4. A Digital and Infernal New Gnosticism
In his thorough research on Gnosticism, Luiz Pinheiro points out that it is a modern category used to describe an ancient and complex phenomenon. While its roots appear as early as the first century BC, it emerged as a “movement” in the second century BC within paganism, Judaism, and Christianity. Gnosticism, or gnosis, is a peculiar form of religious knowledge that asserts the true reality of the cosmos, humanity, and God exists in a spiritual dimension known as the Pleroma or Totality. However, a disruption occurred within this spiritual realm, resulting in the creation of the material cosmos and the physical body. Humanity is divided into two groups: spiritual, pneumatic beings who understand their true nature, and those who are merely material and physical. It is through gnosis—knowledge—that one can attain salvation, awakening to the true reality of the spiritual world. The spiritual, pneumatic human being is a divine spark trapped within the body, seeking liberation to achieve their fullest existence in the spiritual realm. This awakening is facilitated by a spiritual Being who reveals human’s true nature. Pinheiro asserts that Gnosticism not only took on various forms throughout history but also manifests in diverse and specific ways in contemporary times. One such manifestation of the “Gnostic spirit” in the technological age is Cybergnosticism, also known as Cybergnosis, Technognosticism, or Technognosis (Pinheiro 2022, 13-14, 208, 290, 607).
Pinheiro also discusses various escape routes—from reality—that people seek out, often turning to elevated spaces where they look for security and hope for rescue. Among these, he highlights the metaverse and social media. While the wealthy can escape to resorts, scenic landscapes, and refuges as paradisiacal getaways, the poor often find alcohol to be their only accessible escape, using it to cope with frustration, oppression, and marginalization. In general, young people turn to drugs, alcohol, sex, and even self-destruction in their search for an escape. Religious experiences also serve as a form of escape for many. He notes that social media has globalized escape routes (Pinheiro 2022, 576, 588).
I agree with Pinheiro that social media serves as an escape route from harsh realities and has made these escape routes globally accessible to the majority of social groups. However, social media, especially Instagram, has also created many idealized worlds, as I have discussed previously. These new worlds reflect the resurgence of ancient Gnosticism in contemporary life. Concrete and real faces and bodies are seen as inferior, like potentialities trapped in imperfects faces and bodies. On the other hand, the faces and bodies consider are perfect are those displayed and seen on social medial—on the idealized and new Gnostic worlds, where the true beauty and the perfect lives seems to exist. As a result, mass of people tends to desire and imitate what they are see in these “superior” places, leading to the social pathology that we witness today: Many undergo numerous facial and aesthetical procedures in pursuit of these idealized, perfect, Gnostic images portrayed in this modern manifestation of the old Gnosticism. These are the new Gnostic world(s). Each profile on social media can be an idealized and Gnostic world, composed with idealized and Gnostic images, in format of pictures, videos, reels, and stories. At the same time, a single Gnostic image can form a whole Gnostic world, an entire world of projection. A Gnostic image, in this sense, is one which is considered the place of beauty and perfection, in contrast to real faces and bodies, which are seen as bad, inferior, and flawed by comparison, as well as matter with potential to achieve the Gnostic image and world. In this context, dysmorphia is not uncommon.
In this sense, Qureshi-Hurst, while highlighting that social media contains elements that exacerbate anxiety—such as the virtual self, the quantification of social approval, and its failure to facilitate genuine social interactions—points out that this anxiety can lead not only to depression but also to anxiety disorders and body image disorders, citing empirical research to support her claims. As an example of the growing number of people seeking to alter their appearance to match their idealized self-image created by social media filters, including through surgery, she refers to Eshiet’s research, which demonstrates that Snapchat filters, by altering appearance in various ways, significantly impact young women's perceptions of their body image and beauty. The result is what has been termed “Snapchat dysphoria” or “Snapchat dysmorphia,” a phenomenon where young people, particularly women, pursue aesthetic procedures and surgeries to look like the image manufactured by these filters (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 528-29, 531; Eshiet 2020).
Psychologically, these aspects of social media and these new and idealized Gnostic world(s) are hells in people’s lives, as they serve as sources and intensifiers of anxiety, depression, and dysmorphia. In the words of Paul Tillich and Qureshi-Hurst, they are also sources and intensifiers of one’s feeling of “estrangement” from the cosmos, from God—or from the ground of being—and notably from oneself (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 525).
Qureshi-Hurst addresses how certain features of social media intensify and heighten negative emotional states, such as feelings of alienation and estrangement (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 522-23). She explains that “social media acts like a magnifying glass to the extent that it focuses and fortifies aspects of human social existence that lead to [these] feelings” (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 522); and discusses how it causes/exacerbates anxiety disorders—conditions that have increased exponentially among young people, particularly due to social media use (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 523).
Qureshi-Hurst explores three ways in which social media negatively affects its users. The first relates to the individual and their self-perception: social media enables the creation of idealized and artificial versions of oneself—distorted images of one’s face and body—through both social media filters and photo editing software. The second and third ways pertain to the social dimensions of social media. On the one hand, it provides means for quantifying social approval, particularly in group sizes beyond which the human brain has evolved to handle and interact—according to Yuval Harari, humans are, evolutionally speaking, prepared to exist in networks of around 150 people. On the other hand, while social media significantly extends our social networks, the quality of interactions among people does not improve; in fact, it decreases (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 522, 526, 529; Harari, 2014). As consequence of these social effects, opportunities for people to experience social exclusion increases, and it can clear the way for one to experience social unfulfillment, since the online interactions are mostly transitory and poor (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 529). Here, Qureshi-Hurst points out a paradox in social media: “the temptation to seek out communion and escape solitude drives social media usage, but the type of impoverished connection provided through these platforms is unable to fulfil the desire that drove the user to log on in the first place” (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 530).
I return to the first way presented by Qureshi-Hurst, which pertains to the individual and their self-perception, and is central to the subject of this article. Qureshi-Hurst asserts,
Social media platforms allow individuals to construct idealized versions of themselves. Individuals then see this idealized self as, in Tillichian terms, unactualized potential which they are unable to realize. This creates yet another environment in which the individual is aware of latent potential that they are unable to manifest in their lives, resulting in another source of anxiety. The idealized self is created in the following ways. Only the “best” pictures get posted, which creates a highlights reel showing only positive experience. Moreover, and perhaps more damaging for mental health, is an increasing prevalence of photo editing software and the use of filters which distort an individual’s appearance. These create a social experience and physical appearance which functions as a representation of unrealized, often unrealizable, potential (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 526).
In fact, she also highlights the overwhelming quantity of data people receive about others on social media, against which each person can compare themselves. Additionally, the exponential growth of social media users provides even more data for individuals to use in evaluating and comparing themselves. This immensity if data informs people about how their lives should be, the expectations and achievements they should have, as well as how they should look physically. Qureshi-Hurst describes this as a plethora of potentialities displayed by social media, “in terms of both what is possible for humans in general and what is possible for a specific individual to achieve, engage with, or look like” (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 527).
She concludes that intense feelings of estrangement can be caused by comparing oneself to unrealizable potentialities. In addition, due to the massive quantity of users on social media, “with every criterion against which we can be evaluated, there will be another social media user who out-performs us”, which, in turn, “can have a seriously damaging effect on self-worth if by every metric we come up short” (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 527). Anxiety, then, is an effect of the creation of idealized and unrealizable images by an individual, insofar as the person is unable to achieve these creations and satisfy their idealized self-image (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 529). “Striving after such a representation is likely to leave a subject unsatisfied. The individual is faced with a version of themselves that is distorted, and desires reconciliation with the self who is reflected back at them. This is unobtainable, as the reflected, virtual self is an artefact of editing software, not a living, breathing, complex person” (Qureshi-Hurst 2022, 528).