Why did a rather empty essay by Jill Lepore bother me so much yesterday?

I was in the middle of reading articles on Cassirer then Habermas and had 
found one on Jonathan Israel who wrote a massive history of the `Radical' 
Enlightenment. The articles were great. Two were in the New Republic and 
available without subscription. They were on topics I was in the middle of 
trying to figure out. And, in came Jill ... bitching we're out of coffee.

So here are the essays. They are both book reviews. I would have immediately 
just ordered the books because they cover a part of the history ideas that 
are directly related to my Strauss jones. But money is tight and these books 
ain't cheap.

The first by David A. Bell reviews Jonathan Israel's latest, ``Democratic 
Enlightenment: Philosophy, Revolution, and Human Rights, 1750--1790.''

``There's something about the Enlightenment. Today, few educated men and 
women spend much time debating whether Western civilization took a 
disastrously wrong turn in the High Middle Ages. They do not blame all 
manner of political ills on Romanticism, or insist that non-Western 
immigrants adopt Renaissance values. But the Enlightenment is different. It 
has been held responsible for everything from the American Constitution to 
the Holocaust. It has been defended as the birthplace of human rights and 
condemned as intolerant, cold, abstract, imperialist, racist, misogynist, 
and anti-religious. Edmund Burke, in one of the most eloquent early attacks, 
excoriated `this new conquering empire of light and reason.' One hundred 
fifty years later, Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno declared bluntly that 
`enlightenment is totalitarian.' ''

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/books-and-arts/magazine/100556/spinoza-kant-enlightenment-ideas

Bell takes Israel down by historical detail and counter facts, which is a 
good exercise, and maybe Israel deserves a few bruises. It's a reminder that 
when you write on a topic that a lot of well educated and studied people 
know a lot about, you've got to cover your thesis. Bell teaches early modern 
french history (enlightenment and revolution) at Princeton. I went through 
Israel's 1000 plus pages of Radical Enlightenment as part of the background 
on Spinoza. It's a few years ago now, but he made his case in that book that 
Spinoza was a more radical break than figures like Leibnez and Locke. It 
shouldn't have taken so much paper to demonstrate a point that can be put in 
one sentence. Locke's point was freedom to practice religion, while 
Spinoza's point was freedom from religion. Thankfully Israel condensed this 
point into a single essay somewhere, that I read before getting the book. 
Anyway, most of these academic points are involved in the blood and guts of 
today's videos on gas attacks in Syria.

The other article, also from the New Republic (December 2011) is by Peter 
Gordon who teaches (guess what) modern history of ideas at Harvard. It is a 
book review of Jurgen Habermas, ``An Awareness of What is Missing: Faith and 
Reason in a Post-Seclar Age.''

``HABERMAS CAME TO maturity as a philosopher in the left-Hegelian tradition 
of Western Marxism, which typically excoriated religion as an illusory 
diversion from the profane task of this-worldly redemption. In his 
Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right in 1843, Marx 
offered a definition: `Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the 
heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions.' He then 
added the famous line: `It is the opium of the people.' But Marx did not 
mean to suggest that getting over religion was a simple affair of casting 
aside false beliefs. (The opium-analogy is revealing: kicking a drug habit 
is hardly easy.) The thought was that religion serves a compensatory 
function insofar as it offers an unfree humanity a fantasy-an image of 
happiness-that reconciles them to their present unhappiness. This is why one 
cannot hope to redeem humanity from its unhappiness if one confines oneself 
only to the intellectual criticism of religion. One has to change the 
unhappy conditions for which religion offers compensation: `The abolition of 
religion as the illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their 
real happiness. To call on them to give up their illusions about their 
condition is to call on them to give up a condition that requires illusions. 
The criticism of religion is, therefore, in embryo, the criticism of that 
vale of tears of which religion is the halo.' But there is an ambiguity in 
this theory. Did Marx mean to suggest that religion does nothing but 
conspire to obscure the actual conditions of our unhappiness? That is an 
observation only about the social function of religion rather than its 
propositional content. Marx also seemed to be saying that religion may 
contain the right insights-our suffering must be overcome, our hope for 
happiness deserves satisfaction-only those insights are applied to the wrong 
realm, a metaphysical beyond rather than the profane space of human 
action.''

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/books-and-arts/magazine/98567/jurgen-habermas-religion-philosophy

This wasn't as well written and way too wordy, but interesting because it 
tracks the endless war news in its own abstract way. For me the points 
provide some critical material to help dismantle Strauss's obsession with 
what he called the theological and political dilemma. I don't see any 
dilemma of course. My interest in religion is almost entirely devoted to the 
arts produced by numerous religious cosmologies. This interest is the answer 
to Habermas's worry that religion might offer gifts not available to reason. 
Sure, metaphysical visions don't rationalize well, but they can make for 
great art. So, what's the problem here?

In any event, the essay is long and probably boring on some account, but it 
gives me a lot of material to use. The more direct relevance to events of 
the day is directed at Europe and its struggles to find accommodation for 
the influx of immigrants from the Middle East and Africa.


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