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Chapter 2
‘Education and the Significance of Life’
When
one travels around the world, one notices to what an
extraordinary degree human nature is the same, whether
in India or America, in Europe or Australia. This is
especially true in colleges and universities. We are
turning out, as if through a mould, a type of human
being whose chief interest is to find security, to become
somebody important, or to have a good time with as little
thought as possible.
Conventional education makes independent
thinking extremely difficult. Conformity leads to mediocrity.
To be different from the group or to resist environment
is not easy and is often risky as long as we worship
success. The urge to be successful, which is the pursuit
of reward whether in the material or in the so-called
spiritual sphere, the search for inward or outward security,
the desire for comfort - this whole process smothers
discontent, puts an end to spontaneity and breeds fear;
and fear blocks the intelligent understanding of life.
With increasing age, dullness of mind and heart sets
in.
In seeking comfort, we generally
find a quiet corner in life where there is a minimum
of conflict, and then we are afraid to step out of that
seclusion. This fear of life, this fear of struggle
and of new experience, kills in us the spirit of adventure;
our whole upbringing and education have made us afraid
to be different from our neighbour, afraid to think
contrary to the established pattern of society, falsely
respectful of authority and tradition.
Fortunately, there are a few who
are in earnest, who are willing to examine our human
problems without the prejudice of the right or of the
left; but in the vast majority of us, there is no real
spirit of discontent, of revolt. When we yield uncomprehendingly
to environment, any spirit of revolt that we may have
had dies down, and our responsibilities soon put an
end to it.
Revolt is of two kinds: there is
violent revolt, which is mere reaction, without understanding,
against the existing order; and there is the deep psychological
revolt of intelligence. There are many who revolt against
the established orthodoxies only to fall into new orthodoxies,
further illusions and concealed self-indulgences. What
generally happens is that we break away from one group
or set of ideals and join another group, take up other
ideals, thus creating a new pattern of thought against
which we will again have to revolt. Reaction only breeds
opposition, and reform needs further reform.
But there is an intelligent revolt
which is not reaction, and which comes with self-knowledge
through the awareness of one's own thought and feeling.
It is only when we face experience as it comes and do
not avoid disturbance that we keep intelligence highly
awakened; and intelligence highly awakened is intuition,
which is the only true guide in life.
Now, what is the significance of
life? What are we living and struggling for? If we are
being educated merely to achieve distinction, to get
a better job, to be more efficient, to have wider domination
over others, then our lives will be shallow and empty.
If we are being educated only to be scientists, to be
scholars wedded to books, or specialists addicted to
knowledge, then we shall be contributing to the destruction
and misery of the world.
Though there is a higher and wider
significance to life, of what value is our education
if we never discover it? We may be highly educated,
but if we are without deep integration of thought and
feeling, our lives are incomplete, contradictory and
torn with many fears; and as long as education does
not cultivate an integrated outlook on life, it has
very little significance.
In our present civilization we
have divided life into so many departments that education
has very little meaning, except in learning a particular
technique or profession. Instead of awakening the integrated
intelligence of the individual, education is encouraging
him to conform to a pattern and so is hindering his
comprehension of himself as a total process. To attempt
to solve the many problems of existence at their respective
levels, separated as they are into various categories,
indicates an utter lack of comprehension.
The individual is made up of different
entities, but to emphasize the differences and to encourage
the development of a definite type leads to many complexities
and contradictions. Education should
bring about the integration of these separate entities
- for without integration, life becomes a series of
conflicts and sorrows. Of what value is it to be trained
as lawyers if we perpetuate litigation? Of what value
is knowledge if we continue in our confusion? What significance
has technical and industrial capacity if we use it to
destroy one another? What is the point of our existence
if it leads to violence and utter misery? Though we
may have money or are capable of earning it, though
we have our pleasures and our organized religions, we
are in endless conflict.
We must distinguish between the
personal and the individual. The personal is the accidental;
and by the accidental I mean the circumstances of birth,
the environment in which we happen to have been brought
up, with its nationalism, superstitions, class distinctions
and prejudices. The personal or accidental is but momentary,
though that moment may last a lifetime; and as the present
system of education is based on the personal, the accidental,
the momentary, it leads to perversion of thought and
the inculcation of self-defensive fears.
All of us have been trained by
education and environment to seek personal gain and
security, and to fight for ourselves. Though we cover
it over with pleasant phrases, we have been educated
for various professions within a system which is based
on exploitation and acquisitive fear. Such a training
must inevitably bring confusion and misery to ourselves
and to the world, for it creates in each individual
those psychological barriers which separate and hold
him apart from others.
Education is not merely a matter
of training the mind. Training makes for efficiency,
but it does not bring about completeness. A mind that
has merely been trained is the continuation of the past,
and such a mind can never discover the new. That is
why, to find out what is right education, we will have
to inquire into the whole significance of living.
To most of us, the meaning of life
as a whole is not of primary importance, and our education
emphasizes secondary values, merely making us proficient
in some branch of knowledge. Though knowledge and efficiency
are necessary, to lay chief emphasis on them only leads
to conflict and confusion.
There is an efficiency inspired
by love which goes far beyond and is much greater than
the efficiency of ambition; and without love, which
brings an integrated understanding of life, efficiency
breeds ruthlessness. Is this not what is actually taking
place all over the world? Our present education is geared
to industrialization and war, its principal aim being
to develop efficiency; and we are caught in
this machine of ruthless competition and mutual destruction.
If education leads to war, if it teaches us to destroy
or be destroyed, has it not utterly failed?
To bring about right education,
we must obviously understand the meaning of life as
a whole, and for that we have to be able to think, not
consistently, but directly and truly. A consistent thinker
is a thoughtless person, because he conforms to a pattern;
he repeats phrases and thinks in a groove. We cannot
understand existence abstractly or theoretically. To
understand life is to understand ourselves, and that
is both the beginning and the end of education.
Education is not merely acquiring
knowledge, gathering and correlating facts; it is to
see the significance of life as a whole. But the whole
cannot be approached through the part - which is what
governments, organized religions and authoritarian parties
are attempting to do.
The function of education is to
create human beings who are integrated and therefore
intelligent. We may take degrees and be mechanically
efficient without being intelligent. Intelligence is
not mere information; it is not derived from books,
nor does it consist of clever self-defensive responses
and aggressive assertions. One who has not studied may
be more intelligent than the learned. We have made examinations
and degrees the criterion of intelligence and have developed
cunning minds that avoid vital human issues. Intelligence
is the capacity to perceive the essential, the what
is; and to awaken this capacity, in oneself and in others,
is education.
Education should help us to discover
lasting values so that we do not merely cling to formulas
or repeat slogans; it should help us to break down our
national and social barriers, instead of emphasizing
them, for they breed antagonism between man and man.
Unfortunately, the present system of education is making
us subservient, mechanical and deeply thoughtless; though
it awakens us intellectually, inwardly it leaves us
incomplete, stultified and uncreative.
Without an integrated understanding
of life, our individual and collective problems will
only deepen and extend. The purpose of education is
not to produce mere scholars, technicians and job hunters,
but integrated men and women who are free of fear; for
only between such human beings can there be enduring
peace.
It is in the understanding of ourselves
that fear comes to an end. If the individual is to grapple
with life from moment to moment, if he is to face its
intricacies, its miseries and sudden demands, he must
be infinitely pliable and therefore free of theories
and particular patterns of thought.
Education should not encourage
the individual to conform to society or to be negatively
harmonious with it, but help him to discover the true
values which come with unbiased investigation and self-
awareness. When there is no self-knowledge, self-expression
becomes self-assertion, with all its aggressive and
ambitious conflicts. Education should awaken the capacity
to be self-aware and
not merely indulge in gratifying self-expression.
What is the good of learning if
in the process of living we are destroying ourselves?
As we are having a series of devastating wars, one right
after another, there is obviously something radically
wrong with the way we bring up our children. I think
most of us are aware of this, but we do not know how
to deal with it.
Systems, whether educational or
political, are not changed mysteriously; they are transformed
when there is a fundamental change in ourselves. The
individual is of first importance, not the system; and
as long as the individual does not understand the total
process of himself, no system, whether of the left or
of the right, can bring order and peace to the world.
Published by Gollancz, 1992, ISBN 0-575-04676-7
© Krishnamurti Foundation Trust
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