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Posterity

 

Notwithstanding the absence of a soul we all go on into the future in the same way the music persists when the piano roll is in its box, by the mark we leave in the arrangement of the future; because the future is exquisitely sensitive to the past. 

Every day each of us changes the future in many subtle ways and everyone leaves their mark. 

Consider first the mighty. What might have happened if Alexander the Great, Napoleon or Hitler had not been born?  History would obviously be quite different.

But they did not act in isolation Hitler, for example, was heavily influenced by Wagner and Nietzsche; in turn influenced by the ideas of Byron.  Had Byron not been disgraced by his jealous cousin and fled England to Europe, the Nazis may never have risen to power.  Byron’s own birth was problematical; and so it goes. 

The briefest acquaintance with history demonstrates the subtleties of inputs and timing to important decisions made; perhaps through the possession of erroneous information; as a result of an accidental meeting; or a perceived insult.  Everyone in the environment has an impact; the cabbie who was late; the blacksmith that caused the horse to throw a shoe; the maid who spilled the tea.  Had any one of these not been born or in that place, at that time, the future would have been different.  Those who leave ideas, insights or discoveries behind have even more influence.  Consider Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, Darwin or Einstein.

Now consider the accident of your own birth. Everyone has perhaps billions of unborn siblings.  Most women have around 300 thousand follicles at puberty and depending on the circumstances of their lives about 400 of these will become eggs that could potentially be fertilised to become a unique child.  Each man produces between forty and fifty million subtly different sperm per ejaculation.  Every one of these potential combinations of egg and a sperm will produce a different sibling.  But of course not even the most promiscuous woman will fall pregnant at every available opportunity. Which egg is fertilised by which man and which sperm is a great lottery.

The woman’s choice from her available partners, and the exact timing of the events leading to a pregnancy, is critical to the outcome, as are physiological and emotional factors that help determine a successful fertilisation; which sperm succeeds and if the pregnancy goes to term.

Thus the fact that you are here; and not your potential but unborn sibling; is ‘a billion to one chance’.  And so it was for anyone in history.  Indeed if any of the many people who influenced your parents to copulate the instant they did had not been born (friends, a concierge, waiter, cab driver, actor, chef, song writer), nor would you have been.  I acknowledge the influence of Hitler, Churchill, the Wright Brothers and 40’s movies on my parents for my existence. 

The decisions you take everyday inevitably help determine the future of the yet unborn.  If you happen to be a Byron these changes will be more devastating but the outcomes may not be any better.

It has been argued that demonstrating that there is no soul removes the consequences of being good or evil; that if others are persuaded to believe this they will feel free to commit immoral acts because they will fear no ultimate retribution.

Morality is a mode of behaviour that you learn at your mother’s knee; acceptance of civil law the outcome of an accepted social contract; neither has anything to do with ancient religious mores. 

Divine retribution is unnecessary to enforce contemporary mores and indeed our sense of morality is often offended by things we read in ancient teachings.  We no longer approve of slavery or deny equality to women.  We believe that treating children or women as property is wrong.  The Jewish uprising in AD 66 began when Greeks sacrificed birds in front of a local synagogue. Tens of thousands died. Why would you take such teachings seriously in the 21st Century?

If the only future presence you have beyond your death is posterity there is a strong incentive to be well remembered. 

Perhaps you can discover new knowledge, invent something or leave something else worthwhile. Maybe you can become famous?

But extraordinary achievement is relative and therefore not available to everyone.  An achievement's no longer extraordinary if almost everyone can do it.  Nor is fame universally desired. 

 

Eternity 96

 

Most of us will be very content to be well remembered by our friends and community;  to positively influence our children and grandchildren’s development;  or alternatively, perhaps, to abjure from children at all and through our contributions to community support those of others. 

On the other hand, no one concerned with posterity wants to be reviled as evil or remembered as a destroyer of the achievements or the lives of others.  Posterity does not offer forgiveness for these sins.

 

 

 

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Travel

Burma (Myanmar)

 

This is a fascinating country in all sorts of ways and seems to be most popular with European and Japanese tourists, some Australians of course, but they are everywhere.

Since childhood Burma has been a romantic and exotic place for me.  It was impossible to grow up in the Australia of the 1950’s and not be familiar with that great Australian bass-baritone Peter Dawson’s rendition of Rudyard Kipling’s 'On the Road to Mandalay' recorded two decades or so earlier:  

Come you back to Mandalay
Where the old flotilla lay
Can't you hear their paddles chunking
From Rangoon to Mandalay

On the road to Mandalay
Where the flying fishes play
And the Dawn comes up like thunder
out of China 'cross the bay

The song went Worldwide in 1958 when Frank Sinatra covered it with a jazz orchestration, and ‘a Burma girl’ got changed to ‘a Burma broad’; ‘a man’ to ‘a cat’; and ‘temple bells’ to ‘crazy bells’.  

Read more: Burma (Myanmar)

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Book of Mormon

 

 

 

 

Back in the mid 1960's when I was at university and still living at home with my parents in Thornleigh, two dark suited, white shirted, dark tied, earnest young men, fresh from the United States, appeared at our door.

Having discovered that they weren't from IBM my mother was all for shooing them away.  But I was taking an interest in philosophy and psychology and here were two interesting examples of religious fervour.

As I often have with similar missionaries (see: Daniel, the Jehovah’s Witness in Easter on this Website), I invited them in and they were very pleased to tell me about their book.  I remember them poised on the front of our couch, not daring or willing to sit back in comfort, as they eagerly told me about their revelation.  

And so it came to pass that a week ago when we travelled to Melbourne to stay with my step-son Lachlan and his family and to see the musical: The Book of Mormon I was immediately taken back to 1964.

Read more: The Book of Mormon

Opinions and Philosophy

Climate Change - a Myth?

 

 

 

Back in 2015 a number of friends and acquaintances told me that Climate Change is a myth.

Half a decade on and some still hold that view.  So here I've republished a slightly longer version of the same article.

Obviously the doubters are talking about 'Anthropogenic Global Warming', not disclaiming actual changes to the climate.  For those of us of a 'certain age' our own experience is sufficient to be quite sure of that the climate is continuously changing. During our lifetimes the climate has been anything but constant.  Else what is drought and flood relief about?  And the ski seasons have definitely been variable. 

Read more: Climate Change - a Myth?

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