What do we want?
Money.
When do we want it?
Now.
How do we get it?
By being efficient.
‘Give as little as you possibly can while taking as much as you can possibly grab.’
And who’s going to get the job done?
Huh?!?
Capisci?
What do we want?
Money.
When do we want it?
Now.
How do we get it?
By being efficient.
‘Give as little as you possibly can while taking as much as you can possibly grab.’
And who’s going to get the job done?
Huh?!?
Capisci?
Huh?!?
We’re not the only ones able to use tools to solve problems.
We’re not the only ones capable of self-awareness. Otherwise said, to recognize ourselves in a mirror.
We’re not even the only ones able to use language to dampen our feelings for long enough so that the frontal cortex might take over from the amygdala.
So?
But what does it mean to be human?
What if being human means being able to do all those three things, simultaneously?
Well, I’m not so sure I’d be comfortable with that…
‘Dampen our feelings for long enough so that the frontal cortex might take over from the amygdala’.
Oops!
So one of the very things which make us human might also explain why some of us become psycho/sociopaths?
No, not only one. All three of them.
For a psycho/sociopath to become manifest, one has to behave like one. To act like one. To make the difference between their own persona and the rest – self-awareness, and then to use tools to defend/enhance what makes their own persona so special. Regardless of whatever consequences those actions might impose upon any second or third party.
Then how come we have survived for so long?
As a species?
According to Ernst Mayr – ‘evolution is not about ‘survival of the best’ but about the demise of the unfit’, whatever psycho/sociopathy has plagued us wasn’t enough to kill us.
What kept it in check?
We might have a natural propensity for doing the right thing but… bad things still happen… the mechanism which ‘tames’ us has to be a dynamic one… Does the job in an at least satisfactory manner – we’re still here, it has successfully adapted to whatever historical changes had fallen upon our head – again, we’re still here, but is not fail proof. From time to time, evil explodes into the world.
We’ve somehow coped with these ‘explosions’. For now, at least.
Basically, any future strategy for survival might imply one of the next two scenarios.
Put our faith in God. Who had created us. And who’ll lead us out of whatever predicament we might get in. Even if/when we do it to ourselves. Simply because he is our loving father.
Remember that when we had really pissed him off, he had preferred to cleanse the entire (known) world with water. And learn to reign in our own ability to do the wrong thing.
And, maybe, our distance nephews will consider that being human means being able to innovate AND to knowingly keep that ability in check.
Nature.
‘Resources’ to structures to meaning.
Man.
Opportunities to structures to comprehension.
Society.
Pre-existing conditions to structures to culture (survival)
A knife can be used for buttering toast, slicing steak and, occasionally, for slitting throats.
A gun can be used to hunt dinner, defend a homestead or shoot a rival.
Bare hands can knot laces, caress a woman or choke the life out of an innocent.
What makes us, humans, sometimes transform tools into weapons?
We are astonished when we learn about other animals being able to make and use tools.
Which is good. ‘Astonished’ is the opposite of ‘insensitive’. A.k.a. ‘brain dead’.
How about we, humans, learning from the rest of the animals how to solve whatever issues we have amongst us without killing each-other?
You are aware that humans and chimpanzees are the only animals who systematically murder adult members of their own species, right?
But what instance is powerful enough to transform tool into weapon?
Human consciousness?
Is this a ‘fatality’?
The simple fact that each of us is consciously aware of the differences between ‘I’ and ‘all the rest’ means that whenever ‘survival instincts’ kick in our humanity necessarily vanishes? Entirely?
And ‘love thy neighbour as thyself’ becomes ‘dog eats dog’?
We would have already been dead by now… all of us…
Our ancestors must have discovered a way to balance our propensity to ‘stick with your own kind’ with with our need to learn new things and meet new people!
Or is it that some of us continually come up with fresh reasons for ‘war’ while we, the rest, are too lazy to do anything about it? Despite everything history has ever taught us…
There is an almost unanimous consensus about laws having to be considered either natural or man made.
As in the law of gravity is implacable – hence ‘natural’, while the Penal Code is a lot more ‘amenable’.
Yeah, right…
Then how come Hammurabi had been able to write his Code some three and a half Millennia before Newton famously noticed that apples do fall to the ground? Besides being such irresistible objects of temptation, of course.
One way out would be to assume that Hammurabi was a lot smarter than Newton but that would be too easy, don’t you think?
Now that I’ve mentioned the noticing game, let me point out some of my own observations.
People have tried to fly way before Newton had told them this is impossible – for us, at least.
Individuals might occasionally get away with murder but murderous societies are far less stable than the more peaceful ones.
Gravity has been already ‘defeated’ while no totalitarian government has yet managed to ‘stay afloat’ in a consistent manner – no matter how many dissidents it had murdered.
Another approach to this conundrum would be to consider that natural laws deal with the non responsive kind of chaos while man made ones are meant to approximate what happens when the chaos is able to respond to what’s being thrown in it.
For instance weather and financial market. No one can change the weather – hence it is considered a non-responsive kind of chaos, while the market is constantly pushed one way or another by the various pieces of information that reaches the participants. Which participants respond to those inputs – according to their own abilities and preferences, hence the ‘responsive’ character of the market.
So, could we consider that nature is non-responsively chaotic while humans behave equally chaotic but in a responsive manner?
The key word here being ‘we’, of course.
After all, we have coined the very concept of law, we are the ones speaking about the difference between ‘natural’ and ‘man made’ and we have discovered, formulated and eventually bent all laws… both natural and man made.
It seems that the whole situation is a lot foggier than at the begging.
That I’ve messed things up instead of making some sense of them…
Let me use another tack.
First of all, let me notice that we’re surrounded by ‘things’. And that these things relate to each other. And to us, of course.
From this point of view, the world is made of things AND of the relationships that appear amongst these things.
And here’s the catch. Laws are not things. They are a small part of the relationships that appear between the things that exist in this world. And since we’ve already discovered that there are a lot more things around us than we will ever be able to ‘see’/notice, it would be unreasonably to expect us to be able to notice all the relationships that ‘tie together’ the world.
That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try!
Returning to what we call ‘laws’, let me add yet another classification.
‘Noticed’ laws versus ‘pro-active’ laws.
In this sense ‘thou shalt not kill’, the Law of Gravity and ‘drive on one side only’ are, all three of them, ‘noticed’ laws. In the sense that things remain in order as long as we observe these laws.
On the other hand, pro-active laws are a lot more trickier.
‘Do this, do that’! …
‘Why?!?’
‘Because I know better AND/OR because I can make you obey my orders!’
While observing the noticed laws is essential in letting things flow naturally, imposing/accepting ‘pro-active’ laws is the recipe for disaster. Man made disaster.
Let’s take it one step at a time.
A guy hires a woman. A ‘working girl’, to be precise.
After a while, an attorney pays a hefty sum to the working girl and has her sign a confidentiality contract.
When asked about the whole thing, the guy first said that he didn’t know much about anything and then that he had reimbursed the hush money to the attorney.
The attorney apparently gets a lot of money from somebody else. Which somebody else might be, now or become in in the future, in a conflict of interests with the organization presently run by the guy who had once hired a working girl.
It becomes apparent that the attorney is a confidante of this guy. Or, in plain English, that this attorney takes care of the dirty laundry that ‘happens’ around this guy.
It also becomes apparent that this attorney is not satisfied with the amount of money he gets from this guy. That this guy is not his only client. And that this attorney is not very particular when accepting other clients.
What am I to understand from all this?
This guy is cheap?
This attorney is very greedy?
This guy is not very particular when choosing who takes care of his dirty laundry?
So, Japan and Germany have huge trade surpluses. Despite their workers being the best paid in the whole world. In both absolute and relative terms. Among the major economies, anyway.
Meanwhile, the US has a humongous trade deficit. Yet the American CEO-s are ‘compensated’ as if they were the best in the world…
Interesting, right?
More ideas about the same subject here: