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Dec. 26, 2011, at 1:04pm
The experience of life, of death, of time, of celebration—e.g., Christmas—is decidedly different for the religious man compared to the secular man. Mircea Eliade, in his book The Sacred and the Profane, offers four points of difference here (pp. 202-206).
The religious man believes that there is an absolute reality, the sacred, transcending but manifesting itself in this world and making it real. Second, he not only believes that life has a sacred origin but also that persons can only be fulfilled to the extent that they are genuinely religious, i.e., in contact with the sacred. Third, he believes that the history of this world and of his own life involves the history of …
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Gollum too, is a fitting example of addiction.
His 'precious' literally annihilates his personhood--splitting his personality into 2: such that he can no longer say 'me' but only 'we'.
In other words, he is not free to exercise an "I-Thou" relationship of persons, but pitifully, "we-it"
I argue that addiction does precisely this: objectifies the personal dimension of reality, such that everything to the addict can only be viewed in relation to the object, "it". Persons themselves are merely means to the end of possessing "it". It is nothing short of slavery to the "precious"
May. 20 at 4:10pm | See in context