gotzendammerung said in #3814 2w ago:
Nick Land crystalized an important current of the English theological tradition with one word: Gnon. Gnon stands in for Jefferson's "Nature or Nature's God", acronymized (NoNG), reversed (GNoN), and reified (Gnon). The concept is itself a stand-in for uncertainty around the Ultimate Authority by which things are the way they are and by which we ought to live this way rather than that. As a tautology of near-maximum entropy, Gnon may at first seem to have no content. But this is Land's famous "diagonal" trick generalized from Cantor: to define an operator over apparent ignorance that itself proves the presence of knowledge. Gnon, once reified, becomes subject to inquiry. Inquiry yields definite properties.
For example, Gnon apparently commands us to "go forth and multiply" by authority of simple tautological necessity: those who disobey will be wiped from existence. Similarly, Gnon commands that we must live certain ways as not all ways are compatible with continued life. Some lifestyles are a surrender to disease and chaos, while others are clean, natural, and successful. To guide us as to which is which, Gnon shrugs and speaks through the prophets: Emerson says "the sun shines today also", meaning to study nature and its ways as our source of knowledge of the will of Gnon. Darwin does so and finds the laws of life: fertility, heredity, struggle, and selection.
The laws generalize to societies, conceived as meta-organic selves: societies that tolerate within themselves counter-selective, counter-fertile, non-competitive, and heredity-ignoring processes will degenerate into diseased chaotic mush and be wiped from existence. This is not my opinion, some moralistic inheritance from the dead, or any reflexive resentment of the left-behind. These are just the tautological laws of nature or nature's God.
So is Gnon a mean old tyrant, akin to the "bad guys" who ruled before we invented caped superheroes to teach us moral progress? In other words, Gnon commands, but why should we obey? The answer is simple: we affirm that life is good. It would be a crime to allow it to succumb to such degeneration. This is only even a question because it is asked "on our behalf" by the agents of the disease. Of course those who benefit from sickness would have an interest in confusing our idea of health. The more practical question is why we should listen to them.
This brings us to our particular situation in history. In the abstract we know from the simple laws of nature what a healthy outlook and a healthy society must look like, and we know we don't live in one. But the trail seems to go cold when we ask "what is to be done?". Done? There is nothing to be done. Everything proceeds according to nature. The forms capable of life will find their footing and win the future. Here Land leaves with his fatalistic non-politics. Amor fati, anon.
But the idea that applied Gnon-theology is an oxymoron is an unsatisfying non-answer, itself one of the whisperings of death. A strong seed of life does not accept such cope. It takes delight in the opportunity of its nature and its niche. The trail doesn't actually go cold, it just splits. Applied Gnon-theology is highly particularist. For us, I think the opportunity is simple and rich: we have a vein of pure truth in this idea of Gnon theology, right at the heart of the most important questions in current world history.
No mainstream line of thought can justify the continuation of civilized life against the corrosive wreckage of post-christian moralism. But Gnon theology seems able to. It is strong and on the cutting edge of modern philosophy. It has the potential to root a total theory of society and right living. It rejects all the lies of the age and can incorporate the truths of previous schools into its own strength. It is the strong seed of a new health. All we have to do is help it grow.
referenced by: >>3817 >>3844 >>3850 >>3871 >>3873 >>3953 >>3979
Nick Land crystalize