Capitalist Crisis
THE RATIONALITY OF THE ABYSS
by Santiago Alba Rico*
Translated by Mary Murphy
Edited by Simon McGuinness
Quote:
We forget that nature is a limited, makeshift kind of thing , that our
bodies are held together with pins, and that history has often gone
backwards. The good, if it cannot be applied to all, is evil. The
beautiful, if it costs the lives of many people, is ugly. The true, if it
is unjust, is false. Faced with this unattainable historical triad, we
should opt for the ordinary, the pretty, the approximate, as the only things
really compatible with the survival of nature and of human civilisation. For
this reason, the ordinary is better than the good. The pretty is more
beautiful than the beautiful. The approximate is more true than the true.
The contrary of krisis is kairos, which in Greek and Roman philosophy meant
“opportunity” or “the right moment”, the temporal crack that lets divine
intervention in. The krisis is also our kairos. Will we know how to make
the most of it?
Apart from that embryonic light which is growing slowly and unsteadily in
Latin America, the world situation does not inspire hope. Resistance, as we
have said, resembles the world it is rising against. The good, the
beautiful, the true are concepts associated with advertising and consumerism
and thus with individual reflexes - whether painful or pleasurable. In a
world that is globalised and transparent they now make up the dominant
ideology of the dominated classes. We are separated from the ordinary, the
pretty and the approximate, so essential to any kind of political salvation,
not only by the Forbes list, but also by the subjective desire of human
beings themselves, a desire that is trapped in the intrinsic irrationality
of capitalism and its suicidal dependencies: “I will seek my own survival,
even if I have to kill myself too in doing so.”
Last edited by enamdar on 30 Jul 2009, 9:23 pm, edited 2 times in total.