The Grand Synthesis
Dr. Judith has her finger on the pulse of the global zeitgeist. In this article, she talks about the chaotic clash between the static masculine thesis and the dynamic feminine antithesis, which she predicts will result in an unprecedented synthesis of healing and planetary growth.
Adapted from
the book, Waking the Global Heart: Humanity’s Rite of Passage from the
Love of Power to the Power of Love, Elite Books, June, 2006. The book can be ordered
at: www.wakingtheglobalheart.com
Thesis, antithesis, synthesis. It’s an old
story, espoused by philosophers since the beginning of reflective thinking.
From Socrates to Jesus, Goethe, and Hegel, from Karl Marx to the integral world
of Ken Wilber, the song of synthesis has been sung again and again. This
dialectic is one of the basic rhythms of cultural evolution.
The pattern is clear: we begin with a basic thesis; then split off from it to
make something different; then reintegrate with the former thesis again at a higher,
more complex level. From the splitting of chromosomes in cell division to the
bifurcation of social systems and political movements, evolution proceeds by
differentiation and reunification, novelty and confirmation. Each synthesis
brings us back to wholeness, to integration, and to the heart.
The mythic overlay of our collective story reflects this dance, cycling through
paradigms whose values arise from the Divine Feminine and Divine Masculine, in
both their static and dynamic aspects. What follows is a brief recapping of
this story, looking at the synthesis that will become the ground for the next
era of civilization, and era whose values shift from the love of power to the
power of love.
We began with a basic thesis, as infants in the primal garden of the Great
Mother, living in fused symbiosis with Nature. Her field was all there was. Her
rules were absolute; there was no transcending them.
As we matured, we gained small controls over our survival. We could act upon
the natural world: planting seeds, irrigating, traveling, building communities.
This was our teeming toddlerhood where we crawled across the land, rocked in
the cradle of the earliest civilizations. We continued to grow, expanding our
numbers and organizing in ever larger communities.
Land and water became treasured commodities; rights to these resources became
subjects of conflict, which over time, escalated into warfare of increasing
scope and sophistication.
We walled ourselves off from Nature, ostensibly in the name of defense, but
this began our differentiation and separation from the primal ground. Defense
against Mother Nature was coopted by defense against human nature. A village or
city had no choice but to arm themselves or be taken over by the invading
enemy–each case leading to a militarism of society.
Still children, with little means to organize tens of thousands of people, this
fell to the “big man” at the top, who rules through hierarchy and control,
building empires on the blood of soldiers and the sweat of slaves.
We became ever more distant from our primal ground, instead aspiring to
invisible forces from above, lifting ourselves upward toward the heavens. The
primal mother was replaced by a distant father. We moved from feminine values
to masculine values; from procreation to domination, from the Mother-son motif
to that of Father-daughter. We learned to write, calculate, build, mechanize,
print, communicate, relay images, and compute information, until we built the
means for a complex industrial society with a planetary communication network–a
global brain.
Instead of finding our authority from below, we sought it from above. Instead
of organic law, we followed written law. We developed democracy, personal
rights, individualism and personal autonomy. Through science and industry, we
transformed the world and ourselves. We gave birth to the ego. We even learned,
as deconstructionists, to step back and critically evaluate our contemporary
cultural milieu.
But in this process, we lost our ground, our health, and, many would say, our
souls. We still lived as children under parental dictates. By differentiating,
we were caught in an either-or paradigm, between the basic thesis and its
antithesis, caught between Nature and civilization, instincts and
socialization. The antithesis was necessary to develop our freedom and build a
knowledge base necessary to understand the Earth as a whole–but we went so far
into individualism that we began to sacrifice the whole, so far into
reductionism that we became fragmented. We lost our purpose and our collective
moral compass.
We adopted masculine values so completely that the feminine was forgotten.
Fight and flight took precedence over tend and befriend. Conquest and
achievement became more important than nurturing and care. Separation and
detachment held higher value than compassion and connection.
Now, as masculine and feminine forces approach a mutual maturity, we are ready
again for a grand synthesis. The archetypal Mother and Father have played their
roles in our development. We who are alive today are their children, which
means that, quite simply: We are the synthesis. We are now ready to enter
relationships as adult to adult rather than parent to child, maturing to the
point where we take back the reins, and steer the course of evolution in a new
direction. As Barbara Marx Hubbard has said, we are moving from “procreation to
co-creation,” from the primary emphasis on the parent-child relationship, to
one of mutual cooperation in the service of co-creating our future.
If the dance of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis has happened repeatedly,
what’s different now? At our current level of complexity, it is not only a
synthesis of dualities that is occurring, but a convergence of plurality.
Today’s synthesis is not the creation of a third thing, but the process of
throwing ourselves headlong into integration itself. Yes, there are many
dualities to unite: the politics of left and right, the values of masculine and
feminine, the balance between progress and sustainability, civilization and
Nature. We must turn us and them into I and thou, and ultimately we. We must
integrate mind and body, Heaven and Earth, inner and outer.
But the grandest synthesis in our world today is to to find a common purpose
for a plurality of beings. This requires that we each retain our diverse
natures, yet realize a collective identity as members of a global civilization.
This grand synthesis establishes unity in diversity.
Our growth and success as a species has pushed us up against the writing on the
walls. For the first time in our history, the entire human population is
confronted with a common predicament whose solution requires global
cooperation. Just as single-celled organisms once banded together to make
complex creatures; just as our ancestors banded together to create the
irrigation projects in the Tigris- Euphrates valley; just as there were
cooperative efforts to rebuild Europe after WW II; the current crises will call
forth global cooperation like never before. It is only through cooperation that
we will solve our collective crises, create a culture of peace, and begin the
era of the heart.
We are hitting the boundaries of a planet of finite resources and infinite
possibilities. Boundaries are the means by which we define something, and it is
perhaps this very limitation that can give humanity a new definition as an
evolving, global system. Our anxiety may be no less than the pressure of
planetary convergence breaking down our isolated selves in the global cauldron
that’s cooking our collective soup for the next banquet of the gods.








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