Built to last.
Dec 9th 2008NiaLLLarkinUncategorized
I’ve been thinking about the way things change. And the way they stay the same.
I’ve been thinking about the way we think of their physical body as a fairly permanent structure, while we also know that our bodies are undergoing constant renewal. As they say there’s a whole new you every 7 years. But the new you is easily recognizable to almost anyone who knew the old you.
Which means that we ought to see ourselves not as an immutable, permanent structure, but more like a standing wave.
Kinda like this one on the Eisbach river running through Munich’s Englishergarten.
But what is true for the individual. Is true for society and its structures and organisations. Multi-national corporations have emerged and remained highly recognisable as structures and entities over long periods of time.

The same is true of social, political and legal systems. Even though all the people that made up these social institutions have been replaced over and over again the system, like a standing wave has kept its essential recognisable character.
Institutions appear permanent and solidly fixed. But what we are actually seeing is a robust standing wave. Ever changing. Robust and dynamic. Most of the time. But also predictably susceptible to unexpected collapses. Permanent, robust, ever-present institutions are not as solid a rock but as collapsable as a wave.

I suppose, this is what Heraclitus was getting at when he said “All is flux” “Everything flows, nothing stands still.”

I also like to think that the tradition of periodically rebuilding the Ise Shinto Shrines in Japan touches on this view of permanence. The Ise Shrine is a wooden structure that has existed for thousands of years because it is periodically dismantled and rebuilt in a meticulous manner. Making the Shrine forever new and forever ancient. The Shrine stands as a demonstration and testament to the fact that lasting permanence can be supported on the back of a standing wave of social and cultural traditions.
So maybe, the next time we are thinking of building and maintaining something robust and long-lasting. Maybe we should consider adopting a standing wave as a metaphor. Instead of a rock.
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Marie on 09 Dec 2008 at 3:53 pm #
Great post Niall. Really inspiring and thought provoking. :)