As
physicians always have their instruments and knives ready for cases
that suddenly require their skill, so you should have principles ready for the understanding of things divine and human, and for doing
everything, even the smallest, with a recollection of the bond
which unites the divine and human to one another.
For
neither will you do anything well that pertains to man without
at the same time having a reference to things divine, nor the
contrary.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 3 (tr
Long)
We
naturally expect the artist or craftsman to be familiar with the tools of his
trade, and we assume that he is trained in their use through constant practice.
His tools become like an extension of himself. He will know what needs to be
done, and what he will need at hand in order to get it done.
We would
further expect this to be especially true for a physician, who must diagnose
and treat ailments of the body at a moment’s notice, and at the most unexpected
times, so he will always try to have his tool of the trades available. I could
hardly expect my mechanic to fix my car if I were to show up at his door in the
middle of the night, but I would never hesitate to ask my doctor to fix what
ails me at any time of the day.
We
should rightly be impressed at the training and skill that go into any trade,
but especially with those where so much can be at stake so suddenly.
I now
think of how much more is at stake, at every moment of our lives, when we make
those ultimate decisions about what is true or false, right or wrong. Even the
greatest medical skills will be useless if they are not ordered toward the
service of the human good. So what are those even more crucial tools we need to
pursue our highest meaning and purpose?
Many of
us seem to go into the field woefully unequipped. We may have prepared
ourselves for years in our professions, in the mastery of the means, but we
have paid little attention to the vocation of Nature, to the achievement of the
end.
I once
had a moment of extreme frustration, resolved only with the application of the
most profuse Stoic calm, when I was being repeatedly criticized by someone for
wasting so much of my time on philosophy. Politics was the way to go, I was
told, the practical arena where things got done, not some ivory tower filled
with useless ideas and values.
Instead
of feeling angry or hurt, I needed only to remember that we differed on the
question of whether ends are superior to means, whether what we lived for should determine the merit of all of
the rest of our living.
I will
be the first to insist that life should be eminently practical, but I do not
assume this excludes questions of meaning and purpose. I work from the premise
that the life well lived must of necessity include these questions, because it
is precisely what gives direction to every action.
To use a
common Classical image, the best seaman, skilled in all the trimming of sails,
will be useless without the art of navigation. A politician uninformed by a
conscience would be quite similar. He may have all the tools of management and
organization, but it will be his moral tools that determine if he employs his
professional skills for justice or for tyranny, for service or for
slaughter.
I
recognize that the tools I need at hand at all times are those that will allow
me to consider myself, and everything that is around me, in relation to such
guiding principles. I must try to understand the relationship of the whole and
the part, of the unchanging and the changing, of the absolute and the relative,
of what is divine and what is human.
Within
myself, it is my mind that shares more fully in what is divine, and my body
that shares more fully in things of the earth. To know myself is then to know
how each aspect must play its part, not in exclusion of one another, but in
harmony with one another.
Put
another way, it isn’t about the forest or
the trees, but about the forest through each one of those trees. The
relationship goes both ways, from the top down and from the bottom up. As
Marcus Aurelius had previously said, I will understand something more fully
when I grasp how all of Nature works together, both the higher and the lower.
I don’t
think I could ever have made a good physician, not only because I have a
squeamish tendency, but also because I’m hardly clever enough to understand the
principles or manage the tools. I maintain hope, however, that I can still
muddle my way through becoming a good man, and gain some competence with the
use of the tools I need to do so.
Written in 3/2005
Image: Roman surgical instruments, found at Pompeii
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