Are God and Nature then at strife,
That Nature lends such evil dreams?
So careful of the type she seems,
So careless of the single life;...
A.
Lord Tennyson, "In Memoriam" v. 55
"The origins of Europe were hammered out on the
anvil of war."
R. A. Brown, The
Origins of Modern Europe
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Shiva Left Hand: Fire-Destruction Right Hand: Drum-Creation |
Hinduism, the world's
oldest religion, has many deities. One of the most interesting is Shiva whose task
is demolishing the universe to prepare for its rebirth. Like a slash and burn farmer, he sets fire
to existing worlds to nourish new ones--a "no pain, no
gain" kind of deity.
"Creative
destruction" thus has an ancient and venerable pedigree. But it also has disturbing
implications, and some are not so obvious.
Writ large, creative destruction has biological and political aspects that
demand another look at just what it means to be human.
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Aztec Smallpox Victims, 16th cent. |
First, the biological
aspects. Historians of disease like
William McNeill have cataloged the consequences of epidemics in world history,
chief among which was the creation of separate "disease pools" in different
world regions. Continual exposure to diseases
that were specific to one pool allowed its survivors to prevail over populations
in other pools. For example, European diseases
like smallpox wiped out 90% of the Aztecs and Incas in the century following Columbus's
arrival in the Americas. But…this is a very
big "but"…the price of such immunological prowess was colossal: millennia
of suffering and innumerable deaths from illnesses like smallpox, influenza, measles
and tuberculosis.
And consider the
political implications. Historians note that
the strength of states in western Europe and North America, those whose democratic
heritage we celebrate today, derives from their exposure to, and victory in, civil
and interstate wars. For example, the havoc wrought by the Napoleonic wars
prompted the victors to enforce the agreements of the Congress of Vienna in
1815, affirming the legitimacy of Europe's "enlightened" monarchs and
immunizing them against the contagion of revolutionary violence. These wars left the victors with stronger
immune systems in the form of greater national unity and more powerful taxation
and military structures. Sociologist
Charles Tilley put it this way: "War
makes states."
Europe's
political success was, of course, partial and temporary. Post-1815, it remained free of major wars for
nearly a century. Yet revolutionary nationalism,
like a virus on steroids, had its day, beginning with uprisings in 1830 and
1848. Then from 1914-1945 alone, the
continent clocked 60-80 million deaths. And
consider how often war changed Europe's borders from 1914 to now: countries
just came and went.
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Europe 2005 |
Biological pathogens, like their political
cousins, also had their day. Influenza killed
40-50 million people in 1918; the 1980's AIDS pandemic stunned a medical
establishment that had, just a few years before, announced the end of
infectious diseases. Today's antibiotic-resistant
diseases like tuberculosis, MRSA, and SARS pop up and down like microbial
terrorists.
So whatever the battlefield--microbial,
economic, demographic, international--destruction engenders creation, and vice
versa. The elements in this dynamic are
as inseparable as space and time: two sides of the same coin, yet tough to
understand, tougher to reconcile.
The implications of all
this are unsettling. We are beneficiaries of biological and political insults that
created inconceivable misery over innumerable years for countless forbearers. And
like them, we are fodder for the disease- and war-experienced evolution of our descendants. This is a most unedifying take on our place
in the universe.
Tennyson's
verse above reminds us that the sacredness of the individual, a principal pillar of western
civilization, seems trumped by the good of the group in this process. Death and rebirth narratives may give comfort in the present. Yet human suffering appears to
be a precondition for strengthening the bodies and bodies politic of groups who
will come later--much, much later.
Perhaps
we will find some alternative to war and disease as preconditions for
creation. For now though, however
unpalatable, creative destruction remains an unsettling feature of our
identity. Shiva and Schumpeter were on
to something here.