. . . “But such are the ways of these
distractions, such is their power, that though they can move a man's position,
they cannot pluck him from himself or wrench him from his roots. But this
question I would have you answer: do you remember that you are a man?”
“How can I but remember that?”
“Can you then say what is a man?”
“Need you ask? I know that he is an
animal, reasoning and mortal; that I know, and that I confess myself to be.”
“Know you nothing else that you are?”
asked Philosophy.
“Nothing,” I said.
“Now,” she said, “I know the cause, or
the chief cause, of your sickness. You have forgotten what you are. Now
therefore I have found out to the full the manner of your sickness, and how to
attempt the restoring of your health. You are overwhelmed by this forgetfulness
of yourself, hence you have been thus sorrowing that you are exiled and robbed
of all your possessions.
“You do not know the aim and end of all
things, hence you think that if men are worthless and wicked, they are powerful
and fortunate.
“You have forgotten by what methods the
Universe is guided, hence you think that the chances of good and bad fortune
are tossed about with no ruling hand.
“These things may lead not to disease
only, but even to death as well. But let us thank the Giver of all health that
your nature has not altogether left you. We have yet the chief spark for your
health's fire, for you have a true knowledge of the hand that guides the
Universe. You do believe that its government is not subject to random chance,
but to divine reason.
“Therefore have no fear. From this tiny
spark the fire of life shall forthwith shine upon you. But it is not time to
use more severe remedies, and since we know that it is the way of all minds to
clothe themselves ever in false opinions as they throw off the true, and these
false ones breed a dark distraction that confuses the true insight, therefore
will I try to lessen this darkness for a while with gentle applications of easy
remedies, that so the shadows of deceiving passions may be dissipated, and you
may have power to perceive the brightness of true light.”
—from
Book 1, Prose 6
I may
forget the purpose of my humanity, but as long as I do not allow myself to be
diverted, I should surely be able to recover such an awareness.
Formal
definitions may be entirely accurate, though they will be of no help if I
simply mouth the words, or if I fail to fully understand and apply their
meaning. To know what something is requires more than sticking on a label, or
even providing a list of characteristics, but it digs down to the root, to the
very essence. Whenever I ask, “what is it?” I must consider what brought it
about, what it is made out of, what identity it takes, and toward what purpose
it is ordered.
Lady
Philosophy now asks Boethius if he knows what it means to be a man. Earlier in
this part of the text, he said he knew that God had made him. He now adds that
he knows he has been made as an animal, one that can reason, and one that will
die.
However
true both these statements may be, is that a complete answer, one that will
leave me confident and content with my place in the world? Does it explain how
I can find peace through such knowledge?
I
remember the many times I gave oral exams in philosophy, not because they were
any easier to administer, but because I always believed they were the most
helpful for students. If someone told me that Aristotle argued how man was a
rational animal, for example, I could immediately press the point. If a man is
indeed rational, what does this mean about how he will live his life? How might
this awareness change what matters to him? In what way is the function of a
creature that shares in reason any different from a creature that doesn’t share
in reason?
Now some
students would stare at me, realizing it hadn’t been enough to just memorize
the phrases in their notes. Others, though frustrated, would recognize what I
was up to.
“So
wait, you want me to tell you where that definition is going to take me?”
Exactly.
You are seeing how the identity of anything is necessarily tied up with its
purpose. Don’t just tell me that a car is a self-powered machine that moves on
four wheels. Where can it take you? Why bother going there to begin with? How
can that make your life better?
When I
started teaching in the early 90’s, most any progressive college student was listening
to the band Phish. They would always nod knowingly when I quoted these lyrics:
The
tires are the things on your car
That
make contact with the road.
The
car is the thing on the road
That
takes you back to your abode.
Boethius
has the textbook answer down on who
made him, and what he was made as. He
has nothing further to add when Lady Philosophy presses him for more, because
he has no sense of what he was made for.
What is the end, the direction, the goal of my existence? Where am I supposed
to be going, and how should I go about getting there?
The sort
of Universe Boethius currently envisions has all sorts cars tossed on the
roads, but without any rules of traffic, and without drivers who have a route
or destination in mind.
I have
often known that feeling where I let myself me distracted by all the shiny signs
on the side of the highway, and I remember being told that the distracted
driver is the deadly driver. Time to keep my eyes on what is up ahead.
Written in 7/2015
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