QUESTION: ‘Could you give me a very brief
snapshot of what you and Professor Prosen
believe the biological explanation of the
human condition is?
I think I’m reasonably intelligent and I
would like to quickly see if it is going to
make any sense to me?
If it can explain me, well go ahead–tell
me about me!’
ANSWER: [LAUGHTER] Fair enough!
And I agree, what is to be presented is a
first principle-based, rational, testable,
biological understanding of the human condition.
There is no dogma, or faith, or belief, or
mysticism, or superstition, or any abstract
concepts involved in the explanation.
So you’re on safe ground, this explanation
is all about knowledge that either stacks
up or it doesn’t–and if it doesn’t you
should throw it over your shoulder, reject
it.
What I have to explain will either make sense
to you–in fact, make sense of you, because
this explains human behaviour–or it won’t.
I will begin with an analogy.
What would happen if we were to take a migrating
stork and put on his head a fully conscious
mind, such as we humans have?
We’ll call him Adam Stork because this story
is like the Biblical account of Adam and Eve,
but with a very important difference.
(Refer to the following picture of The Story
of Adam Stork.)
When we first come across Adam Stork he is
following his instinctive migratory path up
the coast of Africa to the rooftops of Europe
for the summer breeding season, as storks
do.
However, with his newly acquired fully conscious
mind, Adam Stork is now different–for the
first time he is able to think for himself,
and so he starts thinking.
He sees an island off to his left and thinks,
‘Well, I think I might fly down there for
a rest’, and so he does, he diverts from
his migratory flight path and flies down towards
the island.
But what is going to happen when he does?
Isn’t Adam Stork’s instinctive self, which
is orientated to a migratory flight path that
doesn’t include the island, going to try
to pull him back on course?
We 
can imagine that not wanting to upset his
instinctive self Adam’s conscious thinking
self would decide to abandon his experiment
in self-adjustment and choose not to go down
to the island.
Flying on, however, Adam Stork sees another
island with some apples and thinks, ‘Why
not fly down there for a feed?’
Again, his instinctive self resists this experiment
in self-management.
This puts Adam in a dilemma.
If he continues to obey his instinctive self
and never carry out experiments in self-management
he will never learn to master his conscious
mind.
Only by experimenting in self-management will
Adam Stork ever learn to understand the difference
between right and wrong.
The basic problem is instincts are only orientations,
not understandings.
Over the course of thousands of generations
and migratory movements, only those storks
that happened to have a genetic make-up that
inclined them to follow the right route survived.
Thus, through natural selection, storks acquired
their perfect instinctive orientation to certain
flight paths.
However, when the nerve-based learning system
gave rise to consciousness and the ability
to understand the relationship between cause
and effect, it wasn’t enough to be orientated
to the world–the conscious thinking self
had to find understanding to operate effectively
and fulfil its great potential to manage events.
If Adam Stork obeys his instinctive self and
flies back on course, he will remain perfectly
orientated but he’ll never learn if his
deviation was the right decision or not.
All the messages he’s receiving from within
inform him that obeying his instincts is good,
is right, but there’s also now a new inclination
to disobey, a defiance of instinct.
Diverting from his course will result in apples
and understanding, yet he already sees that
doing so also makes him feel bad.
But, sooner or later Adam Stork must find
the courage to master his conscious mind–so,
not knowing any reason why he shouldn’t
fly down for the apples, he perseveres with
his experiment in self-management and does
so.
Again, his decision is met with criticism
from his instinctive self, which he now must
live with.
Immediately he is condemned to a state of
upset.
A battle has broken out between his instinctive
self, perfectly orientated to the flight path,
and his emerging conscious mind, which needs
to understand why that flight path was the
correct course to follow.
Adam had to do something to resist the unjust
criticism that he was having to endure from
his instinctive self–it would be completely
unbearable to have to just accept the criticism
when he rightly feels it’s not deserved–but
without the ability to explain himself all
he could do was retaliate against the criticism,
try to prove it wrong or simply ignore it–and
he did all of those things.
Adam became angry towards 
the criticism.
In every way he could he tried to demonstrate
his self worth, prove that he was good and
not bad.
And he tried to block out the criticism.
He became angry, egocentric and alienated,
or, in a word, upset.
Adam Stork became angry, egocentric and alienated
as the only three responses available to him
to cope with the injustice of his situation.
Only when he could find the explanation of
his upset condition–the explanation that
has just been given here that science has
at last made possible, which is of the difference
between the gene-based instinctive orientating
system and the nerve-based conscious understanding
system–could he hope to relieve his situation.
Suffering upset was the price of his heroic
search for understanding–it was the inevitable
outcome of his transition from an instinct-controlled
state to an intellect-controlled state, as
it was for humans, because we were the ones
who developed the fully conscious thinking
mind.
The so-called Seven Deadly Sins of the human
condition, of lust, anger, pride, envy, covetousness,
gluttony and sloth, are in truth all different
manifestations of the three fundamental upsets
of anger, egocentricity and alienation that
unavoidably emerged when humans became fully
conscious and had to set out in search of
knowledge in the presence of unjustly condemning
instincts.
This analogy is similar to that of the story
of the Garden of Eden, except in that presentation
when Adam and Eve took the ‘fruit…from
the tree of knowledge’ (Gen. 3:3, 2:17)–went
in search of understanding–they were ‘banished…from
the Garden’ (ibid.
3:23) of our original innocent state for having
become ‘bad’ or ‘evil’.
In this presentation, however, Adam and Eve
are revealed to be the heroes, NOT the villains
they have so long been portrayed as.
While we are immensely upset–that is, immensely
angry, egocentric and alienated–humans are
good and not bad after all!
We can see that as soon as we are able to
explain that we are actually good and not
bad, all the upset–all the anger, egocentricity
and alienation–that resulted from not being
able to explain our upset condition subsides;
it disappears.
Finding understanding of the human condition
is what liberates and TRANSFORMS humans from
our upset angry, egocentric and alienated
condition.
That was a very brief description of the liberating
and TRANSFORMING explanation that is fully
presented in Freedom Book 1.
What it reveals is that we humans are nothing
less than the heroes of the story of life
on Earth.
I say this because our fully conscious mind
is surely nature’s greatest invention and
to have had to endure the torture of being
unjustly condemned as evil for so long (humans
have had a fully developed conscious, self-managing
mind for some two million years) must surely
make us the absolute heroes of the story of
life on Earth.
And indeed, doesn’t the feeling exist in
you and in all humans that far from being
‘banish[ment]’-deserving evil blights
on this planet we are all immense heroes?
When we humans defiantly shook our fist at
the heavens we were saying, ‘One day, one
day, we humans are going to establish that
we are good and not bad after all.’
Doesn’t this explanation at last make sense
of your and everyone else’s immensely courageous
and defiant attitude?
Doesn’t this explanation validate a core
feeling in you that you are not a meaningless
wretch but in fact an immense hero?
Doesn’t this explanation bring deep, bone-draining
relief to the whole of your being?
It is precisely this explanation’s ability
to at last make sense of human life, of all
our behaviour, that let’s us know that we
have finally found the true explanation of
the human condition.
Albert Einstein said that ‘truth is what
stands the test of experience’ (Out of My
Later Years, 1950), and since this explanation
is about us, our behaviour, we are in a position
to personally ‘experience’ its validity,
to know if it’s true or not.
