But
can a certain order subsist in you, and disorder in the All? And this too, when
all things are so separated and diffused, and sympathetic.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 4 (tr
Long)
The question
of order and disorder in life never seems to go away, nor should it. Some
things appear to follow a plan, and other things appear to follow absolutely no
plan at all. All theory aside, this problem influences our daily lives in so
many ways. I may wake up one morning, and everything is just as I expected. I
may wake up on another morning, and nothing makes any sense at all. How I face
this will determine how I face the coming day.
I
believe there are two different questions here, though they are of necessity
very closely related. First, what is it to me? Second, what is it in itself?
If you
think you don’t want to proceed from the former to the latter, by means of honest
observation and sound reason, please stop reading now, because this reflection may
not be for you. You have probably already decided it’s about you, not about you
in harmony with Nature. I wish you the best.
Stoicism,
Classically understood, is about finding solidarity on our human level, and
about finding harmony with the Universe on an ultimate level. The horizontal
fits into the vertical. Narrow theists try to tell you it’s all about God, and
narrow humanists try to tell you it’s all about man. It’s about both, and you
can’t separate them.
The part
only makes sense within the context of the whole. The Stoic is a theist in all
things, however broadly understood, because he sees the power of Divine Reason present
immediately in all of his life. The true Stoic is also a humanist in all
things, however he may express it, because he joyfully loves the dignity of
each and every one of his neighbors.
I can
explain Divine Reason, the Logos, in
various ways. I can explain the dignity of my fellows, through what Marcus
Aurelius calls my social nature, in various ways. But as soon as I neglect
either, I am straying from Stoicism, Classically understood.
The way
my world works doesn’t always seem to have purpose. This is where I need to
follow the guidance of reason, not of my impressions. Truth is never about
cherry picking. I need to take all of it, not just the bits I happen to prefer.
Even as
many things appear so chaotic, they are still parts of everything together.
Effects cannot proceed without causes, and causes must admit of order. I do not
always understand the causes, and I do not always perceive the order, but I
must admit that both are present, unless I wish to reject reason itself.
Yes, it
may seem pointless, and yes, it may seem without any design. I can, however,
choose to think, not just to feel, and I can see that nothing comes from
nothing, and that nothing ever could. My apologies to Rodgers and Hammerstein.
Tell me
that anything happens for no reason, and you have told me to reject logic
itself. That may be clever marketing, but its also terrible thinking.
It may all
seem quite diffused, quite contrary, and quite inconvenient. It isn’t. Even an
apparently chaotic Universe is still a Universe. It isn’t my place to tell
Nature how it should work, but to find my own place in how Nature works.
Written in 10/2005
Image: Flammarion Engraving (1888)
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