John D. Brey
Well-Known Member
Philo's implication that masculinity is essentially invisible (even meontological), ergo "spirit," lends itself to unifying anthropology, theology, philosophy, and religion, in a fundamental and powerful manner. Unfortunately, the truth of an invisible "masculinity" (invisibility being its most crucial or pure element) makes using this masculinity to explain "masculinity" implicitly derogatory as in mansplaining "masculinity" since the explanation can't help but employ "visible" props as the primary man-ifestation of an otherwise meontological logic of masculinity.
The "mansplaining" nature of such and endeavor is exponentially true if and when "spirit" and "invisibility," also imply "singularity" (contra "materiality" and the multifarious elements needed to be material), since then, the masculine-spirit attempting to explain "masculinity" must by practice and by nature of the endeavor be condescending to whomever the explanation is being given since if masculinity is singular and invisible, the person describing it is by describing it being condescending to whomever the explanation is being given since if they don't already know masculinity is invisible and singular (if they did they wouldn't require or be subject to mansplaining) then they're not part and parcel of the realm of the "masculine" and are then merely visible avatars of the materiality, and visibility, of the feminine. Any explanation of "masculinity" to them is "mansplaining" and thus condescending (but not necessarily pointless). It's this counterintuitive truism that explains why the tremendous power of employing "invisible" masculinity as a logical tool to the solve the problems of anthropology, theology, philosophy, and religion, hasn't fully taken place despite the boon to humanity such an event would likely entail.
John
The "mansplaining" nature of such and endeavor is exponentially true if and when "spirit" and "invisibility," also imply "singularity" (contra "materiality" and the multifarious elements needed to be material), since then, the masculine-spirit attempting to explain "masculinity" must by practice and by nature of the endeavor be condescending to whomever the explanation is being given since if masculinity is singular and invisible, the person describing it is by describing it being condescending to whomever the explanation is being given since if they don't already know masculinity is invisible and singular (if they did they wouldn't require or be subject to mansplaining) then they're not part and parcel of the realm of the "masculine" and are then merely visible avatars of the materiality, and visibility, of the feminine. Any explanation of "masculinity" to them is "mansplaining" and thus condescending (but not necessarily pointless). It's this counterintuitive truism that explains why the tremendous power of employing "invisible" masculinity as a logical tool to the solve the problems of anthropology, theology, philosophy, and religion, hasn't fully taken place despite the boon to humanity such an event would likely entail.
The unseen suffers precisely from its continued nonappearance in any form and desires only access to a mode of appearance.
Jean Luc Marion, The Crossing of the Visible, quoted in Wolfson's, Imagination, Theolatry, and the Compulsion to Worship the invisible.
John
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