Sunday, August 22, 2021

Nothing Human is Alien to Me, and It Doesn't Get Worse than That

What comes first, ideas or things? Let's consult an eminent and highly influential left wing philosopher:

For Foucault, a gay man who saw AIDS as a social construct rather than a physiological disease, reality did not exist. "Language is all there is" (Siegel, Sidebar).

I know what you're thinking: didn't this deviant lunatic die of AIDS? Indeed he did, but "death" is just a social construct -- just a word that points to another word. We are enclosed in a circle of language from which even death offers no escape: to paraphrase Orwell, imagine the liberal narrative stifling our curiosity forever:

There will be no curiosity, no enjoyment of the process of life. All competing pleasures will be destroyed. But always... always there will be the intoxication of power, constantly increasing and constantly growing subtler. Always, at every moment, there will be the thrill of victory, the sensation of trampling on an enemy who is helpless. If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face -- forever.

In an unintended sense Foucault is correct: language is all that is; for it is one of the names of God, AKA logos. We could say that God is both source and substance of the Word, without which language is strictly impossible, literally inconceivable. In other words, like everything else, language cannot be without a reason for being. 

For the fatuous Foucault, the sufficient reason of language is power. End of story. Of course, he is half-correct, in that this has always been true of the left (another case of bad philosophy reducing to unwitting autobiography): the common denominator of all left wing policies is the expansion of state power. It's what relieves them of the formalities of fact, logic, principle, and even plausibility. 

For example, what is the principle that unites such disparate items as, say, climate change, COVID hysteria, the redefinition of marriage, state-mandated racial discrimination, transgender rights, and the imaginary wage gap? Correct: each is a pretext for the concentration and extension of state power. For if the state can force us to pretend a man can marry a man, or that men can give birth, there is nothing it can't do.  

Back to the opening question: where do we begin our epistemological ascent, with ideas or things, concepts or objects? We won't re-belabor the point, because even if you have a hard time understanding how traditional realism can be true, we can eliminate the alternative because it leads straight to absurdity. Being that absurdity is ruled out, we are left with the traditional non-absurd principle that knowledge begins in the senses. 

Besides, the notion that words only point to other words is so preposterous that one would have to be mad or even irreversibly tenured to believe it. And we use the word "pre-post-erous" advisedly, because deconstruction reverses the order of pre and post: in reality, words are existentially posterior to things, even though, at the same time(lessness), the Word, AKA logos, is ontologically anterior to things. 

I hope this makes sense: if the world is intelligible to intelligence -- which it self-evidently is -- then there must be a reason. The sufficient reason of each is the logos that pervades and illuminates being. We could say that modernity is merely a rebellion against this principle, while postmodernity is an outright revolution against it.

When did this revolution get underway? Our usual answer is Genesis 3 (All Over Again), which is true as far as it goes. But revelation goes to ontological, vertical, and principial truths, not horizontal, historical, and contingent ones per se. 

Let's ask Fred Siegel, whose latest book, The Crisis of Liberalism: Prelude to Trump, offers a likely story. Which, by the way goes to the definition of history, which is a plausible narrative linking event-objects: a likely story

And just because no story is perfectly adequate to the events, it hardly means that some stories aren't more likely than others. The same descent into relativism makes leftists believe that no culture is worse than any other (except for our uniquely bad White European Patriarchal Christian Slave culture).  

By the way, analogous to what was said above about the logos, we could say the same vis-a-vis profane history and salvation history: history is One Big Story, and Christ is -- or so we have heard from the wise -- the key that unlocks it. Notice, for example, how the Apostles used this very key to illuminate the Old Testament. Without the Inkeynation, it's somewhat impenetrable.

Apologies to our Jewish friends, who obviously see things differently. Not to veer off on a tangent, but we're not so different, you and I. This is from one of my favorite little books, Honey from the Rock by Lawrence Kushner:

For the word is very near to you....

It is to begin with, all inside us. But because we are all miniature versions of the universe, it is also found far beyond. And because we are all biologically and spiritually part of the first man, the place preceded us. And because we all carry within us the genotype and vision of the last man, the place is foretold in us.

Very Coonish! Touching on what was said above about Likely Stories, he writes that

The great stories did not happen to the masters of old alone. They happen to us. You and I. This moment. A tale unfolds.

It is only that we have lost the narrative element of our existence. 

True, he can at times be a bit new-agey, but the underlying principle is sound.

Back to Siegel. Like us, he is an old-fashioned liberal, not the malevolent illiberal progressive kind: for his liberalism 

is focused not on addressing postmodern concerns such as transgender rights, recasting American democracy as primarily an instrument of racist oppression, or the need for draconian steps to address climate change and the pandemic (Kotkin).

Rather, he "wants something more prosaic: the opportunity of ordinary, and extraordinary, people to get ahead in life." Same.  So what prevents this? 

Yes, you could say "the left," but in my opinion, this doesn't go far enough, for the real problem is human nature -- especially a metaphysically untutored human nature that is naive and even blind to the nature of human nature. Really, left and right can be distinguished by their antithetical visions of human nature. 

We, of course, believe Man Writ Large is a lousy sonofabitch, even while he is an Image of God. We are inveterate underachievers, to put it mildly, always living beneath ourselves. 

The left implicitly believes the same (even while denying the existence of human nature, much less its Creator), except they project the lousy SOB into America, Toxic Males, deplorable Christians, irredeemable Trumpians, etc. 

The point is, leftism is like human nature only worse, for reasons we'll get into. To cite one especially obvious example, human beings are uniquely susceptible to envy. Envy was socially adaptive in the small bands through which we evolved in prehistory, but nowadays it's as useful as is our appendix. 

Therefore, envy is something that needs to be transcended, not politically nurtured and indulged.  For to indulge it is merely to awaken a barbaric and precivilized primate, or maybe you haven't seen what the left has done to our inner cities. Antifa is just masked envy clad in black and living in mother's basement -- pure destruction of things others have built. 

I'll have to continue this tomorrow or Tuesday. I need to run some errands.

14 comments:

julie said...

Therefore, envy is something that needs to be transcended, not politically nurtured and indulged. For to indulge it is merely to awaken a barbaric and precivilized primate

And so it needed to be set in stone: Thou shalt not covet. On the one hand, covetousness is merely a state of mind or desire, which mostly only makes the covetous one suffer. On the other hand, without covetousness how much murder, theft or adultery would there be?

Gagdad Bob said...

Kimball, on the left's unending power grab:

"For the people in charge, equality of voting rights was one thing. They could live with that. But the tendency of newly enfranchised groups -- the “bitter clingers” and “deplorables” of yore -- to reject progressive initiatives was something else again. As Woodrow Wilson noted sadly, “The bulk of mankind is rigidly unphilosophical, and nowadays the bulk of mankind votes.” What to do?

"The solution was to shift real power out of elected bodies and into the hands of the right sort of people, enlightened people, progressive people, people, that is to say, like Woodrow Wilson.

"Thus Wilson welcomed the advent of administrative power as a counterweight to encroaching democratization. And thus it was that we have seen a transfer of legislative power to the “knowledge class,” the managerial elite... A closer look at the so-called “knowledge class” shows that what it knows best is how to preserve and extend its own privileges. Its activities are swaddled in do-gooder rhetoric about serving the public, looking after “the environment,” helping the disadvantaged, etc., but what they chiefly excel at is consolidating their own power."

Gagdad Bob said...

They hate Trump because he not only exposed how venal they are, but how stupid they are.

Anonymous said...

Far more plausible than the usual tribalistic nonsense (left or right), was that the startling rise (and ill effects) of Soviet and Chinese communism inspired a true America first nationalism which lasted until Clinton supercharged offshoring with the free trade agreements. FDR wasn’t as much the “socialist“ which conservatives proclaim him to be, as much as he was an America First nationalist bent on saving western capitalism via any means neccessary, as opposed to the ridiculous and empty rhetorical sloganeering of Trump.

Reagan famously claimed to be FDRs #1 fan BTW.

Nixon, Clinton and most obviously Reagan are blamed for having set the stage for the Clinton neoliberals the and Bush neocons, which can be seen as two sides of the same corporatist coin, to send American greatness overseas and redistribute wealth and much fertile ground towards those corporations.

Examining the real whys behind the utter failure of nationbuilding in Afghanistan and Iraq should provide insight into the whys behind the general competency, for the common taxpayer, of both those neo-ideologies.

Anonymous said...

An easy way to distinguish that anonymous from this anonymous, and others, is that one's obsession du jour is Afghanistan. Wonder what shiny object he droned on about before?

Speaking of objects, he provides a fine object lesson affirming the lack of common ground between us with which to have a real conversation. We're left with a verbal paint ball match.

Anonymous said...

They hate Trump because he not only exposed how venal they are, but how stupid they are.

Do you ever step back and look at the nonsense coming out of your mind? I mean, jesus, how fucked in the head do you have to be to think Trump makes other people look stupid and venal?

Barry O said...

Never underestimate Joe's ability to fuck things up.

No One Ever said...

Trump makes our elites look like stable geniuses.

Anonymous said...

We're left with a verbal paint ball match.

Indeed. Though personally, I'd prefer feces. Bwahahahahahahaha!

Speaking of imaginary problem solving via throwing feces, I remember my town zoos chimp exhibit. This was back before natural exhibits were demanded by the left. In that particular exhibit, the one with the window looking into the small cage, the chimps threw feces at the viewing window before smearing it around.

I slowly realized that they were trying to create a sort of privacy screen. Proof of chimp intelligence? Discuss.

Anonymous said...

Speaking of Afghanistan once again, I really do think that a 20 year, $2T, 100K lives lost debacle should be more than just "a shiny object".

I was once a Tea Partier goddammnit!

Something has gotta be seriously wrong if a taxpaying citizen describes such a thing as a mere "shiny object". $2T could've built nukular space bases all over the space place!

Would you be open to a battery of psychological testing, for either low IQ, cult-think tendencies, or just basic everyday psychopathy?

julie said...

Fascinating. He's absolutely correct, think of how many videos or still shots we've seen in recent years from some leftist's office or living room. You can learn an awful lot about someone by the books he want you to think he's read and the paintings he hangs on the walls. Or whether they whip their junk out when they think can get away with it.

Anonymous said...

Oh dear, it seems someone has had their nerve struck. Our latest anonymous troll provides an entertaining look into the self righteous hypocrisy of lefty groupthink. Yes it wears thin, but it's fun for a while.

Anonymous said...

If the Taliban's reintroduction of Islamic Law with it's curbs on abortion in some small way helps safeguard the rest of the world against the immune response of the Universe with global warming and plague then that can only be seen as a good thing.

Anonymous said...

IT looks like Losing $2T means nothing in the face of "entertaining look into the self righteous hypocrisy of lefty groupthink". I know you are but what an I?

So many disjointed words representing so many disjointed thoughts. Modern conservatism is a religion about nothing, basically rationalized insanity, "because the left is always worse".

We must go one louder and shout down The Other.

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