MORAL ARMOR on Materialism and Profit
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Title: MORAL ARMOR on Materialism and Profit
Word Count: 1478
Author: Ronald E Springer
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MORAL ARMOR on Materialism and Profit
Copyright 2005 Ronald E Springer
Desiring to get the most out of life, life’s lovers intend
to earn and therefore deserve the best the world has to
offer. Materialism is an anti-concept which damns this
desire as a spiritually bankrupt, destructive pursuit. In
the most rudimentary separation, it considers the body and
mind to be two halves of a man with no interconnection, and
more often than not, declares them to be fiercely at
odds—the modern equivalent of religion’s “man fighting for
his soul.” They claim they can put him back on track,
exclaiming that spirituality can only be achieved by
renouncing all material interests and necessities. The
anti-concept is further narrowed as no intellectual pursuit
is considered spiritual, omitting whatever could offend the
non-thinking, non-producing man. In true Fear-driven
fashion, they look down on the physical world where they
have no power, and look up to the spiritual where they have
no responsibility.
In their world, spiritual pursuits must yield no
hard-earned clarity or material advantages, just some
empty, unquestionable, eternal bliss. Has anyone ever asked
why? Why is that spiritual; because it’s the Hindu’s
answer? Centuries of monks have passed through time,
sitting Indian-style in silence with steepled hands and
have brought to the world a value amounting to
exactly…nothing. Their credo is mindlessness as the price
of spirituality and stagnation as the price of peace—not a
healthy pattern to follow. Why renounce the material world?
“Man’s greed” would be their response, and the only way
around wanting something improperly—as the Fear-driven see
no alternative—is to want nothing, the only way for them
not to harm is not to move. But greed or any desire, great
or small, is only wrong when one seeks the unearned. Greed
as defined by Webster’s dictionary, is “an excessive desire
for getting or having; a desire for more than one needs or
deserves.” It has a very negative connotation, yet can
simply mean as stated under greedy, “intensely eager.” It’s
a word twisted to draw a moral conclusion in advance; to
assert that a strong desire is wrong in itself regardless
of whether its means of fulfillment is honest or dishonest.
Are people that “never have enough” truly evil? Beginning
with the obvious, a human being is an entity of matter and
consciousness, requiring material and spiritual products to
sustain itself. Should we damn our bodies because they are
never done consuming food? Every day, on and on, nourish,
expel, nourish, expel—the simple nature of the entity. Did
it ever occur to you that Man’s spirit runs the same cycle?
Spirit Murderers often deny this nutritional cycle,
reaching a point where they decide they are done
learning—what I call the Finished Product. They stifle the
expansion of their knowledge, yet expect to continue to
gain spiritual values, never seeing its link to their
unhappiness. Man can no more settle for a fixed amount of
achievement, than he can exist with a single breath of
oxygen. Happy people do not seek or settle for an
intellectually or physically static state of being, at any
age. There is no such thing as a mindless body or a
bodiless mind, and a man cannot live lacking either. To
survive, he must continue to feed both. You may hear about
their wonderful out of body experiences, but what do you
think their body was doing while they were off floating in
no-man’s land? Keeping them alive is all.
They dispense with our ambition, saying “There are
non-material ideals to consider.” That’s true. The
non-material ideals are the abstract ideals of a Self-made
Man, which make grasping and seeking the material ideals
possible. With our own neurobiological understanding, it is
becoming clear that there is no real separation between
mind and body at all. All living organisms have specific
nutrients they must pursue in both realms. But how is this
done? Proper spiritual nutrition is found exactly in the
creative activity of bringing abstract ideas into material
reality, which they damn, not first in buying the goods,
but in producing them. It’s exciting to come up with an
idea and see if the world will go for it. Win or lose, I
keep running this process over and over—I love it! I love
the opportunity to buy the products of another’s
genius—simple inventions like my tool-grabber, things I’ve
imagined but haven’t the time to develop, and revolutionary
new ideas from people who’ve spent passionate time out on
an epistemological limb I’ll never have to walk alone. The
passionate endeavors of others have brought such wealth
into my life, that in my thankfulness, I don’t know where
to begin. Maybe from the harnessing of fire, to the
invention of the wheel, to Aristotle’s laws of logic, to
the founding fathers of America, to Benjamin Franklin’s
experiments with electricity, to Thomas Edison’s light
bulb, to Henry Ford’s Model T, to IBM’s personal computer
and its unlimited applications, to the exotic cars I
treasure—these are all products of Man which I benefit from
greatly, and had no part in designing. All were considered
foolish ostentation or evil upon their inception, in
malicious fear of the creative faculty from which they
came, by those whose productive significance history never
seems to record.
Very few people are wrapped up in “over-consumerism”
—shopping themselves silly as a manic attempt to replace
spiritual fulfillment. Such an addiction is an aversive
dependency just as alcoholism or gambling, but in these
others, the remedial push is to get their act together.
There is rarely a call to separate oneself from oneself,
and reformers focus on those afflicted; they don’t declare
it to be a worldwide epidemic. Their solution for this
supposed rash of greed is only to relegate our time to idle
prayer or to a cruder material pursuit they can understand,
such as farming. Only in socialist slave-pens such as
China, does a society need to focus solely on the
preservation of Man’s body, a need their political system
consistently fails to meet. Freedom translates into
innovations for efficient farming requiring less labor,
releasing individuals to create new products and new
markets. Those who want to stop men from producing whatever
comes to their mind as a salable product, then dictate to
them how they will spend their time, their money and on
what, are the ones to be criticized. America’s wonderful
bounty of products is the result of every man’s right to
exist being recognized, and that’s all. Breathe easily when
a man is after money and luxuries he is willing to earn,
because when he isn’t, he is after control. The Spirit
Murderers are the ones responsible for wanting the unearned
in both realms; the problem was created by them, in
self-restraint supposedly solved by them, and the Finished
Product was its result. This cold, mindless, dead relation
to matter and spirit has nothing to do with us, so we
should leave them to it.
Self-made Man can and does act without harming. He can want
properly. Most forget that those accused of being
materialist, often put many unpaid years into their fields
before any profit is realized, if at all. And profit,
damned for centuries, is the basic necessity of life, the
requirement that one stays ahead of even—in body and
spirit. It is the third step of cognition, the act of
creation—the hope of prosperity in any realm in which one
dares to dream—that brings the human spirit to life. It is
the fourth step of cognition—validation, whose equivalent
in work is profit, which determines whether one remains on
course. Whether one’s interest is commercial, romantic or
both, profiting is not evil or wasteful as the Spirit
Murderers claim, but essential: the very fiber of our
self-esteem, and the key to the deepest spirituality a man
can ever hope to reach—and they know it.
To know that one’s divine inspiration has a productive
purpose—that it brings joy to others and prosperity to
ourselves, that our energy serves a sum, not to be lost in
the past, but a value to be brought forward with every day
of our lives—develops an inertia that will supercharge our
exhilaration for living. This moral awareness is the whole
point of Moral Armor. As a result, all thought and action
becomes tied to prosperity, as it should be. The structure
of every mind assumes the correct hierarchical order and
gains the capacity to project across the span of its own
existence, bringing to fruition a height of personal
significance, almost too precious to contemplate.
About the Author:
Ronald E. Springer is the Author/Philosopher of Moral
Armor, the world's first fully-integrated moral philosophy
based on the nature of Man. Featured on The Mitch Albom
Show, NBC and FOX News radio affiliates, Mr. Springer is
available for interviews, speaking engagements, philosophy
workshops and seminars. Please contact
RonaldESpringer@MoralArmor.com or visit
www.MoralArmor.com for details.
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