and safe conversations of academia, which underwrite the status quo of rewards and penalties.   The meditation describes this sound of these ‘conversations’ as “ ‘white noise,’ the negation of the dynamic…manifesting in the learning community.  ‘White noise’ is not the confusion of perplexity, but the anti-aesthetic unfolding from the complete and utter denial of difference.”  What is normative and what most in academia hear is received for others as “static, ‘marked by loud cracking noises,’…that produce ‘poor’ reception.”(11/22/04 BL 282)  And, indeed, it is only just that: a reception that appears in contrast to what was above described as a celebration.  And for those who participate in the aforementioned celebration, the reception feels like a “deception of ‘self-lessness’ circulating with the imposition of the self upon the other….with the noise of ‘polite’ and ‘civil’ conversation and ‘idle chatter’….” (11/22/04 BL 282)

2 comments:

  1. 3.0 (Friday, Portland ME). Resonances from then to now via fragments from "LEARN": "The derangement of the seminar room. When the students enter the seminar room they encounter a single table, or a circular arrangement of desks, where they will gather alongside their teacher. The scene supports a circular/non-linear discussion that is improvisational and spontaneous. Blanchot describes the commonality emerging from this derangement: “Everything as accepted…(Nietzsche could be said to be its inspiration)...an innocent presence, a ‘common presence’ (René Char), ignoring its limits…because of its refusal to exclude anything…with the impossible as its only challenge.”(UC, 30, 31) Blanchot calls the commonality of discussion the “unavowable community,” and with this name he helps us to describe what cannot be declared as once-and-for-all, namely, the sui generis of each discussion. The learning community is a commonality of action, enacted through discussion -- a performance of freedom. But its existence is never guaranteed, nor is it ever sustained beyond the Moment in which it arrives and is present (happening, presencing). The learning community is “without project,” without a goal it was organized to achieve, without an outcome that can be measured and assessed.(UC, 30) It arrives in the Moment as the “presence of the ‘people’ in their limitless power which, in order not to limit itself, accepts doing nothing.”(UC, 32) “Doing nothing” denotes a learning for learning’s sake, the performance of discussion that happens but does not make anything. The learning community is thus an “organized disorganization,” an experience of “friendship (camaraderie without preliminaries) vehiculated by the requirement of being there, not as a person or subject.” (UC, 32) The amor fati that is expressed in the phenomenological receptivity of the discussion is complemented by another expression of love, the love of friendship: philia. As Arendt describes it: “The community comes into being through equalizing, isasthénai” and the “noneconomic equalization is friendship, philia.”(PP, 83) The commonality is a sharing, a circulation of whatever essentials have broken through and spoken to the students. And because their appearance has arrived spontaneously the essentials remain free when they are shared. No one claims ownership. The discussion circulates around the openness of the open text through which the circulated aphorisms arrive and are received."

    AND "The amor fati that is expressed in the phenomenological receptivity of the discussion is complemented by another expression of love, the love of friendship: philia. As Arendt describes it: “The community comes into being through equalizing, isasthénai” and the “noneconomic equalization is friendship, philia.”(PP, 83) The commonality is a sharing, a circulation of whatever essentials have broken through and spoken to the students. And because their appearance has arrived spontaneously the essentials remain free when they are shared. No one claims ownership. The discussion circulates around the openness of the open text through which the circulated aphorisms arrive and are received."

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  2. 3.0b - AND: AND: "There are any number of reasons why something from the text appeals to the student, and in the spirit of amor fati and hospitality, every contribution is welcomed. When the teacher welcomes the arrival of each and every highlight from the reading that is being shared, and also encouraging students to listen attentively and respond when they are moved by something they hear during the discussion, then she is following the example of Socrates who called the dialogues he staged the practice of “maieutic, the art of midwifery: he wanted to help other give birth to what they themselves thought anyhow.”(PP, 81) The birth of presence, the arrival of the new, this is what is shared and circulates with discussion. The essential is the “dokei moi, that is, of what appears to me. This doxa…comprehended the world as it opens itself to me…The assumption was that the world opens up differently to every man, according to his position in it, and that the ‘sameness’ of the world, its commonness (koinon, as the Greeks would say, common to all) or ‘objectivity’...resides in the fact that the same world opens up to everyone and that despite all the differences between men and the positions in the world… ‘both you and I are human.’”(PP, 80)

    AND: "They arrive and share what has called out to them from the reading, and in this sharing what has arrived continues arriving into the presence of others who will have an experience of “friendship (camaraderie without preliminaries) vehiculated by the requirement of being there.”(UC, 32) Being there, present with others, they experience the particularity, partiality, and the collective plurality of the common text they have studied apart from one another. It is enough that they have arrived and shared what has appeared to them as significant. Being there listening openly and without judgment and speaking without attempting to persuade. Being there thinking together with others, the discussion is autotelic (complete in itself). The discussion is an event, sui generis, and “ends” inconclusively, without a result, and “without project.” A philosophical education is a learning for learning’s sake. And this discloses the autotelic tenor of discussion. Arendt declares “it is obvious that this kind of dialogue, which doesn’t need a conclusion in order to be meaningful, is most appropriate for and most frequently shared by friends. Friendship to a large extent, indeed, consists of this kind of talking about something that the friends have in common. By talking about what is between them, it becomes ever more common to them. It gains not only its specific articulateness but develops and expands and finally…begins to constitute a little of its own which is shared in friendship.” (PP, 82) This “little world” shared by the students arrives, is present, and then withdraws. It is the sudden spontaneous appearance of an authentically shared reality, the arrival of the Moment when all are present, attentively listening and responding.

    AND just now endnoted (#11) in "LEARN" from above and B&L: "What is normative and what most in academia hear is received for others as “static, ‘marked by loud cracking noises,’…that produce ‘poor’ reception.”(11/22/04 BL 282)

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