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energize /build up followers  live action all day in gatherings or assignment day o music is a food to the soul o light food is an aphrodisiac o color and environment count o motivate and highly charged them o people are your significant fountain of knowledge/gifts  Keep an open/collaborative workplace or environment  keep them informed or keep them in “The Know”

Monday, March 30, 2009

Edu 220, Chapter 2 Discussion

Top of Form

Within Erikson's theory,

two stages relate more closely to students in school;

these are the stages of Industry vs. Inferiority and Identity vs. Role Confusion.

Explain the conflict that is going on within these two stages and what a teacher needs to do to promote a positive developmental outcome in each of these two stages.

  Post a response to this statement and a reflective response to another student's posting.


 

    Generally, children come from all sorts of background. Children mirror what is in their environment. Through interaction with family members, peers, the media, game boards, and the community as a whole – they are subject to something (s) external. Whichever or whoever has the strongest hold or influence on the child, surely affects the physiological development of the child. Some folks just stacked their reasoning about these stages as a psychosocial crisis. Erickson theory hits on all three broad and comprehensive factors and how they affect the child's personality highly: more so on demands by parents; and, society, culture and sexuality.

The world is full of adults that used to be children and who lacked positive developmental attachments. Yes. A great number of folks are still going around in circles trying to resolve their identity crisis (Miller 1993) & [46]. Some folks stuffed themselves with Tool Kits or Caboodles to appease this crisis/missing parts; or, they grab some make-over's for what they think they lacked looking at the image they see in the mirror!

As a teacher, I would like to promote an Image Enhancer Pod to my students. Maybe, create a Puzzle for a Day or Today is Just You Day! Encouragement or water completes all living things. How much more children? So here, I would like to share a glimpse of My Personal Reflection as a 5th grader. One day my home-room teacher called me from the line. She bent over at my level and looked me with her large light brown eyes and told me in a clear voice: "I know that you are so good with plants because your mom told me that you tended the home-garden. Since, that is your expertise, I would like you to be in-charge of the classroom's plants ". Indeed, that was one of my most defining moments! My teacher did complete me. Her truthful encouragement has instilled a power and joy within my being; and, it felt like the fireworks of the 4th of July!


 

Maritess S Taylor

College of Southern Nevada

Bottom of Form

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Definitely Red

Definitely Red


 

Definitely Red

Congratulations, Maritess, you are a RED personality. The Core Motivation that drives you through life is "Power". Power means the ability to get things done, to go from A to B as quickly and directly as possible. The word power was derived from the Old French poeir meaning "to be able." Often what is perceived by the other colors as insensitive is simply a pragmatic sense of urgency to accomplish a given task.

As a RED you naturally seek productivity and want others to see you as intellectually strong. As REDS want their own way, you like to be in the driver's seat and are willing to pay the price to be in a leadership role even in an intimate relationship. However, you can get frustrated when your partner cannot think for himself or make intelligent decisions on his own. As a RED, you tend to value whatever gets you ahead in life, whether it is at work, school, or in your personal relationships. What you value, you get done. You may be a workaholic and enjoy it!. You will, however, resist being forced to do anything that doesn't interest you.

As a RED, Maritess, you like to be right. You value approval from others for your intelligence and solution-based, pragmatic style. You want to be respected even more than you want to be loved, and you appreciate admiration for your logical, practical mind.

Next: More About You->

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Core Color = Red

  •   red: 37%
  •   blue: 29%
  •   yellow: 27%
  •   white: 7%

Reds Are

Action oriented

Assertive

Confident

Decisive

Determined

Disciplined

Independent

Leaders

Logical

Pragmatic

Proactive

Productive

Responsible

Task-Dominant


 

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Oh Pigspittle!

Ex Libris Book Reviews

« Memories, Dreams, and Reflections - Carl Gustav Jung | Home | The DaVinci Code - Dan Brown »

August 27, 2003

Wicked - Gregory Maguire


How did the Wicked Witch of the West, from Frank Baum's Oz stories, get to be so wicked? Gregory Maguire tells her story, in Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. Author of Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, Maguire seems to revel in turning our beloved fairy tales upside down, and having us rethink our cherished notions of absolute good and evil. The Wicked Witch wasn't born a witch, nor wicked. In Maguire's delightful telling, we learn of Glinda's obsession with status and fashion, the Wizard's inhumanity, and the friendships, loves, and lost loves of little green Elphalba, the story's moral center, who is ultimately destroyed by innocent Dorothy. This tale is more real, and more like life as we know and experience it, than the original. There's always a different side to a story, and in the case of Oz, this is it. A great read from start to finish. I could not put it down.

Posted by elise at 10:43 AM to Fiction  http://www.elise.com/books/el/archives/wicked_-_gregory_maguire.php

This short review is an excerpt from an internet publication. It is quite a vivid description of one of the many exclamations from readers, fans, bloggers, twitters, and/or tweakers. The above critic found this book an interesting read. The reader similarly acclaimed that Gregory Maguire was indeed a daring agent provocateur of one of the world's literary finest. It is how Maguire tells a story. Maguire makes you think! He makes you say, 'what is he talking about'!

Personally, I was drawn to one distinguishable feature in this amazing novel. It is alive! The fabric of the novel reminds us of life's twisted and knotted mass of threads - weaving though folks' religiosities, goals, dreams, aspirations, vulnerabilities, brokenness, shortcomings, just-being-in-the-wrong-place/time, and even family anger. Oh, snuck-in bad-mouthing and rumors, too. Yet only a few folks could have broken free from any of them whether with or without a broomstick. As the critic have stated, "the Wicked Witch wasn't born a witch, nor wicked". Think. So, that makes us all green and witchy just like Elphaba! Opps, watch out, I am the second critic. Nevertheless, in Chapter 12, Elphie recalled her mother's dream:"the world around her was simply merciless – everything flickered like a glittering candle, but more harshly more stridently …" Again, such was Elphie's mother dream about the 'The City of Anger', and how Elphaba turned to be the "green girl" she's today (384).

Behold, what took my breath away was the "dwarf's" (the guardian of the Grimerie or the Book) witticism when he spoke the following line to Elphaba: "for you are neither this nor that; you were always drawn to the composite creatures, the broken, and reassembled" (374). Moreover, Elphie remembered she was a beautiful little dolt, she believed everything everybody says to her (186). Now, doesn't this sound just like Dorothy! Or, did I hear somebody said, "pigspittle"?


 


 

Maritess S Taylor

College of Southern Nevada


 

Thursday, March 26, 2009

• Teacher research links


 


Teacher Research Links

  • The National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) http://www.ncte.org maintains The Research Foundation for teacher research providing grants of up to $5,000 for classroom teachers, Pre-K-12, to explore questions related to teaching English/Language Arts. Applicants must be members of NCTE.
  • The National Center for the Study of Writing and Literacy (NCWL) http://www-gse.berkeley.edu/research/NCSWL/csw.homepage.html. The center was an independent research center sponsored by the U.S. Dept. of Education and was affiliated with the NWP. It supported research projects examining how students learn to write, how teachers can best help students who come from an increasing diversity of cultural backgrounds, and how writing can be used more effectively across the curriculum.

The National Writing Project (NWP). The NWP's mission is to improve the teaching of writing and improve learning in the nation's schools. Through its professional development model, the National Writing Project recognizes the primary importance of teacher knowledge, expertise, and leadership. To find a local site, go to: http://www.writingproject.org/Programs/local.html

Teacher- Researcher Network is maintained by Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia, USA. Newsletter, e-mail addresses of key people within the network and annual conference information is posted on this web site. In addition, the web site lists an index of teacher research projects that were conducted by teachers in the network. To visit the web page go to: http://www.fcps.edu/DIS/OSDT/StaffDevelopment/trn.htm

Ontario Action Researcher
http://www.nipissingu.ca/oar
The Ontario Action Researcher is a freely accessible, full-text, peer-reviewed electronic journal intended for elementary, secondary, and university teachers who are concerned with exploring the unity between educational research and practice. While the primary aim is to serve the needs of educators in Ontario, the Ontario Action Researcher welcomes readership and submissions from elsewhere in Canada and the world.

Scottish Teacher Researcher Support Network
http://www.scre.ac.uk/tpr/strsn.html
The STRSN aims to support and encourage practitioners in education interested in research. The Network offers members information and the opportunity of contact with other teachers interested in educational research and with experienced researchers. We welcome information about useful publications, networks and meetings.

Spencer Foundation- Practitioner Research Communication and Mentoring Grants (PRCM) http://www.spencer.org. This foundation has three main purposes: (1) to establish or strengthen channels for rigorous examination and discussion of the characteristics and knowledge produced by well-constructed teacher/educator-research; (2) to provide teacher/educator-researchers with the opportunity to enhance their research skills through consultation with others in the teacher/educator-research and/or traditional academic communities; and (3) to support high quality teacher/education research projects.

Teacher as Researcher, a SIG of American Educational Research Association (AERA). This special interest group of AERA is dedicated to showcasing research on practice by teachers K-12 and the work of teachers involved in adult literacy settings, community colleges, or colleges and universities. While this research can be conducted in collaboration with university researchers, the study should reflect equity of initiation, collection, analysis, and presentation, with teachers sharing equal credit and responsibility. Email teacherasresearchersig@smumn.edu.

THE REWARDS OF KEEPING A JOURNAL


Dennis's Ship

USS Salvor, 2009-2010


 


 

  • What did I read TODAY, and how did I react to it:


 


 


 


 


 


 










  • Write down Miscellaneous reactions to the reading whether or not

They fit into a paper topic


 


 


 


 













  • A JOURNAL is a useful place for collecting Expressions:
    • i.e. "their resolve must be our inspiration" B Obama


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 
















  • Journals can be useful study tools
    • i.e., details of the work you read earlier in the term, semester, fiscal year …


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 













  • CAPTURE your 1st reaction
    • Does a line or dialogue surprise you ?
    • Does a particular sentence seem significant ?


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 




































  • Does something in the story not make sense?








    • Record your bewilderment
      • "I'm puzzled by this character motivation"















        • Or work through your bewilderment ……………..


     


     


 


 


 


 


 

Saturday, March 14, 2009

means to feel with the other.

means to feel with the other.

March 13, 2009

skip to part II

BILL MOYERS: Welcome to the JOURNAL. Karen Armstrong's life, as you will soon learn, was turned around by of all things, a footnote. When this former nun fled the convent and became a scholar of literature at Oxford, she thought she'd put all things theological well behind her. But, as the saying goes, if you want to make God laugh, tell Him, or Her, your plans.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: So can I ask you what you think about the Pope?

BILL MOYERS: Next thing you know, Armstrong was creating documentaries about religion and making comments like this:

KAREN ARMSTRONG: The Pope is the world's last, great, absolute monarch. He not only controls doctrinal and spiritual affairs, but also the political, social and economic fortunes of his church. And because he's believed to be directly guided by God, his decisions have the ring of absolute truth, which is strangely out of kilter with the democratic tenor of today's world.

BILL MOYERS: While working on a film in Jerusalem, the ancient city where Islam, Judaism and Christianity converge, the connections among that trio of faiths rekindled Armstrong's imagination and led to another new career.

She became one of the foremost, and most original, thinkers on religion in our modern world. Her many popular books include studies of Muhammad and Islam, the crusades, the ambitiously titled A HISTORY OF GOD and her latest, THE BIBLE.

A self-proclaimed "freelance monotheist," Karen Armstrong is now on a mission to bring compassion, the heart of religion, as she sees it, back into modern life.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Well this is such an honor.

BILL MOYERS: Last year, at an annual gathering of the leaders in technology, entertainment and design, she received their highly prestigious TED Prize, a $100,000 cash award that, like the genie in the lamp, also grants the recipient a wish.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I wish that you would help with the creation, launch and propagation of a Charter for Compassion -- crafted by a group of inspirational thinkers from the three Abrahamic traditions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, and based on the fundamental principle of the Golden Rule.

BILL MOYERS: The Golden Rule: "Do not do to others what you would not like them to do to you." That universal principle of empathy and respect is at the core of all major religions.

Karen Armstrong's Charter for Compassion was launched last year with an interactive website, charterforcompassion.org. There, people of all faiths can submit their ideas about what the Charter should say.

Recently, she traveled to Geneva, Switzerland, and gathered with a group of international religious leaders to draft the guiding principles of her charter for compassion. Karen Armstrong, it's good to see you again.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: It's great to be back. Thank you.

BILL MOYERS: So tell us what you're up to with this movement.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Well, my work has continually brought me back to the notion of compassion. Whichever religious tradition I study, I find that the heart of it is the idea of feeling with the other, experiencing with the other, compassion. And every single one of the major world religions has developed its own version of the Golden Rule. Don't do to others what you would not like them to do to you.

You see, the Greeks too, they may have been not religious in our sense, but they understood about compassion. The institution of tragedy put suffering on stage. And the leader of the chorus would ask the audience to weep for people, even like Heracles, who had been driven mad by a goddess and slew his own wife and children.

And the Greeks did weep. They didn't just, like modern western men, wipe a tear from the corner of their eye and gulp hard. They cried aloud because they felt that weeping together created a bond between human beings. And that the idea is you were learning to put yourself in the position of another and reach out, not only to acceptable people, people in your own group, but to your enemies, to people that you wouldn't normally have any deep truck with at all.

BILL MOYERS: So this is not just another call for another round of interfaith dialogue?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: No, it's nothing to do with interfaith dialogue. Look, I'm not expecting the whole world to fall into a daze of compassion.

BILL MOYERS: Oh, I don't think you have to worry about that.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: But this is the beginning of something. We're writing a charter which we hope will be sort of like the charter of human rights, two pages only. Saying that compassion is far more important than belief. That it is the essence of religion. All the traditions teach that it is the practice of compassion and honoring the sacred in the other that brings us into the presence of what we call God, Nirvana, Raman, or Tao. And people are remarkably uneducated about compassion these days. So we want to bring it back to the center of attention. But then, it's got to be incarnated into practical action.

BILL MOYERS: Do you think, for example, that Osama Bin Laden and the Radical Islamists will sign onto this?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Of course not. But we have to understand that Osama Bin Laden and the radical Islamists are largely motivated by politics. They may express themselves in a religious idiom.

BILL MOYERS: As many of those suicide bombers did as they dived into the World Trade Center.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: They did. But their motivation, when you read Osama's declarations and the suicide videos of our own London bombers are all political. Their grievances are political.

BILL MOYERS: Were you there when London was bombed?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I was right in the middle of it.

BILL MOYERS: What was your reaction?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I thought that this was virtually inevitable. This is a political matter. And Tony Blair had put us right on the front line by joining with former President Bush. And we were all expecting this in London. There was no great surprise.

I was actually in the British library, right next to the King's Cross station, so it was a police zone. And we had to stay in there all day. We weren't allowed out. We didn't know quite what was happening. It was announced over the Tannoy that we were in a terrorist attack. There we were with true British phlegm still fussing about our footnotes. And--

BILL MOYERS: Did this diminish or strengthen your resolve on this issue of compassion?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: We've got to do better than this. Compassion doesn't mean feeling sorry for people. It doesn't mean pity. It means putting yourself in the position of the other, learning about the other. Learning what's motivating the other, learning about their grievances. So the Charter of Compassion was to recall compassion from the sidelines, to which it's often put in religious discourse and put it back there.

BILL MOYERS: One of your peers, a friend of mine, the scholar of religion Elaine Pagels told me many years ago in an interview like this that, "There is practically no religion I know of," she said, "that sees other people in the way that affirms the other's choice."

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes. And this is a great scandal. There used to be. Islam, for example, the Koran is a pluralistic document. It says that every rightly guided religion comes from God. And there must be no compulsion in religion. And it says that Muhammad has not come to cancel out the teachings of Jesus or Moses or Abraham.

Now, Muslims have fallen into the trap that Jews, Christians, and others have done, of thinking that they are the one and only. This is ego. This is pure ego.

BILL MOYERS: But it's inspired, is it not sanctified by religion?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Well, no, I mean, the idea is that you all have to be Muslim, is actually going against the explicit teaching of the Koran, in which God says to Muhammad, "If we"-- using the royal we - "had wanted the whole of mankind to be in one single religious community, we would have achieved, we would have made that happen. But we did not so wish. This is not our desire. So you, Muhammad, leave them alone." And everybody says the Koran has their own din. Their own religious tradition, their own way of life.

Now, this is getting lost to the modern world. But that was also Muslim practice for the first 100 years after the death of the prophet when in the empire that they created, conversion to Islam was actually frowned upon. Because Jews and Christians and Zoroastrians and, later, Buddhists, had their own din, their own religion. And that was to be respected.

BILL MOYERS: But you're putting your finger on a real fault line, it seems to me. That, metaphorically, the language of violence, which goes all the way back in these ancient stories, whether they're true or not, and often invoke God for the sanctification of violent acts.

I mean, in this splendid book that you've done recently, THE BIBLE: A BIOGRAPHY, you quote, for example, from Joshua, "When Israel had finished killing all the inhabitants of Ai, in the open ground. And where they follow them into the wilderness, and when all to a man had fallen by the edge of the sword, all Israel return to Ai and slaughtered all its people. All the people of Ai."

You go to the Koran. You have quoted this too, where the Koran paints a picture. You know, "Allah has sealed their hearings and their hearts. And on their eyes, there is a covering. Theirs will be an awful doom." When you talk about the positive and affirmative side of even these texts, there is also a counter prevailing side that creates this fault line.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yeah. These scriptures all have these difficult passages. There's far more of that kind of stuff in the bible, both old and new testaments--

BILL MOYERS: Right.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: --than there is in the Koran. Now, one of the things that I am going to call for in this Charter are for exegetes, cause the people who interpret scripture, to look at these passages. See how they came into the tradition in the first place. What were the circumstances in which they appeared? What influence they have on the tradition as a whole? And now, what do we do with them? Really study them in depth. How do we deal with them in this age where scripture is the-

BILL MOYERS: By exegetes, you mean the scholars and students and interpreters or every faith?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Every faith. Yes. And that we must, first of all, study our own scriptures, before we point a finger at other people.

BILL MOYERS: You ask the question, "What would it mean to interpret the whole of the Bible as a commentary on the Golden Rule?"

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes.

BILL MOYERS: What's your answer to that question?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Well, this is one of the things that really intrigued me when I was researching this book. How frequently the early rabbis, for example, in the Talmudic period, shortly after the death of Jesus, insisted that to any interpretation of scripture that read hatred or contempt for any single human being was illegitimate.

Rabbi Hillel, the older contemporary of Jesus, said that when asked to sum up the whole of Jewish teaching, while he stood on one leg, said, "The Golden Rule. That which is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor. That is the Torah. And everything else is only commentary. Now, go and study it."

St. Augustine said that scripture teaches nothing but charity. And if you come to a passage like the one you just read, that seems to preach hatred, you've got to give it an allegorical or metaphorical interpretation. And make it speak of charity.

BILL MOYERS: But of course, what some people do is to read for their own purposes what--

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Exactly.

BILL MOYERS: --they call allegorical. And then, read literally what they want to apply in their--

KAREN ARMSTRONG: And of course, you have to understand that this tendency to read scripture in a literal manner is very recent.

BILL MOYERS: Right.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Nobody, for example, ever thought of interpreting the first chapter of Genesis as a literal account of the origins of life, until the modern period. It's our scientific mindset that makes us want to sort of read these texts for accurate information.

BILL MOYERS: But as stories, don't they still have a very powerful effect? I mean, for example, you and I both know that the first murder in the oldest story grows out of a religious act.

Cain and Abel are brothers. They're rivals for God's favor. And out of jealously, Cain kills Abel. And once that pattern is set, it is followed right through like a red thread. Ishmael and Isaac and Joseph and his brothers. Right on down to Christians versus Muslims, Muslims versus Jews. Christians versus everybody. I mean, this is deeply embedded, is it not, metaphorically in our imagination?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I think these are difficult texts. We read these texts as though they're easy. Now, I see Genesis as deconstructing a neat idea of God.

BILL MOYERS: What do you mean deconstructing?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: First, in the chapter one, you've got the famous chapter, where God's sitting in the universe, center stage, totally powerful, totally benign, blessing everything. All that he has made and, no favorites, impartial. Totally powerful, totally benign. Within two chapters, he's completely lost control of his creation. Then, you've got the impartial God turns out to be a God that has real favorites.

And the Bible makes you feel the pain of the ones that are rejects. When Esau cries out, "Oh Father," to Isaac, "Have you no blessing for me, Father?" And Hagar, Abraham's second wife, who runs up and down outside in distress when Abraham has been commanded to leave her in the desert. And then, God, the benign creator becomes God the destroyer, at the end of the flood. And by the end of Genesis, he's retired from the scene.

And Joseph and his brothers have to rely on their own insights and dreams, just as we do. You can't say what God is. That is, people often ask me, "Ms. Armstrong, do you or do you not believe in the God of the Bible?" And I always say, "Tell me what it is." I'll be fascinated to hear because the Bible is a highly contradictory. What it shows, I think, is that our experience of the divine is ambiguous, complex.

We can misunderstand it. We can use it to create mayhem because of our own horrible sort of murderous tendencies. And there are no clear answers, no clear theology in the Bible.

BILL MOYERS: Spoken like a true Protestant, if I may say. I mean, those of us who believe we are, in effect, the editors of our own sacred text. That gets us in trouble.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: But-

BILL MOYERS: But that's what you're saying.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: But it shouldn't be because in the pre-modern world, you were expected to find new meaning in scripture.

BILL MOYERS: The pre-modern world being...

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Before the 17th century. You have the beginning of the scientific revolution in Europe in the 16th century. And that starts changing everything. A different economy, a much more literal approach to life. And the scientists, people like Newton, start to write theology. And the churches seize upon this and they start thinking that the Bible is literally and factually true.

But in the pre-modern world, what you see are the early Christian and Jewish commentators saying you must find new meaning in the Bible. And the rabbis would change the words of scripture to make a point to their pupils. Origen, the great second or third century Greek commentator on the Bible said that it is absolutely impossible to take these texts literally. You simply cannot do so. And he said, "God has put these sort of conundrums and paradoxes in so that we are forced to seek a deeper meaning."

And the Koran is the same. The Koran says every single one of its verses is an ayah, a symbol or a parable. Because you can only talk about God analogically, in terms of signs and symbols.

You must go to the bible and find new meaning, they said. And the same was true of the Greeks. At the beginning of the rationalist tradition in Greece, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the people who commented on them didn't sort of take down everything they did slavishly. They used it as a springboard to have new insights in the presence. Rather as we might use weights at the gym to build up our strength. They use it as something to start them thinking. But the Rabbis used to say, "You may not leave a scripture or text until you have translated it into practical action for the community here and now."

BILL MOYERS: Meaning acts of kindness, acts of compassion.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Acts of compassion.

BILL MOYERS: Acts of justice. Right?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes. Absolutely.

BILL MOYERS: We are all indebted to those Hebrew Prophets for this powerful resonating sense of social justice.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: And the Rabbis who came after them in the Talmudic age, and who created the Mishnah and Talmud, as it were then, New Testament, that paid very little attention to the Hebrew scriptures. But said, "Now we have to move on." Now, we've lost that confidence.

And that's what the charter is trying to do. Trying to nudge people into the hard work of being compassionate. People don't want to be compassionate. When I go around lecturing about this, I sometimes see the good faithful, looking mutinous. Because they may know that they ought to be compassionate. But what's the fun of religion if you can't sort of slam down other people? This is ego.

BILL MOYERS: I'm glad you mentioned this, because I know many atheists and agnostics who are more faithful, if that's the right term, to the Golden Rule than a lot of believing religious people.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes. And I also know a number of atheists who have no time for the Golden Rule at all.

BILL MOYERS: Exactly.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: So this is just people of all-

BILL MOYERS: But what is it that evokes the empathy and the commitment, which you're calling for, to people to put themselves in other's shoes. What is it that evokes that in people?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Basically a sense of urgent need. If we don't manage to do better than this both within our own communities, our own nations, and as regards other nations far away, then I think we are in for a very troublesome ride. We are not doing well at the moment. The three monotheisms, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, they have besetting problem, a besetting tendency. That is idolatry. Taking a human idea, a human idea of God, a human doctrine and making it absolute. Putting it in the place of God. Now, there have been secular idolatries too. Nationalism was a great idolatry.

BILL MOYERS: The state can be-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: The state can be. This is what we do. As Paul Tillich said, "We are makers of idols." We are constantly creating these idols. Erecting a purely human ideal or a human value or a human idea to the supreme reality. Now, once you've made of something essentially finite, once you've made it an absolute, it has, then, to destroy any other rival claimants. Because there can only be one absolute.

BILL MOYERS: Who created God?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Human beings created the idea of God. But the transcendence reality to which the idea of God nudges us, is embedded in part of the human experience.

BILL MOYERS: But if we create God, then we can read into God. Our-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes.

BILL MOYERS: -passions, jealousies, envies, animosities, aspirations.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes and this is idolatry. When you are creating a God in your own image and likeness. When the crusaders went into battle with the cry, "God wills it," on their lips. They were projecting their own fear and loathing of these rival faiths onto other people. And we get a lot of secular people doing this too.

BILL MOYERS: With the Stalinists, the Communists, the fascists-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: And even nearer here in the United States. You know, we've got people saying, "We want to get rid of religion." Or Radical Republicans slanging Democrats. We are very agonistic society.

BILL MOYERS: Agonistic?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Meaning competitive. That we're in our discourse. Can I just say-

BILL MOYERS: Yes.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Let me say this. In our discourse, it is not enough for us in the western democratic tradition simply to seek the truth. We also have to defeat and humiliate our opponents. And that happens in politics. It happens in the law courts. It happens in religious discourse. It happens in the media. It happens in academia. Very different from Socrates, the founder of the rationalist tradition, who when you had dialogues with Socrates, you came thinking that you knew what you were talking about.

Half an hour later, with Socrates, you realized you didn't know anything at all. And at that moment, says Socrates, your-- quest can begin. You can become a philosopher, a lover of wisdom because you know you don't have wisdom. You love it. You seek it. And you had to go into a dialogue prepared to change, not to bludgeon your conversation partner into accepting your point of view. And every single point in a Socratic dialogue, you offer your opinion kindly to the other, and the other accepts it with kindness.

BILL MOYERS: But you can't have a dialogue with people who don't want to have-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: No.

BILL MOYERS: -a dialogue.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: But that doesn't mean we should give up altogether. Because I think the so called liberals can also be just as hard lined in their own way.

Most fundamentalist movements, in every tradition that I've studied, in every fundamentalist movement, in Judaism, Christianity and Islam has begun with what is perceived as to be an assault by the liberal or secular establishment. And look at your Scopes Trial for example. You have this absurd ruling of ban on evolution in the public schools. And after the trial, the secular press do a number on the fundamentalists.

BILL MOYERS: H.L. Menken was ruthless about them-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yeah.

BILL MOYERS: -in depicting a caricaturing of them.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: And they crept away. And we thought we'd seen the end of them. But of course, they were just regrouping. But before the Scopes Trial, fundamentalists had often been on the left of the political spectrum.

Prepared to work alongside socialists and alongside social gospel people in the slums of the newly developing industrialized cities. After the Scopes Trial, they swung to the far right, where they remain. Before Scopes, fundamentalists tended to be literal in their interpretation of scripture. But creation science, so called, was the pursuit of a very tiny minority.

After the Scopes Trial they became more militant in their literal interpretation of scripture. And creation science became, and has remained, the flagship of their movement.

BILL MOYERS: So does your notion of compassion embrace liberals saying that, in the interest of harmony we will encourage our state schools to teach creationism alongside with your Darwin's-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yeah, you see-

BILL MOYERS: -notion of evolution?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: You see, the assault of Richard Dawkins on creationism has resulted, for the first time, in a worry about Darwin in the Muslim world. Up until this time--

BILL MOYERS: What do you mean?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: There was no worry about Darwin in the Muslim world up until very recently. The Koran doesn't say how God created the world. The texts tell you this is an ayah. We don't know what happened. And there was just no problem about it.

Now, and I get to see it on the websites that I get, it's headline news that British scientists sort of slangs creation. And Darwin has now become an anathema as a result of that assault. So I think we've all just got to come off our high horses a bit.

I think just to cool down the rhetoric. I think that truth must be respected. There must be an openness towards science, as Saint Augustine pointed out years ago.

He said, "If a religious text is found to contradict contemporary science, you must find a new interpretation for this text." You must allegorize it in some way. We need to get back to that. And let's just state I don't want this to be going after the fundamentalists. I don't want this to be going after extremists. I want this to just say, quietly, let us to remember the primal duty of compassion.

BILL MOYERS: Which is?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: To put the words calm and passion, means to feel with the other. To experience with the other. Do not do to others what you would not like them to do to you. If you don't like to be attacked, don't attack others. As Confucius said, who was the first to propound the Golden Rule, 500 years before Christ, you seek to establish yourself, then seek to establish others.

If you don't like hearing your own traditions traduced then have the discipline not to traduce the traditions of others. And it's hard. It's hard. It's not- people who say it's a simplistic idea, obviously, never tried to practice the Golden Rule. As Confucius said, "All day and every day." Which means that you constantly have to dethrone yourself and your own ideas from the center of your world and put another there. And realize that even in the most unlikely person there is a trace of the divine.

BILL MOYERS: We'll be back shortly with more of my conversation with Karen Armstrong. We'll discuss Islam, one of her favorite subjects, and how a footnote changed her life. But first, this is the time we remind you that you are the public in Public Television. Please take a moment to call this station and make a pledge. We need you now more than ever. Thank you.

BILL MOYERS: Welcome back and thanks for your support. I'm here with the scholar and historian of religion, Karen Armstrong. Her latest book is THE BIBLE: A BIOGRAPHY, but it was this one, MUHAMMAD: A BIOGRAPHY OF THE PROPHET, that first got everyone's attention. When it was published in 1991, PUBLISHER'S WEEKLY called it "Engrossing," and The ECONOMIST praised the book as "Knowledgeable without being pedantic... and readable." Armstrong's work was even welcomed in the Muslim world, where readers sensitive to misinterpretation of their faith were surprised to learn a westerner, and a woman at that, could so gracefully capture the essence of Islam's founding prophet.

Karen, you were just in Pakistan...

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I was indeed.

BILL MOYERS: Did you get any kind of response when you raised this subject?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Well, I had an immensely warm welcome in Pakistan. One woman came up to me and she said, "When I see you with your blond hair and blue eyes speaking with such respect about our prophet, I just weep."

BILL MOYERS: But what do they say about their own militants?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Well they are--

BILL MOYERS: Those insurgents who are, you know, slitting the throats of many Pakistanis right now.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Indeed-

BILL MOYERS: Decapitating them, murdering them, suicide bombers.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yeah.

BILL MOYERS: What do they say about them?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: They're appalled of course. And you know, they've just had their own sort of 9/11, with the bombing of the Marriott hotel in Islamabad. Not an anti-American thing. This was directed solely against Pakistani Muslims who were breaking their Ramadan fast there.

The Marriott Hotel in Islamabad is right next to the government buildings. It's a great icon in Islamabad. This was a massive attack on their own people. I went to see President Musharraf, and he said that of course, Muslims themselves are under attack from these militants because all fundamentalists movements, whether they're Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Sikh or Buddhist, begin with an assault on their own co-religionists. They see that people are always saying, "What can't these mainstream Muslims keep the militants down?"

Well, the militants regard the mainstream Muslims with absolute disdain and see them as part of the problem. They're not interested in people studying the Koran or praying in the mosque in the usual way. These are political activists.

BILL MOYERS: Can you point today to one place where this notion of compassion has been embraced by different religions to actually bring about a political consequence that we could look upon favorably?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Not as yet. No, I can't, because we're not living in a compassionate society, whether we're talking in a secular or religious terms. You know, look at the way, sometimes, your elections are carried on. With real slanging matches and discrediting.

BILL MOYERS: That's politics.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yeah. That's politics. And what is a lot of this religious slanging, but religious politics? Many of the so called religious leaders are in power not because they are sages of wisdom or contemplatives. They're not Dalai Lamas. They are religious politicians who are not known for their lack of ego.

But basically the human race has never embraced compassion. Why did we create this compassionate ideal at the time of the--when all the great world religions were created? Because their societies had reached a point of violence. And this--the religious people said, people like the Buddha, Confucius, the Sages of the Upanishads , the Prophets of Israel, Socrates, they all said this aggression, even in a good cause, is not the way to go. And people found that when they did it all day and every day, it worked. Because you get rid of ego, it does bring you a sense of enlightenment. But it's not just a question of holding hands in church. Or you know, embracing when you make the peace. Or allowing a charitable thought to rise to your mind in a sporadic moment. It is a discipline that you have to practice all day and every day. I used, you know, to be a really spiteful human being.

BILL MOYERS: No.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I learned a vicious form of rhetoric from my religious superiors. and also, from my teachers at Oxford. You know? And people used to say to me, "I would really hate to be your enemy," because I have this very sharp tongue that I knew how to use it. And I get in first before someone put me down. That kind of thing.

I found that, in my studies I had to practice, what I found called in a footnote the "science of compassion." There was a phrase coined by great Islamist, Louis Massignon. Science, not in the sense of physics or chemistry but in the sense of knowledge, scientia, the Latin word for knowledge.

And Latin--the knowledge acquired by compassion. Feeling with the other. Putting yourself in the position of the other. And this footnote said that a religious historian, like myself, must not approach the spiritualities of the past from the vantage point of post enlightenment rationalism. You mustn't look on this in a superior way and look at the author of "The Cloud of Unknowing," a 14th century text as, poor soul. You know?

And you had to recreate in a scholarly fashion, all the circumstances which had resulted in this spirituality or this teaching and not leave it, or certainly not write about it, until you can imagine yourself putting yourself in that position. Imagine yourself feeling the same. So when I wrote about Muhammad, for example, I had to put myself in the position of a man living in the hell of seventh century Arabia, who sincerely believed he had been touched by God.

And unless I did that, I would miss Muhammad. I had to put clever Karen, edgy Oxford educated Karen on the back burner. And go out of myself and enter into the mind of the other. And I found, much to my astonishment, it started changing me. I couldn't any longer be quite as vicious as I was or dismissive as I was in the kind of clever conversations-

BILL MOYERS: Why? This is the first time I've heard of a born again experience beginning with a footnote. Was it your imagination that said, "I have to see this world the way Muhammad saw it and experienced it?"

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I said that this footnote is right. If I go on writing, as I had been doing up to this point for saying, "This is all rubbish." You know, I know it all. These poor benighted souls in the past didn't know what they were talking about. I was not fulfilling my job as a historian.

It was my job to go in and recreate it, enter into that spirit. Leave myself behind and enter into the mind and society and outlook of the other. It's a form of what the Greeks called ekstasis. Ecstasy. That doesn't mean you go into a trance or have a vision. It means-- ekstasis means standing outside yourself. Putting yourself behind. And it is self, it's ego that hold us back from what we call God.

BILL MOYERS: You speak of the change in you. You're talking about a personal transformation. But take the next step. What would bring about the kind of real change in society and in politics that would be an extrapolation of or a continuation in community of what you're talking about?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Okay. Not to treat other nations or other... in a way that we would not wish to be treated ourselves.

BILL MOYERS: Unless they've attacked you.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Even so, I mean, there was a chance after 9/11, you know, when something different would have been done. The religions have generally developed, as the Koran does, a theory of just war. You know? That you can fight only in self defense. But a lot of the policies that we created helped to, you know, first of all, let's leave America out of this. Look at the British, and their colonial policies.

Many of the problems we face in the Muslim world date back to that colonial period, to British behavior, and arrogance, and the abuse of democracy. For example, in Egypt, between 1922, when Egypt was granted a modicum of independence, and 1952, when you have the Nasser revolution. There were 17 general elections in the country.

All of them won hands down by the Wafd party, who wanted to see reduced British influence in Egypt. They were only allowed to rule five times. On every other occasion, the British made them stand down and put more congenial people in power. This made the whole idea of democracy a bad joke. Now, would we wish to be treated like that ourselves?

BILL MOYERS: Now, this is what some people call blow back, in the intelligence world. And some people say, "Are the chickens coming home to roost?" But I want to make sure that people don't misunderstand. After 9/11, we made a mistake of invading a country that had not attacked us.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Yes.

BILL MOYERS: But what about when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor or when the Germans, the Nazis wanted to come across the channel and destroy Britain? You're not saying they're to treat Germany or Japan the way we would like to be treated.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: No, but you fight in self-defense. And the trouble with war is it has a horrible dynamic of its own. So that, in the end, we all start doing dreadful things that-

BILL MOYERS: That's right.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: That violate all our own principles. Like the British bombing of Dresden, for example.

BILL MOYERS: The American bombing of Hiroshima.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Exactly.

BILL MOYERS: Nagasaki. The atrocities of both sides-

KAREN ARMSTRONG: That's what happens when in war. So that's why they say you-- the Koran, for example, says you must limit war and you must stop hostilities as soon as the enemy sues for peace. That kind of thing. But instead of seeing the other world as them, or instead of seeing our own fundamentalists as them and enemies, somehow learn to see, perhaps, the pain that lies at the root of a lot of this because they feel attacked by us. I was once in a - recently some years back -- in a conference in Portland where a man got up and started shrieking at us, saying that the Jews and the Christians and the Muslims on the stage who were agreed with each other were all going to hell.

And I could hear the pain in that man's voice. That, at some level, we had assaulted him. At some profound level. There was pain there. In a war situation, it takes a long time before you can even get people to sit around the table. In Northern Ireland, for example, before you could get people on all sides, the British and the Republicans and the IRA and the Ulsteristes to get them around the table was an immense achievement.

People said when they saw everybody coming up this drive of Stormont Castle and sitting around that table, the emotion in that room in itself was profound. We're not nearly there yet. One of the things that we can do on our side is to learn to decode fundamentalist rhetoric. As we learn to decipher a great poem or an op-ed article. To see the hidden agendas. To see what lies underneath this. Because they are expressive of a fear and rage that no society, as we've seen, can safely ignore.

BILL MOYERS: What is it--you've studied this--what is it fundamentalist Muslims fear about the world?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Basically they have experienced secularism as a profound assault. We had 300 years to develop our secular institutions. Modernization in Europe, and later the United States took a long time. And the new ideas had a chance to trickle down naturally to all different levels of society. They didn't have that chance. Modernization had to take place very quickly. So that, for example, when Ataturk modernized Turkey, he closed down all the Madrassas. He-

BILL MOYERS: The religious schools.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: The religious schools. He forced the Sufi orders, mystics, underground and forced all men and women to wear western clothes. In Iran, the Shahs used to make their soldiers go out with their bayonets, taking off the women's veils in the streets, and ripping them to pieces in front of them. In 1935, the Shah gave his soldiers orders to shoot at hundreds of unarmed demonstrators in one of the holiest shrines in Iran who were peacefully protesting against western dress.

And hundred of Iranians were killed that day. Now, in such a context, secularism doesn't seem the benign ideology that it has been for privileged people, like you and me. It feels like a dead, lethal assault. The most virulent forms of Sunni fundamentalism in Islam developed in the concentration camps, and to which President Nasser had interred thousands of members of the Muslim Brotherhood without trial.

Submitted them to mental and physical torture and execution. Some of them had done nothing more incriminating than handing out leaflets. And in these camps, they became radicalized. One of them was a man called Sayyid Qutb, who entered the camp as a moderate, a student of French and European literature. When he heard Nasser vowing to secularize Egypt and confine Islam to the private sphere on the western model, he looked around this prison. And secularism did not seem benign. It seemed lethal.

And there's something else. There's been a Gallup poll that asked Muslims what they liked most about the West. And what the biggest thing that they all liked was our freedom. They'd like to see more of it themselves. What do they fear most about the West? What do they dislike most about the West?

What worries them most? Their disrespect for our religion. And when they hear ill considered, uneducated remarks about their religion, this is a gift to the extremists who can use it to show that the West is making a crusade against Islam. And it's also endangering our own security.

BILL MOYERS: But the burden is not wholly on the West, is it?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: We have to do our part. And not exaggerate things. This survey also asked--in 35 Muslim countries, it asked them whether they thought the 9/11 attacks were justified. Only seven percent said they were justified. And the reasons they gave were entirely political. Palestine. You know, the Iraq--sanctions in Iraq, et cetera. The occupation of Muslim lands.

These 93, or 92, percent who said they were not justifiable may not have liked western foreign policy. But what they said was their rational for condemning these attacks was religious. They quoted those parts of their scripture which says that to take one life is to take an entire world. That to kill is not justified. We've got to see that. And we've got to see that reflected more in our own press and in our own dealings with this. Otherwise, we're going to build up a bogey, as we did with the Soviets.

BILL MOYERS: Your new book, "The Case for God," comes out in September.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: It does.

BILL MOYERS: Will you come back?

KAREN ARMSTRONG: I'd love to.

BILL MOYERS: In the meantime, we have Karen Armstrong's, "The Bible: A Biography." Thank you very much. It's been good to talk to you again.

KAREN ARMSTRONG: Thank you, Bill.

BILL MOYERS: As Karen and I talked, I was mindful of a speech Barack Obama made almost three years ago. On June 28, 2006, he reminded us just how impossible it is in a democracy to reconcile absolute claims about God.

BARACK OBAMA: At some fundamental level, religion doesn't allow for compromise. It's the art of the impossible. If God has spoken, then followers are expected to live up to God's edicts, regardless of the consequences. Now, to base one's life on such uncompromising commitments may be sublime, but to base our policy-making on such commitments would be a dangerous thing.

BILL MOYERS: My old friend Martin Marty, one of the country's leading historians of religion, contrasted Obama's message with that of the Reverend Rick Warren, who delivered the invocation at the President's inauguration. Warren had said there are five issues that cannot be negotiated: abortion, stem-cell harvesting, homosexual marriage, human cloning and euthanasia. "To me," Warren said, "they're not even debatable because God's Word is clear on these issues." Actually, according to Martin Marty himself, no stranger to the Scriptures, there are only a few inches of Biblical text that can even be inferred to support Warren's big five, much less treat them as non-negotiable.

What Pastor Warren and millions in his camp advocate, says Martin Marty, is no different from Muslims who base social and political policy on the Koran, or ruling parties in India who dictate law from their holy books. Such rigid literalism works only in a theocracy, where the whole population accepts or is forced to accept one faith's notion of "God's Word."

So it would seem a good thing in a world of clashing absolutes, for all parties to take a few minutes to read Karen Armstrong's Charter for Compassion, a work still in progress but more urgent every day. You'll find the link to it on theMoyers Web site at pbs.org.

That's it for the JOURNAL. I'm Bill Moyers and I'll see you next week. Thank you.


 

Karen Armstsrong opened a deeper meaning about the other and largest God worshiping people of our planet. I was raised Catholic, yet I found Jesus in Las Vegas, NV, USA. I found charity that God is talking about, when a God-child/woman gave me 2 pieces of chicken parts so I can eat. Presently, I invite all people to my flat so they can eat. I strongly agree with Karen Armstrong's basic and proven truth to all mankind in a span of 2,000 yrs. plus: "do unto others as you would like others to do unto you.
The Bible or the Koran are full of stories ... and loaded with wonderful gems (of choice) to guide earthlings in their respective journey. But, LOVE is the only human gift from the Almighty that will last to the end.

Posted by: Maritess Samuelle Sanchez | March 14, 2009 11:40 AM

Bill, thank you so for guesting Karen Armstrong. How encouraging!
Would like to suggest jim guilfoil watch it again.

Posted by: John | March 14, 2009 11:39 AM

Genesis tells us that God gave Dominion over the Word into Matter to One; which became Two and Fell with the Two. Reading "Comments" reaffirms my belief that Truth can only work in a % in Matter.

Posted by: Larry | March 14, 2009 11:28 AM

While Karen Armstrong was cherry-picking religions to reinforce her conceit, she made a mess of Christianity, and by extension, Judaism. Obviously, she has never seen Jesus Christ, i.e., He has never revealed Himself to her. Mohammed is as dead now as the day he died centuries ago. Jesus is alive and seated at the right hand of God. The astounding miracles that Jesus performed proved that God was with him (Mohammed performed none); the resurrection of Jesus proves that He is now with God. Karen Armstrong cuts a sad figure who, thinking herself wise, prattles twaddle while stumbling down the increasingly dark road to eternal perdition. Choosing that path for oneself leads to the grave. Leading others down that path leads to eternal punishings.

Posted by: John Stephens | March 14, 2009 11:13 AM

The golden rule begs the question of the 'self' which rules. Socrates distinguished the golden self from the silver and bronze and argued that the bronze self needed guardians to order his actions. The military self is not ordered by 'compassion' but by 'death before dishonor(Achilles).
The mercantile self is ordered by profit and not by 'empathy' in Adam Smiths sense.
Karen Armstrong needs to show how 'compassion' will overcome the warrior or mercantile self image of dedication to honor or profit.
On the battlefield or market place compassion is to see the other as another self and expect 'caveat emptor' or 'kill or be killed'.
Why should a public morality trump the strong vs the weak morality?

Posted by: jim guilfoil | March 14, 2009 11:04 AM

The golden rule begs the question of the 'self' which rules. Socrates distinguished the golden self from the silver and bronze and argued that the bronze self needed guardians to order his actions. The military self is not ordered by 'compassion' but by 'death before dishonor(Achilles).
The mercantile self is ordered by profit and not by 'empathy' in Adam Smiths sense.
Karen Armstrong needs to show how 'compassion' will overcome the warrior or mercantile self image of dedication to honor or profit.
On the battlefield or market place compassion is to see the other as another self and expect 'caveat emptor' or 'kill or be killed'.
Why should a public morality trump the strong vs the weak morality?

Posted by: jim guilfoil | March 14, 2009 11:03 AM

The golden rule begs the question of the 'self' which rules. Socrates distinguished the golden self from the silver and bronze and argued that the bronze self needed guardians to order his actions. The military self is not ordered by 'compassion' but by 'death before dishonor(Achilles).
The mercantile self is ordered by profit and not by 'empathy' in Adam Smiths sense.
Karen Armstrong needs to show how 'compassion' will overcome the warrior or mercantile self image of dedication to honor or profit.
On the battlefield or market place compassion is to see the other as another self and expect 'caveat emptor' or 'kill or be killed'.
Why should a public morality trump the strong vs the weak morality?

Posted by: jim guilfoil | March 14, 2009 11:02 AM

I also happen to be a long time fan of Karen Armstrong, having read a number of her books. I see the relevance of what she said resonating throughout these postings. I find it fascinating the diversity of perspectives and the strong feelings this interview provoked. I am very encouraged by those who are motivated to take a step back and look at how they are looking at things. In my view, doctrinaire certainty while comforting can short circuit what needs to be a continual searching for deeper truths. For some such a search may ground them more fully in their outlooks and, hopefully, give them a confidence that makes it unnecessary for them to make other people "wrong." For others, it will lead to fresh and widened perspectives that deepen their sense of their own and others' humanity. Either way, such a search is necessary if we are to behave with more and more effective compassion.

Posted by: Manu Mukasa | March 14, 2009 11:00 AM

In the essential article "Fighting Terrorism by Understanding Man's Capacity for Evil," available at www.zimbardo.com, Stanford psychology professor Philip Zimbardo underscores the continued need for compassion as a national character trait following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
The article is prophetic in pointing out that the work of "our intelligence and military forces has the collateral danger of modeling revenge and retaliation at a national level that can become a stimulus for individuals to adopt a similar orientation. [This] fuels the cycle of violence started by the terrorists," accelerating fear and anger, aggression and intolerance.
Zimbardo cautioned us that regarding a terrorist attack as "'senseless,' 'mindless,' 'insane,' or the work of 'madmen' is wrong [because] it fails to adopt the perspective of the perpetrators, as an act with a clearly defined purpose that we must understand in order to challenge it most effectively." Interestingly, at that same time, our president seemed to dismiss this instruction when he said, "We will have no compassion for our enemies."
Understanding compassion, as the ability to "feel as the other," can be aided with an understanding of attribution theory, as developed by Gustav Ichheiser and Fritz Heider, expanded by Edward Jones and Keith Davis, Harold Kelley, Bernard Weiner, and their research collaborators and assistants, and brought to the public mind by authors and teachers of social psychology. In seeking to understand the behavior of others, which helps us achieve a view of them and the greater world that is consistent, we consider causal factors that are from their disposition and from their situation, remembering, too, that some of these factors we as the observer do impact.
With compassion, we can fulfill the command as found in Hebrew scripture (Leviticus 19 v.17-18), and repeated in Christian scripture, to love our neighbors as ourselves.
This program was enlightening. I'm encouraged. Thank you.

Posted by: Phil Crabb | March 14, 2009 10:34 AM

Bill, It is in answer to your question "Who made God?"--that philosophical resolution may reside; that the means to understand and release an inherent compassionate nature may exist. Some new food for thought on this matter exists, but is impossible to explain in a brief note. Thoughts on this and other complex issues can be found in a book "The Long Overdue Letter." The ideas are so new, they may need to be digested slowly. In essence the work states the reason we ask such questions is because mankind is not in its right mind! Our reality traces to isolated primitive ancestors who functioned at an entirely physiological level. The body automatically takes a picture of the environment, and delivers it to the person; and we copy what we see. The view would have been of objects that begin and end; thus failing to abandon this foundation; to this day, even though physicists have proven objects are not as they appear; it remains the range of human mentality, it is the encapsulation of thought in this physical perspective that gives us a picture of isolation from the whole of reality. The view also would have been of predatory activity. Discussion in the book surrounds reasons to believe this intermittent motion that overpowers the normal state and brings things to an end was not part of our original environment. Suggestion is given that it was because of this physical focus, God appeared in the physical form of Jesus to direct our vision away from the environment to a place deep within personal thought. The activity and parables of Jesus awakened an insight; a pure conscious sense of 'fairness'; which is our true inherent mindset; and once this personal worth, was released from oppressive social conditions; an awesome progress followed; suggesting a REAL person is not a body; but an everlasting unlimited conscious energy; and herein exists our only likeness to God. Explanation is given that conscious dissociation from each other, and God separates us from reality; as it was our ability to come together in thought; that brought environmental truths into view; which could be related to the Biblical story relative to the vine. Credit is given to all major religions for directing vision to this common place deep in thought, but most especially credits Jesus for guiding us toward personal freedom from the mind of physical images; our direction toward exercise of compassion and social peace did not come down from human authority; but flowed out from the heart of the people; from this inner mindset; from personal convictions.

Posted by: Dinah | March 14, 2009 10:22 AM

I am amazed that you can speak of the Golden Rule, war, and colonialism in the same breath and not include Native Americans. You cannot see what you do not acknowledge. Lincoln may have emancipated the slaves, but he instituted a policy of extermination and concentration of Native Americans and foreclosed on their land. Swapping one racism for another does nothing to end racism, even as swapping the war in Iraq for the war in Afghanistan will not end the conflict with the Arab world.

Lincoln used Sherman and his total warfare strategy to defeat the South. Then he sent Sherman west to do the same and instituted a policy of extermination and concentration of Native Americans. Heintz Guderian via Liddell Hart picked up on this strategy and renamed it blitzkrieg. Substitute Jews for Native Americans and you have Hitler and World War II. Total warfare, concentration, extermination, and confiscation -- objectively speaking Lincoln was the father of Nazism. Blocks of 640 acres were take from one people and given to another based solely on the color of their skin, and Obama has praised this. Actually, much of America approved what Hitler did until those Native American surrogates, the Japanese, got into the war.

The Golden Rule as found in the New Testament is much more oriented toward karma. It reads more like "Even as you do to others, so it will be done to you." You take Native Americans homes and livelihood, and yours will be taken. You destroy their economy, and yours will be destroyed. You destroy their environment, and yours will be destroyed. You make a racial war on brown people, and they (Korea, Vietnam, Iraq) will make war on you. I see our inability to win these wars and our national economic distress as an indication that we have reached our karmic limit, and our karma is contracting. Karma is multidimensional. Whenever you solve one problem, it gives you a related one to see if you understood it. America elected Obama, but racism against Native Americans goes unabated. To advocate compassion for and putting yourself in the shoes of Muslims without a thought of doing the same for the people whose continent you took does not ring true. How can you speak of respect for other religions but make no attempt at understanding the Native American one. Compassion and Golden Rule ring hollow until you have the willingness to look at the beam in your own eye.

Posted by: Horace | March 14, 2009 9:24 AM

Dear Bill,
Jesus made it very clear that unless a man is born of water and spirit he can not enter the Kingdom of God. Those outside of the KOG are not able to understand the things of God. Every one is invited to come to Jesus but you refuse to come because your deeds are evil. You hate the light but if you repent and turn from your sins God will receive you.
The Kingdom of God is at hand so repent. Why? Because God is wonderful and he loves you more than we can understand he loves you more and wants only good for you. To know Jesus is live eternal. Call on him today.

Once I was lost but now I am his child
Brother Jim

Posted by: Jim Robertson | March 14, 2009 9:07 AM

Bill,
In her quote, Armstrong calls Christianity a monotheistic religion when it's actually trinitarian. I suppose it's only natural to sacrifice one's own tradition in an effort to embrace others, but to minimize differences in an attempt to establish common ground is taking a short cut to tolerance-- it neither promotes understanding nor require real respect.

Posted by: John Larson | March 14, 2009 8:21 AM


 

Posted by: malfax | March 14, 2009 7:09 AM

Bill, your stuck in the sixties. I can't believe people buy into your communist ideals. Just shows how debased we've become as a nation by drinking in the kool-aid you in the corporate controlled media force down our throats daily. Too bad the mindless zombies lap up your insane drivel.

Bill, your an intellectual fool. All of your guests, Ms. Armstrong as example, belong in a padded cell away from normal society.

Your so called program isn't ballanced. Just more crazy anti-American hippies living in the past with their drug induced utopian fabtasy world. What an utter joke you in the media are.

Posted by: malfax | March 14, 2009 7:05 AM

It's amazing to see the diversity of views whenever the public comments on Ms. Armstrong. There's invariably more unrest and dissent than praise, which is understandable (though unfair) since she covers the most sacred issues known to humankind. In a way she serves as a kind of Rorschach test representing the broadly conflicted state of spirituality in America. Obama's difficulties with the Rev. Wright, the perpetually unresolved issues of abortion rights, prayer in school, stem cell research, etc. likewise signify that profound disturbances plague us. And the conflicts have been compounded since 9/11.

Forty years ago, or so, many felt that America had found a secular equilibrium and that religious allegiances would forever be consigned to the private sphere. But because the secular revolution blindly extended liberties while at the same time indiscriminately delegitimized moral values, millions of individuals lost their way. And consequently, America became cursed with reactive, resurgent Evangelicalism, as well as the Culture Wars and the polarization that divides us into sinners or saints, unforgivably gay or fruitfully heterosexual, sacrilegious or righteous. Welcome to the world of black or white, either/or, good or bad categories where there is rarely a middle ground upon which one can work out civil accommodations. Unfortunately, it's a realm closer in scope to Salem than to Heaven.

Ms. Armstrong, following the logic of her research, is simply attempting to provide us with, let's say, the GPS signal that will lead us to that common ground. But she's got her hands full. The trip requires saintly moderation. One bellicose recitation about the End Times or Marx's quote about the opium of the people, and, wham, bam, the journey to Golden Rule Village is over. Like the Titanic hitting the ice, everyone will scatter to their dens of certainty, which contain the beloved creation stories, shamanistic rattlers, or atheistic barbs that fortify preexisting biases. Oddly, at that point, individuals otherwise guided by empirical data in their everyday existence -- accountants, dentists, politicians -- will relax their dependency on facts and resort to their deepest unfounded beliefs. "Love is God." "There is no God." "Religion is destructive." "Atheists deserve a wicked death." And so on.

But where's the proof? There is no empirical proof of God, despite the fact it seems nearly impossible to conceive of the universe self-assembling through fate and chance. Certainly there's no proof in the Bible, anymore than there is proof in the polytheistic creeds of native Americans that there are rain and wind gods. There are indications. There are clever, at times, exceedingly logical arguments. But proof. Nope.

It should be said that for many citing "the Bible" as proof, the book actually being referred to is the New Testament, not the Hebrew Bible. St. Paul and Christ were Jewish rebels, as were the scribes constructing the New Testament and thus much of their account is in conflict with the Hebrew Bible, as well as with each other -- a fact routinely overlooked by many believers. And since the Bible was written by different authors at different times, as Armstrong brilliantly illustrates, there are grave inconsistencies throughout the book. That doesn't mean you shouldn't believe in these books, but it also means there are sufficient grounds to discredit them from serving as the de facto source for universal human governance. You're entitled to your belief system, but why insist on forcing your beliefs on everyone else? That's essentially what Armstrong is saying.

Just as believers do not have empirical, indisputable proof, neither do atheists. Simply because religions have been associated with atrocities such as the Crusades and the Inquisition, doesn't mean they are worthless or inevitably evil. And it doesn't mean there isn't a God, or, maybe two, or five, or a board of divine directors. Right now, in the post-Enlightenment world geared for Reason, there isn't enough proof for or against God or any particular religiously determined set of moral values that can be reasonably, unequivocally supported. So why not seize upon the secular kernel -- Compassion -- common among spiritual and religious beliefs and agree upon this most sensible, universal component? Concepts such as understanding, mutual concern, community, unity, could be substituted for compassion since compassion must exist for them to thrive. The point is, establishing mutual respect for other people's pro or anti religious beliefs that aren't grounded by empirical proof.

Sadly, it's not only this thread that demonstrates how difficult it will be to realize Armstrong's ideal. Just look around. Where are the organs of inquiry in America? Many of them are going out of business. Infotainment rules the land. Other than Bill Moyers and a handful of others, where are the leaders who provide a lengthy forum for philosophical debate? Indeed, much of the current economic tumult is directly related to philosophy. "Free-market" capitalists like Phil Gramm, Greenspan, and other Ayn Rand ideologues, abide by the Enlightenment view of human affairs, especially Adam Smith's Invisible Hand. This perspective is at the heart of the continuing polarization between Republicans and Democrats and yet there's no widely distributed, meaningful debate about it.

Basically, F. Hutcheson, Hume, Smith, and, subsequently, a chain of pro-capitalist advocates extending down through the Austrian school, have functioned according to the presumption of the impartial observer theory. It's similar to the Golden Rule. Supposedly, strangers have a natural affinity for each other, and therefore because of this natural bond -- which is the Invisible Hand -- freedom and minimally regulated capitalism will work harmoniously.

Then, if that's so, if the Golden Rule, give or take a few degrees, keeps things in check, then why did bank regulators deceive the public about the ratings of derivatives, particularly Credit Default Swaps that weren't worth the paper they were printed on? Why did Wall Street firms hire physicists to devise arcane "instruments" like CDOs and SIVs that virtually no one clearly understood? And then why did investment firms, which should have had the capacity to realize snake oil when they encountered it, push the stuff on millions of unsuspecting investors, like Iceland? Why? Because there is no Invisible Hand. Because when Glass-Steagall was repealed, the shysters sensed that the unwitting masses were ripe for the picking. Because there is, as Plato insisted, a beastly element within human nature that manifests itself as insatiable greed, fraud, sociopathy, and conspicuous consumption.

But since philosophy in America is generally treated like a wasted exercise, those discussions get neglected. The notion of the Invisible Hand is perpetuated. The "free-market" exponents, like Bernie Madoff keep pushing their delusions. And the unwitting masses, unenlightened about the matters affecting them the most, keep taking a beating. Regardless of what you may think of Ms. Armstrong's views, her campaign to keep inquiry alive is noble, and illustrative of a compassion for her fellow earthlings.

Posted by: arty kraft | March 14, 2009 6:38 AM

All Ms. Armstrong has to do is read the comments here to see the futility in believing some notion of compassion found in every religion can bring peace.
Clearly half the posters are self-righteous and arrogant believers posting only to assert the superiority of their own sect, their own scared text, and their own interpretation of it.
Our founding fathers had it right – a secular state where every man is equal and no religion can rule over another.
It really doesn't matter if we like, love or respect each other; we just need to respect each other's rights.
Fundamentalists and ideologues can't abide that thought, and there will always be a struggle between them and people of reason.

Posted by: Rudolph | March 14, 2009 5:40 AM

Bill;
I would like to associate myself with the remarks of P.A. Moye and add my personal thanks for your entire body of work.

Posted by: Milton Panzer | March 14, 2009 5:33 AM

Bill;
I would like to associate myself with the remarks of P.A. Moye and add my personal thanks for your entire body of work.

Posted by: Milton Panzer | March 14, 2009 5:33 AM

Well, Karen Armstrong, who has certainly long since shaken free of any and all vows she made as a nun that "We believe in One God, the Father Almighty, Maker of Heaven and Earth" has certainly turned the definition of idolatry on its head! The "New World Religion" she is certainly working to "emerge" is a very strange one indeed. It appears that in Karen Armstrong and the Alliance of Civilization's New Religious Order, one indeed is allowed to have a 'religion.' One, however, is not allowed to believe it true. One must, in Karen Armstrong's newest universe say "blessed by THY God, rather than 'blessed by MY God." She calls this "compassion"? I call what she proposes nothing less than 'religious rape' of souls. While people must remember that a central monotheist religious concept is "thou shalt not kill," they must also not forget, "thou shalt have no other gods before me." As Karen Armstrong utterly rejects and despises Book of Revelation warnings, obviously she is unmoved by the Scriptural warnings of a time she obviously seeks to advance: FEAR GOD AND GIVE GLORY TO HIM FOR THE HOUR OF HIS JUDGMENT IS COME -- WORSHIP GOD WHO CREATED THE HEAVEN, THE EARTH, THE SEAS AND THE FOUNTAINS OF WATERS." Karen Armstrong would have us worship everything and everybody but our Creator -- and dare to call us uncompassionate if we exercise our conscience in this regard. May God have mercy on her poor apostate soul!

CONSTANCE E. CUMBEY

Posted by: Constance E. Cumbey | March 14, 2009 5:11 AM

Mr. Moyers - Thank you so Very Much for your continuing exploration into "What it means to be Human?"

Does not this question underlie your entire career?

I have been blessed by the journey, through Campbell/Myths, Aspen series, Amazing Grace, and Journal. Whether you have felt it or not, you have been, and continue to be, a Blessing.

"THANK YOU" doesn't begin to cover my gratitude.

Posted by: P.A. Moye | March 14, 2009 4:33 AM