Sunday, May 26, 2013

Eyeless

Utterly prophetic.

Look around you, we are getting 3D television, smartphones, new gaming consoles, and every day more and more technology is slipped into our lives.

Aldoux Huxley wrote in reaction to the industrial revolution, decades later, we are seeing the aftermath of it. Albert Einstein once said he was afraid we would one day let the machine outsmart the man, we are on the verge of Singularity.

Einstein and Huxley both  lived in the 1900's, they both died before they could see the theory of singularity come to live. Today we relay on the machine, machines fix people, they fix cars, and animals, and plants. Machines run the world.

Even beyond Huxley's and Einstein's words, men became dependent of the fast evolving technology. To my eyes, Huxley was a prophet, he predicted what we would become if we allowed ourselves to let go of our humanity. I just hope I don't live to see it happen.

The Power of Myth


Through the Hellenistic age in Greece, lived a man known to the modern civilization as Homer. Homer wrote the Illiad and the Odessey, which focus on the events and the aftermath of the Trojan War. Even today historians have not found the remains of the city of Troy, and of the war. Homer's texts which were a historian record, melted down in history as a myth. 



The definition of a myth is an unproved or false collective belief that is used to justify a social institution. A social institution; The Catholic Church, The Jewish believes, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism. All are social institutions, all unproved collective believes. Today we are living the time of disintegration of the catholic church. We have seen how a religion that has been a central power in the world, for centuries, is losing tons of believers to it's conservatism.


Ancient Greek Religion never died away, it transformed and progressed. It's Gods lived on in the Roman tradition and then went on living as a pagan minority. But today it is seen as a childish bedtime story, used to explain why is there a drought or a rough sea. 

Aldous Huxley portrays a very interesting scenario in his book Brave New World, in which he in a way shows us how the modern civilization has moved on from God, and now adores Henry Ford. Interesting enough, the idea of people adoring Henry Ford, seems as alienating to us as it may have seemed to the Ancient Greeks to adore a man by the name of Jesus.

When I went to Cuba, I found out that the African religion known as Santeria leaves still  in the dark skin and heavy words of the cuban mulattos. interesting enough, Santeria has been called witchcraft by the majorly Catholic Cuban state, because of it's pagan rites. Huxley portrays a flagellation in front of a cross, as a pagan rite, in Brave New World. Thereby showing us how our believes will one day too, melt into pure myth.