Thursday, August 16, 2018

Patient Zero of the Left

Another idiosyncratic post that goes nowhere, but may get there tomorrow...

I'm starting to think there may be no longterm cure for liberalism, i.e., that it is fatal. If it were just an acute illness -- say, something that only emerged in the 1930s, or 1960s -- then it might be treatable. But what if we are in the end stage of a centuries-long disease process?

Judge Bork implies as much, suggesting that certain odious developments "have been coming on for a long time and may be inherent in Western civilization."

Usually I think of Western civilization as the solution, not the problem. But if it is the problem, then there is no solution.

If the U.S. fails, then mankind fails. And if conservatism fails -- i.e, if we fail to conserve the vision of the founders -- then America fails.

Interesting how extremes meet. The left would agree with Bork that Western civilization is fatally flawed, but for very different reasons. Indeed, for Bork, the left's devaluation of Western civilization -- its self-loathing -- is just a symptom of the real problem.

Just this morning I was reading of how our whole sinister regime of state-mandated racial discrimination ("affirmative action") was created via an executive order by LBJ in 1965. Thus, it could be rescinded with the stroke of a pen.

In the presidential campaign of 1980, Ronald Reagan promised to do just that. Which, of course, he never did. Why not? How can something so intrinsically un- and anti-American, something so fundamentally at odds with our values, survive?

That's a somewhat rhetorical question. The answer is, violence on one end, cowardice on the other. Prior to Trump, no president has been willing to so subject himself to the violent and hateful rhetoric of the left. But to my knowledge, even Trump has never spoken of undoing this indefensible injustice.

How can we tolerate federal funds going to universities that openly engage in racial discrimination, and which systematically violate the right to free speech? What's the problem here? What is our major malfunction? Why is this happening in America, of all places? That modern liberalism "is intellectually bankrupt diminishes neither its vitality nor the danger it imposes" (ibid.).

And a central reason why it is so dangerous is precisely because it is so intellectually bankrupt. In short, like any other cultish ideology, the progressive left is a closed system that is impervious to evidence, fact, and logic. And vertical closure = hell on earth.

I mentioned this passage a few posts back, but it is certainly worth repeating, because it goes to the essence of the problem:

Modernity, the child of the Enlightenment, failed when it became apparent that the good society cannot be achieved by unaided reason. The response of liberalism was not to turn to religion, which modernity had seemingly made irrelevant, but to abandon reason.

And once the left abandoned reason, it rendered reason impotent in defending us from the left. Brilliant! In a diabolical way.

When truth is eliminated, what's left to arbitrate disagreements? Just power. What, for example, keeps the state discrimination regime thriving? Power. Absolutely no different from the days of Jim Crow, showing once again how Democrats never change. They never change because they are animated by certain false principles that can be traced back hundreds of years.

Thus, what we call "modern liberalism" is more like terminal liberalism. It is, as Bork says, just "the latest stage of the liberalism that has been growing in the West for at least two and a half centuries, and probably longer."

Is there a patient zero? I tend not to think of this in strictly historical terms. Rather, I've long interpreted Genesis 3 as a fable about "patient(s) zero," only repeated ad nauseam through history; the story brilliantly reveals timeless archetypes that play out in time. Every time.

What are the lessons of this complex archetypal narrative? What it is trying -- desperately! -- to convey to us? We've probably posted on this subject dozens of times, so I won't re-belabor the point. But at the very least, it is telling us something about human nature, about male-female relations, about divine-human relations, and about human intercourse with certain "lower-vertical" energies symbolized by the serpent.

What does it tell us about human nature? To me it goes to a certain unavoidable "design flaw" in man; not to say that the Designer erred; rather, that in creating a creature with free will, certain adverse developments are inevitable (or, inEveateapple, as we always say). These adverse possibilities range along a vertical spectrum from venial misdemeanors to felonious plunges into auto-divination.

Another lesson is that man is in permanent exile, and that utopia is no longer an option. That ship has already sailed. The horses have bolted and it's too late to close the barn door. We are all "wandering Jews" who will not return to any terrestrial promised land. It's a vertical diaspora, and the Raccoon has no place to lay his head. Life itself is a mid-life crisis, just as history itself is an endless cosmic war -- or the shadow of one, anyway. Can't you hear the echoes?

All of this was brought home to me in an unlikely way, when I first encountered Joyce some 35 years ago. Let me see if I can explain what I mean without excessive bloviation.

First of all there was Ulysses, which tells the story of an Any- and Everyman wandering through the corridors of archetypal time, such that 24 hours is as if 24 centuries (and vice versa). In short, every day is a kind of "structured eternity" telescoped into a human framework. But then Joyce did himself one better, and situated our Everyman in the historical dreamscape of All Time.

I'm not saying I ever understood the book, but I did spend many months trying. Or better, it was like trying to understand one's dreams. Rarely do I truly understand one, but I very much enjoy dwelling in their protean creative mystery.

Let's try to narrow down our exegesis of the Wake to what went wrong and to what has gone wrong with liberalism. Interestingly, Joyce frankly doesn't pretend to know the details. On nearly every page we are reminded that something has gone wrong, but it is exceedingly difficult to find out what it was. Rumors abound. There are plenty of opinions. You could call it "original sin," which is a little bit like how liberals talk about "structural racism" -- which is to say, racism without any actual racists.

Analogously, original sin is a little like a structure in which we are situated, even if there were no sinners per se. Down here, even perfection is imperfect.

Which of course reminds me of what Schuon says about the subject: something to the effect that existence itself is the most consequential sin. Er, why? For reasons alluded to above: in the very act of creation, God creates something separate from God (even while not radically disconnected, for this would be impossible). The rest is history. Literally.

As Campbell and Robinson write in the Skeleton Key,

The Wake, at its lowest estimate, is a huge time-capsule.... If our society should go smash tomorrow..., one could find all the pieces, together with the forces that broke them, in Finnegans Wake. The book is a kind of terminal moraine in which lie buried all the myths, programs, slogans, hopes, prayers, tools, educational theories, and theological bric-a-brac of the past millennium. And here too will be found the love that reanimates this debris.

And as Joyce "never tires of telling us, 'The same returns.'" Which means the same bad stuff. But if he is correct, it also means the same good stuff. I suppose our theological hope is that this is a spiral and not just an endlessly recurring circle, much less an entropic decay into oblivion.

The radical error -- the deification of man -- does not have its origin in history. Fallen man is the permanent possibility of committing the error. --Dávila

11 comments:

Byron said...

Bob, you say: "To me it goes to a certain unavoidable 'design flaw' in man; not to say that the Designer erred; rather, that in creating a creature with free will, certain adverse developments are inevitable". I'm wondering whether the possession of free will, in itself, is sufficient to account for its woeful misuse since time immemorial. Could not the capacity for free will be just as compatible with a much wiser innate disposition in human beings? Perhaps this is only possible in a 'prelapsarian' state but surely there is also something in the cosmic ambience of conditioned existence that serves to compound the problem. In other words, the design flaw is both in us and in the tenebrous realm in which we find ourselves. If so, then this harks back to our discussion a little while ago about the inevitable curbs on God's omnipotence as a result of bringing an ephemeral and imperfect world into being. So the question as to whether the Designer has 'erred' must hinge, to some extent at least, on whether the manifestation of 'relativity', as Schuon would say, was consciously willed or not (i.e. creation versus emanation). The latter does not, in any way, imply an 'impersonal' divine agency and may go further in accounting for our tragic human nature in a broken world (which does not, of course, detract from the genuine love, beauty and grace we can find here and now in our communion with the Absolute.

Anonymous said...

I add to what Byron has said. Dr. Godwin writes of design flaws and error, adverse developments.

Consider:

In Heaven (defined as the place where souls dwell when not incarnated in the Cosmos) are adverse developments, design flaws and errors to be found?

In the Cosmos (defined as the place where souls dwell when residing in Heaven), are conditions truly to be considered adverse developments, design flaws, and errors?

Hypothesis: The Cosmos gives each incarnated soul a hard time, yes? Nobody escapes existential vexation of one sort or another, true? Could this be intended by the Creator? In such a way as a sculptor strikes and chips the stone in order to reveal the masterpiece, is the purpose of the world to strike, break, and abrade the raw soul, eventually producing a spiritual masterpiece?

And how does this relate to our collective drop into anti-rational misery, as described by Dr. Godwin?

Reflect. Muse. Ponder.

julie said...

Prior to Trump, no president has been willing to so subject himself to the violent and hateful rhetoric of the left. But to my knowledge, even Trump has never spoken of undoing this indefensible injustice.

To be fair, draining the swamp is a massive endeavor. Education, affirmative action, and the rest of the rotten mass of social manipulation are intertwined below the surface. They may yet be addressed, but for the moment the white hats have enough heads of the hydra to tackle, or so it seems.

Gagdad Bob said...

Byron: good question, about "whether the possession of free will, in itself, is sufficient to account for its woeful misuse since time immemorial."

Most traditions, at least ours any way, throw in a negative or entropic or lower vertical influence personified as Satan. It's very tricky to integrate the satanic principle into the whole existentialada without positing an equal and opposite counter-god, which is a non starter. I've posted about the subkect in the past, but at the moment I need to get to a new post.

MOTT has some useful things to say about it, as does Schuon. For example, this description, by Schuon, makes sense, but is a bit abstract:

"The devil being the humanized personification –- humanized on contact with man -- of the subversive aspect of the centrifugal existential power; not the personification of this power in so far as its mission is positively to manifest Divine Possibility."

Gagdad Bob said...

There is some kind of evil power loose in the cosmos, and certainly on earth and in history. Good subject for future posts, or maybe I'll try to work it into the current thread....

Anonymous said...


One approach is to de-fang evil and call it unpleasant but needed happenstance, which serves some purpose for the greater good, in a back-handed way. Do we need evil? What would happen if there wasn't any? Lord, have mercy. Give us clarity.

Affirmative action is a reactive species of counter-racism. It would not exist except for the original insult of slavery. The consequences of slavery may well require an entire millenium to play out; we haven't even made it half way through the sequelae to that monstrous adverse development.



julie said...

Slavery is practically the default cultural norm for mankind. In much of the world, it is still openly practiced today. The real consequence comes as a result of turning away from slavery. America is unique in that we fought a major war to end the practice; we are not uniquely evil for having engage in it in the first place.

As to true evil, it is real, and truly evil beyond what most ordinary Americans can imagine. Thus we get the naive tourists biking through jihadi land and being slaughtered.

John Lien said...

"To me it goes to a certain unavoidable "design flaw" in man; not to say that the Designer erred; rather, that in creating a creature with free will, certain adverse developments are inevitable"

Doing my monthly check in. Hi Bob, fellow raccoons.


Father Stephen talks about original sin being an ontological state. Not something you can negate trying to be good.


So, these are the same concepts, as I see them.


FWIW, I like the less than daily posts. I'm better able to keep up.


John

julie said...

These days, the idea of original sin strikes me as more “the matrix in which we cannot help but live.” That is, unless a person is completely isolated from the rest of mankind such that no human nteraction is possible and is thus completely self-sufficient (in which case, is he properly human?), the mere process of existing mires us, one way or another, in the sins of mankind. We may not be particularly guilty ourselves, but everything we buy, much of what we eat, essentially functioning in society is tainted: by support for abortion, by slavery and human trafficking (who harvested your food, made your clothes, or assembled your computer/ phone/ anything made in another country?), by any number of things we probably can’t and don’t want to imagine. It’s like a nightmarish version of “I, Pencil” where some or even many of the essential parts have been made using intrinsically sinful methods. But you need it, whatever it is, and who has time to source everything to the tiniest detail?

We are not directly guilty, but even so our money goes to supporting those who are, and from our end there really isn’t much we can do about it.

These days, that’s how it comes across to me. From the moment we are conceived, the only way to be truly lifted from the mire is by His grace. Thank God, it has been granted.

Van Harvey said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Van Harvey said...

Playing catchup again. "I'm starting to think there may be no longterm cure for liberalism, i.e., that it is fatal."

Of course there's no cure for leftism. But there's also no reason to cling to it, it's not like it is actually Liberalism itself. Not that original Liberalism didn't have flaws, especially the nominally peaking out from Lockes' margins, but there's a difference between errors and malevolence. Liberalism itself, developed out of Aquinas's take on Aristotle, Cicero, and so forth, not the Patient Zero that's stolen its identity.

That Patient Zero, is actually 0.1, 0.2 & 0.3 - Descartes, Rousseau & Kant. The others, Marx & company are nothing without them, expose, reject, and excise those three parasites, and the Patient has a good shot at recovering. But it's gotta be a thorough job... leave behind tumors of artificial doubt, a romanticized deterministic education of proto-fascism, and the rejection of reality, and the tumors will spread and kill their willing host.

No doubt about that.

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