posted on Feb, 21 2010 @ 11:32 PM
I see the Garden of Eden as a mythos, an archtypal story. Almost every culture has very ancient stories of a kind of connection to a higher realm that
was "severed" or broken at some time. These myths often involve a "world tree" of some sort. The shamanic healer, in places as diverse as Native
American and Siberian cultures, are often involved in rituals designed to reconnect to the primal state of perfection.
In the Abrahamic tradition, the imagery of the garden and the tree strike me of echoes of this ancient and almost universal mythic schema. A lot of
people mistake the tree that Adam and Eve ate of as the "tree of good and evil" but it is in actuality the "tree of the knowledge of good
and evil." This strikes me as a particularly noteworthy thing. Before Adam and Eve knew good and evil, they existed in a state of natural harmony
with a beautiful garden. Then once they began to think in terms of good and evil -- to gain knowledge of this kind of moral division -- they
were expelled from the garden.
I read the story as a record of human psychospiritual development. Once we were more like animals, acting out of pure instinct, in the flow of things.
Does a wolf or a cat ponder good and evil? Or do they just react according to the flow of reality? Once humans developed the capacity to judge we
entered a state of moral agony, where we had to determine good and evil rather than "going with the flow." Taoism is also full of stories about a
kind of "lost paradise" that the "ancient masters" knew intuitively, and it is a complex system for healing this rift that developed when our
nervous systems outgrew simple instinct and began to develop higher, more sophisticated executive functions. The story of the garden, the tree, and
the expulsion is a similar tale, I believe (although with different implications for action).
This is in no way to diminish the power of the story...myths are no less valuable because they are not "literally true." Rather, they speak to deep,
eternal truths in us that lurk below the rational mind, like dreams. They are of the dreamtime, and are to be venerated.
So, I don't think of the Garden of Eden as having any physical location on earth. Although I suppose that another "layer" of later mythmaking could
have tied the story more closely to an actual location that the original inhabitants perhaps had to leave for some reason. Either way, to me, that is
not the most important dimension of the story. Rather it is what it tells us about how we have been "exiled" from our own instinctive harmony with a
garden-like world by our rational and moral judgement.
You have to have men who are moral..and at the same time who are able to utilize..their...primordal insticts,..without feeling without
passion...without judgement...without judgement. Because its judgement that defeats us.
-Col. Kurtz, Apocalypse Now
[edit on 2/21/10 by silent thunder]