Saturday, August 18, 2012

Nietzsche's "middle way"

There is a temptation to see the body as merely an unwelcome distraction from the life of the mind. Nietzsche felt this temptation vividly. Heroic resistance to this temptation is what led him to develop a new form of asceticism, in which commodity fetishes have no place, and yet the body is no longer despised.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Analytic philosophy

What we need is a philosophy that rigorously upholds the rules of logic—as analytic philosophy does—and yet resists the temptation to make an individual thinker no more than an administrator of mankind’s collective project of knowledge accumulation—as analytic philosophy also does. We need both the dispassionate dedication to reason of the mathematician and the ardent dedication to truth of the religious mind. Bertrand Russell, for example, recommends, in addition to knowledge about the universe, “a certain intensity and depth of feeling in regard to what is believed about the universe.” It is those who strive both for truth and for a depth of feeling about truth, Russell says, who are philosophers. Russell cites the case of Heraclitus, for whom “the facts of science, as they appeared to him, fed the flame in his soul, and in its light, he saw into the depths of the world.”

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Divine role models and human role models

In my more cynical moods, I imagine that religions seek to portray their founders as more than human because they want to lower expectations on their parishioners. If the founder of a religion was more than human, then I, being merely human, needn’t feel remorse when I don’t live up to his example.

This sort of watering down is a prerequisite for any religion to be accepted as a state sanctioned religion. If all Christians were held to the standard of emulating their founder, for example, no representative of a state which punishes criminals could call himself a Christian. No trader who seeks personal advantage could call himself a Christian.