• blog
  • in the shadow of sun mountain
  • buy my books
  • photographs
  • paintings
  • bio
  • cv
  • contact
  • search
Menu

Studio Q Photography

Exploring Human Behavior and Death Anxiety Through Art
  • blog
  • in the shadow of sun mountain
  • buy my books
  • photographs
  • paintings
  • bio
  • cv
  • contact
  • search
×

Body and Soul: An Uneasy Alliance

Quinn Jacobson May 3, 2023
“The body is the closest that we come to touching any kind of reality. And yet we have the desire to flee the body: many religions are based entirely on disembodiment, because the body brings with it mortality, fear of death. If you accept the body as reality, then you have to accept mortality and people are very afraid to do that.”
— David Cronenberg

“Body and Soul: An Uneasy Alliance” is chapter 8 from “The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life,” by Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski (co-creators of terror management theory).

If you join me on Saturdays (on my YouTube channel), you’ll know that we’re going through this wonderful book and learning a tremendous amount about how knowledge of our impending deaths drives so much of our behavior, good and bad. I’m posting this as a follow-up to the reading and for those who have watched or listened to the video.

Sub-Chapters and Notes

DISTANCING FROM AND DISPARAGING ANIMALS

  • We regulate activities that remind us of our corporeal nature.

  • We alter and adorn our bodies.

  • We scrub ourselves to eradicate any scents except those that come from bottles or spray cans.

  • We use “rest” rooms to discretely dispose of bodily excretions.

  • We recoil in sophomoric mirth (amusement) at the sight of animals copulating.

  • Disgust: We are “disgusted” by far more than rotting flesh.

  • Bodily secretions like blood, vomit, urine, and feces are more disgusting after thinking about death.

  • We are determined to deny our animality. We want to separate ourselves from animals; we want to be special and superior to the “lowly” animals. Animals remind us that we will die. We hide all of our animal behavior; we have toilets, plates, forks, spoons, and cups; we shave, we wear clothes, and we disguise sex as “love.”

THE MORTIFICATION OF THE FLESH

  • We believe we are superior to all other life forms (Bible, created in the image of God, etc.).

  • Scourging purifications. Whipping the flesh, conquering the flesh—Saint Paul, “Live by the flesh, you will die, put the deeds of the body to death, and you will live.”

FOR BEAUTY, WE MUST SUFFER

  • We decorate our flesh with ink, piercings, scarring, etc.

  • We distinguish between the world of culture and the world of nature (man vs. animal).

  • We have a need to reduce our resemblance to animals; animals remind us of death.

  • Eating from the Tree of Knowledge made the naked human body shameful; it revealed the “worm at the core." - death

  • We go to great lengths not to look old—cosmetics, surgery, etc.

  • Hair: Hairy bodies have always been associated with uncivilized, amoral, sexually promiscuous, and perverted animality.

  • Transforming from animal to human through modifications—piercings, tattoos, and scarification—reinforces that we are more than mere animals.

  • Neck rings, feet, waist, and head binding permanently disable people for “beauty” and “status.”

  • Millions of Americans get plastic surgery every year; the need for a “youthful appearance” is paramount!

“SEX AND DEATH ARE TWINS”

  • Sex is both exhilarating and frightening to us.

  • Ernest Becker said, “Sex is of the body, and the body is of death.”

  • Sex is a potent symbol of our creaturely, corporeal, and ephemeral conditions.

  • Sex is first and foremost a glaring reminder that we are animals; next to urination and defecation, it is the closest human beings come to acting like beasts.

  • We recognize that animals and humans have sex in the same way.
    Reproduction makes us painfully aware that we are transient ambulatory gene repositories (pass it on and die).

  • Ernest Becker was right then when he proclaimed that “sex and death are twins." Thinking about death makes the physical aspects of sex unappealing, and considering the physical aspects of sex nudges death thoughts closer to consciousness.

  • We manage our death-fueled anxiety about sex by imbuing it with symbolic meaning, transforming it from the creaturely to the sublime, thereby making it psychologically safer.

  • We transform sex into a cultural ritual, making it less animalistic.

  • Animal lust becomes human love.

LA FEMME FATALE

  • Women’s bodies and sexual behavior are especially subject to rules and regulations.

  • Men have always made the rules, and women arouse sexual lust in them.

  • Disgust with menstruation and lactation: a lab study

  • From time immemorial, men have utilized their superior physical strength, political power, and economic clout to dominate, denigrate, and control women, as well as using women to serve as designated inferiors in order to prop up their self-esteem.

  • Women make men hard, and this makes it hard for men to ignore their own animality.

  • The reason so many men are misogynistic is because they are reminded of sex when encountering women, they are threatened by this.

  • Men are reminded of their animality through the sexual arousal of women and are reminded of their impending death.

  • Many major religions belittle women, making them subject to men.

  • Widespread patterns of violence against women may well be partially rooted in men’s sexual ambivalence; the conflict between lust and the need to deny animality makes men uncomfortable with their own sexual arousal.

  • Being an embodied animal aware of death is indeed difficult. We simply cannot bear the thought that we are biological creatures, no different from dogs, cats, fish, or worms. Accordingly, people are generally partial to views of humans as different from and superior to animals. We adorn and modify our bodies, transforming our animal carcasses into cultural symbols. Rather than thinking of ourselves as hormonally regulated gene reproduction machines bumping and grinding our way toward oblivion, we “make love” to transform copulation into romance. And when women ooze hormones, blood, and babies, men blame them for their own lustful urges, which serves to perpetuate negative stereotypes about and justify abuse of women.

  • The terror of death is thus at the heart of human estrangement from our animal nature. It isolates us from our own bodies, from each other, and from the other creatures with whom we share noses, lips, eyes, teeth, and limbs everywhere on the planet.

“Humans cannot live without illusions. For the men and women of today, an irrational faith in progress may be the only antidote to nihilism. Without the hope that the future will be better than the past, they could not go on...
Humanists like to think they have a rational view of the world; but their core belief in progress is a superstition, further from the truth about the human animal than any of the world’s religions. Outside of science, progress is simply a myth.”
— John Gray
In Art & Theory, Books, Consciousness, Death Anxiety, Denial of Death, Ernest Becker, New Book 2023, Philosophy, Quinn Jacobson, RA-4 Reversal Positive, Shadow of Sun Mountain, Sheldon Solomon, Tabeguache Ute, The Worm at the Core, Ute, Terror Management Theory Tags The Worm at the Core, death denial, death anxiety, In the Shadow of Sun Mountain
Comment

“Between a Rock and a Hard Place”: found alone between a rock and a hard place, emerging from the darkness, reaching for the light, a small Aspen tree stands bare, waking up from a long, cold winter. RA-4 Reversal Print (direct positive)

The Last Messiah - Peter Zapffe

Quinn Jacobson April 24, 2023
“One night in long bygone times, man awoke and saw himself.

He saw that he was naked under cosmos, homeless in his own body. All things dissolved before his testing thought, wonder above wonder, horror above horror unfolded in his mind.

Then woman too awoke and said it was time to go and slay. And he fetched his bow and arrow, a fruit of the marriage of spirit and hand, and went outside beneath the stars. But as the beasts arrived at their waterholes where he expected them of habit, he felt no more the tiger’s bound in his blood, but a great psalm about the brotherhood of suffering between everything alive.

That day he did not return with prey, and when they found him by the next new moon, he was sitting dead by the waterhole.”
— The Last Messiah - Peter Zapffe

Peter Zapffe was a Norwegian philosopher and writer. In this passage, he describes the existential crisis of humanity and the realization of our place in the cosmos. It reflects on the moment when early humans, represented by "man," became self-aware and conscious of their own existence.

Initially, man is depicted as naked and homeless, symbolizing a sense of vulnerability and a lack of purpose in the vastness of the universe. However, man's "testing thought," or his capacity for reasoning and contemplation, allows him to marvel at the wonders and horrors of existence. This suggests that self-awareness and consciousness bring both enlightenment and anguish as man grapples with the mysteries of existence.

The mention of a woman awakening and urging the man to go and slay represents the emergence of survival instincts and the beginning of human civilization. Man equips himself with tools, represented by the bow and arrow, which symbolize the development of human intellect and technology through the marriage of spirit and hand.

However, when the man goes out to hunt, he realizes a sense of interconnectedness and empathy with all living beings, as reflected in the "psalm about the brotherhood of suffering between everything alive." This suggests a shift in man's perspective, where he starts to see himself as part of a larger web of existence rather than a superior predator. This realization may have led to a change in man's behavior, as he no longer returns with prey but instead sits by the waterhole and eventually dies.

“Man is a tragic animal. Not because of his smallness, but because he is too well endowed. Man has longings and spiritual demands that reality cannot fulfill. We have expectations of a just and moral world. Man requires meaning in a meaningless world.”
— Peter Wesel Zapffe

Zapffe's passage reflects on the human condition, the complexities of self-awareness, and the existential struggles that arise from our consciousness and perception of the world around us. It presents a philosophical exploration of the nature of existence, the search for meaning, and the consequences of self-awareness.

I read Thomas Ligotti’s book, “The Conspiracy Against the Human Race,” a while back. I don’t recall how I ran into his writing; it must have been a book review or something when I was doing research and reading on existential philosophy. Regardless, it is mind-blowing. I wouldn’t say it’s for everyone. It’s dark, scary, and sticks with you. He’s known as a horror writer. This is horror, but in a more realistic way. I’m not sure I’d call him a nihilist, but he’s something akin to that—definitely an anti-natialist. Antinatalism, or anti-natalism, is the philosophical position that views birth and procreation of sentient beings (including non-human animals) as morally wrong. Antinatalists therefore argue that humans should abstain from procreating.

He wrote a lot about Peter Wessel Zapffe in the book. I can get on board with Zapffe, for the most part, anyway. I really like Zapffe’s essay, “The Last Messiah.” It’s littered with metaphor and meaning regarding the human condition. I’ve quoted the beginning of the essay above and wanted to share a tiny bit of insight about it. In this essay, he addresses the giant deer (Irish elk) of long ago that evolution got wrong. The animal grew antlers that were almost 12 feet wide (almost 4 meters)! The antlers were so heavy, they pinned the animal’s head to the ground. Needless to say, the animal went extinct. Zapffe compares human consciousness to this animal’s overgrown antlers.

Zapffe suggests that, like the antlers of the Irish elk, human consciousness is a maladaptation that brings about its own downfall. While other animals are able to live instinctively, without the burden of self-consciousness, humans are burdened with an awareness of their own mortality and the inherent meaninglessness of existence. This awareness creates a tragic contradiction in human life, as humans strive to find meaning, purpose, and significance in a world that appears devoid of inherent meaning.

His analogy of the Irish elk's antlers serves as a metaphor for the heavy burden of human consciousness and the existential anguish that it can bring. It reflects his view that human existence is characterized by a profound sense of tragedy, as humans grapple with the absurdity and meaninglessness of their own existence.


THE WORM AT THE CORE READING

Join me Saturday, April 29, 2023, at 1000 MST on YouTube or Stream Yard for the reading of Chapter 7, The Worm at the Core. This is a big chapter for me. It informs my project and is at the center of the idea behind my current work. The next few chapters really lay out the human response to death anxiety and the denial of death.

The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life

Chapter 7: The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness

  • Derogation and Dehumanization

  • Cultural Assimilation and Accommodation

  • Demonization and Destruction

  • September 11, 2001: The Lash and the Backlash

  • Dr. Strangelove in the Lab

  • Nothing New Under the Sun

  • Out on a Limb?

This is a reading of the book, "The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life" by Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and Tom Pyszczynski. Quinn will read a chapter every week and then have a discussion about it. This book, along with "The Denial of Death" by Ernest Becker, is the basis for Quinn's (photographic) book, "In the Shadow of Sun Mountain: The Psychology of Othering and the Genesis of Evil."

When: Saturday, April 29, 2023, at 1000 MST.

Where: My YouTube channel and Stream Yard

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNTibFMdWLU

Stream Yard: https://streamyard.com/f95s2myq8r

In Thomas Ligotti, Peter Wessel Zapffe, Writing, The Last Messiah, Shadow of Sun Mountain, Reading and Research, RA-4 Reversal Positive, Quinn Jacobson, Psychology, Philosophy, Pessimistic Philosophy, Consciousness, Irish Elk Tags peter wessel zapffe, Irish elk, huge antlers, human consciousness, mortality burden, in the shadow of sun mountain, ra-4 reversal prints, quinn jacobson, thomas ligotti, the conspiracy against the human race, the last messiah
2 Comments
← Newer

Search Posts

 

Featured Posts

Featured
Mar 30, 2026
Holding the Unresolvable: Mortality and Form in a Kallitype Portrait
Mar 30, 2026
Mar 30, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
Arts-Based Research Methodology
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 25, 2026
The Creative Mind & Mortality Podcast—S1E6: The Beginning of Denial
Mar 25, 2026
Mar 25, 2026
Mar 24, 2026
Ocotillo, Chihuahuan Desert
Mar 24, 2026
Mar 24, 2026
Mar 23, 2026
Metabolizing the Polycrisis: The Rupture Field Approach
Mar 23, 2026
Mar 23, 2026
Mar 20, 2026
The Creative Mind & Mortality – S1: Glass Bones, E5, Why Awareness Alone Wasn’t Enough
Mar 20, 2026
Mar 20, 2026
Mar 18, 2026
The Creative Mind & Mortality Podcast: S1E4
Mar 18, 2026
Mar 18, 2026
Mar 13, 2026
Quick Darkroom Studio Tour (Real Quick)
Mar 13, 2026
Mar 13, 2026
Mar 12, 2026
Existential Literacy
Mar 12, 2026
Mar 12, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
Rupture Field Theory - Marie's Story
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026