419 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
419 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
In Praise of Chaos
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by J. Orlin Grabbe
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Speech Presented at Eris Society, August 12, 1993.
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Version reprinted Liberty, April 1994.
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@1994 J. Orlin Grabbe, 1280 Terminal Way #3, Reno, NV 89502
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Internet: kalliste@delphi.com
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Introduction: The Intrusion of Eris
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Chaos has a bad name in some parts. It was chaos that
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brought us the Trojan War (Robert Graves, The Greek Myths,
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chapter 159). Eris, goddess of chaos, upset at not being invited to
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the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, showed up anyway and rolled a
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golden apple marked "kalliste" ("for the prettiest one") among the
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guests. Each of the goddesses Hera, Athena, and Aphrodite
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claimed the golden apple as her own. Zeus, no fool, appointed
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Paris, son of Priam, king of Troy, judge of the beauty contest.
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Hermes brought the goddesses to the mountain Ida, where Paris
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first tried to divide the apple among the goddesses, then made them
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swear they wouldn't hold the decision against them. Hermes asked
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Paris if he needed the goddesses to undress to make his judgment,
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and he replied, Of course. Athena insisted Aphrodite remove her
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magic girdle, the sexy underwear that made everyone fall in love
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with her, and Aphrodite retorted Athena would have to remove her
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battle helmet, since she would look hideous without it.
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As Paris examined the goddesses individually, Hera
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promised to make Paris the lord of Asia and the richest man alive,
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if she got the apple. Paris said he couldn't be bribed. Athena
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promised to make Paris victorious in all his battles, and the wisest
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man alive. Paris said there was peace in these parts. Aphrodite
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stood so close to Paris he blushed, and not only urged him not to
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miss a detail of her lovely body, but said also that he was the
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handsomest man she had seen lately, and he deserved a woman as
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beautiful as she was. Had he heard about Helen, the wife of the
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king of Sparta? The goddess promised Paris she would make
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Helen fall in love with him. Naturally Paris gave the apple to
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Aphrodite, and Hera and Athena went off fuming to plot the
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destruction of Troy. That is, Aphrodite got the apple, and Paris got
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screwed.
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While the Greeks had a specific goddess dedicated to
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Chaos, early religions gave chaos an even more fundamental role.
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In the Babylonian New Year festival, Marduk separated Tiamat,
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the dragon of chaos, from the forces of law and order. This primal
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division is seen in all early religions. Yearly homage was paid to
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the threat of chaos's return. Traditional New Year festivals
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returned symbolically to primordial chaos through a deliberate
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disruption of civilized life. One shut down the temples,
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extinguished fires, had orgies and otherwise broke social norms.
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The dead mingled with the living; Afterward you purified yourself,
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reenacted the creation myth whereby the dragon of chaos was
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overthrown, and went back to normal. Everyone had fun, but
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afterward order was restored, and the implication was it was a good
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thing we had civilization, because otherwise people would always
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be putting out the fires and having orgies.
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Around us in the world today we see the age-old battle
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between order and chaos. In the international sphere, the old
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order of communism has collapsed. In its place is a chaotic matrix
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of competing, breakaway states, wanting not only political freedom
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and at least a semi-market economy, but also their own money
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supplies and nuclear weapons, and in some cases a society with a
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single race, religion, or culture. Is this alarming or reassuring? We
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also have proclamations of a New World Order, on one hand,
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accompanied by the outbreak of sporadic wars and US bombing
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raids in Africa, Europe, and Asia, on the other.
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In the domestic sphere we have grass roots political
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movements, such as the populist followers of H. Ross Perot
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challenging the old order imposed by the single-party Democratic-
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Republican monolith. We have a President who is making a
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mockery out of the office, and a Vice President who tells us we
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should not listen to any dissenting opinions with respect to global
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warming. Is this reassuring or alarming?
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In the corporate-stateist world of Japan we see the current
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demolition of the mythic pillars of Japanese society: the myth of
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high-growth, the myth of endless trust between the US and Japan,
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the myth of full employment, the myth that land and stock prices
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will always rise, and the myth that the Liberal Democratic Party
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will always remain in power. Is the shattering of these myths
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reassuring or alarming?
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In fact, wherever we look, central command is losing
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control. Even in the sphere of the human mind we have increasing
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attention paid to cases of multiple personality. The most recent
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theories see human identity and the human ego as a network of
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cooperative subsystems, rather than a single entity. (Examples of
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viewpoint are found in Robert Ornstein, Multimind, and Michael
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Gazzanaga, The Social Brain.) If, as Carl Jung claimed, "our true
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religion is a monotheism of consciousness, a possession by it,
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coupled with a fanatical denial of the existence of fragmentary
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autonomous systems," then it can be said that psychological
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polytheism is on the rise. Or, as some would say, mental chaos. Is
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this reassuring or alarming?
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Myth of Causality Denies Role of Eris
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The average person, educated or not, is not comfortable
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with chaos. Faced with chaos, people begin talking about the fall
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of Rome, the end of time. Faced with chaos people begin to deny
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its existence, and present the alternative explanation that what
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appears as chaos is a hidden agenda of historical or prophetic
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forces that lie behind the apparent disorder. They begin talking
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about the "laws of history" or proclaiming that "God has a hidden
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plan". The creation, Genesis, was preceded by chaos (tohu-va-
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bohu), and the New World Order (the millennium), it is claimed,
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will be preceded by pre-ordained apocalyptic chaos. In this view of
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things, chaos is just part of a master agenda. Well, is it really the
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case there is a hidden plan, or does the goddess Eris have a non-
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hidden non-plan? Will there be a Thousand Year Reign of the
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Messiah, or the Thousand Year Reich of Adolph Hitler, or are
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these one and the same?
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People are so uncomfortable with chaos, in fact, that
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Newtonian science as interpreted by Laplace and others saw the
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underlying reality of the world as deterministic. If you knew the
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initial conditions you could predict the future far in advance. With
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a steady hand and the right cue tip, you could run the table in pool.
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Then came quantum mechanics, with uncertainty and
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indeterminism, which even Einstein refused to accept, saying "God
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doesn't play dice." Philosophically, Einstein couldn't believe in a
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universe with a sense of whimsy. He was afraid of the threatened
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return of chaos, preferring to believe for every effect there was a
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cause. A consequence of this was the notion that if you could
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control the cause, you could control the effect.
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The modern proponents of law and order don't stop with the
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assertion that for every effect, there is a cause. And they also
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assert they "know" the cause. We see this attitude reflected by
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social problem solvers, who proclaimed: "The cause of famine in
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Ethiopia is lack of food in Ethiopia." So we had rock crusades to
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feed the starving Ethiopians and ignored the role of the Ethiopian
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government. Other asserted: "The case of drug abuse is the
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presence of drugs," so they enacted a war on certain drugs which
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drove up their price, drove up the profit margins available to those
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who dealt in prohibited drugs, and created a criminal subclass who
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benefited from the prohibition. Psychologists assert: "The reason
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this person is this way is because such-and-such happened in
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childhood, with parents, or siblings, or whatever." So any
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evidence of abuse, trauma, or childhood molestation--which over
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time should assume a trivial role in one's life--are given infinite
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power by the financial needs of the psychotherapy business.
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You may respond: "Well, but these were just misidentified
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causes; there really is a cause." Maybe so, and maybe not.
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Whatever story you tell yourself, you can't escape the fact that to
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you personally "the future is a blinding mirage" (Stephen
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Vizinczey, The Rules of Chaos). You can't see the future precisely
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because you don't really know what's causing it. The myth of
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causality denies the role of Eris. Science eventually had to
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acknowledge the demon of serendipity, but not everyone is happy
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with that fact. The political world, in the cause-and-effect
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marketing and sales profession, has a vested interest in denying its
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existence.
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Approaches to Chaos
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In philosophy or religion there are three principal schools
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of thought (in a classification I'll use here). Each school is
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distinguished by its basic philosophical outlook on life. The First
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School sees the universe as indifferent to humanity's joys or
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sufferings, and accepts chaos as a principle of restoring balance.
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The Second School sees humanity as burdened down with
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suffering, guilt, desire, and sin, and equates chaos with punishment
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or broken law. The Third School considers chaos an integral part
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of creativity, freedom, and growth.
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I. First School Approach: Attempts to Impose Order Lead to
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Greater Disorder
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Too much law and order brings its opposite. Attempts to
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create World Government will lead to total anarchy. What are
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some possible examples?
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* The Branch Davidians at Waco. David Koresh's principal
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problem was, according to one FBI spokesman, that he was
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"thumbing his nose at the law". So, to preserve order, the forces of
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law and order brought chaos and destruction, and destroyed
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everything and everyone. To prevent the misuse of firearms by
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cult members, firearms were marshaled to randomly kill them. To
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prevent alleged child abuse, the forces of law and order burned the
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children to death.
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* Handing out free food in "refugee" camps in Somalia
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leads to greater number of starving refugees, because the existence
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of free food attracts a greater number of nomads to the camps, who
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then become dependent on free food, and starve when they are not
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fed.
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* States in the US. are concerned about wealth distribution.
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But, to finance themselves, more and more states have turned to
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the lottery. These states thereby create inequality of wealth
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distribution by giving away to a few, vast sums of cash extracted
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>from the many.
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The precepts of the first school find expression in a number
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of Oriental philosophies. In the view of this school, what happens
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in the universe is a fact, and does not merit the labels of "good" or
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"bad", or human reactions of sympathy or hatred. Effort to control
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or alter the course of macro events (as opposed to events in ones
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personal life) is wasted. One should cultivate detachment and
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contemplation, and learn elasticity, learn to go with the universal
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flow of events. This flow tends toward a balance. This view finds
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expression in the Tao Teh King:
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The more prohibitions you have,
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the less virtuous people will be
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The more weapons you have,
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the less secure people will be.
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The more subsidies you have,
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the less self-reliant people will be.
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Therefore the Master says:
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I let go of the law,
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and people become honest.
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I let go of economics,
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and people become prosperous.
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I let go of religion,
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and people become serene.
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I let go of all desire for the common good,
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and the good becomes common as grass.
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(Chapter 57, Stephen Mitchell translation.)
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You don't fight chaos any more than you fight evil. "Give
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evil nothing to oppose, and it will disappear by itself" (Tao Teh
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King, Chapter 60). Or as Jack Kerouac said in Dr. Sax: "The
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universe disposes of its own evil." Again the reason is a principal
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of balance: You are controlled by what you love and what you
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hate. But hate is the stronger emotion. Those who fight evil
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necessarily take on the characteristics of the enemy and become
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evil themselves. Organized sin and organized sin-fighting are two
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sides of the same corporate coin.
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II. Second School Approach: Chaos is a Result of Breaking
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Laws
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In the broadest sense, this approach a) asserts society is
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defective, and then b) tells us the reason it's bad is because we've
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done wrong by our lawless actions. This is the view often
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presented by the front page of any major newspaper. It's a
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fundamental belief in Western civilization.
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In early Judaism and fundamentalist Christianity, evil is
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everywhere and it must be resisted. There is no joy or pleasure
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without its hidden bad side. God is usually angry and has to be
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propitiated by sacrifice and blood. The days of Noah ended in a
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flood. Sodom and Gomorra got atomized. Now, today, it's the
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End Time and the wickedness of the earth will be smitten with the
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sword of Jesus or some other Messiah whose return is imminent.
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In this context, chaos is punishment from heaven. Or chaos
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is a natural degenerate tendency which must be alertly resisted. In
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the Old Testament Book of Judges, a work of propaganda for the
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monarchy, it is stated more than once: "In those days there was no
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king in Israel: every man did that which was right in his own eyes"
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(Judg. 17:6; 21:25). Doing what appeals to you was not considered
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a good idea, because, as Jeremiah reminds us "The heart [of man]
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is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked" (Jer. 17:9).
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And in the New Testament, the rabbinical lawyer Paul says
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"by the law is the knowledge of sin" (Rom. 3:20), and elsewhere is
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written, "Whososever committeth sin transgresseth also the law:
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for sin is the transgression of the law." (1 John 3:4). And,
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naturally, "the wages of sin is death" (Rom. 6:23).
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New age views of karma are similar. If you are bad, as
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somehow defined, you built up bad karma (New Age view), or else
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God later burns you with fire (fundamentalist Christian view). For
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good deeds, you get good karma or treasures in heaven. It's
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basically an accountant's view of the world. Someone's keeping a
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balance sheet of all your actions, and toting up debits or credits.
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Of course, some religions allow you to wipe the slate clean in one
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fell swoop, say by baptism, or an act of contrition, which is sort of
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like declaring bankruptcy and getting relief from all your creditors.
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But that's only allowed because there has already been a blood
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sacrifice in your place. Jesus or Mithra or one of the other Saviors
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has already paid the price. But even so, old Santa Claus is up there
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somewhere checking who's naughty or nice.
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What is fundamental about this approach is not the specific
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solution to sin, or approach to salvation, but the general pessimistic
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outlook on the ordinary flow of life. The first Noble Truth of
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Buddha was that "Life is Sorrow". In the view of Schopenhauer,
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Life is Evil, and he says "Every great pain, whether physical or
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spiritual, declares what we deserve; for it could not come to us if
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we did not deserve it" (The World as Will and Representation).
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Also in the Second School bin of philosophy can be added Freud,
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with his Death Wish and the image of the unconscious as a murky
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swamp of monsters. Psychiatry in some interpretations sees the
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fearful dragons of chaos, Tiamat, lurking down below the civilized
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veneer of the human cortex.
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The liberal's preoccupation with social "problems" and the
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Club of Rome's obsession with entropy are essentially expressions
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of the Second School view. Change, the fundamental motion of
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the universe, is bad. If a business goes broke, it's never viewed as
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a source of creativity, freeing up resources and bringing about
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necessary changes. It's just more unemployment. The
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unemployment-inflation tradeoff as seen by Sixties Keynesian
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macroeconomics is in the Second School spirit. These endemic
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evils must be propitiated by the watchful Priests of Fiscal Policy
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and the Federal Reserve, and you can only reduce one by
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increasing the other. This view refuses to acknowledge that one
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of the positive roles of the Market is as a job destroyer as well as a
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job creator.
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More generally, the second school has generated whole
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industries of "problem solvers"-- politicians, bureaucrats,
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demagogues, counselors, and charity workers who have found the
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way to power, fame, and wealth lies in championing causes and
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mucking about in other people's lives. Whatever their motivations,
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they operate as parasites and vampires who are healthy only when
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others are sick, whose well-being increases in direct proportion to
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other people's misery, and whose method of operation is to give
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the appearance of working on the problems of others. Of course if
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the problems they champion were actually solved, they would be
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out of a job. Hence they are really interested in the process of
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"solving" problems--not in actual solutions. They create chaos and
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destruction under the pretense of chaos control and elimination.
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III. Third School Approach: Chaos is Necessary for Creativity,
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Freedom, and Growth
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You find this view in a few of the ancient Greek writers,
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and more recently in Nietzsche. Nietzsche says: "One must still
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have chaos in one to give birth to a dancing star." The first
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fundamental point of view here is: Existence is pure joy. If you
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don't see that, your perception is wrong. And we are not talking
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about Mary Baker Eddy Christian Science denial of the facts. In
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this approach you are supposed to learn to alchemically transmute
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sorrow into joy, chaos into art. You exult in the random give and
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take of the hard knocks of life. It's a daily feast. Every
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phenomenon is an Act of Love. Every experience, however
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serendipitous, is necessary, is a sacrament, is a means of growth.
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"Saying Yes to life even in its strangest and hardest problems, the
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will to life rejoicing over its own inexhaustibility even in the very
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sacrifice of its highest types--that is what I called Dionysian, that
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is what I guessed to be the bridge to the psychology of the tragic
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poet. Not in order to be liberated from terror and pity, not in order
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to purge oneself of a dangerous affect by its vehement discharge--
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Aristotle understood it that way [as do the Freudians who think one
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deals with ones neuroses through one's art, a point of view which
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Nietzsche is here explicitly rejecting]--but in order to be oneself
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the eternal order of becoming, beyond all terror and pity--that joy
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which included even joy in destroying." (Twilight of the Idols).
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It is an approach centered in the here and now. You cannot
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foresee the future, so you must look at the present. But because
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"nothing is certain, nothing is impossible" (Rules of Chaos). You
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are free and nobody belongs to you. In the opening paragraphs of
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Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller says: "It is now the fall of my
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second year in Paris. I was sent here for a reason I have not yet
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been able to fathom. I have no money, no resources, no hopes. I
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am the happiest man alive."
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Your first responsibility is to take care of yourself, so you
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won't be a burden to other people. If you don't do at least that, how
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can you be so arrogant as to think you can help others? You make
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progress by adapting to your own nature. In Rabelais' Gargantua
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the Abbey of Theleme had the motto: Fay ce que vouldras, or "Do
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as you will." Rabelais (unlike the Book of Judges) treats this in a
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very positive light. The implication is: Don't go seeking after some
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ideal far removed from your own needs. Don't get involved in
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some crusade to save the human race--because you falsely think
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that is the noble thing to do--when what you may really want to do,
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if you are honest with yourself, is to stay home, grow vegetables,
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and sell them in a roadside market. (Growing vegetables is, after
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all, real growth--more so than some New Age conceptions.) You
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have no obligation under the sun other than to discover your real
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needs, to fulfill them, and to rejoice in doing so.
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In this approach you give other people the right to make
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their own choices, but you also hold them responsible for the
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consequences. Most social "problems", after all, are a function
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of the choices people make, and are therefore insolvable in
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principle, except by coercion. One is not under any obligation to
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make up for the effects of other people's decisions. If, for example,
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people (poor or rich, educated or not) have children they can't care
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for or feed, one has no responsibility to make up for their
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negligence or to take on one's own shoulders responsibility for the
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consequent suffering. You can, if you wish, if you want to become
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a martyr. If you are looking to become a martyr, the world will
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gladly oblige, and then calmly carry on as before, the "problems"
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unaltered.
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One may, of course, choose to help the rest of the world to
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the extent that one is able, assuming one knows how. But it is a
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choice, not an obligation. Modern political correctness and
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prostituted religion have tried to turn all of what used to be
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considered virtues into social obligations. Not that anyone is
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expected to really practice what they preach; rather it is intended
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they feel guilty for not doing so, and once the guilt trip is
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underway, their behavior can be manipulated for political purposes.
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What would, after all, be left for social workers to do if all
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social problems were solved? One would still need challenges, so
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presumably people would devote themselves to creative and
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artistic tasks. One would still need chaos. One would still need
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Eris rolling golden apples.
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Conclusion
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In the revelation given to Greg Hill and Kerry Thornley,
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authors of Principia Discordia, or How I Found Goddess and
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What I Did to Her When I Found Her, the goddess Eris (Roman
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Discordia) says: "I am chaos. I am the substance from which your
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artists and scientists build rhythms. I am the spirit with which your
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children and clowns laugh in happy anarchy. I am chaos. I am
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alive, and I tell you that you are free."
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Today, in Aspen, Eris says: I am chaos. I am alive, and I
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tell you that you are free.
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