There
is no nature that is inferior to art, for the arts imitate the natures of
things. But if this is so, that Nature which is the most perfect and the most
comprehensive of all natures, cannot fall short of the skill of art.
Now all arts do the inferior things for the
sake of the superior; therefore the Universal Nature does so too.
And,
indeed, hence is the origin of justice, and in justice the other virtues have
their foundation: for justice will not be observed, if we either care for
middle things, those things indifferent, or are easily deceived and careless
and changeable.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.10 (tr
Long)
There is an art to being fair,
right, and decent, just as there is an art to all aspects of living well. Yet
that art remains fully in the service of Nature, such that whatever we may
desire must always exist within the whole and for the sake of the whole, never
for one part at the expense of another. It is deeply comforting to know that morality
is grounded in the very dignity of what things are, not merely in how
convenient they may be at the moment.
Still, I need to be quite careful
when I hear people appealing to justice, because they may well be speaking of
something very different. For some, justice does not mean everyone giving and
receiving what is rightfully due, but rather becomes giving only enough to
receive what is most preferred. This is hardly just a play on words; it is the
difference between respect and gratification as the measure of our lives.
The art of justice can easily become
twisted into the utility of cleverness. I have come to recognize this whenever
I see someone who would expect to be treated in a certain way, but will not
treat others in that very same way.
Do you know the sort of person who
demands to be forgiven for a mistake, but will cast blame whenever another
makes a mistake? Do you know the sort of person who is always asking for
sacrifice from you, but who never seems to sacrifice anything of himself? Do
you know the sort of person who distinguishes between telling a lie on the one
hand, and being caught telling a lie on the other? You already know quite well
those who subvert Nature to their own sense of entitlement.
Understanding that justice is rooted
in Nature herself, and not merely in appearance and convention, will change
absolutely everything about how I go about living my life, and it will often
require taking the path that is the not the easiest or the most pleasant.
Justice, as the virtue that orders our relationship to others, in turn informs
all the other virtues, such that no thought or action can ever really be
considered separately from whether it works in harmony with the whole.
If I start ruling my life by what
the Stoics often call “middle things” or “indifferent things” I have left
justice far behind. It is my own virtue that is good for me, and my own vice
that is bad for me. Now there are also all sorts of things in life, those in
the middle, that are neither good nor bad in themselves, rather becoming good
or bad by whether I guide them with character.
So it will in itself be neither good
nor bad for me, and should therefore be indifferent to me, whether I am rich or
poor, loved or hated, healthy or sick, and so on. As soon as I want these things for their own sake, and act toward them as my highest goal, I am
far from being a just man. I am now only a man who follows what he most
prefers, what strikes his fancy from a certain light, and what feels appealing
at the time.
In all, I can
ask myself: Am I acting to improve my own excellence, or just to improve my
situation? Am I acting for the good of the whole, or am I supporting some of
the parts while neglecting other parts? Am I correctly discerning what is good
and bad from what is indifferent?
The scales are only balanced if
these questions are answered rightly.
Written in 4/2009
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