Showing posts with label freedom of religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom of religion. Show all posts

Friday, January 1, 2021

Religion in the Democratic State—Philosophical Non-sense


~by David Aiken~

 

 

Remembering back to the dramatic terrorist activity in the Paris of 2015, at least one conclusion of that terrorist news cycle is now at hand: the Charlie Hebdo terrorism trial, which was held this fall 2020 in Paris, from September 2nd to November 10th, has reached its verdict for those implicated, with sentences ranging from four years to life in prison.

In 2015, as if it were just yesterday, Phrontisterion published an essay around a Charlie Hebdo editorial by Riss.

In democratic society the philosophical problem of religions, any and all religions, is really
quite spectacular and deadly serious. The question was perhaps best considered, and articulated to the Anglo-Saxon world, by John Locke in his 1689 text, A L
etter Concerning Toleration; and that question remains clear and relevant at the outset of this new year 2021: what to do with religions in societies with a democratically organized mandate?

In a philosophical nutshell: Religions, which are structurally authoritarian by nature, are antithetical, and therefore philosophical hostile, to democratic societies. In theory at least, democratic societies must seek to replace the authoritarian tendencies of human animal society, with a reasoned egalitarianism. This is the very essence of the secular society. This is also the very nut of the difficulty.

 

§ March 2015: In response to the tragic events of February 7th at the offices of Charlie Hebdo.

The new century is yet in its adolescence, and in a moment of historical Necessity the rallying cry – “Je suis Charlie” – has been heard in the streets of France. The contemporary translation of a still youngish idea, this cry goes to the heart of the democratic ideal: to unite “free hearts, free foreheads” around the notion, barely more than two centuries old, that men will be happier when allowed to live out their lives in freedom, that liberty and equality will yield a greater harvest of human joy and fulfillment than any form of tyranny, whether of religion or of state. To borrow from Abraham Lincoln’s rhythms—we are now engaged in an historical wager, to test whether Men so conceived and so dedicated in Liberty, can long endure.

 

The following text is Phrontisterion’s translation of Riss’s Editorial from February 25, 2015 (CH #1179), the first edition of Charlie Hebdo to appear on the newsstands after the slaughter of its editorial staff by religious fundamentalists in Paris on February 7th.

 

“For a long time I thought that the worst thing that could happen to a political cartoonist would be to be poisoned, which is what happened to Daumier and Philipon under the reign of the old fool Louis-Philippe. So when Charb, Luz, or myself, young cartoonists, would propose some sketch to satiric newspapers at the beginning of the 1990s, there was nothing to fear, because the benevolent angel of our craft was hovering just above our heads: the sacrosanct Freedom of Expression.

 

With just our cartoons we were hoping to laugh and to make others laugh; but after several years, and after drawing all the famous celebrities in laughable situations, a question came to our minds: to caricature, to make drawings—at the end of the day what is the purpose of it? After all, a drawing is just a drawing. Just a little scribbled something that tries to be humorous all the while hoping to get someone to think. To laugh and to make one think: this is what makes an ideal caricature! The pleasure of surprising the reader by taking an unusual point of view, by doing a little side-step that obliges the reader to look at things obliquely, from an angle that is unfamiliar, different from mainstream seeing.  The exaggeration and the embellishment, which are the much-criticized stock in trade of the political cartoonists at “Charlie Hebdo,” are nothing more than a means of exploring roads less traveled by.

 

It is perhaps this that the assassins of January 7th could not tolerate, those who, if truth be told, never really tried to do anything. They just allowed themselves to be coddled by the comforts of a religion that already has all the responses, and that allows one to dispense with thinking and doubting; because doubt is the worst enemy of religion. There can be no more doubting when one has chosen to enter into a newspaper office in order to kill everyone.

 

The cartoonists and the editors at “Charlie,” on the other hand, spend all their time doubting. About everything, and especially about themselves, their talent, and their inspiration. Which sometimes makes them infuriating. Wolinski wondered after the fire in 2011: “Have we perhaps gone too far?” Only an honest man asks this type of question. Never a killer. Wolinski had the courage to put his his own doubts on display. He chose to make the expression of his vulnerability an art. This is why a cartoonist will never become a killer, and why it is dishonest to make the violence of the assassins comparable to the so-called “provocations” of the cartoonists by proclaiming, “they were asking for it.”

 

In order to doubt, though, one needs others, all those who do not think like you do. How boring it would be if everyone thought like us! The killers of January 7th must sure have lived in a sad world… an inflexible world where any head that is out of place gets decapitated, where any discordant voice is cut off. So, imagine, for these of little brain, even just the idea of making pint-sized cartoons about the prophet! These miserable wretches threw away the lives of others in order to forget that they had thrown away their own. As Luz wrote on the front cover of “Charlie,” we should almost forgive them just for being what little they were.

 

Despite the floods of encouragement and support, it is still right for us to wonder who really has the courage to lead in this battle. Because, frankly, who wants to fight against blasphemy, who wants to defy those who are religious, if it is only to end up being protected by the police 24 hours a day? No one. Everyone came out in support of “Charlie”: “Keep it up, guys! We’re with you!” But how many will dare to draw and to publish blasphemous cartoons? Too few. The crowd has come out in support of  “Charlie” like the crowd backs the bull in the ring, because who knows, perhaps one day, exhausted by the banderillas, “Charlie” will also die to the rousing applause of the admiring crowd.

 

And, behold, precisely at the time when “Charlie” is getting ready to make its appearance again, an almost identical assassination attempt occurs in Copenhagen, with fewer mortalities but the same objectives: to silence those who believe in the liberty of expression and to exterminate the Jews. Those who try to find explanations for the killers, not to say excuses, by blaming the cartoonists for “throwing oil on the fire,” what rationalizations will they find in order to lessen the responsibility of these anti-Semitic murderers? Because the Jews who were the victims in the Hyper Cacher or in Copenhagen did not draw any caricatures of Mohammed; and yet they were assassinated. To accept such violence is already exasperating, but then to have to listen to more or less accommodating pseudo-intellectual speeches, is just intolerable.

 

The attacks in Paris and Copenhagen are, first and foremost, attacks against a modern conception of the relationship between individuals, against diversity in ideas and among men. For centuries religions fought violently against precisely these values; and one had the impression that the modern world had been able to reason with these retrograde religions and their hegemonic intention to control men and minds.  The attacks in Paris and Copenhagen suggest that more time and more blood will yet be necessary before all religions finally accept, for good, this non-negotiable framework of democracy.”

-Riss-

 

Further reading:

 

·      http://bigbrowser.blog.lemonde.fr/2015/02/25/charlie-hebdo-riss-le-dessin-ideal-et-la-democratie-non-negociable/

·      http://www.leparisien.fr/charlie-hebdo/riss-charlie-hebdo-nous-n-avons-jamais-declare-la-guerre-aux-musulmans-25-02-2015-4556939.php

·      http://nonimprimatur.blogspot.com/2020/12/philosophical-enlightenment-versus.html

 

(Reprised and reworked from an original essay, entitled A Wager on History, published on Phrontisterion on April 1, 2015)

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Philosophical Enlightenment Versus the Spirit of Jihad

~by David Aiken~

 

All the ideas and principles that surround the enlightenment start-up project of “a more perfect union” & the philosophical articulation of “We the People,” are drawn from an American version of the Civil Society organized around the foundational idea of Freedom. This idea was crafted for the West and handed down to subsequent generations, and finally to this present generation, from the Enlightenment philosophes of the 18th century, who referenced of course, every school child learns this, the Greek philosophers.

We Americans have been wearing these hand-me-down ideas, with some tweaking and amending, for almost 300 years. Now, though, it would seem that play period is over, and that we must once again take up our studies about civics and history and philosophy with some degree of due diligence; because if Jefferson is correct:

The most effectual means of preventing [the perversion of power into tyranny],” are to illuminate, as far as practicable, the minds of the people at large, and more especially to give them knowledge of those facts which history exhibits, that possessed thereby of the experience of other ages and countries, they may be enabled to know ambition under all its shapes, and prompt to exert their natural powers to defeat its purposes (Thomas Jefferson: Diffusion of Knowledge Bill, 1779. FE 2:221, Papers 2:526).

 

Yet it is not enough for civil society, however diversely it may be composed politically, simply to celebrate its’ cornerstones of civil freedom without also guaranteeing the ongoing relevance of those cornerstones as civil and civic values. To encourage precisely this type of constant relationship between philosophical values and an evolving society, Jefferson encouraged the creation of a specific type of education, which even today constitutes the bedrock of a distinctly American program of liberal education—namely the study of politics, and history, and of philosophy for virtue.

The value of [general knowledge] to a republican people, the security it gives to liberty by enlightening the minds of its citizens, the protection it affords against foreign power, the virtue it inculcates, the just emulation of the distinction it confers on nations foremost in it; in short, its identification with power, morals, order and happiness (which merits to it premiums of encouragement rather than repressive taxes), are considerations [that should] always [be] present and [bear] with their just weight. (Thomas Jefferson: On the Book Duty, 1821).

 

I have written elsewhere that if ‘We the People’ desire to continue enabling a Jeffersonian vision of a civil society, which must be anchored in the ongoing intellectual training of democracy’s gatekeepers, then we who teach in the Liberal Arts

must continue to insist upon the study of those subjects that keep our eyes riveted upon Power of all sorts, and 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 (…) 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).

 

So, increasingly, today’s incarnations of the civil society stand at a fork in the road of the History of Civil Society, as so many before us have stood, where “two roads diverged in a yellow wood.” On the one hand is the road “less traveled by,” the Civil Secular Society, which was taken by the American enlightenment philosophes, which they also sought to protect for posterity by articulating and then transmitting the freedoms of enlightened [read: non-religious] education and the open society [read: freedom from religion]. On the other hand, is the return to some form of a religious or sectarian expression of Theocracy—to a model of Society that, while perhaps structurally, i.e., superficially democratic, because it tolerates unenlightened and obscurantist elements within and without, is a political model that is at least partially closed, which is to say autocratic, by any definition.

            Let me state for the record books of History that, “as the night the day,” it necessarily follows that within the paradigm of the Civil Society as an idea, the Spirit of Enlightenment must finally oppose the Magical or Religious Spirit, which is replete with Neanderthalic mores (to borrow a rather felicitous expression from a recent Salon article). The democratic model of society must not lend credibility to the Spirit of Religion in the civil space because “Doing so lends credence to faiths that, by any humane standard, long ago discredited themselves and should certainly not be legitimized with Washingtonian pomp and reverence.”

 

The American version of the civil society is framed around the foundational ideas of the freedom to express, and the freedom to believe or not and to practice or not, religion; but that New Colossus, the American statue of Lady Liberty, which was once fresh and original but which is now somewhat tarnished and dinged, no longer necessarily stands beside the “golden door” to light our way—Lady Liberty and her torch, to the degree that She has become too tolerant of the Spirit of Religion, may have become the anchor dragging us to our philosophical graves. The outcome depends entirely upon our response, as representatives of Civil Society, to the various autocratic interests soliciting our interest, among which is certainly religious jihad in all of its forms, interests that are seeking to gain control of western societies’ free and open thought life.

 

There are certainly differences between the various forms of civil society that evolved in Europe, and Civil Society as it was philosophically articulated and constitutionally enshrined in the early days of the American colonies. Principal among these differences is the notion of pluralism as a philosophical value. In American civil society pluralism is neither a primary philosophical nor political value; nor, by extension, should it be construed to be a significant pillar of western civil society in general. Pluralism is a derivative or secondary value in America, because it is premised first and foremost on the deliberate intellectual assent to a certain set of core civil principles, which are of primary importance.

            When and where there is intellectual assent about the philosophical foundation, goes the American version of Civil Society, then the edifice of state can be constructed upon it. What is important in this American version of the story of pluralism is that Individuals came together from all over the world in order to build their lives around an idea. This, in fact, was the opportunity in the Land of Opportunity. The individuals were of plural origins, from anywhere and everywhere, but the idea of We the People was always primary and singular; therefore, it was predictable that while there would be disparity or plurality in public discourse among all the diverse opinions concerning deity and morality, culture and alcohol, politics, death and taxes, etc., it was philosophically untenable that there should be discord about the core values articulated in the Constitution.

            That premise, of course, was sorely challenged during Abraham Lincoln’s presidency by a fratricidal war (1860-1864) among American brothers mutually grounded in a single philosophical premise, and he famously questioned, “whether that nation, or any nation so conceived (in liberty) and so dedicated (to the proposition that all men are created equal) can long endure.” Spoiler alert: the answer was ‘Yes’, but not without a fight. Thus, the idea of a common philosophical foundation or premise –freedom, was reinforced in the American mythology: first comes assent to a philosophical idea, then comes trying to work out the particulars about how we who share that common intellectual foundation can live together practically and functionally within the confines of social Freedom.

 

Civil societies in Europe, of course, each have their own unique history, and the evolutions of the idea of Civil Society among and between the various “European peoples” seems to have necessitated an early transformation of the natural I-Thou status quo into a structural social value, thereby guaranteeing some degree of protection for material diversity and pluralism. This was in order to ensure the peaceful cohabitation of the various tribes, clans, ethnic groupings, or who- and what-ever else one might wish to stick in this category of ‘outsider’ living among ‘Us.’

            Even the umbrella document that acts as an ad hoc constitution for member states of the European Union, the Treaty of Lisbon (2009), identifies inhabitants of the member states as “the European peoples,” with the following values, which prevail in civilly defined western democracies:

Lisbon: The Union is founded on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities. These values are common to the Member States in a society in which pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity and equality between women and men prevail.

 

It is inadequate, however, to call pluralism a value where other and more fundamental “ideological,” or idea-based values do not also hold sway, where there is a philosophical vacuum, as it were. As a political value or idea, the European conception of pluralism simply cannot compete against the ethnically unalloyed society or the society that has been purged of religious diversity, which clearly stand stronger in their homogeneity than the state structured around plural groups with competing personal or clan-oriented interests. In other words, socially, every form of authoritarianism, whether theocracy or monarchy or oligarchy, or… ad infinitum, is a naturally stronger cohesive unit than a democracy.

The historical advantage that backlights cultural pluralism, at least in America, which is the first State truly founded upon an “open” or freedom-based philosophy, is not that any and every material cultural group could go to America for the better life, but rather that All and Sundry were drawn to the philosophical concepts that grounded the possibility of America as an Idea – to the freedoms that framed her as a land of opportunity. The world’s diversity was drawn to the American idea like insects to a light; they were fascinated by the idea that it was possible to live in society as self-determining free men, and they voted with their feet, choosing to leave the various forms of autocratic, theocratic, totalitarian and authoritarian societies that were their homes, in order to participate in the new philosophical experiment that was America, Land of the Free and Home of the Brave.

 

Obviously, there will be many analyses of and responses to crises, where the idea of Civil Society stands at an historical fork in the road. Some, like French academic Didier Raoult, reflecting upon the Charlie Hebdo massacre (2015) by Islamic fanatics, perceive the natural end of the idea of Civil Society and the promise of some future religious social reality:

It is not all over; but the “peace and love” that illuminated my youth is certainly gone. One cannot allow the enchantment of a generation of “dunces” (to paraphrase J. K. Toole), which never grasped the failures of the Marxists and those of the Enlightenment (Rousseau’s universality), to lead us into a civil war by invoking an ideal that was never able to become a substitute for religion.

 

For this thinker, the plurality that is France is reducible to a simple material-geographical state of being, which has no grounding in an idea or principle: “It is France’s language and her culture, which are constantly changing and being transformed, which unify [the French state].”

            For others, such as Inna Shevchenko, the leader of the topless, anti-religion activist group Femen,

Steadfast belief in the inerrancy of religious dogma, coupled with… convictions that the dogma’s many mandates are meant to apply to all humanity, clash with principles of secular governance and Enlightenment-era precepts that oblige us, at least ideally, to sort out our problems relying on reason, consensus and law.  (…) [W]e cannot “adapt” here, especially under threat of violence. We must unabashedly stand by reason, the rule of law, and secularism.

 

At the end of the day, the philosophical choice is actually quite simple: if a country wishes to represent the values of the Civil Society within its borders, then it must stand by the Civil cornerstone of secularism, which means that any religion, all religion, must relinquish its claim to the Public Space, and must finally yield to reason in Public Discourse and the articulation of Public Values. Civil Society will either oversee the decline of the Spirit of Religion and Autocracy within its boundaries, or it will be ultimately consumed by that Spirit and thereby cease to be Civil. We cannot travel both roads. And, not choosing, is choosing.

 

As an individual I can remember things from my childhood; but I cannot remember things from my father’s childhood, or his father’s, or his… For longer-term recall, or collective recall, we need resources and education, and we need to study our past historical experiences deliberately, to learn how to value a time and its ideas, which really belonged to someone else. As with individuals, so it is with nations. We are born into our cultural soup, and we absorb everything naturally; so we learn the ‘ways’ of our cultural soup naturally, and we tend to forget that we ‘learned’ everything, because it all seems so natural to us. Then that cultural soup changes as new ingredients are added, as, over time, different chefs take over the tasks of spicing and cooking. With time the original cultural soup is gradually changed, sometimes augmented, sometimes diminished, sometimes on high heat, sometimes on low. Equally, and in keeping with the simile, the edges of an original national identity will necessarily become blurred with the passage of time and the accretion of new and diverse members with their new and diverse thoughts and ideas and ways of viewing the world.

            As it goes in the lives of individuals, so, also, it is inevitable that there will come tipping-point moments in the life of a society. It is also predictable that societies which have been framed around a materially porous national identity, as their material compositions are influenced and transformed through various immigrations, will confront in the course of their history changes of a fundamental nature. The idea of the Civil Society as it was created in the young America, however, is not grounded in any form of evolving historicism of its various ethnicities; rather it is framed around an unchanging core of ideas – it is a true philosophical ideology in the most positive sense of that term. 

           

So at this moment in the history of the American version of ‘We the People’, as the American national identity is being so fundamentally challenged, not by any form of material immigration, but by the malign growth within the Secular Civil State of the Religious and Theocratic Mind, which is pernicious to the very concept of the open Civil Society, the People, the e pluribus unum, needs to continue studying the ideas and the arguments that created the original national identity of the American People– otherwise that Unum is destined to become irremediably lost in the famous Santayanian aporia -- "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it" [George Santayana (1905) Reason in Common Sense, p. 284, volume 1 of The Life of Reason]. Hence the absolute importance of a broad liberal arts education in the Civil, Secular Democracy, as opposed to a form of education that specializes either in the transmission of a religious world-view, or in narrowly defined specializations—with a potential social yield of a “confederacy of dunces.”

 

There is no necessarily correct or right form for a religion. Each religion is ultimately authoritarian or autocratic in structure to whatever degree it is framed around some External Authority and not grounded in the value of the civil state—the individual. History shows that the Spirit of Religion will remain true to itself; this is the nature of the beast. So, it is a media-driven Null Set {}, the nonsensical rhetoric of non-thinking minds, to say that some certain form of a religion, such as its moderate or its extremist expression, is more or less desirable than some other form of that religion. It is no more possible, or meaningful, to argue that moderate Christianity is the most desirable form of Christianity, than it would be to argue that an extremely liberal form of Christianity or an extremely fundamentalist form of Christianity is most desirable.

 

            On the other hand, though, it is absolutely possible to make the argument that only the moderate and assimilating form of a religion, such as Christianity or Islam or Judaism, is conductive to all parties thriving in the civil secular democracy, and that it is therefore the most desirable form of that religion within the civil and secular society. Hence the philosophico-theological quandary when a Civil servant, in the form of an American president, for example, makes indemonstrable utterances on intractable religious issues (from Salon): “…Obama launched into what so riled conservatives — musings about faith being, as he put it, “twisted and misused in the name of evil.””  No matter the speaker, on this subject, so saith the Bard, this type of speech is nothing more than a meaningless “tale /Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, /Signifying nothing.”

 

In their expressions of the Civil Society, France and America share in having laws on the separation of church and state, which is certainly a defensible ideological foundation for the secular state. The French version was not legislated until 1905, some 125 years after the American version, and finally constitutionally enshrined in 1956; so it is the later variation on this theme. There is, however, an interesting nuance to note between the two different conceptualizations of separation of church and state. In the original American idea, it is question of the ‘exercise’ or public practice of religion, but this is not specifically the case in the French application of the principle of laicity. In a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling (‘Hobby Lobby’), for example, Justice Kennedy wrote:

In our constitutional tradition, freedom means that all persons have the right to believe or strive to believe in a divine creator and a divine law. For those who choose this course, free exercise is essential in preserving their own dignity and in striving for a self-definition shaped by their religious precepts. Free exercise in this sense implicates more than just freedom of belief . . . It means, too, the right to express those beliefs and to establish one’s religious (or nonreligious) self-definition in the political, civic, and economic life of our larger community.

 

So, while the American government may not interfere in the free exercise of religion in the public space, the French state has simply chosen not to intrude at all in the question of religion.

 

It would seem that the place of Religion in the American Civil Society is finally being taken to the next level of challenge, which is to say that John Locke’s original anti-religion argument, which he published in his 1689 Letter concerning Toleration, is finally being taken seriously. In his letter Locke argues for the complete separation of church authority from civil authority because, he says, a civil magistrate is not qualified by his civil office to make competent distinctions between competing religious authorities with competing claims. This argument was sufficient, at the time, for the framers of the American Constitution to separate the interests of state from the interests of church in the young republic. 

            Locke’s argument was recently resurrected in an essay at The Immanent Frame entitled “The Impossibility of Religious Freedom,” by Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, professor of law and religious studies, who follows Locke’s thinking, and then some, by making a vigorous and compelling argument against even the very possibility of Freedom of Religion, at least as a category under the law. “Big “R” Religion is a modern invention, an invention designed to separate good religion from bad religion, orthodoxy from heresy—an invention whose legal and political use has arguably reached the end of its useful life.” Her conclusions are incisive:

The legal and religious fictions of religious freedom have become lies designed to extend the life of the impossible idea that church and state can still work together after disestablishment. There is no neutral place from which to distinguish the religious from the non-religious. There is no shared understanding of what religion, big “R” religion, is. Let’s stop talking about big “R” religion.

            What remains, as Clifford Geertz reminds us, is for us to work on creating new fictions together, political, legal, and religious…

 

We must not delude ourselves: ‘keeping faith’ with the ideas of the Civil Society comes at a cost. How much are we willing to yield up to someone else’s desire? How much are we willing to yield up our right to be offensive or offended, to be critical or to be criticized? Are we really willing to become all that the Other desires? What will happen when, not satisfied with western democracies’ principles of an open society, others choose to take offense at the way we dress? At our access to consumer products and to credit purchases? At the gods we may or may not worship? At the cars we drive? How far can the open society yield to the closed society? How far will western civil democracies submit to the fatwas and other whims of religious clerics camping in Yemen?

            At some point, we either stand with the principles and ideas of Civil Society, or we must be prepared to yield our ideas and principles to those who wish to stand with their own vision of the world, and to impose that vision on everyone else. The ideas and principles of Civil Society have defined the various countries of the democratic west for several centuries at this point; but peoples have been moving and borders have become porous; some are forced to leave the country of their birth and culture, others choose to leave. And in the movement of peoples between countries, like the camel of Nietzsche’s Zarathustra, they enter into the west carrying cultural burdens that are, quite distinctly, not western and not necessarily democratic. In and of itself, this very practical reality is neither a good nor an ill; but it is in this way that hard choices are imposed upon us – does the immigrant travel, like the escargot, with his culture on his back, bringing his old home into his new, or does he abandon what he was in that other place in order to become something new in this place? And we, who were born in a democratic and open society, what do we expect from the visitors we receive – that they should cease valuing the ideas that held sway in their home, that they should become as us? So, to some degree, the religious questions that have begun to trouble the west should also inform our thinking about other matters, such as immigration.

 

There is more than one kind of jihad. There is, obviously, a very physical jihad where one sweeps over the opposition to impose rule. And there is the philosophical jihad, where one world-view attempts to impose itself upon another.

           

What can we learn from the Charlie Hebdo massacre of 2015, and those that have come about subsequently? The first edition after the massacre, depicting Mohammed, was already described by a British national Muslim cleric as an act of war. Just as many religious fundamentalists have been called to jihad by radical Islam, so Charlie Hebdo’s resolute and tenacious stance on the non-sacred depictions of Islam’s prophet, can be seen as a declaration of secular jihad, which is grounded in the idea that the open and secular society, as it is envisioned in Enlightenment philosophy, is a preferable political society to one grounded in an authoritarian belief, be it of Christian kings or others from the community of believers, or of radicalized Islamic clerics, or any manifestation of the Religious Mind. The Spirit of Religion is, inherently, a variation on the colonizing themes of empire – it wishes to create a kingdom of God in the world of men. Resistance is not futile!

 

Further reading:

·      https://eu.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/11/29/religious-rights-trump-covid-illness-deaths-supreme-court-column/6436196002/

·      A brief fun video summery of John Locke’s philosophical solution to the presence of religion in civil society: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xILFxFkF3E

 

(Reprised and reworked from an original essay published on Phrontisterion on March 1, 2015)

 

Thursday, September 1, 2016

A Rousing Charlie Hebdo Rendition of ‘A Rose by Any Other Name…’


The psychiatrist-philosopher Karl Jaspers identified it as the struggle with the unseasonable spirit of the times (Kampf mit dem Ungeist der Zeit; interview in Die Zeit, 20, February 1958). But in a more literary incarnation it remains the perplexing problem of ‘a rose by any other name….’ The Bard puts this divisive metaphor of the rose & its scent into the mouth of Juliet when she realizes that her Beloved Romeo, whose essential perfume has intoxicated her, has the odious name of Montague—“wherefore art thou Romeo?”
’Tis but thy name that is my enemy;     
Thou art thyself though, not a Montague.       
[…] O! be some other name:   
What’s in a name? that which we call a rose   
By any other name would smell as sweet;        
So Romeo would, were he not Romeo call’d,   
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title. Romeo, doff thy name;        
And for that name, which is no part of thee,    
Take all myself.

Building upon the metaphor: no matter what name we give a thing, the essential perfume of its reality never changes, for good and for ill. Romeo was a delightfully aromatic essence-of-rose, but bore an inauspicious, unrose-like name. However, not every scent is a Romeo, a pleasant fragrance that we may call “but love.” Which is precisely the disturbing problem presently being fanned about on the wings of Politically Correct Speak in the cities and nations of Western Europe. Politically Correct Speak, or Newspeak, as was made abundantly clear in George Orwell’s 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, is not interested in expressing truth about things, but rather in mis-naming and mis-taking things, in controlling words first, in order then to control the flow of ideas. It is the specific intent of Politically Correct Speak to create partisan narratives; it is the Will to Lie.
So what happens when our mayors and governors, our various elected officials and their various appointed ‘creatures’, what happens when a society, as a general rule of thumb, refuses to call a thing what it is? What happens when we deliberately fail to call the rose a rose, and instead call the aggressive cancer a summer cold?

A Lesson in Hedging.
Suppose, for example, that a certain, broadly-conceived faction of religiously inspired individuals begins radiating out into the world with their weapons, in order to intimidate through combat, to coerce, to compel, and generally to fill with terror—with the Fear of the Lord, as one might have said in other times—just normal people who may or may not be otherwise interested in that particular religion’s ideas, or doctrines, or cultural attitudes. When our Western societies fail to give ‘the rose’ its proper name, we fail to recognize and therefore to correctly identify an essential reality. So we effectively craft a new, other ‘thing’ in the place of the really real; we mask the real, and ignoring the symbolic (to borrow upon Lacanian phrasing), we invent an imaginary world where we are magically transformed into the guests at the feast of Belshazzar of old. And behold, as in former times, the handwriting shall also appear on our wall: the mene, mene, tekel upharsin that tells us that, by our not-seeing, we must necessarily fail to resolve whatever the real, and very non-magical ‘problems’ are.
This problem of perception, which is at its core hermeneutical, is general in scope. Whether intentional or unintentional, the real is replaced by the imaginary; and yet the ‘real’ does not simply go away, but remains growing like a weed or a cancer under cover of darkness and ignorance. But such changeling phenomena of the mind are commonplace. For example, as enthusiastic devotees of the dogmatic scientism that dominates the modern worldview, we have grown accustomed to speak of ‘addictions’, and have tried every way from Sunday to address the problem of addiction medically, with a view to relieve, to remedy, and to rectify the ill. But more recent thinking in the empirical sciences, which is indeed a thinking and not simply a belief in the epistemological status quo, has begun to resist defining addiction as a ‘disease’, really not an illness at all; and so our previous thinking and argument is beginning to disappear down the rabbit-hole in a flutter and flurry, in order to try to understand the implications of the ‘new’ real that is starting to emerge. Such was the polemic at the heart of a recent article in the Chronicle of Higher Education
“But even as new insights emerge from both the physical and social sciences, a longstanding argument over whether or not addiction is a disease prevents researchers from identifying effective treatment strategies. The "disease model" remains dominant among medical researchers as well as in the treatment community. But it is not universally embraced, and some researchers think it gets in the way of fresh ideas about how to help people.
"We don’t have very good science yet, […] and a lot of that has to do with issues of conceptualization and politics."”

Cover of CH, January 2016
Now with respect to our above-mentioned illustration of that rubicund faction of religiously exalted and illuminated, weaponized crusaders who are at present radiating out into the world, if our political and national leaders continue to misname this unseasonal ‘malady’, calling it simply fanaticism (instead of religious fanaticism) or simply terrorism (instead of religious terrorism), and qualifying the actions simply as criminal (instead of religious proselytism), then the societies who are being plagued with this unseasonableness will necessarily fall short of developing effective strategies in their attempts to learn how to deal with events in this modern period of unbridled Religion. For the essential element that is being deliberately ignored and therefore over-looked in the naming of this modern rose, is that, at heart, this fanaticism and this terrorism is a movement of the Religious Mind. And yet this movement will not just go away if we ignore it. For the nature of a thing will always eventually make itself known; we need only pay attention to the scent.
There is impediment, however, from the world of Politically Correct Speak. For our aggrieved and suffering societies do not dare to name any particular religion as somehow significant in the rose-like reality of Religious Fanaticism—suppose for the sake of the argument that it were Islam—because this would provoke a hue and cry, and shouts of discrimination, and amalgamation, and profiling would be heard far and near. And of course members and spokespersons of that specifically named religious group, who are perhaps less fanatic and certainly differently weaponized, will take pains to make it clear to All & Sundry that We-the-Secular-People should pedantically avoid confusing and confounding into some sort of homogeneity, and thereby creating the amalgam between, those religious fanatics who are (really, they say,) irreligious, criminal lunatics and terrorists, and true believers who are truthfully and peacefully believers and holders of the true truth of their religion, and therefore truly religious.

Unfortunately, the spirit of the times seems to have remained intellectually unseasonable (ungeistig), and the allure of totalitarianism irresistible. Indeed, it is precisely the out-of-season nature of the magical or religious spirit that constitutes the unbridgeable gap between religious authoritarianism, which is aggressively on the rise and ravenous for new converts, and the Enlightenment foundations of modern Western democracies. In his 1958 interview Jaspers made clear that “Totalitarianism is neither communism, nor fascism, nor Nazism, but has occurred in and through all of these configurations. The terrible threat for the future of mankind, which is universal, is Mass Order, which is a function of the age and divorced from any particular politic whose existence is determined by principles grounded in notions of nation, history, constitution, and rules-of-law. (...) Totalitarianism is like a ghost that drinks the blood of the living and thereby becomes real, while the victims, like a mass of living corpses, continue on with their existence.”
[“Der Totalitarismus ist nicht Kommunismus, nicht Faschismus, nicht Nationalsozialismus, sondern ist in allen diesen Gestalten aufgetreten. Er ist universal die furchtbare Drohung der Zukunft der Menschheit in der Massenordnung. Er ist ein Phänomen des Zeitalters, losgelöst von aller jener Politik, die durch Prinzipien nationalen, geschichtlichen, verfassungsmäßig-rechtsstaatlichen Daseins bestimmt ist. (...) Der Totalitarismus ist wie ein Gespenst, das das Blut der Lebenden trinkt und dadurch wirklich wird, während die Opfer als eine Masse lebender Leichname ihr Dasein fortsetzen.”]

Jaspers reminds us insightfully that the Spirit of Totalitarianism precedes its myriad translations into historical happenstance, one form of which has undeniably been Religion in all of its various permutations. Leaving the history of the question aside for the nonce, it is more pertinent to our immediate historical moment, and so to our purpose here, to note that the Religious Mind has ever been the viper nourishing in the bosom of Enlightenment; and the viper has now turned to strike a blow for its long-awaited emancipation from enlightened Reason and its return homeward in the direction of its obscurantist heritage.
            At the philosophical birthing of enlightened democracies, which we may quite arbitrarily date at 1689 with the English publication of John Locke’s Letter concerning Toleration, he reasons that there needs to be a place for the Religious Mind in the non-religious, non-theocratic state—the secular state. Hence, already with the birth of the democratic ideal the obscurantism of the Religious Mind was accepted into the bosom of enlightened secularism. The Religious Mind must obviously be permitted to continue to thrive, privately, in the secular state, argues Locke, but any notion of Religion playing an authoritative role in the public arenas of that state is to be absolutely curtailed. Locke argues for the comprehensive separation of church authority from civil authority because a civil magistrate is not qualified, either by his civil office and or by his competencies, to make meaningful distinctions between competing religious authorities with competing claims. For example, what possible criteria are there for validating in civil society one religious denomination as worthy of tax exempt status, and yet for refusing this status to another denomination? In civil society, what makes one body of doctrine a religion, but a different and perhaps competing body of doctrine a cult? And in what way is the American IRS (tax service) educationally or intellectually qualified to make such distinctions?
In the present historical moment, it is for exactly this reason that it is impossible not to conclude that the vast number of commentators and interlocutors on this question of religious fanaticism and religious terrorism are talking indefensible, irrational nonsense. We are compelled to say to all of those who pretend, either from inside the religious context or external observers of the phenomenon, that it is somehow possible or meaningful not to amalgamate religious fanatics with co-religionists of lukewarm or indifferent commitment—Stuff & Nonsense.
Here, for example, one reads the oft-repeated claim, which is not even disguised as a justification, but simply delivered up as de facto statement of historical truth, that “the attacks [in Paris’ Bataclan theatre] were not related in any way to Islam.” And here an essayist seems not to recognize what John Locke already clearly understood in 1689, which is to say, the indefensible irrationality behind the litany: “One cannot say it enough: Islamism, no matter how moderate it is, is not Islam, but a theocratic and neo-fascist deviant of Islam.” Such sterile and incompetent claims and assertions are certainly not logical argument, because they contain neither elements of logic nor of argument, but neither are they meaningful forms of reasoning in civil society. The realm of philosophy remains inviolate in this present atmosphere of non-Thought and non-Argument. Locke’s 17th century reasoning, on the other hand, was sufficiently persuasive for the framers of the American Constitution to separate the interests of State from the interests of Religion in the young American republic. And his Thinking remains relevant for us today.
            The following are Phrontisterion translations of two of Riss’ editorials from late summer 2016 editions of Charlie Hebdo. In these editorials Riss develops in his own inimitable style a line of reasoning that is as old as Enlightenment itself.
           
A Prayer for Miscreants
Editorial: Riss
20 July 2016 / Charlie Hebdo No 1252 / 3
From this issue of CH
What can one really say after Nice? In the year 2015 the French discovered Islamic terrorism. We shall not repeat here the different commentaries that have pummeled us since January 2015, like “They will not make us change of way of life,” “They want to destroy our insouciance,” “Their type of Islam is not true Islam,” “These acts are being committed by the mentally unstable.” If we were a bit more cynical, we would add: etc., etc.
            After each terrorist attack, we ask ourselves about the ultimate role of Religion. But then, just as soon as the notion of Religion is evoked, the specialists show up in the various television studios, affirming that the killer was not a practicing Muslim, or even that he was crazy and that Religion had nothing to do with his action. Just like for the soldier Ryan (TN: Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan), we move heaven and earth to get Religion out of the difficult position that it finds itself in just because of one mindless dumbsh#t. And even if it should turn out that the killer was radicalized quite quickly, the specialists will respond that this is not sufficient to make him a true believer and that his crime therefore cannot be blamed on Religion. Keep moving along; there is nothing to see here!
            And yet the history of religions is chock full of quick conversions. “Paris is certainly worth a mass,” used to say the very Protestant Henry IV just before converting to Catholicism for political gain. So why should paradise not be worth a truck going 90 km an hour on the Promenade des Anglais on one July 14th evening? Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity in one night just before the battle on Milvius bridge, which he won by slaughtering hundreds of his enemies without the help of refrigerator trucks. As for Paul of Tarsus, prosecutor of the Christians, he converted all at once on the road to Damascus, and became from one day to the next Saint Paul, illuminated Christian. These high-speed conversions never shocked anyone; and they have even been repeatedly recounted for us and marveled at for centuries. So why is it that an inhabitant of Nice would not have the right to convert to Islam in a couple of days? There are a lot of them in History, sad-sacks suddenly converted to a religion in order to give meaning to their pathetic destinies. The case of the killer in Nice is not in the least bit something new.
            What strikes us when we look at these types of crimes, is that they are committed like they were prayers. Prayer does not need lots of trappings. Immense cathedrals, sumptuous mosques, or thousand-year old synagogues are not absolutely necessary for prayer to take place. It is enough just to believe, and with some Psalms and verses at the ready, one can pray at the North Pole, in the desert, or on the summit of Mount Everest. Faith does not have material needs; faith has only spiritual needs.
            It is the same with these terrorist acts. It is not necessary to master really complicated weapons, nor war-time techniques learned in Syria or Iraq. A modest knife, such as in Magnanville, or a common truck will do the trick, like a simple rug oriented toward Mecca, a little Bible in the pocket, or a rolled-up Torah are sufficient for prayer. These people kill like they pray, and they only need a direct connection to God and a handsome new refrigerated truck rented two days earlier to make it happen.
            The police forces and the military will never be able to stop these attacks if they focus too much on the technique; because there are no machines that permit one to delve into souls and minds. It is impossible to know what an individual is hiding in the deep recesses of his consciousness, which he dissimulates even from those closest to him. Like deliberate failures or [Freudian] slips that might happen to reveal something that is slumbering in the unconscious, these terrorist acts surface unexpectedly and cannot be anticipated. It is this that gives us the impression that they are committed by crazy people.
            No police force, no army will ever be able to control this. They can act only and uniquely upon visible things, expressed in conversations transmitted by portable phones or computers. But they cannot act upon the invisible things of the mind. The ways of the Lord are mysterious, goes the saying, and therefore it is difficult for the police to verify their identity. It is the mystery of Religion that gives to religions all their force, and, if a religion drifts too far afield from its mystery, and begins clothing itself with the rationalism that is required by our modern societies, that religion becomes weak and loses its strength. Mysticism is fundamentally anti-democratic, because it is incompatible with the balance of powers and the critical spirit that constitute the foundations of democracy.
            So, what remains for us to do in order to protect ourselves from mysticism? Some additional barriers across the Promenade des Anglais, an app on our smartphones called “Attack Alert,” and additional national guard reserves. It is our turn to have faith.

Summer Reform
Editorial: Riss
10 August 2016 / Charlie Hebdo No 1255 / 3
Front page comic

What an odd idea—to want to reform Islam! It is the new trend ever since the attack in Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray. After the assassination of an ecclesiastic from a religion other than Islam by a killer who claims to represent Islam, the home front is in a panic. Muslims are in a panic, because they are afraid that they will become targets of violence. Catholics are in a panic, because they are afraid of a religious war. Politicians are in a panic, because they already know that their security measures have reached their limits.
            And then—why reform Islam? We have been told repeatedly, for months, that the attacks are committed by those who are deranged. But if this were true, it is not Islam that should be reformed, but the psychiatric hospitals, because they have been unable to identify these crazed killers and have not been able to provide effective treatment. Curiously, fifteen days after the attack no one is framing the story anymore in terms of ‘deranged’. Fifteen days later, everyone is talking about Islam.
            If anyone knows how to reform a religion, in three weeks if possible, just before the start of classes, that would be really helpful. Like class dunces who do not do a stitch of work for the entire academic year, and who think they can make it all up in the week prior to the final exams, it is only now that ‘they’ acknowledge the existence of tensions between Islam and our democracy: more and more fundamentalists, more and more veils, more and more beards, more and more mosques that smell of fire and brimstone. ‘They’ wanted to pacify us by pretending that the attacks were a psychiatric problem. ‘They’ already wanted to pacify us in the same way by affirming that the problem with Islam was not Islam, but secularism [laïcité]. There are the intellectuals, if we can call them that, who continue to tell us that it is secularism [laïcité] that needs to be reformed. Every type of manipulation has been attempted by the charlatans of Islamophobia, as Charb used to call them, in an attempt to keep Islam from being criticized and Muslims from having to question their religion.
            Because someone is not exempt from asking questions about the faith just because he is a believer. Quite the opposite. Catholics questioned their faith with Vatican II, which did not make them bad Catholics. If Muslims would do the same, it would not make them bad Muslims. To raise questions about Islam and Muslims is not to stigmatize them; it is the very least one can do when it is a matter of bringing into the public arena questions that are of concern to everyone.
            In a small city in the suburbs where I was doing a news story, ‘they’ explained under what conditions the new mosque had been built. The site had been chosen by local Muslim authorities, and they were adamant that the mosque should be situated right next to the train station. Strange location for a mosque. The spokesman explained to me that this location would permit them to observe which Muslims, when returning home from work, would go straight home without going to the mosque. With their place of worship only fifty meters from the station, they no longer had any excuse for not going there. Local politicians were not shocked by this demand, and accepted it without flinching.
            To reform Islam would first consist in reforming our locally elected politicians. They believed that Muslims were like any other group, like farmers or hunters. That all you needed was to be buddies with them and to satisfy their demands in order to get their vote in the next elections. And because these local politicians know nothing about Islam, they were persuaded by the spiel of those Muslims who are the most militant, which is to say, by the claptrap of those who are the least progressive, because they were convinced that this would be good for their reelection and for social peace. Result: France is on the verge of civil war.
            The massive annual street markets and sidewalk sales that take place in Lille each summer, an event that dates from the Middle Ages and has only ever been interrupted by the Nazi occupation, was just canceled out of fear of attacks by Islamic fundamentalists. One less secular [laïque] festival. On the other hand, even though a priest has just been assassinated, who would dare cancel for security reasons a religious event like the processions of August 15 [NT: The Assumption of Mary]? Likewise, who would dare forbid for security reasons the Muslim Tradeshow or the Muslim Fair, which are annual events.
            How is one to reform Islam? When we see the speed with which those who are secular [laïcs] have already reformed their way of life by adapting themselves to fundamentalist terror, while Muslims have not begun even the slightest bit of work on themselves, we begin to see that the question has perhaps already been answered.

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CH comic