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Your Depression and Bipolar Disorder Source Knowledge is Necessity From primordial soup to beyond, a three-part look at man's incredible journey. "Who the hell are we? What is it about ourselves?" Main articles page. Go here. More Essays Mania - A Christian Perspective |
The Soup From Which We Come We look up to the heavens with one foot mired in the primordial soup from which we came. We feel the divine spark within us, even as we attend to the more pressing needs we share with the animal kingdom. We have the temerity to assume that God has sent us on a mission, but we choose instead to set our own agenda. We are capable of works and inventions that bring out the best in all of us, but all too often we settle for the least and worst. Who the hell are we? one may ask. What is it about ourselves? Let's start out with this basic assumption: man has a unique (as far as we know) capability called conscious. Whereas one of our species sees a tree and all the many things it stands for, a bird sees only a housing project and a dog sees an outdoor toilet. In addition we can perceive things entirely invisible to the rest of the animal kingdom - beauty, justice, and logic, to name a few. Our next assumption is a bit more problematical: that over the course of thousands of years this thing called conscious is refined and improved upon. For example, we no longer believe in slavery and the divine right of kings (though a form of feudalism is still the rule in the workplace), and more recently we have abandoned the notion of racial inferiority while admitting we still have a way to go. Our final assumption is far more problematical: that our conscious in some way has an independent existence not connected to the body. This would explain the idea of life after death and the phenomenon of out-of-body experiences. Now let's turn to two competing propositions:
All the terrible wars over the millennia, together with the bleak living conditions under which most of the world still labors, as well as our despoliation of the environment should more than adequately prove the first point. But there is another element at play here: Back when Jesus walked the earth there were only 250 million people, largely because, based on what man knew at the time, the earth would only support that many. Deforestation and overgrazing had rendered much of the land around the Mediterranean barren, and mother nature was beginning to fight back. Not long after, the tribes of the steppes and forests up north took up farming, and the resultant increase in population brought on a new crisis. The fall of the Roman Empire was primarily due to the failure of its border forces to stem the tide of hordes of desperate and starving people crossing the Danube to seek a better life. Another great agricultural revolution occurred in the 1700s with its inevitable population boom, which in turn brought on the French Revolution, enclosure, forced emigration, and the Napoleonic Wars. When Malthus wrote his dire predictions about a finite earth failing to be able to sustain its ever- expanding population, he was perfectly correct based upon what he knew. He simply failed to take into account man's genius for creating more with less. Forget everything you may have learned about economics. "More with less" is the guiding principle we should be concentrating on. If a farmer can vastly increase his crop yield while using less land, that is more with less. If lighter more efficient and longer lasting cars in greater numbers roll off assembly lines manned by robots, that is more with less. If a microchip doubles its processing power every eighteen months, that is more with less. Since the time man emerged from the trees, we have demonstrated this unique capability. Just to cite one example, back in the 1700s, some 95 percent of the population scraped a meager living off the land. Now - in Europe and America anyway - it is in the low single figures, and farmers produce the kind of surpluses that ironically depress prices and threaten to put them out of business. We are now witnessing a similar trend in manufacturing. For some time, then, we have had the power to create a heaven on earth, and with it the means to advance our conscious capabilities. But the history of our species has been overshadowed by excess populations scrambling for dwindling resources, which in turn has slowed down the evolution of our conscious. Our present assumptions surrounding work and remuneration, for instance, should have disappeared with the feudal system and the divine right of kings, but we still remain stuck in notions better suited to a time when communism was our greatest enemy - but that's the beginning of another article. For three free online issues of McMan's Depression and Bipolar Weekly, email me and put "Sample" in the heading and your email address in the body. Post your opinion here. |
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More with less: This Pentium4 chip delivers six times the productivity of the Pentium3 chip, according to the manufacturer.
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