One active aspect of cynicism
involves the desire to expose hypocrisy and to point out the gulf between
society's ideals and its practices according to Mary Midgley. George Bernard Shaw allegedly
expressed this succinctly: "The power of accurate observation is commonly
called cynicism by those who don't have it" (1).
I have been tossing around
the ideas of cynicism, depression and realistic attitudes, and have some
difficulty. On the one hand, cynics are sometimes thought of as melancholic or
depressed, self-deluded, and on the other as realistic. When someone tells me I
have a cynical attitude, I respond that I have a realistic attitude. Why? Well,
in my education and experience, cynical people were somehow thought of as
being defective. Maybe in personality. Maybe in intellect. Maybe in
spirituality. And I don’t think of myself thusly.
In looking back over my
several decades, I find that the world view I have always held includes the
ideas that humans like to and strive to do good as individuals and some groups.
Take churches for example: countless “missions” are undertaken every year to go
somewhere to do good works. And not always (cynicism?) just to gain new
converts. I ran into Baptist missionary projects in Nicaragua, a fiercely Catholic
country, building sanitary outhouses for extremely rural and poor families.
No illusions of converts. Just good works. At the exact same time,
corporations, governments and individuals all over the world were exploiting
people and resources for their own enrichment. Not for the good of the people.
This is not a cynical observation, just a realistic one.
The cynicism as defined by
Midgley and Shaw, though, definitely shines through. You see, I deeply believe
that humans will per natura act in
their own interests when able, and when powerful enough. Not all people, or
even most people mind you. But enough to tip the scales. A few powerful leaders
control world events. Wars are not started by the citizens of countries, they
are started by the leaders. Revolutions may be good wars started by the
citizenry, but most often are corrupted at the end. Industries operate for
profit and often disregard the long term effects of their actions. Governments
can and often are corrupted by corrosive effects of money, either through the
political process or directly through graft.
I believe that the vast
majority of individuals want to do good and actually do good. Observation of
the world, not a cynical observation either, clearly shows a world descending
into degradation and chaos. Unstoppable? Probably not. Will it be stopped?
Probably not.
Cynical? No, just realistic.
Image: http://crapusa.blogspot.com/2012_11_01_archive.html
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