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Title: Infantile Paralysis Author: Sky Hiatt Date: Spring/Summer 2007 Language: en Topics: green anarchy #24, green anarchy, biology, modernity, civilization Source: retrieved on 11 August 2018 from http://greenanarchy.anarchyplanet.org/files/2012/05/greenanarchy24.pdf Notes: from Green Anarchy #24, Spring/Summer 2004
Imagine you have ten people on Mars. They’ve just arrived and are
focused on survival. If they do survive, they’ll begin adapting and
settling in. If they stay long enough, a Martian culture will take
shape. However, after a year, our colonists will be moved to a new
planet. A year later, another relocation. And so on. After many years
continuing on like this, their cultural profile would become distorted.
Their government, if any, would be adapted to change. Their social
rituals, if any, would be adapted to change. Their art would be adapted
to change. Their language would be adapted to change. Their tools. Their
songs, their prayers. There could be a deteriorating sense of
commitment, dislike of order and sameness, fascination with novelty and
an indiscriminate belief in the value of change. Eventually, there could
be a diminished ability to understand what’s happening to them, or
interest in trying to stop it.
Chronic change is affecting the twin hemispheres of their minds,
threatening to lock them in the uprooted phase indefinitely. The brain
is an evolutionary marvel, but an eccentric one. It’s a developmental
oddity that evolved in a freakish sequence of upgrades resulting in
unheard of cognitive abilities at every stage. But it did this without
giving up any of the primordial elements. The brain stem, or reptile
brain, took its present form 500 million years ago in the Paleozoic era.
To that was added the cerebellum, also prehistoric, and the then limbic
system. The cerebrum was added 200 million years later, perhaps as an
afterthought. The twin hemispheres, the occipital, temporal, parietal
and frontal lobes they are more recent acquisitions. The brain is a
haphazard but cooperative system of ancient attics and stair-wells all
of which are physically present and obvious in modern humans. Our brain
is older than we will ever be. In fact our brain predates us.
We applied our consequent intelligence and built up a formidable
material empire unaware we were beginning to out-pace the brain’s
penchant for geologic time-scales. To maintain a body-mind harmony,
things can change but, slowly. Here on Earth, we are much worse off than
the Martian colony. Down here things change every day. Even every hour.
There’s no way of telling how many millions of years ahead of the brain
we are by now. In its sheltered, temperature regulated dome of the
skull, the brain is burning through logic-boards to keep up with us,
while other, extremely useful cognitive components are almost ossifying.
One half of the brain was designed to deal with change, newness and
novelty. This was important. The other half was wired to manage
constancy and comprehend it. This was vital. The right brain learns
quickly and ingests novelty, is novelty-seeking. The left-brain deals
with pattern recognition, cause and effect, trends, experiences,
prediction of outcomes. Probable consequences. Rational analysis.
Without constancy on an epic scale, the right brain can become
overburdened while the left side fails to thrive. It’s not a
degenerative process, but social changes could set up conditions of
self-perpetuation. Cognitive imbalance could lock humans into a cycle of
perpetual change.
The young of all species are preoccupied with novelty all the time. They
are naturally novelty-seeking and programmed to absorb everything
indiscriminately. For humans, as the child grows, the saga of novelty
dominates their world. If that world remains constant, sometime between
the ages of twenty and thirty, there will be a gradual shift to the
left-brain pattern-seeking process. This shift leads to cognitive
maturity. In his recent book, The Wisdom Paradox, Elkhonon Goldberg
calls this the first step in the wisdom phase of human cognitive
development. He defines wisdom as a fusion of intellectual, moral and
practical dimensions.
Today, in advanced industrialized countries, in any thriving city,
change is the only constant. Homes are torn down or engulfed in flames,
faces appear or disappear from the workplace, friends move away, jobs
flown to India, forests destroyed, rivers dammed, bird songs silenced.
In any given year, twenty percent of Americans move from one residence
to another. Ninety thousand disappear and are never seen again. We just
can’t keep track of them. In The Culture of Technology, Arnold Pacey
warns that such a society will advance counter-intuitively by ignoring
the complex of variables and the impact both cultural and environmental,
[shutting] down cognitive demand and shifting potential geniuses into
deskilled jobs... It’s progressive. In successive generations, the
debilitating process creates wave after wave of cognitively unhealthy
people. Here on Earth, we are exceeding our cognitive replacement rate.
If you are living in a society where novelty levels remain accelerated
throughout your life, you may begin to suffer from what Elise Boulding
(in The Clock of the Long Now) calls temporal exhaustion. She believes
humans need a 200-year present, or a pace of change obvious only from a
200-year vantage point in time. Otherwise the mind could become
impaired. Some people may experience right hemisphere overload and rebel
by allowing selected categories of chaos to drift by them. Others may be
locked in novelty mode into the adult years. In extreme cases, cognitive
maturation is permanently delayed. In this way the counter-evolutionary
pace of change can subtract higher-tier cognitive processes from the
social equation
Such a society may be in ruins, chaos everywhere, while the people
living in it perceive it as the ideal life. From within the circle of
their cognitive limitations, all is well. The birth and death of fads,
acceleration of technological intervals, microchip generations and the
macro-momentum of time drives the median cognitive age downward, from
elders to adults to young adults and finally to the young. The defective
adults notice this but it registers as normal. As Wonderful! How are the
immature adult victims of chronic change going to raise a population of
pattern-seekers? How is the generation after them going to mature at
all? According to Simone Weil in The Need for Roots, once uprootedness
and commerce have accelerated the pace of life past a crucial tempo, it
will have a hold on us, compared to which cocaine is a harmless product.
If we don't have a literal fountain of youth, we have a psychological
one. The crescendo of novelty comfortably abides in the right brain. If
there is a lag between fixes, you may need to camp at the cineplex for
the next film in a favorite series. According to David Loye in The
Sphinx and the Rainbow, the right hemisphere is also the seat of
moodiness and dark thoughts and will tend to register events as more
unpleasant than they are. Marooned at this stage, you may need drugs,
alcohol or chemicals to get by. Even the novelty-seeking mind needs rest
at times. It’s rough being cut off from the calming left-brain
aptitudes. Plastic surgery may be a superficial adaptation to
superficial times. It may also be a way to keep the outer body aligned
with the eternally youthful mind. Otherwise, the discord could be
unsettling. Top models are the ones with childlike proportions, while
the children themselves compete in pageants as miniature grownups
mimicking adult mannerisms. Chronic change is blurring the age
distinctions. There’s a preferred age toward which everyone is
deliriously gravitating. The right brain balances dangerously between
exhilaration and nothingness.
In the learnable world, in wild times, the incessant barrage would
register as catastrophic. Learning was different then. Even the very
young would begin laying down patterns, seeing the connections, building
up the left-brain almost from the beginning. Nothing existed in
isolation. Once a child reached the adult state, life would have settled
into patterned rhythmic certainty. The right hemisphere would become
less vital. Data download would be nearly complete. From this, lessons
could be extracted, trends analyzed, patterns detected, tendencies,
relationships, prediction of outcomes and possibilities. Left-brain
thinking dominates the mature mind and is the seat of wisdom. Normally,
this is the final phase, continuing to develop through old age until
death. The left-brain is the seat of hope, optimism, contentment and
happiness.
But, while many unstable forces are at work, maybe harmonizing forces
have been set in place by the governing ellipses of civilization. Maybe
we’ve built in synthetic fixed-constants for consciousness to cling to.
Well, there’s academic, blue collar, white collar, and industrial
disciplinary isolation. There are schools of higher learning deviating
novitiates onto the high-strung crests of specialization. That can’t be
it. There are workers hired to build the pharaoh’s tombs where the
fabled human potential can be silently interred. There are street
cleaners drained of their dreams. There’s a pin-point, over-focused
workforce subdividing phenomenon into discontinuous blips. There are
professionals trapped in a world of knowledge fragments. No, all along
the line, the stamp of divisional thinking scars the mind.
And there are other scars. It was once assumed the adult human brain did
not manufacture brain cells. New research has proven this untrue.
Elizabeth Gould is a specialist in the emerging field of neurogenesis.
She traces paths of stress and worry on the brain. She calls this neural
wounding a cerebral disfigurement. When a brain is worried, it isn't
interested in investing in new cells. Separating children from their
parents at an early age can wound the mind. And poverty provides ongoing
stress, especially among children. Some brains never even have a chance.
How is it possible to be aware and responsible, Curtis White asks, in
The Middle Mind. in a society that prohibits understanding? Or inhibits
the ability to conceptualize an alternative social world. How can people
whose minds are petrified, save themselves, or save anything? How will
they be able to know truth, or perceive honor or virtue? How will they
know the lie? How will they decipher fact from fiction?
They say it takes a village to raise a child. But, it also takes the
constancy of a village to move adults toward the maturity of wisdom.
Physically mature adults are not the final form. Modernity abandons them
in the adolescent phase in the midst of their learning. As a species
almost completely dependent upon our minds, we need instruction
throughout our lives to survive. This is our renowned species strategy.
But there are few elders now. Only old folks in the old folks home. In
counter-evolutionary fashion, adults must now teach their parents how to
cross the mine field of modernity.
When celebrities are interviewed, they often say they knew from an early
age that life held special things for them. They weren't surprised at
success. They always knew. What they don’t realize is that all children
have such premonitions. The surprise is when it doesn't happen. Ask any
child, they will tell you of the great future that's waiting for them.
The will to greatness is a key survival instinct. In naturalistic
cultures, heroic opportunities were open to everyone. Healthy cultures
invite in courage, heroism, genius, normal mental development.
Possibilities to achieve great things are theoretically unlimited.
Within the dynamic of the tribe or clan, there was considerable
cognitive urgency and transparency. Ideas were sought. The mental trust
was maximized, not out of egalitarian beneficence, but out of need.
Humans were once generalists immersed in ageless sameness. Everyone
learned everything and understood the interconnections. An open
cognitive trust was essential. Species don’t simply materialize and
drift forward through time. Out of a thousand that appear, 999 will fail
and die away.
Children of the 21st century advance toward non-maturity as their
genetic endowment for greatness slips away. The umbilical cord is now
attached to modernity. To reach this stage took hundreds of years of
cognitive repression and imbalanced minds. Thousands of cultural
mistakes were made. The demands of a consumer civilization and
hierarchies of power have neutralized many, many minds. Intelligence and
wisdom are sabotaged. It’s getting harder to understand freedom and its
subsidiary themes. If the mind is not free, how can the body follow?
White says, Imagination is real, its defining concept is freedom.
According to Loye, the novelty seeking mind, frozen in a youthful phase,
tends to see the world around them as, ...inherently divided...broken
into smaller and smaller constituent parts. The lost boys and girls of
the present may have trouble detecting patterns, fathoming them. The
data streams fail to conform to a coherent larger meaning. There are
single causes, single solutions, imperceptible connections, receding
time horizons. From the neglect of constant life experiences comes one
right answer. Black and white. No shades of grey. There are properties
at work in separate chambers of the mind. According to Neil Pacey, in
The Culture of Technology, these non-consecutive thinkers ...will have
limited expectations. They will trust the experts, turn to them. Nuclear
power plants could be built without plans to deal with radioactive
waste. Wars fought not knowing how to end them. Robin eggs
disintegrating. Diseases rising inexplicably. The cranial dimensions of
Neanderthal exceeded those of modern humans, embarrassing science to the
present day. Why would a primitive people need a larger brain than we
have?
With wisdom withering worldwide, and chaos intensifying, social skills
suffer, social anxiety and violence surface. Parenting depreciates.
Clinical neural disease is on the rise. Consider the case of the
mysterious nuns of Minnesota the school sisters of Notre Dame. They
tended to live to old age, mentally acute their final days. But,
autopsies revealed a medical enigma — evidence of advanced stages of
Alzheimer’s in the nuns’ brains. Elkonon has a theory. They must have
been engaged in challenging mental pursuits to the end, and that’s what
saved them. Life-long learning. His results suggest other things.
Working together, pattern expansion and effortless experts increase the
amount of brain space allocated to well-practiced cognitive tasks and
decrease the metabolic requirements necessary for the effective
performance... That is, dealing with patterned familiarity is
metabolically efficient and requires less oxygen than processing
novelty. The ability to perform complex mental tasks with diminished
blood supply serves as a powerful protection against the detrimental
effects of cerebrovascular disease on brain function.
Did the cloister of the convent protect the nuns from the chaos of the
times? Maybe the benediction of the nunnery functioned in a lull of
ritual continuity passed down through the cloistered ages. A haven for
the natural mind to mature in. Alzheimer’s typically affects the right
side of the brain more than the left. Also, in natural aging, the right
hemisphere subsidiary bodies begin to disintegrate earlier in life than
the left, which barely changes until around the age of fifty, writes
Elkonon. Other factors include diet, genetics and contributing
illnesses. Is the current epidemic of Alzheimer’s aggravated by
unrelenting stimulation of the right brain coping with a standing
tsunami of change? Is Alzheimer’s just another disease of civilization?
If so, are there other stable islands somewhere fostering similar
healthy mental tendencies? Well, the Amish have an almost nonexistent
risk of Alzheimer’s. The disease is also rare among Native Americans in
the U.S., and Canada, but only among those living on reservations.
Scientists are hunting for the magic gene that protects them and that
can someday protect everyone. Genetic therapy conforms nicely to the
edicts of a free market system. Beyond the profit motive Dr. Hugh
Hendrie wonders if environmental factors could trigger the tragic
illness. The Canadian Cree suggest studying Native diet and traditional
remedies.
Then there's the case of the mysterious tribal people of the New Guinea
highlands who carry a rare virus almost identical to the one that causes
leukemia but never suffer from the disease. When these people descended
from the cloud forests into the lowlands, bewildered scientists got busy
trying to explain things on a genetic basis. It’snot surprising. After
all, as Simon Boron-Cohen writes in Mind Blindness, Scientists do not
conduct research to find things whose existence they don't suspect.
Owing to broadband static and psycho-social blindness, many people are
willing to allow the present to define them. They are loyal to the
present, obedient to it and defensive of it, even if it destroys them,
even if it kills them. Far too many names to put on a wall. It's ironic
inasmuch as they don’t really want the present. They don’t even want the
future. They want something called futuristic. Forever withdrawing,
never quite here. They will fight for a world someone else will imagine
for them—a world better than this one. They’ve submitted to it before
they’ve even seen it. People unknown to them, whose motives they don't
understand, whose values they may not share, are the new superheroes.
The directive is to keep totally abreast of innovation. Avoid the curse
of obsolescence. This version of the future, novel, distorted, and
perpetually changing, appeals to the unhealthy mind. The learning curve
is subverted, the natural mind unnaturally distressed. Parables are
invalidated. The tortoise no longer wins the race.
Modern men and women must learn to yearn for change, not merely to be
open to changes...but positively to demand them, actively seek them out
and carry them through...They must delight in mobility, thrive on
renewal, look forward to future developments.
–Marshall Berman, All That is solid Melts into Air
To say that our society is falling apart, says Berman, is to say that
it’s alive and well. In Jim W. Corder’s touching memoir, Yonder, he
laments, The holocaust happens again and again in small ways, in large
ways, in impersonal ways. He’s talking about the lost Eden of the
eternal present, and the irrevocable past of the past. He quotes Hitler.
People will believe anything... sufficiently repeated. Mumford warns in
Technics and Civilization, Before industrialization, a reorientation of
wishes, habits, ideas and goals was necessary. It’s been accomplished.
Civilization invokes a temporal distortion that has altered the cultural
mind.
This storm, piles of debris, wreckage upon wreckage, Walter Benjamin
writes in Theses on History, this storm...is progress. The digitized
content of the World Wide Web surpassed the Library of Congress in 1998
and doubles every few months. Torrents of context-free information,
Pacey called it. But he was talking about the telegraph. Eternity has
ceased to be a measure of human actions. According to Stuart Brand in
The Clock of the Long Now, The system cannot be fixed. No one is in
charge, no one understands it, it can’t be lived without, and it gets
worse every year.
Evolution favors species that acquire all they need to know in time to
pass it on. If you find yourself in a world the wise among you cannot
comprehend, there’s a problem. Anti-cerebellum tendencies. Statutory
euthanasia of humankind. According to Elk, the mature mind should offer
society a vast prism of experience. Herbert Simone, (in The Wisdom
Paradox) confirms this, Pattern recognition is the foremost mechanism of
problem solving. The human brain has 100 million neurons, or about as
many neurons as there are stars in our galaxy. Right brain domination is
shutting down many of our mental solar systems.
They are beginning to predict a right-brained future. The odds are good.
We already have cult-like legions of believers craving the tomorrow of
ephemera. The struggles, trials and philosophies of responsible culture
are unfamiliar to them. The bioregional, intraspecies, seventh
generation ethic of survival in which all species advance together
through time, where the honor of plants, wild running rivers, wild dark
skies, wilderness and the Earth is the deepest honor. They are sadly
estranged from all this. The brain-damaged people of the child mind
believe in futures that don’t exist. They desire that the past dissolve
into a traceless mist to make way for unknown developments.
Within a century after Voyager’s launch, it could be that new animals or
humans were being manufactured gene by gene, to suit any
purpose...emerging as parallel, rival or superior beings... human
intelligence hugely amplified... flitting from star to star, forever
learning, forever exploring.
–from Deep Time by David Darling
Of course! By now we need the robots and the robot brains. If we feed
enough data into the synthesized mind and watch the screen, we will
comprehend evolution, global weather patterns, star formation.
Everything! As a precursor, research labs are stringing together herds
of computers to amplify their capacity. Gigaflops, or one billion
operations per second, is not enough. They are aiming for teraflops, one
trillion operations a second. Manufacturers are now selling clusters as
large as 1,250 computers. The buyers name them Medusa, The Hive,
Beowulf. The human brain can store 100 trillion units of information.
It’s not enough. We live in a world we cannot comprehend without the
unified digital mind. As computers merge the data strings, the human
mind remains submissively sub-divided.
The boundary between human and human-made was no longer decipherable.
What had been computers were continuous extensions of the brain... Now
man would aspire to technologies that were truly godlike, reassembled at
will...
–from Deep Time by David Darling
Like a circus of trained toys. Mechanical immortality. So far, we can’t
figure out how to eat right or even feed everyone. But first things
first. For decades we’ve been limited to climbing inside the machinery,
now the machinery will climb inside of us. Manufactured humans wired to
the nano-mind. Will it happen? Look around you, we’ve been poisoned, but
so far, instead of dying, we’re intoxicated!
Persistent change will continue altering things even to the invisible
level, to all the levels, wiping out species and sub-species
indiscriminately. Much is being lost unwitnessed, and without
acknowledgment. How will we ever atone for that? Is there terminology to
discuss it? Is there a language? Are there words? Our legacy will
probably never be fully tabulated. But life is not unconditional.
In Possessing the Secrets of Joy, one of Alice Walker’s characters
complains: Who are you people to never accept us as we are? It is always
we who have to change so that we are more like you. And who are you
like? You don’t even know. Civilization wants everyone to forget who
they are and erase their memories and believe in nothing. When the
Native American children were sent to the boarding schools in the last
century, they promised themselves they would never forget the sacred
prayers. They would repeat them and repeat them—the sacred words. But as
the years passed, the prayers faded. By the time they were returned
home, they had forgotten even the language the prayers were spoken in.
They couldn’t talk to their parents or to any of their people. The
intergenerational cultural bonds had been broken.
Kill the Indian in him, save the man. It seemed harsh, but it wasn’t
enough. Much remained to be destroyed. The Aztecs practiced human
sacrifice. Modern civilization asks only that we sacrifice the mind.