"Page0091" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bloom Howard - The Lucifer Principle (htm))12 Something was running rampant through his psyche, tormenting this man. But it wasn't a physical disease in the standard sense of the term. The tormentor was a set of self-destruct processes that wait within us for their day of use. In the case of the man with the cancer phobia, the day of use had arrived, in part, because his career as a successful executive had come to a sudden halt a year earlier when the company for which he'd been working shut down. Wynne-Edwards has demonstrated that red grouse on the moors of Scotland compete with each other at the beginning of the season for territory. The winners end up comfortably fed and mated. But the losers usually die of predation or disease. The deaths, says Wynn Edwards, are "the after-effects of social exclusion."29 In the body, each cell comes equipped with a mechanism for what scientists call "programmed cell death," "an intrinsic cell suicide program" researchers at University College in London say must be actively restrained from going into action by positive feedback indicating the cell is necessary to the larger organism.30 When a hospital patient is forced to spend months in bed, seldom using his legs, many of the legs' constituent cells, sensing that they are no longer needed, dwindle to mere shadows of their former selves. Others simply disappear.31 When a human spends weeks or months in space, his or her heart no longer has to labor mightily, pumping blood upward in defiance of gravity's force. The heart shrinks dramatically32 as the cells that no longer deem themselves of value scale down to an existence just one step removed from death. The individual is a cell in the social superorganism. When he feels he is no longer necessary to the larger group, he, too, begins to wither away. As we'll see more clearly a few chapters down the road, the demons driving the ad exec mad were the circuits of social disposal, "intrinsic suicide programs" similar to those that remove cells whose lives are no longer needed by the larger social beast. If our instincts 12 Something was running rampant through his psyche, tormenting this man. But it wasn't a physical disease in the standard sense of the term. The tormentor was a set of self-destruct processes that wait within us for their day of use. In the case of the man with the cancer phobia, the day of use had arrived, in part, because his career as a successful executive had come to a sudden halt a year earlier when the company for which he'd been working shut down. Wynne-Edwards has demonstrated that red grouse on the moors of Scotland compete with each other at the beginning of the season for territory. The winners end up comfortably fed and mated. But the losers usually die of predation or disease. The deaths, says Wynn Edwards, are "the after-effects of social exclusion."29 In the body, each cell comes equipped with a mechanism for what scientists call "programmed cell death," "an intrinsic cell suicide program" researchers at University College in London say must be actively restrained from going into action by positive feedback indicating the cell is necessary to the larger organism.30 When a hospital patient is forced to spend months in bed, seldom using his legs, many of the legs' constituent cells, sensing that they are no longer needed, dwindle to mere shadows of their former selves. Others simply disappear.31 When a human spends weeks or months in space, his or her heart no longer has to labor mightily, pumping blood upward in defiance of gravity's force. The heart shrinks dramatically32 as the cells that no longer deem themselves of value scale down to an existence just one step removed from death. The individual is a cell in the social superorganism. When he feels he is no longer necessary to the larger group, he, too, begins to wither away. As we'll see more clearly a few chapters down the road, the demons driving the ad exec mad were the circuits of social disposal, "intrinsic suicide programs" similar to those that remove cells whose lives are no longer needed by the larger social beast. If our instincts |
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