Wednesday, January 08, 2020

You Can't Do What's Good if You Don't Know What Is

While freedom and responsibility are complementary, like all complementarities one must be prior, in this case, responsibility. A human feels a sense of responsibility, obligation, duty; and for the same reason, we come equipped with a sense of guilt, which you might say is the interior "enforcer" of responsibility. If we fail to do the right thing, we are persecuted by guilt. Sociopathy is the exception that proves the rule.

All of this -- responsibility, goodness, choice, conscience -- can go off the rails at various points in the process. Some people -- existentialists, for example -- collapse responsibility into freedom, thereby reducing the question to one of pure action: we are what we choose. There is no right or wrong; or rather, it is wrong to lack the courage to choose. The deed is all.

We call these folks existentialists because they (speaking of complementarities) put existence prior to essence, thereby turning reality upside down and inside out, precisely: we are nothing until we choose (ultimately making ourselves our own gods), whereas in reality we are given freedom in order to actualize our essential nature. Davila says it better; note how each is a refudiation of existentialism:

--Freedom is not indispensable because man knows what he wants and who he is, but in order for him to know who he is and what he wants.

--Freedom is not an end, but a means. Whoever sees it as an end in itself does not know what to do with it when he gets it.

--Upon finding himself perfectly free, the individual discovers that he has not been unburdened of everything, but despoiled of everything.

--Total liberation is the process that constructs the perfect prison.

--Today what is called “intellectual liberation” is a change of prisons.

--Whoever is liberated from everything that oppresses him soon discovers that he is also liberated from what protects him.

This post at a crossroads. At this point it could go in various directions.... Choose one already!

Okay. Another hinge point where things can go wrong is with a "corrupt superego," which perversely punishes us for doing the right thing. Here it seems that if we only internalize a bogus ideology, it permits us to harm others with impunity. The corrupted superego gives us the green light to attack and even murder in good conscience. (Or to undermine good institutions such as marriage, the Boy Scouts, universities, etc.)

While I'm all for the death penalty, I fully understand why John Paul II would come out against it (even though the magisterium itself doesn't forbid it). After all, Catholicism is a world religion, and in most parts of the world, for most of history, the death penalty is little more than a pretext for human sacrifice, which is in turn the apex (or nadir) of a corrupted superego given illicit sanction to murder. The USA sentencing an evil mass murderer to death is nothing like Iran sentencing homosexuals to death. One is justice, the other an immature and primitive form of psychic projection and annihilation.

Likewise other violent ideologies from Fascism to Antifa (but I repeat myself). What better way to hide a corrupt superego than to pretend to fight it. Satan is getting more subtle! Or at least more convoluted.

Note that the corruption of language -- e.g., "Antifa," "social justice," "transphobia" -- is central to the project of the corrupt superego, which makes sense, since the Logos ramifies into both truth and goodness, and in order to do good, one must know the truth, or What is the Case.

Which brings us to the queen of the virtues, prudence. "Justice, courage, and moderation," writes Pieper, "exist only on the basis of prudence." No one talks about it -- I wonder why? -- but prudence "is the presupposition of all moral goodness." Prudence first, goodness second. Look at Jimmy Carter. Let's stipulate that he's a "good guy." How did that work out with Iran? How did his and Obama's niceness accord with prudence?

Some Christians seem to think that niceness is enough. This is profoundly un-Christian. Yes, innocent as doves. But prudent as serpents.

[T]he realization of the good presupposes knowledge of reality; someone who does not know the state of affairs is not able, in the concrete, to do what is good. Mere "good intentions" -- wanting to be just, for example -- is not sufficient (Pieper).

9 comments:

julie said...

Some people -- existentialists, for example -- collapse responsibility into freedom, thereby reducing the question to one of pure action: we are what we choose. There is no right or wrong; or rather, it is wrong to lack the courage to choose. The deed is all.

The other night, in an ONT at Ace's there was a link to a perfect example of this: an interview with a teenage girl who had stolen $150 from a girl scout selling cookies the day before. She was genuinely baffled at why what she had done was even considered a crime; in her words, she didn't have money, and needed money, and it was right there for the taking. What possible reason could there be to not take it? No guilt, no sense of remorse or conscience, no shame; just the simple and pure action of a need being met, as natural as breathing.

julie said...

--Freedom is not an end, but a means. Whoever sees it as an end in itself does not know what to do with it when he gets it.

Much like how people long for eternal life who don't even know what to do with themselves for an afternoon, or in the parlance of our times would rather suffer an electric shock than be alone with their thoughts for 15 minutes.

julie said...

Here's that video about the thieving girl. Worth a view; it's instructive to see that mentality, especially for those of us who rarely (knowingly) encounter it.

julie said...

I hadn't listened to the interview all the way through; the questions the interviewer is asking are also instructive. There's no suggestion that stealing is intrinsically wrong, evil, or disordered; rather the worst thing about it is that it "isn't nice" to steal from a nine-year-old girl. The interviewer can't say, with any authority, "you should be ashamed!" Had the theft been from the store itself, presumably, there wouldn't even be an offense to discuss. In many states, that's hardly a crime at all anymore.

R. J. Neuhaus said...

We could not bear to live in a world where wrong is taken lightly, where right and wrong finally make no difference.

Anonymous said...

If we work our back from the corrupt superego we don't find Satan, we find unmet needs. This is the source.

Why are people so needy? This could bear some examination.

Theoretically, a person who's needs are all perfectly met would be incapable of doing wrong as they would not need to do so.

At the core, the human being is love. The corruption occurs when some need goes unmet. Usually this is for control to put a lid on anxiety. The need for peace of mind is seldom met.

julie said...

Sure, keep telling yourself that...

julie said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Dunno anonymous at 1/09/2020 06:36:00 AM. I've met psychopaths. They know damned well what they're doing. They just don't have any physical capacity to care.

But then there is my own once dear sweet little sister who continuously tries to guilt me for not covering for her incompetent husband who she did after all, chose. Whenever she comes over for a hug, a request for some free home maintenance is sure to follow. I finally told her to send her husband over for his hug, to be followed with a full cash advance payment. She didn't like that. That sort of corruption?

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