9/5/09

Atheism and The God Delusion: 2 - The Knowledge Problem

Human knowledge and science – the blind crippled baby :

What is a Singularity – What is a constant

Is it just me? So many times I am amazed at how primitive and infantile (and blind?) our knowledge is. Our sciences are just an attempt to create a model that resembles the world we live in, but we fail to realize that this model we are creating isn’t really reality: It’s just how we see it, influenced by our shortsightedness, short lifespan, and many imperfections. The model is actually our partial interpretation of what we experience (which is also partial).

Maybe – just maybe – the whole path of sciences is wrong? Maybe we shouldn’t have moved through analysis into more breakups in explanation? More division and re-division? Could it be that this is due to the influence of our senses – whose playground is the physical world? These are valid questions.. There could have been an alternate route that would give more general and bigger answers..

All our knowledge and analysis is too primitive and flawed (there are a lot of factors) to make sure statements about anything – let alone about divinity. Anyway here I remember the beautiful example of Newton – Einstein: Newton came up with the formula that governs the force – acceleration relationship. A few hundred years later Einstein came up with a more general formula for the same relationship, in the light of which Newton’s previous one was simply an approximation – a special case! It’s as if Newton’s formula is a projection of Einstein’s 3-Dimensional formula on a 2-Dimensional plane… so it will miss a dimension… I am inclined to think that Einstein’s formulas and knowledge, as are all our sciences, approximations of the truth and projections on a plane with fewer dimensions. This is why there is a singularity (a point with no laws) in our sciences… do you think that there is that point… NO .. it’s simply the universe’s way of saying : “ you idiots, you’re missing a few dimensions” … the same applies for constants… there are six constants in the laws of physics (including the speed of light, the charge of the electron, etc…) that just appear at certain values, and any change of which will make our universe impossible (instead of the current – highly improbable). So.. why do we have them? AGAIN, because everything we know is an approximation of something.. Some projection on a less-dimensional space, and it happens that these things are what helps avoid looking for the more general equation … the one equation for everything … the ultimately simple complete equation!


Probability, Infinity and God

Euler when told by the queen empress Catherine that Diderot's atheistic arguments are making quite a significant noise, and asked to prove to him that god indeed exists..... He told Diderot:

"Sir, (a+b^n)/z = x, hence God exists.", Diderot had no answer, and returned to France ashamed.

This formula can't be understood nor proven nor disproven mathematically... maybe this is what Euler was trying to say ...


Word Play, Language and the literality of Man

One interesting thing about the atheism discussion is the tendency to exploit the literal statements of some believers and of the religions. In one place in the ‘God Delusion’ Dawkins says that he is not talking about the god of the scientists but the god of men… Well, it’s the same thing. Some people will have the ability to more deeply understand the concept, and their image of this will be far less literal and personal.

It is very important here to take a deeper look at many things discussed by religion, be it heaven, earth, divinity, goodness and so on. What do they represent, and – sometimes – what difference does it make to a believer, who sees his own heaven, shows of acrobatics, wordplay and elaborate byzantine discussions.


The Time scale – Evolutionary eyes again

I just need to re-mention this point here because it is part of our perception and knowledge problem. Evolution by natural selection seemed to be such a huge thing that disproves creationism to Mr. dawkins because it proved that life was created along a stretch of time and not in one shot – well, BIG DEAL!

Our perception of time means nothing. Its – again – something we do to try and portray the world around us, and so the words ‘creating the universe’ imply no possible relation with a certain time frame and not the other, so creation can happen in 1 second, 1 day, or 15 billion years. Time is just one of the dimensions on our own plane – the one with too few dimensions, remember?

Anyway I thought that it would be interesting here to mention that this is something very old, and it doesn’t require any kind of strong imagination.. I think that it is literally mentioned in the Quran that a day in god’s time is equal to thousands of years of man’s (metaphor for the impossibility of measurement).

A last interesting point related to the value of the timescale as far as divinity is concerned is the proof that is quoted in the ‘God Delusion’ that omnipotent (all powerful) and omniscient (all knowing) are mutually exclusive so god can’t possibly have both of them (the non-existent god). He says that since god is omniscient he knows the future, so he becomes not omnipotent because he can no longer change the future (he would cease being omniscient if he did).

Come on!! Really ?? We might as well give god a watch for him to know the time! Can anybody get more literal than that? This is an example of how our perception of reality, limitedness of knowledge affects our ability to understand beyond a certain limited space.


Also:

Atheism and The God Delusion: 1 - The Problem


Intro

After reading the ‘god delusion’, and some of the related literature and effort by leading atheists to explain their opinions, I was prompted to discuss some of the points that normally arise here, as a mental exercise maybe, and as a method for a deeper understanding of many of the thoughts that I’ve had on this topic for years.

I was initially just writing some comments as I read the ‘God Delusion’ by Richard Dawkins, but then developed these remarks and thoughts into the below discussion.


The Nature of God

I was watching a show by the brilliant George Carlin (RIP) once, and he was making fun of some religious old lady, and he shouted at her … “but you worship an old man sitting in the clouds, that’s ridiculous”… And he couldn’t be more correct (I think). There is a huge discussion about god’s nature, and many attribute human qualities to him (see anthropomorphism), something that is sometimes termed ‘the personal god’: A god who is very much like a person, with a person’s emotions, a person’s actions, and a person’s mode of doing things (accounting-wise for example).

My general readings over the years have led me to the belief that so many (I don’t have enough certain knowledge to say ‘most’) prominent scientists are not theists in the traditional sense of the word (I remember reading a statistic about philosophy professors), but are very far from atheism also. They are predominantly what is sometimes referred to as a ‘pantheist’ (literally meaning god-is-all). A pantheist is a person who believes in a form of universal intelligence, where god and the universe are one… Researching a lot of ‘atheist literature’, I will dare accuse the atheists of a conspiracy to hijack pantheism, while in fact; it is much closer to theism. I am a practicing Muslim, and I find – absolutely – no problems in agreeing with pantheism as I read about it [This is by no means something I invented]... The simple statement that god is the infinite creates this coincidence. On the contrary, it seems that a ‘personal god’ is something it is difficult to agree with, even from a theistic point of view... What sense does it make to give the qualities of man to god, unless – as I will discuss later – this is due to some flaw of our understanding of the transcendental.

Belief in god – In no way – means to necessarily believe in a ‘personal god’, Yet Mr. dawkins insists – so very conveniently – that the theist’s general model of god is the most personal image, which is easiest to attack and make fun of. He also accuses many of the non-atheist scientists (who believe in a non-personal god) of intellectual high treason... you wonder is the point really to have a deep discussion or to score points, and if so the weaker the target, the easier to score.

Arguments

Acquinas’ arguments

I had read Saint Thomas Acquinas’ arguments for proving the existence of god before, and some of the discussions about them, and I knew that they are considered an important landmark in the evolution of theology ( I don’t believe that they are THE proof of god’s existence), so was interested to read what dr. Dawkins had to say about them. My initial surprise was that he considered them almost ridiculous (he didn’t say this literally just out of respect for the saint).

Here I will attempt not to argue for the correctness or fallacy of the arguments themselves, but rather of Mr. Dawkins’ discussion of them.

Let’s examine more:

He groups the first three arguments together for their similarity. They are:

  1. 1. The unmoved mover: nothing moves without a prior mover... an infinite regression that leads to god (at termination)
  2. 2. The Uncaused cause: nothing is caused by itself. Similar to the previous, in the need for a first cause to terminate
  3. 3. The Cosmological argument: There must have been a time where no physical things existed, but since they do exist now, there must have been something non-physical that brought them to existence à Again the first cause

Dawkins believes that these three arguments rely on the idea of regress and invoke god to terminate them. Their failure – according to him – is that they assume that god is the end to the regression, since god is ‘not immune to regression’. I was honestly expecting to see something stronger than that... something that will easily show why these statements of acquinas are rediculous... Well if the problem is calling the terminator ‘god’, DON’T… Let’s call him “Pre-BING”... there must exist a “Pre-BING” that (I’m deliberately not saying ‘who’ here) is capable of answering these regressions by his mere existence. It so happens that we called him ‘god’... that shouldn’t be a problem in itself. Anyway, by saying that god doesn’t terminate the regression (because it’s ‘bad’ – almost literally) the writer doesn’t answer anything and his discussion here turns into a childish writing. If he has no clear answer for them, he could have skipped discussing them, let alone calling the proofs ridiculous... He just plays little with words, in a manner not coherent at all that I honestly can’t find anything discuss, then moves to the fourth argument. The ‘God Delusion’ Discussion of these arguments is one important example of the shallowness of the waters as far as theology and philosophy (maybe not evolutionary biology and other sciences are concerned).

How ridiculous is it that we call the initiation of our universe and our existence a ‘singularity’ and then move along?? That is the true intellectual high treason, and signifies a true deficiency in our sense of exploration and wonder.

I know that my discussion of Dawkins’ discussion has no true intellectual weight, but I really found absolutely no statements here... not even wrong ones to argue with. This method of filling space with words will continue a lot through the book, and the weird thing is the writer’s evident sense of achievement about it.

4. 4. The Argument from degree: things in the world differ and there are degrees of everything, and there should exist a maximum, which we call god. Dr. Dawkins, simply says:”is that an argument” and includes an example if we took smelliness… other than the example being completely out of its place, I will have to agree with him here that this is not really an argument that proves anything related to the existence of god, but might have something to do with our awareness of the infinite… Anyway, I think he scores a point here. The way in which he refutes this argument though, does say a lot about the writer’s approach... Indeed it would have been easy to come up with an elegant coherent proof that through a logical contradiction shows that degree doesn’t necessarily dictate a first cause – god – but he didn’t… This flaw in the approach has a lot of value when we understand the background, and in the light of what I will mention later regarding the cultural scientific background of a certain group and their approach to divinity and spirituality. The Left brain versus the right brain… too much analysis, but lack of synthesis which makes the ‘whole picture’ and the ‘colored beautiful view’ disappear, towards more further-breakup and materiality..

5. 5. The teleogical argument: The argument from design. Living things look as if they were designed and nothing we know looks designed unless it has been. The example here is the arrow moving towards its target. It is interesting because in the Quran there is a similar version of this argument saying that the similarity of all living things should be a proof of the existence of god for all those who consider. The writer considers Darwin to be the person who devastated this argument by his theory. He means the theory of natural selection is capable of producing designs, but this argument doesn’t –at all – negate the teleogical argument, as natural selection could have easily been god’s way of creating the designs of living beings. This is something that the writer avoids throughout the book (no wonder). God in no way needs to create each and every animal alone in a horizontal, one time approach – no matter what many believers might think – but could have created the initial life (that too doesn’t need to be done so directly, but rather through mechanisms which science can discover: lightening, pressure, water, fire, etc ..), and the methods for it to evolve.

The Ontological argument

Proposed by St. Anselm of Canterbury, this is an apriori argument. It goes as follows: It is possible to imagine an ultimately great being, that of which nothing greater can be conceived. If you can, and the being exists, then you believe in god. This imagining is indeed possible even for an atheist, as he can think of such non-existent being. A being that doesn’t exist in the real world is surely less great than one which does, so the imagined ‘greatest being’ is not the greatest imaginable being after all. This contradiction proves that god must be existent (The greatest conceivable being).


Dawkins’ reply to this argument is … well... that it is... infantile... voila! He compares it to Zeno’s paradox (which can be easily proven wrong – and a ridiculous trick, unlike the ontological argument)…

Anyway, I do agree that proof of such beautiful truths and grand knowledge and wisdom surely shouldn’t come from purely logical acrobatics… But, again, he didn’t disprove it!!

The Argument from Beauty – Beyond the realm of the logical

I don’t want to over-romanticize things here, but beauty in creation, the design of things, the sheer remoteness of the possibility of our existence are indeed things through which the ‘divine’ can be felt. I guess that atheists can – with the same degree of certainty – say that this is truly where the non-existence of the divine can be… I will not argue a lot here, but would just like to mention the amazing world which is way beyond the logic, measurements and complexity of the material world… the world of the whole, and the world of the infinite boundaries of the mind.. The senses and the physical fail, but the spiritual runs free… If you believe in the divine, it will exist... and heaven might simply be inside you… anyway, I remember reading once the following beautiful sentence “They are two... with his strength the first created the second.. And with his weakness the second created the first.”

The argument from beauty is too vague and meta-logical (the positive kind) for it to be disproven or debunked.

The Arguments from scripture – More on specifics

The Arguments from scripture are arguments that Dr. Dawkins’ used in his book through analysis and discussion of certain statements in the ‘holy books’. He mostly focuses on statements from the Old Testament (some are indeed horrifying), and secondarily on statements from the new testament.. Here my answer is simple. These books are NOT god.. They were produced by people, they reflect psychological, social and even political circumstances of their times. They even reflect – sometimes – the emotional states of the people who contributed to writing them (a gradual process that continued over hundreds of years). Putting these books in their historical perspectives should truly give us a calmer look.. It is normal – although what many may say – that these books reflect elements from their time, which can (and should) be continuously updated and understood based on our newer knowledge and state of society.

It is important to note that the ‘arguments from scripture’ have absolutely no effect on proving atheism to be the correct stance as one can find 100s of problems with a certain book, with little or no effect on religion as a whole.


The 6 Central points of the God delusion: A detailed debate

I have to admit that I was still looking for a knockdown proof of god’s inexistence when I reached the summary. Anyway his summary of the discussion has six points:

  1. 1. It has been a challenge to the human intellect to explain the complex, improbable appearance of the design of the universe
  2. 2. The temptation is to attribute this appearance of design to design itself
  3. 3. This is false because it automatically raises the larger problem of ‘who designed the designer’. To go with ‘2’ would be equivalent to attempting to solve an improbability by posing an even more improbable solution. We need a ‘crane’ not a ‘skyhook’
  4. 4. The most powerful and genius ‘crane’ discovered so far is Darwinian evolution by natural selection. Design is an illusion.
  5. 5. We don’t have an equivalent crane for physics. A multiuniverse theory for physics might do exactly what Darwinism did for biology
  6. 6. We should not give up hope of the better crane in physics, something as powerful as Darwinism.

DONE à There is no god (almost certainly) !

This is it.. This is the central theme and main argument of the book, and here we can have the following discussion:

è Simplicity vs. Complexity: One of the beautiful things in the universe is its simplicity.. Living beings resemble each other wonderfully, the sciences sometimes converge in beautiful ways reflecting the same concepts (sometimes even the same equations), universal truths arise, and we realize deep thoughts and ideas without effort sometimes. Scientists are talking a lot now about unified theories and theories of everything, universal equations and so on. Complexity is simply due to man’s inability to see the ‘bigger picture’ and understand things from a bigger perspective. Our indulgence in over-analysis, the material and the physical, instead of synthesis, the arts, philosophy and spirituality has lead us away from understanding the great simple things in life.

è Design of the Design mechanism – fighting literality: This is important here. How does Darwinism really dismiss the mind’s wondering about the creator.. The initial?? So what if we know how things evolved? Is that really the ultimate thing, after which our imagination and wondering are satisfied?? I think that Darwinism is simply an explanation of something, and there is no reason (at all) to tie belief in the creator to “creationism” or the belief that god literally created everything “as is”. I actually find it somehow amusing that somebody might think that Darwinism through explaining how evolution happened can dismiss our urge to think about the origins of creation and our existence in this universe.

è Just The How: I think that this is the summarizing devastating blow to all of Dr. Dawkins’ arguments. All of this explains ‘the how’ of a certain small thing (his little field of evolutionary biology): How the current states of living beings (just that) happened to be as they are.. The How has never been the issue, so him turning it into the issue (because of the side-struggle between some creationists and Darwinism) is very similar to trying to prove that a certain building doesn’t exist by explaining to you how the plumbing system works!.. I mentioned before that I see evolution to be in harmony with religion. Even religion doesn’t explain “how” god did the creation.. He could have done creation through evolution.. Easy.. Time is not a factor when it comes to the infinite (god).. Yet it’s not the how that needs explanation.. It’s not the ‘how’.. It’s the ‘why’ or the ‘who’ or the ‘from where’ which are the real questions of divinity and philosophy..

è Who designed the designer: The designer in this case being ‘the infinite’ itself is not subject to our ridiculous theories of induction and regression. We can’t discuss the infinite with certainty, looking for iteration in it, knowing that all our – currently existing – sciences and logical devices fail to inform anything about it.

èThe Singularity: This is a response to Dr. Dawkins’ attempt to reduce the problem of religion to simply two sections: a biological one, and a physical one. He believes that Darwinism solved the biology branch of the problem by eliminating the need for a god (my discussion above shows that the Darwinism is an explanation which goes hand in hand with theism, and that evolution can simply be part of design), saying that we shouldn’t lose hope on a physical solution (similar to the biological one). Well any explanations that come from physics would be just beautiful if they touch on the issues of the improbability of our existence, but physics and math have reached a singularity: A point at which all the known laws break and become invalid… this is the moment before the big bang, where the equations of the math and physics become senseless.. It’s like dividing by zero, and creates a discontinuity of sciences, loudly telling us: “This is different”.. It’s not for physics to explore.. Another field of knowledge could be needed here..


Also:

8/30/09

"The God Delusion" - By : Richard Dawkins

The God Delusion is a book that sold more than 1.5 million copies, by far Richard Dawkins' best selling book. This is an author who is known to be the spear-head of atheism in the world, and who has assembled many arguments and did good research to come up with this book which is supposed to deliver the message. As he says, this book is supposed and designed to convince you that there - almost certainly - there is no god.

In this initial post, I will post a brief overview of the book, the ideas shared by the author and some general information and his line of thinking, but I will soon post a new entry that will include a more detailed discussion of thoughts and principles, where I will try to go more into a detailed analysis of the book, and from it (as it definitely includes) many of the discussions along the theism vs atheism front lines..

Here it might be interesting to look at another book on the topic, the review of which i posted earlier:
The language of god:



http://nth-word.blogspot.com/2009/07/language-of-god-scientist-presents.html

I don't usually include detailed descriptions of the authors of books and their deeds, but I think that here, additional to the regular reasons a description of the background has an interesting effect on the discussion of this book and the roots of many of arguments in the theism-atheism debate.

The Author


Richard Dawkins is a british ethologist (the scientific study of animal behavior), evolutionary biologist and a popular science author. He is an atheist and calls himself a secular humanist and a supporter of the brights movement.

[Dawkins is calling for an effort to re-brand atheists as "brights" in a manner similar to the re-branding of homosexuals as "gay":


Gay is succinct, uplifting, positive: an "up" word, where homosexual is a down word, and queer, faggot and pooftah are insults. Those of us who subscribe to no religion; those of us whose view of the universe is natural rather than supernatural; those of us who rejoice in the real and scorn the false comfort of the unreal, we need a word of our own, a word like "gay". ... Like gay, it should be a noun hijacked from an adjective, with its original meaning changed but not too much. Like gay, it should be catchy: a potentially prolific meme. Like gay, it should be positive, warm, cheerful, bright..


This goes in line with one of his statements in 'the god delusion' that "atheism almost always indicates a healthy mind" and his strong effort to correlate intelligence with atheism - we will come to that ]


Dawkins is an "active atheist" - a marketer (or sales man) of atheism, he helped sponsor ( or fully sponsored - im not sure ) the 'atheist bus campaign' in the UK to promote atheism (check this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjoXFq8833U ). His position in this debate is not just that of a scientist, but similar to that of a priest or sheikh or a rabbi .... he is a modern version of the 'priest of atheism' ... He has alot of energy, motivation and drive in promoting atheism.

The main theme of Prof. Dawkins is "there almost surely is NO god.. I can't say for sure, because I can't say that even about fairies and unicorns..". The main message is that science finally delivered conclusive evidence that there is no god, and this proof mostly depends on the theory of evolution - natural selection studies and writings by Darwin and others, even though he tries to invoke different discussion lines - the strongest ones came from the background of evolutionary biology.



The Book



Even though the book's greatest conclusion is the inexistence of god, most of the arguments are against the concept of the 'personal god who counts'.. this will be discussed in detail later, but i mentioned it here because initially the discussion starts with introducing polytheism, monotheism, secularism, and Agnoticism (launching the inevitable strong "sure-man's" attack on the latter - even though he says he can't be sure).


The writer next moves to discussing the main arguments that prove god's existence, showing their fallacy (he says that he is disproving them, but honestly there is alot that can - and will - be said here). He starts with Thomas Acquinas' proofs (the book calls them 'proofs' not proofs), then the ontological argument, then the argument from beauty, the argument of personal experience, the argument from scripture, the argument from admired scientists, Pascal's wager and Bayesian arguments. A lively and interesting discussion is raised over these topics, but one needs to have a good background and understanding of what he mentions to truly grasp what is being discussed.


Moving from defense to attack, the writer moves to proofs of the inexistance of god. The first is a reversal of the Boeing 747 argument [ the argument goes that if I had all the parts of a boeing 747 thrown around in my backyard, and a sudden wind blows, then the probability that this wind creates an actual running plane is similar to that of the world being created by chance ] by claiming that Natural selection reverses the equation making the existence of god that improbable (as opposed to the world just being found).


He then presents a very interesting concept which is the 'worship of gaps'.. he argues that certain gaps in the sciences are quickly filled by 'theists' by god... then whene science fills that gap, god is moved out.... so many things pending explanation are assumed to be 'done by god' in a primitive human tendancy, but as science develops, the writer argues, these spaces will become smaller and smaller, thus disproving god completely as 'unnecessary'. He Adds a discussion about the anthropic principle and its role in proving that theism just can't be true based on this vision of the world from the perspective of being created to 'completely fit' us.



The next part of the book searches for the roots of the religion looking through social and psychological factors that can explain man's tendancy to believe in a god and to look for theism, and he uses an example of the 'cargo cults' - people who used to worship soldiers who used to bring them cargo as messiahs - to show that there is nothing godlike about this tendancy.


In the next part, he moves to a discussion of morality especially since the moral principle is one important source of wondering and thougth for us, arguing that this morality that we have actually does have darwinian (evolutionary origins) and looks for its roots. He also argues - from the other side - that god is unnecessary for being 'good'. Humans can be perfectly moral and good even if there was no belief in god.


The writer moves to a discussion of the old testament, somehow a brutal discussion, showing many of things that are very hard to be accepted by our modern personality and ethics - even if we put them in their historic perspective. One important thing to remember however is that this discussion, even though directs strong blows to judaism - for example, has no strong overall effect on the discussion of theism vs. atheism. He includes the interesting concept of the changing moral zeitgeist, where there is a continuous shift - as he sees - and development in the collective 'moral spirit' of humanity.... this is what makes us reject certain old statements of religion...


The next part is basically a discussion of the evidence that religion is actually not just a support for morality, but rather a burden on it.. He includes religious hostility, fundementalism, the dark side of absolutism, the attitudes towards homosexuality, the sanctity of human life, and that even moderation in faith fosters fundementalism, abuse (physical and mental) of children...


Towards the end of the book, the writer provides a list of friendly addresses that help in 'escaping religion'...


Next I will add an Blog entry that will include a discussion of the ideas, arguments and theories discussed here and in other places as far as the theism vs atheism struggle goes... I will include some of opinions and inputs on the matter.

8/28/09

من أية الطرق يأتي مثلك الكرم - المتنبي


من أية الطرق يأتي مثلك الكرم





من أيّةِ الطُّرْقِ يأتي مثلَكَ الكَرَمُ      أينَ المَحاجِمُ يا كافُورُ وَالجَلَمُ
جازَ الأُلى مَلكَتْ كَفّاكَ قَدْرَهُمُ      فعُرّفُوا بكَ أنّ الكَلْبَ فوْقَهُمُ
ساداتُ كلّ أُنَاسٍ مِنْ نُفُوسِهِمِ      وَسادَةُ المُسلِمينَ الأعْبُدُ القَزَم
أغَايَةُ الدّينِ أنْ تُحْفُوا شَوَارِبَكم      يا أُمّةً ضَحكَتْ مِن جَهلِها الأُمَمُ
ألا فَتًى يُورِدُ الهِنْدِيَّ هَامَتَهُ      كَيما تزولَ شكوكُ النّاسِ وَالتُّهمُ
فإنّهُ حُجّةٌ يُؤذي القُلُوبَ بهَا      مَنْ دينُهُ الدّهرُ وَالتّعطيلُ وَالقِدمُ
ما أقدَرَ الله أنْ يُخْزِي خَليقَتَهُ      وَلا يُصَدِّقَ قَوْماً في الذي زَعَمُوا





تذكرت من فترة البيت الشهير في هذه القصيدة التي كتبها المتني على شرف - وبمناسبة - كافور..يبدأ بالقول أن من كان كافور ملكهم لا بد وأنهم يعرفون به وضاعتم (أن الكلب فوقهم).. ورغم أني و أنا أبحث عن القصيدة هذه صادفت أكثر من تفسير يقول أنه يقصد أهل مصر بالبيت (أغَايَةُ الدّينِ أنْ تُحْفُوا شَوَارِبَكم يا أُمّةً ضَحكَتْ مِن جَهلِها الأُمَمُ)، فإن الأرجح أنه يقصد حالة التخلف العامة والتي ليس لها حدود جغرافية اقليمية..فعلا لقد فهم كثير من المسلمين من دينهم قدرا يوازي "حف الشوارب" نوعا، فحدوا الدين بحدود هذه القشور وأضاعوا المقصد والغاية، غاية الدين والدنيا معا.. جميل جدا تعبير (من دينه الدهر والتعطيل والقدم) لأن هؤلاء بضيق أفقهم جعلوا ألههم الدهر والخمول وعدم الفعل
والماضي الذي لا يعرف التطور و العمل



هذا فعلا جميل ولكن عجبي أن المتنبي قال أقواله هذه في زمن قريب جدا من العصر الذهبي للخلافة الإسلامية - اصطلاحا - أي العصر الذي أمَ المسلمون العالم فيه حضاريا وفكريا وعلميا: في عصر الفلسفة والترجمة والشعروالعلوم والإبداع - ناهيك عن الشخصية الحضارية والسيادة النسبية.. لقد رأى امارات التخلف في فكر سكان أمة ذلك الزمن الجميل نسبيا فماذا يمكن أن يقول "متنبٍ" يسكن زماننا هذا؟؟ تبعية علمية مطلقة، شلل فكري، انهزام حضاري، و تقهقر ديني أسوأ بألف مرة مما كان الوضع عليه وقتها... فعلا سبحان القادر أن "يخزي خليقته" بأيديهم هكذا

8/20/09

احمد العربي - محمود درويش

احمد العربي - محمود درويش

"Arab Ahmad" - By Mahmood Darwish

-------------------------------------------------------

-






ليدين من حَجرَ وزعترْ
هذا النشيدُ..لأَحمد المنسيِّ بين فراشتين
مَضَت الغيومُ وشردَّتني

ورمتْ معاطفها الجبالُ وخبأتني


**
..نازلاً من نحلة الجرح القديم الى تفاصيل
البلاد وكانتُ السنةُ انفصال البحر عن مدن
الرماد وكنت وحدي
ثم وحدي...
آه يا وحدي! وأَحمدْ
كان اغترابَ البحر بين رصاصتين
مُخيَّما ينمو، ويُنجب زعتراً ومقاتلين
وساعداً يشتدُّ في النسيان
ذاكرةً تجيء من القطارات التي تمضي
وأرصفةً بلا مستقبلين وياسمين
كان اكتشاف الذات في العرباتِ
أو في المشهد البحري
في ليل الزنازين الشقيقة
في العلاقات السريعة
والسؤال عن الحقيقة
في كُل شيء كان أَحمدُ يلتقي بنقيضهِ
عشرين عاماً كان يسألْ
عشرين عاماً كان يرحلْ
عشرين عاماً لم تلده أمه الا دقائق في
اناء الموز
وانسَحَبَتْ
بريد هوّية فيصاب بالبركانِ
سافرتِ الغيومُ وشرَّدتني
وَرَمَتْ معاطفها الجبالُ وخبَّأتني


**
أنَا أَحمدُ العربيُّ- قالَ
أنا الرصاصُ البرتقالُ الذكرياتُ
وجدتُ نفسي قرب نفسي
فابتعدتُ عن الندى والمشهد البحريِّ
تل الزعتر الخيمه
وانا البلاد وقد أَتَتْ
وتقمصَّتني
وانا الذهاب المستمر الى البلاد
وجدتُ نفسي ملء نفسي...


**
راح احمدُ يلتقي بضلوعه ويديه
كان الخطوة-النجمه
ومن المحيط الى الخليج، من الخليج الى المحيط
كانوا يُعدّون الرماحَ
وأحمد العربيُّ يصعد كي يرى حيفا
ويقفزَ
أحمدُ الآن الرهينةْ
تركتْ شوارعها المدينة
واتتْ اليه
لتقتلهْ
ومن الخليج الى المحيط، من المحيط الى الخليج
كانوا يُعدُّون الجنازةَ
وانتخاب المقصلةْ
أَنا أحمدُ العربيُّ – فليأتِ الحصار
جسدي هو الأسوار – فليأت الحصار
وأنا حدود النار – فليأت الحصار
وأنا أحاصركم
أحاصركم
وصدري بابُ كُلِّ الناس – فليأت الحصار
لم تأتِ أغنيتي لترسم أحمد الكحليَّ في الخندقْ
الذكرياتُ وراء ظهري، وهو يوم الشمس والزنبق
يا أيها الولد الموزَّعُ بين نافذتينِ
لا تتبادلان رسائلي
قاومْ
إنَّ التشابه للرمال... وأنتَ للأزرق


**
وأَعُدُّ أضلاعي فيهرب من يدي بردى
وتتركني ضفاف النيل مبتعداً
وأبحثُ عن حدود أصابعي
فأرى العواصم كُلَّها زبداً...
وأحمدُ يفرك الساعات في الخندقْ
لم تأت أُغنيتي لترسم أحمد المحروق بالأزرق
هو أحمد الكَوَنيُّ في هذا الصفيح الضيِّق
المتمزِّقْ الحالمْ
وهو الرصاص البرتقاليُّ.. البنفسجه الرصاصية
وهو اندلاعُ ظهيرة حاسمْ
في يوم حريّه
يا ايها الولد المكَّرس للندى
قاوِمْ!
يا أيها البلد – المسَدَّس في دمي
قاوِمْ!
الآن أكمل فيك أُغْنيتِي
وأذهب في حصاركْ
والآن أكمل فيك أسئلتي
وأُولد من غبارك
فاذهبْ الى قلبي تجد شعبي
شعوباً في انفجارك
... سائراً بين التفاصيل اتكأت على مياهٍ
فانكسرتُ
أكُلَّما نَهَدَت سفرجله نسيتُ حدود قلبي
والتجأتُ الى حصارٍ كي احدِّد قامتي يا
احمدُ العربيُّ؟
لم يكذب عليَّ الحبُّ، لكن كُلمَّا جاء المساءُ
امتصَّني جرسْ بعيد
والتجأتُ الى نزيفي كي أُحَدّد صورتي يا
أحمد العربيُّ
لم اغسل دمي من خبز أعدائي
ولكن كُلَّما مَرَّت خطاي على طريقِ فرَّت
الطرقُ البعيدةُ والقريبةُ
كُلَّما آخيتُ عاصمةً رَمتني بالحقيبةِ
فالتجأتُ إلى رصيف الحلم والأشعار
كم أمشي إلى حُلُمي فتسبقني الخناجرُ
آه من حلمي ومن روما!
جميلٌ أنت في المنفى
قتيلٌ أنت في روما


**
وحيفا من هنا بدأتْ
وأحمد سلم الكرملْ
وبسملة الندى والزعتر البلدي والمنزلْ
لا تسرقوه من السنونو
لا تأخذوه من الندى
كتبت مراثيها العيونُ
وتركت قلبي للصدى
لا تسرقوه من الأبدْ
وتبعثروه على الصليب
فهو الخريطةُ والجسد
وهو اشتعال العندليب
لا تأخذوهُ من الحَمامْ
لا ترسلوهُ إلى الوظيفة
لا ترسموا دمه وسام
فهو البنفسجُ في قذيفه


**
... صاعداً نحو التئام الحلم تَتخّذُ التفاصيل
الرديئةُ شكل كُمثَّرى
وتنفصلُ البلادُ عن المكاتبِ
والخيولُ عن الحقائبِ
للحصى عَرَقٌ. أُقبِّل صَمَت هذا الملح
أعطي خطبه الليمون لليمون
أوقدُ شمعتي من جرحيَ المفتوح للأزهار
والسمك المجفّف
للحصى عَرَقٌ ومرآة
وللحطّاب قلبُ يمامةٍ
أنساكِ أحياناً لينساني رجالُ الأمنِ
يا امرأتي الجميله تقطعين القلب والبَصَل
الطريَّ وتذهبين
وللحصى رئةٌ. وصمتُكِ ذَوَّبَ الليل المحَّنط
فاذكريني قبل أن أنسى يديَّ
وصاعداً نحو التئام الحلمِ
تنكمش المقاعد تحت أشجاري وظلِّكِ...
يختفي المتسلِّقون على جراحك كالذباب الموسميِّ
ويختفي المتفرجون على جراحك
فاذكريني قبل أن أنسى يديَّ!
وللفراشات اجتهادي
والصخورُ رسائلي في الأرض
لا طروادةٌ بيتي
ولا مسادةٌ وقتي
وأصعد من جفاف الخبز والماء المصادَرِ
من حصان ضاع في درب المطارِ
ومن هواء البحر أصعدُ
من شظايا أَدْمَنَت جسدي
وأصعدُ من عيون القادمين الى غروب السهلِ
أصعدُ من صناديق الخضارِ
وقُوَّة الأشياء أصعَدُ
أنتمي لسمائَي الأولى وللفقراء في كل الأزّقةِ
ينشدون
صامدون
وصامدون
وصامدون
كان المخَيمَّ جسم أحمدْ
كانت دمشق جفون أحمد
كان الحجاز ظلال أحمد
صار الحصارُ مرور أحمد فوق أفئدة الملايين
الأسيرة
صار الحصار هجوم أحمد
والبحر طلقته الأخيره!


**
يا خَصْر كُلِّ الريح

يا أسبوع سكره
يا اسم العيون وبارُخاميَّ الصدى
يا أحمد المولود من حجر وزعترْ
ستقول : لا
ستقول : لا
جلدي عباءةُ كلِّ فلاح سيأتي من حقول التبغ
كي يلغي العواصم
وتقول: لا
جسدي بيان القادمين من الصناعات الخفيفةِ
والتردد... والملاحم
نحو اقتحام المرحله
وتقول: لا
ويدي تحيَّاتُ الزهور وقنبله
مرفوعة كالواجب اليوميِّ ضدَّ المرحله
وتقول: لا
يا أيها الجسد المُضَّرَجُ بالسفوحِ
وبالشموس المقبله
وتقول: لا
يا أيها الجسد الذي يتزوج الأمواج
فوق المقصله
وتقول: لا
وتقول: لا
وتقول: لا!


**
وتموت قرب دمي وتحيا في الطحينِ
ونزور صمتك حين تطلبنا يداكَ
وحين تشعلنا اليراعه
مشت الخيول على العصافير الصغيرةِ
فابتكرنا الياسمين
ليغيب وجهُ الموت عن كلماتنا

فاذهب بعيداً في الغمام وفي الزراعه
لا وقتَ للمنفى وأُغنيتي...
سيجرفنا زحام الموت فاذهب في الزحام
لنُصاب بالوطن البسيط وباحتمال الياسمين
واذهب الى دميَ المهيّأ لانتشارِكِ
لا وقت للمنفى..
وللصور الجميله فوق جدران الشوارع والجنائز
والتمني
كتبتْ مراثيها الطيورُ وشرَّدتني
ورمتْ معاطفها الحقولُ وجمعتني
فاذهبْ بعيداً في دمي! واذهب بعيداً في الطحين
لنصاب بالوطن البسيط وباحتمال الياسمين


**
يا أحمدُ اليوميّ!

يا اسم الباحثين عن الندى وبساطه الأسماء
يا اسم البرتقاله
يا أحمد العاديَّ!
كيف مَحوتَ هذا الفارقَ اللفظيَّ بين الصخر والتّفاح
بين البندقية والغزاله!
لا وقت للمنفى وأغنيتي..
سنذهب في الحصار
حتى نهايات العواصم
فاذهْب عميقاً في دمي
اذهبْ براعمْ
واذهبْ عميقاً في دمي
اذهبْ خواتم
واذهب عميقاً في دمي
اذهب سلالم
يا أحمدُ العربيُّ.. قاومْ!
لا وقت للمنفى وأغنيتي..
سنذهب في الحصار
حتى رصيف الخبز والأمواجِ
تلك مساحتي ومساحة الوطن-المُلازِمْ
موت أمام الحُلْمِ
أو حلم يموتُ على الشعار
فاذهب عميقاً في دمي واذهب عميقاً في الطحين
لنصاب بالوطن البسيط وباحتمال الياسمين


**
.. وَلَهُ انحناءاتُ الخريف
لَهُ وصايا البرتقال
لَهُ القصائد في النزيف
لَهُ تجاعيدُ الجبال
لَهُ الهتافُ
لَهُ الزفاف
لَهُ المجلاَّتُ أَلمُلَوَنةُ
المراثي المطمئنّةُ
ملصقات الحائط
أَلعَلمُ
التقدُّمُ
فرقةُ الإنشاد
مرسوم الحداد
وكل شيء كل شيء كل شيء
حين يعلن وجهه للذاهبين إلى ملامح وجههِ
يا أحمد المجهول!
كيف سَكَنْتَنا عشرين عاماً واختفيت
وَظَلَّ وجهك غامضاً مثل الظهيره
يا أحمد السرىّ مثل النار والغابات
أشهرْ وجهك الشعبيَّ فينا
واقرأ وصيتَّكَ الأخيره!
يا أيها المتفرجون! تناثروا في الصمت
وابتعدوا قليلاً عنه كي تجدوهُ فيكم
حنطة ويدين عاريتين
وابتعدوا قليلاً عنه كي يتلو وصيَّتَهُ
على الموتى إذا ماتوا
وكي يرمي ملامحَهُ
على الأحياء إن عاشوا!
أخي أحمد!
وأنتَ العبدُ والمعبود والمعبد
متى تشهدْ
متى تشهدْ
متى تشهدْ
متى تشهدْ










8/18/09

The Solitaire Mystery - By : Jostein Gaarder

"Even if you weren't lucky enough to encounter a martian in your garden, it could happen that one day you meet yourself.

In that day maybe you will shout like an indian too. That would be the least that you can do, because it doesn't always happen that you realize you're a flesh-and-blood dweller of a planet which is a small lost island in the universe"


As I finished this book, I could hardly control my smile - in amazement. I remember reading sophia's world a few years back, and thinking what a beautiful and thought-provoking educational novel it was, J.G. is simply great. Like in 'Sophia's world' the story of discovery happens in partnership with the amazed eyes of a child and the beautiful parental guidance of a father-philosopher.

Two stories, a boy and a father in a search for the mother, and a diary of a sailor who found an enchanted island, carry all the themes of this novel.. Finding the self, looking at the world, thinking about our existence, knowing, being and behavior... It moves fast ( and many times goes deep ) to tackle many themes.

One of the beautiful themes of this novel is shock at our ability to stop being surprised by our existence. !! how can we be so ignorant, drunk, and grown up ??!

People are playing cards.. and there are so few 'jokers'.. the different, stand alone, playful and unique jokers. Jokers aren't just content with living on, knowing so little and going throughout life without the sense of amazement, questions, and the quest for knowledge..

"One athenian asked the oracle of delphi about the wisest man in athens, and the answer was 'socrates'. Socrates was shocked to know this, because he realized that he didn't know particularly much.. the only difference was that everybody else was content with the little they knew, while they didn't know more than him.. those who are perfectly content with what they know can never become philosophers."

A very interesting point made by Hans-Thomas's father is to explain how remotely possible our unique existence can be.. we have 2 parents, 4 g. parents, 8 g.g. parents and so on .. if we go back till the middle ages (20 - 30 generations back) we will have 2^(generations) and would require that all these people survive at that particular period of time for us to exist .. Take the example of the plague that wiped half the population of norway in that time, so the survival chance of all of H.T. ancestors is almost negligible [ (1/2)^(their number) ] ... I know that a lot of arguments can be placed here, but this point does tell a lot about our unique existence and how amazing it is.

Gaarder
beautifully implies the story of the playing cards coming to life out of Frode's imagination to hint at our creation and our being.. They were initially thoughts in his mind, but the overflow of imagination and ideas brought them to life [ something similar happens in 'Sophia's world'], they even killed their 'god' to escape their humiliation.

"Existence is an incredible adventure.. the person who knows this is the Joker"

"As much as we are children, we have the gift of discovering the world with amazement before we get used to it in the end. Growing up is deeply similar to a state of drunk-ness and weakening of our senses to the degree of mixing up everything, and then not feeling anything.
In the end I understood what was happening to the dwarfs of the enchanted island: something prevented them from feeling the secret of their own existence, perhaps because they never were kids. When they started drinking that potent drink to compensate what they lost, they ended up uniting with the world surrounding them. I also understood the huge victory that Frode and the Joker achieved by resisting the temptation of the purple lemonade."

"It is sad that people in the end think it very normal that they're alive. we will one day lose the gift of being able to be shocked and might not find it again until we are about to leave this world."

There should always exist a joker to remind all dwarfs (small and big) periodically that they should find it strange to be alive. Who are we .. where did we come from.

Knowing how little we know
Having the wandering questioning mind of a child
Never outgrowing the sense of amazement
Never drowning our thoughts with the magic lemonade

7/19/09

The Language of God – A scientist presents evidence for belief

By: Francis Collins


Dr. Francis Collins is the head of the genome project and one of the leading scientists studying DNA, yet has an ‘unshakable faith in god’. This book is a description of its author’s journey from atheism into belief, and his understanding of the different sciences (Physics, astronomy, Biology, Paleontology, etc...), and his reading of theological philosophers helps him create a very interesting overview of the different issues on the boundaries of the faith vs. science struggle.


The book starts with a description of the backgrounds for the author’s journey through discussing the ‘chasm between science and faith’. Central to this was C.S. Lewis’s book Mere Christianity which discussed many of the themes that are normally thought by scientists. It introduced the ‘Moral Law’ which according to the author is one of the most beautiful of god’s messages planted deep in our conscience. The development of the concept of the moral law is recurring throughout the book. This is one of the remarkable, discontinuous (non-evolutionary) characteristics of the human race (Homo sapiens). Partly its described in altruism – the truly selfless giving of oneself with no secondary motives (I can’t here but think of the very interesting paradox that this is most beautifully and nobly proved by atheists giving away their lives for common good – unlike religious people giving away their lives to enjoy heaven later on ... Divine wisdom?). Another book of C.S. Lewis ‘the four loves’ further explores this selfless love/altruism, – agape (differentiating from the other three: affection, friendship and romantic love).


The writer beautifully discusses some of the most common objectives to the truthfulness of religion, starting from the argument of ‘wishful thinking’, to ‘Harm done in the name of religion’, to ‘allowing people to suffer’ and finally ‘the belief in miracles’.


The next part of the book discusses some scientific truths in astronomy, physics, biology, biochemistry and evolution, showing how in fact instead of proving that the divine principle is not needed, many of these sciences call for divine intervention ( Occam’s razor principle is invoked many times ) to make sense… He stresses on the fact and the need to avoid the ‘god of the gaps’ theories that try to place the proof of existence of god in the current un-explained gaps of these sciences…. These gaps WILL be filled in the future…. Rather the simple fact that the sciences are an interpretation of the natural world, and whenever we move outside the boundaries of that world, the sciences become invalid languages... the boundaries at which these sciences step, rather than the gaps within them are what calls for careful examination.


In the last part, the book discusses the four stances that one can take with regards to this topic, Agnosticism & Atheism, Creationism (Faith Trumps science), Intelligent design (science needs divine help) and Finally Biologos (Theistic Evolution – the harmony of faith and science), which in the writer’s opinion is the solution to the faith-science war, and the one most consistent with human knowledge and nature.


A very interesting rounded book, from a leading scientist, with an open mind – that really adds a lot to the topic..


I would also add that in general ... we as humans are in no way even close to possessing enough knowledge to the degree of removing uncertainty in so many simple facts of life, let alone to produce judgement on the great ultra-natural questions of life and existence based on our elementary (and pitiful) knowledge of the alphabet of science ...


The very fact that many of our sciences move towards complication instead of simplicity and unification shows how much our perspective is really limited, and our experience minor. What makes us sure that what we know now, is different that what we knew - with complete certainty - centuries ago, before gallileo, before copernicos, before newton, before einstein .... all of theirs were just explanations of phenomena that take just one more variable (at a time) into consideration, but there are many many many variables that aren't even thought of .... we know of too few dimensions !!!


7/17/09

Mubarak's Egypt - Comments

Mubarak’s Egypt : زمن "لا-عودة"[1] الروح


أذاعت ال’ بي بي سي ’ (BBC) مؤخرّا برنامجا اسمه "مصر مبارك"، للإعلامي مجدي عبد الهادي، يحاول النظر في إرث النظام المصري، منجزاته، مستقبله، و آثاره العديدة في مختلف المجالات.. ويبدو أن البرنامج – وإن غير مدرك- أشار إلى مجموعة من الأبعاد الحضارية و الإنسانية في سرده و ضمن الآراء الغنيّة الواردة فيه، و التي توصّف الواقع الحالي و حال الإنسان ليس ضمن الإطار المصري فحسب، بل ضمن الإطار الشرقي-الإسلامي-العربي الأوسع.

الهجرة.. من الوطن والهوية

في "عزبة خير الله" حيث توجد مصر أخرى داخل القاهرة.. مصر يسكنها ويحكمها البؤس واليأس، يبدأ البرنامج بسرد وحديث مع بعض العمال المعدمين اللذين أتوا من أسيوط، "بلد جمال عبد الناصر" على حد تعبير أحدهم.. هجّروا لأنّ الصعيد ليس فيه ’أكل عيش’.. تحكي هجرتهم قصة أكثر عمقا من البحث عن حياة أفضل، لتطال قضية الإهمال الممنهج للفقراء، وبناء دول لا تعرف من أبناءها الّا ذوي الأموال المكدسة والصفقات الكثيرة، والأمبراطوريات الماليّة المتوارثة الضخمة.

تحكي الهجرة تحالف النظم الأمنية والسياسيّة مع النخب المالية والإقتصادية ، كما و تحكي شراكتهما في البحث عن استقرار الركود الذي يخنق التغيير و أي أمل فيه.. فالاستقرار يضمن استمراريتهما و توالدهما و اعطاءهما المزيد من السيطرة والتحكم المطلق بقدرات الأوطان والشعوب.

تستمر الهجرة في الظهور ضمن العديد من المقابلات والمواضيع في البرنامج، الهجرة على مستوايتها المختلفة: الهجرة الداخلية (الهروب ألى الداخل) و الخارجية (الهروب من الوطن) و النفسية و الروحيّة (الهروب من الهويّة-الذّات الحضاريّة و التغيير و الأمل و الإيمان بالوطن وشعبه). صارت الهجرة القسرية سمة مميزة لهذه الشعوب، التي ولا شك قسم كبير منها ندم على الثورة ضد الإستعمار، حين – وعلى الأقل – كان يوجد الأمل..

يبلغ مساق الهجرة في البرنامج قمته مع قصة شباب قرية " زنارة " الشديدة الوقع والعميقة الدلالات - قامر 24 شابّا بأغلى ما يملكون للهروب من جحيم الوطن: بحياتهم، وخسروا ! اختفوا جميعا (غرقا؟) في محاولتهم اليائسة لعبور المتوسّط نحو الشمال.. والغربة. تكررت الحادثة هذه السنة، وإن على قدر أقلّ، و ستظل مساحة اليأس والإغتراب تكبر على لوحة الحاضر ما لم يعالج أصل الداء.


الركود .. الأمان .. المساومات

يبدو أنّ أهم النقاط الإيجابيّة التي تسجل للنظام (والتعميم نحو أنظمة أخرى بديهيّ هنا وضروري)، هي ارساءه دعائم الاستقرار وتأمينه الحد الأدنى من الثبات والإستمرارية وإخضاع محاولات زعزعة أسسه. السفير الإسرائيلي السابق في القاهرة شامير يعتبر أنّ بناء البنى التحتيّة (على ضآلة حجمه - بعد أن كانت القاهرة غارقة في مياه الصرف الصحي، المياه القذرة وانعدام أبسط مقوّمات الحياة في السبعينات) و "الأمان و الإستقرار" منجزات تسجل للنظام، و هذا ما يدفع للتساؤل: أي استقرار نريد نحن؟؟ وما هو الحدّ المميّز بين الإستقرار والركود المانع لمسيرة الحياة والتطّور التاريخي و الإجتماعي؟؟

أمنطقيّ ومقبول أن يصير الإستقرار قيمة بحدّ ذاته، أغلى من النهوض والتطوّر و المسيرة نحو العدالة والإنسانيّة؟ قد تفيد الإشارة هنا إلى أنّ رأس النظام يكتسب أهميّة إلهيّة في شخصه لأنه الماضي والحاضر والمستقبل و الممسك بمفاتيح الإستقرار و الأمان (من ماذا؟).

يقول الدكتور جلال أمين: "لقد فشل مبارك في كل شيء، وخلق دولة طريّة ليس بمقدورها تسلّم المسؤوليّة".. و في حديث اللبرلة والإستقرار يبرز مبدأ "المساومات".. لقد تحوّل كل خيار من خيارات الدولة إلى مساومة، بين الإستقرار و الحريّات، بين إسرائيل و الداخل، بين المواقف والإقتصاد (المساعدات).. تحول كلّ شيء إلى مشي على خيط رفيع لا يمكن معه إلا تجذير "الإستقرار".

الفيل في الغرفة

و الفيل هنا هو المؤسسات الأمنيّة والعسكريّة، التي لم تتضخّم حجما ودورا فحسب، بل إنها حرفت وظيفتها الأساس من خدمة مصالح الشعب (ربّ عملها الشرعي الذي يدفع راتبها) غلى العمل لتأمين استمراريّة غير طبيعيّة للنظام، ما يضمن استمرار تضخّم دورها و تخطّيه حدوده الأمنيّة والعسكريّة..

في واحدة من المقابلات التي أجراها البرنامج، يتحدّث أحد العسكريين عن الخطوط الحمر التي تمثلّها المؤسسات العسكريّة و يبرر مضايقة وسجن الصحافيين الذين ينتقدونها.. خطوط حمر وممنوعات تشهد على غرابة الموقف: مؤسسة عامة تماهت مع ألوهيّة النظام ودغمت فيه حتى صارت مثله ركيزة للإستقرار والإستدامة !

تبقى نقطة مهمة هنا وهي أن المؤسسات العسكرية تحوّلت أيضا الى أمبراطورية مالية تضمّ مصانع كبرى، نواد ترفيهيّة ومؤسّسات تجارية متفوّقة بالدعم العام على العديد من المؤسسات الخاصة (ما يزعج حتى بعض كبار رجال الأعمال)، و المؤسسة العسكرية كونها من أكثر المؤسسات صحّة (وآخرها) تبدو للعديد – حتّى الليبراليين – الأمل الأخير (والوحيد) بالتغيير (!!).

أزمة الأخلاق، الوهن العام و مراحل اليأس

حاليا بالأسواق
كدب وغش وغدر وقسوة وفي أزمة أخلاق

تلعب أغنية "طارق الشيخ"، والتي بدايتها السطرين السابقين في الخلفية، مشيرة الى الأزمة الكبرى التي أنتجتها أنظمة "ما بعد الإستقلال" عامة.. أزمة الأخلاق. يورد السيد عبد الهادي مقابلة مع سيّدة (د. سارة خلّاط – جامعة القاهرة) عقدت العزم على ترك الوطن بحثا عن نوعّة حياة أفضل، وبحثا عن التسامح وتقبل الآخر. "لقد أصبح المصريون أكثر عدائيّة و أقل تسامحا لأنّهم في حالة مستمرّة من التوتّر العصبي". و هنا يمكن أن نقف لنتفكّر: أيمكن أن يلام من يبحث عن حياة (أو عن لقمة) فلا يجدها لأنّه شديد و سريع الغضب، أو لأنّه لا يتحلّى بملكة تقبل الآخر حضاريّا؟ يعيدنا هذا السؤال الى الأصل: اليأس، الشرخ الإجتماعي والحضاري العميق جدّا بين أبناء الوطن الواحد.

يورد الدكتور أحمد عكاشة المعادلة النفسيّة الآتية: الإحباط قد يتحوّل إلى عدوانيّة، أو كآبة فتوتّر، أو – وهنا الأخطر – الى لامبالاة.. هذه اللامبالاة الناتجة عن الإحباط تأخذ شكلا عاما، يطال مختلف جوانب الحياة والأفراد، و يبدو أنها هي بالتحديد ما نتج عن سنين اليأس المزمن.

إنّ ضعف الدولة ( على تضخّم أجهزتها ) و عدم قدرتها على تحمّل المسؤوليّة و انعدام علاقتها و ارتباطها بشؤون الشعب و شجونه، اذا عطفت على استمراريّتها الفوق طبيعيّة، عوامل ساعدت على نقل هذا الضعف والوهن التنظيميّين الى الشخصيّة والنفسيّة الجماعيّة للشعب، وهو ما له ارتباط سببي باليأس فأزمة الأخلاق.

ما وراء الحاضر.. و ثنائيّة التسامح والتخاذل

"لقد دارت الثورة 360 درجة، وعادت الى ما قبل 1952 مكملة استدارتها.." يقول السيد عبد الهادي مشيرا الى نصف قرن من أجل لا شيء[2]. الوراثة السياسيّة، الإصلاح، التقدميّة، الديموقراطيّة، العلم، والعدالة وغيرها مواضيع لم تغيّر ثورة وعقود طويلة من حالها شيئا.. حتى الحريّة.. خاصّة الحريّة.. أحالها الآن أفضل ؟

عبرة مهمة من السيّد ثروت عكاشة، الذي كان جزءا من نظام عبد الناصر وشارك في الثورة، و الذي يتوب بشجاعة عن فعلته "لو كنت أعرف أن النهاية ستكون هكذا.. لما قمت بالثروة!"، ضاربا كفّا بكف وساخرا بحسرة "بابا.. عايز أبقى زيّك" (وكم ينطبق هذا على الجميع).. إنذار من التاريخ للمراهنين على دور للعسكر في تغيير الواقع – يؤكّد البرنامج – فما السبيل إذا؟

ضمن استعراض بعض الليبراليين الناقدين الحال التي وصلت اليها البلاد، ترد مقابلة مع السيّدة أنجي حدّاد – ناشرة متخرّجة من جامعة هارفرد – التي عملت مع الحزب الحاكم قبلا حين آمنت بحتميّة التغيير، ثمّ اعتزلت بعد أن تبيّنت عدم صحّة افتراضها هذا. لقد أصيبت باليأس (القاسم المشترك الأكبر بين كل الخيوط) لعذابات الشعب.. "إنّ الإحساس بالعقم لا يمكن احتماله إلى أن يموت شيء ما في الروح".. تتساءل "لماذا لا يرمينا الفقراء بالحجار؟؟" و "كيف يمكن أن لأب أو أم أن يشاهد احتضار ولده لعدم القدرة على شراء الدواء؟!".. " كم يتطلّب هذا من التسامح.. أو الجبن؟!"، تختم بالتساؤل الأقوى – والمحيّر فعلا[3].


فعلا يمكن – ويجب – أن تطرح أسئلة كثيرة، ولكن بعد استعراض تنامي خطر الترهّل و الضعف ليطال الروح ذاتها، والدين، والحضارة، وبعد أن صار الموت الجسدي أبعد من الإندثار وموت الروح والأمل لا بدّ على الأقلّ أن نسأل أنفسنا... إلى أين، و ما العمل؟؟ّ



[1] في إشارة سلبية إلى رواية الكاتب توفيق الحكيم "عودة الروح" الحالمة بالبعث والنهضة بعد انحطاط وتقهقر واستعمار

[2] راجع "قرن من أجل لا شيء" ل لاكوتور، تويني و خوري

[3] يقول أبو ذر: " عجبت لمن لا يجد قوتأً في بيته ، كيف لا يخرج على الناس شاهراً سيفيه"

7/16/09

Some signs from around the world



In a Japanese Airport - so its THAT direction :

Back to Behind


Wireless Internet - OK:


Audible Penis



Caution - So this what somebody might try?

Chipper




From a HONDA Motorcycle - REALLY ?


Crankcase Collar



Regulations in VIETNAM:
Creepy Engrish


SKI:

Dirty Skilift



What's the possible reason - Highly technical?

Lost Remote



Land mine, With directions:

Front Toward Enemy


American Clothes sold in Paris in 2004:

Political Labels


7/1/09

Ports of Call - Amine Malouf - موانئ المشرق - أمين معلوف

Talks the language of 'the first century after Beatrice' in some of its aspects.


The story assembles the fates of civilizations and nations into those of individuals.. warm and touching, uses Malouf's regular 'memoire' style to take the perspective of the lead character and draw the global events in the colors of personal experience.... very humanely.


The east's fall (beautiful symbolizm of irrationality, traditions, madness, riot, etc..)... the struggles of the early 20th century in the east, and its middle in the west ... then going back to the east ... worlds torn apart, lives fading away ...... A hidden mysterious and pure love emerges stronger than everything ... giving life , and hope ..


There is of course the (somehow) regular distant fast and impersonal portray of the middle east struggle, where it seems that the writer blames ignorance - simply - for the tragedies happening .. All people's faults equally .. somehow.. could be a topic too difficult to receive real humane description. It seemed somehow easy to blame the savagery of Nazis ..[ I had to mention this point ]

As good as this book was .. Samarqand remains the #1 book of his, followed by 'The Gardens of light' ...