Meaning In It All
Meaning In It All
Man lives on
food, water and air but not for them. Evolutionary science has
conclusively shown that in a world with scarce resources and a fierce
competition for these, the sole objective of every living being is to secure
these fruits for its own survival, in a struggle to leave behind maximum progeny.
This principle governs all human
behaviour at its core. It operates silently at the level of our genes, by
selecting those genes from the pool which code for such behaviour as will
maximise their survival.
But we do not fall in love in order to produce a large
brood, nor do we look after our children only because they are the means of
propagation of our genes. We do things that seem far removed from this
Malthusian world of struggle for survival. And it appears we live for them.
We sing and dance with our friends, we tell unbelievable tales, we invent
wildly improbable supernatural beings and equally preposterous means to appease
them, we pierce our bodies to put on trinkets, we adorn our homes with
festoons, we toil in our gardens to beautify our surroundings, we invent
intricate systems of sounds and body-movements and derive rapturous joy
listening and watching people who have mastered these, we zealously guard
little leisure wrenched from the gruelling task of earning livelihood and spend
it holding hands of our beloveds, we fritter hard-earned money to travel to
far-off lands to watch sun sink and rise behind an interminable ocean or
distant snow peaks, we willingly agonise our minds for years in an attempt to
write a book which few will read, we pave mountains, we carve stones, we paint
caves.
Are all these activities in pursuit of happiness? If by happiness we
mean sum-total of pleasurable stimuli during a sensory experience, much of our lives
are spent in ventures which are far from pleasant when being
performed. Process of creation is the most tormenting experience of man: be it
painting, sculpture, writing, music, or scientific invention. People spend
excruciating lives in these pursuits. We only learn of those who succeed. Even
they admit that the process of achieving their objective is an unmitigated
misery. George Orwell had this to say of writing.
‘Writing
a book is horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout with some painful
illness. One would never undertake such a thing if one were not driven on by
some demon whom one can neither resist nor understand.’
These human endeavours at least
provide for an illusion of immortality. One feels they are leaving behind a part of themselves for the posterity. What about people who live and die in strange, hostile lands to
spread the message of their imaginary God. People spend their precious youths
in climbing remote, inhospitable mountains or charting the seas of the world. Some derive satisfaction as they force punishing schedules on themselves to aquire chiseled bodies, others adopt strenuous lifestyles to refine their minds. People with exquisite intellect whittle away their most productive
years in inventing esoteric streams of abstract knowledge which has no apparent
utility for mankind. Many toil for years to fathom the mind of God as he
created the world, others persistently torture their minds in discerning how
mankind invented God. What is this gigantic human industry for? If it is not
for the immediate pleasure and apparently not to maximize individual survival,
what then drives it? What does man seek in this relentless labour?
It seems this unflagging strife is in
pursuance of meaning in life. Meaning, not in the sense of Cosmic truth
about existence, but meaning in the sense of a goal, a value, that makes every
moment of life worth living. Meaning gives a narrative to our past and a
direction to our future. It gives us a feeling that our life is not a mere
collection of random occurrences but each moment is a component of the whole
which we can strive to carve. We see our past as a part of this narrative and
expect our future to unfold in fulfilment of this. It is a known fact that life
without meaning, though not lacking in pleasure, is rarely felt to be happy.
While a life devoid of much pleasures but seen to be meaningful is considered
rewarding. People find different meanings in their lives: some find it in arts,
some in being a dutiful parent or a child, some in science others in travel,
some in charity and others in building empires while some in simply being an
honest, sincere citizen.
Science presents another interesting view
of life.
Human life is inconsequential in the
realm of cosmos, though inseparably woven in its fabric. Origin of human life
was a cosmic phenomenon, like any other. In this infinite vastness of universe,
we inhabit a speck of dust called Earth which itself is an insignificant planet
revolving around a moderately sized star. There are billions such stars and
planetary systems in our galaxy and billions such galaxies in our universe. It
would not make any difference to universe if all of a sudden human life was to
be snubbed from it. Planets would go on revolving around their stars, stars
will go on exploding into supernovae or collapse into black holes, universe
will go on expanding and as this expansion slows, perhaps one day it will
vanish into a void from which it had risen. Universe grinds according to
certain simple laws. These laws are blind. They have no purpose. Man’s search
for meaning in his ephemeral life, seen in the context of the meaninglessness
of existence is intensely tragic, if not outright absurd. Steven Weinberg, a
Noble laureate in Physics, thought that ‘the more universe seems
comprehensible, the more it also seems pointless.’ He found meaning in life
in his quest to understand the universe. And had this to say of his search.
‘The
effort to understand the universe is one of the very few things that lifts
human life a little above the level of farce, and gives it some of the grace of
tragedy.’
Wonderful buddy
ReplyDeleteYou have outdone yourself, Dr Rajeev, in your musings about the purpose, not meaning, but purpose of life.
ReplyDeleteYour thoughts have put me in a state of trance. Please keep sharing them, even if it takes people like me some time to get around to them.
ReplyDeleteSir, this post reminds me of the first time when we spoke about existence of God and the purpose of human life. You had made the whole thing crystal clear to me by just saying one word "meaningless". You have wonderfully explained such a thought provoking thing in very few measured words.
ReplyDelete- Devidutta Panda