Also by Thomas Ligotti
FICTION
Songs of a Dead Dreamer
Grimscribe
Noctuary
The Nightmare Factory
My Work Is Not Yet Done
The Shadow at the Bottom of the World
Teatro Grottesco
POETRY
I Have a Special Plan for This World
This Degenerate Little Town
Death Poems
SCREENPLAYS
Crampton (with Brandon Trenz)
The Frolic (with Brandon Trenz)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to express my appreciation to Tim Jeski and Scott
Wetherby for supplying me with materials essential to the
writing of this work; to the members of Thomas Ligotti Online
and its administrator, Brian Edward Poe, for participating in a
forum of commentary on an early version of The Conspiracy
against the Human Race; to Robert Ligotti for being a ready test
subject whenever I needed an alert response from a mind akin
to my own; and to Jennifer Gariepy for the encouragement and
insight she has afforded me over many years. In addition, I
would be more than remiss not to acknowledge the counsel and
labors of S. T. Joshi, David E. Schultz, and Jonathan Padgett,
with special recognition reserved for Nicole Ariana Seary, who
granted me the benefit of her talents and experience during the
most crucial stages of this book's composition. Finally, I am in
debted, as are all devotees of philosophical pessimism who are
not knowledgeable of the Dano-Norwegian language, to Gisle
R. Tangenes for his translations of and writings on the works of
Peter Wessel Zapffe. The responsibility for the use made of
these valued contributions lies entirely with the author.
6
CONTENTS
Foreword by Ray Brassier
.
...................................... ......................................
9
Introduction: Of Pessimism and Paradox ............................................ 13
The Nightmare of Being .............................................................................. 19
Who Goes There? .......................................................................................... 85
Freaks of Salvation ....................................................................................... 1 19
Sick to Death .................................................................................................. 1 4 7
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs .............................................................. 169
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural ....... 183
Notes
..................................................................................................................
7
229
FOREWORD
Ray Brassier
We know what verdict is reserved for those foolhardy enough to
dissent from the common conviction according to which "being
alive is all right," to borrow an insistent phrase from the volume
at hand. Disputants of the normative buoyancy of our race can
expect to be chastised for their ingratitude, upbraided for their
cowardice, patronized for their shallowness. Where self-love
provides the indubitable index of psychic health, its default can
only ever be seen as a symptom of psychic debility. Philosophy,
which once disdained opinion, becomes craven when the opin
ion in question is whether or not being alive is all right. Suitably
ennobled by the epithet "tragic," the approbation of life is im
munized against the charge of complacency and those who deni
grate it condemned as ingrates.
"Optimism"; "pessimism": Thomas Ligotti takes the measure
of these discredited words, stripping them of the patina of fa
miliarity that has robbed them of their pertinence, and restoring
to them some of their original substance. The optimist fixes the
exchange rate between joy and woe, thereby determining the
value of life. The pessimist, who refuses the principle of ex
change and the injunction to keep investing in the future no
matter how worthless life's currency in the present, is stigma
tized as an unreliable investor.
The Conspiracy against the Human Race sets out what is
perhaps the most sustained challenge yet to the intellectual
blackmail that would oblige us to be eternally grateful for a
9
10
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
"gift" we never invited. Being alive is not all right: this simple not
encapsulates the temerity of thinking better than any platitude
about the tragic nobility of a life characterized by a surfeit of
suffering, frustration, and self-deceit. There is no nature worth
revering or rej oining; there is no self to be re-enthroned as cap
tain of its own fate; there is no future worth working towards
or hoping for. Life, in Ligotti's outsized stamp of disapproval, is
MALIGNANTLY USELESS.
No doubt, critics will try to indict Ligotti of bad faith by
claiming that the writing of this book is itself driven by the im
peratives of the life that he seeks to excoriate. But the charge is
trumped-up, since Ligotti explicitly avows the impossibility for
the living to successfully evade life's grip. This admission leaves
the cogency of his diagnosis intact, for as Ligotti knows full
well, if living is lying, then even telling the truth about life's lie
will be a sublimated lie.
Such sublimation is as close to truth-telling as Ligotti's ex
acting nihilism will allow. Unencumbered by the cringing def
erence towards social utility that straightjackets most
professional philosophers, Ligotti's unsparing dissection of the
sophisms spun by life's apologists proves him to be a more
acute pathologist of the human condition than any sanctimoni
ous philanthrope.
Look at your body-
A painted puppet, a poor toy
Of j ointed parts ready to collapse,
A diseased and suffering thing
With a head full of false imaginings.
-The Dhammapada
INTRODUCTION:
OF PESSIMISM AND PARADOX
In his study The Nature of Evil (1 931) 1 Radoslav A. Tsanoff cites
a terse reflection set down by the German philosopher Julius
Bahnsen in 18471 when he was seventeen years old. "Man is a
self-conscious Nothing, " wrote Bahnsen. Whether one considers
these words to be j uvenile or precocious, they belong to an an
cient tradition of scorn for our species and its aspirations. All
the same, the reigning sentiments on the human venture nor
mally fall between qualified approval and loud-mouthed brag
gadocio. As a rule, anyone desirous of an audience, or even a
place in society, might profit from the following motto: "If you
can't say something positive about humanity, then say some
thing equivocal."
Returning to Bahnsen, he grew up to become a philosopher
who not only had nothing either positive or equivocal to say
about humanity, but who also arrived at a dour assessment of
all existence. Like many who have tried their hand at meta
physics, Bahnsen declared that, appearances to the contrary, all
reality is the expression of a unified, unchanging force--a cos
mic movement that various philosophers have characterized in
various ways. To Bahnsen, this force and its movement were
fnonstrous in nature, resulting in a universe of indiscriminate
butchery and mutual slaughter among its individuated parts.
Additionally, the "universe according to Bahnsen" has never had
a hint of design or direction. From the beginning, it was a play
with no plot and no players that were anything more than por13
14
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
tions of a master drive of purposeless self-mutilation. In Bahn
sen's philosophy, everything is engaged in a disordered fantasia
of carnage. Everything tears away at everything else . . . forever.
Yet all this commotion in nothingness goes unnoticed by nearly
everything involved in it. In the world of nature, as an instance,
nothing knows of its embroilment in a festival of massacres.
Only Bahnsen's self-conscious Nothing can know what is going
on and be shaken by the tremors of chaos at feast.
As with all pessimistic philosophies, Bahnsen's rendering of exis
tence as something strange and awful was unwelcome by the
self-conscious nothings whose validation he sought. For better or
worse, pessimism without compromise lacks public appeal. In
all, the few who have gone to the pains of arguing for a sullen
appraisal of life might as well never have been born. As history
confirms, people will change their minds about almost anything,
from which god they worship to how they style their hair. But
when it comes to existential j udgments, human beings in general
have an unfalteringly good opinion of themselves and their con
dition in this world and are steadfastly confident they are not a
collection of self-conscious nothings.
Must all reproof of our species' self-contentment then be
renounced? That would be the brilliant decision, rule number
one for deviants from the norm. Rule number two: If you must
open your mouth, steer away from debate. Money and love
may make the world go round, but disputation with that world
cannot get it to budge if it is not of a mind to do so. Thus Brit
ish author and Christian apologist G. K. Chesterton: "You can
only find truth with logic if you have already found truth with
out it." What Chesterton means to say here is that logic is ir
relevant to truth, because if you can find truth without logic
then logic is superfluous to any truth-finding effort. Indeed, his
only motive for bringing logic into his formulation is to taunt
Introduction: Of Pessimism and Paradox
15
those who find logic quite relevant to finding truth, although
not the kind of truth that was pivotal to Chesterton's morale as
a Christian.
Renowned for stating his convictions in the form of a para
dox, as above, Chesterton, along with anyone who has something
positive or equivocal to say about the human race, comes out on
top in the crusade for truth. (There is nothing paradoxical about
that.) Therefore, should your truth run counter to that of indi
viduals who devise or applaud paradoxes that stiff up the status
quo, you would be well advised to take your arguments, tear
them up, and throw them in someone else's garbage.
To be sure, though, futile argumentation has its attractions
and may act as an amusing complement to the bitter joy of
spewing gut-level vituperations, personal idolatries, and rampant
pontifications. To absolve such an unruly application of the ra
tional and the irrational (not that they are ever separable), the
present "contrivance of horror" has been anchored in the thesis of
a philosopher who had disquieting thoughts about what it is like
to be a member of the human race. But too much should not be
telegraphed in this prelude to abjection. For the time being, it
need only be said that the philosopher in question made much of
human existence as a tragedy that need not have been were it
not for the intervention in our lives of a single, calamitous event:
the evolution of consciousness-parent of all horrors. He also
portrayed humanity as a species of contradictory beings whose
continuance only worsens their plight, which is that of mutants
who embody the contorted logic of a paradox-a real-life para
dox and not a bungled epigram.
Even an offhand review of the topic will show that not all para
doxes are alike. Some are merely rhetorical, an apparent con
tradiction of logic that, if well j uggled, may be intelligibly
resolved within a specific context. More intriguing are those
16
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E HU MAN RAC E
paradoxes that torture our notions of reality. In the literature of
supernatural horror, a familiar storyline is that of a character
who encounters a paradox in the flesh, so to speak, and must
face down or collapse in horror before this ontological perver
sion-something which should not be, and yet is. Most fabled
as specimens of a living paradox are the "undead," those walking
cadavers greedy for an eternal presence on earth. But whether
their existence should go on unendingly or be cut short by a
stake in the heart is not germane to the matter at hand. What is
exceedingly material resides in the supernatural horror that
such beings could exist in their impossible way for an instant.
Other examples of paradox and supernatural horror congealing
together are inanimate things guilty of infractions against their
nature. Perhaps the most outstanding instance of this phenome
non is a puppet that breaks free of its strings and becomes self
mobilized.
For a brief while, let us mull over some items of interest re
garding puppets. They are made as they are made by puppet
makers and manipulated to behave in certain ways by a puppet
master's will. The puppets under discussion here are those
made in our image, although never with such fastidiousness that
we would mistake them for human beings. If they were so cre
ated, their resemblance to our soft shapes would be a strange
and awful thing, too strange and awful, in fact, to be counte
nanced without alarm. Given that alarming people has little to
do with merchandising puppets, they are not created so fastidi
ously in our image that we would mistake them for human be
ings, except perhaps in the half-light of a dank cellar or
cluttered attic. We need to know that puppets are puppets.
Nevertheless, we may still be alarmed by them. Because if we
look at a puppet in a certain way, we may sometimes feel it is
looking back, not as a human being looks at us but as a puppet
does. It may even seem to be on the brink of coming to life. In
Introduction: Of Pessimism and Paradox
17
such moments of mild disorientation, a psychological conflict
erupts, a dissonance of perception that sends through our being
a convulsion of supernatural horror.
A sibling term of supernatural horror is the "uncanny." Both
terms are pertinent in reference to nonhuman forms that dis
port human qualities. Both may also refer to seemingly animate
forms that are not what they seem, as with the undead
monstrosities of paradox, things that are neither one thing nor
another, or, more uncannily, and more horrifically supernatural,
things that are discovered to be two things at once. Whether or
not there really are manifestations of the supernatural, they are
horrifying to us in concept, since we think ourselves to be living
in a natural world, which may be a festival of massacres but
only in a physical rather than a metaphysical purport. This is
why we routinely equate the supernatural with horror. And a
puppet possessed of life would exemplify just such a horror,
because it would negate all conceptions of a natural physicalism
and affirm a metaphysics of chaos and nightmare. It would still
be a puppet, but it would be a puppet with a mind and a will,
a human puppet-a paradox more disruptive of sanity than the
undead. But that is not how they would see it. Human puppets
could not conceive of themselves as being puppets at all, not
when they are fixed with a consciousness that excites in them
the unshakable sense of being singled out from all other objects
in creation. Once you begin to feel you are making a go of it on
your own-that you are making moves and thinking thoughts
which seem to have originated w ithin you-it is not possible
for you to believe you are anything b ut your own master.
As effigies of ourselves, puppets are not equal partners with
us in the world. They are actors in a world of their own, one that
exists inside of ours and reflects back upon it. What do we see in
that reflection? Only what we want to see, what we can stand to
see. Through the prophylactic of self-deception, we keep hidden
18
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
what we do not want to let into our heads, as if we will betray to
ourselves a secret too terrible to know. Our lives abound with baf
fling questions that some attempt to answer and the rest of us let
pass. Naked apes or incarnate angels we may believe ourselves to
be, but not human puppets. Of a higher station than these im
personators of our species, we move freely about and can speak
any time we like. We believe we are making a go of it on our
own, and anyone who contradicts this belief will be taken for a
madman or someone who is attempting to immerse others in a
contrivance of horror. How to take seriously a puppet master
who has gone over to the other side?
When puppets are done with their play, they go back in
their boxes. They do not sit in a chair reading a book, their eyes
rolling like marbles over its words. They are only objects, like a
corpse in a casket. If they ever came to life, our world would be
a paradox and a horror in which everything was uncertain, in
cluding whether or not we were just human puppets.
All supernatural horror obtains in what we believe should
be and should not be. As scientists, philosophers, and spiritual
figures have testified, our heads are full of illusions; things, in
cluding human things, are not dependably what they seem. Yet
one thing we know for sure: the difference between what is
natural and what is not. Another thing we know is that nature
makes no blunders so untoward as to allow things, including
human things, to swerve into supernaturalism. Were it to make
such a blunder, we would do everything in our power to bury
this knowledge. But we need not resort to such measures, being
as natural as we are. No one can prove that our life in this
world is a supernatural horror, nor cause us to suspect that it
might be. Anybody can tell you that-not least a contriver of
books that premise the supernatural, the uncanny, and the
frightfully paradoxical as essential to our nature.
THE NIGHTMARE OF BEING
Psychogenesis
For ages they had been without lives of their own. The whole of
their being was open to the world and nothing divided them
from the rest of creation. How long they had thus flourished
none of them knew. Then something began to change. It hap
pened over unremembered generations. The signs of a revision
without forewarning were being writ ever more deeply into
them. As their species moved forward, they began crossing
boundaries whose very existence they never imagined. After
nightfall, they looked up at a sky filled with stars and felt them
selves small and fragile in the vastness. Soon they began to see
everything in a way they never had in older times. When they
found one of their own lying still and stiff, they now stood
around the body as if there were something they should do that
they had never done before. It was then they began to take bod
ies that were still and stiff to distant places so they could not find
their way back to them. But even after they had done this, some
within their group did see those bodies again, often standing si
lent in the moonlight or loitering sad-faced just beyond the glow
of a fire. Everything changed once they had lives of their own
and knew they had lives of their own. It even became impossible
for them to believe things had ever been any other way. They
were masters of their movements now, as it seemed, and never
had there been anything like them. The epoch had passed when
the whole of their being was open to the world and nothing di-
20
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
vided them from the rest of creation. Something had happened.
They did not know what it was, but they did know it as that
which should not be. And something needed to be done if they
were to flourish as they once had, if the very ground beneath
their feet were not to fall out from under them. For ages they
had been without lives of their own. Now that they had such
lives there was no turning back. The whole of their being was
closed to the world, and they had been divided from the rest of
creation. Nothing could be done about that, having as they did
lives of their own. But something would have to be done if they
were to live with that which should not be. And over time they
discovered what could be done-what would have to be done
so that they could live the lives that were now theirs to live. This
would not revive among them the way things had once been
done in older times; it would only be the best they could do.1
Ante-Mortem
For thousands of years a debate has been going on in the shadowy
background of human affairs. The issue to be resolved: "What
should we say about being alive?" Overwhelmingly, people have
said, "Being alive is all right." More thoughtful persons have added,
"Especially when you consider the alternative," disclosing a jocu
larity as puzzling as it is macabre, since the alternative is here im
plied to be both disagreeable and, upon consideration, capable of
making being alive seem more agreeable than it alternatively
would, as if the alternative were only a possibility that may or
may not come to pass, like getting the flu, rather than a looming
inevitability. And yet this covertly portentous remark is perfectly
well tolerated by anyone who says that being alive is all right.
These individuals stand on one side of the debate. On the other
side is an imperceptible minority of disputants. Their response to
the question of what we should say about being alive will be nei
ther positive nor equivocal. They may even fulminate about how
The Nightmare of Being
21
objectionable it is to be alive, or spout off that to be alive is to in
habit a nightmare without hope of awakening to a natural world,
to have our bodies embedded neck-deep in a quagmire of dread,
to live as shut-ins in a house of horrors from which nobody gets
out alive, and so on. Now, there are really no incisive answers as
to why anyone thinks or feels one way and not another. The most
we can say is that the first group of people is composed of opti
mists, although they may not think of themselves as such, while
the contending group, that imperceptible minority, is composed
of pessimists. The latter know who they are. But which group is
in the right-the existentially harrowed pessimists or the life
embracing optimists-will never be resolved.
If the most contemplative individuals are sometimes dubi
ous about the value of existence, they do not often publicize
their doubts but align themselves with the optimist in the
street, tacitly declaiming, in more erudite terms, "Being alive is
all right." The butcher, the baker, and the crushing majority of
philosophers all agree on one thing: Human life is a good thing,
and we should keep our species going for as long as we can. To
tout the rival side of the issue is asking for grief. But some peo
ple seem born to bellyache that being alive is not all right.
Should they vent this posture in philosophical or literary works,
they may do so without anxiety that their efforts will have an
excess of admirers. Notable among such efforts is "The Last
Messiah" (1 933) 1 an essay written by the Norwegian philoso
pher and man of letters Peter Wessel Zapffe (1 899-1 990) . In
this work, which to date has been twice translated into English,2
Zapffe elucidated why he saw human existence as a tragedy.
Before discussing Zapffe's elucidation of human existence as a
tragedy, however, it may be useful to muse upon a few facts
whose relevance will become manifest down the line. As some
may know, there exist readers who treasure philosophical and
22
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
literary works of a pessimistic, nihilistic, or defeatist nature as
indispensable to their existence, hyperbolically speaking. Con
trary by temperament, these persons are sorely aware that noth
ing indispensable to their existence, hyperbolically or literally
speaking, must make its way into their lives, as if by natural
birthright. They do not think anything indispensable to anyone's
existence may be claimed as a natural birthright, since the birth
rights we toss about are all lies fabricated to a purpose, as any
student of humanity can verify. For those who have given
thought to this matter, the only rights we may exercise are
these: to seek the survival of our individual bodies, to create
more bodies like our own, and to perish from corruption or
mortal trauma. This is presuming that one has been brought to
term and has made it to the age of being reproductively ready,
neither being a natural birthright. Stringently considered, then,
our only natural birthright is a right to die. No other right has
ever been allocated to anyone except as a fabrication, whether
in modern times or days past.3 The divine right of kings may
now be acknowledged as a fabrication, a falsified permit for
prideful dementia and impulsive mayhem. The inalienable rights
of certain people, on the other hand, seemingly remain current:
somehow we believe they are not fabrications because hallowed
documents declare they are real. Miserly or munificent as a
given right may appear, it denotes no more than the right of way
warranted by a traffic light, which does not mean you have the
right to drive free of vehicular misadventures. Ask any para
medic as your dead body is taken away to the nearest hospital.
Wide-Awake
Our want of any natural birthright-except to die, in most
cases without assistance--is not a matter of tragedy, but only
one of truth. Coming at last to the pith of Zapffe's thought as it
is contained in "The Last Messiah," what the Norwegian phi-
The Nightmare of Being
23
losopher saw as the tragedy of human existence had its begin
nings when at some stage in our evolution we acquired "a
damning surplus of consciousness." (Indulgence is begged in ad
vance for the present work's profuse entreaties for assent, or at
least suspension of disbelief, in this matter.) Naturally, it must
be owned that there are quarrels among cognitive psychologists,
philosophers of mind, and neuroscientists about what con
sciousness is. The fact that this question has been around since
at least the time of the ancient Greeks and early Buddhists sug
gests there is an assumption of consciousness in the human spe
cies and that consciousness has had an effect on the way we
exist. For Zapffe, the effect was
A breach in the very unity of life, a biological paradox, an abomi
nation, an absurdity, an exaggeration of disastrous nature. Life had
overshot its target, blowing itself apart. A species had been armed
too heavily-by spirit made almighty without, but equally a men
ace to its own well-being. Its weapon was like a sword without hilt
or plate, a two-edged blade cleaving everything; but he who is to
wield it must grasp the blade and turn one edge toward himself.
Despite his new eyes, man was still rooted in matter, his soul
spun into it and subordinated to its blind laws. And yet he could
see matter as a stranger, compare himself to all phenomena, see
through and locate his vital processes. He comes to nature as an
unbidden guest, in vain extending his arms to beg conciliation
with his maker: Nature answers no more; it performed a miracle
with man, but later did not know him. He has lost his right of
residence in the universe, has eaten from the Tree of Knowledge
and been expelled from Paradise. He is mighty in the near world,
but curs es his might as purchased with his harmony of soul, his
innocence, his inner peace in life's embrace.
Could there be anything to this pessimistic verbiage, this tirade
against the evolution of consciousness? Millennia had passed
without much discussion one way or the other on the subject,
at least in polite society. Then suddenly this barrage from an
obscure Norwegian philosopher. What is one to say? For con-
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
trast, here are some excerpts from an online interview with the
eminent British multidisciplinary thinker Nicholas Humphrey
("A Self Worth Having: A Talk with Nicolas Humphrey,"
2003):
Consciousness-phenomenal experience-seems in many ways
too good to be true. The way we experience the world seems un
necessarily beautiful, unnecessarily rich and strange . . . .
Phenomenal experience, surely, can and does provide the basis
for creating a self worth having. And just see what becomes possi
ble-even natural--once this new self is in place1 As subjects of
something so mysterious and strange, we humans gain new confi
dence and interest in our own survival, a new interest in other
people too. We begin to be interested in the future, in immortal
ity, and in all sorts of issues to do with . . . how far consciousness
extends around us. . . .
[T]he more I try to make sense of it, the more I come back to
the fact that we've evolved to regard consciousness as a wonder
fully good thing in its own right-which could just be because
consciousness is a wonderfully good thing in its own right)
Could there be anything to this optimistic verbiage in which
consciousness is not a "breach in the very unity of life, a bio
logical paradox, an abomination, an absurdity, an exaggeration
of disastrous nature" but something that is "unnecessarily beau
tiful, unnecessarily rich and strange" and "a wonderfully good
thing in its own right," something that makes human existence
an unbelievably desirable adventure? Think about it-a British
thinker thinks so well of the evolution of consciousness that he
cannot contain his gratitude for this turn of events. What is one
to say? Both Humphrey and Zapffe are equally passionate about
what they have to say, which is not to say that they have said
anything credible. Whether you think consciousness to be a
benefit or a horror, this is only what you think-and nothing
else. But even though you cannot demonstrate the truth of
what you think, you can at least put it on show and see what
the audience thinks.
The Nightmare of Being
Brainwork
Over the centuries, assorted theories about the nature and
workings of consciousness have been put forth. The theory
Zapffe implicitly accepted is this: Consciousness is connected to
the human brain in a way that makes the world appear to us as
it appears and makes us appear to ourselves as we appear-that
is, as "selves" or a "persons" strung together by memories, sensa
tions, emotions, and so on. No one knows exactly how the con
sciousness-brain connection is made, but all evidence supports
the non-dualistic theory that the brain is the source of con
sciousness and the only source of consciousness. Zapffe ac
cepted consciousness as a given and moved on from there, since
he was not interested in the debates surrounding this phe
nomenon as such but only in the way it determines the nature
of our species. This was enough for his purposes, which were
wholly existential and careless of seeking technical explanations
for the workings of consciousness. Anyway, how consciousness
"happened," since it was not always present in our species, re
mains as much a mystery in our time as it was in Zapffe's, just
as the process of how life came about from materials that were
not living remains a mystery. First there was no life, and then
there was life--nature, as it came to be called. As nature prolif
erated into more complex and various forms, human organisms
eventually entered the world as part of this process. After a
time, consciousness happened for these organisms (and a few
others at much lower amplitudes) . And it kept on gaining
.
steam as we evolved. On this all theorists of consciousness
agree. Billions of years after earth made a j ump from being life
less to having life, human beings made a jump from not being
conscious, or very much conscious, to being conscious enough
to esteem or condemn this phenomenon. No one knows either
how the jump was made or how long it took, although there
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
are theories about both, as there are theories about all muta
tions from one state to another.
"The mutations must be considered blind," Zapffe wrote.
"They work, are thrown forth, without any contact of interest
with their environment." As mentioned, how the mutation of
consciousness originated was of no concern to Zapffe, who fo
cused entirely on demonstrating the tragic effect of this aptitude.
Such projects are typical among pessimistic philosophers. Non
pessimistic philosophers either have an impartial attitude about
consciousness or, like Nicholas Humphrey, think of it as a mar
velous endowment. When non-pessimistic philosophers even no
tice the pessimist's attitude, they reject it. With the world on
their side in the conviction that being alive is all right, non
pessimists are not disposed to musing that human existence is a
wholesale tragedy. They only argue the fine points of whatever it
is about human existence that grabs their attention, which may
include the tragic but not so much that they lose their commit
ment to the proposition that being alive is all right. And they can
do this until the day they die, which is all right by them.
Mutation
Established: Consciousness is not often viewed as being an in
strument of tragedy in human life. But to Zapffe, consciousness
would long past have proved fatal for human beings if we did
not do something about it. "Why," Zapffe asked, "has mankind
not long ago gone extinct during great epidemics of madness?
Why do only a fairly minor number of individuals perish be
cause they fail to endure the strain of living--b ecause cognition
gives them more than they can carry?" Zapffe's answer: "Most
people learn to save themselves by artificially limiting the con
tent of consciousness."
From an evolutionary viewpoint, in Zapffe's observation,
consciousness was a blunder that required corrections for its ef-
The Nightmare of Being
27
fects. It was an adventitious outgrowth that made us into a race
of contradictory beings-uncanny things that have nothing to do
with the rest of creation. Because of consciousness, parent of all
horrors, we became susceptible to thoughts that were startling
and dreadful to us, thoughts that have never been equitably bal
anced by those that are collected and reassuring. Our minds now
began dredging up horrors, flagrantly joyless possibilities, enough
of them to make us drop to the ground in paroxysms of self
soiling consternation should they go untrammeled. This potenti
ality necessitated that certain defense mechanisms be put to use
to keep us balanced on the knife-edge of vitality as a species.
While a modicum of consciousness may have had survivalist
properties during an immemorial chapter of our evolution-so
one theory goes-this faculty soon enough became a seditious
agent working against us. As Zapffe concluded, we need to ham
per our consciousness for all we are worth or it will impose upon
us a too clear vision of what we do not want to see, which, as the
Norwegian philosopher saw it, along with every other pessimist,
is "the brotherhood of suffering between everything alive."
Whether or not one agrees that there is a "brotherhood of suffer
ing between everything alive," we can all agree that human beings
are the only organisms that can have such a conception of exis
tence, or any conception period. That we can conceive of the
phenomenon of suffering, our own as well as that of other organ
isms, is a property unique to us as a dangerously conscious spe
cies. We know there is suffering, and we do take action against it,
which includes downplaying it by "artificially limiting the content
of consciousness." Between taking action against and downplaying
suffering, mainly the latter, most of us do not worry that it has
overly sullied our existence.
As a fact, we cannot give suffering precedence in either our
individual or collective lives. We have to get on with things, and
those who give precedence to suffering will be left behind.
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
They fetter us with their sniveling. We have someplace to go
and must believe we can get there, wherever that may be. And
to conceive that there is a "brotherhood of suffering between
everything alive" would disable us from getting anywhere. We
are preoccupied with the good life, and step by step are work
ing toward a better life. What we do, as a conscious species, is
set markers for ourselves. Once we reach one marker, we ad
vance to the next-as if we were playing a board game we
think will never end, despite the fact that it will, like it or not.
And if you are too conscious of not liking it, then you may con
ceive of yourself as a biological paradox that cannot live with
its consciousness and cannot live without it. And in so living
and not living, you take your place with the undead and the
human puppet.
Undoing I
For the rest of the earth's organisms, existence is relatively un
complicated. Their lives are about three things: survival, repro
duction, death-and nothing else. But we know too much to
content ourselves with surviving, reproducing, dying-and noth
ing else. We know we are alive and know we will die. We also
know we will suffer during our lives before suffering-slowly or
quickly-as we draw near to death. This is the knowledge we
"enjoy" as the most intelligent organisms to gush from the womb
of nature. And being so, we feel shortchanged if there is nothing
else for us than to survive, reproduce, and die. We want there to
be more to it than that, or to think there is. This is the tragedy:
Consciousness has forced us into the paradoxical position of
striving to be unself-conscious of what we are--h unks of spoil
ing flesh on disintegrating bones.
Nonhuman occupants of this planet are unaware of death.
But we are susceptible to startling and dreadful thoughts, and
we need some fabulous illusions to take our minds off them.
The Nightmare of Being
29
For us, then, life is a confidence trick we must run on ourselves,
hoping we do not catch on to any monkey business that would
leave us stripped of our defense mechanisms and standing stark
naked before the silent, staring void. To end this self-deception,
to free our species of the paradoxical imperative to be and not
to be conscious, our backs breaking by degrees upon a wheel o f
lies, we must cease reproducing. Nothing less will do, per Zapffe,
although in "The Last Messiah" the character after whom the
essay is named does all the talking about human extinction.
Elsewhere Zapffe speaks for himself on the subject.
The sooner humanity dares to harmonize itself with its biological
predicament, the better. And this means to willingly withdraw in
contempt for its worldly terms, j ust as the heat-craving species
went extinct when temperatures dropped. To us, it is the moral
climate of the cosmos that is intolerable, and a two-child policy
could make our discontinuance a pain-free one. Yet instead we
are expanding and succeeding everywhere, as necessity has taught
us to mutilate the formula in our hearts. Perhaps the most unrea
sonable effect of such invigorating vulgarization is the doctrine
that the individual "has a duty" to suffer nameless agony and a ter
rible death if this saves or benefits the rest of his group. Anyone
who declines is subjected to doom and death, instead of revulsion
being directed at the world-order engendering of the situation. To
any independent observer, this plainly is to j uxtapose incommen
surable things; no future triumph or metamorphosis can justify
the pitiful blighting of a human being against his will. It is upon a
pavement of battered destinies that the survivors storm ahead to
ward new bland sensations and mass deaths. ("Fragments of an In
terview," Aftenposten, 1959)
More provocative than it is astonishing, Zapffe's thought is per
haps the most elementary in the history of philosophical pessi
mism. As penetrable as it is cheerless, it rests on taboo
commonplaces and outlawed truisms while eschewing the rec
ondite brain-twisters of his forerunners, all of whom engaged in
the kind of convoluted cerebration that for thousands of years
30
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
has been philosophy's stock in trade. For example, The World
as Will and Representation (two volumes, 1819 and 18 44) by the
German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer lays out one of the
most absorbingly intricate metaphysical systems ever con
trived-a quasi-mystical elaboration of a "Will-to-live" as the
hypostasis of reality, a mindless and untiring master of all being,
a directionless force that makes everything do what it does, an
imbecilic puppeteer that sustains the ruckus of our world. But
Schopenhauer's Will-to-live, commendable as it may seem as a
hypothesis, is too overwrought in the proving to be anything
more than another intellectual labyrinth for specialists in per
plexity. Comparatively, Zapffe's principles are non-technical
and could never arouse the passion of professors or practitio
ners of philosophy, who typically circle around the minutiae of
theories and not the gross facts of our lives. If we must think, it
should be done only in circles, outside of which lies the un
thinkable. Evidence: While commentators on Schopenhauer's
thought have seized upon it as a philosophical system ripe for
academic analysis, they do not emphasize that its ideal end
point-the denial of the Will-to-live--is a construct for the
end of human existence. But even Schopenhauer himself did
not push this as aspect of his philosophy to its ideal endpoint,
which has kept him in fair repute as a philosopher.
Zombification
As adumbrated above, Zapffe arrived at two central determina
tions regarding humanity's "biological predicament." The first
was that consciousness had overreached the point of being a suf
ferable property of our species, and to minimize this problem
we must minimize our consciousness. From the many and vari
ous ways this may be done, Zapffe chose to hone in on four
principal strategies.
The Nightmare of Being
31
(1) ISOLATION. So that we may live without going into a
free-fall of trepidation, we isolate the dire facts of being alive by
relegating them to a remote compartment of our minds. They are
the lunatic family members in the attic whose existence we deny
in a conspiracy of silence.
(2) ANCHORING. To stabilize our lives in the tempestuous
waters of chaos, we conspire to anchor them in metaphysical and
institutional "verities"-God, Morality, Natural Law, Country,
Family-that inebriate us with a sense of being official, authentic,
and safe in our beds.
(3) DISTRACTION. To keep our minds unreflective of a
world of horrors, we distract them with a world of trifling or
momentous trash. The most operant method for furthering the
conspiracy, it is in continuous employ and demands only that
people keep their eyes on the ball--or their television sets, their
government's foreign policy, their science projects, their careers,
their place in society or the universe, etc.
(4) SUBLI MATION. That we might annul a paralyzing stage
fright at what may happen to even the soundest bodies and
minds, we sublimate our fears by making an open display of
them. In the Zapffean sense, sublimation is the rarest technique
utilized for conspiring against the human race. Putting into play
both deviousness and skill, this is what thinkers and artistic types
do when they recycle the most demoralizing and unnerving as
pects of life as works in which the worst fortunes of humanity
are presented in a stylized and removed manner as entertainment.
In so many words, these thinkers and artistic types confect prod
ucts that provide an escape from our suffering by a bogus simula
tion of it-a tragic drama or philosophical woolgathering, for
instance. Zapffe uses "The Last Messiah" to showcase how a liter
ary-philosophical composition cannot perturb its creator or any
one else with the severity of true-to-life horrors but only provide
a pale representation of these horrors, j ust as a King Lear's weep-
32
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
ing for his dead daughter Cordelia cannot rend its audience with
the throes of the real thing.
By watchful practice of the above connivances, we may keep
ourselves from scrutinizing too assiduously the startling and
dreadful mishaps that may befall us. These must come as a sur
prise, for if we expected them then the conspiracy could not
work its magic. Naturally, conspiracy theories seldom pique the
curiosity of "right-minded" individuals and are met with disbelief
and denial when they do. Best to immunize your consciousness
from any thoughts that are startling and dreadful so that we can
all go on conspiring to survive and reproduce as paradoxical be
ings-puppets that can walk and talk all by themselves. At worst
keep your startling and dreadful thoughts to yourself. Hearken
well: "None of us wants to hear spoken the exact anxieties we
keep locked up inside ourselves. Smother that urge to go spread
ing news of your pain and nightmares around town. Bury your
dead but don't leave a trace. And be sure to get on with things or
we will get on without you."
In his 1910 doctoral dissertation, published in English as Persua
sion and Rhetoric (2004) , the twenty-three-year-old Carlo
Michelstaedter audited the tactics we use to falsify human exis
tence as we trade who we are, or might be, for a specious view
of ourselves. Like Pinocchio, Michelstaedter wanted to be a "real
boy" and not the product of a puppet maker who, in turn, did
not make himself but was made as he was made by mutations
that, as Zapffe relays to us from evolutionary theory, "must be
considered blind," a series of accidents that continually structure
and restructure all that exists in the workshop of the world. To
Michelstaedter, nothing in this world can be anything but a
puppet. And a puppet is only a plaything, a thing of parts
brought together as a simulacrum of real presence. It is nothing
The Nightmare of Being
33
in itself. It is not whole and individual but exists only relative to
other playthings, some of them human playthings that support
one another's illusion of being real. However, by suppressing
thoughts of suffering and death they give themselves away as be
ings of paradox-prevaricators who must hide from themselves
the flagrantly joyless possibilities of their lives if they are to go
on living. In Persuasion and Rhetoric, Michelstaedter pinpoints
the paradox of our division from ourselves: "man 'knows,' which
is why he is always two: his life and his knowing."
Michelstaedter's biographers and critics have speculated that
his despair of humanity's ability to become disentangled from its
puppet strings was, in conjunction with accidental factors, the
cause of his suicide by gunshot the day after he finished his dis
sertation. Michelstaedter could not accept a stellar fact of human
life: that none of us has control over what we are-a truth that
extirpates all hope if what you want to be is invulnerably self
possessed ("persuaded") and without subjection to a life that
would fit you within the limits of its unrealities ("rhetoric," a
word oddly used by Michelstaedter) . We are defined by our
limitations; without them, we cannot suffice as functionaries in
the big show of conscious existence. The farther you progress
toward a vision of our species without limiting conditions on
your consciousness, the farther you drift away from what makes
you a person among persons in the human community. In the
observance of Zapffe, an unleashed consciousness would alert us
to the falsity of ourselves and subject us to the pain of Pinocchio.
An individual's demarcations as a being, not his trespass of them,
create his identity and preserve his illusion of being something
special and not a freak of chance, a product of blind mutations.
Transcending all illusions and their emergent activities-having
absolute control of what we are and not what we need to be so
that we may survive the most unsavory facts of life and death
would untether us from the moorings of our self-limited selves.
34
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
The lesson: "Let us love our limitations, for without them no
body would be left to be somebody."
Undoing II
The second of Zapffe's two central determinations-that our
species should belay reproducing itself-immediately brings to
mind a cast of characters from theological history known as
Gnostics. The Gnostic sect of the Cathari in twelfth-century
France were so tenacious in believing the world to be an evil
place engendered by an evil deity that its members were offered
a dual ultimatum: sexual abstinence or sodomy. (A similar sect in
Bulgaria, the Bogomils, became the etymological origin of the
term "buggery" for their practice of this mode of erotic release.)
Around the same period, the Catholic Church mandated absti
nence for its clerics, a directive that did not halt them from be
times giving in to sexual quickening. The raison d'etre for this
doctrine was the attainment of grace (and in legend was obliga
tory for those scouring hither and yon for the Holy Grail) rather
than an enlightened governance of reproductive plugs and bung
holes. With these exceptions, the Church did not counsel its fol
lowers to imitate its ascetic founder but sagaciously welcomed
them to breed as copiously as they could.
In another orbit from the theologies of either Gnosticism or
Catholicism, the nineteenth-century German philosopher
Philipp Mainlander (born Phillip Batz) also envisaged non-coital
existence as the surest path to redemption for the sin of being
congregants of this world. Our extinction, however, would not
be the outcome of an unnatural chastity, but would be a natu
rally occurring phenomenon once we had evolved far enough to
apprehend our existence as so hopelessly pointless and unsatis
factory that we w ould no longer be subj ect to generative
promptings. Paradoxically, this evolution toward life-sickness
The Nightmare of Being
35
would be promoted by a mounting happiness among us. This
happiness would be quickened by our following Mainlander's
evangelical guidelines for achieving such things as universal jus
tice and charity. Only by securing every good that could be got
ten in life, Mainlander figured, could we know that they were
not as good as nonexistence.
While the abolishment of human life would be sufficient
for the average pessimist, the terminal stage of Mainlander's
wishful thought was the full summoning of a "Will-to-die" that
by his deduction resided in all matter across the universe.
Mainlander diagrammed this brainstorm, along w ith others as
riveting, in a treatise whose title has been translated into Eng
lish as The Philosophy of Redemption (1876) . Unsurprisingly, the
work never set the philosophical world ablaze. Perhaps the au
thor might have garnered greater celebrity if, like the Austrian
philosopher Otto Weininger in his infamous study translated as
Sex and Character (1 903) , he had devoted himself to gripping
ruminations on male and female matters rather than the re
demptive disappearance of everyone regardless of gender.4
As one who had a special plan for the human race,
Mainlander was not a modest thinker. "We are not everyday
people, " he once wrote in the royal third-person, "and must pay
dearly for dining at the table of the gods." To top it off, suicide
ran in his family. On the day his Philosophy of Redemption was
published, Mainlander killed himself, possibly in a fit of mega
lomania but just as possibly in surrender to the extinction that
for him was so attractive and that he avouched for a most eso
teric reason-Deicide.
Mainlander was confident that the Will-to-die he believed
would well up in humanity had been spiritually grafted into us
by a God who, in the beginning, masterminded His own quie
tus. It seems that existence was a horror to God. Unfortunately,
God was impervious to the depredations of time. This being so,
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
His only means to get free of Himself was by a divine form of
suicide.
God's plan to suicide himself could not work, though, as
long as He existed as a unified entity outside of space-time and
matter. Seeking to nullify His oneness so that He could be de
livered into nothingness, he shattered Himself-Big Bang-like-
into the time-bound fragments of the universe, that is, all those
objects and organisms that have been accumulating here and
there for billions of years. In Mainlander's philosophy, "God
knew that he could change from a state of super-reality into
non-being only through the development of a real world of
multiformity." Employing this strategy, He excluded Himself
from being. "God is dead," wrote Mainlander, "and His death
was the life of the world." Once the great individuation had
been initiated, the momentum of its creator's self-annihilation
would continue until everything became exhausted by its own
existence, which for human beings meant that the faster they
learned that happiness was not as good as they thought it would
be, the happier they would be to die out.
So: The Will-to-live that Schopenhauer argued activates the
world to its torment was revised by his disciple Mainlander not
only as evidence of a tortured life within living beings, but also
as a cover for a clandestine will in all things to burn themselves
out as hastily as possible in the fires of becoming. In this light,
human progress is shown to be an ironic symptom that our
downfall into extinction has been progressing nicely, because
the more things change for the better, the more they progress
toward a reliable end. And those who committed suicide, as did
Mainlander, would only be forwarding God's blueprint for
bringing an end to His Creation. Naturally, those who replaced
themselves by procreation were of no help: "Death is succeeded
by the absolute nothing; it is the perfect annihilation of each
individual in appearance and being, supposing that by him no
The Nightmare of Being
37
child has been begotten or born; for otherwise the individual
would live on in that." Mainlander's argument that in the long
run nonexistence is superior to existence was cobbled together
from his unorthodox interpretation of Christian doctrines and
from Buddhism as he understood it.
As the average conscious mortal knows, Christianity and
Buddhism are all for leaving this world behind, with their leave
taking being for destinations unknown and impossible to con
ceive. For Mainlander, these destinations did not exist. His fore
cast was that one day our will to survive in this life or any other
will be universally extinguished by a conscious will to die and
stay dead, after the example of the Creator. From the stand
point of Mainlander's philosophy, Zapffe's Last Messiah would
not be an unwelcome sage but a crowning force of the post
divine era. Rather than resist our end, as Mainlander concludes,
we will come to see that "the knowledge that life is worthless is
the flower of all human wisdom." Elsewhere the philosopher
states, "Life is hell, and the sweet still night of absolute death is
the annihilation of hell."
Inhospitable to rationality as Mainlander's cosmic scenario
may seem, it should nonetheless give pause to anyone who is
keen to make sense of the universe. Consider this: If something
like God exists, or once existed, what would He not be capable
of doing, or undoing? Why should God not want to be done
with Himself because, unbeknownst to us, suffering was the es
sence of His being? Why should He not have brought forth a
universe that is one great puppet show destined by Him to be
crunched or scattered until an absolute nothingness had been
established? Why should He fail to see the benefits of nonexis
tence, as many of His lesser beings have? Revealed scripture
there may be that tells a different story. But that does not mean
it was revealed by a reliable narrator. Just because He asserted
it was all good does not mean he meant what He said. Perhaps
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
He did not want to leave a bad impression by telling us He had
absented Himself from the ceremonies before they had begun.
Alone and immortal, nothing needed Him. Per Mainlander,
though, He needed to bust out into a universe to complete His
project of self-extinction, passing on His horror piecemeal, so
to say, to His creation.
Mainlander's first philosophy, and last, is in fact no odder
than any religious or secular ethos that presupposes the worth
of human life. Both are objectively insupportable and irrational.
Mainlander was a pessimist, and, just as with any optimist, he
needed something to support his gut feeling about being alive.
No one has yet conceived an authoritative reason for why the
human race should continue or discontinue its being, although
some believe they have. Mainlander was sure he had an answer
to what he judged to be the worthlessness and pain of exis
tence, and none may peremptorily belie it. Ontologically,
Mainlander's thought is delirious; metaphorically, it explains a
good deal about human experience; practically, it may in time
prove to be consistent with the idea of creation as a structure of
creaking bones being eaten from within by a pestilent marrow.
That there is redemption to be found in an ecumenical non
existence is an old idea on which Mainlander put a new face.
For some it is a cherished idea, like that of a peaceful afterlife
or progress toward perfection in this life. The need for such
ideas comes out of the fact that existence is a condition with no
redeeming qualities. If this were not so, none would need cher
ished ideas like an ecumenical nonexistence, a peaceful afterlife,
or progress toward perfection in this life.5
Self-Hypnosis
Among the unpleasantries of human existence is the abashment
we suffer when we feel our lives to be destitute of meaning
with respect to who we are, what we do, and the general way
The Nightmare of Being
39
we believe things to be in the universe. If one doubts that felt
meanings are imperative to our developing or maintaining a
state of good feeling, just lay your eyes on the staggering num
ber of books and therapies for a market of individuals who suf
fer from a deficiency of meaning, either in a limited and
localized variant ("I am satisfied that my life has meaning be
cause I received an 'A' on my calculus exam") or one that is
macrocosmic in scope ("I am satisfied that my life has meaning
because God loves me") . Few are the readers of Norman Vin
cent Peale's The Power of Positive Thinking (1 952) who do not
feel dissatisfied with who they are, what they do, and the gen
eral way they believe things to be in the universe. Millions of
copies of Peale's book and its imitations have been sold; and
they are not purchased by readers well satisfied with the num
ber or intensity of felt meanings in their lives and thus with
their place on the ladder of "subjective well being," in the ver
nacular of positive psychology, a movement that came into its
own in the early years of the twenty-first century with a spate
of books about how almost anyone could lead happily meaning
ful lives. 6 Martin Seligman, the architect of positive psychology,
defines his brainchild as "the science of what makes life worth
living" and synopsized its principles in Authentic Happiness: Us
ing the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for
Lasting Fulfillment (2002) .
There is nothing new, of course, about people searching for
a happily meaningful life in a book. With the exception of sa
cred texts, possibly the most successful self-help manual of all
time is Emile Coue's Self Mastery through Conscious Autosugges
tion (1 922) . Coue was an advocate of self-hypnosis, and there is
little doubt that he had an authentically philanthropic desire to
help others lead more salutary lives. On his lecture tours, he
was greeted by celebrities and dignitaries around the world.
Hordes turned out for his funeral in 1 926.
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E H U MAN RACE
Coue is best known for urging believers in his method to
repeat the following sentence: "Day by day, in every way, I am
getting better and b etter." How could his readers not feel that
their lives had meaning, or were proceeding toward meaning
fulness, by hypnotizing themselves with these words day by
day? While being alive is all right for the world's general popu
lation, some of us need to get it in writing that this is so.
Every other creature in the world is insensate to meaning. But
those of us on the high ground of evolution are replete with
this unnatural need which any comprehensive encyclopedia of
philosophy treats under the heading L I F E , T H E M E A N I N G OF. In
its quest for a sense of meaning, humanity has given countless
answers to questions that were never posed to it. But though
our appetite for meaning may be appeased for a time, we are
deceived if we think it is ever gone for good. Years may pass
during which we are unmolested by L I F E, THE M E A N I N G O F .
Some days we wake up and innocently say, "It's good to be
alive." Broken down, this exclamation means that we are ex
periencing an acute sense of well-being. If everyone were in
such elevated spirits all the time, the topic of LI FE, T H E M E A N
I N G O F would never enter our minds or our philosophical ref
erence books. But an ungrounded jubilation-or even a neutral
reading on the monitor of our moods-must lapse, either in
termittently or for the rest of our natural lives. Our conscious
ness, having snoozed awhile in the garden of incuriosity, is
pricked by some thorn or other, perhaps D E A T H , T H E M E A N
I N G OF, or spontaneously modulates to a minor key due to the
vagaries of our brain chemistry, the weather, or for causes not
confirmable. Then the hunger returns for LI F E, THE M EA N I N G
O F , the emptiness must be filled again, the pursuit resumed.
(There is more on meaning in the section Unpersons contained
in the next chapter, "Who Goes There?")
The Night111are of Being
41
Perhaps we might gain some perspective on our earthly
term if we stopped thinking of ourselves as beings who enact a
"life." This word is loaded with connotations to which it has no
right. Instead, we should substitute "existence" for "life" and
forget about how well or badly we enact it. None of us "has a
life" in the narrative-biographical way w e think of these words.
What we have are so many years of existence. It would not oc
cur to us to say that any man or woman is in the "prime of exis
tence." Speaking of "existence" rather than "life" unclothes the
latter word of its mystique. Who would ever claim that "exis
tence is all right, especially when you consider the alternative"?
Cosmop hobia
As heretofore noted, consciousness may have assisted our spe
cies' survival in the hard times of prehistory, but as it became
ever more intense it evolved the potential to ruin everything if
not securely muzzled. This is the problem: We must either out
smart consciousness or be thrown into its vortex of doleful fac
tuality and suffer, as Zapffe termed it, a "dread of being"-not
only of our own being but of being itself, the idea that the va
cancy that might otherwise have obtained is occupied like a
stall in a public lavatory of infinite dimensions, that there is a
universe in which things like celestial bodies and human beings
are roving about, that anything exists in the way it seems to ex
ist, that we are part of all being until we stop being, if there is
anything we may understand as being other than semblances or
the appearance of semblances.
On the premise that consciousness must be obfuscated so
that we might go on as we have all these years, Zapffe inferred
that the sensible thing would be not to go on with the para
doxical nonsense of trying to inhibit our cardinal attribute as
beings, since we can tolerate existence only if we believe--i n
accord with a complex of illusions, a legerdemain of duplic-
42
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
ity-that we are not what we are: unreality on legs. As con
scious beings, we must hold back that divulgement lest it break
us with a sense of being things without significance or founda
tion, anatomies shackled to a landscape of unintelligible horrors.
In plain language, we cannot live except as self-deceivers who
must lie to ourselves about ourselves, as well as about our un
winnable situation in this world.7
Accepting the preceding statements as containing some
truth, or at least for the sake of moving on with the present
narrative, it seems that we are zealots of Zapffe's four plans for
smothering consciousness: isolation ("Being alive is all right") ,
anchoring ("One Nation under God with Families, Morality,
and Natural Birthrights for all"), distraction ("Better to kill time
than kill oneself") , and sublimation ("I am writing a book titled
The Conspiracy against the Human Race") . These practices
make us organisms with a nimble intellect that can deceive
themselves "for their own good." Isolation, anchoring, distrac
tion, and sublimation are among the wiles we use to keep our
selves from dispelling every illusion that keeps us up and
running. Without this cognitive double-dealing, we would be
exposed for what we are. It would be like looking into a mirror
and for a moment seeing the skull inside our skin looking back
at us with its sardonic smile. And beneath the skull-only
blackness, nothing. Someone is there, so we feel, and yet no one
is there--the uncanny paradox, all the horror in a glimpse. A
little piece of our world has been peeled back, and underneath
is creaking desolation-a carnival where all the rides are mov
ing but no patrons occupy the seats. We are missing from the
world we have made for ourselves. Maybe if we could reso
lutely gaze wide-eyed at our lives we would come to know
what we really are. But that would stop the showy attraction
we are inclined to think will run forever. 8
The Nightmare of Being
43
Pessimism I
Along with every other tendentious mindset, pessimism may be
construed as a fluke of temperament, a shifty word that will
j ust have to do until a better one comes along. Without the
temperament that was given to them in large portion, pessi
mists would not see existence as basically undesirable. Opti
mists may have fugitive doubts about the basic desirability of
existence, but pessimists never doubt that existence is basically
undesirable. If you interrupted them in the middle of an ec
static moment, which pessimists do have, and asked if existence
is basically undesirable, they would reply "Of course" before re
turning to their ecstasy. Why they should answer in this way is
a closed book. The conclusions to which temperament lead an
individual, whether or not they are conclusions refractory to
those of world society, are simply not subj ect to analysis.
Composed of the same dross as all mortals, the pessimist
cleaves to whatever seems to validate his thoughts and emo
tions. Scarce among us are those who not only want to think
they are right, but also expect others to affirm their least notion
as unassailable. Pessimists are no exception. But they are few
and do not show up on the radar of our race. Immune to the
blandishments of religions, countries, families, and everything
else that puts both average and above-average citizens in the
limelight, pessimists are sideliners in both history and the me
dia. Without belief in gods or ghosts, unmotivated by a com
prehensive delusion, they could never plant a bomb, plan a
revolution, or shed blood for a cause.
Identical with religions that ask of their believers more than they
can possibly make good on, pessimism is a set of ideals that none
can follow to the letter. Those who indict a pessimist of either
pathology or intellectual recalcitrance are only faking their com
petence to explain what cannot be explained: the mystery of
44
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
why individuals are the way they are. To some extent, however,
why some individuals are the way they are is not a full-fledged
mystery. There are traits that run in families-legacies lurking in
the genes of one generation that may profit or impair those of
another. Philosophical pessimism has been called a maladaptation
by those who are concerned with such things. This call seems in
disputably correct. The possibility must be considered, then, that
there is a genetic marker for philosophical pessimism that nature
has all but deselected from our race so that we may keep on liv
ing as we have all these years. Allowing for the theory that pes
simism is weakly hereditary, and is getting weaker all the time
because it is maladaptive, the genes that make up the fiber of or
dinary folk may someday celebrate an everlasting triumph over
those of the congenitally pessimistic, ridding nature of all worry
that its protocol of survival and reproduction for its most con
scious species will be challenged-unless Zapffe is right and con
sciousness itself is maladaptive, making philosophical pessimism
the correct call despite its unpopularity among those who think,
or say they think, that being alive is all right. But psycho
biographers do not often take what is adaptive or maladaptive
for our species into account when writing of a chosen member
of the questionably dying breed of pessimists. To them, their
subject's temperament has a twofold inception: (1) life stories of
tribulation, even though the pessimistic caste has no sorrows ex
clusive to it; (2) intractable wrongheadedness, a charge that pes
simists could turn against optimists if the argumentum ad
populum were not the world's favorite fallacy.
The major part of our species seems able to undergo any
trauma without significantly re-examining its household man
tras, including "everything happens for a reason," "the show
must go on," "accept the things you cannot change," and any
other adage that gets people to keep their chins up. But pessi-
The Nightmare of Being
45
mists cannot give themselves over to this program, and its
catchwords stick in their throats. To them, the Creation is ob
jectionable and useless on principle-the worst possible dis
patch of bad news. It seems so bad, so wrong, that, should such
authority be unwisely placed into their hands, they would make
it a prosecutable malfeasance to produce a being who might
turn out to be a pessimist.
Disenfranchised by nature, pessimists feel that they have
been impressed into this world by the reproductive liberty of
positive thinkers who are ever-thoughtful of the future. At
whatever point in time one is situated, the future always looks
better than the present, just as the present looks better than the
past. No one today would write, as did the British essayist
Thomas De Quincey in the early nineteenth century: "A quarter
of man's misery is toothache." Knowing what we know of the
progress toward the alleviation of human misery throughout
history, who would damn their children to have a piteous
toothache in the early nineteenth century, or in times before it,
back to the days when Homo sapiens with toothaches
scrounged to feed themselves and shivered in the cold? To the
regret of pessimists, our primitive ancestors could not see that
theirs was not a time in which to produce children.
So at what time was it that people knew enough to say, "This
is the time in which to produce children''? When did we think
that enough progress had been made toward the alleviation of
human misery that children could be produced without our be
ing torn by a crisis of conscience? The easy years of the Pharaohs
and Western antiquity? The lazy days of the Dark Ages? The
palmy decades of the Industrial Revolution as well as the other
industry-driven periods that followed? The breakthrough era in
which advancements in dentistry allayed humanity of one
quarter of its misery?
But few or none have ever had a crisis of conscience about
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
producing children, because all children have been born at the
best possible time in human history, or at least the one in which
the most progress toward the alleviation of human misery has
been made, which is always the time in which we live and have
lived. While we have always looked back on previous times and
thought that their progress toward the alleviation of human
misery was not enough for us to want to live then, we do not
know any better than the earliest Homo sapiens about what
progress toward the alleviation of human misery will be made
in the future, reasonably presuming that such progress will be
made. And even though we may speculate about that progress,
we feel no resentment about not being able to take advantage
of it, or not many of us do. Nor will those of the future resent
not living in the world of their future because even greater pro
gress toward the alleviation of human misery will by then have
been made in medicine, social conditions, political arrange
ments, and other areas that are almost universally regarded as
domains in which human life could be better.
Will there ever be an end of the line in our progress toward
the alleviation of human misery when people can honestly say,
"This is without doubt the time produce children"? And will
that really be the time? No one would say, or even want to
think that theirs is a time in which people will look back on
them from the future and thank their stars that they did not
live in such a barbaric age that had made so little progress to
ward the alleviation of human misery and still produced chil
dren. As if anyone ever cared or will ever care, this is what the
pessimist would say: "There has never been and never will be a
time in which to produce children. Now will forever be a bad
time for doing that." Moreover, the pessimist would advise each
of us not to look too far into the future or we will see the re
proachful faces of the unborn looking back at us from the radi
ant mist of their nonexistence.
The Nightmare of Being
47
Pessimism II
In his lengthy study Pessimism (1877) , James Sully wrote that "a
j ust and correct estimate of life is to be looked for" in "views . . .
which lean neither to the favourable nor the unfavourable
pole." By this claim, Sully erred in his otherwise able dissection
of his subject. People are either pessimists or optimists. They
forcefully "lean" one way or the other, and there is no common
ground between them. For pessimists, life is something that
should not be, which means that what they believe should be is
the absence of life, nothing, non-being, the emptiness of the
uncreated. Anyone who speaks up for life as something that ir
refutably should be--that we would not be better off unborn,
extinct, or forever lazing in nonexistence--is an optimist. It is
all or nothing; one is in or one is out, abstractly speaking. Practi
cally speaking, we have been a race of optimists since the nas
cency of human consciousness and lean like mad toward the
favorable pole.
More stylish in his examination of pessimism than Sully is
the American novelist and part-time philosopher Edgar Saltus,
whose Philosophy of Disenchantment (1885) and The Anatomy of
Negation (1886) were written for those who treasure philoso
phical and literary works of a pessimistic, nihilistic, or defeatist
nature as indispensable to their existence. In Saltus's estimation,
a "just and correct view of human life" would justly and cor
rectly determine human life as that which should not be.
Controverting the absolutist standards of pessimism and op
timism as outlined above are "heroic" pessimists, or rather heroic
"pessimists." These are self-styled pessimists who take into con
sideration Sully's unfavorable pole but are not committed to its
entailment that life is something that should not be. In his
Tragic Sense of Life in Men and Nations (1 91 3) , the Spanish
writer Miguel de Unamuno speaks of consciousness as a disease
bred by a conflict between the rational and the irrational. The
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
rational is identified with the conclusions of consciousness, pri
marily that we will all die. The irrational represents all that is
vital in humanity, including a universal desire for immortality in
either a physical or nonphysical state. The coexistence of the ra
tional and the irrational turns the human experience into a
wrangle of contradictions to which we can bow our heads in
resignation or defy as heroes of futility. Unamuno's penchant
was for the heroic course, with the implied precondition that
one has the physical and psychological spunk for the fight. In
line with Unamuno, Joshua Foa Dienstag, author of Pessimism:
Philosophy, Ethic, Spirit (2006) , is also a proselytizer for a
healthy, heroic pessimism (quotes implied) that faces up to
much of the dispiriting lowdown on life, all radically pessimistic
visions being cropped out of the picture, and marches on toward
a future believed to be personally and politically workable. Also
siding with this never-say-die group is William R. Brashear,
whose The Desolation of Reality (1995) concludes with a format
for redemption, however partial and imperfect, by holding tight
to what he calls "tragic humanism," which recognizes human
life's "ostensible insignificance, but also the necessity of proceed
ing as if this were not so, . . . willfully nourishing and sustaining
the underlying illusions of value and order." How we nourish
and sustain illusions of value and order in our lives is explained
in Zapffe's "The Last Messiah." How we might nourish and sus
tain at will what we know to be illusions without a covenant of
ignominious pretense among us is not explained by Brashear and
has never been explained by anyone else who espouses this Ja
<;on de vivre. Not in the same class of pessimism as the anti
natalist Zapffe--Unamuno, Dienstag, and Brashear meet exis
tence more than halfway, safely joined in solidarity with both
ordinary and sophisticated folk, who take their lumps like
grown-ups and by doing so retain their status with the status
quo. Attuned as they may be to the pessimist's attitude that life
The Nightmare of Being
49
is something which should not be, they do not approve of it. But
Unamuno, Dienstag, and Brashear's solution to the pessimist's
rejection of life puts us in the same paradoxical bind that Zapffe
sees in human existence, that is, living with the pretense that
being alive is all right. The only difference is that Unamuno, Di
enstag, and Brashear knowingly accede to a pretense that ordi
nary folk shirk knowing, at least as a general rule, because even
average mortals are sometimes forced to admit this pretense
they just do not linger over it long enough to make it a philoso
phical point of pride and sing their own praises for doing so.
A philosophical cohort of U namuno, Dienstag, and Brashear
is the French existentialist writer Albert Camus. In his essay
The Myth of Sisyphus (1 942) 1 Camus represents the unattainable
goal of the title figure as an apologetic for going on with life
rather than ending it. As he insists in his discussion of this grue
some parable, "We must imagine Sisyphus as happy" as he rolls
his boulder to the top of mountain from which it always tum
bles down again and again and again to his despair. The credo of
the Church Father Tertullian, "I believe because it is absurd,"
might justly be placed in the context of Camus's belief that be
ing alive is all right, or all right enough, though it may be ab
surd. Indeed, the connection has not been overlooked. Caught
between the irrationality of the Carthaginian and the intellectu
ality of the Frenchman, Zapffe's proposal that we put out the
light of the human race extends to us an antidote for our exis
tential infirmities that is infinitely more satisfying than that of
either Tertullian or his avatar Camus, the latter of whom medi
tated on suicide as a philosophical issue for the individual yet
did not entertain the advantages of an all-out attrition of the
species. By not doing so, one might conclude that Camus was
only being practical. In the end, though, his insistence that we
must imagine Sisyphus as happy is as impractical as it is fecu
lent. Like Unamuno, Dienstag, and Brashear, Camus believed
50
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
we can assume a view of life that can content us with the trag
edy, nightmare, and meaninglessness of human existence. Ca
mus may have been able to assume this view of life before his
life ended in a vehicular misadventure, but he must have been
jesting to pose it as a possibility or a duty for the world.
It would be a sign of callowness to bemoan the fact that pessi
mistic writers do not rate and may be reprehended in both
good conscience and good company. Some critics of the pessi
mist often think they have his back to the wall when they
blithely jeer, "If that is how this fellow feels, he should either
kill himself or be decried as a hypocrite." That the pessimist
should kill himself in order to live up to his ideas may be coun
terattacked as betraying such a crass intellect that it does not
deserve a response. Yet it is not much of a chore to produce
one. Simply because someone has reached the conclusion that
the amount of suffering in this world is enough that anyone
would be better off never having been born does not mean that
by force of logic or sincerity he must kill himself. It only means
he has concluded that the amount of suffering in this world is
enough that anyone would be better off never having been
born. Others may disagree on this point as it pleases them, but
they must accept that if they believe themselves to have a
stronger case than the pessimist, then they are mistaken.
Naturally, there are pessimists who do kill themselves, but
nothing obliges them to kill themselves or live with the mark of
the hypocrite on their brow. Voluntary death might seem a
thoroughly negative course of action, but it is not as simple as
that. Every negation is adulterated or stealthily launched by an
affirmative spirit. An unequivocal "no" cannot be uttered or
acted upon. Lucifer's last words in heaven may have been "Non
serviam," but none has served the Almighty so dutifully, since
His sideshow in the clouds would never draw any customers if
The Nightmare of Being
51
it were not for the main attraction of the devil's hell on earth.
Only catatonics and coma patients can persevere in a dignified
withdrawal from life's rattle and hum. Without a "yes" in our
hearts, nothing would be done. And to be done with our exis
tence en masse would be the most ambitious affirmation of all.
Most people think that vitality is betokened only by such phe
nomena as people in their eighties who hike mountain trails or
nations that build empires. This way of thinking is simply naive,
but it keeps up our morale because we like to imagine we will
be able to hike mountain trails when we are in our eighties or
live as citizens of a nation that has built an empire. And so the
denunciations of critics who say the pessimist should kill himself
or be decried as a hypocrite make every kind of sense in a world
of card-carrying or crypto optimists. Once this is understood, the
pessimist can spare himself from suffering more than he need at
the hands of "normal people," a confederation of upstanding crea
tures who in concert keep the conspiracy going. This is not to say
that such individuals do not suffer so much and in such a way
that they sometimes kill themselves, possibly even more per cap
ita than do pessimists, or that because they kill themselves they
are hypocrites for ever having said that anyone is better off for
having been born. It is only to say that when normal individuals
kill themselves, even after having said that anyone is better off
for having been born, they are disqualified as normal individuals,
because normal individuals do not kill themselves but until their
dying day think that being alive is all right and that happiness
will stand out in the existence of life's newcomers, who, it is al
ways assumed, will be as normal as they are.
Blundering
Consciousness is an existential liability, as every pessimist
agrees-a blunder of blind nature, according to Zapffe, that has
52
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
taken humankind down a black hole of logic. To make it
through this life, we must make believe that we are not what
we are--contradictory beings whose continuance only worsens
our plight as mutants who embody the contorted logic of a
paradox. To correct this blunder, we should desist from procre
ating. What could be more judicious or more urgent, existen
tially speaking, than our self-administered oblivion? At the very
least, we might give some regard to this theory of the blunder
as a "thought-experiment." All civilizations become defunct. All
species die out. There is even an expiration date on the uni
verse itself. Human beings would certainly not be the first phe
nomenon to go belly up. But we could be the first to
precipitate our own passing, abbreviating it before the bodies
really started to stack up. Could we know to their most fine
grained details the lives of all who came before us, would we
bless them for the care they took to keep the race blundering
along? Could we exhume them alive, would we shake their
bony, undead hands and promise to pass on the favor of living
to future generations? Surely that is what they would want to
hear, or at least that is what we want to think they would want
to hear. And just as surely that is what we would want to hear
from our descendents living in far posterity, strangers though
they would be as they shook our bony, undead hands.
Nature proceeds by blunders; that is its way. It is also ours. So if
we have blundered by regarding consciousness as a blunder,
why make a fuss over it? Our self-removal from this planet
would still be a magnificent move, a feat so luminous it would
bedim the sun. What do we have to lose? No evil would attend
our departure from this world, and the many evils we have
known would go extinct along with us. So why put off what
would be the most laudable masterstroke of our existence, and
the only one?
The Nightmare of Being
53
Of course, phenomena other than consciousness have been
thought to be blunders, beginning with life itself. For example,
in a novel titled At the Mountains of Madness (1 9 3 6) , the
American writer H. P. Lovecraft has one of his characters men
tion a "primal myth" about "Great Old Ones who filtered down
from the stars and concocted earth life as a joke or mistake."
Schopenhauer, once he had drafted his own mythology that
everything in the universe is energized by a Will-to-live, shifted
to a commonsense pessimism to represent life as a congeries of
excruciations.
[L] ife presents itself by no means as a gift for enjoyment, but as a
task, a drudgery to be performed; and in accordance with this we
see, in great and small, universal need, ceaseless c ares, constant
pressure, endless strife, compulsory activity, with extreme
exertion of all the powers of body and mind. Many millions,
united into nations, strive for the common good, each individual
on account of his own; but many thousands fall as a sacrifice for it.
Now senseless delusions, now intriguing politics, incite them to
wars with each other; then the sweat and the blood of the great
multitude must flow, to carry out the ideas of individuals, or to
expiate their faults. In peace industry and trade are active,
inventions work miracles, seas are navigated, delicacies are
collected from all ends of the world, the waves engulf thousands.
All push and drive, others acting; the tumult is indescribable. But
the ultimate aim of it all, what is it? To sustain ephemeral and
tormented individuals through a short span of time in the most
fortunate case with endurable want and comparative freedom
from pain, which, however, is at once attended with ennui; then
the reproduction of this race and its striving. In this evident
disproportion between the trouble and the reward, the will to live
appears to us from this point of view, if taken objectively, as a
fool, or subjectively, as a delusion, seized by which everything
living works with the utmost exertion of its strength for some
thing that is of no value. But when we consider it more closely,
we shall find here also that it is rather a blind pressure, a tendency
entirely without ground or motive. ( The World as Will and
Representation, trans. R. B. Haldane and J. Kemp)
54
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
Schopenhauer is here straightforward in limning his awareness
that, for human beings, existence is a state of demonic mania,
with the Will-to-live as the possessing spirit of "ephemeral and
tormented individuals." Elsewhere in his works, he denominates
consciousness as "an accident of life." A blunder. A mistake. Is
there really anything behind our smiles and tears but an evolu
tionary slip-up?
Analogies
Schopenhauer's is a great pessimism, not least because it reveals
a signature motif of the pessimistic imagination. As indicated,
Schopenhauer's insights are yoked to a philosophical super
structure centered on the Will, or the Will-to-live-a blind,
deaf, and dumb force that rouses human beings to their detri
ment. While Schopenhauer's system of thought is as impossible
to swallow as that of any other systematic philosopher, no in
telligent person can fail to see that every living thing behaves
exactly in conformity with his philosophy in its liberal articula
tion. Wound up like toys by some force-call it Will, elan vital,
anima mundi, physiological or psychological processes, nature,
or whatever-organisms go on running as they are bidden until
they run down. In pessimistic philosophies only the force is
real, not the things activated by it. They are only puppets, and
if they have consciousness may mistakenly believe they are self
winding persons who are making a go of it on their own.
Here, then, is the signature motif of the pessimistic imagina
tion that Schopenhauer made discernible: Behind the scenes of
Zife there is something pernicious that makes a nightmare of our
world. For Zapffe, the evolutionary mutation of consciousness
tugged us into tragedy. For Michelstaedter, individuals can exist
only as unrealities that are made as they are made and that can
not make themselves otherwise because their hands are forced
by the "god" of philopsychia (self-love) to accept positive illu-
The Nightmare of Being
55
sions about themselves or not accept themselves at all. For
Mainlander, a Will-to-die, not Schopenhauer's Will-to-live,
plays the occult master pulling our strings, making us dance in
fitful motions like marionettes caught in a turbulent wake left
by the passing of a self-murdered god. For Bahnsen, a purpose
less force breathes a black life into everything and feasts upon it
part by part, regurgitating itself into itself, ever-renewing the
throbbing forms of its repast. For all others who suspect that
something is amiss in the lifeblood of being, something they
cannot verbalize, there are the malformed shades of suffering
and death that chase them into the false light of contenting lies.
By analogy with that pernicious something the pessimist senses
behind the scenes of life are the baleful agencies that govern the
world of supernatural horror fiction. Actually, it would be
more proper to speak of the many worlds of supernatural hor
ror, since they vary from author to author as much as the ren
derings of the human fiasco vary from pessimist to pessimist.
Even within the writings of a single author, the source of some
thing pernicious that makes a nightmare of our world switches
about, the common link being a state of affairs that overturns
our conception of reality for the worse.
In "The Willows," for instance, the twentieth-century British
writer Algernon Blackwood suggests that an inimical force abides
within nature. What this enormity might be is known to the
characters of the story only by mysterious signs and sounds that
unnerve them as they make their way in a small boat down the
Danube and camp for the night on an island overgrown with wil
lows, which become the symbolic focus of a region where nature
shows its most menacing aspect. The narrator tries to explain
what it is about the willows that seems particularly threatening
to him, as distinct from the more immediate perils of the severe
weather conditions that have developed along the Danube.
56
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
A rising river, perhaps, always suggests something of the ominous:
many of the little islands I saw before me would probably have
been swept away by the morning; this resistless, thundering water
touched the deep sense of awe. Yet I was aware that my uneasi
ness lay deeper far than the emotions of awe and wonder. It was
not that I felt. Nor had it directly to do with the power of the
driving wind-this shouting hurricane that might almost carry up
a few acres of willows into the air and scatter them like so much
chaff over the landscape. The wind was simply enjoying itself, for
nothing rose out of the flat landscape to stop it, and I was con
scious of sharing its great game with a kind of pleasurable excite
ment. Yet this novel emotion had nothing to do with the wind
Indeed, so vague was the sense of distress I experienced, that it
was impossible to trace it to its source and deal with it accord
ingly, though I was aware somehow that it had to do with our ut
ter insignificance before this unrestrained power of the elements
about me. The huge-grown river had something to do with it
too--a vague, unpleasant idea that we had somehow trifled with
these great elemental forces in whose power we lay helpless every
hour of the day and night. For here, indeed, they were gigantically
at play together, and the sight appealed to the imagination.
But my emotion, so far as I could understand it, seemed to at
tach itself more particularly to the willow bushes, to these acres
and acres of willows, crowding, so thickly growing there, swarm
ing everywhere the eye could reach, pressing upon the river as
though to suffocate it, standing in dense array mile after mile be
neath the sky, watching, waiting, listening. And, apart from the
elements, the willows connected themselves subtly with my mal
aise, attacking the mind insidiously somehow by reason of their
vast numbers, and contriving in some way or other to represent to
the imagination a new and mighty power, a power, moreover, not
altogether friendly to us.
The mystery of the pernicious something that the willows rep
resent is never resolved. However, at the end of the story the
two travelers see a man turning over and over in the rushing
river. And he bears "their mark" in the form of indentations
they had seen before in the sands of the island-funnels that
The Nightmare of Being
57
formed and grew in size throughout the night the men had
camped on the island. Whatever power that was not "altogether
friendly to us" had procured its victim and satisfied itself. The
men had been saved at the price of another's death. That which
makes a nightmare of our world had revealed itself for a time
and withdrawn once again behind the scenes of life.
Such is the motif of supernatural horror: Something terrible in its
being comes forward and makes its claim as a shareholder in our
reality, or what we think is our reality and ours alone. It may be
an emissary from the grave or an esoteric monstrosity, as in the
ghost stories of M. R. James. It may be the offspring of a scientific
experiment with unintended consequences, as in Arthur Ma
chen' s ''The Great God Pan," or the hitherto unheard-of beings in
the same author's "The White People." It may be a hideous token
of another dimension revealed only in a mythic tome, as in
Robert W. Chambers' "The Yellow Sign." Or it may be a world
unto itself of pure morbidity, one suffused with a profound sense
of a doom without a name--Edgar Allan Poe's world.
Reflected in the works of many supernatural writers, the
signature motif Schopenhauer made discernible in pessimism
was most consistently promulgated by Lovecraft, a paragon
among literary figures who have thought the unthinkable, or at
least thought what most mortals do not want to think. In con
ceiving Azathoth, that "nuclear chaos" which "bubbles at the
center of all infinity," Lovecraft might well have been thinking
of Schopenhauer's Will. As instantiated in Lovecraft's stories,
the pernicious something that makes a nightmare of our world
is individuated into linguistically teratological entities from be
yond or outside of our universe. Like ghosts or the undead,
their very existence spooks us as a violation of what should and
should not be, suggesting unknown modes of being and un
canny creations which epitomize supernatural horror.
58
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
Life-Princip les
Philosophically, Lovecraft was a dyed-in-the-wool scientific
materialist. Nevertheless, he is a felicitous example of someone
who knew ravishments that in another context would qualify
as "spiritual" or "religious." Yet from childhood he adhered to a
vigorous atheism. In his lectures collected as The Varieties of
Religious Experience (1 902) , William James proposes that a
sense of "ontological wonder" and "cosmic emotion" argues for
the legitimacy of religious faith. In both his creative writings
and his letters, Lovecraft's expression of the feelings James de
scribes form an exception to the philosopher-psychologist's ar
gument.9 For Lovecraft, cosmic wonder and a "tranquility
tinged with terror, " as the British political theorist and aestheti
cian Edmund Burke referred to such experiences, were basic to
his interest in remaining alive. Sublimating his awareness of the
universe as nothingness
nothingness in motion, he also mitigated the bore
dom that plagued his life by distracting himself with reveries of
"surprise, discovery, strangeness, and the impingement of the cos
mic, lawless, and mystical upon the prosaic sphere of the known "
(Lovecraft's emphasis) .
From the other side of an emotional and spiritual chasm,
the French scientist and Christian philosopher Blaise Pascal
wrote of his a sense of being "engulfed in the infinite immensity
of spaces whereof I know nothing, and which know nothing of
me; I am terrified. The eternal silence of these infinite spaces
fills me with dread" (Pensees, 1 670) . Pascal's is not an unnatural
reaction for those phobic to infinite spaces that know nothing
of them. "Kenophobia" is the fear of such vast spaces and voids.
Perhaps kenophi lia should be coined to describe the "ontologi
cal wonder" and "cosmic emotion" Lovecraft felt when he con
templated the outer rim of the unknown.
A complex and contradictory figure, as illustrated above,
Lovecraft often seemed to be on the fence when it came to his
The Nightmare of Being
59
convictions about the value of existence. In a letter to Edwin
Baird, the first editor of Weird Tales, he penned some remarks
that express a univocal stand by a pessimist who is estranged
from all solace known to ordinary folk. These merit quotation
at length.
Popular authors do not and apparently cannot appreciate the fact
that true art is obtainable only by rejecting normality and conven
tionality in toto, and approaching a theme purged utterly of any
usual or preconceived point of view. Wild and "different" as they
may consider their quasi-weird products, it remains a fact that the
bizarrerie is on the surface alone; and that basically they reiterate
the same old conventional values and motives and perspectives.
Good and evil, teleological illusion, sugary sentiment, anthropo
centric psychology-the usual superficial stock in trade, and all
shot through with the eternal and inescapable commonplace . . . .
Who ever wrote a story from the point of view that man is a
blemish on the cosmos, who ought to be eradicated? As an exam
ple-a young man I know lately told me that he means to write a
story about a scientist who wishes to dominate the earth, and who
to accomplish his ends trains and overdevelops germs . . . and leads
armies of them in the manner of the Egyptian plagues. I told him
that although this theme has promise, it is made utterly common
place by assigning the scientist a normal motive. There is nothing
outre about wanting to conquer the earth; Alexander, Napoleon,
and Wilhelm II wanted to do that. Instead, I told my friend, he
should conceive a man with a morbid, frantic, shuddering hatred
of the life-principle itself, who wishes to extirpate from the
planet every trace of biological organism, animal and vegetable
alike, including himself. That would be tolerably original. But after
all, originality lies with the author. One can't write a weird story
of real power without perfect psychological detachment from the
human scene, and a magic prism of imagination which suffuses
theme and style alike with that grotesquerie and disquieting dis
tortion characteristic of morbid vision. Only a cynic can create
horror-for behind every masterpiece of the sort must reside a
driving demonic force that despises the human race and its illu
sions, and longs to p ull them to pieces and mock them.
60
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
The salient interest of this letter is that it shows Lovecraft as a
perfectionist of cosmic disillusion. But relatively dissociated
from Lovecraft the cosmic disillusionist was another Lovecraft,
one who reveled in protectionist illusions that could not be
more alien to the propensities of his alter ego. In this latter
identity, he took refuge from what he specified as his cynicism
(also "cosmic pessimism") in a world of distractions and an
chorings he had amassed over the years. Among them was his
sentimental immersion in the past. Especially dear to him was
the traditional way of life emblemized by architectural rem
nants of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century New England.
Old towns with winding streets, houses with semicircular
fanlight doors, and other postcard images of Y ankeedom con
jured up for Lovecraft a picture of bygone times as an aesthetic
phenomenon that often tailed into a Blood-and-Soil mysticism.
A proud Novanglian, Lovecraft grew up and lived among
abundant reminders of a past he idealized. His attachment to
historic New England counterbalanced his infatuation with the
far reaches of time and space, beside which, as he well knew,
the outdated culture-streams that so enraptured him were local,
fleeting, and accidental forms without immanent virtue. For
Lovecraft, both quaint small-paned windows and a bracing
alienage from human mores had charms that he heartily hon
ored in his works as well as his life, even during his darkest days
of cynicism and pessimism.
Like most of us, Lovecraft distracted himself with fabri
cated values, and he did so until death was bestowed upon him
by a combination of intestinal cancer and Bright's disease. Con
cerned as a fiction writer with smashing to bits humanity's
grand illusion about its place in the universe, Lovecraft wel
comed any illusions he could accept in good faith, as did Zapffe
and Schopenhauer, who also pursued gratifying diversions that
took their minds off what the latter philosopher called the
The Nightmare of Being
"vanity and suffering of life." During his later years, Lovecraft
did seem to mellow considerably as he walked the plank into
nonexistence. In letters to his friends and colleagues he attested
that he had left his cynicism and pessimism behind and had be
come an "indifferentist," meaning one who sees no malice in the
physical universe but only a flux of particles. To the benefit of
supernatural horror aficionados, Lovecraft's indifferentist phi
losophy did not require him to discontinue writing about per
nicious things that compromise the sanity of anyone who learns
of their existence. Lovecraft was exhilarated by the idea of
something pernicious that made a nightmare of our world,
whether it was indifferent to us or quite partial to our devasta
tion. In his indifferentism, Lovecraft did not seem to have
shambled far from the cognitive-style of the individual who ad
vised his friend to write about "a man with a morbid, frantic,
shuddering hatred of the life-principle itself, who wishes to ex
tirpate from the planet every trace of biological organism, ani
mal and vegetable alike, including himself." If only there were a
man who could bring to fruition such a wish. Then the earth
could finally be "cleared off, " as Wilbur Whately wrote in his
diary in "The Dunwich Horror."
Why anyone should be drawn to the writings of Lovecraft
and his confederates is usually expounded as a natural aspect of
the human temper, a healthy yearning of our souls to exceed
the bounds of ordinary existence. In his lecture "On Morbidity, "
part of a series of brief expositions on supernatural horror, an
academician known only as Professor Nobody (an ostenta
tiously cocky pseudonym) submits his analysis of an atypical
individual who does not partake in the wholesome motivation
of the majority with respect to the horrific and extraordinary, "a
man with a morbid, frantic, shuddering hatred of the life
principle itself." While there is indeed something invigorating in
supernatural horror for this individual, it is a negative rather
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
than a positive activation that pleasures him by its antipathy to
all that lives. The floor is now ceded to the professor.
Isolation, mental strain, emotional exertions, visionary infatua
tions, well-executed fevers, repudiations of well-being: only a few
of the many exercises practiced by that specimen we shall call the
"morbid man." And our subject of supernatural horror is a vital
part of his program. Retreating from a world of heath and sanity,
or at least one that daily invests in such commodities, the morbid
man seeks the shadows behind the scenes of life. He backs himself
into a corner alive with cool drafts and fragrant with centuries of
must. It is in that corner that he builds a world of ruins out the
battered stones of his imagination, a rancid world rife with things
smelling of the crypt.
But this world is not all a romantic sanctum for the dark in
spirit. So let us condemn it for a moment, this deep-end of dejec
tion. Though there is no name for what might be called the mor
bid man's "sin," it still seems in violation of some deeply ingrained
morality. The morbid man does not appear to be doing himself or
others any good And while we all know that melancholic moping
and lugubrious ruminating are quite palatable as side-dishes of ex
istence, he has turned them into a house specialty1 Ultimately,
however, he may meet this charge of wrongdoing with a simple
"What of it?"
Now, such a response assumes morbidity to be a certain class
of vice, one to be pursued without apology, and one whose advan
tages and disadvantages must be enjoyed or endured outside the
law. But as a sower of vice, if only in his own soul, the morbid
man incurs the following censure: that he is a symptom or a cause
of decay within both individual and collective spheres of being.
And decay, like every other process of becoming, hurts everybody.
"Good1" shouts the morbid man. "No good1" counters the crowd
Both positions betray dubious origins: one in resentment, the
other in fear. And when the moral debate on this issue eventually
reaches an impasse or becomes too tangled for truth, then psycho
logical polemics can begin. Later on we will find other angles from
which this problem may be attacked, enough to keep us occupied
for the rest of our lives.
The Nightmare of Being
Meanwhile, the morbid man keeps putting his time on earth to
no good use, until in the end-amidst mad winds, wan moonlight,
and pasty specters-he uses his exactly like everyone else uses
theirs: all up .
Undoing Ill
When people are asked to respond to the statement "I am
happy-true or false," the word "true" is spoken more often
than "false," overwhelmingly so. If there is some loss of face in
confessing that one is not happy, this does not mean that those
who profess happiness as their dominant humor are lying
through their teeth. People want to be happy. They believe
they should be happy. And if some philosopher says they can
never be happy because their consciousness has ensured their
unhappiness, that philosopher will not be part of the dialogue,
especially if he blathers about discontinuing our species by
ceasing to bear children who can also never be happy even
though, to extend the point, they can also never be unhappy
given their inexperience of existing. Ask Zapffe.
So you ask whether I would choose to be unborn? One must be
born in order to choose, and the choice involves destruction. But
ask my brother in that chair over there. Indeed, it is an empty one;
my brother did not get so far. Yet ask him, as he is traveling like
the wind below the sky, crashing against the beach, scenting in the
grass, reveling in his strength as he pursues his living food Do you
think he is bereaved by his incapacity to fulfill his fate on the wait
ing list of the Oslo Housing and Savings Society? And have you
ever missed him ? Look around in a crowded afternoon tram and
reflect whether you would allow a lottery to select one of the ex
hausted toilers as the one whom you put into this world. They pay
no attention as one person gets off and two get on. The tram keeps
rolling along. ("Fragments of an Interview," Aftenposten, 1 959)
The point that in the absence of birth nobody exists who can be
deprived of happiness is terribly conspicuous. For optimists, this
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
fact plays no part in their existential computations. For pessi
mists, however, it is axiomatic. Whether a pessimist urges us to
live "heroically" with a knife in our gut or denounces life as not
worth living is immaterial. What matters is that he makes no
bones about hurt being the Great Problem it is incumbent on
philosophy to observe. But this problem can be solved only by
establishing an imbalance between hurt and happiness that
would enable us in principle to say which is more desirable-
existence or nonexistence. While no airtight case has ever been
made regarding the undesirability of human life, pessimists still
run themselves ragged trying to make one. Optimists have no
comparable mission. When they do argue for the desirability of
human life it is only in reaction to pessimists arguing the oppo
site, even though no airtight case has ever been made regarding
that desirability. Optimism has always been an undeclared policy
of human culture--o ne that grew out of our animal instincts to
survive and reproduce--rather than an articulated body of
thought. It is the default condition of our blood and cannot be
effectively questioned by our minds or put in grave doubt by our
pains. This would explain why at any given time there are more
cannibals than philosophical pessimists.
For optimists, human life never needs j ustification, no matter
how much hurt piles up, because they can always tell them
selves that things w ill get better. For pessimists, there is no
amount of happiness-should such a thing as happiness even
obtain for human beings except as a misconception-that can
compensate us for life's hurt. As a worst-case example, a pessi
mist might refer to the hurt caused by some natural or human
made cataclysm. To adduce a hedonic counterpart to the hor
rors that attach to such cataclysms would require a degree of
ingenuity from an optimist, but it could be done. And the rea
son it could be done, the reason for the eternal stalemate be-
The Nightmare of Being
65
tween optimists and pessimists, is that no possible formula can
be established to measure proportions and types of hurt and
happiness in the world. If such a formula could be established,
then either pessimists or optimists would have to give in to
their adversaries.
One formula to establish the imbalance at issue has been
tendered by the South African philosopher of ethics David Bena
tar. In his Better Never to Have Been: The Hann of Coming into
Existence (2006) 1 Benatar cogently propounds that, because some
amount of suffering is inevitable for all who are born, while the
absence of happiness does not deprive those who would have
been born but were not, the scales are tipped in favor of not
bearing children. Therefore, propagators violate any conceivable
system of morality and ethics because they are guilty of doing
harm. To Benatar, the extent of the harm that always occurs
matters not. Once harm has been ensured by the begetting of a
bundle of joy, a line has been crossed from moral-ethical behav
ior to immoral-unethical behavior. This violation of morality and
ethics holds for Benatar in all instances of childbirth.
People like Benatar who argue that the world's "ideal popu
lation size is zero" are written off as being unhealthy of mind.
Further accentuating this presumed unhealthiness is Benatar's
argument that giving birth is not only harmful but should be
seen as so egregiously harmful that there is no happiness that
can counterbalance it. As harms go in this world, there are none
worse than the harm that entails all others. Ask William James
for a perspective on one of those great harms-to which he
gives the name "melancholy"-and how it is generally passed
over in the lives of healthy adults.
The method of averting one's attention from evil, and living sim
ply in the light of good is splendid as long as it will work. It will
work with many persons; it will work far more generally than
most of us are ready to suppose; and within the sphere of its suc
cessful operation there is nothing to be said against it as a religious
66
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE H U M A N RACE
solution. But it breaks down impotently as soon as melancholy
comes; and even though one be quite free from melancholy one's
self, there is no doubt that healthy-mindedness is inadequate as a
philosophical doctrine, because the evil facts which it refuses
positively to account for are a genuine portion of reality; and they
may after all be the best key to life's significance, and possibly the
only openers of our eyes to the deepest levels of truth.
The normal process of life contains moments as bad as any of
those which insane melancholy is filled with, moments in which
radical evil gets its innings and takes its solid turn. The lunatic's
visions of horror are all drawn from the material of daily fact. Our
civilization is founded on the shambles, and every individual
existence goes out in a lonely spasm of helpless agony. If you
protest, my friend, wait until you arrive there yourself.
(The
Varieties of Religious Experience, 1 902)
James himself suffered a brush with melancholy, but he made a
full recovery and began to think positively, or at least equivocally,
about being alive, answering yes to the question "Is life worth liv
ing?" However, by force of his honesty of intellect he knew this
opinion needed to be defended as much as any other opinion. No
logic can support it. Indeed, logic defeats all feeling that life is
worth living, which, James says, only a self-willed belief in a
higher order of existence can instill. Then every suffering will
seem worthwhile in the way that the vivisection of a living dog,
to use James's example, would seem worthwhile to the animal if
only it could comprehend the goodly ends its pain serves for the
higher order of human existence. In his lecture "Is Life worth Liv
ing," James opined that human beings, unlike dogs, can in fact
imagine a higher order of existence than theirs, one that may le
gitimate the worst adversities of mortal life. James was a rare phi
losopher in that he put no faith in logic. And he was doubtless
wise to adopt that stance, since the fortunes of those who at
tempt to defend their opinions with logic are not enviable.
Naturally, for those whose opinion is that it is "better to be"
than "better never to have been," Benatar's logic for the latter
The Nightmare of Being
proposition is rejected as faulty, the more so in that its conclu
sions are not supported by a consensus of ordinary folk. Logic
notwithstanding, Benatar's moral-ethical censure of reproduc
tion does prove that humanity's continuance is not universally
accepted as a good in itself, even in a super-modern world. It
also reminds us that no one can make a case that every individ
ual's birth, or any individual's birth, is a good in itself. And that
is the case that needs to be made, at least morally and ethically
speaking as well as logically speaking. (For more on this, see the
section Pressurized in the chapter "The Cult of Grinning Mar
tyrs.") If most people believe that being alive is all right-the
alternative to this belief having no appeal for them-the recti
tude of causing new people to become alive is just a matter of
opinion.
Rep ression
In "The Last Messiah," Zapffe wrote: "The whole of living that
we see before our eyes today is from inmost to outmost en
meshed in repressional mechanisms, social and individual; they
can be traced right into the tritest formulas of everyday life."
The quartet of formulas that Zapffe picked out as individual and
social mechanisms of repression are probably the most trite he
could have chosen, which may have been deliberate on his part
because they are so familiar to us and so visible in our day-to
day existence. These mechanisms are related to the psychoana
lytic theory of unconscious repression, although they are also
perilously accessible to the conscious mind. And when they are
accessed, no one can concede them with impunity. Not over
weight persons or tobacco users, who must play dumb when
they are scarfing down a cupcake or smoking a cigarette. Not
soldiers fighting a war, who must not be aware they are risking
their lives and limbs for a rationalization-their country, their
god, etc. Not anyone who is going to suffer and die (that is, eve-
68
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
ryone), who will not voluntarily confess to playing the same old
games for as long as possible rather than be haunted by thoughts
of mortality and the unpleasantness that may precede it. And
definitely not artists, who keep their aesthetic distance for fear
of being hamstrung by the realities they "bring to life."
Once the facts that repressional mechanisms hide are ac
cessed, they must be excised from our memory-or new rep
ressional mechanisms must replace the old-so that we may
continue to be protected by our cocoon of lies. If this is not
done, we will be whimpering misereres morning, noon, and
night instead of chanting that day by day, in every way, we are
getting better and better. Although we may sometimes admit
to the guileful means we use to keep us doing what we do, this
is only a higher level of self-deception and paradox, not evi
dence that we stand on the heights of some meta-reality where
we are really real. We say we know what is in store for us in
this life, and we do. But we do not know. We cannot if we are
to survive and multiply.
Annotating humanity's attempt to bluff itself in the interest of
the species is an extensive literature on self-deception, denial,
and repression.10 Naturally, none of those working in this area
of study believe human life to be such a morass of self
deception, denial, and repression that we do not know which
way is up. But in Zapffe's analysis of self-deception, denial, and
repression, we cannot know which way is up without paying
dearly for this knowledge. Enough of us must addle our con
sciousness so that we can be far less conscious than we might,
which is the tragedy of the human species, for anyone who
might have forgotten. Those who cannot pull this off will suffer
the consequences.
Some who study self-deception, denial, etc. believe these
are healthy practices if they facilitate our happiness without in-
The Nightmare of Being
69
fringing on the happiness of our fellows. They speak of self
deception, denial, etc. as "useful fictions" or "positive illusions"
and ballyhoo them as staples for both the individual and soci
ety. (For his book Vital Lies, Simple Truths: The Psychology of
Self-Deception [1 996], Daniel Goleman studied how people and
groups play along with factitious designs to scotch the animus
and anxiety that would be loosed if an etiquette of honesty
were somehow enforced.) Others believe that self-deceptive
practices are too complex to be usefully analyzed. This does not
mean that self-deceptive practices do not support heinous acts
by the ingenious denial of these acts (Stanley Cohen, States of
Denial: Knowing about Atrocities and Suffering, 2001) ; it only
means that we cannot know how self-deception works in these
cases. Finally, many of those who study self-deception believe
we are not capable of self-deception because we cannot both
consciously know something and consciously not know it, for
this would involve us in a paradox.
However, others have reasoned their way around this sup
posed paradox. An example of such reasoning is presented by
Kent Bach ("An Analysis of Self-Deception," Philosophy and
Phenomenal Research, 1 981) , who offers three means of avoid
ing unwanted thoughts that are nevertheless accessible to a sub
ject's consciousness: rationalization, evasion, and jamming.
These are identical to the methods of isolation, anchoring, and
distraction spotted by Zapffe in human life. Each may keep a
subject in a state of self-deception regarding what is really the
case. Bach's essay does not, of course, extend his three catego
ries of self-deception to the entire human species, as does Zap
ffe. To Zapffe, we remember, we are all by nature and necessity
false and paradoxical beings and should terminate our existence
as strangers to reality who cannot live as we are and cannot live
otherwise, who must constrain our consciousness because,
tragically, our sanity depends on it.
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE H U MAN RACE
In his Why We Lie: The Evolution of Deception and the Un
conscious Mind (2007) 1 David Livingstone Smith examines the
mechanisms of self-deception and denial, both individual and
social, in terms of evolutionary psychology. This approach leads
him to a conclusion about these mechanisms that is compatible
with Zapffe's diagnosis of humanity as a paradox. Smith's thesis
is that at some time in the remote past the human mind split
into the dual levels of conscious and unconscious processes the
better to deceive itself and others for the purpose of adaptation.
This makes Smith's hypothesis about the process of denial tan
tamount to that of the psychoanalytic theory of repression, by
which individuals deny unpalatable facts about themselves to
themselves, and, by extension, to others. Smith is in fact a psy
choanalyst, and this may be seen in his statement that the "ever
present possibility of deceit is a crucial dimension of every hu
man relationship, even the most central: our relationship with
our very selves." To practice this deceit, one must repress con
sciousness of the deceiving, which does not exclude self
deception concerning consciousness itself and what it discloses
about human life. Effectively, then, Smith is allied with Zapffe's
position that the human being
performs . . . a more or less self-conscious repression [Zapffe's em
phasis] of its damning surplus of consciousness. The process is vir
tually constant during our waking and active hours, and is a
requirement of social adaptability and of everything commonly re
ferred to as healthy and normal living.
Psychiatry even works on the assumption that the "healthy"
and viable is at one with the highest in personal terms. Depres
sion, "fear of life," refusal of nourishment and so on are invariably
taken as signs of a pathological state and treated thereafter. Often,
however, such phenomena are messages from a deeper, more im
mediate sense of life, bitter fruits of a geniality of thought or feel
ing at the root of anti-biological tendencies. It is not the soul being
sick, but its protection failing, or else being rejected because it is
experienced-correctly-as a betrayal of ego's highest potential.
The Nightmare of Being
71
Even though Zapffe regarded psychoanalysis as another form of
anchoring, whether or not a repressional mechanism is accessi
ble to our consciousness or is wholly unconscious seems a triv
ial point. For both Smith and Zapffe, they lead to the same
thing: occlusion of the real. Another thing Smith and Zapffe
share is that their ideas about humankind are not scientifically
verifiable and will not be for some time to come, if ever. And
without proof on a platter, anyone whose ideas are unpalatable
to scientists, philosophers, and average mortals must expect to
be poorly heard. Smith does not seem to understand this, and in
the closing pages of his book expresses hope that humanity will
one day "get real," as the saying goes. At the end of "The Last
Messiah," Zapffe expressed an unconditional pessimism that
this could ever happen, which was patently the only reasonable
attitude for him to take. Smith himself might consider "getting
real" about his hope we will ever get real, given that humanity
will always have its reasons for being repressed, self-deceptive,
and unreal. A utopia in which we no longer deny the realities
we presently must repress cannot be realistically hoped for.
And who except a pessimist would wish for that utopia?
The effectiveness of conscious repressional mechanisms has
been analyzed from many angles, particularly in relation to the
fear of death. An enumeration of traditional strategies for grap
pling with thanatophobia appears in Choices for Living: Coping
with the Fear of Dying (2002) by Thomas S. Langer. Although
the subtitle of this book suggests that it concentrates on the
fear of dying, it is more about the fear of death, not about the
suffering and terror that may attend either a short-lived or a
dawdling migration into death. Factually, Langer's book, like
many others of its kind, is fixated on living rather than on either
death or dying, which seem to be only blurry contingencies
while an individual is alive.
72
T HE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
DOCTOR: "I'm afraid you have an inoperable tumor and haven't
long to live."
PATIENT: "That can't be. I feel in perfect health."
PO LICE OFFICER: 'Tm sorry to inform you, ma'am, that your
husband has been involved in a vehicular misadventure. He's
dead."
WIFE : "That can't be. He just left the house ten minutes ago."
Given a little time, of course, the cancer patient and the woman
who just lost her husband come around to their respective reali
ties. Acceptance of one's new condition, as opposed to going
mad or reacting in some other pathological manner, seems to be
the usual process-on the condition, naturally, that an individual
lives long enough to accept it and does not die of an inoperable
tumor first. In the media and all forms of entertainment, such
bad breaks are exposed to us all our lives. But we still do not
heed the old saw "Hope for the best, but expect the worst." In
stead, we hope for the best and think we have a very good
chance of getting it. If we really expected the worst, we might
well go mad or react in some other pathological manner before
the worst came for us and ours. And that really would be the
worst.
Suffering I
For almost all philosophers who write about death, the subject
is studied in the abstract, with the unsightly tangibles at its bed
side either bracketed or shrugged off. If dying is even given the
time of day by philosophers, it must be studied as a sub
category of SUFFERING, THE M EANING O F, which few thinkers
discuss outside of moral philosophy and ethics, relatively soft
cognitive pastimes when placed beside logic, epistemology, on
tology, etc. Philosophies that take human suffering as their
overarching subject are given short shrift by analytic types, who
The Nightmare of Being
73
leave SUFFERING, THE MEANING OF to religions such as Bud
dhism and Christianity, or to pessimists. Unless a philosopher is
·
prepared to go all the way with it, to take a hard line on its
relevance to the whole of human life, as did Schopenhauer and
a few other relics of the pre-modern era, he will balk at saying
anything about suffering.
One who did not balk entirely was the Austrian-born Brit
ish philosopher Karl Popper, who in The Open Society and Its
Enemies (1 945) did have a thing or two to say about human suf
fering. Briefly, he revamped the Utilitarianism of the nine
teenth-century British philosopher John Stuart Mill, who
wrote: "Actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote
happiness, wrong as they tend to promote the reverse of happi
ness." Popper remolded this summation of a positive utilitarian
ism into a negative utilitarianism whose position he handily
stated as follows: "It adds to clarity in the fields of ethics, if we
formulate our demands negatively, i.e. if we demand the
elimination of suffering rather than the promotion of
happiness." Taken to its logical and most humanitarian conclu
sion, Popper's demand can have as its only end the elimination
of those who now suffer as well as "counterfactual" beings who
will suffer if they are born. What else could the "elimination of
suffering" mean if not its total abolition, and ours? Naturally,
Popper held his horses well before suggesting that to eliminate
suffering would demand that we as a species be eliminated. But
as R. N. Smart famously argued (Mind, 1 958) 1 this is the only
conclusion to be drawn from Negative Utilitarianism.
In "The Last Messiah," Zapffe is not sanguine about elimi
nating suffering, nor is he so unworldly as to beseech a commu
nal solution for its elimination by snuffing out the human race,
as did the Cathari and the Bogomils. (He does lash out at the
barbarism of social or religious proscription of suicide, but he is
not a standard-bearer for this form of personal salvation.) To
74
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
reiterate with due compunction, Zapffe's thought is foremost
an addendum to that of various sects and individuals who have
resolved that conscious existence is so odious that extinction is
preferable to survival. It also has the value of advancing a new
answer to an old question: "Why should generations unborn be
spared entry into the human thresher?" But what might be
called "Zapffe's Paradox," in the tradition of possessively named
formulations that saturate primers of philosophy, is as useless as
the propositions of any other thinker who is pro-life or anti-life
or is only juggling concepts to clinch what is reality and can we
ever get there. That said, we can continue as if it had not been
said. The measure of a philosopher's thought is not in its an
swers or the problems it poses, but in how well it fiddles with
these answers and problems such that they animate the minds
of others. Thus the importance-and the nullity-of rhetoric.
Ask any hard-line pessimist, but do not expect him to expect
you to take his words seriously.
Suffering II
Perhaps the greatest strike against philosophical pess1m1sm is
that its only theme is human suffering. This is the last item on
the list of our species' obsessions and detracts from everything
that matters to us, such as the Good, the Beautiful, and a Spar
kling Clean Toilet Bowl. For the pessimist, everything consid
ered in isolation from human suffering or any cognition that
does not have as its motive the origins, nature, and elimination
of human suffering is at base recreational, whether it takes the
form of conceptual probing or physical action in the world-for
example, delving into game theory or traveling in outer space,
respectively. And by "human suffering," the pessimist is not
thinking of particular sufferings and their relief, but of suffering
itself. Remedies may be discovered for certain diseases and so
ciopolitical barbarities may be amended. But these are only
The Nightmare of Being
75
stopgaps. Human suffering will remain insoluble as long as hu
man beings exist. The one truly effective solution for suffering is
that spoken of in Zapffe's "Last Messiah." It may not be a wel
come solution for a stopgap world, but it would forever put an
end to suffering, should we ever care to do so. The pessimist's
credo, or one of them, is that nonexistence never hurt anyone
and existence hurts everyone. Although our selves may be illu
sory creations of consciousness, our pain is nonetheless real.
As a survival-happy species, our successes are calculated in
the number of years we have extended our lives, with the reduc
tion of suffering being only incidental to this aim. To stay alive
under almost any circumstances is a sickness with us. Nothing
could be more unhealthy than to "watch one's health" as a means
of stalling death. The lengths we will go as procrastinators of that
last gasp only demonstrate a morbid dread of that event. By con
trast, our fear of suffering is deficient. So Shakespeare's Edgar
when he passes on the wisdom that "the worst is not I So long as
we can say 'This is the worst."' Officially, there are no fates worse
than death. Unofficially, there is a profusion of such fates. For
some people, just living with the thought that they will die is a
fate worse than death itself.
Longevity is without question of paramount value in our
lives, and finding a corrective for mortality is our compulsive
project. Anything goes insofar as lengthening our earthly tenure.
And how we have cashed in on our efforts. No need to cram
our lives into two or three decades now that we can cram them
into seven, eight, nine, or more. The lifespan of non
domesticated mammals has never changed, while ours has
grown by leaps and bounds. What a coup for the human race.
Unaware how long they will live, other warm-blooded life
forms are sluggards by comparison. Time will run out for us as it
does for all creatures, true, but at least we can dream of a day
when we might elect our own deadline. Then perhaps we can all
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
die of the same thing: a killing satiation with our durability in a
world that is MALIGNANTLY USELESS.
"Worthless" rather than "useless" is the more familiar epithet
in this context. The rationale for using "useless" in place of
"worthless" in this histrionically capitalized phrase is that
"worthless" is tied to the concepts of desirability and value, and
by their depreciation introduces them into the existential mix.
"Useless," on the other hand, is not so inviting of these concepts.
Elsewhere in this work, "worthless" is connected to the language
of pessimism and does what damage it can. But the devil of it is
that "worthless" really does not go far enough when speaking
pessimistically about the character of existence. Too many times
the question "Is life worth living?" has been asked. This usage of
"worth" excites impressions of a fair lot of experiences that are
arguably desirable and valuable within limits and that may fol
low upon one another in such a way as to suggest that life is not
totally worthless. With "useless," the wispy spirits of desirability
and value do not as readily rear their heads. Naturally, the use
lessness of all that is or could ever be is subj ect to the same re
pudiations as the worthlessness of all that is or could ever be. For
this reason, the adverb "malignantly" has been annexed to "use
less" to give it a little more semantic stretch and a dose of toxic
ity. But to express with any adequacy a sense of the uselessness
of everything, a nonlinguistic modality would be needed, some
effusion out of a dream that amalgamated every gradation of the
useless and wordlessly transmitted to us the inanity of existence
under any possible conditions. Indigent of such means of com
munication, the uselessness of all that exists or could possibly
exist must be spoken with a poor potency.
Not unexpectedly, no one believes that everything is use
less, and with good reason. We all live within relative frame
works, and within those frameworks uselessness is far wide of
the norm. A potato masher is not useless if one wants to mash
The Nightmare of Being
77
potatoes. For some people, a system of being that includes an
afterlife of eternal bliss may not seem useless. They might say
that such a system is absolutely usef�l because it gives them the
hope they need to make it through this life. But an afterlife of
eternal bliss is not and cannot be absolutely useful simply be
cause you need it to be. It is part of a relative framework and
nothing beyond that, just as a potato masher is only part of a
relative framework and is useful only if you need to mash pota
toes. Once you had made it through this life to an afterlife of
eternal bliss, you would have no use for that afterlife. Its job
would be done, and all you would have is an afterlife of eternal
bliss-a paradise for reverent hedonists and pious libertines.
What is the use in that? You might as well not exist at all, ei
ther in this life or in an afterlife of eternal bliss. Any kind of ex
istence is useless. Nothing is self-justifying. Everything is
justified only in a relativistic potato-masher sense.
There are some people who do not get up in arms about po
tato-masher relativism, while other people do. The latter want to
think in terms of absolutes that are really absolute and not just
absolute potato mashers. Christians, Jews, and Muslims have a
real problem with a potato-masher system of being. Buddhists
have no problem with a potato-masher system because for them
there are no absolutes. What they need to realize is the truth of
"dependent origination," which means that everything is related
to everything else in a great network of potato mashers that are
always interacting with one another. So the only problem Bud
dhists have is not being able to realize that the only absolutely
useful thing is the realization that everything is a great network
of potato mashers. They think that if they can get over this
hump, they will be eternally liberated from suffering. At least
they hope they will, which is all they really need to make it
through this life. In the Buddhist faith, everyone suffers who
cannot see that the world is a MALIGNANTLY USELESS po-
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
tato-mashing network. However, that does not make Buddhists
superior to Christians, Jews, and Muslims. It only means they
have a different system for making it through a life where all we
can do is wait for musty shadows to call our names when they
are ready for us. After that happens, there will be nobody who
will need anything that is not absolutely useless. Ask any atheist.
Ecocide
Despite Zapffe's work as a philosopher, although not in an oc
cupational role (he earned his living by writing poems, plays,
stories, and humorous pieces) , he is better known as an early
ecologist who popularized the term "biosophy" to name a disci
pline that would broaden the compass of philosophy to include
the interests of other living things besides human beings. In this
capacity, he serves as an inspiration to environmentalists who
worry about the well-being of the earth and its organisms.
Here, too, we catch ourselves-and Zapffe himself, as he af
firmed-in the act of conspiring to build barricades against the
repugnant facts of life by signing on to a cause (in this case that
of environmentalism) that snubs the real issue. Vandalism of
the environment is but a sidebar to humanity's refusal to look
into the jaws of existence.
In truth, we have only one foot in the natural environment
of this world. Other worlds are always calling us away from na
ture. We live in a habitat of unrealities-not of earth, air, wa
ter, and wildlife--and cradling illusion trounces grim logic
every time. Some of the more combative environmentalists,
however, have concurred with Zapffe that we should retire
from existence. But their advocacy of worldwide suicide as a
strategy for saving the earth from being pillaged by human be
ings receives no mention in "The Last Messiah" and was proba
bly not on Zapffe's mind when he wrote this essay. As
appealing as a universal suicide pact may be, why take part in it
The Nightmare of Being
79
just to conserve this planet, this dim b ulb in the blackness of
space? Nature produced us, or at least subsidized our evolution.
It intruded on an inorganic wasteland and set up shop. What
evolved was a global workhouse where nothing is ever at rest,
where the generation and discarding of life incessantly goes on.
By what v irtue, then, is it entitled to receive a pardon for this
original sin-a capital crime in reverse, j ust as reproduction
makes one an accessory b efore the fact to an individual's death?
In its course, nature has made blunders in plenty. These are left
to die out, as is nature's wont. Perhaps this will be how we will
go-a natural death. It might be idly theorized, though, that na
ture has a special plan for human beings and devised us to serve
as a way revoking itself, much like Mainlander's self-expunging
God. An offbeat idea, no protest, but not the strangest we have
ever heard or lived by. We could at least take up the hypothesis
and see where it leads. If it is proved unviable, then where is the
harm? But until then, might we not let ourselves be drawn along
by nature's plan, which includes our sacking the earth as a para
doxical means of living better in it, or at least living as our nature
bids us to live.
We did not make ourselves, nor did we fashion a world that
could not work without pain, and great pain at that, with a little
pleasure, very little, to string us along-a world where all organ
isms are inexorably pushed by pain throughout their lives to do
that which will improve their chances to survive and create
more of themselves. Left unchecked, this process will last as long
as a single cell remains palpitating in this cesspool of the solar
system, this toilet of the galaxy. So why not lend a hand in na
ture's suicide? For want of a deity that could be held to account
for a world in which there is terrible pain, let nature take the
blame for our troubles. We did not create an environment un
congenial to our species, nature did. One would think that nature
80
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
was trying to kill us off, or get us to suicide ourselves once the
blunder of consciousness came upon us. What was nature think
ing? We tried to anthropomorphize it, to romanticize it, to let it
into our hearts. But nature kept its distance, leaving us to our
own devices. So be it. Survival is a two-way street. Once we set
tle ourselves off-world, we can blow up this planet from outer
space. It's the only way to be sure its stench will not follow us.
Let it save itself if it can-the condemned are known for the ac
robatics they will execute to wriggle out of their sentences. But if
it cannot destroy what it has made, and what could possibly un
make it, then may it perish along with every other living thing it
has introduced to pain. While no species has given in to pain to
the point of giving up its existence, so far as we know, it is not a
phenomenon whose praises are often sung.
Hopelessness
In Zapffe's "The Last Messiah," the titular figure appears at the
end and makes the mock-Socratic, biblically parodic pro
nouncement, "Know yourselves-be infertile and let the earth be
silent after ye " (Zapffe's emphasis) . As Zapffe pictures the scene,
the Last Messiah's words will not be well received: "And when
he has spoken, they will pour themselves over him, led by the
pacifier makers and the midwives, and bury him in their finger
nails." Semantically speaking, the Last Messiah is not a messiah,
since he saves no living soul and will be erased from human
memory by a vigilante group whose kingpins are "the pacifier
makers and the midwives." Moreover, a resurrection seems to be
the last thing in the Last Messiah's future.
To exposit why humanity should not further tarry on earth is
one thing; to believe that this proposition will be agreeable to
others is quite another. Due to the note of hopelessness in the
coda to Zapffe's essay, we are discouraged from imagining a world
in which the self-liquidation of humanity could ever be put into
The Nightmare of Being
effect. The Norwegian himself did not take the trouble to do so
in "The Last Messiah." No reason he should, since he would first
have to imagine a new humanity, which is not as a practice done
outside of fiction, a medium of realism but not of reality.
Yet these new humans would not have to be super-evolved
or otherwise freakish organisms living far in the future. They
would only have to be like Zapffe in recognizing that a retreat
from the worldly scene would be a benevolent proceeding for
the good of the unborn. Becoming extinct would seem to be a
tall order, but not one that would be insurmountably time
consuming. Zapffe optimistically projected that those of the
new humanity could be evacuated from existence over the
course of a few generations. And indeed they could. As their
numbers tapered off, these dead-enders of our species could be
the most privileged individuals in history and share with one
another material comforts once held in trust only for the well
born or money-getting classes of the world. Since personal eco
nomic gain would be passe as a motive for the new humanity,
there would be only one defensible incitement to work: to see
one another through to the finish, a project that would keep
everyone busy and not just staring into space while they waited
for the end. There might even be bright smiles exchanged
among these selfless benefactors of those who would never be
forced to exist. And how many would speed up the process of
extinction once euthanasia was decriminalized and offered in
humane and even enjoyable ways?
What a relief, what an unburdening to have closed the book
on humankind. Yet it would not need to be slammed shut. As
long as we progressed toward a thinning of the herd, couples
could still introduce new faces into the human fold as billions
became millions and then thousands. New generations would
learn about the past, and, like those before them, feel lucky not
to have been born in times of fewer conveniences and cures,
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
although they might still play at cowboys and Indians, cops and
robbers, management and labor. The last of us could be the
very best of us who ever roamed the earth, the great exemplars
of a humanity we used to dream of becoming before we got
wise to the reality that we are just a mob always in the market
for new recruits.
Quite naturally, this depiction of an end times by an extinc
tionist covenant will seem abhorrent to those now living in
hope of a better future (not necessarily one in which glorious
progress has been made toward the alleviation of human mis
ery, but at least one that will partially exculpate them from a
depraved indifference to the harm predestined for their young) .
It may also seem a romanticized utopia, since those who pre
dict major readjustments in humanity's self-conception (Karl
Marx, et al.) often b elieve that a revolution in ethics will blos
som when their "truths" are instituted. Worse, or perhaps better
if the solution to human suffering is to be final, the idea of a
new humanity may be a smokescreen for a tyrannical oligarchy
run by militants of extinction rather than a social and psycho
logical sanctuary for a species harboring the universal goal of
delimiting its stay on earth. If Zapffe uselessly exercised himself
by formulating the thesis of "The Last Messiah," he was sharp
enough to give it a hopeless finale. Without an iota of uncer
tainty, humankind is and will always be unsuited to take charge
of its own deliverance. The delusional will forever be with us,
thereby making pain, fear, and denial of what is right in front of
our face the preferred style of living and the one that will be
passed on to countless generations.
The reception of the research of a Canadian scientist named
Michael Persinger may be seen as an indication of humanity's
genius for keeping itself locked into its old ways. In the 1 980s,
Persinger modified a motorcycle helmet to affect the magnetic
The Nightmare of Being
fields of the brain of its wearer, inducing a variety of strange
sensations. These included experiences in which subjects felt
themselves proximate to supernatural phenomena that in
cluded ghosts and gods.
Atheists used Persinger's studies to nail closed their argu
ment for the subj ectivity of anyone's sense of the supernatural.
Not to be left behind, believers wrote their own books in
which they contended that the magnetic-field-emitting motor
cycle helmet proved the existence of a god that "hard-wired"
itself into our brains. A field of study called neurotheology grew
up around this and other laboratory experiments. Even if you
can prop up a scientific theory with a cudgel of data that
should render the holy opposition unconscious, they will be
standing ready to discredit you-imprisonment, torture, and
public execution having gone the way of chastity belts.
For writers of supernatural horror the perquisite of this
deadlock is that it ensures the larger part of humanity will re
main in a state of fear, because no one can ever be certain of ei
ther his own ontological status or that of gods, demons, alien
invaders, and sundry other bugbears. A Buddhist would advise
that we forget about whether or not the bogeymen we have in
vented or divined are real. The big question is this: Are we real?
DebatabiIity
Even though Zapffe's theory is perceptible in our lives, we do
not actually have any sense, or any strong sense, that human be
ings are false and paradoxical beings, at least not yet. And if we
did, why would that mean we should go extinct and not con
tinue to live as we have all these years? One would think that
neuroscientists and geneticists would have as much reason to
head for the cliffs because little by little they have been finding
that much of our thought and behavior is attributable to neural
wiring and heredity rather than to personal control over the in-
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
dividuals we are, or think we are. But they do not feel suicide to
be mandatory just because their laboratory experiments are in
forming them that human nature may be nothing but puppet
nature. Not the slightest tingle of uncanniness or horror runs up
and down their spines, only the thrill of discovery. Most of them
reproduce and do not believe there is anything questionable in
doing so. If they could get a corpse to sit up on an operating ta
ble, they would jubilantly exclaim, "It's alive]" And so would
we. Who cares that human beings evolved from slimy materials?
We can live with that, or most of us can. Actually, we can
probably live with any conception of ourselves for quite a while
longer. Although we may have phases in which the power of
positive thinking peters out, no scientific discoveries or anything
else can get to us for long, at least not as far as we can see into
the future. As a species with consciousness, we do have our in
conveniences. Yet these are of negligible importance compared
to what it would be like to feel in our depths that we are noth
ing but human puppets-things of mistaken identity who must
live with the terrible knowledge that they are not making a go of
it on their own and are not what they once thought they were.
At this time, barely anyone can conceive of this happening--of
hitting bottom and finding to our despair that we can never
again resurrect our repressions and denials. Not until that day of
lost illusions comes, if it ever comes, will we all be competent
to conceive of such a thing. But a great many more generations
will pass through life before that happens, if it happens.
W H O G O E S THE RE ?
Uncanniness I
No philosopher has ever satisfactorily answered the following
question: "Why should there be something rather than nothing?"
It seems a fair enough question on its face. But that it should
even be asked may seem to some of us as inexplicable, even
preposterous. What the question suggests is our uneasiness with
Something. Alternatively, there is nothing troubling about
Nothing, because we cannot give it consideration. Something al
lows or necessitates our experience of the uncanny. Whether we
are speaking of something that evolved naturally or was made
by the digits and opposing thumbs of humanity, whether it is
animate or inanimate, that something may become uncanny to
us, a contravention of what we think should or should not be.
I n the same way that most of us share a general pattern of
feeling about what is right or wrong in a moral sense, we also
share a general pattern of feeling about what is right or wrong
with respect to the world and ourselves-an internal authority
that judges entities and events as within or outside of customs
of reality. In experiencing the uncanny, there is a feeling of
wrongness. A violation has transpired that alarms our internal
authority regarding how something is supposed to happen or
exist or behave. An offense against our w orld-conception or
self-conception has been committed. Of course, our internal au
thority may itself be in the wrong, perhaps because it is a fabri
cation of consciousness based on a body of laws that are written
85
86
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
only within us and not a detector of what is right or wrong in
any real sense, since nothing really is right or wrong in any real
sense. That we might be wrong about something being wrong
would in itself be wrong according to our internal authority,
which would then send out a signal of the uncanny concerning
its own wrongness that would be returned to it for another
round of signaling on the principle that everything it knows is
wrong, which is to say that Something is always wrong. For the
welfare of our functioning, however, we are insured against the
adverse effects of an ever-cycling signal of uncanny wrongness
by our inability to recognize it, although it might be going on all
the time, thus accounting for our uneasiness about Something.
But we may still perceive other phenomena to be on the wrong
side of right and wrong-things that should not happen or exist
or behave in the way we feel they should.
Even the most unexceptional things may impress us in this
way. In no time at all they may cease to be seen the way we usu
ally see them and come to be seen as something else, something
we may not be able to name. This unsteadiness of quality and
meaning in something-a puppet doll, for instance-repels our
lasting inspection of it, for the longer this inspection goes on the
more we become lost in a paradoxical state of knowing and not
knowing what was once known and familiar. And it is then that
the question "Why should there be something rather than noth
ing?" may become lost in the inexplicable, even preposterous,
ambition to resolve it without losing our minds to the uncanny.
Everyday objects seem curiously liable to being perceived as
uncanny, because we see them every day and "know" how they
should be and should not be. One day those shoes on the floor
of your clothes closet may attract your eye in a way they never
have before. Somehow they have become abstracted from your
world, appearances you cannot place, lumps of matter without a
fixed quality and meaning. You feel confused as you stare at
Who Goes There?
them. What are they? What is their nature? Why should there
be something rather than nothing? But before your conscious
ness can ask any more questions, you dial it back so that your
footwear seems familiar again and not uncanny in its being. You
select a pair of shoes to wear that day and sit down to put them
on. It is then that you notice the pair of stockings you are wear
ing and think of the feet they conceal . . . and the rest of the
body to which those concealed feet are connected . . . and the
universe in which that body is roving about with so many other
uncanny shapes. "What now?" a voice from the other side of be
ing seems to say. And what if you should look at yourself-the
most everyday object there is-and feel at a loss to attach a
quality and a meaning to what is being seen or what is seeing it.
What now indeed.
Uncanniness II
A sense of the uncanny can be activated in the average mortal
under various conditions. Principal among these conditions are
those which cause us to feel that we are not what we think we
are, which was touched on at the close of the previous section.
In his groundbreaking essay "On the Psychology of the Uncanny"
(1906), the German physician and psychologist Ernst Jentsch
analyzes this feeling and its origins. Among the examples of un
canny experience Jentsch proffers in his essay is one where indi
viduals cease to appear integrated in their identity and take on
the aspect of mechanisms, things of parts that are made as they
are made and are all clockwork processes rather than immutable
beings unchanging at their heart. As Jentsch explains:
[A] confirmation of the fact that the emotion being discussed [the
uncanny] is caused in particular by a doubt as to the animate or
inanimate nature of things--or, expressed more precisely, as to
their animatedness as understood by man's traditional view-lies
in the way in which the lay public is generally affected by the
88
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
sight of articulations of most mental and many nervous diseases.
Several patients afflicted with such troubles make a quite decid
edly uncanny impression on most people.
What we can always assume from our fellow men's experience
of ordinary life is the relative psychical harmony in which their
mental functions generally stand in relation to each other, even if
moderate deviations from this equilibrium make their appearance
occasionally in almost all of us: this behavior . . . constitutes man's
individuality and provides the foundation for our j udgment of it.
Most people do not show strong psychical peculiarities. At most,
such peculiarities become apparent when strong affects make
themselves felt, whereby it can suddenly become evident that not
everything in the human psyche is of transcendental origin, and
that much that is elementary is still present within it even for our
direct perception. It is of course often in j ust such cases that much
at present is generally accounted for quite well in terms of normal
psychology.
But if this relative psychical harmony happens markedly to be
disturbed in the spectator, and if the situation does not seem triv
ial or comic, the consequence of an unimportant incident, or if it
is not quite familiar (like an alcohol intoxication, for example),
then the dark knowledge dawns on the unschooled observer that
mechanical processes are taking place in that which he was previ
ously used to regarding as a unified psyche. It is not unj ustly that
epilepsy is therefore spoken of as the morbus sacer ["sacred dis
ease"] , as an illness not deriving from the human world but from
foreign and enigmatic spheres, for the epileptic attack of spasms
reveals the human body to the viewer-the body that under nor
mal conditions is so meaningful, expedient, and unitary, function
ing according to the directions of his consciousness-as an
immensely complicated and delicate mechanism. This is an im
portant cause of the epileptic fit's ability to produce such a de
monic effect on those who see it. (Translation by Roy Sellars)
The brilliance of Jentsch's example is that it explicates the un
canny not as an obj ective quality of something in the outside
world, but as a subjective experience of a perceiver of the out
side world. This is how it is in real life: The uncanny is an effect
Who Goes There?
89
of our minds-and nothing else. And yet, at least for the aver
age onlooker in this case, the uncanny effectively originates in
an objective stimulus, something that seems to have about it a
power of its own. In the example given, the objective stimulus
is an animate individual observed as behaving against "animat
edness as understood by man's traditional view," the offender
here being an epileptic exhibiting unusual bodily motions in the
midst of a seizure. The subjective reaction to the seemingly ob
j ective stimulus of the uncanny is the gaining of "dark knowl
edge" about the workings of individuals, including the onlooker
of the epileptic in the midst of a seizure. More expansively
stated, not only is the epileptic perceived as uncanny by the
onlooker (unless the onlooker is a physician who understands
epileptic seizures by the lights of modern medicine and not ac
cording to a "traditional view") but the onlooker also perceives
himself as uncanny because he has been made conscious of the
mechanical nature of all human bodies and, by extrapolation, of
the fact that "mechanical processes are taking place in that
which he was previously used to regarding as a unified psyche."
Neuroscientists are now familiar with some of these mechanical
processes, as was Zapffe, who wrote in "The Last Messiah": "All
things chain together in causes and effects, and everything
[man] wants to grasp dissolves before the testing thought. Soon
he sees mechanics even in the so-far whole and dear, in the
smile of his beloved." The knowledge that we are not the ideal
ized beings we thought, integral and undivided, does frighten
some people, including physicians and neuroscientists. Y et even
though we are not as we usually perceive ourselves to be, we
can still continue in our accustomed ways if only we can quash
the sense of being uncanny mechanisms in a w orld of things
that may be transformed anytime and anywhere. Such quashing
is not often a problem in the so-called real world. But it must be
a problem in the world of supernatural horror.
go
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
Artistic invocations of horror are most successful when the
phenomena they depict call up the uncanny, which, unlike
Jentsch's example of seeing someone having an epileptic sei
zure, are genuinely threatening both from the outside and from
within. This species of horror can only be provoked when the
supernatural is conjoined with the uncanny, because not even
physicians and neuroscientists can be comfortable with super
naturalism, either by the lights of modern medicine or by any
other lights. Bloodthirsty vampires and ravenous zombies are
prime examples in this context, because their intrinsic super
naturalism as the undead makes them objectively uncanny
things that generate subjectively uncanny sensations. They are
uncanny in themselves because they once were human but
have undergone a terrible rebirth and become mechanisms with
a single function-to survive for survival's sake. Necessarily,
they also inspire a subjective sense of the uncanny in those who
perceive them because they divulge the "dark knowledge" that
human beings are also things made as they are made and may
be remade because they are only clockwork processes, mecha
nisms, rather than immutable beings unchanging at their heart.
As uncanny mechanisms, vampires and zombies usually per
form the mechanical act of reproduction with no weighty de
liberation, or none at all-the replication their kind being
epiphenomena! to the controlling urge that drives them. This
second consequence completes the requirements of a super
natural horror story to present a phenomenon that poses an un
canny threat from both outside and from within, which is the
ultimate threat to ordinary folk who only want to live in a
world and in a way that is natural and familiar to them and
their families, even though they are darkly aware that this fa
miliarity is a fabrication that may be invalidated.
Both requirements of the uncanny are recognizable in such
horror films as Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1 9 5 6; remakes
Who Goes There?
91
1 9 78 and 2007) and John Carpenter's The Thing (1 982) , which
belong only negligibly to the genre of science fiction and solidly
to that of supernatural horror as cognate w ith the uncanny. In
the former classic of cinema, human beings are replaced by
physical doubles of themselves by an alien power-something
pernicious, in Jentsch's analysis of the lay person's perception of
epilepsy, "not deriving from the human world but from foreign
and enigmatic spheres." What business does this alien power
have on our p lanet? It has come to protract the survival of its
kind by recreating itself in our image. And that says all we need
to know about its mechanics and intentions: They are the same
as o urs, only they threaten to replace the survival and reproduc
tion of our species with the survival and reproduction of theirs.
The methodology of this alien power is to make duplicates of
us after we fall asleep, so that we will never again awaken as
ourselves b ut will be transformed into another sort of being al
together. Due to these transformations, everyone who has not
been taken by the Body Snatchers suffers from two appalling
uncertainties. One is that any other person may not be what
they seem to be--human. The other is that they themselves
will also be transformed once they go to sleep. But unlike be
coming a vampire or a zombie, neither being a desirable state of
being, our transformation into Body Snatchers, which, despite
the pluralization in the film title, seem to be parts of a hive
rather than uniquely individuated entities, does not look too
bad, objectively speaking. Once absorbed by the alien power,
the converted lose all the qualities they had as humans except
for one--that of contentment, or happiness if you like. They
become quietists in their existence, which in the film appears
the last thing that human beings want, preferring the agitations
of the life they know . This reaction is understandable. No one
wants to be other than they are, or think they are. That is a fate
worse than death: the transformation in which you stop being
92
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
you. And better to die than to live in an assimilated condition,
even one that is permanently collected and reassuring rather
than vulnerable to the startling and dreadful. Our sense of the
uncanny is too ingrained in us as beings that may not be what
we think we are, but who will hold on for dear life to survive
and reproduce as our own species and not that of some alien
power.
John Carpenter's The Thing is quite similar in its ontological
scheme to Invasion of the Body Snatchers. The motivations of the
Thing are the same as those of the Body Snatchers-to survive
and reproduce. Only its method is different, which results in a
somewhat greater degree of uncanniness in this film than in the
earlier one. Because the title creature has the ability to remake it
self as any and all life forms without their knowledge, the charac
ters in the film cannot be sure who is a "thing" and who is not,
since those who are transmuted retain their former appearance,
memories, and behaviors even after they have become, in their
essence, uncanny monstrosities from another world This situation
leaves the members of an Antarctic research station-in the vi
cinity of which the Thing's spacecraft crash-landed long ago-
doubtful about which of them is a thing and which are still the
individuals they seem to be. Naturally, those at the Antarctic sta
tion are invested in repressing any consciousness that they are
things, just as those who witness someone in the midst of an epi
leptic seizure are invested in thinking they are not things of parts
that are made as they are made and are all clockwork processes
rather than immutable beings unchanging at their heart. By isola
tion (putting this possibility out of their minds), the latter can
maintain their sense of being idealized beings, integral and undi
vided, and not mechanisms-human puppets who do not know
themselves as such. They can also distract themselves from any
petrifying news about human beings by watching films in which
all of the characters suffer an uncanny doom that could not possi-
Who Goes There?
93
bly have relevance to real life, since it is represented as an inva
sion from "foreign and enigmatic spheres" they believe have no
place in our world, where we know who we are and who every
one else is-members of a species that exists to survive and re
produce, ordinary folk w ho have nothing to do with
supernaturalism and the uncanny and who are resistant to the
pessimism of fictions like Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The
Thing, whose principals all suffer death or deformation in their
fight to hang on to their lives and their humanity.
In protest to the mentality of ordinary folk, let us again call
on the incorrigibly pixilated Professor Nobody. In his "Pessi
mism and Supernatural Horror-Lecture One," he accommo
dates us with a rejoinder to the average, optimistic mortal and
helps us recall some of the main themes of the present work.
Madness, chaos, bone-deep mayhem, devastation of innumerable
souls-while we scream and perish, History licks a finger and
turns the page. Fiction, unable to compete with the world for viv
idness of pain and lasting effects of fear, compensates in its own
way. How? By inventing more bizarre means to outrageous ends.
Among these means, of course, is the supernatural. In transform
ing natural ordeals into supernatural ones, we find the strength to
affirm and deny their horror simultaneously, to savor and suffer
them at the same time.
So it is that supernatural horror is a possession of a profoundly
divided species of being. It is not a property held by even our
closest relations in the wholly natural world. We came into it, as
part of our gloomy inheritance, when we became what we are.
Once awareness of the human predicament was achieved, we
immediately took off in two directions, splitting ourselves down
the middle. One half became dedicated to apologetics, even cele
bration, of our new toy of consciousness. The other half con
demned and occasionally launched direct assaults on this "gift."
Supernatural horror was one of the ways we found that would
allow us to live with our double selves. By its employ, we discov
ered how to take all the things that victimize us in our natural
lives and turn them into the very stuff of demonic delight in our
94
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E H U MAN RACE
fantasy lives. In story and song, we could entertain ourselves with
the worst we could think of, overwriting real pains with ones that
were unreal and harmless to our species. We can also do this trick
without trespassing on the real estate of supernatural horror, but
then we risk running into miseries too close to home. While hor
ror may make us squirm or quake, it will not make us c ry at the
pity of things. The vampire may symbolize our horror of both life
and death, but none of us has ever been uprooted by a symbol.
The zombie may conceptualize our sickness of the flesh and its
appetites, but no one has ever been sickened to death by a con
cept. By means of supernatural horror we may pull our own
strings of fate without collapsing-natural-born puppets whose
lips are painted with our own blood.
Actors
Within the strictures of commonsense reality and personal abil
ity, we can choose to do anything we like in this world . . . w ith
one exception: We cannot choose what any of our choices will
be. To do that, we would have to be capable of making our
selves into self-made individuals who can choose what they
choose as opposed to being individuals who simply make
choices. For instance, we may want to become bodybuilders
and choose to do so. But if we do not w ant to become body
builders we cannot make ourselves into someone who does
want to be a bodybuilder. For that to happen, there would have
to be another self inside us who made us choose to want to be
come bodybuilders. And inside that self, there would have to
be still another self who made that self want to choose to
choose to make us w ant to become bodybuilders. This se
quence of choosing, being interminable, would result in the
paradox of an infinite number of selves beyond which there is a
self making all the choices. The foregoing position is based in a
strain of philosophical thought called determinism and is here
stated in one of its strongest forms. British philosopher Galen
Who Goes There?
95
Strawson describes this position, which is his own as a determi
nist, as pessimistic. ("Luck Swallows Everything," Times Literary
Supplement, June 28, i 99 8.) It is pessimist because it turns the
human image into a puppet image. And a puppet image of hu
manity is one of the hallmarks of pessimism.
Those who most vehemently oppose the pessimistic form
of determinism are libertarian indeterminists. They hold that
we have absolute free will and can make ourselves into indi
viduals who can choose to want to make a certain choice and
not some other. They hold that we are what Michelstaedter de
spaired we could ever become: individuals who are invulnera
bly self-possessed and not the products of an indeterminable
series of events and conditions that result in our being able to
make only one choice and not any number of choices, because
factors beyond our control have already taken care of who we
are as individuals and what choices we will finally make.
In the history of philosophical lucubration, arguments for de
terminism are traditionally the most argued against. Why is this
so, aside from the fact that it turns the human image into a
puppet image? It is so because arguments for determinism step
on the sacrosanct belief in moral responsibility. Even the aver
age atheist draws the line whenever someone says that we do
not have any degree of freedom and that moral responsibility is
not a reality. As die-hard unbelievers, they may reject the posi
tion that moral laws descend from a higher plane unperceived
by our senses; as tax-paying citizens, however, they still need to
live by sublunary standards of civility. And this can be done
only if free will and moral realism are the law of the land.
Of course, there are rare cases when a wrongdoer's malfea
sance is determined to be the result of determining forces. Then
free will and moral responsibility are waived, and the defendant
is either sent to a psychiatric hospital rather than a prison or
96
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
gets off scot-free because a certain judge and jury in a certain
society temporarily became strong determinists without a sense
of moral realism, thereby turning the human image of a defen
dant into a puppet image. But this is highly irregular. In the
normal course of events, both determinists and indeterminists
are one in promoting some kind of operative morality. As
guardians of our morale, they feel moral realism to be a neces
sary truth, whether it is objectively real, as it is to indetermi
nists, or subjectively "real," as it is to determinists. Without this
truth, or "truth," we could not go on living as we always have
and believe that being alive is all right.
It does not seem wildly improbable that determinations
have been made in our psyches that make some people deter
minists and others indeterminists. If we could only know how
these determinations work, we would be able to answer the
only interesting question in the debate pitting free will against
determinism: Why argue for one side or the other? The answer
to this question would abort all rivalry in this matter, since it
would bring to light the reason why any philosopher would en
gage in a conflict more vain than most in his discipline. But
should we ever get an answer to this question, the repercus
sions would far override matters of moral realism or "realism."
Really, there would only be one repercussion: to reduce all phi
losophical proclivities to the psychology of the individuals who
exhibit them. In his Metaphilosophy and Free Will (1 996) 1 Rich
ard Double speaks of analytic philosophers whose writing is
protective of free will.
Although this type of free will writing pays dividends in terms of
precision, it has its disadvantages. First, we may lose sight of the
philosophical forest for the technical trees. Second, and following
from the first, we may collect psychological consolation at the ex
pense of candor. By submerging ourselves in the nuances of theo
ries, we may avert our attention from the big, scary questions. An
Who Goes There?
97
attention to detail can be an exercise in bad faith when it uses up
our time and energies so that we do not bother to question
whether what we are trying to do is possible. Meticulous preci
sion can enable us to remain happy and engaged at the expense of
averting our eyes from the disturbing big picture.
Perhaps one day cognitive psychologists will settle once and for all
why an individual would argue for either free will or determin
ism. Studies might also be conducted on those who cling to one
side or the other of any philosophical question. This may not ad
vance any philosophical questions, although it might make them
disappear once the argumentative motives behind them have
been determined.
In the everyday world, no such thing as an out-and-out deter
minist ever existed, since none can shake off a sense of having
free will. The best we can do is to reason that we are deter
mined based on observing the common law of causality among
things in the world and applying this law to ourselves. But we
cannot feel ourselves as determined. (One philosopher has said,
and possibly more have thought to themselves: "Can one really
believe in determinism without going insane?") Being deter
mined in thought and deed is not experientially noticeable, only
abstractly deducible. It would be impossible for someone to say
"I am nothing but a human puppet." The only exception would
be an individual with a psychological disease that had induced
in him the sense of being controlled by an alien force. Should
this individual say "I am nothing but a human puppet," he
would forthwith be marched to the nearest psychiatric hospital,
conceivably overtaken by the horror of feeling he was a human
puppet controlled by an alien force working outside him or
within him or both.
The extent to which any of us is determined in thought and
deed may be logically argued but cannot be known by first
hand experience. Determinists are only too aware that if free
98
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
will is illusory on paper, it is insuperable in our lives. To hate
our illusions or hold them dear only lashes us to them more
tautly. We cannot stand up to them without our world falling
apart, for those who care. And those who really care cannot be
anything but believers in some form of moral realism or "real
ism," which buttresses the optimistic reality that most people
call home and braces up everything you need in order to be
you-your country, your loved ones, your job or vocation, your
golf clubs, and, in an all around sense, your "way of life."
Impersonation
In the free will debate, the reality, or "reality," of free will is
something of an irrelevancy, since it is a parasite of the feeling
we each have of being or possessing a self (often capitalized) .
This self is an intangible entity that is spoken of as if it were an
extra internal organ, yet to every one of us it seems more than
the sum of our anatomical parts. Everything comes back to the
self and must come back to the self, for it is the utmost issue in
our deciding whether we are something or nothing, people or
puppets. Without the sense of being or possessing a self, there
would be no use disputing whether or not we are free, deter
mined, or somewhere in between. Why we have a sense of self
has been variously explained. (For one explanation, see the next
section in this chapter.) Having this sense is what brings the
free-will-versus-determinism debate to the table. Even further,
it is what brings everything to the table, or at least to the table
of human existence, because nothing else that exists has a sense
of being a self that can do or not do anything at will.
You can reason that you do not have a self and that your be
havior is determined, but if you feel that you are or possess a
self, then you will probably have a time of it denying responsi
bility for every thought that passes through your brain or the
slightest movement of your little toe. Yet there is a problem
Who Goes There?
99
with the feeling of responsibility, because sometimes you feel
responsible for something that you cannot, by any logic or
physical law, be held responsible for. When someone dies of an
undiagnosed case of liver cancer not long after he punches you
in the stomach, you cannot say, "That's what he gets for messing
with me." Yet people do say such things in such circumstances.
Nevertheless, they can usually be brought to their senses about
feeling somehow responsible for the death by unrelated causes
of someone who has punched them in the stomach.
More often, though, an individual cannot be brought to his
senses when he feels responsible for something that he cannot,
by any logic or physical law, be held responsible for. For exam
ple, you call up a friend or a relative to help you fix your toilet,
and while driving over to your place to do this he is hit by an
eighteen-wheel truck and dies. It would not be out of the ordi
nary if you felt responsible for your friend or relative's death for
the reason that if you had not called him up to help fix your toi
let he would not have been on the road at that time and gotten
killed in a collision with an eighteen-wheel truck. Under these
circumstances, your friends and relatives who are still alive may
find it difficult to convince you of your non-responsibility in the
death of your friend or relative who died in a vehicular misad
venture. There may be any number of factors involved in that
fatal collision, but you could still feel that the only factor worth
consideration was your calling up your friend or relative to drive
over to your place when he would otherwise have been doing
something you had nothing to do with. You would be mistaken
to feel this way, of course, but just because you can reason that
you are mistaken would not in itself make you feel any less re
sponsible for what happened. And you may mistakenly take that
feeling of terrible responsibility to your grave, because you were
the self who called another self to come to your place to help fix
your toilet. You might just as well blame your toilet for going
100
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
out of order when it did, or blame any number of causes back to
the beginning of time as much as blame yourself. The thing is
this: If you can be mistaken in attributing to yourself responsibil
ity, or anything more than a bare trace of causal responsibility,
you can also be mistaken about other things, such as being a self
with free will. But if you feel that you are or possess a self, then
you will probably have a time of it denying responsibility for
every thought that passes through your brain or the slightest
movement of your little toe.
Other people may try to console you for your friend or rela
tive' s death by saying that this atrocious event was not your fault.
They may also surreptitiously blame you for it, as people some
times blame those who have had a heart attack for being lax in
following the unhealthy injunction to watch your health. But it is
quite possible you will disbelieve anyone who says you are not to
blame for your friend or relative's death in a vehicular misadven
ture, perhaps because you can tell that they surreptitiously blame
you for it. But that is inconsequential. As someone who feels he
is a self, you will likely as not feel responsible for things you
could not by any logic or physical law take responsibility for, or
no more than a bare trace of causal responsibility. This is not
even to consider circumstances in which you may feel morally
responsible for something that happens when by rights you
should not feel this way. And here is where the feeling of being a
self with free will really comes in.
Say you asked your friend or relative to help fix your toilet
not because you needed help fixing your toilet but because you
wanted to get back at him for asking you to help him move
into his new house the week before when he could have called
a moving company, as you did when you moved into your new
house, and saved you from having your little toe broken when a
heavy piece of furniture fell on it during the move. Morally, in
conveniencing your friend or relative just to get back at him for
Who Goes There?
101
the reasons stated i n the previous sentence w a s not the right
thing to do, or so you feel after your friend or relative's car
crashed when it collided with an eighteen-wheel truck in an
explosive vehicular misadventure. You did not mean for that to
happen. You were just looking for some petty form of payback,
some kind of reprisal for the pain of your broken toe--a nd not
even a proportionate reprisal, nor anything illegal or particularly
immoral, as these things go. Good luck, though, if you try to
feel you were not responsible in an intensely moral sense for
your friend or relative's vehicular misadventure. You could rea
son that your part in this misfortune was causally determined
and not your fault. But if you feel that you are or possess a self
then you will probably have a time of it denying responsibility
for what happened. If you did not feel this way, what kind of
person would that make you, assuming you still felt yourself a
person and not some monstrous thing?
What is most uncanny about the self is that no one has yet
been able to present the least evidence of it. Like the soul, that
figure of speech which has long since been snickered out of ex
istence, the self may be felt but never be found. It is a spectral
tapeworm that takes its reality from a host organism and grows
along with the physical matter in which it is encased. It may
even grow beyond its material confines. Some believe that a Big
Self enfolds all our little selves. Far fewer, or none, believe that
little selves can have littler selves or play host to a number of
self-contained selves. Do infants have selves? Fetuses? When do
we get a self and can we lose it or have it taken away from us?
Putting nonsense aside, some of us are surer than others of our
selves. And how many of us want nothing so badly as to be a
self- made somebody?
Without a relentless sense of the self, the person, we could
not live as we have all these years. Were a personal god to be
1 02
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
excluded from everyone's universe, persons would still retain
their status. Sensory perceptions, memories, aches, ecstasies: Be
cause these phenomena occur inside the same sack of skin, we
suppose that we are enduring, continuous entities, things that
serve as the infrastructure for war, romance, athletic competi
tion, and every other genre of human activity. We do not just
have experiences-we own them. That is what it means to be a
person. No quibbling, everyone who is anyone holds this article
of faith, even those who, like the eighteenth-century Scottish
philosopher David Hume, have done a good job of logically
dismantling the reality of selves. But logic cannot exorcise that
"I" (ego) which stares back at you in the mirror, just as logic
cannot remove the illusion of free will. When someone says she
has not been feeling her old self, our thoughts turn to psychol
ogy, not metaphysics. To reason or to hold as an article of faith
that the self is an illusion may help us to step around the worst
pitfalls of the ego, but mitigation is light-years from liberation.
To all human beings, or almost all (see the section Ego
Death in this chapter) , we seem to be the most real thing going.
No one can say with assurance what the world outside of us is
like, but inside us we feel self-assured. How does this occur? So
far, no one knows. Cognitive psychologists, philosophers of
mind, and neuroscientists have their theories, of course, among
them those that argue for temporary selves and selves over
time, psychophysical selves, neurological selves, objective
selves, subjective selves, social selves, transcendent selves, the
self as a process and not a "thing," the simultaneous existence
and nonexistence of the self. But these and many other self
concepts leave the self as we have always known and experi
enced it, intact and unharmed. We will all, or almost all, still
feel that we are or possess an old-fashioned self. Thus, cognitive
psychologists, philosophers of mind, and neuroscientists who
extend theories that the self does not exist as we have always
Who Goes There?
103
believed are not saying that the self does not exist; they are only
spreading complex self-constructions that save the self from
anyone's questioning its existence. And those who try to prove
that selves do not look out at the world from behind our eye
balls might as well be telling us that we have been snatched by
the Body Snatchers or coalesced into the Thing.
Within the hierarchy of fabrications that compose our lives
families, countries, gods-the self incontestably ranks highest.
Just below the self is the family, which has proven itself more
durable than national or ethnic affiliations, with these in turn
outranking god-figures for their staying power. So any progress
toward the salvation of humankind will probably begin from
the bottom-when our gods have been devalued to the status
of refrigerator magnets or lawn ornaments. Following the death
rattle of deities, it would appear that nations or ethnic commu
nities are next in line for the boneyard. Only after fealty to
countries, gods, and families has been shucked off can we even
think about coming to grips with the least endangered of fabri
cations-the self. However, this hierarchy may change in time
as science makes inroads regarding the question of selfhood,
which, if the findings are negative, could reverse the progres
sion, with the extinction of the self foretelling that of families,
national and ethnic affiliations, and gods. After all, the quintes
sential sequence by which we free ourselves from our selves
and our institutions is still that depicted in the Buddha legend.
Born a prince, so the story goes, the nascent Enlightened One,
Siddhartha Gautama, embarked on a quest to neutralize his ego
by first leaving behind his family, gods, and sociopolitical sta
tion-all in one stroke. But Buddha's way requires a near inhu
man dedication, and few of us have that kind of stamina. This
being so, a speedy and efficient breakdown of fabrications hav
ing a worldwide ambit seems remote without the intercession
1 04
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
of science, which could at some future date provide a vaccina
tion against the development of "selves" after models already in
use to wipe out certain diseases.
Perhaps the only matter of interest about the self is this:
Whatever makes us think that we are what we think we are
lies in the fact that we have consciousness, which gives us a
sense of being somebody, specifically a human somebody,
whatever that may be, since we do not have a definition of
"human" on which there is universal agreement. But we do
agree that, if only in practice, we are all real-live selves, since
we are all self-conscious. And once we have passed through
every door that qualifies our selves in some way-be it by
name, nationality, occupation, gender, or shoe size--w e then
stand before the door of consciousness-parent of all horrors.
And that is all there is to our existence.
No creature caged in a zoo even knows what it is to exist,
nor does it crow about being superior to another kind of thing,
whether animal, vegetable, or mineral. As for us humans, we
reek of our sense of being special. Those hailed as the most con
scious among us-the ones needful of a refined type of brain
washing--have made investigations into what it means to be
human. Their divergent ramblings on this subject keep our brains
buzzing while our bodies go the way of surviving and reproduc
ing-being alive that is, since we do not especially consider the
alternative. That being human might mean something very
strange and awful, something quite uncanny, is not given a pass
ing thought. If it were, who knows what would happen to us?
We could disappear in a puff of smoke or fall through a mirror
that has nothing on the other side. Naturally, such possibilities do
not lift our spirits the way we need them to be lifted if we are to
continue to live as we have all these years.
Who Goes There?
1 05
Non entities
At the forefront of current studies in selfism and egology, the
field of neuroscience has made unmistakable headway. In Being
No One (200 4) , for example, the German neurophilosopher
Thomas Metzinger provides a theory of how the brain manufac
tures the subjective sense of our existence as discrete "selves,"
even though, as Metzinger explains, we would be more rigor
ously categorized as information-processing systems for which it
is expedient in an existential sense to create the illusion of "being
someone." In Metzinger's schema, a human being is not a "per
son" but a mechanistically functioning "phenomenal self-model"
that simulates a person. The reason we cannot detect these mod
els is that we see through them, and so cannot see the processes
of the models themselves.1 If we could, we would know there is
nothing to us but these models. This might be called "Metzinger's
Paradox": You cannot know what you really are because then
you would know there is nothing to know and nothing to know
it. (What now?) So rather than be know-nothings, we exist in a
condition of what Metzinger describes as "na'ive realism," with
things not being knowable as they really are in themselves, some
thing every scientist and philosopher knows.
The above sketch of Metzinger's central thesis is transpar
ently inadequate, although necessarily so in the present context.
By his reasoning and intuitions concerning the nature and work
ings of consciousness, Metzinger has no equal in his field and
impresses one as a thinker whose speculative investigations will
someday prove to be the way of reality. By argument and analy
sis, he has taken consciousness studies as far as possible by the
resources available in the early twenty-first century. The project
M etzinger has taken upon himself is precisely of the kind whose
import is not restricted to the halls of science but is pursued for
the far-reaching implications it may have with regard to the life
of the average mortal. That said, the following discussion of
106
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
Metzinger has an ulterior purpose having little to do with the
value of his theories.
In his essay "The Shadow of a Puppet Dance: Metzinger, Ligotti
and the Illusion of Selfhood" (Collapse IV, May 2008) , James
Trafford breaks down Metzinger's Paradox as follows: "The ob
ject 'man' consists of tightly packed layers of simulation, for
which naive realism becomes a necessary prophylactic in order
to ward off the terror concomitant with the destruction of our
intuitions regarding ourselves and our status in the world: 'Con
scious subj ectivity is the case in which a single organism has
learned to enslave itself "' The closing quote from Metzinger's
Being No One might be seen as an extension of Zapffe's Para
dox, by dint of which we repress from our consciousness all
that is startling and dreadful in our lives. For Metzinger, this re
pression takes the form of the aforesaid naive realism, which
masks the single most startling and dreadful revelation for hu
man beings: that we are not what we think we are. Assuaging
our qualms about such a deplorable enlightenment, Metzinger
avers that it is "practically impossible" for us to attain realiza
tion of our unreality due to inbuilt manacles of human percep
tion that keep our minds in a dream state.
An interesting fact that seems relevant to Metzinger's study
of the illusion of selves is the following: Metzinger is a lucid
dreamer. His treatise Being No One contains an entire chapter
on the knack of being able to "wake up" in one's dreams and
recognize that one's consciousness is operating within an illusory
zone created by the brain. In that aspect of our lives where we
have no say in what happens and are free to choose nothing, the
lucid dreamer is no one's fool, or at least not his own. He has
peeked behind the curtain of what his consciousness has made
and seen through its tricks and traps. This faculty might very
well explain Metzinger's inquisitiveness about the nature of
Who Goes There?
107
waking perception and the possibility that, as Poe wrote: "All
that we see or seem I Is but a dream within a dream." These
lines sum up the argument of Being No One--that we sleep in
the self and cannot awake. Yet at the close of this 6 99 -page
work, following hard upon an examination of how and why
human beings evolved in such a way that we believe we are
someone while actually being no one, there seems to be some
hedging. "At least in principle," Metzinger writes, "one can wake
up from one's biological history. One can grow up, define one's
own goals, and become autonomous." So imponderably nebu
lous, the meaning of these sentences can only be guessed at,
since Metzinger leaves them hanging in the air. One is unreserv
edly stymied as to how this transformation could occur in terms
of Metzinger's theory and research. Did he wrap up his treatise
prematurely? Does he know something he is not telling us? Or
did he just want to end a disillusioning book on an up note?
The same year that he published Being No One , Metzinger
further clouded the issue. In a lecture at the University of Cali
fornia, Berkeley, he referred to our captivity in the illusion of a
self-even though "there is no one" to have this illusion-as
"the tragedy of the ego." This phrase fits like a glove into Zap
ffe' s theory of consciousness as a tragic blunder. Disappoint
ingly, Metzinger goes on to say that "the tragedy of the ego
dissolves because nobody is ever born and nobody ever dies."
This statement is borrowed from Zen Buddhism (the Heart Su
tra) and loses something when translated from a monastery to a
university lecture hall. In traditions of enlightenment, the only
redress for our fear of death is to wake up to our brain's manu
factured sense of self and thus eliminate what we mistakenly
think we are before it is too late. But Metzinger's mission as a
scientist-philosopher has been to shed light on the neurological
mechanisms that make this goal unfeasible. Why, then, does
Metzinger speak to his auditors about the "tragedy of the ego,"
108
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
which in all probability none of them thought to be a tragedy
before coming to his lecture, and how it "dissolves because no
body is ever born and nobody ever dies"? He seems to be trying
to alleviate any fears they might have about their death at the
same time he is telling them that they do not exist in the first
place. Either way, something is lost that everyone cannot help
wanting to hold on to, tragic as that may be. Metzinger's whole
routine seems to be based in the same kind of paradoxical dou
b le-talk that the world already lives by so as to deny the suffer
ing it must endure and to continue to believe that
consciousness is not a problem and that being alive is all right.
But let us not jump to conclusions. In an online forum in
which some of the most prestigious figures in consciousness
studies responded to Nicolas Humphrey's "A Self Worth Hav
ing," where, as quoted earlier, Humphrey says that conscious
ness is a "wonderfully good thing in its own right," Metzinger
sums up his own position on this subject. Here he tolls the
same bell as Zapffe when he writes:
It is not at all clear if the biological form of consciousness, as so far
brought about by evolution on our planet, is a desirable form of
experience, an actual good in itself . . .
The theoretical blind spot of current philosophy of mind is the
issue of conscious suffering: Thousands of pages are being written
about color qualia or the contents of thought, but almost no theo
retical work is devoted to ubiquitous phenomenal states like hu
man
suffering
or
simple
everyday
sadness
("subclinical
depression") , or to the phenomenal content associated with panic,
despair and melancholy-let alone to the conscious experience of
mortality or of losing one's dignity . . . .
The ethical-normative issue is of greater relevance. If one dares
to take a closer look at the actual phenomenology of biological
systems on our planet, the many different kinds of conscious suf
fering are at least as dominant a feature as are color vision or con
scious thought, both of which appeared only very recently.
Evolution is not something to be glorified. One way-out of
Who Goes There?
109
countless others-to look at biological evolution on our planet is
as a process that has created an expanding ocean of suffering and
confusion where there previously was none. As not only the sim
ple number of individual conscious subjects, but also the dimen
sionality of their phenomenal state-spaces is continuously
increasing, this ocean is also deepening. For me, this is also a strong
argument against creating artificial consciousness: We shouldn't
add to this terrible mess before we have truly understood what
actually is going on here. (Metzinger's emphasis)
Why the disparity in both the tone and substance between
Metzinger's conclusion of his book and Berkeley lecture and his
online exchange with his colleagues? One could speculate that
he felt more comfortable expressing his misgivings about the
evolution of human consciousness in a cyber-convocation of his
peers than in his high-profile opus and public appearances. In
the former outlet, he pulls no punches when he says, " [T] here
are aspects of the scientific world-view which may be damaging
to our mental well-being, and that is what everybody intuitively
feels" (Metzinger's emphasis; quoted in Trafford) . This is a
breathtaking statement for a well-credentialed philosopher to
make (as was his inquiry quoted earlier about whether someone
could really believe in determinism without going insane) .
What else could Metzinger mean by this utterance other than
that well-used caveat of horror fiction that we are in danger of
knowing things we were not meant to know ? And the worst pos
sible thing we could know-worse than knowing of our de
scent from a mass of microorganisms-is that we are nobodies
not somebodies, puppets not people.
In a later book, The Ego Tunnel: The Science of the Mind
and the Myth of the Self (20 09) , Metzinger confronts the prob
lems involved with breaking the news to the average mortal
that he or she is actually an average phenomenal self-model and
not a person. He wants to assure people that this is not a secret
too terrible to know but a truth that will set us free to be bet-
110
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
ter human beings--once we settle on "What is a human being?"
(since to Metzinger we are not what we think we are) and once
we decide "what should a human become?" which is a knotty
issue in light of how this decision should be made and who
should make it. One of Metzinger's fears is that some people
will sink into what he contemns as vulgar materialism" and will
conclude there is nothing for them in this life but survival, re
production, and death, with the wise guys of the world saying
to themselves in Metzinger's imagined soliloquy: "I don't under
stand what all these neuroexperts and consciousness philoso
phers are talking about, but the upshot seems pretty clear to
me. The cat is out of the bag: We are gene-copying bio-robots,
living out here on a lonely planet in a cold and empty physical
universe . . . . I get the message, and you had better believe I will
adjust my behavior to it." This strategy seems to be that of "he
roic pessimists" like Miguel de Unamuno (see above), Joshua
Foa Dienstag (see above) , William Brashear (see above), Frie
drich Nietzsche (see below) , and any number of others who are
already in the know. It is surely the strategy that Zapffe ob
served everyone to be following, the strategy that we must fol
low if we are to go on living as paradoxical beings who know
the score but tamp down their consciousness to keep from
knowing it too well. And it works well enough to keep us liv
ing as we have all these years. But could the vulgar materialist
actually say that he or she is aware of being no one as a fact and
still go on to pretend that he or she is someone? Would this not
be another version of Metzinger's asking "Can one really believe
in determinism without going insane?" Would such a mental
state not only be "practically impossible" but totally impossible,
just as it would be impossible for someone to say "I am nothing
but a human puppet" and continue to live as he or she had
lived before? It does not seem likely that you could ever see
yourself as what you are per Metzinger. You would then know
Who Goes There?
111
the horror and know that you know it: that you are nothing but
a human puppet would not be impossible to believe. What
now? Answer: Now you go insane. Now our species goes ex
tinct in great epidemics of madness, because now we know that
behind the scenes of life there is something pernicious that
makes a nightmare of our world. Now we know that we are
uncanny paradoxes. We know that nature has veered into the
supernatural by fabricating a creature that cannot and should
not exist by natural law, and yet does.
Metzinger's derision of vulgar materialism seems to rest on
his optimistic belief that a future technology of consciousness
will take us places where the "biological form of consciousness,
as so far brought about by evolution on our planet" has not
taken us. Beautiful and wonderful places, in Metzinger's admit
tedly well-informed and extraordinarily humane opinion. If we
do not yet know what it is to be human, we have a ballpark
idea of what it is to be humane. And Metzinger's preoccupation
with the suffering of sentient beings matches that of any pessi
mist. The only difference is in his opinion of how we may
eliminate or greatly ameliorate this suffering. In any event,
while Metzinger has been audacious enough to state that "there
are aspects of the scientific world-view which may be damaging
to our mental well-being, and that is what everybody intuitively
feels," he himself feels that everybody may not always feel that
way and that the risk-benefit calculation will add up in our fa
vor. What else could a neurophilosopher believe--that we
.
should give up on ourselves and go extinct? Metzinger must
have faith that once the rest of humanity has seen through the
game, we will-in all sincerity and not as pretenders-play
through to a world in which day by day, in every way, we are
getting better and better. But that will take time--lots of it.
Even in the twenty-first century there are people who are
incapable of abiding Darwin's theory unless they can reconcile
1 12
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
it with their Creator and His design. Losing hold of these
shielding eidolons would make them honor-bound to become
unhinged, so they might say, because the world as they knew it
would molder away in their palsied arms. Unprepared to re
ceive the evidence, they run from it as any dreamer runs from a
horror at his heels. They think that when this horror closes in
on them they will die of madness to see its shape and know the
touch of what they believe should not be. No doubt they
would survive the experience, as so many have done before
them. We have already weathered torrents of knowledge we
were not meant to know yet were doomed to know. But how
much more can we take? How will the human race feel about
knowing that there is no human race--that there is no one?
Would this be the end of the greatest horror tale ever told? Or
might it be the reinstatement of the way things had been before
we had lives of our own? For now, those who cannot abide
even Darwin's theory w ithout the Creator beside them seem to
be safe. To quote Lovecraft on the subject of forbidden knowl
edge, "The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have
hitherto harmed us little." But perhaps they will one day. Then
the time may come to engage Zapffe's solution for saving the
future from the curse of consciousness.
While we wait breathlessly for the test results of neuroscientists,
people will still be knocking on your door to hawk some gim
mick that will get you into their heaven. Naturally, these sales
men of the sacred do not have a clue regarding what things are
like in heaven. Are there levels of heaven? Could someone be in
heaven and not know it? And how often have we heard that
many who are alive today will not "taste death" but instead will
proceed directly to paradise when the rapture is upon us? This
means that billions have already dropped dead with the unful
filled hope of not having to suffer the throes of the unsaved.
Who Goes There?
What disillusionment must have incommoded them as they lay
in extremis. Death would not be so bad if we could just disap
pear into it without any irksome preliminaries. But even those
who expect the doors of heaven will open for them would pre
fer not to make their entrance after the physical trials of fighting
for the life that God gave them. For the rest of us, the carousel of
consciousness spins round and round, enlightening us only to the
bloodcurdling probability that the worst will likely be saved for
last. And even those who experience being alive as quite all right
will have to live through such tacked-on endings as dying in a
vehicular misadventure or lying abed sucking tubes.
Life is like a story that is spoiled by an unsatisfactory reso
lution of preceding events. There are no retroactive fix-ups for
the corpses we shall become. "All's well that ends well" is well
enough in the short-run. "In the long run," as British economist
John Maynard Keynes reportedly stated, "we are all dead."
This does not sit well w ith us by way of an ending. But it is
not as if we can choose how things will end for us, or for those
yet unborn.
Unpersons
In his novel translated as Moment of Freedom, which was pub
lished ten years before his suicide in 1 976, the Norwegian au
thor and cultural critic Jens Bj0rneboe wrote that "he who
hasn't experienced a full depression alone and over a long pe
riod of time--he is a child." Aside from being indemonstrable
in its validity, Bjorneboe's bilious discharge is also too restrictive
in esteeming his personal class of suffering as the sole rite of
passage to maturity as a conscious individual. Depression is only
one of the psychopathologies that could be selected to make
the bombastic claim that those who have not b een affected by
it in full and over a long period of time belong on a playground
or in a playpen. But it is serviceable as an example of a psycho-
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
logical disease with which most people have had some experi
ence in one or more of its varieties.
The statistically prevailing form of this disease is "atypical
depression." Less common and more deadly is "melancholic de
pression." But whatever family name a given case of depression
goes by, it has the same effect: sabotaging the network of emo
tions that make it seem as if you and your world mean some
thing in some meaningful way. It is then you discover that your
"old self' is not the inviolable thing you thought it was, nor is
the rest of your "old reality." Both are as frail as our bodies and
may be perforated as readily, deflating all that we thought
meaningful about ourselves and our world.
What meaning our lives may seem to have is the work of a
relatively well-constituted emotional system. As consciousness
gives us the sense of being persons, our psychophysiology is re
sponsible for making us into personalities who believe the exis
tential game to be worth playing. We may have memories that
are unlike those of anyone else, but without the proper emo
tions to liven those memories they might as well reside in a
computer file as disconnected bits of data that never unite into a
tailor-made individual for whom things seem to mean some
thing. You can conceptualize that your life has meaning, but if
you do not feel that meaning then your conceptualization is
meaningless and you are nobody. The only matters of weight in
our lives are colored by rainbows or auroras of regulated emo
tion which give one a sense of that "old self." But a major de
pression causes your emotions to evaporate, reducing you to a
shell of a person standing alone in a drab landscape. Emotions
are the substrate for the illusion of being a somebody among
somebodies as well as for the substance we see, or think we see,
in the world. Not knowing this ground-level truth of human ex
istence is the equivalent of knowing nothing at all.
Although varying in intensity and nature, our emotions must
Who Goes There?
seem ever-stable in their concatenation, just as a mixed drink
must be made with specific ingredients in the same relative
amounts so that they may blend into a vodka martini or a piiia
colada. United, our emotions ostensibly form a master self to
which anomalous secondary selves may be compared for quality.
Even as they are ever trading places or running together w ithin
us, clearly cut or amorphous, the experience of these biological
twitterings makes it nearly impossible to doubt that they will
stay with us as far as we can see into the future. Ask any couple
who cannot imagine being without each other, a vital fiction
without which, besides the fact that it often leads to procreation,
no society could exist. It would have no reason to do so, because
reason is merely the mouthpiece of emotion. Hume, who spe
cialized in detaining his readers with obvious but unspoken reali
ties, wrote in his Treatise of Human Nature (173 9-40) that
"reason is and ought only to be the slave of the passions." To free
reason from this slavery would mean our becoming rationalists
without a cause, paralytics crippled by mentation.
In speaking of depression and its defining effect of driving
its victim to the point of caring nothing for anything, the
American talk-show host Dick Cavett once remarked that
"when you're downed by this affliction, if there were a curative
magic w and on the table eight feet away, it would be too much
trouble to go over and pick it up." No better elucidation has
ever been proffered vis-a-vis the uselessness of reason in the ab
sence of emotion. In the recumbence of depression, your in
formation-gathering system collates its intelligence and reports
to you these facts: (1) there is nothing to do; (2) there is no
where to go; (3) there is nothing to be; (4 ) there is no one to
know. Without meaning-charged emotions keeping your brain
on the straight and narrow, you would lose your balance and
fall into an abyss of lucidity. And for a conscious being, lucidity
is a cocktail without ingredients, a crystal clear concoction that
116
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
will leave you hung over with reality. In perfect knowledge
there is only perfect nothingness, which is perfectly painful if
what you want is meaning in your life.
William S. Burroughs said it rightly in his journals. Using his
streetwise voice, he wrote: "Love? What is it? The most natural
painkiller what there is." You may become curious, though, about
what happened to that painkiller should depression take hold and
expose your love--whatever its object-as just one of the many
intoxicants that muddled your consciousness of the human trag
edy. You may also want to take a second look at whatever struck
you as a person, place, or thing of "beauty," a quality that lives
only in the neurotransmitters of the beholder. (Aesthetics? What
is it? A matter for those not depressed enough to care nothing
about anything, that is, those who determine almost everything
that is supposed to matter to us. Protest as you like, neither art
nor an aesthetic view of life are distractions granted to everyone.)
In depression, all that once seemed beautiful, or even startling and
dreadful, is nothing to you. The image of a cloud-crossed moon is
not in itself a purveyor of anything mysterious or mystical; it is
only an ensemble of objects represented to us by our optical ap
paratus and perhaps processed as a memory.
This is the great lesson the depressive learns: Nothing in the
world is inherently compelling. Whatever may be really "out
there" cannot project itself as an affective experience. It is all a
vacuous affair with only a chemical prestige. Nothing is either
good or bad, desirable or undesirable, or anything else except
that it is made so by laboratories inside us producing the emo
tions on which we live. And to live on our emotions is to live ar
bitrarily, inaccurately-imparting meaning to what has none of
its own. Yet what other way is there to live? Without the ever
clanking machinery of emotion, everything would come to a
standstill. There would be nothing to do, nowhere to go, nothing
to be, and no one to know. The alternatives are clear: to live
Who Goes There?
117
falsely a s pawns of affect, or t o live factually a s depressives, or as
individuals who know what is known to the depressive. How
advantageous that we are not coerced into choosing one or the
other, neither choice being excellent. One look at human exis
tence is proof enough that our species will not be released from
the stranglehold of emotionalism that anchors it to hallucina
tions. That may be no way to live, but to opt for depression
would be to opt out of existence as we consciously know it.
Of course, individuals may recover from depression. But in
that event they had better keep their consciousness of what
they went through at heel. Otherwise they might start thinking
that being alive is not as all right as they once thought it was
when they were being shuttled about by a relatively well
constituted emotional system. The same applies to bodily sys
tems of any kind, such as the immune system. Because when
one of your systems goes haywire, you cannot function as you
think you should. You may not even be able to think about
anything except how much vomit, nasal mucus, phlegm, and
watery stool you are discharging from your body when your
immune system cannot withstand an onslaught from a viral or
bacterial infection. If that is the way you were all the time, you
could not go on as a well-constituted being, which means you
could not go on as your old self, whatever that might have
been. But chances are you will get better after one or more of
your systems has gone haywire, and as a newly well-constituted
being you will probably think, 'Tm back to being the real me."
However, you might as truthfully think that the real you is the
one who was sick, not the one with well-constituted systems
working together so cooperatively that you do not even notice
them. You cannot go around thinking that the sick you is the
real you, though, or you would turn into someone who suffers
from chronic anxiety about all the ways your systems can go
haywire. And that would become the real you.
FREAKS O F S A LVATI O N
Down-Going
"Depressing" is the adjective that ordinary folk affix to the life
perspectives expressed by men such as Zapffe, Schopenhauer, and
Lovecraft. The doctrines of world-class religions, dolorous as they
may be, will never be thus defamed, because they are perceived
to be "uplifting" by ordinary folk. Panglossian falsehoods convene
the crowd; discouraging truths disperse it. The reason: It is de
pression not madness that cows us, demoralization not insanity
that we dread, disillusionment of the mind not its derangement
that imperils our culture of hope. An epidemic of depression
would quiet those chattering voices in our heads, stopping life
dead in its tracks. Providentially, we are endowed with enough
manic enthusiasm to keep us plowing onward and making more
of ourselves, bragging all the while about what billions of years of
evolution have bidden every species to do anyway.
Zapffe, Schopenhauer, and Lovecraft fared well enough
without surrendering themselves to life-affirming hysterics.
This is a risky thing for anyone to do, but it is even more risky
for writers, because anti-vital convictions will demote their
work to a lower archive than that of wordsmiths who capitu
late to positive thinking, or at least follow the maxim of being
equivocal when speaking of our species. Everyone wants to
keep the door open on the possibility that our lives are not
MALIGNANTLY USELESS. Even highly educated readers do
not want to be told that their lives are an evolutionary contin1 19
120
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
gency-and nothing else--and that meaning is not what people
think it means.1
For Schopenhauer, the fallout from his negations has been
that he takes up far less floor space in the museum of modem
thought than does his fellow German and antagonist Friedrich
Nietzsche. Schopenhauer promises nothing but extinction for
the individual following the postmortem recall of his "true na
ture" as a tiny parcel of the personless and ever-roiling Will.
Nietzsche borrows from religion and sermonizes that, although
we will not be delivered into the afterlives of his ecclesiastic
models, we must be willing in spirit to reprise this life again and
again to its tiniest detail for all etemity.2 As unappealing as re
peating our lives even once may seem to some of us, we are not
the ones who make a writer's reputation. This is the bailiwick of
philosophical trendsetters, who discovered in Nietzsche the most
spellbinding conundrum in the history of the mind. All the bet
ter for the perseverance of his corpus, which has supplied his
exegetes with lifetimes of interpretation, argumentation, and
general schismatic disharmony-all the purposeful activities that
any religionist, with or without a deity, goes for.
Among other things, Nietzsche is famed as a promoter of
human survival, just as long as enough of the survivors follow
his lead as a peroerted pessimist-o ne who has consecrated him
self to loving life exactly because it is the worst thing imagin
able, a sadomasochistic joyride through the twists and turns of
being unto death. Nietzsche had no problem with human exis
tence as a tragedy born of consciousness-parent of all horrors.
This irregular pessimism is the antinomy of the "normal" pessi
mism of Schopenhauer, who is philosophy's red-headed step
child because he is unequivocally on record as having said that
being alive is not-and can never be--all right. Even his most
admiring commentators, who do not find the technical aspects
of his output to be off-putting, pull up when he openly waxes
Freaks of Salvation
121
pessimistic or descants o n the Will as an unself-consciously stern
master of all being, a cretinous force that makes everything do
what it does, an imbecilic puppeteer that sustains the ruckus of
our world. For these offenses, his stature is rather low compared
to that of other major thinkers, as is that of all philosophers who
bear an unconcealed grudge against life.
Although both Schopenhauer and N ietzsche spoke only to
an audience of atheists, Schopenhauer erred-from a public re
lations stance--b y not according human beings any special
status among the world of things organic and inorganic or
trucking in any meaning to our existence. C ontra S chopen
hauer, Nietzsche not only took religious readings of life seri
ously enough to deprecate them at great length, but was hell
bent on replacing them w ith goal-oriented values and a sense of
meaning that even nonbelievers beg for like dogs-some pro
ject in which individuals may lose (or find) themselves.
Key to Nietzsche's popularity with atheistic amoralists is his
materialistic mysticism, a sleight of mind that makes the
world's meaninglessness into something meaningful and refash
ions fate into freedom before our eyes. As for Schopenhauer's
cattle-drive existence in which an unknowable force (the Will)
herds us along-that had to go. In the form of a diverting fic
tion, it might well be worth its conceptual weight in shivers of
uncanny horror; but as a proposed reality, it is self-evidently
depressing.
In confederacy with those whom he believed himself to
have surpassed in the race toward an undefined destiny,
Nietzsche did what he could to keep the human pageant stroll
ing toward . . . wherever. Even though he had the clarity of
mind to recognize that values did not grow on trees nor were
writ on stone tablets, he duped himself into thinking that it was
possible to create them. But how these values would be created
and what they would be he could not say. After demolishing
122
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
the life-rejecting faith of the Crucified, Nietzsche handed down
his own commandments through the Antichrist-like messiah
Zarathustra, who was groomed to take over Christianity's ad
ministration of the W estem world and keep it afloat with
counterfeit funds. Carrying around a sackload of unrealities
from here to the eternal return, perhaps no one has ever been
as "normal" as Nietzsche.
Why did this nay-saying yes-man believe it was so impor
tant to keep up our esprit de corps by fending off the crisis of
nihilism he predicted as forthcoming? Nietzsche could not have
thought that at some point people were going to tum their
heads to the wall due to a paucity of values, which may run
low sometimes but will never run out. Those who were sup
posed to have gone running into the streets in a funk of founda
tionlessness have survived without a hitch: Nihilistic or not,
they still carried home an armful of affirmations. To publish or
perish is not a question that professional thinkers have to think
about for long. And whatever moral crisis lies ahead will have
to take place in an environment undamaged by nihilism.
As a threat to human continuance, nihilism is as dead as
God. (See James E. Edwards, The Plain Sense of Things: The
Fate of Religion in the Age of Nonnal Nihilism, 1 997.) To do
away with one's values is rather impossible, an ideal to be imag
ined until one is seized by a natural end. Schopenhauer, a virtu
oso of life's devaluation, knew that. But Nietzsche fretted about
those unborn values he imagined his work would inspire, wor
rying over them as would an expectant parent concerned that
his name, his blood, and his codes both moral and genetic be
bodied forth by generations fading over the hills of time. Leav
ing no values that posterity could not cook up on its own,
Nietzsche was withal an admirable opponent of enslaving val
ues from the past. In their place, he left nothing. And for that
we should thank him.
Freaks of Salvation
123
Possibly stolen from Nietzsche is what has been tagged as Zap
ffe's Paradox-where human beings deceive themselves into
thinking their lives are something they are not, namely, worth
living. In his Birth of Tragedy (1 872)1 Nietzsche wrote:
It is an eternal phenomenon: The insatiable will always find a way,
by means of an illusion spread over things, to detain its creatures in
life and to compel them to live on. One is chained by the Socratic
joy of knowing and the delusion of being able thereby to heal the
eternal wound of existence; another is ensnared by art's seductive
veil of beauty fluttering before his eyes; yet another by the meta
physical consolation that beneath the whirl of appearances eternal
life flows on indestructibly-to say nothing of the more common
and almost more forceful illusions the will has at hand at every
moment. (The Birth of Tragedy, trans. Walter Kaufmann)
One can only rue the fact that Nietzsche did not unfold this ob
servation into a life-negating pessimism, as did Zapffe, rather
than into a pessimism that teaches us "what it means 'to be
frightened"'-"a pessimism of strength." But by the time
Nietzsche wrote these words in his "Attempt at a Self-Criticism,"
published as a preface to the 1 886 edition of The Birth of Trag
edy, it was too late for his conversion, or reconversion, to a pur
ist's pessimism. He had already hit the road toward what would
indeed frighten average mortals, a set of persons in which he did
not include himself, or did not want to include himself. Zapffe
did include himself among this set, and his analysis of those who
opted out of it fits Nietzsche to a tee: "In such cases, a person
may be obsessed with destructive j oy, dislodging the whole arti
ficial apparatus of his life and starting with rapturous horror to
make a clean sweep of it. The horror stems from the loss of all
sheltering values; the rapture from his by now ruthless identifica
tion and harmony with our nature's deepest secret-the biologi
cal unsoundness, the enduring disposition for doom." In its life
negating aspect, pessimism lost a great champion when
1 24
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE H U M A N RACE
Nietzsche became j oyful about the frightful, a psychic stand that
in itself is a paradox if ever there was one.
Futurep hi/ia
After Nietzsche, pess1m1sm was revaluated by some, rejuve
nated by others, and still spumed as depressing by average mor
tals, who continued to recite their most activating illusion:
"Today is better than yesterday and tomorrow will be better
still." While being alive may be all right for the moment, the fu
ture is really the place for a person to be, at least as far as we
care to see into it. Lovecraft is a figure of exceeding intrigue
here because much of his fiction is based on a clutch of godlike
beings whose very presence in the universe degrades the idea of
betterment in human life into a cosmic miscalculation.
Azathoth the Blind Idiot God, Nyarlathotep the Crawling
Chaos, Cthulhu the Dead Dreamer: These are some of the enti
ties that symbolize the Lovecraftian universe as a place without
sense, meaning, or value. This perspective is memorably ex
pressed in Lovecraft's poem "Nemesis":
I have seen the dark universe yawning
Where the black planets roll without aim,
Where they roll in their horror unheeded,
Without knowledge or lustre or name.
These lines and others like them are not cordially received by vo
taries of the future, who will deny their vision or treat it as only a
literary diversion, which in effect is all that it is, along with every
glyph and scribble ever recorded since Gilgamesh sojourned in
the land of the dead. More popular among fans of occult fiction
are the canonical texts of Theosophy, Anthroposophy, Scientol
ogy, G. I. Gurdj ieffs Fourth Way, the Kabbalah, and so on.
Among this select bibliography of arcane studies should be
added the curiosa of "transhumanism," a zealous type of utopian
Freaks of Salvation
thought underwritten by the belief that day by day we are get
ting closer and closer to building a better human. Like believers
in libertarian free will, transhumanists believe we can make our
selves. But this is impossible. Because of evolution, we got made.
We did not bring ourselves out of the primeval ooze. And eve
rything we have done since we became a species has been a con
sequence of being made. No matter what we do, it will be what
we were made to do-and nothing else. We may try to make
something of ourselves, but we cannot take over our own evolu
tion. We made antibiotics because we were made to be the kind
of beings who make such things as antibiotics. That changed our
condition without changing us, being as we are the kind of crea
tures who do things and make things, yet are not in the business
of getting ourselves made. Nature had plans for us and still does.
One of those plans seems to be the dream of transhumanism,
which may just be a plan to unmake us. If so, we are not going
to alter that plan simply because we imagine we can make a
new person with new evolutionary programs that we will write.
We know how to survive and we know how to reproduce. We
know how to do many things, but we do not know what to do
with ourselves that is over and above our preset patterns. Some
of us only think we do. We are not even part of the process of
getting remade. We are following orders, as we have always
done, that nature is forever barking out.
As humans conceived transhumanism, transhumanists have
conceived posthumanism, a far-off condition in which none
will live as we have all these years but will have evolved into
something beyond our present selves. And then what? Have the
transhumanists really thought this through? And how could
they? We have no idea where our next thought is coming from,
not excluding the thoughts of transhumanists. We do have
thoughts, but we do not know what we are going to make of
them. How, then, are we to know what to make of ourselves?
126
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
Maybe we could outdo posthumanity, or at least do something
that would not take as long and would be no less useless. But it
is not as if being posthuman is an idea first conceived in the late
twentieth century. In its search for the "good," or at least the
better, it recapitulates our most ancient fantasies. Like a song
we feel we have heard even though we are hearing it for the
first time, the machinations of transhumanists call to us from
the past, and even from a pre-historical Eden of perfect exis
tence, depending on whether or not one likes their song or ca
res for a homecoming in Eden. But these machinations also
sound like something that was over the moment it began-old,
stale, nothing.
By definition, transhumanists are dissatisfied with what we are
as a species. Naturally, they think that being alive is all right
so much so, in fact, that they cannot stand the idea of not being
alive and have envisioned strategies for staying alive forever.
Their problem is that they need being alive to be vastly more
all right than it is. And the power of positive thinking is not
enough to get them where they want to go. They are past all
that, or would like to be. They are also past believing in God or
an afterlife of eternal bliss. To a believer, transhumanism would
be a useless appendage to what they already believe, as well as
an offense against Him who made us as He made us, with nature
as the go-between, and long ago laid down the ways in which
we can make ourselves better and better. Those ways may be
hard to follow, but the alternative is the despair of living with
out hope of an unimaginably better future. For the believer's
alternative to despair, transhumanists have substituted their
own. Yet while transhumanists operate on the assumption that
we will massively profit when we self-mutate into posthumans,
the upshot of their program is still unknown. It could begin a
dynamic new chapter in the history of our race, or it could
Freaks of Salvation
127
trumpet the end of us. Either way, the prophesized leap will be
jumpstarted by all manner of gadgetry and will somehow in
volve artificial intelligence, nanotechnology, genetic engineering,
and other habiliments of high technology. These will be the in
struments of the New Genesis, the Logos of tomorrow. Or so
says one desperate group of scientific thinkers.
For a less desperate group of scientific thinkers, posthuman
ism is a chimera and will not occur: We will go on with our lives
as stumblebums of the same old story. Understandably, the
transhumanist view is more arousing than old-fogy humanism
precisely because an apocalypse has been inserted as a wild card.
(See Bill Joy's "The future doesn't need us," Wired, 2000.) In this
sense, transhumanism is a secular retelling of the Christian rap
ture, and some of its true believers foresee it as happening within
the lifetime of many who are alive today, just as the early Chris
tians believed in an impending Judgment Day. Perhaps at some
time in the future, such predictions will not have to take into ac
count eschatological contingencies and we can all relax, secure in
the knowledge that day by day, in every way, we are getting
made better and better.
Transhumanism encapsulates a long-lived error among the
headliners of science: In a world without a destination, we can
not even break ground on our Tower of Babel, and no amount
of rush and hurry on our part will change that. That we are go
ing nowhere is not a curable condition; that we must go no
where at the fastest possible velocity just might be curable,
though p robably not. And what difference would it make to
retard our progress to nowhere? Zapffe reviled technological
advancements and the discoveries to which they led, since
those interested in such things would be cheated of the distrac
tion of finding them out for themselves at whatever pace they
chose. Every human activity is a tack for killing time, and it
seemed criminal to him that people should have their time al-
128
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
ready killed for them by explorers, inventors, and innovators of
every stripe. Zapffe himself reserved his leisure hours for that
most purposive time-killer-mountain climbing.
As we should know by now, it is as easy to make fun of re
ligious or scientific visionaries as it is to idolize them. Which
attitude is adopted depends on whether or not they tell you
what you want to hear. Given the excitements promised by the
transhumanism, odds are that it will collect a clientele of hope
fuls who want to get a foot in the future, for nobody doubts
that tomorrow will be better than today. Yet one possibility
transhumanists have not wrestled with is that the ideal being
standing at the end of evolution may deduce that the best of all
possible worlds is useless, if not malignant, and that the self
extinction of our future selves would be the optimal course to
take. They have also failed to reflect upon those aspects of the
scientific world-view which may be damaging to our mental
well-being. In that case, transhumanists will not get as far as
stage one in their mission before they must head back to the
conspiracy against the human race and be reeducated in the art
of self-deceptive paradox.
Many people in this world are always looking to science to save
them from something. But just as many, or more, prefer old and
reputable belief systems and their sectarian offshoots for salva
tion. So they trust in the deity of the Old Testament, an incon
tinent dotard who soiled Himself and the universe with His
corruption, a low-budget divinity passing itself off as the genu
ine article. (Ask the Gnostics.) They trust in Jesus Christ, a his
torical cipher stitched together like Frankenstein's monster out
of parts robbed from the graves of messiahs dead and buried-a
savior on a stick. They trust in the virgin-pimping Allah and his
Drum Major Mohammed, a prophet-come-lately who pio
neered a new genus of humbuggery for an emerging market of
Freaks of Salvation
1 29
believers that was not being adequately served by existing reli
gious products. They trust in anything that authenticates their
importance as persons, tribes, societies, and particularly as a
species that will endure in this world and perhaps in an after
world that may be uncertain in its reality and unclear in its lay
out, but which sates their craving for values not of this earth-
that depressing, meaningless place their consciousness must
sidestep every day. 3 Sure enough, then, writers such as Zapffe,
Schopenhauer, and Lovecraft only wrote their ticket to margin
ality when they failed to affirm the worth and wonder of hu
manity, the validity of its values (whether eternal or
provisional), and, naturally, a world without a foreseeable end,
or at least a world whose end no one wants to see.
Buddhanomics
Like many faiths and philosophies that go against the Western
grain, Buddhism has baited legions of those in the cognitive
vanguard. This religion is to be praised both for its lack of an
almighty god-figure and for its gateway teaching of the Four
Noble Truths. The first of these truths is the equation between
the life of the average mortal and dukkha (roughly "suffering,"
but really whatever state of ill-being you care to name) . The
second is that craving anything in this world-good physical or
mental health, long life, happiness, or even the elimination of
craving-is the provenance of all suffering. These Two Noble
Truths sit atop a religion that is incomparable for its prescrip
tions for salvation. These prescriptions begin with the Third
Noble Truth, that there is a way out of suffering, and continue
with the Fourth Noble Truth-that the way to be released
from the leg-irons of suffering is to follow the N oble Eightfold
Path, a list of things-to-do and things-not-to-do much like the
Old Testament Decalogue, except not as plainly spoken or
easygoing.
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE H U MAN RACE
By laying a heavy emphasis on human life as something that
needs to be drastically reworked due to the First N oble Truth
of dukkha, Buddhism has been disparaged as pessimistic. Natu
rally, Buddhists deny that their religion is any such thing. It is a
system for uncovering our true nature-and nothing else. Never
theless, Buddhism and pessimism cannot be pried loose from
each other. The likeness between them is simply too pro
nounced to be overlooked. Buddhists claim that they are not
pessimists but realists. Pessimists make the same claim. Bud
dhists also claim they are not pessimists because their founder's
teachings showed a way out of suffering for all sentient beings.
Pessimists also have their plans toward this end. Ask Zapffe.
Ask Mainlander. Or ask Schopenhauer about working toward a
denial of the Will, which is the cause of dukkha, the facets of
which have been identified by the Ven. Dr. Thanat lnthisan,
and many other Buddhist wise men, to include "dissatisfaction,
imperfection, pain, impermanence, disharmony, discomfort, ir
ritation, war, incompleteness, insufficiency" as well as the
physical and mental suffering of "birth, decay, disease, and
death." Calling oneself a realist is as much the privilege of the
Buddhist as it is that of the pessimist. But to designate Bud
dhism as anything b ut pessimism is j ust a matter of semantics.
The only real discrepancy between the two philosophies is that
hundreds of millions of Buddhists have accepted dukkha as the
primary reality of existence. How queer that pessimists cannot
boast such numbers. While it is not perceived as such by fol
lowers of this ancient religion, the disavowed fact is this: Bud
dhism is pessimism. Yet whereas the pessimism that dares speak
its name is met with near universal incredulity, Buddhism may
advertise as truth w hat no pessimist can prove--that suffering
is basic to human existence and it should be the work of our
lives to liberate ourselves from its grasp. This double standard is
flatly an outrage of logic. Of course, one must always keep in
Freaks of Salvation
13 1
mind the latitude religions are permitted by virtue of the fact
that their beliefs cannot be objectively corroborated and must
be taken on faith, pessimistic though they may be.
Unlike the practical uniformity of pessimists, not all Buddhists
line up on the same side even in some of the broadest aspects
of their beliefs. (Ask Stephen Batchelor, author of Buddhism
Without Beliefs, 1 9 98.) For instance, there are differing opinions
among Buddhists regarding anatta ("no-self') and how it relates
to reincarnation, because if there is no self, then what is it that
gets reborn? To this question are loads of learned exegeses. One
belief held by many Buddhists is that human beings are bits and
pieces that add up to nothing, things of parts, hollow pup
pets-non-beings that think they are something they are not.
Other Buddhists believe that this is only half the story: Things
both exist and do not exist; things are not what they seem nor
are they other than they seem; things are many and they are
one; everything is nothing, including nothing.
Along with every other religion, Buddhism is a compilation
of do-it-yourself projects, and some of them, such as Pure Land
Buddhism, are only lightweight versions of the faiths scantily
detailed here. This principle has its parallel in every philosophy,
ideology, and bag of myths that has ever been presented to the
world. Because no two minds are contoured alike, no one sys
tem or collocation of systems will ever be sized to fit all. If
truth is what you seek, then the examined life will only take
you on a long ride to the limits of solitude and leave you by the
side of the road with your truth and nothing else. This gives
leave to believers in anything to have an opinion about what
ever they like. For Buddhists, though, this is a problem, because
clinging to opinions, or whatever else ordinary folk cling to, is
an obstruction to becoming a right-minded practitioner of Bud
dhism. But you can believe that in Buddhist law, or in some-
1 32
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
one's opinion of Buddhist law, there are allowance conditions
that stipulate when clinging is not really clinging. All religions
must have allowance conditions or they would implode upon
themselves by the pressure of their own doctrines.
Since Buddhism's only objective is attaining enlightenment,
that high road to nirvana (see below), it is at one with other re
ligions in pitching a brighter future for believers in deliverance
from the woes of this world. One problem: Human beings are
rarely so sensitive to the woes of this world that they feel a
pressing need to reject all cravings for the pleasures of this
world, as Buddhism would have them do. And it seems that any
amount of pleasure is pleasure enough to get us to keep the
faith that being alive is all right for everyone, or almost every
one, and will certainly be all right for any children we cause to
be delivered into this world. How else could we stave off a crav
ing to become extinct?
The good news for Buddhism as a for-profit religion is that
there are more than enough people who are sensitive to the
woes of this world, and who are willing to let go of their crav
ings for its pleasures, to seek the extinction of their everyday
selves in the oasis of nirvana (absolute beatitude, permanent de
tachment from all attachment to a benighted way of life, a step
off from the cycle of death and rebirth, or whatever happy
thing you like) . Reaching this oasis may happen during an indi
vidual's lifetime or could be delayed for the next round of rein
carnation, when one will have another chance to cut oneself
loose from karma, a doctrine that Buddhists borrowed from the
Jains and the Hindus.
Leaving aside reincarnation and the mental gymnastics it
foists on the believer, the central focus of Buddhism's three-ring
circus remains the state or non-state of enlightenment, which,
like Jesus' ethereal theme park, is an appetizing carrot sus
pended in the darkness of life's suffering, if you are one of those
Freaks of Salvation
1 33
who are sensitive enough to life's suffering. However, to get
that carrot you must first kowtow to dogmatic authorities that
cannot be told apart from those of Christianity, spiritual minis
ters who strong-arm you to do some things and not do others
under pain of not becoming enlightened.
But here is the real catch: If you want to become enlight
ened you will never become enlightened, because in Buddhism
wanting things is j ust the thing that keeps you from getting the
thing you want. Less circuitously, if you want to end your suf
fering, you will never end your suffering. This is the "wanting
paradox," or "paradox of desire," and Buddhists are at the ready
with both rational and non-rational propositions as to why this
paradox is not a paradox. How to understand these proposi
tions is past understanding, because, per Buddhism, there is
nothing to understand and no one to understand it. And as long
as you think there is something to understand and someone to
understand it, you are doomed. Trying for this understanding is
the most trying thing of all. Yet trying not to try for it is just as
trying. There is nothing more futile than to consciously look for
something to save you. But consciousness makes this fact seem
otherwise. Consciousness makes it seem as if (1) there is some
thing to do; (2) there is somewhere to go; (3) there is something
to be; (4 ) there is someone to know. This is what makes con
sciousness the parent of all horrors, the thing that makes us try
to do something, go somewhere, be something, and know
someone, such as ourselves, so that we can escape our MA
LIGNANTLY USELESS being and think that being alive is all
right rather than that which should not be.
The Buddhist "wanting paradox" might be regarded as correla
tive to Zapffe's Paradox (the paradox of conscious beings at
tempting to disclaim their consciousness of the flagrantly joyless
possibilities of their lives) . The difference between Buddhism's
1 34
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
Paradox and Zapffe's Paradox is that the latter is not amenable
to being resolved, explained away, or denied, either rationally
or non-rationally. It can only be left unacknowledged so that
we can continue to live as we have all these years, or at least as
long as we can before the paradox demands acknowledgment
to the extent that we cannot live with ourselves as beings
whose existence is terribly false and paradoxical, things so un
canny that we can no longer even look at one another or hold
our heads steady. Until that day, we will keep living as obsti
nate selves who affirm that being conscious is an enlightened
way to be and that being alive is all right.
In the marketplace of salvation, enlightenment seems the best
buy ever offered, if only at first blush. Rather than floundering
in a world that is not worth the emptiness it is written on, you
may sign up to attain a conclusive vision of what's what and
what's not. Broadly speaking, enlightenment is the correction of
our consciousness and the establishment of a state of being in
which muddy illusion is washed away and a diamond of under
standing shines through. This is the supreme desert . . . if it may
be had, if it has any reality outside the pat or cryptic locutions
that advert to it.
Millions of people have spent their lives, and some have
even lost their minds, trying to win enlightenment without ever
comprehending, as they sucked their last breath, what it was
they had gambled to get. Had they attained enlightenment
without being aware of it? Are there stages of enlightenment
(maybe, depending on the type of Buddhism to which one sub
scribes) and how far had they gotten? In his One Taste: Daily
Reflections on Integral Spirituality, Ken Wilber, a widely known
and highly influential multidisciplinary scholar and theorist of
spiritual traditions, reported that he asked one Zen Buddhist
master "how many truly enlightened-deeply enlightened-
Freaks of Salvation
1 35
Japanese Zen masters there were alive today." The master re
plied, "Not more than a dozen." Another Zen master put the
number of fully enlightened individuals in the East at one thou
sand throughout Zen Buddhism's history. Wilber's conclusion:
"Thus, without in any way belittling the truly stunning contri
butions of the glorious Eastern traditions, the point is fairly
straightforward: radical transformative spirituality is extremely
rare, anywhere in history, and anywhere in the world. (The
numbers for the West are even more depressing. I rest my
case.) " Indeed, enlightenment by Buddhism truly seems to be a
well-defended redoubt whose location cannot be triangulated
by speech, the only rule being that if you have to ask yourself if
you have arrived, then it is certain you have not.
Ego-Death
As we have seen, Buddhism's ways and means to illumination
are full of shortcomings and vexations. Nevertheless, it does
seem that some have reached a state corresponding to that of
Buddhist enlightenment as delineated in scads of scriptures, dia
ries, copyrighted publications, and public depositions. Curi
ously, these charmed individuals appear to have come to this
state unwarned, sometimes as a result of physical trauma or a
Near-Death Experience (NDE) .
Perhaps the capital instance of enlightenment by accident is
that of U . G. Krishnamurti. Although U. G. gave no credence to
any doctrine of awakening, he claimed to have experienced
"clinical death" at the age of forty-nine, after which he returned
to life as the kind of being glorified in the literature of enlight
enment. Through his clinical death and its aftermath, which he
called a "calamity" due to the pain and confusion he felt during
this process, U. G. was transformed.
For decades prior to his calamity, U. G. was an earnest seeker
who sought enlightenment by effort rather than by accident. But
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAI NST THE H U MAN RACE
his efforts got him nowhere, and he ended up financially drained.
By chance he met a woman who was willing to support him, and
for years he was something of a layabout. It was while living with
this woman that his calamity struck. Upon recovering from his
calamity, he had what he once looked for and in disgust had
given up trying to find. U. G. was no longer the person he once
was, for now he was someone whose ego had been erased. In this
state, he had all the self-awareness of a tree frog. To his good for
tune, he had no problem with his new way of functioning. He
did not need to accept it, since by his report he had lost all sense
of having an ego that needed to accept or reject anything. How
could someone who had ceased to participate in the commerce
of selves, who had inadvertently forfeited his personhood, be
lieve or not believe in anything so outlandish as enlightenment
. . . or any other spiritual vendibles, none of which are evident in
the least and all of which are as outmoded as the gods of antiq
uity or tribal deities with names that sound comical to believers
in "real" religions?4
While it may seem that U. G. had become a zombie, in a
non-philosophical sense, his post-calamity life was nothing like
that. Until his death in 2007, he spent much of his time berating
people who came to him for spiritual succor. Cantankerous and
opinionated as some of the more famous masters of Zen Bud
dhism, U. G. arrestingly and often humorously told those who
had made the pilgrimage to his door that everything they be
lieved about anything was wrong. Few of them could get a word
in edgewise as he assassinated all that humanity has ever held sa
cred. Some would view U. G.'s disrespect for spirituality to be in
happy rapport with the nature of enlightenment, which they
have been taught cannot be pinned down by doctrines of any
kind. Others would deny this assertion, perhaps because they
have been indoctrinated to believe that both irreverence and
deference toward the transcendent are off the mark once one has
Freaks of Salvation
1 37
"awakened." Neither side of this squabble would have tempted
U. G. What he enunciated in interviews is the near impossibility
of human beings, except perhaps one in a billion, to think of
themselves only as animals born to survive and reproduce.
As Zapffe had written long before U. G. began slurring
every belief in the world, mental activity beyond the basic pro
grams of our animalism has led only to suffering. ("In the beast,
suffering is self-confined; in man, it knocks holes into a fear of
the world and a despair of life.") U. G. never spoke of a solution
for what consciousness has made of our lives. We are captured
by illusions and there is no way out. That U. G. came upon a
way out, as he told his countless interrogators, was nothing but
luck, nothing he knew anything about or could pass on to oth
ers. Yet they still came to him and asked for his help. To their
pleas he immediately replied he could not help them, nor could
they help themselves. No help could be had from any sector in
which they searched. They could seek deliverance their entire
lives and make it all the way to their deathbeds with nothing
but the same useless questions and useless answers with which
they began. U. G. had his, but they would never get theirs.
So why should they go on living? Naturally, no one bluntly
posed this question to U. G. But they had his answer: There is
no "you" that lives, only a body going about its b usiness of being
alive and obeying biology. Whenever someone asked U. G. how
they could become like him, he always replied it would be im
possible for them even to desire to become like him, because
their motive for wanting to be like him was self-interested, and
as long as they believed in a self that was interested in canceling
itself, that self would want to keep itself alive and thus would
not want to know ego-death. Whatever people did with their
lives was of no concern to U. G., as he tirelessly recapitulated to
those who engaged him in conversation. He did not see his
himself as a sage with spiritual merchandise to sell. That was for
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
the mountebanks of salvation who infested the world with
their codified sects, each baring its teeth to defend some trade
marked trumpery.
U. G. is not the only known case of enlightenment by accident.
A quite singular instance of the experience in question is that of
the Australian physicist John Wren-Lewis, a non-religious man
who nearly died of poisoning and woke up in a hospital in a
state of enlightenment he never requested or pained himself to
earn. Both U. G. and Wren-Lewis publicly emphasized the un
sought nature of their illumination. Both also warned against
gurus with recipes for enlightenment. In talks with interview
ers, U. G., who did not write books, lambasted every religious
figure known to humanity as a fraud. After his own awakening,
Wren-Lewis became overtaken by the possible connection be
tween enlightenment phenomena and ND Es. His way of think
ing, for what it might be worth, parallels Zapffe's in that it
identifies ordinary consciousness as a "basic malfunction" that
"is some kind of inflation or hyperactivity of the psychological
survival-system" ("Aftereffects of Near-Death Experience: A
Survival Mechanism Hypothesis," The Journal of Transpersonal
Psychology, 199 4) . He derived hope that this malfunction could
be repaired from the fact that NDE-ers are sometimes relieved
from death anxiety by having their egoistic consciousness
commuted into an "impersonal consciousness" of an enlightened
sort. None of this is to say that reports of NDE experience are
any more believable than, let us say, those of alien abductions.
Leniently interpreted, however, they may foretell that our spe
cies has an outside chance at a future without extinction
fearing egos. Since the human race will never do the honorable
thing and abort itself, perhaps someday we will be individually
fixed to die without an unbecoming fight to the death.
A stereotypical report of an NDE is related by businessman
Freaks of Salvation
1 39
and author Tern Horwitz in his essay "My Death: Reflections on
My Journey into Non-Being" (Death and Phi losophy, ed. Jeff
Malpas and Robert C. Solomon, 1998) . In the course of describ
ing his transformation following his death as a result of anaphy
lactic shock in September 1 995, Horwitz wrote: "There was no
vestige of self-importance left. It felt like death had obliterated
my ego, the attachments I had, my history, and who I had been.
Death had been very democratic. It had eliminated innumer
able distinctions. With one bold stroke my past had been
erased. I had no identity in death. It didn't stay erased-some
would say that this was the real tragedy-but it was erased for
a time. Gone was my personal history with all of its little vani
ties. The totality of myself was changed. The 'me' was much
smaller and much more compact than it had been. All that
there was, was right in front of me. I felt incredibly light. Per
sonality was a vanity, an elaborate delusion, a ruse." Compared
with U. G. Krishnamurti and John Wren-Lewis, Horwitz had
only a slight case of ego-death following his clinical death. Soon
afterward he was "cured" of the erasure of his identity.
Another statistic of long-term ego-death was Suzanne Segal,
who one day found she had become bereft of herself. After
years of seeking a cure to the unease this experience had set off
in her-it would seem that not everybody is at peace with be
ing nobody-she wrote Collision with the Infinite: A Life Be
yond the Personal Self (1 996) . The following year she died of a
brain tumor at the age of fo rty-two. Although no link was es
tablished between her diseased brain and the disappearance of
her ego, cerebral tumors causing altered states of consciousness
and changes in personality are not unknown.5
Unlike U. G. but similar to Wren-Lewis, Segal sought an
swers to her transformation in spiritual traditions that addressed
egoless experience. U nlike Wren-Lewis but similar to U. G.,
140
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
Segal had pursued a spiritual practice, Transcendental Medita
tion, before she became the beneficiary of enlightenment by ac
cident. Segal lost her ego two years after discontinuing TM1
which she performed for eight years. In an interview, she stated
that she did not feel meditation played a role in the loss of her
self-identity. U. G. was in agreement with Segal. After years of
pursuing ego-death through meditation, he railed against this
procedure as pointless and perhaps harmful.
For most of humanity, including that part which studies con
sciousness, the phenomenon of ego-death is not enthralling, or
even well marked as a human experience. Ordinary folk have
all their big questions answered to their satisfaction by some big
book. And cognitive psychologists, philosophers of mind, and
neuroscientists have their reputations to consider as high priests
of the noosphere. Quite naturally, then, almost no one figures
their time to be ill-spent in bickering about some point of
scripture or a psycho-philosophical poser rather than in sizing
up some superlative individuals who have called into question
what we are or what we might be aside from slaves of our egos.
Regardless of the life stories of U. G.1 Wren-Lewis, and Suz
anne Segal, ego-death is a state that has nothing but anecdotal
evidence to support it, which groups this phenomenon with
mystical experiences and revealed religions. As one might imag
ine, though, ego-death is laden with about as much mass appeal
as physical death. It has been eyeballed as an ideal only by a min
iscule number of our species who feel there is something wrong
with ego-life, which they conceive as an uncanny masquerade
where things they would rather not see are behind every false
face. To everyone else, life is life and death is death. We are not
sold on impersonal survival. It would negate all that we are1 or
think we are1 for what are we but egos itching to survive? And
once our egos have been deposed, what would be left of us? By
Freaks of Salvation
all recorded accounts, everything would be left except what
Horwitz called "a vanity, an elaborate delusion, a ruse."
Some would say that if human beings must exist, the condi
tion in which U. G., Wren-Lewis, and Segal found themselves is
the optimum model, one in which everyone's ego has been over
thrown and our consciousness of ourselves as persons goes up in
smoke. As Segal tried to explain what had happened to her:
The experience of living without a personal identity, without an
experience of being somebody, an "I" or a "me," is exceedingly dif
ficult to describe, but it is absolutely unmistakable. It can't be
confused with having a b ad day or coming down with the flu or
feeling upset or angry or spaced out. When the personal self dis
appears, there is no one inside who can be located as being you.
The body is only an outline, empty of everything of which it had
previously felt so full.
The mind, body, and emotions no longer referred to anyone-
there was no one who thought, no one who felt, no one who per
ceived Yet the mind, body, and emotions continued to function un
impaired; apparently they did not need an "I" to keep doing what
they always did. Thinking, feeling, perceiving, speaking, all continued
as before, functioning with a smoothness that gave no indication of
the emptiness behind them. No one suspected that such a radical
change had occurred All conversations were carried on as before;
language was employed in the same manner. Questions could be
asked and answered, cars driven, meals cooked, books read, phones
answered, and letters written. (Collisian with the Infinite)
As the ego-dead, so we might imagine, we would continue to
know pain in its various forms-that is the essence of exis
tence--but we would not be cozened by our egos to take it
personally, an attitude that converts an individual's pain into
conscious suffering. Naturally, we would still have to feed, but
we would not be omnivorous gourmands who eat for amuse
ment, gorging down everything in nature and turning to the
laboratory for more. As for reproduction, who can say? Animals
are driven to copulate, and even as the ego-dead we would not
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
be severed from biology, although we w ould not be unintelli
gently ruled by it, as we are now. As a corollary of not being
unintelligently ruled by biology, neither would we sulk over
our extinction, as we do now . Why raise another generation
destined to climb aboard the evolutionary treadmill? But then,
why not raise another generation of the ego-dead? For those
who do not perceive either their pleasures or their pains as be
longing to them, neither life nor death would be objectionable
or not objectionable, desirable or not desirable, all right or not
all right. We would be the ego-dead, the self-less, and, dare we
say, the enlightened.
A depiction of what our lives might be like in such a state
would seem to have been recorded in the eightieth section of
the Tao Te Ching, perhaps to show up humankind's modus
vivendi by daydreaming about one not of this earth.
Let all lands be small
and their people few,
so they have no need
for time- saving machines.
Let them keep their minds
On the coming of death
And never stray far
From w here they were born.
Should they have boats
Or carts to go traveling,
Let there be nothing
They would want to see.
Should they have weapons,
Let them be put someplace
Out of everyone's sight
To rust and grow useless.
Freaks of Salvation
143
Let each person's duties
Be no more than may be
Kept track of by tying knots
On a short piece of string.
Let their food be enough
And their clothes drab,
Their homes decent shelter
And their lives unremarkable.
If the next land is so close
That they can hear its
Dogs barking at night and its
Roosters crowing at dawn . . .
Let them get old and die
Rather than be troubled
By the least curiosity
To have a look over there.
One might think of this not as a description of an ego-dead so
ciety but of one that is dead all the way. But one would be
wrong. Wherever there are those who "get old and die," there
are also those who live in wait for age and for death-youths
and infants and infants-to-be. And although none of them takes
his fate personally, why should any of them take it at all? Of
course, this would not occur to the ego-dead, just as it does not
occur to species of a lower order that recycle themselves as na
ture bids them. The ego-dead would be back to where our race
began-surviving, reproducing, dying. Nature's way would be
restored in all its mindlessness and puppetry.
But even if ego-death is regarded as the optimum model for
human existence, one of liberation from ourselves, it still re
mains a compromise with being, a concession to the blunder of
creation itself. We should be able to do better, and we can. To
144
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
have our egos killed off is second-best to killing off death and
all the squalid byplay that £litters around it. So let all lands be
small, and grower smaller and smaller until no lands are left
where any human footstep need press itself upon the earth.
At the height of her ego-death, Segal was ecstatic twenty-four
hours a day. She also began to speak of what she called the "vast
ness," a term that sounds as if it belongs in one of Lovecraft's
tales of cosmic horror. To Segal, the vastness was a unitary phe
nomenon that comprised all existence. As she wrote, "The pur
pose of human life has been revealed. The vastness created these
human circuitries in order to have an experience of itself out of
itself that it couldn't have without them." Living in the vastness
as she did, nothing was useless to Segal because it served the
purposes of the vastness. For her, it also felt good once she had
gotten over her initial fear of being a tool of the vastness rather
than a person. However, toward the end of her life, as American
psychotherapist and Buddhist Stephan Bodian recounts in his af
terword to Collision with the Infinite, Segal began to have more
intense experiences in which "the vastness became even vaster
for itself." This new phase of the vastness both distressed her
emotionally and sapped her physical energy until she died from
her unsuspected brain tumor not long afterward.
Like Segal's vastness, Schopenhauer's Will has the same
purpose in mind for human beings-to use our "circuitries" to
acquire some kind of knowledge of its mindless self. For
Schopenhauer, though, the self-seeking Will does not feel good
to human beings except during moments when we temporarily
satisfy its universal ravening as it emerges within us. Why the
vastness or the Will should want to use us in this way is a mys
tery. Both of these non-dualistic meta-realities do serve the
purpose of making sense of human life in their own way. But
whether they make us feel good does not seem to matter to ei-
Freaks of Salvation
145
ther of them. We are j ust vehicles; they are the drivers. And
wherever we are going, as Segal and S c hopenhauer have assured
us, along with every other individual whose consciousness has
been opened to the vastness by whatever name o r nature, we
must keep in mind that we are not what w e think we are. Tak
ing things a step further, Professor Nobody would teach us that
neither is our world what we think it is, lecturing us with a
flamboyant dispassion on the o mnipresence of the infernal in
"The Eyes That N ever Blink."
Mist on a lake, fog in thick woods, a golden light shining on wet
stones-such sights make it all very easy. Something lives in the
lake, rustles through the woods, inhabits the stones or the earth
beneath them. Whatever it may be, this something lies j ust out of
sight, but not out of vision for the eyes that never blink. In the
right surroundings our entire being is made of eyes that dilate to
witness the haunting of the universe. But really, do the right sur
roundings have to be so obvious in their spectral atmosphere?
Take a c ramped waiting room, for instance. Everything there
seems so well-anchored in normalcy. Others around you talk ever
so quietly; the old clock on the wall is sweeping aside the seconds
with its thin red finger; the window blinds deliver slices of light
from the outside world and shuffle them with shadows. Yet at
any time and in any place, our bunkers of banality may begin to
rumble. You see, even in a stronghold of our fello w beings we
may be subj ect to abnormal fears that would land us in an asylum
if we voiced them to another. Did we just feel some presence that
does not belong among us? Do our eyes see something in a corner
of that room in which we wait for we know not what?
J ust a little doubt slipped into the mind, a little trickle of sus
picion in the bloodstream, and all those eyes of ours, one by one,
open up to the world and see its horror. Then: no belief or body
of laws will guard you; no friend, no counselor, no appointed per
sonage will save you; no locked door will protect you; no private
office will hide you. Not even the solar brilliance of a summer day
will harbor you from horror. For horror eats the light and digests it
into darkness.
S I C K TO D EATH
Bleakness I
To salve the pains of consciousness, some people anesthetize
themselves with sunny thoughts. But not everyone can follow
their lead, above all not those who sneer at the sun and every
thing upon which it beats down. Their only respite is in the
balm of bleakness. Disdainful of the solicitations of hope, they
look for sanctuary in desolate places-a scattering of ruins in a
barren locale or a rubble of words in a book where someone
whispers in a dry voice, "I, too, am here." However, downcast
readers must be on their guard. Phony retreats have lured many
who treasure philosophical and literary works of a pessimistic,
nihilistic, or defeatist nature as indispensable to their existence.
Too often they have settled into a book that begins as an ora
tion on bleak experience but wraps up with the author slipping
out the back door and making his way down a shining path,
leaving downcast readers more rankled than they were before
entering what turned out to be only a fa<;ade of ruins, a trompe
l 'oeil of bleakness. A Confession (1 882) by Leo Tolstoy is the ar
chetype of such a book.
Having basked in his status as the author of War and Peace
(1 865-6 9) and Anna Karenina (1875-77), not to forget his station
as a wealthy landowner, Tolstoy was ripe for a devastating rever
sal of some kind. This came in the form of a crisis of conscious
ness during which he became mightily disenchanted with human
148
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E H U MAN RACE
life. Naturally, he began casting about for something to ease his
discomfiture. After turning to science for answers to the big
questions that had lately begun to eat at him, he came up with
this: "In general, the relation of the experimental sciences to life's
questions may be expressed thus: Question: 'Why do I live?' An
swer: 'In infinite space, in infinite time, infinitely small particles
change their forms in infinite complexity, and when you have
understood the laws of those mutations of form you will under
stand why you live on the earth."'
Those inclined to query the various sciences will forever
come upon the same answer. It is a useless answer to a useless
question. But Tolstoy did not think the question useless, only
the answer, so he kept on digging until he read Schopenhauer,
who only exasperated the Russian's crisis by answering, "Life is
that which should not be-an evil; and the passage into Noth
ingness is the only good in life." Tolstoy was impressed with
Schopenhauer as a thinker and tried to hold the plow steady as
he made his way through the philosopher's daunting works.
At length, Tolstoy narrowed down the options that people
like himself had available to them depending on whether they
wanted to keep believing that being alive was all right or were
ready to consider the alternative. (Please pardon the length of
this quotation, but Tolstoy's four principal strategies by which
his high-class circle managed the predicament of conscious exis
tence deserve as much of a hearing as Zapffe's four principal
strategies by which everyone manages the same predicament.)
I found that for people of my circle there were four ways out of
the terrible position in which we are all placed.
The first was that of ignorance. It consists in not knowing, not
understanding, that life is an evil and an absurdity. People of this
sort . . . have not yet understood that question of life . . . . They see
neither the dragon that awaits them nor the mice gnawing the
shrub by which they are hanging, and they lick the drops of
honey. But they lick those drops of honey only for a while: Some-
Sick to Death
1 49
thing will turn their attention to the dragon and the mice, and
there will be an end to their licking. From them I had nothing to
learn--one cannot c ease to know what one does know.
The second way out is Epicureanism. It consists, while knowing
the hopelessness of life, in making use meanwhile of the advantages
one has, disregarding the dragon and the mice, and licking the honey
in the best way, especially if there is much of it within reach. Solo
mon expresses this way out thus: "Then I commended mirth, be
cause a man hath no better thing under the sun, than to eat, and to
drink, and to be merry: and that this should accompany him in his
labor the days of his life, which God giveth him under the sun.
Therefore eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry
heart. . . . Live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest all the days
of the life of thy vanity . . . for this is thy portion in life and in thy
labors which thou takest under the sun. . . . Whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do, do it with thy might, for there is not work, nor de
vice, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest."
That is the way in which the majority of people of our circle
make life possible for themselves. Their circumstances furnish them
with more of welfare than of hardship, and their moral dullness
makes it possible for them to forget that the advantage of their po
sition is accidental, and that not everyone can have a thousand
wives and palaces like Solomon, that for everyone who has a thou
sand wives there are a thousand without a wife, and that for each
palace there are a thousand people who have to build it in the
sweat of their brows; and that the accident that has today made me
a Solomon may tomorrow make me a Solomon's slave. The dullness
of these people's imagination enables them to forget the things that
gave Buddha no peace--the inevitability of sickness, old age, and
death, which today or tomorrow will destroy all these pleasures.
So think and feel the majority of people of our day and our
manner of life. The fact that some of these people declare the
dullness of their thoughts and imaginations to be a philosophy,
which they call Positive, does not remove them, in my opinion,
from the ranks of those who, to avoid seeing the question, lick the
honey. I could not imitate these people; not having their dullness
of imagination I could not artificially produce it in myself. I could
not tear my eyes from the mice and the dragon, as no vital man
can after he has once seen them.
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E HUMAN RACE
The third escape is that of strength and energy. It consists in
destroying life, when one has understood that it is an evil and an
absurdity. A few exceptionally strong and consistent people act
so. Having understood the stupidity of the j oke that has been
played on them, and having understood that it is better to be dead
than to be alive, and that it is best of all not to exist, they act ac
cordingly and promptly end this stupid joke, since there are
means: a rope round one's neck, water, a knife to stick into one's
heart, or the trains on the railways; and the n umber of those of
our circle who act in this way becomes greater and greater, and
for the most part they act so at the best time of their life, when
the strength of their mind is in full bloom and few habits degrad
ing to the mind have as yet been acquired.
I saw that this was the worthiest way of escape and I wished
to adopt it.
The fourth way o ut is that of weakness. It consists in seeing
the truth of the situation and yet clinging to life, knowing in ad
vance that nothing can come of it. People of this kind know that
death is better than life, but not having the strength to act ration
ally-to end the deception quickly and kill themselves-they
seem to wait for something. This is the escape of weakness, for if I
know what is best and it is within my power, why not yield to
what is best? . . . I found myself in that category.
So people of my class evade the terrible contradiction in four
ways. Strain my attention as I would, I saw no way except those
four. . . .' (Trans. Aylmer Maude)
Earlier in his life, Tolstoy had fought intrepidly in the Crimean
War, and in War and Peace he used this experience for his rendi
tion of Russian life during the reign of Napoleon. Courageous in
battle, the literary master also flourished his fortitude in writing
the words in the above quotation. Few men of such wealth and
accomplishment have had the mettle to express sentiments of
this nature within earshot of their peers and the general public.
Naturally, Tolstoy expressed these sentiments only after he had
moved to safer ground, which turned his "confession" into a
handbook for survival, a trip guide with directions for skating
Sick to Death
around the pitfalls of consciousness that Zapffe would later out
line in "The Last Messiah."
Tolstoy's salvation came about when he hit upon a way to
disown coherence and sidle up to religion, even though it was
not religion of the common sort and led to his excommunication
from the Russian Orthodox Church. A titan of conceptual pres
tidigitation, he had rationalized his way into irrationality. Spend
ing time with his serfs helped him to befuddle his consciousness.
Like them-more nicely, like his perception of them-he began
living not by his brain but by his "gut." Then he started reasoning
with his gut, which showed him the way to recovery and spared
him the ordeal of becoming a suicide. Later, though, his mind
went to w ork again, and he was once more in crisis. He remained
preoccupied with life and death and meaning for the rest of his
days and as an author preached a brand of positive thought-as
in the b athetic "Death of lvan Ilyich" (1 886)-in an ongoing cru
sade against the bleakness that dogged him.
Bleakness II
Having been betrayed by such works as Tolstoy's Confession,
connoisseurs of bleakness may become shrewd readers. If they
are mistrustful of a book, leery that the promise of its inaugural
pages will be broken by its conclusion, they turn first to the
ending. Many books promoted as vehicles of a "dark vision" fin
ish up by lounging in a warm bath of affirmation, often doing a
traitorous. turnabout in their closing pages or paragraphs.2 As
every author, publisher, and carnival owner knows, lurid billing
gets a patron in the door. And so we have innumerable books
and magazine articles with such inquiring titles as The Misad
venture of Consciousness: Are Human Beings a Mistake of Evolu
tion ? or "Should We Stop Having Children?" The answer is
always "No," sometimes resounding in its declamation but more
often qualified, which is even more vile. Searchers after bleak-
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
ness would do well, then, to begin at the ending of books and
magazine articles with doomful titles or angst-fraught openings
if they are not to be chiseled by a bait-and-switch maneuver.
One of the finest curtain closers in fiction is that of Horace
McCoy's short novel They Shoot Horses, Don 't They? The pro
tagonist of this story is a young woman named Gloria Beatty.
Hoping to walk away with a sum of much-needed cash, and for
lack of anything better to do, Gloria becomes an entrant in a
grueling dance marathon during the Great Depression of the
1930s. A disconsolate loser from the start of the book, she be
gins the dance with an insight not habitually stressed in popular
fiction. "It's peculiar to me," Gloria says to her partner in the
marathon, "that everybody pays so much attention to living and
so little to dying. Why are these high-powered scientists always
screwing around trying to prolong life instead of finding pleas
ant ways to end it? There must be a hell of a lot of people in
the world like me--w ho want to die but haven't got the guts."
After the dance marathon has taken its toll on Gloria and
the other contestants, her once happy-go-lucky partner goes
over to her side, and with more nobility than any high-powered
scientist and more mercy than any god born of human imagina
tion, he helps her to end it all. This liberation is effectuated in
one of the most common and untidy ways the suicidal have
been forced to use for so long-a bullet to the brain. The ending
of McCoy's novel is what the average mortal would call bleak.
Naturally, bleak-minded readers of They Shoot Horses swoon
with relief when the gunshot has done its work. Yet even the
consolations of bleakness have their limits for those who treas
ure philosophical and literary works of a pessimistic, nihilistic,
or defeatist nature as indispensable to their existence. And
should bleakness itself fail them, they have been failed indeed.
Sick to Death
153
Pro-Life
They Shoot Horses, Don 't They? was first published in 1 935.
Since that time, scientists have continued screwing around to
draw out our days of pain and have done almost nothing on the
other front. It is as if they have taken Victor Frankenstein as a
role model and emulate him as they can. In his 1 994 bestseller
How We Die: Reflections on Life 's Final Chapter, surgeon Sher
win B. Nuland recounts how he coaxed a ninety-two-year-old
woman into having an operation that would wring from her a
few more months or years of life. While she initially declined,
content to die at what was already an advanced age, Dr. Nuland
wore her down and got her into the operating room, figuring, as
he states, that his patient was "one of those people to whom
survival was not worth the cost." He admits that he withheld
from her the exact nature of that cost as it would be extracted
in the form of postoperative agonies should she survive the sur
gery. She did survive long enough to suffer those agonies and to
let Nuland know what a villain she considered him to be.
Subsequent to some perfunctory hand-wrenching about his
dishonorable ministration, the doctor tries to vindicate himself by
confiding that, had he not performed this operation, he would be
chastised by his peer group at the hospital's weekly surgical con
ference for not following standard operating procedure. Nuland's
fellow surgeons, so he informs us, would have viewed his compli
ance with a patient's request to let her body die without further
tampering as an ethical call. But that was not his call to make. He
was not a moral philosopher. He was a technician entrusted to
keep bodies beating with life. All his decisions, then, must com
ply with this trust or he would have to answer for why they did
not. And to answer that his patient chose not to go under the
knife would be unacceptable, since doctors should be the only
ones to decide such things.3
1 54
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
In their actions, Nuland and his colleagues played out a main
stay of the horror genre: that of an experiment gone wrong.
This convention became proverbial following the publication in
i 8 1 8 of a novel that immortalized Mary Shelley. It is as if Nu
land and his fellow mad doctors took the botched surgery in
that book as their guiding light. "What protocol would Frank
enstein follow?" they might have asked themselves. He was
their mentor-the one for whom Life was the greatest show on
earth. To boot, Nuland had already sized up the old woman as
"one of those people."
Not as philosophically ahead of her years as McCoy's Gloria
in They Shoot Horses, Don 't They?, Nuland's patient did know
when the time had come for her to bow out gracefully. She
thought she might be allotted that much control over her life.
What she did not know was that she was strapped down in
Frankenstein's world, and by damn she would live and die by
Frankenstein's Oath: "We, as licensed protectors of the species
and members in good standing of the master-class of the race,
by the power invested in us by those who wish to survive and
reproduce, vow to enforce the fiction that life is worth having
and worth living come hell or irreparable brain damage." How
could an old woman who had been stigmatized as "one of those
people" go up against such a juggernaut of chicanery?
Eventually euthanasia will be an elective procedure for the ter
minally ill, and perhaps for anyone who so chooses this sure cure.
At this stage of social progress, however, those who reject Frank
enstein and affirm McCoy's Gloria must take care of themselves
. . . if they can work up the guts or get a little help. But standing
in the way of their making the right move are some formidable
obstacles. One of them is the conscience (archaic for "conscious
ness") that Shakespeare's Hamlet avowed "makes cowards of us
all." Another is the peer pressure that Dr. Nuland felt might
Sick to Death
155
squeeze him out of a j ob. There may also be a crew of friends and
relatives whose lives are interwoven with those of suicides and
who die with them though they live on after the "crime" of vol
untary death has been committed.
If nature made a blunder by retching up creatures in which
consciousness grew like a fungus, she still knew enough to im
plant in them an instinct that serves the species and spurs on its
members to chew off a leg to escape capture and killing, whose
dominant drives are survival and the spreading of themselves
far and wide. Should any philosopher ever establish that life is
not worth having and not worth living, the average mortal, as
well as the average surgeon, w ould somehow preserve the fic
tion of its value, however meager that might be.
Thanatop hobia
A philosophical bromide of the post-nihilistic era asserts that
being alive has no value except within a limited framework. In
the history of cinema, a well-worn storyline is that of a law
enforcement official who moves from a big city to a small town
because in the big city his efforts to better his environment were
ineffective or unnoticeable while those in a small town, he ex
pects, will "make a difference." The plan here is to change
frameworks in hopes of creating the illusion that one's life has
value in itself. It is an atheistic plan, if not overtly so. Theists do
not need limited frameworks to snatch some meaning for their
lives because they believe they have an absolute framework in a
Higher Power, even though they really do not. The veritable ex
clusion of a deity from both high and low cultural products tes
tifies that theism is a rather weak framework of meaning for the
majority of mortals, or at least for those who consume high and
low cultural products. If this were not so, then movies and other
types of entertainment in which meaning is found within the
frameworks of romantic love, action in the world, and so on
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
would be unnecessary, as they prove to be among certain Amish
and Mennonite sects.
Outside of the movies, the plan of exchanging one frame
work for another is more difficult to pull off. And since these
frameworks are made up by our minds, and not by a filmmaker,
they may break up at any moment. Although one may believe
in an ultimate frame in w hich our lives are lived out, the persis
tence of this belief is uncertain and not reliably consolatory.
Faith in some absolute--o r, alternatively, faith in some non
theistic framework of meaning-may go limp without advance
notice. Once the frame falls in upon itself, we must fall back on
our own resources and seek out another frame. None of these
frames is constant in preserving our comfort of mind and assist
ing us in making sense out of our lives. Moving from frame to
frame may afford us some comfort and sense for a good while,
yet there still remains that final frame from which we will never
break loose because it is a holding place waiting to be filled by
pain and then, in some form, by death. This is not a frame one
wants to explore for very long. All things considered, the happi
est epitaph to have etched on one's headstone is this: "He never
knew what hit him." On second thought, though, would dying
without so much as a heads- up and in the blink of an eye really
be the best way for us to go?
In his "Letter on Happiness" addressed to Menoeceus, Epicurus
wrote: "Foolish . . . is the man who says that he fears death, not
because it will pain when it comes, b ut because it pains in the
prospect." This statement seems to affirm that there is nothing
foolish about fearing the pain of death "when it comes." But
when Epicurus himself was dying, he wrote a note to his friend
Idomeneus, "On this blissful day, which is also the last of my
life, I write this to you. My continual sufferings from strangury
[due to kidney stones] and dysentery are so great that nothing
Sick to Death
15 7
could increase them; but I set above them all the gladness of
mind at the memory of our past conversations." So Epicurus
had all a mortal could want: to be fearless of dying, to be happy
while dying, and to be unafraid of death.
Unflustered as he was by the process of dying, the founder
of Epicureanism offered no logic for why others should not be
terrorized by it. His only logical formula was for the relieving
oneself of the fear of death: "Whatever causes no annoyance
when it is present, causes only a groundless pain in the expecta
tion. Death, therefore, the most awful of evils, is nothing to us,
seeing that, w hen we are, death is not come, and, when death is
come, we are not." Some persons may believe in Epicurus's
logic and by it not suffer the "groundless pain in the expecta
tion" of death. But how many can say the same about death's
pain before it comes or "when it comes"? This question brings
us back to our second thoughts on what would be the happiest
epitaph to have etched on one's headstone.
Suppose that the pain of dying were taken out of our lives?
Suppose that we all died without so much as a heads-up and in
the blink of an eye, because if our deaths did not happen in this
manner then dying would necessarily be painful. How else
would you know you were dying without the presence of pain,
the fear of which even Epicurus did not think was foolish? One
second we are alive, and the next we are dead. Then all of us
could never know what hit us, a gift that is now reserved only
for a happy few. Ideally democratic, this system of mortality
would equalize our ruination as one by one, or thousands in a
stroke, we departed from this life without so much as a heads
up and in the blink of an eye. Every time we sat down in a chair,
we could not be sure we would rise again before the reaper im
palpably took our hand. We could bypass every pain that w ould
lead to our death, which is not to say we would bypass pains
that w ould not lead to our death. Being in pain would then
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE H UMAN RACE
mean that one was not dying. Everything would be as it is now
except that we would succumb without so much as a heads-up
and in the blink of an eye. We would never have to think about
How we would die, only When. And when the When came, we
would not even know we had died. Each breath could be our
last. Under such an arrangement, we would either have to be
come Epicureans and not fear death or, more likely, we would
divert from our consciousness the thought that we could die
without so much as a heads-up and in the blink of an eye. The
latter is more likely because this is our present approach to the
inevitability of our death, only we would never have to fear the
all but inevitable pain of dying. Some morbid citizens among us
might become cataleptic with anxiety because their next breath
may be their last, but most of us would not be wrecked by such
unremitting worry. As a further bonus, we would have no grisly
images about the How, since the How would be the same for
all. So even on second thought, the happiest epitaph to have
etched on one's headstone would be: "He never knew what hit
him." We would still have to live our lives in shaky frameworks,
but death would be nothing to us because dying would be noth
ing to us, or most of us, since some of us might be cataleptic
with the morbid fear that our next breath may be our last. But
at least most of us would have it all, as did Epicurus, and would
not be the least bit pained about dying, as the Greek philoso
pher was not. Who among us would be so unrepentantly way
ward as to want a painful heads-up that we are dying or to die
in anything more than the blink of an eye? And only our most
morbid citizens would feel anxious about death.
Be that as it may, there is a school of psychology that has us all
figured as morbid citizens. Known as Terror Management The
ory (TMT), its principles were inspired by the writings of the
Canadian cultural anthropologist Ernest Becker, who was one
Sick to Death
159
with Zapffe in wondering why a "damning surplus of con
sciousness" had not caused humanity to go "extinct during great
epidemics of madness." In his best-known work, The Denial of
Death (1973)1 Becker wrote: "I believe that those who speculate
that a full apprehension of man's condition would drive him in
sane are right, quite literally right." Zapffe concluded that we
kept our heads by "artificially limiting the content of con
sciousness." Becker stated his identical conclusion as follows:
" [Man] literally drives himself into a blind obliviousness with
social games, psychological tricks, personal preoccupations so
far removed from the reality of his situation that they are forms
of madness, but madness all the same." Outlawed truisms. Ta
boo commonplaces.
Synthesizing and expanding Becker's core ideas, three psy
chology professors-Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg, and
Tom Pyszczynski-presented the concepts of TMT to the psy
chological community in the mid-1 98os. In its clinical studies
and research, TMT indicates that the mainspring of human be
havior is thanatophobia, and that this fear determines the entire
landscape of our lives. To subdue our death anxiety, we have
trumped up a world to deceive ourselves into believing that we
will persist-if only symbolically-beyond the breakdown of
our bodies. We know this fabricated world because we see it
around us every day, and to perpetuate our sanity we apotheo
size it as the best world in the world. Housing the most cyclo
pean fabrications are houses of worship where some people go
to get a whiff of meaning, which to such people means only
one thing-immortality. In heaven or hell or reincarnated life
forms, we must go on and on-us without end. Travesties of
immortalism are effected day and night in obstetrics wards, fac
tories of our future that turn out a product made in its makers'
image, a miracle granted by entering into a devil's bargain with
God, who is glorified with all the credit for giving us a chance
1 60
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
to have our names and genetics projected into a time we will
not live to see.4
However, as TMT analyzes this scheme, getting the better
of our death anxiety is not as simple as it might appear. If we
are to be at peace with our mortality, w e need to know that
what we leave behind us when we die will survive just as we
left it. Those churches cannot be just any churches-they must
be our churches, whoever we may be. The same holds true of
progeny and its stand-ins. In lieu of personal immortality, we
are willing to accept the survival of persons and institutions
that we regard as extensions of us-our families, our heroes, our
religions, our countries.5 And anyone who presents a threat to
our continuance as a branded society of selves, anyone who
does not look and live as we do, should think twice before
treading on our turf, because from here to eternity it is every
self for itself and all its facsimiles. In such a world, one might
extrapolate that the only honest persons-from the angle of
self-delusion, naturally-are those who brazenly implement
genocide against outsiders who impinge upon them and their
world. With that riff-raff out of the way, there will be more
room on earth and in eternity for the right sort of people and
their fabrications.
That said, promulgators of TMT believe that a universal dis
persion of their ideas will make people more tolerant of the alien
worldviews of others and not kill them because those world
views remind them of how ephemeral or unfounded their own
may be. The paradox of this belief is that it requires everyone to
abandon the very techniques of terror management by which
TMT claims we so far have managed our terror, or some of it. As
usual, though, there is an upbeat way out for terror management
theorists in that they argue "that the best worldviews are ones
that value tolerance of different others, that are flexible and open
to modifications, and that offer paths to self-esteem minimally
Sick to Death
16i
likely to encourage hurting others" (Handbook of Experimental
Existential Psychology, ed. Jeff Greenberg et al.) . Of course, this is
just another worldview that brandishes itself as the best world
view in the world, meaning that it would agitate others w ith a
sense of how ephemeral or unfounded their own may be and
cause them to retaliate. But terror management theorists also
have a back-up plan, which is that in the future we will not need
terror management and instead will discover that "serious con
frontations with mortality can have positive, liberating effects,
facilitating real growth and life satisfaction." There is no arguing
that humanity may someday reap the benefits of a serious con
frontation with mortality. While waiting for that day, we still
have genocide as the ultimate insurance of our worldviews.
In categorical opposition to genocide on an as-needed basis
are such individuals as Gloria Beatty. Without making too much
of a mess, they quietly shut the door on a single life, caring not
that they leave behind people who are not like them. Most of
these antisocial types are only following the logic of pain to its
conclusion. Some plan their last bow to serve the double duty of
both delivering them from life and avenging themselves for some
wrong, real or imagined, against them. Also worthy of mention is
a clique among the suicidal for whom the meaning of their act is
a darker thing. Frustrated as perpetrators of an all-inclusive ex
termination, they would kill themselves only because killing it all
is closed off to them. They hate having been delivered into a
world only to be told, by and by, 'This way to the abattoir, La
dies and Gentlemen." They despise the conspiracy of Lies for Life
almost as much as they despise themselves for being a party to it.
If they could unmake the world by pushing a button, they would
do so without a second thought. There is no satisfaction in a
lonesome suicide. The phenomenon of "suicide euphoria" aside,
there is only fear, bitterness, or depression beforehand, then the
troublesomeness of the method, and nothingness afterward. But
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
to push that button, to depopulate this earth and arrest its rota
tion as well-what satisfaction, as of a job prettily done. This
would be for the good of all, for even those who know nothing
about the conspiracy against the human race are among its in
jured parties. 6
Tragedy
As we are all well aware, people often have seriously discrepant
interests and desires. If this were not so, we would all be getting
along with one another, which has never been and never will be
the rule. Nothing in our history or our nature even hints that
we will ever liquidate our differences, which can be anything
from a good-natured divergence of opinion to a war-making
contentiousness over property rights. Some people would like
to have a little peace rather than the ever-sounding disharmony
of bloodletting. But for that to happen, our myriad voices
would have to dissolve into a single pitch-a unison that would
bore to tears anyone w ho is not a saint or ego-dead.
Our common preference as a species is for difference rather
than unity. (Vive la difference. Vive la guerre.) Nobody designed
us to be this way-it j ust happens to be how we blundered
into the nightmare of being. Life preys on life, per Schopen
hauer and natural history. One organism's body is another or
ganism's meal. As the title character of Stephen Sondheim's
Sweeney Todd (1 979) sings to his partner in manslaughter, one
Mrs. Lovett: "For what's the sound of the world out there? It's
man devouring man, my dear." To claim otherwise is a lie. Dif
ferences make all the difference to us. What w e want is variety
in our lives-a multitude of distractions to keep consciousness
in its cage. What we want is the unheard-of, the nothing-like.
And there is nothing like the screech of Sweeney's blade that
we hear at the opening to Sondheim's musical tragedy about
the Demon Barber of Fleet Street.
Sick to Death
To entertain ourselves for a spell, let us proclaim that w ere it
not for tragedy the human race would have gone extinct long ago.
It keeps us on our toes and pushes us toward the future in a
paradoxical search to purge the tragic from our lives. As the wise
puppet said, "Better we should be inundated by tragedy than to
have nothing meaningful to work toward." No one knows this
better than the entertainers among us, those sublimating masters
of artifice who could not forge their "great works" without the
screams and sobs arising out of the pit where tremulous shadow s
run from themselves.
As decreed by its author, each action and consequence in
Sweeney Todd flows out of and feeds into the tragic, artificially
speaking. It is the pedal tone over which all other propellants of
the drama-for instance, beauty and love--serve as passing grace
notes that seem to suggest something other than the tragic, yet
are actually as much a part of the piece as the unhomely horrors
that stalk the stage. While Sondheim's musical inspires the pity
and fear that Aristotle believed should be affects of tragic drama,
no Aristotelian purgation of emotion or catharsis is infused in us
at the end. From the opening to the finale of Sondheim's tragedy
there is only a perpetual agon among casualties of the human
condition.
So Sweeney begins his tragic tale: "There was a barber and
his w ife." In the style of many a horror that has wormed its way
from the muck of organic existence, Sweeney Todd has as its
back-story a happy marriage and the propagation of a new life,
in this case that of the child Johanna. ("Wake up, Johanna, it's
another bright red day," sings Pater Todd.) And new life only
rehashes old life in its pain when one offspring meets another. "I
feel you, Johanna I I'll steal you, Johanna," croons Anthony to
his beloved, who together compose a romantic pairing for the
purpose of casting a ray of false hope into the sooty stage set of
the drama.
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
However, to anyone who has not fallen asleep during the
performance, this new Adam and Eve are only being readied for
the meat grinder of existence, just as were a barber named Ben
jamin Barker and his wife Lucy, all because Judge Turpin lusted
after Benjamin's spouse and got him out of the way by unjustly
sentencing the haircutter to a long prison term in Australia. De
ranged by her rape at a soiree presided over by the judge, Lucy
kills herself, or tries to, by drinking poison, leaving her infant
daughter in the hands of the dirty old jurist, who raises her as
his ward and, despite his best efforts, drools to have her in his
bed following a May-December marriage. When Benjamin re
turns after his escape from prison some decades later, all he
wants is to be reunited with his wife and child. Alas, this is not
to be, which is how Sweeney Todd, mad to avenge the wrongs
against him and his wife, not to mention the abduction of his
child, comes to be born. In league with Mrs. Lovett, an unscru
pulous maker of meat pies, the tragedy begins in earnest as
Sweeney begins slicing throats and his consort grinds his victims
into tasty edibles to be sold at her shop.
As husband and wife raising a girl-child, Benjamin and Lucy
would have been galloping bores. It is only when they have
been driven in chains through the inferno of their lives that
they are fit to slake our thirst for tragedy, motivator of both the
masses and above-average mortals. They are positioned within
the innermost circle of hell, while Mrs. Lovett, Judge Turpin,
Tobias Ragg, and others radiate concentrically about them with
their own fateful cravings (for beauty, love, and such like) , edg
ing them ever closer to the barber's blade and the fire-belching
oven.
Ready or not, we all end up as filling for one of Mrs.
Lovett' s meat pies. In the reported last words of Thomas Lovell
Beddoes, the Romantic poet called himself "food for what I am
good for-worms." Even though worms do not dine on many of
Sick to Death
165
us in modernized nations, the point still resonates that our lives
are fundamentally inglorious. It is as a counterweight to the
blithering fatuousness of human life that tragedy as entertain
ment performs a crucial function-that of coating the spattered
nothingness of our lives with a veneer of grandeur and style,
qualities of the theatrical world and not the everyday one. This
is why we are thrilled with the horror of Sweeney Todd and
envy the qualities that he possesses and we lack. He is as edify
ing as any sage when he sings "We all deserve to die," given that
none of us can unmake our making. He has a sense of mission
that few who are made of flesh and blood rather than of music
and poetry will ever know ("But the work waits I I'm alive at
last I And I'm full of joy") . Most of all, he has the courage and
bravado to do that which he knows needs to be done. "To seek
revenge may lead to hell," he cautions, to which Mrs. Lovett an
swers, "But everyone does it and seldom as well . . . as
Sweeney."
Nature is limited to Grand Guignol, spectacles of bloodlust
and fests of slaughter. But we humans can reach for things more
heady than the corpse. After murder and cannibalism have been
played out in Sweeney Todd, the dead rise up for an encore, one
of many they will make in a world where nature is not in
charge--a world that spins in the supernatural, our world. Col
lectively, we are the undead, and for us the work will always be
waiting, the devouring will never be done until someone or
something performs the service of killing our rat race or we kill
off ourselves. As in the beginning, so at the end, the dangling
puppets sing: "Attend the tale of Sweeney Todd," a story that
makes for a wonderfully tragic evening at the theater.
Whatever else we may be as creatures that go to and fro on the
earth and walk up and down upon it, we are meat. A cannibalis
tic tribe that once flourished had a word to describe what they
1 66
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
ate. That word translates as "the food that talks." Most of the food
that we have eaten over the course of human history has not
talked. But it does make other noises, terrible sounds as it makes
the transition from living meat to dead meat on the slaughter
house floor. If we could hear these sounds every time we sat
down to a hearty meal, would we still be the wanton gobblers of
flesh that most of us are now? This is hard to say. But as Farmer
Vincent (Rory Calhoun) says in the movie Motel Hell (1 980) :
"Meat's meat and a man's gotta eat." And it takes all kinds of crit
ters to make Farmer Vincent's fritters.
Beef, pork, sometimes goat-they go into us and come out
of us. This is part of the regimen of nonsense that nature forced
upon us. But it is not all the nonsense we must endure as we go
to and fro on the earth and walk up and down upon it. The na
ture nonsense, the God nonsense. How much nonsense can we
take in our lives? And is there any way we can escape it? No,
there is not. We are doomed to all kinds of nonsense: the pain
nonsense, the nightmare nonsense, the sweat and slave non
sense, and many other shapes and sizes of insufferable nonsense.
It is brought to us on a plate, and we must eat it up or face the
death nonsense.7
But perhaps by lustfully consuming the worst nonsense of
our lives, including the death nonsense, we may eat our way out
of our all-consuming tragedy as a conscious species. Professor
Nobody has something to say about this tactic in his lecture
"Sardonic Harmony." Here he builds to a tone of undisguised ac
rimony unusual for the coolly didactic, self-styled savant. But
that is no reason we should not listen to his nonsense once more.
Compassion for human hurt, a humble sense of our imperma
nence, an absolute valuation of j ustice-all our so-called virtues
only trouble us and serve to bolster, not assuage, horror. In addi
tion, these qualities are our least vital, the least in line with life.
More often than not, they stand in the way of one's rise in the
welter of this world, which found its pace long ago and has not
Sick to Death
deviated from it since. The putative affirmations of life--e ach of
them based on the propaganda of Tomorrow: reproduction, revo
lution in its widest sense, piety in any form you can name--a re
only affirmations of our desires. And, in fact, these affirmations af
firm nothing but our propensity for self-torment, our mania to
preserve a demented innocence in the face of gruesome facts.
By means of supernatural horror we may evade, if momentarily,
the horrific reprisals of affirmation. Every one of us, having been
stolen from nonexistence, opens his eyes on the world and looks
down the road at a few convulsions and a final obliteration. What a
weird scenario. So why affirm anything, why make a pathetic vir
tue of a terrible necessity? We are destined to a fool's fate that de
serves to be mocked. And since there is no one else around to do
the mocking, we will take on the job. So let us indulge in cruel
pleasures against ourselves and our pretensions, let us delight in the
Cosmic Macabre. At least we may send up a few bitter laughs into
the cobwebbed corners of this crusty old universe.
Supernatural horror, in all its eerie constructions, enables a
reader to taste treats inconsistent with his personal welfare. Admit
tedly, this is not a practice likely to find universal favor. True ma
cabrists are as rare as poets and form a secret society by the bad
standing of their memberships elsewhere, some of their outside af
filiations having been cancelled as early as birth. But those who have
gotten a good whiff of other worlds and sampled a cuisine marginal
to stable existence will not be able to stay themselves from the un
canny feast of horrors that has been laid out for them. They will loi
ter in moonlight, eyeing the entranceways to cemeteries, waiting for
some propitious moment to crash the gates and see what is inside.
Once and for all, let us speak the paradox aloud: "We have
been force-fed for so long the shudders of a thousand graveyards
that at last, seeking a macabre redemption, a salvation by horror,
we willingly consume the terrors of the tomb . . . and find them to
our liking."
TH E C U LT OF
GRI N N I N G M A RTY RS
Institutionalized
Undeniably, one of the great disadvantages of consciousness
that is, consciousness considered as the parent of all horrors-is
that it exacerbates necessary sufferings and creates unnecessary
ones, such as the fear of death. Not having what it takes to take
their own lives (ask Gloria Beatty) , those who suffer intolerably
learn to hide their afflictions, both necessary and unnecessary,
because the world does not run on pain time but on happy
time, whether or not that happiness is honestly felt or a mask
for the blackest despondency. Every shrewd slave knows enough
to be as perky as he is submissive in the presence of his master.
And those seated in the head offices of the earth know that
gales of happy talk must be blown the way of ordinary folk,
who need to hear that things are all right all the time, or, if they
are not all right, soon will be. Whether your ambition is to rule
over your fellows or simply to maneuver among them, a show
of j aunty bptimism is requisite.
In a section of The World as Will and Representation where
Schopenhauer argues that only pain is real while pleasure is an
illusion, the philosopher writes: "I cannot here withhold the
statement that optimism, where it is not merely the thoughtless
talk of those who harbor nothing but words under their shallow
foreheads, seems to me to be not merely an absurd, but also a
really wicked, way of thinking, a bitter mockery of the most un1 69
170
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
speakable sufferings of mankind" (Schopenhauer's emphasis) .
Those who do not wholly endorse Schopenhauer's opinion of
optimism can still gain some understanding of what he is talk
ing about when they behold a spittle-chinned demagogue bawl
ing out homilies and lies to a rapt audience. It is on such
occasions that optimism reveals itself as so noisome that even
those who customarily prefer an optimistic spell to be cast
upon them may become queasy with a sense of the wickedness
that turns the gears of the world-machine. "Wickedness," we
know, is a moral term, for those who care about such fabrica
tions. Yet sometimes those who do not usually care a whit
about such things are moved to bark out moral recriminations
as the horribly clownish face of optimism brightens the sky the
better to peruse the bodies and minds being mangled below.
Optimistically wicked or not, most people cannot afford to
care, or to care too much, if they are living in the best or the
worst of all possible worlds. They can only care about the one
thing that, if one is to think of being alive as being all right, is
worth caring about-feeling good, or as good as possible, what
ever "feeling good" might mean to a certain individual at a cer
tain time. Should anyone ask what you are doing, you might
say, "I'm hammering a nail" or "I'm searching for absolute truth."
Yet all you are really saying is this: "I'm trying to feel as good as
I can." Of course, you may be caught in a tight spot where the
best you can feel is not very good or is even very bad. These are
situations in which the alternative, or the perceived alternative,
is to feel worse. Ergo, you are still trying to feel as good as you
can, although you might not see it that way as you mark time
feeling not so good until you can once again feel good in the
way you like most. But as evolution would have it, we seem to
have a "negativity bias" that reins in those feelings which, when
we feel them, are felt to be unquestionably good.
As one arm of evolutionary psychology hypothesizes, pleas-
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
171
urable emotions and sensations germinated because they were
adaptive.' Example: In past ages, climactic release from the
stress of carnal desire was solely a catalyst for the generative
survival of our species, the link between the two phenomena
not yet being known. Following the advent of language, every
one began praising fleshly pleasure, while few, if any, celebrate
the biological drive that leads to it, just as everyone praises a
good meal but not the hunger that makes it so pleasurable. The
analogy between these pleasures and others that are also appe
tite-driven, such as those of a drug addict, should be clear. Being
freed of a desire is indeed a pleasure. But knowing the remorse
less ways of nature, should anyone be thunderstruck that by
mutation she has put a lid on the extent of our pleasure and a
limit on how long it may last, not to mention favoring pain as
the main inducement for our b ehavior?2
If human pleasure did not have both a lid and a time limit,
we would not b estir ourselves to do things that were not pleas
urable, such as toiling for our subsistence. And then we would
not survive. By the same token, should our mass mind ever be
c ome discontented with the restricted pleasures doled out by
nature, as well as disgruntled over the lack of restrictions on
pain, we would omit the mandates of survival from our lives
out of a stratospherically acerbic indignation. And then we
would not reproduce. As a species, we do not shout into the
sky, "The pleasures of this world are not enough for us." In fact,
they are just enough to drive us on like oxen pulling a cart full
of our calves, which in their tum will put on the yoke. As inor
dinately evolved beings, though, we can postulate that it will
not always be this way. "A time will come," we say to ourselves,
"when we will unmake this world in which we are battered be
tween long burden and brief delight, and will live in pleasure
for all our days." The belief in the possibility of long-lasting,
high-flown pleasures is a deceptive but adaptive flimflam. It
1 72
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
seems that nature did not make us to feel too good for too long,
which would be no good for the survival of the species, b ut
only to feel good enough for long enough to keep us from
complaining that we do not feel good all the time.
In the workaday world, complainers will not go far. When
someone asks how you are doing, you had better be wise
enough to reply, "I can't complain." If you do complain, even
justifiably, people will stop asking how you are doing. Com
plaining will not help you succeed and influence people. You
can complain to your physician or psychiatrist because they are
paid to hear you complain. But you cannot complain to your
boss or your friends, if you have any. You will soon be dis
missed from your job and dropped from the social register.
Then you will be left alone with your complaints and no one to
listen to them. Perhaps then the message will sink into your
head: If you do not feel good enough for long enough, you
should act as if you do and even think as if you do. That is the
way to get yourself to feel good enough for long enough and
stop you from complaining for good, as any self-improvement
book can affirm. But should you not improve, someone must
assume the blame. And that someone will be you. This is
monumentally so if you are a pessimist or a depressive. Should
you conclude that life is objectionable or that nothing mat
ters-do not waste our time with your nonsense. We are on
our way to the future, and the philosophically disheartening or
the emotionally impaired are not going to hinder our progress.
If you cannot say something positive, or at least equivocal, keep
it to yourself. Pessimists and depressives need not apply for a
position in the enterprise of life. You have two choices: Start
thinking the way God and your society want you to think or be
forsaken by all. The decision is yours, since you are a free agent
who can choose to rejoin our fabricated world or stubbornly
insist on . . . what? That we should mollycoddle non-positive
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
1 73
thinkers like you or rethink how the whole world transacts its
business? That we should start over from scratch? Or that we
should go extinct? Try to be realistic. We did the best we could
with the tools we had. After all, we are only human, as we like
to say. Our world may not be in accord with nature's way, but
it did develop organically according to our consciousness,
which delivered us to a lofty p rominence over the Creation.
The whole thing j ust took on a life of its own, and nothing is
going to stop it anytime soon. There can be no starting over and
no going back. No major readjustments are up for a vote. And
no melancholic head-case is going to bad-mouth o ur catastro
phe. The universe was created by the Creator, damn it. We live
in a country we love and that loves us b ack. We have families
and friends and jobs that make it all worthwhile. We are some
bodies, not a b unch of nobodies without names or numbers or
retirement plans. None of this is going to be overhauled by a
thought criminal who contends that the world is not double
plusgood and never will be. Our lives may not be unflawed
that would deny us a better future to work toward-but if this
charade is good enough for us, then it should be good enough
for you. So if you cannot get your mind right, try walking away.
You will find no place to go and no one who will have you.
You will find o nly the same old trap the world over. Lighten up
or leave us alone. You will never get us to give up our hopes.
You will never get us to wake up from our dreams. We are not
contradictory beings whose continuance only worsens our
plight as mutants who embody the contorted logic of a para
dox. Such opinions will not be accredited by institutions of au
thority or by the middling run of humanity. To lay it on the
line, whatever thoughts may enter your chemically imbalanced
brain are invalid, inauthentic, or whatever dismissive term we
care to hang on you, who are only "one of those people." So
start pretending that you feel good enough for long enough,
1 74
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
stop your complaining, and get back in line. If you are not as
strong as Samson-that no-good suicide and slaughterer of Phil
istines-then get loaded to the gills and return to the trap. Keep
your medicine cabinet and your liquor cabinet well stocked,
j ust like the rest of us. Come on and join the party. No pessi
mists or depressives invited. Do you think we are morons? We
know all about those complaints of yours. The only difference
is that we have sense enough and feel good enough for long
enough not to speak of them. Keep your powder dry and your
brains blocked. Our shibboleth: "Up the Conspiracy and dow n
with Consciousness."
Disillusionmen t
Antagonistic to any somber ideations, humankind has trained
itself to ingest ever-increasing disillusionments and metabolize
them without any impairment to its system. By means of self
mastery through conscious autosuggestion, or by whatever
means, the biblical Genesis and all other fables of origination
have been unproblematically reduced to mythic precursors of
the Big Bang theory and the primordial soup. Pantheon after
pantheon has been b elittled into "things people used to believe
in." And supplications to the Divine are murmured only inside
the tents of faith healers or in the minds of the desperate.
The only constraint on disillusionment is the following: It
must creep along so sluggishly that almost none can mark its
movement. Anyone caught trying to accelerate the progress of
disillusionment will be reprimanded and told to sit in the cor
ner, if only in free-world nations where the Church and the
State have lost the clout to kill or torture dissenters. A sign of
progress, some would say. But sufferance of renegade minds
should not lead us into premature self-congratulation. The rate
at which our kind plods toward disillusionment is geologically
slow, and humanity can be cocksure of its death by natural
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
1 75
causes or an " act of God" before it travels very far toward that
beatific day when with one voice it might exclaim, "Enough of
this error of conscious life. It shall b e passed down no longer to
those innocents unborn."
In "The Last Messiah," Zapffe conjectures that with the passing
of generations the more profligate will become humanity's
means of hiding its disillusionments from itself: the more
brainless and delusive its isolation from the actualities of exis
tence; the more stupefying and uncouth its distractions from
the startling and dreadful; the more heavy-handed and madcap
its anchorings in unreality; and the more callous, self-mocking,
and detached from life its sublimations in art. These develop
ments will not make us any more paradoxical in our being, but
they could make all manifestations of our paradoxical nature
less effective and more aberrant. Speaking in terms of his time,
and ours, Zapffe writes in "The Last Messiah" of our rising
"spiritual unemployrnent. "
The absence of naturally (biologically) based spiritual activity
shows up, for example, in the pervasive recourse to distraction
(entertai nment, sport, radio--the "rhythm of the times") . Terms
for anchoring are not as favorable-all the inherited, collective
systems of anchorings are punctured by c riticism, and anxiety, dis
gust, confusion, despair leaking in through the rifts ("corpses in
the cargo") . Communism and psychoanalysis, however incommen
surable otherwise, both attempt (as Communism also has a spiri
tual reflection) by novel means to vary the old escape anew;
applying, respectively, v iolence and guile to make humans biologi
cally fit by ensnaring their c ritical surpl us of cognition. The idea,
in either case, is uncannily logical. But again, it cannot yield a final
solution. Though a deliberate degeneration to a more viable nadi r
may certainly save the species in the short run, it will hy its nature
be unable to find peace in such resignation, or indeed find any
peace at all. . . .
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
If we continue on these considerations to the bitter end, then
the conclusion is not in doubt. As long as humankind recklessly
proceeds in the fateful delusion of being biologically fated for tri
umph, nothing essential will change. As the numbers mount and
the spiritual atmosphere thickens, the techniques of protection
must assume an increasingly brutal character.
Rather than being a visionary or a prophet, Zapffe was an ana
lyst of disaster, and his pessimism is nothing if not down to
earth.
Pressurized
The Romanian-born French writer E. M. Cioran counted among
his greatest accomplishments breaking himself of the habit of
cigarette smoking and the fact that he never became a parent.
Nothing in Cioran's file would lead one to think he was ever
tempted to have children. His remark was a derision of people
whose fecundity had swollen a world he would rather have seen
in ashes. A maestro of pessimism, Cioran published several vol
umes of philosophical essays and aphorisms that assaulted what
he considered the inexcusable crumminess of all creation. Con
tained in his works is an ample stock of quotable outbursts, any
one of which could serve as a synopsis of his conviction that
human existence was a wrong tum made by the universe. "Life,"
he wrote, "is an uprising within the inorganic, a tragic leap out of
the inert-life is matter animated and, it must be said, spoiled by
pain." But that was just his opinion.
Those who feel they have free will, meaning everyone, also
feel they are free to have any opinion they want on any issue be
fore them. They are like those "believers in anything" already
mentioned who may have an opinion about whatever they be
lieve to be true. As we know, the premier opinion that has held
in all time and places is that there is some sure reason for the
continuance of the human species. This opinion is so prevailing
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
1 77
that it is usually assumed to be a fact and not an opinion. In
Reason 's Grief: An Essay on Tragedy and Value (2006)1 George
W. Harris propounds this opinion most poignantly: "While we
might . . . admit that the existence of human and animal suffer
ing is itself a tragedy, it would be a greater tragedy still to end it
all. How can we account for this tragic sense, the sense that
something would be lost with such a termination?" That it
would be a greater tragedy to end all animal and human suffer
ing than to have it continue is an opinion stated as a fact. Grant
ing that "something would be lost with such a termination," it
remains to be established whether or not that "something'' were
better let go than kept going. And that this termination inspires
in us a tragic sense for which we need to account is also only
Harris's opinion-one that he later, with disarming honesty,
concedes is reserved for those who are fortunate enough to have
lives they believe are worth having; otherwise, what he calls the
"apocalyptic option" would be all right.
Nothing definitive supports the opinion that humanity should
persist in being, just as nothing definitive supports the opinion
that humanity should cease to exist. In place of universally con
vincing reasons in this matter, or even commonsense thought,
there is pressure. Thus, people who hold the opinion that the
human race should go extinct are pressured by the bad opinion
of almost all others to excoriate themselves as wrong in having
this opinion. All said, the opinion of an anti-natalist is not reck
oned a praiseworthy one in this world, and anti-natalists are cog
nizant of this fact. U nlikewise, pro-natalists are not at all
cognizant that their opinion that procreation is all right is not
praiseworthy either.
Opinion: There are no praiseworthy incentives to repro
duce. For pro-natalists, children are only a means to an end, and
none of those ends is praiseworthy. They are the ends of people
T H E CONSPI RACY AGAI NST T H E H U M A N RACE
who already exist, a condition that automatically makes them
prej udiced in favor of existence. Yet even though these people
think that being alive is all right, they are not at a loss to think
of reasons why in some cases it would be better not to have
been. They can only hope that their children will not be one of
those cases, for their sake as well as for the sake of their off
spring. To have a praiseworthy incentiv e for bearing a child,
one would first have to prove that child to be an end in itself,
which no one can prove about anything, least of all about
something that does not yet exist. You could argue, of course,
that a child is an end in itself and is a good in itself. And you
could go on arguing until the child ages to death or sickens to
death or has a fatal vehicular misadventure. But you cannot ar
gue that anyone comes to an end that is a good in itself. Y ou
can only accept that someday he or she will come to an end
that is an end in itself, which, as people sometimes say, may be
for the best.
In place of arguments pro or con, pressure is brought to
bear on breeders-in-waiting to be of the opinion that there is
indeed a plethora of praiseworthy incentives for making more
of us. The pressure put upon them, biology notwithstanding,
takes the guise of the good opinion of others who want them to
think, and who themselves think, they are right in having the
opinion that procreation is all right. Some may resist this pres
sure, but they will not be roundly praised for doing so, although
they may receive a dispensation if the product of their union is
likely to be defective.
Among the least praiseworthy incentives to reproduce are
parents' pipe dreams of posterity-that egoistic compulsion to
send emissaries into the future who will certify that their mak
ers once lived and still live on, if only in photographs and home
movies. Vying for an even less praiseworthy incentive to repro
duce is the sometimes irresistible prospect of taking pride in
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
1 79
one's children as consumer goods, trinkets or tie-clips, personal
accessories that may be shown off around town. But primary
among the pressures to propagate is this: To become formally
integrated into a society, one must offer it a blood sacrifice. A s
David Benatar has alleged in Better Never to Have Been, all pro
creators have red hands, morally and ethically speaking.
Naturally, the average set of parents is able to conceive of
less reprehensible, but still not praiseworthy, incentives for re
production. Among these are the urgency to beat the biological
clock or abandon all hope for the legendary enjoyments of the
parental role; the desire to solidify a spousal relationship; the
wish to please one's own parents with grandchildren; the need of
an insurance policy that one's offspring will probably feel obli
gated to pay off once their begetters are in their dotage; the
quelling of a sense of guilt or selfishness for not having done their
duty as human beings; and the squelching of that pathos which is
associated with the childless.3
Such are some of the non-praiseworthy incentives of those
who would fertilize the future. And they are all pressures of
one kind or another. These pressures build up in people
throughout their lifetimes and c ry to be released, just as our
bowels cry to be released to avoid the discomfort of a fecal
build-up. And who, if they could help it, wants the discomfort
of a fecal build-up? So w e make bowel movements to relieve
this pressure. Similarly, quite a few people make gardens be
cause they cannot withstand the pressure of not making a gar
den. Others commit murder because they cannot withstand the
pressure building up within them to kill someone, either a per
son known to them or a passing stranger. And so on. Our whole
lives consist of pressures to make metaphorical as well as actual
bowel movements. Releasing these pressures can have greater
or lesser consequences in the scheme of our lives. But they are
all bowel-movement pressures of some kind. At a certain age,
180
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
children are praised for making a bowel movement in the ap
proved manner. Later on, the praise of others dies down for this
achievement and our bowel movements become our own busi
ness, although we may continue to praise ourselves for them.
Yet pressures go on influencing our lives, including pressures to
have some opinions rather than others, and the proper release
of these essentially bowel-movement pressures may once more
come up for praise, congratulations, and huzzahs of all kinds.
No different from other species on this planet, the human
race flourishes while it can, even though there is no praisewor
thy incentive to do so. Nevertheless, we cannot count out the
possibility that with the passing of hundreds or thousands of
years we will attain immortality, or something close to it, which
would obviate our function as servants of our species whose
primary interests are to survive and reproduce ourselves. Let us
also presage that at this distant stage of human evolution we
have fully fathomed all material matters of the universe-its
beginning, its end, and all its workings. Having reached such an
intellectual apex, we would need only to bar from our thoughts
a single question, one to which there can be no positive answer
in either material or metaphysical terms. The question takes
various forms. We have already investigated one form of this
question: "What use is it to exist?" Herman T 0nnessen, in his
essay "Happiness Is for the Pigs: Philosophy versus Psychother
apy" (Journal of Existentialism, 1 9 67) , cites another form of the
question: "What is it all about?" He then explains the context
and significance of the question.
Mitja (in Brothers Karamazov) felt that though his question may be
absurd and senseless, yet he had to ask j ust that, and he had to ask it
in j ust that way. Socrates bandied about that an unexamined life is
not worthy of Man. And Aristotle saw Man's "proper" goal and
"proper" limit in the right exercise of those faculties which are
uniquely human. It is commonplace that men, unlike other living
organisms, are not equipped with built-in mechanisms for auto-
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
matic maintenance of their existence. Man would perish immedi
ately if he were to respond to his environment exclusively in terms
of unlearned biologically inherited forms of behavior. In order to
survive, the human being must discover how various things around
as well as in him operate. And the place he occupies in the present
scheme of organic c reation is the consequence of having learned
how to exploit his intellectual capacities for such discoveries
Hence, more human than any other human longing is the pursuance
of a total v iew of Man's function--or malfunction-in the Uni
verse, his possible place and importance in the widest concei vable
cosmic scheme. In other words it is the attempt to answer, or at least
articulate whatever questions are entailed in the dying groan of on
tological despair: What is it all about ? This may well prove biologi
cally harmful or even fatal to Man. Intellectual honesty and Man's
high spiritual demands for order and meaning may drive Man to the
deepest antipathy to life and necessitate, as one existentialist
chooses to express it: "A no to this wild, banal, grotesque and loath
some carnival in the world's graveyard. (Emphasis in original)
.
"
The quote at the end of this excerpt from Tonnessen's essay is
taken from Zapffe's On the Tragic. While Tonnessen believes
that "intellectual honesty" must lead to "ontological despair, " ul
timately his preference is for living the heroic life of a clear
eyed desperado of pessimism-after the existential stylings of
Miguel de Unamuno, Albert Camus, William Brashear, Joshua
Foa Dienstag, and others-rather than wallowing in the self
deceptive happiness of a human pig. I n principle, there does
seem to be a moral divide between the way of the desperado
and that of the pig; practically, there is none. Both are spoiling
for survival in a MALIGNANTLY USELESS world. And sur
vival is for the pigs.
Ask Professor Nobody about reasoning the state of our lives
to the limit. Tilting again toward stridency, here is what he has
to say on the subj ect in "Pessimism and Supernatural Horror
Lecture Two."
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
Dead bodies that walk in the night, living bodies suddenly pos
sessed by new owners and deadly aspirations, bodies without sen
sible form, and a b ody of unnatural laws in accordance with
which tortures and executions are meted out-some examples of
the logic of supernatural horror. It is a logic founded on fear, a
logic whose sole p rinciple states: "Existence equals nightmare."
Unless life is a dream, nothing makes sense. For as a reality, it is a
rank failure. A few more examples: a trusting soul catches the
night in a bad mood and must pay a dreadful price; another opens
the wrong door, sees something he should not have, and suffers
the consequences; still another walks down an unfamiliar street
. . . and is lost forever.
That we all deserve punishment by horror is as mystifying as it
is undeniable. To be an accomplice, however involuntarily, in a
reasonless non-reality is cause enough for the harshest sentencing.
But we have been trained so well to accept the "order" of an un
real world that we do not rebel against it. How could we? Where
pain and pleasure form a corrupt alliance against us, paradise and
hell are merely different divisions in the same monstrous b ureauc
racy. And between these two poles exists everything we know or
can ever know. It is not even possible to imagine a utopia, earthly
or otherwise, that can stand up under the mildest criticism. But
one must take into account the shocking fact that we live on a
world that
spins. After considering this truth, nothing should
come as a surprise.
Still, on rare occasions we do overcome hopelessness or
velleity and make mutinous demands to live in a real world, one
that is at least episodically ordered to our advantage. But perhaps
it is only a demon of some kind that moves us to such idle insub
ordination, the more so to aggravate our condition in the unreal.
After all, is it not wondrous that we are allowed to be both wit
nesses and victims of the sepulchral pomp of wasting tissue? And
one thing we know is real: horror. It is so real, in fact, that we
cannot be sure it could not exist without us. Yes, it needs our
imaginations and our consciousness, b ut it does not ask or require
our consent to use them. Indeed, horror operates with complete
autonomy. Generating ontological havoc, it is mephitic foam upon
which our lives merely float. And, ultimately, we must face up to
it: Horror is more real than we are.
AUTOPSY ON A PUPPET:
AN ANATOMY O F THE
SUPERNATURAL
Atmosphere
Billions of years had to pass following the formation of the
earth before its atmosphere became . . . atmospheric. This tran
sition could only have occurred with the debut of conscious
ness-parent of all horrors and the matrix of atmosphere. With
our bodies bogged down in the ordure of this world, our new
faculty instigated the genesis of other worlds, invisible ontolo
gies that infiltrated appearances. Now we could feel the pres
ence of things beyond the reach of our physical senses. The
circumference of our fears dilated with further expansions of
consciousness. Under the cover of atmosphere there seemed to
be another side to the realm of being we knew, or thought we
knew. Seeing shadows in the moonlight and hearing leaves rus
tling in the wind, our ancestors impregnated these sights and
sounds with imaginings and apprehensions. Atmosphere had fi
nally arrived, both foreshadowing horror and taking its sub
stance from horror. Without this alliance, the first horror stories
could not have been told.
As the horror story matured and branched out, so did the
qualities of its atmosphere, most of all among the great names
of this literary genre. For these writers, the atmosphere of their
works is as unique as a signature or a fingerprint. It is the index
T H E CO NSPIRACY AGA I NST THE H U MAN RACE
of an identifiable consciousness that has been brewed from an
amalgam of sensations, memories, emotions, and everything else
that makes individuals what they are and predetermines what
they will express as artists. Thus Lovecraft, in a i 935 letter to
Catherine L. Moore, wrote these remarks on the weird story:
It must, if it is to be authentic art, form primarily the crystalliza
tion or symbolization of a definite human mood-not the attempted
delineation of events, since the "events" involved are of course
largely fictitious and impossible. These events should figure secon
darily-atmosphere being first. All real art must somehow be con
nected with truth, and in the case of weird art the emphasis must
fall upon the one factor representing truth-certainly not the
events om but the mood of intense and fruitless human aspiration
typified by the pretended overturning of cosmic laws and the pre
tended transcending of possible human experience. (Lovecraft's em
phasis)
The works in which Lovecraft most successfully put his theo
retics of atmosphere into practice are paradigms of weird (or
supernatural horror) fiction. Yet he wrote himself off as a fail
ure in his pursuit to get on paper what he had in his head and
strove to the end of his life to do what no other horror writer
had done before him nor will ever do: lay bare his conscious
ness in an artifact. By the stress he placed on atmosphere, Love
craft showed the w ay to an analysis of this element in horror
literature, and, by extension, to an evaluation of the genre as a
whole. While his personal use for atmosphere was to facilitate a
sense of cosmic law s being overturned and human experience
being transcended, he also defined the general purpose of at
mosphere in horror stories: to give consistency (mood) to an
imagined world in which we can at least pretend to escape
from our mere humanity and enter into spaces where the hu
man has no place and dies to itself either weeping or screaming
or in awe at the horror of existence. Here lies the paradox of
consuming horror as an escapist venture.
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
185
The secret of atmosphere in supernatural horror is simplicity
itself. Already spoken of in the first paragraph of this chapter, it
is here repeated and made categorical: Atmosphere is created
by anything that suggests an ominous state of affairs beyond
what our senses perceive and our minds can fully comprehend.
It is the signature motif that Schopenhauer made discernible in
pessimism-that behind the scenes of life there is something
pernicious that makes a nightmare of our world. This some
thing, this ominous state of affairs beyond what our senses per
ceive and our minds can comprehend, has previously been
discussed in connection with Blackwood's "The Willows." In
this story, Blackwood was careful not to dissipate w ith explana
tory details the atmosphere he created. Lovecraft admired this
work for its evocation of "nameless presences" that remain
nameless and yet are powerfully felt. This is not a rule that
Lovecraft himself often followed, as is particularly evident in
his later stories. In such works as "The D unwich Horror" and At
the Mountains of Madness, Lovecraft details and analyzes and,
unlike Blackwood in the "The Willows, " names the monstrosi
ties at the center of these narratives. Nevertheless, there are al
w ays unparalleled images and ideas in Lovecraft's fiction that
stay with the reader and instill a feeling of unknown horrors
surpassing those that have been made known.
From the perspective of atmosphere, horror fiction may be
dated only as far back as the novels of Ann Radcliffe, which
contain enough visionary mood to make up for their bodice
ripper plots. Radcliffe's genius resided in turning a rage in the
late eighteenth century for the picturesque in natural topogra
phies into one that emphasized sublime dread as an aesthetic.
Her works are known for the descriptions they contain of land
scapes featuring mountains of intimidating height, valleys vast
and deep, and moody twilights. Here quoted is such a view as
186
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
witnessed by Emily St. Aubert, the heroine of Radcliffe's most
popular novel, The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) . In this scene,
Montoni, the story's malefactor, is delivering Emily and her
aunt to his home. (Please bear with yet a few more long ex
cerpts, ones from a long novel in which Radcliffe at length and
often entertained her readers with sublimely thrilling carriage
rides.)
Towards the close of day, the road wound into a deep valley.
Mountains, whose shaggy steeps appeared to be inaccessible, al
most surrounded it. To the east, a vista opened, that exhibited the
Apennines in their darkest horrors; and the long perspective of re
tiring summits, rising over each other, their ridges clothed with
pines, exhibited a stronger image of grandeur, than any that Emily
had yet seen. The sun had j ust sunk below the top of the moun
tains she was descending, whose long shadow stretched athwart
the valley, but his sloping rays, shooting through an opening of the
cliffs, touched with a yellow gleam the summits of the forest, that
hung upon the opposite steeps, and streamed in full splendour
upon the towers and battlements of a castle, that spread its exten
sive ramparts along the brow of a precipice above. The splendour
of these illumined objects was heightened by the contrasted shade,
which involved the valley below.
"There," said Montoni, speaking for the first time in several
hours, "is Udolpho."
Emily's initial sighting of Udolpho elicits the same kind of tin
gling sensation she feels for nature's mixed effects of minatory
gigantism and soul-striking splendor.
Emily gazed with melancholy awe upon the castle, which she un
derstood to be Montoni's; for, though it was now lighted up by
the setting sun, the gothic greatness of its features, and its mould
ering walls of dark grey stone, rendered it a gloomy and sublime
obj ect. As she did, the light died away on its walls, leaving a mel
ancholy purple tint, which spread deeper and deeper, as the thin
vapour crept up the mountain, while the battlements above were
still tipped with splendour. From those, too, the rays soon faded,
and the whole edifice was invested with the solemn duskiness of
A utopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
i87
evening. Silent, lonely, and sublime, it seemed to stand the sover
eign of the scene, and to frown defiance on all, who dared to in
vade its solitary reign. As the twilight deepened, its features
became more awful in obscurity, and Emily continued to gaze, till
its clustering towers were alone seen, rising over the tops of the
woods, beneath whose thick shade the carriages soon after began
to ascend.
The extent and darkness of these tall woods awakened terrific
images in her mind, and she almost expected to see banditti start
up from under the trees. At length, the carriages emerged upon a
heathy rock, and, soon after, reached the c astle gates, where the
deep tone of the portal bell, which was struck upon to give notice
of their arrival, increased the fearful emotions, that had assailed
Emily. While they waited till the servant within should come to
open the gates, she anxiously surveyed the edifice: b ut the gloom,
that overspread it, allowed her to distinguish little more than a
part of its outline, with the massy walls of the ramparts, and to
know, that it was vast, ancient and dreary. From the parts she saw,
she j udged of the heavy strength and extent of the whole. The
gateway before her, leading into the courts, was of gigantic size,
and was defended by two round towers, crowned by overhanging
turrets, embattled, where, instead of banners, now waved long
grass and wild plants, that had taken root among the mouldering
stones, and which seemed to sigh, as the breeze rolled past, over
the desolation around them. The towers were united by a curtain,
pierced and embattled also, below which appeared the pointed
arch of a huge portc ullis, surmounting the gates: from these, the
walls of the ramparts extended to other towers, overlooking the
precipice, whose shattered o utline, appearing on a gleam, that lin
gered in the west, told of the ravages of war.-Beyond these all
was lost in the obscurity of evening.
The horrid vicissitudes of Emily's stay at Udolpho further ex
tend the spirit-stirring and densely atmospheric world in which
she is immersed. To move along the plots of her essentially ro
mantic narratives, Radcliffe entrapped her heroines in castles so
great and gloomy that their dungeons seem to have dungeons
and their towers appear to the imagination to sprout supple-
188
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
mentary towers into infinity. Within such gargantuan settings,
Radcliffe's young women are terrorized by men of a wicked na
ture. They are also terrorized by simulacra of the supernatural
that are later exposed as being natural in origin. Then they are
rescued by their beloveds and, presumably, live gladsome lives
unmarred by their traumatic experiences.
Some readers and critics disapprove of Radcliffe's ex post
facto rationalizing of what seemed at the time to have been de
pictions of bona fide supernatural events, which for them dispels
much of the frightful atmosphere she worked so diligently to
create. The protest is that if she did not explain her way back to
nature, her protagonists would have had to look into the face of
a metaphysical horror that challenges one's concept of reality
rather than the lesser horror of having to marry a man of bad
character. It must seem a paradox, then, that Radcliffe is credited
here as the parent of supernatural atmosphere when there are no
supernatural happenings in her narratives. The resolution to this
paradox is discussed in the section Supernaturalism later in this
chapter. For now, let us listen to what Lovecraft had to say about
Radcliffe as an author "who set new and higher standards in the
domain of macabre and fear-inspiring atmosphere despite a pro
voking custom of destroying her own phantoms at the last
through labored mechanical explanations."
To the familiar Gothic trappings of her predecessors Mrs. Rad
cliffe added a genuine sense of the unearthly in scene and incident
which closely approached genius; every touch of setting and ac
tion contributing artistically to the impression of illimitable fright
fulness which she wished to convey. A few sinister details like a
track of blood on c astle stairs, a groan from a distant vault, or a
weird song in a nocturnal forest can with her conjure up the most
powerful images of imminent horror; surpassing by far the ex
travagant and toilsome elaborations of others. Nor are these im
ages in themselves any the less potent because they are explained
away before the end of the novel. (Supernatural Horror in Litera
ture, 1 927; revised 1 933-35)
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
189
The only real disappointment of Radcliffe's novels is that she
did not follow through on the death threats to her main charac
ters with their actual deaths, which, considering each of her
novels in whole, burns off some of their atmospheric set-up
with the resplendent sun of a happy ending. But to leave her
heroines or heroes lying dead at the end of one of her narratives
would have violated the terms of the genre of Gothic romance
in which she wrote. And that would truly have been a blemish
on her record as an adept storyteller. Atmospherically, death
itself had not yet been added as an element to concentrate the
effect of a horror tale.
The next innovation in atmosphere began with Poe in the early
nineteenth century. Poe was familiar with Radcliffe's works,
which laid the groundwork of the Gothic genre and registered
brisk sales. Possibly in reaction to Radcliffe, he turned the world
of scenic thrills and salvation upside down in "The Fall of the
House of Usher." The story begins at evening as its narrator ap
proaches on horseback a secluded mansion flanked by a
swampy and putrid-looking tarn. While the House of Usher
may at first seem to be oozing an enchanting Gothic atmos
phere, the narrator goes out of his way to argue that this is not
so. The dilapidated manse, which has a deep crack running
across its fa<;ade, is not sublimely desolate in the manner of the
ruined castles of Radcliffe's novels. It is rather a locus of in
domitable despair. Here is how we see the Usher estate through
the eyes of the character who has come to visit the old pile.
I k now not how it was-but, with the first glimpse of the building,
a sense of insufferable gloom pervaded my spirit I say insufferable;
for the feeling was unrelieved by any of that half-pleasurable, be
cause poetic, sentiment, with which the mind usually receives
even the sternest natural i mages of the desolate or terrible. I looked
upon the scene before me--upon the mere house, and the simple
landscape features of the domain-upon the bleak walls-upon
1 90
T H E CONS PIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
the vacant eye-like windows-upon a few rank sedges-and upon
a few white trunks of decayed trees-with an utter depression of
soul which I can compare to no earthly sensation more properly
than to the after-dream of the reveler upon opium-the bitter
lapse into everyday life-the hideous dropping off of the veil.
There was an iciness, a sinking, a sickening of the heart-an unre
deemed dreariness of thought which no goading of the imagination
could torture into aught of the sublime. What was it-I paused to
think-what was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of
the House of Usher? It was a mystery all insoluble; nor could I
grapple with the shadowy fancies that crowded upon me as I pon
dered. I was forced to fall back upon the unsatisfactory conclusion,
that while, beyond doubt, there are combinations of very simple
natural objects which have the power of thus affecting us, still the
analysis of this power lies among considerations beyond our depth.
It was possible, I reflected, that a mere different arrangement of
the particulars of the scene, of the details of the picture, would be
sufficient to modify, or perhaps to annihilate its capacity for sor
rowful impression; and, acting upon this idea, I reined my horse to
the precipitous brink of a black and lurid tarn that lay in unruffled
lustre by the dwelling, and gazed down-but with a shudder even
more thrilling than before-upon the remodeled and inverted im
ages of the grey sedge, and the ghastly tree-stems, and the vacant
and eye-like windows.
However the narrator tries to relish rather than be distraught by
the atmosphere of the house and its bedraggled grounds, he can
not do so. From the tenor of this beginning, the reader can ex
pect no saving outcome. The atmosphere Poe created in the
introductory section of his greatest tale is genuinely atmospheric
because it bodes doom, which can mean only one thing-death.
And in "The Fall of the House of U sher" such is the portion of
Roderick and Madeline, the brother and sister who are the last
of their family to occupy the hereditary domicile. Furthermore,
the precarious condition of the house worsens to the point
where the structure itself begins to cave. To thicken this climate
of demise, the light of a blood-red moon shines through a wid-
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
191
ening breach in the masonry of the Usher abode as it sinks stone
by stone beneath the still surface of the noxious tarn. Earlier the
narrator told us of the identity that the local townspeople per
ceived between the House of U sher and its inhabitants. Admi
rably, Poe's tale culminates in the extinction of both. With this
conclusion, Radcliffe's picturesque Gothic world had been sup
planted by an atmosphere spilling out of death-the most omi
nous state of affairs with which we must deal.
In his tales, Poe created a world that is who lly evil, desolate,
and doomed. These qualities give consistency to his imagined
world. And there is no escape from this world, only a fall into
it. Poe's enclosure of the reader in an environment without an
exit distinguishes his works from those of earlier writers like
Radcliffe. His characters do not take us from place to place
looking at the scenery. They are inside a world that has no out
side--no well-mapped places from which one can come and
none to w hich one can go. The reader of Poe never has the
sense that anything exists outside the frame of his narratives.
What they suggest is that the only thing beyond what our
senses can perceive and our mind can fully comprehend is
blackness, nothing. It is the same in those most atmospheric of
experiences we all know-dreams.
When you dream, you do not feel that anything exists
which is not in your immediate surroundings. You cannot be
anywhere in a dream except the place you are already in. Be
sides the psychological entrapment of dreams, there is also their
fundamental strangeness, and Poe was expert at insinuating this
phenomenon into his stories. Reading "The Fall of the House of
Usher" is like having a lucid dream: We know that everything
we see is unreal, yet there is paradoxically a heightened reality
to it all. To awaken from such a dream is to lose your freedom
from yo u r self and return to an onerous embodiment where
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
consciousness is a tragedy and you cannot soar unscathed within
an atmosphere of death. You can only die.
It was almost a century after the 1 8 3 9 publication of "The Fall
of the House of Usher" that Lovecraft took a giant step in the
art of atmospherics with his "Call of Cthulhu." Well known as
they may be to readers of horror fiction, the sto ry's introduc
tory sentences require transcription here.
The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability
of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a
placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and
it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each
straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; b ut
some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open
up such terrify ing vistas of reality, and of our frightful position
therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee
from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.
From Lovecraft's overture to this tale, the reader may surmise
that besides the death of a character or two, the human race it
self may go under by voyaging too far on the "black seas of in
finity." While the above statement is abstract, it is all the more
atmospheric for being so, and we are ardent to read what "dis
sociated knowledge," not a stunningly evocative phrase, has
been pieced together by one Francis Wayland Thurston, who is
displaced from his old reality and set into an ill-starred fictional
world that makes all of his former days seem a heaven of na
ivete.
"I have looked upon all that the universe has to hold of hor
ror," F. W. Thurston writes after he has pieced together the
puzzle, "and even the skies of spring and the flowers of summer
must ever afterward be poison to me." In other words, he has
done what no one has been in a position to do before him
sort out the worst of existence from any compensatory divi
dends, a process which leads him to conclude that life is a ma-
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
1 93
lignancy it were better not to k now. This is Lovecraft's atmos
phere-that o f a world in which the "frightful position" he has
placed all human existence could lead to universal madness or
extinction at a moment's notice. Through this atmosphere,
Lovecraft gives consistency to an imagined world where there is
greatness in knowing too much of the horror of a planet in the
shadow of Cthulhu and all that this implies about our exis
tence. As for those people who still go about their ordinary, av
erage business complacently enj oying the skies of spring and the
flowers of summer, innocently unaware of the monstrosities
with which they coexist-they are children. They have no idea
that there is nothing worth living for in Lovecraft's world. They
are not in its atmosphere. Yet at any time they could be. It
must be remembered that the atmosphere of a supernatural
world and its horror exists only in the human imagination.
There is nothing like it in nature, nor c an nature provoke it. It
is a contrivance of our consciousness, and only we can know it
among all the organisms of the earth. We are alone in our
minds with the atmosphere of a supernatural world and its hor
ror. We are both its creators and what it has created-uncanny
things that have nothing to do with the rest of creation.
Theme
The literary world may be divided into two unequal groups: the
insiders and the outsiders. The former are many and the latter
are few . The placement of a given writer into one group or the
other could be approached by assessing the consciousness of
that w riter as it is betrayed by various components of his work,
including v erbal style, general tone of voice, selection of sub
j ects and themes, etc. As any reader knows, such things do vary
among authors. To pin any of them down within a capricious
or oneiric taxonomy of insiders and outsiders would then per
force become an experiment in uselessness.
194
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, Jean-Paul Sartre,
Samuel Beckett, T. S. Eliot, Knut Hamsun, Hermann Hesse:
who is on the inside and who is on the outside? The brain reels
when considering well-known works by these writers, as they
seem to express sensibilities at several arms' length from those
of average mortals. Immediately, we recall Hemingway's story
"A Clean, Well-Lighted Place," which ends with a travesty of
the Lord's Prayer: "Our nada who art in nada, nada be thy
name." Then our thoughts tum to the collection of degenerates
in Faulkner's novels, which do not seem intent on showing off
the nobler side, if there is one, of the human race. Nor should
we forget Eliot's homage to entropy, The Waste Land (1 922) 1 or
the unbalanced protagonists who lead us through Hamsun's
Hunger (1 890) 1 Hesse's Steppenwolf (1928), Sartre's Nausea
(1 9 3 8) 1 and the entire output of Beckett. Conveniently, the
status of these authors-insider or outsider-has been adjudi
cated for us by the Swedish committees that dispensed to each
of them a Nobel Prize in literature, which is annually given out
to authors who produce "the most outstanding work of an ide
alistic tendency."
But should these literary greats be classed as insiders exclu
sively because they received a prize from a panel of Swedish
judges? Some would say "yes," but not entirely because of the
Nobel. Some would say "no," despite the Nobel.1 These con
flicting opinions leave our job unfinished insofar as determining
the consciousness of an author to be that of an insider or an
outsider. To expedite this inquest, we could use a candidate
whose credentials unambiguously place him in the latter group.
To fill this position, any number of worthy outsiders could be
named. One of them is Roland Topor, whose short horror novel
The Tenant (1 964) is a document that expresses the conscious
ness of an unimpeachable outsider. To discern with a modest
confidence what places a writer on the inside or the outside,
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
1 95
The Tenant will be compared with another short novel that
shares its theme, One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand
(1926) by the Nobel Prize-winning Luigi Pirandello. In itself,
theme is no giveaway of an author's consciousness. What counts
is how that theme is resolved. Pirandello's resolution parades
the symptoms of "an idealistic tendency," while Topor's takes
the anti-idealist position.
The theme of One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand is ex
plicitly that of the self as a falsehood born of our systems of
perception and cognition. In contrast to the dogma of the many,
as Pirandello's narrator and leading character Vitangelo Mo
scarda comes to appreciate, the self is an insubstantial construct
invented to lend coherence and meaning to an existence that is
actually chaotic and meaningless. While we all have bodies, we
also recognize--only because we are occasionally forced to do
so-that they are unstable, damage-prone, and disposable phe
nomena. Simultaneously, we believe--until a malignant brain
lesion or some life-rending event causes us to question this be
lief-that our "selves" are more sturdy, enduring, and real than
the deteriorating tissue in which they are encased.
In One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand, Moscarda is
made aware of his misperception of his self, and by extension
of the entire world of forms in which the self functions, by a
misperception he has made about his body. Early in the story,
he believes his nose to be evenly structured on its right and left
sides. Then his wife tells him that his nose is not symmetrical
but is lower on the left side than on the right. Being an incura
bly pensive individual, Moscarda is troubled by his wife's re
mark; being an intellectually honest individual, he has to admit
it is true. That he misperceived this single feature of his appear
ance leads Moscarda to investigate what other delusions he has
been entertaining about his appearance throughout his life. He
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
ascertains a constellation of them. After scrupulous self
examination of his physical person, he grants that he is not the
man he thought he was. Now he believes he is an outsider to
himself-a figment in his own eyes and in the eyes of others.
Later, Moscarda is condemned to further revelations: "I still
believed this outsider was only one person: only one for every
body, as I thought I was only one for myself. But soon my hor
rible drama became more complicated." This occurs w hen he
discovers "the hundred thousand Moscardas that I was, not only
for the others but also for myself, all with this one name of Mo
scarda, ugly to the point of cruelty, all inside this poor body of
mine that was also one, one and, alas, no one . . . . " Fortunately
for Moscarda, and ruefully for the reader (at least the reader
who is an outsider) , he comes to accept the unreality of every
thing he had conceived himself to be and becomes one with all
that exists. He no longer thinks but simply is. "This is the only
way I can live now. To be reborn moment by moment. To pre
vent thought from working again inside me . . . . " The last para
graph of the novel is an exaltation of his new state of existence.
The city is far away. There comes to me occasionally, upon the
vesper calm, the sound of its bells. I, however, no longer hear
those bells within me, but without, ringing for themselves and
perhaps trembling with joy in their resounding cavities, in a beau
tiful blue sky filled with a warm sun, to the twittering of swallows
or swaying heavily to wind and cloud, so high, so high, in their ae
rial belfries. To think of death, to pray. It may be that there is one
who yet has need of this, and it is to his need that the bells give
voice. I no longer have any such need, for the reason that I am dy
ing every instant, and being born anew and without memories:
alive and whole, no longer in myself, b ut in everything outside.
(Trans. Samuel Putnam)
End of story. Things turn out all right for Moscarda. He is now
an outsider who has been saved. In his loss of a self, he brings to
mind U. G. Krishnamurti, John Wren-Lewis, and Suzanne
A utopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
1 97
Segal-those unwitting prodigies who recovered from shocks to
their systems, following which the cognitive mechanisms which
produce a fictive ego shut down. In these instances, the indi
vidual who loses himself is the beneficiary of a rapturous pay
off. This is truly a go od death" in which someone disappears a s
a purported self and is reborn as . . . no one. He is content just
to exist, and equally content n ot to exist.
But does anyone really believe that Luigi Pirandello k new
first-hand his protagonist's state of selfless beatitude? Or is it
more likely that he just imagined this ending of a decidedly "ide
alistic tendency"? Yet whether Pirandello actually experienced
o r merely researched the ideal resolution to Moscarda's painful
self-consciousness, it is not a resolution available to the reader,
who could follow Moscarda's route to salvation step-by-step and
never be delivered to the promised land of the ego-dead. If it
were so, Pirandello would have discovered the most phenome
nal cure ever known for the sufferings especially reserved for
humankind. He would have solved every scourge we face as a
species. As one might expect, though, he did no such thing. In
stead, Pirandello resolved his fairy tale by lowering down a deus
ex machina. His book is a moral scam with mystical transcen
dence standing in for the prayer Moscarda says he no longer
needs. This is what the literary insider offers. In The Tenant, Ro
land Topor supplies the opposing view of the outsider.
"
When Pirandello's character Moscarda describes his escalating
puzzlement over his identity as a "horrible drama," his words
appear as a formality-a perfunctory gesture that fails to con
vey the uncanny nature of his situation. In The Tenant, on the
other hand, Topor affectingly dramatizes the horror of his non
hero Trelkovsky as he traverses the same terrain as his Italian
counterpart. A critical passage in Topor's novel begins with the
following sentence: '"At what precise moment,' Trelkovsky
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H UMAN RACE
asked himself, 'does an individual cease to be the person he-
and everyone else--b elieves himself to be?"'
A Parisian with a Slavic name, Trelkovsky is an outsider and
moves in a world where outsiders are persecuted, as they are in
the real world. Hoping to move into a new apartment-one
previously occupied by a woman named Simone Choule, who
was critically injured and not expected to live--he is made to
feel as if he is nobody by the landlord, Monsieur Zy, and then
by the other residents of this sinister place. By flexing their self
appointed grandiosity, Trelkovsky's persecutors can maintain
their own delusional status as somebodies, real persons who are
well-adapted to the hell they have created for themselves.
Anyone who is marked as being outside of the group is fair
game for those who would assert their reality over all others.
Yet they, too, are nobodies. If they were not, their persecutions
would not be required: They could pass their lives with a sure
mindfulness of their substance and value. But as any good Bud
dhist (or even Pirandello's Moscarda) could tell you, human be
ings have no more substance and value than anything else on
earth. The incapacity to repose alongside both the mountains
and the mold of this planet is the fountainhead of the torments
we wreak on one another. As long as we deny a person or
group the claim to be as right and as real as we are, so long may
we hold this dreamlike claim for ourselves alone. And it is the
duty of everyone to inculcate a sense of being empty of sub
stance and value in those who are not emulations of them.
Without being consciously aware of it, Trelkovsky experi
ences an epiphany at the midpoint of the novel that is inspired
by his neighbors' behavior toward him: "'The bastards] ' Trelk
ovsky raged. 'The bastards] What the hell do they want-for
everyone to roll over and play dead] And even that probably
wouldn't be enough] "' He is more right than he knows. Because
what they want is for everyone to roll over and play them.
A utopsy mi a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
1 99
Martians-they were all M artians. . . . They were strangers on this
planet, but they refused to admit it. They played at being per
fectly at home . . . . He was no different . . . . He belonged to their
species, but for some unknown reason he had been banished from
their company. They had no confidence in him. All they wanted
from him was obedience to their i ncongruous rules and their ri
diculous laws. Ridiculous only to him, because he could never
fathom their intricacy and their subtlety.
Trelkovsky's neighbors cannot admit to themselves what he
comes to realize: Everybody is nobody; no one is empowered to
define who he or she is. But people do arrogate to themselves
the authority to make a ruling on who you are, and you will
stand mute before their bench. From the outset, Trelkovsky is
manipulated to accept this verdict; finally, he pronounces it on
himself. To his broken mind it seems that the only way to defy
his neighbors' murderous conspiracy against him is to cooperate
in it. He does this by allowing himself to fall from the window
of his apartment and through the glass roofing over the court
yard below. The first time does not kill him, so he hauls his
bloody anti-self b ack up the stairs, jeering at his neighbors who
have come out to lunge at his body with sharp objects. He then
falls a second time from the window. Following in the footsteps
of Gloria Beatty, he decides to call it quits in the world's lugu
brious game. Interestingly, The Tenant concludes with the same
kind of leap beyond the mundane as does One, No One, and
One Hundred Thousand. Sadly for Trelkovsky, it is a leap in the
opposite direction. M ore accurately, it is a leap that does not de
liver Topor's protagonist from his "horrible drama" but one that
catapults him into the outermost nightmare of nobodies.
As an insider, Pirandello resolved the theme of One, No
One, and One Hundred Thousand in a spirit-lifting mode. Im
bued with a different consciousness, the outsider can only give
us resolutions of a miserablist nature. For the past few slivers of
human history, those of us living in what is termed the free
200
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
world have been allowed to hold disparate worldviews, but
only on the condition that they affirm, directly or indirectly, the
survival of the species. They must not be pessimistic, nihilistic,
or in any respect skeptical about the livability of human life.
Such perspectives might well be valued by outsiders, but insid
ers, who form the preponderant division of humankind, will
not incorporate the outsider's stark attitudes and unhappy end
ings into their philosophies, ideologies, national policies, or fra
ternal by-laws. Both Pirandello and Topor dealt with the
identical theme: the transformative dissolution of one's self
concept. The former writer ended his story with a portrait of a
man who joyously transcends himself by becoming the "no one"
in the novel's title. This resolution has already been deplored as
a put-up job. An insider might say as much about the ending of
Topor's novel, which implies a descent into nightmare that
Trelkovsky never saw coming.
In the epilogue to The Tenant, it turns out that Trelkovsky
survives what should have been his death-plunge. But he does
so in a strange way. Regaining consciousness in a hospital bed,
he sees he has a visitor. And now everything comes home to
him. (Anyone can tell where this is going.) The hospital bed
where he now reclines is the same one that, at the beginning of
the story, he stood beside as he looked over the bandage-hidden
body of his apartment's former tenant, whom he wanted to see
for himself was not going to recover from her injuries and try to
reclaim her old lodgings. She, too, had fallen from the window
of that shabby residence. The newly bedridden patient, like the
one before, identifies to his horror the one who has come to
visit him. It is himself. Immobilized by his injuries and his face
dressed to expose only one eye and an opening for his mouth,
he realizes that he has changed places with the woman whose
apartment he once coveted. Perhaps not for the first time, as he
might be caught in a loop of reincarnations, he has come to be
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
20 1
at his own bedside. Realizing what has happened to him, the
one in the bed, he already knows what is going to happen to
the one standing over him, the one who is not him anymore,
and yet is. Trelkovsky has now solved his (and Moscarda's) rid
dle: "At w hat precise moment does an individual cease to be
the person he--and everyone else--b elieves himself to be?"
Answer: at the moment when an individual becomes conscious
that he has been trapped in a paradox of identity and there is
no way out for him as long as he believes himself to be some
thing he is not. Ask any puppet that thinks it is a person.
As neither Pirandello nor Topor underwent the transformative
dissolution of the self-concept that is the common theme of
their stories-it would be the high point of each man's biogra
phy if they had-are they not equally disingenuous? The an
swer to that question would seem to turn upon which author's
representation of the world you deem to be more symbolically
well-founded: ending one's days in serene communion with all
that makes up the world . . . or trapped in a damaged body in a
hospital bed, unable to do anything but scream at the sight of a
clueless wraith, the nobody who was you in the dream that was
your life. Whichever conclusion to these thematically analogous
stories appears more faithful to human experience depends on
who you are . . . or who you think you are. This is a very Piran
dellian theme.
While Toper's vision seems empirically sturdier, Pirandello's
is the crowd favorite. To receive the prize Pirandello awards
Moscarda, if only for a moment before one's death, would make
amends for a lifetime of lashings. Grievously, just because
something is a desideratum does not mean that believing in it
will save you. But Pirandello and his kind want you, and them
selves, to die trying. All Topor and his kind have to say is that
you should always have your affairs in order, which may bring
202
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E H U MAN RACE
you some peace of mind if you are confined to a hospital bed
. . . or only looking for a new apartment.
Characters
In his essay "The U ndelivered," Cioran wrote: "The more we
consider the Buddha's last exhortation, 'Death is inherent in all
created things; labor ceaselessly for your salvation,' the more we
are troubled by the impossibility of feeling ourselves as an aggre
gate, a transitory if not fortuitous convergence of elements." Cio
ran could not have been more right about the impossibility of
feeling oneself to be a thing of parts, a being made as it is made.
Transporting our selves to and fro on the earth and walking up
and down upon it, we are doggedly believable characters, al
though we are not provably anything more than that. Yet we do
seem to be more than that, and seeming is enough for us to get
by as we have all these years.
In the course of our disillusionments, we have confessed to
being bodies made of elementary particles j ust like everything
else. But we must stop short of any tidings that would put us on
a par with bacteria and beer mugs. That would be to skyrocket
disillusionment out of the atmosphere, leaving us without a
speck of our invaluable selves and the games they play. One
game that most writers of horror fiction play with their charac
ters is called Good versus Evil. And they play it as if it were the
only game in town. Certainly it is the oldest game in town, the
one we have relied on for much of our characterization from the
time we first knew who we were, or thought we did. A few hor
ror writers, though, play a different game, one in which, as Poe
wrote, "Horror is the soul of the plot" rather than believable
characters. The game of Good versus Evil is about horror in the
world, and its players, its characters, are given a fighting chance.
The other game is about the horror of the world, and none of its
players has a chance, unless by pure chance.
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
203
For example, compare two horror novels that presume the
reality of supernatural possession-William Peter Blatty's The
Exorcist (1 971) and Lovecraft's The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
(written 1 927; published posthumously, 194 1) . In the world of
Blatty's Good-versus-Evil novel, certain believable characters are
dressed for doom and others for survival. (This is a formulaic
element of nearly all popular horror novels.) Two priests, Frs.
Karras and Merrin, give their lives to save Regan, a believable
characterization of a young girl whose body, and perhaps her
soul-the relationship between body and soul among Christian
sects is not consistent-has been possessed by a demon or de
mons. The deaths of these priests are acceptable to readers as
part of the story's formula, despite the fact that they are the sort
of characters whom ordinary folk care about. Burke Dennings,
the director of the movie in which Regan's actress mother Chris
MacN eill stars, is murdered by the possessed Regan. He is not a
terribly likeable fellow, b eing a profane and belligerent drunk, so
the function he serves is that of a character who can be killed off
to advance the narrative in a shocking direction, since the reader
does not care much about him, however believable he may be.
This is very acceptable to readers, who are within their rights to
expect at least one person to be slain over the course of a horror
novel. Such is the way that the greater part of those who patron
ize works of fiction like to see writers handle their characters
believably. They also want a finale in which Good wins out over
Evil, which assures them that the formula "being alive is all right"
is the right formula.
The Case of Charles Dexter Ward is in every way a negation
of Blatty's Exorcist. In Lovecraft's novel, the universe cares
nothing for human life, j ust as it is in the real world, and one
does not care about the characters-they are only a perspective
from which to view the horror of the plot. This is acceptable to
very few readers. Good and Evil are rubrics of an existential
204
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
code long gone, just as they are in the real world. Again, this is
acceptable to very few readers. And the idea of human beings
as creatures with souls is not an issue in The Case of Charles
Dexter Ward because it was not an issue for Lovecraft. Every
one, not only the hapless protagonist of the book, exists in a
world that is a wall-to-wall nightmare. In Lovecraft's universe
without a fonnula, everyone is killable--and some kill them
selves just ahead of the worse things waiting for them. Life as
we conceive it, let alone a configuration of atoms that goes by
the name Charles Dexter Ward, occurs in a context of perma
nent jeopardy which only remains to be discovered and from
which there is no salvation. Lovecraft does not want to take
you on an emotional roller-coaster ride, at the end of which he
tells you to watch your step as your car comes to a stop and
you settle back onto steady ground. He simply wants to say that
we no longer have to stand back very far to see that the human
race is what it always has been in this or any other world
irrelevant, which is as liberating to some as it is maddening to
others, including Lovecraft's characters.
Lovecraft's employment of supernatural possession as a sto
rytelling device in The Case of Charles Dexter Ward is so alien
to Blatty's in The Exorcist that the two men might as well have
been living in different centuries, or even different millennia.
The narrative parameters of The Exorcist begin and end with
the New Testament; those of The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
could only have been conceived by a fiction writer of the mod
ern era, a time when it had become safe not only to place hu
manity outside the center of the Creation but also to survey the
universe itself as centerless and our species as only a smudge of
organic materials at the mercy of forces that know us not, just
as we are in the real world.
As for the special fate of the protagonist of Lovecraft's
novel, his possession by his ancestor Joseph Curwen, a master of
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
205
occult arts, is only a means to much larger ends that have been
eons in the making. As previously imaged, he is just a configura
tion of atoms, not an ensouled creature of a god who has been
toying with us for the past hundred thousand years more or less.
Absolutely up-to-date--that is, post- every thing-The Case of
Charles Dexter Ward emerged from an imagination that was
deferential to no traditions or dogmas, and its author went the
distance of disillusionment in assuming the meaningless uni
verse that became the starting point for later investigators in the
sciences and philosophy. (Ask the Nobel Prize-winning physi
cist Steven Weinberg, who notoriously said, "The more we
know about the universe, the more meaningless it appears.") Al
though Lovecraft did have his earthbound illusions, at the end of
the day he existed in a no man's land of disillusionment. As a
fiction writer, he will ever be a contemporary of each new gen
eration of mortals, because there will always be many a charac
ter in the real world for whom human life is not acceptable.
Uncharacters
In many horror stories there is an assortment of figures that ap
pear as walk-ons or extras whose purpose is to lend their spooky
presence to a narrative for atmosphere alone, while the real bo
gey is something else altogether. Puppets, dolls, and other carica
tures of the human often make cameo appearances as shapes
sagging in the corner of a child's bedroom or lolling on the
shelves of a toy store. There are also dismembered limbs and de
capitated heads of manikins that have been relegated to spare
parts strewn about an old warehouse where such things are
stored or sent to die. As backdrops or bit-players, imitations of
the human form have a symbolic value because they seem con
nected to another world, one that is all harm and disorder-the
kind of place we sometimes fear is the model for our own home
ground, which we must believe is passably sound and secure, or
206
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
at least not an environment where we might mistake a counter
feit person for the real thing. But in fiction, as in life, mistakes are
sometimes made. When they are, one of those humanoid replicas
may advance to the center of a story's action.
In E. T. A. Hoffmann's "The Sandman," for instance, the pro
tagonist Nathanael discovers that the too perfect girl to whom he
has proposed marriage is really just an automaton. This shakes
him up so greatly that he is committed to an asylum until he re
covers his senses. The incident with Nathanael's mechanical fian
cee, a thing of parts who is the creation of two mysterious
characters in the story, also shakes up others who are in love
with dream girls. As Hoffmann's story goes, "Many lovers, to be
quite convinced that they were not enamored of wooden dolls,
would request their mistresses to sing and dance a little out of
time, to embroider and knit, and play with their lapdogs, while
listening to reading, etc., and, above all, not merely to listen, but
also sometimes to talk in such a manner as presupposed actual
thought and feeling." Toward the end of "The Sandman," Na
thanael's madness returns, and he leaps to his death from a stee
ple after screaming "Tum and turn about, little doll."
There are many abominable fates in horror stories, and
among them is that of Nathanael. Worse still is when a human
being becomes objectified as a puppet, a doll, or some other
caricature of our species and enters a world that he or she
thought was just a creepy little place inside of ours. What a j olt
to find oneself a prisoner in this sinister sphere, reduced to a
composite mechanism looking out on the land of the human, or
one which we believe to be human by any definition of the
word, and to be exiled from it. Just as we know that dreams are
merely reflections of what happens in our lives, we are also
quite sure that puppets, dolls, and other caricatures of our spe
cies are only reflections of ourselves. In a sane world, no corre
spondence could exist between those artificial anatomies and
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
207
our natural flesh. That would be too strange and awful, for
things to become confused in such a way. More strange and aw
ful, of course, would be to find this a living confusion-life as
the dream of a puppet.
Supernaturalism
When the narrator of Joseph Conrad's novel Under Western
Eyes (1 9 1 1) writes that "the belief in a supernatural source of
evil is not necessary; men alone are quite capable of every
wickedness," he seems to be speaking for the author, who
shunned the supernatural in his fiction. Nevertheless, Conrad
was a great depicter of what he felt was an ineffable deviltry
that nests in the shadows of all that is. And any close reader of
Conrad will perceive the impure breath of the supernatural in
many of his works. In Heart of Darkness (1902), for example, he
pulls at the collar of psychological realism, plying his genius for
nuance and stealing up to the very border of supernaturalism.
By proceeding thus, Conrad impresses upon his audience the
consciousness of a horror that goes beyond the human and takes
in all of being.
Conrad's odyssey into horror begins when the narrator of
Heart of Darkness, Charles Marlow, acquires a position with a
European business concern as the skipper of a steamboat. His
first charge is to guide the vessel down a snaking African river to
a remote outpost run by one the company's best men, Mr. Kurtz,
a prolific supplier of goods to his employers. At every point,
Marlow feels his journey is taking him farther and farther into an
unholy land as he progresses toward his destination. Thus:
Going up that river was like traveling back to the earliest begin
nings of the world, when vegetation rioted on the earth and the
big trees were kings. An e mpty stream, a great silence, an impene
trable forest. The air was warm, thick, heavy, sluggish. There was
no j oy in the brilliance of sunshine. The long stretches of the wa-
208
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MA N RACE
terway ran on, deserted, into the gloom of overshadowed dis
tances. On silvery sandbanks hippos and alligators sunned them
selves side by side. The broadening waters flowed through a mob
of wooded islands; you lost your way on that river as you would
in a desert, and butted all day long against shoals, trying to find the
channel, till you thought yourself bewitched and cut off for ever
from everything you had known once-somewhere-far away
in another existence perhaps. There were moments when one's
past came back to one, as it will sometimes when you have not a
moment to spare to yourself; but it came in the shape of an un
restful and noisy dream, remembered with wonder amongst the
overwhelming realities of this strange world of plants, and water,
and silence. And this stillness of life did not in the least resemble a
peace. It was the stillness of an implacable force brooding over an
inscrutable intention. It looked at you with a vengeful aspect. I got
used to it afterwards; I did not see it any more; I had no time. I
had to keep guessing at the channel; I had to discern, mostly by in
spiration, the signs of hidden banks; I watched for sunken stones; I
was learning to clap my teeth smartly before my heart flew out,
when I shaved by a fluke some infernal sly old snag that would
have ripped the life out of the tin-pot steamboat and drowned all
the pilgrims; I had to keep a look-out for the signs of dead wood
we could c ut up in the night for next day's steaming. When you
have to attend to things of that sort, to the mere incidents of the
surface, the reality-the reality, I tell you-fades. The inner truth
is hidden-luckily, luckily. But I felt it all the same; I felt often its
mysterious stillness watching me . . . .
This passage substantiates that you do not need the supernatu
ral to invoke the supernatural. Reality fades more and more as
Marlow approaches Kurtz, who embodies the horrible "inner
truth" of things. On the level of narrative, this inner truth is
outwardly made plain by one look at Kurtz's base of operations,
where the barbarous means of his successful career are visible
· everywhere. But Kurtz is not just a bestial headman managing a
trading post in Africa. His whole meaning as a character is
much more than that. What the brutally atavistic Kurtz signi
fies to Marlow surpasses the "wickedness of men" and deposits
A utopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
20 9
the steamboat captain on the threshold of an occult truth about
the underpinnings of the only reality he has ever known-the
anchoring fictions of civilization.
If Kurtz is simply a man who has realized his potential for
wickedness-which, by inference, is a potential for each of
us-then he is merely another candidate for incarceration or
the death penalty. But if he is a man who has probed the mys
teries of something that is wicked in its essence, then he has
crossed the point of no return, and his l ast words-"The horror1
The horror1 "-have prodigious implications. Not to say that the
assorted overtones that literary critics have heard in the story
civilization is only skin deep, European colonialism was a bad
business-are not horrors. But they are not the horror that
every incident of the narrative prefigures. In Heart of Darkness,
Conrad did not cede "the horror" a local habitation and a name
(example: The Creature from the Black Lagoon), but artfully
suggested a malignity conjoining the latent turpitude of human
beings with that active in being itself.
As a species, we might have been saved both from our tur
pitude, latent or not, and from any notion of turpitude active in
being itself. The real horror, the real tragedy, is that we were
not saved. In an 1 8 9 8 letter to the Scottish writer R. B. Cun
ninghame Graham, Conrad wrote:
Yes, egoism is good, and altruism is good, and fidelity to nature
would be the best of all . . . if we could only get rid of conscious
ness. What makes mankind tragic is not that they are the victims
of nature, it is that they are conscious of it. To b e part of the ani
mal kingdom under the conditions of this earth is very well-but
as soon as you know of your slavery, the pain, the anger, the
strife-the tragedy begins. We can't return to nature, since we
can't change our place in it. Our refuge is in stupidity . . . There is
no morality, no knowledge, and no hope; there is only the con
sciousness of ourselves which drives us about a world that . . . is
always but a vain and floating appearance. (Conrad's emphasis)
210
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
Too conscious that Heart of Darkness was not the place for
such discourse, Conrad gave us Marlow's sensitivity to an "im
placable force brooding over an inscrutable intention" and
Kurtz's resonant last words. If our species was not saved from
consciousness, at least the above letter was saved so that we
could know what horror was in Conrad's heart.
Some horror writers are not the least concerned with the wick
edness of men but exclusively attend to an "implacable force
brooding over an inscrutable intention," which is to say, some
thing pernicious behind the scenes of life that makes our lives a
living nightmare. For Lovecraft, this all-embracing nightmare
became the grounding for the supernaturalism of his writings,
most famously in his negative mythology of multidimensional
horrors sometimes collectively designated as the "Great Old
Ones," who came to earth from other worlds, much like the
Body Snatchers and the Thing. Their individual names alone,
some of which were referenced earlier in this book, convey
their otherworldly demonism. Here are some other names:
Dagon, Yog-Sothoth, and Shub-Niggurath the Goat with a
Thousand Young. Lovecraft also wrote of unnamed beings that
may be apprehended only by their sensory attributes, as with
the eponymous entity in "The Colour out of Space" or the un
observed source of the "exquisitely low and infinitely distant
musical note" that sounds in the blackness above the Rue
d'Auseil in "The Music of Erich Zann."
In composing the latter work, Lovecraft came up with a
model supernatural horror tale, one in which a subjective mind
and an objective monstrosity shade into each other, the one pro
jecting itself outward and the other reflecting back so that to
gether they form the perfect couple dancing to the uncanny
music of being. The mind in the story is that of the nervously af
flicted narrator; the monstrosity is the unnamed and unnamable
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
21 1
nemesis of the nervously afflicted Zann. With his viol-playing,
Zann battles to keep at bay this thing that would destroy an al
ready tumble-down world as represented by the Rue d'Auseil,
the street on which he lives and where he dies. In ''The Music of
Erich Zann," Lovecraft offers no sanity or system of meaning.
What he does offer are Zann's "weird notes," which correspond
to powers of disorder that scoff at our fabricated world and show
us the horror of our lives.
Belief in the supernatural is only superstition. That said, a sense
of the supernatural, as Conrad evinced in Heart of Darkness,
must be admitted if one's inclination is to go the limits of hor
ror. It is the sense of what should not be--t he sense of being
ravaged by the impossible. Phenomenally speaking, the super
natural may be regarded as the metaphysical counterpart of in
sanity, a transcendental correlative of a mind that has been
driven mad. This mind does not keep a chronicle of "man's in
humanity to man" but instead tracks a dysphoria symptomatic
of our life as transients in a creation that is natural for all else
that lives, but for us is anything but.
The most uncanny of creaturely traits, the sense of the su
pernatural, the impression of a fatal estrangement from the
visible, is dependent on our consciousness, which merges the
outward and the inward into a universal comedy without
laughter. We are only chance visitants to this jungle of blind
mutations. The natural world existed when we did not, and it
will continue to exist long after we are gone. The supernatural
crept into life only when the door of consciousness was opened
in our heads. The moment we stepped through that door, we
walked out on nature. Say what we will about it and deny it till
we die-we are blighted by our knowing what is too much to
know and too secret to tell one another if we are to stride along
our streets, work at our j obs, and sleep in our beds. It is the
212
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
know ledge of a race of beings that is only passing through this
shoddy cosmos.2
As explained in an earlier section of this work, literary use of
the supernatural may strikingly differ among the works of di
verse authors or even within the output of a single author. A
noteworthy example of the latter case displays itself in a com
parison of two of Shakespeare's greatest plays, Hamlet (c. 1 6001 60 1) and Macbeth (c. 1606) . In Hamlet, the supernatural ele
ment is extraneous; in Macbeth, it is integral. While both dra
mas are patterned along the lines of a soap opera-complete
with squabbles, schemes, betrayals, and deceptions in a world
on the make--Macbeth is played out within a supernatural or
der that is reinforced throughout the play and gives it a terrible
mystery that Hamlet lacks. The latter work does have its ghost,
but this apparition serves only as a dramatic device to get the
plot moving, which could have been done without an other
worldly intervention that gives away the work's central secret
from its commencement and in no sense tinctures the incidents
of the play with a tenebrous and malefic presence, as is the case
with Macbeth.
Without the three witches (a.k.a. Weird Sisters; Sisters of
Fate) , who officiate as masters of a power that reduces the char
acters of the drama to the status of puppets, Macbeth would not
be Macbeth. Without the ghost of Hamlet, Sr., Hamlet would
still be Hamlet. As we all know, later in the drama Hamlet the
Younger doubts the words of his father's presumptive spirit and
double-checks them by having a troupe of actors stage a number
called The Murder of Gonzaga, so that the indecisive protagonist
can see for himself how the new king, his uncle Claudius, re
sponds to the play's reenactment of how he killed his brother.
Hamlet needs earthly evidence, not just the words of a revenant,
to confirm the crime. The play's the thing, not the ghost. It is
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
213
just too much that after all the inside information thunderously
told by the Hamlet the Elder in the first act, Hamlet the
Younger would still feel the necessity to engage in his own de
tective work before making his move. Another set-up could
have been used to point the finger at Claudius's nefarious
deed-a snoop in the shrubbery perhaps-and the paternal
shade could have been edited from the play. Along with this ex
cision there would be lost a side issue of interest to Shakespeare
scholars-to wit, the Bard's treatment of Catholicism's doctrine
of Purgatory-but nothing apposite to the story would have
gone missing. And the matter of whether or not the ghost is
truly that of Hamlet's father or a lying goblin is not kept so
much in the reader or playgoer's mind to be a source of great
suspense and would have derailed the course of Hamlets plot
had it turned out to be the latter. All told, Hamlet is not a work
that gains anything considerable from a supernatural intrusion.
In both Hamlet and Macbeth there is a mass of majestic
rhetoric by the title characters about the mysterious matters of
human life. However, there is a dimension of the unknowable
in Macbeth that situates us in a world of cosmic misrule outside
the boundaries of the natural order. Hamlet is a tragedy of hu
man errors; Macbeth, an uncanny puppet show. The spring
board of the earlier play is, once more, the treacherous murder
of Hamlet's father. That of the later piece is a malicious witch
ery in the world, an unbodied agency that tugs Macbeth
through motions that accurse him and his wife as much as they
do their victims. The play is a ferment of fatality. Every action
is choreographed by a supernaturalism that deracinates its main
characters from their natural drives to survive and reproduce
and leads Macbeth to the revelation, among others, that "Life's
but a walking shadow"-that death is the thing that makes us
uncanny things that have nothing to do with the rest of crea
tion. Hamlet has bad dreams, as do we all. But Macbeth cannot
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U M A N RACE
dream. As contracted by fate, he has murdered sleep and knows
only a waking nightmare.
Plot
In his Idea of the Holy: An Inquiry into the Non-Rational Factor
in the Idea of the Divine and its Relation to the Rational (1 917) ,
the German theologian Rudolf Otto writes o f the "numinous,"
the wholly Other (that is, God) , as a mysterium tremendum et
fascinans ("a terrifying and fascinating mystery") . Confronta
tions with the numinous are uncommon outside the lives of re
ligious mystics, who may be terrified by their supernatural
assignations but are never undone by them. For these extremist
believers, the supernatural is a terror of the divine, not a de
monic horror. And it is the absolute reality. After conjuring up
the wholly Other through prayer and meditation, cultists of the
sacred feel themselves to be nothing in its presence, only a bit
of crud stuck to the shoe of the numinous. Eventually, so says
Otto, they make common cause with the numinous and are
able to feel good about themselves. On Otto's say-so, these are
encounters with the supernatural in its truest and most encom
passing sense; any others, including those evoked by supernatu
ral horror stories, are primitive or perverted. What else could a
theologian say? What other kind of supernatural story would he
have to tell? While The Idea of the Holy has some electrifying
moments when things are touch and go, the ending is all bless
edness and no harm done. But this is not what readers expect
when the supernatural is the featured element. They expect
death, good or not so good, and will feel swindled if they do not
get it. Because death is what really terrifies and fascinates them.
In the midst of their lives, they are deep in death . . . and they
know it. They do not know the numinous, which hangs back
from life and welco mes very few into its circle. Why things
should be this way is the real mystery.
A utopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
215
The context of Otto's tract is the nature and origins of religion, a
respectable fixation for scholars, divines, and anyone else who
has a few coins to throw in the pot. But paranormal researchers
have written with as much conviction, investigative rigor, and
personal experience about their own field of study; they, too,
have tales to tell of the terrifying and fascinating, as if anyone
could have a monopoly on these emotions or reserve their copy
right for true believers only.3 The supernatural is in the public
domain, and, whatever the ontological angle, it is p ackaged with
plots that are missing from the natural world. When we and our
prototypes were part of that world, our lives had as little plot to
them as the doings of earth's flora and fauna. Later, as our con
sciousness began to inflate, we strayed off from the natural. Our
bodies stayed behind, but our minds searched for stories with
better plots than just survival, reproduction, and death. How
ever, these stories could not be set in the natural world, where
there are no stories-where things j ust happen willy-nilly and
events have no meaning outside of material practicality. These
stories had to have plots at a distance from biology.
Say what we like, we do not believe ourselves to be just or
ganisms. Ask any medical researcher in his home-sweet-home if
he thinks of himself and his wife and k ids in the same way he
does the animals he left back in the lab. That we are critters is
only a scientific technicality. What we see in our mirrors are
human beings, and what we need in our diet is the sustenance
of stories telling us that we are more than the sum of our crea
turely parts. And our supply of this provender comes from only
one source--our consciousness, which dramatizes survival as
storied conflicts between everyone and his brother and tricks
up procreation as legends of courtly love, b edroom farces, and
romantic fictions with or without laughs.
But such narratives are not really very far from nature, as
we can confirm for ourselves. Those recitals of physical or psy-
216
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E HUMAN RACE
chological strife among us: Are they really so removed from
survival in the natural kingdom? No, they are not. They are still
nature, red in tooth and claw. Masked by our consciousness and
its illusions to seem uniquely human, our war stories, success
stories, and other bio-dramas are not qualitatively different
from their analogues in the wilderness. This goes doubly for
romance yarns, those dolled-up variations on mating rituals as
seen in nature documentaries. They are not detached from the
procreative dog-and-pony show as observed by zoologists and
would be dramatically incomplete without a sexual union as
their chief motive. Properly considered, they are an ornate por
nography, with oft-repeated plots having their climax in a re
lease of tension between two parties and their falling action in
what cinematic pornographers term a "money shot," which in
conventional filmic products is replaced by a kiss or a marriage
by way of consummation.
As survivors and procreators, we unravel stories that at
their root are not dissimilar from the habitual behaviors seen in
nature. But as beings who know they will die we digress into
episodes and epics that are altogether dissociated from the
natural world. We may isolate this awareness, distract ourselves
from it, anchor our minds far from its shores, and sublimate it
as a motif in our sagas. Yet at no time and in no place are we
protected from being tapped on the shoulder and reminded,
"You're going to die, you know." However much we try to ig
nore it, our consciousness haunts us with this knowledge. Our
heads were baptized in the font of death; they are doused with
the horror of moribundity.
Death-do we really believe it is part of the order of our
lives? We say that we do. But when it becomes lucent to our
imagination, how natural does it feel? W. A. Mozart's attributed
last words are apropos here: "The taste of death is on my
tongue. I feel something which is not of this world" (quoted in
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
217
Jacques Choron, Death and Modern Man, 1964) . Death is not
like survival and procreation. It is more like a visitation from a
foreign and enigmatic sphere, one to which we are connected
by our consciousness. No consciousness, no death. No death, no
stories with a beginning, middle, and an end. Animal stories of
survival and procreation have no comparable structure because
animals have no consciousness of death.
Obviously, not all fictional plots end in death, only those
which follow a character's life until it can be followed no more.
However, in the world of nonfiction where we are making a go
of it on our own, we know how far we will be followed. What
we can never know is How and When the following will end.
But suppose we did know How and When the ending would
take place? What then? How could we go on? Who could live
through a story whose ending he or she knew from page one-
not in a general sense but as to the How and When of that end
ing, which may be a crucifixion and not an easeful cessation?
Only because we do not know How or When our life story will
finish can we keep going. We remain in suspense about these
details, making it possible for us to follow attentively the twists
and turns of our personal plot. And so the story holds our inter
est for as long as it lasts.
Yet everyone knows What is going to happen at the end.
We just do not know what it will be like when what is going to
happen actually happens. One would think that would be
enough to ruin the story, knowing What is going to happen
that no one is going to make it through. Somehow, though, it
does not. Our crafty minds have taken care of that. They have
thought a thousand different endings, most prominently that of
dying in one's sleep, or not thought about the ending at all. But
when it comes, it comes. Nothing will tum away that distin
guished visitor. After being long refused admittance into our
lives, death materializes outside our door and begins pounding
218
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
to be let in. Now everything quivers with an aura of the un
canny, and nameless shapes begin to form. As the end nears,
consciousness surges and the pieces fall together. Being alive is
all right, or so most of us say. But when death walks through
the door, nothing is all right. As some believe that life is that
which should not be, the bulk of the rest of us believe the same
of death. That is its terror and its fascination. Everyone knows
that we are all the dead-to-be. There are gewgaws and knick
knacks that stay in shape far longer than our mortal forms. If
we called ourselves dead from the time we are born, we would
not be far off from the truth. But as long as we can walk or
crawl or just lie abed sucking tubes, we can still say that being
alive is all right.
Without death-meaning without our consciousness of
death-no story of supernatural horror would ever have been
written, nor would any other artistic representation of human
life have been created for that matter. It is always there, if only
between the lines or brushstrokes, or conspicuously by its ab
sence. It is a terrific stimulus to that which is at once one of our
greatest weapons and greatest weaknesses-imagination. Our
minds are always on the verge of exploding with thoughts and
images as we ceaselessly pound the pavement of our world.
Both our most exquisite cogitations and our worst cognitive
drivel announce our primal torment: We cannot linger in the
stillness of nature's vacuity. And so we have imagination to be
guile us. A misbegotten hatchling of consciousness, a birth de
fect of our species, imagination is often revered as a sign of
vigor in our make-up. But it is really just a psychic overcom
pensation for our impotence as beings. Denied nature's exemp
tion from creativity, we are indentured servants of the
imaginary until the hour of our death, when the final harass
ments of imagination will beset us.
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
219
Apart from vulgar mortality, supernatural literature also
centers on the death of sanity, identity, ideals, abilities, passions,
and hand-me-down conceptions about the universe and every
thing in it. Death is accepted in horror stories because a plot
that did not ignite its terrors-in a fictional world, that is
would be a narrative miscarriage. But in real life few of us hang
out in morgues and mausoleum chambers, and even those who
do are only perversely inuring themselves to the graphic details
of what puts us in these places. Being alive is supposed to be all
right, but not when you have no choice but to consider the al
ternative. An example of how this might happen, one with
which most of us are conversant, is the prosaic plot of a vehicu
lar misadventure, a mischance that is ordinarily experienced as
a dreamlike ramble with unforeseen stops along the way.
Imagine: You may be traveling on a slippery road when,
without warning, your vehicle begins sliding across several lanes
of oncoming traffic. You know that such things happen. They
may even have happened to you on a prior occasion. You know
that they happen to other people all the time. Nevertheless,
this accident was not in your plans, which is why it is called an
accident. In principle, it could be plotted as a cause-and-effect
confluence of circumstances, although you would never be able
to trace them to their originating source, not even if you went
back to the beginning of time. It might occur to you, though,
that the responsibility for your accident-to-come lay with a
friend or relative who called and asked you to come over and
lend a hand in some fix-it project, because you would not even
be out of the house except for that untimely request. Yet you
would be just as right to hold other factors responsible: the
slippery road on which you were driving, the weather that
made the road slippery, all the things that determined the
weather, the length of time you spent looking in your clothes
closet for the shoes that would be most proper to wear for the
220
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U MAN RACE
fix-it project in question-that interval of perfect extent which
made sure you would be j ust where you needed to be so that
you would not be too early or too late to become involved in a
vehicular misadventure.
But whatever the proximate or remote causes of your ve
hicular misadventure might have been, you had an idea of how
things were to happen that day, as you do every day, and spin
ning out of control in your car while other vehicles try to cir
cumvent a collision with you was not on your schedule. One
second ago you had a firm grip on things, but now you are veer
ing toward who knows where. You are not filled with horror,
not yet, as you careen along the pavement that is slick with rain
or snow glistening in the moonlight, the wind wailing and shad
ows scattering. At this point everything is all strangeness. You
have been taken to a different place from where you were just
a moment before.
Then it begins. This can 't be happening, you think-if you
can think at all, if you are anything more than a whirlwind of
panic. In reality, though, anything can happen now. This is the
whispering undercurrent that creeps into your thoughts
nothing is safe and nothing is off limits. All of a sudden some
thing was set in motion that changed everything. Something de
scended upon you that had been circling above your life from
the day you were born. And for the first time you feel that
which you have never felt before--the imminence of your own
death. There is no possibility for self-deception now. The para
dox that came with consciousness is done with. Only horror is
left. This is what is real. This is the only thing that was ever
real, however unreal it may have seemed. Of course, bad things
happen, as everyone knows. They have always happened and
always will happen. They are part of the natural order of things.
But this is not how we would have it. This is not how we think
things should be for us. This is how we think things should not
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
221
be. And all supernatural horror, as we remember, obtains in
what we believe should be and should not be.
Yet might we have avoided this horror by w arding off our
belief in what should be and what should not be, by believing
only in what is? No, we could not. We were doomed to hold
this belief and to suffer what looms out of it. What doomed us
(if one will forgive another imperious repetition of this theme)
was consciousness-parent of all horrors and author of all we
believe should be and should not be. While consciousness
brought us out of our coma in the natural, we still like to think
that, however aloof we are from other living things, we are not
in essence wholly alienated from them. We do try to fit in with
the rest of creation, living and breeding like any other animal or
vegetable. It is no fault of ours that we were made as we were
made-experiments in a parallel being. This was not our
choice. We did not volunteer to be as we are. We may think
that being alive is all right, especially when we consider the al
ternative, but we think about it as infrequently as possible, for
this very thought raises the spirits of the dead and all the other
freaks of nature.
No other life forms know they are alive, and neither do they
know they will die. This is our curse alone. Without this hex
upon our heads, we would never have withdrawn as far as we
have from the natural-so far and for such a time that it is a re
lief to say what we have been trying with our all not to say: We
have long since been denizens of the natural world. Everywhere
around us are natural habitats, but within us is the shiver of star
tling and dreadful things. Simply put: We are not from here. If we
vanished tomorrow, no organism on this planet would miss us.
Nothing in nature needs us. We are like Mainlander's suicidal
God. Nothing needed Him either, and His uselessness was trans
ferred to us after He burst out of existence. We have no busi
ness being in this world. We move among living things, all those
222
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
natural puppets with nothing in their heads. But our heads are in
another place, a world apart where all the puppets exist not in
the midst of life but outside it. We are those puppets, those
human puppets. We are crazed mimics of the natural prowling
about for a peace that will never be ours. And the medium in
which we circulate is that of the supernatural, a dusky element
of horror that obtains for those who believe in what should be
and should not be. This is our secret quarter. This is where we
rave with insanity on the level of metaphysics, fracturing reality
and breaking the laws of life.
Deviations from the natural have whirled around us all our
days. We kept them at arm's length, abnormalities we denied
were elemental to our being. But absent us there is nothing of
the supernatural in the universe. We are aberrations-beings
born undead, neither one thing nor another, or two things at
once . . . uncanny things that have nothing to do with the rest of
creation, horrors that poison the world by sowing our madness
everywhere we go, glutting daylight and darkness with incorpo
real obscenities. From across an immeasurable divide, we
brought the supernatural into all that is manifest. Like a faint
haze it floats around us. We keep company with ghosts. Their
graves are marked in our minds, and they will never be disin
terred from the cemeteries of our remembrance. Our heart
beats are numbered, our steps counted. Even as we survive and
reproduce, we know ourselves to be dying in a dark corner of
infinity. Wherever we go, we know not what expects our arri
val but only that it is there.
With eyes that see through a translucent veil shimmering
before us, we look at life from the other side. There, something
escorts us through our days and nights like a second shadow
that casts itself into another world and fastens us to it. Leashed
to the supernatural, we know its signs and try to tame them by
desensitization and lampoonery. We study them as symbols,
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supematural
223
play games with them. Then an eerily hued light bathes them,
and they become real once more: the grinning skull, the curving
scythe, the moldy headstone, all the dark creatures of the earth
and air, all the momenti mori we have hidden within us. These
skeletons of ours-when will they come out and show them
selves? They groan more loudly with each passing year. Time
breezes by with chilling haste. Is the child in that old photo
graph really an erstwhile version of you, your little hand waving
farewell? The face of that child is nothing like the face you
have now. That child's face is now melding with the blackness
behind you, before you, around you. The child is waving and
smiling and fading as your car keeps skidding toward your
abruptly curtailed future. Bye-bye.
Then another face appears. It has displaced the one you are
used to seeing when your rearview mirror goes crooked, as it
has now, and confronts you. You cannot look away, because the
other face is lit up like a full moon, which both terrifies and
fascinates you. And nothing about it looks natural. It seems
rigid-the face of something that belongs in a toy chest. The
face is smiling, but too much and too long to be real. And its
eyes do not blink. The scene shifts moment by moment. Peo
ple, places, and things appear and disappear. You appeared as
others expected but not as you chose. You will disappear as if
you had never been, having taken your turn in this world. You
always told yourself that this was the natural way of things and
that you could submit to it because you belonged to nature . . .
MALIGNANTLY USELESS nature, which coughed you up
like a little phlegm from its great lungs. Yet the supernatural
has cleaved to you from the beginning, working its oddities into
your life while you waited for death to begin beating on your
door. It has not come to save you, but to bring you into its hor
ror. Perhaps you hoped to make it through this horror that sat
like a gargoyle upon your life. Now you find there is no way
224
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
through. Only seconds are left, each one strangling you a little
more tightly. Incantations are spoken all around. They have lost
their power. The living and the dead j abber inside you. You
cannot understand them. Dreams become more lustrous than
memories. Darkness is shoveled over dreams.
Those unblinking eyes are still gleaming in the mirror, the
eyes of that face, smiling too much and too long. And you can
feel your own face smiling, too, your eyes not blinking. Now
that secret you never wanted to know comes into your head
that you were made as you were made and manipulated to be
have as you behaved. And as this secret comes into your head,
the smile of that face in the mirror pushes up at its edges. So
does yours, doing as it is bidden. Both faces at once are smiling
the same smile. It widens past all sane proportion. At last a
long-restrained voice cries out: What is this life! But only silence
answers, and it mocks every mad hope you ever held.
No self now, consciously speaking.
No feeling your old self or new self, false imaginings if you
think about it, self-conscious nothings everywhere you look.
No one to hear you weep or scream, making a go of it on your
own, bye-bye.
No bosom of nature, abandoned on the doorstep of the super
natural, minds full of flagrantly joyless possibilities, a real blun
der that was, the human tragedy.
No reality to speak of, nobody here but us puppets, contradic
tory beings, mutants who embody the contorted logic of a paradox.
No immortality, ordinary folk and average mortals coming
and going, can 't stay long, got an appointment with nonexistence,
no alternative to consider, being alive was all right while it lasted,
so they say.
No life story with a happy ending to tell, only a contrivance of
horror, then nothingness-and nothing else.
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
225
No Free Will-to-live, no redemption by a Will-to-die, how de
pressing.
No philosophies to peddle, pessimism a no-sale, optimism had
to close its doors, too wicked to pass code.
No meanings or mind-games, repressional mechanisms broke
down, self-deception shuttered its windows.
No awakening from a dream within a dream, mutation of
consciousness-parent of a ll horrors, best not mess with it, extinc
tion looking better a ll the time.
No more pleasure, what there was of it, a Jew crumbs left by
chaos a t feast, still a good supply of pain, though.
No praiseworthy incentives, just bowel-movement pressures,
potato-mashing relativism.
No euthanasia, bad for the business of life, you 're on your
own there, but watch out for the eternal return, most horrible idea
in the universe.
No loving God, omnipotence off duty and omniscience on
leave, the deity He dead-the horror, the horror, even the skies of
spring and the flowers of summer must ever afterward be poison,
blame it on the piecing together of dissociated knowledge.
No compassionate Buddha, Body Snatchers got him, heard
tell, or some kind of thing, maybe next lifetime.
No Good-versus-Evil Jonnu las around here, Azathoth running
the show, human beings a mistake or a joke, something pernicious
making a nightmare of our world.
No being nonnal and real, the uncanny coming at you full
speed, startling and dreadful.
No ego-death-enlightenment by accident.
No way out of hann 's way, better never to have been, worst
saved for last.
No Last Messiah, buried in the fingernails of midwives and
pacifier makers, gone the way of messiahs past.
No bleakness either, a failure indeed.
226
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E H U MAN RACE
No terror management by isolation, anchoring, distraction,
sublimation.
No tragedies to read or to write, death kept at a safe distance
past the vanishing point down the road.
No escape routes into a useless bliss, useless existence, malig
nantly so . . .
What now? Now there is only that unnaturally spreading
smile--a great gaping abyss where blackness reaches out to
blackness, nothing. Then: the sense of being swallowed. The
story is done; the plot complete.
Endgame
To contest Zapffe's philosophy, or any philosophy like it, would
be as facile as to contest that of any other philosopher whose
reasoning does not suit your predilections. If his analysis of hu
man existence appears secure in a certain light, it may be
flouted with little exertion by anyone thus motivated. Zapffe
did not discover the New World, with a handful of dirt to
prove it. He was someone who thought he had worked out
why humankind should go extinct, knowing that we would
never make that choice, whatever he and his Last Messiah had
to say. Whether we are sovereign or enslaved in our being,
what of it? Our species will still look to the future and see no
need to abdicate its puppet dance of replication in a puppet
universe where the strings pull themselves. What a laugh that
we would do anything else, or could do anything else. That our
lives might be a paradox and a horror would not really be a se
cret too terrible to know for minds that know only what they
want to know. The hell of human consciousness is only a phi
losopher's bedtime story we can hear each night and forget each
morning when we awake to go to school or to work or wher
ever we may go day after day after day. What do we care about
A utopsy on a Puppe t: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
227
the horror of being insufferably aware we are alive and will die
. . . the horror of shadows without selves enshrouding the earth
. . . or the horror of puppet-heads bobbing in the wind and dis
appearing into a dark sky like lost balloons? If that is the way
you think things are, go shout it from the rooftops and see
where it gets you. We are staying put, but you can go extinct if
you like. We can make more little puppets like you, but we do
not call them that. We call them people who have indivisible
selves and stories that are nothing like yours.
Being somebody is rough, but being nobody is out of the
question. We must be happy, we must imagine Sisyphus to be
happy, we must believe because it is absurd to believe. Day by
day, in every way, we are getting better and better. Positive illu
sions for positive persons. They shoot horses, don't they? But as
for shooting ourselves-ask Gloria Beatty, ask Michelstaedter,
ask Weininger, ask Hemingway. But do not ask Mainlander or
Bj0rneboe, who hanged themselves. And do not ask Jean
Amery, author of Suicide: A Discourse on Voluntary Death
(1976) , who made his exit with a drug overdose. Amery sur
vived Auschwitz, but he did not survive his survival. No one
does. With our progenitors and the world behind us, we will
never hold this life to be MALIGNANTLY USELESS. Almost
nobody declares that an ancestral curse contaminates us in
utero and pollutes our existence. Doctors do not weep in the
delivery room, or not often. They do not lower their heads and
say, "The stopwatch has started." The infant may cry, if things
went right . But time will dry its eyes; time will take care of it.
Time will take care of everyone until there are none of us to
take care of. Then all will be as it was before we put down
roots where we do not belong.
There will come a day for each of us-and then for all of us
w hen the future will be done with. Until then, humanity will
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
acclimate itself to every new horror that comes knocking, as it
has done from the very beginning. It will go on and on until it
stops. And the horror will go on, with generations falling into
the future like so many bodies into open graves. The horror
handed down to us will be handed down to others like a scan
dalous heirloom. Being alive: decades of waking up on time,
then trudging through another round of moods, sensations,
thoughts, cravings-the complete gamut of agitations-and fi
nally flopping into bed to sweat in the pitch of dead sleep or
simmer in the phantasmagorias that molest our dreaming
minds. Why do so many of us bargain for a life sentence over
the end of a rope or the muzzle of a gun? Do we not deserve to
die? But we are not obsessed by such questions. To ask them is
not in our interest, nor to answer them with hand on heart. In
such spirit might we not bring to an end the conspiracy against
the human race? This would seem to be the right course: the
death of tragedy in the arms of nonexistence. Overpopulated
worlds of the unborn would not have to suffer for our undoing
what we have done so that we might go on as we have all these
years. That said, nothing we know would have us take that
step. What could be more unthinkable? We are only human
beings. Ask anybody.
NOTES
The Nigh tmare of Being
i . The nativity of human consciousness as depicted in this paragraph
may be seen as (1 ) a fable of humanity's "loss of innocence" and
alienation from a "natural" way of being in the world; (2) a specula
tive moment with a loose footing in evolutionary psychology.
2. "The Last Messiah, " Wisdom in the Open Air: The Norwegian
Roots of Deep Ecology (1 993) , ed. Peter Reed and David Rothen
berg (translators Sigmund Kval0y with Peter Reed) ; Philosophy
Now, March-April 2004 (translator Gisle R. Tangenes) . Regretta
bly, Zapffe's philosophical masterwork, On the Tragic (1 94 1 ) , has
not appeared in any maj or language at the time of this w riting.
However, abstracts of its substance, as well as excerpts from this
treatise and other writings by Zapffe as translated into English by
Tangenes, confirm that throughout his long life he did not aban
don or dilute the pessimistic principles of On the Tragic as they
appear in miniature in "The Last Messiah." While it may seem
strange or ludicrous for any book to place so much of the w eight
of its discourse on a short essay written by an obscure European
philosopher in the early 1 9 30s, one must start somewhere.
3. Under the collective designation of "constructivists," philoso
phers, sociologists, and other authorities working in a range of
fields have variously deliberated on the fabricated nature of our
lives. Examples: P. L. Berger and T. Luckman, The Social Construc
tion of Rea lity, 1 966; Paul W atzlawick, ed., Invented Reality: How
Do We Know What We Believe We Know?, 1 984; Ernst von Glase
feld, Radical Contructivism: A Way of Leaming, 1 996. For book229
230
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
reading intellectuals, this idea is just one of many that fill their
days. Its import, however, is not often shared with the masses. But
sometimes it is. An instance in cinema where fabrication is hy
pothesized to be the cornerstone of our lives occurs at the end of
Hero (1992) , when the character referred to in the title, Bernard
LePlant, passes on some words of wisdom to his previously es
tranged son. "You remember where I said I w as going to explain
about life, buddy?" he says. "Well, the thing about life is, it gets
weird. People are always talking to you about truth, everybody
always knows what the truth is, like it was toilet paper or some
thing and they got a supply in the closet. But what you learn as
you get older is, there ain't no truth. All there is, is bullshit. Pardon
my vulgarity here. Layers of it. One layer of bullshit on top of an
other. And what you do in life, like when you get older, is-you
pick the layer of bullshit you prefer, and that's your bullshit, so to
speak. You got that?" Despite the cynicism of LePlant's words, the
object of his fatherly lesson is to create a bond between him and
his son. (Hollywood is heavily invested in plotlines in which a
broken family is "healed.") This bond is reliant on the exposure of
life as bullshit and is itself bullshit-since one can have no basis
for preferring one layer of bullshit over another without already
being full of bullshit-which makes LePlant's case that "All there
is, is bullshit" without his being aware of it, which is how bullshit
works. This is not the message the moviegoer is meant to take
away from the mass-audience philosophizing of Hero, but there it
is anyway.
+ It was also no impediment to Weininger's posthumous reputa
tion-after he killed himself by gunshot at the age of twenty
three--that he was an anti-Semitic Jew who converted to Christi
anity, a life-path that looked good on one's resume before the Sec
ond World War, and one that will always look good to the average
evangelical until Judgment Day. (Naturally, Weininger's works
have been widely translated and critically examined.) The libelous
profile of Jews in Sex and Character must have filled someone like
Adolf Hitler with a self-satisfied sense of being a real human and
not a Jew, even a converted one. In regard to the Fiihrer's own
reputation, what we have is a biography of a bungler whose geno-
Notes
23 1
cidal predisposition did not cause the way of life of his target group
to falter. This is quite in contrast to the U.S. government's exper
tise in reducing indigenous peoples to internees on their own home
ground and freely claiming their land What they were is gone for
ever. To thwart suspicions to the contrary, the intent here is not to
sympathize with any person or people but only to play up histori
cal facts that live most vividly in the memory of their victims and
must be repressed in the conscience of their p erpetrators if the lat
ter are to retain a good opinion of themselves, their god, their na
tion, their families, and the human race, or that part of the human
race with whom they believe themselves to share a destiny. Such
facts of life and death are j ust that-facts. To the extent they are
submitted as an indictment of humanity, a blunder has been made.
What has been called "man's inhumanity to man" should not entice
us into a misanthropy smarting for our species to come to an end.
That deduction is another blunder, as much as it would be a blun
der to tub-thump for our survival based on the real abundance of
what is valued as "humane" behavior. Both the "inhuman" and the
"humane" movements of our species are without relevance. None
of us are at the helm of either of these movements. We believe
ourselves to be masters of our behavior-that is the blunder. We
believe ourselves to be something we are not-that is the blunder.
To perpetuate these blunders, to conspire in the suffering of future
generations, is the only misconduct to be expiated, not that we will
ever be ready or able to rectify our incorrigible nature. That we
were naturally or divinely made to collaborate in our own suffering
and that of human posterity is the blunder. Ask Adam and Eve,
symbols of the most deleterious blunder of all, one which we reen
act every d<J,y.
5. For a study that reaches the conclusion that one's subjective well
being is approximately fifty percent determined by genetic lottery
and fifty percent by life experiences, rather than something that a
self- help book can instruct an individual to achieve, see "Happiness
Is a Stochastic Phenomenon" by David Lykken and Auke Tellegen,
University of Minnesota Psychological Science, 1 996. The equal per
centages of genetic and experiential factors in Lykken and Tellegen's
study results in their conclusion that happiness is a "matter of
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST T H E H U M AN RACE
chance" and is not a phenomenon genetically determined in w hole.
A full genetic determinism of one's happiness, and every other trait
of ours, is known as "puppet determinism," although why genetics
should be the lone string-puller and not genetics coupled with
events in one's existence, which would leave nothing of what we
are to chance, seems curious. (For more on determinism, see the
section Actors in the chapter "Who Goes There?")
6. The precis of Mainlander's philosophy in this chapter in based in
several sources: Thomas Whittaker's Essays and Notices Philosophi
cal and Psychological, 1 895; H. P. Blavatsky's "The Origin of Evil" in
the October 1 897 issue of the j ournal Lucifer; Rudolph Steiner's
The Riddles of Philosophy, 1 9 1 4 1 and Evil: Selected Lectures, 1 9 1 8;
Radoslav Tsanoff's The Nature of Evil, 1 9 3 1 ; Francesca Arundale's
The Idea of Rebirth, 1 9 4 2; Aleksander Samarin, "The Engima of
Immortality," May 2005 (http: / /www.thebigview.com) ; Johann
Joachim Gestering's Gemian Pessimism and Indian Philosophy: A
Hen enuetic Reading, 1 986; and Henry Sheldon's Unbelief in the
Nineteenth Century, 2005. A more conventionally philosophical
working out of why the human race should be discontinued is con
tained in the section Undoing III later in this chapter.
7. Zapffe's solution to nature's sportive minting of the human race
may seem the last checkpoint of pessimism. In his Philosophy of the
Unconscious (1 869) 1 the German philosopher Eduard von Hartmann
thinks farther ahead: "What would it avail, e.g. , if all mankind
should die out by sexual continence? The world as such would con
tinue to exist." This endurance of the organic would allow the res
tive forces of life to set up "a new man or similar type, and the
whole misery would begin over again" (Hartmann's emphasis) . For
Hartmann, the struggle for deliverance will not end until a super
potent force exterminates every scintilla of the Creation. While
Hartmann's vision is lunacy, so is the idea that humanity will ever
leave off breeding. Between two uproarious implausibilities, why
distinguish one as more implausible than another?
8. The notion that human beings are caught in a paradox that af
fects no other creatures in this world reemerges in John Gray's
Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals (2002) . At the
233
Notes
end of this work, the author echoes Zapffe's conceptualization of
humanity when he writes : "Other animals do not need a purpose in
life. A contradiction to itself, the human animal c annot do without
one." While observing this contradiction, however, Gray never
gives a moment's regard to the possibility that it might render hu
man existence a paradox that only voluntary extinction can bring
to an end. Even though Gray sees our involuntary extinction as
probable and not far off, he is still o pen to solutions short of the
cooperative cessation of the human race. The one that he suggests,
w hich he seems not to have noticed is already in place, is that hu
manity should do what it can to get by in this world while living in
a state of irremediable delusion. Following the previously quoted
sentences is the parting sentiment of Straw Dogs: "Can we not
think of the aim of life as being simply to see ? " This que ry rests o n
the premise that there is a better way for the human race t o live,
and that we could live that way if we wanted to. I rrespective of
the optimistic spirit of Gray's concluding questio n, Straw Dogs has
been deprecated by many as a breviary of pessimism. Without
cavil, it is a contrarian work that has rejuvenated for the common
reader some of the most basic and neglected difficulties of human
life. But to label it as pessimistic is an overreaction on the part of
those who would remain mere dabblers in actuality
.
9. For a supporting view of James's non-logical exoneration of the
faithful, see Suckiel, Ellen Kappy, "William James on Cognitivity
of Feelings, Religious Pessimism, and the M eaning of Life," The
Journal of Speculative Philosophy, 2004.
10. Included among these works are Herbert Fingarette's Self
Deception (2000) , Alfred R. M ele's Self-Deception Unmasked (2001) ;
Eviatar Zerubavel's The Elephant in the Room: Silence and Denial in
Everyday Life (2006) ; Perspectives on Self-Deception (1 988) , Brian P.
McLaughlin and Amelie Oksenburg Rorty, eds.; Denial: A Clarifica
tion of Concepts and Research (1989) , E. L. Edelstein, D. L. Nathan
son, and A. M. Stone, eds.; and Lying and Deception in Everyday Life
(1 993) , Michael Lewis and Carolyn Saarni, eds.
2 34
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
Who Goes There ?
Galen Strawson explains this experience is similar terms: For
most people, "their personality is something that is unnoticed, and
in effect undetectable in the present moment. It's what they look
through, or where they look from; not something they look at; a
global and invisible condition of their life, like air, not an object of
experience" ("The Sense of Self' in From Soul to Self, ed. M. James
C. Crabbe, 1 999) .
i.
Freaks o f Salvation
One's "sense of meaning" functions as an autonomic system,
something that is noticed when it goes on the fritz but not when it
is in working order. It is part of the cog-and-wheel functioning of
our psychological machinery and would perhaps be better charac
terized as a set of stored-up assumptions than a sensation or emo
tion. When one or more of these assumptions is threatened by
someone or something, their meaning-system will come to the
fore and face off with its foe. After the threat is dealt with, this
system once again returns to its autonomic functioning. Only a
tiny percentage of humans consciously fixate on meaning without
an adversarial provocation. If for most of our race meaning comes
straight from a handbook that may be referenced by page and
paragraph, chapter and verse--" God exists," "I have a Self," "My
country is the best in the world"-for this small percentage mean
ing is principally received from one source: a sense of mystery. In
his essay "The Wall and the Book," the twentieth-century Argen
tine writer Jorge Luis Borges wrote: "Music, states of happiness,
mythology, faces belabored by time, certain twilights and certain
places try to tell us something, or have said something we should
not have missed, or are about to say something; this imminence of a
revelation which does not occur is, perhaps, the aesthetic phenome
non" (emphasis added) . Lovecraft's "Notes on the Writing of
Weird Fiction" opens with this sentence: "My reason for writing
stories is to give myself the satisfaction of visualising more clearly
and detailedly and stably the vague, elusive, fragmentary impresi.
Notes
235
sions of wonder, beauty, and adventurous expectancy which are
conveyed to me by certain sights (scenic, architectural, atmos
pheric, etc.) , ideas, occurrences, and images encountered in a rt and
literature" (emphasis added) . This sense of mystery that is never
dissipated by express knowledge but is forever an imminence or
expectancy explains much of the attraction of supernatural stories
(Blackwood's "The Willows," Lovecraft's "The Colour out of
Space," Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher.") For Borges and
Lovecraft, the experience that a meaningful mystery was about to
be revealed to them was stirred by works of art or by an aesthetic
vision of things in the world. For others, the experience of mean
ing through mystery may not take place because of a crudeness of
character or a mystery-killing condition such as depression, a dis
ease that trumps everything that might mean something. But
when a sense of mystery arises, it does so most potently on the
threshold of realization. Should the mystery ever be revealed, it
will crumble and lie in pieces upon the earth. Afterward, there
will be an incursion of scriptures, doctrines, and narratives that
specify the mysterious as an object, a datum. To say that some
kind of god might exist is to vivify its being with mystery. To de
fine a god into existence because it meets certain criteria for god
hood is to kill that god by turning it into a cheapjack idol with a
publicity team of theologians behind it. This would explain why
so many deities-all of them, in fact-have fallen apart or are in
the process of doing so: eventually every god loses its mystery be
cause it has become overqualified for its job. After a god's mystery
is gone, arguments for its reality begin. Logic steps in to resuscitate
what has been bled of its healthful vagueness. Finally, another "liv
ing god" is consigned to the mortuary of scholars.
2. Borges's essay "The Doctrine of Cycles" both cites and conceives
several refutations catastrophic for the ancient concept of the
eternal return, which posits the identical recurrence of all beings
and events forever and ever and ever. In the words of the bookish
Argentine, the "eternal return of the same" is "the most horrible
idea in the universe." To Borges, this idea was a nightmare born of
bad philosophy; to Nietzsche, it was a nightmare fathered by his
need to be j oyful, or to believe he would be joyful no matter what
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
horror befell him. In Nietzsche's world, coming to terms with this
idea as a reality was a must for affirming one's life and life itself,
thus recalculating the horrors of existence into a fate, or an un
ceasing series of fates, that would somehow inspire love rather
than alarm. Given the antinomy on this issue between Borges and
Nietzsche, should one writer be heralded over the other as genu
ine, authentic, or whatever term of approval one cares to wield?
This is a moot question. Each man was handling the stress of a hy
per-diligent consciousness in his own style and not in one pressed
upon him by cognitive meddlers.
3. How vapid is the rhetoric of insolence when used by infidels.
Only the blasphemies of the faithful who feel themselves ill-used
by their deity carry the music of hatred that the unbeliever at
tempts in vain. Take the Book of Job. Were its protagonist an actual
man and not a lesson in fearful obeisance, the Old Testament might
contain a symphony of rancor greater than any this world has
known. But Job turns legalistic rather than abusive; he wants to ar
gue why he should be spared his hellish trials. No good can come of
that. Any argument can go on interminably . . . or until one party
gives in, which is what Job does because God will not argue with
him and, being almighty, can say and do whatever he likes without
question. One thing that Job's tale has conferred upon worshippers
down through the ages is a compulsory workout in rationalization
known as theodicy-a genre of Christian apologetics that endeavors
to square an all-knowing, all-powerful, and all-loving god with the
evils of existence. Pace Chesterton, reconciling a good Creator with
a bad creation makes for a problem that believers cannot solve with
or without logic. And anyone who believes this problem will ever
go away will believe anything.
4. Some quotes from U . G. may be useful here. The likeness be
tween U. G.'s contentions and those of Zapffe, as well as to others
made or to be made by the author of the present work, are fairly
blatant. Because of these conceptual affinities, skepticism regard
ing the experiences and ideas of U. G. and others in this section is
wanting, for whatever fosters insights we are eager to dispense is
always given a shameful leeway. But as U. G. once said, "All in
sights, however extraordinary they may be, are worthless. You can
23 7
Notes
create a tremendous structure of thought from your own discov
ery, which you call insight. But that insight is nothing but the re
sult of your own thinking, the permutations and combinations of
thought. Actually there is no way you can come up with anything
original." The following selection is taken from interviews with U.
G. collected a s No Way Out (1 991) .
The problem is this: N ature has assembled all these species on
this planet. The human species is no more important than any
other species on this planet. For some reason, man accorded
himself a superior place in this scheme of things. He thinks that
he is created for some grander purpose than, if I could give a
crude example, the mosquito that is sucking his blood. What is
responsible for this is the value system that we have created.
And the value system has come out of the religious thinking of
man. Man has created religion because it gives him a cover.
This demand to fulfill himself, to seek something out there was
made imperative because of this self-consciousness in you
which occurred somewhere along the line of the evolutionary
process. Man separated himself from the totality of nature.
*
*
*
Nature is interested in only two things-to survive and to re
produce one like itself. Anything you superimpose on that, all
the cultural input, is responsible for the boredom of man. So
we have varieties of religious experience. You are not satisfied
with your own religious teachings or games; so you bring in
others from India, Asia or China. They become interesting be
cause they are something new. You pick up a new language
and try to speak it and use it to feel more important. But basi
cally, it is the same thing.
*
*
*
Somewhere along the line in human consciousness, there oc
curred self-consciousness. (When I use the word "self, " I don't
mean that there is a self or a center there.) That consciousness
separated man from the totality of things. Man, in the begin
ning, was a frightened being. He turned everything that was
T H E CONS PIRACY AGAINST TH E H U MAN RAC E
uncontrollable into something divine or cosmic and worshiped
it. It was in that frame of mind that he created, quote and un
quote, "God." So, culture is responsible for w hatever you are. I
maintain that all the political institutions and ideologies w e
have today are the outgrowth o f the same religious thinking o f
man. The spiritual teachers are i n a way responsible for the
tragedy of mankind.
Y our own death, o r the death of your near and dea r ones, is not
something you can experience. What you actually experience is
the void created by the disappearance of another individual,
and the unsatisfied demand to maintain the continuity of your
relationship with that person fo r a nonexistent eternity. The
arena for the continuation of all these "permanent" relation
ships is the tomorrow-heaven, next life, a nd so on. T hese
things are the inventions of a mind interested only in its undis
turbed, permanent continuity in a "self'-generated, fictitious fu
ture. The basic method of maintaining the continuity is the
repetition of the question, "How? How? How?" " How am I to
live? How can I be happy? How can I be sure I w ill be happy
tomorrow?" This has made life an insoluble dilemma fo r us.
We want to know, and through that knowledge w e hope to
continue on with our miserable existences forever.
*
I still maintain that it is not love, compassion, humanism, o r
brotherly sentiments that will save mankind. N o , not a t all. I t i s
the sheer terror of extinction that c a n save us, i f anything can.
I am like a puppet sitting here. It's not just I; all of us are pup
pets. Nature is pulling the strings, but we believe that we are
acting. If you function that way [as puppets] , then the prob
lems are simple. But we have superimposed on that [the idea
of] a "person" who is pulling those strings.
Notes
239
5. Ask C harles Whitman, who left a written request that an au
topsy be done on him that might explain w hy he ascended a
tower at the University of Texas to shoot at and kill strangers be
fore he himself w as shot and killed by policemen. Whitman did
have a brain tumor, but neurologists could not connect this malig
nancy to his actions, possibly because he was dead. In a note writ
ten a few days preceding his murderous rampage on August 1 ,
1 9 66, Whitman stated that in March o f that year h e had consulted
w ith one Dr. Jan Cochrum, to whom he confided his "unusual and
irrational thoughts" and "overwhelming violent impulses."
C ochrum gave Whitman a script for Valium and referred him to a
psychiatrist, Dr. Maurice Dean Heatly. In his one session with
Heatly, Whitman said that he had an urge to "start shooting peo
ple w ith a deer rifle." While no causal association was established
between Whitman's brain tumor and his bloody actions, he
probably should have had his brain checked out sooner, or at least
"chosen" not to destroy so many lives. In a determinist court of
justice, perhaps Cochrum and Heatly would have been tried as
collaborators in the killings. But why be solicitous about such legal
intricacies when the law could put it all on Whitman's head?
Sick to Death
t . At this point in his life, Tolstoy was running low on each of
Zapffe's four methods for befogging one's consciousness
isolation, distraction, anchoring, and, most toweri ngly, sublimation
through his work as a literary artist. As Zapffe may have borrowed
some of his central propositions from Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy,
he may also have gone to school on Tolstoy's A Confession. In
naming the self-deceitful ways of human beings, original ideas are
hard to come by. Zapffe's thought in " The Last Messiah" is indeed
based on "taboo commonplaces" and "outlawed truisms," which
average mortals may not like to hear about but which they cannot
rebuff when they hear about them.
2. A c inematic exemplification of this betrayal is the closing
voiceover of Se7en (1 995) , which was indeed a work of dark vision
in which chaos triumphs over order until, at the last minute, the
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE H U MAN RACE
actor Morgan Freeman saves the day with a laconic voiceover:
"Ernest Hemingway once wrote, 'The world is a fine place and
worth fighting for.' I agree with the second part." This quote is
taken from Hemingway's 1 9 4 0 novel For Whom the Bell Tolls. The
words are those of the hero of the book, Robert Jordan, who sacri
fices his life in war for what he considers a good cause. Not mind
ing being killed by the enemy, Jordan is also willing to commit
suicide in order to avoid capture. But he would rather not kill
himself. His father had done that, as Hemingway's had, and Jordan
judged him a coward for this act. Could Hemingway have also
thought himself a coward when he adjourned this life by suicide
some decades after w riting For Whom the Bell Tolls? What a tri
umph of order over chaos that would have been-a terrible but
heroic integrity.
3. During the 1 970s, N uland himself almost became the victim of
a pack of doctors who wanted to treat a severe depression into
which he had fallen with a pre-frontal lobotomy. If things went as
well as they possibly could with this procedure, Nuland would
have been turned into an emotionless thing with only enough re
sidual intellect to clean the toilets at the hospital where he once
performed surgeries. At the last moment, a doctor friend of his in
tervened. In his friend's minority opinion, the lobotomy should be
postponed until Nuland was first put through a succession of elec
tro-convulsive treatments. This therapy did the trick, and Nuland
went back to being a surgeon. Later he became a writer with a
mystical worship of the "human spirit" and its Will-to-live, al
though not in a Schopenhauerian sense. At the close of How We
Die, Nuland w rites: "The art of dying is the art of living." What he
does not write is that to practice the art of living it helps if you
have a doctor friend who will keep you from having an unneces
sary lobotomy, or a needless surgery.
4 . The human instinct to have one's own "way of life" outlast those
of others is risibly skewered in Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove
or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Faced with
the extinction of humanity at the hands of a doomsday device cre
ated by the Russians and programmed to be tripped by a nuclear
attack on the part of the U.S., American politicians and military
Notes
officials, at the urging of ex-Nazi scientist Dr. Strangelove, plan to
survive by living in mineshafts for the next hundred years, after
w hich they would emerge and, in Strangelove's estimation, " wo rk
their way back to the present gross national product within, say,
the next twenty years." Worried that the Russians c ould have the
same plan, Gen. Buck Turgidson, with all the foresight one would
expect from a man of his positio n, speculates, "I think we should
look at this from a military point of view. I mean, supposing the
Russkies stashed away a big bomb, see. When they come out in a
hundred years, they could take o ver� " Another general agrees with
Turgidson, w ho rambles on, "Yeah, I think it w ould be extremely
naive of us, Mr. President, to i magine that these new develop
ments are going to cause any change in Soviet expansionist poli
cies. I mean, we must be increasingly on the alert to prevent them
from taking over mineshaft space, in order to b reed more prodi
giously than we do, thus knocking us out in superior numbers
w hen we emerge�" The goofball insanity played out in this scene
has had audiences soaking their drawers since Kubrick's film was
released in 1964. The characters seem to be such funny little pup
pets as they draw up a survival plan, the success or failure of
which they w ill not live to see. All they request is the hope that
succeeding generations will carry on the same goofball insanity
that they did. In Zapffe's terms, Dr. Strangelove is a w ork of artistic
sublimation. Its audiences can bust a gut watching it and still go o n
propagating t o secure the way of life i t parodies. Should the events
of this movie ever be realized, those who emerge from the mine
shafts will yelp w ith glee at its goofball insanity no less than those
who went in. George Santayana's epigram "Those who cannot
learn from history are doomed to repeat it" is one big hoot. Only
by repeating history every second of every day can human beings
survive and breed. How out of keeping with this fact is the idea
that anyone among us w ould not want to be doomed to repeat
history. Or that any mortal could possibly learn anything from it
that w ould change our "way o f life." That would be the doomsday
scenario, the prologue to a melodrama that ends with the entrance
of the Last M essiah.
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
5. Consciousness studies sometimes draw attention to the phe
nomenological view that at your death the whole world dies be
cause the representation of it that you have inside your head is the
world, a solipsistic dreamland of your own making. Consequently,
there is no possibility of enshrining the world as you know it or
partaking by proxy-for instance, by sexual reproduction-in the
future.
6. In her 1995 book Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness
and the Artistic Temperament, Kay Redfield Jamison cites an iden
tical apocalyptic sentiment contained in the letters of the French
composer Hector Berlioz, who remarked that in his frequent mo
ments of depression he felt as if he could without hesitation light a
bomb that would blow up the earth. Antecedents of Jamison's
work are The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621) by Robert Burton,
Born under Saturn: The Character and Conduct of Artists: A Docu
mented History from Antiquity to the French Revolution (1963) by
Rudolf and Margot Wittkower, Voices of Melancholy: Studies in
Literary Treatments of Melancholy in Renaissance England (1971)
by Bridget Gellert Lyons, and The Demon of Noontide: Ennui in
Western Literature (1976) by Reinhard Kuhn.
7. One of the least solid rationalizations ever pitched to the world to
soothe our fear of death was made by the Roman philosopher Lu
cretius, a disciple of Epicurus. Lucretius's rationalization to termi
nate death-fear is as follows: We accept with great aplomb that we
did not exist before we were born; therefore, there is no reason to
fear not existing after our death Neither of the two parts of this
proposition is sound (They would be sound if human beings were
consummately rational, but we are not; if we were, then the ration
alization under discussion would not need to be put before us.) It
may be out of the ordinary to experience fear in connection with
the time when we did not exist, but nothing dictates that we can
not look upon it with fear, just as nothing dictates that we must
look upon it with fear. We may or may not look upon anything
with fear-as Pascal was terrified of the "infinite immensity of
spaces" while other people, in the tradition of Lovecraft, do not feel
this terror-or we may fear something at one time but not another.
As for experiencing fear in connection with the time when we will
Notes
24 3
not exist, no one can dictate by reason that we are mistaken to ex perience this fear. Like every other emotion, fear is irrational; it is
not subject to calculation and cannot be entered into philosophical
equations. And whether or not you fear death has nothing to do
with what some philosopher thinks is rational or irrational. Epicurus
ingenuously believed that you could "accustom yourself to believing
that death is nothing to us." While some people can short-circuit
their jitters about speaking in public by repeatedly putting them
selves in situations where they must do so, no mortal can practice
overcoming the fear of death in this or any other manner. (This note
need not be read beyond this point, the point having been made.)
Rationality is irrelevant to our being afraid or not afraid of anything.
Those who say that rationality has or can have any relevance in this
regard do not know what they are talking about, perhaps most of all
when they are talking about the fear of death. One reason among
many for this fear is that we are perfectly capable of visualizing
what it is like to be a stiff just like any other stiff we have witnessed
in repose while loved ones wept and mere acquaintances checked
their watches because they had places to go and people to see who
had not been embalmed This "being-towards-being-a-stiff," as the
twentieth-century German philosopher Martin Heidegger might
say, is an unpleasant prospect, if only in our imaginations. Another
ugly prospect, and one we will be around to experience, is the How
and When of our dying. That philosophy is useless in tackling these
ultimate issues is a sufficient, although not a necessary, reason for
not bothering with philosophy . . . except possibly to distract or
sublimate our consciousness with reference to the How and When
of our dying. This fact goes without saying, which is why we do not
often say anything about it When we do say something about it, we
say that dying is part of life and let it go at that. Naturally, nothing
dictates that we need to fear dying, or nothing that we know of.
There are many, many things that nothing dictates we need to fear,
and the fact that few people are fearful of these things makes the
point. Nothing dictates that we should fear becoming paralyzed be
low our necks. Nothing dictates we should fear having our legs am
putated because they, or some other part of our bodies, might be
damaged in a vehicular misadventure. Nothing dictates we should
244
T H E CONSPIRACY AGAINST TH E HUMAN RACE
fear having horrible nightmares before we go to sleep or that we
should fear waking up with an irritating speck in one of our eyes.
Nothing dictates that we should fear going mad or becoming so de
pressed we want to kill ourselves. Nothing dictates that we should
fear bearing children with cystic fibrosis or some other congenital
disease. Nothing dictates that parents should have the least fear that
their child might be abducted by a psychopath and tortured to
death or that they should fear their child may grow up to be psy
chopath who abducts children and tortures them for his pleasure
because that is the kind of individual his psychology dictates he
must be. Obviously and absolutely, nothing dictates that we need
fear these contretemps or millions of others like them. If anything
did dictate our fearing these things, why would we go on living?
The answer is that if it were dictated that we should fear the mil
lions of horrors that may befall us, we would go on living because
we already exist. And as long as we exist, there will be a noisy
klatch of philosophers haranguing us with reasons why nothing dic
tates we should fear death and why everything dictates that we
should go on living.
The Cult of Grinning Martyrs
i . No scientist actually knows why or how sexual reproduction
came to be, since it is a cumbersome and inefficient means of pro
creation, or it used to be. The pleasure theory is here emphasized
because that is the w ay things are now, and scientific theories in
this area have little existential relevance. It is possible that in the
future non-orgasmic pregnancies will become the reproductive
method of choice, perhaps for the reason that they may come to
yield the best results, genetically speaking. Yet it seems a long shot
that sexual activity among human beings will be relinquished,
since without such activity there would be no reason for opposite
or same-sex genders to bond in a "loving relationship." And that
would be the end of the species.
2. For a two-sided view of this topic and a bountiful bibliography
on the pain issue, see Roy F. Baumeister, Ellen Bratslavsky, et al.,
"Bad Is Stronger than Good," Review of General Psychology, 2oo i .
Notes
245
For an expanding universe of debate on what may or may not be
valid regarding these topics, see all books and essays on sociobiol
ogy, evolutionary psychology, and related studies.
3. Contradicting the positive image that is propagated by society,
studies cited by Daniel Gilbert-author of the best-selling Stum
bling on Happiness (2007)-have revealed that, whatever a cou
ple's rationale may be for having children, they can expect
newborns in their household to have a negative effect on their
well-being or, best case, no effect. It seems that the two happiest
days in parents' lives are the day their c hildren are born and the
day they leave home. Naturally, the parents of the world will deny
this determination, and well they should. When researchers report
that children are not really a source of happiness for their parents,
skepticism does seem in order. Mutatis mutandis, the same has
been said about people who buy recreational boats, which anecdo
tally deliver a worse than neutral payback for the pleasures they
bring due to the incommensurate effort of their upkeep. The
reader is invited to reflect to no avail on any pursuit that is not
more trouble than it is worth. As for p rocreation, no one in his
right mind would say that it is the only activity devoid of a
praiseworthy incentive. Those who reproduce, then, should not
feel unfairly culled as the worst conspirators against the human
race. Every one of us is culpable in keeping the conspiracy alive,
which is all right with most people.
Autopsy on a Puppet: An Anatomy of the Supernatural
L Hemingway thought that Pio Baroja, a Basque writer whose
works are of a pessimistic, cynical, and atheist bent, was more
worthy of the Nobel than he was. As Baroja lay dying in a hospital
bed, he was visited by Hemingway. It seems that the well
awarded American wanted to express personally his veneration for
Baroja's work before the foreign writer made his final exit. The
author of the 1 9 1 1 novel The Tree of Knowledge, a meditation o n
the uselessness o f both knowledge and life, simply sighed "Ay,
caramba" at Hemingway's piety.
THE CONSPIRACY AGAINST THE HUMAN RACE
2. One cringes to hear scientists cooing over the universe or any
part thereof like schoolgirls over-heated by their first crush. From
the studies of Krafft-Ebbing onward, we know that it is possible
to become excited about anything-from shins to shoehorns. But
it would be nice if just one of these gushing eggheads would step
back and, as a concession to objectivity, speak the truth: THERE
IS NOTHING INNATELY IMPRESSIVE ABOUT THE UNI
VERSE OR ANYTHING IN IT.
3. For one of the best accounts by a respected Psi researcher of her
long dedication to making a tenable case for paranormal phenom
ena, see Susan Blackmore's In Search of the Light: Adventures of a
Parapsychologist, i98 7; revised edition, i gg6. For a debunking of
paranormal phenomena, see the same book.
CONSPIRACY AGAINST
THE HUMAN RACE
THE
Thomas Ligotti
“The Conspiracy against tide Human Race sets out what is the most sustained challenge
yet to the intellectual blackmail that would oblige us to be eternally grateful for a
'gift5we never invited.”
-from the Foreword by Ray Brassier
‘T,he Conspiracy against the Human Race is renowned horror writer Thomas
Ligotti s first work of nonfiction. Through impressively wide-ranging discussions
of and reflections on literary and philosophical works of a pessimistic bent,
he shows that the greatest horrors are not the products of our imagination.
The worst and most plentiful horrors are instead to be found in reality. Mr.
Ligottis calm, but often bloodcurdling turns of phrase, evoke the dreadfulness
of the human condition. Those who cannot bear the truth will pretend this is
another work of fiction, but in doing so they perpetuate the conspiracy of the
book’s title.”
-D avid Benatar, author of Better N ever to Have Been:
The Harm o f Coming into Existence; Department of Philosophy, University of
Cape Town, South Africa
Thomas Ligotti is one of the foremost authors of supernatural horror literature.
In this genre, he has been classed with Edgar Allan Poe and H. P. Lovecraft.
His works include Songs oj a Dead Dreamer; Grimscribe, My Work is N ot Yet Done,
and Teatro Grottesco. Ligotti lives in Florida.