Curiosity and Chastity
Curiosity is not really an
extraordinary quality. We are all curious. We are creatures of curiosity. The
word “curiosity”—or “curious”—has a root meaning, which is “care”. We care. Practically
all that we do is based on “care”. As soon as we awaken in the morning we start
“caring”. I care for my teeth, my wearing of clothes, my going to work or
school…etc. Each time we turn to something and attend to it—be it a simple
making of the coffee or a complex web surf—we “care”. We are curious. Just look
at the different directions we have taken in our lives. They have been marked
by a certain “care”.
Now, when we say that someone is
a curious person we think of a good quality of that person. Curiosity, we say,
makes that person search, ask questions, discover things. It is a great
advantage to be curious. Remember that science and technology have been
motivated a lot by curiosity. So there is such a thing as “scientific”
curiosity.
But there can be unhealthy curiosity. For example,
someone is curious about how to cheat.
So that person researches on strategy to cheat. Take another example, the
curiosity in gossiping. When someone gossips, there is a lot of information
that is private but made public. There is also information that is false.
Curiosity in gossip is so unhealthy because gossip is based on false truths. There
is curiosity to engage in things that are not necessary, things deviate us from
the path of authentic life.
So when is curiosity healthy?
How do we make it healthy curiosity? Well, believe it or not, but here is
one word that can help us answer the question: chastity.
The word chastity has its Latin
roots: castus "pure, cut off,
separated." Castus is related to
castration! When chaste we are “castrated”—we are “cut off”. But why use this
word “castration”? It sounds morbid.
Wait…it is not as morbid as we
might fear. In chastity we cut off
from knowing everything about the lives of others. It is to cut off from the private space of others
and we set a space of discretion and space of admitted ignorance. By doing this
we allow the other person to have his or
her own space. The other person has his or her “owness” that can never be
under my scope of knowledge and action. In chastity we cut off from that tendency to infiltrate into the sphere—the sacred
sphere—of the other person.
It is actually quite simple. I am not you and you are not me. No matter how hard we try, we can never really replace each other. Your thoughts and feelings are yours. Sure we share in thoughts and feelings. Someone eating unripe green mango may make me salivate. But I am not exactly tasting that taste of the other person. The experience is still his or hers...it "transcends" me.
It is actually quite simple. I am not you and you are not me. No matter how hard we try, we can never really replace each other. Your thoughts and feelings are yours. Sure we share in thoughts and feelings. Someone eating unripe green mango may make me salivate. But I am not exactly tasting that taste of the other person. The experience is still his or hers...it "transcends" me.
This reminds us of Genesis
chapter 1 and Genesis 2/16-17 and 18.
Genesis 1 says we can have
mastery over everything—but it is a mastery in
the likeness of God. There is the “Sabbath distance”—the “mastery over
mastery”. Just like God we do not
impose absolutely our domination and mastery over others.
Genesis 2/16-18 tells us that
“you may…but”. So we can let our desires go freely as much as we want; eat from
all the fruit trees. But we recognize the limit; do not take from that one
particular tree—the “prohibited tree”. Genesis 2 tells us that our desires must
be responsible desires. We need to
structure our freedom and give it its proper and respectful dynamism. If we do
not do this we “die”. Relationships fall apart. We harm and destroy each other,
like Cain killing Abel.
So this is chastity! It is a “castration”—a
cutting—of exalted mastery and desire. It is a “trimming” off of the many
things we add to our needs and desires and actions. Chastity is the cutting
away of the “tralalas”—that word we use to refer to the “non-essentials”. In our
modern society we are exposed to so many things—and many of those things are not exactly necessary. There is a
kind of “exhibitionism” going on in our societies—the “exhibition” of many
things that we do not need. Yet we consume. Social scientists have noted how
modern societies are “consumerist”.
Playing the game of
exhibitionism and consumerism can be quite “un-chaste”. Our society has become
divided with the alienation of other social members and the alienation Nature. Prestige
is characterized by “how much a person can buy”. Those who buy more have “more
prestige”. Given the intensification of economic production we put so much
pressure on the environment, damaging the “carrying capacity” of Nature. Mastery
(of Genesis 1) and desire (of Genesis 2) run wild!
So let us connect this with
curiosity. When is curiosity healthy? It
is healthy when it is chaste. We are curious of the essentials…we “castrate” away from the non-essential. We
give direction to our life adventure. We search for depths, meaning, and true
happiness.
By way of conclusion, we can ask
ourselves how the notions of curiosity and chastity can apply to our style of modernity.
We can ask what is it that we say is the “meaning of life” today? We pursue
what we think is “meaningful”—and so we are curious. We do exercise this
curiosity. Can chastity, in the way we describe it here, have a part in our
curiosity?