LIVING IN THE AGE OF
CONTRADICTION
by
DAVID SOLWAY
______________________________
David
Solway is a Canadian poet and essayist (Random Walks)
and author of The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and
Identity and Hear,
O Israel! (Mantua Books). His editorials appear
regularly in frontpagemag.com and
PJ Media. His monograph, Global Warning:
The Trials of an Unsettled Science (Freedom Press Canada)
was launched at the National Archives in Ottawa in September,
2012. His latest book of poetry, Habibi:
The Diwam of Alim Maghrebi
(Guernica Editions), is now available as is his most recent
collection of essays, The
Boxthorn Tree. And a song from David's soon
to be released CD.
My
first philosophy professor at the university, when it could
still be plausibly described as a place of learning, was a deceptively
brilliant man. Professor Henderson was prone to delivering a
string of resonant tautologies as if permitting us a glimpse
into the most solemn and abyssal mysteries of metaphysical speculation.
I recall in particular one lecture in which, before a packed
but comatose auditorium of resentful sophomores, he expounded
on the great dictum of the pre-Socratic sage Parmenides: “Whatever
is, is.” Those of us who were still awake had no idea
how to react. Should we ask for an explication? Were we missing
something? Were we too callow to fathom so profound an indubitably
mystical utterance? Or, more cynically, if this was philosophy,
was it a discipline we should consider pursuing? Whatever is,
is?
I got
to know Professor Henderson a little better in the latter years
of the general arts curriculum and discovered a number of salient
facts about him: he was a friend of Bertrand Russell, whom he
called “Bertie,” was chauffeured to university in
the back seat of a silver-and-green Bentley, like a contemporary
Plato on a visit to the court of Dionysius of Syracuse, and
always managed to suggest that the given was precisely that
which was rarely understood, that the obvious was usually inscrutable
to the lazy mind. Clearly, he was no rubicund eminence waiting
to be pastured out into the land of memoirs and reminiscences,
as many of his students tended to think, but an impressive scholar
familiar with the arcana of his subject. Whatever is, indeed
is. It is more than we assume and at the same time less than
we typically dissemble. “We have great trouble,”
he once said to me, “with the 'is.' We are far more comfortable
with the 'is not.' Pity.”
Half
a lifetime later, I find myself thinking back to Professor Henderson’s
Parmenidean analysis of the world, not so much in a metaphysical
but in a political and cultural framework. It seems far more
pertinent to me now than it did when I was his often baffled
student. We live in a very strange time, an age whose mindset
is dominated by the spirit of contradiction and non sequitur,
as if in a concerted assault on the Parmenidean apothegm and
its expansion in Aristotle’s laws of thought as enunciated
in the Metaphysics: namely, the laws of Identity, Non-contradiction
and the Excluded Middle. It seems that we in the West have taken
direct aim at these axioms, which govern coherent thinking and
are clearly mutually implicated. The Law of Identity, a slightly
exfoliated re-statement of the Parmenidean maxim, maintains
that “everything is the same with itself and different
from another”; that is, everything that exists has a specific
nature and cannot be something other while retaining its particularity.
The Law of Non-contradiction stipulates that “one cannot
say of something that it is and is not in the same respect and
at the same time.” The Law of the Excluded Middle states
that “there cannot be an intermediate between contradictories,
but of one subject we must either affirm or deny any one predicate.”
Violation
of these laws in the domains of experience and discourse cannot
be explained away as a manifestation of fuzzy logic, as developed
by AI researcher Lotfi Zadeh in the 1960s, who used the concept
of “degrees of truth” to refine the laws of mathematics
and their eventual application to computer technology. We use
fuzzy logic in everyday life in those cases where judgment is
inherently uncertain — how fast is that car approaching?
— or playfully paradoxical — is the glass half full
or half empty? But in the sphere of determinate events —
the jetliners piloted by jihadists are flying toward the towers
in order to kill as many people as possible — logic can
be fuzzified only at our peril. In other words, fuzzy logic
is not the same thing as fuzzy thinking; the first is chiefly
the purview of competent specialists in a scientific discipline
(and individuals in intrinsically fluid situations), the latter
is the staple of the liberal intelligentsia, post-modernists,
post-colonialists and progressivist ideologues.
The
basic laws of human thought as defined by Aristotle have been
deliberately infringed in the totalitarian political space,
the subject of Orwell’s classic dystopian study 1984,
which, by an apt reversal confirming its thesis, was written
in 1948. One can summarize the nature of totalitarian language
— Orwell’s Newspeak — in the anti-Parmenidean
phrase as “Whatever is, isn’t.” In Orwell’s
account: War is Peace. Slavery is Freedom. Ignorance is Strength.
Communism
and socialism continue to thrive, if not prosper, on such perversions
of cogent reasoning: the individual finds his fulfillment in
the collective; redistribution of wealth leads to personal incentive;
nationalization of industry and finance are the infallible conditions
of increased productivity; property held in common is the road
toward a social utopia devoid of envy and competitiveness. Experience
has proven otherwise, but such precepts are plainly irrational
and contra naturam, as should have been evident from
the start to anyone not blinded by ideological convictions.
Analogously,
those of a social reconstructionist persuasion, mainly academics,
believe that human nature as we have known it since time immemorial
is merely a political and cultural artifice. We come into the
world as blank slates or undifferentiated beings and are then
imprinted or indoctrinated with a “nature” —
a dogma which creates the insoluble problem of origins. Who
or what was the initiating presence? A related form of social
reconstructionism — deriving from Michel de Montaigne’s
praise for the “noble savage” in “On Cannibals”
(1580) and Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s exposition of the mythologem
in Discourse on Inequality (1755) — holds that
primitive man was more peaceful, cooperative and egalitarian
than civilized man and that the psychological structure of modern
man can be radically expunged to allow the pristine substratum
to re-emerge. These feeble and decrepit assumptions constitute
a flagrant contradiction of everything we know from the anthropological
study of primitive tribes and the fossil record. As historian
Bruce Thornton comments, “Wisdom once known by every village
explainer and cracker-barrel crank has been discarded and replaced
with phony ‘sciences’ making claims about human
nature and behavior that are based on nothing other than false
assumptions, political ideology, and wishful thinking.”
He might as well have said: specious thinking, though his allusion
to the West’s “abject stupidity” is close
enough.
To
take a recent case in point. Lorna Salzman in Humanist Perspectives
tells the story of Napoleon Chagnon, an evolutionary anthropologist
who lived among the South American Yanomamo tribes. Using “scientific
and statistical methodologies as well as first-hand observation,”
Chagnon showed that the laws of nature working through genetic
selection were valid, ascertainable and inescapable —
for which defection from the shibboleths and clichés
of the day he found himself the target of a storm of “slanders,
lies, distortions . . . intended to destroy [his] career and
reputation.” The army of cultural anthropologists and
social scientists who have invested in the canard that “humans
are above Nature, not subject to her laws, have no evolutionary
history [and] no genetically conferred attributes” cannot
permit rational thought and empirical evidence to interfere
with their theoretical hallucinations.
The
absurdity doesn’t stop there. Such theorists also assert
that gender — some even go so far as to say sex —
is entirely a social construct, one’s identity as feminine
or masculine, female or male unrelated to one’s physical
anatomy. Anatomy is a delusion, a mere datoid that disguises
the “truth” that gender identity is voluntary, an
expression of desire or feeling rather than palpably somatic,
a physical fact of nature. We are not dealing here with the
rigors of evolutionary biology but with the illicit and puerile
effort to force nature to conform to ideology. A man is a woman
is a hermaphrodite — a blatant violation of the Law of
Identity.
The
political and intellectual realms have been equally vitiated,
corrupted beyond recognition. Every day another instance of
cognitive debauchery surfaces, to the extent that the denial
of reality has become the new normal and its formulation the
new lingua franca. Of course, such intentional distortion
has an ancient pedigree, but it has now become the very air
we breathe. Thus a “psychotic thug” and coward like
Che Guevara can be widely lionized as a noble and selfless revolutionary,
in the face of an Everest of countervailing evidence. Thus an
academic thesis vetted by Hebrew University in Jerusalem claims
that Israeli soldiers are racist because they refuse to rape
Palestinian women. Thus the epidemic of black violence in America,
not only against whites but in the black community itself, is
the direct consequence of white bigotry. Thus George Zimmerman
is a "white Hispanic" — another brazen fracture
of the Law of Identity. Thus the carnage at Fort Hood unleashed
by a Muslim jihadist shouting Allahu Akbar is re-designated
as “workplace violence.” Thus bombing Syria is not
an act of war. Everything is what it is not and is not what
it is.
When,
for example, President Obama declares at a Business Roundtable
speech that “raising the debt ceiling . . . does not increase
our debt,” we find ourselves once again in terra noncognita.
To raise the debt ceiling is an affirmation of the intention
to accumulate more debt, else there would be no need to do so;
to say that it does not or will not lead to an increase of indebtedness
is a denial of the implicit affirmation. Once again, the Law
of Contradiction has been wantonly transgressed — a maneuver
that has rapidly become the presidential mode of communication.
One notes such neural dereliction in the president’s September
24 speech to the UN, in which he lays it down that “Israel’s
security . . . depends upon the realization of a Palestinian
state.” In other words, the survival of the Jewish state
depends upon an entity that rabidly seeks its destruction. As
Israeli journalist David Hornik puts it, “suicide is security,”
an aphorism that would be right at home in 1984.
Israel,
of course, is a magnet for counterfactual thinking. To affirm
the existence of the Jewish people but to deny the right of
Israel to exist, a staple ploy among anti-Zionists, is one more
conspicuous example of a violation of the Second Law. Israel
is among the oldest nations on the planet, has always been a
home to Jews even when they were a minority, was formally re-established
as a haven for a dispossessed and decimated people, and has
figured in the Passover prayer as a solemn promise sworn by
Jews since the prayer was first uttered. That some Jews may
repudiate their 'promised land' or do not make aliya
does not alter the fact that Judaism and Israel are coterminous.
There can be no Judaism without the concept, the hope and the
ancestral reality of the Jewish state. To reject the nation
while affirming the people is both an instance of bad faith
and of faulty thinking.
To
take another howling example of cognitive dissonance: when British
PM David Cameron asserts that the savage attack on the Nairobi
mall by the al-Shabab terror group explicitly targeting non-Muslims
— those who could cite the name of Mohammed’s mother
or recite an Islamic prayer were spared — has nothing
to do with Islam, we are back in anti-Parmenidean country, witnessing
the depraved politicos of 1984 stepping out of the
pages of the novel into the very world we are living in. Here
we go again: what is, isn’t. Such examples can be multiplied
indefinitely and readily observed by anyone still capable of
practicing the law of non-contradiction in a time given over
to the imperium of antinomial speculation, aka the reign of
pure mendacity.
The
sordid pageant of unabashed duplicity and crippled thinking
continues apace, especially with regard to the abomination of
canonical Islam, popularly misrepresented as “Islamism.”
The term “Islamism” furnishes a good illustration
of breaching the Law of the Excluded Middle, which, as we recall,
states that a proposition is either true or false; there cannot
be anything in between. But the term effectively affirms and
denies the source of terror at the same time, while producing
an intermediate entity or “predicate” to camouflage
the rhetorical operation. On the one hand, practicing Muslims
are on the rampage, diligently following the dictates of their
foundational scriptures; on the other, they are not really authentic
Muslims at all but free-floating “militants” (according
to the BBC), “Asians,” disaffected “youth,”
“fanatics,” “zealots” — anything
but Islamic terrorists. Consequently, the terror campaign from
which we suffer is somehow Islamic and yet not Islamic, hence
“Islamist.”
Nonetheless,
far too many of us persist in believing that what is isn’t
and in refusing to exclude the illegitimate middle. Consider.
After 9/11, when 3000 people were incinerated; after another
22,000-and-counting terror attacks around the world; after the
bloody civil war in Syria with its more than 100,000 casualties
and the displacement of millions; after events such as the atrocities
recently committed in Kenya (68 dead), Pakistan (78 dead), Iraq
(96 dead) and Nigeria (142 dead) — and another 50 or more
college students at the Yobe State College of Agriculture murdered
in their sleep by jihadists on September 29); after the random
killings in the streets of France, Canada, the UK, the U.S.
and other countries; and after the mounting number of planned
attacks that have been foiled — after all this and more,
we have come to the happy conclusion that Islam is a religion
of peace that has been hijacked by a tiny minority of extremists.
That their marching orders come straight out of the holy texts
to which Muslims adhere and that there have been no massive
demonstrations by moderate Muslims protesting the ostensible
perversion of their faith are, apparently, matters of little
import. In the bizarro world of the liberal West, the evidence
is undeniable that Islam really does mean peace. The higher
the mound of corpses rising before our eyes, the greater the
certainty that Islam intends us no harm and that Islamic culture,
despite minor irritants like stoning for adultery, gay bashing,
Jew hatred, honor killing and female genital mutilation, is
rich in practical benefits and theological wisdom from which
the West can learn.
Broadly
speaking, the lie has been institutionalized as the truth, deeply
embedded everywhere we care to look: in the academy, in politics,
in the media, in the intellectual arena, in the entertainment
industry, in large segments of the electoral constituency, and
in the public forum in general. There can be no question, then,
that in the current age the lie has achieved industrial strength
and the violation of the fundamental laws of thought has become
ubiquitous and endemic. Bad thinking has acquired something
like corporate status; the fact that it is morbid and infectious
does not prevent it from appearing as perfectly normal and unexceptionable.
It
can take many forms: willful blindness, calculated evasion,
“re-interpretation” of the obvious to mean something
else, revisionary history (Ilan Pappe, Howard Zinn), outright
fabrication (Israel as an apartheid state), treating real conspiracies
as hoaxes (9/11) and hoaxes as real conspiracies (Elders of
Zion), reversing the sign of events (blaming Egyptian Copts
for the slaughter of Christians), and, of course, the mental
disease of political correctness — “how on earth
could this great civilization of ours have degraded into such
hypocritical nonsense as political correctness?”, ask
Soviet dissidents Vladimir Bukovsky and Pavel Stroilov in their
defense of Diana West’s American Betrayal.
Contradiction
is consistency. “Political dishonesty has become so pervasive,”
writes Frank Camp in Last Resistance, “digging
its roots into the deepest parts of our culture, that we are
easily fooled.” The dishonesty, however, is not only political,
a region in which cant and casuistry are standard elements.
Moral cowardice and bogus cerebration have invaded every nook
and cranny of quotidian and professional life. We now find ourselves
embroiled in a moral and intellectual crisis of world-historical
proportions, living as we do in a civilization in which the
rot of consensual prevarication, indifference to the moral code,
and illogical thinking has burrowed so far inward as to augur
with decisive finality the cultural marasmus of the West. When
lie is heaped upon lie and contradiction upon contradiction,
we remark the forging of a vast mental and moral Ponzi scheme
that must one day come crashing down.
No
doubt, Aristotle has been spinning in his grave since the 4th
century B.C.; today he will be virtually centrifugal. Perhaps
the last words should be left to professor Henderson and the
medieval Persian philosopher Avicenna. As the professor noted,
when the Parmenidean dictum is violated, it is indeed a “pity”
and leads to “great trouble.” And as the philosopher
pointed out in his The Metaphysics of The Healing,
“Anyone who denies the Law of Non-contradiction should
be beaten and burned until he admits that to be beaten is not
the same as not to be beaten, and to be burned is not the same
as not to be burned.”