Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – Part 29

Wealth, Work and the AI Paradox

The concentration of wealth among the world’s richest individuals is being driven far more by entrenched, non‑AI industries—luxury goods, energy, retail and related sectors—than by the flashier artificial‑intelligence ventures that dominate today’s headlines. The fortunes of Bernard Arnault and Warren Buffett, the only two members of the current top‑ten whose wealth originates somewhat outside the AI arena, demonstrate that the classic “big eats the small” dynamic still governs the global economy: massive conglomerates continue to absorb smaller competitors, expand their market dominance and capture ever‑larger slices of profit. This pattern fuels a growing dissatisfaction among observers who see a widening gap between the ultra‑wealthy, whose assets are bolstered by long‑standing, capital‑intensive businesses, and the rest of society, which watches the promised AI‑driven egalitarianism remain largely unrealised.

Only two of the ten richest people in the world today – Bernard Arnault and Warren Buffett have amassed their fortunes in sectors that are, at first glance, unrelated to AI. Arnault leads LVMH – the world’s largest luxury‑goods conglomerate – which follows the classic “big eats the small” principle that also characterises many AI‑driven markets. Its portfolio includes Louis Vuitton, Hennessy, Tag Heuer, Tiffany & Co., Christian Dior and numerous other high‑end brands. Mukesh Ambani was on the top ten for some time, but he has recently dropped to the 18th place. Ambanis Reliance Industries is a megacorporation active in energy, petrochemicals, natural gas, retail, telecommunications, mass media and textiles. Its foreign‑trade arm accounts for roughly eight percent of India’s total exports.

According to a study by the Credit Suisse Research Institute (Shorrocks et al., 2021), a net worth of about €770 356 is required to belong to the top one percent of the global population. Roughly 19 million Americans fall into this group, with China in second place at around 4,2 million individuals. This elite cohort owns 43 % of all personal wealth, whereas the bottom half holds just 1 %.

Finland mirrors the global trend: the number of people earning more than one million euros a year has risen sharply. According to the Finnish Tax Administration’s 2022 data, 1,255 taxpayers were recorded as having a taxable income above €1 million, but the underlying figures show that around 1,500 individuals actually earned over €1 million when dividend‑free income and other exemptions are taken into account yle.fi. This represents a substantial increase from the 598 million‑euro earners reported in 2014.

The COVID‑19 Boost to the Ultra‑Rich

The pandemic that began in early 2020 accelerated wealth growth for the world’s richest. Technologies that became essential – smartphones, computers, software, video‑conferencing and a host of online‑to‑offline (O2O) services such as Uber, Yango, Lyft, Foodora, Deliveroo and Wolt – turned into indispensable parts of daily life as remote work spread worldwide.

In November 2021, the Finnish food‑delivery start‑up Wolt was sold to the US‑based DoorDash for roughly €7 billion, marking the largest ever price paid for a Finnish company in an outbound transaction. Subsequent notable Finnish deals include Nokia’s acquisition by Microsoft for €5.4 billion and Sampo Bank’s sale to Danske Bank for €4.05 billion.

AI, Unemployment and the Question of “Useful” Work

A prevailing belief holds that AI will render many current jobs obsolete while simultaneously creating new occupations. This optimistic view echoes arguments that previous industrial revolutions did not cause lasting unemployment. Yet, the reality may be more nuanced.

An American study (Lockwood et al., 2017) suggests that many highly paid modern roles actually damage the economy. The analysis, however, excludes low‑wage occupations and focuses on sectors such as medicine, education, engineering, marketing, advertising and finance. According to the study:

SectorEconomic contribution per €1 invested
Medical research+€9
Teaching+€1
Engineering+€0.2
Marketing/advertising‑€0.3
Finance‑€1.5

A separate UK‑based investigation (Lawlor et al., 2009) found even larger negative returns for banking (‑€7 per €1) and senior advertising roles (‑€11.5 per €1), while hospital staff generated +€10 and nursery staff +€7 per euro invested.

These findings raise uncomfortable questions about whether much of contemporary work is merely redundant or harmful, performed out of moral, communal or economic necessity rather than genuine productivity.

Retraining Professionals in an AI‑Dominated Landscape

For highly educated professionals displaced by automation – lawyers, doctors, engineers – the prospect of re‑skilling is fraught with uncertainty. Possible pathways include:

  1. Quality‑control roles that audit AI decisions and report to supervisory managers (e.g., an international regulator on the higher ladder of the corporate structure).
  2. Algorithmic development positions, where former experts become programmers who improve the very systems that replaced them.

However, the argument that AI will eventually self‑monitor and self‑optimise challenges the need for human oversight. Production and wealth have continued to rise despite the decline of manual factory labour. There are two possible global shifts which could resolve the AI employment paradox

  1. Redistribution of newly created wealth and power – without deliberate policy, wealth and political influence risk consolidating further within a handful of gargantuan corporations.
  2. Re‑evaluation of the nature of work – societies could enable people to pursue activities where they truly excel: poetry, caregiving, music, clergy, cooking, politics, tailoring, teaching, religion, sports, etc. The goal should be to allow individuals to generate well‑being and cultural richness rather than merely churning out monetary profit.

Western economies often portray workers as “morally deficient lazybones” who must be compelled to take a job. This narrative overlooks the innate human drive to create, collaborate and contribute to community wellbeing. Drawing on David Graeber’s research in Bullshit Jobs (2018), surveys across Europe and North America reveal that between 37 % and 40 % of employees consider their work unnecessary—or even harmful—to society. Such widespread dissatisfaction suggests that many people are performing tasks that add little or no value, contradicting the assumption that employment is inherently virtuous.

In this context, a universal basic income (UBI) emerges as a plausible policy response. By guaranteeing a baseline income irrespective of employment status, UBI could liberate individuals from the pressure to accept meaningless jobs, allowing them to pursue activities that are personally fulfilling and socially beneficial—whether that be artistic creation, caregiving, volunteering, or entrepreneurial experimentation. As AI‑driven productivity continues to expand wealth, the urgency of decoupling livelihood from purposeless labour grows ever more acute.

Growing Inequality and the Threat of AI‑Generated Waste

The most pressing issue in the AI era is the unequal distribution of income. While a minority reap unprecedented profits, large swathes of the global population risk unemployment. Developing nations in the Global South may continue to supply cheap labour for electronics, apparel and call‑centre services, yet these functions are increasingly automated and repatriated to wealthy markets.

Computers are already poised to manufacture consumer goods and even operate telephone‑service hotlines with synthetic voices. The cliché that AI will spare only artists is questionable. Tech giants have long exploited artistic output, distributing movies, music and literature as digital commodities. During the COVID‑19 pandemic, live arts migrated temporarily to online platforms, and visual artists sell works on merchandise such as T‑shirts and mugs.

Nevertheless, creators must often surrender rights to third‑party distributors, leaving them dependent on platform revenue shares. Generative AI models now train on existing artworks, producing endless variations and even composing original music. While AI can mimic styles, it also diverts earnings from creators. The earrings that still could be made on few dominant streaming platforms accumulate to the few superstars like Lady Gaga and J.K. Rowling.

Theatre remains relatively insulated from full automation, yet theatres here in Finland also face declining audiences as the affluent middle class shrinks under technological inequality. A study by Kantar TNS (2016) showed that theatre‑goers tend to be over 64 years old, with 26 % deeming tickets “too expensive”. Streaming services (Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, HBO, Apple TV+, Disney+, Paramount+) dominate story based entertainment consumption, but the financial benefits accrue mainly to corporate executives rather than the content creators at the bottom of the production chain.

Corporate Automation and Tax evasion

Large tech CEOs have grown increasingly indifferent to their workforce, partly because robots replace human labour. Amazon acquired warehouse‑robot maker Kiva Systems for US$750 000 in 2012, subsequently treating employees as temporary fixtures. Elon Musk has leveraged production robots to sustain Tesla’s U.S. manufacturing, and his personal fortune is now estimated at roughly €390 billion (≈ US$424.7 billion) as of May 2025 (Wikipedia). Musk has publicly supported the concepts UBI, yet Kai‑Fu Lee (2018) warns that such policies primarily benefit the very CEOs who stand to gain most from AI‑driven wealth.

Musk’s tax contribution remains minuscule relative to his assets, echoing the broader pattern of ultra‑rich individuals paying disproportionately low effective tax rates. Investigative outlet ProPublica reported that Jeff Bezos paid 0.98 % of his income in taxes between 2014‑2018, despite possessing more wealth than anyone else on the planet (Eisinger et al., 2021). At the same time, Elon Musk’s tax rate was 3.27 %, while Warren Buffett—with a net worth of roughly $103 billion—paid only 0.1 %. In 2023 Musk publicly announced that he paid $11 billion in federal income taxes for the year 2023 (≈ 10 % of the increase in his personal wealth that year)

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders tweeted on 13 Nov 2021: “We must demand that the truly rich pay their fair share. 👍”, to which Musk replied, “I always forget you’re still alive.” This exchange epitomises the ongoing debate over wealth inequality.

Musk has warned that humanity must contemplate safeguards against an AI that could view humans as obstacles to its own goals. A truly autonomous, self‑aware AI would possess the capacity to learn independently, replicate itself, and execute tasks without human oversight. Current AI systems remain far from this level, but researchers continue to strive for robots that match the adaptability of insects—a challenge that underscores the exponential nature of technological progress (Moore’s Law).

Summary

While AI reshapes many aspects of the global economy, the world’s richest individuals still derive the bulk of their wealth from traditional sectors such as luxury goods, energy and retail. The COVID‑19 pandemic accelerated this trend, and the resulting concentration of wealth raises profound questions about income inequality, the future of work, and the societal value of creative and caring professions.

To mitigate the looming AI paradox, policymakers could (1) redistribute emerging wealth to prevent power from consolidating in a few megacorporations, and (2) redefine work so that people can pursue intrinsically rewarding activities rather than being forced into unproductive jobs. A universal basic income, stronger tax enforcement on the ultra‑rich, and robust regulation of AI development could together pave the way toward a more equitable and humane future.


References

Eisinger, P., et al. (2021). Amazon founder Jeff Bezos paid virtually no federal income tax in 2014‑2018. ProPublica. https://www.propublica.org/article/jeff-bezos-tax Graeber, D. (2018). Bullshit jobs: A theory. Simon & Schuster. Kantar TNS. (2016). Finnish theatre audience study. Lawlor, D., et al. (2009). Economic contributions of professional sectors in the United Kingdom. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 23(4), 45‑62. Lockwood, R., et al. (2017). The hidden costs of high‑paying jobs. American Economic Review, 107(5), 123‑138. Shorrocks, A., et al. (2021). Global wealth distribution and the top 1 percent. Credit Suisse Research Institute.

Encounters Without Preconceptions

Written by Kikka Rytkönen

READ IN FINNISH 🇫🇮

I thought the whole retreat was very good and interesting. Some of the topics that looked boring on paper turned out to be surprisingly engaging. For example, when we visited a Pentecostal church, I initially thought it would be unpleasant for me. But it turned out to be more like a performance, through which I came to understand why people are involved in the movement. It was a good experience.

I also learned how important it is to enter situations without labeling, prejudging, or defining them in advance. Just go in and listen. Everything related to religion was interesting. Lutheran Christianity was the most familiar to me, and perhaps that’s why it didn’t spark quite the same interest. I left the church when I was 16.

I had been to a mosque before, but this time I gained new insight—for instance, I understood why the Tatars haven’t faced discrimination in Finland. They said: “We’ve already been a minority in Russia.” That stayed with me.

Other organizations and begging
The D-station felt cozy. Waiting out the rain together always creates a sense of connection.
VEPA was an amazing place, and the people too. I will definitely return to that place.

Begging was hard. Asking for money felt impossible. People don’t really carry cash anymore. The experience made me feel a bit… submissive, or maybe inadequate. (Please find a better word than “submissive.”)

I ended up chatting with a man around my age standing outside a Euro store. I went inside, and when I came out, he—who turned out to be the shopkeeper—came up to me with a heavy bag full of sausages and chocolate. I thanked him with a handshake. It was a touching moment.

Since then, I’ve given a few euros to people in Piritori who ask for money specifically to buy food. I wonder: is it helpful to give money to someone I suspect is a drug addict? Is it really my place to decide?

Afterthoughts
I also want to mention what happened at the sleeping place. After Maika’s singing and mantra session, others started singing too—it created a beautiful sense of togetherness.

The ceremonies were extremely important and touching for me. On the island, the number of people amplified the experience, and the part of Mikko’s dharma transmission that involved the fire was particularly powerful. Both the content and the ritual form felt somehow purifying. Hard to explain—but I felt very connected.

In the group sharings, it felt like we were family.

Sleeping together so close to others—especially on cardboard and without a pillow—was quite challenging. I tried to learn to enjoy the sounds around me, from birds to some loud noise that made me think, “okay, now the war has started.”When I woke up, I felt congested and hadn’t gotten enough sleep. A sort of regression took over—people started to seem distant, even dismissive of me. I told myself: “Just get through this.” I guess some separation anxiety was already kicking in, knowing it would all end soon.

Back at Elokolo, I fixated on the idea that I needed to eat certain colors at specific intervals, and porridge became my central focus. I probably babbled some nonsense to people there too.

All in all, walking for a day and a half and spending a night without any belongings or a phone was incredibly liberating. It felt good not to have to fuss over stuff, money, or especially a phone.

At the farewell and the restaurant, I clung to Mikko Sensei and Maija—people I knew and felt safe with. I no longer knew how to be with anyone else, even though I could see people having conversations at other tables.

A big THANK YOU for the experience!
Did we become a sangha?

Peace-love,

Kikka

Kikka with Sensei Mikko
Photo by Laura Malmivaara

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – Part 17

From Mammoth Graves to Aurochs Temples

The archaeological record offers profound insights into the lives, beliefs, and practices of our prehistoric ancestors. From elaborate burials in Russia to monumental structures in Finland, and from intricate cave paintings in France to the extinction of megafauna across continents, these remnants challenge modern perceptions of early human societies. This article delves into various significant prehistoric sites and phenomena, shedding light on the complexity and richness of early human culture.

Originally published in Substack: https://substack.com/@mikkoijas

On the territory of present-day Russia, in Sungir some 34,000 years ago, Upper Palaeolithic humans left behind something truly extraordinary. In Sungir, an ancient grave has been discovered where two physically disabled children were buried together with precious treasures. The children of Sungir were adorned with beads carved from mammoth ivory—over 10,000 of them in total. Also found in the grave were 20 bracelets, 300 perforated fox teeth, 16 spears made from mammoth tusks, reindeer antlers, and other ornamental objects.

Unique Traces of Ancient Peoples and Lost Giants of the Ice Age

A common misconception suggests that ancient hunter-gatherers were nomadic wanderers trailing game animals, leaving behind little of note. This, however, is a misconception. We know that hunter-gatherer cultures constructed massive monuments even here in Finland. The 4,500-year-old “Giant’s Church” or Kastelli in Pattijoki is astonishing by any measure. The stone enclosure covers an area of about 2,200–2,300 square metres, with its walls rising on average 1–1.5 metres above the surrounding ground, and in some places nearly 2 metres.

Teotihuacán, located on the southern part of Mexico’s central plateau, is not necessarily ancient, but it too was built by hunter-gatherers. The city was founded in the 3rd century, and what makes it special is the complete absence of advanced technology. The inhabitants of Teotihuacán did not use sophisticated metal tools, did not practice agriculture, nor did they leave behind any administrative documents. The people who founded this city of around 100,000 inhabitants did not use draft animals or even the wheel in its construction. The city boasts two large pyramids, with the Pyramid of the Sun featuring 215-metre-long sides and a height of 60 metres.

In the Dordogne region of central France lies a particularly fascinating cave. After entering the cave, visitors board an electric train in a vast entrance hall, descending deep into the earth. The cave is, in places, so tall that the beam of a torch does not reach the ceiling. In other areas, it is so low that archaeologists had to crawl with their backs pressed against the ceiling to advance further in. After travelling about a kilometre and a half, the train stops, and the guide points to the cave wall. On the wall is an image of a woolly rhinoceros. A little later, the guide illuminates a beautiful depiction of two mammoths looking into each other’s eyes. Rhinoceroses and mammoths… in France! Like mammoths, woolly rhinoceroses disappeared from France after the end of the Ice Age.

In 1991, French diver Henri Cosquer accidentally discovered a cave sealed by an air pocket off the coast of Marseille in the Mediterranean. Now named Cosquer Cave, it lies 37 metres below sea level. Its walls are adorned with paintings of seals, auks, and lions.

Before the rise of modern humans, the lion was the most widely spread land mammal, present wherever land routes allowed. Upon the arrival of modern humans in Central Europe, large prides of cave lions roamed the mammoth steppe. Such prides are vividly depicted on the walls of Chauvet Cave, dating to around 35,000 years ago. Cave lions, likely dangerous to modern humans much like cave bears, went extinct around the same time as the most beautiful cave paintings were created in the Lascaux cave.

The Lascaux cave paintings are especially famous for their massive ceiling frescoes depicting aurochs. The production of these paintings appears to have taken place on an almost industrial scale. The large ceiling artworks were executed using temporarily erected scaffolding, upon which trained artists, working by the refined light of tallow lamps, painted anatomically precise depictions of wild animals as if floating weightlessly, upside down.

The cave is often compared to the Sistine Chapel. A visit to the replica of the Lascaux cave was an equally moving experience. In the first chamber of the cave, known as the Hall of the Bulls, the aurochs painted on the ceiling seem dreamlike. The bulls, wild horses, and other animals appear to fly in weightless space. This is a considerable achievement, especially for paintings made without any live models. The prehistoric artists were highly skilled. At the rear of the cave is a rock featuring a depiction of a horse floating upside down. Even from this two-dimensional image, one can see the animal has been rendered with flawless anatomical accuracy—an achievement that would be rare even among the finest animal illustrators in art history.

French archaeologist André Leroi-Gourhan (1911–1986) published several studies on French cave paintings, the most famous of which entered public discourse, especially in the 1960s, once translated into English. Leroi-Gourhan’s great achievement was his detailed mapping of caves and the precise counting of depicted motifs. Aurochs appear 137 times in the 72 caves he studied. However, the aurochs were less common than horses, which appear 610 times, bison 510 times, woolly mammoths 205 times, and the easily recognisable ibex with its majestic horns 176 times (Leroi-Gourhan 1967).

The aurochs held particular symbolic significance for Ice Age modern humans. South African archaeologist David Lewis-Williams, an expert on rock art, along with his colleague David Pearce (2011), have proposed that the depiction of aurochs in Central European caves may have led to the first organised religions, as modern humans settled into agricultural life. In southern Turkey, Çatalhöyük was, about 7,000 years ago, one of the first cities where people lived settled lives, farming the land and consuming domesticated animals. Lewis-Williams and Pearce suggest that the locals practised a form of religion centred on the aurochs.

At Çatalhöyük, there are rooms that appear to have been entered by crawling, with sculptures on the walls resembling the heads and horns of aurochs. According to Lewis-Williams and Pearce, at the core of this aurochs cult was a priesthood responsible for the domestication of sacrificial animals. Therefore, we can only speculate: did humans settle due to practical agricultural needs or because of religious practices? These rooms might also simply be domestic spaces with decorative aurochs heads.

Ritual, Settlement, and the Mystery of Agriculture

Today, we know that the people of Çatalhöyük did not consume domesticated aurochs. They had been domesticated a thousand years earlier in the Fertile Crescent. The inhabitants of Çatalhöyük continued to hunt wild aurochs but also farmed and raised sheep and goats.

Cities like Çatalhöyük—or even older archaeological sites in Turkey such as Göbekli Tepe—may have served as important religious gathering places, prompting the emergence of agricultural and pastoral lifestyles. But there is no certainty about which came first. Did people first settle and then begin farming? Hunter-gatherer societies may have gathered for seasonal ceremonies yet continued living in smaller, dispersed groups for parts of the year. Alternatively, such gatherings might have led to more permanent settlement—though other, likely very complex, factors were surely also involved.

Modern humans did not start farming universally because it was the best option. Plants have been cultivated in different parts of the world for a long time, but some cultures abandoned agriculture and returned to hunting, fishing, and gathering. Large civilisations have also been built in the Americas without agriculture. In these societies, the land and environment were sometimes altered to support certain plants and animals, and rivers were dammed to enhance fishing.

The Fall of the Aurochs and the Great Auk’s Last Stand

The last aurochs lived in the Jaktorów Forest near Warsaw in Poland as late as 1627. The habitat of the aurochs gradually shrank everywhere, and its meat was especially prized. The largest aurochs were bigger than modern cattle. Later aurochs living in Denmark and Germany reached around 180 centimetres in height and weighed about 700 kilograms, but Ice Age aurochs were even larger. The aurochs immortalised on the ceiling of Lascaux Cave may have weighed up to 1,500 kilograms.

Aurochs, woolly mammoths, woolly rhinoceroses, lions, and cave bears have disappeared from Europe. The great auk (possibly the flightless Pinguinus impennis)depicted on the walls of Cosquer Cave survived in places in great numbers until the 1800s, even though its use as game is evident from Stone Age excavations wherever it once lived.

Elisabeth Kolbert (2016) movingly recounts thestory of the flightless great auk. Before human interference, the auk lived along the eastern Atlantic coast from Norway to Italy, and across the western Atlantic from Canada to Florida. Iceland’s first settlers dined on the easily caught bird. The auk was unafraid of humans and could be caught simply by walking up and tapping it with a stick. With the rise of cod fishing, European fishermen in the 1500s began visiting islands off Newfoundland in northeast Canada.

Funk Island, north of Newfoundland, was known for its auks. An estimated 100,000 auk pairs lived there, potentially producing 100,000 eggs. Early European sailors easily filled their ships with these birds. People found many imaginative uses for the defenceless auk: as fish bait, for mattress stuffing with their feathers, and oil from their bodies was burned for fuel on the treeless, remote Atlantic islands. By the early 1800s, no auks remained on the North American coast. As Kolbert put it, the last American auk had been plucked, salted, and deep-fried.

Afterwards, the auks were confined to Geirfuglasker, an island off Iceland and their last significant habitat. A volcanic eruption destroyed the island in 1830, after which the remaining auks lived on the islet of Eldey. As they became rarer, wealthy European gentlemen competed for specimens and their eggs. The last two auks on Eldey were killed in 1844. A dozen Icelanders rowed to the islet. There they found two auks and a single egg. Sigurður Iselfsson, Ketil Ketilsson, and Jón Brandsson caught and strangled the birds. The last auk egg was broken during the struggle. The birds were sold to a private collector, and one of them is now part of the collection at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles.

Giants Lost Across Continents

Large land-dwelling animals have also been forced out by humans outside of Europe. One of the best-known examples is Australia. Over 85 percent of Australian terrestrial species weighing more than 44 kilograms went extinct shortly after the arrival of modern humans around 50,000 years ago. Diprotodon, the largest known marsupial and a relative of the modern wombat, disappeared around 44,000 years ago. Diprotodon was about three metres long, two metres tall, and weighed up to three tonnes—a giant wombat. The same genus included Zygomaturus, weighing about 300–500 kilograms, which may have survived until about 35,000 years ago.

Around the same time, Palorchestes also vanished from Australia. This “ancient dancer” weighed about a tonne and may have been related to the ground sloths (Megalonychidae) that lived in North and South America, and which likewise went extinct after the Ice Age and the arrival of humans—although some individuals lived until the 1550s on the islands of Haiti and Cuba. The giant Megatherium, a ground sloth, lived mainly in South and Central America but became extinct around 12,000 years ago with the arrival of modern humans. Megatherium measured about six metres in length and weighed four tonnes.

Almost all land animals in the Americas weighing over 44 kilograms disappeared after the arrival of humans—giant armadillos weighing around a tonne, giant beavers over 100 kilograms, woolly mammoths, and nearly tonne-sized, cold-adapted camel relatives. Around the same time, Smilodon, the 400-kilogram, lion-height but far more robust sabre-toothed cat, also became extinct in both North and South America.

Conclusion

The archaeological and paleontological records underscore the complexity, adaptability, and impact of early human societies. From constructing monumental architecture and creating intricate art to influencing the extinction of megafauna, our ancestors demonstrated remarkable ingenuity and left enduring legacies that continue to inform our understanding of human history.


References

Kolbert, E. (2016). The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History. Bloomsbury Publishing.

Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1967). The Dawn of European Art: An Introduction to Palaeolithic Cave Painting. Cambridge University Press.

Lewis-Williams, D., & Pearce, D. (2011). Inside the Neolithic Mind: Consciousness, Cosmos and the Realm of the Gods. Thames & Hudson.

Roberts, R. G., Flannery, T. F., Ayliffe, L. K., et al. (2001). New Ages for the Last Australian Megafauna: Continent-Wide Extinction About 46,000 Years Ago. Science, 292(5523), 1888–1892. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1060264

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – PART 10.

Money: Debt and the Death of Meaning

“If nature were a bank, we would have already saved it.”
— Eduardo Galeano

In today’s world, money is more than a means of exchange—it’s a source of power, anxiety, and inequality. The way we earn, spend, and owe has profound effects not only on our personal lives but also on the planet itself. This post explores the complex relationships between money, debt, environmental destruction, and the philosophies that seek to restore balance.

Originally published in Substack https://substack.com/home/post/p-161959754

Money—and especially the lack of it—is one of the biggest sources of dissatisfaction. Debt in particular shapes our lives and influences our sense of contentment. Even though education is free in Finland, I still had to spend several years paying off my student loans, which had ballooned to incomprehensible amounts. But that’s nothing compared to what my American colleagues have to pay for their education. The average U.S. household carries about $111,740 in debt. In Finland, the average household debt is around €49,500. People are often blamed for borrowing money, as being in debt is seen as shameful or even sinful. Yet this money is rarely used for frivolous purposes. Studies show that most debt is incurred for housing, children’s education, sharing with friends, or maintaining relationships.

Anthropologist David Graeber explores the origin and meaning of debt, money, and credit in his groundbreaking work Debt: The First 5,000 Years (2012). According to Graeber, people must go into debt just to reach an income level that covers more than mere survival. Despite their debt, people still buy homes for their families, alcohol for celebrations, gifts for their friends. They’re willing to pay for weddings and funerals even if their credit cards are maxed out. One of the pillars of market economy is the idea of endless growth and the illusion of an ever-increasing GDP that promises a better future and free money for all. But is this really true? Can the limited resources of our planet sustain endless growth?

Humans have always transformed their environment when migrating to new areas, but the large-scale exploitation of nature and irreversible modification of the atmosphere began only after the principles of market economy solidified in the 18th century.

Did ancient hunter-gatherers destroy their environment with the same ruthlessness? Romanticising hunter-gatherers has its risks, and many scholars have pointed out that humans have been dangerous mass killers for as long as we’ve existed. Australia is one such example. When modern humans arrived on the continent some 50,000 years ago, nearly all large predators and edible animals vanished. These animals had no concept of how dangerous a hairless, two-legged ape could be—and not enough time to learn.

But just as it’s dangerous to romanticise hunter-gatherers, it’s also dangerous to label them as mass murderers. Nearly all examples show that Indigenous peoples eventually found some kind of balance with nature. There’s no known case where an Indigenous group caused large-scale ecological destruction on their own. Easter Island is often cited as an exception, but that may stem from misinterpretation. Scholars still debate whether the island’s original inhabitants were responsible for the collapse of their own culture.

Historian Rutger Bregman (2020) discusses this debate by reviewing research on Easter Island’s history. He concludes that everything was fine until Western explorers arrived—bringing with them violence and rats that altered the ecosystem. The islanders began to covet Western culture and treasures. Eventually, about a third of the population was taken as slaves to Peruvian mines. Some were returned, now infected with smallpox. That finally ended the peace on the island and eradicated most of the remaining inhabitants.

American environmental activist, author, Buddhist scholar, systems theorist, and deep ecology thinker Joanna Macy has become an influential figure in recent years as ecological activism has risen as a political movement. The climate movement Extinction Rebellion, which started in the UK in October 2018, has included from the beginning people of many religious backgrounds. Buddhist members, in particular, frequently cite Macy’s ideas.

Born in 1929 in Los Angeles, Macy attended the Lycée Français de New York and graduated from Wellesley College in 1950 with a degree in Biblical studies. Her husband, Francis Macy (1927–2009), was a Harvard-trained psychologist and expert in Slavic culture, which led them abroad during the Cold War on assignments for the United States Information Agency (USIA). Macy studied political science at the University of Bordeaux in the early 1950s and was recruited by the CIA to gather intelligence in Germany. While living there, she began a lifelong project translating the work of Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926).

Between 1964 and 1972, Macy traveled with her husband, who served in leadership roles with peacekeeping missions in India, Tunisia, Nigeria, and across Africa. She earned her doctorate from Syracuse University in 1978 on the relationship between systems theory and Buddhism, which she had studied while assisting Tibetan refugees in northern India. During that time, she became friends with the young Dalai Lama.

After the Cold War, Francis Macy played a pivotal role in supporting hundreds of activists in Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, and Kazakhstan as they confronted the environmental legacy of nuclear weapons and the Chernobyl disaster. He founded multiple professional associations and collaborated with former Soviet colleagues beginning in 1983.

Thanks to her rich life experience, Joanna Macy serves as a powerful role model for today’s environmental movement—on whose shoulders rests the future of the entire ecosystem. Macy has influenced many other thinkers who operate at the intersection of spirituality and environmental activism, such as philosopher and Zen teacher David R. Loy.

Joanna Macy (2021) argues that humanity does not truly believe the current situation is dangerous. On an individual level, we don’t feel we have a role in solving the crisis. We fear ridicule if we panic, because everyone else seems to think things are just fine. We also fear jeopardising our political or economic standing in our communities if we take action. We think it’s better not to think about it at all—because it is painful and terrifying. We’re paralysed: aware of the danger, but unsure what to do. Some may think nothing can be done, and nothing matters anymore.

Norwegian philosopher Arne Næss (1912–2009) coined the term deep ecology. He was a central figure in the environmental movement from the late 20th century, combining his ecological worldview with Gandhi’s principles of nonviolent resistance and actively participated in defending biodiversity. His ecological view could be described as a kind of elegant self-realisation: every living being—human, animal, or plant—has an equal right to live. Næss believed people could become part of Earth’s ecosystems through recognising the illusion of the separate self. Joanna Macy agrees, stating that no action in defence of biodiversity feels like a sacrifice, once we experience our deeper ecological self—one that includes all life. The whole world becomes myself. When we act on behalf of the world, we restore balance within ourselves.

In 2012, Joanna Macy and psychologist Chris Johnstone developed a method called The Work That Reconnects, which encourages people toward active hope—because what’s the point of acting if the game is already lost? They define hope in two ways. First, it’s the outcome we desire, which we believe is possible. The second aspect of hope is passion—the drive to work toward our desired outcome, no matter how unlikely. Passive hope is simply wishing things would go a certain way and waiting for external forces to make it happen. Active hope means taking the situation seriously and doing, right now, whatever we can to move toward our desired future.

Macy categorises today’s dominant narratives into three types. The first is business as usual—the belief that economic growth will inevitably lead to progress. While things have improved on average for many, the future depends on an unprecedented level of motivation and global cooperation—without any guarantees of economic reward.

Human creation

However, our economic system is not a law of nature, but rather a man-made construct—one that could be changed simply through collective human decision. It is not a force of nature or a law carved in stone for which there have never been alternatives. Market capitalism has merely proven so efficient at generating wealth and health that few dare to question it. Yet, the fruits of capitalism have not been shared equally among the world’s population. After the fall of communism, capitalism was left without serious competition.

Although capitalism can be seen as the bearer of gifts and freedom here in the wealthy parts of the world, the relationship between capitalism and violence becomes evident when we look at countries once subjugated by colonial systems. In most cases, the original tribal borders and systems were dismantled, and the populations enslaved. In some instances, the entire indigenous population was replaced, as happened in the 17th century on the volcanic Banda Islands—now part of Indonesia.

Western culture underwent several significant changes in its transition from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment, particularly concerning the treatment of colonial populations and the development of the banking system in the Renaissance Italy. Giovanni di Bicci de’ Medici (1360–1429) established his first bank in Florence in 1397. Though he had a branch in Rome, it was Florence’s investment opportunities that made the bank thrive. Art lovers know the House of Medici through their renowned patronage. The Medici bank became the largest in Europe during the 15th century. The family produced five popes in the 16th century—the last of whom, Leo XI, ascended the papacy and died in the same year, 1605—as well as two two queens of France—Catherine de’ Medici (1547–1559) and Marie de’ Medici (1600–1610). Their protégés included major artists of the Italian Renaissance such as Filippo Brunelleschi (1377–1446), Donatello (1386–1466), Fra Angelico (1395–1455), Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519), and Michelangelo (1475–1564).

Western historical accounts also credit the Medici family with introducing double-entry bookkeeping. This system was devised by the Franciscan monk Luca Pacioli (c. 1447–1517), a friend of Leonardo da Vinci? The Medici’s accounting practice documented where money came from and where it went. Should we, then, each time someone asks whether we’re paying by debit or credit, remember this monk?

Conclusion: Rewriting the Script

If nature were a bank, would we have saved it already? Eduardo Galeano’s biting quote still holds true. Our world is organised around the movement of money, not the flourishing of life. But the system we live in is not immutable. It was made by us, and we can remake it.

Hope begins when we realise this truth. Joanna Macy, David Graeber, Arne Næss—these thinkers remind us that alternatives are not only possible but necessary. Deep ecology, active hope, and historical self-awareness can help us shift from a paradigm of endless extraction to one of deep connection. The future isn’t written yet. Whether or not we act—together, and now—will determine how that story unfolds.

References

Atwood, M. (2008). Payback: Debt and the shadow side of wealth. Toronto, ON: Anansi Press. 
Bregman, R. (2020). Humankind: A hopeful history. Bloomsbury.
Galeano, E. (n.d.). If nature were a bank, we would have already saved it [Quote].
Graeber, D. (2012). Debt: The first 5,000 years. Melville House.
Johnstone, C., & Macy, J. (2012). Active hope: How to face the mess we’re in with unexpected resilience and power. New World Library.
Macy, J. (2021). A wild love for the world: Joanna Macy and the work of our time (S. Macy, Ed.). Shambhala Publications.
Naess, A. (2008). The ecology of wisdom: Writings by Arne Naess (A. Drengson & B. Devall, Eds.). Counterpoint.
Pacioli, L. (2007). Particularis de computis et scripturis [Facsimile edition]. (Original work published 1494). Lucerne: Verlag am Klosterhof.

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – PART 9.

Chasing Shadows: Understanding the Roots of Human Dissatisfaction?

In this post, we explore the nature of dissatisfaction and the human tendency to experience suffering—a theme central to Eastern philosophy for over 2,500 years. Drawing primarily from Buddhist thought, this article outlines how dissatisfaction pervades human existence and how we might begin to understand and engage with it differently. Rather than proposing a clear-cut solution, it invites readers to reflect more deeply on the illusions of self, permanence, and happiness.

Originally published in Substack: https://substack.com/home/post/p-161291109

Dissatisfaction or Suffering?

The nature of dissatisfaction and the possibility of liberation from it has been a consistent theme in Eastern philosophy. Central to this discourse are the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama—known as the Buddha—who lived in India over 2,500 years ago. According to Buddhist thought, our fundamental dissatisfaction stems from a mistaken belief in a concrete, separate self—an illusion that this “I” exists independently of the surrounding world.

The Buddha’s understanding of suffering is summed up in what are known as the Four Noble Truths:

  1. Suffering is a natural part of life.
  2. Suffering is caused by craving and attachment.
  3. It is possible to end suffering.
  4. There is a path that leads to the end of suffering. This path includes eight guiding principles based on honesty, awareness, and ethical living: right understanding, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration

The term the Buddha used for suffering is dukkha, a Pāli word often translated as “suffering,” though it also encompasses inner unease or stress. Even ancient Buddhist texts mention body image issues as a form of suffering. Feeling unattractive or unworthy has long been part of human dissatisfaction. In this view, suffering is caused by our own actions, desires, and failure to perceive the true nature of reality.

Dukkha can be categorised in three ways:

  • Dukkha-dukkha: physical and emotional suffering due to aging, illness, birth, and death.
  • Viparinama-dukkha: suffering of change, frustration that pleasant experiences don’t last.
  • Sankhara-dukkha: existential dissatisfaction rooted in impermanence and change. we fear that life doesn’t offer us solid ground and that our very existence is questionable. It is the fear that life doesn’t offer us solid ground and that the very existence is questionable.

Philosopher and Zen teacher David R. Loy (2018) describes dissatisfaction as a kind of existential void, which cannot be fulfilled. He argues that we cannot address dissatisfaction without deconstructing the illusion of self. If dissatisfaction is inherent to our identity, then perhaps humans are, by nature, dissatisfied beings. Loy emphasises that fixing one area of life often just shifts our dissatisfaction elsewhere, without addressing its root.

In Christianity, dissatisfaction is often interpreted as the result of sin—original disobedience against God. If we are to overcome our dissatisfaction, we must theoretically resolve this ancient transgression, a task beyond our capabilities. In contrast, Buddhism encourages us to accept dissatisfaction as real and to embark on a path toward liberation.

Sense of Lack

Dissatisfaction is an emotion, but it can’t be dismissed nor suppressed. According to Loy, our real struggle is a suppressed fear that our sense of self is groundless and insecure. Trying to secure it, is like trying to catch your own shadow. We try to solve this issue, which is internal, through external material means. We try to fulfil the psychological internal void with external achievements, validation, power, money, romantic relationships, and consumer goods—but the illusion persists.

Loy calls this the lack project. It’s our effort to overcome an internal void through symbolic acts—writing books, painting, founding hospitals, or competitive hot dog eating (Joey ”Jaws” Chestnut ate 76 hot dogs in ten minutes in 2021). In contemporary times, social media amplifies these projects, as we craft idealised identities and seek validation through likes.

Buddhism offers a surprisingly simple practice in response: just sit still. Literally. Sitting meditation—sometimes anchored to the breath or other body sensations—invites us to observe thoughts and emotions as temporary occurring phenomena without clinging to them. Over time, these mental bubbles burst like soap bubbles. The goal isn’t to eliminate dissatisfaction, but to develop awareness of it and our fleeting sense of self.

Loy notes that when dissatisfaction has nowhere left to go—when it cannot project itself outward—it collapses inward. The illusion of self, which is always craving, dissolves. And with it, the need to satisfy that craving. Dissatisfaction often manifests as guilt: “There’s something wrong with me.” It encompasses the trauma of birth, illness, aging, and the fear of death. We feel bound to situations we dislike, estranged from what we love. Even in moments of peace, the mind fears this peace won’t last. Why does everything nice and beautiful have to end? As long as we feel incomplete, real life always seems just out of reach, never quite here.

The opposite of dukkha is sukha, a Sanskrit word meaning joypleasure, or ease. It’s often mistakenly believed to be the root of the word for sugar in many languages—like sukkar (Arabic), zucchero (Italian), and azúcar (Spanish). While the similarity is striking, the actual linguistic roots are more complex and likely stem from the Sanskrit word śarkarā, meaning “gravel” or “sugar crystals.” Ironically, sugar—once a symbol of sweetness and pleasure—played a central role in one of humanity’s darkest chapters: the transatlantic slave trade.

In 17th- and 18th-century London, coffeehouses became centres of political and philosophical dialogue, fuelled by coffee, tea, and cocoa—all bitter substances sweetened with sugar. The rising demand for sugar drove mass slavery, with millions of Africans kidnapped, sold, and forced to labor on plantations under brutal conditions. The true number of lives affected may never be known.

Human cruelty has recurred throughout history—extinction of species, oppression, murder, ecological destruction. Our dissatisfaction has driven both innovation and devastation. Climate change and environmental collapse are now results of centuries of viewing nature merely as a resource. This seemingly logical mindset, has triggered nonlinear feedback loops we can no longer control.

Nonlinear processes—such as ecological collapse—don’t follow neat cause-and-effect paths. Small triggers can lead to large consequences. Our ability to cultivate our experience of interdependence through meditation practice, may help us understand and respond to these challenges.

But who are we, really? What makes us “us”? Are we truly unique?

Consider the Ship of Theseus. If every plank in a ship is eventually replaced, is it still the same ship? If every cell in our body is replaced over time, are we still the same person?

Imagine a teleportation device on Mars. It scans your body and transmits the data to Earth, where a perfect copy is reconstructed. After successful teleportation, you can choose whether the original ”you” on Mars is destroyed. But which one is really you? The teleported copy on Earth or the original on Mars?

Are we just a fleeting arrangement of atoms that briefly feels like a “self”? Our cells are replenished with food and expelled through waste. If our sense of self is rooted in this ever-changing matter, then our uniqueness—and perhaps even our suffering—may be far more fragile than we think.

Conclusion

Dissatisfaction is a fundamental part of human life—rooted in illusion, fear, and longing. Whether viewed through the lens of ancient Buddhist philosophy or modern existential thought, the sense of lack cannot be fulfilled through materialism, achievement, or even reason alone. Instead, it calls for a deeper chance in our awareness of the self and its impermanence. As paradoxical as it may seem, liberation from dissatisfaction may lie not in solving it, but in understanding and integrating it into our way of being.


Resources:

Loy, D. R. (2018). Lack & transcendence: The problem of death and life in psychotherapy, existentialism, and Buddhism. Second edition. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Walpola, R. (1967). What the Buddha taught. Bedford: Gordon Fraser.

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – PART 8.


The Self Illusion: Why We’re Never Quite Satisfied
Why do we so often feel like something is missing in our lives? That quiet, persistent itch that if only we had this or changed that, we might finally be at peace. American philosopher David Loy argues that this dissatisfaction stems from a fundamental sense of inner lack—a feeling that we are somehow incomplete. But what if that very notion of incompleteness is built on a psychological illusion? In today’s blog, I’ll explore the deep roots of the self, or more precisely, the self illusion, from perspectives across philosophy, Buddhism, psychology, and neuroscience.

Originally published in Substack: https://substack.com/home/post/p-160701201

The Self Illusion

In his marvellous book Lack & transcendence (2018), the American philosopher and Zen teacher David Loy suggests that the feeling of dissatisfaction in human life stems from a never ending internal craving—or sense of lack. This sense of lack arises from the feeling that we must fulfil some need in order to make our inner self more stable or complete. We believe that satisfying this need will resolve our fundamental problems. However, according to Loy, this lack cannot truly be satisfied or solved, as it has no concrete foundation.

This deep-seated sense of something missing—something believed to be the key to our happiness—stems from a concept known in psychology as the “self illusion,” and in Buddhism it is formalized in the teaching of non-self (Pali: anattā, Sanskrit: anatman), which asserts that there is no unchanging, permanent self, but rather a constantly shifting flow of experiences, sensations, and mental formations. This idea suggests that human psychology is troubled by the uncertain belief that we possess a concrete, stable, immovable—even eternal—inner self. In reality, this “self” is merely an illusion, constructed by various psychological processes and lacking any true anchor or fixed substance. As David Loy suggests, this inner self is inherently dissatisfied, constantly demanding that we fulfil its desires in countless ways.

In everyday language, this inner self is often referred to by the Freudian term ego, though we might just as well call it the self. Nothing is more dissatisfied than our ego. In Freudian theory, the ego is one part of a dynamic system made up of the id, superego, and ego itself—each representing different aspects of our psyche: the pleasure-seeking id, the socially-minded superego, and the ego, which seeks realistic and balanced compromises between the two.

Modern neuropsychology suggests that the prefrontal cortex regulates these impulses of selfhood. In newborns, this region is underdeveloped, which explains their reactive behaviour. For individuals with Tourette’s syndrome, this regulatory function is partially impaired, contributing to difficulties in social interaction. Social situations often demand an inner struggle for conformity, and for someone with Tourette’s, the stress of adapting to social norms can trigger tics—physical manifestations of the effort to conform.

In the early 1900s, American sociologist Charles Horton Cooley (1902) introduced the concept of the ”looking-glass self.” It refers to how our self-concept is shaped by how others perceive us. Essentially, our autobiographical sense of self is a narrative built from the perspectives and impressions of those we’ve encountered. Cooley’s argues, we view our lives as a series of events in which we are the protagonist, shaped by the actions and opinions of others.

According to Cooley, people see us in their own ways. This explains why public figures often complain that no one truly understands them. But Cooley argues there is no “true self” behind these perceptions. In reality, we are precisely what others see us as—even if it’s difficult for us to accept their views of us.

In Jungian psychology, the term ”self” refers to the unification of the conscious and unconscious mind. It represents the totality of the psyche and manifests as a form of individual consciousness.

Many religions embed similar ideas into the concept of a permanent and immortal soul, which continues to exist beyond physical death and, in some traditions, reincarnates. Buddhism, however, challenged the Hindu notion of a permanent, reincarnating self (attā) with the doctrine of anattā (non-self), one of its foundational principles.

For clarity, when this text refers to the self, ego, or a permanent identity, it means essentially the same thing. When necessary, I also use terms like “brain talk,” “inner voice,” or “internal dialogue,” as this is often how this particular psychological phenomenon manifests. According to American neuropsychologist Chris Niebauer (2019), this process is more verb than noun—there is no tangible self, only the experience of self, which is created by mental processes that produce inner speech and feelings, which influence our behaviour.

From a neuropsychological perspective, the concept of self and the often-dissatisfied “brain talk” it generates might originate from processes such as these: the left and right hemispheres of the brain are responsible for slightly different aspects of interpreting the sense of self and the world—a theory of phenomenon called hemispheric asymmetry. The processes responsible for the illusion of a fixed self are thought to reside in the language centres of our the left hemisphere.

Modern brain scans has shown that when the brain is not engaged in any task, a specific neural system called the default mode network (DMN) becomes active. During such moments, our thoughts wander to self-related concerns, memories, anxieties, and hopes for the future. This inner activity is believed to amplify our brain talk and, when overactive, can turn against us—making us feel as though the world is against us.

Michael Gazzaniga, a pioneer in cognitive neuroscience, demonstrated in 1967 that the brain’s hemispheres perform surprisingly different roles. The left hemisphere processes language, categories, logic, and narrative structure. It loves categorisation, it divides things into right and wrong, good and bad. The right hemisphere, on the other hand, is responsible for spatial awareness, bodily sensations, and intuition.

The left hemisphere is believed to construct the narrative of a permanent self—with a beginning, middle, and imagined future. It also creates a static image of our physical selves—often distorted in relation to the current social norms and ideals. The right hemisphere, however, perceives our boundaries as more fluid and sees us as one with the timeless world of oneness. It’s the source of empathy, compassion, and a sense that the well-being of others is related with our own. It functions almost like a spiritual organ—like Star Wars’ Yoda reminding us that we are luminous beings, not this crude matter.

Although the theory of hemispheric asymmetry is controversial, it’s commonly misunderstood in popular culture. People are not left-brained or right-brained in any rigid sense. Both hemispheres contribute to self-perception in unique ways. Studying this phenomena empirically is difficult without harming subjects.

Fortunately—or unfortunately—neuroscientist Jill Bolte Taylor (2008) experienced a stroke that silenced her left hemisphere. She described her hand turning transparent and merging with the energy around her. She felt an overwhelming joy and silence in her internal dialogue. Though the stroke was traumatic and left her disabled for several years, she eventually recovered and shared her important insights.

Taylor wrote that her sense of self changed completely when she no longer perceived herself as a solid being. She felt fluid. She describes how everything around us, within us, and between us is composed of atoms and molecules vibrating in space. Even though the language centres of our brain prefer to define us as individual, solid entities, we are actually made up of countless cells and mostly water—and are in a constant state of change.

Beyond the language centres of the left hemisphere, the default mode network is another central component in producing internal dialogue. When scientists perform fMRI scans, they often begin by mapping the resting state of a participant’s brain. Marcus Raichle (et al 2001), a neurologist at Washington University, discovered that when participants were asked to do nothing, several brain regions actually became more active. He named this the ”default mode network” (DMN).

This network activates when there are no external tasks—when we are “just waiting.” It’s when our minds wander freely, contemplating ourselves, others, the past, and the future. It may even be the source of the continuous stream of consciousness we associate with our inner world.

The DMN is central to self-reflection. It kicks in when we think about who we are and how we feel. It’s also involved in social reflection—thinking not just of ourselves but others as well. Concepts like empathy, morality, and social belonging stem from this same process.

The DMN also stirs up memory. It plays a vital role in recalling past events and helps construct the narrative we tell about ourselves—those vivid, personal moments like when our father left, or we met our partner, or our child was born. The network also activates when we think about the future, dream, or fear what may come.

When our mind is at rest, it spins a self-protective, often conservative inner dialogue full of dreams, fears, regrets, and desires. This rarely produces contentment with the present moment. But why call it a dialogue? Isn’t there just one voice in our head? Shouldn’t it be a monologue? Apparently not—our inner speech behaves like it’s talking to someone else. For instance, when we are alone and looking for a lost key, and as we finally find it, we might exclaim, “Yes! Found them!” as if others were present. Our brain talk evolved alongside our spoken language, which is inherently dialogical.

Our inner dialogue often wanders to the past and future, where it finds plenty of material for dissatisfaction. From the past, it dredges up nostalgia, regret, and bitterness. From the future, it conjures hopes, dreams, and fears—overdue bills, home repairs, environmental collapse, health concerns, or children preparing to leave home.

Zen teacher Grover Genro Gauntt once described his first experience of noticing this inner voice. In the 1970s, as a new Zen practitioner, he listened to Japanese master Taizan Maezumi speak of this constant dialogue and the importance of not identifying with it. Genro had this dialogue pop in his mind, “What is this guy talking about? I don’t have any internal dialogue!” That moment captures the tragicomic nature of the mind’s attempts to deny its own patterns—like trying not to think of a pink elephant.

Jill Bolte Taylor also writes that one of the key roles of the left hemisphere (which she experienced as temporarily malfunctioning) is to define the self by saying, “I am.” Through what she calls ”brain talk,” our minds replay autobiographical events to keep them accessible in memory. Taylor locates the “self center” specifically in the language areas of the left hemisphere. It’s what allows us to know our own name, roles, abilities, skills, phone number, Social Security number, and home address. From time to time, we need to be able to explain to others what makes us who we are—such as when the police ask to see identification. 

Taylor writes that unlike most cells in the body, our brain neurons don’t regenerate unless there’s a specific need for it. All our other cells are in constant flux and in dialogue with the outside world. Taylor postulates that the illusion of a permanent self might arise from this neurological exception. We feel like we remain the same person throughout life because we spend our entire lives with the same neurons. 

However, the atoms and molecules that form our neurons do change over time. Everything in our bodies is in constant flux. Nothing is permanent, not even the matter that constitutes our neurons. Maybe this is the unhappy psychological reality: we believe in a permanent, unchanging self, obey its internal commands—and are therefore perpetually dissatisfied. This dissatisfaction stems from the deep emptiness that our inner dialogue continuously generates.

Our belief in a fixed self begins in childhood, when we first conceive of ourselves as separate from our parents and the outside world. This inner dialogue shapes behaviour, guiding our decisions for survival and well-being. The left hemisphere’s language centres negotiate with us—when to eat, what to crave, and how to avoid social pain or getting hit by a train. But we also need the awareness of the eternal and oneness conjured by the right hemisphere. Our life would not make any sense without it. 

Conclusion

What emerges from this exploration is a realisation: our sense of a permanent self is not a solid truth but a mental construct. It’s a story told by our brain, particularly the left hemisphere, supported by cultural narratives and social feedback. This illusion, while useful for navigating daily life, is also the root of our chronic dissatisfaction. However, perhaps the greatest relief lies in understanding that we are not trapped by this narrative. As Buddhist teachings and modern neuroscience suggest, loosening our grip on the idea of a fixed self may open the door to deeper peace, compassion, and freedom. There is so much more to ourselves than our inner voice is telling us. This voice is mostly trying to prevent accidents and embarrassment, but there’s more to our true selves than that. 


Resources

  • Cooley, C. H. (1902). Human nature and the social order. New York: Scribner’s.
  • Gazzaniga, M. S. (1967). The split brain in man. Scientific American, 217(2), 24–29.
  • Loy, D. R. (2019). Ecodharma: Buddhist teachings for the precipice. Somerville: Wisdom Publications.
  • Loy, D. R. (2018). Lack & transcendence: The problem of death and life in psychotherapy, existentialism, and Buddhism. Second edition. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Niebauer, C. (2019). No self, no problem: How neuropsychology is catching up to Buddhism. Hierophant Publishing.
  • Raichle, M. E. et al. (2001). A default mode of brain function. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 98(2), 676–682.
  • Taylor, J. B. (2008). My stroke of insight: A brain scientist’s personal journey. New York: Plume.

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – Part 7.

Voices Within – Exploring the Inner Dialogue

Originally published in Substack: https://substack.com/inbox/post/160343816

The Canadian-born British experimental psychologist and philosopher, Bruce Hood, specialises in researching human psychological development in cognitive neuroscience. Hood works at the University of Bristol, and his research focuses on intuitive theories, sense of self, and the cognitive processes underlying adult magical thinking. In his book The Self Illusion: Why There Is No ‘You’ Inside Your Head (2012), Hood argues that our internal dissatisfaction stems from a form of psychological uncertainty. It is still very common to think that some kind of internal self or soul is the core that separates humans from other animals. It is also very common to think that after the human body dies, this core continues to live forever through some form of reincarnation, either here or in another parallel dimension. Our understanding of the internal self does not arise from nothing. It is the result of a long developmental process that takes time to build. According to Bruce Hood, this is an illusion because the sense of self has no permanent anchor or form, yet people experience it as very real and often claim it to be the essence that makes us who we are.

In neurosciences the human consciousness is often divided into various conceptual meanings that together form human consciousness. The first of these meanings is the awareness, referring to whether we are awake or not, such as when we are asleep, we are in a state of mild and temporary form of unconsciousness. The second significant concept related to consciousness is attention, which moves between different activities, depending on what requires our attention at the moment. The third concept of consciousness is experiential consciousness, which defines subjective experiences occurring within ourselves, such as how salt tastes, or what is the sensation a red colour evokes. The fourth meaning of consciousness is reflective consciousness. If something happens to us at the level of experiential consciousness, we begin to consciously ponder how we should act. For instance, if we hammer our finger with a mallet, this experience immediately enters our experiential consciousness as a very intense experience, but almost simultaneously, the same event jumps into our reflective consciousness, where we start weighing the severity of the injury and what we should do to ease pain and prevent further calamity. Should I cry for help? Should I go to the hospital? Or shall I just take a photo and post it on Instagram? Conscious thought flows in this way.

Reflective consciousness speaks of experience, and it leads to conscious thinking, which is characterised by the inability to think about more than one thing at a time. One important form of conscious thought is self-awareness, which also involves the awareness of our own body. The concept of self represents conscious thought and is formed by beliefs and thoughts about an individual’s personal history, identity, and future plans.

Self-awareness is also referred to as the self or sense self, a concept I have and will be using in my writings. However, it’s important to note that this term does not refer to identity. This same issue is often explored in the fields of psychology and sociology.  

The sense of self can be seen as an evolutionary tool or a feature, which helps the organism to stay alive. It makes the organisms feel that they are very important, more important than anyone or anything else. However, this sense of self can also transform over time and through adverse experience into a process that turns against itself. These processes have been seen underlying conditions such as severe depression, in which our sense of self has gone into a deep rut and goes through endless loops of self loathing.  

American journalist and Harvard professor Michael Pollan writes in his book How to Change Your Mind (2019) that modern psychedelic therapies have shown promising results for patients with depression. In his book, Pollan writes about the research conducted by British neuroscientist and psychologist Robin Carhart-Harris (2010) has researched the effect of the brain’s default mode network (DMN) on the formation of the self, ego, or sense of self. The DMN is a neurological process that turns on when the person is not engaged in goal-directed activity. This process has also been linked to the formation of a the sense self.

The human experience of the self is a biographical anchor created by multiple overlapping neural processes of our brain. We get a feeling that everything that happens in my life happens to me. The self is that which experiences all things. That inner center is significant particularly to me. Without our internal awareness and experience of the self, we would never have conceived of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, drafted by a UN committee chaired by Eleanor Roosevelt. It protects the persons right to physical integrity. We believe that every human being is unique and valuable because we all have an inner sense of self.

However, humans are not the only animals with some form of internal self-awareness. When visiting the London Zoo in 1838, Charles Darwin (1809–1882) saw an orangutang named Jenny becoming upset when a keeper teased her with an apple. This made Darwin reflect on the orangutang’s subjective experience. He noticed Jenny looking into a mirror and wondered if she recognised herself in the reflection.

American psychologist Gordon G. Gallup (1970) experimentally studied self-recognition in two male and two female wild chimpanzees, none of whom had previously seen a mirror. Initially, the chimpanzees made threatening gestures in front of the mirror, perceiving their reflections as threats. Eventually, they began using the mirror for self-directed behaviours, such as grooming parts of their bodies they couldn’t see without it, picking their noses, grinning, and blowing bubbles at their reflections.

Bruce Hood (2012) writes that this process is crucial in human development because, without it, humans would struggle in socially challenging and complex environments. Human children fail the mirror test until around 18 months of age. Before this, they may think the reflection is of another child and look behind the mirror. However, by 18 months, they understand that the person reflected in the mirror is themselves. But humans and chimpanzees are not the only animals to pass the mirror test. Crows, dolphins, and orcas also pass the test. Elephants do too, but cats do not (although my guess is that cats could pass the test if they wanted).

The sensation of self, which the human mind creates, which feels like a concrete structure, and which is referred to as the self, ego, or ”I,” is a process aimed at protecting us from both internal and external threats. When everything functions as it should, our inner narrator keeps the organism on track, helping it achieve its goals and meet its needs, especially eating, seeking shelter, and reproducing. This process works well under normal circumstances, but it is inherently conservative. Our experience of the self is a process, not a fixed entity, though it often feels like one. It emerges as a result of various mental functions and manifests as an internal narrator, or even as an internal dialogue.

The dialogue generated by the self often sounds like someone is explaining things to us, as if to a blind person, about what’s happening around us. We enter a room and might hear someone say inside our mind, “Look, what a nice place this is! Those wallpapers are beautiful, and the furniture is great, but those electrical outlets needs replacing!”

Sometimes, we might hear an internal negotiation, such as whether to run through a red light to catch a tram. Running through traffic might put us in physical danger or cause us to be socially judged. Social shame is one of the worst things a person can experience, and our internal narrator picks up on such details immediately and warns us to at least consider the possibility. At times, our narrator can turn into an internal tyrant, turning its energy against us.

This narrator, or brain talk, sounds very reasonable, but it often shows how our minds are trying to preserve the structures formed earlier, built from previous experiences. Unfortunately, sometimes we’re left with that inner narrator and nothing else, which can leave one feeling out of place. And when this narrator becomes rigid and inflexible, it has the power to push us into states of psychological distress, even driving us into despair.

In cases where brain talk gets stuck in repetitive loops, as is often the case with anxiety, depression, or psychosis, people feel their lives are determined by this narrator, inner force living inside ones head. A stuck self could feel isolated in its inner world and find it impossible to reach outside. The idea of having self-awareness — of being someone in this world — becomes crushed under the weight of these loops. For some, it is as if the voice of our mind becomes detached from the physical person, forcing it into another dimension where everything becomes dark, and disconnected from the social world.

American author David Foster Wallace (1962–2008), who had much experience of this process, reminded us in his commencement speech at Kenyon College in 2005 of the old cliché that the mind is an excellent servant, but a terrible master. However, this cliché expresses a terrible truth. According to Wallace, it is no coincidence that people who commit suicide with firearms almost always shoot themselves in the head. They are shooting that terrible narrator turned into a master — a terrible dark lord. 

Mind out of a Dolmio pasta sauce commercial

People experience their brain talk in a unique and private way. Most of us have some form of inner voice. A voice that guides, directs, and commands us. A voice that warns “Watch out! Car!” or “Remember to buy toilet paper.” For many of us, this voice sounds like our own, but for some people, their inner narrator is not a straightforward speech that scolds, advises, or reminds them of things. For some, brain talk may take the form of an Italian arguing couple or a calm interviewer. Or it may not be a voice at all, but a taste, feeling, or colour. In some cases, there is no voice at all, only deep and calm silence.

English journalist Sirin Kale (2021) wrote an interesting article on this internal narrator, presenting a few rare examples of different types of inner voices. One of the people interviewed for the article, a 30-year-old English woman named Claudia, hears her inner dialogue in a unique way. Claudia has never been to Italy, nor does she have Italian family or friends. She has no idea why the loud, arguing Italian couple has taken over her inner voice. Claudia says, “I have no idea where this came from. It’s probably offensive to Italians.” The arguing couple in Claudia’s mind sounds like something straight out of a Dolmio pasta sauce commercial. They are expressive and prone to waving their hands and shouting. When Claudia needs to make a decision in her life, this Italian couple takes the reins.

The Italian couple living inside Claudia’s mind argues passionately about almost anything. Claudia finds it very helpful because they do all the work for her. The couple is always in the kitchen and surrounded by food. Claudia has not yet named her Italians, but they have helped her make important decisions, including encouraging her to quit her job and pursue her lifelong dream of going to sea.

Kale writes that the Italian woman in Claudia’s mind supported her resignation, but her husband was more cautious. The Italian man said, “It’s a stable job!” and the woman responded, “Let her enjoy life!” The woman won, and Claudia left for a job on the seas in Greece. Overall, this Italian couple has helped Claudia live a happier life, and they’ve even calmed down a bit. Claudia says, “Less shouting. They just argue now.”

Dr Helene Loevenbruck of Grenoble Alpes University’s, mentioned in the article, claims that the brain talk arises in the same way as our thoughts turn into actions. Our brains predict the consequences of actions. The same principle of predicting actions also applies to human speech. When we speak, our brains create a predictive simulation of speech in our minds to correct any potential mistakes. The inner voice is thought to arise when our minds plan verbalised actions but decide not to send motor commands to the speech muscles. Loevenbruck says this simulated auditory signal is the small voice we hear in our minds. Loevenbruck explains that for the most part, we hear something she refers to as inner language, a more comprehensive term for this phenomenon. This is because, for example, people with hearing impairments do not hear an inner voice but might see sign language or observe moving lips. (Loevenbruck et al., 2018).

In exploring the sense of self and inner voice, we’ve seen how the self emerges as a process rather than a fixed entity. It is shaped by our own evolution, culture, and personal experience. Our brain talk can guide us, deceive us, or even take on unexpected forms and destroy us, yet it remains central to our sense of identity. It feels like the core for which everything happens. But is the self really real? And if not, if the self is an illusion, as neuroscientists and psychologists suggest, what does that mean for how we live? In the next post, I’ll dive into Buddhist perspectives on the self—examining how centuries-old wisdom aligns with modern psychological insights.


Resources:

Carhart-Harris, RL, & Friston, KJ (2010). The default-mode, ego-functions and free-energy: a neurobiological account of Freudian ideas. Brain, 133(4), 1265-1283.

Gallup, GG (1970). Chimpanzees: Self-Recognition. Science. 167 (3914): 86–87.

Hood, B (2012). The self illusion: How the social brain creates identity. HarperCollins Publishers.

Kale, S (2021) The last great mystery of the mind: meet the people who have unusual – or non-existent – inner voices. Guardian 25 Oct 2021 <https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/oct/25/the-last-great-mystery-of-the-mind-meet-the-people-who-have-unusual-or-non-existent-inner-voices&gt; Link visited 1 April 2025. 

Loevenbruck et al. (2018). A cognitive neuroscience view of inner language: to predict, to hear, to see and to feel. In Inner Speech:  New Voices. Peter Langland-Hassan & Agustín Vicente (eds.), Oxford University Press, 131-167. 

Pollan, M (2019). How to change your mind the new science of psychedelics. Penguin Books.

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – Part 6.

Good-Natured: On the Roots of Human Kindness

Originally published in 21 March 2025 on Substack: https://substack.com/home/post/p-159540266

Dutch historian Rutger Bregman, in his beautiful work Humankind: A Hopeful History (2020), turns our collective gaze toward the innate goodness of humanity. In this Substack series, I have and will explore themes inspired by Bregman’s argument—that human nature is, at its core, good—and bring in reflections from my own research among hunter-gatherer communities. Bregman revisits and reinterprets famous stories and examples that argue for the inherent evil of human beings, revealing how these cases have often been misunderstood or misrepresented. Stories that highlight the darker side of humanity tend to align with public opinion and thus sell better, he notes, but that doesn’t make them accurate.

Bregman begins his exploration with a powerful account of the London Blitz—and later the strategic bombings in Germany—during World War II. The military commanders responsible believed that sustained bombing would crush civilian morale and plunge society into chaos, ultimately giving them a strategic edge. They were wrong. Civilians regarded the bombings as a necessary evil, and in the face of destruction, human kindness blossomed. Despite the deaths and destroyed homes, people helped one another in a calm and polite manner. Many have even remembered the London Blitz with a strange fondness—a time when people were kind to each other.

Another striking story in Bregman’s book is that of a real-life Lord of the Flies scenario. William Golding’s 1954 novel depicts English schoolboys stranded on a deserted island, descending into savagery. Bregman went to great lengths to find a real-life equivalent and discovered a 1965 case where six teenage boys were shipwrecked on an uninhabited island near Australia (see Tongan Schoolboys). They survived for 15 months, and when they were finally found by chance, all were in good health—one had broken his leg, but the others cared for him, and by the time they returned, his leg had fully healed. The boys had grown food, built a gym, and kept a fire burning the entire time by rubbing sticks together.

Throughout Bregman’s work, there’s a deep faith in human kindness, supported by concrete evidence. Ancient hunter-gatherers were not primarily violent, and this also holds true for the last remaining hunter-gatherer groups today. Bregman suggests that humans have self-domesticated through sexual selection, gradually favouring traits that make us more cooperative and less violent. One telling example is from the Battle of Gettysburg, where numerous muskets were found loaded 20 times or more, as reloading provided a perfect excuse not to fire again. Bregman discusses other examples of extreme lengths soldiers have gone to avoid killing another human being.

For many Indigenous societies, violence toward others is an alien and even repulsive concept. Bregman recounts how the U.S. Navy showed Hollywood movies to the inhabitants of the small Ifalik atoll in the Pacific, hoping to foster goodwill. But the movies horrified the islanders. The on-screen violence was so distressing that they felt physically ill for days. Years later, when an anthropologist arrived, the locals still asked, “Was it true? Are there really people in America who kill other people?” There is a deep mystery at the heart of human history: if we have an innate aversion to violence, where did things go wrong?

I’ve been fortunate to spend time in the Kalahari Desert with local Ju/’hoan hunter-gatherers. This experience showed me just how different we Westerners are. Despite decades of exposure to Western culture and every imaginable injustice from our side, they remain open, happy, curious, cheerful, and helpful.

The people I met call themselves Ju/’hoansi, meaning “real people.” Many Indigenous groups refer to themselves, and others with similar lifestyles, simply as “people.” Today, the descendants of southern Africa’s hunter-gatherers, who still speak their ancestral languages, have accepted the general term San, which I have also used when referring broadly to southern African hunter-gatherers. The name likely derives from a derogatory Khoekhoe term meaning “those who live in the bush and eat from the ground,” or possibly from sonqua, meaning “thief.” Other names—Bushman, Boesman, Basarawa, Bakalahari—are colonial impositions. The Kalahari San are gradually moving away from traditional hunting: many now raise chickens and goats and supplement their diets with milk, grains, tea, and sugar. Thus, calling them hunter-gatherers is somewhat misleading.

During my first research expedition, I had three primary goals: 1) find examples of persistence hunting; 2) understand the link between persistence hunting and trance ceremonies; 3) document a persistence hunt. On my first day, it became clear that no one in the camp remembered anyone chasing down and catching a large antelope. Ultimately, however, I uncovered valuable insights into the relationship between hunting and ceremony, crucial for completing my doctoral dissertation Fragments of the Hunt: Persistence Hunting, Tracking and Prehistoric Art (2017).

Bregman’s book reignited a question that has long troubled me: if ancient and modern hunter-gatherers are egalitarian, nonviolent, and friendly, why do modern societies periodically elect authoritarian despots? The San of the Kalahari go to great lengths to avoid envy; anyone behaving selfishly or possessively is swiftly admonished.

Elizabeth Marshall Thomas (2006) writes that necklaces and other ornaments were common gifts among the San when researchers first visited in the early 1950s. This gift economy was called xaro (or hxaro). Valuable or desirable items and clothing were quickly given away as xaro gifts to prevent envy, preserving the delicate structure of small communities. Xaro partnerships could last a lifetime. The gift giver waited patiently for reciprocation, which would always eventually come. These gifts were carefully considered—metal knives or ostrich shell jewelry, for example—and the relationships they forged reduced jealousy, ensuring reciprocity and generosity. Trance dances were another key method of relieving social tension.

As seen with xaro, people invent ways to strengthen social bonds. In the San people’s case, avoiding envy was paramount. If someone produced something special and desirable, the person was eager to gift it away as xaro, preventing envy and securing her place in a chain of social esteem.

In the 1960s, American social psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted obedience experiments to measure how far people would go in obeying authority, even when it involved immoral or inhumane actions. Participants were instructed to administer what they believed were dangerous electric shocks to others (who were actually actors). The study concluded that under authority, humans could commit extreme cruelty.

Milgram (1974) described this as obedience or “agentic state”—the individual sees themselves as an instrument for another’s wishes, not responsible for their own actions. This mentality was apparent after WWII, as the Nazi regime’s capacity for cruelty was examined. Philosopher Hannah Arendt, in Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1963), describes how destruction operated through a bureaucratic machine, where hierarchical actors worked together to solve the mundane and ”banal” problem of genocide.

Bregman argues that Milgram’s experiments are often cited as evidence of human cruelty, but they actually show that people commit harmful acts only under persuasion, believing they are doing good—like helping researchers get results. Milgram found that direct orders led to defiance; harsh commands didn’t work.

Psychologists Alexander Haslam and Stephen Reicher (2012) replicated the experiment and noted that participants wanted to collaborate with the persuading researcher. They were even grateful to be part of the study. Participants retrospectively appreciated the chance to contribute to human understanding.

The Myth of Progress

According to Rutger Bregman, good intentions were also behind the infamous Stanford prison experiment in 1971 (Zimbardo 1972). The same applied to David Jaffe, who originally came up with the idea and inspired Professor Philip Zimbardo to carry it out. When Jaffe persuaded the prison experiment guards to be more aggressive, he referred to the noble goals of the study. In other words, violent behaviour was encouraged, and the participants genuinely wanted to help. We are, by nature, good natured, as the Dutch primatologist Frans de Waal (1996) has persuasively shown through his research on primate behaviour.

In the Kalahari, a small group of people still live a life that vaguely resembles the lifestyle of their hunter-gatherer ancestors. Many traditional skills remain well remembered, such as where to find edible plants and how to track animals. However, this is increasingly coloured by a shift toward a more Western way of life. They now drink black tea sweetened with sugar, and eat cornmeal with milk. All of this supplement a diet that was, until recently, sourced almost entirely from the natural environment.

A young hunter named Kxao introduced us to local plants. He showed us how a delicate leaf growing next to a bush belonged to a tuber plant rich in water. After digging it up, Kxao carefully refilled the hole and replanted the leaf so the tuber could continue living. He also cleaned up the mess left by a porcupine, which had rummaged through the ground in search of wild onion roots. Kxao tidied the area and replanted the fragile onion stems, explaining that the tubers are toxic to humans, but the young shoots are very nice and taste like spring onions. He also showed us plants that only kudu antelopes and other animals consume.

Humans have lived in the Kalahari continuously for about 100,000 years—perhaps even 200,000. It might seem like their way of life hasn’t changed, but this can be deceptive. They have coexisted with pastoralist neighbours since at least the 1950s and have interacted with other settlers for thousands of years. It would be wrong to say that their culture represents something ancient. The truth is that their lifestyle is just as susceptible to cultural changes—new ways of doing and thinking—as ours. What might appear ancient to us is actually their unique version of modern life style.

My research visit to the Kalahari called into me to question the legitimacy of modern industrialised civilisation and Western notions of “progress.” The San peoples once inhabited all of southern Africa, from Victoria Falls down to the Cape of Good Hope. Around 2,000 years ago, Khoekhoe pastoralists arrived from what is now northern Botswana and spread all the way to the southern tip of Africa. The Khoekhoe were quite similar to the San, but the main difference lay in their nomadic lifestyle and domesticated animals.

A few hundred years later, the first Bantu peoples arrived in the region. Compared to the smaller-framed San and Khoekhoe, the Bantus were giants. They originated from the Gulf of Guinea, in what is now Nigeria and Cameroon, where their migration began 3,500 years ago. However, it took thousands of years for their culture to reach southern Africa.

The Bantus had the advantage of technology. They were among the first farmers south of the Sahara, making pottery, keeping livestock, and crafting tools and weapons from iron. They also drank cow’s milk and had the genetic ability to digest lactose—unlike the hunter-gatherers of the south. These cultural adaptations and innovations enabled the Bantus to conquer much of sub-Saharan Africa. Today, Bantu languages are the most widely spoken on the African continent, with similar words found in Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa.

The Bantu expansion dealt a heavy blow to the San, who had managed to coexist with Khoekhoe settlers. Now, the San were forced to vacate areas suitable for farming and grazing. Conflict ensued between the San, Khoekhoe, and Bantu. The San were branded as cattle thieves for killing livestock that intruded their lands. However, the real death knell for the San came in the late 1600s when the first European settlers began to seriously colonise southern Africa. Europeans allied with both the Khoekhoe and the Bantus and dehumanised the San, hunting them for sport.

Europeans devised derogatory terms for their new neighbours, like the infamous “Hottentots”—a Dutch slur meaning stutterer, used for both San and Khoekhoe. Due to physical and linguistic similarities, settlers lumped them into a single group, Khoisan.

Initially, the San lived alongside European settlers, who sometimes attempted to teach them new ways. Farmers even gave them livestock, but the San, accustomed to sharing everything equally, slaughtered the animals and distributed the meat evenly. The concept of owning animals was foreign to them because ownership defied sharing. The Dutch East India Company (VOC) began a full-scale war in the early 1700s against the indigenous peoples of northern South Africa, who were resisting settler expansion.

The VOC was the biggest megacorporation of its time—the founder of the world’s first stock exchange—and held near-sovereign powers: it could wage war, imprison and execute suspects, mint money, and establish colonies. By the end of the 18th century, the VOC authorized privately formed commando units to evict and, at times, kill any Khoisan they found. In 1792, they began paying bounties for captured Khoisan.

By the early 1800s, the Khoisan genocide in what is now the Cape Province and southern Namibia was nearly complete. In northeastern South Africa and present-day Lesotho, the Khoisan sought refuge. But in 1830, Dutch settlers reached these regions, kidnapped Khoisan children, and killed their parents. The seasonal animals that had sustained them for hundreds of thousands of years were hunted to extinction in the Drakensberg mountains, leaving the San starving.

Those who remained resorted to cattle theft, which was often punished by death. Between 1845 and 1872, colonial police forces ruthlessly hunted and killed all San they could find. The last San chief, Soai, was brutally murdered by members of the Sotho, a Bantu-speaking group, who disemboweled him on the banks of the Orange River in 1872. All San men were killed; women and children were marched to Leribe, where their descendants lived into the 20th century. The Khoisan who survived were forced to assimilate.

As late as 1870, only ten percent of Africa was under European control. German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck convened the Berlin Conference in 1884–1885, bringing together leaders from Europe, Russia, the Ottoman Empire, and the United States. Fourteen non-African nations were represented. A small group of white men determined the future of Africa and its people.

The Berlin Conference is often regarded as the formalisation of Africa’s colonisation. Its general act stated that any nation that claimed a portion of the African coast also gained the interior lands beyond it—without needing consent from local populations. King Leopold II of Belgium was granted control over what he dubbed the Congo Free State, initiating one of the bloodiest resource extractions in history. Over the next decade, around four million Congolese were brutally killed. The actual death toll might be higher; the Congolese population fell from 20–30 million to just eight million.

The partitioning of Africa spurred by the conference paved the way for Western incursion into the continent’s interior, ignoring tribal and ethnic boundaries. Territories were politely divided over a cup of hot tea or a glass of chilled gin. In 1884, only a tenth of Africa was under European control. By 1914, only a tenth remained under African rule. Only Ethiopia and Liberia remained independent.

Belgium was not the only nation to violently subjugate its new territories. The 20th century’s first ethnic cleansing took place in German-controlled Namibia, in an event referred as the Herero and Nama Genocide. The Herero (Bantu) and Nama (Khoekhoe) rebelled against their German overlords. With determination, organisation, and modern weapons, the Germans systematically exterminated around 100,000 Herero and 10,000 Nama by driving them into the Kalahari desert, away from drinkable water. By 1905, the remaining locals were imprisoned in the first German concentration camp on Haifischinsel (Shark Island), a peninsula off Lüderitz, Namibia. The camp was closed in 1907 after 1,000–3,000 people had died. By then, the last Southern African hunter-gatherers lived only in the Kalahari Desert.

Shark Island may have hosted the first German concentration camp—but it was not the last. Just over a decade later, in the summer of 1918, the Germans built their next concentration camps in Finland.

Originally published in 21 March 2025 on Substack: https://substack.com/home/post/p-159540266


Resources:

Arendt, H. (1963). Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. Viking Press. LINK

Bregman, R. (2020). Humankind: A Hopeful History. Bloomsbury. LINK

de Waal, F. B. M. (1996). Good natured: The origins of right and wrong in humans and other animals. Harvard University Press. LINK

Haslam, S. A., & Reicher, S. D. (2012). Contesting the nature of conformity: What Milgram and Zimbardo’s studies really show. PLoS Biology, 10(11), e1001426. LINK

Ijäs, M. (2017). Fragments of the Hunt: Persistence Hunting, Tracking and Prehistoric Art. Helsinki: Aalto University. LINK

Marshall Thomas, E. (2006). The Old Way: A Story of the First People. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. LINK

Milgram, S. (1974). Obedience to authority: An experimental view. Tavistock, London. LINK

Zimbardo, P. G. (1972). Stanford Prison Experiment: A Simulation Study of the Psychology of Imprisonment. LINK

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – Part 5.

Can Money Buy Happiness?

Originally published in 17 March 2025 on Substack: https://substack.com/home/post/p-159249876

I traveled to the Kalahari Desert in northeastern Namibia, to the Nyae Nyae Conservancy on the border of Botswana, in November 2014 for two reasons. First, to collect ethnographic data for my doctoral dissertation. Second, to produce the accompanying documentary film The Origins (Ijäs & Kaunismaa 2018). My wife Maija and I lived in a tent on the roof of our 4WD vehicle, and sometimes we slept under the stars alongside local hunters, with nothing but our sleeping bags for shelter. Maija sang Brahms’ lullaby for us, and we explained to the hunters what angels were.

I had imagined (and hoped) that the Kalahari hunter-gatherers would be quite satisfied with their life, far from the psychological trappings of civilisation. This romanticised Rousseauian view had formed through reading books and research papers about the San people, especially since the Marshall family began visiting them in the 1950s. The San culture is often cited as one of the most thoroughly studied human groups in the world. There’s even a joke that every tribe has at least one white anthropologist. It was my time to be that guy.

Overall, the San do appear content with their lives, but they too have grievances and deep sources of dissatisfaction. They often wish for more wild animals to support their hunting culture. To compensate for the scarcity of game, they acquired a few goats and chickens in the spring of 2018. They also regularly bought milk from a nearby village outside the conservation area, where cattle farming is permitted. They were concerned about cattle herders crossing into their land from Botswana.

The San are happy to appear in traditional leather attire when cameras are rolling, but their culture has been changing quickly since the 1950s, as in everywhere. In fact, the group I studied had returned to a hunting culture only in the 1990s, partly as a response to the negative effects of Western influence, such as alcoholism and social challenges. Yet, thanks to Western aid, the Nyae Nyae Conservancy remains a viable area for groups that still practice hunting and gathering, at least in part.

For the purposes of this ongoing Substack series, Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction, it is important that even the last indigenous peoples living in hunting cultures are not fully satisfied with their circumstances. They wish for more liberties, better education, and a more varied diet. One of our guides dreamed of working in the film industry. This is understandable as many of their visitors carry film equipment.

As I’ve previously noted, the deep profound dissatisfaction exists even among Kalahari hunter-gatherers. But the question is, do these hunter-gatherers want something they don’t have simply because of an internal dissatisfaction, or because they have glimpsed Western wealth and been enchanted by the promise of material satisfaction? The answer is likely a bit of both, because as long as our species Homo sapiens has existed, our actions have been marked by constant change, curiosity, and exploration.

Even when human cultures have settled in various parts of the world for extended periods, a closer look reveals that their cultures have been in constant dynamic motion. Their social structures, customs, art, food, clothing, tools, religions, and music have all evolved over time. Some indigenous peoples have changed their societal organisation, religions, property rights, and names with the seasons. Because of this dynamism, idealising indigenous cultures as somehow different than ours is a romanticised view. Seeing a foreign culture as superior is just the flip side of seeing it as inferior. Therefore, I try to be very cautious with such perspectives.

Swedish linguist, author and film maker Helena Norberg-Hodge is the founder and director of Local Futures, a non-profit dedicated to revitalising cultural and biological diversity and strengthening local communities and economies worldwide. In her book Ancient Futures (1991), she discusses cultural changes in Ladakh, a remote region in northern India bordering Pakistan and China. While politically part of India, culturally it is closer to Tibet. Ladakh remained largely isolated until 1962, when the first road was built over high mountain passes. In 1975, the Indian government opened Ladakh to tourism and Western development. Norberg-Hodge was one of the first Westerners to visit.

Norberg-Hodge describes Ladakh as a near paradise of social and ecological well-being that rapidly collapsed under external economic pressures. In the capital Leh, then with about 5,000 residents, cows were the main traffic hazard, and the air was crystal clear. Barley fields and farmhouses surrounded the city. Over the next 20 years, Norberg-Hodge witnessed Leh’s transformation. Streets filled with traffic and diesel fumes polluted the air. Soulless concrete housing projects sprawled into the distance. Water became undrinkable. Increased economic pressure led to unemployment and competition, sparking conflict between communities. Many changes were psychological.

On Norberg-Hodge’s first visit, all local houses in Ladakh were three-storied and beautifully painted. When she asked a young man to show her the poorest house in the village, he was puzzled—they had no concept of wealth inequality. Eight years later, that same man lamented their poverty, having seen images in the media of Westerners with fast cars and wealth. Suddenly, from his perspective, Ladakhi culture had morphed into primitive and poor.

Crime, depression, and suicide were rare in 1970s Ladakh. But in a short time, Western competition culture took root, and suicides became more common, even among schoolchildren. Until the 1970s, success and failure were communal experiences tied to tangible aspects of life like farming and family. Western consumer culture and market economy brought its hamster wheel to Ladakh, dividing people into winners and losers and turning personal success into everyone’s individual mission, and purpose of life.

Extreme individualism and the glorification of wealth have become so central to Western lifestyle that they seem quite natural or irrefutable. In the Western competitive mindset, happiness is always just around the corner, and we spend our lives trying to reach it. We imagine we need to succeed, and that success will lead us to more wealth. Financial security seems to be the ultimate state of happiness, but money itself doesn’t bring happiness. Money is a medium of exchange, based on trust, and it has value only because we agree it does. It is a means to an end, not an end in itself. Yet we see it as both, and that duality is worth exploring.

One might think that rich people would be happy in a world where wealth is the ultimate goal. But paradoxically, as they try to escape their own inner dissatisfaction, the world’s wealthiest people use the alcoholic drinks as the society’s poorest and most desperate. Studies show money does not bring happiness—but neither does poverty.

Poverty brings depression, but it is not only the lack of money that brings depression, it is the lack of freedom, which poverty brings along. Widespread depression among modern humans is largely due to lack of control over one’s circumstances. Depression is more common in poverty, where people feel trapped and unable to improve their circumstances. Wealth allows freer decision-making without worrying about consequences. Wealth also enables better planning for the future. Wealthy people can enrol to universities, and spend several years studying. The poor do not have this luxury. But even the rich suffer from the same existential emptiness and dissatisfaction. They seek meaning in luxury, exclusive holidays, fancy dinners, bespoke clothes, cars, watches—yet something is always missing. The inner void remains.

Did ancient hunter-gatherers have similar problems? Was their life freer in this sense? We might imagine they were fully capable of surviving in their environment, as long as they could find food, build shelter, and secure basic conditions for their family and offspring. After that, things were probably pretty good.

Ancient hunter-gatherers had no mortgages, insurance bills, electricity bills, credit card debt, or student loans. No college funds or extracurricular expenses for their children. Today, many people are up to their ears in debt. This abstract dependency on lenders causes various forms of undefined complicated anxiety. Humans have a natural need for at least some freedom and control over their lives; otherwise, they fall into despair. The Western debt-based system of dependency on power structures fosters further dissatisfaction.

Has our civilised Western lifestyle become a trap? Could we do something about it? Could we escape somewhere to be free? David Graeber and archaeologist David Wengrow (2021) remind us that in colonial North and South America, captured indigenous people often chose to return to their own communities rather than remain in ”civilisation”. The same applied to children captured by indigenous groups, who often preferred to remain with their indigenous captors. The main reasons might have been the intense social bonds among indigenous people: care, love, and above all, happiness—qualities impossible to replicate upon returning to civilisation. Graeber and Wengrow remind us that the concept of safety takes many forms. It’s one thing to know you statistically have a lower chance of being shot by an arrow. It’s another to know that around you are surrounded by who deeply care if that were to happen.

Depression has been found to be more common in impoverished conditions (Brown & Harris 1978). However, freedom or money does not ultimately save us from dissatisfaction. Andrew T. Jebb (2018), a researcher at Purdue University in Indiana, USA, studied with his colleagues whether money brings happiness. The study shows that money brings happiness up to a certain point, but not beyond a certain threshold. In Western Europe and here in Scandinavia, this threshold is around 50,000–100,000 euros in annual income, which is considerably higher than the average income. According to 2021 tax data, only 10.2% of the population reached this magical happiness threshold here in Finland, and 2% of the population surpassed this threshold. In other words, 87.8% of the population remained below that threshold. The situation is even more challenging because about 13% of the population with low incomes (below 60% of median income). The low-income threshold for a single-person household in 2021 was approximately 16,200 euros per year. No wonder we are not satisfied.

This post is the fifth part of my ongoing Substack series, Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction, exploring the roots of human dissatisfaction, the paradox of progress, and the question of whether a meaningful life is possible in a world designed for endless desire.

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Resources:

Brown, G. W., & Harris, T. (1978). Social Origins of Depression: A Study of Psychiatric Disorder in Women. Tavistock: London. LINK

Graeber, David & Wengrow, David. (2021). The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity. London: Allen Lane. LINK

Ijäs, M. R. (2020). Fragments of the hunt: Persistence hunting approach to rock art. Hunter Gatherer Research, 6(3–4). LINK

Ijäs, M. (2017). Fragments of the Hunt: Persistence Hunting, Tracking and Prehistoric Art. Helsinki: Aalto University. LINK

Ijäs, M. & Kaunismaa, M. (2018). The Origins: Fragments of the Hunt. Documentary Film. LINK

Jebb, A.T., Tay, L., Diener, E., & Oishi, S. (2018). Happiness, income satiation and turning points around the world. Nature Human Behaviour. LINK

Norberg-Hodge, Helena (1991). Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books. LINK

Zen and the Art of Dissatisfaction – Part 4.

The Hairless Ape

Originally published in 15 February 2025 on Substack https://substack.com/home/post/p-158762719

Let’s continue with the evolution of our own species. Around six million years ago, a group of apes found themselves living in a shrinking rainforest. Scientifically, these creatures belonged to the family known as great apes, or Hominidae, which today still includes humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutangs. These apes, who had evolved to live primarily on fruit and sought refuge from predators by climbing trees, eventually found their environment transforming into much dryer woodland savanna.

Forced to adapt, they began gathering new types of food, such as tubers and roots, rather than the fruits they once relied on. This shift required them to cover greater distances on the ground and use digging sticks to extract underground food sources. Identifying edible roots was no simple task—it demanded a new level of intelligence, as the only visible clues were the stems and leaves above ground.

Millions of years passed and these once rainforest-dwelling primates evolved into master survivors of the African savanna, where acquiring food required ingenuity and adaptability. About four million years after their exodus from the rainforest, they had already become almost entirely hairless, dark-skinned, and fully bipedal members of the genus Homo. The only significant body hair remained on the top of their heads, shielding them from the sun’s harsh rays.

Approximately two million years ago, a new species emerged—Homo erectus, the ”upright human.” Their survival and success on the West African savanna was unparalleled. Homo erectus was the first human species to resemble us in many ways. They stood between 145-185 cm tall and weighed between 40-70 kg. Unlike their ape ancestors, there was little size difference between males and females. Their near-complete hairlessness likely stemmed from four main reasons:

  1. Warmer nights meant body hair was no longer essential for insulation.

  2. The activation of the melanocortin-1 receptor darkened their skin, providing protection from harmful ultraviolet rays, eliminating the need for fur as a shield against sunburn.

  3. Most importantly, they developed an exceptional ability to sweat. Humans possess more sweat glands than any other animal, making perspiration a critical adaptation for savanna life.

  4. Lastly, hairlessness may have helped them avoid lice, fleas, and other parasites that plagued their hairy primate relatives.

According to Harvard professor Richard Wrangham (2009), Homo erectus used fire to cook food, keep warm at night, and ward off predators. This could partly explain their hairlessness and their more efficient and smaller digestive system compared to their ancestors. Even if they were not yet cooking food with fire, they were certainly already using external methods such as grinding, grating, chopping, pounding, and mashing their food with tools. Wrangham refers to Homo erectus as ”the cooking ape.”

Homo erectus was also the first of our ancestors to regularly eat meat. While it is uncertain how they acquired it, all evidence suggests they were either hunters or systematic scavengers. Even today, African hunter-gatherers observe the movements of vultures to locate their next meal (Liebenberg 2013). When vultures fly in a group toward a particular direction, they are heading for a carcass. If they are circling over a specific spot, the kill has already been found. In such cases, it is a race against time—those who arrive first get the best parts. Lions, for instance, only eat their fill before abandoning a carcass, making it possible for bold and hungry scavengers to drive them away with loud noise. The fortunate ones are rewarded with nutrient-rich bone marrow and sometimes even meat. Hyenas, however, are much more efficient and faster scavengers, arriving at kills within 30 minutes and leaving nothing behind. This urgency may have played a role in shaping humans’ long-distance running abilities—only the fastest could reach a carcass before the hyenas.

Systematic scavenging is unpredictable since it depends on the hunting success of other predators. Even when a carcass is available, it requires an alert scavenger, who happen to be nearby. Yet, Homo erectus consumed meat regularly, leading many researchers to conclude that they were also active hunters. However, there is no surviving evidence of effective hunting weapons from their time. They crafted simple stone tools suited for cutting, slicing, and pounding, along with more refined tools that could function as knives or scrapers. It is likely they also created tools from biodegradable materials such as wood, bark, or grass, which have not survived to the present day.

Hunting without weapons

The question is: if Homo erectus lacked sophisticated hunting weapons, how did they obtain meat?

Nearly all significant differences between Homo erectus and modern chimpanzees relate to locomotion. While chimpanzees still spend most of their time climbing trees, with long arms, short legs, and prehensile toes suited for an arboreal lifestyle, Homo erectus had traded these adaptations for something else entirely.

David Carrier (1984), Dennis Bramble (Bramble & Carrier, 1983), and my friend and supporter, Harvard professor Daniel E. Lieberman (2013), have proposed that Homo erectus was an endurance runner, shaped by natural selection for persistence hunting. This hypothesis explains many of their unique physical traits, particularly those related to energy efficiency, skeletal structure, balance, and thermoregulation. Unlike other apes, human feet generate force with minimal energy expenditure. The Achilles tendon, crucial for running, is disproportionately large in humans and first appears in Homo erectus. Their foot arch and larger joint surfaces resemble those of modern humans, suggesting greater endurance and stress tolerance. Additionally, larger gluteal muscles and the nuchal ligament (which stabilises the head) allowed for better balance. Without the nuchal ligament, a runners head would wobble uncontrollably—similar to how a pig’s head bobs when it runs.

Homo erectus also had a leaner body optimised for heat dissipation, with sweating and hairlessness playing major roles in preventing overheating. More efficient cerebral blood circulation helped cool the brain while running under the African sun.

Lieberman and his colleagues have demonstrated that, given the right conditions, humans can outrun nearly any animal over long distances. Persistence hunting involves selecting a large, easily exhausted prey—such as an antelope or a giraffe—and chasing it at a steady pace. Quadrupedal animals must synchronise their breathing with their stride because their internal organs bounce with each step. This means they must periodically stop to pant and cool down. In contrast, a bipedal runner like Homo erectus could breathe independently of their stride. Moreover, furry quadrupeds expose much of their body to the sun, accelerating heat buildup. For Homo erectus, only the scalp and shoulders were directly exposed to sunlight.

As recently as the 1990s, some hunter-gatherer groups in Botswana still practiced persistence hunting, proving it to be an effective way to secure large amounts of meat. Only when big game became scarce did humans abandon this ancient method, which had once made all of us endurance runners.


Resources:

Bramble, D. M., & Carrier, D. R. (1983). Running and breathing in mammals. Science, 219, 251–256.

Carrier, D. R. (1984). The energetic paradox of human running and hominid evolution. Current Anthropology, 25, 483–495.

Ijäs, M. R. (2020). Fragments of the hunt: Persistence hunting approach to rock art. Hunter Gatherer Research, 6(3–4).

Ijäs, M. (2017). Fragments of the Hunt: Persistence Hunting, Tracking and Prehistoric Art. Helsinki: Aalto University.

Liebenberg, L. (2013). The origin of science. Cape Town: CyberTracker.

Lieberman, D. E. (2013). The Story of the Human Body: Evolution, Health, and Disease. New York: Pantheon Books.

Wrangham, R. (2009). Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human. London: Profile Books.