Christianity

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henry quirk
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Re: The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

Post by henry quirk »

Harry Baird wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 5:36 am
henry quirk wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 4:36 am Not fond of my namesake, no.
Oh dear.

I wrote the play on a whim. It sort of wrote itself, and entertained me to write it. I decided to share it here in the hope that it entertained others too, but maybe all it's doing is irritating/alienating folk.
No, keep writing. I just don't care for Quirky. I'm not claimin' character assassination.

Don't stop till it's done.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Harry Baird wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 5:32 am I think he'd probably offer counsel. Something like:

"Develop your spiritual life, and your physical body, so as to build and maintain a connection with God. Pray, meditate, and fast, and stretch and strengthen yourself. Stop consuming alcohol and caffeine. Transmute your arrogance into humility. Develop better self-awareness and arrive at a place of repentance. I can help with all of this, but you need to exercise your own will and better discipline yourself."
I am not sure if you are aware but there is a very renowned channeler (one of those mediums who channels spirits) who has just made available an inexpensive Jesus's Plan for a New Day. It could be just the ticket for you. And as I say it is quite affordable -- only $9.99 a month and the first two weeks are free. How could anyone pass up such an affordable and practical offer?

Some of what is promised the pious subscriber:
Guaranteed elimination of alcohol and caffeine as well as meth, opiates, crack cocaine, pornography, gambling and other addictions within 6 weeks! A proven 'elevate your desires to a Higher Level' and tested plan that has helped millions.

An established and time-proven prayer & meditation routine guaranteed by the Lord to get results fast.

A Jesusonian Life-Calisthenics Middle Eastern Yoga outline which also comes with the Jesusonian Calisthenics Flash Card deck.

A Jesus-inspired arrogance and overweening pride trasmutation program with the 12-point Humility Lessons manual included!

Also included are the 7 taped lectures (channeled as you guessed) on developing Self-Awareness with the object of getting to a place of Total Repentance. Also known as Seven Steps to the Divine Kingdom Lectures with a special code (included in your subscription) you can download on Kindle or Apple podcasts.

You also get five free 15 minute Communion Sessions (through the medium) where Jesus of Nazareth will answer your questions, provide emotional and moral support to get you on the Right Road!
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Harry Baird wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 5:32 am Given that it's not a facetious idea, my sentiments are: although definitions - especially of extensive and internally contested systems of belief - are somewhat flexible, there is a point beyond which such a definition can be stretched at which it no longer refers to the same thing. A "Christianity" in which Jesus is not a saviour, not an authority, not an icon, not even heaven-sent, but rather is like a character in a Shakespearean play seems to me to be a case of a definition which has passed its breaking point and snapped.
Well! Where to begin? You have indicated -- I wondered if you were pulling my leg! -- that in your mind if Jesus were to talk to you it would be like a popular self-help guru. This is what you mean by 'salvation'? And this is what the head Authority of the Universe would have to say to you? And that is what Heaven had sent down to you?!?

Do you not recognize the irony in referring to a 'definition which has passed its breaking point and snapped'?
Jesus-as-Hamlet is a curious idea though, and if I were better studied in the character, I might have a better understanding of what you're getting at. Maybe there is some sort of correspondence between Hamlet's existential angst ("to be or not to be") and Christ's prayer in the Garden of Gethsemene?
The point I hoped to make is that if Jesus of Nazareth could speak now and in our day he would have to speak in an extremely different way. What I tried to refer to, pages back, was the idea presented by Harold Bloom that 'Shakespeare invented the human'. The myriad complexions of human personality. Now, today, there are voices and speakers who are products and outcomes of evolutions in the development of personality -- the expression of being.

It seems to me that if Jesus of Nazareth were to speak, that he would speak (this is just one example) as Richard Weaver speaks in Ideas Have Consequences. I mean, with that sort of depth and insight. I would agree that the philosophical and metaphysical discourse of Richard Weaver, if it were all throught-through and if assent were given to its meaning, that the one who read it would be influenced to 'institute' an entire shift in outlook. Isn't that what 'real ideas' and a real impetus to the soul involves? So, were Jesus to speak today I cannot see how it would not be necessary that he speak with depth. But where are the examples that indicate how he would speak?

Obviously, there is no Jesus of Nazareth who does appear, or even could appear. The idea is made ridiculous by imaging a speaking god.

A Jesusonian Disco Sweat!

I know this and I think all intuitively recognize that this is an impossibility. For if you made Jesus talk (as you sort of did) you imagined that he would say the most ridiculous and insipid things! But what you have done here is what, I assume, millions do. So they reduce the very idea of God, and indeed an appearance of God in the flesh of a man to something like a fortuitous meeting between man and God in the isles of a Walmart or in the self-help section of a national bookstore.

And you are going to talk in terms of 'breaking points'?

In any case . . .
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Re: The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

henry quirk wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 10:23 am Don't stop till it's done.
Don't Stop Till You Get Enough!
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Isles of Walmart or Aisles of Walmart. Haven’t made up my mind!
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Re: Christianity

Post by Dubious »

Belinda wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 10:23 am
Dubious wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 12:09 am
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Wed Jul 20, 2022 6:40 pm
But what or who is the real Jesus of Nazareth?
Certainly not anything like the "Christ" in Christianity.
The Jesus of history is detectable by scholars of several disciplines . The Jesus Seminar has covered this ground approximately as much as possible. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_Seminar.

Another approach to "the real Jesus of Nazareth" is to approach his life and work as told in The Gospels as if the life and work of Jesus is a paradigm case of the Good, the True, and the Beautiful. This approach is possible without including any paranormal events , and rests of the principle that sometimes some scientist, sage, seer, poet, or prophet will hit on how these these transcendental virtues are correctly translated into everyday life and everyday world.

NB sometimes the translator of transcendental virtues is an ordinary obscure sort of person who . maybe during one event only , demonstrates one of the otherwise undefinable transcendental virtues. For examples the German who sheltered Jews, Rosa Parks who refused to surrender her seat on public transport, Grace Darling who risked her life to help row the small boat through the storm, the soldier pictured carrying a wounded comrade through the hell of a battlefield trench, a medic who kept going in their work after days without proper rest, scientist who remains faithful to proper research even when the ruling elite are dangerous crooks . From all these examples and thousands more we can derive the ultimate principles which are 1. The Golden Rule and 2. Universalisation.
There isn't a single line in your post I disagree with. In fact it's an excellent summary of how "transcendental" in human terms reveals itself.

Paul, in a sense, in having established Christianity, becomes the opposite of Jesus who certainly would have agreed with almost none of it.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 1:34 pm I am not sure if you are aware but there is a very renowned channeler (one of those mediums who channels spirits) who has just made available an inexpensive Jesus's Plan for a New Day. It could be just the ticket for you. And as I say it is quite affordable -- only $9.99 a month and the first two weeks are free. How could anyone pass up such an affordable and practical offer?
Goodness me, what value! I'm in! Where do I sign up?!
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harry Baird »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 2:00 pm Well! Where to begin? You have indicated -- I wondered if you were pulling my leg! -- that in your mind if Jesus were to talk to you it would be like a popular self-help guru. This is what you mean by 'salvation'? And this is what the head Authority of the Universe would have to say to you? And that is what Heaven had sent down to you?!?

Do you not recognize the irony in referring to a 'definition which has passed its breaking point and snapped'?
Here's the thing, though, AJ: I don't identify as a Christian. I'm not claiming that my ideas of Christ and/or salvation are compatible with those of Christianity.

It's not clear whether you do and are - you don't seem to want to say - but if you do and are, then, yes, I do assert that you have broken the definition and are now talking about something other than Christianity.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 2:00 pm Obviously, there is no Jesus of Nazareth who does appear, or even could appear.
I mean, there we have it: you can't say things like that and then imagine you can identify as a Christian.

As insipid as you thought the advice I imagined Jesus might give to me directly was, I at least am open to such an appearance happening. And, by the way, I am not saying he would not have deeper, profounder things to say too - just that he would focus on what was most relevant to me personally at the time, since he was, presumably, appearing personally to me and for my benefit. I'm not sure, in any case, how the advice I imagined is any more insipid than what mainstream Christians believe is the means to salvation.

And as for you when it comes to the idea of salvation: as usual, you have offered no details. What is salvation according to Alexis Jacobi? Who on Earth knows? Why even bother asking?
Last edited by Harry Baird on Fri Jul 22, 2022 4:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

Post by Harry Baird »

The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

A Play of Three Acts of Three Scenes Each

<< Act two, scene three | Act three, scene two >>

Act three, scene one

Characters:

Bjorn aGus

Wotter, who'd rather be a beaver, so he could build up a dam, but is satisfied enough with being a W-type (water-loving) otter.

Ring o' Linda, the sound of a belle ringing.

Setting:

A house party. Bjorn aGus, Wotter, and Ring o' Linda sit in a circle, or, what would be a circle if it wasn't a triangle.


Bjorn aGus: So, how crazy is it that I just happened to run into you guys at this party? I mean, what are the chances of that? Phenomenally low! Of course, I'm not suggesting that our meeting totally defies the odds and that it therefore must have been planned... by... uh... somebody... uh, definitely not me... but... hey, has anybody tried the nori rolls?

Wotter: (Squinting sideways a little at Bjorn aGus, but otherwise betraying nothing.) The times are indeed unusual, my man. I think we all feel that.

Ring o' Linda: Hey, so, are we gonna get this game of truth or dare going or what?

Bjorn aGus: Yes. But only if I get to start. I did suggest the game in the first place, after all.

Ring o' Linda: Aha. We have a contender. By all means, Bjorn aGus, spin that bottle.

Bjorn aGus: Why, thank you for your courtesy, Ring o' Linda.

(Bjorn aGus spins the bottle in the middle of the triangle. It lands on Ring o' Linda.)

Ring o' Linda: Oh dear, what have I brought upon myself?

Bjorn aGus: (Muttering quietly, but loud enough for the audience to hear) Lord knows, but let's hope it's real.

Bjorn aGus: (At normal volume) Nevermind me, I'm just talking under my breath. I'm a funny old coot.

Bjorn aGus: Right then. Truth or dare. Dare to act out your forbidden love for Wotter, or tell us the truth of what Pastor Wiola is hiding.

Ring o' Linda: (Turning pale) Wha... what? What is this? Who's been blabbing? You must know that I can do neither. You have caught me in a bind. Both truth and dare are impossible.

Wotter: (Speaking slowly and cautiously) Ring o' Linda... maybe... maybe it's time that that which was hidden be brought out into the light.

Ring o' Linda: (Still ashen) Do you know what you're saying, Wotter? Are you sure you can handle the consequences?

Wotter: (Nodding his head) Yes. Yes, dear Ring o' Linda, I think I can. And so can you.

Ring o' Linda: I hope you're very, very sure of this, Wotter.

Wotter: I am. The time has come.

Ring o' Linda: Be it upon your head, then.

Wotter: If it must, then so be it.

Ring o' Linda: OK. (Speaking slowly, and choosing her words carefully) Bjorn aGus, you need to know something about Wiola. She's... she's not your ordinary human being. She's... she's been places.

Bjorn aGus: You mean, like, Senegal?

Ring o' Linda: Quit fooling around. You know what I mean.

Bjorn aGus: (Suitably chastened) Mea culpa. So, what you're saying is that she's been to The Other Side and back again?

Ring o' Linda: That's only the start of it.

Bjorn aGus: It didn't work out so well?

Ring o' Linda: Bingo. She was granted a view of the One Truth - and it wasn't at all pretty.

Bjorn aGus: What do you mean?

Ring o' Linda: Exactly what I said. She's too horrified to say too much to the rest of us. It's all she can do to function at all, knowing what she knows.

Bjorn aGus: So she hides it, denying its very existence.

Ring o' Linda: Quite. But she has given us enough hints: if it were to become even a little more known in this world, those who know it would be unsafe. So, she's protecting us.

Bjorn aGus: You believe that?

Ring o' Linda: I have no reason to disbelieve it. She is my friend.

Bjorn aGus: What kind of friend hides the truth from you?

Ring o' Linda: A brave, protective friend, in this case.

Bjorn aGus: Hmm.

(He pauses, then spins the bottle idly, or perhaps frustratedly.)

<< Act two, scene three | Act three, scene two >>
Last edited by Harry Baird on Fri Jul 22, 2022 6:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

Post by Harry Baird »

henry quirk wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 10:23 am No, keep writing. I just don't care for Quirky. I'm not claimin' character assassination.

Don't stop till it's done.
Cheers, Henry. (By the way, the writing was done a long time ago. I'm just spreading the sharing out over time).
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Re: The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

Post by henry quirk »

Harry Baird wrote: Fri Jul 22, 2022 3:34 am
henry quirk wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 10:23 am No, keep writing. I just don't care for Quirky. I'm not claimin' character assassination.

Don't stop till it's done.
Cheers, Henry. (By the way, the writing was done a long time ago. I'm just spreading the sharing out over time).
Good deal. I wanna see the rest, so speed it up, bud... 👍
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Re: The Church of No One Truth (NOT): A Cautionary Tale

Post by Harry Baird »

henry quirk wrote: Fri Jul 22, 2022 3:42 am Good deal. I wanna see the rest, so speed it up, bud... 👍
Orrighty, just not *too* fast.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Harry Baird wrote: Fri Jul 22, 2022 3:22 amHere's the thing, though, AJ: I don't identify as a Christian. I'm not claiming that my ideas of Christ and/or salvation are compatible with those of Christianity.

It's not clear whether you do and are - you don't seem to want to say - but if you do and are, then, yes, I do assert that you have broken the definition and are now talking about something other than Christianity.
Since I do not accept the assertion that *Christianity* is one thing only, and also that modernity and myriad perspectives have entered into the picture, such that any definition of Christianity becomes far less possible, I operate in and I exist in a liminal territory; and because I am aware of this territory, and aware that zillions of people are in it, I choose to reveal and talk about this.

You may not claim any particular thing about your *beliefs*, and you may not recognize your own cultural connection with Christianity and also 'Christian culture', and yet you very clearly are a participant and an actor in the sense I have described as 'post-Christian. But you take your place among millions of others in a post-Christian relationship to the former structures. Those former structures are not frequently seen entirely, and I also get the impression that you do not see them fully. But I am quite aware of what comprises the former structures (because I have been studying these directly for some years now).

The area I work in is within the contrast between one tightly woven metaphysical picture and the modern viewpoint and standpoint which cannot 'see' nor 'believe in' the older picture. I find it ironic and amusing that you challenge me to explain if I am or if I am not a believer! It is not possible, today, to believe. Or let me put this another way. Belief becomes a set of absurd declarations and a set of choices one makes as-against *reality*. It would be similar to discovering a need to believe in leprechauns, and then setting one's will to believe what one, in fact, cannot believe in. The positions or perspectives that I try to talk about keep going over your head. Why? Well there is an answer. And the answer is that you too live in the liminal zone between the former perceptual system (it can be reduced to The Great Chain of Being) and what seems to be your more normal, and to a degree stronger, actual belief. A conventional realism within strongly liberal categories.

You seem to *entertain* notions of the possibility of the appearance of Jesus as if such are real or could be real. But all of this occurs in an 'imaginary space' and into this space, as if onto a canvas, you seem to project these images and imaginings. And you are not alone in this! My assertion is that this is indeed the *space* where millions and millions live. It is a shadow-realm that is in its essence uncertain and in fact undefined. It is a dreamscape.

Is this not relevant to see and understand?

Since I have regularly exclaimed that I do not have any idea at all what 'salvation' really refers to, and this means that those who talk about it, who constantly refer to it, refer to a chimerical idea that, when examined, falls to pieces, I could not be said to claim that whater ideas I may have formed are 'compatible' to conventional Christianity. I simply say that the entire notion of salvation has become meaningless. Take you as an example! If it were meaningful you'd have no choice but to act in response to what it means. The realization of 'meaning' and 'meaningfulness' would act as a prod and an inspiration.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 2:00 pm Obviously, there is no Jesus of Nazareth who does appear, or even could appear.
HB: I mean, there we have it: you can't say things like that and then imagine you can identify as a Christian.
But you misunderstand. Part of the reason is that though you may have read many things I have written it seems that certain elements have gone over your head. I will try to clarify. The general shift has been from a "I believe in a God out there who I conceive as being interested in this world and in me" (the general theological picture we are all familiar with) to a different way of entertaining the general idea: the therapeutic model. The references would be Freud and Jung. But more specially Jung. What is God? Where is God? How does 'God' manifest to the individual? And how, when dealing with that Picture, is God actually explained? Jung explored these 'manifestations'. And he explored them, at least to all appearances, as a Modern.

So an manifestation of a god-image -- let's say in a dream or in an epiphany or even as an inkling or as a powerful sentiment -- would necessarily be seen as a manifestation within the psyche and also psychologically which needed, obviously, to be heeded and responded to. But so too a manifestation os something dark, dangerous and devilish would within this model similarly require a therapeutic response. The entire focus, thus, shifted to an inner plane. And the notion of 'shadow' and 'projection/ come to the fore. (Among so many different responses and views that are brought to the fore -- comprising a therapeutic system which is, in a sense, a theological system, in any case a response, and a mode of interaction).

Since you have never, and not till now, had any good reason to understand any part of this shift (beginning in the mid 19th century and carrying forward in the fin-de-siècle and progressing with all manner of different ramifications into our immediate present), you could only interpret my statement as you have! "There we have it: you can't say things like that and then imagine you can identify as a Christian". This is a block for you because you do not fully see the situation we are now in.

Nor did you respond to a relevant critique (poignant one of course!) that your imagined Jesus becomes for you a figure corresponding to Richard Simmons! You have committed a veritable blasphemy and in all senses revealed that God is a meaningless idea. But what? You are going to turn this around so that I am seen as blameworthy here? Think about it . . .

What I proposed about a possible Jesus who might speak you did not or cannot register. I say he'd have to speak with the depth of a Hamlet. An awareness of a crisis situation. How would that Jesus speak? What would be the terms of his speech? The terms of his discourse? The content of his admonitions? When I said that I propose that he'd have to speak as Richard Weaver speaks -- examining with intense analytical focus on the causes for deviation and the reasons why *the world* has fallen into decadence -- this flew over your head! (Because you do not read and, also, you are not really concerned for nor involved in these issues, problems and questions. In this sense then you exemplify a modern man sustained by the State. You have a quasi-existence within a nebulous territory. And here, as often, the you is you-plural and also a 'we').
As insipid as you thought the advice I imagined Jesus might give to me directly was, I at least am open to such an appearance happening. And, by the way, I am not saying he would not have deeper, profounder things to say too - just that he would focus on what was most relevant to me personally at the time, since he was, presumably, appearing personally to me and for my benefit. I'm not sure, in any case, how the advice I imagined is any more insipid than what mainstream Christians believe is the means to salvation.
This is an example of meaningless and rather vain speculation. If there were a meaningful and real entity named Jesus of Nazareth you would live in relation to the meaning of a real existence. But you do not! And along with you are many many millions. So why bother with the vain speculation that you are "open to" such an epiphany when, it is more truthful to say, you are not at all open to it! What is this zone of half-belief then that you(plural) seem to live in and which largely defines our world, our perceptual world?

If the God-being that created this world, the entire Universe, and the kosmic manifestation did not have anything more meaningful to say to you, nor you to him, and if your largest concern were essentially your flab and your minor addictions, then you have a supremely reduced concept of what God is. It is meaningless. It is simply an empty vessel. And as I say that God you might well encounter in the aisles of the Australian counterpart to America's Walmart.

Did you get any of this?
And as for you when it comes to the idea of salvation: as usual, you have offered no details. What is salvation according to Alexis Jacobi? Who on Earth knows? Why even bother asking?
Here is a perfect example that illustrates what we'd touched on in previous pages. Because you cannot understand nuance and because what I am talking about will require of you energy and commitment -- which you do not care to have! -- you can only insist that I make my message intelligible to the 8 years old who is your Everyman reference-point. It does not work this way.

I have been doing little else but writing about the problem that we all face, and certainly in nuanced terms about any *notions of salvation*, but what you seek are statements reduced to bullet points! Again I am speaking to you but really I am speaking to a 'condition' of many many people who exist in a similar lazy, weak, worn out and 'flabby' state. They are 'consumers' who demand their nourishment-bits all chewed up for them in advance. And if it gets at all hard and demanding they simply jump ship.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Dubious wrote:
There isn't a single line in your post I disagree with. In fact it's an excellent summary of how "transcendental" in human terms reveals itself.
When transcendental reveals itself in human terms, that is what in another post I called epiphany.
I understand most Christian sects insist JC is the one and only unique epiphany.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Belinda wrote: Thu Jul 21, 2022 10:23 amNB: sometimes the translator of transcendental virtues is an ordinary obscure sort of person who, maybe during one event only, demonstrates one of the otherwise undefinable transcendental virtues. For examples the German who sheltered Jews, Rosa Parks who refused to surrender her seat on public transport, Grace Darling who risked her life to help row the small boat through the storm, the soldier pictured carrying a wounded comrade through the hell of a battlefield trench, a medic who kept going in their work after days without proper rest, scientist who remains faithful to proper research even when the ruling elite are dangerous crooks . From all these examples and thousands more we can derive the ultimate principles which are 1. The Golden Rule and 2. Universalisation.
Here I think we need to call attention to what seems to be a fact: neither Dubious nor you 'believe in' transcendentals except insofar as (and here referring to the examples provided) they pertain to noble self-sacrifice or the endeavor of gaining some horizontal social (political) goal.

True, you said "sometimes the translator of transcendental virtues is an ordinary obscure sort of person" who demonstrates "one of the otherwise undefinable transcendental virtues", yet there is nothing undefinable in the examples you presented. Quite the opposite since each one is entirely definable.

A German who sheltered Jews could be said to be acting in accord with a transcendental notion but seen in another way I do not see why a transcendental factor need be supposed. Is simple concern for another person "transcendental"?

While I can easily understand that Rosa Parks (and many other people) determined that as payers they had as much right to a front seat as to a back seat, I am not so sure a 'transcendental' question is involved here. It is a question it would seem of rather non-transcendental power-relations. All the other examples are of a similar sort.

The actual issue with transcendentals (genuine transcendentals) is that they often define distinctions and differences and the reasons why these should be maintained.

Richard Weaver deals on this issue in the chapter Distinction and Hierarchy:
It has been said countless times in this country that democracy cannot exist without education. The truth concealed in this observation is that only education can be depended on to bring men to see the hierarchy of values. That is another way of saying what has also been affirmed before, that democracy cannot exist without aristocracy. This aristocracy is a leadership which, if it is to endure, must be constantly recruited from democracy; hence it is equally true that aristocracy cannot exist without democracy. But what we have failed to provide against is the corruption of the system of recruitment by equalitarian dogma and the allurements of materialism. There is no difficulty in securing enough agreement for action on the point that education should serve the needs of the people. But all hinges on the interpretation of needs; if the primary need of man is to perfect his spiritual being and prepare for immortality, then education of the mind and the passions will take precedence over all else. The growth of materialism, however, has made this a consideration remote and even incomprehensible to the majority. Those who maintain that education should prepare one for living successfully in this world have won a practically complete victory. Now if it were possible to arrive at a sufficiently philosophical conception of success, there would still remain room for idealistic goals, and attempts have been made to do something like it by defining in philosophical language what constitutes a free man. Yet the prevailing conception is that education must be such as will enable one to acquire enough wealth to live on the plane of the bourgeoisie. That kind of education does not develop the aristocratic virtues. It neither encourages reflection nor inspires a reverence for the good.
I am going to comment on one element mentioned: Rosa Parks and aspects of the civil rights movement:

It seems to me that the separationist ideology of someone like Louis Farrakhan expresses more fully, perhaps more concretely, a 'transcendental' idea and motive. To be able to say "We are different" and "We desire to live differently" and we desire to accentuate and conserve our difference, expresses a transcending purpose which (could be seen as) trumping the merely material-social objective of achieving horizontal social equality.

It takes a more developed and perhaps a stronger declaration of core values (requiring a supporting transcendental concept) to take a stand against what Farrakhan has described as a social engineering project that would cause his people to lose their distinction and be forced, as an extension of the initial robbery of destiny, to be forcibly incorporated into the *white world*.

Is blending everyone together into a non-distinctive mass the answer? So that is why when they say "Diversity is a strength" or even "Diversity is a good" that there is a rather obvious lie quite easy to expose. What is diverse is that which shows distinction. And if that is a good then distinction is a value that must be maintained. But projects of diversification are really projects of destroying diversity. I need hardly point out that all across the globe there is much evidence and clamoring for the reestablishment of modes of maintaining distinctions (divisions, hierarchies, separations) in the face of (what are described as) elite integration projects (such as 'globalization' is described as being). What real purposes do these serve? Often the answer comes back: mass-commercial objectives. Not necessarily protection of people's 'genuine interests' (when they are asked and they are rarely asked!)

One actual fact about the projects of equalitarianism is that they break apart distinctions and differences and force all people, and all classes, into sameness. My metaphor, albeit tiresome I am sure, is to refer to a Walmart Culture in which no distinctions exist. And what seems to occur is not an opening up into genuine fraternity but rather something opposite of that: a sense of alienation within circumstances of forced proximity.

So it is clear to me that if there is truly a radical conservatism -- and I believe it is a real thing -- it will tend to turn against so many of the liberal assumptions we all operate with and which seem to us 'normal' 'necessary' and 'good'. Therefore this requires a transvaluation of many asserted values. Or in any case the suggestion that these asserted values can be questioned.
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