For
this series is not like a mere enumeration of disjointed
things, which has only a necessary sequence, but it is a rational
connection, and as all existing things are arranged together harmoniously, so the things which come into existence exhibit no mere
succession, but a certain wonderful relationship.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 4 (tr
Long)
We
observe that events occur, but we rarely reflect on why these events occur, and
the manner in which they are all connected to one another. They may seem
isolated and independent, or they may appear to be random and chaotic, yet each
is there for a specific reason, and that reason is joined together with the
reasons for everything within the whole.
It isn’t
simply a matter of one thing following after another in time, a temporal order,
but that one thing proceeds on account of another, a causal order. Such a view
of what happens isn’t based on blind faith or wishful thinking. Rather, the
principle of causality is itself necessitated by the consistent use of reason.
That
which is moved, is moved by another, and whatever comes into being does so
through something else. Motion or change is always from one state to another
state, with each cause and effect joined to together, proximately or
ultimately, with every other. I cannot fully think or speak, therefore, of
anything that happens without reference to all the things that happen.
The
Stoic concept of a Universe ordered by Providence is built upon this axiom. While
one aspect of Epicurean physics was the concept of randomness, the Stoic will
scratch his head at this, recognizing that chance can never logically be in
things, but only in our limited perception of things.
To admire
the beauty within the harmonious relation of all things is not just a matter of
romantic sentiment. I can find joy in the balanced connection of things through
an appreciation of the mind, just as when the understanding of how and why
anything works can give a profound satisfaction.
There
are few things more wondrous than a moment of insight, where we see how an
event fits a pattern, how the effect follows from the cause, and how a part
works within the whole. Then, place and purpose are revealed.
This may all seem too deep or abstract for some people, yet I find time and time again how it plays itself out in daily practice, and serves as a foundation for how I choose to live. When I am completely honest with myself, and temper my presumptions and attachments to desire, I can begin to see things for themselves, and as they are joined to other things, as links in a chain or strands of a web. My own meaning and purpose can gradually become apparent through my intrinsic connection to what surrounds me, from where I have come and where I am going.
This may all seem too deep or abstract for some people, yet I find time and time again how it plays itself out in daily practice, and serves as a foundation for how I choose to live. When I am completely honest with myself, and temper my presumptions and attachments to desire, I can begin to see things for themselves, and as they are joined to other things, as links in a chain or strands of a web. My own meaning and purpose can gradually become apparent through my intrinsic connection to what surrounds me, from where I have come and where I am going.
Written in 1/2006
No comments:
Post a Comment