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Escaping the Iron Cage of Hopelessness

By Edward Curtin

Specialists without spirit, sensualists without heart; this nullity imagines that it has attained a level of civilization never before achieved” Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism

In this frightful round of unchecked means, nobody knows any longer where they are going, purposes are forgotten, and ends are overtaken. Human beings have set off at astronomically high speeds toward nowhere.”Jacques Ellul, Presence in the Modern World

In a previous article I argued that those who think science can solve our major social problems – in particular, world destruction with nuclear weapons and the poisoning of the earth’s ecology and atmosphere – were delusional and in the grip of the myth of science and technology. These problems were created by science when it became untethered from any sense of limits in its embrace of instrumental rationality. Once it became wedded to usefulness and the efficiency of technical means, it lost its original aim: the search for truth. (Obviously this doesn’t include all scientists.) In embracing means as ends, it produced an endless loop of means justifying means that has resulted in what Weber called an “iron cage.”
Concomitantly, the ideology of pure objectivity and impartial innocence was joined to elite state power and the capitalist profit motive where it was supported and instantaneously and completely applied to technical applications, including nuclear, biological, chemical and “conventional” weapons; bio-engineering; GMO foods and people; eugenics and cloning; and chemical/oil production, etc. It is indisputable that if our planet is incinerated or slowly destroyed through toxic pollution that modern science with its Faustian “prohibition to prohibit” will stand indicted, if anyone is left to make the case.
Albert Camus warned us long ago:

And even though we do it in diverse ways, we extoll one thing and one alone: a future world in which reason will reign supreme. In our madness, we push back the eternal limits, and at once dark Furies swoop down upon us to destroy. Nemesis, goddess of moderation, not of vengeance, is watching. She chastises, ruthlessly, all those who go beyond the limit.

Ostensibly rational, the illogical logic of modern science has resulted in a mystifying double-bind that denies human freedom and leads to widespread despair and hopelessness. Many people feel trapped by this deterministic ethos, while others fail to see that the cause of our problems can’t be their solutions.
In this essay I will explore the possibility of a path out of the seeming impossibility of escaping the cul-de-sac of our spiritually disinherited and disenchanted condition.
Max Weber argued that modern rational capitalism was informed by a religious impetus of inner-directed worldly asceticism derived from Protestant Christianity. In essence, modern capitalism was a religion. Likewise, modern mainstream science, despite the discoveries of quantum physics, rests upon a materialistic presupposition that is a self-contradictory act of faith that it denies to others. Committed to determinism, this materialistic scientific world view offers no basis for its truth claim since what is determined cannot be disputed when it wasn’t freely chosen. To espouse a position that was predetermined is to choose nothing. In essence, such science is also a religion that, like capitalism, serves no end but its own regeneration.
Is it any wonder that so many people feel trapped on an endless merry-go-round that contradicts their felt experience and their hopes for a better world? They look around and see a mad world of war and lies and science run amok. The physical scientists tell them that everything started with a bang and will end with a bang or a whimper of one sort or another and that’s how it goes since when did people so puny think they were anything but specks in a vast cosmos of meaningless gas that will devour them in a few billion years, give or take a year or so. The psych folks tell them they are the products of their brain chemicals and neurotransmitters and must submit “freely” to chemical treatment if they know what’s good for them and want to be happy.
The social scientists insist that all knowledge is socially conditioned and relative and therefore everything they think and feel is also relative and so they are lost souls forever wandering in a world of relativity where true wisdom is impossible and the difference between right and wrong is a relative choice that has no basis in any “reality.” And of course the power elites and media play with their minds in endless games of mind control as they insist the only real truth comes through screens that they control. Mind and body warped, so many people stumble through their days like the living dead in search of some exit from their pain and confusion.
Or to say it differently. Science – both physical and social – has resulted in the systemization of doubt and the embrace of the relativity of thought and knowledge. The modern predicament is such that whereas in former times people felt that their knowledge was fact or truth and that it was grounded in a physically palpable reality, we have been exposed to systematic doubt and the suspicion has grown that all the various standpoints are limited and “relative.” While not consciously espoused by the majority of people, this doubting worldview permeates social life as a vague insecurity and uncertainty.
It may be left to intellectuals to circulate such relativizing ideas, but they have become part of the cultural air we breathe. For people today in a scientifically based society, faced with the relativizing of all knowledge and every eternal verity, the question of how to understand their deaths, and thus their lives, has become acutely problematic. Uncertainty has undermined people’s wills as they have forgotten they are free.
The question that modernity forces us to ask is this: once knowledge is seen to be relative; old cosmologies are transformed by science; symbol systems and religions are seen as the products of humans’ own creativity; reality is understood to be socially constructed; once these developments take place consciously and unconsciously, how then can people understand their lives and deaths and find the confidence to live in peace and harmony with the earth and all living creatures?
Tolstoy put it this way:

Science is meaningless because it gives no answer to our question, the only question important for us: ‘What shall we do and how shall we live?’ ”

In order to make our way out of this maze, we might contemplate the underlying presupposition that “everything is relative.” That, of course is an absurd position. Everything can’t be relative when the statement “everything is relative” is an absolute statement. Joined to that, one can muse on the self-contradiction of materialistic determinism and perhaps glimpse an escape from the iron cage, the prison, the closed room, the garbage pail, or the no-exit – so many terms that our best writers have used to describe the modern condition.
Rudolf Steiner did that as follows in The Philosophy of Freedom:

Materialism can never offer a satisfactory explanation of the world. For every attempt at an explanation must begin with the formation of thoughts about the phenomena of the world. Materialism, thus, begins with the thought of Matter or material processes. But, in doing so, it is ipso facto confronted by two different sets of facts, viz., the material world and the thought about it. The materialist seeks to make these latter intelligible by regarding them as purely material processes. He believe that thinking takes place in the brain, much in the same way that digestion takes place in the animal organs. Just as he ascribes mechanical , chemical, and organic processes to Nature, so he credits her in certain circumstances with the capacity to think. He overlooks that, in doing so, he is merely shifting the problem from one place to another. Instead of to himself he ascribes the power of thought to Matter. And thus he is back again at his starting-point. How does Matter come to think of its own nature?

But these are intellectual exercises and are therefore probably not very helpful to the average person.
Tolstoy maintained that for the modern person death had no meaning because civilization was based on progress – an ‘infinite’ progress – which according to its own internal logic should never come to an end.
On this road of progressiveness everything is provisional and indefinite and so individual death seems like a failure and meaningless because it marks an end. But what then, asked Tolstoy, is the meaning to our lives? Are they meaningless means to meaningless ends?
Materialistic science can only answer in the affirmative. A negative affirmative. But for most people this doesn’t satisfy. They sense the truth that we live by faith – scientists do, religious believers do, atheists do, agnostics do, everyone does – faith is the water we swim in; it is our element. It is what impels us to get out of bed in the morning. But getting out of bed in the morning is a choice, a judgment. It is not inevitable. We do it in faith that the day will be meaningful and worth meeting. We encounter others in good faith and hope they do the same with us. This awareness of the faith dimension of life is a daily human experience that points beyond itself and is a source of hope, even when confusion reigns. While modern science and philosophy have largely attempted to treat all things, including people, as objects to be controlled by subjects, most people encounter others in daily life not as Its, as in Buber’s I-It, but as Thous, as in I-Thou.
Where have I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going? These are life’s basic questions that science answers with nowhere, no reason, and nowhere in that order. Such answers are attestations of of a faith in nothing, what is usually called nihilism.
The psychiatrist R.D. Laing maintained that the key to a sane world is for people to truly regain experiencing their experience and not to make-believe. He felt that most people had become estranged from the roots of their being. He put it thus:

The condition of alienation, of being asleep, of being unconscious, of being out of one’s mind, is the condition of the normal man. Society highly values its normal man. It educates children to lose themselves and to become absurd, and thus to be normal. Normal men have killed perhaps 100,000,000 of their fellow normal men in the last fifty years. Our behavior is a function of our experience. We act according to the way we see things. If our experience is destroyed, our behavior will be destructive. If our experience is destroyed, we have lost our own selves…There is everything to suggest that man experienced God. Faith was never a matter of believing. He existed, but of trusting, in the presence that was experienced and known to exist as a self-validating datum. It seems likely that far more people in our time experience neither the presence of God, nor the presence of his absence, but the absence of his presence….The fountain has not played itself out, the frame still shines, the river still flows, the spring still bubbles forth, the light has not faded. But between us and IT, there is a veil which is more like fifty feet of solid concrete. Deus absconditus. Or we have absconded.

So what can we do to break through this mystification of experience that has resulted in a double-bind that has trapped us?
I say nothing, at first. We are so busy doing and thinking our doing is the solution to our problems. We must stop the world we know by first not doing and by simply being in the presence of Being. We must develop a contemplative discipline of allowing the awareness of our egocentric thinking to reveal to us the arrogance of our confused belief that we can coerce others and the natural world to do our bidding and that every problem has a solution. The grotesqueness of nuclear weapons is the physical manifestation of that willfulness. For the magician, the applied scientist, and the technologist all wish to conquer reality with techniques from the outside rather than being open to the truths that Reality (that we are in and is us and that goes by different names – Being, the Tao, Logos – all names for the unnameable) might reveal to us. “To ‘know’ reality,” writes Alan Watts, “you cannot stand outside it and define it; you must enter into it, be it, feel it.”
So the first thing we must “do” is to do nothing so we may heal our divided minds; otherwise we are spinning in a vicious circle, “like everything else which the divided mind attempts.”
This seems self-evident to me and “doing” this should be our first “act” of dissent – our break-out (by breaking in) – from the reigning consensus that underlies the violent and sick condition of the world today. James Douglass, author of the ground-breaking book, JFK and the Unspeakable, says this perfectly in Lightning East to West: Jesus, Gandhi, and the Nuclear Age:

What we know ‘out there’ as the most resistant evil reality to be transformed, is in reality “in here” in its primary being. The precise nature of that correspondence, or identity, between inner and outer worlds is the mystery which Jung was attempting to describe with his theory of Synchronicity, whereby outer events can be increaseingly recognized as unifying correlations of a profoundly traveled inner way. Once we begin to see this profound interpenetration of inner and outer worlds in a oneness of reality, the insoluable enigma of the world of evil gives way to the edge of the unifying mystery of Oneness, or of Love, a mystery that we cannot fully understand but which we can in fact move into with our lives and participate in to the extent of experiencing an ever-more-united world in Reality.

I think if we can see the big picture by “doing nothing,” we will have taken a major step toward a solution, or at the least an insight into how we can act to resist the evil that is occurring in the world.
“Seeing through” is to diagnose – dia, through + gignoskein, to know, perceive – which can allow us to see through to the roots of world problems. Without a deep comprehension of the causes of these problems, and how so many of our solutions have failed because they are based on false premises, we will get us nowhere. “The way one sees through the situation changes the situation,” writes Laing. Then, “as soon as we convey in any way…what we see or think we see, some change is occurring even in the most rigid situation.”
I think we can agree that we are in a “most rigid situation” as the nuclear weapons await discharge, countries and people are destroyed by U. S. war-making, the environment is poisoned, elite capitalist crooks line their pockets at the expense of everyone else, etc. Many of us convey this again and again, seemingly to no avail. Perhaps this is because we are missing the forest for the trees in our understandable haste to remedy it all. I suspect this is so and scatter these thoughts like breadcrumbs in the hope they may suggest a way home. “Conveying” my thought experiments in the hope “some” change occurs in the process. First, in me.
The word spiritual has acquired a bad name with its embrace by New-Agers et al. with its association with magic and out of the world mumbo-jumbo. So I use it reservedly. But if we look to those so many hold in such high regard for their fight against violence and injustice – e.g. Gandhi and Martin Luther King, to name but two – it is apparent that their “truth-force” and “non-violent resistance” were rooted in a spiritual understanding of the human condition. We don’t need to get caught up in words, for they have a way of missing the truth.
Gandhi said God was truth and truth was God. King equated God with love. Truth, God, Love – do the words matter? Did not these men grasp the deepest dimensions of our problems? Didn’t they understand the root causes of hate and violence? Didn’t they see the Tao? Didn’t they see that the way we conceive existence through our deterministic and instrumental sciences is a reflection of our violent world? Didn’t they realize that we can’t force change on anyone from the outside without doing violence and that the only way forward is to move the world through love and truthful resistance? Didn’t they tell us that freedom is our birthright and is indivisible, and when you deny existential freedom you are lost in despair?
Despite the question marks, these are rhetorical questions. Don’t our deepest experiences confirm their truth?
Let me end with James Douglass’s words, for it seems to me they ring true, despite being far outside the reigning scientific paradigm and “common sense.”

Is there a spiritual reality, inconceivable to us today, which corresponds in history to the physical reality which Einstein discovered and which led to the atomic bomb? Einstein discovered a law of physical change: the way to convert a single particle of matter into enormous physical energy. Might there not be, as Gandhi suggested, an equally incredible and undiscovered law of spiritual change, whereby a single person or small community of persons could be converted into an enormous spiritual energy capable of transforming a society and a world? I believe that there is, that there must be, a spiritual reality corresponding to E=mc2 because, from the standpoint of creative harmony, the universe is incomplete without it, and because, from the standpoint of moral freedom, humankind is sentenced to extinction without it. I believe that the human imperative of our end-time is that we discover the spiritual equation corresponding to Einstein’s physical equation, and that we then begin to experiment seriously in its world-transforming reality while there is time.

We must experiment in truth, for time is running out.

Edward Curtin is a writer whose work has appeared widely. He teaches sociology at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. His website is http://edwardcurtin.com/

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Brian Steere
Brian Steere
Jan 10, 2018 12:48 PM

After a recent comment to this thread moved me to revisit it’s extraordinary frame up. (there is no need to escape who you are not), this sentence caught my attention: (it referred to the Steiner quote) “But these are intellectual exercises and are therefore probably not very helpful to the average person.” Anti-intellect posing as a servant of the average person? If something is recognized and accepted true, then it resonates within and as part of who you accept yourself to be. There are many ways to communicate what Steiner says in his particular milieu, and within a particular context that can be recognized observationally and thus open an intuitive recognition that you are NOT as thinking defined you. Whether that thinking is culturally inherited or your own pick and mix of some sense of choice. Acceptance of true is different from thinking about true, and in the author’s retreat… Read more »

Pavel Kanaliev
Pavel Kanaliev
Aug 12, 2017 11:06 AM

The non-cyclic democracy is a permanent, constant election process which has its point of commencement but is infinite in terms of time perspective. It enables people to vote at any time they wish with no limitation on the number of votes. Open vote means the right of people, in case they wish, to step out of their anonymity as voters in the continuous election process of the non-cyclic democracy. Vote of correction means an open vote of confirmation or rejection at any, desired by people time from the continuous election process with the non-cyclic democracy. With the non-cyclic democracy, the number of mandates is changeable. It is defined by the sum from the number of anonymous cyclic votes, combined with the number of open and correction votes at any time from the continuous election process. Threshold of trust of an elected via voting candidate in elective office means half of… Read more »

BigB
BigB
May 25, 2017 1:27 PM

“Where does the answer lie? Living from day to day If it’s something we can’t buy There must be another way.” [(We are) Spirits in a material world; Sting.] Excellent article, Edward. I think about this sort of stuff every day, and my conclusion is that it is not ‘Science’, or any of the emergent properties of the mind (philosophy, politics, economics, etc) – but the pan-global ‘Western’ mindset itself. If you conduct science, or engage in philosophy, politics, economics… with a confused mind – the obvious and only available result is confusion? GIGO. Truth is simplicity – from where I am sitting it is the wind in the trees, the distant view of the Downs, the soul to soul look in my partners eye – how do we commodify, package and sell such things? And what price can we put on actually being fully alive to appreciate them? Do… Read more »

Norman Pilon
Norman Pilon
May 25, 2017 11:49 AM

I read Edward’s piece, and I’m reminded of this quote from Marx: Religious distress is at the same time an expression of real distress and a protest against real suffering. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, just as it is the spirit of spiritless conditions. It is the opium of the people… To this, of course, Marx then adds: To abolish religion as the illusory happiness of the people is to demand their real happiness. The demand to give up illusions about the existing state of affairs is the demand to give up a state of affairs which needs illusions. And commenting on this very short quote from Marx, a certain Humphrey McQueen writes: A similar point can be made about Nietzsche’s “God is Dead.” The messenger is a madman who at once adds that he has arrived too soon. Anyway, the… Read more »

physicsandmathsrevision
physicsandmathsrevision
May 25, 2017 11:58 AM
Reply to  Norman Pilon

It is a controversial assertion to presume that the absence of illusion is predicated on the assumption of the non-existence of a creator. An assumption from which many, for their own very good reasons, would demur.

Norman Pilon
Norman Pilon
May 25, 2017 12:00 PM

Yes, it’s controversial. You believe. I don’t. That’s a controversy.

Catte
Catte
May 25, 2017 12:21 PM
Reply to  Norman Pilon

Atheism is a faith based belief system that often masquerades as an evidence-based belief system. But anyone who opts to believe anything about something unknowable is stating a position of faith. The atheist believes in an absence the theist in a presence. They both deal intuitively with faith and conviction. They understand each other much better than they do someone who sees no value in forming a belief system of any kind about something one knows nothing about.

physicsandmathsrevision
physicsandmathsrevision
May 25, 2017 12:54 PM
Reply to  Catte

Your comment appears to exclude the possibility of belief based on real (if usually extreme) experience. I won’t junk your absence of such experience if you won’t junk my actual (or as you might prefer it, claimed) experience.

Catte
Catte
May 25, 2017 1:25 PM

I have absolute respect for personal experiences of faith. Things can happen to individuals that, although immeasurable, unprovable and unsharable, are immensely revelatory and significant. My point was mainly directed at the common misappropriation of atheism as a “rational” or objective POV, when it’s no more rational and no less a statement of faith than any other data-free belief system.

binra
binra
May 25, 2017 9:09 PM
Reply to  Norman Pilon

But Norman, you can believe whatever you want and may yet uncover belief that you do not realize to be active in your life. Add-on beliefs may be part of the masking persona – where experience beyond belief may open the way to stepping forth in an active belief that embodies the ineffable rather than pleads or wishes it to be true. False polarization prevents the territory being opened to light and those who seek and find controversy – need to assert the belief or lack of it as if it ‘should’ be validated. There’s always lees difference when opening the territory of inner honesty – for however we all articulate or choose NOT to articulate our experience – the fruits are the testimony of its roots in truth. There is no universal language by which to communicate ABOUT an intimacy of being from which all things are brought into… Read more »

binra
binra
May 25, 2017 8:46 PM
Reply to  Norman Pilon

Why see ‘religion’ only in terms of its usurpation? When image, symbol and concept substitute for direct and present participance a ‘fig-leaved mind overlays shame-in-hiding with narrative justifications. If we cannot talk about something without demonizing it, invalidating it, or insinuating a superiority of judgement over it – then we are in the pretence of an escape from consequence. As if ‘they’ are invalid and wrong and I am right – over them and at their expense. The attempt to ‘outsource pain while maximizing private profit, under PR of public masking is the normal for corporates because it is the pervasive ‘culture’ of a masked fear operating in the shadows. Often I see ‘divide and rule’ being considered as if done unto us by others – but the division of self that rules out love’s awareness is not really a ‘rule’ of creative power so much as a guilted or… Read more »

binra
binra
May 25, 2017 11:21 AM

When ‘narrative control’ can be recognized as operating ‘fake news’, it becomes possible to see that the model is fundamentally wrong – and grievously so. Our mind-model taken ‘as if’ reality can be held to ‘as true’ only as an act of perpetual war of assertion against truth – excepting filtered distortions that support our identified and believed investment – or such ‘truths’ as suit us. In science we say we ‘model’ reality and theoretically know the difference between them, but investments of energy and attention in identity will not yield to truth and so instead operates the identity in conflict – as if victory over truth is the power to determine it. But all forms of mind-control are variations on the idea of limitation and diminished in which a lie may be bolstered or supported by the sacrifice of life, consciousness and joy in freedom of being. False ‘meanings’… Read more »

binra
binra
May 25, 2017 11:25 AM
Reply to  binra

Correction to para 2
But all forms of mind-control are variations on the idea of limitation and diminished AWARENESS in which a lie may be bolstered or supported by the sacrifice of life…

Dominic Pukallus
Dominic Pukallus
May 24, 2017 9:41 PM

Wuwei!

Dominic Pukallus
Dominic Pukallus
Jan 10, 2018 7:47 AM
Reply to  Edward Curtin

Dominic Pukallus
Dominic Pukallus
Jan 10, 2018 7:48 AM
Reply to  Edward Curtin

Oops this was meant to be the one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd7ntfETdRM

Maestro
Maestro
May 24, 2017 12:12 PM

“Human beings have set off at astronomically high speeds toward nowhere …..”
A superb article!
– So, who are the ‘heroes’ today?
– Those who are queuing for new iPhones or taking selfies with autonomous vehicles.

rogerglewis
rogerglewis
May 24, 2017 10:52 AM

Reblogged this on MUSO MUSINGS ON FATHERHOOD THEORY AND STUFF and commented:
And a Light shone out from the fog. Such lights save some but not all ships from being dashed upon rocks.

rogerglewis
rogerglewis
May 24, 2017 10:36 AM

And a Light shone out from the fog. Such lights save some but not all ships from being dashed upon rocks.

physicsandmathsrevision
physicsandmathsrevision
May 24, 2017 9:12 AM

Brilliant article. Thank you Edward. It is possible to know there is a God. That which often comes to people who cry out for help while at the very bottom of the pit of despair and hopelessness is an ecstasy of presence, an absolute affirmation, an indescribable power that is the E=mc^2 of the final excerpt in this article. In this condition the Love that IS God is a given. The Truth that IS God is a given. The forgiveness that IS God is a given. However, the work of understanding the truth about this world is not. And this truth is, as your article asserts, the truth about ourselves. This work we must do for ourselves. This is probably why we are here. Unfortunately (or perhaps, naturally) a great many people who find themselves in this ‘possessed by God’ condition are so alone in their condition and the society… Read more »

mog
mog
May 24, 2017 9:02 AM

Great piece of writing that covers so much of what has interested me over the years.
I went to a public talk by Rupert Sheldrake last night. As he is someone who has spent a whole career challenging the dogma of materialism (with the spirit of a true scientist), it was heartening to hear him speak of developments in evolutionary biology that are de-thoning Neo Darwininan ‘orthodoxy’. Ditto, the exodus of philosophers from rigid materialism that seems to be occuring at the moment. Rupert said that during all his time trying to broaden the base of scientific inquiry, he had never seen so much movement toward a new paradigm.
If we consider that 95% of the universe is ‘dark matter’ and ‘dark energy’, maybe a renewal of a spiritually purposeful science could still help us address the desperate problems we face.

susannapanevin
susannapanevin
May 24, 2017 8:30 AM

Reblogged this on Susanna Panevin.

Eric Blair
Eric Blair
May 24, 2017 6:25 AM

A very powerful and insightful piece. Western civilization is adrift and there is no there there (where the future used to be). Prior to the 1990s “the future” was envisioned as a place where life will be easier, with robots and computers finally relieving humanity from the toil of “Adam’s burden” and ushering in an era of leisure and abundance. The year 2000, in the popular imagination, conjured up visions of exotic gadgets, flying cars all playing out in a decidedly 80s influenced scifi scape. Nobody really expected it to be exactly like that but the mood was generally optimistic, or at least romantic. The popular press was full of stories that promised a prosperous and secure future. Seemingly overnight that vanished and was replaced by…whatever it is we have now. A corporatist society where every person carries a pocket computer with access to the sum total of human knowledge… Read more »

Seraskier
Seraskier
May 24, 2017 4:58 AM

[[ Where have I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going? These are life’s basic questions that science answers with nowhere, no reason, and nowhere in that order. ]]
Science has answered many of these questions. The fact that you were unable to understand the answers, or never even bothered to look for them, does not mean that answers haven’t been proposed.
[[ He teaches sociology at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. ]]
Says it all!!

Dead World Walking
Dead World Walking
May 24, 2017 5:15 AM
Reply to  Seraskier

Minds cannot supply truth Seraskier, only self justification.

Eric Blair
Eric Blair
May 24, 2017 6:49 AM
Reply to  Seraskier

Humans need myths to stay “sane” because science and Darwinian evolution are not ideologies or religions. People need something to believe in that is greater than themselves. Be it religion, an ideology…something. Even the comforting, if not entirely accurate, thought that society is fair and just and progressing is no longer believed by most people. The very society they – we – live in is being destroyed and the economy has been “reformed” and no longer provides a stable and secure living for those who aren’t obscenely wealthy or part of the emerging technocratic class that serves them.
Your boorish tone, snide denunciation of the the humanities and bristling, defensive stance against someone who dares to criticize how science has been distorted actually vindicates the author and makes YOU look like a fool who has nothing but scorn and stale ad hominem insults to offer.

Seraskier
Seraskier
May 24, 2017 11:10 PM
Reply to  Eric Blair

[[ Your boorish tone ]]
So ad hom is all you have, Eric?
Laughable.

Dead World Walking
Dead World Walking
May 24, 2017 2:53 AM

Perceptive, succinct and spot on Edward.
The Truth is not outside of us and it is not between our ears.
‘Truth is a path less land’ (Krishnamurti)
Try these simple exercises and see for yourself.
http://www.headless.org/