The late
Arthur Koestler was of the view that mankind is an evolutionary
mistake doomed to extinction. To have given a killer ape the capacity
for intelligence was not, he reasoned, nature’s smartest strategy.
Intelligence
has been a factor that has, in many ways, set humanity apart from
other species. The stabilizing influence of instinct has kept
other life forms within a relatively narrow range of development:
the possum, for instance, one of the oldest of animal species,
has changed very little over the tens of millions of years of
its presence on earth. In contrast, mankind has fundamentally
changed itself and the world in what may be the first million
years of its infancy.
But what
has been the nature of man’s development? How has intelligence
informed our behavior? A view of human history – not just from
the political perspective upon which historians focus – provides
substantial evidence of our using the powers of the mind for both
creative and destructive purposes. Sad to say, the use of our
intelligence to generate tools and systems that destroy life has
been in the ascendancy for well over a century. Why has this been
so? Was Koestler right?
Our problems
may well have their origins in the dualistic nature of our brain,
which appears to be divided into "left-" and "right-"sided
functions. "Left-brain" thinking tends to be linear,
mechanistic, and analytical; it expresses itself verbally, using
logic, math, and other forms of reasoning. The "right-brain"
is represented by non-linear, intuitive, spiritual, emotional,
and spatial thinking; it is the realm of spontaneity and the imagination.
Reduced to overly-simplified terms, the "left-brain"
is more dominated by a desire for structuring; the "right-brain"
by concerns for liberty.
Only a handful
of pathological cases could be said to be totally "left-"
or "right-brained" in nature. Yet each of us tends to
be more or less influenced by one side of the brain or the other.
I have a number of friends who, as "left-brain" driven
engineers, physicians, or business managers, are equally insistent
upon defending individual liberty and unstructured ways of organizing
with others. The examined and well-lived life consists not so
much in balancing these forces, but in integrating
them.
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To the extent
that our culture has become institutionalized, our thinking has
come to be dominated by "left-brain" influences. This
phase of our thinking has produced the inventions and discoveries,
the scientific understanding, the technology, and the means by
which we produce our material well-being, that reflect our mind’s
capacity for life-serving behavior. But as we intensify the importance
of what this side of our brain produces, we tend to ignore the
voices from the right-side. Seduced by the material benefits we
enjoy, we relegate other values to a lower level of concern. In
such ways has the non-material become increasingly immaterial
to us.
Political
systems, and the thinking that drives them, are almost entirely
grounded in "left-brained" activity. For propagandistic
purposes, politicians will give lip-service to such concepts as
"liberty," but without any sincerity. The politician
who does express a genuine, deeply-held concern for individual
autonomy, incurs the enmity of the established interests who control
the political machinery for their ends.
If one wishes
to see what a world would look like when dominated by "left-brained"
thinking, one need only look to recent history. Long before Barack
Obama was born, Americans gave themselves over to the structuring
of their lives in service to the institutions with which they
had come to identify themselves. When corporate-state interests
find wars to their liking, most Americans go into a frenzied flag-waving,
all the while condemning those who fail to shout "hurrah!"
Most parents willingly invest their children in the sordid enterprise,
emblazoning their cars with bumper-stickers that announce to others
how much more they love the corporate-state than they do their
own sons and daughters.
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This country
is now experiencing the logical extension of people identifying
themselves with the institutional order. If major corporations
are – by virtue of their incestuous relationship with the state
– unable to withstand the demanding disciplines of the marketplace,
the political system comes to their rescue by looting taxpayers
of trillions of dollars to bail them out. In a corporate-state
world, whatever the corporations need the state will provide,
regardless of the impact such activity may have on ordinary people
and on the values that can only find expression on a now-excised
"right" side of the brain!
The rest
of the institutional order – with its own interests to advance
in the structuring of the lives of people – offers its support
to the corporate-state cause. The mainstream media and academia
– each functioning as public-relations flacks – create and reinforce
the conditioned thinking that makes us subservient to the establishment
cause. In his novel, The
Chaneysville Incident, David Bradley observed: "one
of the primary functions of societal institutions is to conceal
the basic nature of the society, so that the individuals that
make up the power structure can pursue the business of consolidating
and increasing their power untroubled by the minor carpings of
a dissatisfied peasantry."
I have written
elsewhere (In
Restraint of Trade: The Business Campaign Against Competition,
19181938, Calculated
Chaos: Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival,
Boundaries
of Order)
of the destructive impact that institutionalized thinking has
on the vibrancy of a civilization. The problem may run much deeper
than this. Just as an individual, or an organization, or a civilization
requires resiliency and adaptability to changing conditions –
qualities that implicate such "right-brain" values as
liberty and spontaneity – so, too, does the fate of a species.
We ought to have learned from the dinosaurs – whose enormous size
allowed them to dominate the planet for as many as 165 million
years; far longer than the meager human timeline – that a lack
of resiliency can make you extinct. The logic of "too big
to fail" that now directs the destructive transformation
of the American economy, proved no benefit to these giant reptiles.
It is ironic
that our successes in serving our material needs should cause
us to become attached to and dependent upon the systems that produced
such values. Our ancestors – living at a more subsistence level
than ourselves – seem to have understood the importance of "right-brained"
elements that help to make up our well-being. An etymological
dictionary informs us of the inter-related origins of such words
as "peace," "freedom," "love," and
"friend," sentiments that speak to other than material
concerns. In a world in which people treat one another as friends
in a spirit of love, peace and freedom prevail; conditions that
our "left-brain" powers are meant to serve.
"Right-brained"
considerations reflect the individualized nature of life, and
thus are of little to no importance to the spiritless character
of institutional interests. What activities are more destructive
of life than wars, and the restriction of personal liberty that
allows men and women to make creative responses in an inconstant
world? The study of history and economics inform us what intelligent
minds can no longer doubt: privately-owned property and the economic
freedom implicit in the property concept are the most effective
means of maximizing the self-interests of human beings.
Nor can rationality
fail to grasp that the war system – central to the well-being
of the state – is antithetical to life. Beyond the millions killed
in battles and bombings, as well as those who die from the destruction
of the instrumentalities that produce life-sustaining goods and
services (e.g., factories, office buildings, farms, etc.) there
are numerous unintended consequences to warfare that hasten an
end to life. Even the most entrenched military mind must begin
to suspect that, when more soldiers die by suicide than on the
battlefield, their system of structured slaughter serves no human
purpose. I saw a televised interview of an Army general addressing
the reported problem of fourteen acts of homicide engaged in by
soldiers returning to his installation during a present four-year
period. His response to the problem reflected a purely institutionalized
mindset: the returning soldiers required more counseling and/or
drug treatment to help them "adjust" to the insanity
that had been made of their lives. As with children who do not
conform to the mind-dulling expectations of school systems, the
soldiers must endure a more intense program to silence their inner
voices.
Our language
reflects our attachment to war-like thinking. Almost any social
condition of which we disapprove is met by a declaration of war:
be it the war on poverty, the war on drugs, the war on terrorism,
the war on obesity, the war on climate change, etc. Most of us
are at war with life itself, regarding the exercise of institutionalized
violence (i.e., politics) as the most effective means of accomplishing
social change. Two decades ago, the idea of nuclear war represented
a monstrous horror. Today, psychopaths in high office casually
speak of initiating nuclear devastation against other nations
that pose no military threat to America. What was once considered
unthinkable has since become just one of many acceptable political
strategies.
Fortunately,
we are living at a time when decentralized social practices are
weakening institutional power-structures: vertical authority
is giving way to horizontal networking. The Internet is
but the most familiar of the means by which individuals communicate
with and inform one another, rather than remaining conditioned
to having institutional voices (e.g., mainstream media, governmental
agencies, academia) directing the content of their thinking. President
Obama’s announced plan to appoint an "Internet czar"
to regulate this system, as well as those statists who urge an
expanded definition of "hate crimes" to include people
who express distrust of government or who insist upon constitutional
protections, represent the desperate responses of the political
system to influences that run contrary to the primacy of institutionalism.
If the survival
of a species depends upon its success in adapting to changed conditions,
how much more burdensome is the task when members of that species
must overcome conscious sabotage placed in their way in the name
of intelligent planning? We are too much at war with the processes
by which life sustains itself to be assured of our continued presence
on earth. People whose minds are dominated by mechanistic linear
thinking and a desire to structure all human behavior represent
a lemming-like force that may make mankind the first known species
to destroy itself by collective suicide. Perhaps the stated concern
so many practitioners of "left-brain" regularizing have
in preventing the extinction of other species is little more than
an unconscious projection of the fears of our own removal from
the grand experiment the life force has long conducted on this
planet. Perhaps we humans sense what we are afraid to speak; that,
in the words of the late stand-up philosopher, George Carlin,
"we’re going away!"
There is
no determinism at work here; we are not fated to ends we are unable
to influence to life-enhancing purposes. But if we are to avoid
joining the dinosaurs on the sidelines, we must do what these
predecessors were unable to do, namely, abandon our reptilian
brains and allow our "right-brain" voices to inform
our behavior.
Kenneth Boulding
has expressed the problem as succinctly as anyone else: "If
the human race is to survive it will have to change more in its
ways of thinking in the next twenty-five years than it has done
in the last twenty-five thousand." At a time when both "conservatives"
and "liberals" advertise their spiritual bankruptcy
to a benumbed world, we have never faced a greater opportunity,
or need, to explore alternative ways of thinking. The poet Seamus
Heaney has written that "we are hunters and gatherers of
values." It is time for us to take our search to other fields.