💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › william-manson-biophilia-toward-re-humanization.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 14:46:21. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-07-09)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: Biophilia: Toward Re-Humanization
Author: William Manson
Date: 2003
Language: en
Topics: Fifth Estate, Fifth Estate #360, health, psychology, technology
Notes: William Manson has taught anthropology and sociology for many years, and is the author of Riddles of Eros (University Press of America, 1994).    From Fifth Estate #360, Spring 2003

William Manson

Biophilia: Toward Re-Humanization

As techno-urbanism extends its dominion, imposing mechanized

regimentation on all modes of experience, human nature with-ers for want

of living sustenance. Deprived of the life-enhancing conditions for

expressive self- development, humans in the megamachine become

self-alienated rather than self-actualized. The world as mechanized

market-place: calculable “market-values” almost entirely replace

experiential values (revering, loving, wonder-ing, feeling). The

individual increasingly perceives herself as a commodity to be trained

and sold to the highest bidder.

The dehumanized “cheerful robot,” whose stunted sensibility is an

adaptive advantage in competi-tive commerce, may thrive — but the

unique, all-round, developed human being is threatened with

extinction.[1] The whole individ-ual, uniquely autonomous, is fully

formed, and cannot be conformed to the increasingly standardized and

overspecialized regime of technical expertise. The relatively unformed,

generic inmate of the technocratic system, by contrast, can more readily

be reformed (and farther deformed). Those per-sons most susceptible to

dehumanization are therefore most “adaptable” to techno-urbanism.

With the progressive atrophy of fragile modes of feeling and relat-ing,

rhomme machine increasingly exhibits an affectless, calculating,

“technomorphic” mentality. The year 2000, Erich Fromm prophe-sied in

1968, might be “the begin-ning of a period in which man ceases to be

human and becomes transformed into an unthinking and unfeeling

machine.”[2] In the context of a prevailing dehuman syndrome [3],

spontaneous human expression becomes pathologized: “Being open in

speech; being unashamed of one’s body; relating to nature; hugging,

touching, feeling and making love to other people; refusing to serve in

the army and kill; and becoming less dependent on machines are generally

considered ‘disturbed behavior’ by a society of robopaths.”[4] Of

course, behavioral “modification” is facilitated through ideological

training, expanding law enforcement, and emotion-al anesthesia

(psychopharmacology).

In my view, revitalization of one’s desiccated human-ness first and

foremost requires a renewed con-tact with the web of evolved life, with

Walt Whitman’s “primal sani-ty” of nature. Transcending the blinkered,

bourgeois-utilitarian (mechanistic-industrial) world- view, one can

embark on a purification of consciousness, a purging of the detritus of

cultural pollution (and a recovery of emotional inno-cence). Withdrawing

from the world of urban commerce (and its mind-numbing “messages”), one

severs the flow of media propaganda and ceaseless “information”

(relating to the ubiquitous “buy-ing” and “selling”). Compulsive

“having” is the pathology of deficient “being.” Aesthetic simplicity

means disconnecting from repulsive superfluity.

Seeking sanctuary in wilder-ness surroundings, one rediscovers the

gentler rhythms of low-cost rural living: walking instead of driving,

and prevention of disease through a style of living consonant with

ecological wisdom. Moreover, “information-process-ing” is largely

replaced by an unmediated, sensuous experience of forest, landscape, and

isouciant creatures. The graceful, animated flight of a single bird,

when per-ceived by the newly-innocent eye, discloses the“expressive

language of the living [5]

Withdrawing from the brutaliz-ing techno-marketplace (and its

ideological delusions), one begins to move more freely as a vital being

connected to an infinitely greater, evolved whole. Deficiency-based,

culturally programmed “desires” give way to a more unified flow of

consciousness — what psychologist Abraham Maslow termed

“being-cognition.”[6] This transcendent level of con-sciousness, an

intimation of the evolved unity of all things, is the true religiosity

discernible in animistic creeds and pantheistic cosmologies. From the

perspective of such heightened awareness of meaning, the senseless

follies (and horrors) of modernity are simply transient aberrations.

Joyful alive-ness is renewed when one feels exuberantly free from

societal constraints and yet intimately connected with the world of

living nature. Biophilia, the affinity and reverence for life, has been

empha-sized as an innate human predisposition by the biologist Edward O.

Wilson, as well as by countless artists and philosophers.[7] Drawn to

contact with living nature, healthy human beings in turn avoid the

life-less, sterile, pre-programmed techno-system. One’s own spontaneous

experience is enlivened by die expressive insouciance of kindred

creatures, including of course children and “unarmored” adults. Indeed,

such healing communion with nature should be complemented with the

shared human affections of cooperative living (sociability which, sadly,

has been virtually crushed by the competitive narcissism of

hyper-capitalist society).

To be sure, such a life of natural reverence and aesthetic simplicity

will still include an unswerving commitment to social and environmen-tal

activism. Such “conscientious non-participation,” in itself a

comprehensive form of protest and resistance, is also a model for sane,

ecologi-cally responsible living. A renewed reverence for the

interdependent web of life, sustained by daily contact with wild nature,

is a (partial) anti-dote to the despair afflicting sensitive, aware

individuals longing to escape from “patholopolis”[8] At the gates of a

great city, an embittered citizen warns Zarathustra: “Here you have

nothing to seek and every-thing to lose... Here all great emotions

decay.” The life-loving Zarathustra, angered by the spiritually infected

critic, was quick to retort: “Why did you not go into die forest?” [9]

 

[1] “.. .will (here come to prevail, or even to flourish, what may be

called the Cheerful Robot?... In our time, must we not face the

possibility that the human mind as a social fact might be deteriorating

in quality and cultural level, and yet not many would notice it because

of the overwhelming accumulation of technological gadgets?” C. Wright

Mills, The Sociological Imagination (Oxford University Press, 1959), pp.

171,175.

[2] Erich Fromm, The Revolution of Hope: Toward a Humanized Technology

(Harper & Row, 1968), p. 29. A versatile, radical humanist and

psychoanalyst, Fromm could also be described as a libertarian socialist.

See also his important books Marx’s Concept of Man (Continuum, 1966),

The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1973),

and To Have or to Be? (Harper & Row, 1976).

[3] Ashley Montagu and Floyd Matson, The Dehumanization of Man

(McGraw-Hill, 1983), p. xi

[4] Lewis Yablonsky, Robopaths: People as Machines (Penguin, 1972), p.

43.

[5] Wilhelm Reich, Character Analysis, third edition (Fairrar, Straus &

Giroux, 1949), p. 357.

[6] Abraham Maslow, Toward a Psychology of Being, second edition (Van

Nostrand, 1968). I might add that intense aesthetic experiences of great

music, as diverse as Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony or Copland’s

anarchically exuber-ant Third Symphony, awaken and cultivate “modes of

being” otherwise degrad-ed and stunted in contemporary society.

[7] Edward O. Wilson, Biophilia (Harvard University Press, 1984). See

also, E. O. Wilson and Stephen Kellert (eds.), The Biophilia Hypothesis

(Island Press, 1993). It should be noted that Erich Fromm first

introduced the term, and out-lined the optimal conditions conducive to a

love of life, in The Heart of Man (Harper & Row, 1964). Theologian and

doctor Albert Schweitzer emphasized “reverence for life”; and the

biologist Konrad Lorenz, in The Waning of Humaneness (Little, Brown,

1987), stressed the importance of human contact with wild, living nature

as an authentic source of spiritual meaning in an alienat-ed, urbanized

world.

[8] Lewis Mumford, The Myth of the Machine: The Pentagon of Power

(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1970).

[9]

F. Nietzsche. Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Trans. R. Hollingdale. (Penguin,

1969), pp. 195–198.