Name Recognition

Some two and a half years ago when my brother-in-law Neal Stephenson suggested I start a blog (primarily for the podcasts to which I intend to return), he asked me what I would call such a site. “Sects and Violence in the Ancient World,” was my attempt at a witty, non-committal riposte. Since I was unemployed at the time and still hoping some deus ex machina might put me back into a full-time university post, complete with an Ancient Near Eastern religions component, the title seemed apt. I determined that I would not exploit my relationship to a best-seller author since I wanted to earn my own readership. Sects sells, does they not? Since then I’ve had a number of curious readers wonder why I tend to address modern religious issues, unlike my title suggests. The reason goes back to what I want to be when I grow up.

How many eighteen-year olds really know what their lives will hold in store? Our society asks them to select majors and pick a career path far too young. I had visions of clergyhood in my head so I majored in religion. Like many children of alcoholics, I tend to be addictive in my devotion, so after completing a Master’s in religion, I had to have just one more degree—then I’ll stop—and a doctorate in religion finished ossifying my career track. Having been weaned on the Bible, I’d stuck with it for three degrees and found that during that time the job market had evaporated around me. As I watched society from the sidelines, I saw so many people at the place I had started out, staring wistfully at the Bible, looking for answers. Uncritically, magically expecting a miracle. Just like Oral Roberts said. Once my teaching career had been derailed by misguided Fundamentalists, I realized my interests were much more in the effect religion has on people. It was too late, however, to go back to school.

My way of dealing with any dilemma is to parse its history. That’s why I studied pre-biblical religions along the way to my doctorate in Bible. A couple of things had become clear along the way: religions are very fragile and easily splinter into sects. And most of the large-scale violence in the history of the world has a religious basis. (Probably much of the small-scale violence does as well.) Its origins are literally more ancient than history. What is religion in today’s world if not the direct descendent of sects and violence in the ancient world? And since my idiosyncratic musings have passed the 200K hit mark, it seemed all right to acknowledge the role my brother-in-law has played in all this. So, in good academic fashion, I’d like to acknowledge the suggestions and support of Neal Stephenson in starting this blog, but any errors are, of course, my own.

5 thoughts on “Name Recognition

  1. I read this post because it had the tag “Neal Stephenson”. Then I hit on this sentence:

    “How many eighteen-year olds really know what their lives will hold in store? Our society asks them to select majors and pick a career path far too young. ”

    and it became personal. The child of middle class parents, I was pressured to choose a major and then a university at the age of 16. Must get those applications in early, of course! And like many 16 year olds, I chose romantically, not reasonably. Many semesters later I learned I am, at best, a middling artist. Such a middling artist in fact, that I should have just gone for the non-romantic engineering degree. but oh well.

    Investment made, I waited till I had my degree to decide what I wanted to do with my life. Half a lifetime later, I still haven’t decided. The act of not-decision is always a feeling of freedom, of eternal choice.

    Although I’m suddenly wishing I’d chosen a cooler name for my blog. 😉

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Little Red Reviewer,

      I am in solidarity with you! I’m nearly fifty and haven’t decided what I’ll be yet when I grow up. You’ve got a cool blog going; I’ll be stopping in on occasion!

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  2. DJ

    Thank you for that bit of history. I too am one of the many, many, many people who took the college track without a clue. Well, I had a vague clue, but I didn’t really solidify it, so it turned out however it turned out. I don’t regret my choice in major. It would be nice if there was a more supportive, initiatory phase for youngsters, so it’s not like, “Oh, you’re 18 now. You’re an adult now. Get a job and/or go to college, etc…” I know I’m oversimplifying things, but hopefully you get the idea.

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  3. Baz

    Fast forward 5 years and I think life as we know it now will have markedly different. As more and more work online, what will happen to the empty college buildings?

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