Until Further Titling – Week 2; Covenantal Love
Mike Flynn usually has some insightful blurbs on his blog, and this week is no different. Here, Flynn talks about the rise in emotion-based thought masquerading as reason, and the withering away of true logic and rational thinking. I even find myself saying “I feel like [insert argument here].” Feeling has overcome thinking in almost all realms…:
. . .The important thing was to consider the best arguments on either side of the question. The medievals not only applied this method to natural philosophy, but also even to theology, which, when you think on’t showed a remarkable confidence in human reason. When a medieval held an opinion, it was arrived at in this manner: a considered opinion, not simply a whim accepted on faith.One such opinion was the primacy of the intellect. The intellect was held to be prior to the will. Logically prior in the sense that you cannot desire something unless you first know it. How can you want what you don’t know? But also in the sense of governing the will. We can decide not to act on a desire. We can know beauty, and desire beauty, but not grope the waitress.This all began to change with the Modern Ages. The Renaissance backed off from Aristotelian empiricism in favor of Platonic mysticism. Science switched from a search for knowledge (cf. Aristotle) to a search for power over Nature (cf. Francis Bacon). The purpose of argument became not to reach the truth but simply to win the contest. Diatribe and other techniques became more important than syllogisms. The medieval scholastics were criticized for their obsession with logic and reason.Eventually, science ceased to mean Aristotelian knowledge as such and became only tentative Popperian opinion. Next stop, faith. And a science whose goal is power is a science which focuses on results; on the answers rather than on the questions. This, whether the answers are used for corporate marketing of clever new gadgets or whether they are used to redistribute wealth from the First World to the Third.Now, nothing dies all at once. Galileo, it is true, used ridicule, satire, diatribe, rhetorical tricks, and outright misrepresentation — but he also used logic and reason. And something new: facts. The medievals had used observations, but the invention of a plethora of measuring instruments enabled the 17th century revolutionaries to create observations. Hence, “fact,” from factum est, Latin for “that which has the property of having been made or accomplished.”So an attenuated form of reasoning continued throughout the Modern Ages, most of all in the sciences, but also elsewhere in what Jacques Barzun called “the considered opinion” of the bourgeois. The Modern Ages were, above all, the Age of the Bourgeois. Starting in the 1950s this began to collapse. Barzun noted even then that “I feel that….” had begun to replace “I think that…” in common discourse. Nietzsche, of couse, had written even earlier (and approvingly where Barzun disapproved) of the Triumph of the Will. Truth, he wrote, is whatever makes you feel empowered. The Desire comes first. If it feels good, do it. What do we want? X! When do we want it? Now!Barzun called this the Bohemian Project in contrast to the Bourgeois Project, and it was not all good or all bad on either side. There is something dull about “considered opinions.” (Luther, with his damnation of “that whore, Reason,” would have understood the Beats, would possibly have been one. — There’s an AH for you. — He certainly threw over medieval versions of parental authority.) But Nietzsche, as usual saw more deeply: youth delights in the sputtering fuse, and does not really care about the explosion to come.Now, about Sherlock Holmes, [Star Trek,] and Pelham 1-2-3.. . .What these have in common (or seem to, in the case of the ads) is that stories that were paradigmatically stories of reason — the hijacker of the subway train, Spock (but even Bones and Kirk), Holmes — are becoming the kind of people who say “I feel that…” rather than “I think that…”The ads for the new Holmes movie looks like an action-adventure: Iron Man does Victorian London. The New Spock is anything but cerebral. He had no trouble showing emotion. And the icy and sociopath Robert Shaw has given way to the crazed and pathological John Travolta.This represents not only the Triumph of the Will over the Intellect, but also the triumph of the visual over the textual. The script matters a whole lot less than the cinematography these days, and the visual is foremost a non-logical medium. Logic, from λογος, meaning the word. The text appeals first to the intellect and only passes through the senses. But the visual appeals precisely to the senses. The visual may stimulate thought; but words must stimulate thought.. . . .
Implicit in this phenomenon is the motif of self-importance and the growing idea that facts are not as important as opinions or feelings. In modern times, it often seems the day of factual irrelevance is here, and opinions are to be revered and respected more than any data…