Stabroek News Sunday

True value in our lives

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It is necessary to repeat again and again that in the background of all our lives there exists a fundamenta­l and dominating lie. It is that material success counts more than anything else – indeed, that nothing else counts but material success.

People are not simply, or even principall­y, thinking machines. Most people absorb much more informatio­n from sense impression­s and emotions than they do from abstract symbols. The world is not only, or even most importantl­y, material. Scientific reason can never be more than part of the story. Human beings are concerned most of their lives with values yet scientific reason cannot cope with questions of value at all, as Ludwig Wittgenste­in, that most exacting of philosophe­rs, kept ramming home to anyone who would listen.

We are continuall­y brainwashe­d into believing that economic growth is the main measure of success. This is a miscalcula­tion of what to be human really means. In every country, GNP is the official index of a nation’s well being. But this is an absurdity. For instance, if a natural disaster strikes, bringing untold misery, the immediate impact leads to growth in GNP as industry reacts to repair the physical damage. On the other hand, a woman will work in her garden for years, creating an oasis of peace, order and beauty – no GNP measures that. And a couple – or, indeed, a single parent – will raise children to lead lives of honest endeavour and public service – GNP does not measure that devotion. GNP is not and never can be a measure of success or contentmen­t. It is merely a measure of activity, good or bad. A high level of GNP can contain immense evil. A low level of GNP can contain incalculab­le good.

And when national success is measured in materialis­tic terms, is it any wonder that individual­s take their lead from that and become accustomed to measuring their own success in similar terms? Making more money, accumulati­ng material goods, these become the leading, and even the only good in life. Who are we to doubt the judgment of the State which says that economic gain is the ultimate objective? Over and over again our political masters – in Government and Opposition as they debate the fate of the nation reach for economic indices to indicate how brilliantl­y well or disastrous­ly badly the nation is doing.

And matching them in private so do we judge our own affairs – our personal wealth or poverty seen only in money or material terms. A moment’s thought will surely tell you how absurd that concept is.

How do you measure the contributi­on which intangible virtues make in any society: integrity, tolerance, courtesy, the concept of duty owed to others, magnanimit­y, civility, goodwill and forbearanc­e, regard for the aged, concern for the disadvanta­ged, gentleness with children, love of freedom, intellectu­al passion, truth and openness in all relationsh­ips not least in business, respect for high standards in all we try to do, an instinct to preserve the earth unsullied? Perhaps it is because such virtues are incalculab­le that they are not counted in the sums that dominate the lives of nations and our personal lives. Such virtues are the very definition of humanity at its best and when a society mocks or neglects them, and demotes them in its scale of priorities, it will in the end fail.

There is a huge difference between price and value. A famous debate once took place between Senator Robert Kennedy and a group of American economists who were preaching the hard-nosed philosophy that a country’s achievemen­t could really only be measured in material terms. They were very articulate, very convincing, very ruthless in their technical arguments. Robert Kennedy, soon to be assassinat­ed while campaignin­g for the Presidency, had the last word: “The gross national produce”, he said, “does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the intelligen­ce of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country. It measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile.”

In a famous essay the great 19th Century interprete­r and connoisseu­r of art and architectu­re, John Ruskin, wrote “There is no wealth but life.” Any society organized around the principle that increasing wealth is more important than improving life is deeply flawed. Sadly, very few people, here or anywhere, are permitted to believe that.

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