The Beginning of the New World
Unrest is the sign of the moment. No man, however rich or safely
placed, feels sure of next week. No man knows where he is going.
This is because no man knows where he ought go.
The bases of society have been so shaken that it has become impossible
for anyone to make a plan, just as the banker or a surveyor
could not work if he were no longer sure of the multiplication table.
Now, this state of things is not wholly due to the actual condition
of material existence, to political unrest, or to economic confusion.
Circumstances have not the power to wreck the soul
of man as long as he has in himself adequate driving-power and wit and skill to steer.
When men have a definite aim to pursue,
they instinctively find means of overriding mutual interference,
and may even work together
(unselfishly, as it is polishedly called)
to obtain their separate ends with the minimum of friction.
But when they are aimless they become distracted and witless;
they push each other aside in their desperation; even the simplest
tasks become impossible.
Today the mass of mankind has no longer any law by which to
live, any unchallenged principles of right action.
The one deep cause of the present universal anarchy is
the loss of all man's moral sanction.
The many religions of the world have all lost
their power to guide chiefly because the development
of mean of transport and of international commerce
have convinced the educated that any one religion
is about as good or as bad as another for the
purposes of social discipline, and that none
has any validity from the standpoint of actual fact,
or historical or philosophical truth.
The remedy is evidently to found only in one way.
There must be found a formula based upon absolute common sense,
without one trammel of theological theory or dogma,
a formula to which no man of intelligence can refuse assent,
and which at the same time affords an absolute sanction for all
laws of conduct, social and political no less than individual,
so that the right or wrong of any isolated or concerted action
can be determined with mathematical accuracy by any trained observer,
entirely irrespective of his personal idiosyncrasies.
This formula must be scientific, not religious.
This formula is:
"Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law"
This formula does not, as ignorant or malicious
people pretend, mean "Do anything you like."
On the contrary, it is a most severe self-control
of every individual or social unit to concentrate
its whole energy performing his true proper function;
and this function is to be determined by a profound,
accurate calculation of the potentialities inherent in its constitution.
The first practical step towards this end is the formation
of a strong central organization to direct coherently
the activities of the numerous adherents already established in many countries.
It will then be necessary to convene conferences
of experts in all the sciences, which treat mankind
in his social and individual character,
in order to draw up a comprehensive international programme.
|