Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Australia's obsession with terrorism can be traced to our sense of mortality


A

ustralia’s obsession with terrorism, or at least that of the Federal Government, can be traced to the incumbents’ sense of mortality.

Ernest Becker - he explains
how our fear of death makes
us do what we do.
Look no further than the works of Ernest Becker who explained the perverse motivations stemming from our mortality in his 1973 book, “The Denial of Death”.

The Jewish-American cultural anthropologist and writer, who won the general non-fiction 1974 Pulitzer Prize two months after his death, synthesized the thoughts of thinkers Søren Kierkegaard, Sigmund Freud, and Otto Rank to help us better understand why our denial of death drives what we do.

The basic premise of Becker’s book is that human civilization is ultimately an elaborate, symbolic defense mechanism against the knowledge of our mortality, acting in turn, as the emotional and intellectual response to our basic survival mechanism.

And so each lives in the shadow of certain mortality and our Coalition Government, led by Tony Abbott exploits, knowingly or otherwise, that fundamental flaw in our character to spend huge amounts building elaborate armed forces, introducing perverse limits to personal freedom in the name of safety and within that creates a society-wide fear of the other.

Any brush with mortality, be it physical or through film, literature or discussion, noticeably changes our views on many things, including our willingness to flee into the arms of a strong leader who appears to offer a protective shield against death.

That same leader has sophisticated weaponry, patriotic rhetoric and is supposedly doing God’s will to rid the world of evil, and each of us, subconsciously or otherwise, wrestling with our mortality feel some warmth in aligning ourselves with those seemingly charismatic people.

True, there is no argument, we are all going to die, we are all mortal and it is also true that for the broad betterment of us as individuals and the nation, we need to accept our death rather than deny it.


Alec McLean - his first encounter
 with death was at just four.
Death, many thinkers have explained, often futilely, is intrinsic to living and its acceptance and embrace often make living a vastly more rewarding affair.

My father had his first lesson in death at just four-years-old when his dad died after a horse kicked him in the chest.

His mother died a sad death when she drowned in the River Murray, and in his old age, dad said he spent all his spare time going to friend’s funerals.

A few years before he died, we sat on the river bank drinking tea, talking about death and dying and he said it was something for which he held no fear.  

Subsequently, that chat, along with personal efforts to shoulder open death’s door and being enlightened by Becker, death is personally stripped of its fear and makes me sharply aware that Abbott and his cohort are up to no good.

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