November 07, 2009
"The Issue beneath all the other issues"
From a 2006 article by George Weigel:
...But perhaps the most intriguing intervention of the conference came from my friend Rémi Brague, who divides his time between the Sorbonne in Paris, where he teaches philosophy, and Munich, where he holds the chair of the late, great Romano Guardini. Professor Brague's name would rightly appear on any list of Ten Most Intelligent Catholics in the World, and in Vienna, he didn't disappoint.
Picking up on a phrase I had used in The Cube And the Cathedral, that Europe is "dying from a false story," Brague suggested a fascinating way of looking at the last two centuries of western history. The 19th century, he proposed, was focused on the question of good-and-evil: the "social question," posed by the industrial revolution, the emergence of an urban working class, and the demise of traditional society, dominated the landscape. The 20th century, he argued, had been the century of the question of true-and-false: totalitarian ideologies, built on perverse misunderstandings of the human person, defined the contest for the human future that drove history from the aftermath of World War I until the Soviet crack-up in 1991.
And the 21st century? Ours, Professor Brague said, is the century of the question of being-and-nothingness — the century of the metaphysical question.
Which may sound extremely abstract, but is, in fact, very concrete. For if nothing is "given" in the human condition, then everything is up-for-grabs. If, to take a salient example on both sides of the Atlantic, maleness and femaleness are mere "social constructs," then "marriage" can mean anything someone wants it to mean, including not only "gay marriage" but polygamy and polyandry — and to deny that is an act of irrational bigotry.
Brague, who knows a great deal about Islamic philosophy, knows all about the threat to the West from jihadist Islam. In Vienna, however, he insisted that nihilism — a soured cynicism about the mystery and wonder of being — is the prior enemy-within-the-gates. For nihilism leads to deep skepticism about the human capacity to know the truth of anything; skepticism leads to what Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger described on April 18, 2005, as the "dictatorship of relativism;" and relativism is a solvent eating away the foundations of western self-understanding, western civilizational morale — and the western capacity for intelligent self-defense.
An Enlightenment intellectual, cited by Professor Brague, once said that he didn't have children because begetting children was a criminal act — a matter of condemning another human being to death, to oblivion. That is the kind of nihilism that lies beneath Europe's demographic suicide of recent decades. That is the kind of nihilism that occupies some of the commanding heights of American culture. That is the kind of nihilism that makes the defense of western civilization difficult today — and would make it impossible tomorrow, were it to triumph culturally.
The very goodness of life, the goodness of being — that is The Issue beneath all the other issues of the 21st century. So suggested Rémi Brague. I'm afraid he's right....
Posted by John Weidner at November 7, 2009 07:47 PM
Brague, who knows a great deal about Islamic philosophy, knows all about the threat to the West from jihadist Islam. In Vienna, however, he insisted that nihilism — a soured cynicism about the mystery and wonder of being — is the prior enemy-within-the-gates.
This got me looking for quotes on your blog regarding the idea of Islamic extremism = opportunistic infection, and nihilism = compromised immune system, the underlying problem...found a couple:
03JAN2007: "Islam is just an opportunistic infection. It is a serious problem only because we in the West have a compromised immune system..."
04JAN2006: Quoting Mark Steyn: "Yet while Islamism is the enemy, it's not what this thing's about. Radical Islam is an opportunistic infection, like AIDS: It's not the HIV that kills you, it's the pneumonia you get when your body's too weak to fight it off."
Not relevant, but funny thing in the comments on that 2006 post:
B. Durbin: "Me, I'm waiting until we can get a house, because apartment living with small children seems like a bad idea. IOW, I'm hoping the housing crash comes soon, 'cause California houses are so outrageously priced right now... but it is looking like the tech boom in 2000, teetering on the edge..."
Your reply? Not quite so prescient...still, quite interesting...
For the record, I disagree with you on the nihilism thing - not that it doesn't exist, or that your diagnosis isn't corret - just that we've always had such problems, always had outrageous examples of self-destructive thought, from Copperheads to the Oxford Union to anarchist to fellow travelers to the counter-culture to today's nihilism; and that in so many, many ways, we're many times better off today than we've been in the past. Maybe it's because I've spent most of the last two years living with soldiers, but I see tremendous civic strength in this country...
Posted by: Ethan Hahn at November 7, 2009 11:30 PM
