Under the hood

The Socratic Question, ‘What sort of person should I be?’ – and its variants, ‘What kind of life should I lead?’ ‘What values shall I live by?’ ‘What shall I aim for?’ – asks any reflective person, at any point in life, to pause and consider what really matters, and as far as practically possible to live according to the answers. The Stoic philosopher Epictetus pointed out that a person might be struck by the force of this Socratic challenge even in the last hours of advanced old age, and at that moment ‘begin’, as he put it, ‘to be wise’. It is never too late.

It might strain optimism to think that a philosophy of life could be arrived at early, in the sense that a youth might consider Socrates’ question, come to a decision, and thereafter live in conformity with that decision. Yet although it is never too late to consider one’s philosophy of life, neither is it ever too soon.

AC Grayling, Philosophy and Life: Exploring the Great Questions of How to Live

As I’ve mentioned here before, I came to my interest in philosophy very young – probably between the ages of 14 and 15 – during an extended spell in hospital. I don’t suppose it would have occurred to me then to frame my growing interest in terms of the Socratic Question as explained by Grayling in the quote above; but I was acutely conscious of a need to find out for myself what went on under life’s engine cover. There must, I was certain, be something that made it all go, some intrinsic power or energy behind everything; something that made sense of my earlier – for want of a better term – mystical experiences as a child recovering from a long illness. Academic philosophy, I soon discovered, was not the way to find out.

This longing to look “under the hood” – AKA metaphysical inquiry – has stayed with me all my life. It was the reason for my early interest in Buddhism and Taoism; for my tentative experiments with psychedelics. It was the reason I turned for some years to writing poetry. It was most certainly what drew me – apart from the felt need for a context, and a justification, for practice – to religion; and, paradoxically perhaps, it is what – out of a need to remain close to my own inner experience – has led me out of formal religion altogether.

My life has perhaps been a sequence of beginning again. Some might see this – as I have myself, often enough – as indecisiveness, or even faithlessness. But actually it has been, I now see, anything but either of those things; it has been a process of trying to be true to what I have actually encountered in practice – in stillness, in looking under the outward appearance of things, under the surface of my own apprehensions.

Now that I am getting close to the age of Epictetus’ imaginary example, I am just beginning to realise that just beginning is the necessary condition of insight. I first read Shunryu Suzuki’s Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind many years ago; it seems to have taken me more than fifty years to start to get a handle on what the title means. Now, perhaps, I have learnt to sit still.

3 thoughts on “Under the hood

  1. Pingback: Under the hood | Silent Assemblies

  2. Sue's avatarSue

    Your post fills me with joy, Mike Farley 🙂 It has been relentlessly hot a summer here in Victoria, Australia, and I am sitting out on the balcony and it’s grey and raining and totally delightful, at least for the present. I am looking with pleasure to the equinox, of pumpkin and longer nights under an actual doona while those of you in the UK and Northern Hemisphere unfurl your fronds and (hopefully) soak up some sun.

    i keep blowing my own gaskets lately looking under the hood and trying to work it all out and today my ego seems to be willing to quieten down and soak in the mystery again. It seems to complicate matters further that reality appears to be a nesting of Russian dolls, each with their own hoods, some of which seem to contradict the others. What can you do but to sit back and drink a brew and feel the delight of the rain plopping onto your bare feet?

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    1. Mike Farley's avatarMike Farley Post author

      Thank you, Sue! It’s s beautiful spring day here, chilly but bright; the flowering cherry outside our window is in full bloom, and the chiffchaffs are back. My Aussie mother always used to be struck by the contrast at this time of year, one hemisphere moving towards summer while the other slid into the lengthening days of autumn. Rain on bare feet after a long hot summer is the best!

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