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"There must be some way out of here" (All Along The Watchtower) |
I. Background
This series has taken a look at the various and sundry dementias that historically infect then destroy civilizations.
Our civilization has not officially implemented ways to deal with group dementia, leaving the yeomen’s work on dementia to its manifestation in individuals, so, to the extent that there are similarities between dementia in an individual and dementia in a group, nation, society, or civilization, that is also been addressed from time to time (Etiology of Social Dementia, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13).
In today's post I want to address the habitat of dementia within "groups, parties, nations ... epochs"and civilizations, a la Nietzsche (“Insanity in individuals is something rare – but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.” – Friedrich Nietzsche).
II. What Is Habitat?
In both British English and American English there can be several meanings given to a word.
Seemingly innocuous, at times this innate doublespeak can render discourse anywhere from problematic to catastrophic (Good Nomenclature: A Matter of Life and Death).
So, I often make an attempt to isolate a particular word's meaning to a particular context.
That is probably especially needed in the context of a discussion about "the habitat of dementia."
Seeing as how 'dementia' has been defined in this series, let's define "habitat."
I want to use habitat with an expansive meaning, so lets start with:
"A habitat is made up of physical factors such as soil, moisture, range of temperature, and availability of light as well as biotic factors such as the availability of food ..."(Wikipedia). The "physical factors" (dirt, water, temperature, light) in this sense are "abiotic" in contrast to the biotic factors:
A fair definition of Biology is:(Weekend Rebel Science Excursion - 27). For those who would take umbrage at this Dredd Blog explanation, relax, there are other sources for your reading comfort:... the science of life or living matter in all its forms and phenomena, especially with reference to origin, growth, reproduction, structure, and behavior.(Dictionary, emphasis added). A fair definition of Abiology, then, ought to be:... the science of non-life or non-living matter in all its forms and phenomena, especially with reference to origin, growth, reproduction, structure, and behavior.(see e.g. abiological). One problem or question that biologists struggle with is the art of defining life (Erwin Schrodinger, PDF), but, to be sure that arises most often inside the twilight-zone between the abiotic and the biotic realms.
Habitats consist of both the biotic and abiotic factors found in the environment. Biotic factors are living things, while abiotic factors are nonliving things.(What Is Habitat? - Definition & Explanation, emphasis added). If you want an utterly long look into the abiotic habitat that existed billions of years before carbon based organic habitat evolved, check out (On the Origin of the Genes of Viruses, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13) and (The Uncertain Gene, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11).
III. What Is Civilization?
Let's begin to answer the question with a look at some specialized literature:
"The meaning of the term civilization has changed several times during its history, and even today it is used in several ways.(Ancient History Encyclopedia, emphasis added). I think that many of these cultural dynamics of civilized behavior are actually cultural trances induced in many cases by the cultural amygdala (Hypothesis: The Cultural Amygdala, Choose Your Trances Carefully).
During the late 19th and early 20th centuries CE, it was widely believed among European scholars that all human communities were involved in a process of straightforward progression by which the conditions of a society were gradually improving. As part of these changes, it was believed, societies experienced different stages: savagery, barbarism and, finally, civilization."[Establishment social science was of that mindset too: "Lastly, I could show fight on natural selection having done and doing more for the progress of civilisation than you seem inclined to admit. Remember what risks nations of Europe ran, not so many centuries ago, of being overwhelmed by the Turks, and how ridiculous such an idea now is! The more civilized so-called Caucasian races have beaten the Turkish hollow in the struggle for existence. Looking to the world at no very distant date, what an endless number of the lower races [Chuck was a tad-bit racist eh?] will have been eliminated by the higher civilized races throughout the world." - Charles Darwin (1881); cf. "Even what were once considered elite scientific journals have turned out to have been utter long-winded bullshit (The Eugenics Review Vols. 1 to 60; 1909 to 1968)" -Weekend Rebel Science Excursion - 28]"Civilization, in this context, was understood as the last stop in the long journey of human society. The different stages of this social evolution were equated to specific human communities: Palaeolithic and Mesolithic hunter-gatherer communities were considered part of the savagery stage, Neolithic and Bronze Age farmers as part of the barbarism stage, and finally Bronze Age urban communities (particularly those in the Near East) were considered an early phase of the civilized world. Today, this approach is no longer valid since it is linked to an attitude of cultural superiority, by which human communities which are not yet "civilized" are seen as somehow inferior.
In everyday conversation, there is a tendency to use the word "civilization" to refer to a type of society that displays a set of moral values, such as respect for human rights or a compassionate attitude for the sick and the elderly. This can be problematic, since moral values are inevitably one-sided and ethnocentric. A behaviour considered "civilized" by a particular culture may be judged senseless or even seen with horror by another culture. History records an abundant number of examples of this issue. A famous one is reported by Herodotus, who describes the conflicting funerary practices of a group of Greeks, who cremated their dead, and the Indians known as the Kallatiai, who ate their dead:
During his reign, Darius summoned the Hellenes at his court and asked them how much money they would accept for eating the bodies of their dead fathers. They answered that they would not do that for any amount of money. Later Darius summoned some Indians called Kallatiai, who do eat their parents. [...], he [Darius] asked the Indians how much money they would accept to burn the bodies of their dead fathers. They responded with an outcry, ordering him to shut his mouth lest he offended the gods. Well, then, that is how people think, and so it seems to me that Pindar was right when he said in his poetry that custom is king of all (Herodotus 3.38.3-4)."
In another sense of history, civilization is merely a group entity which comes to an end by suicide or murder, but much more frequently by the former (A Study of History, Toynbee).
In another sense we could call it "the largest form of a human group."
IV. The Habitat of Cultural Dementia Within Civilization
The early stages of social dementia resemble being lost in, of all places, space (You Are Here).
In other words, not knowing where we are, lost.
We hear of individuals walking around lost, but that is actually the legacy of civilizations that have come and gone too.
In the current presidential elections in various countries, right wing extremism is challenging the status quo.
In the U.S. version, one candidate does not know were we are in terms of believing the environment, the habitat, can not be harmed.
There other is like the current president, who talks like a showman but acts like the worst of the worst, killing entire nations fro their oil as those who went before did (The Fleets & Terrorism Follow The Oil - 6).
The dementia lurks behind the billboard of lies, hides in the reality, covered by the cocoon of propaganda (The Deceit Business).
Cultural dementia hides within the institutions of civilization, in the literature, in the educational system, in the government, in the military, and especially in the corporate media.
The study of that dynamic, the generation of ignorance, is being done within the most likely soon to be doomed discipline of Agnotology (Agnotology: The Surge, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17).
These ignorance generators in society produce what the institutions perpetuate in an epigenetic dynamism we vaguely see and describe as "the status quo."
It plays out in a more and more obvious, more and more exposed, and more and more degenerate stupor (Comparing a Group-Mind Trance to a Cultural Amygdala).
Economically, it plays out as an economy morphing into a plutonomy within a wartocracy, i.e. neo-feudalism (American Feudalism, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11).
V. Conclusion
It won't get far having failed The Test (The Tenets of Ecocosmology).
The previous post in this series is here.
Black guitars matter.