.
. . Third, that if men do rightly what they do, we ought not to be displeased,
but if they do not right, it is plain that they do so involuntarily and in
ignorance.
For
as every soul is unwillingly deprived of the truth, so also is it unwillingly
deprived of the power of behaving to each man according to his deserts.
Accordingly men are pained when they are called unjust, ungrateful, and greedy,
and in a word wrongdoers to their neighbor . . .
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.18 (tr
Long)
As rational animals, we will most
certainly decide how we will act, and therefore we will be responsible for how
we will live; still, our judgments will proceed from the premise that we always
choose what seems to be beneficial. We may desire something harmful, and we may
do something harmful, but it is only because we somehow think it is good that
we would ever pursue it.
When I do what is evil, I certainly could know better, and I certainly should know better. At the time, however, and
in whatever twisted sort of a way, I have convinced myself that left is right,
that up is down, that right is wrong. The vice comes across as a virtue. Yes,
the harm is seen as necessary, or the lie is seen as convenient, or the lust is
seen as fulfilling.
When I come to see this ignorance in
myself, I ask to be forgiven, to be taught, or to be helped. I want to become
better. When I see it in others, should I not ask for much the same? Ignorance
is hardly an excuse, though overcoming such ignorance is the remedy.
At the very least, this will assist
me in putting up with others, and at the very best, it will assist me in
sharing the burdens of others. It reminds me to improve myself by helping
others to improve themselves, to look at wisdom and ignorance as the root
causes of virtue and vice, and not merely to boil away with resentment at
offensive words and deeds.
Profound and abstract philosophical
reflection are not even required to understand this, since we can also see it
immediately in the patterns of our daily behavior. Observe how we may do
something thoughtless, selfish, or manipulative, but if we are corrected or
challenged, we quite easily become defensive and indignant.
We don’t like being seen as wrong,
because we so desperately want to be right. We might be terribly unjust, but we
become charged with a stubborn sense that we embody everything that is just.
The only way out of the cycle of
resentment is to admit ignorance, and thereby being open to learning something
new. In this way, good living will always follow from good thinking. I can
hardly be a decent man if I don’t really know what it means to be decent, nor
can I reasonably expect that from anyone else.
Written in 5/2009
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