Studies show that school
performance levels are
significantly influenced
by the type of home
people come from.
Children from more
affluent homes, whose
parents are very
interested in their
learning abilities, and
where there are
plentiful books and a
place to study, are more
likely to do well than
those from lower-income
groups, among whom these
aspects cannot be
available.1
Kardec commented that it
can happen that the
Spirit retains the
psychic traits of
previous existences in
its new existences, but
if the social position
is not the same, it can
undergo enormous
transformations.
According to him, if
he becomes a slave from
a master, his
inclinations will be
very different, and you
would have difficulty
recognizing him. The
Spirit being the same,
in the different
incarnations, its
manifestations may have,
from one to another,
certain similarities.
These, however, will be
modified by the customs
of the new position.2
In the Spiritist
Magazine, after
narrating the suicide of
a young lady who had
killed herself out of
despair at not being
able to feed her
children, Kardec
reproduces the thoughts
of the Spirit
Lamennais: This
unfortunate woman is one
of the victims of your
world, your laws, and
your society. God judges
souls, but He also
judges times and
circumstances; He judges
things forced and
despair; He judges the
background and not the
form. And I dare say:
this unfortunate woman
died not out of crime,
but out of modesty, out
of fear of shame. It is
that where human justice
is inexorable, it judges
and condemns material
facts, divine justice
finds the depths of the
heart and the state of
consciousness [...]3
c) Circumstances and
opportunities:
opportunities are not
the same for everyone.
Many people admit that
their success in life
has a lot to do with
events that occurred in
which they played no
part.
Also here, someone will
comment that the
easiness and
difficulties we
encounter in life have
to do with our
reincarnation past,
therefore, it is related
to issues involving
merit or demerit. Here
too, this is only
partially correct.
Kardec clearly defined
that many accidents in
the course of life are
not previously
predicted: fatality
only consists of these
two hours, those in
which you must appear
and disappear in this
world. 4Thus,
even considering each
person's reincarnation
history and the role of
disembodied Spirits in
life's events,
unpredictability is
something that cannot be
ignored.
A study showed that
teenagers performed 10%
worse on school tests
the week a homicide
occurred in their
neighborhood. 5How
many times young people
and adults are harmed in
competitions, or job
interviews, due to an
unforeseen illness, or
family events, which
generate a strong mental
state of disturbance!
Fifth
There is reason to doubt
that even a perfectly
realized meritocracy (if
that were possible) is
the path to a just
society. The
meritocratic ideal is
related to mobility, not
equality. It doesn't say
there are big gaps
between rich and poor.
What matters for
meritocracy is that
everyone has an equal
opportunity to climb the
ladder of success; there
is nothing to say about
what the distance
between the stairs
should be. The
meritocratic ideal is
not a remedy for
inequality; it is a
justification for
inequality, as it
legitimizes the generous
rewards that the market
grants to winners and
the meager payments it
offers to workers
without a university
degree. In 2014, CEOs of
large American companies
received three hundred
times more than the
average worker.6
The most tragic
indication of this,
according to Michael
Sandel, is the increase
in “deaths of despair”.
The term was coined by
two economists from
Princeton University
(USA), to refer to
self-inflicted deaths:
suicide, treatment
abandonment, drug
overdose, liver disease
related to alcoholism.
It is believed that
“deaths of despair”
account for the drop in
life expectancy in North
America between 2014 and
2017, a surprising fact,
because throughout the
twentieth century life
expectancy increased
progressively. “Death of
despair” is typically
seen in middle-aged men
without a college
degree; the main victims
of globalization and the
tyranny of merit.7
Kardec recognizes
that it is the strongest
who make the laws and
that they did it for
themselves8,
but that divine justice
wants everyone to
participate in the good,
that it does not agree
with the validity of
laws made by the strong
to the detriment of the
weak9; that
justice is exercised
with less partiality;
may the weak always find
support against the
strong; that man's life,
his beliefs and opinions
are better respected;
that there are fewer
unfortunate people;
finally, and that every
man of good will is sure
that he does not lack
what is necessary.10
Yearning for a just and
fraternal society,
Kardec states: When
men have divested
themselves of the
selfishness that
dominates them, they
will live as brothers,
without doing each other
any harm, helping each
other, impelled by the
mutual feeling of
solidarity. Then the
strong will be the
support and not the
oppressor of the weak
and men will no longer
be seen who lack the
essentials, because
everyone will practice
the law of justice.11
The considerations
exposed make us aware of
the development of a
different vision of the
“successes” and
“failures” of life. The
way of thinking about
who deserves what is not
morally defensible. A
vision that considers
evolution as something
collective and
supportive is the only
one that holds up
against the universalist
proposal of the
Spiritist Doctrine.
Gustavo Geley, a
spiritualist researcher
who died in 1924, used
the expression solidarity
evolution. Geley
referred to the need to
understand spiritual
development, a central
thought of the Spiritist
Doctrine, as a
collective effort
towards improvement, not
just personal, but that
of the entire community.
He wrote: Its
practical consequences
[of reincarnation] are
easy to conceive. First
of all, it imposes work
and effort; not isolated
effort, the selfish
struggle for life, but
solidarity effort,
because everything that
favors or retards the
evolution of others and
general evolution favors
or retards the evolution
of any member of the
community.12
Although evolution also
occurs in the intimacy
of each person, in the
personal expansion of
cognitive and affective
resources, the
exclusivist focus of
this evolution
neutralizes the very
dynamics of the process,
as it crystallizes in
selfishness, the source
of all human
imperfections.
All conditions related
to corporeality –trails,
expiations, and missions
– are never isolated,
unique conditions,
restricted to the
individual himself.
These are collective
events, which connect
all the people linked to
it. The mature Spirit
renounces expectations
of solely personal
achievement to invest in
collective well-being.
Out of love, out of
altruism, out of
commitment to the
beautiful, the good, the
noble and the just, he
takes on tasks,
sometimes of great
renunciation, and feels
happy about it.
Either we evolve
together, or no one will
advance alone. Peace of
mind will never be the
achievement of the
selfish soul. It is
established in those who
are doing what they are
supposed to do. Nobody
falls alone. No one
rises alone. Our vital
interactions are so deep
that we never know, when
faced with an unworthy
act or a noble act,
where to locate the
greatest guilt and the
greatest merit.
There is no exclusively
individual
responsibility for any
good or bad act as there
is no exclusively
individual sanction for
this act. Everything you
do, everything you
think, good or bad;
Everything that
translates into an
emotional impression,
joy, or pain, in any
individual, has
repercussions on
everyone and is
assimilated by everyone.
There is no decadence or
progress that is not
supportive.
__________________________
1 Sociology,
Anthony Giddens.
2 Spirits’
Book item 216
3 O
padeiro
desumano–suicídio RE,
Maio/1862.
4 Spirits’
Book item 859
5 The
Anatomy of Violence,
Adrian Reine.
6 The
Tyranny of Merit,
Michale Sandel.
7 The
Tyranny of Merit,
Michale Sandel.
8 Spirits’
Book,
item 795
9 Spirits’
Book,
item 781-a
10 Spirits’
Book item
793
11 Spirits’
Book, item 916
12 Summary of the
Spiritist Doctrine,
third part.
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