Ready or Not: V XV, N - 7 F 14, 1962
Ready or Not: V XV, N - 7 F 14, 1962
Ready or Not: V XV, N - 7 F 14, 1962
7
FEBRUARY 14, 1962
READY OR NOT
IT is natural that, with the decline of familiar
assumptions and securities, individuals everywhere
should begin to work on new philosophies of life for
themselves, and perhaps for othersat least, there is
often an inclination to share what one produces in
this way. While the results of such efforts are
seldom worth publishingnot many personal
formulations present the human situation with the
freshness and the depth needed to excite the
imagination of othersthe frequency of these
attempts is a fact of some importance. If the
undertaking is serious, it represents new buds and
branches on the tree of life for that individual.
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REVIEW
AN UNUSUAL MOVIE AND A GOOD-TRY
BOOK
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COMMENTARY
WHAT DO PEOPLE LEARN FROM?
MANAS has published little on the Eichmann
Trial. Our first notice of the case was a quotation
from Hans Zeisel in MANAS for June 21. Then
there was a quotation from Edmond Beaujon's
article in the Journal de Geneve (MANAS, Aug.
16, 1961), then Harvey Wheeler's article,
"Eichmann and Totalitarianism" (MANAS, Sept.
27, 1961), finally Anna Vakar's luminous allegory,
"Where Be I?" (MANAS, Nov. 1, 1961). The
feeling of withdrawal felt by so many in relation to
the prosecution of Eichmann is by no means
evidence of mere squeamishness or moral
weakness. The trial has seemed to many an
ignominious extension of the horror of the Nazi
crimes.
It was not a purifying event but
something done out of scale. Yet one hesitated to
make a big point of this; the sufferings of the Jews
were immeasurable and to argue the matter
heavily seemed ungracious.
What was printed in MANAS was in
furtherance of a reflective consideration of the
values missed or ignored by the trial. The nub of
the pertinent criticism was well put, it seemed to
us, by Mr. Zeisel, when he said (in the Saturday
Review):
The trial of Adolf Eichmann is likely to make
all the wrong points because neither the procedure
nor the substance of our criminal law fits such a case.
Our criminal law has meaning only for crimes that lie
within the range of human understanding . . . . but
this crime lies too far beyond ordinary human
experience to make such a recognition possible. . . .
Eichmann's trial will keep us from seeing our share in
this catastrophe because, by comparison, our share
must seem infinitesimal. And yet, what ought to
matter is not the absolute comparison but the relative
comparison with our respective consciences.
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CHILDREN
. . . and Ourselves
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FRONTIERS
Another Conversation
A READER with an interest in continuing the
dialogue begunor resumedin MANAS for
Jan. 10, by means of discussion of Ralph Borsodi's
"Fourteen Questions," has written to extend
consideration of the twelfth question: "What is the
nature of human nature?" He takes his reply from
A1fred Korzybski, founder of the general
semantics movement, as embodied in a Phi Beta
Kappa address of forty years ago by Cassius
Jackson Keyser, on "The Nature of Man." Keyser
wrote in elaboration of Korzybski's idea that "Man
is the time-binding form of life."
Plants, Keyser suggests, are "chemistrybinders." That is, the living plant performs a work
of synthesis, drawing up into its organism in the
needed proportions minerals and water, and with
the aid of sunlight transforms these raw materials
into tissues which have enduring form and
specialized function. As our correspondent, Dr. J.
Samuel Bois, suggests: "Left to itself, the soil
does not bind its chemicals in such a fashion. So,
the term chemistry-binders is a good description
of what plants are and do. It puts them in a class
by themselves. The term applies equally to the
least conspicuous moss as to the most majestic
tree." The animalpursuing the logic of this
approachis a space-binder. He ranges far for
his nourishment, bringing to the synthesis of his
organism elements gathered from distant places.
Dr. Bois continues:
We come now to man. He, of course, is capable
of doing what plants do as chemistry-binders and
animals do as space-binders. But he is not limited to
these activities. He has a characteristic that is
distinctly human, and that neither plants nor animals
can share with him. [For collateral reading, see
Julian Huxley's book, Man Stands Alone.] He is a
time-binder: selects, gathers together, and combines
into something new elements that belong to different
periods of time. He combines them, assimilates them,
and makes of them something that did not exist
before. He can repeat the operation as often as he
wishes, each time creating a modification, an
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