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Our Primate Social Matrix
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Adrian, a person very mindful of the social matrix, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Card URL: http://www.zaporacle.com/card/our-primate-social-matrix-2/
WATCH THIS CARD AS A VIDEO

"Chimpanzees are natural politicians driven by a desire for power."
National Geographic documentary on primate behavior

What a piece of work is a man! how noble in reason!
how infinite in faculty! in form and moving how
express and admirable! in action how like an angel!
in apprehension how like a god! the beauty of the
world! the paragon of animals! And yet, to me,
what is this quintessence of dust?
Hamlet, Shakespeare

We are primates, and like all primates and other social animals, we are driven by a will to rise in a social hierarchy and secure our position. For example, a male adolescent rhesus monkey will leave its troop and travel to another troop of rhesus monkeys for a chance to breed with more genetically diverse females. In the new troop, the young monkey has no social ranking, and if he is accepted, he will start at the very bottom, like the new kid on the block. Before he approaches the new troop, the young monkey will study them from a distance for a few days, observing their social structure and rankings. The troop hierarchy is so exact that monkey #27 can lord it over monkey #28, just as monkey #26 can lord it over monkey # 27. Higher-ranked monkeys gain valuable resources — greater chances for sex, food, and offers of grooming and other services from lower-ranked monkeys who will tend to be social climbers and court favor with the elite. The parallels to the human social matrix are as obvious as they are awkward to acknowledge.

If we are honest with ourselves, we know that we are profoundly motivated by the social matrix. One of the most absurd self-deceptions is the commonly heard statement, "I don't care what other people think." This proclamation is inevitably made to other people to influence how they think about the speaker. Unless we are profoundly autistic, or in a coma or some other extreme state, we care very much what other people think of us and how they rank us.

Accepting the fact that we are powerfully influenced by the social matrix can help us from being ruled by it. A central theme of the I Ching is the need to achieve inner independence. Inner independence may not be a goal that we reach absolutely and permanently, but is more like a guiding star helping us navigate through the social matrix's potent and distorting influences. We are social mammals, so complete and absolute inner independence is extremely rare and not necessarily desirable. A creative interdependence with others that enhances individuality is an attainable goal. The common fate, however, is to be ruled by the social matrix, and we see utterly it dominate people everywhere. In our society, few people ever recover from high school. Many adults, decades after high school, are still desperately trying to compete in various sex and power games, mesmerized by the celebrity parade, driven to be the alpha, or fatalistically convinced that they will always be the beta trodden on by the more popular primates.

The way to deal with the primate social matrix is neither to pretend we are free of its influence nor to submit to it and spend our days obsessed with our ranking and frantically trying to rise in the hierarchy. Instead, we need vigilant awareness of how influenced we are by the vast power of the social matrix. We need to observe ourselves and others like compassionate primatologists fascinated with the complexity of the social process, its myriad transactions and ever shifting equilibria.

Mindful observation gives us a greater degree of free will and a greater ability to resist the tugging strings of that over-caffeinated puppet master, the social matrix.
That was all very general on the social matrix, so here are some very relevant links:
Lessons for an Entity Incarnating as a Social Mammal
How Others See You
Other Intentions — What are my/your Intentions toward the Other
Confessions of a Self Aware Starship
The Psyche as an Oscillating Entity in Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure (I know that's a very obscure sounding title, but it is a brief paper that has everything to do with being dominated by the social matrix).