Law in Contemporary Society

-- JinduObiofuma - 19 Feb 2016

 
The thinking man is the man who engages with the world around him and prides himself on being well-read, present in various movements and capable of making independently formed opinions. The establishment of that character as the outlier, the lone champion of true critical thought, in a world of faceless followers is something we might need to believe in. Most likely, the case will be that we want to believe it about ourselves, that we are the man in the mirror. That we are capable of looking introspectively at our values and projecting those values competently onto the world around us in an attempt to map our truest beliefs about the world onto our varying realities. However, simply wanting to believe that that person in the mirror, that person who reads all the thought pieces on the Atlantic, the person who ruthlessly rips apart other people’s arguments, opinions, and characterizations, the person who reads Kant and Marx because they’ve heard that’s what other smart people do, has some significance does not necessarily make it so. It’s almost too easy to get caught up in ideas of one’s own intellect, honing it, building it up, and jealously guarding it against criticism which might show us the fragility of our intellect. Intellect has become more ornamental than it’s ever been. The thinking man has the right credentials to discuss anything you would like to discuss, but to what extent does he--do you--internalize that information? To what extent is it yours? In this day and age, with access to unprecedented levels of information and where others have unprecedented access to our own intellect, intelligence is simply decorative. Likes, statuses, and following give us new tools through which to monitor our fellow humans and new tools through which we are also monitored. Everyone is now the thinking man like they have always been, but now there’s an audience. Before, where the thinking man may have been somewhat predicable, he is now completely scripted. If you “like” something, you know others will see it, and so you must “like” the right things. If you read something, how will others know you have read it unless you share? And then of course, again, you must read the right things. The thinking man, once a myth of a man, one so rarely seen, is now “seen” everywhere. And the irony is that we are faster about calling them out. Pseudo intellectuals are called out by pseudo intellectuals and each thinks that the other is the liar. We select our authorities based on whose truth most closely aligns with our ideas of the world and consider ourselves thinking men. We consider ourselves more educated than our counterparts because we have aligned ourselves with someone whose philosophy is our own and we consider others unintelligent when their critical thought doesn’t lead them to our conclusions. We run ourselves ragged trying to pull people to our side, convinced that, being the thinking men that we are, salvation lies with us, with our way of living and thinking which is crucial to something larger than us and something that is crucial to society as whole, little realizing that we are holding things that have been handed to us. The ideas that we think will redeem society has been handcrafted and specially packaged for us by products of that same society, and thus—while we congratulate ourselves for being outside the system—the system uses us to sustain itself.

Navigation

Webs Webs

r1 - 19 Feb 2016 - 05:44:17 - JinduObiofuma
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM