Conversations with Tyler - Ross Douthat on Decadence and Dynamism
Episode Date: March 25, 2020For Ross Douthat, decadence isn't necessarily a moral judgement, but a technical label for a state that societies tend to enter—and one that is perhaps much more normal than the dynamism Americans h...ave come to take for granted. In his new book, he outlines the cultural, economic, political, and demographic trends that threaten to leave us to wallow in a state of civilizational stagnation for years to come, and fuel further discontent and derangement with it. On his second appearance on Conversations with Tyler, Ross joined Tyler to discuss why he sees Kanye as a force for anti-decadence, the innovative antiquarianism of the late Sir Roger Scruton, the mediocrity of modern architecture, why it's no coincidence that Michel Houellebecq comes from France, his predictions for the future trajectory of American decadence – and what could throw us off of it, the question of men's role in modernity, why he feels Christianity must embrace a kind of futurist optimism, what he sees as the influence of the "Thielian ethos" on conservatism, the plausibility of ghosts and alien UFOs, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded February 25th, 2020 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Ross on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Hello, and welcome to Conversations with Tyler.
I'm here once again with Ross Douthit,
and Ross has a new book out, which I'm a big, big fan of,
called the Decadent Society, how we became the victims of our own success. Ross, welcome.
Thank you for having me back, Tyler. It's an honor. A very simple question about decadence.
I read in the New York Times this morning, which is late February, quote,
In the past several years, Kanye West has announced so many plans that he wants to start a church,
that he plans to run for president, that he will invent a method for auto-correcting emoticons,
that he aims to redesign the standard American home,
that he might legally change his name to, quote,
Christian genius billionaire Kanye West for a year.
Is Kanye decadent?
No.
Why not?
Kanye is not decadent because decadence involves drift, repetition, and stalemate,
and Kanye's public persona is defined by creativity, conversion, and reinvention.
Now, that's not to say that Kanye might not participate in decadence.
One of the implicit or explicit arguments of my book is that even when you're a rebel against decadence, it's very hard to escape these fundamental forces in our society dragging us towards stalemates and repetition.
So maybe all of Kanye's reinventions and plans to reinvent the question mark come to nothing in the end.
but the fact of his ambitions and the fact that he has actually invented, he has invented a church, right?
I mean, Kanye has a cult.
He has Sunday services that are a sort of unique phenomenon among celebrities.
So even if there are limits on what he can achieve, he is a force for anti-decadence in a decadent society.
So does the popularity of Kanye suggest we're moving away from decadence?
Or is that a kind of placebo we use to insulate ourselves from dynamism?
Oh, I like Kanye, and then we go about being decadent.
That's probably a little bit of both.
I mean, I think you can see this in politics, right, where when I started writing the book,
kind of a long time ago now, the populist moment hadn't really arrived in the Western world.
And so one of the questions hanging over the argument is, does the populist moment prove that decadence is coming to an end, right?
Does it end with populism and nationalism and the return of history?
And I think that's an open question.
The answer that I lean towards in the book is that it doesn't, that these rebellions are sort of more performative and virtual than real.
But their appeal suggests that people aren't content with decadence.
And that is a sign that maybe at some point it will come to an end, right?
Support for Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump partakes of decadence, but also represents.
a desire for something else. And as long as that desire is there, there has to be some possibility
of escape. Our mutual acquaintance, Roger Scruton, who died recently, he seemed to love fox hunting
and the operas of Rickard Wagner. Was that decadence? Or is that innovation? I think there are
forms of antiquarianism that are sufficiently antiquarian to cease to be decadent and to become
almost innovative. So I think you could argue that we've reached a point of sort of, we've reached a
point where our culture, our mass culture, but also our elite culture is sort of sufficiently
dominated by just repetitions of cultural forms and products from the baby boomer era, that to be
an antiquarian, to reach back towards traditions and forms and aesthetic forms that were popular,
150 years ago is also an escape from decadent.
So I'm already, so there we go, Kanye isn't decadent,
Roger Scruton isn't decadent.
We're whittling away at my thesis one celebrity or late celebrity at a time.
Are you decadent?
So you wrote a column about architecture.
And in that column you say,
making American architecture a little more traditional, dot, dot, dot,
certainly wouldn't hurt.
Yes.
Shouldn't American architecture be more like Kanye West?
That is decadent.
No, absolutely.
I would say that basically both the place that modern architecture has ended up and the traditionalist alternative are both sort of decadent.
And I prefer the traditionalist forms on aesthetic grounds, but I recognize that they are not dynamic and innovative, that you're sort of accepting that we've reached some sort of dead end in architectural style making and choosing.
the beauties of traditional forms over some of, I think, I mean, frankly, the less the ugliness
and more than mediocrity that I think a lot of post-1960s architectural forms have ended up with.
So like, under my definition, the golden age of brutalism is not decadent.
It's bad, right?
I don't like brutalist architecture.
I do, of course.
But it is, right.
But it is, well, we can find common ground at least in that.
It was trying to create a distinctive style for a disenchanted age and sort of express something about modernity and sort of the forms.
Whereas I think that, and I say this, I'm not a professional architecture critic, so take this with a grain of salt.
But I think the last 25 years of public architecture has been less spectacularly ugly and more just sort of me.
mediocre imitations of more striking modernist forms.
But you probably have stronger opinions on this than I do, ultimately.
I'm more of an optimist about architecture, I think, than you are.
And interiors of homes, it seems to me, have become much better.
It's hard to see them precisely because they're interiors.
But when I was a kid, it was very rare you'd see a nice interior of any home, even of a wealthy person.
And now even an upper middle class person, you might think, my goodness, that looks amazing.
I was in someone's house in Lubbock.
It was gorgeous.
That's Lubbock, Texas, right?
Yes.
No, HGTV, the interior suggests a certain kind of aesthetic progress, although in other ways,
HGTV is decadent.
So it's complicated.
There's a famous quotation with the source actually being contested or unknown,
and it goes as follows, quote,
America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between.
True or false.
Was that not Clemenceau?
Is it?
People don't agree.
People don't.
Yes.
Probably it was someone before him, some version of that.
Yeah, I mean, I enjoy that quote without agreeing with it.
I think that America in many respects really did represent a sort of particular peak of civilizational progress.
in the years of its ascent from somewhere in the 19th century up till the moon landing.
And so I would defend the civilization of the Americans.
It's, you know, it's particular.
It's not there are certain forms, high cultural forms that America has not specialized in.
But America's produced a lot of great mass art and a certain amount of good elite art
and a lot of impressive
technological progress.
And I think that adds up to civilization
and not barbarism.
Was the moon landing in some sense a mistake
that after we did that,
we patted ourselves on the back too much
and we weren't sure what to do for an encore?
However glorious it may have been.
No, it wasn't.
It wasn't a mistake.
It was you had to do it.
It was the thing to be done.
It was the thing,
it was the furthest step we could take into space
that was dramatic
and a sort of
embodiment of human beings going beyond the planet Earth.
But why did we basically stop a little bit after that?
I mean, I think what I want to say, right, as a critic of decadence, is that there was some
sort of failure of will or of nerve and so on.
But, you know, you...
But that's endogenous, right.
You have to acknowledge that the problem with space is that there's, under current technological
conditions, the moon landing was what we could do.
And there wasn't that much else that we could do, certainly that had the kind of
presumable financial rewards or opportunities for people starting new lives.
All of the things that drove ages of discovery in earlier periods in human history just
weren't available and still aren't available.
And that's, you know, whatever the sort of psychological, civilizational factors at work,
that's the dominant reality that people like me who really want.
want to go into space have to acknowledge.
But we did settle Nevada afterwards, right?
Is that not the greater achievement?
They're both dry.
They're both distant.
The settlement of Nevada is, in a sense, yes, maybe the last great blow against decadence struck.
But the way we settled it was, I mean, not universally, but I think you can see Las Vegas.
Las Vegas is decadent under the standard definition of decadence, right?
Not yours.
No, but I think it's decadent under mine.
too in the sense that it represents a kind of a sort of simulated sublimity where you are
creating models of all of the great achievements of the human species and the modern world
and practicing various forms of entertainment around them.
So in that sense, it is, I think, under my definition too, not just the chocolates and
bondage dens definition.
I think it is decadent.
It ends, I borrow this concept of the technological sublime from David Nye and before him Perry Miller, a couple of great American historians, this idea that American history is sort of punctuated by these moments of some technological breakthrough that's also a kind of wonder of the world.
And that is distinctively American in a way that I think is not in spite of sort of the Eiffel Tower and other things as European examples does sometimes seem to the more sophisticated European mind, maybe mildly barbaric, our delight in our steam engines and transcontinental railways.
But I think it's been a distinctive part of the American experience that has sort of run out since the moon landing.
And Las Vegas and the iPhone and, you know, in different ways are sort of imitations of that,
but that are more focused on simulation and entertainment than the steamship and the railway and the space shuttle were.
Of all the Western nations, given your notion of decadence, which is the least decadent?
Are we counting Israel as Western?
Not for the purposes of this question.
Then probably the United States of America.
And what would be number two?
I have an impulse to say France, which is sort of strange, right?
Why France?
Because I feel like France is a place, I would put it this way.
I think France is in certain ways very advanced in decadence, but it's also a place
where a lot of forces of post-decedents, whatever that may be, are sort of in play in really interesting ways.
It's a place that has some of the most interesting political and intellectual debates about liberalism and post-liberalism,
even though it hasn't actually seen a far-right or far-left party take power.
it's a place that's at that sort of a particular example of the uneasy confrontation between a decadent Europe and Islam and Islamic immigration, right?
I don't think it's a coincidence that the great chronicler of decadence, Michelle Welbeck, comes from France.
And so if there's a point at which, yeah, in that sense, I think France is both further advanced in its decadence, but also sort of therefore more.
more interested in and open to whatever strange things lie beyond.
But that's speculative.
Are you long or short, France?
I am long France in the sense that I think that it is the most likely crucible for whatever forces are going to reshape Europe over the next hundred years.
I am short France in the sense that that means it is the place most likely to have a civil war.
maybe in the next 100 years.
So long in terms of drama, short, maybe in terms of stability.
I think that means short.
What if I were to argue?
Only if you're an investor, not if you're a journalist.
What if I were to argue Canada is in fact highly innovative?
They seem to have completely sane governance, which is now all of a sudden a novelty.
And several of their major cities have foreign-born populations of more than half the total.
it works very well.
Also a lot of those populations are non-Western, different religions.
Yes.
In world history, this is quite astonishing.
Sane governance and so many foreigners and their cities are wonderful.
Why isn't that this phenomenal innovation?
And Canada is the least decade in country.
I think that's a reasonable argument.
And the careful reader of my book will notice that I don't talk a great deal about Canada in part because it doesn't display as
fully a lot of the manifestations of decadence that I'm talking about, sort of political gridlock
and sclerosis, which I think fits much of Western Europe, fits the United States, in certain
ways fits the Pacific Rim. It has some of the same issues of demographic decline as other
countries, but it's not as steep as East Asia. And as you say, it has managed a certain
kind of immigrant assimilation in ways that I think other Western countries are struggling with.
So in that sense, I think Canada, if it is decadent, it has decadence without some of the more
extreme difficulties associated with it.
I guess my question for you as an observer of Canada is, at what point does this sort
of Canadian exceptionalism start to dramatically influence the world?
Fundamentally, should we think of Canada as a large country, which it is, or as a small country, which it also is, right.
In some ways like the Nordics, I'm not sure Canadian exceptionalism will last, but I find striking the question, why don't more Americans actually want to move to Canada?
So they would take either of us, right?
That's very flattering to us, but we're still sitting here.
I need to read my wife has descended from Canadians on one side, from Newfoundland and Ontario.
And when, you know, things get particularly hot on Twitter, she will sometimes suggest that she needs to reclaim her Canadian citizenship.
But I think I actually think that is how certain Americans think of Canada, not as a land of opportunity, but as sort of a stable and lower risk version of the U.S. to which they can abscond.
And to the extent that's true, then that suggests that there is this kind of resilient dynamism in the U.S. that comes with risk.
but it doesn't seem to be on offer in Canada.
But do you think that's out of date?
I mean, do you think the sort of, do you think Canada, how dynamic do you think Canada is right now?
I think market size matters greatly.
So talented Canadians come to the U.S. and great numbers, but not so much vice versa.
So it could just be that people care about market size much more than they care about the kinds of issues you and I talk about.
And that always gives me pause.
Just size of the country seems to be a more important variable.
relative to the amount of print space it gets from public intellectuals.
And that's why we don't want to go to Canada.
Plus, it's cold.
It is cold.
And all Canadians live in a very narrow strip of Canada.
The population distribution is sort of, as you would expect, extraordinarily compressed.
So in effect, geographically, it functions like a very nice northern province of the U.S.
with an immense and entertaining hinterland.
They will get mad at you for saying that.
To me, it feels more like a series of independent city states on our margins.
But I think I would find a problematic to live in a city state, even in the U.S.
When I go to Texas, I feel comfortable.
It's like I'm in a big country.
When I go to Rhode Island, I feel claustrophobic.
Well, but also the city state model historically, the most dynamic.
I mean, if you think of obviously Venice as a city state, but even sort of quasi-city states.
Like, you know, you can see the low countries in the 17th century, right, as quasi-city
States functioning within a landscape of empire, but they have tended to be influential in part
because of their geographic placement.
And maybe that matters less globally than at once did, but it still feels like Toronto is a
terrific city, but it's not, if Toronto were dropped down in a different part of the world,
it might be a more influential city.
Is decade cyclical or it just keeps on getting worse and worse?
I think that it can be cyclical.
I mean, I think one way to look at it is that, you know, under my definition, it's a very normal thing for human societies to enter into, perhaps much more normal than the kind of dynamism that we have taken for granted in the U.S.
And to the extent that it reflects patterns of sort of prosperity leading to torpor and stagnation, you would expect a kind of cyclical phenomenon, right?
So to take the demographic example, right?
So you have real substantial demographic decline in the Western world.
Some of that just reflects the fact that we had this huge influential generation, the baby boom generation, that didn't have nearly as many kids as their parents did and has sort of bestridden our world for a long time.
And it's possible, I think it's sort of a sub-theme of the book, that as the baby boom generation passes to,
their reward that decadence will ease a little bit and there'll be more room for young people
to do creative things and attain positions of power and all these kind of things.
And the demographic landscape of Western societies will change a little bit.
So in that sense, I think you can tell a cyclical story and certainly can see cyclical
stories in history.
I do think though that if you just push existing trend lines in the Western world forward, you
would say the decadence is likely to deepen at least over the next 25 to 40 years. I mean, just
to stay with fertility, right? There does seem to be a kind of low fertility trap that countries get
into where you have small families, growth in vigor slow down, and in that landscape, there's
less support for having children, and so fertility rates stay low, and that drives economic growth
rates lower and you and that sort of those things feed on one another. And so that's why I spend
a certain amount of the later parts of the book talking about, you know, scenarios that are more
disjunctive, right, where you need, you need something unexpected and dramatic to happen to shift
things. And maybe that's a particular invention that we're on the cusp of reaching or maybe it's
a religious revival that we don't expect. But I think I think the decadence we have now
it requires some sort of disjunctive event to shift us out of it, which could very well happen.
But it's not if you just plot the course of the United States forward to 2050, I would say that we stay decadent.
Maybe the problem with the low birth rate, it's not that kids aren't fun, but men are not fun.
So once women have some wealth or employment opportunities at all, they don't need men as much.
those men don't compete as much to marry to those women
and you have families forming later or not at all
or there's high rate of single motherhood of course
but you'll just have fewer kids
what would possibly reverse the problem of men
simply not being that much fun
I think it's
it's a hard question
your kids are a lot of fun right
but right no but you're right that that's if you track right
so if you track fertility declines
in not just the US but to take a strong case
Finland, right, which has had in spite of all its social supports for child rearing that are, you know, the
envy of family policy experts the world over, their fertility rate keeps falling. And it seems to be
just a consequence of all the trends you said, delayed marriage, delayed family formation,
and men in particular not seeming to have a clearly defined role. And I go back and forth on this
because on the one hand, like, you know, we have three kids. We're about to have a fourth.
Oh, congratulations.
Thank you.
And it seems to me as an observer of marriages and child rearing that men are very important, right, even in our post-feminist post-industrial age.
Right, the good ones.
But that should create an incentive for cultures and societies to form good ones and to figure out how do you form good men in this landscape.
And we haven't, you know, it's pretty clear that we aren't figuring out exactly how to do that.
And instead, you have these selection effects where you increasingly have sort of male spaces and female spaces that aren't single sex spaces, right?
They aren't spaces where women go to be women and men go to be men and then they meet in the dating market.
There are spaces that are heavily female but have a certain percentage of males or heavily male but have a certain percentage of females have their own sort of self-examined.
have their own sort of self-contained dating markets where because of the imbalance, there ends up being hostility between the sexes. And, you know, thus, on the, you have the far right in cells online complaining about how women are terrible because in their world, there aren't very many women, right? And so all the incentives are, you know, sort of for, you know, women to behave like normal human beings and take advantage of their position. And then on the other side, on, on
In sort of left-wing academic environments, you have fewer men.
And so the men don't behave as well, and the women feel like the men are terrible.
And that seems like a hard cycle to break.
And it does seem like you would need some sort of effectively cultural campaign around rebuilding male education and manhood.
And right now, sort of the models for that are polarized between conservative.
religious models that, you know, as a conservative religious person I'm in favor of, but they obviously have a limited purchase in the culture as a whole. And then more feminist models that are trying to sort of remake men along the lines of female virtues that I don't think actually work, that don't sort of effectively identify core ways of making men sort of successful as men. But I do think, to be the social conservative for a minute, I do think,
pornography plays a really nasty role in all of this and that a society that's stigmatized and limited pornography would have at least slightly better men. I think readily available, constantly available pornography pushes men away from women, pushes men away from the cultivation of masculine virtues, makes them less marriageable, makes them literally more impotent in certain ways, and is a sort of underappreciated aspect.
in the decline of men.
In the theology of original sin, what percentage of men are the good ones?
No, zero.
Zero.
Well, you know, I mean, setting aside Jesus, but the line, I mean, look, the line,
the famous phrase, right, the line between good and evil runs through every human heart.
We just had this horrifying thing in my own Catholic world, where Jean Vanier, the founder of Larch,
this set of communities where people care for the disabled, but really their communities where
people live together. It's not sort of hospitals for disabled people. It's communities of people
living together who was, you know, had died recently, was considered a living saint and had done
incredibly good things. And I personally know people, young men, whose lives were transformed
by working in these communities or just writing about these communities. And it came out that he had
you know, not a Harvey Weinstein problem, but sort of the milder religious version where he had
pressured women, including nuns, into sexual relationships. And to their credit, the community
put out, you know, a report about this. But, you know, men, Catholic men that I know or observe
on the internet were particularly devastated by this because he was this model of sort of
saintly Catholic masculinity for them. And so it's a terrible thing. But it's also, I mean,
it's, I'm circling around back to your original question, right? Because it doesn't eliminate
the good things he did. He did tremendously good things. He had saintly aspects, but he wasn't a saint.
He was, you know, he had that line running right down the middle of his heart.
Do the arguments of your new book lead you to admire Mormonism more?
I mean, I admired Mormonism a great deal.
But at the margin, right?
Before I wrote the book.
But yes, in the sense that, you know, you asked about non-decant spaces in the Western world.
And Israel is one.
And you could argue reasonably, I think that Utah is another.
I think there is a difficulty for Mormons in that the founding of their faith and some of the pretty obvious
controversies associated with it have pushed them a little bit away from certain forms of
intellectual and theological work that you would want a really successful religious community
bent on evangelizing the United States to be able to do. So that is sort of my non-Mormon Christian
caveat about Mormonism. But in general, I went out to Salt Lake City when Mitt Romney was
running for president. They were trying to introduce journalists to Mormondom, right? So we, you know,
we didn't get to see their holies of holy, but we got tours of, you know, the missionary centers
and the supermarket slash food banks that they run for low income people. And, you know,
speaking as a member of a Christian church Catholicism that has sort of entered into its own
obvious form of decadence in the U.S. over the last 50 years. It's a shaming experience in certain
ways to see what the Mormons can do in the most basic forms of Christianity. You know,
feed the hungry, clothe the naked, help drug addicts, help people get their lives together
while also serving God. It's a remarkable and admirable thing that basically every other
Christian church in the U.S. should be envious of. And they combine this, I think, in a way that
does fit with some of my speculations in the book with this strong interest in economic development
and technological progress, right? I don't think there's, there isn't high Mormon theology
and high Mormon aesthetics, but there's certainly a sort of the technical side of
Americanness is very much on display in Mormon culture. If you see, is a,
Israel as relatively non-deccadent, do you then infer that being under a military threat all of the time is what keeps decadence away?
Certainly that it's one thing.
Yeah.
I mean, Israel, there seems to be some sort of existential issue involved in how people think about the future.
And part of the book is suggesting that there's a loss of optimism in the Western world, a sense that frontiers are closed.
We're not going to go to the stars.
because we're stuck here with ourselves.
We're bored.
What do we do now?
But there's also a sense in which extreme pessimism or extreme concern about the future can be a spur against decadence.
And what's so striking about Israel's in demographic terms, right, is that Israel is the one country at its level of income that has a birth rate, not just at replacement, but way above replacement.
It's dipped a little in the last couple of years.
And people hear that statistic and say, well, it's just the ultra-Orthodox, right, having big families.
in fact, secular Israelis have much larger than American average families as well, again,
in a landscape where their children are in more sort of geopolitical peril than children in the U.S.,
in a country that is built out of a desert on a narrow strip of land up against the Mediterranean.
Now, politically, you know, I mean, we're recording this in the midst of the interregnum between
Israeli elections of which we're on track to have 17 in the next year or so, I think that you can
see elements of the same political decadence on display in other countries on display in Israel
too. And so I don't want to suggest that they're exempt from the trends I'm describing,
but they are like the Mormon's exceptional relative to the rich society norm.
To get back to the theme of your own decadence, so you've written columns skeptical of the
internet. You mentioned pornography a moment ago, which is usually now consumed over the internet.
Presumably, when it comes to CRISPR babies and transhumanism and genetic engineering, you're at
least partly skeptical, maybe very skeptical. But if you think those are the areas right now where
we're seeing the major advances, isn't it the case that to overcome decadence, you have to actually
embrace the innovations that you yourself are not comfortable with? The printing press in its early
days led to religious wars. I would have certainly, certainly been against the printing press.
Yes. And I think, well, I think there is definitely, there are places where there is a tension between
my Catholic or Christian moral commitments and my desire to escape decadence. And certainly,
I think, elements of transhumanism are one of them. And I say as much in the book that there is
sort of a, you could imagine a real transhuman revolution that would not be decadent.
that would mark the end of decadence, as I'm describing it, but that I would not welcome, right?
And I think that's sort of decadence isn't, it isn't necessarily a moral judgment.
I'm sort of stealing my definition from Jacques Barzun who said it's not a slur the term.
It's a technical label.
And in that sense, to the extent that it's a technical label, you have to be able to say things could happen that ended decadence.
and it didn't lead to collapse or catastrophe that led to development, change, dynamism that from a moral perspective I might find repellent.
And it's also, I think, why I'm drawn much more to the older frontier, you know, the idea of the space program and space as a frontier because that's a case that I think the idea of human beings as they are going exploring.
seems to me much more fundamentally appealing
than the idea of human beings staying put
and changing who we are.
And I can imagine someone with a different worldview
having the opposite reaction.
Although Silicon Valley seems to have both reactions, right?
You have both investment in space
and investment in transhumanism.
So they're playing both sides of the escape from decadence scenario.
You've argued at times that popes should never step down.
Would you feel the same way
if life extension meant that popes would live to the age of 140 or 150?
I think in that scenario, now we're into totally speculative terrain, I think that you would
expect popes to be elected later. And I think a 50-year pontificate is generally an unwise thing
for the Catholic Church in the same way that, you know, a 50-year span of governance by any
really powerful figure often ends up in bad places in the end. But in that, in the scenario you're
describing, I would imagine that you would elect popes at the ripe late middle age of 100.
New York confines columnists also, right?
Well, that would be 117 and you'd finally get a column.
I think in that case, yeah, you would, maybe 93. Maybe there, I think the perfect zone for the
columnist would be age 80 to 100. And then you would, then you would.
step down. I mean, my assumption is, I've been a columnist for 10 years, and my assumption is that I
will run out of things to say at some point. I just turned 40, so maybe 50 is the point at which
I want to have fully transitioned to writing fantasy novels instead. I've argued that Peter
Teal is the most influential public intellectual on the right today. Agree or disagree?
Mostly agree. Why? Well, first, I should say it's, I have to agree, because,
as anyone who reads the book will find a number of quotations from Peter Thiel throughout.
And I have, with some amendations, mostly accepted his analysis of the technological and economic component of our stagnation.
So I am indebted to him.
I think that he, in his own evolution, I think, has sort of followed, but in certain ways, blazed a trail for other evolutions.
of younger conservative intellectuals who are, I think, in certain ways, in search of a new fusionism, one way to put it, right?
So modern conservatism begins with the fusionism of social conservatism and mid-century Hayekian, Hayek to Rand, that wide spectrum of libertarianism.
And I think there's a general sense that that kind of fusion has broken down.
And you have people, I think, who imagine a new conservatism that's just social conservatism, right?
And then you have libertarians who sort of imagine a libertarianism that leaves conservatism behind.
But I think there are a lot of people who want to sort of put things back together again, but in a slightly different way.
And to make an argument that's maybe kind of like the argument that I end up with in the book, that there is some sort of interesting.
alchemy between a society that looks a little further back and a little further ahead,
right? So what I was saying earlier about Scruton, right? The idea that looking back to the
19th century or the 17th century isn't necessarily decadent because it also lets you maybe look
a little further ahead. And I think that's in certain ways there in at least some of
teal stuff where he's sort of simultaneously sympathetic to, you know, he's sort of an eccentric
Christian of some sort, maybe. He's at the very least sympathetic to religious conservatives
in a way that other Silicon Valley figures are not. At the same time, he is a dynamist in a way that
sort of the Burkean version, the most Burkean version of social conservatism isn't. I mean, you've written
about the idea of state capacity libertarianism, right? I think that's one example of ways in which
people who are skeptical of wherever liberalism is right now are trying to forge something else.
So it's a sense of some combination of a strong state, some kind of small-sea conservative social renewal, and some sort of
futurism
offers some kind of alchemy.
And I don't think there's a, you know,
teal has not written,
he wrote zero to one,
which has sort of an implicit political teaching,
but there isn't a sort of tealian manifesto
at the moment, right?
So I think his influence is in
the inchoateness of his combination
of ideas,
sort of speaking to the inchoatness
of other people's combinations of ideas.
And he wrote an essay,
there was a piece very critical of him, of course, I think in New York Magazine, but that looked at this essay he wrote for first things a little while ago that had this sort of very particular point sort of aimed at Christian readers where he said, look, the Bible begins in a garden and ends in a city, right?
And I'd read that essay when he wrote it, and I think it actually did have some sort of subconscious or conscious influence on it.
me where, you know, I think there's a strong religious conservative draw towards pastoralism,
right, towards the idea, you know, my friend Rodrier's book, The Benedict Option, sort of has
this idea of like the retreat into the monastery, the retreat into sort of the Wendell Berry farming
community and so on. And I think that has to be, for Christianity to be a plausible faith for
our civilization that has to be balanced with a certain kind of the futurist optimism that has
always been part of Christian cultures.
Always?
Not, I mean, you know, 2,000 years of history offers, probably offers a lot of counter examples.
But I think the Christian world in general has been hospitable to dynamism.
I think that's a fair characterization of the history of Christianity.
Yeah.
Do you think there could be a Peter Thiel manifesto, whether written by him or someone else,
or does the very existence of the Bible or possibly the church render that impossible,
and thus much of it has to exist on the Straussian plane?
And is thus more powerful?
What do you mean by the existence of the Bible or the church that?
The Bible sets out a very definite worldview or worldviews, of course,
depending on how you read it or even what you consider to be the Bible.
But if you write a manifesto, you then have to lay out, well, what in the Bible are you agreeing with or not?
And the manifesto then becomes quite subordinate or overly rebellious.
And maybe the idea is almost powerful in the Straussian realm where notions are hinted at
and you have to put the pieces together for yourself.
There's a certain power to all of the ideas not being fully spelled out,
and they also can evolve more freely in a dynamic way, which reflects the dog.
I think that's possible. I think it's particularly possible for someone like Teal who clearly, you know, has a very heterodox relationship, whatever it may be, to Christian faith. So yeah, I think you're right that any manifesto he put out would highlight more clearly his points of tension with both the religious traditions that he is in dialogue with and the different sort of,
of broken factions of conservatism that he's in dialogue with. And I think the Thelian, you know, the
tealian ethos to me, well, it's a venture capitalist ethos in the sense that he, you know, he,
in certain ways, he's invested in Christianity and invested in transhumanism. So, you know, eternal life,
he's got an investment in eternal life and investment in physical immortality. And he's invested in
disaster preparedness, but also willing to invest, which I, as a pundit, was not in the candidacy of
Donald Trump, right? So I think in that sense, yeah, a specific manifesto would limit his capacity
to be sort of poking at a lot of different points of our decadence and seeing where you could
push your finger through. Maybe that's not the right metaphor.
Other than just mentioning the pope, do you think that most young people today could answer
with any kind of specificity, what is the difference between Catholics and Protestants in the United States?
No.
Does that concern you?
Do you care?
Yes, of course.
I mean, what's the difference they should focus on that they're not grasping right now?
In fairness, you don't want to overestimate the capacities of normal human beings in times past, right?
I mean, it's not, it is not the case that there was some golden age of Christian history where, you know, farmers and peasants in rural Germany could,
recite the anathemas of the Council of Trent, right? I mean, this is... But they would read pamphlets
about the an anathomous of the Council of Trent. Well, or they would have, I think, an
intuitive grasp. I mean, I think if you asked a lot of people prior to Vatican, too, what are the
differences between Catholicism and Protestantism? They wouldn't cite the Council of Trent. They would
say, if they were Protestant, that Catholics have a weird superstitious, you know, weird superstitious
as rituals and spooky nuns and priests. And if they were Catholic, they would say, you know,
well, Protestants don't really believe in the Virgin Mary, like to, you know, to be, to be crude.
And I think the, I think it's sort of a signal failure of Catholicism since the 60s is not,
it's not defined necessarily in the inability of people to, you know, recite the catechism,
chapter and verse, but it's more in that sort of cultural and liturgical distinctive area, right? So if you go
into a typical suburban Catholic church, and I've been to Mass and a lot of them, and then you,
it can feel like a mainline church with a tiny bit more formality and a statue of Mary. And that, I think,
is a, you know, it's a sort of a mark of Catholicism's attempt to assimilate to what was
in the 60s still a sort of Protestant mainstream. But now that that Protestant mainstream is
gone, it just leaves Catholicism as this sort of extra mainline denomination. I think that will,
I do, since we're talking about ways out of decadence, I do expect that to change over the
next 50 years because I think Catholicism more than evangelicalism is likely to go into steeper decline
over the next generation institutionally. And what will be left behind will be a weirder and
more distinctive Catholic faith that will have some clearer differences from its Protestant
neighbors than exist right now. But that's a case of sort of shrinking in order to become distinctive
and dynamic again. If you're worried about some aspects of the relative decline of Catholic,
Why make marriage of the priesthood such a central issue for the church?
As you well know, the Orthodox Church in the East has a very different attitude toward marriage of priests.
And they are broadly a Catholic church historically.
Why not side with them?
And they are still distinctive, right?
No one would confuse them with modern American Protestantism.
They are still distinctive.
I mean, there are some wrinkles there.
A lot of the Orthodox churches don't let married men become bishops.
And, you know, it's a little bit more complex.
But I think in general, it's a case of just to analyze it in cultural terms, leaving theology out of it.
I think it's another case of sort of giving up a distinctive, giving up something that separates you and distinguishes you from other churches and suggests to people that there's something interesting and particularist.
going on here. And I mean, then there are sort of structural hurdles, too. The Catholic Church
is not actually set up to provide for married pastors and their families. But I think in a, I mean,
but that would be self-financing, right, if they chose to do it. Well, they'd have to, I mean,
they could try and, you mean, finance themselves. Yeah, that is what. But more people would
become priests if they could marry. See, I'm not completely sure. I think you would see a temporary
a bump in the number of people becoming priests, but in general, I think problems of, you know, there's a problem of talent recruitment for mainline Protestant nominations too. And also, I mean, this is the more Catholic argument, but I think there's a dynamic relationship in a healthy Christianity between a church having strong models of celibate life and strong models of merit.
life. And I think when that goes away, in fact, married life gets harder too because there's this sense, you know, that everyone is supposed to get married. And if you're not married, you're defective. And marriage is the highest form of life. So if your marriage isn't particularly happy, then you should get out of it and find a better marriage. And in fact, I think having a commitment to celibacy at the heart of your religion is better.
for the diversity of human types and experiences than just making marriage the summit of all things.
And it's also, this is more the argument of my last book than this one, but they relate to one
another, I suppose. Part of what I find attractive and persuasive about Catholicism is that
not always and everywhere, but in particular ways it has preserved commitments to the radical
side of the New Testament, the non-Bourgeois side. And I think that's true in the church's
resistance to divorce, which has crumbled a bit under this pontificate. But I think it's true in
issues of celibacy as well. If you read the New Testament, especially if you read the Gospels,
but Paul's letters too, you would not come away convinced that this is a religion that's all
about Ross Douthat and his wife and four kids as like the model Christian, right? The model Christian
is somebody doing something much more radical.
And if you drop that or downgrade it from its position in the church, then a piece of New Testament
radicalism goes away.
And, you know, that New Testament radicalism is literally what I think God has given us
in his most direct and intimate revelation.
So I think it would be a bad idea to jettison it.
Here's a reader question.
quote, I believe 95% of Catholic universities are Catholic in name only.
Does he agree in what direction does he hope for the future of Catholic universities?
Should the church withdraw its sanction?
I don't know about 95%, but I think generally Catholic universities have followed the same path of imitation and assimilation that I was describing earlier.
But say Georgetown, right, that's nominally Catholic.
But if you went there, it would in no way shape your time as a student?
No, I mean, I don't want to be particularly harsh on Georgetown, but I do think it's the Catholic university that's most assimilated to the secular model of elite education.
I think if you went to a school like Notre Dame, it's possible to go through Notre Dame without having, I should say, Notre Dame, not Notre Dame.
might sound pretentious. It's possible to go to Notre Dame and have a very mild exposure to Catholicism, but there is a intense Catholic subculture there. There's a beautiful basilica at the heart of campus. There's still a real Catholic culture, and that's a very successful top-tier university. I think what you see, when I talk to Catholic academics at those kind of schools, they will often say that the thing that the university supplies, in many cases, it's not a Catholic identity.
for every student, but it's a preservation of a Catholic option and a sort of potential encounter
with religion that is not available at a secular university.
So this is what a professor at Boston College, right, which would be cited as another example
of a sort of somewhat secularized Jesuit university said to me.
He said, look, you know, the BC is not going to, you know, become as Catholic as it was
50 years ago overnight, but it's a place where the administration and the president want to
preserve some Catholicism within the school. And to the extent that schools are trying to do that,
I don't think the church should withdraw its sanction. That said, I do think there's a certain
range of schools that are now very much quasi-secularized and it wouldn't be a bad thing
if the church just sort of recognized that and they came to an effective party.
of the ways. But I have more hope for the Notre Dame model than maybe your correspondent does.
Does the Vatican have too few employees? So there's a Slate article. It claimed in 2012, the Roman
Curia has fewer than 3,000 employees. Walmart headquarters at the time had 12,000.
If the church is a quite significant global operation, can it be argued, in fact, that it's not
bureaucratic enough? They don't actually have state capacity in the sense that state capacity
libertarianism might approve of? Right. State capacity libertarianism would disapprove of the Vatican
model. And it reflects the reality that I think media coverage of the Catholic Church doesn't
always reflect, which is that in Catholic ecclesiology and sort of the theory of the institution,
bishops are really supposed to be pretty autonomous in governance. And the purpose of Rome is sort of the
promotion of missionary work and the protection of doctrine, and it's not supposed to be
micromanaging the governance of the world church. Now, I think what we've seen over the last
30 years, and I think it's been thrown into sharp relief by the sex abuse crisis,
is that the modern world may not allow that model to exist, right? That if you have this global
institution that has a celebrity figure at the center of it, who's the focus of endless media
attention. You can't, in effect, get away with saying, well, the Pope is the Pope, but sex abuse is an
American problem. And to that extent, I think, yeah, there is a case that the church needs more
employees and a more efficient and centralized bureaucracy, but then that also co-exist with the
problem of, you know, the model of Catholicism is still a model that was modern in the 16th century.
It's still much more of a court model than a bureaucratic model.
And Pope after Pope has sort of theoretically tried to change this and has not succeeded.
And part of the reality is, as you well know, as a world traveler, the Italians are very good at running courts that exclude outsiders and prevent them from changing the way things are.
done. And so time and again, some Anglo-Saxon or German blunderer gets put in charge of some
Vatican dikastory and discovers that, in fact, the reforms he intends are just not quite possible.
And, you know, in certain ways, that's a side of decadence that you can bemoan, but in certain
ways you have to respect to.
Abortion presumably is an important issue for you. Given that, why not just outright support
President Trump?
That's a good question.
I think the basic answer that I've had is twofold.
One, I've had throughout Trump's ascent and well into his presidency and expectation that
the gap between his skill level and competence and the challenges of being president
was large enough that over a long enough time horizon, he would lead the U.S. into some
sort of catastrophe that would have a dramatically negative effect on the political causes that I care
about even.
But it would have to kill many millions of people to outweigh the expected value of the change
in abortion policy.
But I guess my assumption is that you don't get a substantial and long-lasting change in
abortion policy without a pro-life political coalition that's capable of governing the
country for a long period of time.
And in that sense, maybe I was, maybe I'm read too much into this experience, but I came of age with George W. Bush's presidency, right, who was a pro-life president who put conservative justices on the Supreme Court. And then, you know, his, his foreign policy mistakes and other issues led to his presidency ending in total catastrophe. And this is unprovable. But I think there is some connection between the subsequent
decline of religious affiliation and sort of, you know, the total route of social conservatives
on issues of same-sex marriage and this sense that people had in the mid-2000s, that religious
conservatism was associated with a totally incompetent president and a botched war and then
a financial crisis.
And so I've sort of imagined something similar as the likely endgame for Trump, that
something like to pick an example from the news this winter and likely.
the spring, the coronavirus, that the incapacities of his White House are more likely to lead to
some catastrophic failure that dramatically discredits his party and, you know, destroys his presidency.
Now, that being said, you know, generally the Trump era has been more stable, more sustainably
decadent, if you will, than I expected. And in that sense, I can certainly see why
a certain faction of Never Trump says, well, you know, we overestimated the tail risks of this presidency and things are more stable than we thought. And therefore, we should welcome his judicial appointments and embrace him for a second term. And it, you know, it could be that I sort of do too much cultural analysis in a way, right? I spend too much time thinking about, well, what do, you know, younger people in churches think of the hypocrisy,
involved in evangelical support for Trump and won't that, you know, lead to a further decline
for Christianity that outweighs any gains. And maybe that kind of analysis is sort of, maybe
it's too much analysis. Just two wins might be what matters. Right, right. Maybe there's
Sanders wins. That helps one set of ideas. Yep. And all the other complicated second order effects.
Exactly. And you and you don't know. The pundits mistake is sometimes to try and think 14 steps
ahead and the sort of the partisan mind may have a certain advantage where it just says, no, we
have to win this election and let the future take care of itself. But that still hasn't brought me
around to supporting Trump. But I think my arguments against supporting him are weaker than they were,
again, pending the outcome of whatever happens with the coronavirus.
We live in America that supposedly respects religions. Yet if you were to try to
argue in public that say a child were possessed by demons, you would be mocked and called insane,
whether or not it were true. Where do you personally draw the line that you respect religions,
but are there claims you hear that when you hear them, you think that's so implausible,
it couldn't possibly be true. You file it in the insane category, the way most people, when they
would hear talk of a child being possessed by demons, would think that's insane and not required
by their supposed respect of religions. Do you see what I'm asking? I do. I think it is
quite possible for a child to become possessed by demons. And I actually mildly disagree. I think
in the circles in which you and I move, that claim would be just greeted with automatic mockery.
But I think in American culture writ large, there is plenty of space for at least openness
to ideas of the supernatural and the demonic. That, yeah, I think the mockery is still,
even in our more secularized age, an elite phenomenon. My general,
sense is the, I've struggled to persuade my secular friends of this view, but it's still the old
Chestertonian view that I find the improbable harder to swallow than the impossible, right? So we were
talking about Mormonism earlier, and my objection to Mormonism is not the idea of the Angel
Marani appearing to Joseph Smith. It's the claim that there existed these large-scale civilizations
in Central America, for which we have no archaeological evidence. So I'm much more skeptical of
claims that are should be amenable to real world scientific, archaeological, what have you,
testing and don't pan out than I am to supernatural claims. And again, I recognize that's not,
that's a minority view in our peer group. But I'm, you know, I'm, I'm a pretty convinced
supernaturalist. I think demonic possession, I think the literature on demonic possession is,
I think it's unwise to spend too much time with it because it leads.
to dark places, but I think it's quite convincing that there is something going on there
that is not adequately explained by existing theories of psychology and the human mind.
What's your point estimate of the probability that what we now call UFOs are, in fact,
something interesting and mysterious and related to some kind of life from a distance?
Right now.
My probability that they are something interesting and mysterious is very high.
I would say 80%, 85%, that they're related to life from a distant planet is a lot lower.
I would say quite low, maybe 15, 10, 15%.
That's very high.
That's actually high.
I would probably, I'm going to lose all credibility, so I should go a little lower.
But, I mean, I think there are two things going on with UFOs, right?
One, there is a historical continuity that I find very persuasive between human stories of fairy encounters from the Middle Ages and the pre-modern period and stories of alien abductions, where you have similar depictions of the creatures involved, similar emphasis on trickery and people sort of playing games with human beings.
similar emphasis on sex and sort of quasi-medical experimentation, all of these kind of things.
And what that suggests to me is, on the one hand, that you should assign some probability to the
possibility that there are supernatural beings who like to mess with us, who are neither angelic nor
demonic, but leaving that aside that there is some kind of human experience that we don't
fully understand that is not just made up, that is maybe it's some sort of Jungian unconscious thing
that gets interpreted as aliens in one age and as fairies in another, but is real and interesting, even if the fairies themselves aren't real. That's one area. Then you have the UFOs that we pick up on video, right, that we now actually have, you know, published in my own newspaper. Pretty compelling videographic evidence. It could be that that's one more example of, you know, if the fairies are real, that's this is just one more way they mess with us. I think I would assign us.
slightly higher probability to the weird advanced military technology explanation for those, that they
seem a little different from the UFO abduction stories. But I think there's clearly, well, put it
this way, there are unidentified flying objects that we can see on videos that pilots have seen
that are presumably not a hallucination and therefore must represent one, the supernatural, two,
advanced military technology or three visitors from another planet, right? Yes, three final
questions. But what, wait, but I know it's not my interview, but what is your, what is your assigned
probability of those options for the... It's called conversations with Tyler, right? Not my Tyler.
I said on marginal revolution, I thought it was maybe up to a 5% chance. It was aliens, real beings.
And then I talked myself down to about 1%. But 1% is still quite high. So we should be thinking
and talking about it more. What probability do you assign to the supernatural when you think about
when you think about these.
Not for this in particular, but general.
Like if I came to you and I said, you know, Tyler, I want you to read the literature on hauntings and ghosts, going into reading that literature, what probability do you assign that ghosts are in some sense real?
Yeah.
That's a difficult question because I am so willing to entertain the notion that the true model of physics is so weird.
It could be weirder than religion.
That is fair.
So what you're calling supernatural, I could.
It's a slight pop out, but I'll accept it.
So I don't dismiss the weirdness, but I don't know what should make me call it supernatural for almost tautological reasons.
I think, I mean, that the one of the sort of UFO obsessives who pivoted to this fairy interpretation had basically that view.
He was arguing that it is a parallel, a bizarre parallel dimension being effect.
So I'll allow it.
Three last questions.
As technology advances, won't we need to end most lives by euthanasia?
Not people who fall off cliffs, but you could always hook someone up and keep them going.
So won't euthanasia become, say, the case for 80% of deaths?
I mean, I understand why people are skeptical of it, but I generally buy the distinction that my own church makes between the withdrawal of care and the injection of lethal drugs.
I know there are areas where that line gets blurry, but I think, yes, over a long enough life expectancy horizon, human beings would need to sort of create a culture of refusing and withdrawing care.
But I think that is still different from, at least right now, the means we have that where you're actually actively hastening death through interventions designed to do so.
Last two questions.
First, is Connecticut good?
Yes. Connecticut, so I just did an interview with a very nice reporter for Connecticut Magazine where I was trying to explain, you know, I was saying positive things about Connecticut, but then also saying that it was sort of an example of decadence, right? It's a very wealthy American state that, you know, has a lot of old institutions, Yale University in the city that I live in, that is getting older and has trouble attracting young people and is not a dynamic state.
or not as dynamic as it once was.
But I grew up in Connecticut, so I have that sort of partisanship.
But I like living there.
I like it sort of mix of intimacy and history and the New England landscape.
And I think that if you could rescue Connecticut from decadence, maybe you could rescue the whole world.
Finally, is Lyme disease good?
In the sense that God uses all things for good, yes, but not in any sense besides that.
And that's the next book I'm actually under contract for is about Lyme disease.
And your own experience.
My own experience, but I do think of it in part as my own very small attempt to work against decadence.
If I could convince readers that there are, in fact, better treatments for Lyme disease available
and help people make progress against one particular disease, then maybe that's a more effective anti-deadicance effort than
writing an entire book,
bemoaning the state of civilization.
Ross, thank you very much.
And again, I'd like to recommend his book to you all,
The Decadent Society,
how we became the victims of our own success.
Thank you.
Thank you, Tyler.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
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