Stories


From the pond they call life,
the fame they make believe,
seven billion lives ascend
asleep in their own dreams,
with the weight of life upon them,
trying their best to make amends
forever beyond their reach.

Conjecture: The moral dilemma of when/if it is right to kill another only arises in a society where the sheer weight of its population guarantees the act of murder. Conversely, the smaller the population, the less likely it is that murder will occur and hence the need for its moral argument, as it would seem absurd to kill in an environment where every individual is required to work with the group in order that the group survives.

Where the population is great, hegemony ensconced, resource capture and distribution industrialised and an economy of self-created scarcity in motion, then it will follow that the life of the individual, in such a programmed mass, is of little consequence to the whole and murder, whether by the state or an individual, will be more likely for this fact.

People will need to be convinced of the immorality (or morality when the state is the perpetrator) of the act of murder and laws imposed to control those who see through this ‘story’ and attempt it all the same.

The story given will omit any mention of population as a cause and instead will divert the reader’s attention to powers outside of their normal perception: a God, a form or an ideal. The reason for this is that the makers of the law must never be threatened, or their laws brought into question, by values arising from our direct physical relation to the world/environment about us, experiences of which are rudimentary and within the grasp of all.

When such values are realised the structure of power/control crumbles and is most likely to be replaced by another hegemony once a better ‘story’ is found, and so we witness the succession of philosophies, religions and political ism’s.

Given this set of circumstances we can use pragmatism in our daily lives to work our way through, however, we are often simply responding to ever new structures of power rather than ‘realising’ our actual relationship to our environment: our actual ‘being-in-the-world’. To put it another way: while we are busy fighting the spectacle and creating our own stories, like the one I am telling you now, we forget that we are animals preoccupied mostly with eating, defecating, sleeping, procreating and dreaming, and it is here we find the essence, eternally sought yet never to be found, hidden by ourselves.

Simon Leake

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