When our default orientation regarding happiness is at Level 1 or 2, our perception is that the world exists to serve us and to satisfy our desires; we refer to this as “ego in.” As many philosophers, theologians, psychologists, and scientists have discovered, though, what sets us humans apart from the lower animals is a deeper and more profound desire to make, as Fr. Spitzer puts it, an optimal positive difference (OPD) in the world.
At that point, our perception shifts to the attitude that we exist to serve the world; we refer to this as “ego out.” I know instinctively that serving others and making the world a better place for me, having lived in it, is a much more satisfying form of happiness that is more pervasive, enduring, and deep. But it is not as easy to satisfy as our Levels 1 and 2 wants, and, as we’ve seen already, technology makes it even easier to indulge our Levels 1 and 2 desires.
Thus, to experience this more satisfying happiness at Level 3, we must become more self-aware, intentional, and disciplined to habituate Level 3 practices, particularly in response to the technology that surrounds us today.
As we explored in the introduction to this series, humanity since the end of the 19th Century has experienced the most profound societal and technological change worldwide than the human race has ever known. As a society, we were caught a bit off guard as to how to deal with all of this change.
Alvin Toffler coined a “new” phrase with his 1970 book, Future Shock, in which he reflects on the stress that a fast rate of social and technological change puts on individuals and on society as a whole. In such cases, I believe that our reflex reaction is to use technology to indulge our Level 1 and 2 desires for immediate gratification and prestige because those are the easiest to satisfy. We need to be more aware and deliberate in the face of rapid change. Pope St. John XXIII, I believe, was inspired in responding to this dilemma. His pontificate was right smack in the heart of this boom in the mid-20th Century on the heels of World War II, the nuclear bomb, and the rise of Socialism. In his encyclical letter Mater Et Magistra (On Christianity and Social Progress) leading up to the Second Vatican Council, he reflects on the challenges of the changes in the worldwide economy, Socialism, nuclear weapons, and the role of advancing science and technology.
This, I suggest, framed much of the impetus for the work of the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s as evidenced in the council’s pastoral letter Gaudium et Spes, The Church in the Modern World, which speaks to the challenge of advancing technology both in terms of its value and its threat. Technology has great potential in helping us to achieve our Level 3 motives:
When man develops the earth by the work of his hands or with the aid of technology, in order that it might bear fruit and become a dwelling worthy of the whole human family, and when he consciously takes part in the life of social groups, he carries out the design of God manifested at the beginning of time, that he should subdue the earth, perfect creation, and develop himself. At the same time he obeys the commandment of Christ that he places himself at the service of his brethren.
However, we need to be vigilant not to allow these advances to cause us to fall into what Spitzer calls the Category Error in which we seek perfect and unconditional truth in human knowledge and systems, and the council goes on to say in Gaudium et Spes:
Indeed, today’s progress in science and technology can foster a certain exclusive emphasis on observable data and an agnosticism about everything else. The methods of investigation that these sciences use can be wrongly considered as the supreme rule of seeking the whole truth. By virtue of their methods, these sciences cannot penetrate to the intimate notion of things. Indeed, the danger is present that man, confiding too much in the discoveries of today, may think that he is sufficient unto himself and no longer seek the higher things.
Does our modern knowledge and technology lead us outward (ego out)? Do we use it to place ourselves at the service of our brothers and sisters? Or does it tempt us to turn inward (ego in), thinking that we are sufficient unto ourselves?
Technology can offer some notable advantages in helping us achieve our Level 3 desires. For example:
Thus, as Fr. Spitzer says, we don’t want to eliminate our Level 1 and 2 desires, but we do need to re-orient them to Level 3 (and 4). So, again, we come back to the need for self-awareness, contemplation of our motives, and a sense of meaning in life. Spitzer recommends an exercise where I specifically contemplate my view of meaning (ego out) and ask myself the following question:
How can I, with my talents, my time, and my energy, make an optimal positive difference, starting with the most intimate: my family and friends, my colleagues at work, my church, my community, and the culture and society around me?
When I answer this question, I can say, “For this I came!” This becomes my identity statement. This is what I can contemplate in my daily Examen prayer.