Friday, December 15, 2006

December 16th, '06 -- Wonder

A crowd of black villagers are packed shoulder to shoulder in an aerial photograph, gazing up at the camera. There are hundreds of them--the frame is not large enough to hold them all. Every one of them is smiling and waving--eyes wide and bright, teeth flashing. They are the embodiment of simple excitement and happiness, as bright as the clothes they're wearing.

A caption on the back of the photo states they are African villagers waving at a hovering helicopter.

At what point do we trade joy and wonder for technology and creature comforts?

Does mapping the human genome and colonizing space make us happy? Does it make us better?

There are tiny pockets of tribal people who live off their land, self-sufficient and self-actuating, who live, love, struggle and die without ever seeing a microwave oven. They know their place in the world, are sure of their purpose, and are spiritually rich. Their happiness is simple and honest and direct, as is their pain. Their joy is the people and land around them.

How will curing cancer benefit their lives?

Will education make them better people?

In our desperate struggle to complicate and validate our lives, we are outdistancing our own capacity for joy and wonder.

1 Comments:

Blogger Eben said...

I agree with pretty much everything you posted, but would like to add/clarify something: I'm not asking "is technology bad or good" or suggesting that it's needlessly complicating our lives. I'm suggesting that perhaps we're a bit distracted by it, that it's too easy to use as a yardstick for progress and as seductive as wealth when a purpose to life is sought after.
I agree that evolution is the name of the game for anyone anywhere, be they technically advanced or not. The big one for me is, are we missing the big picture? Will our technical evolution naturally converge with our spiritual progress at some point in the future and the two of them lead us forward as we would hope, or will we "miss the boat" because we're too fascinated and self-validated with our more tangible accomplishments?

12:23 AM

 

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