Showing posts with label Zarathustra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zarathustra. Show all posts

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)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, June 1, 2018

Plato’s Noble Lie and the Psyche of the Philosophical Man



~by David Aiken~

Many and sundry have been the attempts to “get a handle on” a deceptive idea that has its origins in Plato’s Republic—the idea of the Noble Lie. The Noble Lie was never intended to be an element of political theory—this is only the shallow storyline, the theatrical mask that Plato lends to his narrative to throw the profane reader off the track of the sacred richness of his philosophical teaching. In matter of fact, Plato’s Noble Lie is a very clear rational mechanism of Plato’s fully human and fully philosophical ontology; it is not some device to be used for political or state enablement, but rather, it is a constructive philosophical mechanism that enables the 'golden' part of the individual, the rational mind, to construct the individual as a philosophical whole!

One recent transmogrification of the Platonic idea of the Noble Lie was in the 2008 Batman film, The Dark Knight.
At the heart of this dark comic book, cinematographic narrative is the pattern of the black & white, yin & yang quality that defines Everyman. We are none of us entirely white, the Harvey Dent cum White Knights of the world who dare to oppose Evil in the open light of day; nor are we entirely black, the unproblematic embodiments of the unpredictable Joker, the modern Johnny Appleseed of pain and loss, of random suffering and harm.  Rather, Everyman is both of these in differing and mixed degrees. In perhaps our best incarnations we are actually all of us, individually, both the tormented Black Knight, the man-bat, the creature who comes out of the night to drag bad actors and their actions into the light of day, and that complex human creature who, on a much more personal level, is consumed by his personal struggle to make sure that, at least most of the time, the enlightened goodness in his soul that reaches out for justice, overshadows the gnawing, inky hunger of the psychic demon that urges him, almost irresistibly, to punish and to avenge.
            On this telling Harvey Dent fails to live up to one side of his persona by embodying only the White Knight of Justice, and the darkness of his obscured yin overawes the lightness of his aggressive yang. In his high-handed hubris Harvey Dent fails the task of being Everyman; unlike the unusual man-bat who manages, somehow, to balance delicately in the nether regions of his humanity the vital forces of his yin in the light of his yang. In an additional and interesting move, the narrative flow of the film demands that the lead players mask the imperfections of the man under the “persona” of a social Story, behind a myth, a noble lie: that Harvey Dent died heroically in the line of duty, fighting for justice, and in the service of the community. For the “brassy” commoners of the city must not learn that the “golden” man, Harvey Dent, failed; that he turned; that he became mostly lost in the dark. For the sake of the people the Cover Story must not fail; and even if the man behind the mask/myth/Story fails, the Narrative of Justice must not fail; it must remain eternal.
            When all is said and done, this filmic “read” is actually a faithful reflection and reworking of the idea of Plato’s noble lie as it has come down to us in the western thought traditions of philosophy and political theory. And that is unfortunate.

At the risk of sounding adamant, let us just say it right out in the open: Plato’s Republic, one of the perennial great works in the corpus of world literature, which has resided for centuries in the intellectual domain of political philosophers and theorists, is not really about a republic, ideal or otherwise. In the same way that war movies are not about war, i.e., their Subject is not “war,” but rather about Men’s Character and Human Action framed situationally around the thematic of war, so also, when Plato dramatizes a conversation with Socrates around a political thematic, it does not mean that the Subject of the work is political in nature or even anything that is remotely concerned with political thinking. Plato’s Republic is framed around the idea of the City; the City, in turn, is built in the image of Human Ontology, and seeks to answer the question – what is a man? How should a man act? What role does right education play in the evolution of the human mind and soul? In this Platonic metaphor for the philosophical life, as the soul goes, so goes the City.
            If we fail to grasp this distinction between the subject of a work and its opportunistic framing or narrative thematic, then with works such as Plato’s Republic or Machiavelli’s The Prince, once they are construed as politically or philosophically earnest texts, we hermeneuts who come after in the thought tradition are obliged to construct interpretations that correct other interpretations, and in so doing, by committing ourselves to reading literally and failing to read metaphorically, we inadvertently create a whole new set of interpretative problems.
Dr. Frankenstein creating his monster
            For example, by committing to a political interpretation of Plato’s Republic, we also necessarily create as an interpretative by-product an antique Frankenstein in the person of the great Socrates, thereby “disappearing” this irreplaceable thinker behind a political interpretative persona. This tradition’s earnestly-political “read” of the Republic includes almost all the great thinkers, except Augustine, from Aristotle to Machiavelli, and, in the contemporary political philosophical arena, from Karl Popper to Leo Strauss. And, yet, this telling also transforms the story’s hero, the Socrates of the history of philosophy, into the much more well-known Franken-Socrates, once-upon-a-time master teacher of the life of the Just Man, who seems, all irony aside and in great seriousness, to be making the case for Justice and the Just Man by promoting the practice of euthanasia, social classism based on racial purity, selective breeding, and telling noble lies to motivate leaders to act well in the City. Really?!
            This philosophical transmogrification of Socrates is simply too implausible, though, and so the tradition ends up speaking dismissively, or not speaking at all, of the Franken-Socrates it has created, because he is simply too Hitlerian to retain any “street credibility,” philosophically speaking.  This interpretative process is precisely what a sin against Thinking looks like.
            With transmogrifying interpretations such as this, at the end of the day we end up dismissing the work not only because it portrays for us a Socrates qua Machiavellian prince, which violates our politically correct sensibilities, but also because we do not find other cases made in the Republic, such as the case for an ideal state, to be politically persuasive in general. So, the thought tradition that wanders down this interpretative Holtzweg succeeds only in creating an unacceptable political theory and an anti-Socrates—but then, this might have been the intention all along. And perhaps there is some masked man yet “out there” who will come along, some man-bat or Lone Ranger of philosophy, to help us out of the intellectual quagmire created by such a mishmash of non-thinking and pseudo-interpreting on this question of noble lies… Quien sabe, Kemosabe?
             
So, what sense is there to be made of a Socratic statement such as Plato places in of Resp. 377c: "it is imperative for the rulers of the city to supervise the makers of tales," and of the idea of the Noble Lie that follows? In Resp. 414c we begin to learn about this γενναῖον ψεῦδος (gennaion pseudos), which better translates as a false (lying, untrue, mendacious, fraudulent) genealogy (family history). So, our adopted family history, “according” to Socrates, would actually have two parameters. The first is that the citizens of the “Socratic” republic are earth-born, which is to say that we are all inter-related and therefore interconnected. This is a straightforward idea borrowed from the Stoic philosophers. The second parameter is that, as with all that is earth-born, we each contain elements from our Earth-Mother, but not necessarily all the same elements. Some of us are born out of gold metal, some from silver, and others out of bronze and iron. The metal core of the individual will determine his worth and role in the city.
               At face value, at least for politically minded thinkers, the Noble Lie is essential for the political apparatus to maintain stable social structures; it is a lie, in the sense of an “opiate for the masses,” which is force-fed to the masses to subdue them, to keep them happily at their stations in the structures of state. If this argument is teased out literally, we arrive at the conclusion that Socrates promotes, in an ideal kind of way, the practice of euthanasia, social classism, racial purity and separation, selective breeding, and the telling of “lies” to motivate people to behave themselves in their social environment.  
               Yet, this simply cannot be the case, unless, like Mark Anthony before us, we philosophers-turned-Philistines also come to bury Socrates, not to praise him; for it will be true of this Franken-Socrates, as with the many others who have shared similar controlling, manipulating, and authoritarian ideas, that “The evil that men do lives after them.”

However, what if we tease out this argument metaphorically, rather than literally? What if we seek to praise Socrates rather than to bury him? Most philosophers would agree, generally, that there are two ideas that must remain consistent and valid for interpretations of Plato to be plausible. First, Plato the philosopher was clearly a dualist who thought that unchanging truth was possible. Conjecture and Belief, thought Plato, are forms of knowledge linked to the changing world; True Knowledge (or “Seeing”) and Wisdom, on the other hand, are linked to things that are by their nature eternal and unchanging, such as the Forms or Ideas. In this respect Plato shows that he was influenced by the 5th century philosopher from Elea (Southern Greece), Parmenides.
            In his poem, On Nature, which is by and large the most significant fragment still existing from Parmenides, he tells the story of the Young Man who, in his quest for virtue, which is the philosophical or just life of True Knowledge, sees all things (ln. 3) with the same eternal and unblinking Gaze as the Goddess (Muse) (stanza 25-30).  
Meet it is that thou shouldst learn all things, as well
the unshaken heart of persuasive truth, as the opinions of
[30] mortals in which is no true belief at all.

Χρεὼ δέ σε πάντα πυθέσθαι
ἠμέν Ἀληθείης εὐκυκλέος aτρεμὲς ἦτορ
[30] ἠδὲ βροτῶν δόξας, ταῖς οὐκ ἔνι πίστις aληθής.

Where Parmenides speaks in his poem of “opinions” (δόξας), this idea will translate into Plato’s thought as “Belief,” a type of knowing reserved for transient things instead of permanent things; and as this lower form of knowing is juxtaposed over and against True Belief (πίστις aληθής) in Parmenides, so it is as well in Plato, where “Seeing” will be the knowing of eternal truths, of things that are not subject to change because they are transcendental, hence unchanging and permanent.

The second concept that must remain consistent and valid for any interpretation of Plato’s philosophy to be plausible, is that he was enormously impressed by his teacher, Socrates, who was not so much a teacher of Justice, but rather a teacher of the Just Man. Ironically, it is precisely this distinction that allows one to begin unraveling Platonic thought and separating it from Socratic thought. A Platonic Socrates, for example, would typically be expected to articulate some clear teaching on Justice as a permanent and eternal value; this would be consistent with Plato and his love of the Idea/Definition of things. However, this does not seem to be the case in most of the Platonic dialogues involving Socrates, especially the so-called aporetic dialogues. These dialogues are problematic, aporetic, precisely because, in a decidedly un-Platonic move, Socrates does not provide us or leave us with any definition of the virtue desired, such as Piety (Euthyphro) or Justice (The Republic). Instead, the historical Socrates actually argues against such an Eternal Definition of the virtue in question, by showing that any such argument must necessarily contradict itself; and he leaves us understanding and valuing the perception that, as he might well have said behind the scenes of history, we may not be able to find a full-proof definition for Justice, but we can recognize a Just Man from a mile away.

So, in fact, it will actually be the Socrates of history who shows us that Noble Lies, however this idea might be variously interpreted in aftertimes, will have no effect upon the man whose character is not naturally virtuous. A myth or belief of any sort, genealogical, religious, or nationalistic, even though we might be born into it and know nothing else our entire life, will ultimately be for naught if the individual man fails to act out of a fundamental sense of his own character’s virtue. According to Socrates, failure of individual character necessarily trumps any mythological or metaphysical prop; because virtue does not derive from some Belief or other, but rather from individuals who act out of Reasoned Seeing.

So how does this little reflective journey inform those of us who, worlds away from the Greece of antiquity, live in an existential no-man’s land where, possibly for the first time in human history, there is an opportunity for true and authentic individual freedom (for better and for worse) in a land where ancient philosophico-religious mythologies yet still hold sway, and where every variety of nationalism scorches the earth of our souls?

Is truth possible? Plato thinks so, as does Socrates; although their conceptions of truth were quite distinct—Plato’s being framed by an other-worldliness, and Socrates’ by a this-worldliness. Yet either conceptualization of truth would have the effect of bringing like-minded (philosophical) men together, of unifying those who seek to live out the virtuous life. This is one of the true teachings of Plato’s Republic. This philosophical truth stands in obvious contrast to the idea of binding differently-minded men together through any variety of Noble Lie, viz., genealogical, religious, or nationalistic, thus seeking to enslave their emotions rather than to persuade their reasoning minds.

WWNS? What Would Nietzsche Say, perhaps, or a Nietzsche inspired philosopher, about this meandering reflection on noble lies and failures of character?  In the unappeased craving for the freedom to think thoughts that are truly one’s own, and in light of the fact that we are so obviously wandering around lost in the undefined fields of human existential history, Nietzsche might encourage us to break free of all of the noble lies that surround us, or at least as many as we become aware of. A State’s noble lies certainly have no supremacy when measured against the truths of our philosophical wanderings; and the role of a free-thinking res cogitans is, precisely, not to allow itself to be duped by a state’s myths about foundations or origins—beliefs and myths such as patriotism, father- or mother-land, God & Country, among all the others.
           
In The Dance Song, a discourse found in Part II of Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra, Nietzsche helps his reader “feel” the nostalgia that permeates the life lived outside the comforting confines of the foundational myths that surround us, those myths by means of which we construct our very personal identity, and without which we are the ultimate Stranger: at once native, and yet oh so very foreign in this our native land.
An unknown presence is about me, and gazeth thoughtfully. What! Thou livest still, Zarathustra?
Why? Wherefore? Whereby? Whither? Where? How? Is it not folly still to live?—
Ah, my friends; the evening is it which thus interrogateth in me. Forgive me my sadness!
Evening hath come on: forgive me that evening hath come on!"
Thus sang Zarathustra.

Ein Unbekanntes ist um mich und blickt nachdenklich. Was! Du lebst noch, Zarathustra?
Warum? Wofür? Wodurch? Wohin? Wo? Wie? Ist es nicht Torheit, noch zu leben? –
Ach, meine Freunde, der Abend ist es, der so aus mir fragt. Vergebt mir meine Traurigkeit!
Abend ward es: vergebt mir, daß es Abend ward!«

Also sprach Zarathustra.

And what would an individual’s life outside the foundation Stories and Myths look like? How do we recognize the life of the man who is free? The freedom of one’s mind does not necessarily reflect through the life of the individual, although it certainly may; so, frankly, no one really knows.  Nietzsche simply tells us that this transformation of the way our minds think will make of us children again—New Beginnings who are free to explore to our heart’s content. “Innocence,” he writes in The Three Metamorphoses, “is the child, and forgetfulness, a new beginning, a game, a self-rolling wheel, a first movement, a holy Yea (Unschuld ist das Kind und Vergessen, ein Neubeginnen, ein Spiel, ein aus sich rollendes Rad, eine erste Bewegung, ein heiliges Ja-sagen.).” Nietzsche does not seek to validate any particular code of moral behavior; any moral/ethical construct will do the job, including the heroic and virtue ethics, religious ethics and deontology, and all the various incarnations of utilitarian calculations.

As a suggestion, though—perhaps we might adopt as philosophically and ethically unproblematic in this new life of the child, that we may assume the general rightness or propriety of courtesy toward the Other, and kindness, and consideration. This is the stock-in-trade of the Just Man.
            If there are Dissenters from this idea-axiom, then they may abstain from reading further, as they have already clearly abstained, by dissenting from this fundamental valuation of Self in the form of the Other, from thinking humanely about their fellow humans. As they progress along their dissenting path, we may await any and all conduct/thought… for the failure of character, the lack of the will to virtue, is already evident.

There is certainly a dilemma here, though, as we try to imagine a thought-life outside of our Stories; and one can absolutely see why Wittgenstein did not write much in his life. Imagine: here we all are, sitting around at the foot of Wittgenstein’s Mauer des Schweigens, the wall of silence beyond which knowledge is impossible, and so silence becomes the byword… And yet that very silence is equivocal—it has two voices. Because just as the “word” cannot embrace the transcendental “thing,” the thing on the other side of that Mauer of silence, which is by its very definition “no-thing,” nor can a “word” rightly encompass the immanent “thing” on this side of that Mauer. If the word is not the thing, then all it can do is reach up toward whatever inchoate obscurity it is trying to grasp in an attempt to get us, approximately, to some kind of meaning.   At the end of the day, Wittgenstein’s thinking succeeds in reminding us that we are isolated in the time capsule of ourselves, in the closed loop of our own reasoning processes. Pace Wittgenstein, though; for Lady Philosophy still has her role to play in sorting out the noble truths that will help ground the Historical Animal who is slowly descending into the quagmire of fleeting time.

Perhaps, after all, it is for the best that Wittgenstein did not write much.

(reworked from an essay published 1 June, 2014)

Further Phrontisterion readings around the theme of ‘becoming’: