In the 1960s, two alternative visions of the future burst
onto the popular landscape. Stanley
Kubrick’s film, 2001: A Space Odyssey,
which was co-written and based upon a short story by science fiction writer
Arthur C. Clarke, was released in 1968, and two years earlier, in September
1966, the American television series Star
Trek debuted. While both of these
science fiction productions immediately captured widespread attention, their
receptions were not universally positive at the time. 2001: A
Space Odyssey opened to decidedly mixed reviews, with some critics praising
its vision and scope, and others deriding it for its plodding length and the
lack of an engaging or compelling story line.
Star Trek also premiered to
mixed reviews, and had less than stellar ratings during its entire original
three-year run. It is probably safe to
say that time has been kind to both of these productions, however, since today
they are both generally regarded as groundbreaking works of science
fiction. I have always been fascinated
by the similarities and contrasts of these respective visions of the future.
Both, for example, shared what in retrospect was clearly an
overoptimistic assessment of where our technology would take us by the beginning
of the twenty-first century: conducting manned explorations of our own solar
system, and on the threshold of interstellar travel. (While the Star Trek setting was more than two centuries into the future, it
is clear from certain episodes that manned space exploration had begun in
earnest by the end of the twentieth century.)
At the time, however, such optimism was certainly warranted by what had
taken place over the previous century.
After all, one hundred years earlier, conveniences that were commonplace
in the 1960’s, such as telephones, radio, television, automobiles, and atomic
power, were completely unimaginable. It
had been just a little over sixty years since the Wright brothers had
successfully lifted off of the ground in their heavier-than-air flying machine,
and in the succeeding two generations, their simple design was transformed into
the modern jet airplane that could ferry passengers across the Atlantic or
Pacific Ocean in just a matter of hours.
Advanced propulsion systems also powered rockets that could send manned
capsules above the earth’s atmosphere into outer space, and by the end of the
1960s, one of these actually enabled the first landing of astronauts on the
surface of the moon.
Small wonder, then, that science fiction writers in the
middle of the 20th century envisioned a 21st century
world that would be as different from their own as theirs was from that of a
hundred years earlier. While the Apollo
11 moon landing in 1969 must have provided an ecstatic confirmation that such
visions of the future were coming to pass, I can only imagine the shock that
most of these writers would have felt back then if they could have looked ahead
half a century, and seen a world in which there had been no significant further
advance to the planets and the stars, no apparent general interest or desire in
even making such an advance, and in fact a skepticism evident among many that human
beings had ever actually walked on the moon.
The future conquest of space, for 20th century
scientific visionaries such as Arthur C. Clarke and Gene Roddenberry (the
creator of Star Trek), was a
given. It was part of our collective
destiny, and the trajectory of scientific discoveries – particularly those of
the past century – suggested that this destiny was an imminent one. This was the shared vision of 2001: A Space Odyssey and Star Trek: that we were on the cusp of a great leap into a new, exciting level of civilization, and that this leap
would involve a movement outward, into the limitless reaches of outer space. But as intriguing as the similarities of
these visions were, there was a much more intriguing, fundamental difference,
and this involved human beings themselves, and how best they should accommodate
themselves to the future.
In the universe of 2001:
A Space Odyssey, humanity, and human civilization, have come into being
through a process of personal transformation, or rather, transmutation. At the beginning of the movie, we are shown a
sort of creation story explaining the rise of Homo sapiens: how a group of
ape-like creatures were suddenly endowed with the ability to conceptualize the
creation of tools and weapons after encountering a mysterious black
obelisk. It is assumed that this
endowment involved more than simply the transmission of an idea, but also a
genetic mutation that gave these creatures the latent ability to use and retain
such information. The saga then moves
forward, to the future, where scientists have discovered another of these obelisks
on the moon, and a mission of astronauts is sent to Jupiter to find the
destination of a mysterious, directed, signal emitted by that lunar structure. The movie concludes with an encounter by one
of these astronauts with yet a third obelisk, orbiting Jupiter, which
transmutes the astronaut into a higher being: a “star child”. In Arthur C. Clarke’s novel of the same name,
the story ends with this new entity contemplating how it will re-engage with
the human race, the implication being that – as the transmuted ape-men had done
millions of years earlier – he will have a direct role in moving humanity and
human civilization into its next, higher phase of evolution. Hence, in this vision of humanity’s
evolution, each milestone in development is catalyzed (presumably, with the
help of an advanced alien race) by the appearance of one or more “supermen”,
who, through both their actions and their genes, advance the species upward to
the next rung.
It is ironic, then, that Star Trek, which was first broadcast two
years before 2001: A Space Odyssey
premiered, constitutes a sort of rebuttal to that movie’s vision of
civilization’s advancement. Because a
recurring theme in this television series is that the improvement of
civilization comes about through making do with what we have, and who we are,
rather than through some sort of profound transformational process. In fact, in the Star Trek universe, the “star child” was always the nemesis of such
a process. In episode after episode, the
appearance of a prodigy always signaled potential disaster, and it was only through
the valiant efforts of the series’ main characters that such prodigies were
eventually reined in or destroyed. Here
are just a few of the episodes that touched on that theme:
·
In the pilot episode for the series, “Where No
Man Has Gone Before”, a crew member of the Enterprise – the starship which is engaged in
interplanetary exploration – attains nearly god-like powers after having been
irradiated with some strange energy source at the edge of the galaxy. (And in an interesting twist, the actor who
portrayed this crew member, Gary Lockwood, was also in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, portraying the
doomed fellow astronaut of the man who would become the “star child” at the end
of that film.) Rather than using these
powers to shepherd humanity onto its next phase of evolution, the affected man
becomes a narcissistic tyrant, and is only destroyed after the series’ main
hero, Captain Kirk, enlists the aid of a woman who has also gained some of
these powers in opposing him (Captain Kirk convinces her that the man will
never tolerate a rival with similar powers: in the end, he warns, there will
only be “one jealous god”) and she successfully does so at the cost of her own
life.
·
In the original, failed pilot episode, “The
Cage” (which was later incorporated into the series as “The Menagerie”), a race
of beings called Talosians have evolved their mental faculties to such a high
level that dreams and fantasies have become more important to them than
reality, and they are desperately in search of some other, less-evolved species
which can rebuild their world for them.
·
In “Charlie X”, a teenaged-boy who had gained
telekinetic powers from a race of advanced aliens terrorizes the crew of the Enterprise , as he lashes
out at them while struggling with the typical emotional upheavals and
insecurities of adolescence. The crew is
only saved when the aliens return and take him away, explaining that because of
his new powers he will never again be able to coexist with other human beings.
·
In “Space Seed”, the crew encounters a spaceship
with human beings in suspended animation.
After reviving their leader, Khan, Captain Kirk learns that these people
are survivors of a eugenics experiment in the late 20th century: a
plan to create a race of supermen and superwomen with heightened mental and
physical capabilities. Rather than
saving the world, however, these super-beings had nearly destroyed it, as they
behaved like marauders and conquerors, rather than sages and guides, until they
were finally defeated and sent out into exile.
Captain Kirk is forced to defeat them again, and exile them again onto
another planet.
These are just a few of the many variations of this theme
that played out through the entire run of the series. In Roddenberry’s vision of the future, the
star-child, the superman, is the bane of humanity, not its savior.
Was Roddenberry right?
Is there no place for the superman or superwoman in our world? They have certainly found a place in our
mythologies, our popular dramas, and even our histories. Perhaps a cursory inspection of some of these
will help to shed light on the role, if any, of the superman. And there is probably no better place to
start than with the philosopher of the superman himself, Friedrich Nietzsche.
In Thus Spoke
Zarathustra, Nietzsche used a historical figure, the Persian sage
Zoroaster, as the mouthpiece for his own philosophies about God, morality,
power, and the purpose of existence. The
real Zoroaster had preached that existence consists of a struggle between truth
and falsehood, and that the goal of life is to sustain truth through the
practice of good works and constructive acts, and the shunning of
ignorance. Such behaviors increase the
divine force within the world, while moving those who engage in them closer to
union with God. Nietzsche’s Zoroaster
(Zarathustra) also preaches the pursuit of truth, but for this Zarathustra,
truth comes from exposing the lie that is inherent in conventional concepts of
morality. “God is dead”, he declares,
and man is merely a being in a precarious state of transition between ape and
superman. Ignorance and chaos are
overcome, not by the practice of good works, but through self-mastery, courage,
and enhancement of one’s power and abilities.
Nietzsche’s Zarathustra declares:
I teach you the superman. Man is
something that shall be overcome. What
have you done to overcome him?
All
beings so far have created something beyond themselves; and do you want to be
the ebb of this great flood and even go back to the beasts rather than overcome
man? What is the ape to man? A laughingstock or a painful
embarrassment. And man shall be just
that for the superman: a laughingstock or a painful embarrassment. You have made your way from worm to man, and
much in you is still worm. Once you were
apes, and even now, too, man is more ape than any ape. . . .
Behold,
I teach you the superman! The superman
is the meaning of the earth. Let your
will say: the superman shall be the
meaning of the earth! I beseech you, my
brothers, remain faithful to the earth,
and do not believe those who speak to you of otherworldly hopes! Poison-mixers are they, whether they know it
or not. Despisers of life are they,
decaying and poisoned themselves, of whom the earth is weary: so let them go!
In 1896, less than a decade after Nietzsche published his
novel, Richard Strauss composed the musical tone poem Also sprach Zarathustra, which had been inspired by that work. It is the opening bars of this musical
composition which are heard at the beginning and the end of Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Of course, for those who have been alive within the past
half century, and particularly for Americans, the word “superman” probably
produces a very distinct image, which seems to have little connection to the
Nietzschean one. It is of the tall man
with the red cape and the letter “S” on his chest, the Superman of the comic
books. His story is actually not that
far removed from that of Kubrick’s movie:
He was a “star child” in his own right, sent by a benign, advanced extraterrestrial
civilization to improve the lot of humanity.
In probably the best and most memorable depiction of this story, the
1978 movie Superman, with Christopher
Reeve, Kal-El, the alien, receives an explanation in recordings from his
long-dead father, Jor-El, of why he has been sent to earth:
Live as
one of them, Kal-El, to discover where your strength and where your power are
needed. . . . They can be a great people, Kal-El, they wish to be. They only lack the light to show the way. For this reason above all, their capacity for
good, I have sent them you . . . my only son.
Now this speech of Jor-El’s in the 1978 movie, along with
the presentation in that movie of Superman’s early life history – evidence of
precocious abilities as a child, his apparent withdrawal from the world during
his late adolescence and early adulthood, followed by his return at the age of
thirty with a clear sense of his mission – brings to mind another “star-child”
who has played a major role as a religious figure in western civilization, but
more on that later. Those who have seen
this or any of the Superman movies, or read the comic books, while marveling at
his powers and admiring his heroism, must be left wondering exactly what sort
of lasting legacy to the human race he was supposed to leave. Because, quite frankly, it seems that he
spends all of his time doing good deeds – fighting crime, saving people from
natural catastrophes, playing the role of valiant knight for his fair lady and
occasional damsel in distress, Lois Lane, and dispatching the occasional
megalomaniacal evil genius – but doing nothing else of consequence that will
move humanity onto a higher plane of being.
One can only imagine that after spending a lifetime of putting out
fires, rescuing cats from trees, and chasing down felons and petty criminals,
this super being would be left asking himself what it all amounted to. I am reminded of a comedy sketch in which the
comedian Jerry Seinfeld portrays Superman in an interview. The interviewer asks if he might consider
helping out with garbage collection while the garbage workers’ strike is going
on, to which he angrily replies that he will do no such thing, regardless of
how easy it would be for him to do it.
But really, what Superman does
do to occupy his time does not seem that much more consequential, in the grand
scheme of things. What is the lasting,
world-changing, lesson that his life would impart to us: that we should all
devote a greater amount of our time to civic activities, such as joining the volunteer
fire department?
Perhaps, like the transmuted ape men in Kubrick’s movie, he
would leave us with an improved genetic heritage, after marrying Lois Lane and
fathering children with her. But what
guarantee would there be that all of his descendants, each of whom would have
at least a part of his remarkable powers, will be as high-minded as he was,
with the same sense of mission? What if
one or more of them chose to use their powers strictly for their own self-aggrandizement,
possibly in very brutal ways? And isn’t
there a real danger that this lineage of supermen and superwomen would merely
set themselves aside as an upper caste of superior beings, and run roughshod
over the rest of humanity?
This darker vision of the star child was presented in the
1995 science fiction film Species, in
which scientists receive instructions from an extraterrestrial intelligence on
how to use gene splicing in order to create a genetically-enhanced human
being. The female that is produced becomes
ruthlessly fixated on propagating this new, superior, line, and the unfortunate
human males that she attempts to enlist in achieving this end are given the
same treatment as the mate of a female preying mantis or black widow spider – a
reflection of the general contempt and complete disregard that she holds for
ordinary humans.
In mythology, the intermixing of superman and man, or rather
god and man, is not uncommon, and, with some exceptions, such as in the Old
Testament, where when “the sons of god came unto the daughters of men” the
result was a race of giants, these unions did not generally produce disruptive
consequences. Many of the royal lines of
ancient civilizations, such as the pharaohs of Egypt , believed that they were
descendants of divine beings. And many
of the heroes and heroines of Greek and Roman mythology were god/human hybrids,
such as Achilles, Hercules, Theseus, Perseus, and even Helen of Troy. Aeneas, the legendary Trojan ancestor of the
Romans, was the son of a human father and the goddess Venus. Often, the supermen and superwomen of
mythology – the gods and demigods – became the center of mystery cults, where
secret knowledge was passed on to initiates.
A particularly interesting example is that of Dionysus, another
god/human hybrid. He became associated
with wine, dance, and theatrical entertainments, and his cultic followers were
reputed to be driven into ecstatic frenzies during their nightly
gatherings. Dionysus became the symbol
of self-expressive, impulsive freedom, along with a contempt for oppressive,
conventional mores and standards.
Nietzsche’s Zarathustra preached just such a Dionysian approach to
living.
And lest one be tempted to think that the manic ecstasies
that overcame the followers of Dionysus – the “Bacchanalia” – were purely the
stuff of myth and legend, one need only look to the modern incarnations of
Dionysus that appeared in the 20-century, such as Elvis Presley, whose fans
screamed, swooned, and fainted during his performances. It became customary for an Elvis concert to
begin with the opening bars of Richard Strauss’s Also Sprach Zarathustra, and for the same reason that it was used
in Kubrick’s film: to herald the imminent appearance of the superman. Elvis’s impact on his audience was soon
rivaled by the Beatles, and here, too, an almost supernatural aura eventually
haloed these artists. More than a few
devotees of the band pored over the lyrics of their songs, hoping to tease out
of them answers to the riddle of life.
The Beatles’ meteoric rise was nearly aborted when one of its members,
John Lennon, declared that the band was “bigger than Jesus”, which created a
firestorm of controversy that only subsided after Lennon subsequently distanced
himself from the remark in a display of public contrition. And this brings us to that most famous “star
child” of religion, Jesus Christ.
Jesus has all the classic hallmarks of a “superman”: with
extraordinary powers, an unnatural origin, and a sense of a personal
mission. He is linked with the
Judeo-Christian god, but he is not a demigod like those of classical mythology:
a hybrid between god and man. Rather he
is presented as God and man both, and his birth is not attributed to any sort
of intercourse between his mother and a supernatural being. And yet, in his incarnation as a human, he
faces many of the same dilemmas and challenges as the other supermen described
above. In the first public miracle that
he performed as an adult (as reported in the Gospel of John), he and his mother
had been attending a wedding, and his mother informs him that the host has run
out of wine. With probably more than a
little irritation (his mother’s implied request brings to mind Jerry Seinfeld’s
Superman being asked to help out during the garbage strike), he replies “O
Woman, what have I to do with you?” and then proceeds to turn water into
wine. The miracles that follow in his
career are of a decidedly more altruistic bent, as he heals the crippled, the
sick, and the insane, and even restores life to persons who had recently passed
away. But within the physical
limitations of a man’s body, he can only do so much, regardless of his supernatural
abilities. This is tellingly portrayed
in the rock opera Jesus Christ, Superstar,
when, at one point, when he is mobbed by an overwhelming throng of people
begging to be healed, he shouts “Stop . . . stop!” There is simply not enough time and
opportunity to heal everybody who needs healing, even for a God incarnate.
One is tempted to wonder, had Jesus lived a long life,
wandering about Judea healing the sick and the lame, if he would also have had
an existential crisis, asking himself what enduring legacy his lifetime of good
works had produced, if any. I suspect
not. It seems that for Jesus, his real
mission, all along, had been to leave the world with a new idea, about how one
should relate to God and to one’s fellow human beings. Clearly, there was no intent to leave some
sort of genetic legacy (The Da Vinci Code
novel notwithstanding) by producing a new priest caste with a supernatural
lineage, although, according to some early church histories, the Romans
actually had suspected that Jesus’ intent was to produce a sort of messianic or
royal lineage in Judea, and so set about exterminating all of his living
relatives, including those who had never been associated with his
movement. Nor did he ever seem to
involve himself in the political revolt of Judeans against the abuses of the
occupying Romans. No, this particular superman
always had a spiritual legacy in sight, never a hereditary or a political one.
Some religious scholars have attempted to draw parallels –
or even links – between the Jesus story and the myth of Dionysus, with the
special role of wine (and its symbolic relationship to blood) in the rituals of
both of their followers, the mystical process of infusion of the spirit of God
(or of a god) into devotees, and the common motif of the god-man that dies and
is reborn. But the morality of Jesus –
or at least that of his later Christian followers – was distinctly
anti-Dionysian, and it is this morality that Nietzsche directs most of his
wrath against in his own philosophy of the superman. For Nietzsche, Christianity – or rather his
interpretation of it – was a slave morality, a religion of resentment, in which
the weak and oppressed could look forward to a better life in the next world,
while those who had been bold enough and/or powerful enough to savor life and
its possibilities in this one would be punished for their impetuosity and
advantages in the afterlife. Clearly,
all supermen do not sing from the same songbook.
(It should be noted, however, that the Christianity which Nietzsche rails against bears little resemblance to the actual sayings of Jesus. The Jesus of the gospels is a vocal critic of an overly structured and legalistic approach to religion and ethics, advocating instead a positive morality grounded in love and compassion which is organic rather than rigid, and which could even be considered - according to the Russian philosopher Nikolai Berdyaev - as a dynamic, creative morality. In this respect, the morality of Jesus, if not that of formal Christianity, might not be so "anti-Dionysian" after all.)
What role, if any, has the superman played in the recorded
history of civilization? If we leave
aside the supernatural, and the extraterrestrial, then what we are left with
are prodigies – human beings with special gifts that allowed them to leave a
lasting impact upon posterity. These are
almost invariably intellectual gifts, associated with philosophical or
scientific geniuses who lighted the way to material advances in civilization,
men such as Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein.
We might also include great artists, architects, musical composers, and
industrialists. Perhaps we could also
include political or military geniuses, who founded or overthrew empires, and
created new systems of government.
Interestingly, few if any of these prodigies, I think, would
have regarded themselves as supermen, or would have espoused a philosophy of
the superman. (Although the popular 20th
century philosopher Ayn Rand, in her novels Atlas
Shrugged and The Fountainhead, promulgated
a philosophy that celebrated the gifted engineers, entrepreneurs, inventors,
architects, and artists of the world, and which suggested that the bane of
civilization has been those who have attempted to undermine or even sabotage
their achievements and contributions under the banner of altruism.) There were, of course, notable exceptions,
most memorably in the twentieth century: men such as Hitler, and Stalin (a name
that he gave himself, which means “man of steel”). Whatever genuine personal abilities that
these men possessed, they certainly were the architects of ambitious programs
among their respective peoples to try to achieve greatness, with horrifying
consequences. At the height of his
popularity, Hitler had that same Dionysian quality of the 1960s rock stars
which enabled him to stir his audiences into a hysterical, ecstatic,
frenzy. Many have even suggested that –
with his intent to create the “master race” – he drew direct inspiration from
the Nietzschean philosophy, but if so, it was a garbled application of it,
since Nietzsche’s Zarathustra would have abhorred the conformist and regimented
society of Nazi Germany as antithetical to the impulsive, self-expressive
personality of the superman he envisioned.
In fact, many if not most of the authentic benefactors of
our civilization would probably have regarded themselves as very ordinary human
beings who simply answered a higher calling.
In some cases, this calling was thrust upon them, as in the case of the
Old Testament’s Moses. For persons such
as he, there is often an initial reluctance to answer the call, because they
are certain that there must be somebody else out there, infinitely more
qualified than them, to answer it. I am
reminded of one of my favorite movies, Zulu,
which depicts the true story of the desperate resistance put up by British
soldiers in a solitary outpost in Africa against several thousand Zulu warriors
who had recently defeated and massacred a British army that had greatly
outnumbered them. There are only about
one hundred and fifty soldiers stationed at this fort, and so the odds of their
survival – let alone victory – against this Zulu army seem overwhelmingly low. In one particular scene in this movie, as the
occupants in the fort are preparing to fend off an assault by the Zulu
warriors, a young British soldier, frightened, weary, and very distraught,
turns to his sergeant and says, “Why is it us?
Why us?” The sergeant replies, stoically,
“Because we’re here, lad. Nobody else. Just us.” The British soldiers
ultimately prevail, fending off wave after wave of attacks by the Zulus, until
the native warriors finally give up on their assault, salute the occupants of
the fort as fellow braves, and leave them in peace. At the end of the movie, a narrator (the
actor Richard Burton) reads the names of the British soldiers who received the
Victoria Cross for valor in this battle, and what impresses the viewer is that
some of these soldiers, before they had been thrown into this conflict, had been
most conspicuously un-heroic characters.
It was the extraordinary circumstances that they had been compelled to
face that had made them great, by meeting and overcoming these challenges.
Other ordinary people found their greatness by actively seeking
out some great calling to answer in their lives: persons such as Winston
Churchill, who had shown himself to be a most unremarkable and unpromising
student as a youth, but who went on to become one of the most legendary
statesmen of the 20th century because of his personal passion for
engaging in the affairs of the world. The
American inventor Thomas Edison had received little formal education in his
youth, and one of those who had attempted to educate him considered him
“addled”, with a wandering, undisciplined mind.
But he devoted himself to scientific innovation and the creation of new
things by addressing problems with an open mind, avoiding preconceived notions
on how to solve them. Had anyone called
Edison a genius, he probably would have protested that his accomplishments came
about from his commitment to look at the world in creative, unconventional
ways, and not from any innate, superior abilities. Even many if not most of the spiritual
innovators in our history, such as the man who would eventually come to be
known as the Buddha, did not possess innate talents or gifts that predisposed
them to their insights, but instead came to these insights through a devoted,
intensive search for truth and revelation.
And, too, many of the most accomplished persons in our
history have actually been handicapped human beings: blind, deaf, disabled, or
with other limitations that would seem to make them the opposite of
“supermen”. Yet, in spite of these
limitations, or perhaps because of them, they made great, lasting
accomplishments in the world. Thomas
Edison and Ludwig Van Beethoven both had to contend with deafness before the
end of their lives. Steven J. Hawking,
one of the greatest physicists of our time, has been crippled for much of his
life with Lou Gehrig’s disease. Ray
Charles and Stevie Wonder, two very popular composers of the past century, are
both blind. Look at just about any
noteworthy artist or innovator in human history, and you will probably find
something about them that was conspicuously imperfect.
This, really, is the mark of the hero, as opposed to the
superman. The hero is somebody who is
ordinary, or less than ordinary, but who finds their inner greatness by rising
to meet extraordinary challenges. This
process of confronting the extraordinary might change them – and usually does –
but only because it forces them to rise above themselves and what they had
perceived to be their own limitations, and to find ways to draw upon
inexhaustible resources within and without them to achieve what had once seemed
impossible.
Of course, often the lines have been blurred between the
superman and the hero: between those who have accomplished great things because
they felt that they had the innate ability to do so (and perhaps felt an
obligation to manifest their talent), and those who addressed great problems
simply because they felt that these needed to be faced or overcome. (Who for example, would not call the comic
book Superman a hero?) Was Nietzsche’s
philosophy of the superman really a call for a new, superior line of human
beings, or merely an exhortation to all of us to embrace the Dionysian spirit
of courageous self-expression, and by doing so move closer to that brand of
behavior that might actually be characteristic of the hero? And sometimes, those who have applied
themselves to great trials or undertakings actually discover that they do possess talents or abilities that
they never dreamed of. (One wonders how
many potential chess masters never came to be, simply because they were never
introduced to the game, or how many great pieces of music were never written,
because the geniuses that would have composed them had never learned how to
play a musical instrument.) On the other
hand, many persons who have accomplished remarkable things by boldly engaging
with the world have subsequently succumbed to the temptation to falsely believe
that they are “supermen”, or at least men of destiny, such as Julius Caesar,
and Napoleon Bonaparte, with ultimately disastrous consequences.
The hero and the superman:
Perhaps our civilization actually has benefited from them both. I believe, however, that the hero’s course
has always been the harder one, because it compels one to face challenges and
to abandon preconceived notions of oneself and the world that one is
facing. On the other hand, the ideal of
the superman has always been a lure, a temptation, a hope. We want to be saved by supermen: each of us
may even want to be a superman. And in the coming generation, gene technology
may actually provide us with the means to make this possible. We may have the capability to change – if not
ourselves, then our descendants – in ways that will present advantages in the
future world. Like plastic surgery, we
might be presented with a menu of such improvement options. But I cannot help but wonder if recourse to
such technologies – which may only be available to those who can afford them –
will only serve to deepen the already growing gulf that we are experiencing
between the haves and the have-nots.
And it is for this reason that I tend to rest my hopes for
the progress of civilization on the hero, rather than the superman or star
child. I think that the vision inherent
in the Star Trek series is the more
compelling one than in Kubrick’s 2001: A
Space Odyssey: we will find our
future destiny by facing the challenges of an evolving technological
civilization with the capabilities and limitations that we currently have. By accepting and embracing our humanity, with
all of its latent potentials, but also its inherent and inescapable
shortcomings, we will best be able to continue this progress of civilization,
and bring out the greatness that is within all of us.
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