Confronting Existential Chaos

A More Coherent Approach to Self and Others in a Culture Soiled with Ignorance, Error and ‘Evil’.

Modern humanity collectively expends an extraordinary amount of energy in trying to secure individual and social happiness. At this point in our evolution there is yet no agreed upon common approach – current world affairs are a case in point. In fact, many different approaches exist to the basic question of how we should order our lives in common: religious exhortations to submit to a higher reality and promote its spiritual visions; philosophico-ethical commitments to pursue social justice and equity; politico-social commands and mandates to subject the self to an authority in the interest of the greater good. Those who have much should share with the less fortunate in a spirit of charity. Social, political and legal sanctions are meted out to those that transgress or even just challenge the prevailing mores. The range of possibilities seem beyond the limits of rigorous analysis.

Thus far, in spite of the dedication and sincere efforts of many, our pursuit of a more perfect union is a work still very much in progress. Corruption, tyranny and war still plague us, apparently because we cannot even agree on something as fundamental as a common aspiration. The risks of conflict loom ever-present. Politicians, people usually with a gift to instill faith and trust, typically insist that they are on the right side of history because the other factions are the ones responsible for most of the problems, often due to some moral deficiency on the part of those others. We are all quite good at identifying flaws in the narratives of others, not so much our own. Rather surprisingly, a rigorous analysis of problems is not a primary goal of leadership, the media or most of the rest as far as I can tell. The icons of our culture are recognized more for their celebrity than the originality and creativity of their lives.

Thus only focusing on the daily chatter about what to do next would be utterly confusing; a serious systemic flaw inherent in a self-governing society. My basic assumption then is that I am the only one that knows what I think, and that I must attempt to answer the basic questions of existence by and for myself. This ‘simple’ approach leads to some surprising conclusions.

The problem really lies within and among us:

– We do not yet know much about what we are, what makes us tick and how we got here. This basic knowledge would be a requirement for anyone interested in the puzzle of how we should proceed in the future. I have looked at these questions and have concluded that ‘scientism’ or materialism is a useful approach that is more likely to provide a basis from which to proceed. This is NOT to say that just because a theory is based on science that it cannot be profoundly wrong. There have been multiple examples in the past in which science had become disastrously politicized or skewed by groupthink. On the other hand, empirical data, objectively collected and honestly reported, must never be ignored or censored just because they do not fit a pre-existing narrative. Similarly, theories not based on ‘science’ may still be crucial to our appreciation of ourselves and the universe.

– Sensory and cognitive overloads of individuals are unavoidable. In order to survive and flourish everyone has to create a representation of the natural and cultural universe in their head; anthill … bread, brachytherapy, Beethoven, beach, books, birthday, beauty … love … zebra, ad infinitum. It is a superhuman task. Indeed, we are miraculous processors of information but we do not have direct access to most of objective reality, including those most important questions on the nature of our cohorts and our selves. We are forced to interact with self-created representations, greatly reduced and simplified. We now rely on technology to compensate for our limited sensory apparatus. The totality of information that we now have access to increasingly outstrips the processing abilities of the nervous system of any individual. Working together in a committee very likely could even exacerbate the problem.

– Society itself is supercomplex*, i.e. beyond reduction. The dynamics of constant interaction between large numbers of exquisitely social, mutually dependent, highly aware but also separate and different individual biological units presents an enormous challenge that also exceeds our processing abilities. The behavior of others are often profoundly mysterious and inexplicable. No one is an open book. I get the impression that even sociologists are giving up on the idea of understanding our culture. The idea that a 3 lb. brain could understand the whole of an 8 billion member society seems illogical. A similar challenge has been raised against the claims of some that they know or understand the creator of a virtually infinite universe.

– Our naively ignorant and unquestioning acceptance of our own individual faculties in consciousness of logic, reason and narrative analysis – the irresistible theater of the mind – had left us oblivious to our limitations and to the challenges of identifying the basic processes and relationships in the phenomenal world as represented in that consciousness. That most individuals are ignorant of their own ignorance to various degrees is an important example. This affects everything and everyone, including the leadership cliques of every country. Such leaders or groups with power can thus embark on utterly counterproductive campaigns, even when supposedly done in ‘good faith’. Creating a system that is maximally inclusive must take this into account.

– Out of necessity, therefore, most of us place our faith in some group that claims to have found the answers. This move is even more problematical than at first glance since at best the true interests of any such group are unknowable, including to itself. (I guess this is the essence of faith; believing something that one knows is not necessarily true.) Only an individual person can know whether they are expressing an honest opinion about a complex or supercomplex phenomenon, real or virtual. Also, it is only an individual that can make a moral distinction and decide to do something about it. Too often, unfortunately, the choice is to conform and comply with the perceived in-group or leadership – standing up for virtue can be costly and so we go along in order to get along. At worst, one is being purposely deceived and misled in a process more akin to indoctrination and exploitation. On the other hand, it is in our human nature for most individuals to aspire to be a self-affirming agent, not just of their own life, but perhaps also bathing in the admiration and loyalties of others. Thus a group without a recognized leadership is a sitting duck waiting to be coopted and directed by an ambitious egotist. Sometimes groups conspire against the other with devastating effect. A union of the many would therefore inevitably chafe under the dictates of an ascendant few, which is what routinely happens in supposedly egalitarian societies. On the other hand, society grinds to a halt when without governance and rules by which to live. The dynamics of groupthink are unavoidable.

– The ordinary opinions about or within a group often are illusions in the naive minds of almost all of us. When numerous people identify with such a perceived group opinion, this has been referred to as a collective illusion. That a group has an opinion is an illusion since only individuals can think. This illusion is further evidence of our incredible but unreliable creative faculties of thought, awareness, empathy and identification with the other. The group itself may be an illusion since not every supposed member of a group actually identifies themselves as being part of that group – an illusory collective with a collective illusion! The stage is thus set for the seamless appearance of collective delusions in society.

– Everyone is biologically and functionally diverse to varying degrees and have also been exposed to a unique set of cultural experiences. So then, even when people utter the same narrative, the intended meaning of their statements are likely to differ. Communication is therefore not as precise as it seems to be but we nevertheless think that large numbers of people are actually in agreement when they say the same things. I also suspect that we tend to gravitate toward people that ‘think or act like we do’, which further enhances our tendency toward groupthink.

– Language is a ‘cultural construct’, i.e. individuals learn the sounds, structure and purported meaning directly from members of the community in which everyone constantly strings together narratives about everything that occurs to them. Actual meaning is the private product of a living consciousness which itself has no direct connection to any other consciousness. So, when someone tells a meaningful story to nine other people there is one public narrative – everyone heard the same words – but ten private ones since the meaning is different for everyone. Our ability to function in a supercomplex society is thus further testament to the true miracle of individual processing ability.

– Transcendent beliefs therefore seem to be a personal confrontation with the unknowable, nothing more than a very inspired guess. This has been known for at least 2000 years: “Neither shall they say, Lo here! Or, Lo there! For, behold, the kingdom of God is within you.” No matter what anyone claims, the universe is actually within you, and among you – a multibillion fold multiverse.

There is therefore a cognitive mismatch between the individual processing abilities of any and all persons and the supercomplexity of our global culture, i.e. the world in which we live. To compensate for this deficiency we rely on and trust the abilities of others, or groups of others for services and sources of information and advice. We unconsciously learn how to deal with these issues from infancy on, but it is obviously impossible for anyone to be completely sure of what is ‘really’ going on, and to accurately and fully explain the situation to others. There are many, however, who claim or pretend to have the final answer. When someone of this type gets into power we could be at the mercy of the psychopathology of that one person.

Like most people, I am and always have been enthusiastic about meeting the challenges of the moment. This drive to survive is a biological reality, something that is true for virtually everyone. However, upon looking around and analyzing the data it has become increasingly clear to me that there is no single or agreed upon set of foundational and/or transcendental truths that could serve as a basis from which I or anyone could proceed. The intuitions ‘about reality’ that have guided me were no more than that – subconscious intuitions. Starting roughly at the age of 15 my life decisions were based on what seemed to make intuitive sense. Sixty years later I now realize that my basic values and responses were unconsciously adopted from my environment; initially much from parents, uncles, aunts, cousins, teachers and friends – learning about groups starts on day one. Looking back I can sort of identify the main themes of my acculturation and how I got to understand and accept them. Our family-group was highly unique and I had erroneously assumed in my ignorance that it was basically the same for most people – an example of projection, an error typical of groupthink. I suspect this fundamental misunderstanding affects most, if not all of us, especially in the early decades of adult life. At least it now seems clear, having been tested by experience and having learned from mistakes, that there are important potential advantages to mature adulthood.

[I still catch myself being uncritically sympathetic to the viewpoints of others, especially when their opinions seem to reinforce mine, their expertise is great, or because they are respected by those that I trust ~ groupthink. However, in many cases doing some further research and a little critical thinking, it appears that divergent opinions are almost always also held by other very knowledgeable persons. These experts not infrequently then accuse each other of being wrong, misguided or sometimes even of having malign intentions. Therefore, viewpoint deferment to others should never happen if one could manage the issue oneself. The problem is that it is not practical and just too tiresome. The easiest and quickest solution is thus more practical and often the preferred one for most issues. Thus, we are prone to following leaders and accepting the judgements of others, but a breakdown of logic and reason is required in order for that approach to work. Hence many ‘great leaders’ have turned out to be completely misguided.]

Our real problem being one of systemic ignorance then becomes clearer. Individuals engaged primarily in self-preservation exist in a social domain upon which they absolutely depend but which is riven by chaos: our generally very useful, fun, enjoyable human culture is continuously soiled by error, lies, misinformation and exploitation through the perfectly natural social processes of groupthink. Most of us sincerely try to do the ‘right thing’ but actually may worsen the problem by being ‘agreeable’ and so unwittingly contribute to the dissemination of error. All of us are born factually ignorant, yet are biologically structured for a prodigious amount of learning and creative action. Again, at the very beginning of our lives we are completely dependent on closely related others who help us make sense of the overwhelming mysteries before us. I suspect that most of what we ‘know’ we acquire through unconscious copying. We must learn how to separate the inner world form the outer, self from other, what to rely on and what to discard. Perhaps most important, underlying all this is the learning of a public language which is wholly acquired from others, but the ultimate meaning of which is subjective, i.e. private. We are all budding philosophers, psychologists, scientists, economists, and artists from day one, but where we end up as individuals depends on fate: a combination of biological configuration, inner drives, specific cultural exposure and chance. Fortunately then, towards the end of life we are in a unique position to abstractly reanalyze it all, try to make more sense of it and, perhaps, identify a new and better approach. Certainly, it would seem reasonable to try something different given the craziness of the past.

If this sounds depressingly nihilistic it should not be for there is much reason for hope: we are a very young species and nevertheless have made amazing progress in a very short time. Furthermore, the popular idea amongst intellectuals that existence is meaningless is irrational. There is still an awful lot we need to learn, and we seem to be doing it in spite of all the challenges. Probably what is happening now is that all the easy dissemination through new technology of vast amounts of information is causing a lot of cultural disruption. For the first time there is now widespread recognition of the massive information overload that everyone has to deal with. There is also a more acute awareness of the mistakes of the past. I believe we are in the process of learning how to deal with these challenges. Of course, it is no surprise that ‘impetuous youth’ are at the ramparts shaking things up, literally. Rather, we should proceed with urgency but first we should try to do no harm.

We are at the very beginning of time for the human race. It is not unreasonable that we grapple with problems. But there are tens of thousands of years in the future. Our responsibility [[as individuals?]] is to do what we can, learn what we can, improve the solutions, and pass them on. It is our responsibility to leave the people of the future a free hand. In the impetuous youth of humanity, we can make grave errors that can stunt our growth for a long time. This we will do if we say we have the answers now, so young and ignorant as we are. If we suppress all discussion, all criticism, proclaiming “This is the answer, my friends; man is saved!” we will doom humanity for a long time to the chains of authority, confined to the limits of our present imagination. It has been done so many times before.

It is our responsibility as scientists, knowing the great progress which comes from a satisfactory philosophy of ignorance, the great progress which is the fruit of freedom of thought, to proclaim the value of this freedom; to teach how doubt is not to be feared but welcomed and discussed; and to demand this freedom as our duty to all coming generations.

― Richard P. Feynman, What Do You Care What Other People Think? (Emphasis mine.)

The solution then is not to expend a prodigious amount of intellectual and political energy in trying to discover the one and only true narrative of how to deal with others and the world. As we have suggested, that is a delusion, it cannot exist other than as an instance of virtual groupthink! Naive pursuit of a dominant narrative results in what we can see now all too clearly: angry shouting, vicious confrontation and never ending wars. Politicians seem to always blame the other for what they regard as deficient in society, seeing a venal opposition rather than an opportunity to find practical improvements to our cultural union as a whole – practical improvements that will encourage all those creative people out there. The idea that a revolution is required is a perfect example of the problem.

………..

Thus, how do we improve our culture? If the problem is within us then that is where we should find the solution:

1. Avoid repeated misdiagnosis of the problem. The real problem is that there is no one person or group on the planet that can make sense of all of our challenges: our ignorance relative to the challenge is great. We should therefore try to avoid the usual trap of searching for yet another oversimplified (reductionist) false narrative coming from a widely acclaimed expert of what is wrong with the world and thus implying that we then know what others should be doing in order to cure our cultural pathologies. I suspect, in stead, that the answer is within us and among us. ‘Everyone’ already suspects what the problem is but no one as yet has articulated it since the inherent limitations of language are also part of the challenge, as are the miraculous complexity of our human nervous system and supercomplexity of our chaotic, imperfect culture that we create and recreate every day. Everyone should confront the challenges as they best see fit while keeping our strengths and weaknesses in mind. Perhaps there is an answer that is blowing in the wind?

2. Promote individual virtue and agency as opposed to group agency, thus secondarily improving culture from the bottom up. Focussing on how to improve ourselves and our immediate communities inevitably will affect our culture, including the flow of information. This would be a continuous and delicate process starting probably from the first day of life, with support, encouragement, education and learning from the examples of others. Every child is exposed to a different set of influences. Paramount then is the respect for and appreciation of the potential abilities and diversities inherent in all persons. Disagreements are normal and necessary, and could even be encouraged. Culture is not a straightjacket into which everyone should be forced, quite the contrary, it is a play in which 8 billion creative actors participate. There is a positive feedback loop between the quality of human culture and the skills and abilities of all persons. A better culture produces better people. However, the only way culture gets better is when individuals take it upon themselves to find ways to improve their own behavior and interactions with others. Culture does not have a nervous system, does not think, and so the only units that can innovate and improve are individual persons. This may require the recruitment of others into a group to be more effective but individual effort is still the essential part. The ways in which we can improve our culture are limitless since the information embedded in culture vastly exceeds the individual computational powers of anyone. Any behavioral improvement, no matter how small, directly and immediately results in an improved global culture – it’s just a mathematical fact. Forcing changes on others in order to improve behavior is not an essential part since everyone has different interests, perspectives and priorities. Vilifying and disparaging others are often counterproductive and can lead to deadly confrontations.

3. Participate in groups and try to improve them, the ultimate purpose being the sharing of skills and the improvement in the quality and flow of information. Minimize unconscious indoctrination and enculturation with the pervasive, potentially harmful products of ‘groupthink’. Operating within groups is absolutely unavoidable: family, faith, goals of any kind, professions, corporations, etc. Thinking is one kind of activity that does not require the direct participation of others, however, the community does provide the tools and materials with which we create ideas, and may harbor essential expertise. So it is important to recognize the different kinds of groups, their structures and understand both their potential and limitations.  Social psychology in fact examines the dynamics of information processing in groups: in “politics, governance or industry, decision-making is often delegated to groups. These groups make important decisions that impact the lives of many. Groups have the potential of making decisions of higher quality than individual decision makers** [?] when group members open-mindedly contribute and evaluate their own and their fellow group members’ unique information and insights, and when they constructively discuss doubts, criticisms, and competing scenarios. Conversely, the quality of group decision-making is often threatened by individual self-censorship along with conformity pressures and excessive need to affiliate with others. Such “groupthink” biases individuals away from sharing uniquely held insights and information, leaving the potential for groups to outperform individuals unrealized.”  [** Rather, individuals have the opportunity to make better decisions when working together in groups, especially when the group members are honest, fair and diligent. Be very careful.]

4. The most effective governmental arrangement would seem to depend on individual input at all levels. This would then seem to be one in which power is peripherally distributed to individuals and their local groups and governing institutions. A direct benefit is that power and regulatory authority are in close proximity to the information processing units of society, individuals. This would improve feedback and information flow up and down the executive chain. Centralization of power should only occur when practically unavoidable and should be fully and directly accountable to the people with robust checks and balances. In essence, communications between local municipalities and the central executive should be promoted from both ends.

An examination of specific global, internationational and national issues of governance is beyond the scope of my research at this time. A global ‘committee of the whole’ would seem to be necessary in order to honestly and transparently deal with all the most supercomplex cultural issues of global significance. Without full transparency there is a heightened risk of corruption and tyranny. Authoritarians obviously believe that their edicts are superior to the will of the people, and that a small coterie of the committed will deliver superior happiness to the majority. So far history has shown the opposite, the apparent reason being that despite initial high moral standards such a system is continually vulnerable to a takeover by ‘evil’ cliques.

………..

A case in point: right now a powerful psychopath, reportedly one of the richest, and therefore most corrupt, people in the world, is using brutal military force to take control of a non-aggressive, militarily weak neighbor in order, as I see it, to advance his personal interests – money, power, ego – at the same time as he pretends to advance the grand interests of Russia. Since his first inauguration in 2000, and in glaring opposition to his fake inspiring words roundabout that time in support of democracy, free press and international cooperation, he has systematically suppressed competing ideas and sources of accountability through corruption, assassination and imprisonment – effectively separating the levers of power from the people. His military allegedly committed war crimes in Chechnya and Syria. State run media supported the Kremlin’s claims of innocence in all these matters, and, until perhaps now, the rest of the world has been in a groupthink state of denial and went along in spite of the evidence. After all, George W Bush could see his soul and felt reassured. Barack Obama was caught sending a message to “Vladimir” signaling that he, Barack, would be more flexible after his reelection. One of the first things Biden did was to re-open the Nordstream-2 gas pipeline flowing directly from Russia to Germany at the same time as he moved to limit domestic production in the US. Joe probably thought that both Vlad and the climate change lobby would be impressed. Obviously everyone conformed themselves to the idea that they had no other choice but to deal with this genocidal monster. Thus they collectively became complicit in his crimes – more or less unwittingly.

How does this happen . . . that the worst among us can rise to the top and threaten to destroy everything? The probable psychodynamics of this is an example of how groupthink works: in order to understand the other we have to project our thoughts, feelings and reason on them. We have no choice since there is no direct communication between minds. A brutal, devious schemer like Putin takes advantage of the naive innocence of the vast majority of humans who intuitively believe that most people can be trusted, and that outliers are easily identified and can be helped and rehabilitated. An admired, elected leader couldn’t be that evil. The fact is that personality disorder and sociopathic behavior is surprisingly common. This is where groupthink takes over; an unaware and misinformed majority utters the same sentiments which then begin to ring true, and those that strongly disagree and warn of the dangers are then confidently labeled as conspiracy theorists, extremists or enemies of the state that should be canceled or, worse, even be eliminated. However, it seems that the world has slowly been waking up to the fact that narrative is easily manipulated and that we should be more rigorous. A system of regular house cleaning should be part of every power structure in order to discourage systemic corruption by incumbents.

Political matters are routinely settled virtually in ‘the minds’ of the various factions. It is no big deal when the consensus is wrong except, of course, when the leader is a Hitler a Stalin or a Mao. Putin might still back down, who knows. I am worried that it might get worse. It depends a lot on Biden. In my humble opinion, and engaging in groupthink, some feckless corrupt corporate elites are also to be blamed. They continued to deal with this obviously ‘inhuman’ human for their own profit all the while as crimes and atrocities curiously followed in his wake. Sadly, rigorous standards wither in the face of money and power.

The founders of the American Republic were onto this. In order to control corruption they stipulated the separation of powers, delegated only limited authorities to the federal government and included a Bill of Rights protecting individual freedoms from governmental tyranny. There are increasing complaints nowadays that the Constitution of the United States needs to be rejuvenated after almost 250 years of legal and legislative wear and tear at the hands of well-meaning people that apparently had never learned the ‘true’ lessons of history.

Conclusion.

’Everything is the way it is because it got that way”. D’Arcy Thompson, the first ‘biomathematician’ supposedly had said this referring to the principles of change in complex structures. Applying this to global issues it seems clear that we cannot even describe accurately the state of the world, even less how we got here.

Since we are all part of the problem, it stands to reason that everyone should commit to be part of the solution. Therefore, I will personally try to do better and improve my interaction with those around me. I will also be more respectful of others and I will keep my eye out for cheaters. Ultimately, however, a more perfect union awaits a more knowledgeable humanity, and vice versa. Facing up to the challenges of one’s world is the best way to learn. We should be patient while admitting that it has been a very painful wait so far.

And that is the way it is – according to me.

………….

*Supercomplexity. It is becoming apparent that many challenges of life need to be approached from the perspective of supercomplexity: ontologic and epistemic challenges that exceed our ability to specifically conceive of or study objectively. Many questions relating to culture easily fall in the supercomplex category since we can not recognize or define all of the components and how they might relate to each other. We do not even know what the measures for success might be. In algebra supercomplex and hypercomplex are terms used to describe ‘fictitious’ numbers that cannot be described in ordinary language. These concepts appear to be necessary to ‘understand’ data related to gravity and quantum physics, etc. (https://youtu.be/E2zUeCK6k-A) In biochemistry it refers to a stable structure formed by the “association of two or more complexes of biological molecules that occur separately elsewhere”. (http://www.yourdictionary.com/supercomplex) The microscopic structure of our bodies similarly are supercomplex because we do not have the tools to ‘visualize’ what is inside of a neuron, for example. By transferring the rules gleaned from the macroscopic world to the microscopic one, we are engaging in a categorical leap of faith – the lack of reason in quantum phenomena illustrates the point. In addressing the complexities of preparing for tomorrow, Barnett (2004) refers to the supercomplexity of life’s learning challenges: “The challenges of complex systems, even if they could not be altogether unravelled, could be dissolved to a significant degree. The challenges of supercomplexity, in contrast, could never be resolved.

Rose, Todd. Collective Illusions. Conformity, complicity and the science of why we make bad decisions.

Todd Rose et al. Studies on Collective illusions. populace.org

De Wilde, TRW. The Neuropeptide Oxytocin Enhances Information Sharing and Group Decision Making Quality https://www.nature.com/articles/srep40622#ref-CR18

NPR News. Transcript of Putin interview.https://legacy.npr.org/news/specials/putin/nprinterview.html

Scientistic Perspective on Everything – 3. Culture and Existence.

A SCIENTISTIC PERSPECTIVE ON EVERYTHING.
A PROPOSED BASIS FOR IMPROVED COMMUNICATION IN A WORLD OF CHAOS AND INCOHERENCE.

PART THREE: CULTURE AND SOCIAL EXISTENCE.

Domain 3. Total Global Culture is constituted by the theoretical objective aggregate of all existing humans, including their appearances, stated and recorded beliefs, rules and regulations, observable behaviors, accumulated artifacts and technologies. Everyone constantly interacts with a small unique subset of the whole and comes to their own understanding of the concept. Local, regional and sectarian differences have been labeled as separate traditions or ‘cultures’, but these always interact with each other and change continuously and unpredictably with time.


Culture is a defining feature of everyone’s life and the most super-complex of any subject. Most impressively, like an epiphenomenon, it is created as ~8 billion humans are otherwise focused on their personal priorities. The engine of culture then is the individual and so it stands to reason that as we learn more about ourselves, the better we will understand culture. The recent introduction of intelligent machines has further complicated matters and heightened our concerns. Society composed of humans is real, their virtual culture is continuously made real as a magical representation within each of us.

A complete description of the whole of human culture is not possible: different pursuits, languages, histories, religions, philosophies, economies, polities, disciplines, natural ecologies, etc. prevent everyone from assessing the whole. The obvious implication of this fact is that there is no definitive methodology for predicting the future, and so there is no schema by which anyone or any group could confidently plan for the long term. Progress must then have occurred by means other than through our focused cognitive efforts. The possibility that there is continuous non-cognitive bio-cultural (structural) evolution going on seems to be a likely explanation.

Furthermore, the crucial dynamic interaction of each individual human with society and ‘culture’ is the critical point at which all information becomes real as a phenomenal representation in our minds, the so-called ‘reality’ that we, as individuals, respond to all the time. This actualization of the virtual occurs continually inside everyone in a process that is ineffably complex. We know the brain plays a central role, but we really have no coherent idea of how it works. Our narratives are still woefully incomplete and contradictory at this point, but it seems that it is all due to natural physical processes created by the miraculous 4 billion year evolution of life.

This crucial role of the individual in the creation of culture introduces yet another ineluctable unknown: each individual is biologically different in important but unpredictable ways – biological diversity apparently is a basic adaptational strategy. The representational universe of everything that we create for ourselves and by which we decide and act, is different for everyone. Distinguishing between what is ‘real’ in nature and what exists only in our minds would seem to be basic to any understanding of our world. Some things exist only in our minds and are not objectively real. The virtual idea of Santa Claus is an example. The idea exists, it provides a huge boost to the economy every year despite his being an imaginary figure. However, like all thoughts, the thought of Santa Claus is real in our minds, and so is powerful. There are many such cultural ‘metaphysical’ entities that are not objectively real but, nevertheless, rule our lives: happiness, beauty, truth, love, virtue, morality, good, evil, propriety, acceptance, etc, etc. Even the qualities of mundane things such as smell, taste, color and sound are fictions in our heads. There is within me a self-created universe, the ‘kingdom of god’, an ‘idioverse’ containing everything that I am aware of. Plus, there is much that I am only vaguely aware of, or not at all, but which still affect my behaviors and attitudes. Those that proceed from the assumption that they know what many others think or what is in the best interests of those many others are, therefore, deeply misguided – a common form of ‘delusion’.


Thus far we have rather fancifully attempted to sketch the evolution of Reality over about 14 billion years, from a hypothetical Original Moment to the arrival of molecules that self-organize, grow, replicate and ultimately ‘compete’ for survival – Life. We can only guess as to the process of how larger molecules aggregated to form ‘self-aware’ organisms. Consciousness has evolved over about 4 billion years to the point where it can now describe itself in abstract terms. Continuous improvement over billions of years have yielded us, a species of organism with incredible subtlety and diversity of communication and interaction – just think of all the myriads of things we do, much of it quite astonishing.

All of the circa 8 billion original copies of H. sapiens survive at the trough of society and its culture, all the while as they are also creating it. Culture is so rich and varied that even parts cannot be fully described. It is also riddled with error and confusion, so all historical narratives, no matter how inspired, can not be trusted or relied upon because they are incomplete and dependent on the authors’ personal and cultural point of view at the time, and systemic ignorance.

We will, therefore, simply point out some problems that are not generally appreciated, and then speculate on perhaps a better way forward:

We are unaware of our human limitations. For instance, most people assume that things are fairly simple and that they have a good understanding of their local culture and what their community is about. In reality, each one of us interacts with the small, unique and under-representative sample that we have access to. Extrapolation to larger issues are difficult and highly error prone.

Our exquisite language is at the foundation of culture and the business of life, yet it too is limited in its ability to transfer information fully, especially with regard to subjective matters. As already indicated, it appears that we are the only ones that can recall our experiences, simulate them and relay them for further consideration and commentary. We can also simulate and plan future events, and even freely imagine novel situations or circumstances . Most crucially, we can communicate and share aspects of this virtual simulation with our fellow human beings for the purposes of discussion, learning and planning for the future. Children are most attentive consumers of such information.

Thus, adding together all the things we can learn, do and say, we create our own mental experience of ‘everything’ in a deceivingly effortless and seamless process. We neither understand the processes involved, nor do we agree on the ultimate purposes, but our culture is completely dependent on these processes: the real, dynamic connections of immaterial, virtual ideas and the real material states of our brains. A dynamic web of virtual ideas and practices is created by real material processes brought together in our brains and bodies by evolution. Our mysterious brains are the critical central processing units in the vast web of our cultural universe. Each one of us occupies a small niche in this multidimensional web where we actively participate in this continuously creative and destructive process of maintaining our culture; each brings their own perspective on what is beautiful, good and desirable, or not, and usually acts accordingly. Thus there is a creative and/or destructive liberal agenda to discover the new and replace the old, or a conservative agenda to preserve and protect what works. That every single person brings a totally unique perspective on everything, is a fact that unfortunately is not generally recognized nor appreciated in the vast majority of situations.

The only coherent and comprehensive statement that can thus be made about the structure and content of human culture is that it is so vast and complicated that no one individual is capable of grasping the whole or even understanding it in the abstract. Nor would anyone seriously consider putting a thousand experts in a room, and ask them for a definitive summary – most people would not believe them anyway. Something as simple as a universal declaration of human rights is a bridge too far. There are so many components of culture and divisions of humanity, no one person can understand them all, nor what their essential features are. There are so many different perspectives on our supercomplex ‘reality’ that there can never be universal agreement. (This last sentence would be a candidate for such a universal truth.)

A further fundamental difficulty with culture is the large excess of information; no person is capable of directly sampling even a small fraction of it all. This explains the talk about trans-humanism to augment our thinking by means of prostheses that could download vast amounts of information directly into the brain. These efforts probably are misguided, as is the idea of superhuman computers capable of integrating all available knowledge and then presenting humans with manageable summaries from which they could make more informed and ‘reasonable’ decisions. It is difficult to see how this would work, but it clearly illustrates the problem. However, humans have long transcended their natural inputs and outputs with multiple technologies such as slings, arrows, spears, explosives, telescopes, microscopes, cars, printing presses, telephones, televisions, calculators, copying machines, spread sheets, internet based communication and search engines, etc.; these trends should continue to transform our culture at an accelerating pace, but there are obvious challenges and dangers.

Another challenging aspect of culture is that much of its content is entirely opinion based and personal. Probably all human beings accept as true great swaths of belief that can not be verified or falsified, but are accepted simply because such ideas appeal intuitively, are embedded in tradition or are repeated by large numbers of individuals. Children especially have no choice but to trustingly imbibe much of culture as it is presented to them by important others. This makes perfect sense from a survival perspective, but it leaves every young adult pre-loaded with a large pool of entrenched ideas that will go largely unvetted. The generally accepted ordinary or folk view of ‘reality’ is therefore highly subjective, even as it appears highly real to the observer. Fundamental misunderstandings of ‘the way things really are’ are built into our consciousness.

Subjectivity is absolutely personal. The qualitative experience of culture is different for everyone for social and biological reasons. We exist, intellectually, subjectively or ‘consciously’, in a seamless but virtual, self-enclosed individual-social-cultural continuum. What we see and hear in our heads, the incredible Theater of the Mind, appears to correspond exactly to what is happening out there in the virtual ‘reality’ that is our culture. The reason for this is straightforward: all consciously observed events or objects out there must first be simulated before one becomes consciously aware of them. This process of simulation occurs continuously 100% of the time, separately, in the brain of each one of us. Since all of awareness is continuously created by one instrument, one’s own brain, it stands to reason that everything we are aware of is absolutely personal, familiar, internally consistent and compelling. This is obviously so since there is no other source of information. The interactions between self, society and culture therefore take place in a clear and compelling virtual space that is entirely constituted as a simulation in our unique brains, separately, one at a time – the simulation process is real, the content is virtual. Each one of us is the bearer of their own version of the universe: disagreements about the nature of ‘reality’ are normal and to be expected.

Understanding the individual in society. Thus the individual personality interacts with a simulation of a vast and expanding idio-socio-cultural universe grounded entirely on inter- and intracellular physical processes in their own brain! The obstacles to an accurate understanding of just about anything are enormous. Very few are aware of this and its implications, but realizing this makes it imperative for us to change our perspective and to strive doing better – to begin to think ‘outside the box’: collective progress occurs as a result of the inspired efforts of individuals; how do we communicate better, plan more effectively where we want to go, or exercise our ‘free will’ more constructively. The limits of global cultural possibilities are set by the aggregate limits of individual imaginations, whether that of hunters, gatherers, farmers, workers, managers, investors, owners, artists, musicians, academics, philosophers, libertarians, communists, etc. The idea that an elite alone can take care of matters is a grievous, but still widely prevalent error. The potential total cultural experience is vast beyond comprehension, yet the degree of creative participation by individuals vary tremendously. Greater involvement by everyone, according to their interests and skills, should be more generally recognized as being in the primary political interest of all members of society, liberal or conservative, collectivist or individualist, or somewhere in between. We certainly have so far been frustrated by our inaccurate understanding of self, society and culture.


Time and history are basic aspects of reality. What happened a century or a second ago is determinative in so many ways of what will happen next. Historians claim that we will repeat the mistakes of the past unless we study history writ large, the story of how our culture came to be the way it is today. An obvious problem, however, is that recreating and understanding the more distant past is even more difficult than understanding culture as it is now. Rather, at best it would seem that a careful and sympathetic reading of history might assist us in understanding the present a little better.

So, let us take a quick tour through the past. Existence in culture has continued to become more and more complicated ever since the days of Australopithecus and Homo erectus. Some ancients related our struggles to eating of the fruit of knowledge, expulsion from paradise and a fall from grace. However, our information based culture has nevertheless, defiantly continued to partake over the millennia; even now we seem to be going through a rather tumultuous period of discovery. At the beginning, ~200,000 years ago, ‘modern’ human culture consisted of what was discussed around the campfire – we can only imagine. The hearth fire, in fact, ended up being a central religious symbol of the ancestral gods around which the greco-roman family gathered in prehistoric times.

Communities kept on growing. About 40,000 years ago counting systems began to appear and about 6,000 years ago the first literature on business and entertainment apparently came into use. Almost immediately speculative religious, philosophic, political and scientific writings also appeared. Many great names from that time are still revered today even though most of what happened then is dimly recorded and left to the imagination. A high demand for books finally lead to the development of the printing press in the 15th century; affordable secular works became available for the first time to a rapidly growing audience. Intellectually we were off to the races, consistent with the classical theory of consciousness as primarily involved with discovery, learning, logical analysis and informed executive action based on knowledge and truth. Today there is an over-supply of information, electronic media have made access to content effortless and universal.

One could bet, though, that just like today crowds flocked to the best entertainments of the day. In the early days of Rome one had to venture down to the Colosseum for a distraction from the daily grind. Today we turn on with a billion others to easily watch the big game on one of our devices. The crowd always follows the crowd. It seems to have a mind of its own, whether in search of a charismatic leader or a paragon of entertainment. When aroused a crowd will not be deterred – there is power there, waiting to be unleashed or brokered. This fits the theory, therefore, that human consciousness (language, thought, affect, feelings and emotions) is more involved with social interaction and bonding. The pleasures and rewards of friends and community serve to pull societies together even as these same forces can work to separate us, or, even worse, blow us apart in conflict and war. When the crowd wants to get serious, it engages in dogmatic debates on religion and politics, hurling stock phrases at the perceived opposition in language usually couched in terms of fighting, battle, victory and defeat. However, there are tantalizing signs suggesting that the crowd is wising up, which would be a wonderful thing – why should anyone trust conniving bands of self-appointed elites?

Crowds certainly need to be collectively inspired. Mass religion could thus be viewed as performing important social and cultural functions such as fostering cohesion and reducing internal conflict. Community-wide foundational, explanatory and aspirational narratives eliminate the need for endless debates and argument; society can just go ahead with its daily business. Life is thus certainly made easier for everyone including the rulers who can use religion as a powerful motivational force against an enemy. The great religions have been the most successful in this regard, but, in the end, different doctrines, even within a religion, have almost always led to conflicts on an even larger scale. A temporary peace and quiet is inexorably followed by an uncontrolled eruption of fear, paranoia and war. The naive faithful have a very difficult time psychologically, dealing with challenges to their entrenched foundational beliefs. Unfortunately, confrontations are inevitable since most religions claim to explain all of the mysteries – they are a type of primitive theory of everything. Volumes of objective evidence adduced so far, however, have contradicted the basic religious explanations of life and the cosmos in all cases. Those that remain in denial collectively affirm the infallibility of their blind vision. Their dogma must be preserved against a tide of evidence to the contrary. Finally, when challenges become increasingly existential, a final confrontation ensues. Such a process can be bloody as believers rise in a violent defense of their ‘Truth’ and the superiority of their way of life. Crude political interests usually inflame the passions even more.

Some observers have suggested that, because of the above, the idea of a creative rational person capable of ascertaining truth is an illusion, or even that consciousness may have no real adaptive value. It seems obvious, however, despite our history of irrational and pointless pursuits, rational conscious thought can indeed be a very powerful creative, learning and adaptive tool.

In contradistinction to the mindless crowd, individuals and small groups are the creative forces in society. Philosophy, amongst many others, is such a product of the incandescent power of our minds but, unlike religion, the diversity of its manifestations approach infinity. Individuals insist on expressing their private thoughts. Any interesting question automatically provokes many different and challenging answers – tot homines quot sententiae. As we all know, persons will interpret difficult questions differently and are likely to come up with their own unique answer. It may actually be that we are destined to come up with different answers for multiple reasons: every brain, like every person, is genetically different; every brain is functionally and physically(!) shaped differently, at birth and subsequently by an unique set of experiences (plasticity), especially during development. We are also prone to information processing errors: conscious thought can be susceptible to uncritical acceptance of perceived socially sanctioned solutions; conscious thought sometimes may not be aware that it is making things up; every individual comes from a different perspective and will produce different simulations based on the history of their idio-socio-cultural continuum. Left to our own devises, therefore, we are guaranteed to come up with different conclusions on all questions that are not easily verified objectively. This is true because all complex problems ultimately require unverifiable and unfalsifiable subjective analysis. Philosophy is extremely productive in coming up with fascinating or important questions, but quite the opposite in the discovery of practical answers. Further highlighting the problem, philosophical ‘answers’ usually have political repercussions.

Individual expertise in any field of practice or knowledge requires much dedicated learning, including familiarity usually with technical languages. The focus of philosophy appears to reside in rigorous analysis of the contents of minds, of the philosopher’s own and that reported by others. Novel ideas and speculations are often introduced, but firm conclusions, though, that universally persuade others are never established, even when some empirical support is found. Alternative formulations are inevitable, challenging the original position, ad infinitum. Many philosophical questions over time have become of interest to scientists, and when science provides reproducible relevant information, philosophy is obligated to take that into account. There is no philosophical position that can survive when it is consistently contradicted by empirical findings. Indeed, psychology and sociology employing the methods of science have contributed much to what used to be the exclusive domains of philosophers. Even in metaphysics empirical findings are changing the landscape. Of course, established scientific consensus has to be revised every now and then, and discredited ideas can likewise be resurrected.

Mathematics, scientific enquiry and technological creativity are the most obvious examples of the positive powers of conscious thought: logic, reason, creative intuition. The apparent explanation for the astonishing successes of science and technology is that their searches, insights and inventions relate to objects or ‘things’ that are available for independent examination and verification or falsification by other interested parties. This is a crucial difference with religion and philosophy. The pursuit of objective knowledge is a cooperative individual effort that always seeks to find support through the accumulation and analysis of objective evidence – the empirical “show me” approach. Science and technology build knowledge one little step at a time, ideally without much concern for authority, the survival of any pre-existing favored opinions or the sensitivities of others. Constant revision is part of the scientific process. Coming up with more accurate and complete answers is, in fact, the goal and a reward in itself. Application of mathematical rules to physical relationships has also been amazingly powerful. Analytic human thought is thus capable of discovering new aspects of phenomena as they directly or indirectly appear in existence around us. We also try to probe the secrets of Reality as it is, but that has been extremely difficult. Deep mysteries still remain at the limits of our imaginations, and wide differences of opinion abound.

What about those unique individuals that make up the crowd? What kind of actors are they? We apparently guide our behavior through continuous simulations of the past, present or future in consciousness. We probably have little control over the content of our simulations. What bubbles up from our unconscious processes is not under direct conscious control as far as we can tell. For example, when one meets an old acquaintance, the name of that person comes to mind automatically. Sometimes the memory can be jogged, sometimes the name pops up two days later, seemingly from nowhere. Conscious efforts to remember only help sometimes. Recall from memory can also be highly unreliable; sometimes memories are simply incorrect no matter how distinct they are. The content of such memories are highly conditioned by our past psychological events, themselves colored by our particular cultural environment. This would roughly correspond to our personality – the type of person we are as perceived by others.

One way to easily enrich culture is to clearly express our thoughts. While conscious thought is conditioned by cultural history, memories and contemporary phenomena, it is still free to ask any question or to simulate any response. The subjective content of thoughts and images is immaterial, purely ideal, and has no specific mass. It is therefore almost effortless to manipulate any thought according to the personal inclination or caprice of anyone. The only requirement is to keep the bodily parts and molecules intact and moving. Unlike anything else in the cosmos that we know of, the range of human thought is potentially infinite. The concept of infinity is a good example. The only place where infinity exists for sure, is in human imagination: infinite number of integers, infinite space and time. (Space and time may or may not be infinite in reality.) All our thoughts, therefore, require approximately the same expenditure of energy, it does not matter whether they are little banal truths or great transcendental errors. The only difference might be that more time could be ‘wasted’ on the latter because they are so beguiling.

The distinct clarity with which we view the world and ourselves thus becomes somewhat suspect once one starts probing into the processes involved. Our pervasive innocence and naivety are not always obvious to ourselves. Nevertheless, it appears that it is our faculties of conscious thought, social interaction and ‘semi-conscious’ culture building that has made us the most successful primate – the most fit for survival. Our greater mental abilities have allowed us to exploit nature to a point where we ourselves have become a problem, primarily due to the recent population explosion. Our benign earth now may need to be protected. Erstwhile predators and competitors are extinct or in danger of going the way. The biggest threat to our survival now is us. That is clear, but what is very unclear is how to tackle the problem that is us. In the past we managed by assuming that an appeal to truth is the best guide for our actions. That foundation is now in ruins; the belief that we have an ability for discovering and being guided by radical existential truth is being assailed from all sides: physics, biology, psychology, philosophy. Support for this conclusion jumps out by simply observing the nature of political action and philosophical discourse. There is no limit on our technological exploitation of natural processes.


Unassailable truth had been a delusion, a pipe dream, inherited from more innocent times. Mastery of truth would require total access to all information and flawless data processing, a situation that could only be found in a Mind of a God. Such a theoretical mind presumably would instantly understand everything that has been, is and will be. A MoG knows ultimate Reality as it is, as it was, and as it will be, without limit of time, place, space or number – no need for counters or clocks. It does not need to think, ponder or plan because that would indicate a degree of uncertainty. A MoG is not dependent on any senses because that would limit the information streaming in, it would also imply that God needs to learn when everything is already known. A MoG is not defined by any human category, distinction or requirement. Is a MoG jealous and wrathful as stated in the Bible? Does it care about human interests but not those of bacteria? And if it does, why? We ask these questions because we can, while knowing that any answers would be human answers, meager anthropocentric efforts, limited by our very impressive but still very finite processing capabilities.

We are created as nature and the cosmos is created, through evolution, but we do not understand the processes well at all. We should be honest and recognize that our answers to existential questions are articles of faith. All philosophers, politicians, pundits and preachers are simply expressing their opinions with varying degrees of insight and skill. Truth by acclamation is a democratic delusion but it has been our best governing option. There is naive untutored personal conviction with clear and distinct opinions at one end and unattainable absolute truth at the other. In between, there are numerous different local combinations of subjective belief and objective fact, depending on which of thousands of subcultural communities is being addressed. Everyone operates in the sphere of their personally held beliefs, their ‘truth’, which merges with their existential reality: all their simulations, memories, internalized values and interactions with others combine to produce an unique instance of personality, beliefs and behavior, an idioverse (Rosenzweig). A personal identification with a particular, self-defined but real community is thus arrived at – no one operates in a vacuum. A further limitation of our deliberations is that most of the information processing occurs unconsciously, away from the theater of the mind. The degree, therefore, to which individual biologic and genetic variations affect our thoughts is presently unknown, but it is an important question that is being asked more and more.

A better, more pragmatic approach to the true nature of our world could, therefore, still be extremely useful: truth is always relative to the perspective of individuals, whether they be the questioner, the responder or an innocent bystander. Every individual therefore is a custodian of part of the truth, wrapped in many layers of hope, faith and, alas, confusion. Everyone is contributing to the structure and content of society, whether they are aware of it, or not. This is a responsibility that should be taken more seriously. Personal convictions have a naive air of certainty and authenticity, but are always riddled with biases, inaccuracies and gaps. Radical self-doubt should not be encouraged, for good reason: no contribution is too small. Religious, cultural and political axioms are nothing more than strong contemporary convictions or passing popular opinions on the diverse needs of individuals, communities and societies. Ultimate and final truth is unattainable, but it still remains as an ultimate aspirational goal and, as such, it is related to such concepts as God and Cosmic Reality. ‘Culture’ is unable to solve our problems for us.

Humanity seems to be in need of a better regime: honesty with oneself diligence in one’s endeavors, fairness to others. Humility, self-reliance and openness should be natural outflows. We should be careful, the only ones that should be trusted are those that have been vetted, preferably in person. All dogmas are suspect. There are thousands of communities that are so focused on their narrow agendas that they are ignorant of the big picture, of what affects the whole of mankind. Life in all its splendor and diversity could pass these specialists by because they are too busy or too distracted. There is a great need to be able to communicate broadly which puts an onus on us to learn, to integrate and improve at the personal and community level. Labor needs to understand capital, collectivists needs to understand individuals, economists needs to understand workers; the list is infinite. Certainly atheists and believers should try empathy for the other. Left versus right, conservative versus liberal – these labels confuse more than enlighten. A generally well-educated layperson would be struck by the obvious biases of these specialists. A better system of education would do wonders. 

Society must learn to flourish as it acknowledges the now very apparent limitations and biases afflicting everyone, especially the so-called elites who seem to be especially vulnerable to the temptations of self-delusion and corruption. The best compromise is to recognize that local community efforts have the potential to leverage individual efforts by generating better information, limiting errors and moderating biases. Promoting the independent efforts of everyone in all their diversity, would be fundamental in our quest to elevate individuals, communities and culture as a whole. Society needs to be more integrated, up and down, back to front, left to right. Imposition of one will over another is always an act of oppression, it is a taking of liberty that should be avoided if possible.

In conclusion, our theoretical scientistic narrative of the evolution of everything places all systems of information and knowledge into a feasible relationship. Any discussion, debate or disagreement could benefit by reference to an overall map of knowledge. At the center of our problems are the many different exclusionary and conflicting formulations of ‘the human condition’.


Additional reading.

Wilson, EO. Genesis. The Deep Origin of Societies

Laland, KN. Darwin’s Unfinished Symphony. How Culture Made the Human Mind

Barrett, LF. How Emotions are Made. The Secret Life of the Brain

Siedentop, L. Inventing the Individual. The Origins of Western Liberalism

Anatomy of Culture

“It is very likely that never in human history have there been as many treatises, essays, theories and analyses focused on culture as there are today. This fact is even more surprising given that culture, in the meaning traditionally ascribed to the term, is now on the point of disappearing. And perhaps it has already disappeared, discreetly emptied of its content, and replaced by another content that distorts its earlier meaning.” — Mario Vargas Llosa, 2016. From ‘Notes on the Death of Culture. Essays on Spectacle and Society.’

The death of culture seems a mite exaggerated. An opposite view might well be that culture is at an apotheosis. Never in our history has culture been so busy. We certainly could not exist without it – it is part of our fabric, it defines us. Improving it depends on the efforts of most.

Perhaps we should rather come to grips with what culture truly is and how it operates. Any ignorance, and hence confusion, regarding the invisible forces of ‘culture’ could be an obvious source of our many social difficulties and political misadventures. Direct and indirect references to culture are continuously being made in many contexts, leading inevitably to the question: Is there anything in society that is not cultural? Contrary to popular belief, it is being recognized that all of our public activities contribute to ‘culture’, even the vast numbers of trivial pursuits that set the stage for more interesting and controversial ones. We can therefore legitimately ask, do we ever really know what we are talking about when we explicitly reference the concept of our culture, most of which is generated via social interactions? There probably was a naive time when many thought that they did, or at least the educated ones. Even today, politicians and experts fervently work at persuading us that their view of the cultural world is ‘true’, that they hold the key to happiness, and that we should follow them. Caution! One should not expect these ambitious public actors to really know what they are talking about, or to be sufficiently aware and honest enough to admit to the limits of their understanding. The possibility that the average Jan or Jo is as, or even more, aware of their surroundings than their supposed leaders probably never occurs to those leaders. Jan and Jo are indeed ignorant, but so are we all, as we shall see.

It is surprising to note, however, that although culture is such an important part of our conversation, the modern concept of it has only been around since the mid 19th century. The first formal definition, and still one of the most useful, is by Edward B Tylor (1), the ‘first anthropologist’: “Culture or civilization, taken in its wide ethnographic sense, is that complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society”. Primitive Culture: Researches into the Development of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Language, Art, and Custom (1871). (Emphasis mine.)

At the same time, ca. 1871, Matthew Arnold (2) published Culture and Anarchy wherein a much more aspirational and moralistic view of the goals of society as a whole was articulated, stressing our common humanity. In his universalist view Arnold held common ground with Tylor, but there were many dissenters right from the beginning as one would expect. In the early 20th century, Franz Boas thus gained much support for his particularist view of many cultures, a view that is consistent with what most intuitively still accept today. Scientists, however, seem to prefer the view that all social information passed on to others constitutes culture. (3) Thus the fields of sociology and anthropology have not settled into anything resembling a consensus. In fact, today the very concept of culture is being challenged, battered perhaps by the incomplete renderings and weak defenses of it. (4,5)

It seems clear then that a robust and complete definition of culture would be an essential basis from which to develop a better understanding of the incredibly complex relations of humankind. Ignorance and incomplete understanding, especially of self and others, must necessarily produce conflicting irrational systems of coexistence. Society is composed of self-governing individuals, tasked by fate with having to arrange increasingly complex societies, and learn how to flourish in them. But countering ignorance, error and confusion is hard work and success is not guaranteed. Wars, genocides and mass exploitations are still upon us. Opportunities for improvement all around are therefore great: reducing our inhumanity towards each other; providing for a greater sense of purpose and meaning in the lives of all 8+ billion; inducements for all to be the best that they can be; perhaps most important, we might improbably even acquire the tools by which to guide our future global culture in a more sustainable direction – virtuous evolution!

It would thus seem necessary to formulate a way of finding the keys in the present so that we may solve the problems of the future. The fact that we are here and can talk about these questions means that we have been somewhat successful so far. The task appears immense, yet there is reason for optimism.

The Components of Culture.

  1. Global Culture. This is the natural ‘culture medium’, that ineffable totality, within which all people exist while actively participating in Darwin’s “war of nature”, surviving as best they can. (6) Simply put, it is a web of everything: (i) all that is publicly displayed and articulated by all living humans across the globe, en mass or individually. In reality, it also includes all the diverse behaviors, good, bad or indifferent, and all products and possessions, including tools and technologies, of all presently existing humans. Also including, rules, habits, addictions, (mis)understandings, (mis)classifications, (im)moralities, trades, disciplines, etc, etc (An ‘alloverse’*, as opposed to the individual idioverse of Rosenzweig.) (7) (ii) It also includes all the currently accessed stores of historical information about what has been believed, thought, taught, observed, produced and evinced by humanity as a whole: physical and electronic records, books, articles; historic, archeologic and fossil artifacts. (iii) It also includes all the recognized features of nature in the different localities where humans operate, now extending to the bottom of the ocean, miles underground, and to the outer limits of the solar system. Trillions of galaxies have very recently become ‘visible’ outside of our own. (Iv) This intricate, indescribable whole constantly changes from moment to moment, in ways and at a pace that far exceed our individual or collective faculties of apprehension and comprehension. (v) While people, their behaviors, statements, artifacts and environments are real, the corresponding vast body of information and knowledge that is physically transmitted is virtual – i.e., strictly speaking, transmitted signals do not constitute knowledge. If and when such signals are captured by the sense organs of a person, they are processed in the body of that person, mostly within the brain, recreating a real representation of knowledge and awareness in a mind, albeit as an indirect, unique, approximate representation. So, while culture, like language, is public, its meaning is private – a fundamental dualism that affects all our interactions. There are also many physical limitations to our ability to capture signals. The statement that neutrinos are passing through my body is an interesting shareable thought, a phenomenon, a publicly signaled statement, that we can discuss. Actual neutrinos that routinely pass through my body without any interaction, are undetectable signals, not phenomena. The alloverse of cultural information, while immense, thus represents only a very small fraction of all the signals in the physical or material universe. To put all this another way:

Total Global Human Culture is that supercomplex whole consisting of the cumulative totality of all phenomena in nature and society as observed by everyone. This includes reports of phenomena communicated via language or emotion. Nature, human behaviors and artifacts, including all technologies, are the predominant sources of such phenomena, defined here as all events and structures perceptible by humankind. Global culture is therefore synonymous with observable external reality. Every human being is continuously contributing to its maintenance and construction. (8)

2. Effective Personal Culture. The set of all those specific phenomena of global culture that a person, due to their unique situation, has been exposed to and has interacted with, learned from, and responded to, up until the present moment of their life. This represents our small view of a vast panoramic whole, a small evolving slice of the totality of global culture. We directly learn from it and are continuously shaped by it in a seamless dynamic process that to varying degrees becomes somewhat more self-directed and selective with the passage of time (wisdom). Even just observing the routine activities of people passing by teaches us something about the community in which we happen to be. Most importantly, in terms of our personal development, each child starts learning from the moment of their first breath, directly from a completely new and strange sensory and phenomenal world composed mostly of family and its social circle, including teachers. This represents an extraordinary diverse and unpredictable source of information; a private source of diverse signals and stimuli. (There are even suggestions that fetuses start learning to recognize a mother’s particular language while still inside the womb.) Some ‘highly cultured persons’ acquire and become widely known for prodigious amounts of socially interesting information. Even so, fame very often amounts to nothing but a short-lived vanity. All of us directly participate in shaping our immediate environment, thus playing an essential role in the maintenance of culture. Alas, this process of learning, creativity and teaching does not seem to gravitate toward a meaningful consensus or recognizable goal. Rather, differing perspectives and disagreements multiply leading to more disagreement, confusion and even chaos. Despite our extraordinarily productive brains in which hundreds of billions of cells, including almost a 100 billion neurons, are constantly processing ‘information’, we can only partially sample and internally process a small fraction of the whole external cultural reality, that global universe of all cultural phenomena. Therefore, it is thus impossible to accurately describe the whole at any moment in time, or even any significant part of it. Hence the term supercomplex is used in our abstract definitions of global and personal culture.

Effective personal culture is the unique, limited, supercomplex sum of all the phenomena within global culture that the life cycle brings a particular person into direct contact with, providing an evolving supply of learning experiences, feedbacks and opportunities.

3. Personal Theory of Culture. Each person has their own incomplete, mind-view, intuition or narrative ‘theory’ of what culture is, whether they call it that or not. (Prior to the 19th century it was usually called by another name.) This is often what is being referred to when one talks about ‘our culture’. It is an individual intuitive synthesis and understanding of the milieu in which they act out their biological and social imperatives. It is based on our personal effective culture (personal and social history) and shaped by our own unique biologic features – our idioverse (Rosenzweig). This is akin to Theory of Mind, except on a grand scale. A theory/intuition/concept is automatically conjured up in our minds when confronting the thought of society, or related questions such as morals, duties, expectations, choices, actions, meanings, purposes, rewards, punishments, pleasures, and what individuals and groups are up to. This mental construct is a more or less coherent product of all personal experience and can therefore be expected to change with time or situation. It is always personal and subjective, and variably but incompletely corresponds with that held by others, most closely with family and friends. The meaning and use of the word has drastically changed and expanded over the last 150 years, yet global culture itself has changed even more, in a runaway process fueled by our many biological drives, accumulating knowledge and evolving technology. This may be the reason why it has been reported that there are more than 160 published definitions of culture. Investigators apparently hone in on aspects of their effective culture that seems to be most fundamental or meaningful to them, most relevant to their interests. Furthermore, ‘our culture’ or immediate external world is the ultimate complexity that we must consciously deal with – certainly of greater immediacy than the universe and even our bodies. ‘Our culture’ is effectively ‘infinite’ since the reality of it dwarfs our mental and physical abilities. For these reasons, nobody, no polymath, no creative genius, anthropologist, historian, politician, scientist, or philosopher has sufficient sensory awareness or computational wherewithal to fully, accurately and precisely describe or explain all the phenomena as experienced by themselves, or any other person or group. Abstract, very ‘thin’ narrative conceptualizations are the best we can do. Many of us specialize in writing, art, poetry or music, perhaps believing that these aspects are most representative of culture. Others specialize on a particular set of phenomena (e.g. science, history, literature, economics, finance, philosophy etc.), but then becoming perhaps less sure of how it all fits together – a variant of the Heisenberg Principle. We might as well also invoke a variant of Gödel’s Theorem at this point: we all seem to strongly assume certain things to be true even though we do not have specific information to support that view. Thus, waiting for a cultural consensus would be on a par with Waiting for Godot.

A Personal Representation and Theory of Culture is recursively generated in the mind of each biologically unique, evolving person, guiding that individual to better survive and flourish in a challenging, uncertain and changing perceived external phenomenal reality.

3. Community Identities and Traditions. These used to be thought of as fairly easy to recognize. From a distance groups of people from various localities looked, dressed, spoke and behaved in a recognizably different way. This was referred to as ‘their culture’. But the world is changing rapidly and what once seemed to be stable communities are now seen to be rapidly transforming everywhere. They may still communicate in their own language and still have characteristic shared beliefs. Such ‘local culture’ leads to a certain predictability and confidence in interactions with members of such a traditional community or group: locality thus tends to homogenize the effective cultural experiences of local inhabitants, whose theories of culture would then also have more shared features, leading to similar behaviors. This is a powerful source of learning – enculturation. Such local adaptations can even lead to physiological changes: differences have been observed in central nervous system function when comparing distinct populations. E.g., different regions of the brain are used to perform the same task in people from Europe or Asia. In selected Asian-Americans, different regions of the brain of an individual may be used for the same task depending on whether the subject had just been primed with Asian or American associations. Our brains unconsciously switch modes! However, cultural traditions often have rather fuzzy geographical edges and they evolve continuously. Even very isolated population groups learn from other communities with which they intermittently come into contact with, and so none are, nor were, ever completely isolated. Furthermore, individual biological and psychodynamic variation within such traditional communities may be wide and there would always be subgroups, exceptions and outliers. For example, it is inevitable that some members would be conservative, others liberal; some more socially conforming, others more individualistic – such diversity would itself be expected to provide a survival benefit. Dominant, widely established traditions tended to be viewed as ‘civilizations’ that often saw themselves in opposition to lesser civilizations, or even uncivilized barbarians. All this seems to be going out the window as a result of the communications revolution.

Group formation is a fundamental feature of human behavior – our biologically determined social drive. (9) Innumerable local and global, real and virtual groups and communities exist due to changes in technology and the explosion of information and communication. The word culture is often affixed to these as a loose descriptive term: corporate, criminal, drug, police, rural, cosmopolitan, metropolitan, African, Asian, Polynesian, European, etc. In this sense the word at best provides a very general sense of what is being considered, but very little, if any, reliable information is identified by these labels. Not infrequently ‘cultural’ ideas are reified as in when ‘likeminded’ individuals engage in illusory ‘groupthink’ and then decide on group action.

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Going somewhat beyond Tylor, we identify a single ‘infinitely’ large ‘supercomplex’ abstract whole necessitating a multipartite, multi-perspectival approach. It is now obvious that there is just one global culture, albeit extremely diverse. There has been a lot of confusion about this in the past. All peoples on earth have been interconnected by migration, trade or war, but information traveled rather slowly in earlier times. In the ‘good old days’, different ‘cultures’ or ‘civilizations’ were identified by unique features such as language, manners, arts, ceremonies, dress and social arrangements, all the while ignoring the simple fact that most of the basic behaviors and social interactions across all regions were very similar or indistinguishable. Where distinct differences did exist, intermediate instantiations were often found, and the borders were fuzzy. Superficial differences overrode deep commonalities. In this respect, ‘cultural differences’ have much in common with ‘racial differences’. Just as it is now recognized there is only one race, there is just one very diverse culture – there are no biological incompatibilities amongst human groups, there are no hard boundaries of social behavior. The underlying motivations for the categorical, but erroneous, separation along imagined lines of race and culture may, in fact, be very similar: groups tend to form around any idea or behavior that might be associated with a competitive, security or lifestyle advantage. Such groups engage in positive feedback loops of self affirmation, so becoming less concerned about accurate honest evaluation of the evidence – cardinal features of groupthink. (Higher levels of oxytocin may enhance ethnocentric behavior.) Jim Crow laws and the Jewish holocaust are recent extreme examples of this kind of collective ‘thinking’ but it is still very much alive in the polemics of today. (To emphasize, thinking is not a collective activity since the entire process occurs within single isolated brains. The extent to which we can simulate the minds of others is an open question.)

Ontologic ignorance and epistemic confusion cannot be legislated away. Rather, society appears to change as increasing proportions of its members intuitively see themselves and the world differently – innovation occurs at the level of the individual, the evolution of culture is a slow and messy process. There is no evidence to suggest that legislators are in a significantly better position to understand where society needs to go.

Fads rapidly and chaotically come and go nowadays, but global social change appears to be an extremely slow process. The deep convictions seen in the process of ‘othering’ are usually misguided, even though they may be ‘adaptive’. So it has been hard or impossible to identify in real time anything by which ‘progress’ could be measured. Everyone’s personal theory of culture is incomplete, uncertain and often in conflict with others. Today’s undeniable trend might be the key to future success, but, more likely, it will just be tomorrow’s forgotten infatuation. “The inability of the mind to see its own advance is one of the reasons the future will always surprise us.” (Jason Kuznicki, 2018.) We could try to change that.

The problem in a nutshell: First, serious, evidence based public debates founded on a rational analysis of the complex problems of society have been of very limited effectiveness. Profound inherent super-complexities, structural and functional, are involved: different effective cultures, different theories of culture, different or conflicting traditions and groups. Language (narrative) also is an important limiting factor, only a very thin version of reality is communicated. Stories and narratives appeal to intuitions in ways that we do not fully understand. All our true inner feelings on questions of morality, values, fairness, duty or mission are difficult to define and therefore to articulate, and so are opaque to others, and probably to others. What is for me is never exactly for the other. A better approach, therefore, would be to be a little less concerned about what is wrong with the narratives of others – all are incomplete and usually inaccurate anyway – but to be more focused on a self-critical analysis of one’s own gaps in understandings and knowledge, and improving on those. Such a continuously self-improving person could hopefully then act in a more effective manner, leading to a greater influence on others in their community. ‘Progress’ does not appear to be the direct result of our endless polemics. Ignorant self-righteous shouting and screaming across a perceived divide exemplifies the problem. Authentic changes in behavior and attitude that spring from direct personal experience of real, self-identified problems in society have a greater chance of beneficially influencing others: each one of us teaches by example. In so doing we contribute to culture.

Second, learning from our supercomplex history is also a lot more complicated and fraught with more error than commonly realized. Self-affirming biases are the rule and so one might ask whether it is ever possible to discover a solution by delving into the past. The volume of information available to a broad public is now unprecedented, placing more and more people in positions where very sophisticated decisions need to be made all the time. The industrial revolution presented new challenges and brought about great changes in social arrangements. It also brought the most destructive wars in history. We are now in another such period of large scale change. The scary thing is that we again seem to have no clear idea of what is coming. A simple, but reasonable, rule of thumb would be to invest in the diverse talents of all individuals above all else, to prioritize the functionality and competence of each uniquely valuable person. Society should organize around the primary principle of respect for each and every one – maximally inclusive diversity, building on the true successes of the past and trying to avoid previous errors.

Third, the postmodern philosophical critique of ‘Enlightenment Culture’ and its supposedly terminal condition has been quite destructive. Continental ennui infected society with an over-dramatic meme of death: death of the individual, reason, God and even culture itself. It has been devastating but could now be losing steam. We seem to be at an inflection point with Critical Theorists suddenly gaining an undue influence in the US Democratic Party. Reconstruction of virtuous humanism and libertarian aspirations is hopefully in ascendance – a never ending cycle? Evolution is war, entailing the ‘death’ and elimination of obsolete functional and cultural features. However, what is fit survives and so we necessarily evolve. Without change there can be no improvement. Conservatives and liberals just disagree on how cautious we should be.

Fourth. Large corporate structures (bureaucracies, businesses, political movements, etc) to whose interests people defer rather than exercising their own best individual judgements may represent the greatest threat to our happiness. We need to nudge and cajole our fellows into taking greater individual responsibility. We should also heed the lurking dangers of the moment. Politics is an extremely crude and dangerous instrument, but absolutely necessary. If only we could find ways to improve it.

Greater clarity on the frameworks within which we exist and operate would greatly help us in putting disagreements in a more constructive perspective. Greater awareness of the super-complex structures and relationships in ‘our global culture’ may therefore be essential guideposts in our pursuit of happiness, and survival.

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(1) “While a foundational figure in cultural anthropology, Tylor … accepted the premise that all societies develop in the same way and insisted on the universal progression of human civilization from savage to barbarian to civilized. Nowhere in his writing does the plural “cultures” appear. In his view, culture is synonymous with civilization, rather than something particular to unique societies, and, so, his definition refers to “Culture or civilization.” In part, his universalist view stemmed from his Quaker upbringing, which upheld the value of a universal humanity, and indeed Tylor’s refusal to accept the concept of race as scientifically significant in the study of culture was unusual in Victorian science.” Logan, PM; 2012. BRANCH. (http://www.branchcollective.org/?ps_articles=peter-logan-on-culture-edward-b-tylors-primitive-culture-1871)

“But in terms of cultural theory, the most important criticism [of Tylorean evolutionary anthropology] was that of the American anthropologist Franz Boas (1858-1942). A German immigrant to the United States, he was influenced by German Romantic philosophy, including Herder’s insistence on cultural particularity. In 1896, Boas published an influential critique of Tylor’s science, “The Limitations of the Comparative Method of Anthropology,” in which he persuasively challenged the basic notions of psychic unity and independent invention upon which Victorian evolutionary anthropology rested. .… He argued throughout his work for cultural pluralism, for “cultures” in the plural, and with him began the final shift in anthropological thought from the traditional universalism to the new, particular theory of culture that characterized twentieth-century thought.” Ibid.

(2) “Arnold objects to (the Victorian) narrow definition of culture, calling it a combination of “vanity and ignorance,” and attacking its acolytes as people who value culture solely as a form of “class distinction,” a “badge” that separates them “from other people who have not got it”. Instead, he argues, culture is a combination of broad intellectual interests with the goal of social improvement. “There is a view in which all the love of our neighbor, the impulses towards action, help, and beneficence, the desire for removing human error, clearing human confusion, and diminishing human misery, the noble aspiration to leave the world better and happier than we found it,—motives eminently such as are called social,—come in as part of the grounds of culture, and the main and pre-eminent part”. Culture combines this commitment to “the moral and social passion for doing good” with the ideal of scientific objectivity, “the sheer desire to see things as they are”. Rather than a means to differentiate the elite from the mass, Arnoldian culture assumes the elite and the mass have a shared humanity. This was a novel use of the term at the time and was seen then as the most striking aspect of his new idea, …” Logan, PM; 2012. BRANCH (http://www.branchcollective.org/?ps_articles=peter-logan-on-culture-matthew-arnolds-culture-and-anarchy-1869) 

Arnold, M. from Culture and Anarchy: “The whole scope of the essay is to recommend culture as the great help out of our present difficulties; culture being a pursuit of our total perfection by means of getting to know, on all the matters which most concern us, the best which has been thought and said in the world, and, through this knowledge, turning a stream of fresh and free thought upon our stock notions and habits, which we now follow staunchly but mechanically, vainly imagining that there is a virtue in following them staunchly which makes up for the mischief of following them mechanically.”

(3) Chris Buskes, Nijmegen; 2013: “Hence ‘culture’ can be defined as: all information that is transmitted to next generations by non-genetic means, i.e., through spoken or written language, teaching, or imitation. … Similar definitions of ‘culture’ can be found in Richerson and Boyd (2005); Jablonka and Lamb (2005); Plotkin (2010); Distin (2011), and Mesoudi (2011).” (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11406-013-9415-8#Fn7)

(4) VandenBroek, AK. 2014: The Culture Concept. “The culture concept — which overtime has been contrasted, combined, and entangled with the related concepts of society, personality, identity, symbolism and practice — weaves together the history and core philosophical and methodological debates of anthropology as a discipline. Yet, today the concept that lies at the center of what anthropology is and does is fragmented and contested, as anthropologists have taken on the challenges put forth by postmodernity to cope with contradiction, borderlessness, constant flux, and the impacts of anthropological and historical biases, such as sexism, orientalism, and othering. This has left some anthropologists reaching back to science to find stability and others plunging into a realm of interpretation and description, while a new generation of anthropologists formed within this milieu must find space to make a discipline, whose central subject is disputed, both relevant and professional.(http://ak.vbroek.org/2014/01/03/the-culture-concept/) Emphases mine.

(5) Vargas Llosa, M. 2012. Notes on the Death of Culture. The realm of culture is “understood not as a mere epiphenomenon of social and economic life, but as an autonomous reality, made up of ideas, aesthetic and ethical values, and works of art and literature that interact with the rest of social existence, and that are often not mere reflections, but rather the wellsprings of social, economic, political and even religious phenomena.” (https://lithub.com/mario-vargas-llosa-how-global-entertainment-killed-culture/)

(6) Darwin, C. Origin of Species, 1859. “Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted object which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animals, directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”

(7) “Alloverse”, a neologism, refers to an universe composed of all that is outside of the universe that is within. An alloverse, in theory, consists of all the psychic events and behaviors of all members of our global community. This is derived from Saul Rosenzweig’s concept of an idioverse: “The idioverse consists of the population of events experienced by a single unique individual. This conception supersedes that of personality because the idioverse purports to be a more direct and objective formulation.” (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1026063429852) “… the concept of the idioverse, defined as a self-creative and experiential population of events.…” (https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/s15327752jpa8203_02) In short, idioverse would then consist of all the psychic experiences (events) during an individual lifetime. The interaction between idioverse and ‘alloverse’ is yet another perspective on understanding our place in the world – the supercomplex relationships between and among individuals and groups.

(8) Supercomplexity. It is becoming apparent that many challenges of life need to be approached from the perspective of supercomplexity: ontologic and epistemic challenges that exceed our ability to conceive or study objectively. Many questions relating to culture easily fall in the supercomplex category since we can not recognize or define all of the components and how they might relate to each other. We do not even know what the measures for success might be. In algebra supercomplex and hypercomplex are terms used to describe ‘fictitious’ numbers that cannot be described in ordinary language. These concepts appear to be necessary to ‘understand’ data related to gravity and quantum physics, etc. (https://youtu.be/E2zUeCK6k-A) In biochemistry it refers to a stable structure formed by the “association of two or more complexes of biological molecules that occur separately elsewhere”. (http://www.yourdictionary.com/supercomplex) The microscopic structure of our bodies similarly are supercomplex because we do not have the tools to ‘visualize’ what is inside of a neuron, for example. By transferring the rules gleaned from the macroscopic world to the microscopic one, we are engaging in a categorical leap of faith – the lack of reason in quantum phenomena illustrates the point. In addressing the complexities of preparing for tomorrow, Barnett (2004) refers to the supercomplexity of life’s learning challenges: “The challenges of complex systems, even if they could not be altogether unravelled, could be dissolved to a significant degree. The challenges of supercomplexity, in contrast, could never be resolved. They are the challenges that arise from the question: what is a university? Or: what is a teacher? Or: what is a doctor? The challenges of such questions could never be dissolved, at least not in ways similar to those of complexity. For such questions, in principle, yield a multiplication of answers and further questions. And some of those answers and further questions spring from perspectives, value positions and even ideologies that are mutually incompatible. To see universities and teachers as consumers of resources, or even as producers of resources on the one hand, and to see universities as sites of open, critical and even transformatory engagement are, in the end, incompatible positions, no matter what compromises and negotiations are sought.” (https://www.hv.se/globalassets/dokument/stodja/paper-theme-2-5.pdf) Many examples of the inability of logic and reason to explain human behavior have been documented. Time, context and order affect outcomes, demonstrating the need for quantum-like theories of cognition and rational behavior – gestalt, query, configurable weight, integration, and fuzzy trace theory. A quantum probability theory model might succeed better at predicting outcomes. (Pothos, Busemeyer. 2013) (https://ppw.kuleuven.be/okp/_pdf/Lee2013QMOCA.pdf)

(9) Weingarten, CP and Chisholm, JS; 2009. Attachment and Cooperation in Religious Groups. An Example of a Mechanism for Cultural Group Selection. “Nowak (2006) modeled the evolution of cooperation via five mechanisms: kin selection, direct reciprocity, indirect reciprocity, network reciprocity, and group selection. Nowak concluded: “we might add ‘natural cooperation’ as a third fundamental principle of evolution beside mutation and natural selection”. Group-selection models can be mathematically equivalent to models based on individual selection (Boyd 2006; Lehmann and Keller 2006; Nowak 2006).” (https://johanneslubbe.blog/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/06ce5-commenton_attachmentandcooperationinreligiousgroups.pdf)

Emphases mine.