It should be obvious that if we are to live the good and
maximally beneficial life, we have to know who we are and what we need. Without
this knowledge, we do not know how to take care of ourselves.
If we don’t understand our car, we will destroy it. We have to know that the gas goes in the gas tank, and the water goes into the radiator and not into the gas tank. We also need to know where to find the gas pedal and where to find the brakes.
However, others deny such a thing
as “human nature.” Eric Fromm wrote this about Karl Marx:
- Marx did not believe, as do many contemporary sociologists and psychologists, that there is no such thing as the nature of man; that man at birth is like a blank sheet of paper, on which the culture writes its text. https://www.marxists.org/archive/fromm/works/1961/man/ch04.htm
According to Marx and his
followers, humanity is nothing more than a byproduct of
the economic system. Historian
Robert Royal wrote:
- The materialist view of the person – combined with the notion that humans, as material beings, can be reshaped into the New Man of the Communist dream merely by a change of their social conditions, a view still widespread today – is a falsehood that inevitably leads to awful consequences… By most credible estimates, Communist countries killed about a hundred million people in the twentieth century. (The God that did not Fail, 247)
In contrast with the materialistic
view of humanity, the better we understand humanity, the better we can serve
them. It’s like taking care of
anything. If we don’t understand our car, we will destroy it. We have to know
that the gas goes in the gas tank, and the water goes into the radiator and not
into the gas tank. We also need to know where to find the gas pedal and where
to find the brakes.
If we don’t understand our car, we will destroy it. We have to know that the gas goes in the gas tank, and the water goes into the radiator and not into the gas tank. We also need to know where to find the gas pedal and where to find the brakes.
Knowledge is necessary for the care of anything, even our
clothing and the kitchen stove. This is uncontroversial! However, when it comes
to understanding humanity and human nature, this understanding is often
overlooked, as if there is no human nature at all.
Strangely, we do not forget that our cat, parakeet, and
goldfish have their own nature and therefore require care in accordance with
their nature. We do not throw our parakeet in the fish's bow; nor do we place
our fish in a bird cage. Each creature has its own optimal environment.
However, we show even less attention to our human nature,
assuming that our individual differences represent the totality of who we are.
We encounter one example of this disregard for human nature
in the last place that we should expect it – in the study of clinical
psychology. This study has been dominated by a preoccupation with the
pathological, the human differences, not the commonalities.
Myopically, to determine what is pathological, clinical
psych has adopted a medical model. According to this model, the pathological is
what causes pain or symptomology like sores or swelling. However, when we apply
this model to psychology, whatever causes long-term pain, discomfort, or
interferes with personal fulfillment is considered pathological. Consequently,
the optimal human state is to be pain-free, without unpleasant symptoms, and to
be maximally fulfilled or happy. For most psychotherapists, the goal is to
reduce unwanted symptomology. (Just look at how they advertise their services!)
However, there is much the matter with this analysis. Pain
is also a good thing. It tells us when we have to remove our hand from a hot
stove. Likewise, guilt tells us that we might be doing something wrong. To be
without pain-receptors is to be a leper. To be without a conscience and guilt
feelings is to be a sociopath. Pain is often necessary!
This raises the questions, “What is our common human nature?
What is normalcy (if there is such a thing)? And how do we live in accordance
with our human nature?” Failing to answer these questions makes it impossible
to talk about pathology. Is it pathological to have a sensitive conscience? To
not feel bad in the context of injustice? To be concerned about what others
think of us? To live our lives for our family at the expense of our own
fulfillment?
In comparison, medical issues are relatively simple.
Sickness is something that interferes with our maximal physical functioning.
But what does it mean to be mentally sick? In order to answer this question, we
need to understand what it means to be mentally healthy – something psychology
knows little about.
At a secular discussion group, one participant stated that
our purpose is to “glorify humanity.” Central to this glorification is our
freedom of thought to question everything without any limitations, moral or
otherwise.
While I agree with many aspects of this assertion, I think
that we need to further explore what it means to be “free.” Is freedom the
absence of limitations or rules, as many are prone to believe today? Just try
to play chess with complete freedom to move our pieces any way so want and at
any time. Complete freedom represents chaos and a meaningless, unsatisfying
game of chess.
Complete freedom can also represent supreme bondage. Take
the goldfish in his very limiting fishbowl. He eyeballs the great world outside
of his bowl and concludes, “I need to be free of the limitations of this bowl.”
With a great effort, he jumps out of his bowl, flapping helplessly on the floor
below.
The goldfish had maximized his freedom within the
limitations of water. Perhaps we too need to learn about our human limitations
and to live in accordance with them. Perhaps, as with any other creature, we
were created for a specific environment or set of lifestyles that maximize our
freedom and well-being.
Let me suggest two sets of limitations within which we
should live – what we believe/think and how we act.
WHAT WE BELIEVE/THINK
Thinking accurately is essential. Our thinking must be
limited by the truth or wisdom. Our thought processes largely determine if we
are going to navigate successfully through life. If we are not accessing and
responding to accurate data, we will cash our car. As we drive, we need to know
precisely where the other cars are. Anything less will produce catastrophe.
Does this insight also pertain to the gushier aspects of our
lives? Definitely! If I think that my mailman is canvassing my house in order
to find the right occasion to kill me, this will adversely affect my feelings
towards him and my behavior.
More to the point, I used to think that others didn’t like
me and was convinced that, in order for them to like me, I had to become a
different person. Such a belief was not only inaccurate, it was also costly,
alienating me from myself and from others.
Everyone has their areas of blindness. One dear friend
believed that most women were terribly attracted to him, even those who told
him “no!” His blindness in this area proved costly, including several arrests.
Blindness is always associated with crashes, costs, and even
arrests. This means that maturity and growth must entail growth in
understanding the truth – seeing reality as it is. This realization suggests
that we are constrained by the truth of reality. While we are free to create
our own reality, to can only be done at the price of a costly collision with
reality.
This same principle applies to human nature. We might decide
that we are free to recreate ourselves – and to a certain extent, we can do so
– but there are human constraints to which we must adhere.
HOW WE BEHAVE MORALLY
In another way, we are constrained by our human nature. It
seems apparent that our human nature is also a moral nature. If we live
contrary to our moral nature, we will
crash. Of course, we can choose to live in conflict with our moral
nature, but only at great cost to ourselves.
A friend had recently confided that, as a young man, he had
become the “mascot” of some mafia-type guys. My friend now calls them
“monsters.” They had everything – power, money, respect, women – but they were
miserable. There was no joy in their lives. Why not? They were living in
opposition to their moral nature. They knew better, but they rejected this
knowledge.
Meanwhile, many studies have shown that the most satisfied
people are those who live according to what they know within themselves. They
know that being other-centered is right, and they live that way.
When I live selfishly, I feel most uncomfortable. However,
when I center myself on the needs of others, I experience the greatest joy and
peace.
What then does it mean to be free, and how do we maximize
our freedom? When we live in accordance with the truth, whether external or
internal! This means living in accordance with the limitations of our human
nature.
CAN A PILL BE INVENTED THAT WILL ALLOW US TO LIVE FREE FROM
OUR CONSTRAINING NATURE?
A pill will not enable us to circumvent reality, no more
than an anti-anxiety drug will enable us to drive blindfolded.
Even more to the point, why would anyone want to circumvent
reality? Only a superficial view of reality would cause us to ask such a
question. Some believe that reality is nothing but change. In this case, human
nature and moral reality is nothing to be reckoned with. Better to be a
trend-setter!
However, if human nature is such by the design of a superior
Intelligence who has created us with a moral nature to understand Him and to
enter into a loving and eternal relationship with Him, our nature is to be cherished
and not changed.
Yes, we are glorious, but how so? As we walk in sync with
Reality – our Creator - first in belief and then in action!
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