Essays
Spirituality,
Ethics, and Globalization
An Essay by Geoffrey L. Breedon
This essay
is adapted from portions of the book The Chrysalis Age: A Handbook for
Spiritual and Global Transformation in the New Millennium
The accident
was over in seconds. The driver of the semi-truck that cut them off didn't even
notice as John and Mary's car spun off the highway and crashed head-on into a
large sycamore. Mary regained consciousness some ten hours later in the
hospital intensive care ward. She awoke only to be told that her husband had
not survived the crash, dying on impact. Grief-stricken, Mary quietly requested
that the doctors preserve a small sample of John's tissue. The couple had been
married for five years, during which time Mary repeatedly attempted to convince
John that they should have children. Unlike Mary, who had always felt she was
destined to be a parent, John was against the idea of bringing more children
into an already overpopulated world. Mary persisted, but to no avail. Two
months after the funeral, she met with the director of a fertility clinic
specializing in cloning. With her donated egg and her husband's DNA sample,
Mary was soon pregnant. She had briefly considered using a "celebrity
sample," but the licensing fees were high and, really did the world need
another Tom Cruise to add to the two hundred it had already? It didn't matter,
she was finally having a baby. Nine months later, Mary gave birth to a baby boy
who she loved deeply, in part because he was a baby boy that would eventually
grow up to look just like the man she had loved so greatly and lost.
This little
bit of fiction may seem absurd, but whatever emotions and reactions this
scenario raises it also poses some serious ethical questions. Is it ethical to
clone a human being? Is it ethical to clone a loved one who has died? Is it
ethical to clone someone without his or her permission? How many times is it
ethical to clone yourself? Is it only ethical the first time, tacky by the
tenth time, pathological by the twentieth time and unethical the fiftieth time?
If only these questions were hypothetical. From all indications it seems likely
that a human being will be cloned within one to three years. I won't say
successfully cloned, because there is no way of telling how the cloning process
will affect this poor individual on a genetic level until many, many years
later.
Cloning is
only the most recent ethical conundrum to face us as we plunge headfirst into a
new millennium filled with moral confusion. Everyday we are faced with unspoken
ethical questions that underlie our lives. For instance, is it ethical for the
United States and Europe to use some seventy percent of the world's resources
and contribute roughly forty-five percent of its greenhouse gasses while only
maintaining some ten percent of its population? Is it ethical to invest in a
company that uses cheap labor from developing countries without labor laws to
make its shoes, solely for the purpose of raising its profit margin? Is it
ethical to take supplies from the office if the company makes billions a year
or if it lies about its profits? Is it ethical to fudge the facts on your taxes
or for CEO's to use offshore accounts to hide their wealth from the IRS? Is it
ethical to invest in a company whose primary product causes people to die
slowly, like a tobacco company? Is it ethical to buy products from a
corporation that you know is owned by a tobacco company? Is it ethical to work
for a company that makes weapons, like handguns, automatic rifles, and land
mines, that will be used to kill people, including innocent and unsuspecting
children?
These
questions are phrased in the extreme, but we are faced with variations of them
everyday. As we move into this new century we will be faced with more of them,
and they will become increasingly complex. We will be confronted with questions
whose answers will not only affect the lives of ourselves and our families but
which will affect the entire world for years to come. For instance, is it
ethical to change the DNA of our children before they are born, and pass these
changes down to future generations? If it is, what sorts of changes are
ethical? Is it ethical to change a sequence of genes coding for a disease, but
not to change those controlling height, or eye color? Is it ethical to insert a
gene from another species? Possibly you even have answers to all these
questions. If you do, the interesting thing to note is not what you believe,
but why you believe it. The way you respond to ethical dilemmas depends on your
ethical perspective, and your ethical perspective is informed by your
worldview. The deeper your worldview the deeper your ethics.
Our
worldview is, quite literally, the way we view the world. It is the manner in
which we interpret the events of our lives and the world around us. In
philosophy this is known as an epistemology, the way we know what we know. All
philosophies are an attempt to explain and define their author's worldview.
Whether they utilize mythology, occult interpretation, philosophical
rationalization, scientific empiricism, or direct interior observation, they
are all attempts at explaining at least some small portion, if not the whole,
of the universe. Interestingly, not only do our philosophies describe the
world, they change the world as well. Our understanding of the world determines
how we behave in it, and our behavior inevitably alters the world. This
eventually becomes a feedback loop, whereby the changes we make in the world
evoke changes in our epistemology. Much of the epistemological crisis
experienced by people from the Renaissance onward is due to the internal
conflict this feedback loop generates. This is because while it seems to be
clear that we all move through various stages with ever-deeper worldviews, or
frames of consciousness, we do not all move through them at the same pace, or
in the same manner.
There are a
fascinating number of ways of looking at the world, and each of these
worldviews engenders a different way of engaging our lives. The manner in which
we live our lives, the choices we make of what to do and what not to do, is our
ethics. Our worldview informs and in many ways constructs our ethics, the
system of morals with which a person interacts in the world.
While there
are a number of different worldviews, contrary to what many postmodern
relativists might suggest, not all are equal. The widest worldview, the one
with the greatest breadth and depth of perspective is always superior. The
scientific worldview apprehends truths that the pre-scientific perspective
simply cannot acknowledge. Likewise, a post-scientific worldview, an
Integral-Spiritual perspective, is open to truths that science has no means of
measuring, and science falls apart without measurement. As economist and
philosopher E. F. Schumacher pointed out in A Guide for the Perplexed
"…the methodical restriction of scientific effort to the most external and
material aspects of the Universe makes the world look so empty and meaningless
that even those people who recognize the value and necessity of a 'science of
understanding' cannot resist the hypnotic power of the allegedly scientific
picture presented to them and lose the courage as well as the inclination to
consult, and profit from, the 'wisdom traditions of mankind.'" A deeper
worldview sees the validity of both the scientific tradition and the wisdom
traditions.
We are
living in a world that is integrated at every level and to survive in it, we
must acquire an Integral worldview and an Integral ethics. With these tools we
can then begin to create a vision of the future we might want to forge from the
slag we are rapidly turning our world into. To accomplish this our worldview
must eventually become not simply Integral, but Spiritual. A Spiritual
worldview is one that sees the full depth of the universe, from matter to life,
to mind, to Spirit. This progression is the Great Chain of Being of the world's
wisdom traditions. Philosopher Arthur Lovejoy describes it in his classic book
of the same name as a universe composed "… of an infinite number of links
ranging in hierarchical order from the meagerest kinds of existents, which
barely escape non-existence, through 'every possible' grade up to the ens
perfectissimum," or Absolute Being. An Integral-Spiritual worldview is one
that attempts to see the whole of the universe at every level of its depth, not
simply its physical dimensions. Furthermore, it is a worldview that supports an
ethics capable of coping with the Gordian knot of moral issues that an integral
world creates.
The truths
of each worldview are the basis of its ethics. Consequently, the worldview with
the greatest depth of understanding will be the one with an ethics that has the
greatest depth of meaning. The significance of this is quite important. The
greater the depth of a worldview and ethics, the more appropriate it will be
for understanding and engaging the world. To be clear, I am not suggesting a
Rousseau-like return to some historically earlier worldview, nor am I
recommending the abandonment of Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment scientific
empiricism. I am not promulgating an Eastern over Western perspective, nor am I
advocating an adherence to religious, philosophic, or scientific dogma. Plainly
put, I am saying that the world we have created, and more importantly the world
we will be creating in the coming century, requires a whole new worldview that
transcends, yet still encompasses the valid truths of the previous, more
limited worldviews. Our brave new century, our Chrysalis Age, requires a
worldview that is capable of understanding the unlimited connections being
created between nearly all the spheres of life. This is the Integral worldview.
Our world is also in desperate need of an ethics that is not based in religious
dogma, philosophical rationalizations, scientific absolutism, or free-market
abstractions, but is instead grounded in a direct apprehension of the
interconnectedness of all things. This is an Integral ethics. Unfortunately,
when ethics is mentioned at all in reference to globalization we tend to be
straddled with either a Modern, highly utilitarian sort of ethics, or a
dysfunctional postmodern ethics caught up in cultural relativism.
In the
spring of 2001, I attended the International Forum on Globalization conference
in New York City. One of the things that struck me while sitting through an
otherwise informative conference was that two words were suspiciously absent
from the discussion: "ethics" and "spirituality." While I
can understand the absence of the spirituality from the discussion, as it isn't
the first thing most people consider when talking about globalization, I
couldn't understand the absence of discussion about ethics. The debate on
globalization is by its very nature a discussion about ethics, but few people,
whether pro-globalization or anti-globalization, are willing to admit this
openly. It seems we are assumed to be trapped in an ethical vacuum when making
decisions about how to organize the world. This is an extreme misplacement of
our concern. We should be concerned about globalization because of our ethics,
not for intellectual or emotional reasons. I give many of the speakers at the
conference a great deal of credit for attempting an Integral critique of
globalization, but no criticism can be fully integrated without considering at
least ethics, not to mention spirituality. The pro- and anti-globalization
sides each have their own view, for their own reasons and both assumes that
they are "right." Without a discussion of ethics, it is impossible to
tease out the truths of either side.
What is
worse, in my opinion, is that many in the anti-globalization camp, while
attempting to defend the cultural integrity of developing nations from the
modernizing, and mostly Americanizing, forces of globalization, often fall into
a great cloud of ethical relativism. In one of the breakout conferences on how
developing nations were being affected by globalization an audience member
asked the panel how we, as culturally modern people, were to respond to the
fact that the cultures of many developing nations engaged in activities we
found morally abhorrent. The panel was unfortunately in relative agreement on
its relativism. They agreed that the cultures of many developing counties
engaged in activities that we find difficult to stomach, particularly where the
rights of women were concerned. However, they felt that these problems were the
individual culture's to work out in their own way, regardless of how much these
actions might repel us. This is the dysfunctional postmodern worldview at it's
best. While the Modern worldview sees its cultural modes as superior, the
dysfunctional postmodern worldview, in trying to see that all cultural modes
have some value, mistakenly give them all equal value. The truth is that the
Modern cultural mode is in many ways superior, but not in all ways. An Integral
worldview, one not trapped in relativism, clearly sees that the Traditional and
Modern cultural modes both have a great deal to offer, and a great deal that
should be discarded. The Integral worldview sees that while much of the culture
of developing nations should be conserved as a precious heritage, that where
the cultures create suffering and deny equality to their citizens, they should
change. The Integral worldview acknowledges that some worldviews are better
functional fits than others, and accepts that Traditional individuals and
cultures should abandon some their ways for Modern ones, which in turn should
be abandoned for Integral ones, which eventually should be abandoned for
Spiritual ones. One of the largest differences between the Modern and Integral
worldviews is that the former sees itself as the height of development, while the
latter realizes that it is merely a stepping stage to greater heights of
development individually, culturally, and socially.
As the
forces of globalization sweep over the planet, seemingly unchecked, no aspect
of our burgeoning global civilization is left untouched. Arenas of life that
hitherto had only marginal effects on all of us are now tied together in a
complex dance of near chaos. The global stew of economics, politics, social
structures, diverse cultures, and the natural environment is being heated to a
roiling boil by a vast array of technologies that threaten to outpace our
ability to understand their current meaning, much less their long term
implications.
To emerge
from this maelstrom not merely in one piece but more whole than ever, we must
not only acknowledge the storm, but our part in creating, maintaining, and
exacerbating it. To do this will require not simply that we transform some of
the social structures we use to create our world, but that we transform the
very way we perceive it. This personal transformation, this transcendence of
shallow ways of seeing for deeper ways of knowing, will by necessity demand
that we challenge ourselves and others to examine in full our ways of being in
the world as well as our ways of perceiving it. This challenge is not to be
taken lightly. Change rarely occurs without some manner of challenge and as we
are in desperate need of extraordinary amounts of change, we will have to begin
to supply equal doses of challenge in order to fully accomplish the tasks that
we will be called upon to achieve. To create a Tsunami of change we will need
wave upon wave of challenges. These waves of challenge should come at both the
individual and collective levels. Moreover, they should be guided by the deeper
ethics that the more encompassing worldviews engender. To simply provide
challenge without guidance is to promote chaos on a level that can as easily
lead to collapse as the emergence of new and novel ways of being. As our ethics
guides our decisions it will also guide our manner of challenging the world
around us. Consequently it will guide our vision of the world we wish to create
and finally the actions that we take to accomplish the goals set out by this
vision. Without a deeper worldview, we cannot obtain a deeper ethics, and
without both of these we cannot hope to create a vision of the future that
contains any real depth, nor can we hope to bring such a vision to fruition.