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Man,
the Center of the Universe
Civilization
has helped most of mankind to change from ignorance, undernourishment,
and filth to education, at least relative abundance, and sanitation.
That these changes are to the good is unquestionable. Yet, in the
process of change man has also lost and failed to recapture some
things of inestimable value.
Man
no longer enjoys the certitude that he stands at the center of a
universe created especially for his sake or the twin certitude that
this universe is presided over by a Power that can be implored or
propitiated and which cares for man, individually and collectively.
Copernicus
and Galileo suddenly broke the news that the world does not revolve
around man but man, instead, revolves around the world. And in this
world, vast and merciless instead of snug and familiar, man is incidental
and almost superfluous. The feeling of schism between man and nature
was expressed with unsurpassed poignancy by Pascal (16231662):
When
I consider the short duration of my life, swallowed up in the eternity
before and after, the little space which I fill, and even can see,
engulfed in the infinite immensity of spaces of which I am ignorant,
and which know me not, I am frightened, and am astonished at being
here rather than there; for there is no reason why here rather than
there, why now rather than then. . . . The eternal silence of these
infinite spaces frightens me.
Attempts
have been made to relieve mans alienation from the world he
inhabits. Descartes thought that while animals were machines man
possessed an immortal soul; Locke pointed out, however, that there
is nothing in mans mind that did not enter there via the sense
organs.
Romantics revolted against the tyranny of mechanistic science, trusting
the poets inspiration more than the scientists plodding
toil; but it was physics, not poetry, that led to the industrial
revolution, to the abundance of material goods, and eventually to
the frightening power of atomic energy. Nothing succeeds like success,
and the man in the street became convinced that material power is
to be admired above intellectual power.
To
many Darwin seemed to have delivered the heaviest blow, making the
schism in mans soul irreparable: far from the world having
been made for man, man himself proved to be merely one of some two
million biological species, a result of material processes of a
rather unedifying sort, called struggle for existence and survival
of the fittest, and a relative of creatures as disreputable as monkeys
and apes. With Freud the depreciation of the human condition reached
the lowest level. Freud mocked mans pretensions to spirituality,
by denying him not only spirituality but rationality as well.
The
most important point in Darwins teachings was, strangely enough,
overlooked. Man has not only evolved, he is evolving. This is a
source of hope in the abyss of despair. In a way Darwin has healed
the wound inflicted by Copernicus and Galileo. Man is not the center
of the universe physically, but he may be the spiritual center.
Man and man alone knows that the world evolves and that he evolves
with it
Teilhard
de Chardin saw that the evolution of matter, the evolution of life,
and the evolution of human beings are integral parts of a single
and coherent history of the whole universe
He chose to designate
the direction in which evolution is going as The Point Omega.
This is
a
harmonized collectivity of consciousnesses, equivalent to a kind
of superconsciousness. The Earth is covering itself not merely by
myriads of thinking units, but by s single continuum of thought,
and finally forming a functionally singe Unit of Thought of planetary
dimensions
Such grand conceptions are patently undemonstrable by scientifically
established facts. They transcend cumulative knowledge; it is sufficient
that this one is not contradicted by this knowledge. To modern man,
so forlorn and spiritually embattled in this vast and ostensibly
meaningless universe, Teilhard de Chardins evolutionary idea
comes as a ray of hope. It fits the requirements of our time. For
Man
is not the centre of the universe as was naively believed in the
past, but something much more beautifulMan the ascending arrow
of the great biological synthesis. Man is the last-born, the keenest,
the most complex, the most subtle of the successive layers of life.
This is nothing less than a fundamental vision. And I shall leave
it at that.
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