Decoding the Gurus - Mini-Decoding: Indulgent Monologuing
Episode Date: February 28, 2024Sometimes our intrepid Decoders like to focus on a specific rhetorical technique or recurrent pattern that can be observed across the Gurusphere. Here, Matt and Chris take a look at a bite-size portio...n of the philosopher John Gray's recent appearance on Sam Harris' Making Sense podcast. Gray was invited to outline his critique of New Atheism, and his response is a remarkable monologue that encompasses a vast range of intellectual topics, philosophical thinkers, and historical periods. We travel from ancient religion to medieval peasants and finally to (almost) the contemporary era. It is a veritable tour de force of an erudite philosopher's mind palace. So join us for a hike around through that palace and see if you agree with our assessment that the notable features reflect some common issues in academic, philosophical, and guru discourse. Alternatively, you might find Gray's approach vibes with your interests, and that it is Matt and Chris who are simply showcasing their grumpy materialist perspective (again). It will probably be impossible to tell unless we first consider what Spinoza said to Oldenburg in 1665 while taking due consideration of the Kokutai doctrine as elaborated by the Mito School in Meiji Japan, but that, of course, leads us to ancient Egypt and the pharaohs...LinksIs Moral Progress a Fantasy?: A Conversation with John Gray (Episode #354)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Guru's mini decoding with Matt the psychologist and Chris
the psychologist slash anthropologist two things really but we don't need to dwell on that what we
are here to dwell on today is a very specific technique that gurus, also some other people, academics,
perhaps in general, are a little bit prone to, but I find a rather egregious example of it in
content recently, so I wanted to highlight. So this is a mini decoding, but a specific guru-ish technique.
Understood. Understood. I haven't heard this yet.
No, you have not. And it's from a recent
podcast with Sam Harris. Now,
it's not focusing on Sam Harris, okay?
We've already had enough talking to, with, about Sam recently.
This is not about Sam.
It's something that his guest does.
And his guest in this instance is a philosopher called, what's his name?
I had it a second ago, called called john gray and it's from a recent
episode called is moral progress a fantasy again this is not important the kind of topic of that
we're not hugely invested in this issue of his moral progress no you would think it is but
nonetheless john john gray might have some arguments against that.
But let's set aside the philosophers' tendencies. I don't know how to put it, what they like to do,
arguing things that seem like you should be able to argue them. But at the end of that episode,
there is a segment where they address the issue of new atheism and atheism
in general, because apparently John Gray was quite a strong critic of the new atheists, right? Which
includes Sam. So Sam invites him at the end, you know, maybe what would you raise as your
criticisms about atheism, new atheism.
And it's his response where we get to see the technique that we're looking at today.
So why don't I play the start of the response
and then I'll stop it and we can see
if you pick up on what I'm getting at, okay?
Okay, all right, let's go.
So here we go.
I think we should close on atheism and in particular your criticism of new atheism.
And I guess I'll just put it to you.
What is it that you think we got wrong about religion?
Oh, well, a number of things.
One is that religion isn't just or even primarily an intellectual error. I mean, if you approach the human animal in the spirit of scientific impartiality,
you would observe that however religion is defined,
it's not perhaps ubiquitous in every human being,
but it's nearly universal in human culture.
So if you started with that assumption, you might think it served some needs,
human needs or had some kind of functions in
human life, quite apart from whether or not it involved intellectual mistakes or errors.
So the first thing is a kind of intellectualist or rationalist theory of why religion is wrong.
And of course, I've been rather caustic about that in some of my writings
because what I observe as an historian of ideas is that people...
Okay.
So starting off, I think that's generally okay.
Yeah, that sounded okay to me.
That sounded cogent, made sense to me.
He's saying, look, my issue is that religion is ubiquitous.
It probably does fulfill some kind of functions,
and it's maybe limiting to
understand it purely in terms of it being intellectually fallacious or not.
Yes, and no issue so far. That was a reasonable point to raise that this is one of my objections
of the new atheists. But it continues.
Who believe they shed every blast vestige of religious belief.
I'm not speaking of you or even of other new atheists,
but those who became dialectical materialists or Marxist-Leninists or even
scientific racists, for example.
Many of them were atheists.
They thought they'd sort of,
but what they hadn't ex-removed in themselves was a need for some kind of worldview or belief, which sustained their sense of value and importance in the universe, which, of course, is one of the things that religions do.
And, of course, we have to bear in mind here that whatever the meaning of the word religion, I don't think dictionaries, Pinker often uses dictionary, I don't think they're that useful here, but whatever it means, it includes more than monotheism,
because there have been countless religions in the world, Greek, ancient Greek religion,
Chinese religion, Indian religion, most of the religions in the world, including what
may be the primordial human religion, animism, which probably all human and pre-human, early human and pre-human cultures
sustained, was the idea that the world is full of spirits. And the idea that, for example,
one of the unexamined distinctions that is often invoked by scientific is between natural and
supernatural explanation. But that only really arises if you have a monotheistic or some similar
idea of creation if you think as the ancient greeks did or the let's take a pause here
take a little break yeah so what did what did you pick up there the next he's kind of laid on a bit
more right he has he has and um it's easy to forget what the original
question was hey so sam asked him what's your problem with the new atheist uh take on religion
right he started off okay in that first section but now he's talking about that religions or you
know there's lots of difference not just monotheism there's it all goes back to animism
and only the monotheistic ones had a
distinction between the natural and the supernatural what else did he say well yeah he also pointed out
that there have been secular regimes which have been quite brutal and he implied that you know
they were still searching like they needed to fill the gap of religions of the marxists and the nazis and
yeah yeah well he he pointed out that some of the new atheists anyway came to be known to hold
unsavory opinions and scientific racism yeah but yeah i mean so that's a ding against them in his
mind but yeah it's all a bit it's all a bit tangential, isn't it? None of it is really addressing the question yet.
It might be building their point.
So let's continue.
Congolese pygmies and the Aztecs did and so on,
that the universe was more or less everlasting,
but there were various gods that appeared in it.
And that the world was,
if you thought that the natural world was full of gods, full of spirits, you wouldn't make this distinction between natural and
supernatural. You would just look at things without making that. It's an artifact. Much of
what passes for atheism is an artifact of monotheism in that although the beliefs are
negated or reversed or turned upside down or rejected or refused, repudiated, the conceptual
framework is still there.
And you can get out of that conceptual framework
if you try and inhabit the conceptual framework
of ancient Greek religion, or ancient Indian religion,
or ancient Chinese religion, or Aztec religion.
Of course, in all of them, you'll find an interesting feature,
which is that the gods are normally plural,
although in Indian religion,
they're sometimes said to be aspects of a single impersonal god.
So there are impersonals as well as personal gods,
but also they're not necessarily in any way benignly disposed towards human beings.
And this even includes some of the early Middle Eastern religions
from which Christianity eventually emerged in Gnosticism and other Middle Eastern traditions.
There is something like Zoroastrianism.
Zoroastrianism then, in some of its forms,
assumes the permanence of two principles in the world,
light and dark, and in some of its forms
doesn't even assume that light will eventually prevail.
It could prevail, but it might not prevail.
Oh, Chris, I'm really beginning to feel,
I feel for Sam Harris here, Guy,
because I can hear him try,
like becoming maybe a little bit impatient.
I think he's got the point.
He's ready for it to continue because,
yes, so again, the kind of position here seems to be
that there are religions or cultures which do not
make a distinction between supernatural and natural and that the kind of contemporary
atheism is a product of modernity so it's it's kind of trapped into the monotheistic or
like modern religious framework but if you go back
you wouldn't you wouldn't have modern atheists if you went to cultures where there was no concept of
secularity you wouldn't have secular people because it wouldn't make sense right that he
also says that yeah like atheism is like a reaction against a monotheistic religion.
It's not so it's just really a different facet of monotheism.
Anyway, but he doesn't really support that point.
I don't think he just says it.
But Chris, he's gishgaloping.
He's not actually answering the question.
Well, how dare you, Matt?
What do you mean?
He's giving illustrative examples.
It's just these are all relevant.
You know, Zoroastrian, he's now talking about.
Maybe we need all of this context about how there's many polytheistic religions,
but Indian polytheism is maybe not quite the same because it could be different
aspects of the one God.
I mean, this is all, we hope, pertaining.
It's all necessary background for us to understand the answer he's going to
give we assume at some point to the original question let's see where it's going let's see
where it's going so there's a whole wide range of phenomena that come under some by the best book
ever written to my mind by a philosopher at least on religion is will James's The Varieties of Religious Experience because he looks at mental kind of subjective experiences of a variety of people including
himself but he's very aware of the diversity of religions and so my first reason is that religion
whatever else it may be is definitely not an intellectual mistake, not primarily. It's something much more profound,
and you can see that from its near universality in human culture.
And the fact that once monotheism, Christian or Jewish or other monotheism,
was rejected, the underlying need for some framework of belief or of ideas
or of a worldview of some kind of which bolsters the human sense of importance,
both as an animal, a species in the cosmos,
and as of the individuals who comprise it, went on and was expressed
in the 20th century in many different, and the 19th century
and even the 18th century, but certainly in the 20th century,
in ideas of history which are very like some Christian ideas of history.
So, well, I think we did have a little...
We did have some kind of answer there.
...short summary there, right?
Yeah, he did circle back to an answer there.
Let's give him credit.
He explained that, one, he thinks new atheists have got it wrong
because religion is ubiquitous,
so, you know, it must be doing something pretty important.
Yeah.
And two, that he thinks that
people need a kind of underlying worldview a moral framework and so on and that if you don't
have religion then people like atheists will just substitute it with something else probably
something worse marxism or like the yeah the history of 20th century bad ideas and and the
second one you hear a lot don't you you? You hear it from religious conservatives.
He will say that the problem with leftists is that they've abandoned
the good old-fashioned traditional religion.
They've substituted it with all these terrible new secular religions.
Yes, and he did also manage to point in a book recommendation,
William James's Varieties of Religious Experience. A good
book, but sort of an aside, an indulgent aside, given the length of the answer. And the other
point that he wanted to make is that there, what is that one? That, oh yes, that there's
a more different types of religion than monotheism, right? so atheism and the new atheists are mostly talking
about monotheistic traditions they're not talking about animists and uh yeah like polytheists and so
on that feels pretty weak though right because any atheistic argument that applies to christianity is
also going to apply to no i'm not just there well does it matter like hold on hold your horses he
wasn't finished so let's we're probably cutting him off before he's going to bring up the better arguments.
In which history is a meaningful moral drama. By the way, that's completely different from some of the pre-Christian writings on history of the Greeks and the Romans, because although there's a diversity there, the idea that there was any overall moral meaning to history was absent. History was, and even in Aristotle,
I mean, he talks about the regimes of come and go in biological terms, like summer and winter,
things grow up, they have a youth, then they decay. In other words, he took for granted
something which is now, it's taken for granted by I think practically everybody until Christianity took hold. And even up to the 18th century,
lots and lots of people believed it. The Renaissance thinkers all believed it. They all assumed
that history was, in terms of its ethical and political aspects, was cyclical. So that
even the most, the best regimes that could exist among humans would fade and die. Machiavelli says that
categorically. They all took that. When they rediscovered pagan thought, as they called it,
they didn't become new atheists. They took the assumptions of the ancient world as being truer
than those of the Christian world that had followed it. That's to say they assumed that
the same errors, the same atrocities, the same evils would recur,
and that they didn't deny that there were better and higher, worse civilizations.
Quite the contrary, they were possibly now would be condemned as white supremacists in that way,
although some of them admired non-Western civilizations as being as good or even superior, actually, as some of them did.
But they certainly assumed there were better and worse civilizations,
but they also assumed that the best civilizations
wouldn't last all that long and would fade away
because of certain and replaced by others that would be worse,
at least for a while, possibly long while, centuries or millennia,
because of the contradictions within human beings.
Okay.
We're traversing new territory now aren't we we're now talking about how medieval people saw the world and how they were influenced
when they rediscovered pagan thinking but either way they saw things as cyclical and
things really wouldn't get better and how has this got anything to do with well
well i think the argument here is that the new atheists are imagining that you can progress
like beyond religion kind of religious tradition and conventions to more like
a more enlightened secular scientific notion and he's contrasting that with but medieval peasants didn't believe
that so yes okay renaissance poets and various other people yeah haven't agreed that i think
what he actually wants to like emphasize there is that it's a christian notion this like notion
of progress that society progresses and
whatnot. But then he had to deal with the fact that there were perceived hierarchies in better
and lower societies. But you know, some of them didn't think exactly. So anyway, he's ended up
kind of dealing with the counter examples and whatnot. but so that's the argument right is that
maybe new atheists again they're just really a variety of christians or reactionary force of
christian because they're taking this assumption about progress which shouldn't be a given yeah
but you could be like if being an atheist doesn't like progress isn't bound into it surely i mean have i misunderstood
atheism does it necessarily involve a notion of technological and social progress well maybe he
would say the new year if he has suggested it does but and but again matt you're interrupting
him he's not this is it's building up it's layering up it's like a, this is, it's building up, it's layering up, it's like a cake. This is just the foundational level.
It's going to have a nice topping shortly.
So just have patience.
In what used to be called human nature,
and one of the things about all these thinkers is that they assumed
there was such a thing as human nature.
They actually thought that, and his people who wrote about around that time
thought that, and they thought that these
contradictions within human nature propensity to make catastrophic decisions to even make some of
make them willingly which had been explored not by the ancient greek philosophers i think so much
as by the ancient greek dramatists you're actually were um they were constitutive of human beings
they were coterminous with
human beings, and for that reason
wouldn't go away. So Machiavelli was a great
patriot in his way, and a great
idealist, a great optimist
almost, in wanting
to have a republican form of government
in Italy of his time, at least
at the level of a city-state.
But he thought that even that would,
you could have it for a period, a fairly long period,
but it would fade away.
It would be defeated by accommodations of circumstances.
And that would happen inexorably and inevitably and over time
and would be recurrently repeated.
Nothing would ultimately be learned except that.
Except that.
That's how history is and was and will be.
And that's essentially my view.
So I think he was just reiterating the point there
that there was, you know, who did he highlight?
I think I've blanked it out of my mind.
Well, it was Machiavelli.
Oh, Machiavelli, right.
But wasn't there a Greek person involved?
Well, he mentioned Greek playwrights, I suppose, like Euripides.
Okay, but so apparently
machiavelli was somebody that held this cyclical notion that you know the society would inevitably
collapse i did read the prince but i don't remember that bit but maybe he wrote it somewhere
else i've got a bad memory also but but anyway machiavelli at that point though let me let me
get this straight.
So, yes, he was traversing all of this thought, right,
Renaissance, medieval, ancient thought,
which was not necessarily Christian,
but it was definitely religious and spiritual and didn't, you know,
that all had a... And in that world, the common thing that he identifies
in all his worldviews, whether it's a medieval peasant
or Machiavelli or a Greek playwright, is that things can't change.
I mean, they can't change permanently.
There can't be any kind of progress, like real change.
Things could be good for a while, then they become bad for a while
and things are cyclical.
And I think most people are aware of that, like medieval peasants.
Because there was very little progress, I mean,
for long periods of time, people couldn't really discern it.
So it was a more natural kind of view of the world and the seasons and all that.
So I get that.
But so his argument is, is because he does it, because he thinks that there can't really
be any progress and a new atheism, according to him, involves an assumption that there has to be some kind of human progress, a permanent change in the way things are.
I don't know why that is.
I assume to change from being religious to not being religious, like permanently, maybe.
Is that the change that he's talking about?
And for that reason, the new atheists have got it all wrong i mean that seems insane
to me like but basically saying because because medieval peasants didn't think this was true
then not just medieval peasants the machiavelli and greek playwrights and indian philosophers
and so on but yes that does seem the argument but i think you haven't quite got it, Matt. Maybe more examples will help. So it has quite a lot of
predecessors in modern European civilization, but it's
not the view of practically any of, because what most of the new atheists
said was that they believed that ethics and politics were backward
in that they could advance as rapidly and as consistently
and as consecutively and cumulatively as ethics,
but they just haven't for various reasons.
I don't believe that's even right.
I'm on Machiavelli's side there.
By the way, Machiavelli in that respect is a deeper thinker
or a truer thinker than Hobbes,
because Hobbes recognises that all regimes tend to fall apart
and you have states of nature then supervening.
States of regimes are mortal, so he reigns.
But he does sort of occasionally, at least now, if only my thoughts,
my way of thinking, my principles, his theory of the social contract,
his rationalist sort of ideas could be adopted by a prince,
then we could set up a state which would last a very, very long time.
Machiavelli never thinks that because there's much more conflict within the human animal even separate even within
the single human animal in Machiavelli and it's from those conflicts that both what enlightenment
think it might call progress let's call it betterment and also what they would call regress
let's call it barbarism they both come from the would call regress, let's call it barbarism. They both come from the same source.
And as I've put it, I always strive to put difficult thoughts
in the simplest terms possible.
I've said civilization is natural for the human animal,
but so is barbarism.
So just to be clear, Hobbes, he did have a similar thought,
but he wasn't as, you know, he thought that if people adopted his philosophy,
the system could last longer.
So he's a bit not as good as Machiavelli.
This was important to kind of veer off into.
And as we could see from this, gray likes to put difficult complex things into very
short concise descriptions and he says for humans it's natural for them to create civilization and
it's also natural for them to be barbarous we you know we are not purely good creatures so yeah yes and this relates to new atheism how this is my question uh okay okay i see
i see the problem you haven't got it yet matt wait it's not it's not finished yet so look he'll help
he'll help both are natural and uh if you just look at history, I mean, barbarism can last an awful long time. There was the long periods in the history of China, the wars of the warring states in Russia at the time of the Troubles,
and of course in Europe in the wars of religion.
Immensely destructive wars.
30% of the population being killed off, one way or the other, in Central Europe.
A long, long time.
Then you have a period in which that experience is still so vivid in memory. And you have a period in which people explore
ideas of toleration and peaceful coexistence, and they get partially embodied. And I think,
by the way, there might be a history of ideas, difference between us, because my view of that,
of where toleration comes from, is it comes from Job, ultimately from the book of
Job, and from certain elements in Christianity. In other words, it comes from theism, not from
the secular enlightenment, because the further away the secular enlightenment got away from
Judaism and Christianity, the more illiberal it became, and you eventually get things like,
oh, because Comte, who certainly was an enlightenment thinker everybody thought he was and he thought he was but he was a complete anti-liberal uh he hated
liberalism except as a except as a sort of um a transition point between medievalism which he
liked which he admired medieval catholicism he admired as an organic society as he called it
but was based on magic and religion. So that wasn't good.
To a new society, the technocracy,
which would also be organic.
Did that help?
You've pieced it together.
We're now on the comp, I think, aren't we?
I feel like he's taken us by the hand
and taking us for a walk around his mind palace.
This reminds me a bit of Jordan Peterson.
He's clearly a guy who's got a
lot of interests likes reading philosophy likes reading history likes reading the classics and
he's passionate about them and it's they're all woven in there in this magical mystery tour that
he's taking us on but i i keep coming back to the question what has this got to do with with the
point is he just rambling is he senile is? Is he an academic? Is he a professor?
I have questions.
He is an academic philosopher.
I don't think he's senile.
But I do think this is extremely indulgent because, yes,
we are pausing that and stuff, but you have to realise that's breaking
up what is an unbroken monologue, right?
This has been going now for about five or six minutes.
And he's now, what is he doing?
He's detailing the wars of the world,
all the history of conflict.
And now he has gone down to talk about Comte
and his philosophy and what his views about technocracies
and whatnot are.
And well, let's see.
Maybe we'll get back to you.
We'll get back to it.
We have to have faith.
We have to assume that this is all necessary background
to the definitive answer.
Based on science.
By the way, I think it's no accident.
I know one of them says this, but I think it's true,
that among Kant's disciples was the French leader,
intellectual leader of Action Francaise,
Charles Morin, the anti-Semitic pro-fascist thinker.
He was a great admirer of Comte's.
And he thought, this is what we want.
I mean, for most of his life, Morin was an atheist.
In fact, he probably died an atheist, I suspect,
but I can't know that.
But he favoured propping up.
He liked the clerical fascist regimes of Europe for propping
up or keeping alive a certain kind of neo-feudal order, and he detested liberalism in all of its
forms. And this sort of brings out the point that the associate, when people talk about liberal
enlightenment values, they're talking about something that really exists in the Enlightenment.
There is a tradition of it in Locke, male in different forms,
utilitarian, rights-based, and some continental European thinkers, Benjamin Constant and others,
that really exist. But there are also lots and lots and lots of Enlightenment thinkers who were either non-liberal or actively anti-liberal. Some of the founders of modern criminology,
for example, Lombroso, Cesare Lombroso, he thought of himself as an Enlightenment thinker,
and he said, based it on Comte, because Comte said, ultimately
human sciences are all based on physiology.
It's easy to see how that could turn
into racism, as it then did
in the Nazis, who
on the one hand revived Christian anti-Semitic
demon.
So we're now, well, at least
we're getting closer to the modern period, right?
We've got the Enlightenment, we're into Lombroso
and his kind of physiology of criminology and this, right?
And you can see sometimes the little thing that he wants to throw in,
that there was an admirer of Comte who was like pro-fascist
and probably also an atheist.
He can't be sure be sure he's pretty sure
that he is that he liked fascism right and there were enlightenment thinkers who weren't liberals
so that's a problem right that's another that's another ding against the new atheists i think
yeah yeah yeah i mean well i gotta hand it to sam harris i mean the man can monologue but he
can also take a monologue like a champion. I imagine him sitting there
impassively like a rock, just absorbing
it all. Yeah.
And it's not done, man.
We're not done. So Lombroso,
he had some problems.
He's probably an atheist.
What else?
On the other hand,
said that it could be formulated
in scientific terms, which of course was false,
but it gave their movement a kind of ideology which was consistent with the modern idea
that science is the paradigm of knowledge.
So there's a whole variety of reasons why.
And in my book, as you remember, my seven types of atheism, there are seven that I distinguish.
Not only seven, I'm sure there could be more.
And there are only two that I strongly condemn.
Five of them. And like the other, the last
two, which is the kind of atheism one finds in writers such as
Schopenhauer and... Schopenhauer, not Nietzsche.
Because Nietzsche, although I have learned a lot from Nietzsche, Nietzsche
was a radical humanist.
He thought that a small category of human beings could impose.
Sorry, we need to talk about Nietzsche a little bit
because you might mistake him for one of the good atheists,
but he's not.
He's one of the five.
Well, no, I think he's going to say that he is a good atheist
because you might mistakenly classify he is a good atheist, because you
might mystically classify him as a
bad atheist, but he's a good atheist for
reasons that we're
about to hear. Okay.
With a certain meaning on history
by act of will.
I think it's a complete fantasy and illusion.
And he also thought that
he was the son of a pastor.
He was much more steeped in Christianity than Schopenhauer,
who I think stepped outside of it more radically.
Schopenhauer was basically a Buddhist with a bad attitude, as far as I can tell.
Well, I know you're interested, but yes, he was.
The part of Buddhism he never really quite took on board was compassion.
Yeah, as evidenced by the moment he, didn't he hurl his man, lady,
down a flight of stairs or something?
He knocked her down a flight of stairs,
and for some reason or other she irritated him.
And when she died, he wrote, I can't remember,
Anad Obasanat, which means the burden goes, the old woman has died.
So he was pleased that she was out of the way.
He was certainly not a practicing Buddhist of the kind that most Buddhists,
but he did.
So we had a sidetrack there, partly because of Sam's fault.
Schopenhauer?
Schopenhauer, yeah.
Schopenhauer, yeah, not the atomic bomb guy.
So he liked Buddhism, but he doesn't practice compassion.
He pushed this person down the stairs.
Nietzsche, actually, it turned out he didn't like something about Nietzsche.
I was wrong.
So Nietzsche, not totally bad, but kind of a bad atheist.
But Schopenhauer's family, he had some religious
involvement more,
so it's unclear
does that really,
is that so important? But okay,
we must be finding the point.
The time is running out
on the podcast.
Take a step that others didn't take,
which is when he rejected the
Christianized philosophy of history
that Hegel, his contemporary, whom he hated,
and he actually put Schlechtes on at the same time as Hegel's,
but nobody came to Schlechtes, so it didn't really work.
He hated, he thought that Hegel was sort of a court philosopher
of Prussian authoritarianism, which I think to some extent he was,
as well as a mysticogue.
Also unreadable as well.
A very unreadable way.
Chauvin was very readable.
Very readable.
Wonderful stylist, even in English.
He thought that history was what the Buddhists,
but even more the Hindus, the Vedantic thinkers,
thought it was, namely a troubled dream,
a succession of troubled dreams that had had no meaning.
And that was a view,
you can find it among the ancient, in the ancient world, the pre-Christian world, in Gnosticism and in other traditions as well. But it was definitely not the view that was accepted in
19th century Europe. So Nietzsche was much closer, oddly enough, to the European consensus of his day in suggesting that some human beings, a small category of human beings, could impose their will.
By the way, I recently reviewed...
So Nietzsche had a view that was... I've got lost. Hegel, he didn't like no schopenhauer didn't like
hegel he put his lectures at the same time but nobody went to them and then there was the
hegel had a view about time being a dream or something and ancient people all so we're back
at the point that ancient people have a different cyclical conceptions.
Yeah, that's right.
History is a dream.
Nothing really means anything in history.
And this has all got something to do with new atheism.
I mean, I think it does thematically, right?
Because he kind of, you know, he tied it to his kind of critique
about new atheists assume progress.
kind of critique about neophytes assume progress. But essentially all he said so far is some people haven't fought like that
throughout history, including some Enlightenment figures.
I've said it there in like two sentences.
And it's just one thing that you'll notice, and he just did it here, but don't worry, he'll do it again,
is that when he reaches a kind of end point of a thing, he will then say, by the way, or on that point.
Or on the other hand.
Yeah, and continue on.
And maybe Sam doesn't get it.
You know, it is the case that sometimes people don't pay attention to well,
the other people have already understood their point
and they continue to provide examples and illustrations and elaborations.
But it does feel indulgent.
Like the thing which strikes me is like,
isn't there isn't a sense that like maybe you've been going on for a while and the why it's nice to give examples and go on tangents
like there's another person there right and sure it's an interview but like you know yeah
if you're being asked a pretty specific and pretty straightforward question,
I think it's a good idea to try to give a succinct and straightforward answer.
I mean, it's not clear that he's answered the question at all to me,
except in as far as what you just said, which is, in his view,
somehow atheism requires some degree of progress.
I don't know why.
New atheism.
New atheism.
I seriously do not know why do you know
why why does atheism new atheism might have to keep he said five types of if yes are okay sorry
why does why does new atheism require that there is progress social and historical progress yeah
because he's saying that the new atheists have like a naive child history of the world that sees that you can go
from tradition and convention and religious dogma to like science and reason and you know so so so
yeah that's what i thought too so his point is that's silly because nothing can ever change
because mackinac or hegel and bloody blah yeah he doesn't agree that there's progress but other
people have also said that there's no progress including enlightenment thinkers this doesn't
make sense like how could like imagine if i said if you said look chris you said matt i'm gonna go
on a diet i'm gonna become a vegetarian i'll go don't be silly chris you can't do that because
nothing ever changes you can't that's right? You weren't a vegetarian before.
How can you change from not being a vegetarian to a vegetarian?
Hegel said this and Nietzsche said that and the ancient believers.
You need to go on for quite a bit longer.
Isn't that a stretch to say that?
You can say that about anything, any idea, or atheism.
What about democracy or anything?
No, no, that's important yeah well i
think he in general he doesn't like the new athens because in general his broader thing is that the
assumption of progress is wrong like so and new athens insofar as they are embodying a desire
for a progress and thinking are wrong yeah but it's yeah but it's arguments here yeah there does seem
this is my issue like like like you strip away all of the name dropping and you know he's a very
erudite guy he's obviously you know yeah he knows the people he's talking about he he is learning
he is learned but i mean this is baffling with bullshit isn't it like you've got
like the fundamental bones of his case is just what we just said.
And when you just say it like that, it sounds pretty stupid.
But if you –
It just sounds weak.
Well, it's weak.
Yeah, well, it's just a weak argument.
You know, it is.
But if you add in this great big long discursive tour of all of Western thought from the ancients to –
Not just Western thought. No. That's true. discursive tour of all of western thought from the ancients to not just western
well thought through all the recorded history then you know maybe you don't notice that that's
the fundamental point he's making yeah well let's see let's see it's almost at an end, so it might come to like a kind of summary point. Some of your
listeners may be the first book by Bronze Age pervert.
And this
was in the New States when they can look it up if they want. I think
there's a paywall, but you can look at two or three articles without paying any money.
And there I went back to Ayn Rand, who, of course, emigrated from Russia.
And when she emigrated from Russia, I think in 1922 or 23 or something like that, but
from about 1890 to about 1920, the dominant, the biggest intellectual influence in Russia
had not been Marx or Marxism, it had been Nietzsche.
And there were Nietzschean everything, Nietzschean liberals, Nietzschean communists, Nietzschean nationalists, Nietzschean
orthodox Christians, everything. And one of the things that entertained me in, I've never
been a Randian, but in her first book, We the Living, was the sections that she later
took out in which she says, which the hero, a thinly fictionalized version of herself,
says to her Bolshevik lover, I detest your ideals, but I love your methods.
So maybe not, Matt.
Maybe we should give up at this point because...
I am beginning to lose hope.
He's got the online and a book review he wrote
of Bronze Age perverts,
Brooks Bronze Age pervert being an online alt-right guy.
But is it necessary to go into Anne Rand's history of emigration and her jokes
that she makes in individual segments of her book that you like. Again, the level of
indulgence seems very high. And this is something that every academic is familiar with at a
conference where it's a kind of comedy trope where somebody says, it's more of a comment
than a question. And they proceed to blabber on endlessly about their ideas without really posing the question to the
person who ostensibly they're supposed to be engaging with. And maybe John Gray, I hear that
his books are more tightly written or whatever the case might be. But I think this is really,
it is an academic disease, but it's a philosopher disease and a guru disease that they really go on elaborate, like verbal wanderings, danderings around.
And they like to sprinkle it with the people that they've met with the, you know, the big books, the weirdy tomes, the figures that they've met with the you know the the big books the weirdy tomes the figures that they
know and i guess some of it is relevant but like it did his points
really need all of these examples at this like because we're are we're gonna stop here but but like we're at 1920 no we got
we're slightly past the enlightenment but we're still not up and like could have been talking
about dawkins and hitchens yeah i mean this is the new if he has he's got one of them right in
front of him yeah it's incredibly self-indulgent isn't it it's um and it is like jordan peterson it reminds me of
of him a lot but you know it's also a gish galop isn't it i think it can be yeah what's someone
supposed to say at the end of this yeah so so that was your complete surprise to do you if it's and
that's one of the things that people do is that they kind of layer in so many things that by the time that you have the point to
respond, and usually at the end, they'll say something controversial as well. Or, well,
and another point is blah, blah, blah. And then your option is, do I try and work my way back
through all of that? Or do I move on to the next question? Because we've only got like five minutes left right now. And
this is going to take like to debate his characterization of Nietzsche. Like, is that
worth your time? But in most conversations that you have in life, people would observe a social
cue where, oh, I've been monologuing for quite a long time. So, and you did just ask me a pretty straightforward set question. So let me just say, this is what I
meant and move on. But this is not the way of podcasts and gurus. It's almost a desirable
characteristic in podcast world. If you're able to, I mean, it's not, it's not desirable, but
it's some people, I think mistake that for illustrating the profundity and depth of your thought.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think a good way to evaluate these things is, one, you've got to be more concise.
If someone asks you a direct question, and this is not a question that he's not unprepared for.
He's written books about this right is this is a like so a bit like a phd student who's asked to give the five
you know the elevator pitch or the three minute description of what they're doing for their phd
you should be able to distill it into a nicely organized little response right and he didn't so
that's his first crime right he's spoken for far far too long on too many relevant points as you
said the second crime is is that he just hasn't answered the question not to my satisfaction like imagine if you set an essay test for a student and he said oh and they
explained the main explain the main objection to new atheism from someone's point of view
and imagine if they gave you and you you were 2000 words in and you were traversing anran's immigration from russia yeah
you would fail them because that's a shitty answer to the question and this guy's a professor he
should be doing better i think yeah yeah it's a bit it does remind me you know of tucker carson
whenever putin said to answer that let me first provide a brief history of Russia.
After like 35 minutes later, he's still talking about Peter the Creator or whatever.
So yeah, there does feel a bit like that.
And the thing here is just to say that this isn't an isolated example where this,
like it's kind of particularly noticeable.
When I was listening to it, I just realized after a while,
wait, this is the same.
It's the same question.
And it goes on.
But this happens a lot.
You may have heard it on other podcasts recently
with other guests where people do this.
And there are options.
You know, the other person in the conversation
can interrupt them and be like,
but the thing is that, especially in an interview context there's a sort of dynamic where that would be rude in just terms of the actual interaction habitus that we have like if you say
sorry you're going on for too long we really need to get to the next question that is taking this like
you being rude and the person is your guest so you shouldn't do that so yeah and the audience
yeah at least some of the audience definitely doesn't like it right you shouldn't let them
finish let them elaborate further oh yes some of them don't though if you go to Sam Harris's
reddit and look a lot of people picked up on this monologuing tendency
and they were not happy about it.
That's good.
And yeah, I'm sure they apply that consistently.
I hope they do across different people that, you know,
that they might be more positively inclined to who,
if they have tendencies to monologue, that they would also not like that.
But that's neither here nor there.
It's just a comment to mention. So, yes, also not like that. But that's neither here nor there. It's just a common dimension.
So, yes, I thought this was interesting
because it's a particularly bad example or good example.
Yeah, it's a good example of a common thing.
Yeah, of a bad tendency of people.
And I suspect that philosophers and academics
and older philosophers and academics
are probably in the Venn diagram of prolific
monologuers right like they're they're right there but but it's also it's also got to do with that
style of thinking isn't it and we talked about this a lot back way back when we covered jordan
peterson where that sort of poetic scattergun kind of thing where there's this thing and that thing
and that thing and they're sort of thematically related in some vague fuzzy of thing where there's this thing and that thing and that thing and
they're sort of thematically related in some vague fuzzy way i think there's a kind of person for whom
both in the audience and the people who do it for whom that kind of thing is yeah reasoning is is
appealing they've sketched it out and like an impressionistic allegorical sketch and um that i
just find it incredibly frustrating because I just,
I did, maybe it's just the person to some degree, maybe it's a personal preference, but I,
I, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I get it. Well, that's all for today, Matt. We had a look
at the piece of content, but yeah, maybe you should listen to the rest of it. If you want
to find out where it goes there's still a lot more
to cover so how long instead of interest how long in totem was his answer how many minutes i i
genuinely don't know but i oh it's over 10 minutes over 10 minutes and it's not done yet it's because
it's hard to tell right because they it bleeds into another point and then they start discussing that.
So it never actually comes to that.
I feel like we'll never get to hear
just a clear, direct answer to the question.
I think he did.
I mean, he gave it somewhere in the middle.
It's just that it was those kind of weak points,
which is some people don't believe in like the change change
some people don't believe that historical change is possible so the new atheist lots of people have
been religious throughout history so it's probably doing something and if you don't have religion
you'll replace it with something worse so yeah these are all changes impossible anyway so
you know in a long time don't try to think that the world could start not paying
more attention.
Get better because it will collapse.
Societies will eventually collapse.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cool.
Cool.
Cool.
Cool.
Cool.
Good for thought.
Something to think about there.
So, well, that's it, Matt.
Anyway, that's it.
Sorry, Professor.
What's his name again?
John Gray.
John Gray. Sorry, Professor Gray. Yeah. name again? John Gray. John Gray.
Sorry, Professor Gray.
Yeah.
No right to reply.
Sorry.
You're not coming on.
The door is closed.
All right.
And just one point, though.
The thing is about Euclides.
Right.
Shut up.
He went after Sophocles.
Sophocles had a mistress
that he didn't like much
oh really
Althusser
didn't he beat his wife to death
the Marxist
and he was an atheist too wasn't he
he knew someone who was an atheist
I can't say for certain
but he did kill his wife
and he was a historical
materialist.
And those are ideas that fertilized
the tyrannies of the 20th century.
Right, the Nazis.
I mean, yes, they referenced some Christian
things, but not in the
way that the Catholic
Church would approve of.
Not the way that i conceptualize it anyway Thank you.