Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Nurture and Nurture's God

Talk about rude: that silly title just now broke into my head and demanded that I honor it with a post! I don't like to reward bad behavior, but my head is otherwise empty this morning, so might as well.

Nor are we in the habit of quoting John Paul... Sartre around here, but he was surely right about one thing: that there is no such thing as human nature, because God doesn't exist.

Except God does exist. As they say in France, T'oh!

via GIPHY

Thus, score one for our perspicacious Founders, who acknowledged that we are indeed endowed by our Creator with, you know, the thing. No Creator, no human nature, no natural law, no unalienable rights, yada yada. France may roll that way, but we don't. Except for the left, which would like for us to roll over like the French army.

This goes to the most fundamental principle distinguishing the left from reality, bearing in mind that it necessarily takes numerous forms. It does so necessarily because reality -- obviously -- is one, while alternatives to it are literally infinite.

For example, in reality you are either a man or a woman (with a handful of tragic exceptions that prove the rule). Deny this reality and you have LGB... then QT... followed by IA... and let's not forget U and C... not to mention 2, P, O, and the controversial SA. We might just say QWERTY as a synecdoche for the entire alphabet, but this unjustly excludes the numbers, to say nothing of the symbols... Let's just go straight to nominalism and say that every person is zir own gender. (If the Incarnation is the Best Idea Ever, then nominalism must be among the Worst.)

If human beings have no nature, this is not "liberating," but rather, the opposite, for it means we are so many bags of wet cement to be shaped in the manner seen fit by the state.

Marriage, for example, is quintessentially in the nature of things. Not so, says the Supreme Court: marriage is between any two -- for now -- people -- for now -- who love the state! But if anyone is free to marry, then no one is. Which is the whole point: to destroy the institution of the family, because the state is a jealous god and frowns upon the existence of mediating institutions between it and its subjects.

Now, back when I was growing up, words were still used to describe reality. This was before they were used to create, distort, and redefine reality.

Reality. You will have noticed that there is an exterior (objective) reality and an interior (subjective) reality; and if you notice a bit more deeply, that there is a relationship between these two.

In fact, there is always a relationship, such that we can never identify either pole without the other. If you don't believe me, try imagining what the world looks like with no one there to see it; or, at the other end, imagine what consciousness is like with no object or content. Apart from its complement, each is just nothing, and nothing doesn't exist.

Therefore, we must regard the categories of subject and object as arrows that point to and define one another without ever reaching that to which they point. Human existence always takes place, and can only take place, in the dynamic and generative space between these two poles.

If this sounds suspiciously subjectivist, well, it is and it isn't. It would be if there were no such thing as human nature -- or, at the other end, if there were no such thing as the laws of nature. In other words, there is objectivity at both ends; but there is also subjectivity (or interiority) at both ends, and these interpenetrate one another in the act of knowing.

Let's crank down the abstraction or put down the bong for a moment, and apply this to plain old reality. In his A Government of Laws, Sandoz writes that "whatever the political order may be, the fundamental requirement is that [it] be a fit habitation for human beings."

Again, if there is no such thing as human nature (because no God), then there is no proper political order and no necessary habitation for our flourishing: representative democracy and free markets are no better than fascism and communism.

How did that work out?

Yes, but why did it not work out? And show your work!

Speaking of which, A Government of Laws is all about showing the work of the founders, in that the subtitle is Political Theory, Religion, and the American Founding. Let's consider some of their work, the better to understand how and why the left rejects it in favor of an alternative metaphysic.

Let's start with Aristotle, who understood that

if we are to devise an optimal, or at least a moderately satisfactory order for men, we must understand who it is that will occupy this habitation so as to be able to judge its fitness for human occupancy (Sandoz).

Obvious, no? Indeed, one must have an advanced degree in political science in order to not understand this on a metaphysical level, or in other words, to be fundamentally wrong in principle. For the rest of us, we want a political order that reflects human nature.

Which is precisely what Madison rhetorically asked: "what is government itself, but the greatest of all reflections on human nature?"

(Not "of" but "on," which is to say, based on a consideration of who and what man is; no government could be a literal reflection of man, since he is reflected in art, religion, science, and countless other activities, so the state would have to be omniscient, omnipotent, and omnicompetent. Which, incidentally, touches on why "the notion of saving mankind through politics is, indeed, not only mistaken but ultimately disastrous.")

So, the political order isn't exactly "man writ large." Rather, it's more like a structure that permits man to WRITE and LIVE LARGE, or to become who he is: "the nature of man is displayed in the man who fulfills his potential as a human being and lives as a mature man.... This discloses the horizon for human endeavor and human actualization" (ibid.).

Ever wonder why the left infantilizes citizens and encourages immaturity, dependency, and emotionality? Well, wonder no more. It's all bound up with their initial assumptions about a de-divinized world and the absence of human nature. In reality, human beings are hierarchically structured such that there is a

series of grades from the bottom (so to speak) up to the point where he participates in the divine being as his own true self. Noetic participation in divine being distinguishes man from all other beings, insofar as man thereby has something of the divine in him (ibid.).

We're god-paddling in rather deep waters at the very edge of the subjective horizon, at the limits of our capacity to remain buoyant, so we apologize for any lack of clarity and/or linearity. We'll take another dive into the same waters in the next post...

9 comments:

julie said...

Re. The QWERTY mafia, I noticed this morning that the Netflix Kids (in theory, showing only kid-appropriate material) menu now offers a selection of alphabet-friendly programs for confused tots. A very helpful list for astute parents, now they know which programs are particularly important to avoid...

Gagdad Bob said...

Can't have an artificial reality without an artificial language.

Anonymous said...

Hello All:

I loved the post! Very well written, psychedelic and cannabis inflected at certain points, but not overdone. A enjoyable read.

Godwin wrote:
"If human beings have no nature, this is not "liberating," but rather, the opposite, for it means we are so many bags of wet cement to be shaped in the manner seen fit by the state."

I see things from the perspective of the state. I was born and raised under the wing of the state, have been molded by statist ideals, have been pressed into service by the state from early in my youth to hoary old age, and feel comfortable and at home being "Big Brother" as it were.

So I will say, we (state people) do want compliant citizens who can be shaped in the the manner seen fit by the state. I don't know as you have to be bags of wet cement, but the metaphor is sound.

We wish citizens would not resist the state and just go along with the program. It would be so much easier for all parties.

Do we undermine the family to try to get compliance? I think this is a stretch. Families are very functional for the state as long as there is a strong leader in the family who believes in conforming to the desires of the state and can make the others fall into line.

We don't like defiance, independent thinking, or too much thinking of any kind for that matter. Let the state do your thinking, and you just relax and enjoy yourself, work hard, obey the laws, and pay the taxes. Do we have a deal? Good.

Behave. That's all we ask.

julie said...

Bob, I suppose that our cultural overlords figure since the kids aren't getting it from school, they have to get it from the next best indoctrination center...

Van Harvey said...

Yep.

Anonymous said...

As a kid I used to build statist spacecraft models and dreamed of being a statist cosmonaut. But when the Soviet Union fell and my dreams of moving to Moscow died, I joined the Democratic Party instead. I watch the Communist News Network for all the latest in socialistic agitprop.

Yet still I remain confused.

So what social damage is done with these gay marriages I hear so much about? Will they make us all want to go full jihad? Is it the gay gulag commandant we fear? I just don't get it. And all the replies along the lines of "Well, you wouldn't!" explain nothing. Are gay marriages a sort of gateway vice, which will lead inexorably to marriages with, say, one's horse or hamster? Not that would be bad. Especially for the children.

I'm not gay, nor do I ever feel compelled to say "Not that there's anything wrong with that", after anything gay is brought up seriously or in joke form. I just need a clearer moral explanation about why gays marrying is bad for society. I can then go and educate my fellow comrades.

Anonymous said...

Hello Anonymous:

No harm will come to the state from gay marriage.

Some believe the harm comes when children get confused by gay marriage and then start to lose their moral compass and reliance on eternal truths; the objection to gay marriage being that it is not even possible, and pretending it is opens the gateway to pretending anything you want and the abandonment of reason.

In truth, gay marriage has been around for time out of mind. Gay people were forming clandestine unions back in the days of Ramses II and even before. They feel committed, they love each other. Is it a marriage? No? Is it a close relationship? Yes?

What does God think of gay people? He made them, so he must love them, one would think. He made billions of them; there is no error in gayness. It is absolutely intentional on the part of the Creator. No one has been able to get a straight answer from God as to what gives with the gays, and that is something that should be undertaken.

I've asked Him about it and He said being gay was an experience he wanted people to have; it adds to the well-roundedness of the soul. Everyone takes a turn with it to try it on, it is expected.

I must add I am an elitist overlord. I want you all to know that. I do exploit and despoil; I don't want to come across as some benign administrator. I am The Man. You should try to resist me if you have any ovaries at all.

Anonymous said...

Then you too shall be added to our gulag collection. Nothing personal, just business. But of course we still have the revolution in the planning stages so you've got some time. We were hoping to have Obama as our guest speaker but he's booked with all his Wall Street gigs. You'd be amazed by how many stockbrokers are comrades.

The good Dávila has no aphorisms regarding gays. I searched for "a penis" ("happiness" as a Columbian might say it), as in "a penis comes from the Divine". But I found nothing. In fact I don't think there's even an aphorism about happiness. Or getting stoned for that matter. I did see a thinly veiled reference about a tryst with Pablo Escobar though.

robert curry said...

Brilliant! And fun!

Classic Godwin.

Thanks, Bob

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