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THE ROLE OF REALITY PERCEPTIONS
in the acceptance of suffering, death and decay
A Study in Thought
sa030
by
Marius Heuff
Chapter 1
Content
About deserving attention and earning loyalty.
Something about my writing habits.
The title as a summary or focal point of a discussion.
What is death?
Religious beliefs and their use to cope with the stress of dying.
The psychological victory over death.
The personal nature of our reality perceptions.
We die in a reality of our own making.
The definition of death, and, differences with suspended animation.
Death; the irreversible dissolution of the structure and function of a living
organism.
Freezing, and the slowing-down of chemical processes.
The possibility of a selective death of the brain.
A short review of the essence of the living coherence of a cell.
Clinical death, life-support measures, and the essential difference between
selective brain-death and suspended animation, when cardiac arrest occurs in a
severely chilled body.
The "power supply" to the brain, and the networks of nerve-cells
engaged in specific functions.
1 I have been looking at this
title, now, for some time, because I start a new piece of writing with the
title. At least, at the present time, it is my practice to use the title as a
focal point in the organisation of my thoughts, and, I try to keep this focus
in mind throughout the entire work. In this case, the title has been written-down
quite some time ago; several months, as a matter of fact, and, this reflects
another aspect of my working methods. If I think about a certain topic, (long
before I start to actually write about it), I usually jot-down a series of
headings and this heading was the result of an intuitive decision that this
topic deserved attention.
2 Yet, as you know, if you have
ever tried to write-down your thoughts, one of the most difficult parts is the
opening, and, I am not thinking, here, about the conventional advice that is
given to aspiring writers; how they should make every effort to "grab the
attention" of the reader.
3 Certainly, I believe that any
writer has to earn, fully, the attention of his readers, as well as the
longer-term loyalty of his audience, but I believe, also, that this attention
and loyalty can not be earned or bought with gimmicks. I am convinced that
serious readers will soon see-through such attempts to grab or capture the
attention with psychological or technical tricks. No, lasting attention can
only be drawn to a piece of writing by the simple fact, that the writer has
something to say, and, if the writer is to the point, direct and honest, and,
if he shuns verbosity or empty talk, (which is, usually, an effort to hide the
fact that he does not quite know, yet, what to say, or how to say it), he will
be able to focus attention upon his writings by being himself, and, by simply
starting to say what he wants to say.
4 The difficulties experienced by
a writer are, then, not a somewhat vain concern, whether or not his audience
will like what he has to say; whether or not his readers will be captured by an
intriguing or exciting opening, but, his concerns are about the organisation,
presentation and illumination of the various aspects of the subject he is going
to discuss.
5 Let us come back to the title
of this discussion, which was written several months ago. At that time, I
certainly had not composed, as yet, any outline of the thoughts I wanted to
put-in writing, but, now, after a considerable time spent in thinking about the
subject, it has struck me, that the title has a number of interesting features,
which I did not perceive, clearly, at the time I wrote it down.
6 The heading suggests, first of
all, the peculiarly human characteristic of being aware of death, as well as
the knowledge that all living organisms have to die, at one time or another.
The other implied assumption is the awareness, that death is, so frequently,
preceded by suffering, in spite of the fact, that an individual or a socially
integrated grouping is often exposed to suffering and decay without going-on to
a state of irrevocable dissolution, or death.
7 Death may also come quick and
painless, or, almost unnoticed, and we observe such a phenomenon with mixed
feelings. Certainly, the absence of suffering and anxiety seems to make the
process of dying and the occurrence of death, less frightening, but the mystery
of death remains. What happens, when we die, and, what happens to our ability
to be consciously aware of ourselves and our surroundings? These questions come
to the fore, whenever we witness such a quick transition into a state of death.
The sense of mystery about the essence of being dead, remains as clear and
tangible as ever for those who are left behind.
8 In spite of all our
technological powers and psychological insights, we still have the feeling,
that we do not know what death is, nor do we know, what death will bring us
when the time has come to die. It is such an irrevocable transition of existence;
or, is it, indeed, a transition? Is there an existence after death?
9 Our religious beliefs have
always provided us with clear-cut but unverifiable answers to our intuitive and
explicit questions, and yet, the many conflicting religious view-points, as
well as the imprecision of our thoughts about super-natural realities, do not
really assure us, and, we always wonder, whether or not we can fully rely upon
such an imagery. Certainly, we use every belief structure, primarily, as a
means to cope with the challenges of life, and, ironically, the need to cope
with the certainty of death, is one of these challenges of life.
10 We use religious beliefs,
primarily, as a means to accept the inevitability of death, as well as the
process of dying, in particular, when we are unfortunate and have to die in
agony, pain and despair. In the reality of life, such stressful circumstances
are not often resolved in a happy-ending, but, they lead, nearly always, to an
overwhelming situation, ending in the death of the individual who has been
exposed to such a high level of stress. It is true, that such a period of
intense suffering, before death, may make us welcome death as a relief, but,
before we can give-up our hopes and instincts to cling to life, we must, indeed,
have suffered a great deal.
11 If we accept death and suffering
as a transition to a state of bliss, we may accept the process of dying with
less fear and aversion, and, we reduce the level of suffering by subduing our
physiological and psychological instincts to cling to life. However, our
beliefs provide us usually with an imagery where death is not seen as a final
annihilation of our personality, but, as a transition to a state of existence
where we have conquered death, and will be rewarded, in one way or another, for
the suffering and misery we have experienced on earth. Then, the belief
structure functions as a psychological adaptation to the stress of suffering,
death and decay, and, in our hopeful expectations, we overcome death
psychologically, even, if the reality of such a belief structure is not
convincing to those, who are not involved in the stress and process of dying.
12 Upon careful study and
thoughtful reflection, we could, perhaps, agree amongst ourselves, that there
is no more powerful example of the concept, that, in essence, our reality
perceptions are behavioural tools and are primarily designed to help us survive
and adapt to stress. Is it not a fact, that the experiences and beliefs of the
dying individual are, in essence, the only reality that matters for this
individual? The perception of reality is, in essence, an act of individualised
behaviour for each and everyone of us, but the level of conviction we achieve
about the truthfulness of our reality perceptions, depends, to a large extent,
upon the consensus we find in our social environment.
13 The religious believer, dying in
the full conviction of his Faith, may be experiencing the opening-up of the
Heavens, or Hell, because he has believed, and still believes, these to be
realities of existence, and, for this individual, it is immaterial, whether or
not he is being observed by someone who has a totally different perception of
reality; someone, who does not believe, for one moment, that the dying
individual is entering either a Heaven or a Hell. We may, therefore, say, that
we all die in the context of our beliefs, and, for this reason, the individual,
wrecked with guilt on his death-bed, will have to face the tangible reality,
that he may be entering a Hell, while the agnostic may also be haunted by
doubts about the reality of his agnostic beliefs, and, he may experience that
his worst fears are becoming a reality at the moment of his death, because he
is entering a Hell after all.
14 There is a wide variation in the
abilities of dying people to communicate their experiences, but we should keep
in mind, that, everyone, who is able to express certain experiences when dying,
or, who is able to describe experiences after having recovered from a period of
unconsciousness, will describe images and experiences that fit logically into
the reality perceptions of this individual, and, these experiences do not
necessarily represent a truth for those, who have a different perception of
reality.
15 Of course, we do not have to
emphasise the simple fact, that anyone who recovers from an apparent death,
(even, if physicians have pronounced such an individual dead), has not crossed
this essential boundary-line between life and death. By definition, anyone, who
recovers after a severe illness or a period of deep unconsciousness, has not
died, because the body, nor the brain, have broken their essential coherence,
which is the essence and definition of a living structure. The definition of
death is, therefore, not dependent upon an arbitrary time-period during which
the heart-beat was absent, or appeared to be absent, but, it depends on the
observation, whether a resumption of the biochemical mechanisms show the
phenomena of life, or, the disruptive processes of decay and autolysis. Severe
cooling of the body will retard the disruptive processes of autolytic enzymes
to a remarkable extent, as we all know from the fact, that we can preserve
meats and other foods, for years, in a good freezer.
16 We should consider, for a
moment, those peculiar circumstances where modern technological aids make it
possible to keep the body of a human being, or any other complex animal, alive,
even, if a near-total destruction and autolytic dissolution of the brain has
taken place. In a normal environment, such a severe degree of brain damage
would be totally incompatible with life, since, quickly, the respiratory
functions would cease as a result of spreading autolytic destruction and
pressure upon the soft neural tissues within the skull or the spinal column.
The impaired respiratory functions would, quickly, lower the oxygen-content of
the blood to critically low levels, leading to heart-failure and cardiac
arrest. Under normal or natural circumstances, the death of a vital organ will
set into motion a chain-reaction that leads, quickly, to the death of all the
organs and their cellular communities.
17 However, with the techniques of
artifical respiration and the ability to correct chemical deficiencies or
imbalances of the blood, "life" can be prolonged, almost
indefinitely, after a selective destruction of the brain has occurred, even, if
none of the normal physiological and psychological inter-actions can take place
between the individual and his environment.
18 There is absolutely no evidence
for any awareness function in people, who are sustained by such technical
means, or "life-support" systems. We will argue, why it is
justifiable to consider such individuals as having died already, while those,
who recover from a prolonged period of cardiac arrest under circumstances where
the body temperature had been lowered significantly, never died at all, but
entered a state of "suspended animation".
19 If we look at a single cell, we
see, that the criteria of life are embodied in the functional coherence of a
complex set of biochemical reactions that take place in a spatial arrangement,
as well as in a specific sequence. We also know, how these living structures,
either, as an individually existing cell, or, as a community of cells in a
multi-cellular organism, have to use, continuously, a part of the energy-flow
through their system for the purpose of maintenance and repair. The fluidity of
biochemical reactions, the lability of many biochemical compounds, the
continuous influx of harmful substances, (such as ions from the watery
environment, as well as the continuous accumulation of biochemical
waste-products and other noxious substances), are the reasons, why some energy
has to be used, continuously, in order to ensure, that the living system
remains in a condition that is compatible with life. This is the essence of a
state of continuing functional and structural integrity of the living
organisation.
20 A paralysis of biochemical
functions by a variety of poisonous substances, the lack of oxygen or a suitable
source of energy, or, the disruptive effects of mechanical, chemical or thermal
influences, all these factors may produce stressful circumstances, which may
well be too great for the living unit to resist or repair. Metabolism, or, the
flow-rate of energy liberated by chemical reactions, is directly proportional
to the temperature of the cell and its environment. If the temperature is low,
all reactions are slowed-down considerably. Reactions necessary for repair and
maintenance are slowed-down as well, but, also, those that lead to the
accumulation of noxious waste-products. It seems, then, as if "time"
is stretched-out or "slowed-down", too.
21 Cells of the central nervous
system are highly vulnerable to oxygen deficiencies at a normal body temperature,
but, if these cells are much cooler than usual, the time-period that they can
exist without adequate oxygen and energy-supplies, is markedly prolonged.
Therefore, a cardiac arrest lasting more than three to five minutes in a body
that is at normal body temperature, will lead to severe and often irreversible
brain damage, while a body that has been chilled by exposure, may suffer a
cardiac arrest for a much longer period of time, perhaps up to several hours,
without serious damage. It all depends on the degree to which the cerebral
metabolic rate has been slowed-down, and, how long the circulation through the
vital organs, including the brain, has been interrupted.
22 We should not forget. that it is
far more common for people who have suffered a prolonged period of cardiac
arrest, to suffer brain damage than to escape with an intact central nervous
system, since most people have not been chilled to any significant extent prior
to a period of cardiac or circulatory arrest.
23 Similarly, brain damage may
occur as a result of a direct injury, a bleed, or, some sort of pressure upon
the brain, and, if the vital functions are adequately supported in a hospital
environment, the integrity of the other body cells can be maintained for a
prolonged period of time, provided, that the circulation and the oxygenation of
the blood can be maintained adequately. In the case of a severe head-injury or
bleed into the brain, the body, then, experiences a selective death of a
majority of its brain-cells, and, the organism loses, completely, the ability
to react to its environment. We see, then, only "primitive reflexes"
that take place mostly at the level of the spinal cord, because the spinal cord
is not quite as sensitive to a circulatory arrest as the brain.
24 However, brain damage may not be
complete, and, often, head-injuries that impart a rotational force to the
brain, cause it to pivot and twist around its axis or its "stem",
resulting in a severe interruption of the pathways that "power" the
brain into a level of conscious awareness. Under such circumstances, an
individual may remain in a prolonged coma, but, the brain is not dead. Most, if
not all of its major circuitry is intact, and, if the "power supply"
can be restored by a gradual recovery of cellular function at the site of the
interruption, consciousness may be regained. The body is, usually, able to
maintain its respiratory functions in such a "brain-stem injury".
Electrical activity of the brain is not absent, and, the chance of recovering
consciousness remains fairly good, even, if it may, occasionally, take weeks or
months, to accomplish it. The longer the period of unconsciousness lasts,
however, the more likely it is, that evidence of severe and permanent
brain-damage will become apparent, whenever a measure of conscious awareness
has been regained.
25 However, if the brain has been
largely destroyed, not only, its power-supply, represented by this network of
circuits that allows the brain to be alert, but also, all the circuits that
carry-out the specific cerebral functions, the brain becomes a shell, or, even,
a thin-walled "bag", filled with clear fluid. In such a case, no
"brain waves" can be detected or recorded with an
electro-encephalograph, and, the body is nothing more than a collection of
organs without a brain. It can only "vegetate", and, it is totally
dependent upon the constant care and support of its surroundings. There is,
then, no chance that the individual will regain consciousness, and we speak of "brain
death".
26 This is the reason, why
specialised physicians looking after such cases, will cease to do all that is
in their powers to sustain the life of a body without a brain, once they have
become absolutely convinced, that the brain is dead. The body is, then, allowed
to deteriorate naturally, by not correcting all possible deficiencies in the
oxygenation or electrolyte imbalances of the blood. Eventually, the heart
function will become impaired, rapidly aggravating the deterioration of the
blood-supply to the still living parts of the body. It is obvious, that, at the
time brain death has been diagnosed with certainty, still healthy organs of the
body may serve as a donor in transplant operations.
.......
Chapter 2
Content
The hope to gain an extension on life, in the future, by preserving a body in
the deep-freeze.
The fallacy of the assumptions behind this hope.
Would future generations be interested to bring-back to life, if possible, the
relics from the past?
The fearful egocentricity of the motivation to cling to life.
Pyramids of eternal hope.
The acceptance of death and suffering.
The importance of emotional neutrality, in particular, as a tool to avoid
stress.
Death can also be accepted by an emotionally neutral understanding of the
indivisible link between life and death.
The exploration of possibilities of existence; natural evolution.
Conscious awareness; a biological product of natural evolution, based upon the
life and death of countless preceding generations.
The need to seek a harmony between our beliefs and behaviour-patterns.
The evolution and modification of beliefs as a prelude to behavioural
adaptation can not be a goal in itself.
The viability of stress-anticipation and -avoidance.
Self-discipline and emotional neutrality; a possibility for educational
transfer of attitudes and ideas.
The essence of the scientific method of classification; the usefulness of such
classifying skills for our daily behaviour.
Accepting a calculated risk.
The ability to find a way-out, after fear and anxiety have been controled to
some extent.
1 As a conclusion to this review
of the process of dying and the definition of death, we should spend a few
moments discussing the hopes of people who have decided to preserve their
bodies, or the bodies of their relatives, by a process of rapid freezing at, or
shortly after, the moment death has been established. The rationale of this
practice is found in the expectation, that, at some time in the future,
scientific knowledge and medical technology will have progressed to the point,
that it has become possible to correct whatever processes were leading to, or
have led to, the death of the person who has been frozen.
2 At the present time, there is
no indication that it is possible to freeze, completely, a complex animal
organism such as a mammal, and bring it back to life when thawed-out many days,
weeks, or, even, years later. Certainly, single-celled organisms and some of
the lower multi-cellular organisms can be frozen for prolonged periods of time
and will resume their living processes when thawed-out. It is not clear,
however, whether the resumed life-processes are completely normal and
comparable to those that were taking place prior to the freezing process. It is
likely that some damage has occurred. These injuries may not interfere with the
overall integrity of the structure of the living organism, but these changes
may have a bearing on the expected life-span of the organism after thawing-out;
e.g., they could have damaged the reproductive process or other biological
functions necessary for the maintenance of normal existence.
3 Theoretically, there is no
difficulty with the idea, that it should be possible to suspend, almost
completely, all biochemical processes by quickly bringing an organism to a
temperature close to the absolute point of zero degrees Kelvin, but, in
reality, the processes of freezing and crystal formation of the watery
environment in which all living processes take place, have a severely
disruptive effect on the biochemical structure and its functions. Rapid
freezing limits the size of the ice-crystals, but it is very difficult to
freeze, rapidly, a large, warm-blooded organism. The practical difficulties in
bringing a fairly large and complex organism into a state of suspended
animation by freezing, and bringing it back to life after an arbitrary period
of frozen existence, are so overwhelming, that those people, who have invested
a great deal of hope, as well as large sums of money, are likely to be
disappointed. Besides, these people are often unscrupulously exploited by
those, who play upon their hopes and financial assets.
4 Even, if it would be possible
to bring a healthy mammal into a state of suspended animation, who can foresee
the difficulties that will be encountered in correcting the disease processes
that led to the death, or near-death of people, who have now been frozen in the
hope of living again? The next question we have to ask ourselves is this; would
future generations of mankind have any desire to bring such relics of the past
back to life? Perhaps, they may carry-out such a revival experiment,
occasionally, as a technical curiosity, but there is no reason to believe, that
they will feel any compelling urge to bring back to life everyone who has
invested, fearfully and egocentrically, large sums of monies in the hope of
prolonging their existence.
5 It seems to me, that the
attempt to freeze people at the time of death, is nothing more than one of the
numerous expressions of hope, that, somehow, at some time in the future, the
human being will overcome the riddle and inevitability of death. We are, once
again, expressing our tenacious instincts to cling to life as long as we can,
and, we are not so different from those civilisations that embalmed their dead
in the pyramids of eternal hope. Our generations, at least, some of the
wealthier members, place their faith in the deep-freeze and the evolution of
science. We can scarcely consider such primitive attitudes towards the problem
of death as an adequate response to the phenomena of life and death. Let us,
therefore, try, once more, to understand the essence of life and death.
6 Let us again look at the title,
and, this time, we will emphasise the concept of acceptance. We have hinted,
briefly, upon the emotional aspects of trying to cope with the impending
dissolution of ourselves as an individual entity, as well as the simultaneous
occurrence of the stress of suffering. We will argue these aspects more
extensively, as we analyse and describe the psychological adjustments and
adaptations that take place whenever we are subjected to one form of stress or
another. I would like to emphasise, here, that it is possible to accept,
intellectually and with an emotionally neutral frame of mind, the knowledge, that
we have to face death at some time in the future, as well as the likelyhood,
that we will suffer some form of stress at the same time.
7 The intellectual form of
acceptance and adaptation to stress will be most successful, if we construct a
clear-cut conceptual framework for the mental imagery of our reality
perceptions, because such a conceptual framework will provide us with the most
precise anticipation of the stresses we have to deal with at the time of our
death. By recognising the fact, that we have, almost always, some opportunity
to avoid or minimise stressful circumstances, we accept a measure of
responsibility for the stressful situation we may have to face in the future.
8 You may want to ask, how we can
avoid such an inevitability as our own death? In spite of all our attempts to
anticipate and accept the happenings of the near future, we can never avoid the
fact, that we will have to die at some time in that future. Yes, we can not
avoid everything, and, we can certainly not avoid our own death, nor should we
try or hope to avoid the fact, that our own personal life will come to an end
at some time in the foreseeable future, but, a clear understanding of the
processes of life and death will provide us with a measure of tranquility and
resignation. This leads to a remarkable mitigation of our anxieties, as well as
a broad insight into the inter-relationships that exist between life and death.
9 It should not be difficult to
agree with the conclusion, that the living existence of each and everyone of us
would not have been possible without the life and death of countless
generations of human beings before us. Not only, do we make room for the next
generation of human beings by dying in our own time and not lingering,
indefinitely, in the realm of the living, actualised members of human
existence, but, we may also see, quite clearly, that the evolution of the human
gene-pool would never have been possible, if it had not been for this
remarkable phenomenon of the temporary existence of each and every living
organisation.
10 We have seen, how each living
organisation is an expression of a particular possibility of existence. This
possibility was originally given by the physical conditions on earth, and, it
was, and still is, fueled by the constant availability of solar energy. We have
described, on previous occasions, the reasons for the slow fusion of single
cells into strictly organised, multi-cellular communities, exploring
possibilities of existence with the tools of symbiotic co-existence, as well as
the techniques of scavenging, parasitism and predation. Without this constant
stream of life being born, and dissolving again into its basic, inorganic
structural components, we would not exist, nor, would human consciousness and
awareness exist; nor, would there exist any form of reality which you and I can
recognise and communicate.
11 As a product of natural
evolution, we occupy, momentarily, a position of actualised existence. We
happen to represent a temporarily viable combination of human genes, which
started to explore its particular possibilities of existence within our
mother's womb, and, which continued to search for viability after birth, by
learning and adapting within this complex structure of social
inter-relationships into which every human being has been born. Slowly, our
potential for awareness, thought and inter-action with our human and non-human
environment was developed, while we soaked-up from our cultural environment the
conceptual and symbolic tools, which made it possible for us to react as an
integrated, yet individualised human being.
12 To see ourselves in this light
provides an extra-ordinarily powerful tool to accept death as the inevitable
corollary of having been born. Certainly, such an intellectual acceptance can still
be swept-away easily by strong emotions, which are, largely, pre-programmed
behaviour-patterns we have been born with. After all, we should not forget,
that natural evolution of the living organisation was exclusively concerned
with an exploration of possibilities of existence. Therefore, viability was
always the supreme judgement of evolutionary success, and not the ability to
accept death with an attitude of calm resignation.
13 The development of belief
structures, as well as the subsequent need for the human being to react in
accordance with his beliefs, has led to the formulation of questions, which are
expressed in language symbols. This ability to formulate conscious beliefs and
ask questions reflects a peculiarity in evolutionary development. The emergence
of a conscious reality perception resulted from the evolution of symbolic
representations, as we have discussed before, and, we are compelled by our
nature to search for a belief structure that provides us with a coherent answer
to our questions.
14 We need answers in order to have
a coherent view of our realities and retain the ability to respond coherently
to the demands and pressures from our external and internal environments. Yet,
behavioural efficiency is centered around the criterium of viability, and not
around the absolute validity of a specific reality perception. It does not
matter, therefore, what we believe to be true; what matters for each one of us,
is the fact, that we can only experience a measure of well-being, if we act and
behave in harmony with what we believe to be true. If we fail to reach such a
state of harmony, our behaviour is vague, indecisive, and, ultimately,
unviable.
15 Certainly, a transitional period
of search and exploration is useful as an expression of the ability to modify
and adapt our belief structures, but, this period of searching for answers has
only meaning as a transitional period, and not as a goal in itself.
16 The search for viability means,
that, in evolutionary terms, the level of viability will determine the value of
a behavioural response, and every belief structure will, ultimately, be judged
in this light. Therefore, any belief, regardless, how logical or intellectually
sound, which advocates a premature yielding to stress and an attitude of
"lying-down" and "giving-up", is "lost", or, will
be weeded-out as an evolutionary inviable way of life. On the other hand, an
intellectual belief structure that allows us to avoid many stressful situations
and allows us to enter, eventually, into a state of dissolution with a minimum
of disruptive and futile agonies, is a highly valuable and evolutionary sound
pattern of behaviour. Because of the ability to avoid or minimise stressful
situations, we may postpone the moment of our death quite considerably, and,
such an ability constitutes, beyond dispute, a gain in viability.
17 Let us come back to the
intellectual imagery that lets us see life and death as inseparable twins; one
not able to exist without the other. Does such a view-point lead to a fatalistic
acceptance of the inevitability of death? Not at all. While a superficial
reaction in a moment of despair, may sap, temporarily, the will to live, a
life-long excercise of our abilities to think clearly and foresee the
consequences of our actions and attitudes, will also teach us, that the bleak
circumstances we happen to be in, may not have been necessary.
18 Even, if we accept contemporary
circumstances as essentially unavoidable, clear and persistent thinking will
show us, almost invariably, ways to improve the situation. Certainly, these
pathways of improvement are often difficult and require emotional sacrifices in
the form of stern self-discipline, or, the abandonment of emotional crutches
and prejudices, but, it can be done.
19 It is very difficult to
accomplish a radical shift in our attitudes and emotional reactions, once we
have reached our full maturity in middle-age, but a youngster, trained in
intellectually clear and consistent behaviour, and, rewarded, from time to
time, for such an intellectually clear and emotionally controled pattern of
behaviour, will be able to excercise a measure of self-discipline. Such an
individual will be able to become a responsible and contributing member of
society, provided, of course, that he or she has also been trained to use these
intellectual tools within a framework of social responsibilities and moral
concerns.
20 Let us look, for a moment,
specifically, at the aspects of stress-avoidance. These behaviour-patterns become
possible with clear-cut anticipatory insights, and, we will, once again,
recognise the undeniable increase in viability resulting from such an
emotionally neutral form of behaviour. We should all be able to identify with
the experience, that a careful analysis of observations leads to an ever more
precise classification of phenomena into categories of similarities in
existence and event, and, upon these classifications rests the ability to
manipulate our environment. We have stated, here, of course, the essential
principles of scientific endeavour, while technological developments are a
direct, manipulative application of the fruits of scientific insights.
21 In our daily lives, we rarely
behave with the rigorous objectivity and emotional neutrality which lie behind
the principles of idealised scientific work. Neither do we have, as a rule, the
necessary technological aids at our disposal to make useful scientific
observations. Yet, the attitude of emotional neutrality and the willingness to
observe our inter-actions with a measure of emotional control, are powerful
tools for all of us. By adopting such techniques, we learn to forecast, with an
ever greater degree of precision and predictability, what the consequences of
our actions are going to be; for us personally, as well as for others.
22 While we are not always interested in choosing a course of action that is the "safest" possible way to behave, we learn, nevertheless, to calculate, accurately, the risks we take upon ourselves, when we decide to engage in one activity or another. For example, because of the existence of surplus energies, or "elan vital", we need to lead a part of this growth-pressure into challenging and meaningful activities, and, we may, therefore, deliberately place ourselves in a position of danger, as we do, almost invariably, whenever we embark upon an adventure or a demanding sport. A careful analysis of all the possible consequences will show us, quite clearly, what dangers or stresses we are likely to encounter, and, by accurately evaluating the magnitude of these dangers and our ability to overcome stressful situations, we should be in a position to predict, accurately, the level of stress we will be exposed to, and, we should be able to judge our ability to handle these stresses.
23 If we engage in risky activities
on the basis of an impulsive, spur-of-the moment decision, we will be unable to
anticipate, accurately, what we are going to experience, and, the likelyhood of
encountering severe, life-threatening situations is, therefore, greatly
increased. "This is logical", you will say, but, let us not forget to
see in this moment of self-evident logic, that the careful analysis in an
attitude of emotional neutrality plays an enormously important role in minimising
the exposure to severe stress, and, these attitudes and techniques are,
therefore, direct contributors to our ability to survive.
24 Similarly, an emotionally or
intuitively unattractive solution to the problem how to extricate ourselves
from a difficult situation, may become more palatable by a critical,
emotionally more or less neutral evaluation; whenever we have been able to
overcome the influence of fear and anxiety aroused by first impressions.
Carefuly analysis may show us, that the risks involved are not as great as
initially feared, and, once again, viability has been enhanced.
25 These two generalised mechanisms
of stress-avoidance; by emotionally neutral anticipations and controling a
reaction of fear, show us, how useful our intellectual capabilities are. They
function as a cautious moderator during adventurous explorations, as well as a
tool to search for logical and acceptable solutions that are, initially, hidden
from view by a strong emotional response.
.......
Chapter 3
Content
Emotional neutrality as a tool to analyse emotional reactions.
The intuitive and emotional worlds of human inter-actions.
The absence of a generally agreed-upon imagery of the human personality.
Behavioural flexibility; a complicating factor in the object of study, as well
as the observer.
The ability to see similarities in human behaviour-patterns, when observing
them in an emotionally neutral frame of mind.
The shared egocentric orientation of our goals and aspirations.
Many layers of motivations.
The temptation to engage in a fight, and the lure of victory.
A target for suspicion and hostility, if behaviour becomes markedly different
from the average.
The trade-off between emotional control and stress-resistance.
The art of mediation.
An ultimate reality perception that can be shared globally.
The many opportunities to abuse intellectual skills.
Evolutionary weapons, developed, primarily, as an egocentric or small-scale
social tool for survival, give us also the potential to forge a global society
of harmony and justice.
Intuition, and its relation to emotions and emotional neutrality.
The scale from emotional neutrality to emotional extremes.
Coping with varying levels of stress.
The logic and emotional neutrality of many religious reality perceptions.
The logic of seeing the forces of nature as volitional, anthropomorphic forces.
The peculiar position of the scientific perception of reality.
1 We should consider the
possibilities provided by an emotionally neutral technique of careful analysis,
whenever we examine the complex world of stress and conflicts between human
beings. Let us start by acknowledgeing, that, in the sphere of human
relationships, the technique of emotionally neutral observations is even more
difficult than in the relationships with our non-human environment. The main
reason is the complexity of human behaviour, which makes it very difficult to
arrange our observations into clear-cut categories without being side-tracked
by fears and anxieties.
2 We lack the ability, at least,
to a large extent, to recognise the patterns of similarity in human behaviour,
and, secondly, we are dealing in our observations with an essential feature of
human unpredictability; the freedom of choice. The freedom of choice, or, the
anthropomorphic arbitrariness of a force-field, is exactly the one essential
feature which modern scientific insights exclude from all observable phenomena
in the world of matter and energy. Behavioural flexibility and the arbitrary
human choice become, therefore, an object of observation, as well as a factor
in the behaviour of the observing individual, and, the resulting complexity has
prevented, until now, a decisive grasp over the nature of the human
personality. We lack, therefore, an intellectual belief structure about our own
existence, which can be widely accepted across cultural and religious barriers.
3 It is not surprising, that it
has been very difficult to classify human behaviour within a generally
acceptable framework of concepts, and, it is logical, that the mental picture
of the human personality and his social relationships has remained confused. We
have outlined, on several occasions, how this confusion can be overcome by
constructing a reality perception that is based on evolutionary origins and
mechanisms.
4 We will not repeat these
arguments here, and, we will only mention the fact, that problems still exist,
and, that we, necessarily, evaluate each other's behaviour largely in a
pragmatic, emotional and intuitive manner. Yet, we would like to show the importance
of trying to adopt more emotionally neutral attitudes when in contact with each
other, and, we would like to point-out the remarkable benefits that may arise
from such attitudes, even, if we do not understand the details of our
behaviour.
5 An emotionally neutral attitude will show us the many similarities between us, and, it allows us to recognise the same traits and trends in others and ourselves. This is, by far, the most important observation we can make, since it provides a basis for a rational evaluation of the forces at work in inter-personal relationships, especially, if we encounter a situation, where our goals and aspirations are not shared by others. It will show us the rather pronounced egocentric orientation of our goal-patterns, and, it will provide us with an opportunity to see, that the objectives and aspirations of someone else, in close contact with us, may have a similar egocentric orientation that clashes with our interests. The similarity of the egocentric orientation becomes, then, the common feature explaining the stress and strain between us. We also learn to see, with an emotionally neutral attitude of observation, that we frequently use or abuse an apparently altruistic or socio-centric orientation as a means to satisfy our drive for influence, power or respect.
6 An emotionally neutral attitude
provides us with an opportunity to analyse our reasoning and become aware of
hidden motivations. It may show us, how we, just as our fellow human beings,
are continuously exploring avenues of a potential advantage for ourselves,
either by persuasion, deceit or force. It may show us, how superficial the
concerns for our fellow human beings really are, because we are insisting,
primarily subconsciously, on recognition, gratitude, or the acceptance of
authority in return for our "good deeds".
7 The recognition, that we all
are, primarily, concerned with the well-being of ourselves as a matter of
existential necessity, may dampen our emotional reaction-patterns of aggression
and hostility, opportunism or fearful defensiveness, and, we may be awed by the
vision, how similar we are in our desires to profit, gain power, wealth or
security; to be loved, respected or admired; to be successful and to be
satisfied with our accomplishments.
8 An emotionally neutral attitude
may show us, how we are constantly subjected to the temptation to fight, and,
how we long for an experience of triumph and victory, and, we may learn to
acknowledge the price we have to pay, if we give-in to our primitive,
instinctive desires. We understand and comprehend these mechanisms from a less
egocentric point of view, if we learn to observe ourselves and others with
honesty and rationality.
9 It is true, that, on occasion,
a constant and disciplined approach in emotional neutrality may make us
somewhat less accessible to those, who are not used to scrutinise and observe
themselves, and others, in such a strange and unsettling atmosphere of rational
and abstract relativity. It is true, that we will become less susceptible to
being swept-up into communally synchronised attitudes of anger, aggression or
fear, and, because of this isolation, we will become, sometimes, targets of
suspicion and fear ourselves, since our emotional neutrality and rationality,
as well as the refusal to become part of a polarised attitude, make us appear
strange, unreliable and incomprehensible.
10 Since the other members of the
community operate, so often, in an emotionally synchronised manner, the
rational, reasoned and emotionally neutral approach is easily considered to be
treacherous, and, it places a heavy burden of isolation on such an
independently thinking and behaving individual. It requires skill and
persuasion to allay the fears and suspicions of the social surroundings, and, when
such an attitude of persuasion fails, the scapegoat is easily found in this
slippery and treacherous attitude of a relativistic rationality.
11 It is also true, that a constant
and disciplined emotional neutrality in attitude and behaviour may, occasionally,
result in a diminished ability to resist severe stress, since we can not draw
on those final reserves of resistance, which can only be liberated by a strong
emotional response of fear and anxiety. Yet, when we are increasingly involved
in highly significant existential circumstances, we are drawn into more
primitive, emotionally charged reaction-patterns, and, we should recognise, in
our emotionally more neutral moments, that emotional neutrality is a fragile
and often temporary frame of mind.
12 The wisdom of moderation and the
search for an acceptable compromise in order to avert a deadly conflict, have
to be based on the emotionally neutral ability to discern the few common
grounds that exist between us and our adversaries, and, these common grounds
have to be exposed, carefully, in an effort to cool the emotions of hostility.
13 There can be little doubt, then,
that, in a pragmatic, intuitive manner, the virtues of emotionally neutral
attitudes in our dealings with each other, have been recognised for a long
time, but, by providing a conceptual framework for the mechanisms of emotional
neutrality and a generalised plan in the search for compromise when defusing a
conflict-situation, we hope to raise the art of mediation from an intuitive
skill to a level of conscious awareness, where we can teach our children, as
well as all the citizens of the world, why it is so important to see the common
denominators of human existence. An emotionally neutral but intellectually
sophisticated imagery of the mechanisms of a relativistic reality perception,
including a relativistic interpretation of the functions of life, will provide,
eventually, a sound basis for harmony in view-points as well as attitudes.
14 We have to learn to see, that
evolutionary developments show us, clearly, how behaviour can be finely tuned
with observations that have been obtained in an emotionally neutral zone, and,
we have to appreciate the reasons, why this represents a more sophisticated
development in the search for viability than the more primitive,
phylogenetically older patterns of emotional or instinctive behaviour. In other
words; we have to control or "fine-tune" our emotional responses,
and, we have to learn about the hierarchical order of the various functions
taking place in the human personality.
15 Finally, we have to emphasise,
once more, the enormous abuse intellectual skills have always been subjected
to. Almost invariably, the sharpening of intellectual skills, manipulative
powers, knowledge and insight have been used to serve narrow egocentric goals,
either for the individual, or the elite. This, of course, reflects the fact,
that, all skills, including the skills of intellectual analysis, have been
developed and used as a weapon in the struggle for survival.
16 These same tools, developed as a
result of the search for continuing individual or small-scale social survival,
show us, also, the need to enlarge our sphere of concern, and, to extend our
sphere of concern to all the members of mankind, and, eventually, to the entire
terrestial environment. These intellectual tools show us, with ever greater
clarity, that the increasing inter-dependence of human beings with each other
and their environment, makes survival a question of harmony in symbiotic
relationships, and not a survival of the strongest, predatory elements. In
other words; these intellectual tools give us, at the same time, the
possibility to recognise the viability of symbiotic harmonies in the
multi-cellular organism, in addition to the more easily visible but more
primitive struggle for survival by the mechanisms of competitive dispersion and
the survival of the fittest. The latter mechanisms are rapidly losing their
existential advantage because of the level of devastation associated with
modern warfare.
17 I would like to make one
additional point, here. Intuitive attitudes or actions do not necessarily imply
that they are emotionally coloured. Intuitive attitudes, especially, in the art
of mediation, are oriented towards emotional neutrality, but, intuitive
attitudes, judgements or actions lack a comprehensive belief structure that
allows us to spell-out the reasons, why we adopted, intuitively, certain
attitudes, and, why we made the decisions we did. In intuition, we make use of
a large input from a subconscious or only partly verbalised source of
experiences, and, in doing so, we lack an essential element of clarity in the
explanation or rationalisation of our actions. These attitudes and actions do
not have to be coloured emotionally to any sigfnicant extent, but, if we lack
the intellectual precision to scrutinise the mechanisms or logic of our
actions, we will also lack the ability to perceive, clearly, when we are
sliding into prejudicial behaviour-patterns or emotional attitudes.
18 We have indicated before, that the major contribution of intelligent scrutiny and emotionally neutral evaluations lies in the realm of stress-avoidance. Once we are subjected to stress, the sense perceptions become existentially highly significant, and, we are automatically sliding into a pattern of behaviour that relies more on pre-programmed, genetically determined behaviour-patterns. We have discussed the inter-play between learned and genetic factors in the composition of emotional behaviour, and, we will not repeat these arguments, here. We only remind ourselves, that there is a gradual, continuous scale from emotional neutrality to emotionally coloured responses, all the way to the most primitive, genetically determined behavioural reactions at the extreme ends of the existential scale of significance; either positive, in exuberance, triumph or ecstasy, or negative, in anxiety, fear and panic.
19 Let us return to a specific
consideration of the acceptance of misery, suffering and death, and, we see,
that the emotionally neutral zone is useful to avoid severe stress and
contributes, thereby, significantly to viability or longevity. On the other
hand, the actual coping with stress, once we find ourselves in a position of
severe, relatively acute stress, evokes, primarily, an emotional form of
behaviour. In a situation of chronic, relatively mild stress, we see a
resumption of the emotionally more neutral mechanisms. It would be somewhat
simplistic to say, that emotionally neutral behaviour-patterns only apply in
stress-avoidance, and, that emotionally coloured behaviour only plays a role in
stressful situations. It is correct, however, to see the function of
emotionally neutral behaviour predominantly as a tool to stay out of trouble,
while we tend to resort to more emotional behaviour-patterns, once we have
gotten into trouble.
20 Similarly, it would be wrong to
assume, that emotionally neutral observations would only give rise to
scientific images, while emotionally coloured beliefs are the domain of the
religious beliefs and behaviour patterns. We have discussed, on several
occasions, the idea, that, beliefs and concepts we now classify as religious in
nature, represent man's earlier attempts to come to a rational explanation of
the phenomena and experiences he was subjected to. Therefore, a great deal of
emotional neutrality and clarity of thought, as well as logical ways of
connecting concepts into a framework of understanding, were part of beliefs
that would see man within an overall structure of anthropomorphic force-fields,
and, these beliefs would, therefore, include elements of a volitional
"will" in the operation of these forces.
21 It was obvious to the members of
mankind during most of the early, developmental stages of the emergence of
beliefs, that they only partially understood the multitude of forces they were
surrounded by. The apparent haphazardness and unpredictaility of all these
forces led to the logical conclusion, that, most, if not all these forces were
exerted by entities of existence which were endowed, just like man himself,
with a will; a purposeful, flexible, volitional type of behaviour, very much
like man's own.
22 When the powers of observation
became more refined with an increased arsenal of technological instruments, the
ability to predict became such a predominant phenomenon, that man stripped the
forces of nature, gradually, from all vestiges of unpredictability or
volitional, anthropomorphic features. Slowly, man developed this curiously
mechanistic and extremely audacious concept of a Universe of forces that could
be grasped with the technique of logical conclusions and mathematical
calculations. The result was a near-perfect predictability, based on a
foundation of generalised natural laws, as well a powerful concept of "statistical
variability", or "scatter".
23 It is not our intention, here,
to debate the validity of such a slowly evolved and hard-won perception of
reality, but, we have to remind ourselves, living in an ambiguous age of
technological mastery and a sense of suspicion about the fruits of science,
that, indeed, such a mechanistic, scientific view-point is unusual, especially,
when seen in a large historical perspective.
.......
Chapter 4
Content
The difficulties associated with an imagery of the Universe without any
anthropomorphic features.
The emotional dissatisfaction with such an interpretation.
The emotional and emotionally neutral use of religious and scientific images.
Reaction-patterns in an increasingly stressful situation.
The four stages; avoidance, mild but increasing stress, the maximum resistance
of stress, and the gradual yielding to overwhelming stress with the acceptance
of impending death.
Decreasing abilities or opportunities to communicate in "stage four".
Fading gradually into a private world of blurred reality perceptions.
The mechanisms of a blurring of reality perceptions.
Stress is reversible, until the momentum towards disintegration has become
overwhelming.
The stress of uncertainty.
A review of stress.
The role and function of hope.
The gradual return to a new "equilibrium" in conditions of chronic
stress.
The balance between hope and emotionally neutral faculties of criticism.
Unnecessary suffering resulting from rigid behaviour-patterns, based on hope,
divine exclusivity, or a belief in absolute truths.
The fine line between courage and stubbornness.
A comparison between dying and falling asleep; the common ground of losing
contact with the environment.
The differences between falling asleep, being anaesthetised, coma and death.
The difficulties of thinking about a state of non-existence.
A review of sleep; subjective experiences when trying to observe the process of
falling asleep.
The "pull-back"; the identity-feeling and its "appearance"
during sleep.
The stress of being constantly in a state of vigilance.
Different scales of time perception in dreamless and dream-sleep.
1 An imagery of nature and the
Universe, where all anthropomorphic features have been removed, creates
difficulties for us, in particular, when this imagery fails to give us an
adequate description of the human personality and its needs. There is a feeling
of isolation associated with such a scientific view-point, and, the curious
loneliness of our intelligence and "free will" makes this imagery difficult
to accept, especially, when people have not been exposed to these scientific
ideas in a coherent and comprehensive teaching program. If the scientific
reality perception remains fragmentary and incoherent, it does not develop the
same persuasiveness it may have for someone, who is fortunate to have developed
a good grasp over the scientific imagery.
2 We have elaborated these
arguments before, and, we only hint upon them, here, to show, that scientific
and religious belief structures have many aspects in common. Both suffer from a
tendency to be regarded as absolute truths, and, both have a strong foundation
in the emotionally neutral zone of observations. Both become emotionally
charged, when they serve in the organisation of existentially significant
behaviour.
3 It is more advantageous to
analyse the acceptance of suffering, death and decay in the various categories
or zones of stress-adaptation, rather than in terms of a scientific or
religious imagery. The first category, nl., that of stress-avoidance, has been
discussed. The second category represents a gradually rising intensity of
stress, and the behavioural organisation reflects then an increasing resistance
to stress. Mild forms of stress are resisted with a measure of ease, and,
intellectual or emotionally neutral behaviour still plays a dominant role, but,
in the more severe forms of stress, we reach a point, where it threatens the
continuation of existence.
4 This last category is an
intense and painful experience, and the behaviour of a stressed human being
alternates between hope, optimism, confidence, and, even, exuberance, if a
turning point is seen or is thought to be present, and, periods of despair,
depression and somber foreboding, where the resignation to the inevitable or the
acceptance of a Divine Will, becomes a focal point for the relief of anxiety
and despair. We have discussed the mechanisms of hope, as well as the attitudes
of a reliance on the Wisdom of a Divine Will, on various occasions.
5 In the fourth category of stress,
we see a gradual acceptance of the fact, that death is imminent. This stage is
not always reached after a struggle, because it may be the result of a chronic
illness, where the energies have been sapped by an illness, and the attitude of
acceptance has prevailed, long before the terminal stage of the illness has
arrived. Or, the stage of impending death may be reached so quickly, that the
individual does not realise the severity of his predicament. This happens,
often, in accidents of one sort or another. However, if the progression of
events is slower, we see, how the attitudes of hope and rebellion give way to
resignation. This stage is less likely to result in a vigorous and clear
expression of feelings, sensations, emotions and thoughts, as the will to live
and communicate begins to fade.
6 Certainly, it is common for
people to experience feelings of togetherness when trapped into a situation of
impending death. Yet, the ability to communicate becomes rapidly impaired,
because contact with the surrounding world is nearly always absent. The powers
of communication and observation are fading and make it more difficult for an
observer to understand what is going-on. The clearest communications are
received from those, who remain to the last moment in category three;
considering themselves still to be a part of living humanity, and, hoping for a
favourable turn of the events; until the last moment, when they realise, that
everything has been lost.
7 Those, who give-in to stress,
reduce their resistance to it, and, they become apathetic, less relevant and
somewhat incomprehensible for those who are struggling. People in category four
are becoming oblivious to their social surrounding. They fade, gradually, into
a private world of their own, which is characterised by a blurring between
sense impressions, representing a contemporary reality, and, memory-traces
welling-up from their subcsoncious. Yet, those, who are severely stressed are
not aware of this blurring, because their critical and discriminatory faculties
have been over-powered by the level of stress.
8 Reality, as we see it, (and the
dying used to see it, in spite of the many variables between the reality
perceptions of those who are alive), begins to blend with mental images that
well-up from conscious and subconscious memory-banks, and, these images may
acquire the strength and conviction of visions or hallucinations. We need to
have the ability to evaluate, critically, the differences between an occurring
sense impression, and, an imagery that has welled-up from our memory-banks,
before we are "in touch" with reality. We die, therefore, in the
reality of our beliefs, based on past experiences and culturally acquired
structures of concepts, if we die fully awake, but, occasionally, we lose all
contact with a commonly shared world of realities, as the progression of images
welling-up from our subconscious becomes rather haphazard and chaotic.
9 Most often, however, there
remains a measure of contact, as well as a sharing of reality with those in the
immediate social surroundings, until the level of awareness drops to a state of
unresponsiveness. Then, the observers of the dying individual are unable to
know anything with certainty about the sensations, feelings and thoughts of the
person who is near death, and is living the last few moments of his or her life
in the privacy of a personal reality perception.
10 These categories or stages of
stress and awareness are only conceptual vehicles for our convenience and
desire to grasp the reality of a transition into a state of death, and, these
categories do not have sharp boundaries in reality. We see, in essence, that
stress may occur at widely varying levels of intensity, and, stress may
fluctuate, or be resolved, at any stage, but, it may also reach such a peak of
intensity, that the possibility of existence is being lost. The loss of
manipulability and predictability caused by increasing levels of stress is one
of the reasons for the swings between hope and despair, adding its own
dimension of suffering to the existing stress.
11 The level of suffering is directly related to the tensions created by the displacement forces of stress, (displacing the living organism from an "optimum equilibrium"), as well as the measure of resistance the organism puts-up against this displacement force. Stress is, indeed, a tension, and the intensity of this tension and the intensity of the experience of suffering, is, therefore, proportional to the magnitutude of the displacement force, multiplied by the resistance exerted by the living organism.
12 If the displacement force is
small, the resistance is minimal, because the initial phases of adaptation are
characterised by a "yielding" or "moving out of the way",
rather than a behaviour of resistance. As we have discussed, the organism can
anticipate the likely occurrence of a displacement force, and, it may be able
to take appropriate measures to avoid stress all-together, thereby completely
by-passing the occurrence of a situation of stress, except for the fact, that
the avoidance-reaction in itself constitutes a certain form of stress.
13 Certainly, avoidance may mean a
slight reduction in the status of an "optimum equilibrium", or, in
the degree of accomodation left for future adaptative responses, but the important
feature, here, is the fact, that it is, indeed, possible to avoid stress by
proper anticipatory behaviour.
14 In the increasingly severe
situations of stress, the degree of latitude in adaptation has been exhausted, and
the organism is caught in a situation, where it has to resist the
stress-producing forces as much as possible, in the hope, that the factors of
stress will ease-off before exhaustion and collapse of the stress-resisting
capabilities has occurred. The maximum point of stress is experienced at the
point, where further resistance becomes impossible, and a conscious organism
begins to realise, that the end is near, unless help or relief comes soon.
15 Here, the factor of hope, the
expectation or belief, that the situation will improve, is exerting its maximum
influence, and, we have discussed the curious trade-of that takes place as a
result of the attitude of hopeful expectations. The bias towards an optimistic
appraisal of the situation "as is" allows the organism to mobilise
its last reserves of resistance and endurance, and, this gamble may pay-off, if
easement of the stress-situation comes before total collapse has taken place.
However, this bias of hopeful expectations diminishes the ability to finely
tune the behavioural response.
16 A prolonged situation of stress
will produce its own forms of adaptation, when the organism gradually accepts a
new standard of reference as the "normal" status-quo, effectively
reducing the level of stress and suffering, and, allowing emotionally more
neutral evaluations to resume a role in the organisation of attitudes and
behavioural responses. This slow adaptation to a situation of chronic stress is
associated with increasing expressions of doubt about the validity of the
belief structures upon which hopeful expectations have been based.
17 However, this is just an aside;
a peculiarity that is associated with the effects of chronic, moderately
severe, stressful circumstances. Let us resume our discussion about the trade-of
between the increasingly emotional bias of hopeful expectations and the
mobilisation of reserves on the one hand, and, the loss of behavioural
fine-tuning on the other. There is little doubt, that such an emotionally
coloured attitude of hope does, indeed, mobilise enormous quantities of
energies for the resistance of stress, in particular, when this hope occurs in
a synchronised form throughout a small community experiencing the same
stressful circumstances.
18 Yet, we see, time and again,
that such an emotional synchrony of hope and belief aggravates the tensions of
stress unnecessarily, because the emotional bias prevents the individual, or
the group, to see a reasonable compromise with the stress-producing factors. We
are, of course, referring, here, to a situation, where communal stress is being
experienced as a result of a conflict-situation with a powerful adversary. An
emotionally synchronised attitude of hopeful expectations, strong religious,
moral or ethical beliefs, as well as a mutual re-enforcement of ethnic pride
and historical awarenesses, lead, so often, to a stubborn and uncompromising
attitude, which fails, completely, to acknowledge the view-points or
motivations of the stronger, dominating society. When we look at history, we see,
time and again, the occurrence of unnecessary suffering, death and destruction
as a result of such strongly organised behaviour-patterns that are based on
hope, Divine exclusivity and an unshakable conviction in an Absolute Truth.
19 Occasionally, we see courageous,
if somewhat incomprehensible behavioural acts that reveal an enormous
capability to resist stress, or, some people seem to seek, actively, the
severest, most lethal forms of stress in an attitude of defiance and triumphant
victory over the stark contemporary realities of death and defeat. While these
examples may be revered as sacrosanct attitudes by the followers of Heroes and
Saints, we have to question, whether we are seeing, indeed, admirable courage
and steadfastness, or, a measure of irresponsible stubbornness and fatal
narrow-mindedness.
20 However, the main focus of our
attention, here, is on the observation, that, strongly emotional behaviour
will, inevitably, lose some of its ability to resolve the stress-producing
factors by the mechanisms of compromise and an understanding of the adversay.
This is the crux of the trade-of or price we pay for the comfort of hopeful
expectations and the convictions of an Absolute Belief. We pay for an increased
ability to resist a stressful force with a lessened ability to resolve stress
with intelligent compromise.
21 Let us look, again, at category
four, and see, whether or not we can gain further insights into the process of
dying by comparing this process with the daily, yet mysterious experience of
"falling asleep". We will see, that the differences are marked and
far more obvious than the similarities, but, in one aspect, falling asleep and
death show a remarkable similarity. I am referring, here, to the fact, that, in
both instances, we lose gradually contact with our environment, and, an
analysis of the process of falling asleep may help us visualise, what happens
during the process of dying. We will also discuss the much less physiological
experience of being anaesthetised, but, let us begin with a discussion of the
differences between falling asleep and dying.
22 Obviously, the most striking
difference is the fact, that falling asleep is a temporary, reversible loss of
consciousness, while in the definition of death, the existence of the living
organism is terminated by the processes of dissolution and post-mortem decay.
Since the essence of living existence has been destroyed, the process of death
is, by definition irreversible. We will discuss the difficulties we encounter,
trying to visualise the transition into a state of non-existence; when we
review the inevitability of giving a quality of existence to whatever we are
thinking about. This leads to curious difficulties, when we try to think about
the state of non-existence. Let us discuss, first, the mechanisms of sleep.
23 Sleep is a process that most
complex animals, and, certainly, most mammals need as part of a general
mechanism of physical restoration. We know, how an organism can call-upon vast
reserves of energy in short bursts of activities, whenever it experiences a
life and death situation. Such highly taxing experiences are seen, especially,
in the predatory species', because they have to go through a strenuous hunting
procedure to secure their energy-supplies, or, they may have to flee for their
life, when they are pursued by a predator in turn. Short bursts of high
energy-expenditure are possible, but, these bursts of energy-expenditure have
to be repaid by a period of panting, where the oxygen-deficit is restored,
waste-products are eliminated, and heat is dissipated. However, the organism
also needs extended periods, when its behaviour is relaxed and the stress of
constant vigilance has been removed.
24 Every complex animal needs
periods when its alert, vigilant state of watchful contact with the
environment, is being relaxed as a result of a situation of shelter, comfort
and satiety. Then, the organism loses gradually contact with its environment.
Nevertheless, the animal always remains "arousable", and, this means,
that danger signals can still be perceived and will arouse the animal into a
state of alertness.
25 If we try to observe in
ourselves what is happening when we fall asleep, we encounter a curious
difficulty. The objective of observing what happens to us as we start to fall
asleep, implies a great deal of alert contact with the "external
world", even, if this external world is, primarily, our own sphere of
awarenesses, but, the process of falling-asleep is characterised, in essence,
by a loss of orientation of our awarenesses in relation to their environment.
This orientation towards the environment includes such fundamental functions as
the awareness of time, the ability to think logically, and the voluntary recall
of a large repertoir of images. It is, therefore, difficult, if not impossible,
to really observe ourselves falling asleep, and, most of us have experienced
the fact, that a sudden awareness that we were beginning to fall asleep, had
the effect of pulling us suddenly back into a state of being wide awake.
26 If we wake-up after a short
snooze, we may experience another interesting sensation, because it seems, that
there remained a continuity of our "identity feeling" throughout this
short period of sleep, and, it seems, as if our identify feeling became
attached to a thought or a sensation and blended with it to such an extent,
that we did not have the ability to distinguish between our feeling of identity
and a mental image emanating from our memory-banks.
27 The reason why we can make this
distinction when we are awake, lies in the reception of a constant stream of
reality perceptions, which we are receiving as a result of our inter-actions
with the environment. The awake state is, to a large extent, a continuous
mental activity, where we, constantly, evaluate the situation "as
is", including our memories, projections, hopes and fears, as well as
other forms of judgements. In the awake and alert state, we are always able to
make the distinction between a thought, a memory, a feeling or a wish, and, the
sense impressions that reflect a contemporary reality which we have to take
into account.
28 However, if we become "lost
in thought"; if we start to day-dream, or, if we are severely exhausted or
under the influence of certain drugs, or, if there is a remarkable poverty of
sensory stimuli from the surrounding environment, then, the distinction between
a reality, represented by contemporary sense-impressions, and a reality, that
is created by a stream of mental images originating from our memory-banks,
(such as specific memory-recalls, fantasies or thought-patterns), becomes very
difficult, or, even, impossible.
29 Fatigue, drugs, sensory deprivation, stress of all sorts; all these factors can interfere with the perception of reality, as well as the distinction between a contemporary sense impression and a memory-trace. In the process of sleeping, we experience a more or less voluntary relaxation of these discriminatory faculties, where, under the influence of being sheltered and secure, as well as a general sense of well-being, we drift-off into a state of non-awareness, or, rather, of non-interaction with the environment. The constant alertness and vigilance of the awake state represents a form of stress, which requires energy and a measure of volitional input, at least, in the human being who is not strongly existentially aroused, and, after a number of hours, the organism gets tired and wants to fall asleep, restoring its reserves and capabilities in order to be able to be highly alert and vigilant, the following day.
30 During this period of
physiological sleep, the awareness of the "self" in relation to its
environment, (as a distinct entity, different from the body), seems to
disappear, and, the "self" seems to become identified with a series
of haphazard, often chaotic image progressions. The perception of time is
distorted. Many hours of dream-less sleep are not perceived at all and seem to
have passed in a moment, while, occasionally, a few minutes of vivid
dream-sleep is associated with such a rapid progression of images that, in
retrospect, the remembered portions, now perceived in the normal time-scale of
being awake, will seem like many hours of dreaming.
.......
Chapter 5
Content
Dreamless sleep and dream-sleep.
Sequential image progression during dreaming.
Twitching of many muscles during dream-sleep.
Mental image progression and the processes of "free association".
The absence of "logic", due to the absence of a check against
"contemporary reality".
The relaxing effects of a good night's sleep.
No image-progression during an anaesthetic; a period of restlessness and
confusion during the recovery from anaesthesia.
The inability to fight-off a loss of consciousness.
The subjective experience of a short time-interval between "going
under" and "waking up" after an anaesthetic.
No time perception is possible without a kaleidoscopic "play-back" of
mental images, and, therefore, the fact of being deceased can not be
experienced.
A review of the realities in which we may die.
Differences between the realities of our enemies and ourselves.
Testimonies by people, who have seen Heaven or Hell.
A short review of the reasons, why there is, almost always, a strong belief
that some sort of life exists after death.
The appearance of deceased individuals in the dreams of the living.
The general acceptance of "spiritual" or anthropomorphic
force-fields, existing without a body.
The belief, that the human being is a link between lower and higher forms of
intelligent existence.
The difficulties and peculiarities of the scientific reality perception, where
all forms of awareness are linked to the existence of a living organism.
The concept of the immortal soul, and the influence of science upon the
religious imagery.
Problems in describing the functions and qualities of "the soul".
1 It has become clear, that sleep
takes place, in essence, as two different forms of rest, but, both are
characterised by a loss of contact with the surroundings. Large periods of
sleep are spent at a markedly reduced level of activity of the body, including
the brain, and, probably, there is no image-progression going-on in the brain
during this form of sleep; at least, not with an intensity that makes it
possible for us to recall fragments of the dream-sequences, later, after we
have woken-up. However, these dream-less periods of sleep are interrupted with
periods of sleep, where a very active mental image-stream occurs, and, where
all sorts of twitching movements of the face, eyes, hands, arms and legs can be
observed.
2 We think, that, during these
periods of dream-sleep, the condition of being asleep is actively maintained by
a center in the brain-stem, and, this active maintenance of a state of sleep
reduces the susceptibility of the brain to arousal by stimuli from the
environment. Yet, the brain itself is quite active during this form of
"dream-sleep", because a rapid and active procession of mental images
is taking place. However, this imagery is free from the usual restraints that
are placed on the sequences of thoughts and mental images during a state of
contact with the environment. During the awake state, the mental
image-progression is guided by the constant stream of sense impressions that
come-in from the senses and represent a "contemporary reality" for
the awake organism.
3 Therefore, the sense of logic
does not seem to operate in the same manner during a dream as it does in the
awake state. While many parts of a remembered dream-sequence seem logical,
there are always certain aspects of our dreams, in particular, behavioural
situations and reactions, which seem, in retrospect, in the state of alertness,
to be highly illogical or even impossible. Yet, no feeling of strangeness or
impossibility was experienced during the dream itself.
4 Since these memory-sequences or
image-progressions are not controled by our logic or voluntary will, (with the
help of a check against incoming reality perceptions), these progressions are
"free", in the sense, that, their sequence is determined, largely, by
a process of association. In an association, an image may evoke another image
by virtue of the fact, that the evoked imagery has some similarities or
associations with a previous image.
5 During periods of dream-sleep,
difficulties, problems, frustrating experiences, etc., have a chance to
"re-play" themselves in many combinations, which would have been
suppressed by our logic in the awake state, and, this may account for the fact,
that the relaxation associated with a good night's sleep, often, makes it possible
to see solutions or fresh approaches, which were not visible in a more anxious
and somewhat compulsive attitude during the previous day.
6 People, who have been brought
under the influence of an anaesthetic drug, also experience a reversible loss of
contact with the environment. However, it seems, that, during the period, when
the anaesthetic drug is exerting its influence, the brain is in a state of
"dream-less sleep", since the activity of the brain-cells is
suppressed by the anaesthetic. Image-progression is, almost certainly, not
taking place, and, therefore, there is no perception of time. The moment of
falling asleep or "going under", and waking-up, are experienced in
immediate succession, regardless, how long the period of unconsciousness under
anaesthesia has lasted.
7 The period of waking-up from an
anaesthetic takes time, and, then, there may be a period, where the brain has
become active, again, without the individual having regained, fully, his
orientation and contact with the environment. It is during this period, that
the individual may become restless and confused, and it is possible to
experience vivid, dream-like experiences that can be recalled later; at least,
to some extent.
8 It is possible to have a
partial and, sometimes, fairly complete contact with reality, while,
supposedly, being "under anaesthesia". The paralysing effects of some
drugs used in conjunction with an inadequate dose of the anaesthetic, may
prevent any communication of such a contact with reality, until after the
period of "anaesthesia" has ended.
9 In addition to a marked
distortion of the perception of time, there is, also, the feeling, that the
identity of the individual became contracted into a point-like existence, when
being brought under the influence of an anaesthetic drug. There may be a
feeling of pressure, sound or other vague, non-specific awareness. Since the
loss of contact with reality is rapid and involuntary when being anaesthetised,
the awareness or the realisation that contact is being lost, does not result in
a "pull-back" to reality, as happens, when such an awareness occurs
while falling asleep physiologically. This inability to "fight-off"
this loss of contact with reality, is somewhat frightening, but, since the waking-up
is experienced almost immediately following this anxiety, the feeling of fright
is, subjectively, short-lived.
10 Falling asleep under natural
circumstances happens, because we are snug, secure and relaxed, and, the
presence of anxiety-provoking stimuli will keep us awake, as we all know. As we
mentioned, any sensation of drifting-off to sleep may be reversed, if we
suddenly realise, that we are in the process of losing contact with the
environment. Falling asleep is, therefore, quite different from being brought
under anaesthesia, even, if we consent voluntarily to being anaesthetised, and,
even, if the anxieties about the impending operation and anaesthetic are dulled
with tranquillising drugs.
11 It is important to emphasise,
that, dream-less sleep, as well as a deep anaesthetic, where the brain is not
able to play-back a rapid, kaleidoscopic sequence of mental images, will be
void of the perception of time, and, we know, therefore, that the eternity of
death can not be appreciated by anyone who has died. Not only, can we not know
that we are dead, but, we can not even perceive the time when we are deeply
unconscious, and, for these reasons, we may focus our attention exclusively
upon the process of dying rather than on the period of being dead. The
transition period, when the organisation of life is falling-apart, as well as
the mental imagery we can form about the state of being dead, are the most
important features of our concerns about the phenomenon of "death".
12 Death has meaning only for those, who are living; not for those, who are dead. Death has an enormous meaning for those, who are in the process of dying, and, who are on the verge of losing contact with reality, knowing, that these are the final moments of their conscious existence. As we mentioned before, we die in the reality perceptions of our beliefs, and, those of us, who believe, strongly and honestly, that we have conducted ourselves to the best of our abilities and according to the Will of our God, may experience "going to Heaven". At least, a Heaven as its exists in our imagination. Those, who have doubts about their acceptance in the eyes of the Lord, will, inevitably, project their fears into the reality images of their final moments.
13 Those psychopathic individuals,
who have lived and murdered, harmed or callously injured countless people, will
also die in the reality of their beliefs, and, if they, somehow, think that
they have done nothing wrong, their final experiences may reflect such a warped
sense of justice, as well as undeserved state of tranquility. We, the injured,
having suffered unimaginable injustice, can not visualise those enemies to die
in peace, without retribution, and, they die, in our imagery, in a Hell of fire
and just punishment, but, we should not forget, that this is our imagery, and
not necessarily the imagery of our enemies.
14 The process of entering our own
Hell or Heaven represents, therefore, a stage in the process of dying, and, the
mental imagery may occur with a startling vividness. However, this imagery is,
nevertheless, a product of the living mind, and, it reflects a function of
life, and not of death. Sometimes, we hear accounts from people, who have
"seen" Heaven or Hell, when they thought they were dying; e.g., when
they were losing consciousness as the result of an illness or an accident. The
mental imagery or the religious experiences of these people will, of course,
reflect what they believe to be true or a likely event, even, if the actual
account of what they saw or heard, was something that was "new" to
them; something, they had never seen or experienced before.
15 The testimony of people who
thought that they were dying, may be so sincere, so honest and convincing, that
many people may be persuaded to believe the reality of such a testimony, and,
since many of us share, culturally, the same imagery, even, if we disagree
about the details, such convincing testimony may make people accept these
experiences as evidence for the truthfulness of their religious beliefs.
16 The awareness of the existence of death, as well as the inevitability of the occurrence of death for each and every living organisation, is the price we pay for the possibility of intelligent, conscious awarenesses, with a wide scope of vision and a long-range anticipation of events. The awareness of being dead, however, is impossible, but the awareness of being in the process of dying, is a central concern in the reflective moments of us all. The many divergent opinions about the nature of death, as well as life, together with the questions about the sort of awareness or existence we may experience after death, give an aura of mystery and uncertainty about these matterns and make us wonder and think.
17 Let us repeat, here, briefly the
arguments we have put forward for the almost universal belief in some sort of
an existence after death, in spite of the common-sense evidence to the
contrary. We can see this tenacious belief in an existence after death in
nearly all religious beliefs, past and present. The belief, that man can, and does
exist in some form after his death, is so widespread, that we do not have to
concern ourselves with a proof for this statement, and, we will go-on to
enumerate a series of reasons and arguments, which will make it understandable,
why man, from the earliest times of being consciously aware, has concerned
himself with the question, what happens to him when he dies.
18 The plausibility of some kind of
existence after death was re-enforced, time and again, because the living
members of the community would experience the appearance of a respected and
recently deceased member in their dreams. Not only, would this constitute a
"proof" of their existence for those, who were not aware of the
distinction between memory-images and sense impressions representing a contemporary
reality, but, it would provide, also, a very effective way to communicate with
such a deceased individual. The belief, that deceased people would exist
somewhere, and, that they could influence the living community, for better or
worse, became, often, a central theme of religious beliefs and magical rituals,
and, we see, how important these beliefs still are in the formulation of
contemporary reality interpretations and behavioural guidelines.
19 Another reason for accepting the
persistence or isolated existence of a human or humanoid "spirit",
quite apart from its existence within the body, was, and still is, the fact,
that all religious beliefs share an anthropomorphic interpretation of the
natural force-fields. Such a natural force-field could have nearly all the
qualities of a human personality, and, sometimes, their powers would be far
greater, but, it would not have to exist in conjunction with a visible body. We
see in the early religious beliefs, a whole pantheon of spirits, while later,
in the mono-theistic religions, the multitude of spiritual forces is brought
under the control of a Supreme Being, God.
20 The faculty of conscious
awareness of the alert human being has almost always been linked to the world
of spirits or divine beings, and, not to the existence of a physiologically
intact organism. The idea, that all forms of conceptual awareness are
intricately linked to the existence of an intact, functioning human body, is
still a minority reality perception, shaped, largely, on the basis of rather
recent scientific insights, and, this imagery is still widely unacceptable to
those, who find such a fragility of conscious existence, illogical and
emotionally unsatisfactory. The idea, that the human spirit, his consciousness,
his occasional experiences of ecstasy, "expanded consciousness", or
any other forms of "cosmic awareness", are only a product of natural
evolution and a "by-product" of an intact brain in an intact human
being, seems, for most people, a foreign and incomprehensible concept; far
removed from our primary sensory impressions and conventional interpretations.
21 Certainly, for those, who do not
accept, or have not been able to see reality perceptions in a modern,
physiological, biological and relativistic light, the experiences of the human
being seem to lead to the inevitable conclusion, that, some form of conscious
life exists quite independently from bodily functions. The influence of modern,
scientific thinking upon the traditional, religious interpretations of reality
has resulted in a somewhat vague conceptual entity; the immortal soul. This
soul is now generally considered by the intelligent religious believer to be
stripped from most physiological functions, but, the knowledge of identity and
some sort of implied or tacit memory-function remain an essential part of these
concepts about the immortal soul, because a soul that has been stripped of all
awareness functions would make the idea of an immortal soul, unsatisfactory and
meaningless.
22 What would such a soul mean to a
Christian, who believes, that God will judge this soul, if the soul would be
completely stripped from all identity or knowledge that it represented the
believer during his earthly stay? How could the soul be held responsible for
the deeds of its owner, if this soul would not know, anymore, whom it
represented, or, if it would not remember any of its behaviour on earth? Any
punishment for wrong-doings it does not remember, or, for the existence of a
sinner with whom the soul could not identify, seems unjust and arbitrary, and
would come into conflict with our concepts of an all-knowing, all-loving God.
23 The belief in an immortal soul
represents a common and durable, dualistic interpretation of human existence,
and, it is an essential feature of the Christian Faith. For this reason, the
soul has to have capabilities of knowledge and memory, but, we know, now, that
these functions can not exist without the presence of an intact, living, human
being.
.......
Chapter 6
Content
The creation of the past, the present and the future by the living human
individual.
The central spectator, judge and life-giving agent; reasons, why we do not ask,
where we were before birth.
Why it is not possible to visualise a state of nothingness, because every
imagery possesses the quality of existence, including an attempt to visualise
the essence of non-existence.
The need to use rigid analogies; the human circle and the electronic device.
The death of an electronic device, and the reasons why the components do not
fall-apart or disintegrate, like the biochemical substances of a dead cell.
Death; the disappearance of functional and structural integrity.
The reversibility of the "death" of an electronic device or man-made
machine.
The fragility of the living organisation, and the essential need for such a
fragility and fluidity in order to react to the forces of natural selection;
the low internal resistance to decay.
Chance, and the process of guided manufacture by the genetic code.
Similarities with man-made mass-production.
A comparison of the evolution of man-made designs and the mass-production of
the genetic pool, after a blind evolutionary search has made a start in the
chain of exploring possibilities of existence.
Parallels between the eternal existence of matter-energy and God.
Existence can not come from non-existence.
A mental imagery, accepted world-wide, is still a man-made concept and not an
absolute truth.
1 There is another reason, why it
is difficult to visualise a concept of death that leaves nothing in the place
of this deceased human being, whom we still remember, so clearly. This
difficulty relates to the simple fact, that all existence, even, all imaginary
possibilities of existence, are created by our own conscious awareness. We have
argued before, how the entire past, not only our own past, but of all
happenings and events, exists only by virtue of the fact, that, we, the living
generations, create such a collective mental imagery of this past in our minds.
2 Therefore, all past existence
exists because of us, and, we function, not only, as the "creator",
but also, as the central spectator and judge of all these happenings of the
past. This is the reason, why we never have any difficulties accepting the
fact, that we did not exist in this past. We hardly ever feel the urge to ask,
where we were, before we were born. We know, intellectually, that we did not
actually exist, when that past was a reality, but we do exist in this past as
it has been recreated in our imagination, and, we are the central, life-giving
body of this entire spectacle of past happenings and events, including the
existence of past generations.
3 Similarly, if we think about
the future, including the happenings that may take place after we have died, we
accept, intellectually, the fact, that we will not be there, and yet, beause we
are creating an imagery of this future in our contemporary minds, we actually
do exist in the future, just as we exist in the past.
4 It becomes, therefore,
impossible to "visualise" our death, because by trying to visualise
what it means to be dead, or not to exist, we are trying to give birth to an
image that takes us out of the sphere of existence. Yet, any such imagery or
concept is created by us, as a living entity of conscious awareness, and, we
are the "giver of existence" to this concept, and, in doing so, we
are unable to avoid being the creator and giver of existence to a concept that
portrays the non-existence of ourselves.
5 This is the "physiological
argument", why complete nothingness of our individuality is so difficult
to grasp for our imagination, and, this difficulty may well contribute to the
universal human tendency to assign some sort of a conscious existence to
ourselves after death. If we want to come closer to an appreciation of our own
nothingness or non-existence, we will have to work with rigid analogies, rather
than a mental imagery of nothingness, because we realise, now, the fundamental
difficulties, when trying to create an imagery of our own non-existence.
6 We have learned to
conceptualise many transient forms of existence, where we can see, clearly,
their total disappearance without leaving a trace of their previous existence.
If, e.g., a group of people form a circle by giving each other a hand, we see
the existence of a human circle or chain, joined from hand to hand, but, the
moment we release our handgrips, the circle is gone, without a trace, while we
continue to exist as a group of individuals standing around in a form that
resembles a circle.
7 There are many analogies like
this, and, let us look e.g., at the functional unit of an intact electronic
device, like a radio or television set. We see a conglomerate of components,
joined by circuits in a certain manner. If powered properly, and, if all
components function the way they should, it becomes possible for a tiny
electro-magnetic signal, picked-up, together with countless others, to be
selected, amplified and transformed, and, eventually, displayed in such a way,
that the original meaning of the transmitted signal is understood by us in
essentially the same manner as it was intended to be understood by the people,
who transmitted this signal.
8 If, however, the device is not
powered properly, the required electron-flow is not present, or, it is
interrupted somewhere. Then, the various components are not able to perform
their intended functions. The device does not work; it is "dead".
Similarly, if an essential component fails, the electron-flow is interrupted,
and, once again, there is no output. The device is dead, but since we are
dealing with inorganic components, the structural integrity of the device does
not suffer immediately, like the structural integrity of a living cell, where,
as we have discussed on many occasions, there is a constant need for a minimum
flow of biological energy, in order to prevent this constant tendency for the
cell to break-down and disintegrate.
9 We have outlined, how the
living organisation, seeking possibilities of existence under the pressures created
by a reservoir of captured solar energy, requires a fluid medium of existence.
It requires a fluid type of machinery in order to look for, and make use of,
these possibilities of existence. In the electronic device, as well as other
technological innovations of the human mind, the juxta-positioning of inorganic
materials is created artificially, after testing possibilities of existence in
practice, as well as in design. This means, that the possibilities of existence
or function were created, as seen and judged by human intelligence.
10 Inorganic materials have a far
greater resistance to natural decay compared to the fragile biochemical
substances of the living cell. This is the reason, why a radio, if defective,
does not decay like a dying cell, but the "fluid parts", such as an
electron-flow, an electronic oscillation, or, the maintenance of an
"electronic switch" in the random access memory of a computer,
disappear, whenever the "power" or flow of electrons through the
device has been halted, just like a waterfall disappears, if the continuous
influx of water has been interrupted.
11 "Death" is reversible
in the case of an electronic device, as long as the cause of the interruption
of the electron-flow has been correctly diagnosed and the offending situation
corrected. Similar considerations apply in medical therapeutics, where it is
possible, on occasion, to reverse or alter the diseased flow of energy through
a living system, thereby minimising the harmful and painful effects of a
pathological process.
12 Once the energy-flow through the
multi-cellular organism has been halted, the effects are so widespread and
cumulative, affecting all cells of the body in rapid succession, that reversal
becomes quickly impossible, because medical knowledge and manipulability have
not progressed to the point, that they can restore the structural and
biochemical relationships within a single cell. This would be necessary to
re-create or re-channel the flow of biochemical energy and restore the
functions of the living organisation.
13 Death is, therefore, the
disappearance of a functional cohesion and structural integrity. Since
functional cohesion and structural integrity are so closely linked in the
living organisation, a serious functional interruption leads, rapidly, to an
enormously chaotic structural dissolution, beyond human repair, and, beyond the
restoring powers of the life processes themselves. Even, if the appearance of
structural integrity has been maintained by a process of rapid freezing, death
has occurred, in the sense, that a resumption of biochemical processes after
the structure has been warmed-up, shows, only, the dissolution and decay of a
post-mortem disintegration, and not the functions of life.
14 We have touched upon the fact,
that technological devices have been created by a mechanism of human creativity
in a conscious search for functional possibilities. This deliberate
"putting together" is a specifically human inter-action with the
natural surroundings, and, it is, of course, summarised by the concept of
"creation". The essence of natural evolution is the fact, that there
is no such artificial or deliberate juxta-positioning of materials, but, the
evolution of a living organisation takes place as an essentially "blind
search" for existence possibilities, and, this requires a different, more
volatile and fluid type of building material.
15 The concept, that life arose
from the myriad of biochemical combinations taking place in the fluidity of a
luke-warm, primordial sea, implies, that this possibility to search, fluidly,
for possibilities of existence is paid-for with a low interal resistance to
decay. Without such a low internal resistance, these biochemical reactions
would not be able to flow under the gentle pressures of captured solar energy,
while seeking-out and testing the viability of all these possibilities of
existence. Fragility and transience of existence are, therefore, the inevitable
pre-requisites for an evolutionary exploration of the possibilities of living
existence, and, as we have seen before, life could not have been developed
without this essential feature of transience and susceptibility to death and
disintegration.
16 Those chance-combinations that
led to a state of increased viability, or usefulness, had to be safeguarded
against loss of the "construction plan" by a process of guided
duplication, as well as the encoding of sequential instructions for the
organisation of biochemical mechanisms. The chances of finding, again, a
fortuitous happenstance would be so low, that, any significant penetration into
the realm of more complex possibilities of existence would be virtually
impossible without a sequential code to duplicate complex possibilities of
existence. Genetic reproduction of a complex living structure takes, therefore,
the element of chance out of finding the combination again, and the genetic
instructions become an organisor of biochemical events, steering the biological
energy-flow and the substances, floating in the watery surroundings, in such a
way, that, under favourable conditions, a replica of the same complex structure
will come-about.
17 This is analogous to the
mechanisms of mass-production, where a product is rapidly mass-produced by a
carefully controled, sequential organisation of manufacturing steps,
transforming the available raw materials, with the help of a suitable source of
energy, into the finished end-product. As long as the circumstances are
suitable, mass-production will continue. As long as there exists a suitable
source of raw materials and energy, and, as long as the organisation of the
manufacturing instructions remains intact, copies of the same end-product are
being produced.
18 Even in the design of
technological devices, we see an interesting parallel with natural evolution.
As soon as the human mind "foresees" a possibility to make a useful
tool, it will make one, but, in the process of using the tool, the human mind
will also see possibilities to improve on it, and, slowly, the tool
"evolves", because there is a constant feed-back between the
usefulness of the tool on the one hand, and the user on the other, because the
user perceives and communicates possibilities to enhance or increase this
element of usefulness. Just like natural evolution, circumstances may change so
radically, that a tool, considered to be useful a short while ago, has become
"obsolete', and, the tool "dies", or, rather, it becomes
"extinct" as its use, production and development, cease.
19 There are many interesting parallels between the evolution of natural life and man-made implements, and, the short-cut of reproduction, (where a living organisation is sustained as long as the genetic blue-print has a chance to perpetuate itself in an uninterrupted series of successive generations), finds a ready parallel with the development of complex technological devices and instruments, which have been "created" by the human mind.
20 The successful genetic pool of
instructions for the "manufacture" of an actualised living organism,
evolves under evolutionary pressures. Sometimes, evolutionary change is rapid,
if there are severe pressures, and, the gene-pool may be teetering on the brink
of extinction as it tries to adapt, as rapidly as possible, in order to
maintain its viability. Viability is found, if the gene-pool is successful in
creating a sufficient number of actualised individuals to ensure the existence
of a number of successive generations.
21 The chance-happening forms the
beginning in the exploration of a series of existence possibilities, but, continued
existence of a viable combination depends on safeguarding the blue-print of the
viable chance-happening. The blue-print is the sequential organisation of the
instructions that are necessary to transform the raw products, (the substrate),
into the finished end-product, (a copy of the living organisation), with the
help of a suitable source of biochemical energy and building-blocks.
22 As a parallel, we see, that the
"creative" activities of the human mind explore possibilities of
existence in the form of mental images, but this process of
"conception" tests actual existence, first, "in the mind",
before it tests such an existence in reality. Together with the manipulative
ability of the human organism, this mental pre-testing allows for the deliberate
putting-together of inorganic materials, or "building-blocks", in
such a manner, that a suitable flow of energy through the system may create all
sorts of effects and results that are more or less "foreseen" in the
mind of the designer. Without design, logical reasoning or conceptual
structuring, the chances of finding something that is useful or workable, would
be extremely small, and, yet, we know, that, often, such chance-happenings play
a role in the development of a tool or a scientific insight.
23 The precision of conceptually
forecasting the results of an artificially created sequence of events, is
limited, however, and, we have described, before, why there has to be a
continuous process of testing, in order to ensure, that conceptual extra-polations,
judgements and predictions stay more or less in line with actual observations.
Creation by a human intelligence shows many aspects or features that are
reminiscent of natural evolution, as possibilities of usefulness are
continuously tested by alterations and changes in the instructions for the
manufacture of a product. We see, how a line of industrial instructions may
become extinct as the usefulness of a product, tool or device has disappeared,
or has been supplanted by a more useful tool with a different lineage of
development.
24 Creation and evolution are,
therefore, similar and complementary processes that go hand in hand. The
reason, why the human mind has difficulties seeing the similarities between the
creation of a human device and the natural evolution of a biochemical, living
structure, relates to the fact, that the mechanisms of coherence of the various
living species' were not clear, until quite recently. The complexity of the
living structure is still so baffling, that the human being, in an attitude of
humble reverence, comes to the conclusion, that a far superior Divine
Intelligence or Will must have created this complexity in a manner, which is
somewhat similar to the ways man can create a complex tool or device.
25 We have, now, a clearer picture
of the relationships between the physical conditions and circumstances of the
early earth, and, the origins of the experiment with the living organisation.
However, let us acknowledge, that we "sense" this coherence more than
we can prove it. We do not know, and, we will never know, exactly, a reality
"as it really happened". Just because we have learned to see, how our
human reality perception must be a fantastic over-simplification of any
external, non-human reality, (if there is any correlation), it has become
intellectually easier to accept the fact, that these complex biological
mechanisms could, indeed, have been formed in this unimaginable vast laboratory
of biochemical experimentation; the early earth.
26 Since we do not know where existence
comes from, except as a creation of our conscious mind, and, since we assume,
that existence can not come from non-existence, we surmise, that matter-energy
has always existed in one form or another. This is an argument that has an
interesting parallel with religious reasoning, where God can not have come
forth from non-God, and must, therefore, have existed from eternity.
27 At this stage in our knowledge,
the scientific imagery seems to favour the eternal existence of matter-energy,
oscillating between a high-velocity and rather stable form of radiant energy,
and, an orbital, gravitationally contracting form of matter-energy, with mass
or inertia, which we call "matter". Together with an unexplained and
unexplainable existence of this matter-energy, we accept, that this
matter-energy has certain characteristics and fundamental properties or
constants that are valid throughout the Universe. Again, we do not pretend to
know these constants with any degree of finality, and, even, if we reach a situation
where our interpretation of these constants would be generally accepted from
one generation to the next, we still should not lose sight of the fact, that
this conceptual formulation is a man-made and collectively agreed-upon mental
imagery, rather than an absolutely valid reality.
.......
Chapter 7
Content
Intelligence; a behavioural tool that develops only under specific and
restricted circumstances.
The break-through of predation and symbiosis.
In the religious point of view, "Intelligence" is the essential,
organising principle.
The logic of man's beliefs in a created reality.
The Prime Mover; a concept that developed as a result of increasing scientific
coherence.
The emotionally unsatisfactory aspects of such a stark image of reality.
Religious sects, and the elitists.
The hierarchy of spirits, and the intermediate position of man; in between the
lowly physical forms of life and the "free spirits".
Difficulties reconciling religious and scientific points of view.
The similarities between the concepts of matter-energy and those of a Prime
Mover.
Reality perceptions, seen as a biological function; the relativity of truth.
A review of what has been discussed.
Suicide; the voluntary death by one's own hand; mechanisms and an analysis.
Pathological forms of human existence.
The most harmful elements are not suicidal but psychopathic in nature.
Conditions for a reflective attitude.
The slow emergence of an appreciation for life.
Relinquishing obsessive long-term goals.
The meaning of death has to be found in the meaning of life.
Death is nothing more, and nothing less, than the absence of life.
The fallacy of suppressing thoughts about death and dying.
1 In our modern, scientific
insights, we tend to interpret the nature of intelligence as a behavioural tool
that may develop under specific and restricted evolutionary circumstances.
Life, as we know it, is a process that requires a particular set of conditions
as existed on the early earth, and, under the right conditions, a natural experiment
with the possibilities of the living organisation will take place.
2 We have discussed, on previous
occasions, how the break-through of multi-cellular symbiosis is preceded by the
mechanisms of predation, and, we have seen, how it has become possible to
explain our own existence, including the functions of the central nervous
system, on the basis of predatory, multi-cellular existence. The break-through
of behavioural flexibility and secondary social integration led, eventually, in
the human species, to the ability to represent and communicate, symbolically, a
large variety of conscious awarenesses.
3 These conscious awarenesses can
be evoked and re-stimulated, voluntarily, into a focus of attention with the
help of symbolic representations. We will not repeat these developments and
images here, but, based upon such insights, the scientific view-point favours
the idea, that intelligent life is the result of a particular line of
evolutionary development, and, the faculty of intelligence is, therefore,
completely dependent upon the existence of a biological organisation of
matter-energy.
4 In the religious explanation,
intelligence has been interpreted as the essential, organising principle of the
Universe, and, we have discussed, how man's primary observations of the
complexity of the observable world with his naked senses, favoured, logically,
the interpretation of a "created reality", just because man himself
was able to create tools and objects of use, and, because he was able to bring-about
conditions of existence in a goal-directed, teleological way of life.
5 The creative intelligence of
the spirits and the gods slowly contracted into an overall Intelligent
Principle, still very much like human intelligence, but, the exalted position
of the overall Creative Spirit led, naturally, to the belief, that it must be
an Omiscient, Perfect Intelligence, endowed with all those attributes of
behaviour that were highly regarded and valued amongst man. These qualities
included love and compassion, (if we look at Christianity), but, also,
sternness, strength, and, even, "wrath", if we look at the God of the
Old Testament. As the concepts and ideals of human existence evolved, the
images of the human gods changed too, and, eventually, under the pressures of
scientific scrutiny, the Creative Intelligence of the Spirit became a Prime
Mover; a force, that started the clock-work of the Universe, but, then,
remained silent and unmoved.
6 However, such a stark picture
of Divine Intelligence has never satisfied a majority of human beings, and, the
religious reality perceptions developed several "systems", where the
nature and intentions of the Divine Creator were outlined with varying degrees
of precision. In addition to the major religions with their guiding Scriptures,
there have always been a number of more secretive, elitist and essentially
non-ethical religious movements, where an active participation and conscious
effort were required in order to achieve, eventually, some sort of mystical
union with this Supreme Intelligence. The vagueness of these secretive beliefs
and their essentially anti-social nature, made mystical sects a haven for the
elitist, and, often, a target of scorn and hatred for the rest of society.
7 Let us not get lost in the
myriad of ramifications we can see in the religious views and practices of
mankind. We only want to emphasise the idea, that "Intelligence" is
not a product of natural evolution in the religious perception of reality, but,
it is the ultimate Creative Principle for the existence and function of the
Universe, as well as everything that exists in the Universe. Since the human
form of intelligence seems to represent the highest form of intelligence
amongst the living creatures on earth, the human being assumed an exalted position,
but, in the overall hierarchy of intelligent existence, the human being was
often seen as a rather lowly form of intelligence amongst the many types of
spiritual, angelical or divine forms of Intelligence that were presumed to
exist throughout the Universe.
8 This difference in the
interpretation of "Intelligence" is a corner-stone of the division
between the sciences and the religions, and, this difference in interpretation
explains, why the religions were compelled to attribute an immortal or independently
existing form of intelligence to the physical existence of the human being. The
human being is then seen as a curious, transitional form of existence; on the
one hand, linked to the lower, non-intelligent, instinctive forms of animal
life, and, on the other hand, reaching out into the clear, unfettered realm of
Spiritual Intelligence.
9 These remarkable differences in
interpretation explain the many antagonistic view-points between the sciences
and the religions. Many people, searching for a harmony between these
view-points, point to the common ground of the eternal existence of the cosmos,
matter-energy, and the eternal existence of a Prime Mover. Yet, as we have
discussed, we feel, that this approach is somewhat old-fashioned and has been explored,
now, for centuries. I am convinced, that a far more fruitful approach is found
in an analysis of our mental mechanisms, including our beliefs and levels of
awareness. Such an analysis will lead, eventually, to the concept of the
relativity of truth, and, we have outlined these arguments, now, on a number of
occasions.
10 It is time to return to the
central theme of our discussion, when we took upon ourselves the task of
reviewing the mechanisms of a wide range of reality perceptions, as well as the
resulting knowledge of the inevitability of death. We have discussed a number
of specific aspects, ranging from the experience of dying, the differences
between dying and falling-asleep or being anaesthetised, and, we have
pointed-out the common links between the experiences of losing contact with a
contemporary reality, because, we know, now, that every form of conscious
awareness is based on the continuous evaluation of a stream of sense
impressions.
11 We have also discussed the
complex reasons, why man believes, nearly always, in some sort of an existence
after death, and, we have discussed the nature of death. We have indicated the
difficulties associated with conceptualising nothingness, and, we have outlined
the concept of functional cohesion and structural integrity as a central
element in the definition of life and death. The inevitable link between life
and death has been considered, and the evolutionary processes have been
reviewed, briefly. The function of hope, belief and emotional neutrality were
hinted upon during an introductory review of some of the psychological
mechanisms that play such a crucial role in the way we accept death, or cope
with the stress of suffering and dying.
12 So far, we have assumed, that
death has been faced involuntarily, and, this is indeed the case in most
instances, regardlesss of the fact, that the circumstances under which death
has to be faced, may vary widely; from a slow, well anticipated death to the
almost instantaneous annihilation in a severe accident. But, as we all know, a
substantial number of deaths occur voluntarily, where people, either take their
own lives, or, are seeking death in one way or another and welcome it as a
relief from an unbearable situation.
13 Suicide, the death by one's own
hand, is a surprisingly common occurrence amongst the members of affluent
societies, and, so often, from an outsider's point of view, such a death seems
to be needless, because it is not associated with unbearable suffering or
interminable misery, and, we tend to feel a mixture of horrified disbelief, as
well as anger, when confronted with a suicide victim. We are subjected to
contradictory feelings and emotions. On the one hand, we try to sympathise with
the victim, and, in particular, with friends and relatives of the suicide
victim, and, we try to understand, at least, to some extent, the mental and
emotional mechanisms that led to a suicide, but, on the other hand, we feel an
emotion of anger with the short-sighted self-pity of those who commit suicide,
and, we deplore their incredible lack of vitality or inability to enjoy life in
the circumstances they may find themselves.
14 It is clear, that a great
majority of suicide vicitms did not experience circumstances most people would
consider "unbearable". Many people survive, and survive quite well,
under far worse conditions, such as imprisonment, physical and mental violence,
anguish, persecution, or, even, torture, and, they are still able to maintain
their sanity and find a measure of meaning in life. Suicide victims seem always
pre-occupied with a sense of worthlessness, and, they are blinded by a lack of
appreciation for their own physiological and mental capabilities. They are
unable to communicate with others because of a chaotic personality structure.
The personality may have become defective for one reason or another, or, it may
have been severely damaged and stunted during its growth and development.
15 Since the perception of reality
is a self-centered function of the mind, and, since we all are responsible for
creating our own reality perceptions, the reality perception of such deranged,
extremely introvert and depressed people is clouded with feelings of anxiety; a
sense of failure, as well as a deep sense of being worthless or useless. The
mere act of staying alive, facing the mostly trivial or imagined anguishes and
problems of life, (trivial and imagined from an outsider's point of view), the
obsessive, egocentric orientation, as well as a constant self-pity, give the
impression to the suicidal personality, that life has become an intolerable
burden; that no improvement is in sight, and, slowly, the inexorable desire
develops to end it all in a state of blissful oblivion.
16 We will not discuss, here, the
many neurotic asepcts of the suicidal personality, or, the frequent use of the
threat of suicide as a means to get attention. The neurotic dependency, the
chaotic personality, and the frequent addiction to drugs, the inability to
excercise self-discipline and the ever more distorted perceptions of reality,
often lead to self-destruction, but, these developments are, at the same time,
an indictment of the social environment in which the suicide victim grew-up.
17 The many divergent circumstances
and mechanisms that may lead to suicidal tendencies will not concern us, here.
We only want to emphasise the simple fact, that, death for an individual with a
suicidal tendency, is not a stressful, anxious or mysterious hurdle, but a
welcome relief from inner turmoil and anxiety, chaos and confusion, because we
are then dealing with a mind that has lost most, if not all its natural
inclinations to cling to life as long as possible. We are dealing with a mind
that is sick and recognises, intuitively, its low viability and its inability
to cope with the normal stresses of existence, and, above all, the suicidal
personality recognises, intuitively, but essentially accurately, that it is not
valued by society. Then, the suicidal personality may have come to the
sometimes justified conclusion, that it is "in the way", and, that it
would do the community a service by removing itself.
18 We will not judge, here, whether
or not suicide is justifiable; whether or not society should calmly accept the
suicide of those, who want to make an end to their existence. It seems, that in
the pathological areas of our modern, aflluent societies, many minds have
become so diseased, so distorted and warped, so inviable, that, indeed, it
seems, that no-one would miss them, if these diseased minds remove themselves
from society. Unfortunately, the most harmful and dangerous pathological
elements in society are not suicidal at all, but, they are ruthless,
exploitative and manipulative psychopaths, who do far more harm than the
lonely, pityful, depressed and neurotic individual, who is contemplating doing
away with him- or herself.
19 Let us return to the more normal
reluctance to give-up a life that seems, so often, to acquire ever more meaning
as death comes closer. It seems, that we are only occasionally able to
appreciate the wonderful fact of being alive; of being a thinking, feeling and
communicating individual, acutely aware of the joys of a crisp morning, a
fragrant smell, a beautiful view, a warm, cosy corner to sit-in and relax. We
seem to appreciate contemporary existence, only, after we have lost some of our
compulsive drive to pursue those long-term goals of success and achievement.
20 It is remarkabe that we are not
even aware of our existence as an individual during a significant part of our
lives. After we discover ourselves as an existing "I" during
childhood, this identity remains, often, submerged for prolonged periods of
time, as we develop, slowly, our skills and confidence, seeking and testing our
position in society, formulating our goals and aspirations.
21 During childhood and
adolescence, we begin to formulate some ideas about who and what we want to be
in terms of social standing or skilled abilities. We work and play, and,
gradually, very gradually, we learn to become more critical of what we hear,
see, or are being told. The sharpness of our mental imagery develops like a
delayed photographic plate, and, many of us will always remain a follower of
someone or something, belonging to a political party, a social movement, or a
religious organisation.
22 Yet, even so, we learn, that our
elan vital has limitations. We learn, that our progress through the social
hierarchy is coming to an end, and, that our goals and financial obligations
are absorbing an ever greater part of our energies. We slowly learn to consolidate
our situation, and, for the first time, we relax somewhat and start to look
around with a renewed interest and a fresh approach to the meaning of it all.
23 As we grow older, a slow
physical deterioration starts to drive home the fact, that we may have to
accept a gradual but inexorable decline in physical powers, and, later, of
mental powers as well. Then, we start to reflect more intensely. At least, some
of us have a tendency to become reflective, while others bury themselves deeper
into work, hobbies or activities, in order to forget about advancing age. Most
of us will cling tenaciously to our social position, because a loss of our
social position is a severe reminder of our declining powers.
24 It is remarkable, how much
energy people are willing to spend in holding-on to the illusion, that they are
not ageing, and, that their performance at work is not declining. In the
affluent societies, the anxieties about a social decline and a loss of prestige
and earning powers, are, sometimes, compensated for by a flamboyant,
consumerist life-style, entrapping an individual in ever-increasing financial
and social obligations.
25 It seems safe to state, that, in
a competitive social environment, almost all middle-aged people spend their
entire energy-output in fighting the inevitable decline of social status and
earning powers, as well as a decline in physical and mental capabilities. It is
not surprising, therefore, that society is, so often, immune to the wisdom and
admonitions of those who have overcome these obsessions.
26 Yet, the time comes, that we can
not hold-on any longer. Often, we realise, suddenly, how much of a stress or
burden we are under, and, then, our goals may change radically. From a
tenacious clinging to a position, we want to get-away from it all, finally
relaxing and enjoying ourselves in a leisurely pace of living, realising, that
time is running-out. Sooner or later, we all are forced to develop, at least, a
measure of wisdom, but, unfortunately, during those tenacious and desperate
years of social activities, we may have done a lot of harm to ourselves, our
family, our social environment, or the community as a whole. During those years
that we were blinded by egocentric anxieties, we probably have contributed
significantly to this pernicious momentum of an egocentric and consumerist
life-style.
27 Society does not mature as
quickly as an individual, and, the varying rates of communal and individual maturation
form a fruitful topic for reflection and study. However, we will not enter upon
this topic here, because we are discussing the remarkable fact, that we only
learn to appreciate the moment of the present, after we have abandoned, to some
extent, our compulsive pre-occupation with the future.
28 Perhaps, for some of us, the clearest realisation and appreciation of the mystery of being alive, will come as we enter this other mystery of our existence; our death. What a regret must we feel, if we realise, all of a sudden, that the most precious appreciation of all, the appreciation of our own existence, was completely overlooked and taken for granted, as we obeyed, unthinkingly, our existential drives and the promptings of our vital energies.
29 At the threhshold of death,
while becoming an object for reflection and study for those left behind to
ponder the mystery of death, we may suddenly realise, that the real mystery is
not death, but the existence of life. As we depart from life and slowly lose contact
with those around us, the single, clearest thought in our mind may be the
surprising conclusion, that we have failed, completely, to appreciate and probe
the mystery of our existence as it was passing-by, so quickly.
30 What an irony would it be, that
the mystery of death turns-out to be a discovery, that we failed to give
sufficient attention to our existence as a living human being. But, then,
perhaps, it is only possible to become aware of the mystery of life and the
possibilities of living existence, if we are quite familiar with the phenomenon
of death. Only by realising, clearly, that living existence is measured in a
very limited span of time, can we appreciate the phenomenon of death. Only by
thinking, clearly, about death, when we are alive and well, can we avoid the
regretful insight at the moment we die; that we have failed to understand the
meaning of being alive.
31 Life and death are two faces of
a single reality. Life is not possible without death, except, perhaps, in a
vague and imprecise religious belief that has been based more on hope than on
clear thinking, and, understanding the processes of dying, is not possible
without an appreciation of the essence of living, since death is nothing more,
and nothing less, than the disappearance of the coherence and integration that
characterise the living entity.
32 Therefore, one of the most
foolhardy and counter-productive attitudes we can adopt, is a neurotic
suppression of the awareness, that we have to come to terms with the fact, that
we will die, at some time in the future. By our fearful refusal to think about
the fact that we have to die, and, perhaps, suffer as well, we deprive
ourselves from one of the most essential mechanisms to help us understand life,
humanity and ourselves.
.......
Chapter 8
Content
How to avoid the tragedy of discovering, at the time of our death, that we have
failed to appreciate life.
Why we should care about building-up a coherent imagery of reality and our own
existence, whenever we can.
The reliance upon society, and, the limitations of an attitude of complete
reliance upon the leadership-input from other people.
The need to become responsible, and develop all our talents for thought and
reflection.
The importance of the intelligent, deliberate choice.
The meaning of individuality.
An exhortation to become thinking individuals within a social contract of
essential equality and global justice.
Let us not underestimate the difficulties of dying.
The death penalty.
A review of some ideas about social existence.
Religious freedoms, and the need to monitor all sub-groupings in society.
The need for transparence, and the ability to scrutinise all leaderships,
including the overall political leadership.
How to live with a condition of complete social transparence.
A return to the process of dying.
Our responsibilities towards future generations.
1 Let us try to give a few
examples of what we have in mind, and how we can avoid the trap of wasting our
lives in vain and idle goals. How can we avoid the tragic discovery at the time
of our death, that we failed to understand life? How can we avoid this final
moment of intense regret, or, do we have to reach, once again, for a religious
reality perception in order to ease our mind and allay our fears?
2 Let us begin by asking
ourselves, simply, who we are. Do we have any idea, how we function? Do we know
what makes us tick? Do we know, what information is available; what people have
been thinking about the nature of human existence and life itself? Do we care,
what information is available, and, what people have thought about these
questions?
3 We should, because, if we do
not care about these matters, and, if we fail to build-up some sort of coherent
structure of beliefs, we will not be able to know, whether or not we are
blindly following our instincts and passions, or, perhaps, the fashionable
trends of the day. We will be ill-prepared to cope with the stress of growing
old or getting sick, as the worn platitudes of conventional beliefs and wisdoms
may fail us at the crucial moment of our death.
4 We may feel comfortable in the
conventional wisdoms of our cultural environment, and, we may place our full
confidence and unquestionable faith in the authority of our leadership, but,
what happens if our leaders are wrong? What happens, if our leaders crumble,
and, if there is no-one in whom we can place our trust? What happens, if we
come into conflict with another culture, another society, or another nation?
Are we going to war, again, blindly and blandly believing, that we are totally
right and our enemies totally wrong?
5 If we allow ourselves to be
guided, and, possibly, misguided by our leaders or the fashionable opinions and
worn-out platitudes of our social environment, relying completely on the
traditions of our culture or the concepts of our Faith, then, we share in the
blame, if things go wrong. We will be partly to blame, if our culture stagnates
because of simplistic attitudes of right and wrong, and, we will have failed in
our duties as an individual, because we have failed to excercise, fully, our
powers of observation and thought. If we rely, blindly, upon our culture, we
become a parasite, sucking-up this culture for our nourishment, while never
thinking about the need to give something back to the cultural code of our
social environment.
6 It is not sufficient to give
our culture and our leadership a blind loyalty, because we do not contribute,
then, in any way, to a renewal or rejuvenation of the cultural pool. We remain
will-less tools in the hands of our leaders, and, let us not forget, that the
temptation to abuse blind devotion and loyalty is always there. There is
nothing more tempting for a leader than to "mold" a will-less and
loyal following for the purpose of pursuing egocentric objectives.
7 No, we owe it to ourselves, as
well as our social environment, to question, scrutinise, observe and think
about everything we see, hear and do, because, only then, will we be able to
support, wholeheartedly, whatever we understand and consider to be valuable and
worth preserving. We do not support on account of a blind faith, or, because we
are used to obey orders. We understand, we have evaluated, and, we support,
because we see and appreciate the importance of what we support.
8 The ability to support,
enthousiastically and wholeheartedly, the main features of our culture and the
guidelines of our society, is paid-for with the price of having to criticise,
reject or modify some aspects, because, as mature and critical citizens, we are
able to see, how, and why, some features lead to undesirable side-effects. We
criticise, reject or amend those features we can not endorse in an attitude of
responsible dissent, because we have come to the well-founded conclusion, that
these features are unworthy of our support. The cultural guidelines of our
social environment may be harmful to some, or unjust to those outside our
immediate concern and cultural horizon.
9 We do not worship the freedom
of individual unfolding as an opportunity to sharpen our intellectual skills
for narrow egocentric gains during a ruthless, competitive struggle. This would
be an irresponsible attitude, and, every social environment that worships the
freedom of individual enterprise with this egocentric objective in mind, betrays
a fundamental lack of knowledge and concern about the social origins of its
culture and the essence of its viability.
10 Individuality is a tool for
evaluation and examination, requiring hard work and honesty, as well as
devotion to a sense of logic. Individuality requires a consistent attitude and
a balanced approach to our environment, and, it leads, often, to the conclusion
that the truth is a pragmatic but scrupulously fair interpretation of
common-sense principles of operation.
11 A culture that fears the
individuality of its members is caught in the trap of stagnation and has cut
itself off from its only source of rejuvenation, but, a culture that does not
recognise the fragmentation of unbridled egocentric individualism, is decaying
without realising it. Unless we learn to harnass the instincts of individuality
in the light of socially responsible attitudes, we fail to ensure the continued
viability of a cultural system, but, if we suppress, in a neurotic anxiety, the
elan vital of our members, we have stifled our society into the mold of a
living fossil.
12 This is our duty in life; to
understand ourselves, and, in doing so, we will be able to recognise the
similarities as well as the differences between human beings. It is our duty to
think and ponder, examine and be honest, otherwise, we do not learn and
contribute, but, we posture and deceive. We posture and deceive, primarily,
ourselves, and, perhaps, a few others as well.
13 Not all of us are endowed with
the gift of scrutiny, nor, have we all been given the opportunity to develop
whatever talents we have, and, therefore, a large number of people will always
feel the need to place their trust in a leadership. However, none of us should
abandon the responsibility to do whatever we can, and, make a contribution to
the Cause of individualised existence, whenever we have an opportunity to do
so.
14 Yet, understanding life, and
ourselves, will come in many different ways. For some, it may be an articulate
philosophical exposition. For others, it may be a more intuitive, artistic
experience; again others may find their understanding in the beauty of a
genuine religious belief, while some will find their essence of understanding
in a devotion to another human being, a family, or a specific ideal. Yet, let
me repeat; in addition to the emotional satisfactions that flow from an
artistic appreciation, the comfort of a religious promise, or the buoyancy that
comes with a tightly-knit group of friends and relatives, we all have an
intellectual capability as well, and, we can not ignore this faculty of thought
and scrutiny.
15 Each one of us should develop
this intellectual ability as fully as possible, because we all are called-upon,
sooner or later, to make important decisions that will affect our lives, as
well as the well-being of our immediate social surroundings. Making sensible
decisions, based upon a thorough understanding of what we are and what we
really need, will be a pre-requisite for long-term, large-scale, social
viability. It will be necessary to contribute, consciously and voluntarily, to
the "collective will", and, we have discussed, on previous occasions,
how important this conscious, collective will is going to be for the future of
mankind.
16 The excercise of our
intellectual capabilities will make us realise to what extent we have been
caught in a web of our own making, woven by our aspirations, desires and
drives, while blindly obeying a large variety of primitive behavioural
organisers. There is no more convincing argument in favour of the mechanisms of
natural evolution, than to have a close look at the nature of human existence,
as well as the organisation of life in general. Such a perception of reality,
which can now be extensively elaborated and supported by massive scientific
evidence, will show us, also, that we have to accept, fully, the intellectual
and emotional consequences of such a mental imagery.
17 We have to realise, that an
atmosphere of peace and good-will between human beings can not be brought-about
by wishful thinking, a pious hope, or, a prayer to God, but, it has to be
worked for, and, it has to be negotiated in a settlement that acknowledges, in
practice as well as in theory, the existential requirements of all human
beings. The conditions of peace and good-will have to satisfy this
all-important criterium; a satisfaction of the sense of justice for the
overwhelming majority of the members of mankind.
18 With natural evolution as our common
background, as well as the basis for a commonlly shared reality perception, the
future of mankind is not, any longer, an uncertainty beyond the control of the
human will. It is not a future that has to be feared and prayed for, nor, does
it have to be drowned in a fatalistic concentration on the dreams of the past,
the hopes for the future, or the pleasures of the moment. The future of mankind
will increasingly be the product of a sustained and concerted effort, which, in
turn, can only be generated, if we start to accept the need for, as well as the
importance of, a deliberately designed and articulated "collective
will".
19 Mankind is growing, not only, in
size and numbers, but, also, in its level of awareness and the clarity of its
perceptions, and, in spite of the fact, that the penetration of more rational
attitudes will be painfully slow, we have, now, the technical means of
communication and education, to make sure, that the next few generations will
grow-up with a far more coherent philosophy of life.
20 A reflection upon the meaning
and possibilities of life will provide us, also, with the fortitude to cope
with decay and death, but, let us not underestimate the difficulties. Many of
us will have to leave the realm of living existence, long before we feel ready
to do so; before we have understood life, savoured life, or, before we have
contributed to life in the way we feel, we can. Inevitably, many of us will
feel a measure of regret and incomprehension, when we realise, that the time of
our departure has come. The vagaries of fortune, disease and accident will
always be with us, and, probably, the crimes of murder and violent injustice as
well.
21 I do not want to leave the
impression, that the death penalty should be abolished completely. We have
argued, elsewhere, that society will need to eliminate, occasionally,
incorrigeable psychopaths; people, whose psychological functions are, for one
reason or another, so derailed, that it is not possible to ever accept them
back into society. Rather than incarcerate and sequestrate such individuals for
life, we have argued, that it would be more humane to execute them. We have
also discussed, that psychopathically diseased personalities have often such a
warped sense of reality that they feel completely out of place in society, and
may themselves prefer death over life-long incarceration. Similarly,
non-criminal but severely disturbed people with strong suicidal tendencies may
also prefer, after all treatment has failed, to end their lives, and, we should
not categorically prevent such a course of action.
22 It is obvious, that it is never
justified to resort to murder or executions merely to stifle opposition or
dissent. We have outlined, how verbal or ideological dissent can only be
counter-acted by verbal or ideological means, and, if an established ideology
feels seriously threatened by a new and revolutionary idea, it may be time to
examine such revolutionary ideas carefully, because they may well have
something to contribute, and, they may point to the fact, that the established
ideology is becoming rigid and irrelevant.
23 An ideology that denies the
validity of equal rights for all people and attempts to destroy the principles
of social justice and essential equality, should be vigorously attacked and
exposed by a skillful campaign of verbal counter-attack, and, there should be
no problem to expose the fallacies of such erroneous ideas.
24 As long as a view-point refrains
from interfering with the essential rights of other people, the idea should
only be attacked ideologically. If, however, warped ideas lead to an
infringement upon the rights of others, or the society as a whole, the
behaviour based on these ideas becomes criminal in nature, and has to be dealt
with accordingly; but, always, with a sustained effort to understand, why such
erroneous ideas and doctrines appear to appeal to some people.
25 We are sliding somewhat into
considerations that are relevant for the construction of Constitutional
Guidelines, and, they do not concern us, here, as we explore the beliefs and
attitudes that play a role in the acceptance of suffering, death and decay.
Yet, in the context of what we have discussed above, we should say a few words
about the range and limitations of religious freedoms.
26 In many contemporary societies,
we have come to the conclusion, that it belongs to the fundamental rights of
each individual to worship his God and practice his religion completely free
from scrutiny or interference. Such ideas arose out of the awareness, that
religious conflicts have led to untold misery and bloodshed in the past, and,
that it is possible to avoid many of the pernicious clashes between absolute
beliefs, if society tolerates a freedom of religious expression.
27 On the whole, such an attitude and practice has worked well, and, this practice is in keeping with the ideals of freedom of expression. However, on occasion, we are confronted with religious fanatics who practice within their group a level of coercion and control that is contrary to the ideas of individual freedoms and rights. While we assume, as members of the society at large, that the members of these religious sects always have the freedom to leave such a sect, whenever they start to dislike them, we completely ignore the level of control the leaderships of religious cults and sects excercise over their members.
28 Society has a right, as well as
an obligation, to monitor the behaviour of each and every individual, including
the leaders of every sub-grouping and the leadership of society as a whole. If
we do not insist on such widespread monitoring activities, we close our eyes to
many intentional or inadvertent violations of the Constitutional guarantees
that are supposed to safeguard the rights of all members in society.
29 We will not repeat, here, our
arguments, that, eventually, secrecy has to be abolished completely, and, that
we have to accept responsibility for all our actions, intentions, and, even,
our thoughts. In many contemporary societies, the right to privacy is held
sacred, but, often, this right to privacy is subverted by egocentric attitudes
and violates the requirements of honesty and justice. We have to learn to live
in such a way, that we do not have to be ashamed for anything we say and do,
or, anything we own and earn.
30 Here again, we are a long way
from implementing, or, even, accepting these ideas, but, a reflection upon the
need for mutual trust and essential equality in a social contract of justice,
makes it clear, that we can not expect our neighbours to trust us, unless we
are completely open and honest in our dealings with them. If we are wealthy,
or, if we earn a lot of money, we should not hide the extent of our property,
nor should we hide the way we earned our income or acquired our assets. If we
do, we create a justified suspicion in the minds of our neighbours, and, we
give the impression, that our acquisitions and earnings are immoral,
exploitative or, perhaps, even, outright illegal.
31 There is, probably, nothing more
comforting when we die, than the knowledge, that we have acted justly, and,
that our friends, relatives and neighbours are left behind in an atmosphere of
good-will and mutual trust. To die with hatred, disillusionment and cynicism in
our hearts and minds, must be a frustrating death, since we will be torn by
emotions and fears, as we start to lose contact with reality at the moment of
our death. Those fears and feelings of hatred, the passions and turmoil of our
mind, will take shape as thoughts or images of reality, and, we may die, after
all, in a Hell of our own making.
32 Certainly, the moment will be
short, and, soon, we will become nothing, We will dissolve, as the life
processes of our particular being are coming to an end. Yet, our time
perception has been altered, and, we have argued, how we will not be able to
know eternity and the peace of nothingness. All we know are those dreadful
moments of our final existence, and, we may fear, that we are never going to
get out of those final moments.
33 In a way, it is logical to see
those final moments as an eternity, and, it is somewhat justified to consider
such a tormented soul as entering an eternal Hell of turmoil and anxiety; all,
beause the individual has failed to understand, and has failed to find peace
and tranquility in an attitude of justice and honesty towards his fellow human
beings.
34 Do we know, now, what death and
dying is all about? Our concepts will continue to change. Our attitudes will
change, too, from time to time, and, even, a confident feeling of understanding
and compassion may be shattered by strong emotions of fear and doubt. It will
be a struggle, at times, and, we will have to work diligently, all our lives,
to deepen a sense of understanding and maintain an attitude of acceptance about
the inevitability of death.
35 It is natural, that we will
always fear, at least, to some extent, the possibility of severe suffering
before it is all over. Regardless, how resigned we are to the idea of having to
die, none of us relish the thought of having to suffer, and, fortunately, there
is rarely a need for it.
36 Most suffering can be avoided,
if we die in an atmosphere of harmony with those around us. It is rarely
necessary to die in a heroic struggle against our enemies, if we take the
necessary steps to avoid a bloody confrontation. We do not have to die in great
pain and a prolonged agony, as our knowledge of analgesics and tranquillising
medication can help everyone, who is suffering from severe pain or mental
disturbances during a terminal illness. Certain deaths will be painful. It will
always be painful to die from thirst, starvation, exposure or wounds sustained
in a remote place, far away from help, but, then, most people who die in such
unfortunate circumstances have taken the risk to be exposed to such an
occurrence, even, if they often failed to appreciate the true magnitude of
these risks.
37 Death will often remain tragic
and unnecessary, but, let us anticipate, clearly, what may happen, before we
embark upon risky adventures, and, this applies, in particular, to our strong
tendency to engage a common enemy in a euphoric mood of absolute righteousness
and victorious expectations.
38 Let us keep thinking about our
life and our death, and, the simultaneous focus on these apparent antipodes may
be one of the most powerful ways to achieve understanding, harmony and a
genuine feeling for our common existential roots. Let us abandon that foolish
and neurotic suppression of the awareness of impending death, or, even common
ageing. Let us mature, because it is time to grow-up and accept, fully, the
responsibilities of being alive. Let us think about the generations of mankind
that are coming after us, and, let us realise, how dependent their existence
and quality of life will be upon our contemporary actions and insights.
39 Let us acknowledge, that we may
jeopardise their existence, or, even, make their existence completely
impossible, if we fail to formulate a vision of long-term responsibilities and
conditions of viability. Understanding what human life is all about, will, not
only, make our own death natural and fully acceptable, but, we will be able to
give life to many generations of mankind still to come.
.......
Summary
1. About deserving attention and earning loyalty.
Something about my writing habits.
The title as a summary or focal point of a discussion.
What is death?
Religious beliefs and their use to cope with the stress of dying.
The psychological victory over death.
The personal nature of our reality perceptions.
We die in a reality of our own making.
The definition of death, and, differences with suspended animation.
Death; the irreversible dissolution of the structure and function of a living
organism.
Freezing, and the slowing-down of chemical processes.
The possibility of a selective death of the brain.
A short review of the essence of the living coherence of a cell.
Clinical death, life-support measures, and the essential difference between
selective brain-death and suspended animation, when cardiac arrest occurs in a
severely chilled body.
The "power supply" to the brain, and the networks of nerve-cells
engaged in specific functions.
2. The hope to gain an extension on life, in the future, by
preserving a body in the deep-freeze.
The fallacy of the assumptions behind this hope.
Would future generations be interested to bring-back to life, if possible, the
relics from the past?
The fearful egocentricity of the motivation to cling to life.
Pyramids of eternal hope.
The acceptance of death and suffering.
The importance of emotional neutrality, in particular, as a tool to avoid
stress.
Death can also be accepted by an emotionally neutral understanding of the
indivisible link between life and death.
The exploration of possibilities of existence; natural evolution.
Conscious awareness; a biological product of natural evolution, based upon the
life and death of countless preceding generations.
The need to seek a harmony between our beliefs and behaviour-patterns.
The evolution and modification of beliefs as a prelude to behavioural
adaptation can not be a goal in itself.
The viability of stress-anticipation and -avoidance.
Self-discipline and emotional neutrality; a possibility for educational
transfer of attitudes and ideas.
The essence of the scientific method of classification; the usefulness of such
classifying skills for our daily behaviour.
Accepting a calculated risk.
The ability to find a way-out, after fear and anxiety have been controled to
some extent.
3. Emotional neutrality as a tool to analyse emotional reactions.
The intuitive and emotional worlds of human inter-actions.
The absence of a generally agreed-upon imagery of the human personality.
Behavioural flexibility; a complicating factor in the object of study, as well
as the observer.
The ability to see similarities in human behaviour-patterns, when observing
them in an emotionally neutral frame of mind.
The shared egocentric orientation of our goals and aspirations.
Many layers of motivations.
The temptation to engage in a fight, and the lure of victory.
A target for suspicion and hostility, if behaviour becomes markedly different
from the average.
The trade-off between emotional control and stress-resistance.
The art of mediation.
An ultimate reality perception that can be shared globally.
The many opportunities to abuse intellectual skills.
Evolutionary weapons, developed, primarily, as an egocentric or small-scale
social tool for survival, give us also the potential to forge a global society
of harmony and justice.
Intuition, and its relation to emotions and emotional neutrality.
The scale from emotional neutrality to emotional extremes.
Coping with varying levels of stress.
The logic and emotional neutrality of many religious reality perceptions.
The logic of seeing the forces of nature as volitional, anthropomorphic forces.
The peculiar position of the scientific perception of reality.
4. The difficulties associated with an imagery of the Universe
without any anthropomorphic features.
The emotional dissatisfaction with such an interpretation.
The emotional and emotionally neutral use of religious and scientific images.
Reaction-patterns in an increasingly stressful situation.
The four stages; avoidance, mild but increasing stress, the maximum resistance
of stress, and the gradual yielding to overwhelming stress with the acceptance
of impending death.
Decreasing abilities or opportunities to communicate in "stage four".
Fading gradually into a private world of blurred reality perceptions.
The mechanisms of a blurring of reality perceptions.
Stress is reversible, until the momentum towards disintegration has become
overwhelming.
The stress of uncertainty.
A review of stress.
The role and function of hope.
The gradual return to a new "equilibrium" in conditions of chronic
stress.
The balance between hope and emotionally neutral faculties of criticism.
Unnecessary suffering resulting from rigid behaviour-patterns, based on hope,
divine exclusivity, or a belief in absolute truths.
The fine line between courage and stubbornness.
A comparison between dying and falling asleep; the common ground of losing
contact with the environment.
The differences between falling asleep, being anaesthetised, coma and death.
The difficulties of thinking about a state of non-existence.
A review of sleep; subjective experiences when trying to observe the process of
falling asleep.
The "pull-back"; the identity-feeling and its "appearance"
during sleep.
The stress of being constantly in a state of vigilance.
Different scales of time perception in dreamless and dream-sleep.
5. Dreamless sleep and dream-sleep.
Sequential image progression during dreaming.
Twitching of many muscles during dream-sleep.
Mental image progression and the processes of "free association".
The absence of "logic", due to the absence of a check against
"contemporary reality".
The relaxing effects of a good night's sleep.
No image-progression during an anaesthetic; a period of restlessness and
confusion during the recovery from anaesthesia.
The inability to fight-off a loss of consciousness.
The subjective experience of a short time-interval between "going
under" and "waking up" after an anaesthetic.
No time perception is possible without a kaleidoscopic "play-back" of
mental images, and, therefore, the fact of being deceased can not be experienced.
A review of the realities in which we may die.
Differences between the realities of our enemies and ourselves.
Testimonies by people, who have seen Heaven or Hell.
A short review of the reasons, why there is, almost always, a strong belief that
some sort of life exists after death.
The appearance of deceased individuals in the dreams of the living.
The general acceptance of "spiritual" or anthropomorphic
force-fields, existing without a body.
The belief, that the human being is a link between lower and higher forms of
intelligent existence.
The difficulties and peculiarities of the scientific reality perception, where
all forms of awareness are linked to the existence of a living organism.
The concept of the immortal soul, and the influence of science upon the
religious imagery.
Problems in describing the functions and qualities of "the soul".
6. The creation of the past, the present and the future by the living
human individual.
The central spectator, judge and life-giving agent; reasons, why we do not ask,
where we were before birth.
Why it is not possible to visualise a state of nothingness, because every
imagery possesses the quality of existence, including an attempt to visualise
the essence of non-existence.
The need to use rigid analogies; the human circle and the electronic device.
The death of an electronic device, and the reasons why the components do not
fall-apart or disintegrate, like the biochemical substances of a dead cell.
Death; the disappearance of functional and structural integrity.
The reversibility of the "death" of an electronic device or man-made
machine.
The fragility of the living organisation, and the essential need for such a
fragility and fluidity in order to react to the forces of natural selection;
the low internal resistance to decay.
Chance, and the process of guided manufacture by the genetic code.
Similarities with man-made mass-production.
A comparison of the evolution of man-made designs and the mass-production of
the genetic pool, after a blind evolutionary search has made a start in the
chain of exploring possibilities of existence.
Parallels between the eternal existence of matter-energy and God.
Existence can not come from non-existence.
A mental imagery, accepted world-wide, is still a man-made concept and not an
absolute truth.
7. Intelligence; a behavioural tool that develops only under specific
and restricted circumstances.
The break-through of predation and symbiosis.
In the religious point of view, "Intelligence" is the essential,
organising principle.
The logic of man's beliefs in a created reality.
The Prime Mover; a concept that developed as a result of increasing scientific
coherence.
The emotionally unsatisfactory aspects of such a stark image of reality.
Religious sects, and the elitists.
The hierarchy of spirits, and the intermediate position of man; in between the
lowly physical forms of life and the "free spirits".
Difficulties reconciling religious and scientific points of view.
The similarities between the concepts of matter-energy and those of a Prime
Mover.
Reality perceptions, seen as a biological function; the relativity of truth.
A review of what has been discussed.
Suicide; the voluntary death by one's own hand; mechanisms and an analysis.
Pathological forms of human existence.
The most harmful elements are not suicidal but psychopathic in nature.
Conditions for a reflective attitude.
The slow emergence of an appreciation for life.
Relinquishing obsessive long-term goals.
The meaning of death has to be found in the meaning of life.
Death is nothing more, and nothing less, than the absence of life.
The fallacy of suppressing thoughts about death and dying.
8. How to avoid the tragedy of discovering, at the time of our death,
that we have failed to appreciate life.
Why we should care about building-up a coherent imagery of reality and our own
existence, whenever we can.
The reliance upon society, and, the limitations of an attitude of complete
reliance upon the leadership-input from other people.
The need to become responsible, and develop all our talents for thought and
reflection.
The importance of the intelligent, deliberate choice.
The meaning of individuality.
An exhortation to become thinking individuals within a social contract of
essential equality and global justice.
Let us not underestimate the difficulties of dying.
The death penalty.
A review of some ideas about social existence.
Religious freedoms, and the need to monitor all sub-groupings in society.
The need for transparence, and the ability to scrutinise all leaderships,
including the overall political leadership.
How to live with a condition of complete social transparence.
A return to the process of dying.
Our responsibilities towards future generations.
.......