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Epilogue Long before the nuclear superpowers began to extend their competition into space Bertrand Russell (1959) wrote, When I read of plans to defile the heavens by the petty squabbles of the animated lumps that disgrace a certain planet, I cannot but feel that the men who make these plans are guilty of a kind of impiety (p. 19). Russell's words lead us to a central dynamic, the arrogance of power of nations spiritually adrift, terrorized by the destructive energy that their scientists have released from particles of matter. The self-glorification of nations lies at the root of war, the conviction that it is right to pursue the interests of one's own nation however they may conflict with those of others (Russell, p. 78). The proclamation of superiority and special rights, interests, and virtues is tolerated, even applauded, when put forth by the leaders and citizens of national collectivities, whereas such behaviors or attitudes would be regarded as unacceptable if expressed by individuals. Aggression in our technologically sophisticated age takes bizarre, remote forms. It is difficult to find the locus of responsibility for it among advanced systems of computers, strange weaponry, distant institutions, sanitized language and elaborate justifications. But it diffusely present nevertheless, complexly organized in our war institutions, multinational corporate structures, and related collective organizations. It comes to the surface more readily when national and subnational groups experience real or imagined injuries to their collective egoism. Freud and those who have followed him, working with individual patients, have identified the unconscious psychological forces that limit the possibilities of human well-being and fulfillment. Collective human phenomena, such as international conflict, represent a different kind of challenge, one to which psychoanalysts can contribute usefully only if they collaborate with colleagues who bear a more direct responsibility for the policies and decisions of political life. It is important, however, that we do make this a central professional concern and bring what new approaches we can to the understanding and better management of the destructive forces that often dominate the relations between nations. If we fail to do so, it may come about that the dark elements in the human soul will, before long, lead to the extinction of life altogether. John E. Mack, M.D. REFERENCE Russell, B. (1959). Common Sense and Nuclear Warfare.
London: George Allen & Unwin
John E.
Mack, M.D., is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author and professor of
psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Mack is the founder of the
Center for Psychology & Social Change. He is the author or co-author
of eleven books, including A
Prince of Our Disorder, a Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of
T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia), and most recently, Passport
to the Cosmos. |
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