Transrational Peaces
Transrational peaces do not found themselves in ultimate reason, but accept the impossibility of final statements about truth: the claim to truth is unconditional as it is always embedded in relations and, hence, contextual. Existence is perceived as an interrelated network of events, in which no part or element is fundamental.
Philosophical and scientific approaches based on transrationality deal with the lack of founding from a so-called bootstrap approach, i.e. accepting a multiplicity of overlapping yet not completely coinciding viewpoints, a shifting of perspectives between overlaying lenses that never completely merge and so their descriptions of reality differ. The spiritual might as well be expressed in terms of a systemic approach, of deep-ecology, as the transpersonal or yet again the holistic.
In the realm of peace and conflict studies, transrational inquiries are not so much guided by questions of ‘why?’ (diagnoses, based on first principles and following a linear model of cause-effect), but by questions of ‘how?’ (observations of patterns and processes as vectors of transformation).
Thematic Shifts:
Transrational peaces take the four thematic emphases of the peace families and combine the knowledge and relevance of each of them. Transrationality recognizes the need for harmony, security, justice and truth for the existence of peace, yet contrary to focusing on one of these themes transrational peaces seek the dynamic equilibrium of these four topics.
Trans-Rational Peace Quadrants:
A | B |
---|---|
Interior Energetic and Postmodern | Exterior Moral and Modern |
Intentional: Peace out of Harmony | Behavioral: Peace out of Security |
Cultural: Peace out of Truth | Social: Peace out of Justice |
Wilber’s original four-quadrant matrix postulates that every complete act of human communication and relation contains an interior just like an exterior, an individual (singular) just like a collective (plural) component. Based on this, Wilber constructs his matrix with four quadrants, each of which stands for one aspect of being: intentional, behavioral, cultural and social. To this, Dietrich adds the respective terms found in the observation of the variations of the Many Peaces. It is easy to recognize where the attention of Peace Research within the corresponding approaches lies:
- Modernity perceives peace as a question of the exterior-plural quadrant and focuses on the visible aspects of behavior within the social, which it investigates and works on from family units to world-encompassing systems. This usually leads it to the moral or also Idealist demands for a peace out of justice. Such Peace Research is geared towards questions that can be grasped empirically.
- The quadrant relating to the inner-plural aspects, which usually are called culture, points to issues such as values, worldviews and their truth claims are much harder to grasp than positivist indicators of conflict described in quantitative fashion. Collective attitudes and feelings or even memories are subject to certain imponderability. This poses a challenge to the perceiving subject, which requires it to define itself and its own perspective and to argue the own interpretation. Postmodernphilosophy and Peace Research has preferentially dealt with this field.
- As regards the singular aspect, every individual is embedded in the social stratification of its Mitwelt. As far as this relation occurs on the outside it again arouses the interest of modern science. The individual is of interest as material building block for a materially larger entity, society, and should in this sense function as predictably as possible. If it acts accordingly, it is perceived as normal, sane and secure. The relation between the individual and society here primarily turns into a question of security. If the individual acts against the norm then this is perceived as a risk to the security of the community and is usually punished. In the reciprocal case, the community provides the physical and social security for that individual conforming to the norms.
- The intentional quadrant strips science of its auxiliary construction: While behaviorists are able to study the behavior resulting from intentions, neurologists can measure and localize brainwaves, identify active neurons and so forth, they will not be able to prove the singular thought, the sensation, the feeling itself from the interior. It is this a sphere that can only be experienced. It is a fascinating sphere, because it is known to every human being. The by far largest part of experiencing the world occurs in this not communicated and not provable sphere. Whatever surfaces on the exterior, is an expression of this inner energy, of thought or feeling, never the thought or feeling itself. This the peace that everybody can only experience for him/herself, the harmony that is only true, just or secure if it is also really felt. It is this the sphere where all great moral, social and cultural designs, insights and agreements begin and end. Here is the pivotal point for the transrational experiences of peace.
A | B | C | D |
---|---|---|---|
Energetic Peaces | Moral Peaces | Modern Peaces | Postmodern Peaces |