| Deloria: |
I think the primary difference is that Indians experience
and relate to a living universe, whereas Western people - especially
scientists - reduce all things, living or not, to objects. The implications
of this are immense. If you see the world around you as a collection
of objects for you to manipulate and exploit, you will inevitably
destroy the world while attempting to control it. Not only that,
but by perceiving the world as lifeless, you rob yourself of the
richness, beauty, and wisdom to be found by participating in its
larger design.
In order to maintain the fiction that the world is
dead -and that those who believe it to be alive have succumbed to
primitive superstition - science must reject any interpretation
of the natural world that implies sentience or an ability to communicate
on the part of nonhumans. Science insists, at a great price in understanding,
that the observer be as detached as possible from the event he or
she is observing.
Contrast that with the attitude of indigenous people,
who recognize that humans must participate in events, not isolate
themselves.
Ironically, although science prides itself on being
a search for knowledge, Indians can obtain knowledge from birds,
animals, rivers, and mountains that is inaccessible to modern science.
And Indians can use this knowledge to achieve better results. Take
meteorology. Scientists know that seeding clouds with certain chemicals
will bring rain, but this method of dealing with nature is wholly
mechanical and forces nature to do our bidding. Indians achieved
the same results more peacefully by conducting ceremonies and asking
the spirits for rain. The two methods are diametrically opposed.
It's the difference between commanding a slave to do something and
asking a friend for help.
Being attuned to their environment, Indians could
find food, locate trails, protect themselves from inclement weather,
and anticipate coming events thanks to theirunderstanding of how
all things are related. This knowledge isn't unique to American
Indians. It's available to anyone who lives primarily in the natural
world, is reasonably intelligent, and respects other life-forms
for their intelligence. Respect for other life-forms filters into
our every action, as does its opposite: perceiving the world as
lifeless. If you objectify other living things, then you are committing
yourself to a totally materialistic universe - which is not even
consistent with the findings of modern physics.
The central idea of science, as it has been developed
and applied, is to get machines or nature to do the work human beings
don't want to do. This is immensely practical, but in a shortsighted
way.
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| Deloria: |
Developing the automobile, for example, allowed people
to get quickly from place to place, but at what cost, both in terms
of accidents and of damage to the natural world? And what effect
have automobiles had on our spiritual life?
In a capitalist system, whoever supplies the money
determines the technology. This means that science, as it's applied,
is never really for the good of humankind, but instead for the good
of the financial elite or the military. It also means that science
will be dominated by the authorities who have found institutional
favor, whether they have the best evidence for their beliefs or
not.
When beliefs and knowledge harden and becomeinstitutionalized,
we turn to institutions to solve all our problems: people purchase
food grown by others, settle their conflicts in courts and legislatures
rather than by informal, mutually agreed-upon solutions, and wage
extended and terrible wars over abstract principles instead of minor
battles over the right to occupy land for hunting and fishing. Similarly,
beliefs about the world are processed into philosophical and rational
principles rather than anecdotal experiences, and religion is reduced
to creeds, dogmas, and doctrines.
Now, every society needs educated people, but the
primary responsibility of educated people must be to bring wisdom
back into the community and make it available to others. Because
of hierarchies, European thinkers have not performed their proper
social function. Instead, science and philosophy have taken the
path already taken by Western religion andmystified themselves.
The people who occupy the top positions in science, religion, and
politics have one thing in common: they are responsible for creating
a technical language incomprehensible to the rest of us, so that
we will cede to them our right and responsibility to think. They,
in turn, formulate a set of beautiful lies that lull us to sleep
and distract us from our troubles, eventually depriving us of all
rights- including, increasingly, the right to a livable world.
Respect for other life-forms filters into our every
action, as does its opposite: perceiving the world as lifeless.
I like the Pacific Northwest tribes' idea that, in
the distant past, the physical world was not dominant, and you could
change your shape and experience life as an animal, plant, or bird.
Then that world changed, and some people were caught in different
shapes and became animals, plants, and so on.
Why do Western people - and the Near Eastern peoples
from whom their religions are derived - need a messiah? Why is their
appraisal of the physical world a negative one? . . . Why do they
insist on believing that ultimate reality is contained in another,
unimaginable realm?
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