Equality?

September 25, 2018 Sociocultural Issues No Comments

Everybody knows we live in a world of huge inequality. Indeed. But inequality in what? Where lies importance? Thus, in what should we strive for more equality?

In money?

Thus: in the currency that can be traded for any other ‘goods’: a car, a house, even a wife in (many men’s) imagination?

A strict focus on money would make an urge for ‘equality’ also a surge for objectified materialism. Even ‘the other wife’ becomes objectified, materialism-ated.

Is that OK to you?

Not to me. At one time, it struck me deeply when working as a doctor for less money-privileged patients. Then at times of election, huge numbers just voted for own money and against other people, principles, anything… Money makes the world go around till everything stops, doesn’t it.

So, striving for monetized equality?

Sure, with realistic moderation.

An already more to-the-point general currency: status.

In a world where money = status, the difference is not obvious. One ‘does it’ without thinking: the person with money can ‘boss around’ the person without. If this ‘bossing around’ is not done, it’s felt as a gift.

Which then again is OK! It’s nice to give and it’s nice to receive. A real gift is given wholeheartedly. It’s a person giving a piece of himself to another person.

A real gift is not a deal, in any way.

Equal-worthiness

In my view, equality should be about status indeed. Not the one that is money or -related status, but the one that is related to ‘human (end) value’. [see: ‘Being of Value’]

We all deserve that status, although this is obviously not easy to achieve in vivo… Best is to start giving it to yourself. Paradoxically, this is of course the only way to achieve real status and yet it’s also the ‘most difficult way’ unless one is in the game of self-deception.

Different people, different statuses

Again, so obvious.

And yet people massively turn the other way.

Deep down, we – probably naturally – manage status as for instance the thing needed for erotic success. It’s as if we (humans) just cannot help it. We need status to have a workable environment that looks more or less like the present.

Then, we could change environment.

In the future, we will, as we have done in the past.

Should we then strive for an environment prone to utmost equality?

Which equality?

Equal-worthiness would probably be most correct, but very fuzzy.

Or: we might ‘forget’ equality altogether. See where that leads to… In my view, we should then all the more strive for worthiness and happiness, such things, in which then again money and status may play their roles, not in an urge for equality but for end-result…

Eventually, people should be able to make their own self-worthiness

but they (we) definitely need a lot of support in this.

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

The 999 + 1 Doors Principle

If all doors are closed to a beautiful space behind the wall, yours is most important. You should not look at the others to keep yours closed ― easier said than done. It’s innate to the human being to be one of the 1000. Historical herd mentality It’s probably a survival reflex ― therefore, Darwinian. Read the full article…

Lisa Spheres: Politics of Inner Growth

Politics once meant the shared art of living together — the care of the polis, the community. Today, it often feels reduced to competition and noise. To turn this tide will be challenging. Still, Lisa Spheres proposes a different politics: one rooted in presence, depth, and inner growth. What would governance look like if citizens Read the full article…

Communal Culture

Individualism and collectivism dominate many discussions about how people relate to one another. But there is a deeper possibility: communal culture. This blog explores how we might grow toward the latter — not by compromise, but by depth, invitation, and a shared presence that asks nothing but brings much. Individualistic and collectivist cultures These are Read the full article…

Translate »