The
man who has an elevated mind and takes a view of all time and of all substance,
do you suppose it possible for him to think that human life is anything great?
It
is not possible, he said.
Such
a man then will think that death also is no evil.
Certainly
not.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 7 (tr
Long)
It’s quite hard trying to help someone
understand that the self is not the beginning and end of all things, almost as
hard as trying to help someone understand that death is not in itself a bad
thing at all. People may look at you funny, worry about your sanity, and
whisper around that you may be quite disturbed.
I’m sure they thought and said that
about Plato as well, or his teacher Socrates, or any of the Cynics and Stoics.
Yet Plato understood something that most of us will so easily overlook. It
isn’t all about me, but about me in the context of all other things. And if I’m
not the center of the world, then my end won’t mean the end of the world. These
two insights go together. The former helps me to make sense of the latter.
We are accustomed to thinking of
life as an extended conflict, a state of war, where what is good for me is
often in opposition to what is good for anyone or anything else. For me to be
rich, you may well have to be poor. For me to feel secure, you may well have to
feel threatened. For me to be happy, you may well have to be miserable. And, if
necessary, for me to live, you may well have to die. The vice of pride, of
course, centers on the importance of the self, at the expense of others.
Yet wisdom, seeing things from a
perspective that is both broader and deeper, teaches me that all things are
part of a whole, and that all things are made to work together, each playing
its own distinct part. There is no me without the order of the whole world, and
there can be no me at the expense of the whole world. It is all a totality.
Accordingly, I do not need to think
of my own good separately from the good of anything else, and I must respect
that my good is in service to the good of everything else. We think that vanity
frees us, but it actually imprisons us. A wise man can be serene, precisely
because he can joyfully look beyond himself. He is no better, or more special,
or more necessary than any other creature.
This is also why he does not fear
death, or does not consider it an evil, because he knows it is natural and
right for all creatures to come to be, and to cease to be. Only the self-serving
man cares for his reputation, or his wealth, or the accumulation of his
pleasures, just as only the self-serving man cares about when he will die.
Written in 11/2007
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