"Who has set this all up? What intelligence stands behind it? And what, knowing what we can know if we do realize our situation, conceive it accurately and clearly, what are we to do? what are we to choose?"
Processing what you say means getting to the core and the heart of your perceptual stance and your *belief*. With this statement you return to the essential assertion that we make it up. But at the same time you *skip* the core question I ask which again, to repeat it, suggests that all of this has been created for us and not by us. Your view is, I think, that all of this (the Kosmos let's say) simply came to be and who knows how? But the 'how' does not concern you and what you seem to do is turn away from that question (who, what, how?) and to suggest that there is no real sense to things, and no revealing story to be told. There is however story but, if I read you right, all stories are false. I.e. made up, human inventions.
Once the basic idea is placed out into the light its simplicity becomes plain.
Here you assert that 'necessity is the mother of invention'. It is the *need* to invent a transcendental order that provokes the mind-stuff of man to devise a Story. But this is simply another way of saying 'make up'.It's one in which the transcendental becomes a personal abstraction, indigenous to the species which conceives and requires it. It is a subjective emanation of intelligence, though not all intelligences may require it.
What I note is the declarative stance. The language you employ seems to indicate admiration or respect yet again when the core tenets are examined you would only be able to say that *it is all made up*. If so then some one will come along to point this out more directly or perhaps with militant emphasis. And when we (that is we human beings) encounter something that is *essentially false* it cannot be masked by proposing it is *useful* and utilitarian. It must be collapsed. Or the truth of the real situation (*It is all false*) is maintained by an élite while 'the masses' are allowed to believe those necessary fibs that allow them to be manipulated by Rulers.It is not something which exists outwardly to which we may ascend, but rather that which blends alchemically with the mind to transmute the rust and iron of reality with the conceptualized gold of a higher existence.
Again I am simply trying to notice and restate the *central operative tenets* in your assertions of truth. Coercive imagination. Metaphysical a=or transcendental descriptions as either (false)real of hyperreal. A mutable illusion. Fabrication of 'intensity' which have a locking-in function.It is this which imagination coerces into the foreground as real or hyperreal with the power to thrust life itself into a separate state of temporary illusion boosting the palpability of an after-life to become more intense.
I would have to say you are ever-so slightly a Modern!
I guess you are referring to or riffing off my assertion that Nature is a rule all unto itself. If there is a *logic* in it, and there certainly is, it is something unalike what we *impose* on it through our idealisms. Therefore, what is asserted as transcendent and eternal and that which opposes the *mutable* world of 'becoming' is again seen as illusory. And again what is illusory is false in essence. And what is false cannot be sustained as truth.At the end one defaults to nature's reality nevertheless; visions of transcendence survive only as long as one is alive being the mind's way of surmounting the perceived hideous indifference of nature through the imagination's vast arsenal of forcing it into a more friendly countenance.
This does contradict the entire proposal of metaphysics and also of the transcendent which reverses, let's say, the order of assertions. What is defined as transcendent and eternal is given precedence over the mutable and perishable.
But the 'science' you define is extremely novel, which I am sure you are aware of course.In spite of science and its stringent methods, humans have always been at war with reality in as many ways as possible.
But is it best to describe *it* as a war? That is, the war of the armies of the unreal battling against a real that you define as the view that you are presenting? Which as I say undermines all previous orders and renders them false and untrue?