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Reality's Hidden 'Minority Report'
The
Political Gnosis of Philip K. Dick
By Jay Kinney
It seems hard to imagine that it has been nearly twenty years since
Bladerunner was released. That riveting and influential film was the first
movie to be inspired by the writings of science-fiction author, Philip K. Dick.
Other films, of varying success, have followed, including Total Recall
and Screamers, but the until now the most Dickian movies have been those
that copped his dystopian and paranoid sensibility without directly basing
themselves on one of his books or short stories. The Truman Show, They
Live!, Pleasantville, and most notably, The Matrix, were all
Dick films at heart, despite his absence from their credits.
The recently
released Spielberg film, Minority Report, returns to directly dipping
from PKD’s deep well of inspiration, and despite the inevitably Spielbergian
ending, succeeds in evoking one of Dick’s favourite themes: how does one elude
the suffocation of an encroaching police state? In Minority Report, this
trope takes the form of the local Department of Precrime in Washington D.C.,
which has succeeded in eliminating murders by arresting and incarcerating the
perpetrators before they commit their crimes. This is accomplished by
drawing on the abilities of three precogs (for precognitives), who have the
involuntary talent of seeing into the near future and glimpsing the
murders-to-be in progress. As the film unfolds, in the year 2054, a national
referendum is about to occur on whether to expand precrime prevention to a
national policy.
Given the recent
moves by the Bush Administration in the US to indefinitely detain those who have
committed no crimes, but who may have planned to, the timeliness of Minority
Report is almost uncanny. Dick’s original short story appeared in 1956, and
the script for the film was written well in advance of the shock of 9/11. But
somehow, Dick’s intuitions of precrime enforcement have been brought to the big
screen at just the moment when their analog is being enacted in real life. PKD,
who died in 1982, would savour the irony, were he still with us.
Gnosis
Gnosticism is a
name commonly applied to numerous early Christian sects who emphasised the
necessity of receiving “gnosis” (divine knowledge of true reality) in order to
be saved. While they considered themselves to be Christian, the Gnostics
diverged from both Judaism and Catholic Christianity in their belief that this
world was a flawed and ensnaring creation of a despotic Demiurge who had usurped
the position of God. Through the agency of a redeemer Christ and his bride,
Sophia (Wisdom), the Gnostics hoped to return, upon death, to the most high
realm of the Pleroma (Fullness) to unite with the true Unknown God.
The Penultimate Truth (1964)
“Most
humans live in tank cities far below the surface of the Earth, believing
themselves to be safe from the ongoing nuclear war above their heads. In fact,
the war has been over for ten years, and instead of a radioactive ruin, the
planet is a vast park, ruled by feudal barons who are playing power politics
with the buried masses of their fellow men.”1
That, at least,
is the standard potted summary of Gnosticism. If one takes a broader view, there
have been many gnosticisms, and many “gnosi” – some predating the Christian Era
and some quite independent of Christianity. Gnosis, as a synonym for
illumination or mystical union, is equivalent to marifah (Arabic) or
irfan (Persian) in esoteric Islam, for example. However, while we might
assume that the state of consciousness signified by the term “gnosis” is
universally accessible (or at least potentially so), it is not at all certain
that those using the term were always referring to the same thing.
For instance,
the gnosis of the Sufi mystics of Islam includes no admission of the existence
of a Demiurge or false, lower God. Indeed, tawhid, the Unity of God and
Creation, is such a fundamental assumption of Islam, that a spiritual
realisation pointing to a Higher God than that of the Creator would be
immediately rejected as a delusion. On the other hand, Hindu yogis might readily
agree with many Gnostics that this world is a veil or delusion (maya in
Sanskrit), and that there is an Absolute God behind or above lesser gods. But
few yogis would share the Gnostic assessment that this indicates a moral flaw in
the universe.
What exactly
is the nature of the divine knowledge that the Gnostics and other mystics
have sought? It is impossible to describe precisely, because of the
non-discursive nature of that knowledge. Frithjof Schuon refers to gnosis as
“our participation in the ‘perspective’ of the divine Subject which, in turn, is
beyond the separative polarity, ‘subject-object’....”3 G.E.H.
Palmer refers to it as “Wisdom made up of Knowledge and Sanctity,” and
underscores the distinction “between knowledge acquired by the ordinary
discursive mind and the higher Knowledge which comes of intuition by the
Intellect, the term Intellect having the same sense as in Plotinus or Eckhart.”4
In other words,
gnosis, according to this definition, is an experiential “knowing” that results
from the expansion of the Gnostic’s consciousness to the level of the divine
Intellect, where the illusion of the separate self (ego) is obliterated – at
least temporarily – in the vast perspective of the higher Self. Such a state
cannot, of course, be sustained indefinitely. What goes up must come down. But
having risen to such heights, the ego that is reassembled upon its descent, is
permanently affected. It now “knows” its own place in the cosmic scheme of
things.
Such “knowledge”
is not easily communicated to others, in part because shared reference points
are few, and because any attempt at describing the experience is bound to
diminish and reify it. Thus, those who have been blessed with gnosis have used
oblique strategies to impart the ineffable: poetry instead of prose; myths
instead of clear-cut analysis; paradoxical statements instead of declarations.
There is still
another factor contributing to the proliferation of gnosi and gnosticisms: while
the experience of gnosis may be ahistorical, i.e., beyond time and place, the
gnostic himself is obviously not. A Tibetan Buddhist in the recesses of the
Himalayas, who takes reincarnation for granted and believes in numerous gods, is
not going to clothe his gnosis in the garments of a Muslim Sufi in Andalucia,
who believes in one lifetime and one God. And vice versa.
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The
Crack in Space (1966)
“Frozen sleep seems like a
humane way to end unemployment and over-population pressures: Send the
excess citizens to the future. The government warehouses are filled with
bibs when a political fight erupts over whether or not to dispose of them
through a space-warp. Then some unknown outside agency helps the sleepers
to awake.”2
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A gnostic whose
historical era and cultural milieu is one of war and persecution is likely to
have his circumstances seep into his post-gnosis explication of reality. There
may still be a higher Reality beyond conflict and violence that he experiences
in gnosis, but his mythic version of the journey to the Truth may feature a
harsher struggle to get there than would otherwise be the case.
Finally, there
is the personality and psychological condition of the gnostic to be considered.
Contrary to contemporary holistic assumptions that assume that the combination
of a good diet, a good life, and a good attitude are most likely to lead one to
higher spiritual consciousness, this is not always so. Higher states may also be
triggered by asceticism, psychoactive substances, disciplined practice, or sheer
happenstance. True, an absence of cravings and obsessions may make meditative
practice easier, but gnosis can also erupt in someone who is by no means a
saint. In such a case, his post-gnosis understanding of the Real may well be
tinged with his neurotic predisposition.
The Divine Invasion
Which brings us
back to Philip K. Dick.
In February,
1974, Dick was living in Fullerton, California, an undistinguished city in
Orange County. He’d fled his long-time residency in Northern California out of
fear for his life and his sanity. He’d been mixed up in long-time illicit drug
use, tax refusal in protest against the Vietnam War, and chronic poverty. In
1971, his previous home in San Rafael, north of San Francisco, had been broken
into by persons unknown, his safe blasted open, and things taken. He’d attempted
suicide, checked himself into drug rehab in Vancouver, and in 1972 had flown
from there to Fullerton.5
By 1974, he’d
married his fifth wife, Tessa, and had a new child, Christopher. But most
immediately, in February, he’d just had two impacted wisdom teeth removed and
was awaiting the delivery of prescribed medicine from the drug store.6
The doorbell
rang and Dick answered the door. The delivery girl from the drug store stood
before him, wearing a delicate necklace from which hung a golden fish, a symbol
of Christ often worn by evangelical Christians.
As Dick later
recounted it – possibly in mythologised form – a laser-like pink beam shot from
the fish to Dick’s third eye. It had an extraordinary effect:
I
suddenly experienced what I later learned is called anamnesis – a Greek word
meaning, literally, ‘loss of forgetfulness.’ I remembered who I was and where
I was. In an instant, in the twinkling of an eye, it all came back to me. And
not only could I remember it but I could see it. The girl was a secret
Christian and so was I. We lived in fear of detection by the Romans. We had to
communicate in cryptic signs. She had just told me all this, and it was true.7
There was plenty
more to follow. For the next year or so, Dick felt his psyche invaded by a
“transcendentally rational mind, as if I had been insane all my life, and
suddenly had become sane.”8 He
experienced hypnagogic visions, auditions, tutelary dreams, and an eight hour
all night vision of thousands of coloured graphics resembling “the nonobjective
paintings of Kandinsky and Klee.”9
Dick came to
nickname the invasive rational mind as VALIS (for Vast Active Living
Intelligence System), which became the name of his 1981 novel recounting his
mind-boggling experience in fictional form.
Perhaps most
significantly, he perceived that “real time had ceased in 70 C.E. with the fall
of the temple at Jerusalem. It began again in 1974 C.E. The intervening period
was a perfect spurious interpolation aping the creation of the Mind....”10
PKD’s life-long
preoccupation with the questions of “what is reality?” and “what is man?”
wouldn’t allow him to resolve his 1974 experiences into a single easy
explanation. He variously explained them to himself as communications from God
or from a satellite orbiting Earth, or most baroquely as psychic invasions
courtesy of Soviet Academy of Sciences psychotronic transmitters. They provided
fodder for several more novels before his untimely death at age 53 in 1982.
The question
might be fairly asked whether Philip K. Dick’s 1974 experiences constituted a
form of gnosis. Judging from his many stories and novels, Dick operated
throughout his life from a gut feeling that reality, as we commonly perceive it,
is a façade. He sensed that there was something morally wrong in a universe
where a friend’s innocent cat could walk across the street and be blithely run
over by a passing car. His novels returned, time and again, to the theme of the
little man caught in the machinations of powers beyond his kin or control. Dick
may have nominally been an Episcopalian, but he was constitutionally a gnostic.
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VALIS
(1981)
“A coterie of religious
seekers forms to explore the revelatory visions of one Horelover Fat; a
semi-autobiographical analogue of PKD. The group’s hermeneutical research
leads to a rock musician’s estate where they confront the Messiah; a
two-year old named Sophia. She confirms their suspicions that an ancient,
mechanical intelligence orbiting the Earth has been guiding their
discoveries.”11
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But, here’s the
paradox: not every gnostic receives complete gnosis. Some Gnostics, such as the
Cathars of southern France, recognised this in dividing their members between
mere believers and the elect (perfecti), and it is safe to assume that
not every perfecti had achieved full mystical awareness.13
The Gnostics
taught that there are several planes or spheres between our material world and
the purely spiritual realm of the Pleroma, “home” of the Unknown God. These
planes were ruled by Archons, and part of the challenge for the Gnostic’s soul,
at death, was to navigate past these cosmic authorities without becoming
ensnared.
The Gnostic who
realised complete gnosis prior to his own death, (an awareness referred to in
Sufi terminology as “to die before you die,”) was blessed with the key to safely
make that post-death journey. But not every gnosis is complete and some
experiences might provide only a partial realisation – perhaps of an
intermediate Archonic realm that more resembles our veiled world than it does
the Pleroma.
Although
incomplete, this Archonic gnosis could still be useful in shedding light on our
present predicament – as long as its insights were not taken as the final word
or the total picture.
Philip K. Dick’s
gnosis, I’d suggest, was of this partial sort: troubling, compelling, ambiguous,
and as political as it was spiritual. His predisposition towards paranoia –
exacerbated by amphetamine abuse, and the temper of the McCarthy era and the
political upheaval of the ’60s – led him to write dozens of novels prior to 1974
that were broadly gnostic in their exploration of hallucinogenic realities, the
individual’s struggle with hostile higher authorities, and in their questioning
of conventional morality.
Dick’s
February-March ’74 gnosis – which he experienced in a dissociated manner as the
intrusion of a higher rational mind into his consciousness – came to be
understood by him as a revelation of profound political implications. Given his
political preoccupations, which were already in place, this is hardly a
surprise.
Human history
might seem to be an endless series of recurring cycles: power held by the few
consolidates itself, corruption ensues, the regime falls and is replaced, and so
on. PKD, however, in the thralls of his pink beam gnosis, arrived at an urgently
mythic conclusion: real time stopped in 70 C.E., a spurious dream-time was
thrust upon us for nineteen centuries, and then, through external intervention,
real time was begun again. Beneath the ordinary appearance of our modern world,
Dick (and select others) were really early Christians in conflict with the Roman
Empire, which was still in power.
Is this really a
grand cosmic truth? I think not. Even in the 1970s it had its trivial side, such
as Dick’s notion that President Nixon’s resignation after Watergate was an event
of cosmic significance.
But in a
metaphorical, and even archetypal, manner, PKD’s gnosis did unveil a
politico-spiritual reality that is increasingly relevant to us, twenty years
after his death. “The Empire never ended,” wrote Dick, and who would argue with
that, as we watch the reigning Superpower rattling its sabres at its minions and
designated foes. The cultural collossi of the media conglomerates and Hollywood
have spun a dreamlike fog that subsumes the past and future into an everlasting
present of novelty and distraction. An effort to merely think clearly, free of
clichés, cant, and consumables, takes a heroic effort, akin to dodging the
Archons at every turn.
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The
Divine Invasion (1981)
“An air collision
jeopardized the successful conclusion of the Second Coming. Emmanuel’s
Appolonian and Dionysian selves are divided by partial amnesia. Their
reintegration is opposed by Belial’s forces of decay, which control the
Earth. The Paraclete’s foster father, Herb Asher, faces problems with his
own redemption. Herb finds allies in the prophet Elijah, his partner in a
retail audio store; and in singer Linda Fox, his own true love, and a
construct energized by VALIS.”12
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Dick thought
that 1974 was a turning point – a time when Truth was beginning anew to
penetrate the veil of appearances. One wishes that this were really true, but
the shock of 9/11 and the subsequent psyops war, lead one to conclude that there
is plenty of veiling still in place – perhaps more than ever.
To the degree
that it slightly parts the veil, Minority Report imparts a whiff of
Philip K. Dick’s political gnosis. Despite all the hypnotic baffling in place,
sometimes a liberating signal makes it through. But no movie – and no book – is
a substitute for one’s own rendezvous with the Unknown God.
Any genuine
gnosis – whether partial or complete, whether political or spiritual – is more
valuable than all the words that have been written about it. Above all, stay
alert, and when that knock comes at the door, say a quick prayer that it’s the
girl with the fish necklace and not the police from the Department of Precrime.
Recommended
Reading:
Gospel of Thomas; The Gnostic Gospels by Elaine Pagels.
Footnotes:
1. Summary from
Daniel J.H. Levack, PKD: A Philip K. Dick Bibliography (San Francisco, CA:
Underwood/Miller, 1981), p. 24.
2. Ibid, p. 53.
3. Frithjof
Schuon, Gnosis: Divine Wisdom (Bedfont, Middlesex: Perennial Books, 1990) p. 76.
4. Ibid, G.E.H.
Palmer, “Translator’s Forward,” p. 8.
5. For a full
account of Dick’s life, see: Larry Sutin, Divine Invasions: A Life of Philip K.
Dick (New York, NY: Harmony Books, 1989).
6. Dick’s own
account has him eagerly awaiting pain medicine. His wife’s account suggests he
was already on codeine and was awaiting medicine for his blood pressure.
7. From “How to
Build a Universe that Doesn’t Fall Apart Two Days Later,” published as an
introduction to I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon (New York, NY: Doubleday, 1985.)
8. From
interview in Charles Platt, Editor, Dream Makers: The Uncommon People Who Write
Science Fiction (New York, NY: Berkeley Books, 1980) p. 155.
9. PKD letter to
Peter Fitting, June 1974.
10. Philip K.
Dick, VALIS (New York, NY: Bantam Books, 1981) p. 228.
11. Levack, p.
70.
12. Ibid, p. 27.
13. Yuri
Stoyanov, The Hidden Tradition in Europe (London: Penguin/Arkana, 1994) p. 162.
______________________________________________________________________________
Jay Kinney
is the co-author, with Richard Smoley, of Hidden Wisdom: A Guide to the Western
Inner Traditions (Penguin/Arkana, 1999) and editor of the forthcoming anthology,
The Inner West (J.P. Tarcher). He was publisher and editor in chief of
Gnosis
Magazine from 1985-1999 (
www.gnosismagazine.com
).
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http://www.newdawnmagazine.com .
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