A Skeptic's View of Sexual Transcendence

Please note: This piece includes a few passing references to my personal sex life. Family members and others who don’t want to read about that stuff may want to skip this one. This piece was originally published on the Blowfish Blog.

Urban tantra
For some reason, the sex- positive community is also, very often, a spiritual community. (At least in the San Francisco Bay Area, where I live.) It’s not often a conventionally religious community; but many varieties of Wicca, Goddess worship, shamanism, Tantra, astrology, chi, chakras, belief in a collective metaphysical consciousness, and other forms of New Age belief and magical thinking permeate it, both privately and publicly.

This troubles me. I am a hard- core atheist/ materialist/ naturalist/ humanist/ skeptic/ whatever you want to call someone who doesn’t believe in any supernatural entities or substances. And I’m just as unconvinced — and almost as troubled — by the ideas of the Goddess and chi energy and immortal consciousness and so on, as I am by the ideas of God and angels and Hell.

Now, I’m not writing this piece to argue against religion. I may yet write a piece criticizing spiritual beliefs and practices in the sex- positive community… but it’s not what I’m doing here. (If you want to see my reasons and arguments for my lack of spiritual belief, you can do so here, and here, and here and here and here.)

What I want to do here is offer an alternative.

I want to offer a positive way of looking at sexuality and sexual transcendence that doesn’t involve any sort of belief in the supernatural. I want to offer a sex- positive philosophy that is entirely materialist. The materialist view of life in general and sex in particular is often viewed as cold, bleak, narrow, mechanical, reductionist, and generally a downer. I don’t think it is. And I want to talk about why.

*

Brain
The materialist view says that there is no supernatural world. At all. There is only the physical world. All those things that seem non- physical — thoughts, feelings, choices, selfhood, transcendent sexual ecstasy, consciousness in general — are actually products of the brain, and of the brain’s interactions with the rest of the body and the rest of the world. We don’t yet know exactly how this works — the science of neuropsychology is still in its infancy — but the overwhelming evidence we have so far is that this seems to be so.

And to me, this is not a downer. This is magnificent.

To me, the idea that, out of nothing but earth and water and sunlight, these wildly complex living beings have developed, not only with the capacity for consciousness but with the capacity to create the experience of ecstasy for ourselves and one another… that is just jaw-droppingly astonishing. We can create the experience of joy, of deep, expansive pleasure that takes us out of ourselves and into one another… and we do it through a complex re-arrangement of the energy of the sun, and the atoms and molecules of the planet.

That is magnificent. That, more than any spiritual belief I ever had, makes me feel both humble and proud. That makes me feel intimately connected with the rest of the Universe… in a way that no spiritual practice ever did. What’s that old hippie song about how we’re stardust, made of billion- year- old carbon? You don’t have to believe in metaphysical energy to think that that is wicked cool.

Descent of man
There’s something else, too. When you look at human beings from a materialist and evolutionary standpoint, not as special spiritual entities or children of the Goddess but simply as another twig on the evolutionary tree… that view puts sex squarely front and center in the human experience. Sex has an immensely important place in the evolutionary scheme. Darwin wrote an entire book about it.

Why does sex feel so good? Sex feels so good because it evolved to feel good. Sex feels profoundly, transcendently amazing because evolutionary forces strongly favor animals who really, really like to boff. That’s an oversimplification — for one thing, evolution can also favor animals who are picky about their sex partners — but it is a huge part of the picture.

Of course, birth control and other non- reproductive sexual practices have been shifting this picture somewhat for humans, putting reproduction into our conscious control and increasingly setting it apart from sexual pleasure. And as a queer spanking fetishist who neither has nor wants kids, I’m very much in favor of that. My DNA is apparently under the impression that it’s going to replicate by spanking other women, and I’m happy to let it dream on. But it is undeniable that these evolutionary forces are where the roots of sexual pleasure lie… roots that go back hundreds of millions of years.

Brain 4
In other words: According to a materialist viewpoint, the capacity for transcendent sexual joy is hard- wired into our brains… and it’s deeply and powerfully hard- wired, as a crucial and central feature of our lives, by hundreds of millions of years of evolution. And this doesn’t just mean that suppressing or trivializing sex is stupid and futile, dangerous and harmful, a cruel and pointless crusade against the deeply- laid grain of our nature. (Although it certainly does mean that.)

It means that the act of sex, and the experience of sexual pleasure, connects us to every other living thing on earth. We are the cousins of everything that lives on this planet, with a common ancestor of primordial soup going back billions of years… and we are all related, not entirely but substantially, because of sex.

That is awesome. That makes me want to go fuck right now, just so I can feel connected with my fish and tetrapod and primate ancestors. That is entirely made of win.

And finally:

Love_in_a_cliff
When you don’t believe in God or the soul or any sort of afterlife — when you believe that this short life is all that we have — then making the most of that short life, and taking advantage of the joyful experiences it has to offer, suddenly becomes a whole lot more important. It’s almost a moral obligation. The odds against you, personally, having been born into this life, are beyond astronomical. Are you going to waste that life by not giving yourself, and other people, as much joy as you possibly can?

Now, this doesn’t mean, as many anti- atheists claim, that without a belief in God or an afterlife, we can and would behave entirely selfishly and with no moral compass. It doesn’t mean that even a little bit. But it does mean than we can base our morality — including our sexual morality — on how our behavior demonstrably affects people in this life, and not on how it supposedly affects invisible beings in an unproven hypothetical life after this one. And it means that — as long as we don’t cause harm to people in this life — it is not only acceptable, but a positive and meaningful good, to engage in any activities that bring joy and epiphany and meaning to ourselves and the people around us. Including, and maybe even especially, sex.

In other words:

I don’t think we need to see sex as spiritual in order to see it as transcendent.

Kiss rodin
I don’t think we need to see sex as blessed by the Goddess, or a telepathic connection between souls, or a channeling of the chi energy, or as any form of worship or spiritual practice, in order to see it as valuable. I think we can see sex as a physical act between animals… and still see it as richly, deeply valuable and meaningful. I think we can see sex as a physical act , and still see it as an act that connects us intimately, not only with ourselves and with one another, but with all of life, and with the expanse of history, and with the vastness of the universe.

{advertisement}
A Skeptic's View of Sexual Transcendence
{advertisement}

13 thoughts on “A Skeptic's View of Sexual Transcendence

  1. 2

    For some reason, the sex- positive community is also, very often, a spiritual community…
    It’s not for “some” reason — you yourself mention the reason a few paragraphs down. “Spirituality” is about the experience of transcendence, and sex is one of the oldest (and easiest) routes to that experience.

  2. Eli
    3

    Did you ever hear Alan Watts on the ceramic versus the organic versus the mechanical view of the universe? He stated (roughly) that the “ceramic myth” – that man was made by god out of clay in his image – put man in an unbearably exalted position, and that the “mechanical myth” was in part a reaction to that, and hence it contains a large number of put-downs – life is “just” a chemical process, man is a “mere” accident on an “insignificant” speck of dust, etc.
    I think there is something to that, and this “downer” legacy is something that is still too often seen as inseparable from rational materialism. I think it’s high time to distance ourselves from that and reclaim awe and transcendence from the claws of religions. Your posts are often excellent examples of that. Thanks for writing!

  3. 4

    For some reason, the sex- positive community is also, very often, a spiritual community…
    Given how many spiritual groups around the world are also profoundly sex-repressive (among them some of the really HUGE ones), I have to wonder if your sample is just a tad skewed by locality. Taking our species as a whole, I’d bet that more people worldwide are pleasuring themselves and others DESPITE supernatural beliefs than those that are BECAUSE of them.

  4. 5

    When you don’t believe in God or the soul or any sort of afterlife — when you believe that this short life is all that we have — then making the most of that short life, and taking advantage of the joyful experiences it has to offer, suddenly becomes a whole lot more important.
    Yes…yes…YESSSS!!!
    I’m not comfortable with the word “transcendent,” but that may just be my hang-up that needn’t concern anyone else. In my view, sex and the arts are intense experiences that lift people above the mundane things we say, do and feel in life – they are the spices that enrich life. And, this life is the only opportunity any of us will have to experience such intensity and joy. It would be a shame to squander that opportunity.

  5. 9

    What’s that old hippie song about how we’re stardust, made of billion- year- old carbon?

    I think you mean Carl Sagan?

    We are made of star stuff.

    Not to be pedantic, but the magic of his point is the heavier elements are created when stars go nova and then new stars and planets form from the debris. The Sun is a third-generation star.
    Isn’t this way more cool than goddidit?
    Ok, back to the sex part…

  6. 10

    Actually, Ildi, I didn’t mean Carl Sagan. I meant Joni Mitchell’s “Woodstock” (most famously covered by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young). It’s neat that Sagan said something so similar, though.

  7. 11

    “Sex has an immensely important place in the evolutionary scheme.”
    A minor comment on this: A male rat will lick a female rat’s genitals
    before mounting her. Given when our last ancestor dates to, this
    suggests that cunnilingus has a proud tradition 75 million years long.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *