It seems that some errors will always be with us: not Darwinism per se, but something deeper than Darwinism. (And I hasten to emphasize that we're not talking merely about the mechanism of natural selection, which no one disputes, but rather, the naive and uncritical reduction of everything that transcends the genes back into the genes: spirit into matter, subject into object, truth into reproductive success, wisdom into tenure, etc.)
It seems to me that the Perennial Error that Cannot be Eradicated is a form of immanentizing the Christian eschaton. Ironically, the anti-theism expressed by Henrich could only occur in a post-Christian world (which is still a variant of Christianity).
After all, natural selection wasn't discovered by Buddhists or Muslims. With regard to the former, no intellectual would waste his time focused on the illusory ins, outs, and what-have-you's of ceaseless change. We get it: the only permanence is the impermanent. As for Islam, any changes are dictated by Allah. There is no randomness, including the genetic kind. End of story.
So, the truth of the matter is that Henrich is high up in the Christian tree of Western civilization, enthusiastically sawing away at the branch he's sitting on. But more than that, he's really attempting the chop down the whole tree -- the tree of transcendence -- and return it to the immanent ground of the forest, i.e., a world of pure horizontality.
To help us see the forest for the trees (and vice versa), let's turn to Voegelin. Maybe he's not always as clear as he could be and should be, but who else gets to the root of the problem as he does? He's like metaphysical Roundup. No, literally:
The soul grows full of weeds unless the intelligence inspects it daily like a diligent gardener (Dávila).
Look at the size that menu! Where to begin? This looks like a good appetizer: Evolutionary Theory and Kant's Critique. Let's chew on it and see if it's digestible. Hmm. We may have bitten off more than we can chew:
if the radically immanent theory of evolution were accepted, researchers would have to ascribe to the universal mother, with her generative power, an expedient organization geared to all the creatures that have come forth from her and without which the appropriate forms of the animal and plant worlds would be impossible.
Okay what? I think he means that if you radically immanentize the process of evolution, you end with a kind of de-differentiated Womb of Nature -- perhaps similar to the worldview of paleolithic cave painters. They too noticed how mother earth ceaselessly throws out forms from her womb, which is why they thought they could participate in the process by tunneling down into the earth and putting those images on the walls. Is this what Henrich is doing? Yes, only with banal words and ideas instead of glorious images. No, literally:
Without aesthetic transfiguration all of reality is pedestrian.From an aesthetic experience one returns as from a sighting of numinous footprints.
The work of art is a covenant with God.
Aesthetics is the sensible and secular manifestation of grace.
Every work of art speaks to us of God. No matter what it says.
The laws of biology in themselves do not have sufficiently delicate fingers to fashion the beauty of a face.
So, our cavedwelling cousins were the first to discover transcendence, and their paintings are urgent memos to that effect. They launched us into this vertical space, but people such as Henrich would literally reduce this space to a meaningless horizontal shuffling of genetic material. There's an ap(horism) for that:
Reducing another’s thought to his supposed motives prevents us from understanding him.
In other words, reducing our thought to the selfish motives of our genes obviously prevents Henrich from understanding us. But more to the point, it also prevents him from understanding himself. I realize this is basic stuff, but has it really never occurred to him that he isn't magically immune from his own theory, and that his ideas cannot possibly be true, only genetically useful? Yes, he's only a biologist and not a philosopher, but c'mon, man!
Back to Voegelin, then we have to get some work done:
If this idea is followed to its logical conclusion, the law according to which species develop moves closer and closer to the beginning of the history of evolution, until the first life-form is endowed with the evolutionary tendency for the entire living world, and finally speculation pushes back beyond the first life-form into inorganic matter, from which the former spontaneously originated.The "explanatory" law that was intended to be immanent thus turns again into a transcendent one, into a law that "precedes" the evolutionary series of life...
In other words, there is no God, and matter is his prophet.
We are far from finished with this subject (we've only just begun), but we'll end this post with a few aphorisms that are as paper to the rockheadedness of ideological Darwinism:
The philosopher who adopts scientific notions has predetermined his conclusions.The doctrines that explain the higher by means of the lower are appendices of a magician’s rule book.
Four or five invulnerable philosophical propositions allow us to make fun of the rest (Dávila).
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But more than that, he's really attempting the chop down the whole tree -- the tree of transcendence -- and return it to the immanent ground of the forest, i.e., a world of pure horizontality.
I wonder what it is about humans that makes us long for a return to the muck, whatever shape such a return may make? Civilzations are built, greatness achieved, for a while a culture does what is generally right, or at least right enough for most of its peoples to live relatively well, and then... ? Suddenly, it's not enough, and the cries come to tear it all down and "start again" - by which they really mean, whether they know it or not, that they want to go back to the law of the jungle and a life that is nasty, brutish and short.
Intellectual nostalgie de la boue, maybe.
Anacyclosis is a fairly common sensical theory, which is said to usually happen in even the most honorable of places. It's easy to understand, unless one doesn't get out much I suppose.
I get it, both from my small understanding of history and from an intellectual and (of course, being human) even a personal sense. Destruction is fun.
But at the same time, I don't, at all, any more than I can understand why someone might get a thrill out of molesting children, or cannibalism. There are some things which, even if I could really grasp, I wouldn't want to. The desire to destroy civilization is one of those.
Also the desire to spend $750 on a pair of mud-stained, torn pants.
Do you view this from the perspective that most destructive drives come from 'bottomfeeders'? Can it potentially come from everywhere, with the worst of it being dysfunctional mob reactions to dysfunctional concentrations of power?
I've seen anacyclosis at many levels in many organizations, ranging from small startups to my local county government to what was once of Americas greatest corporations. It appears to take hold for a variety of reasons, but I'm seeing the elites in whatever organization having, wittingly or unwittingly, the most influence in it.
The real question is, why do the masses allow it to happen? Or maybe a better question, why do the masses not recognize what's going on and nip it in the bud before the entire structure collapses?
The modern State is the transformation of the apparatus that society developed for its defense into an autonomous organism that exploits it.
Is that what happened to Rome?
Civilizations are the summer buzzing of insects between two winters.
I once debated with a historian who itemized all the items leading up to the fall of Rome.
He went over the Parthians, Celts, Huns, Visigoths... We finally kinda-sorta agreed that Rome wasn't able to maintain their slaves, loot, bread and circuses economy under those pressures. IOW, it's far easier to maintain such when an empire is expanding, than when it's contracting.
But he never explained to me why the Roman citizenry just stood there and watched while the Visigoths pillaged their city, nor why Honorius preferred to play with his chicken instead of doing something meaningful about it. My own theory was that anacyclosis moves into the next phase (oligarchy or perhaps mob rule) after the corruption of the powers that be wrecks the cultural "asabiyya".
Rome was said to be half slaves, unemployed, or underemployed for most of its many centuries, yet the empire remained in some kind of stable state until that shared sense of social solidarity went away. I certainly don't want to blame Constantinian Christianity, of course. Seems that would increase solidarity. Did the inclusion of barbarian immigrants lend a hand?
Anybody care to share further ideas about this? Nicolás, Tits, or anon#2, perhaps?
The most ironic thing about history is that foreseeing something is so difficult and having foreseen it is so easy.
It's the other way around with global warming: it only accounts for the future, not the present or past.
Yet my dear Nicolás, there have to be real reasons why history repeats.
Maybe that's the Great Filter. Intelligent life blows itself up, thanks to the inherent selfishness behind the will to survive well. Today becomes more important than tomorrow, ultimately making room for the next wave of "intelligent life".
I surf sci-fi sites as well.
History shows that man’s good ideas are accidental and his mistakes methodical.
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