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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Sheretz, Shoals, and Swarms

The scholar Rashi (Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki - the name "Rashi" an abbreviation using the initials) defined the term "sheretz" as "any living being that is not higher than the ground - like flies, ants, beetles, worms, rats, mice, and all fish."
Later he defines a related term "remess" as "insects that are low, crawling on the ground, and look as though they are being dragged, because their movement is not clearly perceived."
There is a matter of two dimensionality in "sheretz"; they are "not higher than the earth". They lack height, the third dimension. In remess, there is a quality of unwilled movement: being "dragged".

In "sheretz" I understand motion ( and "life" to the mediaeval mind ) that is like a school of fish or a swarm of ants or a horde of mice: swarm behavior which although possibly "willed" shows no particular individuality, but rather a uniform movement. And that movement is mostly within a strict plane of motion, appearing two dimensional. In fact, since Rashi says "all fish", and fish are not even "on the ground",  I take the movement of schools of fish to be Rashi's defining concept:  motion restricted to a plane of 2 dimensions... even though the entire plane ( the school of fish seen as length and width ) may itself move within 3 dimensions; i.e., the school swimming in 2 dimensions may swim up, down, or sideways in 3 dimensions.
In other words, a movement that appears to be uniform with 2 dimensions, like a crowd of people seen from high in a bell tower above the town square as they move in one direction towards the cathedral: "they look like ants from way up here!"

In "remess", on the other hand, movement appears unwilling because there is no apparent individuation, rather the animals appear indistinct and form a blot of color, like a carpet, perhaps, being pulled and dragged here and there.

In Genesis, the word remess is used to describe all animal life, except Man. Mankind appears as individuals that move as individuals, not schools or swarms, and each human's movement (life) is clearly distinct the one from another.(At this point, it may be objected that Mankind often acts like a swarm and is a slave to crowd mentality, and that is true. The point is that Mankind's nature is to be individual, even though they may choose to lose a dimension now and then.)

In Genesis, the blessing of fertility is first given to fish, fowl, and animal life. As Zornberg says "To proliferate is, in a sense, the "sheretz" modality.
But early man did not have the numbers such as possessed by the fish in the sea nor the birds of the air. Elias Cannetti (the author of "Crowds") writes: "Men may press closely together and enact a multitude in traditional rhythmic movements, but they are not a multitude; they are few, and have to make up in intensity what they lack in actual numbers."

Zornberg: "When God blesses Adam and Eve, or commands Noah... "to be more"... "Fill the earth... abound on the earth [lit., swarm] and increase on it."  there is a command to be like "sheretz-remess" of animals.

Zornberg: "Surrounded by emptiness, man seeks the animal faculty of increase. What man is blessed-commanded to do is not simply to propagate; the process in one, in Canetti's terms, of transformation:

Early man, roaming around in small bands through large and often empty spaces, was confronted by a preponderance of animals... Many of them existed in enormous numbers. Whether it was herds of buffaloes or springboks, shoals of fish, or swarms of locusts, bees, or ants, their numbers rendered those of man insignificant.
For the progeny of man is sparse, coming singly and taking a long time to arrive. The desire to be more, for the number of people to whom one belongs to be larger, must always have been profound and urgent, and must, moreover, have been growing stronger all the time... Man's weakness lay in the smallness of his numbers... In the enormously long period of time during which he lived in small groups, he, as it were, incorporated into himself, by transformations, all the animals he knew. It was through the development of transformation that he really became man; it was his specific gift and pleasure.
This continues on to a discussion of Australian aborigines, whose ancestors believed themselves of a dual nature, both animal and human at once, each ancestor embodying a specific animal as part of themselves.
Zornberg: "These Canetti sees as products of transformation. A successful and established transformation becomes a kind of endowment: it signified a connection with the numbers of animals incorporated into the human identity. Man desired the increase of the animals, since they were connected with man: ' When they increased, he also increased; the increase of the totem animal was identical with his own.'  Plants, as well as animals, even insects, scorpions, lice, flies, or mosquitos can be designated as a totem"  ' it can only be their immense number which attracts them; in establishing a relationship with them he means to ensure their numbers for himself.'

In Genesis, man is told to proliferate and rule; to swarm yet to be above the swarm. It is to be swarmlike and attached to the earth ( or, in the case of fish, in the medium one lives ). It is also to have the third dimension, the height to be above the swarm and have an all-encompassing view of the world, and thereby to rule it wisely.

I have more to say, and  shall refer back to this. But this is enough for now.

7 comments:

Unknown said...

I think perhaps, that humans are supposed to be able to have the wisdom of being able to perceive things on a three dimensional plane. But it seems frequently such attempts to "scale the heights" are waylaid. Perhaps Rabbi Schlomo Yitzhaki did not think of it, but if we take ants, who work together unselfishly for the good of their colony, I can see that they indeed seem to possess more than just the "sheretz" attributed to them. Of course, they are not imbued with consciousness, so maybe it is just in their nature to be unselfish...but the third dimensional plane still seems to be there.

What do you think?

Ben

Ben

Montag said...

I read Rashi as being aware of the intelligence and co-operation and communication necessary between animals for sheretz behavior. Taking the schools of fish, for example, this is highly complex stuff, and he seems to appreciate it openly.

There is that third dimension implied, where we look down and "everyone looks like ants", but I do not think it is consciousness, for I am not clear that Rashi would deny consciousness to animals capable of the complex behavior such as "swarming".

Personally, right this second, I would think the difference, the third dimension, is a more acute sense of the Holy, more acute...

excuse me...

as I wrote that, the image that Canetti wrote about: "the ancestor embodying a specific animal" sort of swept in front of me...

the POINT seems to be humans have a more acute sense of The Holy;

they demonstrate this somewhat by their interpretation of the multitudes of animals as important Powers in their world;

the humans identify with the Powers which are represented by animals;

this is a part of the process of being aware of the Holy in one aspect as a command to increase and multiply and fill the face of the earth;

and humans differ from animals in that animals do not do this type of identifying themselves with other beings as symbols! (at least, as far as we know, they do not do it.)

Thanks. I needed that.

Anonymous said...

It is wonderful that we can incorporate and symbolically find harmony with all things...

I think that God has the potential to be in everything. And that God is not beyond us, but with us, within us, and around us too. I believe that this is our heaven, right here, right now, and if it is hell, it is because we have made it so...why else are we able to reason and realize who and what and where we are, if not to make Heaven?

Ben

Professor 0110 said...

Just a quick further point on the transformations that Elias Canetti and Zornberg explains, how the animals were, in a sense, the brothers and sisters of early man. Such transformations seem to be long gone in our modern age, or would the world be in a better state? (sorry to be cynical here). And with the increase in metallic structures and the decrease of natural nature, the ability of those transformations has also been lost. Rather than seeing and hearing and breathing God all around us, it seems that we now have to fathom a metaphysical comprehension of God. Aye, and limited....and that's only for those who choose to seek God. The rest will have to make do with the metal world, or failing that, with a favela and little food.

Ben.

...But still in the world, there are many who DO take on these transformations...only, there aren't near enough of them, or nearly as often occurring as the earth itself pleads (for it is pleading with us to improve circumstances, or else how will it survive?).

Montag said...

How many "Bens" are there?

Transforming is like playing with reality.
We create our own real world as intelligent beings. The so-called "real world" of brute facts is nothing but a crude universe devoid of any knowledge about itself or anything else.

When I was a kid, I played cowboys, was shot,then played again; resurrected, as it were.

Our tragedy is we have created our world and then we have chosen to not be transformed, we have chosen to accept death.

Ben said...

Sorry, about that. They're all the same Ben...It would be quite a coincidence if they were all named Ben and different. I can't remember which account I am signed in to, and sometimes I forget to change options....I promise to be consistent from now on :)

Just on the last point, the tragedy point on choosing to accept death. Do you mean we have chosen to languish in a sort of listlessness while chaos reigns?

Ben

Montag said...

Whew! That is a relief about the Bens.

Yes. We have chosen to languish in our grossly deficient narratives. I think if 2008 showed us anything, it was that our myths do not work, are far removed from reality, and hinder us rather than help us, regardless whether there is chaos or not.