Monday, September 7, 2009

The Detrimental Power of Excessive Pride

For centuries, we as humans have considered the consequences of being over-confident. For the Greeks, hubris brought downfall and suffering. In Sophocles’ Antigone, an extremely self-centered king named Creon causes the suicide three people, two of whom were his wife and his son. It is only after he has been reduced to a shadow of his former self that Creon realizes his inherent flaw of hubris.
I believe that it is in human nature to be greedy, to want to procure the most material that ensures appeasement and survival. This greed, in turn, leads to a common feeling of pride and invincibility in those who have so much that their values become convoluted into a twisted mess of nonsense. That is not to say that wealth and power lead automatically to egoism; it is just that those with the most power and wealth seem to be more self-centered than those with less. I also would not say that pride leads to suffering and pain. One must possess a certain amount of pride to function in a life filled with hardship and adversity. But excessive pride can cloud one’s vision and warp the mind to become amoral and lowly.
Human life in general would be better if some weren’t so snobby, but there are countless examples of the rich and famous donating billions of dollars to charity. It is these people that I tend to pay attention too, not those who keep most for themselves and seem not to care at all about the world around them. I would say that the chorus’s statement at the end of the play is correct in that for those who are too self-centered, it takes a series of detrimental events to bring them back to earth. Thus, they are taught that humility is a valuable trait to have in a world in which anyone can fall. Does this happen too often though? The ideal would be for it not to happen at all.
One of the areas in which pride leads to failure is the workplace. There are countless people who complain that they have to go to work everyday with others who cannot take any criticism and thus are incapable of leading or maintaining the favor of their more humble co-workers. If these proud people could just realize that others may have better ideas, then a significantly greater amount of work would get done on account of less arguing. In this sense, it is clear that inordinate amounts of pride are detrimental to the functioning of an individual, especially a worker. It may even take a firing or a meeting held to call out this individual before he or she realizes that over-confidence is a significant personal problem. Nearly once a week I hear about a co-worker that my parents disapprove of because of rash decision making and failure to hear others’ ideas.
All in all, I think the world would become a more peaceful, moral place if all humans realized their place within the order, thus downplaying feelings of invincibility or all-encompassing power. In our human society as it is, there are self-centered individuals who realize their personality flaws in time to make a significant difference. It is these people who are promising. But, as long as greed and materialism persist in humanity, excessive pride will continue.

1 comment:

  1. Chris, I like the way you look at the subject of pride from many angles, including greed, the desire for power, the inability to listed to others, and the failure to understand one's place in the order of things. In all, you provide a thoughtful, well rounded look at the topic. Thanks. (remember to include word count)

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