Do we actually want to know? - Choice
December 9 2017
Humans cannot help their curiosity. It drives them to absurd lengths to better understand things not known to them. As we get closer and closer to understanding, we become so anxious we work even harder. Once we finally satisfy this urgency to know, our attention begins to wane.
The mystery of religion haunts people constantly. To know the divine is to know how the universe works. So many things bother us on a daily basis and the questions to why and how we do what we do seems the most prominent and long lasting. As we talked in class and in Landscapes of the Sacred, God remains hidden behind a mask. The mask and the Holy live in contention, one cannot exist without the other. This drives us to go to church, to pray and try to find answers to our burning questions. Picasso dedicated many of his works to the mask of the Holy. He believed painting in certain ways would help reveal the power behind the mask.
Once the chase ends, a dog becomes bored. A ball is only a ball. The fun came with chasing it. Obtaining it stops the game; thereby, stopping the fun. Hypothetically, if we knew how to separate the Holy from the mask, would we lose interest or become more enthralled? I believe it would go both ways. Some would be disappointed or underwhelmed. They may be excited at first, but they would quickly lose interest. Others would put more dedication into their religion as they ever did before. This revelation of the Holy would only strengthen them.
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