61 Propositions
1. All of our propositions, including naturally all of the ones
I am presently positing, are based on
a point of view which is unalterably human. All of our definitions and our understanding are predicated on the anatomy and
physiology of the human nervous
system and the way in which that system typically creates the experience of consciousness. (Even the
term “nervous system” is in itself a human
mental construct.) Therefore, every attempt to use language to describe our experience is inherently limited.
2. The human frame of reference is inescapable and no
examination of our condition can be
anything except “subjective” (however that term may be defined). It is logically impossible for humans to stand
outside human definitions,
perceptions, interpretations of perceptions, or human mental constructs. The human perspective is the
only one of which we are capable, and we
cannot climb out of it in any way.
3. This study, therefore, will inevitably be a victim of its
own assumptions. Its author
cannot escape the limits of his own perspective, nor can any potential reader.
4. Emergence is a fundamental quality of reality. Chaos
resolves into a level of order,
which resolves into a higher level of order, and so on.
5. Either mathematical probability or another in a series of
periodic events triggered the beginning
of the Universe. From the physical forces there emerged the particles out of which everything
physical is composed. From physical reality chemical
reality, biological reality, socio-cultural reality, and historical reality arose in turn.
6. Humans are therefore an intrinsic part of the Universe. They
are composed of the same materials out
of which other common physical bodies
are composed. They are subject to all
the fundamental rules of the Universe, and in fact reflect in themselves all of the Universe’s basic
features.
7. The human species evolved from the larger web of life, and
all human traits ultimately
have their origins in this fact.
8. The human nervous system’s evolution, especially the
evolution of the central nervous
system, is the key to understanding the way in which humans perceive the world around them.
9. There is a free-standing “real” reality that exists outside
of us and then there is the reality
we perceive from our human standpoint. Humans do not perceive reality in and of itself. They
perceive a version of reality through a nervous system that evolved in such a way that human survival chances
were enhanced.
10. The brain and “mind” in all probability evolved in a
synergistic fashion, as intelligence
facilitated the survival of the brains that possessed it. Consciousness and all other aspects of human perception exist only within the
physical confines of the brain
(although the brain may—may—be able to transmit electrical signals directly to other brains by means as yet not
understood.)
11. The human is a species of animal, not something apart from the
broader web of living things. Humans
are physical objects, subject to the laws and processes of biology, chemistry, and physics.
Humans do not have bodies—they are
bodies.
12. Human reality
is related to the “real” reality and, in ways perhaps forever beyond our
understanding, reflects it in some way. Mathematics may be the closest we get to directly contacting this reality.
13. Both
solipsism (the idea that everything exists only in my own consciousness) and idealism (the idea that things don’t
exist independently of our perception of them) are fundamental errors, perhaps even definitions
of insanity. We will assume that all
humans are real and that the forest exists even when no one is watching it.
14. Organic evolution did not have as its “goal” the creation of
the human species. The evolution of
humans was (from our standpoint) a fortuitous event but it was not preordained. As Stephen Gould said,
if we “rewound the tape” and started the process
all over, there is no guarantee that anything like us would come to exist.
15. Human history is the attempt to describe the story of our
species, a species which has evolved in a
particular way. This evolutionary process has brought about beings with a distinct way of perceiving the
universe around them. Human history is
therefore the story of what humans have experienced and done within the framework of their consciousness.
16. We may therefore argue that the world the humans have built around
themselves is nothing more or less than
a reflection of the internal functions of their brains. Those functions in turn reflect the evolutionary history of the
brain itself. Consciousness could
therefore be thought of as an amalgam of instinctive, emotional, and intellectual impulses and capacities,
although distinct boundaries between
these capacities may not exist.
17. In relation to this, therefore, human behavior is a mixture of
“primitive” autonomic processes, need
satisfaction, emotional expression, and intellectual processes, reflecting the long evolution of the animal, mammalian,
primate, and hominid brains in
succession, although not in a
seamless or sharply chronological manner.
18. Human behavior is a synergistic interaction between genetic inheritance
and life experience, an interaction
that is relentless and ceaseless, in an infinitely complex shifting mosaic.
19. Human behavior, therefore, has exceedingly complex origins.
The actions the human animal takes and the way the human animal perceives the
world defy simple description
(with the exception of instinctive self-defense or protective reactions, such as withdrawing one’s hand from
a hot surface). The evolution of high
level consciousness in the human therefore makes him/her the most complicated living thing on the planet.
This complexity means that humans are capable
of the widest range of possible actions and responses of any living thing, and are therefore the least predictable living
thing.
20. The human brain has not
evolved to give humans complete understanding of the world around them. It has evolved, rather, to help them survive
within it—a far different
mission. Survival skills and knowledge are much more strongly developed than the capacity for philosophical
certitude.
21. No one fully comprehends his/her own motives or impulses. No
one completely understands why he/she
is doing what he/she is doing. There are degrees of understanding, ranging from reasonably good to totally absent.
22. Humans enter the world at birth not only completely helpless
physically but also completely without
comprehension of what is happening to them, and probably without any mental sense of being a
self whatsoever. The process of growing up involves,
therefore, not only physical maturation and an increasing ability to care for one’s self, but also an attempt, whether
conscious or not, to make some kind of
sense of the world in which the individual ego finds itself immersed.
23. Human consciousness evolved in group settings, and it requires
interaction with other humans in a
culture to manifest itself. No child’s consciousness can develop without some form of language-based
interaction.
24. Humans
generally like to have an effect on the environment around them. Humans generally like the experience of having
caused something to happen, at least
at first. Children quickly learn that doing certain things causes other things
to occur. The adult impulse to change
the world or affect history in some way may simply
be an elaboration of our child-like delight in causing something to happen.
25. Human
males and females evolved in order to reproduce and care for offspring. They did not evolve to understand each
other’s complex and distinct way of processing
reality. The male and female outlook and perspective are equally valid and equally part of the definition of what it means to experience the world as a human. There are degrees of maleness
and femaleness in all humans, regardless of sex,
and therefore even the terms male perspective and female perspective have to be
qualified. There seem to be some genuine and fundamental differences between the male and female brain that affect
behavior and the general perception of
the nature of the world. Cultural factors also deeply shape gender definitions.
26. Every human who has ever lived has experienced the world in a
unique way. No two human biographies
are identical. We are able to relate to each other, at least somewhat, because there are enough
common experiences we share to permit a minimal
level of understanding.
27. Basic human sensations (such as the perception of red, the
feeling of physical pleasure, and
other somatic events) cannot be described in such a way as to be meaningful to someone who has never experienced
them. They are irreducibly fundamental.
I have to have actually seen a red object in order for me to understand what you say when you describe
something as “red”.
28. Language is inherently limited as a communication device. The
idea of “perfect” communication is a
hopeless ideal. What communication exists is based on the existence of enough experiential common ground
to permit it. Language is an imprecise
tool. No one means exactly the same thing by the use of a particular word as someone else, because the
mental associations attached to that word in the
brain of its user are unique.
29. The awareness that death is inevitable has probably been the
major driving force behind most of the
world’s religions and philosophies, as well as a major force in human artistic expressions.
30. The genus Homo has
existed only for a brief period relative to the known universe’s existence—perhaps 2.5 million years out of a period of
about 13,700,000,000 years,
less than two-tenths of one percent of the Universe’s existence. This was discovered only recently in the history of
the genus.
31. The home of the human species is extraordinarily miniscule in
the physical context of the Universe,
occupying a space so tiny that if the Universe were reduced in size to an object the size of the Earth, the Earth
itself in turn would be reduced to
a size less than that of a single atom. This is also a recent discovery.
32. Humans are therefore temporally and spatially insignificant.
Outside of the human community,
human history means absolutely nothing (so far) and has had no effect whatsoever on the larger Universe.
This could change as humans reach out and
explore small areas of the Universe (or perhaps seed the Universe with self- replicating devices).
33. Human philosophies and religions were basically all created
before the knowledge of humanity’s
temporal and spatial insignificance was understood. The fact of human insignificance is not yet widely comprehended, or
even accepted as true.
34. There is no reliable scientific way of ascertaining whether
there is a god of any kind. There is
no philosophically sound way of either conclusively proving or disproving god’s existence.
Therefore, metaphysical explanations of human history
will largely be absent from this study.
35. Human memory is particularly unreliable because it did not
evolve to provide a photographic
account of reality. The development of information storage systems external to the human brain reflects an
understanding of this limitation.
36. Human consciousness emerged before humans realized what it was
(or even where it was located).
Only gradually have humans understood the significance of the anatomy and physiology of their
own brains.
37. Human consciousness creates what we call human psychology,
something we only dimly and
incompletely understand. Humans therefore do not have a full understanding of why they do what they
do or feel what they feel.
38. The superior level of human intelligence relative to other
animals accounts for the dominance of our
species over all others and the spread of our species across the surface of the planet.
39. Humans have, up until relatively recently, been forced to make
a living out of whatever the
immediate environment provided them in the way of resources.
40. Because humans adapted to a wide variety of ecological niches,
a correspondingly wide variety
of ways of life emerged.
41. Because language—the use and manipulation of symbols to
represent ideas and convey
descriptions of the world—emerged as a property of human consciousness (in a synergistic, self-reinforcing
manner), human culture was able to emerge. Language
is therefore the basis of culture. Culture may be thought of as a way of life consisting of the material objects created
by a group and the ideas, customs, traditions,
beliefs, and methods of doing things the group passes from one biological generation to the next.
42. Since many, many sounds can be used to represent the same kinds
of objects and ideas, many human
languages emerged. The greater the physical isolation of human groups from other human groups, and
the less such groups linguistically interacted
with others, the more unique the group’s language tended to be.
43. Human society emerged out of the physical inadequacies of our
ancestors in relation to the
environmental dangers surrounding them. The individual human was generally no match for the kind of
predatory animals, harsh climatic fluctuations,
challenging topographical conditions, and hard-to-extract resources of the areas in which the early humans
evolved. Only by living in groups and cooperating
in teams could humans make a go of it.
44. Human morality emerged out of the need of humans to create
rules by which the group could survive
and flourish. There may also be some very deep biological roots to such concepts as “fairness”.
There is no need to infer a supernatural origin
for moral behavior, although such an origin is not automatically ruled out.
45. Human groups tended to develop, as a survival
skill, “us versus them” orientations
to those outside of the group. The use of violence, something rooted deep in animal evolution, to ward off
such outsiders or steal their means of survival,
is very ancient, very useful, and the root cause of interpersonal, intragroup, and intergroup violence. Some
violence appears to have no instrumental
purpose at all, and is merely the expression of disturbed mentalities.
46. The use of tools—objects from outside of the human body used to
accomplish work—was absolutely essential
to the survival and flourishing of human groups. Tool making encouraged, in a reciprocating manner, dexterity,
eye-hand coordination, abstract
conceptualization, and other physical-mental skills. Those who had the best brains made the best tools.
Tool use facilitated survival, which in
turn gave a genetic advantage to those who made them. Even better brains produced even better tools, and so on.
Therefore, human tool making and human evolution
affected each other in a synergistic way.
47. Because humans, like all other animals, can physically suffer,
the threat of such suffering has
always been an effective tool of social control. No rational individual wants to be injured or
suffer physical pain, and the knowledge of just how bad such experiences really are allows those who control
the means of violence and
social authority to rule over others. Fear is a very ancient tool of human interaction, rooted in the very
animal natures of humans themselves.
48. Human
sexuality has been a key variable in the unfolding of human history, as has human violence. The distance between
the two is not as great as many people might
imagine. Human sexual expression has covered the entire range of physical possibility, and a human’s sexual nature is
a key element of his or her basic self.
49. Human beings as a group consistently overestimate their own
understanding of the world and their
understanding of themselves. The human brain is not evolved to either fully comprehend reality or
to completely grasp the nature of the self and consciousness.
This is because the human brain is a jerry-rigged, haphazardly evolved structure that developed as it did
because it was useful from a survival/reproductive
standpoint.
50. The human world reflects our lack of understanding. Human
history has careened forward in totally
unexpected ways. They are unexpected because the human species, as a group, does not understand what is happening to it at
any given moment. There are simply too
many variables operating at any given time for such
an understanding to be even remotely possible. Human history is also affected by mathematical randomness
and quantum indeterminacy. It may not even
be possible to predict anything about the future direction of human life.
51. Human social interaction and social relationships are fraught
with difficulties because of the
inadequacies of human communication, the existential loneliness of the human being, and the fathomless
vagaries of human psychology, itself the product
of our haphazardly evolved brains.
52. Life and reality are ruled by a set of interrelated processes,
most of which are usually hidden
to human perception.
53. As a result of our convoluted history and fundamental
ignorance, the vast majority of humans
have lived lives that by contemporary standards in the Western world would be considered abysmal and miserable.
54. The vast majority of human beings believe there is a
supernatural plane of reality, a belief
which is deeply rooted in the evolutionary processes by which their brains developed. These beliefs are massively shaped
by cultural inheritances as well.
55. As a result of variations in human brains and individual human
life experiences, there is no action,
no matter how debased or atrocious, that has not been taken by at least someone, somewhere, at some
time.
56. The average
life is spent in the carrying out of routine tasks.
57. The average
life is undramatic and ordinary. The day to day life of the human species has probably always been this
way.
58. Many humans are certain that they know the truth of any given
matter, when in all probability
this is not the case.
59. The arts are rooted in the human attempt to explain,
interpret, react to, and/or express
the reality humans perceive.
60. The sciences are rooted in the human attempt to explain the
rules and nature of reality by use of
methods which strive as much as possible to eliminate all elements of “subjectivity”, even though the sciences
still operate within the limits of
human perspective.
61. The world
probably does not exist for our benefit. But who knows?