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Reflections on being human
Nicholas Johnson
Oct. 26, 2022 7:00 am
Homo sapiens are the only animal species able to talk themselves into difficulties that would not otherwise exist, from divorce to war.
“Is” enables the generalizations of prejudice: “she ‘is’ Black,” “he ‘is’ a Jew” — when they are both so much more.
Although some list three to nine human groupings, there is only one race. The human race. One species. Homo sapiens. Individuals whose DNA is 99.9 percent identical.
“Race,” or species, relations would be how we get along with cats and dogs, wildcats and bears.
An American astronaut and Russian cosmonaut come from different cultures and speak different languages. But they have more in common with each other than either does with their countries’ farmers, or brain surgeons. The same can be said of different countries’ trades workers, hobbyists and athletes.
Like other species, humans vary in height, weight, bone density, eye and skin color — including comparing “whites” who spend the summer building the perfect tan and those who stay indoors.
But the significant differences between us are matters of culture: customs and norms, language and arts, religion and celebrations, history and mythology.
We trivialize the cognitive ability of plants and other animal species because we believe ourselves to be so much smarter. But the only two cognitive abilities any species requires are survivability and reproduction.
Molly Ivins once said of a Texas legislator, “If his IQ slips any lower we'll have to water him twice a day.” Given what Homo sapiens have been up to recently there are plant species demonstrating more cognitive ability than we have.
There are many advantages of a liberal arts education, however obtained. It’s like going from black and white TV to color TV, or well-seasoned rather than bland stew. Everything you see, hear, read about or do explodes with multifaceted meaning.
Even if one’s goal is great wealth from business, take note: over one third of Fortune 500 corporate CEOs have liberal arts degrees.
Similarly, the more one values and knows of others’ cultures the more one can borrow and use in their own. Why are Denmark’s citizens so happy? How do matriarchal societies work? Cultural Anthropology should be a required course.
When walking my Fitbit steps I greet those I meet. I’ve followed up with some I’ve talked to from India, Kurdistan, Saudi Arabia, Tajikistan, Turkey, and Vietnam in a neighborhood park. For example, our Turkish friend attended our family gatherings. He informed us about, among other things in Turkey, family relationships, history, politics, his military experiences — and the game of reading fortunes from Turkish coffee grounds.
In fact, throughout my life I’ve found everyone I’ve met and talked with, no matter where they’re from or what they do, has had something to tell me I didn’t know. From millionaires to the homeless, they all have their story.
But that can only happen when I see an individual rather than a member of a group; when I approach the conversation with questions rather than assumptions and labels.
Nicholas Johnson is the author of “Test Pattern for Living.” Contact mailbox@nicholasjohnson.org
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