The larger
issue they all nibble at the edges of is, “what does it mean to share a common
humanity?” That’s the elephant in the
room. For the answer we give to that
question shapes our social policies, the forms and purposes of our governments,
and how we treat each other in a crowd at the shopping mall. Science fiction authors have been dabbling
with the question for the last 100 years, since H.G. Wells posited a “War of
the Worlds” that caused us first to think, what if others really
different from us are out there: what would the differences be? They soon
concluded, in sagas like Asimov’s Foundation Series, that the fundamental
nature of being human has nothing to do with color or shape, and is not even
defined by whether one is born or manufactured. The ultimate hero of the Asimov series is a
robot. Nor is it defined by one’s
place on the socioeconomic scale.
That issue was already being worked on, well
before the science fiction writers got hold of it. In the 19th century, the response
of de Tocqueville to Marx’s Das
Kapital was, “I detest those great theories, which by relegating human
history to the progress of one great idea, remove Man from the history of
Mankind.” In the 18th
century, the great religious reformer John Wesley wrote, “One great reason why the rich in general have so little
sympathy for the poor is because they so seldom visit them. Hence it is that .
. . one part of the world does not know what the other suffers.” Both Wesley and de Tocqueville, along with
Marx, were reflecting the recognition of a common humanity that rose above
social systems and our individual places in them. That idea had begun its
emergence ever since the Age of Exploration had brought us into contact with
peoples and cultures so unlike us that at first we doubted that we shared the
same family tree.
Now in our own confused times, we are learning new
lessons. Apart from our day-to-day
dealings with potential horrors and catastrophes like global climate change and
a Middle East-wide civil war (for that is what it is), in this still-new 21st
century we must face and conquer two great human challenges. We must learn to recognize that our true
humanity is not only a set of inborn traits, it is a learned characteristic,
shaped by our culture as much as by our genes: that is the insight we gained
from the ruminations of 20th century science fiction, and from 20th
century science. We are what we teach
ourselves and each other to be. Second,
we must learn how to reshape our politics and social institutions, including
our economics, to enable the practice of a common humanity. We can no longer ignore others who are
different, and seek to shape society to fit only our own needs. Simply the presence of global epidemics will
prevent that. Resolutions will include
day-to-day matters like appropriate business regulation and global issues like
the massive human migrations that will be a characteristic of our century. They will also involve resolving questions
about whether stratified human societies, separated between great wealth and
abject poverty will be a wave of the future or a relic of the past. We humans have come as far as we can as
isolated individuals, buffered by weapons and prosperity from the sufferings of
others. Our future will be either a
shared one, or a return to the Dark Ages of the past. The French have an old saying, that the
primary task of each generation is to save civilization from the barbarians of
the next generation. We need to get to
work.
1 comment:
good post, added you to my RSS reader.
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