Can We Dare To Imagine Goodness?

I well remember the first time someone told me they believed in the Calvinist doctrine of “the depravity of man.” It shocked me. To complain about human behavior I understood, but to condemn the entire human species as depraved… that was and remains obscene to me.

The sad truth, however, is that the modern West swims in a sea of secular Calvinism. The corporate bullhorns feed everyone they can a steady diet of the bad, the ugly, and if possible the bloody. Under their influence we would believe that all is darkness, that truth is illusion, that the human path is ever-downward, and that all professions of goodness are frauds.

In other words, the minds of millions of people (billions, probably), are continually pushed to imagine that human depravity is an inescapable fact. The strategy has terribly effective, but it is no less than obscene.

And it’s false. Humans are amazing creatures: very often kind, gracious and loving creatures.

The Real Revolutionaries

I’ve used this passage from G.K. Chesterton’s The Defendant before, but it’s so important that I could use it once a month and feel fine about it:

Every one of the great revolutionists, from Isaiah to Shelly, have been optimists. They have been indignant, not about the badness of existence, but about the slowness of men in realizing its goodness.

The popular image of a revolutionary is of someone railing against rulers and leading a mob against them to bring in a new political regime. Notwithstanding the ridiculous notion of politics saving us from politics, this has always been a fantasy. It’s very dramatic of course, which is why it remains, but in real life it simply doesn’t happen.

The actual revolution of our time is not to bring anything down; it’s seeing that we’ve outgrown a dark and manipulative public order, that it’s fit to be tossed aside like the worn-out tee-shirts of our youth.

Real revolutionaries don’t want to take over an outmoded and abusive status quo, but to transcend it… to leave it behind and build better things. Behind such a belief, as Chesterton noted, stands a realization of the goodness of existence.

How Good Can We Get?

Consider the millions of hours… billions of hours… wasted every year in outrage against the endless evils (nearly all of them embellished or simply imagined) that are pumped through television, radio and social media. Then please consider that the problems so terrifyingly portrayed are never really solved.

How silly is it to spend our time and treasure fighting within a system that can never allow its problems to be solved – if it solved the problems it would have no reason to exist – when we are quite able to improve ourselves with less time and energy?

Consider this please, even though it’s a forbidden thought:

We have no real idea of how good we can get, because we haven’t seriously focused on improving ourselves.

Or, said differently: Instead of endlessly imagining human evil, what if we started imagining human greatness? One is just as possible as the other, so why shouldn’t we take the bright path instead of the permanently dark path that’s proven not to work?

And I will add that the progress we have seen in the world… science, medicine and the like… has mainly come from people who imagined better ways, better things, and better lives.

The radical and revolutionary belief that stands before us is this: That mankind is better than we’ve imagined… that human life can be satisfying and rewarding. All we have to do is to look up from the stream of darkness and start trying.

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Paul Rosenberg

freemansperspective.com