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Living Myth

Episode 409 - The Law of the Fish vs. The Rule of Law

Living Myth

Michael Meade

Transformation, Philosophy, Society & Culture, Genius, Education, Myth, Soul, Culture

4.9944 Ratings

🗓️ 13 November 2024

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Michael Meade turns to an ancient myth from India to show how elections can have such dire consequences that the rule of law becomes replaced with the “law of the fishes.” In the great oceans the big fish endlessly devour the little fish and the same drama is often replicated in the realm of culture, where every pond has its big fish and the small fry continually become fodder for the big shots. The law of the fishes was used by ancient people to describe periods of cultural disorder when there is no genuine leader, but only those seeking to wield power.

 

Raw power lacks morals, lacks principles and only has interests. And the interests of those who are seduced by power become endless longings for more wealth, more personal fame and more dominance. When those elected to positions of authority are committed to the idea that there are only winners and losers, the big fish not only make all the rules, they also break the rules and do so for personal gain at the expense of everyone else. It is not simply that an excess of power corrupts, but that the desire for great power attracts those who are most corruptible.

 

The chaos that ensues from the lack of genuine leadership leads to increasing divisions amongst people and to the loss of norms that otherwise would protect common folk. If leaders are dishonest, unjust and not dedicated to serving the people as a whole, if they are too narcissistic and power driven, the society will fall into the realm of the fishes. Under the law of the fishes, as governing falls into the hands of a powerful few the rich become richer and the poor become poorer. Society becomes more lawless, people turn against each other and minority communities live at the mercy of those who hold power, but do not know what to use it for.

 

In the ancient story, as at this troubled time on Earth, everything hangs in an uncertain balance as humanity is required to choose between the chaos of the “survival of the fittest” and the greater sense of awakening to the force of meaning and truth and the presence of an underlying unity of life. In the midst of fear and division people can learn to reconnect to the origins of life, which mysteriously leads to becoming interconnected with all other levels of life and to being reconnected to life's inner power to renew itself. The drama of the world turns out to have more than one level of understanding, so that at opportune times, a small change can lead to a great effect and can even turn everything around.

 

Thank you for listening to and supporting Living Myth. You can hear Michael Meade live by joining him for two free online events: “Arts and Practices: Antidotes to Overwhelm, Sources of Resiliency” on Thursday, November 21 and “Living Authentically in Uncertain Times” on Thursday, December 5. 

 

Register and learn more at mosaicvoices.org/events. 

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Living Myth podcast with Michael Mead, where this shifting, changing world is looked at from a mythic perspective.

0:18.2

On this episode, Mead turns to an ancient myth from India to show how elections can

0:24.5

have such dire consequences that the rule of law becomes replaced with the law of the fishes.

0:32.2

In the great oceans, the big fish endlessly devour the little fish, and the same drama is often replicated

0:38.9

in the realm of culture, where every pond has its big fish, and the small fry continually

0:45.6

become fodder for the big shots. The law of the fishes was used by ancient people to

0:51.6

describe periods of cultural disorder when there is no genuine

0:56.1

leader, but only those seeking to wield power.

1:00.9

In the ancient story, as at this troubled time on earth, everything hangs in an uncertain

1:07.2

balance as humanity is required to choose between the chaos of the survival of the fittest

1:13.6

and the greater sense of awakening to the beauty is truth and truth is beauty.

1:47.8

That's all you know and all you need to know.

1:55.7

To me, there's great truth in that. There's beauty in it too. Yet, there are other energies and other forces in this world that are compelling to people, and one of them is power.

2:03.0

And it turns out that the reckless pursuit of power can pull and drive people

2:09.3

further and further away from beauty and truth.

2:15.1

And of course I'm saying this because of the conditions in the world right now,

2:20.4

because I'm still in the aftermath of the recent election. That was a culmination of the

2:26.5

process of giving undue and unhealthy amounts of power to leaders who have clearly been

2:33.8

seduced by the intrigue of power, and as has often

2:39.1

been the case at the cost of beauty, at the cost of truth, and at the cost of unity amongst people.

2:48.5

It is often said that power corrupts, but it is more true that power attracts

2:55.4

those who are most corruptible. Those who are more balanced, more humane, and more sane are

...

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