Hi Dauer:
I took a little break on this thread so I could step back. Hope you are well.
Regarding the Integral Aspect of it, you might be interested to learn that in the original Reb Zalman shiurim from which this material is drawn, there's no references to Integral Halachah or Ken Wilbur. I wasn't part of the final edit of the book or the change of the title from Psycho-halachah to Integral Halachah and I'm not familiar with Ken Wilbur. I know that some people didn't like Reb Zalman's term Psycho-halachah, though I'm not exactly sure why not. So there was a push to change it. However, I understand that Reb Zalman is still using the term Psycho-halachah.
That's not to say that there isn't harmony between the ideas because Reb Zalman was involved on the final edit, so I'm assuming it makes sense.
So I just read up about the quadrants you reference and it reminds me of a section that was from a Q&A after one of the lectures that wasn't in the book. Here's the excerpt. I think it might be interesting to you.
"Q. I’ve been trying to understand what you mean by psycho-halakhah."
Z.
"If it is merely halakhah, to say that this is the law and it does not have any impact on your psychological inner life, then it’s only halakhah, not psycho-halakhah. The way I want to deal with this is that it should have the transformative quality built in. That’s how I use the word psycho. All the other things -- if it doesn’t have a psychological impact, then it couldn’t be transformative.
"You may ask, 'On which level of psychology does psycho-Halakhah work?' So I say behaviorism is one level, depth psychology is another one, humanistic is another, transpersonal is another. But all the levels: That’s what I mean when I say 'psycho.' It’s a four-worlds thing. It brings us back to four world davvenen. That’s what I mean by it. And it’s a process. It also has the sense of process and one moves through it. It isn’t a static thing. And at the same time you can also talk about embodied- or ensouled-halakhah.
"All of these would be a good way of saying it. With, 'Embodied-halakhah,' one gets a different sense than just 'halakhah.' If one says, 'Ensouled-halakhah,' or, 'Engaged-halakhah,' all of these would work. That’s what I mean by psycho-halakhah."
I'm not sure if this is in line with Wilbur's quadrant or not, but it sounds similar. I'd be curious to hear your reaction to this.
I'm not raising issues that I have with psycho-halachah, but issues that I have with claiming it's not new and with what I see as an elevation of individual experience in the interpretation of historical data.
-- dauer
Regarding the whole issue of deconstruction, I have the sense that because of his scholarship, knowledge of philosophy, knowledge of language, intuition, understanding of people and souls, etc., that when Reb Zalman reads something from the past, he is really well-equiped to relate it to a living experience. So, for example, if I read Plato's Symposium, to an extent, there's a barrier between me and the characters because I'm not so good at personally relating to the people of that time, their life realities, their experience of being alive at that time, etc.
There was a tape I have somewhere called freeze-dried worship. Reb Zalman takes a psalm and describes the reality for King David in such terms that you feel that you are there, that you are King David experiencing his life and what goes into this psalm. The historical chasm is made small or becomes non-existent.
I get the feeling that Zalman is able to do that with halachah too. He doesn't say anything about how hard it is for the rest of us who might not have his training. I mean, I don't read gemara and know about the lives of every Reb so-and-so like a real talmud chocham would. So perhaps I can't do deconstruction like he can.
In shiur one of the second part of the book, he cautions the rabbis who might be interested in experimenting with halachah in any way to not raise experiments into changes to halachah for the community unless they have exercised a huge degree of care. There is a level of responsibility that comes into it when people move from personal experimentation to changing Jewish public policy and he surrounds the whole subject with an air of caution.
So I believe it is Reb Zalman's position that you, I and Pork's Okay Guy (POG) would all need to go through some kind of training before we would be eligible for making proposals to change Judaism; and this is no different than it has ever been. There's a big chunk of the material in this book specifically aimed at the people who will sit on the Beis Din of tomorrow. Reb Zalman isn't thinking of a "Renewal Community" Beis Din. He seems to be thinking of a mamash Beis Din in Israel.
I get this impression a lot from the book, but the example that comes to mind is when he cautions the Renewal community Rabbis (who were his audience in 1993 when the shiur was delivered) that if they don't handle the rules of conversion right, when their grandchildren want to marry the grandchildren of Orthodox Rabbis they will be creating a problem for their grandchildren. So he is envisioning a time when the division that seems so strong today evaporates, when Orthodox children are falling in love with Renewal children. And the issue is that anyone who changes halachah has a danger of becoming separate from Israel. So if one is a renewalist today and believes that patrilineal descent is kosher for a Jewish child, that is insufficient on the level of klal yisroel and that person will be creating a situation where they might end up on the outside. The same issue applies to circumcision, which is taken very seriously by Reb Zalman.
It's a complicated book. Yaasher koch'cha for opening this dialogue because it is very worthwhile. I agree with your comment that I'd like to see more voices join us.
Brachot,
Seth