Yah, dann habe Ich wichtiges Weltschmerz gehabt!

Ed
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Cordell, Arthur: ECOM 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; futurework 
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Sunday, September 02, 2007 10:52 PM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] [Ottawadissenters] Viruses anybody?


  Weltschmerz -- sadness on thinking about the evils of the world 

  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weltschmerz

  might also be relevant.


  arthur 



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  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Ed Weick
  Sent: Sun 9/2/2007 10:12 AM
  To: futurework
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: [Ottawadissenters] Viruses anybody?


  I've been doing something dangerous, going through stuff I had stored on old 
floppies and zips to see if anything of interest is on them.  I do find the odd 
thing, like the following which I wrote in 1996 and sent to the Futurework 
list, a very good list at the time.  Read it if you feel like it, but delete if 
don't.  Even though I call it a short essay, it's quite long.

  I don't quite recall where I got the idea of viruses, but it wasn't from 
Richard Dawkins.  I hadn't yet encountered his viruses of the mind or "memes".  

  Ed

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  A Short Essay on Viruses
  Some recent postings have raised the fascinating topic of the effect of 
disease on history. Recurrent pandemics such as bubonic plague, cholera, typhus 
and influenza have played an enormous role in defining the course taken by 
peoples for several centuries thereafter. Syphilis has brought dynasties to 
ruin. The viruses or bacteria which were at issue affected physical health. I 
would suggest that another type of virus, a intellectual one, has been at least 
equally potent in shaping human history. As an entity, we can think of it as 
something like a computer virus - as something which does not take the shape of 
an organism, but which is transmittable from person to person nevertheless.

  What does this intellectual virus do? Just as biophysical viruses sicken the 
body, it sickens and immobilizes the mind. It numbs and dulls human potential, 
and plunges people into states of pessimism, meanness and despair.

  The impact of this virus varies from civilization to civilization, and from 
era to era. The Aztecs have recently been mentioned on this list. Some years 
ago I did some reading on the Aztecs, and one of the things I recall is that, 
for many years before the coming of Cortez, the Aztecs were in a state of deep 
pessimism. They felt their world to be ending. I believe it had something to do 
with their calendar, a human invention which they invested with cosmic powers. 
When Cortez finally came along, they were immobilized to the point of not being 
able to do anything about him and his small army. However, the facts of 
smallpox and rebellion by peoples the Aztecs had subjugated did not help.

  Another example of the virus comes from the 11th to 14th Century Europe.  Led 
by activist thinkers such as Peter Abelard, and fed by the accessibility of 
Arabic and Classical material, the 11th Century witnessed an increasing 
secularization of the Christian world, and an explosion of initiatives toward a 
more rational theology, which laid the foundations for the development of 
science. Heretical liberally-religious groups such as the Waldensians and 
Cathers sprang up and found fertile ground among intellectuals who had been 
long dominated by oppressive Catholicism. It was not long, however, before the 
virus set in. The very foundations of the Church were threatened. The Church 
moved to suppress the liberalizing influences in whatever way seemed necessary. 
People such as Abelard were isolated. Heretics were burned at the stake. 
Finally, in 1277, the Pope issued a statement on where the church stood on the 
matter of faith versus reason. If you wanted openness and reason, you could not 
have it in the Church and the Church was very much in control.

  Now, some will argue that there was no virus at all, that all that happened 
was that the dominant power structure, the Catholic Church, had been challenged 
and had retaliated. But that was not all that there was to it. The drama played 
itself out over two Centuries, and it would appear that for much of that time 
the Church had been tolerant of what was going on, and even encouraging. Anselm 
of Canterbury, 1030-1109, who lived at the beginning of the so-called "Twelfth 
Century Awakening", was an early rationalist. Peter Abelard, 1079-1142, was 
condoned by the Church for a considerable part of his life as a teacher. But 
what gradually happened was something of a slow "gathering of dark forces", to 
use a Tolkien-like image.

  The growing virus of the intellect was aided and abetted by natural disasters 
and real biophysical viruses which reinforced the vengeful power of God. 
Between 1315-1317 Europe was devastated by a "hideous famine".  Adverse trends 
in climate which had begun in the 13th Century culminated in appalling weather 
conditions which led to an "medieval economic depression" which continued to 
have effects to the beginning of the Renaissance. And, of course, 1347 brought 
the Black Death. 

  What does all this have to do with the world of today? Some years ago, 
Barbara Tuchman held the world of the 14th Century up to us, proposing that in 
it we would see a distant mirror image of ourselves. We tend to forget her 
lesson. The 14th Century saw the closing down of an earlier two-century period 
of enlightenment; the 20th Century may be witnessing the closing down of the 
one which has now run for some two centuries, beginning, I would propose, with 
the American and French Revolutions.  

  Though it saw war and mass exterminations, this period also witnessed the 
growth of democratic institutions, the spread of "universals" (education, 
health, social security), the humanization of capital, the growing power of 
labour, and rising standards of living. However, this may have begun to end 
sometime during the past fifty years. The past few decades, since World War II, 
have been a period of economic florescence and gradual decline. The 1950s, 
1960s, and early 1970s, were the perhaps the most prosperous years of human 
history. It was not only the advanced world which prospered and grew, but the 
underdeveloped world witnessed the Green Revolution and industrialization which 
showed every promise of bettering human life. Since then, productivity has 
fallen, unemployment has grown, and poverty has again become part of the 
accepted commonplace. The Green Revolution, based on chemical fertilizers and 
pesticides, has turned out to be green more in illusion than in fact, and 
industrialization in the NICs is raising the prospect of massive environmental 
damage.

  So, these are real problems. What do they have to do with my virus? I would 
suggest the following: along with the deterioration of the economy, the falling 
productivity of capital (except, it would seem, the productivity of finance 
capital), the mounting debts of governments, and growing unemployment, has come 
a pessimistic meanness - a gathering, once again, of the Tolkien-like "dark 
forces". It is hard to tell how this began, but someone, some group, somewhere 
may have started it and it has since spread to become the dominant thought mode 
of our civilization. During the 1950s, we placed our faith in education and 
growth, and during the 1960s in flower-power and the rebuilding of society 
along more humane lines. Since then, we have been running for cover, striving, 
as John Ralston Saul has so ably pointed out, to hide within corporate groups 
and exclude others by speaking specialized languages that are not even 
understood by ourselves.

  Whether or not there really is a virus behind all of this does not matter.  
My point is that, as in the 14th Century, we have once again become a society 
of despair. Like the Aztecs waiting for, and dreading, the return of 
Quetzalcoatl, we are immobilized. Our governments, unable to do anything 
positive, are doing every negative thing they can - cutting, hacking and 
lacerating all in the name of satisfying our dour lust for leanness and 
meanness. A whole culture of consultants, like an austere medieval priesthood, 
has grown up around re- engineering and lean production - squeezing more work 
out of those lucky enough to retain their jobs and getting rid of 
("terminating") all others.

  How do we get out of this? Must we again endure two centuries of purging and 
self- flagellation before a new renaissance? Or can we come to recognize that 
many problems are of our own making and refuse to become victims of the virus 
of despair? How, in place of universal pessimism and lost hope, do we promote 
the idea that we can regain control? I believe that the answers cannot come 
from society, or, as some appear to believe, from a technology such as the 
internet. They must come from ourselves, each and every one of us. It would 
seem that the most important thing is to become skeptical of everything, 
including popular scapegoats and remedies.

  Is it really the TNCs, computers and robotics that are shafting us? If so, 
what countervailing powers do we have? If not, find the real causes.  Perhaps 
it is ourselves, burying our heads in the sand and getting our asses kicked. Is 
it government? Well, in democracies, those who govern are accessible, and if 
they are not, storm the barriers and make them so. They are our servants, not 
our masters. 

  But perhaps it really is ourselves. We don't like to think that it is, so we 
look around for others to blame for having done this to us, or perhaps for a 
virus. Having quoted him once, I will quote my old friend Pogo Possum again 
because he may be right: "We have seen the enemy and he is us."

  Ed Weick



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