Chapter 10 – World Views and the War Digression
Protoplasm
moves forward through time only in certain limited ways. If a branch of the
living community of the earth strays outside those shifting boundaries, it is
cut off from the energy-flow patterns of the planet’s ecosystem and it shrivels
and dies. From the earth’s perspective, the extinction of a species, a culture,
or an individual is neither sad nor ironic nor comic: it is simply over. Even
in complex, nation-sized groups, humans cannot ignore this truth for long.
Ruins of ancient
Beersheba.
Recognizing
that survival, if it is to happen at all, must happen in material reality, not
the dimension of Plato’s forms or the soul or cyberspace, all societies
including prehistoric ones, historical ones, and contemporary ones have always
tried to integrate their value systems—the codes by which their citizens choose
and carry out their actions in all phases of living—with their society’s
worldview. Thus, a society’s worldview is crucial to its staying in a favourable
part of the energy available physically near that society. A society’s worldview,
its way of picturing reality, gives rise directly to its value system, then to
its morés and behaviour patterns, and finally, to its survival.
A worldview
is a way of understanding or organizing our sensory perceptions, memories of
sensory perceptions, and categories of perceptions of the physical universe.
Every society that survives arrives, by consensus of generations of its people,
at a system for organizing people’s perceptions of their universe (and the
roles of humans in that universe). The people then perceive their society’s
“way of life” as being correct, appropriate, and natural.
Whether
a worldview precedes, parallels, or follows a set of values favoured by that worldview
is difficult to say. Worldviews and the value systems and morés that go with
them are subtly intertwined. A change in a society’s worldview, the value
shifts that change leads to, and the behaviours the new values foster – these
probably all arise sporadically as one large complex in a nation’s ways of
thinking, talking, doing, and living—its culture, in other words.
Aztec calendar (a neatly
condensed world view).
In
any case, a society’s world view, if it is analyzed closely, can be thought of
as a condensed version of, and guide, to that society’s values. In conjunction
with their basic view of what the universe is, a society’s people design
systems of values and attached behaviors that they teach to their children as
being good and right. The word right
has two meanings here: right in the sense of accurately describing things in
the material world (“Is that thermometer right?”) and right in the sense of
being moral (“Do the right thing.”). Upon close analysis, this ambiguity is not
ambiguous at all. We want deeply to believe that our idea of moral rightness is
consistent with the way the universe really works.
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