Sunday, March 15, 2020

Peptic Justice and Other Alimentary Principles

The effect of liberal rhetoric on taste is called nausea. --Dávila

Continuing with our theme of rightly ordered disgust, it seems that we (Dávila and I) are not alone in believing that sensitivity to our digestive system may be a reliable source of information about the immaterial world.

Lewis notes that Aristotle, for example, maintained "that the aim of education is to make the pupil like and dislike what he ought":

When the age for reflective thought comes, the pupil who has been thus trained in 'ordinate affections' or 'just sentiments' will easily find the first principles in Ethics; but to the corrupt man they will never be visible at all and he can make no progress in that science.

Wrong abdominal sensations, wrong ethics.

Note that there can be no "social justice" in the absence of gastric justice -- or rather, if one's gastric sentiments are unjust. This no doubt sounds a bit silly, but think about it: "just" has to do with what is fitting, or what is right and proper. Suppose I think it's fitting to conduct human sacrifice in order to ensure that the sun has sufficient nourishment. Imagine how disordered one must be to not feel the injustice of this in one's gut.

Not to get ahead of ourselves, but we see an everyday example of this with regard to the abortion debate. Irrespective of one's position, every rightly ordered person is disgusted by the practice. Bill Clinton attempted to square this circle by saying it should be "safe, legal, and rare." Why rare? In order to acknowledge a disgust that is universally felt in the rightly ordered soul.

But we have made great digestive progress in the two decades since Clinton left office. At least Democrats are consistent. Back in the early to mid-19th century, they developed the "positive good" theory of slavery, in contrast to the general sentiment of the framers, none of whom argued that it was moral or just. Jefferson would later write that

I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just, that his justice cannot sleep forever. Commerce between master and slave is despotism.

In other words, while he of course owned slaves, he had sense enough to recognize that the institution was evil and intrinsically unjust. Compare him to this nasty piece of work, who argues for the positive good of abortion:

Prior to 1830 or so, you didn't hear Democrats shrieking that

Here I was, sitting in Virginia, in my beautiful plantation, so I could have sufficient time and leisure to focus on politics. And I have all of this -- ALL OF IT! -- because! BECAUSE! BECAUSE! -- I was allowed to own human beings! I will not be shamed into being quiet! I WILL NEVER STOP TALKING ABOUT MY SLAVES, OR MY PLANTATION, OR MY WHITE PRIVILEGE!

Back to Lewis. He writes that St. Augustine too spoke of "the ordinate condition of the affections in which every object is accorded the kind of degree of love which is appropriate to it."

For example, it turns out that we should not only allow our children to live, but even accord them the love to which they are entitled. Moreover, we should teach them "to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likable, disgusting and hateful":

In [Plato's] Republic, the well-nurtured youth is one 'who would see most clearly whatever was amiss in ill-made works of man or ill-grown works of nature, and with a just distaste would blame and hate the ugly even from his earliest years and would give delighted praise to beauty, receiving it into his soul and being nourished by it...

The human soul is properly nourished by truth, beauty, justice, and other transcendental food. Children should be taught gastric justice, or rather, one might say that recognition of justice -- and injustice -- should reach into one's bones and viscera. If it's only a mental abstraction, it's not going to be very reliable. I'm thinking, for example, of the horrors that have resulted from the rigorous application of abstract political ideologies disconnected from somatic awareness of evil.

This isn't to say that untutored disgust is a reliable compass. The key is to properly link psyche and soma. For example, in Iran they're disgusted by dogs, while in China they're not disgusted by eating bats.

Closer to home, millennials in particular aren't properly disgusted by socialism, and are instead disgusted by positive goods such as the free market, fossil fuels, free speech, and disinterested racial colorblindness. If this doesn't disgust you, you have no ontological taste.

I would go so far as to say that "social justice" is peptic injustice. If you're not disgusted by SJWs and their unjust ethic, there's something wrong with your brain-intestine network.

Here are a couple of closing aphorisms that go to the subject of rightly ordered disgust:

Each day it becomes easier to know what we ought to despise: what modern man admires and journalism praises.

It is enough to know nothing more than that certain beings have adopted an idea to know that it is false.

At the other end of the spectrum,

The intelligent idea produces sensual pleasure.

The intelligent man quickly reaches conservative conclusions.

Conservatism should not be a political party but the normal attitude of every decent man.

Perhaps these sound like unseemly self-flattery or unearned auto-congratulation. However, we're the ones who not only reject the whole self-esteem and give-everyone-a-trophy ethos, but first train our disgust on ourselves. We are proponents of the self-disappointment movement, which is the other wing that allows the self to take off in vertical space.

It may have been Chesterton who said that God doesn't love us because we are particularly lovable, but because he wants to help make us lovable. He doesn't just hand out trophies for nothing, but makes it possible for us to receive one by cooperating with his grace. Thus,

Nobody will ever induce me to absolve human nature, because I know myself.

No one who knows himself can be absolved by himself.

We can never count on a man who does not look upon himself with the gaze of an entomologist (Dávila).

11 comments:

Gagdad Bob said...

Too much self-esteem, not enough self-awareness.

julie said...

Imagine how disordered one must be to not feel the injustice of this in one's gut.

Worse, imagine how monstrously disordered one has to be to believe that murder will relieve any problems of the gut!


I would go so far as to say that "social justice" is peptic injustice. If you're not disgusted by SJWs and their unjust ethic, there's something wrong with your brain-intestine network.

One slight advantage, if you can call it that, of sending your kids to public school is they get a constant drip of SJW nonsense -and if their gut is properly developed, they recognize and detest it almost instinctively. Too much, though, and the poison starts to have its effect...

Gagdad Bob said...

Next week the youngster will be getting his AGW brainwash through his homeschooling co-op. So I'll just use it as an opportunity to set him straight. Coincidentally, I just read a concise and helpful survey of the subject, Inconvenient Facts.

Anonymous said...

Leftists in my city were caught buying up supplies and then selling them for much more than they paid.

One socialist told me to my face "my secret is to buy low and sell high." He seemed proud of it. What about the customer who gets ripped off? He didn't care. This is why Communist systems always collapse. Socialists are heartless, all they care about is making a profit any way they can, and damn the consequences.

At the store today I saw some leftists coming in to buy supplies like they had as much right as anyone to buy what was left in the store. The nerve, to know that good and decent people were in low supply, and thinking their worthless selves were going to take what little was left.

Now we are a tolerant nation, but there is a limit to the indignities these hyenas can perpetrate on us before we become not so tolerant.

Just sayin'

Anonymous said...

Wrightstone says that while the earth is indeed warming, that there isn’t a damned thing any of us can do about it. Damn right.

Jefferson said that while slavery is evil and intrinsically unjust, he knew that he couldn’t do a damned thing about his own many slaves let alone other peoples slaves. Indeed people.

Finally we have Davila, who pretty much says that everybody and everything human sucks and that there’s isn’t a damned thing any of us can do about it. Now that’s a man after my own heart.

We should be like Batty reveling in his own time, crushing the god of biomechanics, because there wasn’t a damned thing he could do about it.

Anonymous said...

Hello Anonymous 9:19

There is plenty to do, but you have to pick your battles. The most useful thing a pesron can do is self improvement, which entails dropping bad habits and reinforcing good habits, and making small continuous changes in your life with an eye towards becoming more good, beautiful and true.

Each of is given a fiefdom on Earth which ours to control and improve, and that fiefdom is ourselves. There is the proper sphere of action.

Addressing larger issues consists largely of how you respond.

Slavery, for instance. If you support slavery, you could go out and obtain a slave. This is difficult but by no means impossible.

For global warming, if you think we could go warmer, you could burn stuff. There are always things to burn laying around the house. Carbon is everywhere. Light it up.

So, as you say "can't do a damn thing about it?" Think small, act locally. That's a damn thing you can do.

I'm going to go to take a piss in the back yard. Just because I can add nitrogen to the soil. I believe in fertilizer.

-Redundant Clause

Anonymous said...

Owning slaves is harder than it seems. It's hard to know what's PC these days. I once owned a little Mexican guy named Pablo but folks showed their disapproval especially if I beat him in public. But they were far more tolerant, even seeming amused, when I bought an asian girl and made her wear leathers and walked her around with a collar and chain. It's confusing sometimes.

I tried self-improving to the point of becoming more good, beautiful and true, but nobody except the slaves noticed. Most people are just too into themselves. As for the rest, well lets just say that they're dumb as stumps. But when you go around saying that there's not a damned thing they can do about stuff, they seem to notice.

Anonymous said...

Hi Anonymous 8:17. Could you please go into more detail about the Asian girl in leather, collar and chain. What did you make her do? Did she cooperate? Do you still own her?

Let me know.

-Becky's on the couch, feeling curious.

julie said...

It occurs to me just now, what with the various quarantines & social distancing going on, a lot of those people who've been longing for the cottage lifestyle finally have time to practice living out their fantasy.

I wonder how much they'll enjoy it?

Anonymous said...

Hi Julie:

Yes, this thing plays right into the propensities of the introverts among us. I myself like to gad about but I've been laying lower than usual.

Netflix is good. I mean really good. I think we can all enjoy a good binge watch. Of course Dr. Godwin will use his extra time to read his source materials.

Now as far as the cottage thing, I think I will put out some gingham and my best teapot. It has this marvelous little cozy I found at a church sale...

The possibilities are endless. Tea and scones anyone?

Ta ta from Asa White, also known to my friends as Little Old Lady Koo

Stay Cozy!

Anonymous said...

Julie, I've lived a quasi-homesteader lifestyle all semi-rural and self-reliant and independent of others except for income and internet, for many years now. Works pretty good.

Maybe I should visit my old semi-like-minded friends over at the Maggies Farm blog. What they get right, is that good and decent hardworking people deserve all the freedom they can get. But what they seem to get wrong, is understanding that extroverted evil wants all the same freedom as well. And evil isn't happy to just work in their own fields. They want your fields as well. I suspect that their power will grow immensely this pandemic season and the cottage lifestyle will involve the streets.

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