From several recent posts:
Renė Descartes walked into a bar. The bartender says ‘Hey Renė how you doing. Having a beer today?’ Renė says ‘well, er, um…no. I think not’ and disappeared.
The joke is contained in the book ‘The Know It All.’ Fitting perhaps. Quoting a Canadian professor emeritus at great length is similar to quoting a Canadian senator. Space that could be put to no better use. Not.
I’d say that it’s human nature to seek advantage and avoid disadvantage. I’m not sure it’s natural at all for humans to live in mass society nation states. Nations don’t have
conflicts because they are, well just nations—constructs that only exist in the mind. National leaders have illusions of advantage or disadvantage that frequently produce conflict and war. It’s leaders who have conflicts, perhaps because they believe they lead us and have duties and obligations.
To individuals or small bands advantage has immediacy. We know what we face. We can see what another has that may benefit us, and we also know the potential of injury or death for ourselves if we seek to take what another has. We temper what we want since the cost of it is immediate and apparent. However, we know nothing of immediacy in our national lives. Our individual advantage has all the reality of images of dancing light on phosphorescent screens or black marks machined on white paper. For that is how we participate in our national lives we consume that which has the same guarantee of reality as do fairy tales. Anything is possible in a fairy tale except that which can’t be imagined by the author. In fairy tales there are no guides for right and wrong and there are no reality checks. You just believe. In fairy taales. we allow our lives to be reduced to ‘Please tell me a story before I go to sleep.’ And who, you might ask, would tell those stories and why. Any what you might ask can we possible know of the tellers of stories whom we know only as dancing light or black marks. What can we possibly know of our leaders? What can we possible know of our advantage expressed through our national lives? We may as well dream it—which takes us back to Renė. Oh yes, some of us vote.
For god’s sake just take back ownership of your own lives by living them and being responsible for them. Nobody else can be responsible for them unless life really is just listening to bedtime stories. You’ll likely find that everybody’s life is valid and deserves respect, and our leaders have little more to offer than do each of us. All the anti’s in our national lives are fairly tales until we live them.
For military types who carry on and posture, reading Beowulf might be good. It’s a manly warrior’s tale, and warrior lessons abound. Lessons for us all abound. In its reading, warriors might ponder whether you serve Hrothgar or Beowulf, and what might await you. Some lessons I took from Beowulf were that a leader must lead and a hero must be heroic. Rich kingdoms are beset by nightmares. Rich kings who hire heroes to confront the nightmares loose that which they love best and their kingdoms are never heard of again. Heroes find that they must confront a nightmare themselves. There is no help, and once a nightmare is confronted, then the mother of that nightmare must be confronted. Heroes also learn that ultimately they must do it themselves. Weapons prove unreliable, age is relentless, and eventually there must be new heroes. Ultimately nothing changes. There always rumors of wars.
Beowulf seems the essential handbook for a western warrior. A warrior who can’t find themselves in the tale might do well to seek another occupation. But really, heroes belong in fairy tales. Do we know of any among our present leaders you might ask, or perhaps not ask? Read or perhaps not read. The Seamus Henney translation is good but the Norton Anthology version is OK too. And after Beowulf, The Rite of the Ancient Mariner is good. The literature and poetry from our culture carries more truth than does the network news. The truth is that our national lives remain little different from those of the Norse raiders, but in that view of life nothing eve changes. Wars and rumors of wars persist. Those who serve die and for no good purpose