"EVOLUTION,"
SAID THE CACHALOT WHALE

Evolution
is To Be Changing in a direction
as awareness moves
toward the development
of new sensory
abilities
to satisfy the
desire to know
the error in
expectations
and thus survive.
CATS AND WHALES EVOLVING IN CAIRNS,
NORTH QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA
The El Torito swims in from the Solomon Islands, ugly as
ever, back lit by the early morning sun, replete with Walter, family, friends and toys.
When I stagger sleepily on deck and see her gliding through the leads into the harbor, the
first thing I think of is time - as in wasted time. Here it is, February. Five months have
flown by. Five months! What have we been doing? Nothing. What are we going to do now? Who
knows?
Freddy and I have breakfast and wait until they have
finished clearing in and move El Torito to the piles. Then we go over for a joyous
reunion. Walter and I sit down and, in his usual way, he knifes straight to the most
embarrassing issue. "What have you been up to?"
"I haven't been doing very much of anything," I
admit. "Just looking around."
He nods his head, neither sympathetic or surprised and
asks, "OK, so what have you discovered about Cairns?"
"Cairns reminds me of a small Midwest American town.
There is a Woolworth's (called Woolies by the Aussies), supermarkets and shopping malls
full of US brand-name products with `made in Australia' on the label. They even have US
magazines revised and reprinted in Australia - Time, Newsweek, Playboy."
Walter knows all this and is looking thoughtful, or maybe
tired. "I also found out Australians might seem to be aspiring Americans, but they
don't especially like Yanks up here in North Queensland. Cairns is a town on the move and
tourism development is what it's moving towards."
"Met any interesting people?" Walter stifles a
yawn. "Sorry, I haven't had a full night sleep for a week."
"We've met lots of people. Interesting? Well, there is
a young American couple here, Ron and Susan O'Connor. They run a dive shop and own that
big sportfisherman over there at the wharf - the Osprey. They want to meet you, so we'll
head over there whenever you want."
Walter digests that for a few moments and I sit there
unhappily thinking of how lethargic I've been. Shamefully, I haven't even gone diving on
the Great Barrier Reef which lies some 40 miles offshore. In fact, since we anchored by
the outer marker, the Research Vessel Moira has not budged.
Walter and his gang are ready to drop, so Freddy and I
leave and return to Moira.
We are on the west side of the harbor. Walter has tied El Torito to The
Sticks on the east side. The Sticks are a nest of pilings - North Queensland's answer to a
marina. There are several large wharves on our side of the harbor - the side where the
town is. We anchored on this side because it is closer to town and because I have an
inborn distrust of outboard motors and a healthy respect for fast moving tidal currents.
Outboards always work perfectly for me unless it is pouring rain, blowing hard, or pitch
black with an outgoing tide moving at 5 knots.
Outboard motors have a sixth sense to let them know the
worst possible time to quit and not start again. So, we anchored on this side. If the
motor quits between Moira and shore, we will either be carried back to Moira or to shore
depending on the tide. If it quit while we were half-way from one side of the harbor to
the other, we might wind up drifting out to sea. In fact, we have rescued quite a few
dinghies whose outboards failed in mid stream. Since we are the last boat before the long
drift to the Great Barrier Reef, I feel somewhat obligated to go out and tow them in when
I hear that late-night "HELP," drifting by.
Freddy and I slouch in Moira's cockpit and have one of our
democratic ships meetings. "What do you think? Should we be friendly and move Moira
over to tie up alongside El Torito." I table the suggestion.
"No
fucking way," She looks at me like I'm some kind of nut.
This tough decision made, we sit and stare at each other.
"So what now?" Freddy grabs Walter the Cat and
ruffles his fur.
"I don't know. Walter has no real plans yet. He just
wants to get started with the business of settling in and immigrating here."
"Sounds terrible," Freddy mumbles, the cat
belly-up on her lap.
"Yeah. I'm not especially interested in immigrating.
Importing the Moira would be a horrendous expense. The combined customs and sales tax
comes close to 65% of the Customs Department's estimate of the value of the boat." We
don't have that kind of money.
"Right, so what ARE we going to do?" Freddy
persists.
I shrug. I don't know. I have not been completely idle.
I've been considering writing a book - about dolphins. And lately I've been doing a little
research on evolution. About selection, to be exact. And we've been fixing up things on
Moira, keeping her shipshape.
We decide to go
ashore and wash the spinnaker in the fountain. Arlene and Rinehart from Ganesh come along
to give us a hand. It is nearly lunchtime and the only people in the park are four Abo
men, sprawled in a state of semi-consciousness under the hedge surrounding the park. They
are accompanied by scattered wine bottles; the modern version of the ancient Dreamtime.
After lunch, spurred on by the need to do something at
least a little biological, if not mechanical, I sit down and make some notes about
evolution. Here's what I write:
It seems to me the forces creating selective pressures on a
population are close to (the same as?) Moirae. Random chance may play a part in evolution,
but selection is certainly not random. Just the opposite. Natural selection. An
interesting couple of words. Just what is natural supposed to mean? And what, exactly is
selection when Natural does it? How can the process of selection be random when it is
specifically targeting successful behavior?
Walter
the Cat decides to take a more active role in this afternoon science project and
relinquishes his post at the companionway hatch to sit on my navigation desk. His
unfathomable eyes watch me write. Fed a gourmet diet complete with vitamin pills, he has
grown to an enormous size, about 15 kilos and almost a meter long from nose to tail-tip.
He sits like one of those statues of the ancient Egyptian Temple Cats.
What about the evolution of cats like Dr. Walter A. Starck
III? Did man select cats or did cats select men? I look at him again. This particular
furry monster walked out of the Solomon Island night and stood on my foot. Clearly, he
selected me.
I write in my
log, a
strange story indeed.
I stop. What
I have written? The idea is preposterous.
Humans have damn near exterminated the whales.
Not a very successful "great plan"
on the part of the alleged universal whale
mind.
"What's
wrong?" Freddy looks up from her book.
"Nothing,"
I snap. Why do I feel like this? As I wrote
in the log, I felt excited, like just thinking
about whales let me see - really perceive
- the mind web of the sea. The whole idea
engulfed me, sucked me in, grabbed me.
I think back,
as I often have in the past few months, to
that moment when I faced the
seven sperm whales in my hypnotic dream.
Whales? I shiver suddenly, as the memory of
that sonic thrumming washes over me again.
It is a memory as sharp and clear as the actual
event. Or rather, the actual hypnotic dream.
Sonic
thrumming, everything clear and sharp, a window
into a universe of thought beyond one knowing.
"Damn!"
I shout, jerking back from the desk.
"What? What
is wrong with you?" Freddy puts down
her book.
"Nothing,
nothing at all, I was just thinking, uh, about
whale evolution." But what really happened
was this.
After I wrote
the words, "Or rather, the actual hypnotic
dream." I sort of just sat there thinking
about nothing. Then I glanced down and discovered
my hand was still writing. Without my knowing
it! My hand wrote the sentence about sonic
thrumming all by itself. Even as I write these
comments, I feel an effort to divert the hand
to write what my conscious mind wants to say.
So, what the hell, I'll let my unconscious
have its say.
Consider man's
evolution. Selective evolutionary forces are
conditions and events in the ambient environment
modifying human behavior. Long-term modification
of behavior patterns results in selective
advantages to statistical genotypes.
Religion is the
most powerful, persistent selective force
in the formation of the modern domesticated
human. Gods, witchcraft, and the supernatural
have obsessed hominids from the most primitive
moments of human consciousness. Gods, Spirits,
Souls and all myths and other metaphysical
concepts exist in the mental and physical
behavior systems of hominids. Belief in them
was an active selective force originating
and defining humanity.
For this reason,
the conceptual realm of metaphysics remained
a persistent vector of hominid evolution.
Consider the selective mechanism of The Inquisition
or of the Holy Wars. Or of any war. Humans
justify massive wars, as well as governmental
mandates for almost any action, on religious
grounds. God gives humans strength to fight
and die. God provides a mandate for patriotism.
So help me God.
Religion gives
social groups a belief system assuring the
members of the tribe are something special,
different from other hominid groups. Their
faith will be rewarded by God, if not now,
then later; after death. Providing, of course,
the hominids behave as required by the social,
political control system. Accordingly, by
the millions, humans allow themselves to perish
to gain the mythological higher reward after
death. Or, in some belief systems, fear of
punishment after death.
In the Western
World, during the dark ages, hominids were
selected rigorously on the basis of fine points
of dogma set forth by Church bureaucrats.
Followers, believers, the faithful, lived.
Rebels, thinkers, non-believers, died.
In Egypt and
the Orient selection was more direct. The
local government leader was the personification
or representative of God. Hominids in these
geographic areas believed, obeyed or died.
In this evolutionary
progression, belief systems formed the vectors
for selection. Church leaders or Official
Governmental Representatives of God, acting
according to their internal displays of these
vectors, cast the selective web over the populations
of hominids. Leaders and followers were manifested
along the belief vectors. As a result of many
generations of this selectivity, wild hominids
were filtered into a population of domestic
hominids genetically predisposed to leader-follower
chains of command.
Leaders - the
hominids at the apex of the pyramid of power
- became the ultimate followers, herding the
entire structure of cultural evolution towards
the golden carrot. When leaders see the golden
carrot, what exactly do they see? Here is
the crux.
To comprehend
the machinations of the Moirae, examine the
golden carrot. There are a host of decoy viewpoints
concealing the nature of hominid control networks.
There is a way past these decoys, passing
a thread of directionality through the defenses
enthralling humanity..."
"What are
you writing?" Asks Freddy. "You
look so intense. Much too serious." She
gets up and comes over towards me. Quickly
I scribble.. "Whales. Remember the whales...
but it is only a receding echo of the inner
voice dictating something about how humanity
has evolved.
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