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Journal ArticleDOI

The Human Condition.

Andrew J. McLean
- 29 Jun 2017 - 
- Vol. 41, Iss: 6, pp 771-771
TLDR
In some religious traditions, the myth of the ‘Fall from the Garden of Eden’ symbolizes the loss of the primordial state through the veiling of higher consciousness.
Abstract
Human beings are described by many spiritual traditions as ‘blind’ or ‘asleep’ or ‘in a dream.’ These terms refers to the limited attenuated state of consciousness of most human beings caught up in patterns of conditioned thought, feeling and perception, which prevent the development of our latent, higher spiritual possibilities. In the words of Idries Shah: “Man, like a sleepwalker who suddenly ‘comes to’ on some lonely road has in general no correct idea as to his origins or his destiny.” In some religious traditions, such as Christianity and Islam, the myth of the ‘Fall from the Garden of Eden’ symbolizes the loss of the primordial state through the veiling of higher consciousness. Other traditions use similar metaphors to describe the spiritual condition of humanity:

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

“Miriam’s Place”: South African jazz, conviviality and exile

Abstract: Michael Titlestad has suggested that jazz serves “to mediate, manage and contest” what he terms a “staggered, but also cruel and unusual South African modernity.” His volume Making the Changes (2004) uses the “pedestrian” as a chronotope to describe the “local peripatetic appropriations of global symbolic possibilities” that jazz affords there. This paper proposes a different “chronotope”: that of the train. This substitution facilitates the reading of jazz history in South Africa in tandem with histories of labour migration and other forms of displacement – including trajectories of exile that intersect my account elsewhere of the “global itinerary” of South African cultural formations under apartheid. The deterritorialisation of South African works of expressive culture and social actors associated with anti-apartheid resistance, I have argued, affords the cultural historian strong historiographic purchase over conjunctures outside of South Africa. The present discussion explores this claim in r...
Book ChapterDOI

Reflections on the Pactum in the Public and Private Spheres

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the movement toward the conceptualisation of good faith as an organizing principle and implied term in the Common law tradition is due to the need to counterbalance our inhuman condition as made manifest by the humanitarian facade of the modern constitutional project.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visas, Jokes, and Contraband: Citizenship and Sovereignty at the Mexico–U.S. Border

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the checkpoint jokes of drugtraffickers as represented in several narcocorridos (popular ballads about drug-trafficking) and examine the consular interview for the U.S. Border Crossing Card.