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THE FALL by Steve Taylor...Chapter 1What's Wrong with Human Beings?
If there are any aliens who've been observing the course of human history over the last few thousand years they might reach the conclusion that human beings are the product of a scientific experiment which went horribly wrong. Perhaps, they might hypothesise, other alien beings chose the earth as the site for their experiment to try to create an ideal living being, with amazing powers of intelligence and ingenuity. And create this living being they did - but perhaps they didn't get the balance of chemicals exactly right, or perhaps some of their laboratory equipment broke down half way through, because although the creature did possess amazing intelligence and ingenuity, it also turned out to be a kind of monster, with defects which were just as great as (or even greater than) its abilities. Imagine if you had to draw up a 'balance sheet' for the human race, listing our positive achievements on side of the paper and our failures and problems on the other. On the 'plus' side there would be the amazing scientific and technological feats which have made us the most successful species in the history of the earth. The advances of modern medicine, for example, which have doubled our life span, massively reduced infant mortality rates, controlled ailments which made life a misery in previous times (such as toothache, deafness or short-sightedness), and eliminated or controlled diseases which killed our ancestors, such as smallpox or tuberculosis. Then there are our feats of engineering and building - 100 storey buildings, aeroplanes, space travel, tunnels underneath the sea - and the incredible advances of modern science, which have enabled us to understand the physical laws of the universe, how life has evolved, to uncover the chemical structure of living beings and the physical structure of matter. The 'plus' side would also include the magnificent achievements of human creativity. The symphonies of Mahler or Beethoven, the songs of the Beatles or Bob Dylan, the novels of Dostoyevsky or D.H. Lawrence, the poems of Wordsworth or Keats, the paintings of Van Gogh - in their own way, all these are just as impressive (if not more so) as any great building or scientific discovery. The wisdom and insight which great philosophers and psychologists have given us would be there too, which have helped us to understand our own psyche, and our predicament as conscious living beings. And if, as some scientists believe, the only real purpose of life - for all living beings - is to survive and reproduce, then the human race has been massively successful in this regard too. Countless species have become extinct - according to some estimates, only 1% of the species which have ever lived on earth are still in existence today. But 2 million years after its emergence, the human race is not only still in existence, but has massively increased in number. 10,000 years ago the world's population was only 10 million; now there are more than six billion people in the world. However, it seems to be a law of nature that great development in one area is offset by a lack of development in another. Great talent always seems to be balanced by great deficiency. Think of the great artists, like Van Gogh or Beethoven, who paid for their genius with mental instability, depression and a lack of social skills. Or think of the archetypal absent-minded scientist who forgets to tie his own shoelaces and can't remember his grandchildren's names. But the best illustration of this law isn't any individual human being but our species as a whole - because the 'bright' side of the human race's achievements is balanced by a devastating and depressing dark side. The Dark Side of Human History - WarAs well as being the most successful species in the history of the earth, the human race has been by far the most destructive and violent. It's impossible to read any history book - dealing with any period of history over the last five thousand years
- without being shocked by what the historian Arnold Toynbee called
'the horrifying sense of sin manifest in human affairs.' For most historians, history begins with the civilisations of Egypt and Sumer, which emerged at around 3500 BC. And from that point on, right until the present day, history is little more than a catalogue of endless wars. Conflicts over boundaries, raids to win slaves or victims for sacrifice, invasions to win new territory or increase the glory of the empire…In fact these outward reasons for fighting aren't so significant, since the real cause of it all is the inner need which human beings have always had for conflict. The first is that war is completely unknown amongst the rest of the animal kingdom. Apart from gorillas and chimpanzees (who occasionally raid other groups - although even they are nowhere near as 'war-like' as human beings) fighting between different groups of animals never occurs. As J.M.G. Van der Dennen writes in his book The Origins of War, for example, 'Genocide, genocidal warfare, massacres, cruelty and sadism are…virtually absent in the animal world'. Apart from the killing of prey and the occasional practice of infanticide, the only type of violence which occurs amongst animals is what Van der Dennen calls 'ritualised interindividual agonistic behaviour' - in other words, aggression between the members of groups, usually connected to dominance or mating issues. But even here, actual fighting is quite rare. In fact most animals go to great lengths to avoid fighting. As the zoologist Glenn Weisfeld notes, 'The animal usually threatens its opponent intiially, as by hissing, vocalising, teeth-baring…Attack comes as a last resort.' And even if fighting does take place, animals also have 'appeasement signals', or displays of submission (such as when a dog roles over), which abruptly end the fight before any killing occurs. Human beings are one of the very few species who do not have these instinctive inhibitions against killing, and the only species which practises collective aggression and attempted conquest of other groups. The second reason is that, far from being 'as old as humanity', war is actually a relatively recent (at least in terms of the whole history of our species) historical development. There is still a general assumption that early human beings were primitive 'savages' who were much more aggressive and war-like that modern human beings - but archaeological and ethnographic evidence which has accumulated over the last few decades has now established that this isn't true. There's now a general agreement amongst scholars that so-called 'primitive' human beings were free from inter-group aggression and also much of the 'interindividual' aggression which Van der Dennen speaks of. Van der Dennen examined the data on over several hundred 'primal' peoples and found that the majority of them were 'highly unwarlike', with 'war reported as absent or mainly defensive', while the others only had 'allegedly mild, low-level and/or ritualised warfare.' While another scholar, the anthropologist R. Brian Ferguson, has written that, 'the global pattern of actual evidence indicates that war as a regular pattern is a relatively recent development in human history, emerging as our ancestors left the simple, mobile hunter-gatherer phase.' As we'll see later, the 'age of war' only seems to have begun at around 4000 BCE. Since then, however, as if to make up for lost time, human beings have turned large parts of this planet's surface into a constant battleground. Historians have calculated that until the 19th century CE, European countries were at war either one or more of their neighbours for an average of nearly every second year. Between 1740 and 1897, for example, there were 230 wars and revolutions in Europe. Warfare actually became slightly less frequent during the 19th and 20th centuries, but this was only because of the awesome technological power which nations could now utilise, which meant that wars were over quicker. In actual fact the death toll from wars rose sharply. Whereas only 30 million people died in all the wars between 1740 and 1897, about 8 and a half million people died in the First World War alone (estimates range from 5 million to 13 million), and another 50 million during the five years of the Second World War. And of course, at the same time as war between different human groups, there has always been conflict within individual groups. Internal conflict has been as rife as external. Members of the ruling classes have continually battled with one another for power, religious groups have continually fought against one another, and oppressed peasants have frequently rebelled against the ruling classes. The Roman Empire was so riddled with in-fighting that to become emperor was practically to condemn yourself to a premature - and usually a terrible - death. Of the 79 emperors, 31 were murdered, 6 were forced to kill themselves, and several more disappeared under suspicious circumstances after feuds with enemies. At the same time historians have estimated that in medieval China there was a peasant revolt almost every year, while one sixty year period of Russian history (1801-1861) witnessed 1,467 of them. PatriarchyThere are, I believe, three main characteristics of human societies throughout recorded history (although, as we'll see later, there were peoples in some parts of the world who this doesn't apply to). War is the first of these; the second is patriarchy, or male domination. Feminist readers might already have objected to my statement that 'the human race' has always waged war. In actual fact only half the human race has waged war, since war has always been an almost exclusively male occupation. And in a sense men have always fought against women too. As well as being a catalogue of endless wars, the last few thousand years of history have been a story of continuing brutal oppression of women by men. It has been suggested (by the sociologist Steven Goldberg, for example, in his book The Inevitability of Patriarchy) that patriarchy - or the dominance of men over women - is inevitable too, because of the higher levels of testosterone which men have, which make them much more aggressive and competitive than women. But in actual fact, again, this view is contradicted by the fact that patriarchy is a relatively recent historical development. As we'll see, early human societies - and many 'primal' peoples who survived until recent times - were not dominated by men; women had equal status and equal rights. Like war, patriarchy only seems to appear in history at around 4000 BCE. From that point on, however, for many human groups the status of women has been only a little higher than that of slaves. In almost every society in Europe, the Middle East and Asia, women were not able to hold any positions of authority, or to have any influence over the political, religious and cultural lives of their cultures. It was taken for granted that they weren't fit to, since they were, in the words of the misogynistic philosopher Schopenhauer, 'childish, foolish and short-sighted…something intermediate between the child and the man.' In many countries, women could not own property or inherit their family's land or wealth. In fact they were often treated as mere property themselves. In some countries they could be 'confiscated' by money lenders or tax collectors to help settle debts (this was, for example, common in Japan from the 7th century CE onwards). In ancient Assyria during the 3rd millennium BCE, cases of rape would be settled by handing over the wife of the rapist to the husband of his victim, to do as he desired. And most gruesomely of all, some cultures practised what anthropologists have called 'ritual widow murder' (or 'ritual widow suicide'), when women would be killed (or kill themselves) shortly after the deaths of their husbands. In some parts of India this practice continued into the twentieth century, where it was known as suttee. The wives of Brahmin (or high caste) men would throw themselves - or else be thrown - on to their husbands' funeral pyres. It continued until recent times in China too, where women would hang themselves or cut their throats. In addition to this institutionalised oppression, women have continually been subjected to actual physical violence. In many cultures female adultery, sex before marriage and abortion were punishable by death. In China women were permanently deformed and disabled by having their feet bound, party because men considered this erotic and partly because, as one Confucian scholar wrote, it would
'prevent barbarous running around'. Islamic law allowed a husband to beat his wife if she disobeyed him, and wife-beating appears to have been common everywhere, and even to have been regarded as necessary. Women were seen as emotional and undisciplined creatures who needed physical violence to learn self-control. Social StratificationIt's not simply a question of men dominating and oppressing women though. Men have always dominated and oppressed each other too, of course. The third main characteristic of human societies over the last few thousand years has been the massive inequality which has always filled them, and the rigid classes and castes which have existed, with vastly different degrees of wealth and status. Once again, as we'll see later, inequality and social oppression seem to have been absent from the earliest human societies. But since around 4000 BCE, history has also been the story of the brutal oppression of the great mass of human beings by a tiny privileged minority. One of the world's first 'class systems' was developed by a people called the Indo-Europeans - the ancestors the Romans, Greeks, Celts and most modern Europeans and Americans). By the time they appeared in the Middle East and Central Asia in the fourth millennium BCE, they had already divided themselves into three classes: the priesthood, the warriors and rulers, and the producers of economic wealth (which included merchants, farmers and craftsmen). And as they migrated into new lands and conquered the peoples who inhabited them, they added a new class to their social structure, consisting of the peoples they conquered, and who from that point on would be ruthlessly oppressed and exploited by them. A similar social system developed in ancient Sumer in the third millennium BC. The majority of property was owned by a small number of men (women weren't allowed to own any, of course), and a class system developed in which, as the historian Harriet Crawford writes, the royal family and the priests, 'controlled large numbers of men and women who worked for wages of food and other necessities and who do not seem to have been free to move away, nor did they own any land of their own.' A similar social structure to this has operated throughout Europe, the Middle East and Asia for most of our history. This tiny privileged minority might only make up 1 or 2% of a country's population, and yet own most of the country's wealth and land, and have complete control over political, economic and legal decisions. According to the sociologist Gerhard Lenski the rulers and governing classes of what he calls 'advanced agrarian societies' - which dominated Europe, Asia and the Middle East from around 1000 BCE to the 19th century CE - typically had an income of more than half of their whole country's income. In England at the turn of the 13th century, for example, the average income of nobles was roughly 200 times that of an ordinary peasant, while the king's was 24,000 times as much. Similarly, in China in the 19th century, the average income of a member of the governing class was 25 times higher than an ordinary person's, although in some cases in was 10,000 times higher. And in addition to owning most of their countries' land and wealth, the governing classes often actually owned the peasants who they dominated. This system of 'serfdom' was common throughout Europe - especially Eastern Europe and Russia - and meant that the great mass of people were effectively slaves, who couldn't marry or even leave the estate without their landowner's permission. In 19th century Russia, for example, the Czar owned over 27 million serfs, while noblemen sometimes owned as many as 300,000. Serfs could be called up for war at any time, leaving their farms to rot and their families to starve. Many landowners made use of what historians euphemistically call le droit du seigneur - their 'right' to have sex with any of their Serfs' brides on the wedding night. (The idea was that the 'seigneur' would take the bride's virginity before the husband, of course, but we can probably suppose that, at least in some cases, the husbands had already done this before marriage.) But even when peasants were free and owned their own land, their situation was usually little better. Landowners exploited them so brutally, with high rents, high taxes, massive interest rates, tithes, fines and compulsory
'gifts', that, according to Lenski's estimates, they were forced to give away at least half
- and sometimes much more - of the value of the goods they produced. As a result, while their masters were living lives of luxury and leisure, peasants lived lives of abject poverty and squalor, and often starved. And all of this was only possible because, because, in the same way that many men didn't consider women to be truly human, the governing classes saw their subjects as barbaric subhuman creatures who didn't deserve empathy or equality. Legal documents from medieval England, for example, actually refer to peasants' children as his 'brood' or 'litter', while there are estate records from Europe, Asia and America in which peasants are listed in the same category as livestock. What's wrong with human beings? These kinds of social pathology are so familiar to us that it's difficult to appreciate how strange and even insane they might appear to an impartial observer. After all, why should human history be such a terrible saga of violence and oppression? Why should human beings have this insatiable need to create conflict and to dominate and oppress one another? And why, as a result, should the lives of almost all the human beings who have lived over the past few thousand years have been so terrible, so full of suffering, misery and deprivation? Was life really meant to be as terrible as this? It's not surprising that some philosophers have concluded that, in the words of Socrates, 'it is better never to have been born', or that, in the words of the Buddha, 'life is suffering'. It's also not surprising the human beings who endured these terrible living conditions consoled themselves in a belief that it was all just a prelude to a glorious eternal life where they would be completely free of the problems which afflicted them here. The Dark Side of the Human PsycheBut even all this - terrible enough though it is in itself - is only half of the story. In fact, to be more precise, it's only the external half. So far we've been dealing with what you could call 'social suffering', which human beings inflict on one another. But there is another terrible price which the human race seems to have paid for its intelligence and creativity. This is a second kind of suffering, which comes from inside us: our psychological, or psychic, suffering. This is such a normal part of our experience that we usually don't realise it's there. But in its own way it's just as dangerous as warfare or social oppression. In fact in a sense it's actually more dangerous than them, since to a large extent - as we'll see later in this book - it actually produces these external problems. The aliens who are observing us have probably noticed that that there seems to be 'something wrong' with human beings as individuals too. Why do human beings seem to find it so difficult to be happy? they might ask themselves. Why do so many of them seem to suffer from different kinds of psychological malaise - e.g. depression, drug abuse, eating disorders, self-mutilation - or else spend so much time oppressed by anxieties, worries and feelings of guilt or regret, and negative emotions like jealousy and bitterness? Or more generally, why do some many of them seem to find it impossible to rest in a state of contentment, to strive for happiness and never find it, and feel a general sense of being 'let down' by life, as if the world has cheated them in some way? Animals don't appear to have problems like these. So far as we can tell, they experience a kind of inner harmony and wholeness. They don't commit suicide (except in certain instances of over-population), take drugs or mutilate themselves. They don't even appear to suffer from boredom (if they did cats and dogs wouldn't find it so easy to sit in front of the fire doing nothing all day), and don't spend time worrying about the future or feeling guilty about the past. As we'll see later, there's also some evidence that early human beings, and native peoples who have survived until recent times, had a more unified and peaceful kind of 'psyche', and do seem to have been much closer to contentment than modern human beings. But at a certain point - and again, my guess is that this happened at around 4000 BCE - a giant transformation seems to have occurred. A giant can of psychological worms seems to have opened within the human mind. Symptoms of DiscontentIf they looked a little closer, our aliens would see some very compelling evidence suggesting that there is 'something wrong' with the human psyche. There seems, for example, to be a fundamental kind of restlessness inside us, which makes it impossible - or at least extremely difficult - for us to do nothing, or to be in any situation where there isn't something external there for us to focus our attention on. 350 years ago the French philosopher and mathematician Pascal wrote that 'the sole cause of man's unhappiness is that he does not know how to stay quietly in his room.' Nowadays, of course, staying in our rooms isn't so much of a problem for us, as long as we have television sets, computers or radios to give our attention to. Think about everything you did yesterday, for example. It's likely that you spent the vast majority of the time you were awake for with your attention focused outside yourself. Perhaps you read the paper or listened to the radio while you ate your breakfast, and listened to the radio in the car on your way to work (or read a newspaper on the train). For the next 8 or 9 hours your attention was mainly occupied by the tasks and chores of your job, and partly by chatting with your colleagues. Perhaps you listened to the radio again (or read the paper again) on the way home from work, and spent the evening watching TV, reading books, chatting to friends or playing sport (or combinations of these and other entertainments and activities). There were probably just a few moments when the parade of external stimuli halted and your attention wasn't occupied in this way - perhaps for ten minutes when you were waiting for your train, a few times when you were waiting for the kettle to boil or on the toilet, or ten minutes or so when you were lying in bed at night before you fell asleep. The aliens would be amazed at some of the lengths we go to to make sure we are never inactive and alone with ourselves. They would look at the housewives who vacuum their carpets, dust their ornaments and clean their windows every single morning, the rich businessmen who still work 60 hours a week even though they could have retired years ago, and the people with peculiar hobbies like trainspotting or collecting toy cars. Perhaps most of all though, they would be amazed by our habit of watching television. If we were asked, most of us would probably say that we watch television because we want to relax, to be entertained, or to be informed about the world, and it's true that to an extent television does have these functions. But it's likely that the main reason why so much many of us spend so much time watching TV is because it's the best method which anybody has yet devised of keeping our attention focused outside ourselves. Again, this way of living is so normal to us that it's easy to forget how absurd it might seem to an objective observer. Why do these human beings have to do all the time, and seemingly find it impossible just to be? the aliens might ask themselves. Why do they spend an average of 25 hours a week sitting in rooms staring at boxes with moving images on them, and try so hard to fill every other moment of their lives with activity or distraction? It's as if we're afraid of ourselves, as if there's something in our own psyche which we don't want to face. And this fear certainly isn't groundless. There are some situations in our lives where it becomes very difficult for us to keep our attention focused outside ourselves, and when we suffer greatly as a result. This is one of the reasons why unemployment can have a terrible effect on people, making them feel frustrated and depressed. It's one of the reasons why retired people often have problems adjusting to their new lives, and lose the 'will to live'. It's also probably the main reason people like pop stars or film stars, whose professions involve a great deal of inactivity or who have become so wealthy that they don't need to work, are so prone to drug problems and other kinds of psychological malaise. All of these people are denied the eight or nine hours per day of automatic distraction and activity which a job provides. As a result their attention turns in on themselves, and they seem to confront a kind of fundamental disharmony or dissatisfaction in their psyche. Similarly, studies by the American psychologist Mihaly Csiskzentmihali have shown that, for people who live alone and don't go to church, Sunday mornings are the unhappiest time of the week. This fits with the strange fact that, from Freud onwards, psychologists have noted that Sunday morning is the 'optimum' time for nervous breakdowns. We can presume that this is because Sunday morning is the time of least activity and least distraction during our weekly routines, when there is less than usual opportunity to keep our attention fixed outside ourselves. Or as Csikszentmihalyi writes, 'with no demands on attention, [people] are unable to decide what to do. The rest of the week psychic energy is directed by external routines...But what is one to do on Sunday morning, after breakfast, after having browsed through the papers?'
This wouldn't be so much of a problem if possessions and status could actually satisfy us, if we could achieve a certain amount of success and wealth and then say to ourselves
'Great, I'm happy now, I'll stay like this for the rest of my life'. Part of the problem is that many of us are never satisfied with our lives as they are, and live in a permanent state of wanting. A new car or a new house satisfies you for a short while, but then discontent arises again and you want another car with a sun roof or to add a swimming pool and a Jacuzzi to your house. You might feel satisfied for a short while when you become the manager of your company, when your first novel is published or when your song is played on the radio, but then the glow of ego-satisfaction fades and you start to hanker after a higher level of success. And this never-ending cycle of wanting takes place in other areas of our lives too. Many of us feel an almost constant desire to change our lives in some way
- to get a better job, find a new partner, live in a different house in a new area, improve your appearance etc. However, whenever any of these desires is realised, a new one takes its place almost straight away. The Root CauseThis list of problems from the minus side of the human race's balance list aspects is by no means exhaustive. As we'll see later, there are other kinds of 'social suffering' besides the three major ones I've mentioned: for example, the hostile guilt-ridden attitude to the human body and sex which has run through the last few thousand years of history, and the sense of alienation from - and the desire to dominate - nature. I also haven't even mentioned a giant problem which stems from this attitude to nature, and which is perhaps the most convincing piece of evidence that there is
'something wrong' with us: namely, our destruction of the environment. I'm not going to go into detail here, since the details are depressingly familiar to all of us, but perhaps, from the point of view of an objective observer, nothing would seem as insane as the way in which we are damaging and slowly destroying the life support systems of this planet. It's my intention in this book to show that this latter scenario is the true one, and that there really was a point in history when something 'went wrong' with human beings. The amazing thing is that, although at first they might not seem to be connected (especially the social problems and the psychological ones), all of the problems I've dealt with in this chapter can be traced back to the same fundamental cause. And in fact this is even true of human beings' positive achievements as well, our creativity, ingenuity and technological and scientific prowess. The 'plus' and 'negative' sides of the human race's balance sheet are the positive and negative effects of the same phenomenon: namely, the event which I will later refer to as 'The Ego Explosion', but which is more commonly known as 'The Fall'.
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