The new issue of Democratiya is out. The lead article is “Separating Truth and Belief” by the French philosopher André Glucksmann. Better than anything else I’ve seen, it puts into words the disorganized thoughts that have been floating around in my mind about the Cartoon Jihad. The article is short, so I’m posting all of it (the emphases are mine):
- The anti-caricature campaign started by attacking a newspaper. It then focussed on Denmark as a defender of the freedom of the press, and now it has all of Europe in its sights, which it accuses of having a double standard. The European Union allows the Prophet to be denigrated with impunity, but it forbids and condemns other ‘opinions’ like Nazism and denial of the Holocaust. Why are jokes about Muhammad permitted, but not those about the genocide of the Jews? This was the rallying call of fundamentalists before they initiated a competition for Auschwitz cartoons. Fair’s fair: either everything should be allowed in the name of the freedom of expression, or we should censor that which shocks both parties. Many people who defend the right to caricature feel trapped. Will they publish drawings about the gas chambers in the name of freedom of expression?
- Offence for offence? Infringement for infringement? Can the negation of Auschwitz be put on a par with the desecration of Muhammad? This is where two philosophies clash. The one says yes, these are equivalent ‘beliefs’ which have been equally scorned. There is no difference between factual truth and professed faith; the conviction that the genocide took place and the certitude that Muhammad was illuminated by Archangel Gabriel are on a par. The others say no, the reality of the death camps is a matter of historical fact, whereas the sacredness of the prophets is a matter of personal belief.
- This distinction between fact and belief is at the heart of Western thought. Aristotle distinguished between indicative discourse on the one hand, which could be used to reach an affirmation or a negation, and prayer on the other. Prayers are not a matter for discussion, because they do not state: they implore, promise, vow and declare. They do not relate information, they perform an act. When the Islamist fanatic affirms that Europeans practise the ‘religion of the Shoah’ while he practises that of Muhammad, he abolishes the distinction between fact and belief. For him there are only beliefs, and so it follows that Europe will favour its own.
- Civilised discourse analyses and defines scientific truths, historic truths and matters of fact relating to knowledge, not to faith. And it does this irrespective of race or confession. We may believe these facts are profane or undignified, yet they remain distinct from religious truths. Our planet is not in the grips of a clash of civilisations or cultures. It is the battleground of a decisive struggle between two ways of thinking. There are those who declare that there are no facts, but only interpretations – so many acts of faith. These either tend toward fanaticism (‘I am the truth’) or they fall into nihilism (‘nothing is true, nothing is false’). Opposing them are those who advocate free discussion with a view to distinguishing between true and false, those for whom political and scientific matters – or simple judgement – can be settled on the basis of worldly facts, independently of arbitrary pre-established opinions.
- A totalitarian way of thinking loathes to be gainsaid. It affirms dogmatically, and waves the little red, or black, or green book. It is obscurantist, blending politics and religion. Anti-totalitarian thinking, by contrast, takes facts for what they are and acknowledges even the most hideous of them, those one would prefer to keep hidden out of fear or for the sake of utility. Bringing the gulag to light made it possible to criticise and ultimately reject ‘actually existing socialism’. Confronting the Nazi abominations and opening the extermination camps converted Europe to democracy after 1945. Refusing to face the cruellest historical facts, on the other hand, heralds the return of cruelty. Whether the Islamists – who are far from representing all Muslims – like it or not, there is no common measure between negating known facts and criticising any one of the beliefs which every European has the right to practice or poke fun at.
- For centuries, Jupiter and Christ, Jehovah and Allah have had to put up with many a joke. The Jews are past masters at criticising Yaweh – they’ve even made it a bit of a speciality. That does not prevent the true believers of any confession from believing, or from respecting those of a different faith. That is the price of religious peace. But joking about gas chambers, raped women and disembowelled babies, sanctifying televised beheadings and human bombs all point to an unbearable future.
- It is high time that the democrats regained their spirit, and that the constitutional states remembered their principles. With solemnity and solidarity they must recall that one, two or three religions, four or five ideologies may in no way decide what citizens can do or think. What is at stake here is not only the freedom of the press, but also the permission to call a spade a spade and a gas chamber an abomination, regardless of our beliefs. What is at stake is the basis of all morality: here on earth the respect due to each individual starts with the recognition and rejection of the most flagrant examples of inhumanity.
Please repost this. Everyone should read it.
Marc:
I read this piece, and while I must admit that I understand very little of it, and do not comprehend the basic connections he makes, it has caused me to think differently about an event I have pondered for a few years now.
In an article describing one of the early anti-Iraq War public rallies, David Horowitz wrote “Feminist activists marched next to radical Islamists, despite the fact that the Islamists would have the feminists killed were they given the power to do so.â€
I have always assumed that this represented a common cause of two very different groups against the common enemy, the “White Male Society.â€
But perhaps what was really happening was a collusion between two groups who thought the same way, albeit about different things and with opposite results. Both the Left and the Islamists choose beliefs over facts, as a matter of course. Both choose to believe in ideas that are unsupported by facts, whether the deliberate Western destruction of the Caliphate or the innate superiority of women over men. Both oppose mightily even the revealing of the contrary facts, or even an admission that such facts could exist. Both oppose the “White Male Society†because it holds an intrinsically contrary viewpoint, basically the idea that real facts matter more than unsupported beliefs, especially in the creation of a society and the rules it goes by.
The hounding of Larry Summers from his post at Harvard and the attacks on 9/11/01 both come not from the same thoughts, nor even the same kind of thoughts, but rather the same way of thinking.
Wayne,
Judged by your comment, you completely understand the article. And your citing of Summers’ excommunication by the High Church of the Left—i.e., Harvard—is a perfect example of what Glucksmann is talking about. He had the facts, but that didn’t matter.
Glucksmann’s is a needed reminder and focus; that some need reminding is not surprising. Still, that far too many need repeated reminders is itself a reminder of a different and a sobering kind.
My own thoughts here. I’m ambivalent about the article, because I too believe that liberal democracy functions best when we carve out a sphere of rational political discourse but I also find his diagnosis of the “primary contradictions” of the present age misleading.
Did Summer’s lose his job because he spoke “truth to power”? Doubtful.
He lost his job because he was a poor manager of a complex organization. His speculations (he never presented them as facts but rather as one of many possibilities) on the causes of female under-representation among the top ranks of natural scientists didn’t help matters. Nor did his explicit denigration of other disciplines than the natural sciences and economics—and here I need to point out that economics has no better, or worse, a track record than political science or sociology. Nor did his support for a colleague and friend accused of substantial miscoundt at the HIID.
I wish he’d been better at handling entrenched interests. He had the right idea about the state of undergraduate education at Harvard: the core is a disaster. He was right to chastise West for putting celebrity before scholarship. But I cannot agree that he should be treated as an anti-PC political martyr. And I say this as someone deeply concerned about the fetters being placed—by both the left and the right—on what can and cannot be said in the classroom.
“Our planet is not in the grips of a clash of civilisations or cultures. It is the battleground of a decisive struggle between two ways of thinking.”
I have restated the above so that it is more precise:
Our planet is in the grips of a battle between those who think they know what to do and those who want to do what God says. Simply look around at what is happening in the world. What you see must reflect the value of what the most intelligent people are thinking. If not why are they not wise enough to make a difference. Either that or it measures the value of the decisions of those who are presently powerful enough to determine what your freedoms and liberties should be. They force their own idea of what is right and what is wrong, good or evil on the rest of the world.
This is the very first lie ever told, the original sin:
Genesis 3
4And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: 5For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.
If you read the rest of the bible it explains how this lie will eventually be vindicated.
For more truth visit my blog.
Regards
Geoff
“Civilised discourse analyses and defines scientific truths, historic truths and matters of fact relating to knowledge, not to faith.”
The bible indicates that eventually faith will not be required and knowledge will take over.
Do people just have faith that God, Satan and Jesus Christ is real or do they have knowledge? Using a very unique approach which did in fact require much faith to undertake in the first place I am convinced that I now have my faith replaced by knowledge.
Does that sound too bold to be true?
Or do you also want your faith replaced by knowledge?
A good place to start would be to carefully examine what I have already discovered:
http://ablebodiedman.blogspot.com/
Once you have done that you should be convinced that the turmoil in this world does make sense and in the near future it will eventually cease.
Regards
Geoff
“With solemnity and solidarity they must recall that one, two or three religions, four or five ideologies may in no way decide what citizens can do or think.”
You are wrong Mr.Glucksmann.
That is what democracy does. It allows all religions and ideoligies to decide what citizens can do or think!
Democracy allows for a majority to determine what the truth is no matter wether it is based on fact or faith. It allows citizens to determine what is right and what is wrong, what is good or evil. They determine what their freedoms and liberties should or should not be. By voting for what they believe is the truth they become sharers in the consequences.
The 20th century has proven to be the biggest bloodbath ever. It makes the dark ages look like a cakewalk.
The fruitage of what democrats believe is already left behind in our recent history and a prognosis of the 21st century future which looks like it may outdistance the 20th in the horrors and turmoil it produces.
Democracy allows everyone to have a chance at being a god. It fully supports and enables the ideology originally advanced by Satan himself:
Genesis 3
5For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.
Mr. Glucksmann, I think your heart is in the right place however, you have been over reached and misled by Satan.
If you want to find the real truth you do need to go back to your Jewish roots.
Regards
Geoff
[...] Earlier this year, I posted an article (“Separating Truth and Belief”) from Democratiya by French philosopher André Glucksmann, and said that “Better than anything else I’ve seen, it puts into words the disorganized thoughts that have been floating around in my mind about the Cartoon Jihad.” Follow-ups to that post are here and here. [...]
[...] The words of French philosopher André Glucksmann have graced this blog before. Here’s his latest, from the New Republic: [...]