Showing posts with label Aristotle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aristotle. Show all posts

Monday, November 1, 2021

The Anhistorical Man_Pars Secunda. Will Democracy Survive in the Age of Aquarius?


~by David Aiken~

                                                                                                              

§ Prologue

            In The Politics (1310a: 12-36), Aristotle reminds us that there are two fundamental ‘goods’ to respect in order to preserve any system of government, which includes a system of government that is framed of the People, by the People, and for the People. One, is to educate The People into the ideas of that government; and two, is to teach The People that an appropriate education is not necessarily what The People wish for or what brings The People pleasure.

The greatest thing of everything that has been mentioned for preserving a system of government, although this is the thing everyone slights, is providing education in accordance with the system of government. For even the most beneficial and widely approved laws bring no benefit if they are not going to be inculcated through education and the habits of the citizens. Education appropriate for a democratic system of government is not to be guided by what brings enjoyment to the partisans of democracy but rather by what makes it possible to run a system of government democratically.

 

To quickly summarize from Pars Prima, which was published on Phrontisterion last month:

Pars Prima: Act I. Humanities, Crisis, & Inhumanities

There is crisis in the Education of The People, which manifests itself in the study of Humanities, although this should not be the case if Americans are interested in the long-term success of the Enlightenment Project: Democracy, as America’s trade-mark mode of political and social self-expression in the world.

 

Pars Prima: Act II. Plato's Euthyphro: An Ancient Drama of Religion and Politics

As an explanation and a metaphor for at least some elements linked to current crises in the Humanities, we can look to the various “FAILURES” that were experienced by the great philosopher Socrates, and especially his striking failure so dramatically represented by Plato in the Euthyphro dialogue.

[…] On this reading, does not Plato lead us to the conclusion that genuine “Socratic” dialogue, which should ideally lead us to convert intellectually to the ‘good life’ and thereby transform us into wise men, is in fact futile when confronted with an audience that is disposed neither to conversion nor to wisdom? And by metaphorical extension, are we not guided toward the same conclusion of futility when we consider that the same insurmountable obstacles that faced and finally crushed Socrates, continue to face those who engage in the modern humanistic pursuits?

[…] In Jefferson’s vision of American, however, the education of the people […] strives after the ongoing improvement of democracy’s gatekeepers, teachers of Humanities must continue to argue and to militate for the study of those subjects that keep our eyes riveted upon Power of all sorts, and, how much more, upon the subtle permutations of power into tyranny. We need to study history, and politics, civics and current events in order to keep before our eyes the political institutions whereby Men define and govern themselves; and we need to study foreign languages, philosophy, religions, mythologies and literatures, and all the sciences in order to understand that it is through various and diverse languages and “stories” that we as a people initially begin to frame, and then to flesh out, our political and social institutions, which in turn become reflections of the intellectual life of the American demos. Why do we do this? Because, "[i]f the children are untaught, their ignorance and vices will in future life cost us much dearer in their consequences than it would have done in their correction by a good education" (Thomas Jefferson to Joseph C. Cabell, 1818. FE 10:99).

 

Will Democracy Survive in the Age of Aquarius?_Pars Secunda

But, then, these Socratic failures also seem to dominate in our own moment in history. Because it certainly seems that, in a post-facto kind of way, we inhabit the antechambers of Enlightenment’s new-age inferno. Enlightenment Man is fundamentally anhistorical, in that he represents an attempt, fairly unique in human history, to create Man entirely and whole-clothe in the image of man, without the formal traditional accoutrements of religious trappings. Along with the king’s Crown, the Enlightenment philosophes of the 18th century also deposed the Christian God of Western History. But new intellectual battles lines are now arising whose forms are only starting to become clear. It is the dawning of a new age—the Age of Aquarius.

 

§ In a galaxy a lot like our own...

Hamlet said a mouthful when he said to his friend Horatio: “There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy,” where ‘your philosophy’ really means ‘what you think you know by your empirical sciences’. According to western astrology there are 12 signs or houses of the zodiac, and therefore twelve astrological ages, each one lasting approximately 2155 years, for a total astrological cycle of 25,860 years. Our Wiki-source unravels the calculations for the cycle of the ages:

The approximate 2,160 years for each age corresponds to the average time it takes for the vernal equinox to move from one constellation of the zodiac into the next. This can be computed by dividing the earth's 25,800 year gyroscopic precession period by twelve, the number of Zodiac constellations used by astrologers. According to different astrologers' calculations, approximated dates for entering the Age of Aquarius range from 1447 AD (Terry MacKinnell) to 3597 (John Addey).

 

This source continues on to explain the whys and wherefores of these supposed astrological ages, which are certainly based more on a mixture of speculative and historical evidence rather than any verifiable empirical science:

Astrological ages exist as a result of precession of the equinoxes. The slow wobble of the earth's spin axis on the celestial sphere is independent of the diurnal rotation of the Earth on its own axis and the annual revolution of the earth around the sun. Traditionally this 25,800-year-long cycle is calibrated for the purposes of determining astrological ages by the location of the sun in one of the twelve zodiac constellations at the vernal equinox, which corresponds to the moment the sun rises above the celestial equator, marking the start of spring in the Northern hemisphere each year. Roughly every 2,150 years the sun's position at the time of the vernal equinox will have moved into a new zodiacal constellation. However zodiacal constellations are not uniform in size, leading some astrologers to believe that the corresponding ages should also vary in duration. This however is a contentious issue amongst astrologers.

 

§ The Age of Aquarius.

In the eyes of a whole generation a musical group named The 5th Dimension formally ushered in the "Age of Aquarius," early in 1969, with their eponymous platinum song, which was to go on to become one of the most popular songs of that year worldwide, winning Grammys in 1970 for Record of the Year and best Pop Vocal Performance by a Group. According to Wiki sources, the “Age of Aquarius” is listed at #66 on Billboard’s “Greatest Songs of All Time.”

Astral sign for Pisces

In their song, The 5th Dimension celebrates a celestial transition that marks the end times of an astrological “age” –the world’s passage out of the Piscean Age, or Age of Pisces, and its entrance into a new age of the world: the Age of Aquarius. Now according to our Wiki-source, the Piscean Age, whose dust we are apparently in the process of collectively shaking off our sandals, is the “Age of Monotheism, deception, & fraud,” and

could be called the “Age of Deception.” Some of the keywords symbolizing Pisces are: deception, illusion, hidden, misled, confusion, fraudulent schemes, fantasy world, secrets, false, fake, mysteries, drugs/alcohol and on the positive side, kind, intuitive, and gentle. It rules the arts and humanities. You can see the “deception” and “illusion” in every aspect of your life; appearance, finances, communication, your home, entertainment, health, the foods you consume, drugs, government, and religion.

 

However, the new age of the world, the “Age of Aquarius,” will be marked by “love, light, and humanity.” Whence all the chitter-chatter about ‘new-age’ philosophy, religion, et al.

Astral sign for Aquarius
Traditionally, Aquarius is associated with electricity, computers, flight, democracy, freedom, humanitarianism, Idealism, modernization, astrology, nervous disorders, rebellion, nonconformity, philanthropy, veracity, perseverance, humanity, and irresolution.

 

All of this sounded tasty and delicious to a generation of young Americans in the 1960s and 70s, who were wandering lost through a wasteland war in southeast Asia, and who were being culturally drafted, through ideas, music, and drugs, into an infinitely more desirable vision of a new, peaceful age of the world. The end of an age, the Piscean age, marked by the ravages of war, supposedly had given way to peace on a cosmic level, although when this rather fluid event began to occur is not precisely agreed upon by those in the know.

In 1929 the International Astronomical Union defined the edges of the 88 official constellations. The edge established between Pisces and Aquarius technically locates the beginning of the Aquarian Age around 2600 AD. Many astrologers dispute this approach because of the varying sizes of the zodiacal constellations and overlap between the zodiacal constellations. […] Many astrologers consider the appearance of many of these Aquarian developments over the last few centuries indicative of the proximity of the Aquarian age. However, there is no agreement on the relationship of these recent Aquarian developments and the Age of Aquarius.

 

When put to music, the changing of an age might well sound like the musicand words of the The 5th Dimension. But in going the extra mile visually, Milos Forman’s cinematographic translation into Hair perfectly translates the cultural spirit of the times, rendering for us the day when America’s youth found itself awakening to a new dawning as the New Age of the World made its hippy-esque entrance into the world of men.

 

Age of Aquarius (1969)
When the moon is in the Seventh House
And Jupiter aligns with Mars
Then peace will guide the planets
And love will steer the stars

This is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius
Age of Aquarius
Aquarius! Aquarius!

Harmony and understanding
Sympathy and trust abounding
No more falsehoods or derisions
Golden living dreams of visions
Mystic crystal revelation
And the mind's true liberation
Aquarius! Aquarius!

When the moon is in the Seventh House
And Jupiter aligns with Mars
Then peace will guide the planets
And love will steer the stars

This is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius
Age of Aquarius
Aquarius! Aquarius!

Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in
Let the sun shine, Let the sun shine in
The sun shine in

 

The times were indeed delicious and heady. And then, as the urgency surrounding the war in southeast Asia began to fade, the peacenik Flower Child movement was slowly subsumed into the Jesus Revolution of the American 70s. It was a transvaluation of Nietzschean proportions, where a movement for political and military peace was co-opted by new leadership in the form of the sometime Son of the war-mongering God of the Jews. Jesus, the Palestinian Jew had to remind his friends of his warrior status and attitude: "Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword” (Matthew 10:34); his was a cosmic standing clearly reminiscent of his claim to be El-Gadol, the Great Warrior God of Isaiah 9:14, and was subsequently transformed by the new Jesus Revolution into Jesus, the Prince of Peace.

            A peace movement morphed into a religious revolution, with all the pertinent military accoutrements of language, metaphor, and overtone.  Which brings us to the problem of the place of Religion in the Civil Society.

 

§ On Religion and the Enlightenment State: Homo Luminis & Homo Tenebrarum

The various pre-state territories of historical Europe were embroiled in religious wars from 1524 to 1648. This represents just about 80 continuous years of bloody conflict about Religion among the various European territories, before allowing that the “Holy Roman Empire” (which included the Kingdoms of Germany, Bohemia, Burgundy, Italy, and a variety of other, smaller territorial players) would recognize three distinct Christian traditions: Roman Catholicism, and the two reformed traditions of Lutheranism and Calvinism.

In our present day, History may well be repeating itself, perhaps just in order to test our collective memories. For Men of Light (Homo Luminis), those who favor the creation of a Civil Society where reason and education hold sway, continue to this very day to remain locked in a philosophical, and ultimately political struggle with Men of Obscurity (Homo Tenebrarum), those who defer to “Other” authorities, which are seated beyond human ken. So the question for contemporary Civil Society is entirely philosophical in nature. The Enlightenment goal is not to invalidate the religious experience, such as do those who ask the idiotic and impossible-to-answer question of whether, for example, “radicalized people are mentally ill,” and whether “religious conviction can be ‘treated’ by a pill?” Nor is Enlightenment’s philosophical goal, in the sense of this essay, to discern whether or not Religion makes legitimate claims to truth. Rather, it is to determine how men of differing convictions about reality, and knowledge, and truth, can live together, meaningfully, in Civil Society.

 

For John Locke (1632-1704), the English Enlightenment philosopher who was born while the blood was yet flowing from the various European religious wars, the philosophical challenge confronting England during his life was not that of expunging religion from Civil Society, nor of invalidating or even challenging religious belief, nor, finally, that of denying the possibility of authentic religious experience.

Rather, the philosophical experiment was to try first to determine whether and then to establish how, various and conflicting religious traditions could successfully cohabit the public space together with civil and Enlightenment values and rules. It would only be later, however, well after Locke’s time, that the American pragmatic philosopher, John Dewey (1859-1952), would confirm the importance of a Jeffersonian idea as an essential cornerstone for the completion of Locke’s initial philosophical direction. This would lay a foundation for a reasonably definitive philosophical bridge: public Education, which would create the necessary conditions for the possible coexistence of civil society and religion. Following Jefferson in this, Dewey contended that for democracy to continue existing, society must educate the successive generations of youth in the fundamental precepts of the democratic philosophy. The possibility and hope for democracy lays in public Education. From John Dewey, Democracy and Education (1958, 4):

If a plague carried off the members of a society all at once, it is obvious that the group would be permanently done for. Yet the death of each of its constituent members is as certain as if an epidemic took them all at once. But the graded difference in age, the fact that some are born as some die, makes possible through transmission of ideas and practices the constant reweaving of the social fabric. Yet this renewal is not automatic. Unless pains are taken to see that genuine and thorough transmission takes place, the most civilized group will relapse into barbarism and then into savagery. In fact, the human young are so immature that if they were left to themselves without the guidance and succor of others, they could not even acquire the rudimentary abilities necessary for physical existence. The young of human beings compare so poorly in original efficiency with the young of many of the lower animals, that even the powers needed for physical sustentation have to be acquired under tuition. How much more, then, is this the case with respect to all the technological, artistic, scientific, and moral achievements of humanity!

 

An additional ingredient, however, must be added to Dewey’s witches’ brew of Human Civilized Society, which is an idea suggested by the study of both anthropologyand sociology. And that is the ingredient of Religion. In Dewey’s phrasing: every barbarism on its journey toward civilization, ultimately grounds itself in some sort of a religion.

 

In his A (Very) Short Primer on Kant’s Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason, Joshua Broggi reminds us that the question of religion also lies at the very heart of Immanuel Kant’s quintessentially Enlightenment thinking.

I take it that the question Kant is asking in the 1793 Religion is this: How much of

Christianity (or religion more generally) can we responsibly believe and practice, if our decision is grounded solely on some basic skills of reasoning? The answer is, ‘not very much’, and in arriving at that answer, Kant formulates arguments that would profoundly affect how subsequent philosophers and theologians thought about religion. Such a question about religion is not original to Kant, but was widely asked among the vanguard of Enlightenment intellectuals – and their answers covered a range of possibilities, some far more skeptical than Kant’s.

 

§ Homo Luminis Versus Homo Tenebrarum: The Conflict.

In the New Testament (Romans 13), the apostle Paul makes the case that all authority, political and other, is given by God and that men must submit to that authority as unto God Himself. Christianity, which is inherently theocratic, stands in opposition to the wider conception of the liberal democracy. To extrapolate a more general Enlightenment principle—authoritarianism exists wherever there is an appeal made to any authority whatsoever other than to that of human reason alone. The philosophical challenge that any and all Religion opposes to the Civil Society, is therefore obvious.

In media there are an almost infinite number of examples of the multifaceted, quasi-eternal conflict between Homo Luminis and Homo Tenebrarum.

Source: http://religiondispatches.org/its-the-apocalypse-stupid-understanding-christian-opposition-to-obamacare-civil-rights-new-deal-and-more/

My argument in a nutshell is that the apocalyptic theology that developed in the 1880s and 1890s led radical evangelicals to the conclusion that all nations are going to concede their power in the End Times to a totalitarian political leader who is going to be the Antichrist. If you believe you’re living in the last days and you believe you’re moving towards that event, you’re going to be very suspicious and skeptical of anything that seems to undermine individual rights and individual liberties, and anything that is going to give more power to the state. [insufficient, given Biblical statements]

But their conclusions, broken down to their simplest form are these: We’re living in the church age and we’re moving towards the Rapture. Jesus will Rapture all true believers out of this world, they’ll just disappear, they’ll go up to heaven with Jesus, and then with the loss of Christian influence in the world, Satan will have free rein to take power through a political leader, called the Antichrist, who is then going to rule over the world for seven years. This period is called the Tribulation.

Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/11/16/in-light-of-the-paris-attacks-is-it-time-to-eradicate-religion/

Religion, it would seem, breeds violence. Far from being great, God might be thought terrible.

                  In a globalized world, the terror of God’s crazy-eyed followers is threatening lives, peace and prosperity of everyone on the planet. We are tempted to conclude: The sooner that humanity either eradicates or quarantines off religion, the better our world will be. This conclusion would be too hasty, however.

                  First, if the hope for the world depends on eradication of religion, we should all despair. Religions are in fact growing in absolute and relative terms. In 1970, there were 0.71 billion unaffiliated or non-religious people, while in 2050, there will be 1.2 billion. That’s impressive growth, until you compare it with the projected growth of religions.

                  Between 1970 and 2050, the number of Hindus is projected to grow from 0.43 to nearly 1.4 billion, the number of Muslims from 0.55 billion to 2.7 billion and the number of Christians from 1.25 billion to 2.9 billion. And due to the immense popularity of the democratic ideal, religious adherents are becoming increasingly politically assertive.

Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2015/11/18/does-isis-really-have-nothing-to-do-with-islam-islamic-apologetics-carry-serious-risks/?tid=sm_fb

But if the goal is to understand ISIS, then I, and other analysts who happen to be Muslim, would be better served by cordoning off our personal assumptions and preferences. What Islam should be and what Islam is actually understood to be by Muslims (including extremist Muslims) are very different things.

Source: http://www.versobooks.com/blogs/2337-mourning-becomes-the-law-judith-butler-from-paris

Those commentators that seek to distinguish among sorts of Muslim communities and political views are considered to be guilty of pursuing "nuances." Apparently, the enemy has to be comprehensive and singular to be vanquished, and the difference between muslim and jihadist and ISIL becomes more difficult to discern in public discourse. The pundits were sure who the enemy was before ISIL took responsibility for the attacks. (Judith Butler)

Source: Salon: This is the religious right’s radical new plan: The very real efforts to create an American theocracy in plain sight

Religious Pluralism. This brings us to the very core of the problem: Religious freedom is not about religion vs. irreligion, but about individual freedom vs. institutional coercion.

Source: www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-evangelicals-idUSKBN0TU16M20151211?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews&utm_source=twitter#kZlYdtc6P8wJptxZ.97

Lane and his network of pastors say they are well within their rights to bring politics into the church. “The founding fathers never meant for the church not to participate in government,” said Lane. “They meant for the government not to interfere with the church.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-and-the-cliche-of-civilizations_us_566ad2a6e4b0cdc1831f6863. Levy’s article from Haaretz: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.686732

 But Levy … deliberately wades into the conflict taking place within Islam itself, a clash within a civilization, between what he identifies as the good guys, the “Islam of the enlightenment,” and the bad guys, the Islamofascists.”

                  […] “Which brings us back to this question of a civilizational conflict. To repeat, there is no clash between Islam and the West, except in the minds of the Islamic State and the ideologues of the “free world” who believe that inside every Muslim is an Islamofascist dying to get out. The real clash is taking place within a civilization, within Islam, over doctrinal issues, the nature of the state, the relationship with the market, and so on — and the Islamic State is largely peripheral to this ideological clash.

                  More fundamentally, an equally contentious struggle is going on within the so-called free world. Here is where the civilizational rubber really hits the road. Will enough good people of conscience — enough moderate Christians and moderate Jews and moderate whatevers in the United States — stand up to the intolerance of our native extremism?

                  As an unknown French wit once said in the 1930s, America is the only society to go from barbarism to decadence without knowing civilization. Bernard-Henri Levy is free to take potshots at Islam. But, honestly, we here on this side of the Atlantic, in the throes of Trumpian decadence, are in desperate need of an Enlightenment of our own.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/skye-jethani/is-this-the-end-of-evangelicalism_b_2499253.html

The role of religion in the civil society

 

§ I Spy in My Mind’s Eye… what does Voltaire see?

So there was the Prontisterion Puppenmeister, reading along in the Oeuvres of Voltaire (volume 8, “Philosophy,” § 1, Paris: 1847) in the quiet of a fine summer morning, enjoying an early cup of coffee and minding one’s own business in a polite, philosophical kind of way, when, in a very impolite way indeed, Voltaire pricked one’s early-morning, still semi-slumbering wits.

One becomes accustomed to Voltaire’s uncompromising tones when he is speaking about the barbarism of the fanatical mind. He is of course wholly inclusive and non-discriminating on the question of fanaticism, including All & Sundry – the religious, the political, and the romantic barbarisms, and V insists that the barbarically minded, like rabid dogs driven to attack some new victim, will always and inevitably persecute the philosophically minded. Sigh….

In this particular section of Voltaire’s text (p. 126), he takes to task the Welch for rabidly attacking the English Enlightenment philosopher John Locke, and who were entirely focusing their attention on L’s contention that, while it is impossible to make any final philosophical determinations concerning the immateriality of the soul, it is obvious that the soul must be immortal, because God, etc.  Apparently, the Welch were of the mind that philosophers, at least in Wales and for the Welch, ought not, and are not even permitted to, weigh in on such matters, to which Voltaire (p. 127) responds that, O contraire, mes amis: “this is indeed quite permissible and quite useful for the French, and that nothing does more good for the English, and that it is high time to exterminate this barbarousness” (“cela est très permis et très utile chez les Français ; que rien n’a fait plus de bien aux Anglais, et qu’il est temps d’exterminer la barbarie.”)

            Then comes the less than politically correct rub, when Voltaire addresses the reader in an exergue (p. 128): “You reply to me that we shall never be able to complete this task. No, perhaps not among the people and the imbeciles; but among those who are honest you will win the day” (“Vous me répliquez qu’on n’en viendra pas à bout. Non, chez le peuple et chez les imbéciles ; mais chez tous les honnêtes gens votre affaire est faite.”)

 

There is a disturbing idea suggested in this Voltairean conclusion, which does not bode well for the long-term future of democracy as a political and social philosophy. And it is the intimation that the philosophy of democracy is doomed to failure to whatever degree it depends upon the good graces of either ‘The People’ or ‘Imbeciles’, terms which, frankly, might well be interchangeable in Voltaire’s context. And then to add the final bit of bitterness to the Prontisterion Puppenmeister’s early summer-morning coffee, there is Voltaire’s concluding idea, that the distribution of power among individuals, which is after all the anchoring philosophical principle of democracy, will work, will be effective and therefore fruitful, if and only if we use the tools of thought and persuasion on those who are already in and of themselves ‘honest’. However, because honesty is not necessarily an intrinsic characteristic of the Human Animal, there is cause for fear & trembling among the enlightened masses.

 

§ A Media Muddle Surrounding the Survival Potential of Democracy as a Participatory Political Philosophy

Source: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/10/12/democracy-and-the-demagogue/?_r=1

There is however an excellent argument that it is not possible to prevent politicians in a democracy from endorsing antidemocratic attitudes. A chief value of democracy is liberty. Liberty is the freedom for all to pursue their own paths; the common interests are to be found where these diverse paths intersect. But liberty centrally includes freedom of political speech. One might legitimately wonder whether a society that bans antidemocratic speech in the political realm is genuinely a democracy. We cannot force politicians to commit to protecting democratic values by restricting their democratic freedoms, chief among them the freedom of speech.

                  In Book VIII of “The Republic,” Plato is clear-eyed about these perils for democracy. He worries that a “towering despot” will inevitably rise in any democracy to exploit its freedoms and seize power by fomenting fear of some group and representing himself as the protector of the people against that fear. It is for this reason that Plato declares democracy the most likely system to end in tyranny. Plato’s prediction is most dramatically exhibited by Weimar Germany. But more mundane recent examples of his description of democracy’s breakdown and descent into tyranny exist to varying degrees in the cases of Hungary and Russia. The fragmentation of equal respect is a clear alarm for the United States. We must heed it by categorically rejecting politicians who seek to gain office by exploiting the mistaken belief that democratic values are weaknesses.

Source: https://aeon.co/opinions/democracies-fail-when-they-ask-too-little-of-their-citizens

Source: http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2015/11/newcomers-must-pledge-to-uphold-dutch-values-sign-contract/

Source: In this article from The Huffington Post.fr, the remedy for democracy, and the unique intrinsic value that, according to this article’s author, we need to transmit to our upcoming generations for democracy to survive, is a criticalspirit.

Esprit critique as the cornerstone of democracy? As the foundation for philosophical thought, this is equivalent to the Socratic elenchus, which only demonstrates a negative truth, i.e., that your interlocutor is ignorant, but it does not necessarily yield up positive or true knowledge. It is for this reason that the reader walks away from the majority of the Socratic dialogues thoroughly persuaded that the non-Socratic speaker is ignorant: per Euthyphro, Cratylus, Glaucon (Resp.), Meletus and the jury of judges (Apology). But the reader is not further enlightened as to the true nature of the question debated— e.g., piety, language, justice.

The critical spirit does not bring us any true or positive insight on the questions we ask, but only shows us that we do not necessarily have or know a right answer to our questions. When we have only a critical spirit to transmit as the summation of our culture, then it is no wonder that intellectual and social terrain is lost in the struggle for Democracy. We are more interested in transmitting ‘skills’ as the framework for Democracy, instead of some kind of real, arguable knowledge. Unfortunately, as a framework for democracy, skill-sets are empty of ideas.

 

Further Readings:

From Phrontisterion:

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.nl/2015/11/culture-shock-in-ivory-tower.html

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.nl/2012/09/on-faith-in-god-or-character-of-god_19.html

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.nl/2015/02/the-divine-right-of-kings.html

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.nl/2015/03/enlightenment-and-spirit-of-jihad.html

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.nl/2013/09/one-nation-under-god-pseudo-romance.html

From Media Sources:

·      http://www.lefigaro.fr/vox/monde/2016/01/21/31002-20160121ARTFIG00170-islam-et-occident-une-petite-histoire-du-choc-des-civilisations.php

·      http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/features/stop-whining-about-false-balance-w440228

·      http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/news/a48604/donald-trump-tyranny/

·      http://www.huffingtonpost.com/deborah-caldwell/christian-dominionism-debt-default-_b_4097017.html

·      http://www.huffingtonpost.com/skye-jethani/is-this-the-end-of-evangelicalism_b_2499253.html

·      http://chronicle.com/article/The-Ties-That-Bind-Jihadists/234161. Scholars explore the “culture” that surrounds radical Islam.

·      http://www.lefigaro.fr/vox/politique/2016/09/23/31001-20160923ARTFIG00384-robert-redeker-l-heredite-nationale-est-politique-et-non-biologique.php

·      http://www.huffingtonpost.fr/caroline-fourest/la-democratie-face-aux-pr_b_8627716.html?utm_hp_ref=france

·      Source: http://www.lepoint.fr/invites-du-point/jean-paul-brighelli/brighelli-quand-daech-declare-la-guerre-a-notre-ecole-08-12-2015-1988058_1886.php -- Daech declaring war against public (secular) schools.

·      http://www.lefigaro.fr/flash-actu/2015/06/13/97001-20150613FILWWW00120-valls-veut-un-islam-compatible-avec-la-democratie.php

·      http://www.politicalresearch.org/2016/01/12/when-exemption-is-the-rule-the-religious-freedom-strategy-of-the-christian-right/#sthash.Bh5RjsjG.dpbs

·      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hosanna-Tabor_Evangelical_Lutheran_Church_%26_School_v._Equal_Employment_Opportunity_Commission

·      http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/10-553.pdf

·      http://www.christianitytoday.com/gleanings/2016/january/jerry-falwell-jr-donald-trump-evangelicals-liberty-universi.html

·      http://www.nationaljournal.com/magazine/2015/06/26/ted-cruzs-secret-weapon-win-right

 

Reprised and reworked from an original two-part Phrontisterion essay published in November 2016. This essay was modified from its original form, which was presented as part of a Panel Presentation at The International Humanities Symposium held at Columbia University in 2007, with the title: “Conversations and Conversions: Humanities in the State University.” The complete Panel Presentation was published as "Skepticism, Stoicism, and the Jeffersonian Model" in The International Journal of the Humanities, Vol. 5, No. 8, 2007. ]

 

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

The Superman & The Eternal Return_The Great Unlearning of Morality

 

~by David Aiken~

 

§ Preface

There is soon set to open its doors in Monflanquin, France a philo-café, associated with Phrontisterion, called L’Eternel Retour. The Eternal Return is a symbol perhaps better known in the West by one of its earliest images, the ancient Egyptian ouroboros, or the serpent that eats its own tail; a wiki source claims that this symbol “is often interpreted as a symbol for eternal cyclic renewal or a cycle of life, death, and rebirth.


The artist’s logo for this philo-café, which was designed by Esfaindyar, has the ceaselessly winding serpent encircling Friedrich Nietzsche’s head, because in the history of Western philosophy, Nietzsche is the philosopher of the eternal return, and Nietzsche’s Zarathustra the prophet of the »ewigen Wiederkunft«.

In the Ecce Homo (§ 3), Nietzsche writes, “Die Lehre von der »ewigen Wiederkunft«, das heisst vom unbedingten und unendlich wiederholten Kreislauf aller Dinge – diese Lehre Zarathustra's könnte zuletzt auch schon von Heraklit gelehrt worden sein,” which is to say: “The teaching about the "Eternal Recurrence"—that is to say, of the unconditional and endlessly recurrent cycle of all things—this teaching of Zarathustra's could unquestionably have been taught by Heraclitus.” In a less didactic moment, where Nietzsche is able to provide a much more interesting, dramatic amplification of the idea of the Eternal Return, he famously describes in the Gay Savoir the moment when one becomes aware of the reality of recurrence:

The Heaviest Burden.—What if a demon crept after thee into thy loneliest loneliness some day or night, and said to thee: "This life, as thou livest it at present, and hast lived it, thou must live it once more, and also innumerable times; and there will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy and every thought and every sigh, and all the unspeakably small and great in thy life must come to thee again, and all in the same series and sequence—and similarly this spider and this moonlight among the trees, and similarly this moment, and I myself. The eternal sand-glass of existence will ever be turned once more, and thou with it, thou speck of dust!"—Wouldst thou not throw thyself down and gnash thy teeth, and curse the demon that so spake? Or hast thou once experienced a tremendous moment in which thou wouldst answer him: "Thou art a God, and never did I hear aught more divine!" If that thought acquired power over thee, as thou art, it would transform thee, and perhaps crush thee; the question with regard to all and everything: "Dost thou want this once more, and also for innumerable times?" would lie as the heaviest burden upon thy activity! Or, how wouldst thou have to become favourably inclined to thyself and to life, so as to long for nothing more ardently than for this last eternal sanctioning and sealing?—

 

So, this is a reprised reflection, and the celebration of an idea in which we join together these three seemingly disparate players: an eponymous philo-café in France called L’Eternel Retour; an ouroboric serpent latched eternally on to its own tail; and a strange German philosopher with enormous moustaches and eye-brows, whose prophetic Zarathustra continues to teach us about a new man for a new age of the world.

 

§ The Superman & The Eternal Return_The Great Unlearning of Morality


Much has been written, much mused, and much else assumed about Nietzsche’s notion of the Übermensch, culminating in what is perhaps the notion’s most inappropriate, because malapropic contemporary avatar: ‘It’s a bird…It’s a plane… It’s Superman.’ It just seems so irresistibly facile in this latest translation-adaptation of the Übermensch idea, to imagine our red-becaped Superman, accessorized with his fire-engine red, spandex jockey shorts on full display, arriving on the scene of some paralyzing human drama and pronouncing in the mellifluous intonations of the very-French, love-crazed skunk of cartoon-dom, Pépé le Pew: “I am ze Übermensch, mon amour .”

In order to speak seriously about Nietzsche’s notion of the Übermensch, we must first return to Roman antiquity, to the Stoic philosopher Seneca, to revisit his aphorism that “quae philosophia fuit facta philologia est” (“What was philosophy is now become philology”). In 1869, as the new professor of philology at the University of Basel, Nietzsche delivered his inaugural address, which he entitled ‘Homer and Classical Philology’, in which he playfully inverted Seneca’s aphorism to say, “What was philology is now become philosophy.” Today we must hark back to Seneca’s original statement, because it would seem that mainstream opinions about Nietzsche’s Übermensch are primarily concerned with the possible meanings of the actual word, Übermensch, rather than in the philosophico-psychological concept the word is intended to express.

There are reasons for this, however. The Übermensch idea remains elusive at least in part due to the prepositional prefix –über (‘over’, ‘beyond’, and even ‘super’—if  dragged kicking and screaming through a layer of Latin) attached to the word –mensch (person), and it has been translated into English diversely—as ‘Beyond-Man’, ‘Superman’, and ‘Overman’. None of these are particularly felicitous translations, however, because they remain burdened by the compulsion for a one-word for one-word literalism that sometimes—actually many if not most times—just does not work well between languages.

           

§ The Zeitgeist of the 19th Century

It is banal to say that Nietzsche’s Übermensch was conceived in an 18th-19th century thought-world defined by the two influences of Hebraism, which is to say the Judeo-Christian religious heritage of western civilization, and Hellenism, or the vigorous resurgence of Greek cultural ideas through Anglo-German poetry and scholarship.

            Matthew Arnold published Culture and Anarchy (1869) in the UK to mixed, or mostly negative reviews. The title of perhaps the most famous chapter in Arnold’s Culture and Anarchy is “Hebraism and Hellenism,” which suggests a certain opposition of ideas. In a 2016 review published by the Washington Examiner, a noted American historian calls this antithesis unambiguous:

The governing idea of Hellenism is spontaneity of consciousness; that of Hebraism, strictness of conscience. The uppermost idea with Hellenism is to see things as they really are; the uppermost idea with Hebraism is conduct and obedience. The Greek quarrel with the body and its desires is that they hinder right thinking; the Hebrew quarrel with them is that they hinder right acting. Hellenism is comfortable in the “pursuit or attainment of perfection”; Hebraism, obsessed with sin, sees only “the difficulties which oppose themselves” to perfection.

 

And yet the framing of Arnold’s book not only anticipates, but resembles comme deux gouttes d’eau the framing of Nietzsche’s own thinking: the same themes that wander around in the writings of Matthew Arnold will also inform Nietzsche’s thinking, from the works of his youth, such as Die Kindheit der Völker (1861), which Nietzsche composed as a 15-year old student, through his first scholarly book, The Birth of Tragedy (1872), and into the Genealogy of Morality (1887), which goes to show that this “framing” for his ideas will remain significant to Nietzsche throughout his thinking and writing life.

 

So, both Arnold and Nietzsche are ‘prophets of culture’ who are working within very similar zeitgeistige framings, yet they draw strikingly dissimilar conclusions from their thinking. For Arnold, “The two [principles of Hebraism and Hellenism] are not so much opposed, … as “divergent,” animated by “different principles” but having the “same goal” and “aiming at a like final result.” Both are “contributions to human development—august contributions, invaluable contributions.” Both “arise out of the wants of human nature, and address themselves to satisfying those wants.”

            For Nietzsche, on the other hand, as the Genealogy of Morality makes unambiguously clear, the creation of ‘Morality’ is an anti-life evolution of thought, a nihilism that kills the naturally ‘Good’ wherever it comes into existence. For Arnold, it is truly “Hebraism and Hellenism,” whereas for Nietzsche it is “Hebraism vs. Hellenism.” So, while there are many similarities clearly showing that Matthew Arnold and Friedrich Nietzsche come from the same thought-world, which suggests a more general philosophical arena for these framings and these thoughts, there is absolutely no traceable, direct contact between these two thinkers. Nietzsche does not seem to have specific personal knowledge about Matthew Arnold, nor are there any of Arnold’s writings in Nietzsche’s personal library.

 

§ Undermen as Overmen—a ‘History’ of False Starts

Famous, but alas all too typical of the Übermensch idea in normal and uninformed parlance, is the “Leopold and Loeb” case in Chicago of the 1920s. In the Wiki-telling: L&L are two students who, becoming friends at the University of Chicago and having a shared interest in committing the ‘perfect crime’, dusted off their portable Nietzsche and convinced themselves that they were resplendent examples of the Übermensch idea “— transcendent individuals, possessing extraordinary and unusual capabilities, whose superior intellects allowed them to rise above the laws and rules that bound the unimportant, average populace. …[B]y [Leopold’s] interpretation of Nietzsche's doctrines, he was not bound by any of society's normal ethics or rules. Before long he had convinced Loeb that he, too, was an Übermensch. In a letter to Loeb, Leopold wrote, "A superman ... is, on account of certain superior qualities inherent in him, exempted from the ordinary laws which govern men. He is not liable for anything he may do."

            L&L did not succeed in committing the perfect crime; so Clarence Darrow, of Scopes Monkey Trial fame (1925) and otherwise champion of scientifically minded rationalism, was engaged to defend the two men. Darrow succeeded in accomplishing two things in the defense of his two clients. First, it would seem that he probably saved Leopold and Loeb from being executed by the state of Illinois for the murder of Robert Franks, because both were only sentenced to life imprisonment, which seemed to buck the trend at the time. Second, Darrow succeeded in transforming Nietzsche and his notion of the Übermensch into the stooge for human arrogance, a sense of social entitlement and superiority, and evil intent. In Darrow’s version of the facts-and-only-the-facts, L&L were just two normal lads who turned bad because they had had the misfortune of reading too much philosophy, and specifically, of reading too much Nietzsche in their youth. It remains undecided whether philosophy in America has ever really shaken this guilt by association.

 

Some, such as a writer for Philosophy Now, see some kind of connection between Nietzsche’s Übermensch and the Over-soul of Ralph Waldo Emerson, the American transcendentalist, who published “The Over-soul” as Essay IX in his Essays: First Series in 1841. In PN’s article, entitled “Nietzsche’s Übermensch: A Hero of Our Time?,” we read that,

The term Übermensch, often translated as Superman or Overman, was not invented by Nietzsche. The concept of hyperanthropos can be found in the ancient writings of Lucian. In German, the word had already been used by Müller, Herder, Novalis, Heine, and most importantly by Goethe in relation to Faust (in Faust, Part I, line 490). In America Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote of the Oversoul, and, perhaps with the exception of Goethe’s Faust, his aristocratic, self-reliant ‘Beyond-man’ was probably the greatest contributor to Nietzsche’s idea of the Übermensch.

 

It is indisputable that Emerson greatly impressed Nietzsche, an interest and an affinity that spanned Nietzsche’s entire life. Unfortunately, while there does seem to be a demonstrable connection between Carlyle, Goethe, Emerson, William James, and Nietzsche, on the notion of the Great Man, that connection does not seem, in addition, to contribute discernably to or to inform our interpretation of Nietzsche’s Übermensch.

            The PN author also draws upon a Fordham University article, Nietzsche’s Zarathustra and Parodic Style: On Lucian’s Hyperanthropos and Nietzsche’s Übermensch, to establish some kind of philologists’ “must-have-been” connection between Nietzsche’s Übermensch and the Greek term coined by the 2nd century AD satirist, Lucian of Samosata. Unfortunately, while it is certainly accurate to say that the term hyperanthropos is found in the writings of Lucian, it is equally accurate to say that any reference to Lucian in Nietzsche’s corpus is entirely tangential, as opposed to substantial, and that hyperanthropos never occurs in his work.

            Furthermore, the hapax usage of hyperanthropos in Lucian (in The Downward Journey, sec. 16; Loeb, vol. 2, 1999) is an ab ovo misdirection, because it is employed by a neighbor of the tyrant Megapenthes, whose name is Micyllus, and who says that the tyrant,

appeared to me a super-man, thrice-blessed, better looking and a full royal cubit taller than almost anyone else; for he was uplifted by his good fortune, walked with a majestic gait, carried his head high and dazzled all he met. But when he was dead, not only did he cut an utterly ridiculous figure in my eyes on being stripped of his pomp, but I laughed at myself even more than at him because I had marveled at such a worthless creature, inferring his happiness from the savour of his kitchen and counting him lucky because of his purple derived from the blood of mussels in  the Laconian Sea. 

 

As a satiric description attached to the somewhat ludicrous, I-wish-I-weren’t-so-dead tyrant Megapenthes who is busily attempting to negotiate his way out of Hades, this irony-laden connection seems an obscurantist and erudite non-starter as far as the history of Nietzsche’s idea might be concerned.

 


Other ‘literature’ on the question of the Übermensch is polyphonic and both predictably and unhelpfully inconclusive, although the populist consensus seems determined to associate the concept with eugenics and the creation of a higher biological type. Some, such as Safranski (Nietzsche: A Philosophical Biography, p. 365), arguing a variation on the biologism theme, think that, “Nietzsche intended the ultra-aristocratic figure of the Übermensch to serve as a Machiavellian bogeyman of the modern Western middle class and its pseudo-Christian egalitarian value system.” This interpretative trend was certainly also evident in Nazi thought, which used Nietzsche’s concept of the Übermensch to articulate a particular national version of the Aryan master race.

            Popular culture, as well, has certainly had a wonderful time fussing with Übermensch-type personae, from Siegel’s first villainesque Superman, to G.B. Shaw, and James Joyce. In a more philosophically interesting treatment, of course, there is always Ayn Rand’s transmogrification of the Übermensch into her radically individualistic and supra-moral Supra-Men characters. Likewise, in George Bernard Shaw’s Man and Superman, a four-act drama written in 1903, there is the famous act called Don Juan in Hell (Act 3, Scene 2), which is often produced as a stand-alone piece. It consists of a dream-act debate concerning the advantages of Hell, which, in quintessentially übermenschlicher style reminiscent of Faust’s Mephistopheles narrative, include the more emotive topics of art and beauty and love and pleasure, whereas Heaven will only celebrate rational discourse and the dissemination of the Life Force. The Devil defends such hedonistic amenities, whereas Juan wants none of them and heads for a thinker's Heaven. There is a theater review here, and a YouTube version of Don Juan in Hell here.

 

§ I Thought I saw an Übermensch… I Did, I Did.


There is every sort and variety of opinion ‘out there’ about the Übermensch; and they occupy whatever thought-terrain is fertile enough to sustain them. However, all the above opinions about Nietzsche’s Übermensch are simply wrong and wrong-headed—they have nothing to do with Nietzsche’s thinking. So, who is or might conceivably be, an Übermensch? Who exactly are ‘those who have gone beyond’? And, if this is indeed a philosophical model of some sort, or a political model, or a heroic model, what is the exact profile?

There are some Nietzsche scholars who are actually subtle enough in their thinking to understand that Übermensch is not a state of ontology, but rather a state of mind. Nietzsche is not proposing an Antichrist, or a Führer, or a Carlylean Great Man with this concept; rather, he is proposing to his readers something much more akin to a philo-psychological adjustment, such as taught by Epictetus in the Enchiridion: e.g., “Of things that can happen to us in a lifetime, there are some that we can control [are dependent upon us], and some that we cannot control [are not dependent upon us].” Corrections in our thinking of this type, says Nietzsche, will transform us into freie Denker, free thinkers, and ultimately, into free minds.

            There is evidence that some contemporary scholarship is starting to read Nietzsche psychologically, such as in the essay entitled ‘Nietzsche and the Greeks’ published recently (2013) in the The Oxford Handbook of Nietzsche. There we read that, “Nietzsche was generally more interested in the psychological consequences of philosophical doctrines than in their content.” There is also a 2010 book, Nietzsche, Psychology, and First Philosophy, which challenges “various traditional views of Nietzsche, taking him at his word when he says that his writing can best be understood as a kind of psychology.”

            At this point, it might be helpful to recall our Western intellectual history—that psychology as a discipline is only a very young blossom on the western vine of knowledge, and only began separating itself from philosophy after the 1850s. So it would seem reasonable, given the time frame, that Nietzsche should in fact consider himself a psychologist; and in fact, the self-identification as psychologist permeates Nietzsche’s writing, and especially the Twilight of the Idols [1888]:

·      Beyond Good and Evil [1886: 76, 20]: “Der neue Psycholog bereitet dem Aberglauben ein Ende, der bisher um die Seelen-Vorstellung wuchterte.”

·      Twilight of the Idols [77, 343]: “Aus meinen Schriften redet ein Psychologe.”

·      Twilight of the Idols [77, 405]: “Es gab vor mir noch gar keine Psychologie.”

 

Finally, among his aphorisms from Idols is number 35: “Es giebt Fälle, wo wir wie Pferde sind, wir Psychologen, und in Unruhe gerathen: wir sehen unsren eignen Schatten vor uns auf und niederschwanken. Der Psychologe muss von sich absehn, um überhaupt zu sehn.”

 

So, Nietzsche the psychologist continually reminds us that it is a misdirection to seek for models and profiles of what the Übermensch can be… For it is not about some particular model of a more-than-human, such as a Caesar or a Napoleon, but rather about the mental context and framing of an übermenschlich state of mind.

            As a psychological moment, the Übermensch-realization is actually a fusion of two distinct insight-events. Aristotle, in the Poetics [1452a&b], refers to the first insight-event as a discovery [anagnorisis], as the recognition of the moment of “seeing” something, of grasping the truth about something, of the ah-ha moment when we ‘get it’. It is that very private moment in the life of our mind when, finally, the light bulb goes on and we realize that… for example, our partner does not love us, or that someone has been cheating on us, or that our boss has been defrauding the company, or, or, or…

            Obviously, there are untold examples of this insight-event in literature, but it is important for Nietzsche that these moments should be philo-psychologically correct, that they should correspond to the actually lived human condition of mind, and that they should take us beyond ourselves into a different sphere of knowing.

Aristotle himself thinks that Sophocles’ depiction of this moment in the life of Oedipus is superb—the moment when Oedipus, cast down under the weight of his misery and shame, stabs out his eyes, finally realizing that blind, he would see no worse than with his eyes wide open.

            There are also other great and moving insight-events in literature, such as when Ajax falls upon his sword after finally realizing that Athena has deceived him, blinding him to truth through folly. Or when Viktor Frankenstein realizes that the creature he has made is no man, but a monster. Or when Milton’s Satan [Book 9; lns. 458-466], standing before Eve and contemplating even then the enormity of the evil he was going to bring into her life in Paradise, is struck dumb before her loveliness.

                        Her heavenly form

Angelic, but more soft, and feminine,

Her graceful innocence, her every air

Of gesture, or least action, overawed

His malice, and with rapine sweet bereaved

His fierceness of the fierce intent it brought:

That space the Evil-one abstracted stood

From his own evil, and for the time remained

Stupidly good; of enmity disarmed,

Of guile, of hate, of envy, of revenge:

 

Now however humanly touching these illustrations may be, none of these particular insight-events actually captures entirely what Nietzsche intends with his Übermensch-realization, which is an insight-event actually quite limited in scope. For in addition to the insight-event as a psychological event, Nietzsche’s Übermensch-realization is also about a second, very specific type of realization. It is about the insight that dawns on us when we finally grasp that everything we have “believed” about Value, about morality and moral thinking, about right and wrong and good and evil, and about human destiny, is philo-theological misdirection.  It is a layer of fiction applied to a world of fact—an unhappy because antagonistic joining if ever there was.

            Through his Zarathustra, Nietzsche has undertaken the task of radically rethinking the foundations of morality, and of imagining the psychological and emotional consequences of that rethinking in the normal course of a life. Just imagine the psychic wreckage and emotional damage! Just imagine the courage needed, the daring, to overcome our own private foundation myths, which whisper quietly to us from the stillness of our souls, of right and wrong, good and evil. And then imagine the courage needed, and the discipline of mind, to rebirth ourselves in innocence, and to create in our innermost selves a willingness to throw ourselves, body and soul, into a life that is to be newly created and defined each and every day, entirely by us.

            Nietzsche’s Zarathustra is the story of such a mental and emotional journey, which has three quite distinct segments. As the journey begins, (and we have to remember that this is a journey possible to each one of us through the thinking and imagining mind), Zarathustra has to imagine first that he is a camel. The camel is the perfect Beast of Burden; it is an animal that carries, almost as if by second nature, burdens that are not his own. The first leg of Zarathustra’s journey, then, is to become aware that he also, like the camel, carries a burden that is not properly his own—the burden of ideas and values and beliefs—of Culture writ large, that are inherited through the mother milk of World that surrounds us, beliefs which grow up inside us as we grow up, almost as a second skeleton, and which become so fundamental to our psyche that they organizes all the spaces of our minds into our own private character.

            The lion characterizes the second segment of Zarathustra’s journey of the mind. This segment of the journey, which demands all the courage of the lion, happens only in the solitary wastelands of the mind, where we give battle to the fiction of inherited morality, where we finally push it away from our minds and dare to stand alone in human history, finally.

            The child embodies the third and final segment of Zarathustra’s journey of the imagination. What happens to us, emotionally, when we finally dare to step out of an abusive or horrible situation? There is a sense of relief, certainly; but there is also a sense of being overwhelmed because we have to start everything all over again. So, says Nietzsche, we have to put on the mind of the child – to accept in all innocence the new-Beginning of the world that stands before us; and we have to go on to create anew our life, not just physically, but also and especially psychically.

 

Thus spoke Zarathustra.

 

§ Eternally Returning  Windmills In Your Mind.


According to Nietzsche, a fundamental element of the Übermensch life of the mind is the recognition of the Eternal Return of the Same, or Eternal Recurrence. As an idea, and for the mental image, this certainly brings back to mind the 1960s Noel Harrison tube, “The Windmills of Your Mind.”

Round like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending or beginning on an ever-spinning reel
[…]

Like a clock whose hands are sweeping past the minutes of its face
And the world is like an apple whirling silently in space
Like the circles that you find in the windmills of your mind!

Nietzsche’s thinking about the Übermensch is framed in the zeitgeist of his century, which tended to separate time into sacred or divine history [e.g., Hebraism; Heilsgeschichte] and human empirical time [Hellenism; Geschichte]. This is a distinction, just for the example, that will also be much and usefully exploited by the philosopher and historian of religion, Mircea Eliade.

 

First in Nietzsche’s thinking about the eternal return, is the idea that divine or Christian history is a linear conception of time that does not recur. This is to say that we humans enter into the sacred flowing at some point, and the current takes us unidirectionally toward the culmination of time in the Parousia of God. This linear notion of history, or divine history, reasons Nietzsche, usurped at some remote time the Greek or natural pagan notion of history, which saw time as a series of recurring revolutions or cycles in the ‘great clock of being’ (Zarathustra). For Nietzsche, the Übermensch stands before a choice—to live out his life through unidirectional divine time, which is the destruction of fully human time and, thus, a nihilism, or to cast himself into the multi-faceted organization of the world’s, and so into man’s, natural time: “…it is the world which redeems our contingent existence, reintegrating the Christian ego into the order of cosmic necessity, i.e., into the eternal recurrence of the same” [Gay Savoir § 341-342, under “the heaviest burden” and “the death of God” § 343]. Clifford Geertz, the American anthropologist, will translate an idea much like this into the following: ‘One of the most significant facts about us may finally be that we all begin with the natural equipment to live a thousand kinds of life but end in the end having lived one.’

            Natural cyclical time, where we enter and re-enter into the full stream of a fully human experience and creation of time, is an ancient concept found not only in the philosophies of India and Egypt, but also in Greek antiquity, and notably among the Stoics and Pythagoreans. Nietzsche encapsulates this idea in a very Epictetian or Stoic value: Amor fati, a Latin expression about ‘embracing one’s fate’ because it is one’s own. In his book Meaning in History, Karl Löwith reminds us on this point (p. 216) that Nietzsche introduces this idea, “not as a metaphysical doctrine but as an ethical imperative: to live as if “the eternal hourglass of existence” will continually be turned, in order to impress on each of our actions the weight of an inescapable responsibility.”

            Among the Greeks the notion of Eternal Recurrence was normative, and included 1) living a life “in harmony with nature” (Plato’s Philebus); and 2) the idea of circularity (of lives, the process of generation and creation, orbit of planets, etc.) – Heraclitus, Empedocles, Pythagoras, Plato (cf. esp. Timaeus, The Statesman, and The Republic), Aristotle, Eudemos of Rhodes, the Stoics, and the Hellenistic astronomer Hipparchus, who will contribute the idea of the equinox precession (the slow spin of the earth) to Plato’s Great Year, which idea will recur later in Cicero’s De Natura Deorum.

Like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending or beginning on an ever-spinning reel
As the images unwind, like the circles that you find in
The windmills of your mind!

 

Further Phrontisterion reading:-

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.com/2020/08/nietzsche-eichmann-and-heideggerrub-dub.html

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.com/2019/12/nietzsches-prophecy-great-unlearning-of.html

·      https://nonimprimatur.blogspot.com/2019/09/great-unlearning-i-elvis-has-left.html

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.com/2019/04/dead-gods-wandering-around-lost-in.html

 

References:

·      https://sites.google.com/site/ictgrupo12bachnietszche/home/theories/calendar

·      For the first known ouroboros, found in one of the shrines of Tutankhamun: Image by Unknown author - Chrysopoea of Cleopatra (Codex Marcianus graecus 299 fol. 188v), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=36915535

 

(Reprised from December & January’s 2014/2015 Essay_The Superman & The Eternal Return_The Great Unlearning II)