That Worrying Need For Illusion
Mariano Barusso
?? Líder en transformación estratégica, cultural y directiva ?? Conferencista internacional ?? Coach y asesor C-Level??Pensador y creador de conocimiento para la acción ? Fundador y CEO de Asertys
The compulsion for illusion is growing exponentially, generating an existential risk.
“It is rather our frenzy of communication and information that makes things disappear. Information, that is, non-things, is placed in front of things and makes them pale. We do not live in a realm of violence, but in a realm of information that poses as freedom.” — Byung-Chul Han
Those who know me are aware of the attention I dedicate to the tendency us humans have to alienate ourselves in what we do and have, something I attribute to our need to avoid the responsibility of engaging in a healthy project, with a sense of purpose that constitutes us as free beings in coexistence with others.
One of the manifestations of this deviation that we all can fall into, even repeatedly, is?illusion. I refer to illusion in the first sense provided by the Royal Spanish Academy (RAE), as?“Concept, image, or representation without true reality, suggested by the imagination or caused by the deception of the senses.”
I am truly concerned about the compulsion to delude ourselves, in its denial of reality or exculpation of our existential responsibility. We live with such a need for illusion that we later fall into the apathy derived from the resistance imposed by reality. Are we renouncing to the opportunity to learn from frustration and believe in collective effort as a possibility for transforming our reality?
This is something I observe and continue to understand in my every day living, as I help others in my work, and as I engage in dialogue with thinkers I admire, personally or through their works.
Erich Fromm is one of those wise men with whom I dialogue, and who helped me differentiate between “The Chains of Illusion” and “Man’s Search for Meaning,” that constitutive drama of our existence which represents knowing that we are thrown into the world without having chosen it, being free in the shaping of our individuality, and being aware that we have an expiration date.
I always try to remain attentive to illusion as a human need and its possible derivations, whether towards a healthy project that embraces the complexity of the task of choosing and choosing ourselves, or an unhealthy project that opts to binary options and delegates existential decisions to others.
It is a topic that fascinates me, central to my work, and easy to observe when we train our perception for it. At the same time, I recognize myself as a persistent advocate of this cause, which will never be “a lost one”.
What motivated me to write this today is that we are daily witnesses to a series of converging forces that make me think that humanity’s compulsion for illusion, far from remaining in its rightful place, is growing exponentially, generating what I consider an existential risk.
I refer to an existential risk because I believe that an excess of illusion competes with higher functions of our cultural biology, such as contemplation of facts, giving meaning, critical thinking, and recursion, among others, which allow us to observe ourselves as observers within an ecosystem that transcends us and think about who we are.
The more we exercise primal, virtual, and uncritical illusion, the weaker become our functions that are most difficult for algorithms to learn. Let us bear in mind that the loss of these cognitive and social functions may represent the first stage of our extinction as a species, the decline of that which makes us unique and irreplaceable diversity, generated to our own detriment.
“The more we exercise primal, virtual, and uncritical illusion, the weaker become our functions that are most difficult for algorithms to learn.”
What are the forces I observe converging as links in the robust chains of 21st-century illusion?
Is it that difficult for us to take responsibility for freedom that we prefer a “happy world” where the work of being a project is seemingly resolved?
I am convinced that there are neither Leviathans nor Messiahs in the future of humanity, only the arduous endeavor to seek the common good, by cultivating the highest functions of our biological-cultural constitution and honoring our Home-Planet-Earth.
I know that we feel it is a difficult, probably utopian process, opposed to the illusory idea of a guaranteed promising outcome. But without that resistance, without that density… what are we here for, and what “thing” will we become in the era of posthumanity?
“The Game” promises simplicity in consuming your being, in a freemium model.
Quoting the great Fromm, at the end of a long series of questions about the meaning of our contradictions:?“Does it make sense that we live in the midst of abundance and receive so little satisfaction in return? Does it make sense that we all know how to read and write, and have radio and television, and yet we are chronically bored? Does it make sense that…? We could continue for many more pages describing the irrationalities, fictions, and contradictions of our Western way of life. However, all these irrationalities are taken for granted, and we hardly perceive them. This is not due to a lack of critical ability: we see these same irrationalities and contradictions clearly in our opponents; we simply refuse to apply a critical and rational judgment to ourselves.”
My dear Irvin Yalom declared himself the executioner of love, the executioner of that search for unrealistically perfect love. I declare myself the executioner of illusion because what we risk is living the vertigo of a life with meaning.
But what do we do with illusion? Let’s transform it into hope.
Mariano Barusso | Buenos Aires, Argentina | May 20, 2023 | Image: Delusion, 2016 — All rights reserved ? 2305204371016