Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Great Illusion of Human Greatness is Pride

 The Great Illusion of Human Greatness

A Scientific and Spiritual Reflection on Humility, Mortality and the Meaning of Life

 

By:  lim ju boo - Chinese name lin ru wu ( )

 

 

Summary:

 

 

Zoological fact about us as Homo sapiens.  We are one animal species among millions. We possess extraordinary intelligence, language, imagination and moral reasoning, but biologically we still obey exactly the same laws that govern every living creature. We are born, we grow, we age, we become ill, and we die. Yet, we are far too proud of ourselves. 


 Death has never granted immunity to kings, presidents, billionaires,  scientists, doctors, professionals, or beggars. 


Here's My Main Thoughts:

 

Human beings often regard themselves as the centre of the universe. We build magnificent cities, accumulate wealth beyond our needs, seek fame, power, titles and social status, and often spend our entire lives competing with one another for recognition and admiration.

Yet from a biological standpoint, we are simply one species of animal—Homo sapiens—living temporarily on a small planet orbiting an ordinary star in an immense universe.

Like every other animal, we borrow our time here.

Our basic biological needs are surprisingly simple. We require only air to breathe, water to drink, food to nourish our bodies, clothing for protection, and modest shelter from the environment. Every other desire beyond these essentials belongs not to survival but to human ambition.

Other animals never dream of building mansions, owning luxury cars, accumulating enormous bank accounts, or becoming famous. A bird is content with its nest. A deer needs only grass, water and shelter. A lion does not seek a larger kingdom after every successful hunt. Nature has taught them contentment.

Only human beings have transformed simple needs into endless demands.

Ironically, despite all our achievements, every one of us remains completely dependent upon something we cannot create ourselves—a single breath of air. Remove oxygen for only a few minutes and all human pride disappears.

No wealth can purchase another breath when God has determined that our time has come.

History repeatedly reminds us of this unavoidable truth.

Science Could Not Defeat Death

The greatest physician of antiquity, Hippocrates, often called the Father of Medicine, devoted his life to healing others. Yet he himself eventually died from natural causes.

Albert Einstein, whose revolutionary theories transformed modern physics, died at the age of seventy-six from a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. The man who explained the curvature of space and time could not prevent the failure of his own body.

Marie Curie, the only person awarded Nobel Prizes in two different scientific disciplines, died from aplastic anaemia after years of radiation exposure during her pioneering research.

Their brilliance enriched humanity, but their knowledge could not exempt them from mortality.

Even the Greatest Minds Could Not Escape

William Shakespeare, whose writings continue to shape English literature four centuries after his death, died at only fifty-two years of age.

Leonardo da Vinci, perhaps history's greatest polymath, eventually succumbed after suffering strokes.

Jane Austen, whose novels remain treasured throughout the world, died at only forty-one years of age, probably from Addison's disease.

Their words have survived, but they themselves did not.

Wealth and Power Could Not Save Their Owners

Alexander the Great conquered much of the known world before dying at only thirty-two years of age. His empire could not negotiate with death.

Genghis Khan, whose empire stretched across continents, also died.

Mansa Musa, perhaps the wealthiest individual in recorded history, accumulated riches beyond imagination. Yet his wealth purchased neither immortality nor another day of life.

Every emperor eventually becomes a page in a history book.

Even Presidents of the World's Most Powerful Nation Had to Die

The office of President of the United States is among the most powerful positions on earth, yet the presidency offers no protection from death.

William Henry Harrison died from severe illness shortly after taking office.

Zachary Taylor died from acute gastrointestinal disease.

Warren G. Harding died from heart disease.

Franklin D. Roosevelt died from a cerebral haemorrhage while still leading his nation during World War II.

Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.

James A. Garfield was assassinated.

William McKinley was assassinated.

John F. Kennedy was assassinated.

Political power cannot overrule biology.

 

Wealth Could Not Protect Billionaires

Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, one of the richest men of his generation, died from complications that included bronchial pneumonia.

His widow, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, herself admired throughout the world, later died from non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

Money could purchase magnificent yachts, private islands and luxurious homes, but it could not purchase immunity from disease or death.

Death Is the Great Equaliser

Disease recognizes neither wealth nor poverty.

Cancer does not distinguish between kings and commoners.

Heart disease asks no one about academic degrees.

Stroke ignores social status.

Death shows favour to no race, no nation, no religion and no profession.

Before death, every human being eventually becomes equal.

Just to remind ourselves  life here is exceedingly  brief for everyone, and that death is no respecter of any person. Arrogance, pride, titles, power, wealth and status have no place in the afterworld. They are just fleeting shadows here before death. 

Let me show you the ages of these famous people, including the previous Presidents of the United States of America who all passed away even before they could reach 80 years of age:


1. Marie Curie: 66 years old

2. Leonardo da Vinci: 67 years old

3. Genghis Khan: Around 65 years old (exact birth year is historically uncertain)

4. Mansa Musa: Around 57 years old (exact timeline is historically estimated)

5. William Henry Harrison: 68 years old

6. Warren G. Harding: 57 years old

7. Franklin D. Roosevelt: 63 years old

8. Abraham Lincoln: 56 years old (assassinated)

9. James A. Garfield: 49 years old (assassinated)

10. William McKinley: 58 years old (assassinated)

11. John F. Kennedy: 46 years old (assassinated)

12. Aristotle Onassis: 69 years old

13. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: 64 years old


The ancient words of the Book of Ecclesiastes remain remarkably true:

"As he came from his mother's womb, naked shall he return... and shall take nothing for his labour." (Ecclesiastes 5:15)

Likewise, the Apostle James reminds us:

"For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away." (James 4:14)

The Psalmist wrote:

"The days of our years are threescore years and ten... for it is soon cut off, and we fly away." (Psalm 90:10)

And again,

"For He knoweth our frame; He remembereth that we are dust." (Psalm 103:14)

Even Shakespeare echoed the same truth in Macbeth:

"Life's but a walking shadow..."

Another passage from The Tempest beautifully reminds us of our temporary existence:

"We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep."

Across cultures, religions and centuries, the message remains remarkably consistent:

Human life is temporary.

 

What Then Is There for us ?

If our intelligence, wisdom and university- acquired  knowledge  cannot prevent death, 

If our wealth cannot purchase immortality,

If our fame fades,

If our titles are eventually forgotten,

If our bodies return to dust,

What then remains for anyone to boast about?

Our greatest achievement is not how much we accumulate, but how much kindness we leave behind.

The respect that truly matters cannot be demanded.

It must be earned.

People may fear power, but they willingly honour humility.

History remembers many conquerors with fear, but remembers humble servants with affection.

Humility is not weakness.

It is wisdom.

The truly educated understand how little they know.

The truly wealthy understand that they cannot take their wealth with them.

The truly powerful recognise the limits of their power.

The truly spiritual recognise that every heartbeat is a gift.


Perhaps we should spend less time asking how great we can become, and more time asking how good we can become.

For in the end, every one of us, scientist or labourer, physician or patient, emperor or beggar, billionaire or bankrupt, will leave this world exactly as we entered it, with nothing except the character we have formed and the love we have shown to others.

While God graciously grants us another breath, let us use it not to exalt ourselves, but to serve others.

For respect cannot be demanded.

It can only be earned.

And humility remains one of the greatest honours a human being can ever possess.

Humans are indeed zoologically animals, but unlike other animals, we possess a remarkable capacity for symbolic thought. This gift has enabled us to create science, medicine, music, literature, art, mathematics, and acts of compassion. These are not reasons for arrogance; rather, they are reasons for responsibility. If we have been entrusted with greater intellectual ability, then we should also exercise greater humility. As the saying often attributed to Isaac Newton expresses:

"If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." 

Whether or not we are brilliant, wealthy or influential, we remain dependent on one another


It has taken me since 10:47 pm yesterday till now at 3:28 am in the morning = 281 minutes (4 hours 41 minutes)  to think how to write this article just  to share that combines biology, history, philosophy, and Christian reflection into a single, timeless message:

 greatness lies not in what we possess, but in how humbly we live while our borrowed time lasts.

 

Our Greatest Gift Is Also Our Greatest Responsibility

There is, however, one remarkable difference between human beings and every other known animal.

Biologically we are animals, subject to the same laws of birth, ageing, disease, and death. Yet we have been endowed with an extraordinary mind. We alone have developed science, mathematics, medicine, literature, music, philosophy, and art. We have explored the depths of the oceans, walked upon the Moon, unravelled the structure of DNA, and peered billions of light-years into the universe.

These achievements are indeed wonderful. They are among the noblest expressions of the human mind.

But they should never become reasons for us to boast how intelligent and knowledgeable  we are.  That to me is pride.

On the contrary, they should become reasons for humility.

Knowledge should teach us not how great we are, but how much remains beyond our understanding. The more we discover, the more we realise how little we truly know.

Sir Isaac Newton expressed this beautifully when he wrote:

"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants."

Every discovery rests upon the work of those who came before us. None of us succeeds entirely alone. 

Whether our abilities come through genetics, education, opportunity or, as I personally believe, by the grace of God, they are gifts entrusted to us—not trophies to glorify ourselves.

Intelligence without humility becomes arrogance.

Wealth without compassion becomes selfishness.

Power without wisdom becomes oppression.

But knowledge combined with humility becomes one of humanity's greatest virtues.

Perhaps this is the highest purpose of our intelligence—not merely to make us cleverer than other animals, but to make us kinder, wiser and more compassionate while we journey together through this brief life.

 If I were allowed to add only one more sentence to what I have written, it would be this:

"The measure of a human life is not how high we stand above others, but how deeply we stoop to lift others while we still have the breath to do so."

Over the past two years I have discussed quantum mechanics, black holes, molecular biology, medicine, forensic science, cosmology, theology and many other subjects here in my blog. What I have written are not really about science alone. They ask a deeper question:

"What should knowledge do to the human heart?"

My personal answer has consistently been the same: genuine knowledge should make us more humble, not more proud.

That, I think, is the real message I want to pen here  all night long. The examples of Einstein, Curie, Alexander the Great, Kennedy and the others are not there merely to remind us that they died. They remind us that greatness itself is temporary. What endures is the legacy of truth, kindness, wisdom and service.

May this be so for all of us


Wishing you all who have read and have share the same thoughts with me good health and wisdom  

Amen 

jb lim 

3:59 am 

June 30, 2026 



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The Great Illusion of Human Greatness is Pride

  The Great Illusion of Human Greatness A Scientific and Spiritual Reflection on Humility, Mortality and the Meaning of Life   B y:   lim ju...