Thursday, February 11, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Thursday 11 February 2021

 

First published in 1961


Thinking, as Arendt experiences it, is an inner silent dialogue, which may reach conditional conclusions but whose real result is a proliferation of distinctions made by conversing with a thinking partner. To be conscious of thought as a conversation is rare, due both to its silence and its lightning-like speed, but to Arendt the dialogic character of the activity of thinking is what human consciousness (con-scientia) is.
--Jerome Kohn, "Introduction"


All modern scientific work rests on the absolute presupposition that nature is one and that science is one: that the different realms of nature are in part governed by one and the same code of absolutely identical laws, the laws of mathematics, and in part by special codes which do not differ radically among themselves but are so linked together by analogies and similarities that they may be regarded as so many local variants of laws which in spite of these variations can still be called ‘laws of nature’; while the various sciences that investigate the various realms of nature are not independent sciences but only modifications of one and the same thing, a single thing which we call by the single name of natural science.

Walter Benjamin wrote, the self-alienation of humankind ‘has reached such a degree that it can experience its own destruction as an aesthetic pleasure of the first order’.

A nonplussed Hayek told an interviewer, “Milton [Friedman's] monetarism and Keynesianism have more in common with each other than I have with either.” For Hayek, who believed that depressions simply had to burn themselves out, even monetary therapy was dangerous.

I say to some extent, because although (theoretical physicist John Archibald] Wheeler and the scientists who follow his lead use the term ‘participation’ they do not share [Owen] Barfield’s, [Colin] Wilson’s and others’ belief that our own volition – our will – can increase our participation. Theirs is a ‘participatory universe’ but, like earlier scientific models, it is a passive one. That our consciousness participates in the universe is for them as much a ‘law’ as is gravity. For people like Barfield, the idea is to consciously increase our participation, and hence freedom. And by consciously increasing our participation, we do not then gain greater control over the things that make up our world, but of our picture of that world, just as while I cannot control what takes place in a television programme I am watching, I can control the quality of the picture on the screen; i.e., increase or decrease the focus, clarity, and so on.

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Wednesday 10 February 2021

 

Published December 2020

Given a choice between a hypothesis and an experience, go with the experience.

“Trying to determine what is going on in the world by reading newspapers,” as a famously clever screenwriter/director/journalist named Ben Hecht once wrote, “is like trying to tell the time by watching the second hand of a clock.”

“Whig” was not just a party-political label but also the name of a climate of opinion, as Daniel Walker Howe characterized it in a classic study, The Political Culture of the American Whigs (1979). To Whig reformers the rest of America was not the Wild West but the Wild Everywhere, a bride-short, male-dominated free-for-all scarred by dueling, drinking, whoring, and rioting.

“He was, in fact, saying that the market doesn’t work. He only half recognized it.” For all his grand optimism and ecstatic visions of a fifteen-hour workweek, Keynes remained a Burkean conservative, anxious about actually implementing the changes he believed possible, even those he thought necessary to the preservation of democracy.

You cannot now solve the problem by saying that God chose to create the world at a certain place chosen by Himself in the uniform matter. This is presumably what Thales said: but it is not sense. Unless God had a reason for His choice, it was no choice; it was something of which we have no conception whatever, and calling it a choice is merely throwing dust in our own eyes by pretending to equate it with a familiar human activity, the activity of choosing, which we do not in fact conceive it to have resembled. Choice is choice between alternatives, and these alternatives must be distinguishable, or they are not alternatives; moreover, one must in some way present itself as more attractive than the other, or it cannot be chosen.

A goal defines an outcome you want to achieve; an area of focus establishes activities you want to spend your time doing. A goal is a result; an area of focus is a path. A goal points to a future you intend to reach; an area of focus settles you into the present.

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Tuesday 9 February 2021

 

1944 publication


Once it is fully understood that there are no natural harmonies and equilibria of power in history, as there are in nature, and that advancing civilization tends to accentuate, rather than diminish, such disproportions of power as exist in even primitive communities, it must become apparent that property rights become instruments of injustice.

Crucial, then, to any understanding of revolutions in the modern age is that the idea of freedom and the experience of a new beginning should coincide.

Being able to depart for where we will is the prototypal gesture of being free, as limitation of freedom of movement has from time immemorial been the precondition for enslavement. Freedom of movement is also the indispensable condition for action, and it is in action that men primarily experience freedom in the world. When men are deprived of the public space—which is constituted by acting together and then fills of its own accord with the events and stories that develop into history—they retreat into their freedom of thought.

Since the greatness, but also the perplexity, of all laws in free societies is that they only indicate what one should not do, and never what one should do, political action and historical movement in constitutional government remain free and unpredictable, conforming to, but never inspired by, its essence.


Monday, February 8, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Monday 8 February 2021

 

Frederick Douglass


“We are a country of all extremes, ends and opposites; the most conspicuous example of composite nationality in the world … In races we range all the way from black to white, with intermediate shades which, as in the apocalyptic vision, no man can name or number.”

— Frederick Douglass, 1869


A Government founded upon justice, and recognizing the equal rights of all men; claiming no higher authority for its existence, or sanction for its laws, than nature, reason and the regularly ascertained will of the people; steadily refusing to put its sword and purse in the service of any religious creed or family.


--Frederick Douglass



Increasingly it was seen that Creation was only the most grand form of a variety of mechanical devices – machines – that had recently captured western imagination. From a world of qualities what was emerging was one of quantity.

The decline to shopping-mall and fast-food aesthetics is not entirely due to economic and psychological depression or to the prescription drugs we take to numb us down. Tastelessness derives also from the neglect of the deeper soul, which has aesthetic needs, apart from physical satisfaction. The soul shrivels without images and sensations of beauty.

The trend in ecosystems is from the relatively simple and wasteful pioneer stage characterized by competition toward the more complex and cooperative climax stage distinguished by mutualism.

The trend in ecosystems is from the relatively simple and wasteful pioneer stage characterized by competition toward the more complex and cooperative climax stage distinguished by mutualism.

America, we like to think, has been specially “graced.” Set apart. The first child of the Enlightenment, it was “declared” to others as the harbinger of a new order. Yet this rationally founded nation was also deeply devotional, a redeemer nation. Reason and religion, which should have contended near our cradle, conspired instead. If we kept ourself isolated from others, it was to avoid contamination. If we engaged others, we did so from above, to bring light into their darkness. To deal with others as equals would betray our mission.


Saturday, February 6, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Saturday 6 February 2021

 

1995 publication


Perhaps ideas are the single most precious miracle in human existence. For ideas determine our goals of action, our styles of art, our values of character, our religious practices and even our ways of loving.

Greek and modern physics are agreed that the most universal characteristic of this world is motion.

In the wake of Hegel and under the influence of an extremely intense interest in history, philosophy threatened to degenerate into speculation on the possibility that some kind of inherent law was manifested in history.

Machiavelli’s theory of political power, according to which the act of foundation itself—that is, the conscious beginning of something new—requires and justifies the use of violence.

Everything you do has the potential to limit what you do next. Everything you think has the potential to limit what you think next. And you won't even know that this is happening.

Reading The Human Condition: Part 1 "Prologue"

 

                                          The flyleaf notes that I purchased this book on 12 October 1974. I know it well--and I don't.

My copy of The Human Condition (THC) is back in service once again. During the past year, spurred on by a pandemic-created opportunity, I joined the Virtual Reading Group sponsored by Hannah Arendt Center of Bard College. After having read three of Arendt's books, Men in Dark Times (1968), Essays in Understanding 1930--1954: Formation, Exile, & Totalitarianism (2005) , and The Promise of Politics (2005), we're now turning to what I consider to be the centerpiece of Arendt's project, THC, which was published in 1958. I don't know how many times I've read it. When I purchased it, I was taking a year off from my undergraduate studies, and I assume that I read it during that period. Then, when I returned to complete my senior year, I took a course entitled "Contemporary Political Theory" that assigned THC as a required book. As I recall, before taking that class (also probably in my year away) I read Arendt's Between Past and Future: Eight Exercise in Political Thought (1961), a collection of essays about contemporary political thinking and related topics (history, education, culture). Thus, when I took the class on "Contemporary Political Thought" in the fall of 1975, I cam pre-loaded with Arendtian thoughts. The instructor, in his final evaluation, stated that he wished that my focus in the class had not centered so much on Arendt. Then, during law school, the same teacher (now on the tenure track) offered a class solely about Arendt, and he kindly allowed me to sit-in. Since then, I don't know how often I've gone back to THC and other of Arendt's works, but I did. I never lost touch with Arendt, so to speak. Then, in 2016, along with many others, I turned instinctively toward Arendt as the American republic entered a new, dangerous phase. 

So, this isn't my first THC rodeo. Perhaps it's needless to say, but I'll do so anyway: I think that there's more I can get out of this book. And in an effort to do so, I intend to write a series of essays as we read through the book in our Virtual Reading Group, hoping to spur my efforts and to share what insights that I can glean. Now, to the Prologue. 

Synopsis

In 1957 "an earth-born object made by man was launched int the universe . . . ." (1). This event was more important than the splitting of the atom and should have "been treated with unmitigated joy" except for the fear of the military and political consequences surrounding the event. (1). [The Soviets gained an upper-hand in the "space race."] But the joy accompanying this event wasn't "triumphal" or a celebration of human achievement, but one of "relief" that humankind had taken "'the first step toward escape from men's [sic] imprisonment to the earth.'" (1). Humans have kept pace with scientific and technological development, often imagining such events before they occur. The "respectable press" (2), however, hasn't kept up, while the genre of science fiction writing, which serves as an unattended vehicle of "mass sentiments and mass desires." has. (2). Although Christians and philosophers have often sensed this world as a vale of tears and the body as a prison, before this new era no one had thought of going to the moon as an escape. "Should the emancipation and secularization of the modern age, which began with the turning-away, not necessarily from God, but from a god who was the Father of men in heaven, and with an even more fateful repudiation of an Earth who was the Mother of all living creatures under the sky?" (2). 

"The earth is the very quintessence of the human condition" (2) and is, so far as we know, unique in the universe. "Human artifact" separates us from "the mere animal environment" but life is based outside of the human artifact, although scientists have been striving to create artificial life to expand the powers and length of human life. Humans seem to be rebelling against the life given to them. There is no doubt that this course of action can be followed, just as "there is no reason to doubt our present ability to destroy all organic life on earth. The question is only whether we wish to use our new  scientific and technical knowledge in this direction, and this question cannot be decided by scientific means; it is a political question of the first order and therefore can hardly be left to the decision of professional scientists or professional politicians." (3). 

But already science itself is starting to suffer a crisis. "The trouble concerns the fact that the "truths" of the modern scientific worldview, thought that can be demonstrated in mathematical formulas and proved technologically, will no longer lend themselves to normal expressions in speech and thought." (3). We humans may be condemned to live in a universe that we can never fully comprehend. "If it should turn out to be true that knowledge (in the modern sense of know-how) and thought have parted company for good, then we would indeed become the helpless slaves, not so much of our machines as of our know-how, thoughtless creatures at the mercy of every gadget which is technically possible, no matter how murderous it is." (3). 

The "situation created by sciences is of great political significance. Wherever the relevance of speech is at stake, the matter becomes political by definition, for speech is what makes man a political being." (3). We cannot "speak" with mathematical symbols, which are abstractions from reality. In science, mathematical symbols are a source of communication, but not so in the wider world. In a sense, science has lost speech and therefore its entryway into politics. To make sense of the world, to make it meaningful, it must be spoken about. "There may be truths beyond speech, and they may be of great relevance to man in the singular, that is, to man in so far as he is not a political being, whatever else he may be. Men in the plural, that is, men in so far as they live and move and act in this world, can experience meaningfulness only because they can talk with and make sense to each other  and to themselves." (4). 

Perhaps of equal significance is the advance of automation, which could reduce the demand for labor, by which the modern age has come to see society as a "laboring society." (4). And while escape from labor by most people has been much sought-after for ages (limited as it was to the elite), freed from the fetters of labor, many wouldn't know what to do with themselves. People wouldn't know how to respond to higher callings. "

Within this society, which is egalitarian because this is labor's way of making men live together, where no class left, no artistocary of either a political or spiritual nature from which a restoration of the other capacities of man could start anew. Even presidents, kings, and prime ministers think of their offices in terms of a job necessary for the life of society, and among the intellectuals, only solitary indviduals are left who consider what they are doing in terms of work and not in terms of making a living. What we are confronted with the prospect of a society of laborers without labor, that is, without the only activity left them. Surely, nothing could be worse. (5). 

Arendt offers no solution to these concerns. There is no single "answer" by any single person to such concerns and they therefore a matter of practical politics. Arendt states the purpose of this work: 

What I propose in the following is a reconsideration of the human condition from the vantage point of our newest experiences and our most recent fears. This, obviously, is a matter of thought, and thougtlessness--the heedless recklessness of hopeless confusion or complacent repetition of "truths" which have become trivial and empty--seeems to me among the outstanding characteristics of our time. What I propose, therefore, is very simple: it is nothing more than to think what we are doing.

"What we are doing" is indeed the central theme of this book. It deals only with the most elementary articulations of the human condition, with those activities that traditionally, as well as according to current opinion, are within the range of every human being. For this and other reasons, the hightest and perhaps purest activitiy of which men are capable, the activiting of thinking, is left out of these present considerations. (5). 

The book therefore will only address labor, work, and action. The final chapter deals with "the modern age," and throughout she deals with the "various constellations with the hierarchy of activities as we them from Western history." (6). 

Arendt distinguishes"the modern age" from "the modern world." Arendt states that the modern age began in the seventeenth century and ended at the beginning of the twentieth century. "The modern world" began as a political matter with the first atomic explosion. Arendt does not discuss "the modern world" in this book. Arendt sticks to the three primary characteristics of the human condition: labor, work, and action. And she will trace the historical development of "modern world alienation" that comes to include the "flight from the earth into the universe and from the world into the self . . . .to arrive at an understanding of the nature of society as it had developed and presented itself at the very moment when it was overcome by the advent of a new and yet unknown age." (6). 

Commentary

If I was given only the Prologue to read without any background and without any background knowledge, how would I know that I was written in 1958 and not 2020? Perhaps the reference to the launch of a satellite into earth orbit (Sputnik) in 1957 without mention of the moon landings by astronauts, Mars landings, and reports from satellites at the furthest edges of the solar system gives it away. But still, the Prologue continues to have a very contemporary feel to it. 

Is the exploration of outer space (I know, I date myself with this term) the most significant event of my life (b. 1953)? I don't feel that way. As a baby boomer, I grew up under the shadow of the mushroom cloud. I'm old enough to have been (roughly) aware of the Cuban Missile Crisis and the implications of a nuclear war. (I grew up an hour's drive from Offut Air Force Base, SAC headquarters. One didn't have to be a junior Einstein to know that in the event of a war, that place was a prime target if the missiles and bombers actually went where intended, and I knew that fallout knew few bounds.) In short, that threat of nuclear annihilation by instant incineration or the slow burn of fallout weighed very heavy on my mind growing up and when my classmates and I were asked this question in class I  took on Arendt. Now, I'm more worried about the slow boil of climate change. But alas, there seems to be no rule of having only one "existential risk" (a term I dislike) at a time. 

The Prologue also includes her reference to the threat of "automation" to jobs. This seems to have been a concern, of greater or lesser degrees, my entire life. The topic is again hot, as the idea of "driverless" cars and other forms of automation, using high-powered computers and AI algorithms again seem to threaten the loss of many traditional forms of labor. (See Noah Yuval Harari, for instance, in his 21 Lessons  for the 21st Century, for a widely commented upon example.) If this proves true, Arendt's fear that people won't know what to do with themselves could prove prescient. As someone who worked in a profession and is now happy to read and then scribble, scribble, scribble, this strikes me as not such a bad thing, But a society that comes to depend on bread and circuses (or junk food & Super Bowls) to occupy the under-employed seems not to be a good bet--and this assumes that these displaced workers would have sufficient income to live upon without generating resentment, which is not a certainty not a given considering our current predominant economic and cultural ideologies. 

This essay provides a useful introduction to the whole of the work. The trinity of what Arendt will later in the book dub "the vita activa," labor, work, and action, is here, along with her idea that speech is the heart of politics. Although she does not say it directly in this book as I recall; she considers many actions that we would consider "political," which involve the use of violence, threats,  and other forms of coercion, as not "politics" at all, an issue that will continue to arise from reading this and other of her works.

In the early 1960s. in a televised interview (the transcript of which is included in Essays in Understanding), Arendt eschewed the label of "philosopher" and preferred to call herself a "political theorist." One can respect Arendt's desire here and one can see her point in these works, but in the prologue and later in THC, one can still see Arendt the philosopher shining through. (Not to mention her first major work, her dissertation (habilitation) on the concept of love in St. Augustine and her Gifford Lectures published as The Life of the Mind on the trinity of the vita contemplativa, thinking, willing, and judging, which was the final book that she wrote (and the final section, on judging, was incomplete at the time of her death). The idea of "world alienation" and the flight from the earth and from "the world into the self" reveal her deep philosophical grounding and concerns. These tells found throughout THC and confirm Arendt's underlying calling as a philosopher and not simply as a political theorist

N.B. Arendt distinguishes "the human condition" from "human nature." She also distinguishes "thinking" (solitary, "useless") from "action" & "speech" (which are closely related.). Her ideas about "thought" & "thinking" are quite different from the use of "thought" in R.G. Collingwood, which entails all intentional human cognition (planning, strategy, theorizing, etc.) and all actions taken pursuant to such "thought." 




        


 

 



 

Friday, February 5, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Friday 5 February 2021

 

1993 publication. Postman a favorite of mine


Technopoly is a state of culture. It is also a state of mind. It consists in the deification of technology, which means that the culture seeks its authorization in technology, finds its satisfactions in technology, and takes its orders from technology.


If logic is defined as the capability to press on to conclusions with a total disregard for all reality and all experience, then Hitler’s greatest gift—the gift to which he owed his success and which brought about his downfall—was one of pure logic.

Ludwig Wittgenstein said, language frames our reality so completely that “the limits of my language mean the limits of my world.”

Hoarding may feel like the rational thing for the rich, but it is against their true self-interest, which is found not in clotting but in circulation to the whole.


Thursday, February 4, 2021

Thoughts for the Day: Thursday 4 February 2021


 

How vulnerable is the whole texture of facts in which we spend our daily life; it is always in danger of being perforated by single lies or torn to shreds by the organized lying of groups, nations, or classes... 

— Hannah Arendt


Essences cannot be localized. Human thought that gets hold of them leaves the world of the particular and goes out in search of something generally meaningful, though not necessarily universally valid. Thinking always “generalizes,” squeezes out of many particulars—which, thanks to the de-sensing process, it can pack together for swift manipulation—whatever meaning may inhere. Generalization is inherent in every thought, even though that thought is insisting on the universal primacy of the particular. In other words, the “essential” is what is applicable everywhere, and this “everywhere” that bestows on thought its specific weight is spatially speaking a “nowhere.”

Particularly so in light of the seemingly reactionary alternative origin to the age of modern philosophy Benjamin proposes. Ultimately, for him, only God—an event as divine as the phenomenon of speech itself—can supply true salvation. Just as language—as the foundation of all meaningful access to the world—cannot in Benjamin’s view be of human origin, the healing shock of the perception of truth (in “pure language”) cannot be, either. Like Wittgenstein, Benjamin insists time and again that the miracle of language cannot be explained in language. At most, its essence can be shown through particular linguistic modes of representation.

The underlying theme of every essay in Between Past and Future is that the great Western philosophic-political tradition has been ruptured, and so definitively ruptured that its authority can never be restored.

It’s strange that in America we have not learned the lesson that hasty, unplanned development can provoke a backlash. After all, the country has experienced several, most notably the 1930s Dust Bowl, the greatest ecological disaster in North American history. The event is seared in the American imagination, depicted in novels and captured in movies. The bitter tale of desperate Dust Bowl migrants inspired John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath—describing the plight of people who could be called AFarmerica’s first climate refugees. And it is a story of human action causing a natural reaction.
We just read (aloud) Grapes of Wrath this fall: a great book.

First, in human understanding, facts do not come alive until the ideas internal to them are grasped. Second, the appropriate question to ask of human activities is not whether they are true or false, but what they mean.

“The rentier class.” Keynes meant by this the people who made money simply by owning something that others needed, and charging for the use of it: this is rent in its economic meaning. Rent goes to people who are not creators of value, but predators on the creation and exchange of value. So “the euthanasia of the rentier class” was Keynes’s way of trying to describe a revolution without revolution, a reform of capitalism in his time, toward whatever subsequent post-capitalist system might follow.

If, in the selection of members of the élite, there existed a condition of perfectly free competition, so that each individual could, without any obstacle, rise just as high in the social scale as his talents and ambition permitted, the élite could be presumed to include, at every moment and in the right order, just those persons best fitted for membership in it. Under such circumstances—which [Alfredo] Pareto seems to imagine after the analogy of the theoretical free market of classical economics, or the biological arena of the struggle for survival—society would remain dynamic and strong, automatically correcting its own weaknesses. However, a condition of this sort is never found in reality. There are always obstacles, or “ties” as Pareto calls them, that interfere with the free circulation of individuals up and down the social scale.
Cf. Collingwood on "the ruling class" in his "The Three Laws of Politics."

Psychopathy is part of the so-called dark triad of traits. And as it turns out, the other two, narcissism and Machiavellianism, also seem to describe many of the traits we associate with the grifter.