Human Identity In Of Cannibals By Montaigne
Throughout "Of Cannibals," Montaigne describes how human knowledge, through a false sense of
cultural superiority, have not only shifted European definition of human identity, but also how
knowledge, through inventions, have disconnected European society from nature. Cultural
superiority, according to Montaigne, is derived from the idea that there is "no other level of truth and
reason than the example and idea of the opinions and customs of the place wherein we live." Lost in
our biased perception of nature and reality, Montaigne criticizes how Europeans view "others," such
as cannibals, as inferior and nonhuman, "accommodating them to the pleasure of our own corrupted
palate." Rather than trying to understand their cultural and ethnic backgrounds,...show more content...
Montaigne, throughout both "Apology to Raymond Sebond" and "Of Cannibals," imply that we
have to be aware of our biases and perspectives, as our awareness is merely a result of our perception
of the truth. Despite Montaigne's repetition of the "lack of," such as the "no manner of traffic, no
knowledge of letters, no science of numbers . . . no use of corn or wine," they also have no words
that signify corruption and greed, such as "lying, treachery, dissimulation, avarice, envy, detraction,
[and] pardon." Compared to indigenous cultures, which lives in harmony with the laws of nature,
Montaigne criticizes how Europeans have corrupted nature through intermixing it with corruption
and greed, and thus, corrupting our interpretation of nature and others. Furthermore, in order to
emphasize the simplicity and purity of cannibals, Montaigne analogizes them to the ancient Greeks,
as "all their inventions [feign] a happy state of man, but moreover, the fancy and even the wish and
desire of philosophy itself. Thus, human knowledge and inventions, such as religion, not only
corrupts out interpretation of nature, but also, as a result, disconnects us from nature itself. Since
our interpretations are representations of nature, they are not equivalent to nature and, as a result,
not all interpretations are
Get more content on HelpWriting.net