Construction Versus Destruction
By John Scales Avery
It is often said that ethical principles cannot be derived
from science , that they must come from somewhere else. Nevertheless, when
nature is viewed through the eyes of modern science, we obtain some insights
which seem almost ethical in character. Biology at the molecular level has
shown us the complexity and beauty of even the most humble living organisms,
and the interrelatedness of all life on earth. Looking through the eyes of
contemporary biochemistry, we can see that even the single cell of an amoeba is
a structure of miraculous complexity and precision, worthy of our respect and
wonder.
Knowledge of the second law of thermodynamics , the
statistical law favoring disorder over order, reminds us that life is always
balanced like a tight-rope walker over an abyss of chaos and destruction.
Living organisms distill their order and complexity from the flood of
thermodynamic information which reaches the earth from the sun. In this way,
they create local order; but life remains a fugitive from the second law of
thermodynamics. Disorder, chaos, and destruction remain statistically favored
over order, construction, and complexity.
It is easier to burn down a house than to build one, easier
to kill a human than to raise and educate one, easier to force a species into
extinction than to replace it once it is gone, easier to burn the Great Library
of Alexandria than to accumulate the knowledge that once filled it, and easier
to destroy a civilization in a thermonuclear war than to rebuild it from the
radioactive ashes. Knowing this, we can form an almost ethical insight: To be
on the side of order, construction, and complexity, is to be on the side of
life. To be on the side of destruction, disorder, chaos and war is to be
against life, a traitor to life, an ally of death. Knowing the precariousness
of life, knowing the statistical laws that favor disorder and chaos, we should
resolve to be loyal to the principle of long continued construction upon which
life depends.
War is based on destruction, destruction of living persons,
destruction of homes, destruction of infrastructure, and destruction of the
biosphere. If we are on the side of life, if we are not traitors to life and
allies of death, we must oppose the institution of war. We must oppose the
military-industrial complex. We must oppose the mass media when they whip up
war-fever. We must oppose politicians who vote for obscenely enormous military
budgets at a time of financial crisis. We must oppose the planned illegal and
insane Israeli attack of Iran, which threatens to lead to a world-destroying
conflict. We must oppose these things by working with dedication, as though our
lives depended on it. As in fact, they do.
countercurrents
Mabon yn Hapus-Happy Equinox
Autumn Equinox, 2nd Harvest, September 21st
Mabon, is the Autumn Equinox. The Autumn Equinox divides the
day and night equally, and we all take a moment to pay our respects to the
impending dark. We also give thanks to the waning sunlight, as we store our
harvest of this year's crops. The Druids call this celebration, Mea'n Fo'mhair,
and honor the The Green Man, the God of the Forest, by offering libations to
trees. Offerings of ciders, wines, herbs and fertilizer are appropriate at this
time. Wiccans celebrate the aging Goddess as she passes from Mother to Crone,
and her consort the God as he prepares for death and re-birth.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.