Wilber, however, does indeed run away from competent, thorough criticism like vampires flee
from the sunlight. Mark that well. You do not need
to be first-, second-, or nth-tier to see that; all you need to be able to do is recognize competent
research when you see it, and then note kw’s derogatory response to (or freezing-out of) that.
You will not, though, find anything resembling the same academic competence in kw’s own writings,
which is exactly why he needs to
so hysterically marginalize people who can think and research at least several orders of magnitude
more clearly and thoroughly than he has ever been able to do.
If the self-promoting kw really thinks that critics such as Meyerhoff don’t quote sources
(“nobody-quoting”), he may well have confused
truly excellent, properly referenced scholarship, with his own method of “research” (i.e., make things
up and then hope as hard as you integrally can that nobody goes back to check the original sources to catch you
violating the truth). Or, perhaps he means that the scholars who are quoted against him are “nobodies”
relative to His Integral Self. Either way, he is pathetically wrong.
You will notice that nowhere in that rant does Wilber address the reality that
a large percentage of the criticisms which he brushes off as being “first-tier” are taking him to task
for having provably misrepresented the purported “established facts” in the fields which he
claims (falsely) to be integrating.
Whether or not developmental studies are in “complete disarray,” Wilber has brutally misrepresented
the purported agreement regarding, for example, Piaget’s stages of psychological development. There is no way around
that fact; so, not surprisingly, all kw can do in response is to claim that he understands the relevant fields
much better than his harshest critics do ... thus apparently licensing him to utterly/unprofessionally
misrepresent the ideas in
those same fields ... and thus actually showing, for anyone who wishes to see, that he either hasn’t understood
them or is deliberately and dishonestly misleading his readers.
If you can see agreement in fields where it provably does not exist, you are not second/third-tier, you are
delusional.
But, into which group do I fit? Lunatic, nut, fake, or (well-footnoted) fraud? Or maybe a “perv” instead?
(Keep in mind that both Huston Smith and James Fadiman endorsed my own
first book with far greater enthusiasm than they have ever given publicly
to any of Wilber’s own dismally failed attempts at scholarship.)
If, then, you have ever been bothered at all by my “tone,” you owe it to yourself to be at least as bothered by kw
attacking his critics at least as colorfully and with far less rational basis for doing so.
One is reminded of Albert Einstein’s comment that “only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity,
and I’m not sure about the former.”
From the same dismal blog, this is a partial listing of Wilber’s fertile imaginings regarding the purported
shortcomings of persons such as myself, who dare not only to have no use for his addled philosophy
but to further point out, in reasoned detail, why his half-baked conjectures make so very little sense:
As a wise man recently noted, all that one would have to do is just read that blog by kw (and nothing else)
to see why Wilber is losing respect even from those academics who used to think he deserved his high standing
in the transpersonal/integral community. Indeed, kw’s childish response makes him look much worse, in his
character, than any criticism of him by others could ever have done.
Further, consider that Wilber himself cannot have spent much more than “3 full hours” studying
David Bohm’s
work before stupidly imagining himself to be in a position
to trash it for purportedly not meshing with his transpersonal fantasies. Certainly, he hasn’t spent
even three full nanoseconds actually understanding Bohm’s ideas.
If you have to “rape and pillage” the details in any field in order to get them to “fit” with your
grand theorizings—as Wilber has done throughout his entire career, and without which intellectual
abuse there would not be any AQAL or the like—you are not integrating anything.
Conversely, when people see details to which you (kw) are “legally blind,” and correspondingly reject
your supposed “integrations,” it is not because they are seeing less than you are, but rather
because they are seeing more.
Ironic, to be sure. Yet, to anyone who, unlike kw, doesn’t imagine himself to be the center of the integral
universe, or who isn’t so in awe of the (delusions of) grandeur of his Bald Integral Hero that he can’t think straight,
that should be clear as day: If you pay proper attention to details and to simple, competent research,
you cannot be “integral.” Because it is exactly that attention to detail and broad knowledge-base which
proves that things do not fit together—and most probably never will—in anything resembling the fashion which
kw foolishly pretends they do. And then, because you will not accept Wilber’s detail-ignoring claims, you
can only be “first-tier.” So, if kw finds himself more slack-jawed than usual in reading the most damning
criticisms of his “work,” that may well be just his involuntary reaction to writings and authors who
can understand and incorporate proper details into their own work.
Wilber is royally fooling himself if he imagines that any of the recent criticisms by myself, Meyerhoff, or Andrews,
for example, are based in envy, lack of “second-tier” perspective, or resentment deriving from his ill-gotten “success.”
Anyone who wants to bullshit through his teeth in presenting fairy-tale realities which have no real hope of being true
is indeed on a well-traveled road to “success” in this world. But there are still those of us who would rather
get our recognition the honest way. If you are even a competent undergraduate student with a conscience, there is
next to nothing for you to “envy” in Ken Wilber’s work or character: you already have more of what makes a
decent human being in you than kw will ever even want to recover from his own wasted life. All you can really
learn from the likes of him is what not to do with your life, and how not
to behave in attempting to make a name for yourself.
On June 11 of 2006, Ken Wilber published a
“Part II” to his previous diatribe, claiming to have only posted the
earlier rant as a “test.”
First, from one of his fans, as quoted in that follow-up piece:
NEVER in over two years have I witnessed anything like this. THIS IS NOT WHAT YOU [KW] ARE REALLY LIKE.
I repeat, I have NEVER seen you act like this.
Bauwens and Dallman, however, have long ago seen that side of kw. He has shown enough of it in his
mistreatment of the late
David Bohm,
too, all of which is in black and white by his own hand.
I can’t help but wonder how Wilber reacted when he first learned that Frank Visser would be publishing Meyerhoff’s
debunking of his (kw’s) work, online. More or less exactly as childishly and petulantly as he behaved in his
earlier rant, I would guess.
Sometimes the most compassionate thing one can do is to cut down dangerous and terrorist egos.
Is that what we are now to Wilber’s loyal followers?
“Terrorist” egos? Being cut down “compassionately”? For trying to warn
people that Wilber’s teachings and community are not what they appear to be? Ask me why I have compared the
behavior of cult followers to that of “patriotic” Americans following 9/11 and preceding the war on Iraq.
I read Meyerhoff’s MS a couple of years ago. There were some interesting points here and there, but even
these I assumed you would be capable of rebutting with little problem. [Why would you assume that? On what
possible grounds? And why would kw publish this letter, when it really only shows how little actual questioning
his friends and followers are capable of?] I said as much to him, but then asked: What is the point of writing
this document? If Wilber is as misguided as you think, why would any press bother publishing the MS? In
other words, if the target is so pathetic, what’s the point? And if you have turned the target into a straw
man [he hasn’t, that is Wilber’s job, e.g., with regard to Bohm], then again—what’s the point of publishing
the document? (As you note, Meyerhoff can’t get this turkey published.) I then asked him: What is YOUR, Meyerhoff’s,
alternative contribution? What do YOU have to bring to the party?
Whoever wrote that has no
business having a professional opinion in the fields of psychology, psychiatry, or philosophy. Or publishing,
for that matter. Whatever happened to the inherent worth in separating true ideas from false ones, even just
in the pure pursuit of knowledge?
The point of putting these debunkings of Wilber’s work into print is to do what one can to prevent others,
not merely from wasting their time on Wilber’s fabrications, and not merely from meditating to the point of
developing clinical psychoses when they think they’re working toward psychological stage-growth, but also from
throwing their lives away on the likes of Adi Da and Andrew Cohen, based on Wilber’s foolish endorsement of
them. If one were working “for” the integral movement, that same attitude would be called “compassion.” Here,
however, it gets you branded as a “petty fucker” (see below).
Details are not “petty,” nor does taking a “50,000-foot view” release you from the obligation of squaring
your overarching principles with an honest representation of each and every detail. It was exactly because of
the confirmation (to within experimental accuracy) of the predictions of Einstein’s theories that he and his ideas
became famous; without that precise validation, no one would even know his name today, much less care about the
elegance of the core ideas underlying those theories. In the integral world, by contrast, you can screw up
on details, and even actively misrepresent them, as much as you like, and the clueless followers in that field will
only defend your reasons for doing so, rather than taking you to task for that academic dishonesty and/or
incompetence.
Plus, in fields of real scholarship, there has always been room for persons who merely gave harsh criticisms
of the prevailing ideas, even without being able to offer better alternatives themselves—never mind that,
in the integral world, having an alternative will only be held against you, via the claim that in tearing kw’s
ideas down you are just trying to get your own work noticed. (Note that, while my own first book was again endorsed
more enthusiastically by both Huston Smith [Wilber’s close friend] and James Fadiman than any of kw’s books
have ever been feted by them, I have since completely disowned the same book. So, I could very easily
bring an alternative contribution to the “integral tea party,” I’ve just learned far too much about the
skeptical objections to transpersonal claims in the past few years to want to be at that gathering.)
If people are going to sincerely buy into our approach, even if the ideas beautifully stand on their own
(as they do) [no they don’t], they’ll do their due diligence. Especially those in the United
Nations community or those seriously involved in corporate strategy and considering changing their approach.
Meyerhoff has done an appropriate level of “due diligence,” in going back to the original sources which kw
claims support his view, to prove that they regularly do not. How has he been treated by the integral
community for doing so? And, how many people who get interested in kw’s ideas would even be able to find
the time, much less the interest, to do the same? All they can do is trust that the community wouldn’t let
incompetent or dishonest work rise to the top. Big mistake. And you think the politicians in the UN, or our
world’s corporate executives, are going to do even one-tenth of that work, as opposed to just looking at the
roster of “big names” endorsing the fallacious integral ideas, and then proceeding in the confidence that
“a hundred thousand Wilber fans can’t be wrong”? Of course they won’t. Those are people who cannot look past an
“executive summary” to the details in the first place. Give kw and Co. credit for one thing, at least:
They have picked a logical, and easy, target.
the rule of criticism, imo, is first understand the point of the person whom you are criticizing. frank visser’s
site, for example, explicitly disagrees with that.
When you can prove that the principles on which a theory is founded are false (or grossly misrepresented), you
actually don’t need to separately debunk its conclusions. If the premises are wrong, the conclusions will be wrong,
too. (Of course, by pure coincidence and probabilities, a quack such as Wilber may still manage to get a few
conclusions right—as even Velikovsky did.)
KW:
I got several calls from spiritual teachers around the country, and they all said almost exactly the
same thing: “I wish I had the nerve to do this.” That was a very common response, and many teachers
went on to lament the “green swamp” their own sanghas seemed to be, “and what can I do about it?”
What do you figure the odds are that at least one of those sympathetic calls was from Andrew Cohen? The
“green swamp,” after all, wants democracy and dialog in what is inherently a dictatorship. “What can I do about it?”
Indeed: Any guru would like nothing better than to suppress that “talking back.”
KW:
you don’t like us, you hate us, you hate I-I, you hate wilber, you hate this and you hate that—we heard you
loud and clear. And we saw you. And now we know each other, don’t we? But was that you or your shadow
responding?
Personally, I have zero tolerance for being deceived simply because I don’t go around bullshitting others;
I ask nothing from them, in that regard, that I haven’t previously demanded from myself. As recently as
three years ago, I was still considering donating money to the Integral Institute; it was only in documenting
Wilber’s provable and gross misrepresentations of David Bohm’s work that I began to sour on him, and since
then to find his “work” shot through with the same bald cluelessness, which can only qualify as either
academic dishonesty or professional incompetence. If you can look at that simple following-of-the-evidence
and see only projection or hatred ... well, yikes. “What We Are, That We See.”
From the Fans of Ken:
I trust the meta-vision you see of human and social evolution, and if this posting as is serves the Kosmos,
then so be it....
I couldn’t list all your third-tier reasons for this, but I deeply know that Integral resonates with, and works for,
those who are ready for it. It is a truth that doesn’t need a prop to stand.
Of course, Wilber must be “third tier,” uniquely able to judge the effect of his actions on the Kosmos. That
should have been obvious by now. Just like Adi Da is the only seventh-level sage.
The first thing any spiritual leader must learn is that you must always keep at least one step
(in purported spiritual evolution) ahead of the followers.
If you find professional incompetence, academic dishonesty, and/or unconscionable manipulation in Wilber’s work,
that has nothing necessarily to do with tiers/altitude, shadow-projection, or the like.
You are much more likely simply seeing it for what it really is.
When a bullshit artist tries to tell you that you are “first-tier” and shadow-projecting simply because you
won’t stand for being manipulated or misled, or
that his blog “includes an excellent, useful explanation of why these critiques are invalid” (no, it
doesn’t really), or that “second tier would get it, and that is who it was meant
for”—well, “fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.”
Yes I was pissed off about IU hosts being referred to as minions ... fuck the crazy critic.
First “terrorist egos,” and now “crazy,” too. And you wonder why I regard the Wilberian
community as a cult?
Personally, I have never publicly referred to Wilber’s close followers as “minions.” But, truth be told,
that is exactly what I regard them as being. Their thoughts as included on the “I was only kidding” blog
by kw have only confirmed that for me.
[D]oes telling a group of mental masturbators that they’re off the mark actually legitimize them in a way? If
their intent is simply (!) to fantasize, they are unlikely to have the decency to be embarrassed at being caught
once again with their pants down around their knees.
First, does the integral community not realize that they are seen by skeptics as being every bit as
“crazy” and unworthy of legitimization, as they now view kw’s critics? No, of course they don’t realize
that. But it is nevertheless true.
And beautiful, how they reduce cogent criticism to the status of fantasy, while elevating their own transpersonal
fantasies and outright delusions to the status of “reality.” Myself, Meyerhoff, Andrews, and other solid
critics have nothing to be “embarrassed” about, if the previous “lacking in substance” blog entry by kw is
the best that he can offer in terms of trying to prove us to be “mental masturbators.”
And again, it is Wilber who is sophomorically miming masturbation in public, and considering that to be funny.
Where is his “decency”?
Or his sense of embarrassment at being caught, repeatedly, with his own “pants down,” blatantly and
unconscionably fabricating information?
Or his understanding of humor, or of group dynamics/laughter, for that matter?
KW again:
Part of the lesson—for you, for me, for any of us—when it comes to integral (second tier, vision-logic,
centaur, turquoise) in today’s world especially relates to the difference between what Trungpa Rinpoche called
compassion and idiot compassion.
Quoting the alcoholic fraud
Chögyam Trungpa.
Nice. “Decency,” indeed. How many lives did that drunken,
abusive, “compassionate” Buddhist dictator ruin?
The best response actually came from Wilber’s close friend, Stuart Davis:
it’s fantastic, it’s overdue, and i feel it is appropriate and proportionate in tone and content. i laughed out
loud half a dozen times, and it’s right on the money. how fucking LONG are you supposed to sit back without
comment while these toxic, petty fuckers make preposterous attacks on work that’s ten years old? and only one
in a hundred even knows what the fuck they’re talking about, because like it or not YOU’RE RIGHT TO SAY it is
a cross-altitude issue. these green shits take pot shots at 2nd tier morning, noon, and night, and they are
literally not capable of registering the content, the locations, the addresses, the altitude of 2nd tier.
it’s insane, and i’m relieved to see you calling a spade a spade in this way.
Speaking of psychological shadows....
And, even work a decade old is certainly worth debunking, particularly for how the provable dishonesties and/or
incompetencies in it reflect on the character of its author, and for how the same shortcomings suggest the
(un)likelihood that his current work will stand up to future criticism.
Plus, Davis genuinely
believes
that the “Dagon” (sic) tribal people received their purported knowledge of astronomy from extra-terrestrials.
And Wilber proudly puts all of that pandering into print, without so much as a twinge of realization
as to how it looks to the real world.
But then, any other cult leader or quack with a small, loyal following would have done exactly the same
thing, just as proudly and just as opaquely.
KW:
I should mention that when IU opens we will be having specific classes, for those who want, where we analyze
various forum responses for their altitude, their levels and lines, and their shadow elements.
Of course, nothing bonds an in-group like laughing together at the flaws in their out-group critics, who just
cannot see things as clearly as they, the “special ones,” do.
all we have to do now is send people to that blog and watch their response. if it freaks them out, it’s unlikely
they would do very well in any type of second-tier work.
so at least we know. the thing is, K loves these people, I’ve seen him work with them because he’ll work with anybody.
“All for the Non-Dual Love of Ken.”
And through all of that, has Wilber offered any cogent, intelligent response to any of his recent critics ...
never mind to David Lane’s critique from 1996? No, of course not. What he has posted
could rather just as well have all been a deliberate smoke screen, to distract from the real issue. That is,
to obscure the fact that his ideas consistently do not stand up to any kind of thorough questioning—a
point which is hardly mitigated by him trotting out a few anonymous “experts” who daftly imagine the
contrary.
* * *
Frank Visser gave his own
response to kw’s rant:
[T]elling the audience Meyerhoff’s book got rejected by publishers is a bit low: wasn’t
The Spectrum of Consciousness rejected 33 times?....
Wilber writes: “Have you noticed that the people who complain the most about the concept of boomeritis
almost always have the worst cases of it?” So what about the number #1 crusader against boomeritis himself?
Looks like he has a particularly bad case of it. Even jokingly mentioning “I am at the center of the vanguard
of the greatest social transformation in the history of humankind” is telling. Sure, it’s a joke. Or is it?
Why mention?....
Wilber mentions the mind-body problem, for which he has presented an interesting solution of his own.
Why is there a complete radio silence in the philosophy of mind about this theory? (David Chalmers was
kindly willing to add two of Wilber’s papers on this topic to his online repository
when I asked him to do so, but he filed it somewhere under “Miscellaneous”). What does that tell us?....
I will not get caught in this game of praise and condemnation, so reminiscent of cultic milieus I have
been in before. Instead, I will tirelessly go on publishing writings which I consider helpful in understanding
integral philosophy. I may be wrong, I may be right—but that’s not the issue. [T]he issue is that there should
be an open, public forum where all voices can be heard. That’s why Integral World is valuable.
There was, of course, a time when
Wilber himself gave at least lip service to something approaching the latter idea:
What does matter, as Kierkegaard so rudely reminded us, is that only by investing and speaking your
vision with passion, can the truth, one way or another, finally penetrate the reluctance of the world.
If you are right, or if you are wrong, it is only your passion that will force either to be
discovered.
Apparently in Wilber’s world, though, that principle only applies to “theorists,” not to critics.
And personally, I take kw’s placing of himself at the
“vanguard of the greatest social transformation in the history of humankind”
as an accurate statement of his narcissistic delusions regarding his own value to the world. It’s fully in line
with his self-promoting use, within his own books and websites, of quotations from “experts” as to how
brilliant and important he and his work allegedly are (as I’ve collected at the start of the
Norman Einstein chapter, here).
And by the way: My
first book was rejected by 125 publishers in the U.S., U.K., and India. The quality of
a book, after all, is barely relevant to whether or not it is published by a traditional
press. What matters is, pure and simple, whether it’s going to sell. Anyone who has
had any contact at all with the publishing industry knows that.
* * *
Michel Bauwens of the P2P Foundation posted several excellent responses to Wilber’s “planned meltdown.”
On the logic of cultism at the Integral institutes:
Being integral is increasingly being defined as: “agreeing with Ken Wilber.” This is the only
critique being accepted within the movement. And basically it takes the form of: yes you are a
genius, but wouldn’t you consider that xxx. Such a form of self-denigrating critique is the only one
acceptable, and it can only serve to strengthen the edifice and the influence of the master....
[Even without Firmage’s money, and Don Beck’s reinforcement of kw’s narcissism]
the totalizing edifice and the particular personality of Wilber would in all likel[i]hood have evolved
in this way eventually....
Can there be any hope for such a movement? In my opinion: none whatsoever. The point of no-return has long passed.
Ken Wilber is losing it:
[Wilber’s rant and Boomeritis, plus, I would add, kw’s telephone interviews as featured
on Integral Naked] sounds like the expression of a man desperately in need of confirmation by the
young, attempting to be “cool,” but not quite knowing how to do it, and revealing his own immaturity
in the process....
At one point in our lives, we may seek a system of systems that may put to rest of fears of paradoxes
and contradictions, showing how different truth claims can nevertheless be all true at some higher level
of integration. But at another point in your life, if you are not intellectually and spiritually lazy,
you have to learn again to live with the uncertainty of knowledge, and then, frankly, any reliance of a
total edifice a la Wilber becomes counterproductive.
Personally, I agree strongly with nearly all of the points made in both of those fine postings.
Visser then published a truly excellent “companion article” to his own
response to kw. From
Sorry, It’s Just Over Your Head:
I read many responses to Wilber’s part I, and the only person who speaks as if he might actually feel
anything remotely like actual “hate” toward Wilber is Geoffrey Falk, and I think that calling Falk
“hateful” would require us to read more into Falk’s way of expressing himself than may be there.
But let’s say for sake of argument that Falk hates Wilber and II.
I cannot quarrel with any of that.
But, of course, we should always leave open the possibility that I, too, have been deliberately trying
to “push the buttons” of Ken and his followers, shouldn’t we? You know, in addition to obviously enjoying saucily
“calling a spade a spade” when it comes to leaders and followers with whom one sadly cannot reason,
so one might as well (generally justifiably) insult them (after having first proved them to be in the wrong)
and hope that something gets through in all that.
So, love or hate the hatred (or “skillful love”?) with which I express myself, it makes no difference to
the validity of the criticisms I’ve made of kw’s ideas (and character). And really, without those solid
critiques, which the Wilberian world cannot counter even were they disposed to responding cogently rather
than reflexively (i.e., the knee-jerk “you’re green” thing),
would kw have been pushed to his (very damaging to I-I’s grandiose
“mission” in the world) “divine meltdown”? Perhaps ... but perhaps not.
(I don’t want to take too much “credit,” since Meyerhoff’s outstanding work seems to be bothering kw much
more than mine, at least by name.)
It is an open question as to whether or not I personally “hate the sinner” in any of my irreverent (“Eighth Deadly Sin”)
criticisms of our world’s gurus and pandits. But I certainly “hate the sin,” no question about that!
Anyone who tells me half-truths or worse to try to get me to cave to his ideas, in religion or otherwise,
has picked the wrong person to try to deceive.
SRF
was the first organization to find that out the hard way.
So, as the former/late Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau once said,
“the universe is unfolding more or less as it should.”
* * *
An anonymous blogger posted a fantastic
analysis
of Wilber’s guru-like “card-playing,” in his claims that his recent behavior has constituted
a skillful teaching, that people fail to see that only for not having evolved to his high level,
and that the objections to that “teaching” are based simply on his critics’ psychological
projections.
Folks, outlining how and why this is classic cultic behavior is too elementary to even go into.
Just pick up any book on the subject, or go read about the true root of all this: Adi Da....
In the end, Ken is trying to silence critics/outsiders by asking that they simply STOP, which is all
he really wants at this point. He asks that they take a moratorium on judging others, on loathing and
condemning him. Notice that none of this addresses anything of any real substance; it’s just an attempt to
bring it to an end, with him still on top as the teacher. He is the game-master, after all. In real academic
and/or spiritual circles (or within an adult community) such cards are considered completely and totally out
of bounds. They only work in guru and cultic environments. Ken, PLEASE, you are the one who needs to STOP.
Is there anyone at II with the courage to tell him this?....
The herd mentality that Wilber should concern himself with is the herd mentality he encourages in his young
followers, the groupthink, the in-group versus out-group dynamic, the loading of the language with jargon and
psychobabble, the arrogance, narcissism, and grandiosity.
It is truly wonderful that all of that cultic behavior is becoming so clear, through kw’s own
actions, that only people in complete denial could fail to see it.
More from kw:
I want to be hated for the real me! I am perfectly capable of generating massive irritation all by myself—I don’t
need your shadow to do it. So please do me the honor of hating the real me!
Yes, that is precisely what I have been doing, though the “hating” thing is still an open question.
Okay, jokes aside: Let’s forgive and forget the past, and start afresh. And let’s see who honestly wishes to
deal with this, and who wants to continue gun-fighting their own shadows....
Both sides could use a little confession, repentance, and forgiveness. I can say that, right here and now,
I fully forgive any and all hurt that has been inflicted on me by unfair and unwarranted accusations, criticisms,
and condemnations. With full heart, I sincerely mean that.
The provably dishonest and/or professionally
incompetent Wilber “forgives” his critics. Particularly
the ones whose criticism is clearly warranted and inarguably valid, but which he can only deal with by
absurdly pretending that
he is being misunderstood by first-tier “morons” who have treated him unfairly.
And this man is the president of a
university.
And, how generous of Wilber to offer his “forgiveness” to others ... without asking, nay begging,
for the same from them! That is integral narcissism, in spades.
(One is reminded of
Salieri, at the end of Amadeus, blessing others in his newfound role as
the patron saint of mediocrity.)
I really wish kw were joking about all that: The degree to which the Integral Emperor has become detached from
reality, here,
is truly astonishing. The eleventh of the integral Bullshit-Herding Pictures: Door ajar. Light extinguished
on porch. Nobody home.
Helen Titchen Beeth on kw:
Try as I might, having seen you and sat in your aura, (I was at the very first ITP—as it was then—seminar
in December 2004—asked you a question about Europe) and heard your voice, I just have not been able to accept
all the outraged finer feelings expressed on the London Integral list....
Remember back when kw was in the habit of ejaculating all over himself in endorsing Adi Da? He, too,
had experienced only a few darshans or the like in the presence of Da Avatar. He has learned
nothing since then, has he? Except to pull the same tricks himself, in presenting an appropriate “public face”
when potential converts are watching.
Andrew Cohen will surely end up as one of Wilber’s few loyal friends when all is said and done—their
reported dysfunctionalities are far too similar for them to not stand side-by-side against the evil,
projecting, “green” world, until the end. Why, even the current issue of
What Is Enlightenment? magazine, presciently, is largely devoted to the life’s work and
Great Insights of their “favorite integral prophet.”
You knew it was just a matter of time until kw got anointed as a “prophet,” right?
* * *
Wikipedia has this to say on the subject of
narcissism:
While in regression, the person displays childish, immature behaviors. He feels that he is omnipotent,
and misjudges his power and that of his opposition. He underestimates challenges facing him and pretends
to be “Mr. Know-All.” His sensitivity to the needs and emotions of others and his ability to empathize
with them deteriorate sharply. He becomes intolerably haughty and arrogant, with sadistic and paranoid
tendencies. Above all, he then seeks unconditional admiration, even when others with more objective
views perceive that he does not deserve it. He is preoccupied with fantastic, magical thinking and daydreams.
In this mode he tends to exploit others, to envy them, and to be explosive.
That, of course, matches Wilber point-by-point. From his recent childish blogging, to his misjudging
of his most cogent critics as “morons” compared to his own “brilliance,”
to his know-it-all nature, to his insensitive “forgiving” of others (and simultaneous failure to ask
for forgiveness himself) when he is clearly the one in the wrong, to
his haughtiness and arrogance, to his paranoid (i.e., disproportionate to reality) feelings of being loathed
and condemned, to his obvious need for undeserved unconditional admiration,
to his certainty, from his own misinterpreted experiences, that paranormal phenomena
and mystical
winds exist—implying the magical ability
of his thoughts to influence the world
around him—and through to his unconscionable manipulation and exploitation
of others to ensure his own “greatness.”
Completely consistent with that same diagnosis, Matthew Dallman has independently
noted, of Wilber:
I have ... never met a more self-absorbed person....
Any real teacher is someone abundant in their help; in my experience, and according to accounts of
several long-time associates, Wilber helps no one unless it serves to help him and his reputation....
It also turned out that what I thought was a think-tank [i.e., the Integral Institute]
was, in reality, a company, which went on
to produce products like any company would. Those products include self-help DVDs, for-pay websites
promising exclusive access to him, as well as expensive seminars and experiential workshops.
Essentially, the whole thing is to sell Wilber, even if advertised otherwise.
And to what may kw look forward, in his own “psychological development”?
A personality disorder arises only when repeated attacks on the obstacle continue to fail—especially if
this recurrent failure happens during the formative stages (0-6 years of age). The contrast between the
fantastic world (temporarily) occupied by the individual and the real world in which he keeps being
frustrated (the grandiosity gap) is too acute to countenance for long. The dissonance gives rise to
the unconscious “decision” to go on living in the world of fantasy, grandiosity and entitlement.
Of course, Wilber is blessed to not have to retreat into complete fantasy in order to live all that out:
He has already created the “reality” of the Integral Institute in which to act out his delusions of
greatness and entitlement (to unconditional admiration, etc.).
Len Oakes wrote an entire book
(Prophetic Charisma)
on the typically narcissistic personality structure of cult leaders. What we are seeing with kw these days is
just par for the course and would, as Bauwens has noted, have happened eventually even without the recent
“critical” provocation: Wilber was always an “institute” waiting to happen.
* * *
On June 22, 2006, in the third installment of his “Wyatt Earp” series of blog postings,
Wilber gave his best, yet still embarrassingly limping
arguments, as to why his Integral Institute is supposedly not a cult:
Based on a year-long study of his and many other experiences, a study supported by the Center for the Study of
New Religious Movements in Berkeley, we arrived at this 3-variable, 8-box grid, which has continued to be highly
accurate in spotting and predicting cultic behavior, because it is based, not on making judgments like
“it doesn’t allow criticism” (which is meaningless), but rather on several nonjudgmental variables that have
been found empirically to be associated with behavior that injures groups and individuals. (This stops people who
don’t like a movement from labeling it cultic by coming up with checklists of things they don’t like, which are
just tautological.) It was, and is indeed, a landmark publication.
[Well, a lot has happened over the past twenty years in the cult-studies field and elsewhere;
what was (wrongly) regarded as being insightful then, hasn’t
necessarily stood the test of time—you may have seen that pattern before with Wilber’s writings.
Who in the cult-studies field actually uses the ideas in kw’s co-written Spiritual Choices today?
No one that I’m aware of; I cannot recall having ever even seen the book cited, and have read it only
because it is part of kw’s “canon” of supposedly “landmark” works.]
I am glad to report that both the structure and beliefs of Integral Institute fall in the box (out of 8 boxes)
that, in the past, has had the lowest number of cultic behaviors.
I-I is not charismatic [but, you can be just as tightly bound by infallible teachings as by a charismatic
leader; just ask any Catholic];
its teachings are not based on your relation to a person but on your relation to an idea [but see the above],
namely AQAL. If you also happen to like or love me, I very much appreciate it, but that’s not what we do. We do not
teach relationships to me, but rather how to learn, use, criticize, and apply AQAL. And it’s important to realize
that AQAL is simply one version of integral. There are all sorts of other integral philosophies, integral forums,
and arenas where somebody can play if they reject our approach, and I support the existence of those other forums
and always have.
Yes, you are welcome to go and “play” with some other guru or organization if you cannot take the
heat at I-I, or if you are simply too unevolved to understand the Great Work they imagine themselves to be doing.
“So long, Failure. You never even existed here.” Ask
Matthew Dallman: “I was the first composer featured on that site, but any reference to
me was removed after I resigned from IU.”
Of course, I already have a whole chapter in STG pointedly titled
“Spiritual Choices,”
debunking the false claims to excellence of Wilber’s book of the same name.
So, have the “8 boxes” of Wilber and his co-authors really “continued to be highly accurate in spotting and predicting
cultic behavior”? Not even remotely. From STG, as published well over a year ago:
Incredibly, most of the “enlightened” individuals and ashrams included herein would have been considered to
fall close to the “safest” of the categories in the typologies of Dick Anthony (1987), et al., via the
Spiritual Choices book. That is, nearly all of the spiritual teachers we have met thus far
(not including the leaders of the Hare Krishnas, Moonies, or Jim Jones) were:
-
Monistic rather than dualistic—i.e., working toward realizing a state of inherent
conscious oneness with all things, as opposed to placing God as inexorably separate from creation and
approachable only through a unique savior such as Jesus, with the failure to follow the appropriate
savior leading to eternal damnation (exceptions: none)
-
Multilevel—i.e., having a “distinct hierarchy of spiritual authority,” in gnosis
versus teachings versus interpretations (unilevel exceptions, which “confuse real and pseudo-transcendence
of mundane consciousness,” include Findhorn, Scientology, Rajneesh and TM [notwithstanding that the
Maharishi’s teachings themselves are rooted in the Vedas]), and
-
Non-charismatic—i.e., emphasizing techniques of spiritual transformation (e.g.,
meditation), rather than relying on a personal relationship between disciple and teacher as the means
of evolution/enlightenment of the former (exceptions: Ramakrishna, Meher Baba, Neem Karoli Baba,
Adi Da, Muktananda, Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati, Jetsunma, Cohen, and Sai Baba and Chinmoy to lesser degrees)
Trungpa,
Satchidananda and
Zen Buddhism
were all explicitly placed in Anthony’s “safest” category—of “multilevel, technical monism.” In his second-safest grouping (“multilevel, charismatic monism”) we find
Meher Baba,
Neem Karoli Baba,
Muktananda,
Chinmoy and
Adi Da.
If those are “safe” spiritual leaders and communities, though, one shudders to think what “dangerous” ones might
look like. One’s jaw drops further to find that, as late as 2003, Wilber has still been recommending
Spiritual Choices to others as a means of distinguishing “safe” groups from potentially “problematic” ones.
That such recommendations are coming years after the central thesis (as documented above) of the text has been
wholly discredited in practice, is astounding.
Fooled by the arguments of Anthony, et al., I myself had endorsed Spiritual Choices at one point in a
previous work. Obviously, however, my opinion of that book and of its authors’ ideas has matured significantly
since then. Indeed, by this point I very much regret that previous naïvete on my part, particularly when it is
coupled with ideas such as the following, from the same group of “experts”:
[Tom] Robbins and [Dick] Anthony’s own contribution [to In Gods We Trust (1982)] includes a superb
introduction—perhaps the best single chapter in the anthology; a complete and devastating critique
of the brainwashing model; and an insightful report on the Meher Baba community
(Wilber, 1983b).
The relevant meager, twelve-page, utterly simplistic chapter on brainwashing, however, is anything but a
“complete” critique, much less a “devastating” one. Whatever one may think of the brainwashing and mind-control
debate, how could a five-thousand word treatment of that complex subject possibly be “complete”? Entire books
have been written from both sides of the controversy without exhausting it; entire Library of Congress
Cataloguing in Publication designations exist for the subject! Even if the short paper in question were the
greatest ever written, it could not possibly be “complete”!
For myself, I have found the chapter in question to be utterly unimpressive. Indeed, it shows near-zero
understanding of the psychological factors influencing one’s “voluntary joining,” and later difficulty in
leaving, such environments. There is nothing whatsoever “devastating” about the text, whether one agrees or
disagrees with Anthony’s overall perspective....
For a revealing example of Anthony’s own wilber-esque attempts at critiquing other scholars’ ideas, see Zablocki
(2001).
If Wilber cannot even intelligently evaluate
Andrew Cohen’s
community, well after the publication of both the
Mother Of God and
Enlightenment Blues exposés, not to mention the
WHAT Enlightenment??! blog,
is it any surprise that he cannot (or will not) see his own cult-leader behaviors in their real light?
Further, it is well-known that destructive cults also form around
political and psychological leaders. In those cases, the “important” dichotomies of monistic vs. dualistic, and
of multilevel vs. unilevel, are completely absent. That is, Wilber and Anthony’s “matrix” reduces
to simply whether the group follows techniques of spiritual transformation (e.g., meditation),
or relies on a personal relationship between disciple and teacher! So, in any
non-spiritual context, their “landmark” contributions there reduce to merely
two boxes. Talk about binary, black-or-white thinking!
Even if the matrix worked in terms of reliably evaluating spiritual
communities (it doesn’t), it would be all-but-useless in any of the other contexts in which one needs
to evaluate whether or not a given group is a destructive cult. That is truly pathetic, and should
be a glaring indication that the criteria given by Wilber and Anthony for spotting
potentially destructive spiritual groups have little relevance to reality.
And talk about tautologies—Wilber using his own past theorizings to “prove” that his current
community is okay! As if those previous theorizings (by himself and the utterly misled “cult-apologist”
Dick Anthony) weren’t created from
within exactly the same psychological blinders which have produced his current community!
If “it doesn’t allow criticism” is a meaningless criterion for defining what a cult is,
then how about “it doesn’t allow persons to make
competent, thorough and valid criticisms of its leaders’ teachings or character, which the leaders cannot refute,
while still permitting the questioners to remain members in good standing of the community”?
More from Wilber:
After part 1 was up (and before part 2 was put up), one individual posted statements urging everybody to
contact some of the universities that I-I is in partnership with, telling them that they should re-consider
whether that is the kind of partnership they wanted.
I wasn’t the person explicitly advocating that course of action; but I do fully support the idea.
KW again:
But notice this. Ordinarily you would tell somebody that their capacity to love is wonderful, something to
be nurtured and increased. The more they love, the better. EXCEPT if they love me. If they feel any sort
of love for me and say so, then they are a cultic idiot. So apparently if anybody loves me, they are sick.
If, after becoming aware of Meyerhoff’s and my own work
(etc.) in exposing Wilber for the manipulative fool that he is, you still don’t get what kw is up to, well,
then yes, I cannot see any other conclusion than that there must be
powerful factors in your own psychology blinding you to that reality—and those are indeed
some of the same factors which get people into, and life-long stuck in, even the worst recognized cults.
And if, after having had it demonstrated to you that a person’s “philosophy” is filled with
“half-truths and lies,” and that even with those gross and inexcusable violations of truth it cannot manage
to be self-consistent, you still continue to accept that worldview as being valid ... well, in any other field
of knowledge you certainly would not be regarded as thinking clearly or competently.
Nevertheless, those of us who have been through cults
ourselves
don’t generally refer to other people, who in the absence of
proper debunking of the leaders may simply be as gullible as we once were, as being “cultic idiots.”
(In the cult-studies field, with
its emphasis on coercive persuasive, a.k.a. “brainwashing,” they would never refer to followers
in that way.) I have indeed used the phrase “integral idiots” to describe followers of Wilber who go out
intent on teaching (or censoring) me, for example, without having first done their research;
hell, I have even referred to the same people as “dumb FOKs” (Fans of Ken).
But that is very different from viewing anyone as being a “cultic idiot” simply for “loving” Wilber.
If you can love a raging narcissist, who by all believable reports will “love”
you back only so long as you are useful to him, more power to you. But even then, don’t get suckered into
his “theories,” because as soon as you go back to primary sources to verify their supporting claims,
it all falls apart,
and the dishonesties and/or professional incompetence of their author become obvious for anyone with eyes
to see.
By all means “love the sinner” if you can. But far too many of the individuals who have recently been fawningly
expressing their “love” for kw are, I think, also “loving the sin,” i.e., lapping up the bullshit and cultic
manipulation in which Wilber has been overtly indulging, and correspondingly being utterly unwilling
or unable to evaluate that critically, and see it for what it really is. Overall, that is indeed extremely
cultic behavior, both on the part of the leader and his followers.
As anyone familiar with Wilber’s work knows, the context in which such fawning “love” is expressed matters
immensely; kw “skillfully” omits that fact from his above “analysis.” The problem is not that his followers “love” him
and openly express that sentiment in spite of his glaring character flaws and the near-worthlessness of his
“theories.” Rather, the worrisome thing is how they feel the need to gushingly express how they were moved to
tears by his great and “compassionate” teaching methods in the very midst of being blatantly manipulated,
with that unsettling reaction being presented as proof of their own “second-tier,” “saved” status in the
unquestioning community. And yes, when “love” is expressed in that context it is indeed disturbingly cultic.
All of that is a far cry from Wilber’s simplistic, sadly manipulative and narcissistically paranoid framing of the issue as being
“if anybody loves me, they are sick.” But then, kw didn’t get to where he is today by paying attention
to nuances, did he? Indeed, his theories could not exist were he to competently and honestly
represent the details of their component disciplines and perspectives.