The Grey Robes
Initiation into a Global Priesthood and Fraternal Order. Announcing a five-week course starting March 10, 2024.
Do you have a sense that something is wrong with the world? Authorities are too powerful? Are you keen to unravel mysteries, serve a mission, and make meaning with others who feel the same?
We know that techno-wizardry and digital nomadism are not enough.
In partnership with Parallax, experience a powerful initiation into the Grey Robes, an order where philosophy meets innovation and counterculture meets wisdom.
(Those curious about the Jefferson Society concept take note.)
You Will Learn To
Innovate around authoritarian powers
Embody new modes of seeing and being
Practice timeless virtues that ripple outward
Make meaning out of satellites and stardust
Realize your potential through embodied alignment
Ascend to new cognitive and psychospiritual heights
Employ arcana to reveal the unfolding mystery
Find deep solidarity in a new fraternal order
This course is nothing less than the seed of a global priesthood dedicated to humanity’s liberation.
Overview
In 2014, writer Scott Alexander identified a new tribe. Alexander called this group the Grey Tribe because they were an emerging alternative to the partisan Red and Blue tribes. Since then, many have used the term, including Gray high priest, Balaji Srinivasan. What mades the Grey Tribe coalesce is a commitment to decentralization and a will to invent the future.
But this is not enough.
The Grey Robes need a beating heart, a belief system, and a set of practices.
Max Borders, author of The Social Singularity and editor at Underthrow will establish a fraternal order so that the Grey Tribe can become more focused, synchronized, and potent. Enter The Grey Robes. While the order is in its nascency. Borders thinks this loosely networked band of anti-authoritarians cannot thrive on antipathy and techno-wizardry alone.
Borders has thus assembled the rudiments of a priesthood/fraternal order in hopes the Grey Robes can expand their sovereignty. It starts with one’s inner cosmos but wells into the thinking, feeling, and practices of an embodied being who connects with others like her. Such Renaissance Men and Women will bask in the Mystery, serve the Mission, adopt the Means, practice Morality, and make Meaning before they die. And they will do it together.
Lesson One: Mystery
The Unanswerable Questions, the Unquestionable Answers, and the Gifts of Existence
In this lesson, we explore humanity’s oldest questions and answers that will send us on various forking paths yet unite us as an order. As a question opens her legs to an answer, the pair begets more questions and answers that beget yet more questions and answers. We acknowledge the power of dialectics and integration as we spread out endlessly from these Ur-questions like a fractal.
But as we telescope in and out of this fractal, perhaps to tell our own stories, form our own theories, or develop our own methods, we can ascend in our psychosocial development. Such practices, a duty of our priesthood, offer gifts of existence. We call these the Illuminations. We will explore these gifts of existence together.
Lesson Two: Mission
We don’t just engage in intellectual and spiritual onanism, we exert ourselves in the world
The gifts of existence that proceed from this fractal Mystery are our spiritual reservoir, but our order comprises warrior-monks. That means we don’t just bathe in the Mystery. We dedicate ourselves to a Mission. But as most of humanity has lived under some variation of Pharaoh for more than 3000 years, a failure of imagination keeps us in servitude. Most simply cannot fathom “the consent of the governed” outside of democracy, which is just another spectacle of power.
So we must criticize by creating.
The Mission, then, is nothing less than to instantiate a decentralized, consent-based order. But as we develop and adopt technologies that promise to lateralize our relationships—instead of submitting to arbitrary authority—we create new paths of exodus, opening new horizons of possibility. We become more potent and self-sovereign as we approach The Social Singularity (a theoretical point in the future beyond which humanity transitions from hierarchical to networked organization.) Understanding ourselves as living in a domination-based order, we explore the concept of asymptotic anarchism, the idea that we might move ever-closer to The Social Singularly but never actually get there.
Lesson Three: Means
As Warrior-monks, we must practice and use means to serve the Mission
Warrior-monks on a Mission need Means. Those Means include a combination of thoughts, words, and actions. We begin by channeling the Elemental Drives, which we must bring into balance within ourselves in order to bring about their balance in society: “As within, so without.” The Elemental Drives are named such not just because they are in some sense basic but also because they are symbolized by the four ancient elements: Earth, Fire, Water, and Air. These elements are created through an alchemy that crosses masculine and feminine forces with the drives of sex and death. And freedom, we learn, is feminine.
But once we have understood the need to balance the Elemental Drives within ourselves, we must do something. Because the Grey Robes only turn to violence in defense or retaliation, we have two preferred means: communication and innovation. Thus, the Grey Robes train in the Arcana of Persuasion and Subversive Innovation. We will review the imperatives of each, which must be practiced like any other artform.
Lesson Four: Morality
We will become practitioners of Virtue and animate society with it while staying embodied
If the Grey Robes are to create a global consent-based order—and our means are well understood and practiced—we must embrace a timeless morality. But bare, abstract rules are bloodless and impotent unless morality animates those who live by them. Something similar can be said about abstractions of Western philosophers in the deontological and consequentialist traditions. As with yoga and music, virtues must be practiced to empower the practitioner and animate society. Vices are actively to be avoided and shunned. And because politics is just the institutionalization of vice, the Grey Robes seek to transcend politics.
But what are the primary Virtues and Vices? And how are we to practice them? Furthermore, given that human beings are no angels but rather hairless apes who evolved from creatures that slinked from the deep, how can we acknowledge that we both have a dispositional grain (which we call the Archetypes) and a set of urges and taboos that we repress (which we call the Shadow)? We’ll hold the Virtues in dialectic juxtaposition with the Archetypes and the Sacred Shadow to reveal how we can become better people while still being human.
Lesson Five: Meaning
We will create meaning from nothing, ascend the spiral, and look after each other
Without meaning, there is nothing. Too many are still trapped in the postmodern era with its irony, relativism, and residue of nihilism. While acknowledging these as features of the fractal mystery, integration becomes a vector of meaning-making. The Grey Robes know at some level that there is a mission behind the Mission, to live out our telos as meaning makers. How can we find meaning in the multiverse? Or make meaning out of nothing? What are the primary ways of making meaning, starting with the basics and moving into the complex?
We also have to consider that moving through complexity is hard. It challenges us cognitively and spiritually in ways that mean we either languish in stasis or develop dynamically. For its members, the Grey Robes have exapted the integral spiral into sub-orders we call the Ascending Orders. This exaptation offers a model of progress and a heuristic of development. It is not a map standing in for the territory. It is a way to keep our members from getting lost in the postmodern wilderness or trapped in the past. It is not “colonial as hell” unless you mean the Grey Robes wish to colonize the world with happiness, harmony, and prosperity. In the process, we reserve a harsh warning for so-called systems thinkers.
We close with the idea that there is magic in mutualism. What are our common pleasures? What will be our rituals? How will we look after each other?
Course Content
Offline: 5 pre-recorded lectures
Online: 5 live interactive Sunday video conferences
Extra: Fireside chat: After the Arcana: The Seeds of a New Fraternal Order
Sunday classes begin on March 10th at 1 pm ET via Zoom
Sounds like a Nietzsche/Jung collaboration.
Interesting, is there a community of thinkers to explore concepts with on the other side of doing the course? How does this work long term be part of this? My substack is dedicated to this sort of theme too