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  • It doesn't seem to make sense to suggest there might be such a thing as "good materialism".

  • After all, isn't materialism just plain bad always?

  • It can seem as if we're faced with a stark choice:

  • either you can be materialistic, and that means obsessed with money and possessions, shallow and selfish

  • or you can reject materialism, be good and focus on more important matters of the spirit.

  • But in truth, most of us are, in our hearts, stuck somewhere between these two choices,

  • which is pretty uncomfortable.

  • We're still enmeshed in the desire to possess but we're encouraged to feel rather bad about it.

  • Yet, crucially, it's not actually materialism,

  • the pure fact of buying things and getting excited by possessions

  • that's ever really the problem.

  • We're failing to make a clear distinction between good and bad versions of materialism.

  • Let's try to understand good materialism through a slightly unusual route: religion.

  • Because we see them as focused exclusively on spiritual things,

  • it can be surprising to note how much use religions have made of material things.

  • They've spent a lot of time making and thinking about scrolls to hang in your house,

  • shrines, temples, monasteries, artworks, clothes, ceremonies...

  • However, they've cared about these things for one reason only:

  • because they wanted material things to serve the hightest and noblest purpose,

  • the development of our souls.

  • It's just that they recognize the we are incarnate, sensory, bodily beings

  • and that the way to get through to our souls has to be, at least in part, through our bodies

  • rather than merely through the intellect.

  • The importance of material things was for centuries at the core of christianity,

  • which proposed that Jesus was both the highest spiritual being and a flesh and blood person.

  • He was the spirit encarnated, holiness embodied.

  • In the Catholic Mass great significance is accorded to the bread and the wine,

  • which are believed to be transubstantiations of Christ,

  • that is, material objects which simultaneously have a spiritual identity,

  • just as Jesus himself combined the spiritual and the bodily while on Earth.

  • This can all sound like a very weird and arcane point entirely removed from the local shopping mall,

  • but exactly the same concept actually apllies outside of religions.

  • Many good material possessions can be set to involve a kind of transubstantiation

  • whereby they are both practical and physical, and also embody or allude to a positive personality or spirit.

  • Take this watch by the designer Dieter Rams.

  • To the outer eye it's an ordinary time piece,

  • but at a psychological level it's also a kind of transubstantiation.

  • It tells the time but it also hints at a more psychological, even spiritual side,

  • with ideals of purity, simplicity and harmony floating around it.

  • It tell us how long there is to lunch, but it also trying to nudge us towards being a certain sort of person

  • Or take this chair, it too transubstantiates a set of important values:

  • straightforwardness, strenght, honesty and elegance.

  • by getting closer to the chair we stand to become a little more like it,

  • which is an important piece of inner evolution.

  • Material objects can therefore be said to play a positive psychological or spiritual role in our lives,

  • when higher, more positive ideals are materialized in them,

  • and so, when buying and using them daily gives us a chance to get closer to our better selves.

  • When they're contained in physical things, valuable psychological qualities, that are otherwise often intermittent in our thoughs and conduct,

  • can become more stable and resilient.

  • This isn't to say that all consumerism just conveniently turns out to be great,

  • it depends on what a given material object stands for.

  • An object can transubstantiate the very worse side of human nature:

  • greed, callousness, the desire to triumph,

  • as much as it can the best sides.

  • So we must be careful no to decry or celebrate all material consumption just like that.

  • We have to ensure that the objects we invest and tire ourselves in the planet by making

  • are those that land most incouragement to our higher, better natures.

It doesn't seem to make sense to suggest there might be such a thing as "good materialism".

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