Brain-Directed Animals
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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Do you realize
that every human being on this Earth alive today believes he or
she is right?
It's true.
The Wall Street millionaire, the villager in Somalia, the Chinese
general, the Amazonian Indian, the homeless wino in Chicago, the
president of the United States, and you and I all are doing what
we think at the moment is the right thing to do, based on the belief
that our perceptions of the world are correct.
This is a
built-in defect in the way human beings are constructed by nature.
Human beings are brain-directed animals. We can't lift a finger
or speak the simplest word without directions from the brain. Yet
the brain has no source of information except the human senses
sight, smell, hearing, touch and taste.
Throughout
the millennia, humans have developed elaborate codes, called languages,
with which to describe and process the data we receive from our
senses. We have an irresistible impulse to name things. Using the
English code, we name a certain segment of reflected radiation "yellow."
If we use the Spanish code, we name it "amarillo." These
names are chosen arbitrarily, vary from language to language and,
as we often forget, are not the things they name.
The president's
"axis of evil," for example, is neither an axis nor an
evil. It's a judgment he (or his speechwriters) made about three
countries whose governmental policies he disapproves of. The countries
were not allies. In fact, two of them (Iraq and Iran) were enemies.
North Korea has a different culture, different language and different
interests than the other two.
As we grow
up, we grow up in a particular place, using a particular language
code, learning a particular history and a particular set of customs.
The concept of the universal citizen of the world is just that,
a mental abstraction that has no counterpart in reality. A common
mistake we Americans often make is to assume that people in foreign
countries think the same way we do. In fact, of course, people in
our own country do not think exactly alike.
The cornerstone
of human existence is perception. We normally act on the basis of
our perception of reality, which easily can be defined as the way
things are. The perception, for example, that we can beat a train
to the crossing has life-or-death consequences if we act on it.
Prejudice is the offspring of misperceptions. Millions died because
of the perception that yellow fever was caused by noxious vapors
from swamps. I don't think it is an exaggeration to say that 90
percent of human conflicts and tragedies are caused by misperceptions
of reality.
Therefore,
we all should attempt to sharpen our perception of reality in an
attempt to make it as accurate as humanly possible. For the same
reason we don't wish to drink dirty water or eat contaminated food,
we should be careful about accepting other people's perceptions
of reality as fact. Generalizations and excessive verbalization
both hinder accurate perceptions. Propaganda, which is a deliberate
misstatement of reality, is voluminous and constant in our times.
Ayn Rand said
it well when she observed that we can evade reality, but we cannot
evade the consequences of evading reality. Dogen, a great Japanese
thinker, pointed out that "flowers die and weeds flourish without
our permission." Our ability to affect reality is quite limited.
We age and die whether we wish it or not, for example.
The
point of all this is that conflicts are difficult to avoid, even
under ideal circumstances. A good start would be to set harmony
and balance as our goals rather than domination.
August
30, 2007
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2007 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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