How to Build a Universe That
Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later
by Philip K. Dick 1978
First, before I
begin to bore you with the usual sort of things science fiction writers say in
speeches, let me bring you official greetings from Disneyland. I consider
myself a spokesperson for Disneyland because I live just a few miles from it --
and, as if that were not enough, I once had the honor of being interviewed
there by Paris TV.
For several weeks
after the interview, I was really ill and confined to bed. I think it was the
whirling teacups that did it. Elizabeth Antebi, who was the producer of the
film, wanted to have me whirling around in one of the giant teacups while
discussing the rise of fascism with Norman Spinrad... an old friend of mine who
writes excellent science fiction. We also discussed Watergate, but we did that
on the deck of Captain Hook's pirate ship. Little children wearing Mickey Mouse
hats -- those black hats with the ears -- kept running up and bumping against
us as the cameras whirred away, and Elizabeth asked unexpected questions.
Norman and I, being preoccupied with tossing little children about, said some
extraordinarily stupid things that day. Today, however, I will have to accept
full blame for what I tell you, since none of you are wearing Mickey Mouse hats
and trying to climb up on me under the impression that I am part of the rigging
of a pirate ship.
Science fiction
writers, I am sorry to say, really do not know anything. We can't talk about
science, because our knowledge of it is limited and unofficial, and usually our
fiction is dreadful. A few years ago, no college or university would ever have
considered inviting one of us to speak. We were mercifully confined to lurid
pulp magazines, impressing no one. In those days, friends would say me,
"But are you writing anything serious?" meaning "Are you writing
anything other than science fiction?" We longed to be accepted. We yearned
to be noticed. Then, suddenly, the academic world noticed us, we were invited
to give speeches and appear on panels -- and immediately we made idiots of
ourselves. The problem is simply this: What does a science fiction writer know
about? On what topic is he an authority?
It reminds me of a
headline that appeared in a California newspaper just before I flew here.
SCIENTISTS SAY THAT MICE CANNOT BE MADE TO LOOK LIKE HUMAN BEINGS. It was a
federally funded research program, I suppose. Just think: Someone in this world
is an authority on the topic of whether mice can or cannot put on two-tone
shoes, derby hats, pinstriped shirts, and Dacron pants, and pass as humans.
Well, I will tell
you what interests me, what I consider important. I can't claim to be an
authority on anything, but I can honestly say that certain matters absolutely
fascinate me, and that I write about them all the time. The two basic topics
which fascinate me are "What is reality?" and "What constitutes
the authentic human being?" Over the twenty-seven years in which I have
published novels and stories I have investigated these two interrelated topics
over and over again. I consider them important topics. What are we? What is it
which surrounds us, that we call the not-me, or the empirical or phenomenal
world?
In 1951, when I
sold my first story, I had no idea that such fundamental issues could be
pursued in the science fiction field. I began to pursue them unconsciously. My
first story had to do with a dog who imagined that the garbagemen who came
every Friday morning were stealing valuable food which the family had carefully
stored away in a safe metal container. Every day, members of the family carried
out paper sacks of nice ripe food, stuffed them into the metal container, shut
the lid tightly -- and when the container was full, these dreadful-looking
creatures came and stole everything but the can.
Finally, in the
story, the dog begins to imagine that someday the garbagemen will eat the
people in the house, as well as stealing their food. Of course, the dog is
wrong about this. We all know that garbagemen do not eat people. But the dog's extrapolation
was in a sense logical -- given the facts at his disposal. The story was about
a real dog, and I used to watch him and try to get inside his head and imagine
how he saw the world. Certainly, I decided, that dog sees the world quite
differently than I do, or any humans do. And then I began to think,
Maybe each human being lives in a unique world, a private world, a world
different from those inhabited and experienced by all other humans. And that
led me wonder, If reality differs from person to person, can we speak of
reality singular, or shouldn't we really be talking about plural realities? And
if there are plural realities, are some more true (more real) than others? What
about the world of a schizophrenic? Maybe, it's as real as our world. Maybe we
cannot say that we are in touch with reality and he is not, but should instead
say, His reality is so different from ours that he can't explain his to us, and
we can't explain ours to him. The problem, then, is that if subjective worlds
are experienced too differently, there occurs a breakdown of communication...
and there is the real illness.
I once wrote a
story about a man who was injured and taken to a hospital. When they began
surgery on him, they discovered that he was an android, not a human, but that
he did not know it. They had to break the news to him. Almost at once, Mr.
Garson Poole discovered that his reality consisted of punched tape passing from
reel to reel in his chest. Fascinated, he began to fill in some of the punched
holes and add new ones. Immediately, his world changed. A flock of ducks flew
through the room when he punched one new hole in the tape. Finally he cut the
tape entirely, whereupon the world disappeared. However, it also disappeared
for the other characters in the story... which makes no sense, if you think
about it. Unless the other characters were figments of his punched-tape
fantasy. Which I guess is what they were.
It was always my
hope, in writing novels and stories which asked the question "What is
reality?", to someday get an answer. This was the hope of most of my
readers, too. Years passed. I wrote over thirty novels and over a hundred
stories, and still I could not figure out what was real. One day a girl college
student in Canada asked me to define reality for her, for a paper she was
writing for her philosophy class. She wanted a one-sentence answer. I thought
about it and finally said, "Reality is that which, when you stop believing
in it, doesn't go away." That's all I could come up with. That was back in
1972. Since then I haven't been able to define reality any more lucidly.
But the problem is
a real one, not a mere intellectual game. Because today we live in a society in
which spurious realities are manufactured by the media, by governments, by big
corporations, by religious groups, political groups -- and the electronic
hardware exists by which to deliver these pseudo-worlds right into the heads of
the reader, the viewer, the listener. Sometimes when I watch my eleven-year-old
daughter watch TV, I wonder what she is being taught. The problem of miscuing;
consider that. A TV program produced for adults is viewed by a small child.
Half of what is said and done in the TV drama is probably misunderstood by the
child. Maybe it's all misunderstood. And the thing is, Just how
authentic is the information anyhow, even if the child correctly understood it?
What is the relationship between the average TV situation comedy to reality?
What about the cop shows? Cars are continually swerving out of control,
crashing, and catching fire. The police are always good and they always win. Do
not ignore that point: The police always win. What a lesson that is. You should
not fight authority, and even if you do, you will lose. The message here is, Be
passive. And -- cooperate. If Officer Baretta asks you for information,
give it to him, because Officer Baretta is a good man and to be trusted. He
loves you, and you should love him.
So I ask, in my
writing, What is real? Because unceasingly we are bombarded with
pseudo-realities manufactured by very sophisticated people using very
sophisticated electronic mechanisms. I do not distrust their motives; I
distrust their power. They have a lot of it. And it is an astonishing power:
that of creating whole universes, universes of the mind. I ought to know. I do
the same thing. It is my job to create universes, as the basis of one novel
after another. And I have to build them in such a way that they do not fall
apart two days later. Or at least that is what my editors hope. However, I will
reveal a secret to you: I like to build universes which do fall apart. I
like to see them come unglued, and I like to see how the characters in the
novels cope with this problem. I have a secret love of chaos. There should be
more of it. Do not believe -- and I am dead serious when I say this -- do not
assume that order and stability are always good, in a society or in a universe.
The old, the ossified, must always give way to new life and the birth of new
things. Before the new things can be born the old must perish. This is a
dangerous realization, because it tells us that we must eventually part with
much of what is familiar to us. And that hurts. But that is part of the script
of life. Unless we can psychologically accommodate change, we ourselves begin
to die, inwardly. What I am saying is that objects, customs, habits, and ways
of life must perish so that the authentic human being can live. And it is the
authentic human being who matters most, the viable, elastic organism which can
bounce back, absorb, and deal with the new.
Of course, I
would say this, because I live near Disneyland, and they are always adding new
rides and destroying old ones. Disneyland is an evolving organism. For years
they had the Lincoln Simulacrum, like Lincoln himself, was only a temporary
form which matter and energy take and then lose. The same is true of each of
us, like it or not.
The pre-Socratic
Greek philosopher Parmenides taught that the only things that are real are
things which never change... and the pre-Socratic Greek philosopher Heraclitus
taught that everything changes. If you superimpose their two views, you get
this result: Nothing is real. There is a fascinating next step to this line of
thinking: Parmenides could never have existed because he grew old and died and
disappeared, so, according to his own philosophy, he did not exist. And
Heraclitus may have been right -- let's not forget that; so if Heraclitus was
right, then Parmenides did exist, and therefore, according to Heraclitus'
philosophy, perhaps Parmenides was right, since Parmenides fulfilled the
conditions, the criteria, by which Heraclitus judged things real.
I offer this
merely to show that as soon as you begin to ask what is ultimately real, you
right away begin talk nonsense. Zeno proved that motion was impossible
(actually he only imagined that he had proved this; what he lacked was what
technically is called the "theory of limits"). David Hume, the
greatest skeptic of them all, once remarked that after a gathering of skeptics
met to proclaim the veracity of skepticism as a philosophy, all of the members
of the gathering nonetheless left by the door rather than the window. I see
Hume's point. It was all just talk. The solemn philosophers weren't taking what
they said seriously.
But I consider
that the matter of defining what is real -- that is a serious topic, even a
vital topic. And in there somewhere is the other topic, the definition of the
authentic human. Because the bombardment of pseudo-realities begins to produce
inauthentic humans very quickly, spurious humans -- as fake as the data
pressing at them from all sides. My two topics are really one topic; they unite
at this point. Fake realities will create fake humans. Or, fake humans will
generate fake realities and then sell them to other humans, turning them,
eventually, into forgeries of themselves. So we wind up with fake humans
inventing fake realities and then peddling them to other fake humans. It is
just a very large version of Disneyland. You can have the Pirate Ride or the
Lincoln Simulacrum or Mr. Toad's Wild Ride -- you can have all of them,
but none is true.
In my writing I
got so interested in fakes that I finally came up with the concept of fake
fakes. For example, in Disneyland there are fake birds worked by electric
motors which emit caws and shrieks as you pass by them. Suppose some night all
of us sneaked into the park with real birds and substituted them for the
artificial ones. Imagine the horror the Disneyland officials would feel when
they discovered the cruel hoax. Real birds! And perhaps someday even real
hippos and lions. Consternation. The park being cunningly transmuted from the
unreal to the real, by sinister forces. For instance, suppose the Matterhorn
turned into a genuine snow-covered mountain? What if the entire place, by a
miracle of God's power and wisdom, was changed, in a moment, in the blink of an
eye, into something incorruptible? They would have to close down.
In Plato's Timaeus,
God does not create the universe, as does the Christian God; He simply finds it
one day. It is in a state of total chaos. God sets to work to transform the
chaos into order. That idea appeals to me, and I have adapted it to fit my own
intellectual needs: What if our universe started out as not quite real, a sort
of illusion, as the Hindu religion teaches, and God, out of love and kindness
for us, is slowly transmuting it, slowly and secretly, into something
real?
We would not be
aware of this transformation, since we were not aware that our world was an illusion in
the first place. This technically is a Gnostic idea. Gnosticism is a religion
which embraced Jews, Christians, and pagans for several centuries. I have been
accused of holding Gnostic ideas. I guess I do. At one time I would have been
burned. But some of their ideas intrigue me. One time, when I was researching
Gnosticism in the Britannica, I came across mention of a Gnostic codex called The
Unreal God and the Aspects of His Nonexistent Universe, an idea which
reduced me to helpless laughter. What kind of person would write about
something that he knows doesn't exist, and how can something that doesn't exist
have aspects? But then I realized that I'd been writing about these matters for
over twenty-five years. I guess there is a lot of latitude in what you can say
when writing about a topic that does not exist. A friend of mine once published
a book called Snakes of Hawaii. A number of libraries wrote him ordering
copies. Well, there are no snakes in Hawaii. All the pages of his book were
blank.
Of course, in
science fiction no pretense is made that the worlds described are real. This is
why we call it fiction. The reader is warned in advance not to believe what he
is about to read. Equally true, the visitors to Disneyland understand that Mr.
Toad does not really exist and that the pirates are animated by motors and
servo-assist mechanisms, relays and electronic circuits. So no deception is
taking place.
And yet the
strange thing is, in some way, some real way, much of what appears under the
title "science fiction" is true. It may not be literally true, I
suppose. We have not really been invaded by creatures from another star system,
as depicted in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The producers of that
film never intended for us to believe it. Or did they?
And, more important,
if they did intend to state this, is it actually true? That is the issue: not,
Does the author or producer believe it, but -- Is it true? Because, quite by
accident, in the pursuit of a good yarn, a science fiction author or producer
or scriptwriter might stumble onto the truth... and only later on realize it.
The basic tool for
the manipulation of reality is the manipulation of words. If you can control
the meaning of words, you can control the people who must use the words. George
Orwell made this clear in his novel 1984. But another way to control the
minds of people is to control their perceptions. If you can get them to see the
world as you do, they will think as you do. Comprehension follows perception.
How do you get them to see the reality you see? After all, it is only one
reality out of many. Images are a basic constituent: pictures. This is why the
power of TV to influence young minds is so staggeringly vast. Words and
pictures are synchronized. The possibility of total control of the viewer exists,
especially the young viewer. TV viewing is a kind of sleep-learning. An EEG of
a person watching TV shows that after about half an hour the brain decides that
nothing is happening, and it goes into a hypnoidal twilight state, emitting
alpha waves. This is because there is such little eye motion. In addition, much
of the information is graphic and therefore passes into the right hemisphere of
the brain, rather than being processed by the left, where the conscious
personality is located. Recent experiments indicate that much of what we see on
the TV screen is received on a subliminal basis. We only imagine that we
consciously see what is there. The bulk of the messages elude our attention;
literally, after a few hours of TV watching, we do not know what we have seen.
Our memories are spurious, like our memories of dreams; the blank are filled in
retrospectively. And falsified. We have participated unknowingly in the
creation of a spurious reality, and then we have obligingly fed it to
ourselves. We have colluded in our own doom.
And -- and I say
this as a professional fiction writer -- the producers, scriptwriters, and
directors who create these video/audio worlds do not know how much of their
content is true. In other words, they are victims of their own product, along
with us. Speaking for myself, I do not know how much of my writing is true, or which
parts (if any) are true. This is a potentially lethal situation. We have
fiction mimicking truth, and truth mimicking fiction. We have a dangerous
overlap, a dangerous blur. And in all probability it is not deliberate. In
fact, that is part of the problem. You cannot legislate an author into
correctly labeling his product, like a can of pudding whose ingredients are
listed on the label... you cannot compel him to declare what part is true and
what isn't if he himself does not know.
It is an eerie
experience to write something into a novel, believing it is pure fiction, and
to learn later on -- perhaps years later -- that it is true. I would like to
give you an example. It is something that I do not understand. Perhaps you can
come up with a theory. I can't.
In 1970 I wrote a
novel called Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said. One of the characters is
a nineteen-year-old girl named Kathy. Her husband's name is Jack. Kathy appears
to work for the criminal underground, but later, as we read deeper into the
novel, we discover that actually she is working for the police. She has a
relationship going on with a police inspector. The character is pure fiction.
Or at least I thought it was.
Anyhow, on
Christmas Day of 1970, I met a girl named Kathy - this was after I had finished
the novel, you understand. She was nineteen years old. Her boyfriend was named
Jack. I soon learned that Kathy was a drug dealer. I spent months trying to get
her to give up dealing drugs; I kept warning her again and again that she would
get caught. Then, one evening as we were entering a restaurant together, Kathy
stopped short and said, "I can't go in." Seated in the restaurant was
a police inspector whom I knew. "I have to tell you the truth," Kathy
said. "I have a relationship with him."
Certainly, these
are odd coincidences. Perhaps I have precognition. But the mystery becomes even
more perplexing; the next stage totally baffles me. It has for four years.
In 1974 the novel
was published by Doubleday. One afternoon I was talking to my priest -- I am an
Episcopalian -- and I happened to mention to him an important scene near the
end of the novel in which the character Felix Buckman meets a black stranger at an
all-night gas station, and they begin to talk. As I described the scene in more
and more detail, my priest became progressively more agitated. At last he said,
"That is a scene from the Book of Acts, from the Bible! In Acts, the person
who meets the black man on the road is named Philip -- your name." Father
Rasch was so upset by the resemblance that he could not even locate the scene
in his Bible. "Read Acts," he instructed me. "And you'll agree.
It's the same down to specific details."
I went home and
read the scene in Acts. Yes, Father Rasch was right; the scene in my novel was
an obvious retelling of the scene in Acts... and I had never read Acts, I must
admit. But again the puzzle became deeper. In Acts, the high Roman official who
arrests and interrogates Saint Paul is named Felix -- the same name as my
character. And my character Felix Buckman is a high-ranking police general; in
fact, in my novel he holds the same office as Felix in the Book of Acts: the
final authority. There is a conversation in my novel which very closely
resembles a conversation between Felix and Paul.
Well, I decided to
try for any further resemblances. The main character in my novel is named
Jason. I got an index to the Bible and looked to see if anyone named Jason
appears anywhere in the Bible. I couldn't remember any. Well, a man named Jason
appears once and only once in the Bible. It is in the Book of Acts. And, as if
to plague me further with coincidences, in my novel Jason is fleeing from the
authorities and takes refuge in a person's house, and in Acts the man named
Jason shelters a fugitive from the law in his house -- an exact inversion of
the situation in my novel, as if the mysterious Spirit responsible for all this
was having a sort of laugh about the whole thing.
Felix, Jason, and
the meeting on the road with the black man who is a complete stranger. In Acts,
the disciple Philip baptizes the black man, who then goes away rejoicing. In my
novel, Felix Buckman reaches out to the black stranger for emotional support,
because Felix Buckman's sister has just died and he is falling apart
psychologically. The black man stirs up Buckman's spirits and althought Buckman
does not go away rejoicing, at least his tears have stopped falling. He had
been flying home, weeping over the death of his sister, and had to reach out to
someone, anyone, even a total stranger. It is an encounter between two
strangers on the road which changes the life of one of them -- both in my novel
and in Acts. And one final quirk by the mysterious Spirit at work: the name
Felix is the Latin word for "happy." Which I did not know when I
wrote the novel.
A careful study of
my novel shows that for reasons which I cannot even begin to explain I had
managed to retell several of the basic incidents from a particular book of the
Bible, and even had the right names. What could explain this? That was four
years ago that I discovered all this. For four years I have tried to come up
with a theory and I have not. I doubt if I ever will.
But the mystery
had not ended there, as I had imagined. Two months ago I was walking up to the
mailbox late at night to mail off a letter, and also to enjoy the sight of
Saint Joseph's Church, which sits opposite my apartment building. I noticed a
man loitering suspiciously by a parked car. It looked as if he was attempting
to steal the car, or maybe something from it; as I returned from the mailbox,
the man hid behind a tree. On impulse I walked up to him and asked, "Is
anything the matter?"
"I'm out of
gas," the man said. "And I have no money."
Incredibly,
because I have never done this before, I got out my wallet, took all the money
from it, and handed the money to him. He then shook hands with me and asked
where I lived, so that he could later pay the money back. I returned to my
apartment, and then I realized that the money would do him no good, since there
was no gas station within walking distance. So I returned, in my car. The man
had a metal gas can in the trunk of his car, and, together, we drove in my car
to an all-night gas station. Soon we were standing there, two strangers, as the
pump jockey filled the metal gas can. Suddenly I realized that this was the
scene in my novel -- the novel written eight years before. The all-night gas
station was exactly as I had envisioned it in my inner eye when I wrote the
scene -- the glaring white light, the pump jockey -- and now I saw something
which I had not seen before. The stranger who I was helping was black.
We drove back to
his stalled car with the gas, shook hands, and then I returned to my apartment
building. I never saw him again. He could not pay me back because I had not
told him which of the many apartments was mine or what my name was. I was
terribly shaken up by this experience. I had literally lived out a scene
completely as it had appeared in my novel. Which is to say, I had lived out a
sort of replica of the scene in Acts where Philip encounters the black man on
the road.
What could explain
all this?
The answer I have
come up with may not be correct, but it is the only answer I have. It has to do
with time. My theory is this: In some certain important sense, time is not
real. Or perhaps it is real, but not as we experience it to be or imagine
it to be. I had the acute, overwhelming certitude (and still have) that despite
all the change we see, a specific permanent landscape underlies the world of
change: and that this invisible underlying landscape is that of the Bible; it,
specifically, is the period immediately following the death and resurrection of
Christ; it is, in other words, the time period of the Book of Acts.
Parmenides would
be proud of me. I have gazed at a constantly changing world and declared that
underneath it lies the eternal, the unchanging, the absolutely real. but how
has this come about? If the real time is circa A.D. 50, then why do we see A.D.
1978? And if we are really living in the Roman Empire, somewhere in Syria, why
do we see the United States?
During the Middle
Ages, a curious theory arose, which I will now present to you for what it is
worth. It is the theory that the Evil One -- Satan -- is the "Ape of
God." That he creates spurious imitations of creation, of God's authentic
creation, and then interpolates them for that authentic creation. Does this odd
theory help explain my experience? Are we to believe that we are occluded, that
we are deceived, that it is not 1978 but A.D. 50... and Satan has spun a
counterfeit reality to wither our faith in the return of Christ?
I can just picture
myself being examined by a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist says, "What year
is it?" And I reply, "A.D. 50." The psychiatrist blinks and then
asks, "And where are you?" I reply, "In Judaea (Judea?)."
"Where the heck is that?" the psychiatrist asks. "It's part of
the Roman Empire," I would have to answer. "Do you know who is
President?" the psychiatrist would ask, and I would answer, "The
Procurator Felix." "You're pretty sure about this?" the
psychiatrist would ask, meanwhile giving a covert signal to two very large psych
techs. "Yep," I'd replay. "Unless Felix has stepped down and had
been replaced by the Procurator Festus. You see, Saint Paul was held by Felix
for --" "Who told you all this?" the psychiatrist would break
in, irritably, and I would reply, "The Holy Spirit." And after that
I'd be in the rubber room, inside gazing out, and knowing exactly how come I
was there.
Everything in that
conversation would be true, in a sense, although palpably not true in another.
I know perfectly well that the date is 1978 and that Jimmy Carter is President and
that I live in Santa Ana, California, in the United States. I even know how to
get from my apartment to Disneyland, a fact I can't seem to forget. And surely
no Disneyland existed back at the time of Saint Paul.
So, if I force
myself to be very rational and reasonable, and all those other good things, I
must admit that the existence of Disneyland (which I know is real)
proves that we are not living in Judaea in A.D. 50. The idea of Saint Paul
whirling around in the giant teacups wile composing First Corinthians, as Paris
TV films him with a telephoto lens -- that just can't be. Saint Paul would
never go near Disneyland. Only children, tourists, and visiting Soviet high
officials ever go to Disneyland. Saints do not.
But somehow that
biblical material snared my unconscious and crept into my novel, and equally
true, for some reason in 1978 I relived a scene which I described back in 1970.
What I am saying is this: There is internal evidence in at least one of my
novels that another reality, an unchanging one, exactly as Parmenides and Plato
suspected, underlies the visible phenomenal world of change, and somehow, in
some way, perhaps to our surprise, we can cut through to it. Or rather, a
mysterious Spirit can put us in touch with it, if it wishes us to see this
permanent other landscape. Time passes, thousands of years pass, but at the
same instant that we see this contemporary world, the ancient world, the world
of the Bible, is concealed beneath it, still there and still real.
Eternally so.
Shall I go for
broke and tell you the rest of this peculiar story? I'll do so, having gone
this far already. My novel Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said was
released by Doubleday in February of 1974. The week after it was released, I
had two impacted wisdom teeth removed, under sodium pentathol. Later that day I
found myself in intense pain. My wife phoned the oral surgeon and he phoned a
pharmacy. Half an hour later there was a knock at my door: the delivery person
from the pharmacy with the pain medication. Although I was bleeding and sick
and weak, I felt the need to answer the knock on the door myself. When I opened
the door, I found myself facing a young woman -- who wore a shining gold
necklace in the center of which was a gleaming gold fish. For some reason I was
hypnotized by the gleaming golden fish; I forgot my pain, forgot the
medication, forgot why the girl was there. I just kept staring at the fish
sign.
"What does
that mean?" I asked her.
The girl touched
the glimmering golden fish with her hand and said, "This is a sign worn by
the early Christians." She then gave me the package of medication.
In that instant,
as I stared at the gleaming fish sign and heard her words, I suddenly
experienced what I later learned is called anamnesis -- a Greek word
meaning, literally, "loss of forgetfulness." I remembered who I was
and where I was. In an instant, in the twinkling of an eye, it all came back to
me. And not only could I remember it but I could see it. The girl was a secret
Christian and so was I. We lived in fear of detection by the Romans. We had to
communicate with cryptic signs. She had just told me all this, and it was true.
For a short time,
as hard as this is to believe or explain, I saw fading into view the black
prisonlike contours of hateful Rome. But, of much more importance, I remembered
Jesus, who had just recently been with us, and had gone temporarily away, and
would very soon return. My emotion was one of joy. We were secretly preparing
to welcome Him back. It would not be long. And the Romans did not know. They
thought He was dead, forever dead. That was our great secret, our joyous
knowledge. Despite all appearances, Christ was going to return, and our delight
and anticipation was boundless.
Isn't it odd that
this strange event, this recovery of lost memory, occurred only a week after Flow My Tears
was released? And it is Flow My Tears which contains the replication of
people and events from the Book of Acts, which is set at the precise moment in
time -- just after Jesus' death and resurrection -- that I remembered, by means
of the golden fish sign, as having just taken place?
If you were me,
and had this happen to you, I'm sure you wouldn't be able to leave it alone.
You would seek a theory that would account for it. For over four years now, I have
been trying one theory after another: circular time, frozen time, timeless
time, what is called "sacred" as contrasted to "mundane"
time... I can't count the theories I've tried out. One constant has prevailed,
though, throughout all theories. There must indeed be a mysterious Holy Spirit
which has an exact and intimate relation to Christ, which can indwell in human
minds, guide and inform them, and even express itself through those humans,
even without their awareness.
In the writing of Flow
My Tears, back in 1970, there was one unusual event which I realized at the
time was not ordinary, was not a part of the regular writing process. I had a
dream one night, an especially vivid dream. And when I awoke I found myself
under the compulsion -- the absolute necessity -- of getting the dream into the
text of the novel precisely as I had dreamed it. In getting the dream exactly
right, I had to do eleven drafts of the final part of the manuscript, until I
was satisfied.
I will now quote
from the novel, as it appeared in the final, published form. See if this dream
reminds you of anything.
The countryside,
brown and dry, in summer, where he had lived as a child. He rode a horse, and
approaching him on his left a squad of horses nearing slowly. On the horses rode
men in shining robes, each a different color; each wore a pointed helmet that
sparkled in the sunlight. The slow, solemn knights passed him and as they
traveled by he made out the face of one: an ancient marble face, a terribly old
man with rippling cascades of white beard. What a strong nose he had. What
noble features. So tired, so serious, so far beyond ordinary men. Evidently he
was a king.
Felix Buckman let them pass; he did
not speak to them and they said nothing to him. Together, they all moved toward
the house from which he had come. A man had sealed himself up inside the house,
a man alone, Jason Taverner, in the silence and darkness, without windows, by
himself from now on into eternity. Sitting, merely existing, inert. Felix
Buckman continued on, out into the open countryside. And then he heard from
behind him one dreadful single shriek. They had killed Taverner, and seeing
them enter, sensing them in the shadows around him, knowing what they intended
to do with him, Taverner had shrieked.
Within himself Felix Buckman felt
absolute and utter desolate grief. But in the dream he did not go back nor look
back. There was nothing that could be done. No one could have stopped the posse
of varicolored men in robes; they could not have been said no to. Anyhow, it
was over. Taverner was dead.
This passage
probably does not suggest any particular thing to you, except a law posse
exacting judgment on someone either guilty or considered guilty. It is not
clear whether Taverner has in fact committed some crime or is merely believed
to have committed some crime. I had the impression that he was guilty, but that
it was a tragedy that he had to be killed, a terribly sad tragedy. In the
novel, this dream causes Felix Buckman to begin to cry, and therefore he seeks
out the black man at the all-night gas station.
Months after the
novel was published, I found the section in the Bible to which this dream
refers. It is Daniel, 7:9:
Thrones were set
in place and one ancient in years took his seat. His robe was white as snow and
the hair of his head like cleanest wool. Flames of fire were his throne and its
wheels blazing fire; a flowing river of fire streamed out before him. Thousands
upon thousands served him and myriads upon myriads attended his presence. The
court sat, and the book were opened.
The white-haired
old man appears again in Revelation, 1:13:
I saw... one like
a son of man, robed down to his feet, with a golden girdle round his breast.
The hair of his head was white as snow-white wool, and his eyes flamed like
fire; his feet gleamed like burnished brass refined in a furnace, and his voice
was like the sound of rushing waters.
And then 1:17:
When I saw him, I
fell at his feet as though dead. But he laid his right hand upon me and said,
"Do not be afraid. I am the first and the last, and I am the living one,
for I was dead and now I am alive for evermore, and I hold the keys of Death
and Death's domain. Write down therefore what you have seen, what is now, and
what will be hereafter."
And, like John of
Patmos, I faithfully wrote down what I saw and put in my novel. And it was
true, although at the time I did not know who was meant by this description:
... he made out
the face of one: an ancient marble face, a terribly old man with rippling
cascades of white beard. What a strong nose he had. What noble features. So
tired, so serious, so far beyond ordinary men. Evidently he was a king.
Indeed he was a
king. He is Christ Himself returned, to pass judgment. And this is what he does
in my novel: He passes judgment on the man sealed up in darkness. The man
sealed up in darkness must be the Prince of Evil, the Force of Darkness. Call
it whatever you wish, its time had come. It was judged and condemned. Felix
Buckman could weep at the sadness of it, but he knew that the verdict could not
be disputed. And so he rode on, without turning or looking back, hearing only
the shriek of fear and defeat: the cry of evil destroyed.
So my novel
contained material from other parts of the Bible, as well as the sections from
Acts. Deciphered, my novel tells a quite different story from the surface story
(which we need not go into here). The real story is simply this: the return of
Christ, now king rather than suffering servant. Judge rather than victim of
unfair judgment. Everything is reversed. The core message of my novel, without
my knowing it, was a warning to the powerful: You will shortly be judged and
condemned. Who, specifically, did it refer to? Well, I can't really say; or
rather would prefer not to say. I have no certain knowledge, only an intuition.
And that is not enough to go on, so I will keep my thoughts to myself. But you
might ask yourselves what political events took place in this country between
February 1974 and August 1974. Ask yourself who was judged and condemned, and
fell like a flaming star into ruin and disgrace. The most powerful man in the
world. And I feel as sorry for him now as I did when I dreamed that dream.
"That poor poor man," I said once to my wife, with tears in my eyes.
"Shut up in the darkness, playing the piano in the night to himself, alone
and afraid, knowing what's to come." For God's sake, let us forgive him,
finally. But what was done to him and all his men -- "all the President's
men," as it's put -- had to be done. But it is over, and he should be let
out into the sunlight again; no creature, no person, should be shut up in
darkness forever, in fear. It is not humane.
Just about the
time that Supreme Court was ruling that the Nixon tapes had to be turned over
to the special prosecutor, I was eating at a Chinese restaurant in Yorba Linda,
the town in California where Nixon went to school -- where he grew up, worked
at a grocery store, where there is a park named after him, and of course the
Nixon house, simple clapboard and all that. In my fortune cookie, I got the
following fortune:
DEEDS DONE IN
SECRET HAVE A
WAY OF BECOMING FOUND OUT.
I mailed the slip
of paper to the White House, mentioning that the Chinese restaurant was located
within a mile of Nixon's original house, and I said, "I think a mistake
has been made; by accident I got Mr. Nixon's fortune. Does he have mine?"
The White House did not answer.
Well, as I said
earlier, an author of a work supposed fiction might write the truth and not
know it. To quote Xenophanes another pre-Socratic: "Even if a man should
chance to speak the most complete truth, yet he himself does not know it; all
things are wrapped in appearances" (Fragment 34). And Heraclitus
added to this: "The nature of things is in the habit of concealing
itself" (Fragment 54). W. S. Gilbert, of Gilbert and Sullivan, put it:
"Things are seldom what they seem; skim milk masquerades as cream."
The point of all that is that we cannot trust our senses and probably not even
our a priori reasoning. As to our senses, I understand that people who have
been blind from birth and are suddenly given sight are amazed to discover that
objects appear to get smaller and smaller as they get farther away. Logically,
there is no reason for this. We, of course, have come to accept this, because
we are use to it. We see objects get smaller, but we know that in actuality
they remain the same size. So even the common everyday pragmatic person
utilizes a certain amount of sophisticated discounting of what his eyes and
ears tell him.
Little of what
Heraclitus wrote has survived, and what we do have is obscure, but Fragment 54
is lucid and important: "Latent structure is master of obvious
structure." This means that Heraclitus believed that a veil lay over the
true landscape. He also may have suspected that time was somehow not what it
seemed, because in Fragment 52 he said: "Time is a child at play, playing
draughts; a child's is the kingdom." This is indeed cryptic. But he also
said, in Fragment 18: "If one does not expect it, one will not find out
the unexpected; it is not to be tracked down and no path leads us to it."
Edward Hussey, in his scholarly book The Pre-Socratics, says:
If Heraclitus is
to be so insistent on the lack of understanding shown by most men, it would
seem only reasonable that he should offer further instructions for penetrating
to the truth. The talk of riddle-guessing suggests that some kind of
revelation, beyond human control, is necessary... The true wisdom, as has been
seen, is closely associated with God, which suggests further that in advancing
wisdom a man becomes like, or a part of, God.
This quote is not
from a religious book or a book on theology; it is an analysis of the earliest
philosophers by a Lecturer in Ancient Philosophy at the University of Oxford.
Hussey makes it clear that to these early philosophers there was no distinction
between philosophy and religion. The first great quantum leap in Greek theology
was by Xenophanes of Colophon, born in the mid-sixth century B.C. Xenophanes,
without resorting to any authority expect that of his own mind, says:
One god there is,
in no way like mortal creatures either in bodily form or in the thought of his
mind. The whole of him sees, the whole of him thinks, the whole of him hears.
He stays always motionless in the same place; it is not fitting that he should
move about now this way, now that.
This is a subtle
and advanced concept of God, evidently without precedent among the Greek
thinkers. "The arguments of Parmenides seemed to show that all reality
must indeed be a mind," Hussey writes, "or an object of thought in a
mind." Regarding Heraclitus specifically, he says, "In Heraclitus it
is difficult to tell how far the designs in God's mind are distinguished from
the execution in the world, or indeed how far God's mind is distinguished from
the world." The further leap by Anaxagoras has always fascinated me.
"Anaxagoras had been driven to a theory of the microstructure of matter
which made it, to some extent, mysterious to human reason." Anaxagoras believed
that everything was determined by Mind. These were not childish
thinkers, nor primitives. They debated serious issues and studied one another's
views with deft insight. It was not until the time of Aristotle that their
views got reduced to what we can neatly -- but wrongly -- classify as crude.
The summation of much pre-Socratic theology and philosophy can be stated as
follows: The kosmos is not as it appears to be, and what it probably is,
at its deepest level, is exactly that which the human being is at his deepest
level -- call it mind or soul, it is something unitary which lives and thinks,
and only appears to be plural and material. Much of this view reaches us
through the Logos doctrine regarding Christ. The Logos was both that which
thought, and the thing which it thought: thinker and thought together. The
universe, then, is thinker and thought, and since we are part of it, we as
humans are, in the final analysis, thoughts of and thinkers of those thoughts.
Thus if God thinks
about Rome circa A.D. 50, then Rome circa A.D. 50 is. The universe is not a
windup clock and God the hand that winds it. The universe is not a
battery-powered watch and God the battery. Spinoza believed that the universe
is the body of God extensive in space. But long before Spinoza -- two thousand
years before him -- Xenophanes had said, "Effortlessly, he wields all
things by the thought of his mind" (Fragment 25).
If any of you have
read my novel Ubik, you know that the mysterious entity or mind or force
called Ubik starts out as a series of cheap and vulgar commercials and winds up
saying:
I am Ubik. Before
the universe was I am. I made the suns. I made the worlds. I created the lives
and the places they inhabit; I move them here, I put them there. They go as I
say, they do as I tell them. I am the word and my name is never spoken, the
name which no one knows. I am called Ubik but that is not my name. I am. I
shall always be.
It is obvious from
this who and what Ubik is; it specifically says that it is the word, which is
to say, the Logos. In the German translation, there is one of the most
wonderful lapses of correct understanding that I have ever come across; God
help us if the man who translated my novel Ubik into German were to do a
translation from the koine Greek into German of the New Testament. He
did all right until he got to the sentence "I am the word." That
puzzled him. What can the author mean by that? he must have asked himself,
obviously never having come across the Logos doctrine. So he did as good a job
of translation as possible. In the German edition, the Absolute Entity which
made the suns, made the worlds, created the lives and the places they inhabit,
says of itself:
I am the brand
name.
Had he translated
the Gospel according to Saint John, I suppose it would have come out as:
When all things
began, the brand name already was. The brand name dwelt with God, and what God
was, the brand name was.
It would seem that
I not only bring you greetings from Disneyland but from Mortimer Snerd. Such is
the fate of an author who hoped to include theological themes in his writing.
"The brand name, then, was with God at the beginning, and through him all
things came to be; no single thing was created without him." So it goes
with noble ambitions. Let's hope God has a sense of humor.
Or should I say,
Let's hope the brand name has a sense of humor.
As I said to you
earlier, my two preoccupations in my writing are "What is reality?"
and "What is the authentic human?" I'm sure you can see by now that I
have not been able to answer the first question. I have an abiding intuition
that somehow the world of the Bible is a literally real but veiled landscape,
never changing, hidden from our sight, but available to us by revelation. That
is all I can come up with -- a mixture of mystical experience, reasoning, and
faith. I would like to say something about the traits of the authentic human,
though; in this quest I have had more plausible answers.
The authentic
human being is one of us who instinctively knows what he should not do, and, in
addition, he will balk at doing it. He will refuse to do it, even if this
brings down dread consequences to him and to those whom he loves. This, to me,
is the ultimately heroic trait of ordinary people; they say no to the
tyrant and they calmly take the consequences of this resistance. Their deeds
may be small, and almost always unnoticed, unmarked by history. Their names are
not remembered, nor did these authentic humans expect their names to be
remembered. I see their authenticity in an odd way: not in their willingness to
perform great heroic deeds but in their quiet refusals. In essence, they cannot
be compelled to be what they are not.
The power of
spurious realities battering at us today -- these deliberately manufactured
fakes never penetrate to the heart of true human beings. I watch the children
watching TV and at first I am afraid of what they are being taught, and then I
realize, They can't be corrupted or destroyed. They watch, they listen, they
understand, and, then, where and when it is necessary, they reject. There is
something enormously powerful in a child's ability to withstand the fraudulent.
A child has the clearest eye, the steadiest hand. The hucksters, the promoters,
are appealing for the allegiance of these small people in vain. True, the
cereal companies may be able to market huge quantities of junk breakfasts; the
hamburger and hot dog chains may sell endless numbers of unreal fast-food items
to the children, but the deep heart beats firmly, unreached and unreasoned
with. A child of today can detect a lie quicker than the wisest adult of two
decades ago. When I want to know what is true, I ask my children. They do not
ask me; I turn to them.
One day while my
son Christopher, who is four, was playing in front of me and his mother, we two
adults began discussing the figure of Jesus in the Synoptic Gospels.
Christopher turned toward us for an instant and said, "I am a fisherman. I
fish for fish." He was playing with a metal lantern which someone had
given me, which I had nevel used... and suddenly I realized that the lantern
was shaped like a fish. I wonder what thoughts were being placed in my little
boy's soul at that moment -- and not placed there by cereal merchants or candy
peddlers. "I am a fisherman. I fish for fish." Christopher, at four,
had found the sign I did not find until I was forty-five years old.
Time is speeding
up. And to what end? Maybe we were told that two thousand years ago. Or maybe
it wasn't really that long ago; maybe it is a delusion that so much time has
passed. Maybe it was a week ago, or even earlier today. Perhaps time is not
only speeding up; perhaps, in addition, it is going to end.
And if it does,
the rides at Disneyland are never going to be the same again. Because when time
ends, the birds and hippos and lions and deer at Disneyland will no longer be
simulations, and, for the first time, a real bird will sing.
Thank you.