Reply By: scatter629 Posted: Thursday, December 30, 2004 How true. I think the important thing is getting the message in plainspeak to ordinary people and motivate them to be extraordinary for their survival. It's more of an art - something that's quite divorced from assigning the class to read three books about why we should pay attention to books ,continually question and value life.
I don't think that it is so hard to get the message out that you are responsible for your own life and especially the beliefs you hold. However, there are a lot of institutions dedicated to contrary principles. If this is all just a game played by unknowable Gods, then what is the point in trying to take responsibility? Better to just try to figure out what the Gods - or the authorities (which works out to the same thing in practice) - want, right? And that game is repeated a few billion times over around the globe, at great profit to the institutions that promote it. Try reading Stirner. Use the link I provided and you can read him on line. He didn't have the word "meme," but he thoroughly understood the concept.
The real lack, however, is a failure to have a stake in the future. The "Pie in the Sky" keeps us from focussing on real challenges and opportunities right here and now on this planet. We are living in the most interesting times ever, with the real possibility of destroying our selves completely as a species, at the same time that we have the chance to transcend our genetic heritage and become our successors, evolving into new kinds of beings with lifespans measured by the deaths of stars. There's nothing in science or philosophy to prevent us from taking this next logical step, yet at the same time we are our own worst enemy.
As an aside, one thing I've noticed lately is that of all peoples on our globe today, the Japanese seem to have really grasped the onrushing future. Take a look at the recent movie "Ghost in the Shell," or the series it was based upon. This gives me hope.