Everything
exists for some end—a horse, a vine. Why do you wonder? Even the sun will say,
I am for some purpose, and the rest of the gods will say the same.
For
what purpose then are you—to enjoy pleasure? See if common sense allows this.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 8 (tr
Long)
As soon as I
ask myself, what is it? I must also
ask myself, in the same breath, so what
is it for?
Purpose is
implicit in form. Everything that moves and changes, moves and changes from one
state, and into another, and that is inseparable from its very identity. It is
coming from somewhere, and going to somewhere. What it is, is itself only
complete through what it is made to become.
So I am a
creature of flesh and bone, of feelings and instincts, and of reason and
choice. To say that alone is not enough. What am I meant to do with those
qualities? What sort of life do they point me toward?
I can look at a
plant, or an animal, or a tool made by other men, and I can quite clearly
discern what they are intended to do. Now let me look at myself. What am I
supposed to be?
Some of us will
look at a lower aspect alone, at the expense of a higher aspect. We know that
we can enjoy pleasure, and so we assume that this is all that there is, all
that there could be. We neglect the whole at the expense of the part. Am I a creature
of gratification? Of course. Am I a creature only of gratification? Not at all.
As the
Philosopher-Emperor says, there is no sense at all in making an animal of a
man. A man will feel pleasure or pain, but what distinguishes him from other
creatures is his power to know true from false, right from wrong, and thereby
to give meaning to his pleasure and pain. He directs what he feels by what he
knows.
He understands
that how well he feels follows from how well he lives. Pleasure is not the end,
but a consequence of the end.
Understanding
is greater than utility. Love is greater than contentment. Utility and contentment
follow from understanding and love, and never the other way around.
Let me keep my
hand on my heart, but let me first and foremost keep my head turned upwards, to
an awareness of truth, goodness, and beauty.
Written in 3/2008
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