Beta Culture: Fresh Crops in Failing Fields

Thinking out loud here …

I’ve written about converting at least one closed church into a Beta Culture Nexus in every large city in America. But I have this slightly different idea for … well, think about this:

Look at this article about abandoned malls across the U.S.: Completely Surreal Photos of America’s Abandoned Malls.

Say you acquired an abandoned mall at a fire-sale price.

You turn most of the shops inside into dwelling units, nice condos, plus maybe a small hotel. You could adapt an out-of-the-way part of it into commercial mini-storage or vehicle storage. Keep a small part of the parking lot (or all of the parking garage) for tenants. The remainder of the parking lot, you sell off most of it as prime commercial property, but keep several acres around the main building for a park and gardens.

Meanwhile, you rip out the escalators and replace them with stairs to save on energy. Tear open the roof and fill it with natural-light skylights, adding solar panels and huge water reservoirs in remaining areas for backup energy and water. Reserve one rooftop area as an open-air lounge for enjoying sunsets and the night sky. Fill the promenades with planters and ponds and water fountains, comfortable benches and tables for mingling and relaxing — plus bike, golf cart or even skateboard lanes for people traveling the interior.

Build an indoor gym, library, tech center, full-coverage wi-fi, art studio, child care center, senior center, meeting/convention and performance venue (what used to be the multi-cinema), and reopen the food court for tenants. Add offices for residents who telecommute.

THEN declare the entire place, or as much of it as possible, a church or religious order.

Which, you know, as a Beta Culture project, it WOULD be.

Beta Culture: Social Sharing, Social Shaping

Early on, I asked myself why anyone would want to join an artificially-created culture, which would, obviously, entail some sort of adherence or obedience to cultural norms. If you’re going to be a member of the Water Buffaloes, you have to wear the Big Funny Hat, right? But what if you don’t want to wear the Big Funny Hat?

The answer is that people would join if they knew the culture would empower and protect them. If it made them BETTER people, healthier, smarter, more effective in the world both as the larger group and as individuals. If it was a more-than-fair trade, they might even be willing to wear the Big Funny Hat.

And truthfully, strengthening and empowering people — already living in a decidedly predatory social environment — is my primary goal in thinking about Beta. If we can’t create something better, why would any of us bother to bother?

In his book Religion for Atheists: A Non-Believer’s Guide to the Uses of Religion, Alain de Botton makes a number of points that align very closely with some of my own thinking on Beta Culture.

I should say here that I don’t completely like the title of de Botton’s book. It disturbs me in that it gives a slightly false image of what de Botton is really talking about, which is, mainly, culture. Culture as it is used — and abused — by religions, but which is really available to all of us.

To an atheist, religion-as-culture is sort of like a banana. You know you don’t like the peel, but no banana-eater thinks about the peel, other than as something you tear off and throw away, or use to illustrate a pratfall joke. You take the peel off and eat the banana, happily and healthily. Just so, you can peel religion away from culture, throw it away, and have something useful, healthy and life-affirming left. Something that is not religion, nothing like religion, but that takes back and makes useful some of what religion has stolen from us.

For instance, if religion annexes Morality and claims it as its own — as it has — and you choose not to be religious, the answer is not to be amoral, but to take back the ownership of morality by showing it as something HUMAN. The result being that you’re able to be MORE moral than those who take a strictly religious approach to it, because you understand that morality is a human endeavor, subject to human judgments and aspirations, and not something instructed by the tight-assed god of whatever holy book you happen to be reading.

I’ll quote de Botton from his chapter on Kindness:

By contrast with this Christian desire to generate a moral atmosphere, libertarian theorists have argued that public space should be kept neutral. There should be no reminders of kindness on the walls of our buildings or in the pages of our books. Such messages would, after all, constitute dramatic infringements on our much-prized ‘liberty.’

However, [ we can admit that ] our public spaces are not even remotely neutral. They are — as a quick glance down any high street will reveal — covered with commercial messages. Even in societies theoretically dedicated to leaving us free to make our own choices, our minds are continuously manipulated in directions we hardly consciously recognize.

[…]

Atheists tend to pity the inhabitants of religiously dominated societies for the extent of the propaganda they have to endure, but this is to overlook secular societies’ equally powerful and continuous calls to prayer. A libertarian state truly worthy of the name would try to redress the balance of messages that reach its citizens away from the merely commercial and towards a holistic conception of flourishing. True to the ambitions of Giotto’s frescoes, these new messages would render vivid to us the many noble ways of behaving that we currently admire so much and so blithely ignore.

More than once, I’ve found myself watching something wonderful on TV or elsewhere, a short video with a message of love, or giving, or caring, and then felt disappointed to find it was a commercial from Nike or McDonald’s, or some bank. (I admit to a certain fondness and forgiveness for the Budweiser Clydesdales.) I’ve caught myself hoping, more than once, that this time, THIS TIME, what I was watching was going to be a genuine message of caring, or togetherness, or love for one’s fellow man.

And honestly, can anyone give me a good reason why it couldn’t be? Why it SHOULDN’T be that we might see messages of human aspiration and connection, at least as often as we’re persuaded to buy Big Macs or Fords or socks? On the so-called “public airwaves,” why is there almost nothing but lowest-common-denominator entertainment and commercial sales pitches?

I’ll give you a couple of examples which are, sadly, still commercials, but which lean very strong toward the sort of teaching stories, the social sharing and shaping I imagine.

I’ll admit I don’t know who would pay for such things. But I would darned sure like to see them, and in some ways I don’t think we can afford to NOT have such caring reminders in view, at least as often as the current nonstop barrage of exploitative commercial messages.

A people that cared about people, and all the other things worth caring about, would manage it.

Beta Culture: Forgotten Gods 2

Following up on my thesis that “remnant religion” still occupies us in ways simultaneously invisible and rampant, I’ve been thinking about movies, and science.

Maybe a dozen times in my life, I’ve tossed out the general question:

If you could live to be 200/500/forever (the question has varied with each asking), would you?

I’ve been amazed each time, not so much at the quantity of negative answers (a huge majority), but at the INSTANTANEOUS negative answers. No thought required, people somehow KNEW they would not want to live for extended periods.

From my point of view, the answer was an easy YES!! After all, you’ve got life, where fun things happen, where there are interesting things to learn, where there are a huge number of things to see and do. How could you not want more of that?

Some part of the replies contained what I eventually came to feel was the absolutely predictable counter-question:

But what if you lived forever and you just got sicker and older forever?

And I’d be like “WTF? It’s a hypothetical question. Why would you instantly assume the worst possible version of it?”

Yeah, but what if you DID just get sicker and older? You’d be stuck like that forever! That would be horrible!

Uh, yeah. But if that happened, you could, you know, kill yourself. I was sort of asking about eternal youth and health. Would you choose that?

I still wouldn’t want it. I mean, what if you got bored?

What? WHAT IF YOU GOT BORED?? Are you f*cking stupid?? You’d have the whole world to adventure in, healthy and alive for hundreds of years, and your first thought is that you’d GET BORED? Christ, if that happens, call me and I’ll come over and beat you to death with a shovel. Quickly, so it won’t be BORING. Faced with the opportunity of a radically extended lifespan, God save your poor, dull little self from getting BORED.

Gah. I constantly wonder at what goes on in some people’s heads, but I think I figured out what’s up in this case. It’s the Frankenstein story — the warning against hubris (overconfident pride or arrogance) — so basic in our culture it’s practically in our DNA.

In all its thousand different variations, Dr. Frankenstein pushes against forbidden limits and pays a horrible price.

Item: The Hollow Man. Kevin Bacon is a scientist involved in a project that can turn a man invisible. As the test subject who gains the power, it drives him murderously mad.

Item: 28 Days Later. Scientists experiment with a deadly virus, which escapes and lays waste to all civilization.

Item: Jurassic Park. After the initially glorious introduction of an island of cloned dinosaurs, things begin to go nightmarishly wrong.

The Alien films all carried a strong subtext of hubris, traveling too far, venturing too boldly, with Man’s inevitable downfall presented in the form of an unbelievably deadly alien predator. Ditto for the Terminator series, where men meddled with poorly-understood forces that unleashed unstoppable robotic assassins from the future.

By contrast, I suspect one of the strongest reasons for the popularity of the original Star Trek series, and its TV and movie sequels, is that it asked the question “But what if something GOOD could happen? What if we created a future of beauty and adventure?” Recent superhero films mostly avoid preaching against hubris, or at least find ways to show that it can be successfully overcome, envisioning beings with god-challenging powers as benefactors rather than bringers of automatic misfortune.

But back in the real world, it’s not uncommon for real scientific research to face automatic opposition. When Dolly the cloned sheep came along in 1996, legions of commentators — and large numbers of the public — had instantly negative reactions. Proposals to recreate woolly mammoths, to clone Neanderthals, or even the attempt to eliminate fatal childhood diseases, triggers instant negativity among large numbers of people. Not thoughtful caution that attempts to foresee problems and then find ways to work around them to achieve the worthwhile goal, but unthinking and instant opposition that desires the end of all effort.

Why? I can only imagine it’s because there are some things Man Was Not Meant to Know. Nobody should be allowed to try this stuff, because when humans PLAY GOD, something MUST go wrong.

This is yet another way in which remnant religion grips modern humanity and slows its progress into some better future.

To me, the thought of it is extremely annoying.