better than liberal irony

Jessi Jezewska Stevens:

Back in 1931, when the West really was on the brink of being overrun by card-carrying fascists, the German-Jewish essayist Walter Benjamin found himself exasperated with exactly this kind of knee-jerk negative posture. The left of the Weimar Republic, Benjamin felt, was winning the moral high ground but losing the rhetorical (and therefore political) war. In a widely read review titled “Left-Wing Melancholy,” he took aim at the New Objectivity, an artistic movement that satirized the vacuousness of modern life. These artists and writers, he wrote, had abandoned the “gift” of disgust with present material conditions in favor of rote, routine and self-flattering criticism. Preferring to pose as a “spiritual elite” rather than actively engage with the labor movement, they were guilty of a “grotesque underestimation of the opponent” (in this case, capitalism). Where their ideals used to be, Benjamin lamented, there lay only “the empty spaces where, in dusty heart-shaped velvet trays, the feelings—nature and love, enthusiasm and humanity—once rested. Now the hollow forms are absentmindedly caressed” with a “know-all irony” that “turns the yawning emptiness into a celebration.”

For many progressives, Benjamin’s gift of disgust with material conditions has likewise been displaced, shifting instead to a disgust with the people who vote for Trump. Since 2016, it has become common across the left-liberal spectrum to argue that these voters are low-information, cast ballots against their own interests, are primarily motivated by misogyny and racism, and on top of this are just plain stupid. While a pedigreed “spiritual elite” has tried to educate these voters out of their incorrect economic assessments and backwards cultural beliefs, it has in the meantime allowed a “yawning emptiness”—a silence—to engulf issues that its ostensible base, working-class voters, say really matter to them.

I think it’s worth pointing out that part of that yawning emptiness includes the “God gap,” finely highlighted by David French. “A party that’s culturally disconnected from (or perhaps even scornful of) traditional religious faith,” says French, “is going to alienate itself from tens of millions of voters it could otherwise reach.” That elephant in the blue room seems to almost-but-not-quite have a place in this essay.

Helpfully getting more specific, Stevens goes on to describe the way that, in the last four years, the narrative on the left repeatedly dismissed economic complaints as essentially fictional:

The reasoning went something like this: Consumer sentiment (bad) had become spuriously uncoupled from the underlying macroeconomic data (good) and could therefore be dismissed as “bad vibes.” All Biden—and Harris after him, forced to clean up the campaign disaster he left in his wake—had to do was show us enough data to make us believe inflation was under control. Never mind that other year-over-year data for 2022-23 showed trends like worsening inequality, a deepening affordability crisis (especially pronounced in blue states, which have failed to build housing), an uptick in credit-card defaults and a 12 percent increase in the national homelessness rate. The standard political vocabulary—GDP is rocking!—failed to capture the underlying reality, which is that it rocked unequally. The Democrats used this language anyway. The idea of a “vibecession,” meanwhile, smuggled in the contemptuous suggestion that the problem lay with the voters themselves, who simply refused to admit how wonderfully they were doing.

…Dismissing the economic experiences and self-perception of low- and middle-income voters is also a bad idea for a party that is still seen as having presided over the biggest bailout for banks in global history. The appeal to “vibecession,” itself a gross misdescription of how “real people” experience the “real economy,” in fact recalls the underlying causes of the 2008 financial crisis: back then, financiers chose to dress up the economic outlook in fancy math and intentionally obfuscating language that directly contradicted the underlying—and structurally rotten—material conditions.

Stevens’s essay, titled “Left-Wing Irony,” is a good example of (and step toward?) the conversation that I wish would take place publicly on the left today. “Irony Abounds” could just as easily have been the essay title, and to counter that sea of irony, on both the left and the right, Stevens says the left needs a better “type” of irony:

A more productive left-wing irony might be rooted not in the ideological certainty of the smug critic—the “know-all” irony of Benjamin’s “spiritual elite”—but in ideological humility. The irony, that is, of holding two thoughts in mind at once: my experience, and yours.

She goes on to prescribe Richard Rorty’s “liberal irony” as just such a productive humility:

This is irony as reconnaissance mission: it requires paying attention to a wide range of experiences in order to accurately describe how people are living today and what they desire—especially people whose experiences are different from yours. It provides a blueprint for the contemporary left-wing irony American politics so desperately needs.

Though I admire the honest criticism and love some of the descriptions of vision that Stevens lays out, I don’t think she has much of substance to offer even a sympathetic reader like myself. And I’m not even a little convinced that Rorty is a source improvement. (Mark Edmundson has argued convincingly that Rorty’s philosophy is a substantial part of what led us exactly to where we are, so it’s difficult to see how he could simultaneously appear as a source of needed wisdom.) Stevens saves a fair amount of space at the end of the essay to lay out a little Rortian groundwork as she sees and recommends it, but I felt like I was waiting for a package that never showed up.

This a great time for me to be starting O. Carter Snead’s What It Means to Be Human. Although he does say his book is explicitly about law, it seems pretty clear to me that the anthropology that Snead advocates is both firmer and more dynamic ground than Rorty’s liberal irony.

From the introduction:

Building upon this richer anthropological account, the book argues … that for both their basic survival and their flourishing, embodied (vulnerable) human beings depend on networks of “uncalculated giving and graceful receiving” constituted by other people who are willing to make the good of others’ their own, regardless of what this might offer by way of recompense. By first depending on these networks, and then participating in them, individuals become the sort of people who can care for others in this same way. This transformation of persons from needy consumers of unconditional care and support to mature uncalculating caregivers for others, of course, guarantees the sustainability of these essential networks. But, more importantly, it also helps people to develop into what an embodied being should become, namely, the kind of people who make the good of others their own. Put most simply and directly, by virtue of their embodiment, human beings are made for love and friendship.

In older, dried out parlance, this is about moving the conversation away from the dominant language of negative rights and back to where it was always meant to be: responsibility and care.

I’m looking for more of the criticism that Stevens offers, and more anthropological cow bell from folks like Snead. This is good stuff.

imagining *toward* utopias… or not

In Blake Smith’s essay “Just Another Liberalism?” he describes liberalism, à la Michel Foucault, as having a “nondogmatic reflexivity.” I like that phrase. It recalls Alasdair MacIntyre’s description of the flexibility and expandability within the boundaries of a living tradition — boundaries which are also flexible yet in a way consistent with the tradition itself. Liberalism’s reflexivity, says Smith, is part of a larger “capacity for imagining utopias… in spaces outside of state power.”

Liberalism’s utopias reside in liberal subjects’ capacities (themselves instantiated by a wider culture and its pedagogical institutions, such as schools, media, and the political process itself) to imagine themselves as the agents of their own lives, which are most intensely and happily lived where the shadow of politics least falls.

Our lives are “most intensely and happily lived where the shadow of politics least falls.” I think that’s a great place to plug the “anarchism” in the politics quadrilateral.

As many, many, many have pointed out for some time, liberalism has been slowly losing (and ceding) ground to both “neoliberalism” and illiberalism. (Of course, these are words that are happily and helpfully avoided in the healthy day-to-day.) That loss of ground has occurred not only because of badly misguided politics and poor civic education, but because the proponents of liberalism have so neglected that life outside the shadows. On this, Smith/Foucault offer a grave warning.

If liberals do not recover these traditions, they—and the vitalizing energies of political life—may pass wholly over to their enemies, who may be able to appropriate for themselves, on the one hand, all our longings for a natural, normal, quiet life outside of politics, and, on the other, all our desires to be something greater (larger and more estimable) than a self-interested individual calculating his potential gains.

That calculating, self-interested individual is the human as homo economicus, the primacy of which, according to Foucault, marks neoliberalism from its more “polyvalent” classical rendering. I count myself a fan of that polyvalent liberalism, of that polyvalent treatment of the liberal subject in all of his or her diverse capacities, no matter how idealized and unrealized it has always been. That it is infinitely preferable to the ever-self-intersted, necessarily disenchanted neoliberal subject should always have been obvious. But even this subject — the blindered, morally shallow, left-brained human — might find itself in danger very soon.

Left with no decent passions at its command, liberalism would be—and perhaps is—a spent force. But even illiberalism seems trapped within the specifically neoliberal anthropology, narrower and meaner than the expansive, polyvalent vision of humanity at the heart of the liberal tradition. And what comes may be still worse. The rational, self-interested individual, however base we consider him, possessed at least a certain coherence. Contemporary technologies of distraction seem to act increasingly on fragmented, disconnected parts of a splintering subject, while contemporary political rhetoric, in its systemic and transparent falsehoods, bypasses the minimal conditions of instrumental reason. If there is a subject of governance after neoliberalism, rather than transcending self-interest, he may be too psychically scattered and disoriented to be considered a self. The alternative to a recovery of the liberal imagination in its true political dimensions (and not merely as the false charms of an aestheticized inner life) may be neither illiberalism nor the neoliberal status quo but a new barbarism.

Despite being explicitly about liberalism, all of this also points pretty clearly to a need for the “conservatism” in the above mentioned quadrilateral — conservatism that values the past, as well as the unknown and uncontrolled, and is therefore wisely skeptical of change (especially the “inevitable” kind), and is therefore always inclined toward reform over revolution. (At least this is true in the political realm; the clearly conservative anarchist revolucion is another thing.)

Yes, this conservatism is utterly opposed to progressivism, as well as zealotry and the pride of victory, but that’s because it is more fundamentally concerned with inheritance and with gratitude — that is, with the human condition itself, improvement of which cannot erase a loving “fidelity to daily tasks.” There is still plenty of legroom here for a nondogmatic reflexivity, plenty of capacity for imagining utopias, in spaces both within and without state power. As Ivan Šarčević wrote about tradition and inherited identity: “Like the parable of the talents, in gratitude for the inheritance, with things he received an individual regains not only the equal worth of the inheritance but the chance to engage in creative work with the gifts and have them ‘double” in value.’”

To me, the opposite of conservatism is not progressivism but neglect. (By its nature, it’s primarily neglect of the past, but always of the present and future, too.) One of the obvious problems with this neglect — that is, with our neglect of any of life’s conservative elements — is that whatever starting point one envisions, whether for conviviality or for revolution, will be more callow and tenuous. Whereas inheritance and gratitude, with a little reflexive critique and utopian-inspired imagination and investment — to this, more will be given.

In any case, it is not, and has never been, possible to avoid being a bit idealistic. Envisioning a liberal-conservative(-socialist)-anarchist imagination, however proleptically, is not an easy thing, let alone enacting such a vision. But as Kay Ryan once wrote (and many others have said to similar effect): “This is, of course, an ideal, and one not fully attainable. Yet one must hold such banners aloft, stitched in gold upon a field of gold. For there are powerful enemy banners.”

As Nicholas Carr took the time to warn us yet again, there’s a lot of present and future space currently being carved out by and for very small, very callow souls who possess as little human imagination as possible — if a capacity for human beings exists in that space at all.

Whether you’re a liberal, conservative, socialist, anarchist, or all or none of the above, now’s not a bad time to decide what banners you and yours want to stitch and hold aloft. And make ‘em count.

supernatural hope

Josef Pieper:

Supernatural hope, then, which embraces not only the firm expectation itself, but also the living source of this expectation, is able to rejuvenate and give new vigor even to natural hope. “Rejuvenate” is precisely the right word here. Youth and hope are ordered to one another in manifold ways. They belong together in the natural as well as in the supernatural sphere. The figure of youth is the eternal symbol of hope, just as it is the symbol of magnanimity.

Natural hope blossoms with the strength of youth and withers when youth withers. “Youth is a cause of hope. For youth, the future is long and the past is short.”37 On the other hand, it is above all when life grows short that hope grows weary; the “not yet” is turned into the has-been, and old age turns, not to the “not yet”, but to memories of what is “no more”.

For supernatural hope, the opposite is true: not only is it not bound to natural youth; it is actually rooted in a much more substantial youthfulness. It bestows on mankind a “not yet” that is entirely superior to and distinct from the failing strength of man’s natural hope. Hence it gives man such a “long” future that the past seems “short” however long and rich his life. The theological virtue of hope is the power to wait patiently for a “not yet” that is the more immeasurably distant from us the more closely we approach it.

The supernatural vitality of hope overflows, moreover, and sheds its light also upon the rejuvenated powers of natural hope. The lives of countless saints attest to this truly astonishing fact. It seems surprising, however, how seldom the enchanting youthfulness of our great saints is noticed; especially of those saints who were active in the world as builders and founders. There is hardly anything comparable to just this youthfulness of the saint that testifies so challengingly to the fact that is surely most relevant for contemporary man: that, in the most literal sense of these words, nothing more eminently preserves and founds “eternal youth” than the theological virtue of hope. It alone can bestow on man the certain possession of that aspiration that is at once relaxed and disciplined, that adaptability and readiness, that strong-hearted freshness, that resilient joy, that steady preseverance in trust that so distinguish the young and make them lovable.

We must not regard this as a fatal concession to the Zeitgeist. As Saint Augustine so aptly says: “God is younger than all else.”

you shall and *can* know them by their fruit

Paul D. Miller:

A Confessing Church would challenge its members to ask themselves: Was it morally permissible for German Christians to vote for the Nazis in the 1920s because they hadn’t yet become the Nazis of 1939? Was it morally permissible to vote for Communists in the 1920s because the reality of the Soviet Gulag was still a few years away? Or do we hold their early voters morally culpable because the parties’ later actions were the predictable flowering of seeds planted by their ideological commitments? 

cowardice, a family tradition

Kevin Williamson:

Donald Trump has his name on the front of The Art of the Deal. John F. Kennedy’s name is on Profiles in Courage. Both men used ghostwriters, but we may take these works as testament to their priorities. 

From father to son to father to son, the Trumps have been a line of small, oafish, grasping, chiseling, dishonest, dishonorable, cowardly, conniving, dim-witted, donkey-souled plotters and plodders, and no sensible country would trade the lot of them for one of the 159 Canadians who died in Afghanistan—or for one of the hundreds of British troops who died in Afghanistan, or for any one of the French, Germans, Italians, Poles, Danes, Australians, Spaniards, Romanians, Georgians, Dutch, Turks, Czechs, Kiwis, Norwegians, Estonians, Hungarians, Swedes, Latvians, Slovaks, Finns, Portuguese, Koreans, Albanians, Jordanians, Belgians, Bulgarians, Croats, Lithuanians, or Montenegrins who lost their lives in that conflict. And certainly not for the Ukrainians who served alongside U.S. forces in Iraq. Nor for any one of the British and European doctors and nurses who saved the lives of so many wounded Americans evacuated from those battlefields.

These are our allies, not our enemies. Many of them are our trading partners, too—not a gang of pirates trying to victimize Americans with … abundant goods provided at reasonable prices. 

Donald Trump seems surprised by the ferocity of the Canadian response to his attempts to strong-arm the country with his imbecilic bullying and threats to annex it. I am not. Canadian pride may sometimes take the form of toxic anti-Americanism, but there is no doubting the resolve or the patriotism of our neighbors to the north. […]

But we know what to expect from Trump, which is the same thing any intelligent person expects from him: cowardice. 

And, for Donald Trump, cowardice is a family tradition. 

on stupidity… and contempt

Dietrich Bonhoeffer:

Stupidity is a more dangerous enemy of the good than malice. One may protest against evil; it can be exposed and, if need be, prevented by use of force. Evil always carries within itself the germ of its own subversion in that it leaves behind in human beings at least a sense of unease. Against stupidity we are defenseless. Neither protests nor the use of force accomplish anything here; reasons fall on deaf ears; facts that contradict one’s prejudgment simply need not be believed—in such moments the stupid person even becomes critical—and when facts are irrefutable they are just pushed aside as inconsequential, as incidental. In all this the stupid person, in contrast to the malicious one, is utterly self-satisfied and, being easily irritated, becomes dangerous by going on the attack. For that reason, greater caution is called for when dealing with a stupid person than with a malicious one. Never again will we try to persuade the stupid person with reasons, for it is senseless and dangerous.

If we want to know how to get the better of stupidity, we must seek to understand its nature. This much is certain, that it is in essence not an intellectual defect but a human one. There are human beings who are of remarkably agile intellect yet stupid, and others who are intellectually quite dull yet anything but stupid. We discover this to our surprise in particular situations. The impression one gains is not so much that stupidity is a congenital defect but that, under certain circumstances, people are made stupid or that they allow this to happen to them. We note further that people who have isolated themselves from others or who live in solitude manifest this defect less frequently than individuals or groups of people inclined or condemned to sociability. And so it would seem that stupidity is perhaps less a psychological than a sociological problem. It is a particular form of the impact of historical circumstances on human beings, a psychological concomitant of certain external conditions. Upon closer observation, it becomes apparent that every strong upsurge of power in the public sphere, be it of a political or a religious nature, infects a large part of humankind with stupidity. It would even seem that this is virtually a sociological-psychological law. The power of the one needs the stupidity of the other. The process at work here is not that particular human capacities, for instance, the intellect, suddenly atrophy or fail. Instead, it seems that under the overwhelming impact of rising power, humans are deprived of their inner independence and, more or less consciously, give up establishing an autonomous position toward the emerging circumstances. The fact that the stupid person is often stubborn must not blind us to the fact that he is not independent. In conversation with him, one virtually feels that one is dealing not at all with him as a person, but with slogans, catchwords, and the like that have taken possession of him. He is under a spell, blinded, misused, and abused in his very being. Having thus become a mindless tool, the stupid person will also be capable of any evil and at the same time incapable of seeing that it is evil. This is where the danger of diabolical misuse lurks, for it is this that can once and for all destroy human beings.

Yet at this very point it becomes quite clear that only an act of liberation, not instruction, can overcome stupidity. Here we must come to terms with the fact that in most cases a genuine internal liberation becomes possible only when external liberation has preceded it. Until then we must abandon all attempts to convince the stupid person. This state of affairs explains why in such circumstances our attempts to know what “the people” really think are in vain and why, under these circumstances, this question is so irrelevant for the person who is thinking and acting responsibly. The word of the Bible that the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom declares that the internal liberation of human beings to live the responsible life before God is the only genuine way to overcome stupidity.

But these thoughts about stupidity also offer consolation in that they utterly forbid us to consider the majority of people to be stupid in every circumstance. It really will depend on whether those in power expect more from peoples’ stupidity than from their inner independence and wisdom.

(See also Ian Lesie on rule-based stupidity.)

Do note, for your own purposes, Bonhoeffer’s last paragraph. For my purposes, I feel a little vindicated, especially for this post where I argue that, for all the stupidity going around, what we have is a leadership problem much more than a citizenship problem. That is, our citizenship is more or less the same one we’ve had for some, if not all, time. Whereas our leadership, from elected officials to media personnel to many who “aspire to leadership,” seem insufferably content on the lowest possible road.

And so important is that last paragraph that it would seem wrong not to include the next short section of Bonhoeffer’s letter:

On Contempt for Humanity?

The danger of allowing ourselves to be driven to contempt for humanity is very real. We know very well that we have no right to let this happen and that it would lead us into the most unfruitful relation to human beings. The following thoughts may protect us against this temptation: through contempt for humanity we fall victim precisely to our opponents’ chief errors. Whoever despises another human being will never be able to make anything of him. Nothing of what we despise in another is itself foreign to us. How often do we expect more of the other than what we ourselves are willing to accomplish. Why is it that we have hitherto thought with so little sobriety about the temptability and frailty of human beings? We must learn to regard human beings less in terms of what they do and neglect to do and more in terms of what they suffer. The only fruitful relation to human beings—particularly to the weak among them—is love, that is, the will to enter into and to keep community with them. God did not hold human beings in contempt but became human for their sake.

overcoming the music

Nicholas Carr:

Building on that idea in The Human Use of Human Beings, [Norbert Wiener] argues that, once set in motion, machine learning might advance to a point where — “whether for good or evil” — computers could be entrusted with the administration of the state. An artificially intelligent computer would become an all-purpose bureaucracy-in-a-box, rendering civil servants obsolete. Society would be controlled by a “colossal state machine” that would makes Hobbes’s Leviathan look like “a pleasant joke.”

What for Wiener in 1950 was a speculative vision, and a “terrifying” one, is today a practical goal for AI-infatuated technocrats like Elon Musk. Musk and his cohort not only foresee an “AI-first” government run by artificial intelligence routines but, having managed to seize political power, are now actively working to establish it. In its current “chainsaw” phase, Musk’s DOGE initiative is attempting to rid the government of as many humans as possible while at the same time hoovering up all available government-controlled data and transferring it into large language models. The intent is to clear a space for the incubation of an actual governing machine. Musk is always on the lookout for vessels for his seeds, and here he sees an opportunity to incorporate his ambitions and intentions into the very foundations of a new kind of state. It’s preformationism writ large.

If the new machine can be said to have a soul, it’s the soul Turing feared: the small, callow soul of its creators.

Even more than a flesh-and-blood bureaucracy, Wiener understood, an inscrutable bureaucracy-in-a-box, issuing decisions and edicts with superhuman speed and certainty, could all too easily be put to totalitarian ends. The box might seem autonomous, its outputs immaculate, but it would always serve its masters. It would always be an instrument of power. “The modern man, and especially the modern American, however much ‘know-how’ he may have, has very little ‘know-what,’” Wiener wrote. “He will accept the superior dexterity of the machine-made decisions without too much inquiry as to the motives and principles behind these.”

To explain his distinction between know-how and know-what, a distinction he saw as critical to the future course of technological progress, he tells another story:

Some years ago, a prominent American engineer bought an expensive player-piano. It became clear after a week or two that this purchase did not correspond to any particular interest in the music played by the piano. It corresponded rather to an overwhelming interest in the piano mechanism. For this gentleman, the player-piano was not a means of producing music, but a means of giving some inventor the chance of showing how skillful he was at overcoming certain difficulties in the production of music. This is an estimable attitude in a second-year high-school student. How estimable it is in one of those on whom the whole cultural future of the country depends, I leave to the reader.

cheerful, contented, intellectually and physically well-nourished people…doin’ their thing

George Dyson, in 2005 after visiting the “Googleplex”:

My visit to Google? Despite the whimsical furniture and other toys, I felt I was entering a 14th-century cathedral—not in the 14th century but in the 12th century, while it was being built. Everyone was busy carving one stone here and another stone there, with some invisible architect getting everything to fit. The mood was playful, yet there was a palpable reverence in the air. “We are not scanning all those books to be read by people,” explained one of my hosts after my talk. “We are scanning them to be read by an AI.”

When I returned to highway 101, I found myself recollecting the words of Alan Turing, in his seminal paper Computing Machinery and Intelligence, a founding document in the quest for true AI. “In attempting to construct such machines we should not be irreverently usurping His power of creating souls, any more than we are in the procreation of children,” Turing had advised. “Rather we are, in either case, instruments of His will providing mansions for the souls that He creates.”

Google is Turing’s cathedral, awaiting its soul. We hope. In the words of an unusually perceptive friend: “When I was there, just before the IPO, I thought the coziness to be almost overwhelming. Happy Golden Retrievers running in slow motion through water sprinklers on the lawn. People waving and smiling, toys everywhere. I immediately suspected that unimaginable evil was happening somewhere in the dark corners. If the devil would come to earth, what place would be better to hide?”

For 30 years I have been wondering, what indication of its existence might we expect from a true AI? Certainly not any explicit revelation, which might spark a movement to pull the plug. Anomalous accumulation or creation of wealth might be a sign, or an unquenchable thirst for raw information, storage space, and processing cycles, or a concerted attempt to secure an uninterrupted, autonomous power supply. But the real sign, I suspect, would be a circle of cheerful, contented, intellectually and physically well-nourished people surrounding the AI. There wouldn’t be any need for True Believers, or the downloading of human brains or anything sinister like that: just a gradual, gentle, pervasive and mutually beneficial contact between us and a growing something else. This remains a non-testable hypothesis, for now. The best description comes from science fiction writer Simon Ings:

“When our machines overtook us, too complex and efficient for us to control, they did it so fast and so smoothly and so usefully, only a fool or a prophet would have dared complain.”

exposure is cynical

The very question “Does prayer work?” puts us in the wrong frame of mind from the outset. 

Rereading C.S. Lewis’s 1959 essay in The Atlantic “The Efficacy of Prayer,” a couple things come to mind:

  • Bruce Waltke’s book, the title of which says it all, Finding the Will of God: A Pagan Notion? We might also ask, “A scientific notion?”:

    Ever since the Enlightenment, the Western world has held a faith in the power of the human mind and of the scientific method to know “truth.” It has sought to understand and control nature and has believed, almost without question, that anything that could not be understood by unaided human reason and validated by science was not to be taken seriously. We can know absolutely, however, only if we know comprehensively. To make an absolute judgment, according to Cornelius Van Til, humanity must usurp God’s throne:

    ”If one does not make human knowledge wholly dependent upon the original self-knowledge and consequent revelation of God to man, then man will have to seek knowledge within himself as the final reference point. Then he will have to seek an exhaustive understanding of reality. He will have to hold that if he cannot attain to such an exhaustive understanding of reality, he has no true knowledge of anything at all. Either man must then know everything or he knows nothing.”

  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer spoke of essentially the same thing in a letter from prison to Eberhard Bethge, dated 5 December 1943:

    I think that under the guise of honesty something is presented here as “natural” that on the contrary is a symptom of sin; it [is] really quite analogous to open talk about sexual matters. “Truthfulness” does not at all mean that whatever exists must be uncovered. God himself made clothing for human beings, that is, in statu corruptionis many aspects of the human being are to remain concealed, and when one cannot root it out, evil is likewise to remain hidden. Anyway, exposure is cynical; and even if cynics appear particularly honest in their own eyes or act like fanatics for the truth, they still miss the decisive truth, namely, that after the fall there is a need for covering [Verhülling] and secrecy [Geheimnis]. For me, [the novelist Adalbert] Stifter’s greatness lies in the fact that he refuses to pry into the inner realm of the person, that he respects the covering and regards the person only very discreetly from without, as it were, but not from within.… It impressed me once that Mrs. von Kleist-Kieckow told me with real horror of a film in which the growth of a plant was portrayed with time-lapse photography; she and her husband were unable to bear that as an illegitimate prying into the mystery of life.

Exposure is cynical; prayer is human.

Someone recently quoted a line from Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow: “If they can keep you asking the wrong questions, they don’t have to worry about answers.” For us, it could just as well be said, “If we can keep ourselves looking for answers, we don’t have to worry about having asked all the wrong questions.”

And now more things come to mind.

  • From A. R. Ammons wonderful essay “A Poem Is a Walk”:

    Definition, rationality, and structure are ways of seeing, but they become prisons when they blank out other ways of seeing. If we remain open minded we will soon find for any easy clarity an equal and opposite, so that the sum of our clarities should return us where we belong, to confusion and, hopefully, to more complicated and better assessments.

    Unlike the logical structure, the poem is an existence which can incorporate contradictions, inconsistencies, explanations and counter-explanations and still remain whole, unexhausted and inexhaustible; an existence that comes about by means other than those of description and exposition and, therefore, to be met by means other than or in addition to those of description and exposition.

  • From Patrick Kavanagh’s “Canal Bank Walk”:

    O unworn world enrapture me, encapture me in a web
    Of fabulous grass and eternal voices by a beech,
    Feed the gaping need of my senses, give me ad lib
    To pray unselfconsciously with overflowing speech
    For this soul needs to be honoured with a new dress woven 
    From green and blue things and arguments that cannot be proven.

Exposure is cynical; prayer is human.

One more:

  • Prologue to Christian Wiman’s Survival Is a Style (no doubt inspired by Ammons and Kavanagh):

    Church or sermon, prayer or poem:
    the failure of religious feeling is a form.



    The failure of religious feeling is a form
    of love that, though it could not survive

    the cataclysmic joy of its inception,
    nevertheless preserves its own sane something,

    a space in which grievers gather,
    inviolate ice that the believers weather:

    church or sermon, prayer or poem.



    Finer and finer the meaningless distinctions:
    theodicies, idiolects, books, books, books.

    I need a space for unbelief to breathe.
    I need a form for failure, since it is what I have.

from “my animal, my age”

All creatures touched to life, clutched
By life, are the beings they must be and bear.
Mindlight, spinelight, and somewhere, nowhere,
The dark wave…

My animal, my age, ravenous in your cage,
What flute might bend the bars, bind the gnarled
Knees of days, and bring forth a world
Of newness, world trued to music—
A lullaby for human grief,
Of human grief,
While the adder breathes in time in the grass.

Wave after wave of grave aboriginal green,
And then, buds plumped to the point of bursting,
And then, again, all the soft detonations of simple spring…

But not for you, my beautiful, my pitiful,
My necrotic, psychotic age.
More cruel for the weakness that taunts you,
More crippled for the supple animal that haunts you,
You stagger on,
Staring back at the way you’ve taken:
Mad tracks in a land called Gone.

—Osip Mandelstam (1923), translated by Christian Wiman