Reposted from Renaissance Universal.
Steve Taylor
Let’s begin by looking at the footprints we’ve left. At first sight the human race’s future seems so bleak that a pessimist might be forgiven for believing we might not have much of a future. After all, there are certainly very good grounds for pessimism if we look at the world’s present environmental predicament. A report published last year by a number of organisations including the World Conservation Monitoring Centre at Cambridge University shows that environmental destruction is accelerating at an alarming rate. According to the report, the world’s freshwater resources are being dangerously depleted, with half of the available resources already used, and the figure increasing by 6% a year. As well, since 1970 the consumption of wood and paper has increased by two-thirds, consumption of fish has doubled so that now they are ‘in serious decline’, carbon dioxide emissions have doubled and, perhaps most worrying, the overall situation is getting worse now that many ‘developing’ countries are growing economically and beginning to deplete their own supplies of natural resources.
It’s also clear that global warming is causing serious problems to the world’s climatic system. Figures recently released by the insurance industry show that 1998 was the by far the worst year on record for natural disasters like earthquakes, hurricanes and floods. During this one year the world suffered more than twice as much damage than in the decade of the 1980s. Scientists expect the situation to get worse, with the world entering a ‘new era’ of hurricanes.
The Indo-Europeans
An observer from another planet would probably conclude that the human race has agreed to some sort of collective suicide pact, perhaps decided that life isn’t worth living after all and resolved to make themselves extinct within the next hundred years.
Or perhaps they’d look back at history and come to the conclusion that this self-extinction was more or less inevitable from the beginning. Because we can, in fact, trace the existence of the particular human group which is mainly responsible for the problems; back to around 4000 BC, for example, when a group of human beings, later called the Indo-Europeans, began to branch out from their homeland in the steppes of Southern Russia.
Most of Europe was then inhabited by Neolithic peoples who, as the archaeological evidence shows, lived in a similar way to the native inhabitants of America and Australasia. As Riane Eisler shows in her book, The Chalice and The Blade, these people were artistic, spiritual and felt a strong sense of connection to nature. Their societies were remarkably egalitarian and non-hierarchical, with women afforded the same status as men. They worshipped goddesses, and, perhaps most strikingly, there is an absence of fortifications in their settlements and of warrior images in their art, suggesting that they weren’t aggressive or war-like.
The Indo-Europeans were different. Archaeological evidence makes it clear that they were a war-like people who worshipped ‘the power of the blade’ rather than nature, whose gods were all male and whose society was rigidly hierarchical and patriarchal. And when around 4000 BC they began to enter the territories occupied by the Neolithic peoples, the outcome was probably inevitable: they ‘conquered’ the whole of Europe and parts of Asia, and the old European culture of the Neolithic peoples was replaced by a new one based on their values.
Over time these Indo-Europeans subdivided into many different groups: the Ancient Greeks, the Romans, the Celts, the Germanic peoples and many more. But no matter how culturally divergent they became they retained the basic Indo-European value system, and developed similarly patriarchal, hierarchical and war-like societies, worshipping male gods and developing a concept of nature as an enemy to be conquered and exploited.
These original Indo-Europeans are the ancestors of modern Europeans, of course, and of modern North and South Americans and Australians too. It was their development of chariots and horses as a form of transport which enabled the original Indo-Europeans to conquer old Europe, and, thousands of years later, the ship-building and sea-faring prowess of the ‘Indo-Europeans’ of western Europe enabled them to cross the oceans to distant continents. And there, of course, from the 16th century onwards, they destroyed the native American and Aborigine cultures with the same ruthlessness that their ancestors had destroyed the old European Neolithic culture, and replaced them with societies based upon the old Indo-European ‘dominator’ principles.
The Old State of Being
This suggests that there was something wrong with the Indo-European ‘state of being’ right from the beginning. Above all, what characterises the modern American or European (or the old Indo-European) mentality is a highly developed sense of ego. In contrast to native peoples like Aborigines or native Americans (and probably the Neolithic peoples) we experience ourselves as sharply defined ‘selves’ which live inside our brains and our bodies and exist in complete separation to other human beings and to nature. Because of this, we’re literally more ‘selfish’—that is, our own needs and desires are usually much more real and more important to us than the welfare of other species, the environment as a whole, or even other people. And it also means that we tend to live inside our heads instead of actually in the world. We’re so busy thinking and worrying and planning that it’s unusual for us to actually give our attention to our surroundings, which means that the natural world isn’t as real to us as it is to other peoples who haven’t got such strongly developed egos.
Perhaps the original Indo-Europeans developed this state of being because of the hostile climatic conditions in which they originated—in the steppes of southern Russia—which meant that they had to develop a certain selfishness and a competitiveness to survive, which peoples from more pleasant climates didn’t need. And we can certainly see the roots of our present environmental problems in this state of being: the lack of connection to nature and the lack of a sense of the ‘alive-ness’ of natural things, resulting in us treating nature as something ‘other’ to us which we’re entitled to conquer, abuse and exploit.
A New State of Being
Since the fundamental problem is our state of being, we need to collectively develop a new state of being to ensure our species’ survival. We need to overcome our sense of ego-separation, develop a new sense of connection to the world and a new sense of spirituality—to develop a state of being similar to that of native peoples and of the old Neolithic peoples.
This might seem another cause for pessimism. After all, how can we expect hundreds of millions of people to somehow transform themselves in this way, especially when it seems that they’ve only got a very limited amount of time to do it in? But this is one of the biggest sources of optimism in our present predicament—because a lot of evidence suggests that such a widespread transformation actually is taking place.
We can see this in the amazing growth of the ‘personal development’ movement over the last forty or so years, the massive upsurge in interest in eastern religions like Buddhism and Hinduism, spiritual practices like meditation and yoga, and in other ‘alternative’ spiritually-based practices like Reiki healing, rebirthing, Shamanism, etc. Research conducted by Peter Russell (reported in his book The Awakening Earth) showed that this interest in self-development is the fastest growing trend today, with the number of people involved in it doubling every four years.
It’s also evident in a slightly more obscure way from the increasing restlessness which seems to be spreading through our societies. More and more people are, it seems, finding themselves unable to live the ‘ordinary life’ which is expected of them, in which they’re supposed to live in exactly the same ‘life-situation’ for years on end, doing the same jobs and going through the same daily and weekly routines and restricting themselves to a narrow range of experience. There seem be an increasing number of ‘misfits’ or ‘drop-outs’, people who switch from one job to another instead of sticking to one career, who go travelling around the world, who find the routine of work too soul-destroying to put up with and resign themselves to life ‘on the dole’, or people who perhaps do live an ordinary life with jobs and mortgages but feel as if they’re trapped and ache to break free. This suggests that there’s an increasing alive-ness spreading amongst people, an increasing desire for experience and unfamiliarity, and a growing realisation that the purpose of life isn’t just to ‘get on’ in the world and to enjoy yourself through material goods and sensual pleasures.
There’s also an increasing spirit of empathy which we can see as evidence that a collective change is taking place, suggesting that people in general are becoming less selfish and separate. Studies of life in previous centuries—such as Colin Wilson’s A Criminal History of Mankind—make it clear that our ancestors were generally more cruel and indifferent to other people’s sufferings than we are. As Wilson writes, ‘Our present concern for children and animals would have struck an early Victorian as ludicrous, while Doctor Johnson would simply have condemned it as a dangerous sentimentality.’ But since then, especially over the last forty years or so, people seem to have developed a more pronounced ability to identify with and to feel for others (including other species). In recent decades this has shown itself in, for example, better treatment for disabled people, a decline in racism, an increase in vegetarianism, etc.
Morphic Resonance
It seems obvious that this change is taking place in response to the dangers we face. Perhaps it’s being caused by a deep-seated survival impulse within our collective being, or perhaps, in some mysterious way, nature herself is engineering it. After all, it’s not just a question of making ourselves an extinct species; if our ecological destruction continues it’ll have terrible consequences for all life on earth, and probably set back the process of evolution by millions of years. So perhaps the sheer catastrophic weight of the crisis has triggered a response from nature, and she’s implemented a sort of ‘check’ similar to the natural ‘checks’ which some animals species undergo when their populations grow too big.
A pessimist might say that even if all this is true it doesn’t make much difference because there’s not near enough time left for this transformation to occur. After all, the change only seems to have affected a minority of people so far, and it’s probable that if our ecological destruction continues for a few more decades it’ll already be too late.
But this is where we come in. We don’t have to just leave it to nature to spread this new state of being throughout our species, because we can, in a very real sense, help spread it ourselves. As biologist Rupert Sheldrake has shown, the changes which individual members of a species undergo affect the species as a whole. When some members of the species develop a new trait its ‘morphic resonance’ builds up, making it easier for other members of the species to develop the same trait, until eventually, when the morphic resonance has built up sufficiently, the trait is taken on by all members of the species, and becomes a part of the ‘species blueprint’ which members of the species develop from the moment of conception. So by developing ourselves spiritually and moving towards a new state of being, we’re prompting other human beings to do the same. We’re influencing them, building up the morphic resonance for this new state of being, and eventually, when a certain ‘threshold number’ of human beings have moved towards it, the state of being will become as natural to us as our present one is.
The responsibility for the human race’s future doesn’t, therefore, just lie in the hands of governments, global corporations or environmental groups; it lies with every one of us. We all have a choice to make. If you like you can forget about the future and just spend your life enjoying the spoils of capitalism, earning and spending money and trying to become more and more successful so that you can earn and spend even more, in which case you’ll be adding your signature to the human race’s death warrant. On the other hand you can make spiritual development the main purpose of your life, knowing that by changing yourself you’re helping the whole human race to change; in which case you’ll be helping to lead our species away from a catastrophic future, and towards a new harmonious one.
Steven Taylor is a writer and teacher living in Singapore. He is the author of two books, Waking Up From Sleep and Return to Happiness. He can be contacted at essytaylor@yahoo.com.