Today’s Solutions: May 03, 2024

Jed McKenna | May 2007 issue
Cogito ergo sum:
I think, therefore I am.
–René Descartes
That is all ye know on Earth;
And all ye need to know.
–John Keats
Whaddaya know?
Seriously. With absolute certainty, what do you know?
Put aside all opinions, beliefs and theories for a moment and address this one question: What do you know for sure? Or, as Thoreau put it:
“Let us settle ourselves, and work and wedge our feet downward through the mud and slush of opinion, and prejudice, and tradition, and delusion, and appearance, that alluvion which covers the globe … through church and state, through poetry and philosophy and religion, till we come to a hard bottom and rocks in place, which we can call reality, and say, ‘This is, and no mistake’; and then begin…”
In other words, let’s cut the crap and figure out what’s real. The cogito—introduced by philosopher René Descartes to define existence as the result of rational awareness—does exactly that, and it’s very simple. The question is: What do you know?
The answer is: I Am.
All other so-called facts are really non-facts and belong in the category of consensual reality and relative truth, i.e. unreal reality and untrue truth.
Cogito ergo sum
Cogito ergo sum is the equation that proves the fact. But before we go on, let’s ask what else we know. What else can be said for certain?
Nothing. We don’t know anything else. And that’s the real point of the cogito. The importance of I Am isn’t that it’s a fact, but that it’s the only fact.
I Am is the only thing anyone has ever known or will ever know. Everything else, all religion and philosophy and science, is nothing more than dream interpretation. There is no other fact than I Am. The cogito is the seed of the thought that destroys the universe. Beyond the cogito, nothing is known. Beyond the cogito, nothing can be known. Except I Am, no one knows anything. No man or god can claim to know more. No God or array of gods can exist or be imagined that know more than this one thing: I Am.
We can’t avoid letting this topic drift briefly into the Judeo-Christian realm. When Moses asked God His name, God answered, “I am that I am.” The name God gives for Himself is I Am.
Note that I Am can’t be conjugated. It allows for no variation. God doesn’t say, “My name is I Am, but you can call me You Are, or He Is.” The cogito, the I Am equation, does not extend beyond one’s own subjective knowing. I can say I Am and know it as truth, but I can’t say you are, he is, she is, we are, they are or it is. I know I exist and nothing else. Understood this way, I Am, a.k.a. God, truly is the alpha and the omega; the entirety of being, of knowledge, of the known universe, of you.
The line is drawn
The cogito is the line between fantasy and reality. On one side of the cogito is a universe of beliefs and ideas and theories. To cross the line is to leave all that behind. No theory, concept, belief, opinion or delbate can have any basis in reality once the ramifications of the cogito have fully saturated the mind. No dialogue can take place across that line because nothing that makes sense on one side makes sense on the other.
We all think we know what the cogito means; this is an invitation to challenge that assumption. If professors of philosophy truly understood it, they wouldn’t be professors of philosophy. Influential Anglo-American philosopher Alfred North Whitehead said that all philosophy is a series of footnotes to Plato, but all philosophy, Plato included, is rendered obsolete and irrelevant by Descartes. Nothing but the subjective I Am is true, so what’s the point of prattling on?
The cogito isn’t a mere thought or idea, it is an ego-eating virus that, properly incubated and nurtured, will eventually devour all illusion. Once we know the cogito, we can begin systematically unknowing everything we think we know, and unravelling the self we think we are.
Life is but a dream
There is no such thing as objective reality. The number two cannot be proven. Nothing can be shown to exist. Time and space, love and hate, good and evil, cause and effect, are all just ideas. Anyone who says he knows anything is really saying he doesn’t know the only thing. The greatest religious and philosophical thoughts and ideas in the history of man contain no more truth than the bleating of sheep. The greatest books are no more authoritative than the greatest luncheon meats.
No one knows anything.
Disprove it for yourself
Anyone wishing to deny these statements about the meaning of the cogito need merely prove that something, anything, is true. By all means, give it a try, dash your head upon it, but it can’t be done.
Cogito ergo sum, however, isn’t the endpoint of inquiry, it’s the starting point; it’s a tool that helps us see, without intermediaries, exactly what is true and what isn’t.
Adapted with permission from an article by Jed McKenna. McKenna is the author of Spiritual Enlightenment: The Damnedest Thing, Spiritually Incorrect Enlightenment and the upcoming Spiritual Reality, a trilogy from Wisefool Press, www.wisefoolpress.com. Little information is known about McKenna, who has been called a one-man spiritual revolution, fueling speculation that he is the nom de plume of another writer.
 

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