History
is littered with examples of two civilisations meeting. In most cases, these
first meetings decided the fate of one and the ascendancy of the other.
Particularly “famous” for this state of affairs were the western powers – Italy , Spain ,
Portugal , France , Great Britain . Wherever they went
they decided unilaterally that they were “superior” to those with whom they met.
Even today, this
mind-set continues but perhaps at a more subconscious level (but then again,
maybe not). One would surely have expected the human animal to have learned
from his past mistakes… but no, we continue in our self-delusion of “being
better”.
This behaviour
is most unusual in actual fact. In the natural world, two species coming
together rarely show superiority, preferring to do their own thing and go their
own way. This was brought home to me recently whilst taking some macro
photographs, and the picture below shows the meeting of two “races” – one the
right, a very small ant (about twice
life-size in the picture) face to face with a certain species of drone
fly (also about twice life-size). Not wishing to anthropomorphise my “views and
feelings” onto these two insects, it does seem to me there is a mutual
recognition – “I am who I am, you are who you are” – a mutual respect and
understanding with no hint of aggression or superiority.
I wonder whether
the human race will ever reach a stage of development where we can be as
intelligent as these two?
Until next time
(and waiting),
Peripatetic
Scribe

Great photography, PS - and a most intuitive message... will we ever be as bright as these guys? I'm not holding my breath!!
ReplyDeleteJames, Totnes.
James, thank you for your thoughts. It took a long time waiting for the moment when they met! A nice quote from Kurt Vonnegut: "I was taught that the human brain was the crowning glory of evolution so far, but I think it's a very poor scheme". Nothing more to say!!
ReplyDeleteA brilliant blog post and fully in line with my feelings on this issue. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteLucana