A desparing conclusion to a life of daring thought, by H. G. Wells—Mind at the end of its Tether (1946)
This is the conclusion of his last work, in which he argues that
everything is ultimately founded upon nothing, an insight extracted
from his own impending death. Wells foresees the extinction of the
human species and the complete disappearance of the Great Globe itself
(yea), the Universe:
The searching skepticism of the
writer's philosophical analysis has established this Antagonist as
invincible reality for him, but all over the earth and from dates
immemorial, introspective minds, minds of the quality of the brooding
Shakespeare, have conceived a disgust of the stress, vexations and
petty indignities of life and taken refuge from its apprehension of a
conclusive end to things, in mystical withdrawal. On the whole mankind
has shown itself tolerant, sympathetic and respectful to such retreats.
That is the peculiar human element in this matter; the recurrent
refusal to be satisfied with the normal real world. The question "Is
this all?" has troubled countless unsatisfied minds throughout the
ages, and, at the end of our tether, as it seems, here it is, still
baffling but persistent.
To such discomfited minds the world
of our everyday reality is no more than a more or less entertaining or
distressful story thrown upon a cinema screen. The story holds
together; it moves them greatly and yet they feel it is faked. The vast
majority of the beholders accept all the conventions of the story, are
completely part of the story, and live and suffer and rejoice and die
in it and with it. But the skeptical mind says stoutly, "This is
delusion".
"Golden lads and lasses must, like chimney sweepers, come to dust."
"No," says this ingrained streak of protest: "there is still something beyond the dust."
But is there?
There is no reason for saying there is. That skeptical mind may have overrated the thoroughness of its skepticism. As we are now discovering, there was still scope for doubting. The severer our thinking, the plainer it is that the dust-carts of Time trundle that dust off to the incinerator and there make an end to it. Hitherto, recurrence has seemed a primary law of life. Night has followed day and day night. But in this strange new phase of existence into which our universe is passing, it becomes evidence that events no longer recur. They go on and on to an impenetrable mystery, into the voiceless limitless darkness, against which this obstinate urgency of our dissatisfied minds may struggle, but will struggle only until it is altogether overcome.
Our world of self-delusion will admit none of that. It will perish amidst its evasions and fatuities. It is like a convoy lost in darkness on an unknown rocky coast, with quarrelling pirates in the chartroom and savages clambering up the sides of the ships to plunder and do evil as the whim may take them. That is the rough outline of the more and more jumbled movie on the screen before us. Mind near exhaustion still makes its final futile movement towards that "way out or round or through the impasse".
That is the utmost now that mind can do. And this, its last expiring thrust, is to demonstrate that the door closes upon us for evermore.
There is no way out, or round or through.
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