Wednesday, 27 March 2024

Pacifism And Future Weapons

The Long Way Home, CHAPTER FOUR.

Blausten, one of the Explorer crew, had been what he calls "'...a pacifist...'" (p. 40) That word can have different meanings and he qualifies it by adding, "'...intellectual pacifist...'" (ibid.) He saw war as a farce and thought that the solution was easy:

"'It stares you right in the face. A universal government with teeth. That's all. No more war. No more men getting shot and resources plundered and little children burned alive.'" (ibid.)

He is in the wrong future history. That solution was tried, unsuccessfully, in Poul Anderson's Psychotechnic History. But this brings us to different meanings of "pacifist." "...with teeth..." means preparedness to use force, a monopoly on violence. In fact, "universal government" definitely means a monopoly on violence. However, the purest, arguably the only fully consistent, meaning of "pacifist" is a rejection of any use of force or violence. Thus, pacifism has to mean anarchism: no government.

Besides, a universal government addresses only the political organization of society. Would the economy continue to be organized in a way that generated conflicts which sometimes became violent?

Blaustein had hoped that the human race would have learned after five thousand years. The cycle of the rise and fall of civilizations might continue, as described, over that long a time although maybe not - how can life and its environment survive the use of such devastating weapons as are described? 

"'Did you know they can disintegrate any kind of matter completely now? Nine times ten to the twentieth ergs per gram. And there are things like synthetic virus and radioactive dust.'" (p. 41)

6 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I have no use for pacifism. Humans are not natural pacifists--they can and will fight and quarrel and compete. For wealth, power, status, mates. And I don't believe in some mystic, impossible "communal" economy, nor any need for it when free enterprise economics works so well when it's allowed to.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,

In this case, of course, I am merely clarifying "pacifism," not defending it.

Free enterprise will be redundant when technologically mass produced wealth is abundant.

Paul.

S.M. Stirling said...

The problem is that 'no government' means 'ubiquitous violence'.

There was no government for most of human existence, in the sense that there was no organization that tried to monopolize violence.

The result was a continuous low-level war of all against all, where you reflexively took a spear along to pee on a bush, and the commonest cause of death for adult males was being killed by violence.

Governments reduced and localized violence -- it was concentrated, but subtracted from the intervals between, eg., wars. Modern governments continued this trend.

But the Old Adam is always waiting for the restrictions to be lifted.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

The protean enemy.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

Absolutely! But dreamy idealistic types are unwilling to face these hard facts. All humans are innately prone to being violent, quarrelsome, murderous.

Ad astra! Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,

Not all. And we can make conditions where no one is motivated to violence or murder.

Paul.