Alan Watts
(1915-1973)
Parapsychologists have long noted that people who appear to
have authentic supernatural abilities are often also gifted
illusionists. The assumed explanation is that they began to use these
abilities when very young to impress and/or offer assistance to
friends and family – but sometimes the abilities fail. So, in a
predictable compensatory maneuver, they resorted to using tricks and
illusions when the real magic wouldn’t come. This makes it difficult
to study these people, of course, because you sometimes can catch them
in their tricks, which makes you doubt the authenticity of what
appears to be truly mysterious.
It could be said that Alan Watts was in some ways similar to
these psychic/magicians. The first essay you will see in a collection
called “The Essential Alan Watts” is “The Trickster Guru.” The beauty
of Alan Watts is that his tricks were of such sophistication and charm
that they approached the level of magic, and therefore there was no
need to pretend they were anything but tricks. Let me explain.
Alan Watts was one of the best-known interpreters of Eastern
philosophies for the West. He published his first essay on Buddhism
when he was just 20 years old, in 1935. By the time he died on his
famous house-boat in the San Francisco Bay, in 1973, he had published
more than 25 books and hundreds of essays, articles, lectures and
seminars. His life was an adventure: he was an Anglican priest,
Buddhist scholar, professor of philosophy, consultant at psychiatric
hospitals, and entertainer. He was a gifted and prolific writer, but
he was not a man who spent his life sitting alone in a room with a
typewriter. His life drove his writing much more than his writing
drove his life.
When I wrote earlier that Watts was a bit of a “trickster
guru,” what I meant was that he really understood the essence of
Eastern philosophies – particularly Zen Buddhism – so well that he saw
the illusion underlying everything, including his own brilliance and
fame. So his teachings on the big questions: the nature of life and
death, of love, of transcendence, of reality, of consciousness, and so
on – were all infused with humor and self-deprecating irony. He was,
above all, a guru who didn’t take himself, or his teachings, too
seriously. For example, wrote that, “a person who truly believes in
God would never try and thrust the idea on anyone else, just as when
you understand mathematics, you are not a fanatical proponent of the
idea that two and two are four.”
Let’s end with Alan Watt’s own words concerning the
self-importance of humans: “The point is that rapport with the
marvelously purposeless world of nature gives us new eyes for
ourselves – eyes in which our very self-importance is not condemned,
but seen as something quite other than what it imagines itself to be.
In this light, all the weirdly abstract and pompous pursuits of men
are suddenly transformed into natural marvels of the same order as the
immense beaks of the toucans and hornbills, the fabulous tails of the
birds of paradise, the towering necks of the giraffes, and the vividly
polychromed posteriors of the baboons… Seen thus, the self-importance
of man dissolves in laughter.”
http://www.alanwatts.net/watts.htm