|
Education
for Life:
Preparing Children to Meet the Challenges
by J. Donald Walters
Chapter Five
Every Child's Real Self
“Gnothi sauton,”
proclaimed the inscription at the oracle of Delphi: “Know thyself.”
“The proper study
of mankind,” wrote Alexander Pope, “is man.”
“This above all,”
stated Shakespeare through the mouth of Polonius in Hamlet, “to
thine own self be true.”
How many times have
great minds offered mankind the counsel to “turn within” in the quest
for wisdom. Man’s very ability to relate meaningfully to others
depends first of all on his own sensitivity. As Shakespeare put it
again (concluding the above quote), “And it shall follow as the day
the night, thou canst not then be false to any man.”
It is this eternal
truth—this wisdom—that has been swept aside in the modern rush
for more “scientific” values. And yet, even scientific discovery has
not been granted to every scientist. We see that, in certain respects
at least, the greatest scientists have also been great human
beings—not great merely because of their brilliance, but in a fuller
and deeper sense. Indeed, intelligence alone is a very poor criterion
of greatness. There are far too many intelligent idiots in this world,
who show a regrettable lack of common sense despite their
intelligence.
Great scientists
demonstrate greatness also in their ability to rise above petty
self-preoccupation and reach out toward broader realities. Lesser
scientists generally, like lesser human beings everywhere, have not
shown even an inclination in this direction.
Motivation is only
one test of greatness. Lesser scientists, and lesser human beings
generally, are almost by definition motivated by the thought, “What’s
in it for me? What will I get out of it?” It is their pettiness
that makes them lesser. The broader the outlook on life, the less the
concern with personal gain. Admittedly, there have been great
scientists as well as great people in other fields who, owing to
egotism or personal ambition, were less great than they might have
been. In their work at least, however, they were able—far better than
most people—to rise above pettiness. Often, indeed, it was their high
energy that passed in the minds of little people for egotism.
Great scientists,
again, have been clear and calm enough in themselves to be able to
focus all their energy and attention on the tasks at hand. Most people
lack this ability to concentrate. They haven’t, therefore, that extra
faculty of perception which is the final secret of genius. Sensitive
perception is a natural product of calm concentration. Another word
for it is intuition.
Luther Burbank, the
famous botanist, was so inwardly focused during his experiments with
plants that his eyes would often remain half closed and half open,
gazing inwardly as much as outwardly. Other botanists of his day
challenged his findings on the basis that they hadn’t been able to
duplicate them. Yet the new botanical strains he produced sufficiently
proved the reality of his discoveries.
Burbank considered
self-knowledge an essential part of the work he did with plants. Who
can say whether even insight into the workings of the cosmos doesn’t
require, first, a degree of self-knowledge?
Pythagoras, the
Greek sage, lived at a time when civilized man had neither the facts
nor the vision to think of the universe as anything but flat, and
geocentric. Yet Pythagoras stated that the Earth is round, and that we
and all the visible stars revolve around a great central fire. His
explanation of things, for many centuries considered only quaint, is
astonishingly like that given by modern astronomers, who tell us that
all the visible stars belong to a single galaxy, and revolve slowly
around what might be described as a fiery center—packed as it is, from
our distant perspective, with the billions of stars of the Milky Way.
Whence,
Pythagoras’s amazing knowledge? Surely, no theory so all-embracing
could have sprung out of the common knowledge of his times. It must be
attributed, first, to the expansiveness of his own consciousness.
In this Twentieth
Century a great deal has been written, albeit somewhat superficially,
on the importance of self-knowledge, and of acting in keeping with
that knowledge. Nora, in Ibsen’s play The Doll House, was one
of the first examples of this doctrine. So also was Kate, the
protagonist in J. M. Barrie’s The Twelve Pound Look. Both women
chose to live their lives self-reliantly, rather than continue in
bondage to their boorish and condescending husbands. In more recent
years, the quantity of this sort of literature has grown apace, along
with hundreds of classes and seminars offering techniques of
self-fulfillment.
It would be no
great stretch further to bring this emphasis into the high schools and
universities. The process is, in fact, already underway.
The question still
remains to be asked: How to know oneself as one really is?
Is it enough to
follow the lead of Nora and Kate?—to stand up to the world and cry,
“From today on I’m going to be my own boss”? More than self-assertion
is called for, if self-knowledge is to be achieved.
One of the best
exponents of the “personal fulfillment” philosophy in our times was
the existentialist Jean Paul Sartre. Sartre claimed that it is
people’s self-generated desires that define them as they really are.
He insisted that if we will but rid ourselves of the expectations
other people hold of us, and be true to our own nature, we will become
genuine human beings at last. And if the final outcome of this
supposedly purifying process should make us social outcasts, why, so
be it. In remaining stalwartly true to ourselves, we will—by Sartre’s
definition—deserve to be called saints.
Sartre even wrote a
book titled Saint Genet, about a man who, faithful to these
“principles,” dared both to be and to boast about being a thief and a
male prostitute.
The writings of
Sartre have been avidly studied, as though they were actually
important to the quest for fulfillment. Sartre was, however, a
nihilist. He accepted no established human norms. And he was not
joking. Nor has his influence on modern society been a joke. One sees
the effect of his philosophy on the behavior of countless young people
today—many of them barely pubescent—who self-assertively proclaim that
life is meaningless and who behave, accordingly, with egocentric
abandon.
One wonders: Why
have these nihilistic teachings been given so solemn a hearing in the
classrooms, especially when there exists a vast body of time-tested
teachings on the subject of meaningful self-fulfillment? Yet this
material is virtually ignored.
Sartre’s grotesque
distortion of man’s eternal quest will eventually, I believe, prove
the sterility of his own case. For his examples of “fulfilled” human
beings make it clear with repetitive monotony to the discerning mind
how vast is the distance between ego-affirmation and Self-realization.
There is a radical difference between the ego and the deeper self, the
experience of which is an awakening, a goal implied in the saying
“Know thyself.”
Greatness has
always been associated with an expansion of consciousness. And an
expansion of consciousness has always, in the long history of
civilization, been associated with an expansion of such feelings as
sympathy, empathy, and love. Far from setting oneself apart from, or
even against, other human beings, self-expansion naturally includes a
concern for the well-being of all. How different, this, from the
teaching of Sartre, which he stated in these words: “To be conscious
of another is to be conscious of what one is not.”
Consider,
therefore, the great teachers of mankind—Buddha, Krishna, and Moses,
for example, and of course, best known in the West, Jesus Christ.
Their teachings receive hardly a passing nod in the modern classroom.
Why this disdain? Is it merely because those men of wisdom are now
considered “old hat”? Can anyone really expect the philosophy of
Sartre to replace wisdom that has been cultivated with hard labor by
spiritual geniuses through the ages? What can this fascination with
that dour philosopher, and with others of his genre, be but a fad,
merely?
A likely
explanation for the attention presently being given to this and to
similarly faddish philosophies is that they offer no call to serious
action. They suit the intellectual’s disdain for personal commitment,
and flatter his preference for clever theories over demonstrable
truths. The intellectual’s favorite weapon is not honest reasoning,
but mockery. But mockery is a coward’s weapon. It is a saber rattled
within the seemingly safe fortress of untested theory. The fortress
itself, however, is merely a stage set, painted to look real, but the
merest spark of clear reasoning may send it crashing down in flames.
Jesus and countless other great men and women through the ages began
and ended their message with warnings against remaining satisfied with
mere theory, and with a call to action—to direct, personal experience
of the truths they proclaimed. To the intellectual—or perhaps I should
call him the pseudo-intellectual, since he uses intellectuality
without discrimination—any moral principle that can be tested by
actual experience seems drab and uninteresting. Far more appealing to
him are theories that only he, and perhaps a few other precious souls
like him, can understand.
The common
explanation, of course, for not including spiritual teachings in the
classroom is that formal education is concerned with imparting
demonstrable facts, and not with dogmatizing students in unproven
sectarian claims. I grant you, it is a bit much to hear people
describe universal truths as the possession of any particular
religion: to hear humility, for instance, described as “Christian”
humility, as though Christian humility were different in some
fundamental respect from Buddhist humility, or Hindu humility. Strip
the veneer of religion away from the quality of humility, however, and
you find a human characteristic that can be tested for its value to us
all in our search for personal fulfillment. Why leave it buried in the
Bible simply because Jesus spoke well of it?
Qualities such as
humility are by no means untested sectarian dogmas. It doesn’t take
much experience of life to see that pride does in fact “go before a
fall,” as the wisdom of the ages has always told us; and that genuine
humility “works”—that is to say, it attracts what people really want
in life: success, support from others, and an ability to ride the
waves of difficulty. Humility, like countless other virtues, is a
practical concept. Why not teach it that way in the classroom?
There are numerous
other teachings, born of practical human experience, that are the
discoveries of people who showed by their own lives that they had
found keys to unlock the door to human happiness. Their discoveries
have nothing to do with religious sectarianism. Why exclude them from
the teaching we give our young?
Great men and
women, whether scientists or artists or leaders of any kind, are great
in some way, at least, as human beings. Were this not so, they
would never be able to manifest what it took to produce their great
works. Is it enough, then, merely to study their works? Children need
to be offered also a study of what makes people great as human beings.
In this way, the children may be inspired toward greatness themselves.
Is this not self-evidently better than giving them what is,
essentially, the philosophical encouragement to become thieves and
murderers? For that is what it amounts to when we tell them, with
Sartre, that all values are relative, and that truth is anything you
yourself want it to be.
>> Next: Punishment and Reward
|
|