<SPAN name="XIV"></SPAN>
<h2>XIV</h2>
<h2>A MAN AND HIS ENVIRONMENT</h2>
<br/>
<p>I now come to an entirely different aspect
of the whole subject. Hitherto I have
dealt with the human machine as a contrivance
for adapting the man to his
environment. My aim has been to show
how much depends on the machine and
how little depends on the environment,
and that the essential business of the
machine is to utilise, for making the stuff
of life, the particular environment in
which it happens to find itself—and no
other! All this, however, does not imply
that one must accept, fatalistically and
permanently and passively, any preposterous
environment into which destiny
has chanced to throw us. If we carry
far enough the discipline of our brains,
we can, no doubt, arrive at surprisingly
good results in no matter what environment.
But it would not be 'right reason'
to expend an excessive amount of will-power
on brain-discipline when a slighter
effort in a different direction would produce
consequences more felicitous. A
man whom fate had pitched into a canal
might accomplish miracles in the way of
rendering himself amphibian; he might
stagger the world by the spectacle of his
philosophy under amazing difficulties;
people might pay sixpence a head to
come and see him; but he would be
less of a nincompoop if he climbed out
and arranged to live definitely on the
bank.</p>
<p>The advantage of an adequate study of
the control of the machine, such as I have
outlined, is that it enables the student
to judge, with some certainty, whether
the unsatisfactoriness of his life is caused
by a disordered machine or by an environment
for which the machine is, in its
fundamental construction, unsuitable. It
does help him to decide justly whether,
in the case of a grave difference between
them, he, or the rest of the universe, is
in the wrong. And also, if he decides
that he is not in the wrong, it helps him
to choose a new environment, or to modify
the old, upon some scientific principle.
The vast majority of people never know,
with any precision, why they are dissatisfied
with their sojourn on this planet. They
make long and fatiguing excursions in
search of precious materials which all the
while are concealed in their own breasts.
They don't know what they want; they
only know that they want something.
Or, if they contrive to settle in their own
minds what they do want, a hundred to
one the obtaining of it will leave them
just as far off contentment as they were
at the beginning! This is a matter of
daily observation: that people are frantically
engaged in attempting to get hold
of things which, by universal experience,
are hideously disappointing to those who
have obtained possession of them. And
still the struggle goes on, and probably
will go on. All because brains are lying
idle! 'It is no trifle that is at stake,'
said Epictetus as to the question of control
of instinct by reason. '<i>It means, Are
you in your senses or are you not</i>?' In
this significance, indubitably the vast
majority of people are not in their senses;
otherwise they would not behave as
they do, so vaguely, so happy-go-luckily,
so blindly. But the man whose brain is
in working order emphatically <i>is</i> in his
senses.</p>
<p>And when a man, by means of the
efficiency of his brain, has put his reason
in definite command over his instincts,
he at once sees things in a truer perspective
than was before possible, and therefore
he is able to set a just value upon the
various parts which go to make up his
environment. If, for instance, he lives
in London, and is aware of constant
friction, he will be led to examine the
claims of London as a Mecca for intelligent
persons. He may say to himself:
'There is something wrong, and the seat
of trouble is not in the machine. London
compels me to tolerate dirt, darkness,
ugliness, strain, tedious daily journeyings,
and general expensiveness. What does
London give me in exchange?' And he
may decide that, as London offers him
nothing special in exchange except the
glamour of London and an occasional
seat at a good concert or a bad play,
he may get a better return for his expenditure
of brains, nerves, and money in
the provinces. He may perceive, with
a certain French novelist, that 'most
people of truly distinguished mind prefer
the provinces.' And he may then actually,
in obedience to reason, quit the deceptions
of London with a tranquil heart, sure of
his diagnosis. Whereas a man who had
not devoted much time to the care of his
mental machinery could not screw himself
up to the step, partly from lack of
resolution, and partly because he had
never examined the sources of his unhappiness.
A man who, not having full
control of his machine, is consistently
dissatisfied with his existence, is like a
man who is being secretly poisoned and
cannot decide with what or by whom.
And so he has no middle course between
absolute starvation and a continuance of
poisoning.</p>
<p>As with the environment of place, so
with the environment of individuals.
Most friction between individuals is
avoidable friction; sometimes, however,
friction springs from such deep causes
that no skill in the machine can do away
with it. But how is the man whose
brain is not in command of his existence
to judge whether the unpleasantness can
be cured or not, whether it arises in himself
or in the other? He simply cannot
judge. Whereas a man who keeps his
brain for use and not for idle amusement
will, when he sees that friction persists in
spite of his brain, be so clearly impressed
by the advisability of separation as the
sole cure that he will steel himself to the
effort necessary for a separation. One
of the chief advantages of an efficient
brain is that an efficient brain is capable
of acting with firmness and resolution,
partly, of course, because it has been
toned up, but more because its operations
are not confused by the interference of
mere instincts.</p>
<p>Thirdly, there is the environment of
one's general purpose in life, which is, I
feel convinced, far more often hopelessly
wrong and futile than either the environment
of situation or the environment of
individuals. I will be bold enough to say
that quite seventy per cent. of ambition
is never realised at all, and that ninety-nine
per cent. of all realised ambition is
fruitless. In other words, that a gigantic
sacrifice of the present to the future is
always going on. And here again the
utility of brain-discipline is most strikingly
shown. A man whose first business it is
every day to concentrate his mind on the
proper performance of that particular day,
must necessarily conserve his interest in
the present. It is impossible that his
perspective should become so warped that
he will devote, say, fifty-five years of his
career to problematical preparations for
his comfort and his glory during the final
ten years. A man whose brain is his
servant, and not his lady-help or his pet
dog, will be in receipt of such daily
content and satisfaction that he will
early ask himself the question: 'As for
this ambition that is eating away my
hours, what will it give me that I have
not already got?' Further, the steady
development of interest in the hobby
(call it!) of common-sense daily living
will act as an automatic test of any
ambition. If an ambition survives and
flourishes on the top of that daily cultivation
of the machine, then the owner of
the ambition may be sure that it is a
genuine and an invincible ambition, and
he may pursue it in full faith; his developed
care for the present will prevent
him from making his ambition an altar
on which the whole of the present is to be
offered up.</p>
<p>I shall be told that I want to do away
with ambition, and that ambition is the
great motive-power of existence, and that
therefore I am an enemy of society and
the truth is not in me. But I do not
want to do away with ambition. What
I say is that current ambitions usually
result in disappointment, that they usually
mean the complete distortion of a life.
This is an incontestable fact, and
the reason of it is that ambitions are
chosen either without knowledge of their
real value or without knowledge of what
they will cost. A disciplined brain will
at once show the unnecessariness of most
ambitions, and will ensure that the remainder
shall be conducted with reason.
It will also convince its possessor that the
ambition to live strictly according to the
highest common sense during the next
twenty-four hours is an ambition that
needs a lot of beating.</p>
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