hey onacruse!
it's good. i think it's good we keep having these types of discussions about the nature of our old beliefs.
first off, just let me say that i am approaching the genesis myth from an athropological perspective, and not a christian perspective. i am not thinking in terms of its literalness. i am thinking in terms of what it might represent humans having gone through on our journey from animals to who we are today. adam and eve are none more than metaphors to me. i have good reason to believe that at the time the bible says that they sinned, there were already thousands of neolithic homo sapiens in the area of the cradle of civilization.
Why should there be shame in realizing what we are by nature?
but the catch for me here is, that by nature we were not alienated at all. we were animals that lived in unconscious and weaved co-existence with nature. we did not fight nature. we simply went with it, which also included survival in it. not control of it. but at a certain point we came to have the impression that we were separate from nature, and came to abhor nature as a result. this is where the shame of our bodies (our selves) began, because we no longer identified ourselves with our bodies (which fit the ecological niche so well) anymore. we identified ourselves with a new abstraction in our mind, that for all of its wobbilyness and immaturity, was still an obvious imposter in the landscape. and so the long quest for knowledge and a yearning to be one again with nature. the problem is that for a long time we could not tell the difference between dominating nature and being at one with it. perhaps because we came to hate our animal past? our minds no longer wanted to view ourselves as animals.
Perhaps the Biblical characterization of the Devil's "original lie" assertion was rather more of a confirmation, than a deception?
yes, i see it as simply a confirmation that we had abilities far beyond that of the animal. a reminder of greatness that we could achieve with this new mind that we began awakening to. if there was a deception anywhere, it was in our explanation to ourselves that we needed to control, and *own* nature in order to feel at one with it. and indeed, that is a great deception!
Granting that that might have been true for Adam and Eve, how could it be true for their descendants?
What "qualitative relatedness" to nature was so utterly obliterated from the human soul by the actions of these two Biblical characters?
again, i don't personally approach it anymore from the angle of dealing with the myth literally. i see adam and eve as human representatives in the collective experience of our awakening to a highly abstracted human mind in the niche of culture. the abstraction capabilities in our minds, instead of remaining a tool, came to eventually dominate us. in other words we came to identify ourselves with our minds. the adam and eve characters, for me, represent that alienation. and i don't see the traits as being obliterated. indeed the inner peace that humans experience in being close to nature is testament that we have been alienated from it, imo.
even in cultural terms, the descendants of "adam and eve" inherited the ideas of the humans who came before them, and since the brains were so similar from generation to generation, so the pathologies were also passed on down from parents to children. and so in a way, early humans passed on both "sin" and "salvation" to the rest of us: that pathological alienation from nature is a sin, but that we must strive to still keep the gifts of our outstanding minds, and reunite the two again eventually. hence the history of philosophical contemplation, inluding religion and spirituality.
i dunno. just me chatting away. at first i wasn't sure how to answer your questions, and paused to reflect. the above is just what came out. but at least you know my slant a little better now! what do you think?
have a nice sat night! talk soon,
tetra