The neo-cons' favourite philosophy had a distinctly seamy side

by John Gray

New Statesman (June 19 2006)

It is not surprising that Enlightenment thinking has become 
fashionable again: in uncertain times, people turn to the security 
promised by faith. For the signatories of the Euston Manifesto as for 
American neoconservatives, the cure for our contemporary ills is 
clear: back to the Enlightenment. For these people the Enlightenment 
is a holy amulet, able to ward off the evil forces of terrorism and 
religion while offering sanctuary to endangered liberal values.

They are half right: liberal values are certainly at risk, but it is 
silly to look to the Enlightenment to safeguard them. It was a hugely 
complex movement, and some of its most influential thinkers were 
enemies of liberalism. Karl Marx allowed liberal values only a 
transitional role in human development, while Auguste Comte, founder 
of the influential positivist movement, rejected ideals of toleration 
and equality. Yet this was not simply a battle of ideas. In the late 
19th and early 20th centuries, the anti-liberal strand of 
Enlightenment thinking gave birth to the "scientific racism" that 
would be adopted by the Nazis. This ideology can be traced back to 
Kant's lectures on anthropology, published in 1798, in which he 
maintained, for instance, that Africans are inherently disposed to 
slavery.

As an intellectual movement, the Enlightenment has always had a 
distinctly seamy side. In its political incarnation, it was one of the 
factors that shaped modern-day terror. Right-thinking French 
philosophes campaigned for the prohibition of torture, but their ideas 
also gave birth to the Jacobin Terror that followed the French 
revolution. Later, Enlightenment ideas animated some of the most 
repressive and murderous regimes of the 20th century. Contrary to 
views often voiced on the left, state terror in the Soviet Union and 
Maoist China was not produced by national traditions of despotism. It 
resulted from the utopian character of communism itself. The tens of 
millions who starved or were killed under communism perished for the 
sake of an Enlightenment ideal.

What is needed today is not the return to faith beloved of 
Enlightenment believers and born-again Christians alike. It is realism 
and doubt - especially regarding the myth of progress in ethics and 
politics. A couple of hundred years ago, this myth may have been 
useful. Today, after the disasters of the 20th century, it is merely a 
sedative. How many times has one heard the plaintive cry "If I didn't 
believe in progress I couldn't get up in the morning"? The 
Enlightenment revival is not a return to rationality. It is fuelled by 
the emotions, and above all by fear.

The Enlightenment also produced some great sceptical thinkers, 
however. David Hume had no hopes of humanity ever being ruled by 
reason. A genial and tolerant soul, he would surely have been 
entertained by the spectacle of today's rationalists clinging 
frantically to an irrational faith in progress. We should follow his 
example, and look on the true believers in Enlightenment with a smile.

Copyright (c) New Statesman 1913 - 2006

http://www.newstatesman.com/200606190044



_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
[email protected]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to