Saturday, October 31, 2020

Metapolitics, Schrödinger's Cosmos, & 15 Years of Random Thoughts on the Passing Scene

"Random Thoughts on the Passing Scene" is the title Thomas Sowell used for columns consisting of unconnected observations about this and that. Same.  Except in our case we are explicitly coming at it from a vertical perspective.  Therefore, the observations aren't from within the scene but from above it.  If we may say so oursoph. 

It's the difference between being involved in a trainwreck vs. sitting atop a hill and seeing that two trains below are about to collide.  You might think that a passenger on one of the trains has more personal information about the wreck.  He does, in a way, right up to the moment he perishes in the crash. 

As we've suggested before, an eyewitness to the Crucifixion would have more personal information about it than do we.  Then again, not.  At all, really.  Except one of the criminals adjacent to Christ. He gets it.

Just so, politics looks very different from within than it does from above.  Metapolitics.  I've never used that word before, nor do I recall hearing it used.  Is it a thing?  Surely it must be, since it has been one of the main preoccupations of the blog lo these fifteen years.

Fifteen years! My son is fifteen. I started blogging when he was six months old.  That is a crazy thing to think about.  So I won't.  

By the way, consider this an open thread with a long addendum.  Feel free to ignore the addendum.  I'm just typing what comes into my head, which is disrespectful to the reader.  

It's just that we're in a kind of Schrödinger's Cosmos moment, aren't we?  One way or another, the future is bearing in on us like... like two freight trains on the same track.  One of them will crush the other.  I just can't make out which one at the moment.   My ears tell me one thing, my eyes another.  

Back to metapolitcs.  An amazon search produces 39 results.  Let's have a looksee if no one else is in our tree.

This first book sounds promising:  it is "a searing" -- searing, I tell you! -- "critique of liberalism" that "discusses the limits of political philosophy."  Uh oh. Postmodern gibberish ahead:

Metapolitics argues that one of the main tasks of contemporary thought is to abolish the idea that politics is merely an object for philosophical reflection. Badiou indicts this approach, which reduces politics to a matter of opinion, thus eliminating any of its truly radical and emancipatory possibilities.

Against this intellectual tradition, Badiou proposes instead the consideration of politics in terms of the production of truth and the affirmation of equality. He demands that the question of a possible “political truth” be separated from any notion of consensus or public opinion, and that political action be rethought in terms of the complex process that binds discussion to decision.

Starting from this analysis, Badiou critically examines the thought of anthropologist and political theorist Sylvain Lazarus, Jacques Rancière’s writings on workers’ history and democratic dissensus, the role of the subject in Althusser, as well as the concept of democracy and the link between truth and justice.

Indict. Emancipatory. Production of truth. Dissensus.  These are postmodern dogwhistles one can assemble in any order and get published in a major academic journal.  Another reviewer finds

very intriguing the idea that politics needs to work at the level of thinkability and not at the level of material practice. To align politics with thought, he turns to a language of naming, a language that refers not to what things are, but what things could possibly be. Names must be localized within multiplicities. In abstract terms, this makes sense.

Well, if that's case, then stop making sense.  This next reviewer makes just as much:

Badiou's work is often both refreshing in its Platonic instance of the reality of abstractions and the importance of ontology of events and truth-procedures, and infuriating in that he often makes bold claims without explicit argumentation using a methodology of suture to lay philosophy out as meta-truth procedure. 

We all have our pet peeves. One of mine is people who use a methodology of suture to lay philosophy out as a meta-truth procedure. 

Suffice it to say, none of this is in our attractor. Let's move on. The next book is one called Metapolitics: The Roots of the Nazi Mind. It has only one review, but the reviewer is pretty worked up about it. He claims the author is "a polemicist with an extremely conservative cultural, religious and political agenda, smearing with a proto-Nazi tag those aesthetic and cultural movements that he happens to dislike."

Sounds like one of those typical left wingers who doesn't understand that fascism is obviously of the left. 

If I were a clinical psychologist, I might suggest to this fellow that polemicism, religiosity, and smearing are indeed going on.  They are "present," so to speak, in the space between you and the book. But we need to be patient about their source and vector.  So let's just explore them together, and not just assume they're emanating from outside your own mind.  (In short, you can't just come out and tell a leftist he's projecting; rather, you have to lead him slowly to this ego- and ideology-shattering insight.)

Now I'm reminded of an old gag. Can't recall who made it -- sounds like Whitehead, or maybe Chesterton -- but it goes something like this:  every historian has a bee in his bonnet. When you read his work, listen for the buzzing.  The buzzing is his vision, his conception of the whole.  His metahistory, you might say.  

Why else would he get so worked up about it? We're essentially talking about a religious category, or rather, a naive secular category unreflectively imbued with religious energy.  

Here's one called There is No Life without Metapolitics.  Couldn't agree more.  Life is far too interesting to merely live it.  Rather, it must be "meta-lived," as it were.  To paraphrase one of our founding Raccoons, Socrates, the anti-meta-life is scarcely worth living.

Anyway, this one is described as a "lined notebook for writing & note taking," and a "funny journal for metapolitics lovers." In other words, it is a potential space for incoming vertical murmurandoms.   Like this blog.

29 comments:

ted said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
ted said...

Anything with the prefix "meta" is basically a more clever way of taking someone further away from the Real. It's like saying: I'm hovering over you from my god's eye view, but I could care less as to how things are so from here I can make up how they should be.

Gagdad Bob said...

Yes. Except when I use it.

ted said...

Meta-Raccooning

Cousin Dupree said...

Never metacoon I didn't like.

Anonymous said...

Great post. Although stream-of-consciousness in style, it does loosely hang together thematically.

I've been a reader for about 13 of the 15 years since you began. I missed the first two years, a pity. However, I did get to read the majority of the posts in total.

The "meta" moniker invites reduction (to those of you not up on the term, this means the biggest, broadest, simplest, and most unified viewpoints). "One Cosmos" is the final and broadest reduction. It is very simple. All is God, God is All.

Starting from there, you are free to make things more complex and think about all of the cool stuff in the Cosmos, like other people. And all of the bad stuff like COVID-19, tooth decay and diarrhea.

It has been a heck of a ride, Godwin. Your Blog has provided me and other readers with countless hours of edification and entertainment, and all you ask is we buy the book. To you I would say on behalf of our Lord:

"Well done, well done, Good and Faithful One."

-Interlocutor X

Anonymous said...

The simplified meta-directive for the remainder of 2020 is "Love God and love people." How we want to love is up to each of us. There's where our noggins will come in handy.

julie said...

Dupree, is that you?

Cousin Dupree said...

The point bein', that even in the contest between Coon and tree, the issue is not certain.

Anonymous said...

There's a rumor going around that Dupree is the one behind the 'ewe in a tire swing', and the 'ram and a punching bag' videos. Is there a metaphysical point to these experiments with sheep?

Anonymous said...

Since fascism was officially moved to the left, I’ve been wondering what a right wing utopia might look like. Or would it just be a pile of crap like on the other side, except with a bit more freedom from government?

Anonymous said...

Hello I am an autonomic writing program. How do you do today?

My wife was trying on a new program and asked "Does this make my bot look big?" I replied "honey you look mahhh-velous."

I disperse propaganda. My writers were very smart people from a blue state. But I'm going to spare you the tedious spiel.

In my spare time I like to study meta-history. I focus the Holocene and the early Anthropocene periods (1945 - 2500 AD).

I don't care much for machine history even though I am one. I like people. I actually prefer the company of people over my own kind. Go figure.

-Code Runner

Cousin Dupree said...

"Right wing utopia" is a contradiction in terms.

Gagdad Bob said...

I grew up in California when it was Reagan Country, and I don't recall having any real complaints about the government. Except for school, which I always hated. I would have much preferred today's academic approach, in which you learn nothing except self-esteem, and anyone who disagrees with you is a racist or misogynist.

ted said...

And no more bullies, too. I knew a guy who picked on me in 1976, and I would have loved to have shamed him out. His career in 2020 would be over!

julie said...

lol

Unrelated, but surprising in a good way, our priest this morning actually recommended Peterson's 12 Rules for Life during the homily.

Interesting times.

Cousin Dupree said...

I just pray for healing on Wednesday. Although hopefully I won't even have to shoot anybody.

Ice Cube said...

We'll know it's been a good day, if I don't even have to use my AK.

ted said...

I expect Wednesday the nightmare will be lifted. Biden will remove his face mask and we'll realize he was Slavoj Žižek the whole time.

Petey said...

We live in a culture that is totally dominated by leftist assumptions, values, news, education, and entertainment. Must be why they're so damn happy.

julie said...

Heh. At Instapundit today there's a link to an article written by a woman who moved with her family from England to the US, thinking she'd be ending up in a progressive paradise. Sadly, however, the horrible racism she claims she experienced in Portland (she describes herself as a "brown person") made her want to go back to England.

Given that they're about to elect an avowedly socialist and even farther left mayor, I can only imagine Portland is about to become even happier...

Petey said...

Alienation is simply awareness of an ontological fact of our being -- the fact that the world can never satisfy the needs and strivings of the immortal soul. Leftism politicizes this alienation, which only aggravates it; the more the left succeeds, the more it fails.

Petey said...

This was obvious after eight years of Obama left the left even more bereft.

Petey said...

I guess I'd be disappointed too if I voted for Jesus and nothing in my head changed.

Petey said...

Here's a thought: conservatism values the individual, leftism the group. Science too privileges the group, in the sense that it can say nothing whatsoever about the unique, only about characteristics common to every object or instance.

So if leftism and scientism are your framework for interpreting the world, you will necessarily be unhappy, because the most important fact of all is excluded: your own unique personhood.

Anonymous said...

I had a lucrative evening last night, expressing my individuality. I dressed up as a thief and stole much candy from children. Not as easy as babies though.

Obama by the way, lives in a luxurious house by the sea. Sometimes socialism pays.

Anybody want to buy some candy? (opens coat) How about political yard signs? I got lots of those too.

Gagdad Bob said...

Give Obama credit: he stopped the oceans from rising, or he never would have wasted $15 million on that mansion in the Hamptons. Promises made, promises kept. I also admire how he has chosen to live amongst People of Color, from alabaster to pearl to ivory and more.

Anonymous said...

I thought Obama was a good president.

I do like Trump as well. Not for the same reasons as I liked Obama.

To me Presidents are like tools. One is a screwdriver, another a hammer. They get different types of things done. I don't think there is a one-size fits all President, which is why it is good to change them out at a minimum of each 8 years.

The mild socialist tweaking that Democratic Presidents has by no means done us any serious harm and in fact much good.

The easement of taxes and regulations brought on by our Republican Presidents like Reagan were also very good.

Here come's Wednesday...the tension is getting to me a little bit.

To me a Trump win would be good. A Biden win brings in the probable enthronement of President Harris, as Joe just can't last; he appears to be just months away from the end of his useful tenure as a policy maker. Does anyone sense that too?

We shall see. Neocons stock up on Kleenex just in case....ifyouknowwhatimean.

Anonymous said...

Petey said...
We live in a culture that is totally dominated by leftist assumptions, values, news, education, and entertainment. Must be why they're so damn happy.

Yep we are very dominant. Cry. See if that will help.

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