Conversations with Tyler - Ross Douthat on Narrative and Religion (Live at Mason)
Episode Date: January 17, 2018Last year, Tyler asked his readers "What Is the Strongest Argument for the Existence of God?" and followed up a few days later with a post outlining why he doesn't believe in God. New York Times colum...nist Ross Douthat accepted the implicit challenge, responding to the second post in dialogic form and arguing that theism warrants further consideration. This in-person dialogue starts along similar lines, covering Douthat's views on religion and theology, but then moves on to more earth-bound concerns, such as his stance on cats, The Wire vs The Sopranos, why Watership Down is the best modern novel for understanding politics, eating tofu before it was cool, journalism as a trade, why he's open to weird ideas, the importance of Sam's Club Republicans, the specter of a Buterlian Jihad, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded January 11th, 2018 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.
Transcript
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Hi, everyone. Conversations with Tyler is coming to New York City.
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For details and to register, visit mercadus.org slash Levine.
Now, onto my conversation with New York Times columnist, Ross Douthett.
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Ross is the youngest person ever to have been an op-ed columnist?
for the New York Times.
You had to start there.
He is one of our best and most important thinkers,
and in March he has a new book coming out called
to Change the Church, Pope Francis and the future of Catholicism.
And just to make this clear, this is the conversation with Ross
I want to have, not the one you want to have.
Ross, welcome. Thank you.
Thank you, Tyler. It's good to be here.
I'd like to start with something quite esoteric.
Now, to prepare for you, I was reading the Calvinist theologian,
Rosh Duni.
and he argues the Council of Chelsedon in 451 AD
actually enabled liberty through its Christology
the notion that you embed in Christianity
salvation through grace rather than through self-deification
and this ends up meaning the state is not the Savior
and the church and state thus eventually end up as opposing principles
and this is a kind of foundation for later individual liberty
now with someone who's both Catholic and who has an interest in
conservative and liberty-related ideas. What is your take on that account?
Sometimes I'm persuaded by a version of it, and sometimes I'm not.
I think that there's a very natural story to tell about Western civilization in which
particular Christian ideas about the individual, the individual's relationship to God,
render unto Caesar, what is Caesar's, and so on, that these sort of embedded ideas
eventually develop into the constituent forms of modern
liberal democracy. And in that story, you could argue either that liberal democracy is a kind of
happy development out of sort of original Christian ideas and Christian thoughts, or that it is a kind of
rebellious stepchild who has, you know, sort of taken over the house and banished the parent to the
attic. And I guess those are sort of views that I toggle back and forth between, depending on what
seems like the state of Western liberalism at any particular moment.
As a Catholic, you have a kind of intermediate view on how important works are for grace.
So you would reject the views of Calvin and Luther, that it's strictly determined by God.
But the Pelagian heresy, that there is no original sin.
Right.
That also is unacceptable to you.
That would lead you to Mormonism or something else.
What makes that intermediate position so compelling to you?
And is it in some way an underlying feature of how you think about politics?
I've never been asked that question.
I mean, I suppose that I'm drawn to the idea that the truth about human existence lies in what can seem like paradoxical formulations.
And this is, of course, a very Catholic in certain ways, certainly G.K. Chestertonian idea.
So I'm just stealing it from other people.
But the idea that various heresies of Christianity, Calvinine,
including, with apologies to my Calvinist friends, tend to take one particular element of
a view that's supposed to be in synthesis and possibly in tension and run with it. And therefore,
the sort of the truth about things lies in a place that may seem slightly contradictory.
And I think this is, you know, this is sort of borne out in many ways in everyday experience,
this kind of both and experience of human existence, the idea, you know, the idea.
that you can't sort of split up grace and works in any kind of meaningful way.
I think it's connected to larger facts about the nature of human existence,
the fact that the sort of the tension between determinism and free will that persists in any
philosophical system, right?
You can get rid of God and stop having these sort of Jansenist Jesuit arguments about predestination
and so on, but you're still stuck with the sort of free will determinism debate.
That debate doesn't go away.
So, yeah, I think that there's a sort of point at the intersection of different ideas that is as close to the truth as our limited mind can get.
And in Christian thought, we call that point orthodoxy.
Now, how that is connected to my political views is a really good question.
I mean, I think that a lot of the time in politics, I suppose I am in certain areas of our politics, I'm looking for that point, I guess you could say.
But that's, but that's mostly true in, no, I guess it's true.
in a lot of places. Like, I think that there is, for instance, I think that the solution to,
and maybe now we're into sort of more Hegelian territory rather than Christian territory,
but there's a solution to a lot of problems in some as yet uncertain synthesis. So I
write a lot about sort of social conservatism and abortion and feminism and these kind of issues.
And I do think that somewhere out there in that zone of argument, there is a synthesis of
the best social conservative ideas and the best feminist insights that I personally haven't been
able to grasp yet and probably am not necessarily equipped to do so. And also that our society
as a whole hasn't grasped, but that that is sort of where the actual truth lies. And you can sort of
distill it in certain slogan-ready ways like saying, well, you know, you need a sort of a more
feminist pro-life movement or something like that. And those slogans only get you partway there.
But yeah, I do think that that sort of idea of synthesis is somewhat important to the somewhat speculative political writing that I do.
But as you know, there's a tendency within Catholicism to try to use Hegelian arguments to push a very liberal version of Catholicism.
Well, this thing is going to keep on evolving.
There's no way into the process.
So we can get away from your idea of Catholicism as spanning the generations as something continuous and unified.
Are you worried you'll become too Hegelian or are you not yet Hegelian enough?
I mean, I think the Hegelian insight can be true in the development of political forms and sort of responses to problems that social changes create, problems that technological changes create.
And you can sort of hold that view while also holding the view that the Hegelian dialectic can't be usefully applied to certain ideas and certain truths.
And, you know, you can sort of take extreme examples and say, well, there isn't a synthesis to be had to violate Godwin's law sort of early in our conversation.
There isn't a synthesis to be had with Nazi Germany, right?
There are certain ideas about racial hierarchies and so on that are not part of some synthesis that you need to sort of work through and grasp.
And then be a Catholic, I think, is to believe that there is sort of a larger body of revealed truths that have to remain as a grounding for civilization, Christian civilization and so on, even as you sort of grope forward towards programmatic practical solutions and sociological solutions to sort of new.
problems that emerge. We all know the Marcionite heresy, the view from early Christianity,
that the Old Testament should be abandoned. At times, even Paul seems to ascribe to what later was
called the Marcionite heresy. Why is it a heresy? Why is it wrong? It's wrong because it takes the
form, well, I mean, it's wrong for any number of reasons, but in the context of the conversation
we're having, it's wrong because it tries to basically take one of the things that Christianity is
trying to hold in synthesis and run with it to the exclusion of everything else and to sort of
essentially to sort of solve problems by sort of cutting things away. So the, you know, the Marcionite
thesis is basically, well, if you read the New Testament, Jesus offers you a portrait of God
that seems different from the portrait of God offered in Deuteronomy. Therefore, these things are
in contradiction. Therefore, if you believe that Jesus' portrait of God is correct, then the
Deuteronomic portrait of God must be false. Therefore, the God of the Old Testament must be a
wicked demiurge, et cetera, et cetera. And the next thing you know, you're ascribing to, again, a kind of
what is the Aryan-Kristianity of the Nazis, if not the Marcionite heresy given form in the
1930s and 1940s. And so the Orthodox Christian says, no, that sort of any seeming tension between
the Old Testament and the New, any seeming contradiction is actually suggesting that we need to
look for a kind of synthesis between them and for a kind of a sense in which there is not
contradiction but fulfillment in some way, which...
Bringing us back to Hegelian death. Yes, yes. Now, to prepare...
No, no, there's a, I mean, no, and you're absolutely right. There is a kind of, in order
to get to the orthodoxy of Nysia and Chalcedon, there's a sense in which there's a kind
of Hegelian fulfillment. The issue there, though, is just that the Orthodox Christian
believes that at a certain point, the revelation is actually final, that God essentially
doesn't play tricks on you. And this is sort of, I think, an important idea that too much
Higalianism leads you to the point where you're saying, well, what God is saying in one era
just doesn't hold true in another. And that gets you to a point where it's a kind of dishonesty,
I think, necessarily imputed to God in that scenario, that he's sort of withholding, giving you
a revelation, but he's constantly withholding for, you know, for the future. And I think the God that I
would prefer to believe in does give, when he says he's giving final answers, he actually means it.
To prepare for this conversation, I read some more Catholic theology. So I read Hans Urs von Balthasar,
Karl Rannar, Heath Kongard, Hans Kung, Edward Stilbeck. You're way ahead of me then. Others, but let me give
you my impression, and I hope this doesn't offend anyone. It mostly really bored me. But when I went
back and re-read parts of the Bible, the New Testament, it didn't bore me at all. It was absolutely
fascinating, gripping. I wanted to go back and read it yet again. Now, given that theology
comes through the church, is this not in some way evidence for a version of Protestantism being
correct, or do you have a different reaction to these texts? Is it all right to say that I have a
similar reaction to many of them, or will that, I mean, I, it's a dangerous thing to say,
because in my position as a sort of hack journalist who writes about Catholic controversies,
I'm often getting criticized by professional theologians for lacking adequate theological training and so forth.
So if I admit that I find many theologians dense and boring, that will be used against me when my book comes out in a few months.
But I guess it's too late.
So having said that, no, I think that the heart of Catholicism is found in the link between the New Testament and the form and structure and ordinary life of the church.
and what theologians are doing is very important, but it is far from the most interesting and
essential part of the Catholic project. So to the extent that there's sort of an aha moment
for someone sort of thinking intellectually about the connection between the New Testament and the Catholic
Church, it should come in the experience of looking at the Eucharist, looking at what goes on
in Catholic churches every day around the world, and connecting that to the startling and
and scandalous things that Jesus says about his, you know, about his body and blood in the New
Testament, connecting it to the form of the Last Supper, connecting it to that story. And the theological
commentary on all of this can be fascinating and theological controversies can be very interesting.
But that, I mean, to me, the sort of, you know, the really, yeah, the sort of the heart of
the connection between Catholicism as a religion and the startling, striking.
world of the New Testament lies more in liturgical life, the lives of the saints, the sort of
everyday stuff of the Catholic Church rather than the abstract arguments. I'll also say that the
post-60s Catholic theologians are also maybe a little more dense in certain ways. I mean,
there's a good piece by Rusty Reno, is the editor of First Things that he wrote a little while
ago, about sort of arguing that a lot of those Catholic theologians, the ones that you read,
it sounds like are working, they're working as sort of critics of a sort of existing tomistic,
sort of Thomas Aquinas rooted foundation in Catholic theology that they felt had gotten very stale and
very boring. And they were right, I think, in certain ways. But the problem is they're also
writing on the assumption that their reader sort of understands this foundation, that they're sort
of operating in a landscape of critique and commentary and so on that assumes a kind of 1880s or
1940s Catholic education in their readers. And so the sort of collapse, which they hastened in certain ways of
that tomistic consensus, means that in certain ways their works don't make that much sense.
They're sort of driving forward, but there's a missing synthesis that you need to sort of
understand what they're driving at sometimes. But again, that's a more theologically learned take
than my own, which sometimes matches yours. Let me ask you my number one question about you.
and maybe it's too big a question for you to answer,
but it's what I've been thinking about for the last few weeks.
The apparent, I wouldn't say lack of interest in theology,
but you don't write about theology much in its theological aspects.
It may be part of a sociological narrative.
But what strikes me, rereading everything you've written as a whole,
is how interested you are in aesthetics and narrative,
film, television, and novels.
This is elevated.
So if you read St. Augustine, as you know,
in the confessions. He's very skeptical about theater. It's potentially a form of idolatry.
It distracts people from God. And theology is weaker in your approach, and narrative and aesthetics
are stronger. And this strikes me ultimately as a kind of theological decision. So in the
Catholicism of you, what's the theological basis of narrative and aesthetic themselves being
elevated over theology? That's what's been bugging me. Okay. And maybe if you could address that,
I would be happy. I'll venture a theory again about something that
I haven't thought about before you raised it 30 seconds ago. So, so please take this with a
grain of salt. But I think that you could make the argument that narrativity is the way in
which God has revealed himself in the world. And from a Christian perspective, from a Judeo-Christian
perspective, you know, the Old and New Testaments contain a lot of theologizing, but they are
above all narratives. They are stories of a chosen people. There are travails and betrayals and
wars and miseries and judgments and all the rest. And then there's a story in the New Testament that's,
you know, as the cliche goes, the greatest story ever told. And I mean, I think you're right about me.
When I read the New Testament, I want to read the Gospels much more than I want to read St. Paul.
And I find the Gospels much more interesting than St. Paul. And that's obviously not true of
everybody or we wouldn't have been having wars about, you know, what Paul meant in Christianity
for the last 2,000 years. But I think to the extent that I would defend my own instance.
and my own approach, it's in, you know, that, I mean, sometimes I say this to my children when I'm sort of
clumsily trying to indoctrinate them in my faith. I say, you know, you were living inside a story,
and God is the storyteller. And again, this is not a thought original to me at all, but
God is the storyteller, and you are an actor within that story. And the difference is that in
this story, Christians would say God himself enters the story. He becomes a character
in the play, which is a very difficult thing for playwright to normally do. But that that story,
the fact that God is a storyteller tells us something reasonable about how best to approach him,
and that it is not just okay, but completely plausible to approach him through narrative,
through poetry, through art, through stories, and so on. And there is a sense, I think this
idea I'm stealing from Alan Jacobs, who wrote a biography of C.S. Lewis, but I think there's a real
sense in which, and maybe this speaks to the failure of Western theology over the last 50 years,
but Christians in the West, in the United States, sort of well-educated, would-be intellectual
Christians tend to be heavily influenced by storytellers, heavily influenced by Lewis,
heavily influenced by J.R. O'Tolkin, heavily influenced even by Dorothy Sayers and her detective
stories, heavily influenced by Chesterton's father Brown stories. I think it's probably fair
to say that Chesterden's father, Brown, stories had as much.
influence on my worldview as his more sort of polemical and argumentative writings. And again,
I think therein lies some important insight that I haven't thought through, but I think you're
correctly gesturing at about sort of a particular way of thinking about God and theology that isn't
unique to Christianity, but that it's strongly suggested by just the structure of the revelation
that we have. But Marilynne Robinson has a line, I think, in Gilead about, you know, he's,
one of the characters is imagining that, you know, this life is like the epic of heaven,
that we're living in the Iliad or the Odyssey of heaven.
This is the story that will be told in the streets.
And I think that's a very powerful and resonant and interesting way thinking about our lives,
but thinking about sort of the Christian view of history that we're living inside us,
a very interesting story that people will be, you know, talking about in heaven for a long time.
Now, you've been very critical of Angela Merkel's decision to take in so many Syrian refugees into Germany, the heart of Europe. And of course, many of those refugees are Muslims. So when I read some of what you write, I sense a kind of tension between Catholicism, which is universal in some important ways, but also a kind of Eurocentricism and a fear that the longstanding historical connection between Catholicism, Christianity, and Europe will be broken by migration patterns, by changes in the
the European Union. At the margin, how much tension do you see between a kind of Eurocentrism
that's in most of our thinking in the West and Catholicism itself?
There's some substantial tension, I think. I think that the situation in Europe is a very
challenging one for anyone to think through, but particularly for a Catholic, because you have
this sort of, it's the ancestral homeland of my faith. And we're talking about stories.
The story of Catholicism is a European story for much of its history.
Much of the great dramas, the great debates and so on take place in that continent.
And when I sort of think, you know, when I think of figures that I identify with, when I think of sort of the writers and artists and so on that I relate to, they are primarily European just because of that synchronicity, because the faith is Europe and Europe is the faith historically.
But now we're in an era when that's not really true.
Europe is sort of a museum of Catholicism in this weird way.
You know, with some exceptions, but particularly in Western Europe, it's a museum.
And the culture of Europe is in certain ways hostile and becoming increasingly hostile to traditional religious faith.
And at the same time, you have this sort of alternative of Islam whose potential power and potential ability to reshape Europe is sort of ambiguous.
It's not at all clear to me how powerful or how substantial that influence would be.
And so the Catholic is sort of given, at least at the moment, this sort of strange choice.
Would you rather have this museum of your faith be preserved in its existing form, in a sort of post-Catholic, maybe still residually Catholic situation?
Or would you have it be changed dramatically by the entrance into Europe of the faith that you're, you know, that Catholicism contended with for world mastery for hundreds.
hundreds and thousands of years. And I, I, that's, that's a strange choice to be placed to someone,
I think. And it's further complicated by the fact that sort of overshadowing that particular
tension is the reality that a large share of the potential long-term migration to Europe could
be from Catholic and evangelical portions of Africa, which is sort of, you know, it sort of adds
a further layer, layer of dilemma. And so my, my reaction to Merkel,
Merkel's move is not, it sort of, it sits at like one remove from that debate. My reaction to
Merkel's move was very much as sort of a political analyst who thinks to myself, you know,
stability is better than chaos, as flawed as the liberal order is in various ways. I want it to
hold up. Therefore, I don't want leaders to make these big dramatic moves that I think, you know,
could have obviously destabilizing, an obviously destabilizing impact. So I've been skeptical for a long time
of the sort of extreme sort of, you know, Mark Stein or beyond Mark Stein analysis that Europe is
inevitably going to go Muslim and so on. But having Merkel make a decision like she did sort of
pushes me slightly in a Steinian direction probably. It makes me think, you know, Europe's elites are
not sort of reckoning with how big, you know, how fast demographic transformations can change societies,
divide societies, create space for all kinds of extremisms to flourish. That's sort of my columnist's
pundits answer. But I don't know exactly, I don't know exactly how to connect it to this
deeper question of what, what kind of future of Europe, given the available option, should
a Catholic desire? Because, you know, to some extent, if you're asking me, would I rather
be, Europe be atheistic and sort of effectively anti-Catholic for the next thousand years,
or rather have it be Muslim? Perhaps I'd rather have it be Muslim, right? I mean, from,
from a Catholic perspective, a sincere Islamic faith is preferable to a sort of truly post-
Catholic landscape. But at the same time, we're not being fully presented with that choice either.
So anyway, I'm just suggesting various uncertainties, I guess. Your forthcoming book gives an
estimate that perhaps by 2040, there will be 460 million African Catholics, twice as many as in
Europe. Arguably, they go to mass much more often. So if you imagine a future Catholicism,
where the letter of James is more central to the Bible, there's more exorcism, more fasting,
Holy Water is more important. There's a more magical view of the Eucharist. Arguably a kind of
supernaturalism is more primary. Would your reaction just be, well, my loyalties to the church,
so I'm just going to go with that flow? Or do you feel there's some more Eurocentric view of
Catholicism that's being lost in a way we would want to fight for? Both. I mean, I would think
that the future of an African Catholicism, of a sort of Africanized Catholicism, is better
than many, many futures that I can imagine.
But I would still be sorrowful if sort of particularly European distinctives that within the church
are lost in that transformation.
I mean, I think if I were playing the optimist, I would say that there is a sort of
Euro-African future for the church where sort of African forces, African migration,
African ideas, African leaders sort of help in renew.
and enrich and sort of return European Catholics to their faith. And you can find sort of small,
strange examples of this, right? Like Robert Serra, who is this Ghanaian cardinal, who's sort of seen as
kind of a partial antagonist to Pope Francis in certain intra-Catholic debates, he went to the
Vonday in France for the anniversary of the Vandé and sort of, you know, and gave a speech there
sort of hailing the resistance of Catholics to the revolutionary regime in France in the 18th century,
which is kind of this extraordinary moment,
not anything you would have imagined 150 or 200 years ago,
and a kind of moment that, yeah,
lets you briefly imagine that kind of, you know,
that there could be a Catholicism
that sort of revived certain European elements
in the process of becoming more African.
But that's a very, from a Catholic perspective,
optimistic view and the likelihood
is that things will be more chaotic and messier and so on.
But, yeah, I mean, but ultimately my first loyalty is
or tries to be to the church rather than to European culture.
So I would certainly take an African Catholicism over, again, the museum that we have in Europe today.
When you see how much behavior, Islam, or some forms of Islam motivate, I mean, do you envy it?
Do you think, well, gee, what is it that they have that we don't?
What do we need to learn from them?
Or, I mean, what's your gut emotional reaction?
I think that Western civilization is decadent and that decadence has,
virtues among them, you know, the absence of the kind of massive bloody civil wars
currently roiling the Middle East. But at the same time, there is a sense in which, yeah,
I mean, there's parts of Islam that are sort of closer to asking the most important questions
about existence than a lot of people are in the West. And, you know, asking important questions
carries major risks and incites levels of extremism that we've sort of tamped down and put away.
that desire for the extreme and the absolute and the truth about things that animates some of the best and some of the worst parts of Islam, I think that's, it's better for human beings to have that desire than not.
There was once a long blog post you wrote really in response to me.
And in that subject of various conditions, too complicated to explain, but I'll mention them so you're not misquoted.
You at least mention the possibility of a 10% chance that there's some truth to a synthesis of Judaic, Christian, and Muslim ideas.
is. In that synthesis, highly conditional within your discourse, what's the element from Islam that
appeals to you? I guess when I think about the synthesis in that case, I gave it quite a low
probability because it seems to me that Judaism and Christianity make, and again, this comes
back to sort of the storytelling issue maybe, but I think there's a more organic and obvious
unity in that story than there is in the combined story. I don't think I have a certain answer. I can tell
you things as I just, I suppose, started to that, you know, that I, that I admire within the
Muslim world. But I can't tell you sort of definitively, and this is, I guess, you know,
why I am a Christian and not a Muslim. I can't tell you what I think, how I think that story would
fit together. If God's revelation to Muhammad were a, you know, as sort of as definitive
a revelation as the revelations of Christianity and Judaism, I can't make that story.
story works. So the story then has to be sort of bigger. I guess that's, that for, for there to be a
sort of Judeo-Christian Islamic synthesis, then it does await some further revelation that would
make more sense of the Islamic story to me. As you know, I come at, all of this is very much
an outsider. So let me ask a very naive question. If I look at the Catholic Church, there's a
movement, as you know, called Opus Day. The priests of that movement, they seem to be less caught up
in sex scandals. Parts of the movement seem to have some understanding of what you might broadly
call conservative economics. In Spanish politics in the 30s, 40s and 50s, they were actually
considered a liberalizing force, so they don't have to be seen as reactionary per se. So why aren't
they simply the good guys? They don't come up much in your writings. I'm reading you, and I think,
where's Opus Day? I mean, I'm pro Opus Day overall. I think that, I guess that there is,
It seems to me sometimes that Opus Day is a particular, it's a particular apostolate, right?
And the particular idea of Opus Day is that you are, you know, it's not primarily supposed to be a priestly order,
even though there are, of course, priests of Opus Day, that the central idea, and with apologies to Opus Day members,
if I'm getting this at all wrong, but the central idea is that it's a ministry, it's an apostolate for lay people who are at work in the business world,
the journalism world, the corporate world, the communications world, and so on. And as such, I think
it, you know, it has, it has an admirable and important vocation in the life of the world and the life
of the church. But it doesn't, it seems to me that in part that there is a sort of set apart,
not set apartness exactly, but there, there's an element of, well, I think a big part of the
crisis in Catholicism in the last 60 or 70 years is can simply be,
distilled to a collapse in the sense of the importance of religious life, of consecrated life,
of, you know, the priesthood, religious orders, sisters and brothers, and so on.
And it's as easy for me to say because I have, you know, I did not become a priest and so on.
It's always always easier once you haven't become a priest to say, oh, well, you need more people to
become priests.
But to the extent that that's true, Opus Day seems like it's very well tailored in certain
ways to sort of secular society as it exists right now. But I think the ultimate revival of the
church is much, is likely to come from a slightly more radical view of the proper relation to
the world. That essentially what the church needs now is the equivalent of the Franciscans,
the Dominicans, the Jesuits, these kind of orders from previous eras that are sort of, they,
they aren't, you know, I mean, Opus Day sort of asks, it asks lay people to,
to take vows of various kinds.
You know, sort of celibate laypeople are part of the Opus Day structure.
And I think that there is essentially there's just sort of a straightforward need
for a more old-fashioned model of just sort of priests and nuns.
Like the church needs more priests and nuns.
Catholicism can't function without priests and nuns,
which doesn't take anything away from what Opus Day is doing.
And of course, they have many vocations and many priests.
But when I, yeah, I mean, to the extent that it,
It doesn't get the due maybe that it deserves in my writings.
That's probably maybe the root of it.
Again, you're teasing out things I haven't even begun to think about before.
There's no particular reason why, yeah.
I mean, you know, the church, the sacramental life of the church depends on a strong priesthood.
It depends on men becoming priests.
It depends on religious orders and so on.
And so full revival in the church, I think, would need a kind of priestly center to it in a way and not just a focus on apostolets and evangelization within the world.
Like Catholicism has been caught up in the idea that this is the age of the laity for the last 50 or 60 years.
I think the age of the laity has kind of been a disaster for the church in certain ways.
Here's a question from a reader, and I'm stringing together a few different sentences, something like,
Is conservatism always particularist and local? Can there ever be a universalist conservative position?
Is the phrase Christian conservative an oxymoron because Christianity, like Islam, is a universalist faith that seeks to convert every soul on earth?
Isn't the word conservative better suited for a more eloof, inegalitarian, less aggressive religions such as Hinduism,
which are less insistent on natural right? How would you respond to that?
I think conservatism is particularist, sort of by definition, yes.
And I think that every form of conservatism is going to be different depending on the cultural context.
I think, you know, conservatism in America at its best is trying to preserve a kind of, you know, a kind of American exceptionalism that doesn't sort of have applications, really, when you're thinking about what a German conservatism would be or a Russian conservatism and so on.
And in that sense, you know, a Christianity can only be.
be conservative in sort of provisional and context-bound ways, right? Like in a culture that was
universally Christian and is in the process of ceasing to be so, then Christianity, then the phrase
conservative Christian makes a lot of sense in the sense that you're trying to, you have a
universal faith that has sort of taken over a particular piece of the world, and you're trying
to sort of preserve its influence and power over that piece. But that's always contingent
and temporary. And yes, Christianity is at its root a more radical religion. Now we have two
porcelain bunnies here on the table with us, and those are to refer to a novel Watership Down
that you once called, quote, the best modern novel about politics. Why is this the case?
That was maybe an overstatement. But I think Watership Down, you know, we live in an age of
intense attention paid to children's books and young adults' books by people who are adults.
and there's a lot of, I think, reasonable controversy over whether that's a good thing necessarily.
But I've been sort of always disappointed that there hasn't been a kind of sustained watership-down revival because it's such a great book.
And it's a book about a founding, right?
It's a book about it's connected in a sense to the kind of things that the Straussians are always arguing about and so on.
You know, what does the founding mean and so on?
But you have a group of rabbits who go forth and encounter different models of political order,
different ways of relating to humankind, this sort of shadow over rabbit kind at any point.
You have a, you know, you have a Warren that has essentially surrendered itself to humanity
and exist as a kind of breeding farm.
And you have a Warren that's run as a fascist dictatorship, essentially.
And then you have sort of this attempt to form a political community that, you know, is somewhere in between the two.
getting back to our, you know, this sort of Hegelian synthesis and so on. And you have sort of
of these, you know, this very primal narrative where the problem is, of course, that they don't
have any females. And so there's sort of this competition for reproductive power that's
carried out between these different warrens where the rabbits from the good Warren have to literally
not kidnap because the does come willingly, but sort of steal women from the fascist
dictatorship, which maintains a ruthless control over reproduction. So there's just a lot of
fascinating stuff there.
it's all interspersed with storytelling. There's this, you know, these sort of rabbit folk tales.
So narrative again. Adam narrative again that Richard Adams came up with that are just brilliant
about El Arara, the great rabbit, you know, sort of folk hero and his relationship, you know,
there is actually sort of the rudiments of a rabbit theology in Watership Down. Like how would,
how would rabbits think about God, right? How would rabbits think about their proper relationship to
God. What kind of myths would they develop to explain their position in the world as opposed to
every other creature? And it's all, yeah, it's all quite brilliant. It's a great novel. And I, in fact,
I reread it last year and it was still quite great. And then there's even, right, and then there's
even sort of a mystical element. The book begins with a rabbit, this rabbit Fiverr, who is sort of a
runt, who has visions. And the whole founding is sort of based on various prophecies and visions that he has
throughout the beginnings of this rabbits warren that these rabbits go out and found. So he has a vision
of apocalypse. So, you know, there's an Aeneid element, right, clearly, where it's probably he uses quotes
from the Aeneid. He has quotes before every chapter, but where it's, you know, the city falls and you have to go
found a new city, and there's sort of religious visions along the way that relate to the legitimacy of the
founding. And there's a tension between, sorry, I'm rambling, but you've got to be going. There's this
tension, there's this great tension between Hazel and Bigwig, who are the two sort of leaders of
the city that's being founded. And Bigwig is, he was a member of the Ausla, which is the sort of
rabbit martial order. And everyone assumes when they sort of meet this group of rabbits that he is the
leader. But in fact, the leader is Hazel, who is this rabbit, who is, you know, neither the visionary
nor the military leader, but just sort of, he's the politician and he's good at it. And the
success of the Warren is based on ultimately the subordination of Bigwig and the
marshal and the religious to sort of the politician. So, you know, the next time you have
Peter Thiel here for one of these conversations, you can really press him on the sort of, you know,
if there's a Gerardian element in Watership, I mean, there's a lot further to go with this,
but I've probably gone far enough. Your wife Abigail Tucker has published a famous book about
cats. What's the biggest disagreement you have with her about cats?
I mean, I think, well, I need to be, I need to be a little careful here because it's, it's, I mean, Abby, Abby, when we met and got married, loved cats. And I always sort of admired cats from it. No, I liked, I was a cat person who admired their sort of singular standoffishness and so on. And I think in certain ways, writing the book about cats brought her around to something closer to my view. So she, she, she's, she's,
started the book shortly after we started having children. And one of the interesting things that she
sort of realized was how much of her reaction to cats was a sort of displaced child reaction that cats
have these faces that, you know, look like infant's faces and have the eyes and the, you know,
the sort of wide faces and they meow in this way that approximates an infant cry. And they
essentially hijack the maternal instinct. So she had sort of maternal feelings towards cats. But in the
process of having actual children and writing the book, I think she,
came to an appreciation of them more as these sort of fascinating apex predators. That's sort of
the theme of the book, which you should all read. It's much more interesting than late 20th
century Catholic theology. But it's the theme of the book is this idea that, you know, the sort
of cuddly fur baby in your room is an apex predator who has taken over the world through
its relationship to human beings. And I think that was my view all along. So really we've ended up on,
we've sort of smoothed out our fundamental disagreement by the process of having her learn more
about cats than anyone could ever possibly imagine knowing.
As you may know, we often in the middle have a segment overrated versus underrated.
Been dreading it, yes.
And of course, feel free to pass.
Let's start with the TV show, The Sopranos.
Overrated or underrated?
Very slightly underrated.
Why?
I think that the sort of the proliferation of soprano's imitators and there were a lot of people
who wanted to like the wire more than the Sopranos because the wire was sort of sociological and political in a way the Sopranos wasn't. And so there was a certain number of people who should have known better who convinced themselves that the wire was a better show than the Sopranos, which is not.
The Spranos is more theological, and it's more personal and psychological. I mean, it is, the characters on the wire are fascinating, but they are, when you meet them, you know, you sort of know who they are. I mean, it is Dickensian in that sense, the sort of endless jokes about the Dekensian.
Enzian element on the wire are right. And Dickens is a great novelist, and the wire is a great show.
But there is a depth to much of the Sopranos that I think is not equaled by the wire and hasn't
quite been equaled in any show since. So, but only very, I mean, you know, people love the wire,
so it can only be very slightly underrated. I mean, people love the Sopranos.
Evelyn-ois, Bride said revisited.
Overrated.
Why?
There's a little too much sentimentality in the, in the Catholicism.
and the sort of Honor trilogy is a little more cold-eyed and therefore slightly better.
A side question, if you think about a lot of the Catholic authors, Walker Percy, Graham Green, Flannery O'Connor, Gene Wolfe, Louise Erdrich,
do you feel as a whole Catholicism is sufficiently well represented in literature,
or in a sense are you a bit let down by the aggregate weight of the better-known Catholic novels?
No, I think it's well represented, and I think that the decline in sort of Catholicism's importance in literature,
since that Waugh, Green, Golden Age has happened in parallel with the decline of literature's
cultural importance in certain ways. Some of it depends on whether you claim Shakespeare for the
Catholics or not, which is a lively. It's been a while since I've been a live, but I want to,
yeah, but it's been a while since I really dug into that debate. But I'd like to. And I think that
actually does, in a weird way, tip things, you know, in certain ways when you're talking about
the scale of things. But no, I mean, I'm that the period
that produced Waugh and Green and a lot of those writers is in certain ways one of my favorite
periods in modern literature. And even the writers in that era who are not practicing Catholics
seem to me to be influenced in different ways. But like, I mean, Hemingway and Fitzgerald in
different ways, for instance, Hemingway is writing in a Catholic cultural context in a lot of his
stories. And Fitzgerald is, of course, a lapsed Catholic of a certain kind. So I think
Catholicism hangs in an interesting way over that whole first half of the 20th century period of
literature. And I think that's the best recent period of literature. So I'll claim some chauvinistic
pride. Elgar's oratorio, dream of gerontius. Pass. What music then best express is God?
In musical terms, I'm a bit of a Philistine. I like, you know, a lot of, well, this is, again,
you're going to get me on narrative every time. I like a certain, I like a lot of sort of, sort of
folk country kind of music. I don't know, I don't know that I would make any special
theological claims for it generally. But that's sort of my, my musical tastes run to, I don't even
know how to say this without being embarrassing, but like Natalie Merchant, that kind of thing.
And I don't, I haven't thought through the theological dimension except I do like some of
the stories, the storytelling and country music. The Andrew Lloyd-Weber musical, Jesus Christ
superstar.
It's been a while, but I'll say slightly underrated just for kicks.
What should we infer from the narrative superiority of Dante's Inferno within the
Divine Comedy, but of course feel free to challenge the premise?
No, I won't challenge the premise.
I think that there is a sort of sincere limit to human imagination when it comes to
contemplating the idea of the beatific vision and so on, and that that comes across.
cross. We don't know how to tell stories about the story outside our story in quite the same way.
And, you know, the Inferno is telling a story about the world that we're all familiar with,
and that's easier. Which American demographic will start the next Great Awakening?
Let's say Asians just to be provocative. Okay. Good answer. In your book...
And if you ask me which Asians, I'm really... In your book with our common friend, Ryan Salam,
you develop a philosophy sometimes called the Reformicons,
and you make the point that Republicans ought to try harder
to address what are sometimes called Sam's Club Republicans,
lower-income groups who have been hurting in some ways
due to economic trends.
When you look at the last year to a year-and-a-half
or two years of our politics,
does part of you want to turn back
and have politics more focused on elites once again?
And does any part of you feel
that trying to address Sam's Club,
Republicans, Democrats, independence, that there's a danger there that we hadn't seen before, or no?
No, I think that you can't escape in a democratic society. You can't escape the demos.
And so attempts to sort of maintain elite control over politics that don't address deep, profound, systemic social problems are doomed to eventually produce things like the Trump phenomenon.
And so, you know, it might, it didn't, of course, in sort of a narrow moment by moment way during the campaign, if you followed my mostly wrong commentary during Trump's march to the nomination, I was, I was all for sort of elite energy being expended in that moment to sort of to block Trump. And, you know, the point, the point of elites is to prevent manifestly unfit people from becoming president. But if there's a larger systemic elite failure,
then, you know, then things like that will happen.
And so the way to avoid that situation is for elites to focus, again, to sort of care about what's going on with the demos,
with the actual people out in actual America.
And that's something I don't think Republicans were very good at before Trump.
And I don't think it's something they're particularly good at under Trump.
But, and I think had they been better at it, the Trump phenomenon would at least have been different than it was.
CRISPR is a new technology that has made significant progress lately. Maybe it will never allow us to deliberately engineer the entire human or the entire human baby, but it seems plausible to believe it could lead to some kind of slow genetic drift. In a way, that would be in some manner planned or programmed by human beings. For you, is this a kind of nightmare, or does this possibly have an upside or even a utopian side?
I'm skeptical of its utopian side. I don't think it has to be a nightmare.
But I think that there has to be, I think that there is a deep aversion, particularly in the United States, but elsewhere as well, to exercising political control over technologies.
And I think the challenge of the next 100 to 500 years of human history is getting better at exerting political control over technologies and sort of preventing actual nightmare scenarios.
And I mean, I feel this in certain ways with computers, the Internet virtual reality.
and so on. I think that we're, that to me is a more immediate sort of source of anxiety than
genetic engineering. I think that we're going to wake up in 20 or 30 years and be, well,
we may not wake up, but I would like to think that we'll wake up in 20 or 30 years and say,
why were we putting all of our children in front of these screens for so much of their
childhood? And shouldn't this be something that we had exerted actual control over instead of
just sort of leaving it to some combination of experiment and market forces and sort of governments
wanting to be hip and cool and buying a lot of Chromebooks that Microsoft wanted to unload and so on.
So I could see something similar happening with genetic technology, but I think bringing technology under control
so that sort of the more radical genetic experiments are limited and happening sort of in happening at the margins, basically,
is that should actually be the goal.
I think it doesn't mean that we could actually succeed,
but I think it's a reasonable goal to set.
What do you think we'll see is the main cost 30 years from now
from letting our children sit behind screens for so many hours a day?
I think it's bad for human imagination,
for normal relationships,
for appreciating reality as it actually exists.
I think the reason we may not see costs
is that it has a sort of numbing effect in certain ways on human behavior,
that it doesn't necessarily lead to sort of egregious acting out of the kind
that leads to, you know, crime waves or political tumult or anything like that.
So the costs, I think the costs are likely to be felt in,
as I think they're already to some extent being felt in sort of increased mental disturbance
on the margins, difficulty forming marriages, families, normal human relationships,
sort of and and more sort of more cultural despair, I think.
As you know, euthanasia is now relatively easy in both the Netherlands and Switzerland.
What do you feel is the intellectual and or moral error behind this reality?
And I take it you do view this as an error.
Yes, I do.
I think that, you know, it's a, it's an example, I suppose,
to go back to the very beginning of our conversation of where this sort of liberal view
of rights has so far escaped its Christian origins as to become, you know, a kind of a vision of
self-ownership that I think is not actually true to human existence, true to human experience.
And yeah, I mean, I don't, I think that the case against suicide is quite similar to the
case against murder. And I think our drift away from recognizing that is sort of a case study
in the working out of certain liberal ideas
that have gotten far enough from the truth
as to just be false.
Religion aside, learning to tie your shoelaces aside,
what did you learn from your mother?
I suppose I learned this folds in religion.
So I apologize.
It's cheating a little bit.
But we spent a lot of time.
My mother had health issues when I was young,
And we ended up as religious as we were in part because of, you know, sort of healing services that she went to because she was ill or because she had friends who recommended them.
But there was a sort of wider orbit to that where we ate, you know, health food long before health food was cool.
We ate tofu and you could only get tofu by going to the back of a sort of weird health food store.
And it would be in these sort of vats of water and you'd pick up these huge blocks of tofu with top.
like people pulling icebergs out of 19th century ponds in Vermont. So I would say that between
the religious element and the sort of strange world of health food, you know, you'd go to a
health food store and you'd have the health food restaurant here and you'd have the New Age bookstore
next to it. They'd always be attached. And, you know, you would always have the same sort of books.
You'd have the Utney Reader and all those kinds of magazines. But at the same time, I was having a
sort of in certain ways, conventional, upper middle class, southern Connecticut background.
And I think I had that sort of weird combination of, you know, sort of normalcy in certain ways,
religious experiments over here, sort of dietary experiments that blended into weird cultural
experiments over there. It gave me, you know, generally an appreciation for sort of the weird
diversity of America that I think I wouldn't have gotten if my mother hadn't been ill and
sought out strange cures and so on. And it also gave me an appreciation for the fact that,
you know, there can be things that are true about the universe that are not available
through the experience of sort of expert consensus and so on. And these, we were very much
outside the mainstream during my childhood. And the fact that,
that, you know, there was a lot of lies and nonsense and BS outside the mainstream,
but there were also things that I've held on to and think are true that, you know,
that's had a fairly powerful effect on my thinking.
Not always, you know, I mean, I, for instance, like I have a, like with the anti-vaccine
debates, for instance, right?
I mean, the anti-vaccine side seems to me to be, you know, pretty much just wrong and obviously
dangerous in certain ways and so on.
But there is always a small part of my mind and experience that is not entirely, that wants to stick up for the anti-vaccine side, which I don't do in the pages of the New York Times.
No, because there isn't, there isn't that I can see a compelling argument and there isn't, you know, and it does a disservice to millions of children to make an argument that people shouldn't vaccinate their kids.
That's all true and well and good.
But something like the anti-vaccine crusade will be proven.
correct. There are weird ideas out there right now that are actually true. And I think the
strangeness of my childhood sort of, that's something that I carry with me as an assumption.
Three more quick questions before I turn it over to all of your questions. How people pronounce
your last name, what does it tell you about their class backgrounds or otherwise?
There are two main ways to mispronounce Douth it. The first is to say do that.
The second one is to say dutat.
And essentially, as you climb the pretension ladder in America, the dutat mispronunciation becomes more prevalent.
Whereas when I was in middle school and fourth grade, the do that mispronunciation was more prevalent.
But you can always tell whether someone's gone to graduate school or not by whether they try and mispronounce it as a French last name.
You wrote a New York Times column yesterday on sterility, and you cite,
three different individuals is wondering that maybe sex will be too much pushed out of American life.
One was Masha Gessen, who of course is from former Soviet Union, Kathy Young, who grew up in Moscow,
and Geraldo Rivera, who actually is half Jewish-Russian. So all three of the people you cited,
whether you're aware of it or not, are Russian, and they're the ones worrying. What do you infer from this?
that Russia is a very cold country.
No, I do think there's, I mean, there's absolutely no question
that people who have lived experience of totalitarianism,
which I do not, thankfully, tend to fear anything
that smacks of totalitarian impulses.
And so to the extent that there's,
I'm not sure about the Geraldo case,
but to the, because his lie, well,
But his seem more like a self-justification for a life badly lived.
But to the extent that there is actually something there, then, yeah, I mean, I think it's sort of a normal reaction to being sort of traumatized by authoritarianism.
Last question, and this is also a perennial.
You became famous at a very young age.
You've published four books.
Youngest New York Times, op-ed columnist ever.
The last two years, you've even had health problems.
You've continued to be as far as I can tell, as productive as ever.
What does the Ross do that production function?
What is your productivity secret that maybe is undervalued by other people?
There's plenty that goes into what you produce.
But what would be an insight you would share with us as to how you get this all done?
Undertaking family obligations certainly helps as a motivating force, I think.
I think that male productivity is, you know, I don't want to say this isn't true, a female
productivity too, but I only have the male experience to go by. I think male productivity is often,
it's, you know, it's often closely linked to being bound to and linked to other people and sort of having a sort of, you know,
having kids and family and so on. I think that that's a not uncommon route of greater productivity.
and I'm certain it's true in my own case.
I wasn't married that young,
but I was married younger than many people in my cohort.
I don't know.
You know, you also like journalism,
you go to events and, you know,
with wonderful hosts and audiences and so on,
and people sometimes introduce you as a public intellectual.
Sometimes they even say thought leader,
and that's the worst.
When I run my totalitarian state now,
but journalism is a trade, right?
I mean, there's,
there is obviously a sort of intellectual component.
And, you know, we wouldn't have been able to sit here and have this conversation with me babbling at you
if I didn't have intellectual pretensions.
But the work of journalism is, this is less true in the age of the internet,
but it is linked to a very physical thing that comes out every week or every month or every day.
And it comes out and it has to be filled.
There is a place on the New York Times, on the printed New York Times,
that would be blank or have an ad, you know,
I'm stuck on it if I didn't write my column.
And so you write the column.
You know, you write the column.
And that, I think, it's useful for journalists to think about it this way.
It's useful for anyone inclined to sort of over-romanticize or over-admire journalists to think about this way.
But there is a sense in which writing a column is, you know, it's like you're a plumber.
You know, the toilet has to be fixed.
So you fix the toilet.
The column has to be written.
So you write the column.
And getting lost, I mean, there's another version.
of myself that was going to write novels, you know, and was going to fantasy novels, but, you know,
that was going to sort of follow these aesthetic and narrative ambitions that, you know, you rightly,
I think, discern lurking below the surface of my analysis of the Republican tax plan or whatever.
And maybe that version of myself would have produced, you know, the great American novel, you know,
some great work.
And certainly I like to imagine that, or at least something that's sold as well as George R.A. Martin.
But it also might be the case that if I had spent my life sort of sitting around with my unfinished novels, I never would have produced anything interesting.
And so it's better to be a kind of tradesman.
And that's at least part of how I think about my job.
We'll get to your questions in a moment.
But Ross, thank you very much.
These are the rules for the questions, and they are enforced.
Line up at the two microphones.
You are not allowed to make statements.
These are questions for Ross to answer.
I will cut you off if you start making a statement.
We will start on this side.
The first question, please.
I was wondering how you thought the development of artificial wounds
will change the politics of the abortion debate.
A softball.
Well, it'll be interesting if we do actually develop artificial wounds.
which I'm not 100% sure that we will.
But supposing that we do,
my expectation would be that it would be a sort of,
it would create a sort of weird cultural crisis
for the kind of people who currently are pro-life
while also creating substantial political pressure
in favor of the pro-life cause.
And I'm not entirely sure how those two things
would interact with one another,
But you would clearly have, you know, a sort of deep religious resistance to the technology, to the practice, to that sort of severing. And you would have strong cultural resistance to it, I think, independent of religion. I think there would be a sort of strong anti-artificial womb kind of, as in the sort of crunchy bookstores of my childhood. There would be a sort of left-wing hippie-ish resistance to it as well. And so the question would be, how would that, yeah, how would that, yeah, how would that, yeah,
how would that resistance to it interact with this sort of possibility that here you have a technocratic solution to the abortion debate?
But I'll say I'm a little skeptical that, I mean, if you imagine, I mean, again, it depends, you know, how do you get to the artificial womb point, right?
Is it something where are you imagining a world where a woman gets pregnant and somehow the embryo is removed from her body and placed into the womb?
That seems sort of, you know, requiring a sort of level of technological intervention that would, you know, raise a host of the same sort of privacy concerns and so on that motivate the more, you know, the more certain portions of the pro-choice side.
Or are you envisioning a world where you have artificial wombs and everyone is sort of provisionally sterilized at age 14, that, you know, this becomes the state policy and so on.
So you could imagine a sort of pro-life totalitarianism that emerged out of some combination of technologies,
all of which is to say I don't have a brilliant answer for your question.
But I think there would be a lot of very strange and different cross-currents
that the people most inclined to make the pro-life argument right now would be disinclined to sort of run with,
immediately run with whatever political possibilities it presented,
but also that the nature of the technology, its level of invasiveness and what sort of making it work would mean.
would in turn determine sort of where liberalism went and so on.
Next question.
Is Mormonism anti-American or quintessentially American?
Quintessentially American, surely.
I mean, I think that it's interesting in that Mormon sexual ethics have sort of repeatedly brought them into conflict with the dominant American culture.
That fact and that reality is, you know, is a sign that they're,
there exists some interesting tension between Mormonism and America as a whole.
But nonetheless, Mormonism is a, both in sort of its actual lived experience and its theology
is unimaginable without, you know, it has an American essence.
There is no more American figure in certain ways than Joseph Smith.
The entire Mormon theology is built around an attempt.
you know, we were talking earlier about, you know, how do you, how could you integrate Islam, Judaism, and Christianity into one story, and I was failing to give Tyler a good answer.
Mormonism is sort of an attempt to do that, not with three religious traditions, but with the Americas.
How do you integrate the Americas into what seems like the sort of old world dominated story of Judaism and Christianity?
And that that is sort of to the extent that Mormonism is sort of out to solve a problem.
It's to solve the problem of, well, what about, you know, what about the America?
What about all this world over here?
So in that way and various others that I could go on listing, I think the tensions between Mormonism and the dominant American culture still make it quintessentially.
It still leaves it quintessentially American just as like, you know, let's say the drug culture of the late 1960s was in tension with sort of bourgeois American society at that point.
But Woodstock, there's nothing more American than Woodstock, right?
in the same way, even when it's in tension with whatever else is going on in the culture.
There's nothing more American than the latter-day saints.
Next question.
One thing that I've been seeing a lot of recently is your tweet storm on fertility and child tax credit.
One of the criticism that keeps coming up is that there's no reason to think that the child tax credit would actually be an effective movement of fertility rates.
So two-part question.
Do you think the importance of the child tax credit is mostly symbolic,
or actually effective. And second, if you were put on a committee and tasked with offering one
piece of policy that would raise the American fertility rate in a sustainable way, what would that
policy be? Those of us who were involved in the selling of the child tax credit to Republican
politicians tended to make an argument that wasn't per se about the fertility rate. There was an
argument that this was a matter of sort of distributional justice, that the tax
Code was penalizing parents in various ways because of their kids' contributions to Social Security
and so on through a rather elaborate schema that I think was true and correct.
I don't – I mean, that argument had some flaws, but I think by and large it was a reasonable
argument.
But it was also an argument sort of geared to satisfy the slightly sclerotic ideological preconceptions
of the Republican Party.
And, you know, sitting before here before you find people tonight, I'll just say, you know,
the goal of the child tax credit is to help people have more babies.
That should be the actual goal.
And when the Wall Street Journal accuses it of being social engineering, it is social engineering,
and I'm happy to admit it.
And maybe there'll be a Wall Street Journal editorial about this tomorrow.
But I think that in the same way that the Wall Street Journal's preferred economic policies,
which they hope will spur entrepreneurship and new hiring and business formation and all of these things,
are also social engineering in a certain way.
I don't think that you can sort of, I don't believe in some pristine separation of the economic sphere, which isn't social engineering and your tax policies, aren't social engineering from the family.
So the baseline is I'm in favor of giving people money to help them have the babies that they want to have.
Now, would the child tax credit have accomplished that to the extent that it would have much effect?
I would say it was a bare and very minimal effect.
I think if you look at the literature, you need something much, much larger to have any hope of moving the needle.
But I wouldn't say it's symbolic.
I think it's a step in the direction that I would like American society to take, which would take us towards something that wasn't a $2,000 per child tax credit, but a $5,000 per child tax credit, and so on, even upward from there.
So those are sort of my maximalist ambitions.
Now, it is also true that cultural forms and assumptions and so on play a much more important
shaping role in all this.
And it might be the case that even if you got to my ideal number, that it wouldn't move the dial that
much.
But in that case, I would still favor it in part as a means of sort of, I think there's value
in building the foundations in political economy for the cultural changes that you wish to
see even if those changes haven't arrived yet. So it might be that the child tax credit's effect
would be counteracted by the deranging influence of screens on people's romantic lives or something.
That might be the case. But then the child tax credit would still be there waiting for the
butlerian jihad of the future. The people who laughed are dune readers and everyone else is not.
It's important at some point in every public event to separate the dune readers from the non-dune
readers. But until the moment arrives when we sort of get a handle on our technological problems and
achieve some sort of cultural shift. But anyway, yes, the long story short, I, at least on the
roster of plausible policies, that's, that would be the policy that I would offer. And I think
the goal is to, it probably wouldn't have that much influence in its existing form, but the goal
would be to get to a form where it did have a chance of having influence. Next question.
In relation to your upcoming book, obviously there's been many Christian denominations like Eastern Orthodox, certain conservative Protestant groups that have a less strict line on the divorce question without entirely succumbing to kind of the cultural liberalism that's underbite a lot of Christianity in the West.
So in light of that, my question to you is, is your objection to the Pope's potential shift so much due to his actual proposals or more the therapeutic language itself in making the case that you find the problem?
No, I think it's the proposal itself.
There's a sort of, there's a sort of sociology of religion argument that conservative Christians tend to get into that you're referencing on these questions where you say, you know, stricter churches do better at sort of weathering the storms of modernity than more lax churches.
And sort of, you know, there's value in having a church that is sort of explicitly pushing back against cultural trends and so on.
And I think all of those arguments are, in some cases, plausible.
I think they would be plausible.
In this case, I think a sort of therapeutic shift on divorce would have, you know,
negative practical effects on the everyday lives of Catholics.
But the reason the issue is particularly important to me, I guess,
and the reason I've written about it so much is that I think the church is risking,
betraying its connection to, you know, Jesus.
and that's the sociological stuff is important, but it's secondary.
I mean, to me, you know, one of, I sort of referenced the radicalism of the essential
radicalism of Christianity, and obviously Catholicism has not been in sort of political
practice, a radical force at every moment in human history.
But one of the great things about the Catholic Church and one of the things that sort of
makes me think in the kind of, you know, the probabilistic game that Tyler somehow induced me to play
online. One reason I give it a high probability of being the one true church is that there are these
core sort of very strange and radical things that Jesus says and does that are sustained in the life
of the church in ways that they haven't been in other Christian denominations in churches. And one of those is
the Eucharist and the idea of transubstantiation, the idea that you are literally consuming the body
and blood of Christ. Another of them is this sort of, another thing I referenced earlier, this sort of
persistence of priestly religious monastic vocations, this sort of idea of Christianity as a
counterculture to the point where it is sort of, you know, actively turning its back on family
life in certain ways and sort of retaining this kind of space for a radical, a radical core,
a radical witness. And another of them is the teaching on marriage and divorce, which in the context
of the New Testament is clearly presented as a kind of radicalization of Jewish law on marriage and
divorce. And the church has maintained that radical perspective. And I think it's done so
infidelity to the man that we think was the son of God. And I would prefer that it continue to
maintain that fidelity rather than sort of softly give it up.
Next question.
So I was actually going to ask you about the necessity of a butleran jihad.
Good, good, good, good.
Since you're already on board, I'll skip straight to practicality.
What form do you think it should take?
How extreme do you think it should be?
And would you be willing to lead it?
So the butlerian jihad is an event that takes place in the universe of Dune,
the science fiction novels by Frank Herbert.
And it takes place in the distant past,
although his son wrote some other novels that sort of try and lay out how it happened.
They don't count.
don't count. Thank you. No, I actually, I'm a big, I mean, yeah, Dune itself, I'm a huge fan of. I could
never actually finish all of Herbert's novels, which makes me a Dune non-completist, which means I might
be the wrong person to lead the Batlerian Jihad. But the Baudelarian Jihad is this sort of rebellion
against, I think it is, maybe you can correct me, but it's AI more that it's a rebellion against,
rather than computers per se, or is it? I would have to read. You would have to, well, anyway,
it's some sort of rebellion against the, you.
use of sort of computational replacements for human beings. And so you have this far-distance space-faring
culture that relies on mentats, these sort of these humans who have developed their intellect to
somewhat superhuman levels, perhaps through the use of CRISPR, thereby I'm trying to unite all
the themes of tonight, Tyler, but they don't use certain, you know, certain forms of computing
power that we would assume people in the far future would. Anyway, that's the necessary background.
My view for a short term but Larry and Jihad is much more limited and boring.
I think that people should limit or reduce or eliminate the use of computers and screens and digital devices for children and in schools up to a certain age.
And I'm flexible and could argue about what that age should be.
But I think that young childhood certainly should not be a place.
I think that I think that young human being should be given a sustained encounter with action.
physical and social reality before being placed in front of a screen. And I think that that should be
educational common sense and that we've gone in the opposite direction is an unfortunate thing.
So I think you start with that and then we can talk about future steps. We can talk. I don't want to,
I don't want to suggest any in case I'm quoted out of context. But you can imagine next steps.
We'll just stick with that educational step first.
question from my iPad screen right here. I can't take it, Tyler. The jihad is happening even as we speak.
The wires are being cut. The cloud is being dismantled. If and when artificial intelligence comes along,
how will this change our understanding of religion? I think that if human beings could actually
create consciousness, it would sort of an actual conscious AI, it would tell us something
about consciousness that we don't currently know, that would have some, yes,
some unknowable influence on theological debates.
I mean, I think, you know, if you look at like where some of the smartest non-Christian,
non-theistic critics of a limited of materialism end up, someone like Thomas Nagel or something,
they end up in this sort of pantheist or panpsychist kind of vision where mind is a kind of
emergent property of the universe.
I might be getting that slightly wrong, but that might be the idea.
I mean, I think that, you know, there are versions of AI that you could imagine emerging that could be claimed as, well, I don't know.
But they might, there's something about consciousness that we don't understand, obviously.
And I'm very skeptical of the idea that, you know, we're just going to get through some Moore's Law doubling, you know, we're going to get to a recognizable consciousness sort of by accident.
It's just going to, you know, Skynet's going to become self-aware or something.
I think that there would have to be some remarkable breakthrough, and I don't know what the nature of the breakthrough would be,
but I think it would at least contribute something to theological debates about the mind's place in the cosmos.
Next question.
Do you think that social media is contributing to polarization and a breakdown of discourse more generally,
and especially can you comment on its effect on journalists and journalism?
Sure.
I mean, I don't want to, having done my butlerian jihad,
I don't want to oversell the horrors of social media because I think if you look at a lot of the polarization in American life, it's being driven by an older technology, cable television, and that sort of the effect of cable news on older Americans probably goes a longer way to explaining some of our polarization right now than does social media.
So that would be my caveat.
With that being said, I mean, I think the main, the effect of social media is Thailand.
had an interesting, you had an interesting post about this today or yesterday, right? I mean, I, and, and, and you sort of worked out a kind of Higalian dialectic of different people on Twitter that I, I, I wish I could summarize, but I can't quite. But at the very least, like, in my own experience, Twitter and social media generally, they, you know, it has a deranging effect. It creates a sort of a sense of permanent crisis and sort of permanent alarm and so on, where, you know, people have their Facebook feeds,
where they and their friends are sort of sharing things that confirm their view that the world is coming to an end.
And as a journalist, I feel like I'm often called upon by people in my non-journalistic social circle to sort of reassure them.
And of course, they're no longer reassured because during the last election, I kept telling them that Trump wasn't going to be the Republican nominee and that he probably wasn't going to be the president.
So my level of reassurance has been limited by that.
But I feel like I see a lot of people in my social orbit who aren't journalists who seem to be.
be sort of, they're sort of pushed to the edge of panic constantly by what they see in the
news and on social media. And then they'll sort of write to me and ask me to sort of explain what's
really going on, which I may not always be able to do. But so to the extent that there's sort of
an obligation for journalists, it's often, I think, that obligation to sort of walk people back
from the edge, the edge of panic in certain ways. But in terms of its effect on us, you know, it's
I mean, it's a little hard for me to say because I haven't, I wasn't really a journalist before.
I was a little bit.
You know, I wasn't on Twitter probably until 2011.
So I had some pre-Pwitter understanding.
But, you know, it's, I mean, Twitter's, it's a forum.
Like, it's such a sort of journalist-specific forum in certain ways.
Like, it's so geared towards journalistic culture and everyone's on there arguing with each other and sharing stories with each other and so on.
And at its best, I think it gives people sort of some, a little more sense of the inner workings of journalism in certain ways, like to the extent that it, I don't want to be all doom and gloom.
Like there is, there is virtue in sort of being exposed to watching journalists sort of share stories and have those stories partially discredited and sort of walk back stories and argue over stories and so on.
Like, you know, there's there's probably value in sort of demystifying some of the work, some of the work that we're,
we do. But I assume that it can't help but have a kind of, you know, it furthers already
existing group think among journalists and it has a deranging effect on us. And one of the big,
one of the big challenges, and we were talking about this before the conversation, is sort of
figuring out what, you know, what is real and what is just Twitter. And at what point does just
Twitter become, become what's real, right? Because like so much of what I do and what people in my
profession do is, you know, we're watching a world that's happening online, even as we're trying
to describe a world that exists offline. And I'm often puzzled by the connection between the two.
Like, I can't tell. Like, how real is the alt-right? That is a question that is very hard for me to
answer, because the alt-right is very real on the Internet. It doesn't seem to be particularly
real in reality. But maybe social media is reality. This is sort of, you know,
or at some point it becomes reality, and then it doesn't even matter what's happening out in the real world?
I'm not sure, but we're at the very least, we're at a point where there seems to be some huge disproportion
between the importance of a phenomenon on social media and its ability to get like any number of men.
Like Richard Spencer has like the same 60 people showing up for all his events.
And, you know, he can do something.
He and others can do something like Charlottesville, but there isn't a mass movement of the alt-right.
and there are more profiles of alt-right leaders in liberal publications than there are, you know,
sort of avowed alt-writers who will actually show up and carry a tiki torch.
And so the question is, well, but does nonetheless the alt-right phenomenon sort of, you know,
allow us to see some buried psychological reality among white Americans?
Maybe it does.
But it's just very hard to tell.
One minute. Last question.
Back to the Catholic Church.
If it is in need of revitalization and there's a crisis in the clergy, why can we not open up
ordination to anyone who feels that they have a vocation and can comply with any other
regulations such as women and married men?
I'll start with married men because that's easier.
You know, there is not, you know, in that case, there is not any dogmatic prohibition
or claim of a dogmatic prohibition.
the church ordains men who have been married and has in the past.
At the same time, I mean, there are structural impediments.
You know, the Catholic bureaucracy is not set up to support priests and their families,
and that kind of structural impediment is actually incredibly important to thinking about how such a thing would work itself out.
But there, I tend to take the sort of sociological argument that I gestured at in answering one of the earlier questions,
that for the church to sort of give up on the elevation of celibacy in a way that large-scale married priests inevitably would be seen as doing,
would not be a likely source of revitalization and revival in the long run.
It would represent the church sort of surrendering on a point where it offers something that is the most contradictory to the dominant culture
and giving up something that I think is in many ways one of its most valuable countercultural teachings.
that a life can be lived well without having sex.
So in that sense, while there isn't a sort of doctrinal and dogmatic barrier to it per se,
there are some people argue that there is.
But I think that it would be trading sort of trading the promise of renewal for the reality of sort of effective cultural surrender in certain ways,
which is something I think the church has done on a number of fronts.
On the question of female priests, I think that there it's a sort of, it's a sort of,
simpler issue that, you know, the church and this, you know, probably, probably could be read
into my view of aesthetics and narratives as well as everything else. But I, the argument that
Jesus ordained, chose only men for the priesthood, I think is ultimately less powerful than
the argument that God chose Jesus to be his son and he chose to be, to sort of perform the
central liturgical, the liturgical predecessors of what became Catholic Christianity in the form
of a man with, you know, and that therefore the sort of the enactment of the sacrifice of the mass
depends on priests who are, who can stand in the person of Jesus Christ and that it makes
sense for them to be men. That doesn't mean that the church could not, and here I'll do the
Hegelian synthesis thing. It doesn't mean that the church.
could not, in its governing structures and in sort of the way that the church functions in Rome
and elsewhere, could not integrate women more fully into the actual governance of the church.
I think it can and should.
But my preference would be for that integration to happen through a revival of female
religious orders and nuns.
I would much rather have many more nuns in positions of power in Rome than laymen and lay women.
And again, maybe that's some sort of strange sort of aesthetic preference as much as
as it is anything else. But I think that it would be a more certain path to renewal for the church
to find a way to sort of to have a kind of a kind of female activism that comes through a
revival of the female religious tradition in the church rather than a sort of attempt to
do what Episcopalians and others have already attempted and sort of shift the
shift the understanding of the nature of what the priest is and trying to do with the mass itself.
Ross, thank you very much.
Thank you.
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