Why Live? (Let us speculate)

The question "why should we continue living", cannot be seen as a purely philosophical question. There are interests at stake which lie on top of it, and smother it's purity. We could talk about it, but the words would have to compete with ingrained habits; the necessary connections that are created by our expectations. To truly ask the question “Why Live”' means a terrifying leap into the abyss of existential nihilism - to start again, from yourself, with nothing taken for granted.

This is why we cannot get honest answers from power. Power has at its heart only its own interests, and not your own as an individual (there is no such thing as a power which respects individuals). The question of why one should live does not even occur to one swept away by power. It knows why it should live, and that is to compete and win, to triumph, against other powers (be they natural or artificial). All other reasons to live - if indeed there are any - are subordinated to the ambitions of power. Dissidents will be tolerated so long as they do not pose a perceived threat to power. Indeed, dissidents can be part of power, themselves being defined through struggle with it. They become obsessed with it, hating it as they fight it. Dissidents may also give those within the bosom of power purpose and belonging. The people will choose a familiar dictator before they embrace the unfamiliar liberator.

Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely. Perhaps corrupt is the wrong word - power is an expression of human purity. And that purity is the purity of an answer, which strife and contest provides. Nothing provides purpose like war. The question is not whether men will war, but only by what means. Castles and fiefdoms have today become replaced with ASDAs but the tigers on the train to Canary Wharf have all been reading A Game of Thrones the last time I checked.

But do we not have a natural drive toward happiness, peace, equality? No. How can self-hatred survive in so many people and how can so many deny their own interests for others if this were the case. Why do some people have unhealable wounds? The answer is that we human beings do not have a drive toward life and happiness, we have a drive toward purpose and meaning, even if that means maintaining our own suffering and stunting ourselves. We are context machines, and we will destroy ourselves, literally our own bodies, in the name of meaning and belonging. Nowhere more will we find our answers than in the bosom of power.

Mind / Body and Life -

If we take the above seriously, then we are posed with a simple criticism. It sounds as if I am saying that there are drives and forces beyond our control; as much within us as they are without us. How can this be justified? Are we two people?

An effective argument for mind/body dualism (the type I refer to states that a human being is made up of two 'components', and that the mind is not identical to the brain) lies out there, in the real world. It is also evident in our own bodies. Mind/Body dualism can explain human hypocrisy, or paradox, more than anything. The 'physiological morality' - that is, the morality of the body, consists in drives. We are not separate from them, but nonetheless do not know where they come from, when they will come, and we cannot turn them off. If we could turn them off by force of our own will, how could we turn them back on?

Greed, war, tribalism, these things are not the result of 'moral evil' nor individual selfishness. They are the product of physiology, and the playing out of natural drives; they are often, if anything, done for the sake of love. There is such thing as a human being, a human essence, that can be discovered. It is forever changing, it is not always the same, but it is still fairly predictable.

The awakened mind rests inside this irresponsible animal. I was once criticised, rightly so, for suggesting that the human body works like machine. So we know it does not, it is a forever changing, and subject to irregularity. This does not take away the fact that it is a creature of appetite. Just because something is not set in stone, that does not mean it is completely fresh and new with every passing moment; human nature will change with evolution, but it will bring with it patterns of behaviour which indicate what it is.

If you have accepted this, then you agree that we cannot hold human beings responsible for their actions precisely because of their unchosen natural imperatives. Our natural urge is to become powerful (in relation to a weaker body), or at least reach a basic level of power (ownership of space, resources and so forth). We may not consciously do these things at the expense of those immediately around us, but when one power rises, another will often fall.

The natural imperatives for power and belonging are encouraged by customs. We are social animals, and we are never alone - individualism is impossible, and desirable only for genii and philosophers. The masses are social animals, their internal, innate drives provoked by the outside world, for even at the smallest level of biology, genes require an environment to stimulate them. And the people cannot be held responsible for wanting to be part of power, for that is how they will hoard wealth, how they will find a sense of purpose, how they will fornicate and create children - in short, how they will become a human being. As each person is not responsible for their nature, nor are they then responsible for allowing it to actualize them. This will to life is separate from the conscious will! The drive to life is not you - as in, you the entity who is reading now.
It is only Inhuman Beings who we may hold responsible, those who are aware enough and willing to shut out the drive for life and outer-power. They have existed throughout history, in the form of monks and holy people (self-denying ascetics). However, the Inhuman Beings of the past had something we do not have - the ignorance of obsessive religiosity. We are left with no such escape route from ourselves, and this is why human civilization has not progressed beyond that of a bee seeking a colourful flower, or the enchantment of a politician's lie.

To advocate a world less wretched than our own, is to be inhuman. And as an (In)Humanist, I can only welcome the destruction of natural values - which allow a man to say one thing and then do another, and get away with it so easily. Which allow such a vast disconnect between idea (mind) and action (body). Whose Justice is so utterly, blatantly non-existent. Who permits evil so long as it is evil done within a custom. Where natural instincts to protect one's own lead to favouritism and inefficiency. And where every two steps forward have been accompanied by one backwards.

So why live?

In light of this, why live? If you are of nature it will be to execute your imperatives - to breed, to play, to cling, to gather, to power, and to fulfill your appetite. If you are not, then there is no reason to live. This does not make death any more of an inviting prospect - one does not need a reason to live to continue living. It simply means that there is no actual reason for it beyond what is dreamed up, or argued for. Certainly there is no appeal to nature; the easier answer!

The reasons to live given by institutions or power are just reflections of their own goals. This is obvious insofar as they provide a final answer which falls into the boundaries of their great plans. No institution will ever entertain the notion that life is goalless - their very power lies in the ability to get people to put themselves, body and soul (as it were) into their projects.

I am apart from the human sea, and my head is above water, so it is impossible to return to the flow. Out here, there is only the stark beauty of a fleeting, decaying, imperfect world to live for, and the 'romance' of solitude. That, and the warm glow of philosophy which may be a better guide to surviving the void than any religious belief or hiding hole. Who knows.

St. Zagarus

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