For the past sixteen months, I have been posting,
sequentially, the transcripts to the episodes of a radio documentary that I
prepared for airing back in 2004, which I had titled Larger than Life. It was a
series that attempted to show how our collective beliefs about ourselves and
our places in the universe actually shape the evolution and major events of our
society.
The precipitating cause of this project was actually my
visit to an Irish Pub in Chesterton ,
Indiana called Wingfield’s on its
weekly “all-you-can-eat ribs” night. That
was back in 1995. A friend and coworker
had invited me to join him there, and it just so happened that this was also
“poetry slam” night at the same establishment, where patrons were invited to
step up to a microphone and share their inspired verbal compositions with
everyone else. After a suitable
indulgence in ribs and beer, I was sufficiently inspired (and inebriated) to go
to the stage myself, and recite a poem that my friend and I had scrawled on the back of my
menu. To the surprise of my friend, and
probably myself as well, the poem got a large round of applause from the
audience. The manager was also suitably
impressed, and after the event ended, she stopped by our table and invited me
to return on some future poetry slam night with more compositions. I protested, however, that I wasn’t really a poet, and that I was actually
more of a history buff, and offered instead to step up to the microphone some
night and give a talk on some historical subject. Surprisingly, she agreed to this, and offered
to devote an entire evening to my presentation.
The talk that I gave was called “Homer’s Greece ”, and I spent most of it retelling
Homer’s tales of the Trojan War and Odysseus’s voyage back to Ithaca .
The presentation was well received by the patrons, and the manager
invited me back for an “encore” on a future night. I intended to continue along the same vein,
by talking about the history of ancient Greece
in its Classical era, covering its battle with the Persians, and the
Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta . On the scheduled night of my return, I was
overjoyed to find that the pub area was packed with hundreds of patrons. Extra tables had even been brought in to
accommodate them. “I’m a hit!” I thought
to myself, exuberantly, and couldn’t understand why the manager looked so
nervous upon my arrival. And then one of
her associates explained to me that the large crowd was actually a retirement
party for a steelworker at a local mill.
The manager offered to reschedule me to another night.
But I was undaunted.
I got onto the stage and started my presentation, confident that the
audience would soon be enthralled by my recounting of ancient Greek
history. As I began, the patrons
actually did fall silent, and I could see the manager and her associates
looking at each other with hopeful smiles.
But as I continued, a din began to arise, as conversations resumed among
the patrons, and it finally became so loud that I couldn’t even hear myself
speak. I left the stage, and as I walked
away from it, I saw that one of the retiree’s companions had leapt onto it and
taken the microphone. I heard him make a
joke about my failed presentation, and heard him say that now it was time for
some genuine entertainment.
Fortunately, the manager was able to salvage the evening for
me by moving my presentation into a side room and, much to my relief, I
discovered that some people – about two dozen – had actually come that evening
to hear it. I was of course a little
shaken by the whole experience, but managed to get through my entire talk, and
sensed once again that it was well-received.
Thus began what would turn out to be a recurring speaking
engagement, and for all of my future presentations, the manager made sure that
there were no competing parties or events that would put me at risk of enduring
the same humiliating spectacle as on that second night. Those first two talks comprised a good part
of what would eventually become Episode 4 (“Troy ”) of the Larger than Life series.
Over the course of the next two years or so, I gave “live” performances
which included material that would also find its way into that series,
including “Arthurian Legends” (Episode 7), “Mass Hysteria” (“The Secret
Doctrine”, Episode 8), “Machiavelli” (Episode 10), “Washington and Napoleon” (Episode 11), and
“Great Discoveries” (“The Lost World”, Episode 12).
That final presentation at Wingfield’s, “Great Discoveries”,
was a very special one for me, because it was actually videotaped by a local
cable channel, and was then showed several times on that station. This had become an emerging ambition of mine,
to somehow turn these talks into an actual series: a documentary not unlike
those that are shown on public television stations or, these days, on the
History Channel. Sadly for me, however,
this would not come to pass. For a
while, it seemed that whenever a new manager or producer got a job at that
local station, and came across the single presentation of mine that had been
recorded, they would contact me, and enthusiastically raise the prospect of
doing just that. But inevitably, they
found that their limited resources meant that they had promised more than they
could deliver. My hopes were raised and
then dashed more than once, until finally, mercifully, the enthusiastic calls
stopped coming, and I resigned myself to the fact that nothing more would come
of this avenue.
Just when I was about to abandon hope of doing anything more
with this project, a new opportunity came from an unexpected quarter. A friend and former boss of mine, Cathy
Hodges, got involved with a group of people who were planning to start a new
public radio station in Valparaiso ,
Indiana . She had taken on the task of searching for
programming ideas, and, having attended one of my presentations at Wingfield’s,
solicited me for some proposals of my own.
Naturally, the idea of doing a documentary based on my presentations
again came to mind.
But I needed a central theme to organize these around. Had there been a common thread of ideas
running through the various topics that I had chosen to speak on – something
that had motivated me to choose them? I
sensed that there was. As a very young
man, I had developed an interest in philosophy, and in particular became fascinated
with the ideas of the German philosopher Immanuel Kant. In his day, back in the eighteenth century, a
debate had been raging between the schools of idealism and materialism: whether
the ultimate basis of reality lay in the mind, with the apparent universe
around us being merely a mental construct; or in matter, with consciousness
being only a sort of accidental result of the chain of causes and effects
between material things. Kant’s insight
was that both of these schools were right: there really is something “out there”,
independent of the mind, but we can never know exactly what that is, because
our minds play an active role in shaping what we perceive and conceive. In that sense, we create our own reality.
As a simple analogy, consider your computer. In the room surrounding it, there is a
multitude of sights, sounds, and smells.
And yet, all that your computer is capable of “perceiving” is what is
transmitted to it through your keyboard.
And then, all that can be done with the electrical impulses passed
through to it this way is what the computer is programmed or “hard-wired” to do
with them: it can only “comprehend” them in pre-determined ways, structured by
the computer’s design and programming.
Similarly, even our own multi-faceted perceptions – sight, hearing,
smell, taste, and touch – can only take in a fraction of our surroundings, and
what we do with these perceptions, including how we organize them and take them
in to begin with, is governed by our own “programming” and “hard-wiring”. Now it is true that, as living, organic
beings, we are more than simple machines: we have found ways to expand the
capabilities of our perception, with such things as microscopes and telescopes,
and we have at least some ability to “modify” our internal programming, but in
spite of this, our reality is still profoundly limited and arbitrarily
structured by us. It is, predominantly,
a product of our own creation.
Around the same time that I had discovered Kant, I had also
come across a book entitled The Social
Construction of Reality, by Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann, written in
the 1960s, and which had clearly been inspired by Kant’s ideas. In fact, it took these ideas to another
level, arguing that not just individual beings but human societies create their
own realities, by collectively developing ways of looking at the world and
making sense of it. People living in a
certain society are conditioned to viewing and interpreting their surroundings
in particular ways, and this conditioning is so fundamental that their entire
reality is essentially a social construct.
It affects not just their way of looking at the world around them, but
also the way that they perceive members within their community, people who are
not part of their community, and even the way that they perceive themselves and
their role in the universe.
This idea affected me profoundly, and as I thought about the
subject matter of my history presentations, I realized that this book, along
with Kant’s earlier ideas, had been a fundamental inspiration for them. The topics of interest to me had been the
lives of great persons – both real and legendary – and the momentous events of
civilizations, but also how these interacted.
Because as a part of creating their own realities, people also create
their own personal legends, and in the case of some people, these personal
legends eventually affect, in profound ways, the lives of others in their
society. In the most extreme cases, they
actually remold that entire society’s view of itself and its place in the
universe. And the process works both
ways, because in the collective development of their myths and legends,
societies create historical figures of great importance who are either entirely
fictional, or, if they actually existed, have lives that are now remembered in
embellished and exaggerated terms: that have become “larger than life”.
Of course, generally the personal legend that each of us
manufactures is “larger than life” as well, in that they include beliefs about
oneself and about one’s destiny that are not entirely grounded in reality (and many if not most of which were molded in turn by the beliefs about reality that our society has imposed on us). But it is precisely those people who have had
a profound sense of personal destiny, and who have acted upon this, who have
often made the most significant impacts on history, either in positive ways
(George Washington), negative ways (Adolf Hitler), or with both positive and
negative consequences (Christopher Columbus and Napoleon Bonaparte). Even those who have merely contributed
world-changing ideas or inventions, such as Darwin, Newton, Copernicus,
Galileo, Marx, Freud, and Edison, were generally motivated by a personal sense
of mission, and a faith in their own capacity to discover new truths and
ideas. Individually and collectively,
then, we are authors of our own reality, and even if this reality is merely an
illusion, it is an illusion that sustains us and impels us forward.
The first half of what became a sixteen-part series dealt
with the role that mythology, religion, and occultism played in our early
civilization. The second half, which
began with historical events surrounding the discovery of America , shifted to an analysis of
the impacts of more contemporary beliefs – the “isms” that have arisen in
modern times: Scientism, Darwinism, Capitalism, Marxism, Freudianism, and
Nationalism, among others.
When my proposal for the new series was accepted, I imagined
that I would merely have to write the scripts, and narrate them, and all of the
other things that needed to happen in order to make them “ready for prime
time”, such as putting in background music and doing sound editing, would be
taken care of by experts who had been enlisted by the radio station. And in fact, this is what I was led to
believe. But as idea shifted to
execution, I soon discovered, once again, that the promises made by others had
exceeded their capability to deliver on them.
I came to the sobering realization that if this series was ever going to
air, then I would have to somehow take charge of every aspect of production,
from start to finish. It seemed like an
overwhelming prospect, and I nearly despaired of even attempting it. After all, never, in my wildest imaginings,
did I think that I might be capable of sound editing, let alone musical
scoring. This was what I have called, in
a previous blog (March 2015), a “cold, dark well” experience.
But rescue came in the person of a consultant hired by Cathy
Hodges to assist her in doing the initial programming for the radio
station. His name was Joel Cohen, and he
was a former teacher at the Columbia College in Chicago ,
which specializes in arts and media.
Joel took a personal interest in my project, and he not only encouraged
me to rise to the task of taking on the entire project from start to finish,
but also gave me practical suggestions on how to do such things as providing
background music scores for the narration.
Still, my initial steps into the project were faltering ones. It took me more than a year to compose,
record, and sound edit the first episode, and several months to complete each
of the next three. But by the fifth
episode, I had systematized the process, and become adept at carrying out all
of its phases – from writing, to narration, to recording, to sound editing, to
musical scoring – so that I was able to complete each episode within one
month’s time. Episode 5 was completed in
January of 2004, and all of the remaining ones, through Episode 16, were
completed by the end of that year. It
was in 2004 and early 2005 that the series had its first and perhaps only run
at the local public radio station. Over
the next year or so, I made some further attempts to find avenues for getting a
video production made, but with no success.
I am grateful to have had the opportunity to share the
series through yet another entirely different avenue. Ironically, I only did so because I had come
into a “dry spell” in my blog entries, having run out of original ideas to
write about. I think that the average
size of the readership of the series worked out to about the same as that of
the attendance to my live presentations.
On the blog, two of the episodes, “The Secret Doctrine” and
“Machiavelli: The Prince of Darkness” were conspicuously more popular than all
of the others, but I suspect that the titles for these played a role in the
interest that they received. (I do,
however, think that these were two of the best episodes.)
I actually made very few changes to the original transcripts
that were written a decade ago: generally only correcting factual errors that I
had discovered after the series aired. (At
the end of “The American Dream”, for example, I recount the story of the brutal
murder of Kitty Genovese, which was witnessed by her neighbors, who did nothing
to help her. In the original version, I
stated that there were thirty-eight witnesses to the attack, as this was what
was generally believed about the crime after it occurred. It has since been determined that this was
actually something of an urban legend in its own right, and that the real
figure is probably closer to a dozen.
Still, this was high enough in my opinion to merit retaining the story,
as an example of personal non-engagement.)
And I must say that it was eerie how some of these episodes, as I posted
them, seemed to provide timely commentary on current events, shortly after I
published each of them on the blog.
Were I to rewrite the series today, however, I can think of
a number of significant additions and changes that I would make. It is embarrassing, when reading through them
again, to see how culture-centric they are: telling a history of the world
where most of the major events of consequence happen in Europe, and with America
presented as a sort of final culmination of the story. In the years since the series originally
aired, I have had the opportunity to listen to two series of lectures on China : the
first covering its ancient history, and the second covering its history in
modern times. A “Larger than Life”
story, just as compelling as the one I told, could easily be written about China , and
about other cultures and countries as well, no doubt. I must say, too, that when reading through
these again I was more than a little embarrassed to see the proliferation of
male gender nouns and pronouns (“man”, “mankind”, “his”) when talking about
general trends or phenomena, and here, too, a personal bias was apparent, as
nearly all of the biographies presented are about male historical figures. I tried to correct some of the more egregious
examples of bias in my general nouns and pronouns, but barely scratched the
surface, I’m afraid. And in a future
writing I would endeavor to be more inclusive in describing the people – male
and female – who have contributed to the story of civilization.
Even the critique of the behaviors of modern human beings –
and of Americans in particular – which was done in the final two episodes of
the series, was probably colored by an egocentric bias: what psychologists call
“projection”. This is a tendency for a
person to more often see one’s own faults reflected in others than in
oneself. In other words, there is a real
possibility that many of the shortcomings that I ascribed to our contemporaries
might actually have been unconscious reflections of my own. For example, a lack of neighborly behavior,
affinity for fast food, fleeting attention span, and tendency towards spiritual
dilettantism are all charges that could be laid at my own doorstep. I can only hope that my failings are
sufficiently representative of those of my peers so that these and the other criticisms
are genuinely relevant . . . and enlightening.
I can think of at least a couple of episodes that could have
been added to the series. For example, I
had not been aware of the role that occultism played in some of the significant
trends and events of the past century or so, such as the rise of Nazism. (I had discovered this recently when watching
a show on the History Channel, which is not surprising, since Hitler and
occultism seem to be two of the more popular subjects on that channel, along
with extraterrestrials.) A recurring
theme in my series was how religious and magical thinking has persisted into
modern times in an awkward side-by-side relationship with science and
rationalism, and this undercurrent of occultism would have been a very tangible
illustration of the phenomenon.
One of the biggest single gaps in the series is the absence
of any discussion of modern mythology: science fiction. This genre, which has grown, over the past
one hundred years, beyond magazines and books to movies and television series
that are popular on a global scale, has had a significant impact on both the
ideals and actual scientific advances of our society. Some scholars of ancient mythology such as the
late Joseph Campbell have recognized this, and noted that science fiction has
indeed taken over the role that ancient mythology once played. (I must comment, however, that I disagree
with Joseph Campbell’s choice of Star
Wars as an iconic example of modern mythology expressed through science
fiction. I think that the original Star Wars series was merely successful
escapist entertainment, and that the second trilogy of movies that were made
several years after the first lacked even this quality because their producer,
George Lucas, had felt overwhelmed by the great cultural importance attached to
his movies by Campbell .) At least one entire episode of my series
could have been devoted to the evolution of this genre, its messages, and the
tangible impact that these messages have had.
Clearly, much science fiction has tried to address the question of what our
destiny should be, or should not be. In
this respect, it has even competed with religion in illustrating for us an end
goal for our collective existence.
In the final episode, I tried to summarize the ideas that
had inspired this retelling of human history and the additional insights that
emerged from it after I had done so.
Probably the most significant such insight that came to me, by the time
I had finished, was that science, while succeeding in better describing for us
the “how” of the universe, and in doing so replacing many of the obvious
distortions and misconceptions which had been provided by superstition and
mythology, has singularly failed in providing a satisfactory “why” for our
existence. And an answer to that “why”
is one thing that human beings continue to desperately need, both in their
personal and collective lives. It is a
psychological source of sustenance every bit as important as the more material
ones of food and shelter. Science has not
only failed in providing an answer to this question, but when attempts have
been made to use it to do so, disastrous and tragic consequences have often
resulted, either directly through the application of misguided philosophies, or
indirectly when unscientific fanatics or demagogues have used the modern tools
of science to destructive ends on a much larger scale than would have been
possible before the modern age. It is
for this reason, I think, that religion continues to hold a great sway over our
civilization, even when many of its practitioners doubt or even disbelieve some
of its central tenets, because it provides a meaningful role for them. I doubt that science, in spite of its
impressive advances, will ever reach a stage where it can do so. My hope is that religion will evolve (as the
philosopher Henri Bergson thought it has, and it will) so that it can answer
the “why” of existence without resorting to irrationalism or historical
fictions.
And so I can return Larger
than Life back to the shelf again, perhaps for the final time, after having
found this new venue to share it. As I
find myself approaching the threshold to becoming (and I hate this term) a
“senior citizen”, I doubt that even if an opportunity did arise to turn it into
a television documentary now, I would present it myself (as, in my younger and
vainer days, I imagined myself doing).
That chore would better be passed on to a younger and more photogenic
presence. My more practical, remaining
hope is that some past or future reader of the series will be sufficiently
inspired to attempt a similar project of their own, perhaps based upon the same
underlying insights as this one, and do so in a much more eloquent, comprehensive,
unbiased, and researched manner than I did.
If it becomes a success, then I will have been grateful to have played
at least some small part in contributing to it, or, at the very least, in
providing motivation for the accomplishment..
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