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Tuesday, January 08, 2013

Liberal Fascism and Left Brain Tyranny

Although there's a fantastic amount of multidisciplinary research in The Master and His Emissary, overall the book is a failure in terms of its prescription, because it essentially tries to use the left brain to find an escape hatch from the left brain.

I think McGilchrist's diagnosis of left brain hegemony is perfectly accurate -- as far as it goes -- but it's a little like Gorbachev's attempt to reform communism from within communism. Once you recognize the essential flaws of communism, the whole thing falls apart.

Even before getting into pathology -- i.e., diagnosis -- we must have a norm. In the absence of a norm, there can be no deviations, no perversion, inversions, regressions, or developmental arrests; nor can there be any meaningful evolution or development.

The function of the mind is to know reality. Thus, everything follows from the two principles embedded in this statement: first, that reality exists; and second, that we may know the truth of it.

The whole "modern turn" in philosophy, beginning with Kant, undermines these principles. It either denies one side at the expense of the other (as in scientism); or conflates them (as in the Chopraesque newage sewage of "perception is reality").

The result is, on the one hand, a desolate scientism that presumes to know the truth of reality, but without anyone to know it; or, a psychic projection of the nervous system. Thus, the world is either a left-brain scheme or a right-brain dream.

To his credit, McGilchrist is sensitive to this problem, but in the absence of a proper norm, he cannot propose a rigorous solution. Instead, he deals with the problem of left-brain tyranny on pragmatic grounds. He essentially says that the left brain has made a mess of things, so we need to rely more on the right.

He writes of, for example, "the profound kinship" between modernism and Nazism. But do we need to know about neurology to tell us that fascism is evil? Or in other words, is fascism what we call "evil" just because it involves a subjugation of the right brain by the left?

Of the "modernist enterprise," he writes that it involves a left-brain "admiration for what is powerful rather than beautiful, a sense of alienated objectivity rather than engagement or empathy, and an almost dogmatic trampling on all taboos..."

But with no norm other than utility, who's to say they're wrong?

The last chapter of the book is called The Master Betrayed (the master being the right brain). In it he presents a picture of what the world of the left hemisphere would look like, and it looks awfully familiar:

"We could expect, for a start, that there would be a loss of the broader picture, and a substitution of a more narrowly focussed, restricted, but detailed, view of the world..."

Check.

"The broader picture would in any case be disregarded, because it would lack the appearance of clarity and certainty which the left hemisphere craves."

Check.

"Ever more narrowly focussed attention would lead to an increasing specialization and technicalising of knowledge."

Check.

This "would promote the substitution of information... for knowledge, which comes through experience."

Check.

Knowledge "would seem more 'real' than what one might call wisdom, which would seem too nebulous..."

Check.

"There would be an increase in both abstraction and reification..."

Check.

Or, you could just say that the world becomes quantified at the expense of its prior -- and immediate -- qualities.

As a result, "the impersonal world would come to replace the personal..." "Individualities would be ironed out and identification would be by categories: socioeconomic groups, races, sexes, and so on," leading to intergroup competition, resentment, and paranoia. In other words, OBAMA-BIDEN 2012 (not to mention Big Chief Affirmative Token).

"Reasonableness would be replaced by rationality," leading to "a complete failure of common sense." "Anger and aggressive behavior would become more evident in our social interactions," since empathy is located in the right brain. And we can also expect sex to become "explicit and omnipresent," since the real implicit power of sex is located in the right.

The left-brain government of such a left-brain sheeple "would seek total control -- it is an essential feature of the left hemisphere's take on the world that it can grasp it and control it."

Obamacare, the attempt to control the economy via manipulation of aggregate demand, regulation of the world economy under the pretext of controlling the weather, state-mandated redefinition of marriage -- each of these flows from a left-brain fantasy. Oh, and give us your guns, especially those of you who don't buy into the fantasy.

In short, "Individual liberty would be curtailed," and "panoptical control would become an end in itself." The aim would be "to increase the power of the state and diminish the status of the individual.... according to the left hemisphere's take on reality, individuals are simply interchangeable parts of a mechanistic system, a system it needs to control in the interests of efficiency."

People are reduced to the proverbial Bags of Wet Cement, to be shoved around by the state. The state would "play down individual responsibility, and the sense of individual responsibility would accordingly decline." Loss of the implicit structure of the right brain would bring with it a flood of explicit legislation to try to control behavior.

We would see a "loss of insight, coupled with unwillingness to take responsibility," and an "increasing passivisation and suggestibility." "A sense of [existential] nausea and boredom before life would likely lead to a craving for novelty and stimulation." And of course, "Religion would seem to be mere fantasy."

So, what's the real solution? Seems to me I've been blah-blah-blogging about it ad gnoseum for over seven years, and I have no idea how to summarize it. But it's still one cosmos under god, regardless of what the left brain thinks.

12 comments:

  1. OBAMA-BIDEN
    sure reads like
    OSAMA-BINLADEN
    seen suddenly
    from the paragraph above!

    Brain doesn't create Mind---
    but more like tunes it in
    The enlightened Mind Buddha & all sages became one with
    is God, never changing, always impersonably becomeable hallelujah

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  2. Yes, I don't see how a person could incarnate in a nervous system that isn't simultaneously particularistic and holistic. Its proper function should be R-->L-->R, so the particularization always results in a higher synthesis and more complex unity.

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  3. Instead of L and R, you could just say science and religion, time and eternity, particle and wave, ocean and drop, etc.

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  4. Here's an interesting essay by Daniel Greenfield (AKA Sultan Knish) that looks at the sociological implications of what you've been discussing: The Civilized Savage.

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  5. Skorpion - yes, that was a good one. Apropos, Sippican has this pithy observation today: "We are mostly living in the ruins of civilizations we could not now make ourselves. Hope it holds out a while."

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  6. In it he presents a picture of what the world of the left hemisphere would look like, and it looks awfully familiar: ...

    Does he not see that, with the exception of those who willfully choose otherwise, that's exactly the world we've got?

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  7. Some random comments (as I follow along far behind in the book):

    Despite a supposed norm from religion, Kant also "essentially tries to use the left brain to find an escape hatch from the left brain." So it's gotta be the right kind of norm.

    Also, two instances of wonderful bucking the tide by people with very, very powerful left-brains: 1: Maxwell champions Faraday precisely because (it seems to me) Faraday kept his left-brain thoroughly subordinate. So in Faraday, and even more in Maxwell who was a mathematical (i.e. left-brain) superhero, we have scientists who tamed the emissary in science itself.

    And the final example is Alexander Humboldt -- Humboldt's Cosmos -- who did amazing things to try to show the German Romantics that they needed to embrace and use their left-brain in order to vindicate the vision of the right.

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  8. I think Godel must be the quintessential case of using the left to totally vindicate the right.

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  9. I'm just reading in this history of the Catholic Church, how (paraphrasing here) the trivium dealt more with spiritual realities, while the quadrivium dealt more with material ones, very much in the spirit of right and left brain cooperation in a liberal education that aimed at liberating one from ignorance....

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  10. ot, new newsweek [now no longer a real mag.] has long tom wolfe piece on facebook nerds, wall street quants:
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek.html

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  11. "Anger and aggressive behavior would become more evident in our social interactions," since empathy is located in the right brain.

    Can I just plead guilty and be done with it?

    The European Union should rename itself as the Wholly Wet Cement Empire.

    I have always been skeptical of missionaries coming back with their stories of miraculous healings and supernatural manifestations in far away, uncivilized locations like Namibia, Inner Mongolia, or Lower Arkansas. People that I somewhat trust that have witnessed such things point to differences in the mindset.

    Being I really am from Missouri, I am still inclined to call most of it BS, but I suppose there could be a right-left dominance difference.

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  12. ge - I've been passing that Newseak article around to friends and fam the past few days. It's more than a little alarming and now they don't want to talk to me. :-)

    Let's all Do the Collapse!

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I cannot talk about anything without talking about everything. --Chesterton

Fundamentally there are only three miracles: existence, life, intelligence; with intelligence, the curve springing from God closes on itself like a ring that in reality has never been parted from the Infinite. --Schuon

The quest, thus, has no external 'object,' but is reality itself becoming luminous for its movement from the ineffable, through the Cosmos, to the ineffable. --Voegelin

A serious and good philosophical work could be written consisting entirely of jokes. --Wittgenstein