Friday, 23 October 2020

The Future Of Humanity

St Paul wrote that he did not understand why he did the evil that he did not intend to do and did not do the good that he did intend to do. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn wrote that the line between good and evil is not between groups of people but within each individual. A spokesperson for the future utopian society in William Morris's News From Nowhere says that of course social change was violent because what peace was there among those poor deluded wretches of the twentieth century? - or words to that effect. At the end of HG Wells's The Shape Of Things To Come, a radical transformation of social and environmental conditions is beginning to produce a new kind of human being, healthy, intelligent and inquiring, the opposite in every respect of their frightened and deluded twentieth century ancestors. The premise of Poul Anderson's Psychotechnic History is an organization that tries to tackle head on the "protean enemy" of psychological conflicts rooted in primitive resistance to civilization. It is unfortunate that the Psychotechnic Institute fails and is overthrown early in this future history but its aims seem to have been achieved in the much later Galactic civilization.

5 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

And I am totally skeptical and SUSPICIOUS of dreams about--and attempts--of radically changing or transforming the human race. So, I have more sympathy for what St. Paul and Solzhenitysyn said than I do for the "radicals." Wise leaders work with human beings as they are, not as they would like them to be.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,

I think it is a case of "Let's see if improving their conditions can change people for the better" rather than "Let's act towards people now as if they were better than they are now!" If someone has been convicted of violent crimes, then I am not about to deal with him in the hope that he can suddenly be transformed into a Ghandian pacifist!

Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

It's hard enough for any society to not be too terribly bad, and took countless centuries to get as far as we have in the more advanced countries, at least technologically (some, like mainland China and N Korea, are brutal despotisms). But you are more realistic than too many who are not!

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,

I saw the other writers as responding to the problem indicated by St Paul and Solzhenityzyn, not as contradicting what they said.

Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Understood. And I still don't believe "The Chapter Ends" is properly part of the Psychotechnic Institute series.

Ad astra! Sean