Ideas - How poetry offers insight into the meaning of life

Episode Date: July 25, 2025

Canadian scholar and philosopher Charles Taylor insists poetry persuades us through the experience of connection. His book, Cosmic Connections: Poetry in the Age of Disenchantment, traces how poets, b...eginning in the Romantic period, found a new avenue to pursue meaning in life. He argues that while poetry can often be incomplete and enigmatic, its insight is too moving — and true — to be ignored. *This episode originally aired on Jan. 7, 2025.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Shaw Festival in Niagara on the Lake presents The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, filled with breathtaking battles, mythical creatures, and unforgettable characters. This new adaptation of C.S. Lewis's classic will mesmerize the whole family. Don't miss this epic adventure. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, this season at the Shaw Festival. For tickets, go to Shawfest.com. This is a CBC podcast. Why not?
Starting point is 00:00:35 Okay. Oh, and the fruiting begriefer, there is no stella, the not truer, the dontone forcundiguing. First, in the little questions and outlawed. Welcome to ideas.
Starting point is 00:00:50 I'm Nala Ayad. Aynneur, a reigning of the day. Then the stuf in the her, Roof, Stofer in the an, We're listening to a man who's been enchanted by the Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke. It's a strong that fallen to for a sparinger spiel. And foresick, in the summer. But I should go on maybe with the German.
Starting point is 00:01:21 It's nice to hear it, though. Yeah. It'd be unusual to broadcast a longer German. But it would be nice to do it a little bit. It's always the first time. Yes. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:01:37 One more, thanks. Not only the morn out of the zonnas, not just as the wander in their time. The reader is Charles Taylor. At 93 years old, the Canadian philosopher has a new book out. Enchantment is his topic, along with what Taylor calls,
Starting point is 00:01:56 the age of disenchantment. of these entvallenen and the ways, not the wiesen in the abet, not not
Starting point is 00:02:05 after the abetting clear and not the narned and an abens but the
Starting point is 00:02:17 nests, the hos the hoon of the summers nests, none, the sterner of the earth
Starting point is 00:02:24 oh, one's to be and to know, unendly. He gives sterner, then we, V, V, V, V, he, he, he, he, he, is he forgotten.
Starting point is 00:02:34 So, I... He gives us the translation of Rolka's poem. Oh, in the spring would understand. Annunciation, it would echo everywhere. First, those small questioning notes which a clear, confident day would surround with heightening silence. Then up the calls, up the flight of steps,
Starting point is 00:02:55 to the dreamt of Temple of the Future. than the trill, the fountain, whose jet ascends through its own falling as in a union of promise and play. And up ahead, summer. Not just all the summer dawns. Not just how they change in today and glistening with Genesis.
Starting point is 00:03:15 Not just the days which are mild around flowers and above around the full-formed trees, forceful and strong. Not just the calm relevance in these outspread powers. Not just the paths, not just the meadows as evening deepens, not just after late thunderstorms, the pulsing clarity, and not just the approach to sleep in a twilight, a premonition, but the nights, all these towering summer nights, and the stars, the stars of Earth, ought to be dead one day and then know them forever, all the stars, for how, how, how to forget them. Then, after all that, the thing is summed up by Heozine Ishalic. To be here is glorious. So you get a sense of that night sky is the shining for you.
Starting point is 00:04:14 It's got, you know, it really is. The cosmic poet at his best. Yeah. Charles Taylor has long been Canada's most famous philosopher. He gave the Massey lectures back in 1991 on the malaise of modernity. His major books are listed among the most important philosophical contributions of recent decades, works like sources of the self and a secular age. Writing in the New Yorker, fellow Canadian Adam Gopnik calls him
Starting point is 00:05:03 a hard thinker to pigeonhole at once precise and prophetic. I mean, the great thing here is the sense of someone looking at the sky, looking at the earth, and feeding a sense of exaltation, exultation, exaltation. The sense of worry shining through is what you get in the passage that were climaxes in Heelzeinist Helene. Taylor's latest book is
Starting point is 00:05:51 cosmic connections, poetry in the age of disenchantment. It's a story of how poets, beginning in the romantic period, found a new avenue to pursue meaning in life. The poets were responding to huge changes in society, linked to scientific discovery and industrialization. We have this new category, I would argue, after the 18th century, of something which powerfully evokes something very powerful. In this case, what we would use the word glory, glorious, but would powerfully invoke that without making a claim. This is how it really is.
Starting point is 00:06:38 Not claiming to tell you how things really are. The poem is humble in that respect. In other ways, it's infinitely ambitious. Charles Taylor sees something profoundly important going on in a poem like this one by Rilke. It's something hard to put into words, but still it's more important than all the disputes in Western philosophy. And Taylor feels it's key to how humanity must respond now as we face new causes of disenchantment. For one of the world's most celebrated philosophers to come to this conclusion does take some explaining. That's why Cosmic Connections
Starting point is 00:07:19 is a very thick tone. Five hundred and ninety-eight pages. I wonder what your early thoughts were about the most important thing about living a full human life. Yeah, I have to sort of reconstruct backward. To see where Taylor's coming from, it helps us start at the beginning.
Starting point is 00:07:37 It would have been music, poetry, before these big political questions and these big civilizational questions. I am curious, if you remember what the first poem was that you fell in love with. Well, I don't know exactly for it, but Keats was, to me, one of the most remarkable.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Why? Oh, just the music of a, yeah, yeah. I met up with Charles Taylor, around the corner from his home in Montreal. He's lived in the city off and on since 1931. I had a wonderful teacher in, I suppose, high school of this, you know, and he was English, a poet himself,
Starting point is 00:08:21 and he sort of, this is at the beginning of a lot of things, he taught us the romantic period, you know, and it's through that poetry that I got. And this is kind of full circle. Yes. Do you remember that teacher's name by any chance? Do I have the, what? Do you remember that teacher's name by any chance?
Starting point is 00:08:42 Yeah, but Patrick Anderson, he was an Englishman, and he taught it at Selenhouse, my school. Selwyn House is an English-speaking private day school for boys. Historically, it's been the school of choice for the sons of Montreal's Anglophone elite, the Molesons, the Bronfmans. Charles Taylor was born into that elite, more or less. His family lived in Uttremont, at that time, a town just outside Montreal. It's since been swallowed up by the city.
Starting point is 00:09:10 His father spoke only English and ran a steel company. But Taylor also belonged to an important French-speaking family. My mother's family was Bobienne, and the Bobienne dominated Otremeau in those days. That was my horizon when I was really very small, right? So what did you speak at home? Well, both were circulating on, which is a great advantage, actually. What was it like growing up in Montreal in a bilingual family? The thing is, when you're very small, that's just the nature of the universe, right?
Starting point is 00:09:44 I became aware later on that they were uninguals on both sides. And you straddled the middle. Well, yeah. I mean, actually, I think there was a kind of maybe too lofty of you of our vocations family. We always try to explain the English and the French to the English. And if you're in that position, you have moments when you're with purity. Prangopones, and well, then you're angry acrobots, and they talk about the
Starting point is 00:10:16 other. And if you're in our kind of position, you say, well, this is wacky. Do we shut up? No, the Tartre Claim. No, that's not what the bank of bones are all about. It's almost like a diplomatic position. Well, I kind of
Starting point is 00:10:32 just get annoyed after all that these totally fictitious ideas circulate. Did you feel like you made it, you You changed someone's mind? Well, this is a small number of individuals, but the going stereotypes were just so powerful.
Starting point is 00:10:53 How much of that duality do you think kind of informed what you became, who you are? Oh, absolutely central. Absolutely central. I mean, you've got to have two ways into the world, or three or four, and so on, you know. In its politics, Taylor's family, was blue or blue, not rouge or red, meaning they valued Quebec's confederation with the rest of
Starting point is 00:11:19 Canada as well as the province's historic links to Britain and France. They believed in the duty Quebecers had to the old countries in times of war. And then, of course, the war was there, the issue of conscription, and the family was fairly, they voted conservative. My father voted conservative because of conscription, and, you know, he fought in the First World War, so he was really, and there was, of course, a very strong anti-ante, what do you call it, accommodation with Hitler and Mussaneda. Apeasant, is the word of you. So everybody in the family was agreed on that.
Starting point is 00:12:01 My father, because he was, you know, British Empire Patriot, and my grandfather, because he had this tremendous love of France. One of the most marking emotional moments was the day that France surrendered in June. I remember a beautiful day, you know, and you felt like going on a picnic, but there was the end of civilization had occurred as far as my grandfather was concerned. I mean, he was. You know, the reaction was so powerful. You really felt that something really big or terrible what happened. Charles' own political views would soon turn sharply away from his family's bleu traditions. Maurice Duplessi was the head of Quebec's conservative Union National, and Duplessi's campaign strategy involved stoking fears about threats to Quebec identity.
Starting point is 00:13:02 In particular, supposed threats posed by Jehovah's witnesses and Jewish refugees, This outraged, the young Charles Taylor. I was absolutely horrified, but then I got to be adolescents. I was utterly horrified with that. Actually, my first political commitment was really to the provincial liberal party, right? Because, you know, I really wanted to put an end to the end. And that is deeply seared me. I mean, that's, you know, the idea of running,
Starting point is 00:13:38 anger campaign against the minority and religion in order to get a terrible policy. Well, it's deja vu for me. He's referring to today's politics in Quebec, Bill 21. The secularism law brought in
Starting point is 00:13:55 by Premier Francois Légo. I think of Logo as we kind of Dupasi reincarnate. It was kind of providential that I had that role in the commission and then yeah. Which we'll get to as well. Conversation with Charles Taylor presents the challenge of keeping up with his references, their range, and their number.
Starting point is 00:14:17 He'll weave Quebec's political history in with the politics today. He'll nod to literary works in English or French or German, and he can rarely resist a quick chuckling aside to acknowledge a cliche or a joke or a slogan that was popular at some point over the decades. And then there are all the philosophers. He spent his life reading and arguing with hundreds of them. Taylor began his university career in 1949. He studied history at McGill. Then he won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford,
Starting point is 00:14:50 where he took the combined degree in politics, philosophy, and economics. Philosophy was an obligatory subject. You had to take some papers in all three, right? Economics was new, but I welcome that. I want to fill it in. but the philosophy I just found a so very flat-footed and it's very, very, at that point, positive sort of anti-metaphysical health. And I really thought this is so narrow and dense.
Starting point is 00:15:27 The fashion in those days was to try to make philosophy more like science. Knowledge should be verifiable. Confirmable. Questions must be answerable in one way or another, or else they're just bad questions. There are views of this kind, scientific views, but there are other views, and I find them more convincing, but the idea that the whole thing, all your teaching, should be concentrated in this small corner, with an immense amount of contempt for people who didn't have this opinion. So I guess that got me going because I suppose I had to prove to myself that that my negative reaction was quite justified. And in that, I didn't get any help in Oxford, but a friend of mine, a student, came back from Paris and said, you know, I hear you talking all the time.
Starting point is 00:16:26 I have a book that will probably interest you. And it was Merleau-Ponty, Filmed My Jita Perception. And I read it, wow. It got me going on the line that I've really been mining ever since. Maurice Merleau-Ponty wrote Phenomenology of Perception in 1945. There was a significant difference between the way Merleau-Ponty liked to think, compared to Charles Taylor's professors at Oxford. This is an example of what's often called
Starting point is 00:17:01 a great divide in Western philosophy between the continental and the anglophone or analytic varieties. Now, it's perilous for a non-scholar to try to encapsulate in a sentence or two the causes of this divide. In fact, even some of the 20th century's greatest minds never really saw what the fuss was all about. They included Charles Taylor's close friend, Isaiah Berlin,
Starting point is 00:17:28 the Russian-British liberal theorist, advisor to world leaders, a man described in the newspapers of his day as the world's greatest talker. I liked him a lot, and I readmired him, but he was in a very interesting way. I don't mean marginal that he wasn't influential or so on, but marginal to this movement. He sort of, it was really like this. He was kind of convinced that they were right,
Starting point is 00:18:02 or at least the trying to do something more. They was wrong. What? They being who? They, really the positivist majority, right? And he knew Freddie Eyre and all these people from the 1930s, but he was, but frankly, it bored him. So, as a matter of fact, he made a kind of great statement.
Starting point is 00:18:28 He went to the war and the British embassy in Washington, and then he flew back. And that gave him not only the occasion, but even the compulsion to rethink his academic life. And roughly, it's this. Positiveism is right, but boring. I tend to take it and all that the Puritans are right but repulsive and the others are wrong but romantic well they were right but utterly boring
Starting point is 00:19:06 so what really interested him was making some well-known or at least very important figures in European thought live again so that people can get a sense why they were into that, right? And so he did that
Starting point is 00:19:26 really, he gave these lectures where he really could invoke so people like Herder like Vico and he loved, of course he was Russian so he loved Heertsen you know the 19th century revolutionary so that's what he went
Starting point is 00:19:43 like talking about and he's spellbinding when he got into that even sort of very positivistic-minded people were just riveted. But he, how did it, we hit it off, so we spent a lot of time together, and I learned a lot from him, but not in the direction that I was trying to push the subject. So where do the roads diverge? Well, because, you know, the whole. whole phenomenological movement really interested me. I mean, I remember several times, as
Starting point is 00:20:22 I would say to me, tell me about Heidegger, I thought, oh God. So he really wanted to know, right? So I started explaining, and gradually his eyes glazed. Glazed over. And after about 15 minutes, 20 minutes of this, we were, he let us be. interrupted. Obviously with some relief. So he really wanted to know, right? But he didn't really have the equipment, I mean, the background to, to see the point. And, you know, it was a matter of sheer curiosity. It's a very interesting phenomenon. This is an utterly opaque philosophy doesn't seem to be saying anything, but a lot of people, very intelligent people, are saying to you, this is, you know, you must read these authors. And so he just,
Starting point is 00:21:16 I could be his conduit in there, but I utterly failed. I mean, maybe if I try it, now I'd find a way of doing it. So I'm reaching across the, but it just seemed to me that there are all sorts of interesting issues about human beings, why they even have a very strong sense of meaning, what it is to have a sense of meaning, one of the various avenues, how you're alive, people's lives, work out as they begin to explore a certain, vein, use a mining expression of meaning, and maybe, in some cases, interrupted and so on, but what draws them in the first place? So what was the mission that you set yourself on as a scholar?
Starting point is 00:22:05 Well, in a way, clarifying these issues, and I was thinking all the time that that would be a service if I could, to the extent I could clarify. But also, I couldn't stop myself. If somebody said, no, you're going to go off and run a relief organization or political, which I did lots of, the political thing I did a lot of commitment to. But if somebody said you can't afford to waste your time working out these ideas, it's not important, right? Writ large, what was the mission? And, well, at large it was exploring, it's a philosophical anthropology of a big word for, what it is to be human being, and what are the things that you in a way are not developing in order to grasp
Starting point is 00:23:02 what human life is really all about? No small question. Yeah. Limitous question in a certain way, yeah. I mean, I suppose one way of talking about it. just thinking of it, talking about, is it meaning? There's a sense of meaning, the meaning word, linguistic meaning and something.
Starting point is 00:23:23 But there's a sense of meaning when people use it. That is real meaning for me. My life is without meaning. When I got to contact with this, then my life began to take off that sense of meaning, right? I mean, the positives were very fast with the word meaningless. They met that linguistically, right? These sentences don't mean anything, but what lies behind, taking that stances against the kind of stance I take, is the sense of meaning in life, whether that just is a private matter of how you feel or whether there are real issues here.
Starting point is 00:24:08 So I was convinced at the second that there are real issues here. That's a question which can be totally off your agenda. Any kind of discipline, you can do history, you can do politics and so on with an awareness of that issue and interest in it and a belief in its importance, or you can do history the way, well, later on when I was in the political science department, the kind of standard American originating comparative politics. I guess as a non-area expert, I'm curious at that time, how you even begin to approach answering that question? Well, I mean, there are all sorts of phenomena of people finding, as they say, this meaning and this meaningful and so on. And so you can start asking yourself, what's going on here?
Starting point is 00:25:07 What is the issue? what it would be to say yes or no here. There is such an issue, and not only that, but it's one of the most important things to resolve for yourself or to resolve in general. Or the opposite, if you have a very empirically oriented, almost natural science-type modeled notion of sociology
Starting point is 00:25:31 or a notion of political theory, that is sidelined. Or it's understood to be, sort of emotions people have, right? And it's not worth trying to understand as an actual issue. On Ideas, you're listening to This Way to Reenchantment with Charles Taylor. We're a podcast and a broadcast heard on CBC Radio 1 in Canada, across North America on Sirius XM, in Australia on ABC Radio National, on World Radio Paris, and around the world at cbc.ca.ca slash ideas.
Starting point is 00:26:11 Subscribe to ideas on Spotify or whatever podcast app you choose to use. I'm Nala Ayyad. The Shah Festival in Niagara on the Lake presents the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, filled with breathtaking battles, mythical creatures, and unforgettable characters. This new adaptation of Sius Lewis's classic will mesmerize the whole family. Don't miss this epic adventure, the lion, the witch, and the wardrobe this season at the Shaw Festival. For tickets, go to Shawfest.com. Hey, how's it going?
Starting point is 00:26:51 Amazing. I just finished paying off all my debt with the help of the Credit Counseling Society. Whoa, seriously? I could really use their help. It was easy. I called and spoke with a Credit Counselor right away. They asked me about my debt, salary, and regular expenses, gave me a few options, and help me along the way. You had a ton of debt and you're saying credit counseling society helped with all of it? Yep, and now I can sleep better at night. Right on! When debts got you, you've got us. Give credit counseling society a call today. Visit no more debts.org. You mentioned your political activities. In the 60s, you returned to Montreal
Starting point is 00:27:27 and you started teaching at Miguel. Yeah. And the University of Montreal. And you threw yourself wholesale into politics. Yeah. I mean, you ran for office four different times. Why didn't you ever win an election? Oh, it wasn't propitious here, you know. We could have, I don't think I would have had, but the party in 68, if Pierre hadn't come along.
Starting point is 00:27:54 By the party, Charles means the federal New Democratic Party. And the Pierre, he's talking about, is Pierre Trudeau, who ran against Taylor in my own. 1965 in the Mount Royal riding. Trudeau won the seat. He really changed. Chantilly had that done, you know, of the politics in Quebec. Absent Trudeau, Robert Klisch would probably have made it in Juvenet, but not very many other people. And with Pierre entering the scene, the whole thing was, yeah. Yeah. Do you think it's possible for an
Starting point is 00:28:33 intellectual to be a politician? Are the roles too far apart? No, I mean, there are terrible strains and there are big issues of time and so on, right? So if I'd actually got elected department, it might have been a disaster for me. So there would have been a huge problem, a priority there. But what is it that drew you to a possible political career? What motivated you? No, I really wanted this party to take off.
Starting point is 00:29:03 The place it had least taken off was Quebec, right? Then later you've got this great orange wave, you know, with Jack Leighton, but it was just, you know, almost unthinkable. So my goal was, let me spend a few years trying to get the parties, as it were, become an acceptable alternative, right? So I'd had these two goals in life, but I mean, one of them, you know, hit a brick wall, but the other didn't, so that, the shape of my life is kind of dictated by that.
Starting point is 00:29:43 Charles Taylor's career as a politician never took off. He now looks back on that fact with relief. As he just noted, it might have been a disaster for his career as a scholar if he had won that seat in Parliament. But he never left politics entirely. He stayed on the board of the New Democratic Party, and his name is on a problem. for excellence in policy research handed out each year by the Broadbent Institute. And even when Taylor is writing
Starting point is 00:30:11 about philosophy or romantic poetry, matters of politics are never far away. It's something like how his bilingual family once saw their role bridging the two solitudes. Taylor finds himself explaining the intellectual world to the political
Starting point is 00:30:27 and the political to the intellectual. It's a really difficult time for democracy. It's being questioned, you know, at all levels of society. In the states, there's a majority of voters who feel that it's underthreatened in their country, and it's certainly easy to see that from the outside as well. And the polls are showing, of course, a decline in the value that young people place on the democratic system. What are your feelings these days about the goodness of the liberal democratic model as a way of organizing society? Well, I mean, it's more
Starting point is 00:31:03 comes across to me as the badness of the negation of these basic values, because terrible atmosphere is created, terrible a lot of suffering inflicted on some people by others, terrible disenchantment will break out even among the Trumpians, you know, they'll eventually see what this involves. So the alternatives are really stark. Do you think there's enough awareness that the alternatives are really stark? No, I mean, there is certain awareness, but the big issue in all our Western democracies is,
Starting point is 00:31:45 is there something horrifying here, or is it fine? The polarization is around that issue. It's not that people on the lap disagree with not enough money is being spanned on medical, et cetera. It's not details like that. It's really something deeply horrifying, yeah. Quite fundamental. But is it fine?
Starting point is 00:32:10 I mean, what's your sense? Is it fine? No, we have to get over this. We have to get beyond this. We have to see what's terrible here. What is it going to take for us to see that, do you? I don't know. I mean, yes, I do. In detail, I know the kinds of coalitions
Starting point is 00:32:30 that had to be built, but I don't know the key to success. I mean, I would have thought after January 6th, after a whole lot of other things, that the comeback really would have a ceiling to it, right? Do you think there's something about our time that made it inevitable for us to question this way of organizing ourselves? No, but I mean, you can see that a certain kind of intellectual and allegiance and so on had an awful attitude to the mass of the voters.
Starting point is 00:33:08 I mean, they're not really identification with them at a certain amount of contempt. You can see that building up, yeah. Do you see a way out of, a way back from the disillusionment and disenchantment with liberal democracy, or is it going to have to be reinvented for people to believe in it again?
Starting point is 00:33:29 Well, I think you're really, have to be reinvented. But in the meantime, there are coalitions that can defeat that. The thing is, now the big issue has become, for Trump too, but all across Europe, the big issues come with the refugee now. When you look at the conditions, the growth of this huge refugee stream was obviously, you know, had to happen and couldn't be stopped, right? Because it's driven by war, global warming, but also by the fact that people who are living in much poorer countries now have media that tell them what it's like here, Europe. So there's no way the refugee stream can go but up, up, up, up. Newcomers, immigrants, a tide of refugees. Tolerance of minority groups
Starting point is 00:34:24 was the issue that first awoke Charles Taylor to politics back when he was an adolescent. And this was the issue at the heart of Taylor's biggest contribution to Quebec politics. In 2007, he joined Gerard Bouchard, brother of Lucien, and they toured the province together. The Bouchard-Taylor Commission, it came to be called, its official title, The Consultation Commission on Accommodation Practices related to cultural differences. The project was aimed squarely at opening up public conversation in Quebec in a healthy way. encouraging people to speak their minds about the place of Muslim, Sikh, Jewish, and other minority groups in Quebec society. Taylor and Bouchard traveled from town to town, village to village, inviting locals to their public hearings.
Starting point is 00:35:15 What was the experience like for you? Oh, just so revelatory. I mean, I got a depth understanding of how these people felt. And so you can see them in the context or a cadre of Xenopoble. and so on. But you can also see them with the element of panic, Eskivon nous changet.
Starting point is 00:35:39 That's the question that came. That is a terribly crucial question in Quebec. Iskilvon nu change us? Are they going to change us? And the answer was? Well, the answer was, you know, that's what we fear.
Starting point is 00:35:56 And what we tried to do with the report is give another view. and that they change immensely, they change a lot more than you change when they're here for a while, and particularly when their kids get brought up in the schools, they change just totally. So there's going to be people quite far down
Starting point is 00:36:17 that you're emerging from this because the parents brought them here and they went through the schools and they became North Americans in many, many respects. But I mean, you need, to have that faith that that's going to happen. And, of course, the kids understand this. See, my grandchildren were going to Francophone schools through this,
Starting point is 00:36:41 and they bug out like that with what they're saying about these people. My friend Ellie in school, it's nothing like that guy. They really couldn't understand it. Looking back from today's perspective, when it comes to seeing a cultural threat from New York, It's the fragility of people's fears that still stands out for Charles Taylor. In the short run, tensions over cultural differences can be at their worst in areas close to a major city. For instance, the two most raucous meetings that we had were St. Jerome and Longuey.
Starting point is 00:37:23 These are towns just outside Montreal. We nearly broke up a fight, had to break up a fight in Longuey. Over what? Well, some very aggressive woman said to the people who were vocal on the other side, you know. You're totally closed minds, you're idiots and so on. And a very, very aggressive guy to do. Was getting up to the streets. We rushed down the aisle.
Starting point is 00:37:54 We're not supposed to, we're supposed to just have an inquiry. They're dramatic. Yeah. So there was a lot of anger. Whereas when you're way up in like that famous place, Eruvilles, right? That kind of thing. They were lamps. I mean, they had all these very deep prejudices and so on, but they didn't feel personally threatened. Whereas the people around Montreal in the Bonnure, they have had all sorts of aggravation of the existence of these people here and very much worked up by having
Starting point is 00:38:35 a debate in a big assembly where obviously the people who were chairing the discussion, namely us, had a very strong criticism, implicit criticism which we tried not to rammed on their throats, but they sensed that, and then there was always a vocal minority like this woman, you know, a young woman, really telling it like it was
Starting point is 00:38:59 as far as you're concerned you don't like to be told that to take you by a younger woman. Dramatic standoffs, potential fistfights. The risks of speaking to each other must be weighed against the long-term danger to society when people don't articulate what matters to them.
Starting point is 00:39:21 Throughout much of Charles Taylor's latest book, it would be easy to forget the political backdrop. He talks mostly about his favorite poets, Wordsworth, Malarmé, T.S. Eliot, these cosmic poets, in Taylor's view, come as close as anyone could to expressing what's most important, what's really going on in the human desire to come to terms with the cosmos. It's not a topic that lends itself to easy or quick expression. A lot of human beings, sometimes all in a given sense. society, but even when there's division to what this, a lot of people have a very strong
Starting point is 00:40:01 sense of the meaning, powerful meaning of our relation to nature, the planet, but I'm using this cosmos as a general term. It's a very important part of meaning of life for lots of people and perennially, but in this bewildering way with great changes. One of the greatest changes and people's sense of cosmic connection happened in Europe between the 17th and 18th centuries. An older, dominant way of connecting with the cosmos seemed to give way. For centuries, most Europeans felt themselves belonging to an ordered universe,
Starting point is 00:40:40 something like Aristotle's description of a great chain of being. It put humans into a hierarchy that included the divine and the natural world. By the middle of the 18th century, for many people, this feeling had vanished. But, Charles Taylor believes, their desire for cosmic connection remained. The dominance in some ways, socially, politically, philosophically dominant view,
Starting point is 00:41:09 a cosmic order would be Newton earlier, not the great chain of beating. I read the cropping up in a lot of arts, but particularly in poetry, of this kind of invocation of cosmic order as a compensatory move. It has to be something that carries this. It's epistemically differently placed
Starting point is 00:41:36 because it's not on the side of reigning philosophy or reigning science. Emphatically not, right? But so that's why I talk about it as something that's only invoked, but with what I call epistemic retreat. That is, the retreat is not making a claim about what's absolutely there and zish for itself.
Starting point is 00:42:01 But it's how it necessarily, powerfully appears to us. So the invocation, you've got a very strong sense of what it would be like if you like to be rejoicing at the cosmic order, right? but it's not in the role of that's what it absolutely is. So you get a very interesting phenomenon in the 19th century in English literature that everybody loves Wordsworth. Yeah, but a lot of people that do shrug off the fact
Starting point is 00:42:38 that they're not taking this literally, right? Five years have passed. summers with the length of five long winters. And again I hear these waters rolling from their mountain springs with a soft inland murmur. This is Ward's Wardsworth's poem, lines written a few miles above Tinturn Abbey. Once again do I behold these steep and lofty cliffs that on a wild secluded sea impress thoughts of more deep seclusion and connect the landscape with the quiet of the sky. The day is come when I gain repose here under this dark sycamore and view these plots of cottage ground,
Starting point is 00:43:24 these orchard tuffs, which at this season with their unriped fruits, are clad in one green hue, and lose themselves mid-grows and copses. Once again I see these hedgerows, hardly hedgerows, little lines of sportive wood run wild, these pastoral farms, green to the very, door and wreaths of smoke sent up in silence from among the trees, with some uncertain notice, as might seem, of vagrant dwellers in the houseless woods, or of some hermit's cave,
Starting point is 00:43:58 whereby his fire, the hermit sits alone. I have to move along. Wow. This is a long. Yeah. Now, this is the key passage. But maybe we can move a little bit back. But he talks about the love he had as a boy and so on, and that time has passed, and all its aching joys are now no more, and all its dizzy raptures. Not for this faint eye, nor mourn, nor murmur.
Starting point is 00:44:39 Other gifts have followed. For such loss, I would believe, And this is now the really key, for I have learned to look on nature, not as in the hour of thoughtless youth, but hearing oftentimes the still sad music of humanity, nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power to chasten and subdued. And I have felt a presence that disturbs me with the joy of elevated thoughts, a sense sublime of something far more deeply interfused, whose dwelling is the light of setting suns and the round ocean and the living air and the blue sky and in the mind of man, a motion and a spirit that impels all thinking things, all objects of all thought, and rolls through all things.
Starting point is 00:45:35 So you begin to get a powerful sense of movement here, is moving towards you, but also all objects of all thought. and rolls through all things, see, very powerfully invoked. And that is the way you have to see a lot of poetry. So then you get someone like Rutka, but there's no, it's not on the map whether this is a scientific truth or so on, but you can see the poetry is straining to express some sense of this movement in reality. And the great success is the elegies which start off not being able to say it,
Starting point is 00:46:23 not being able to say it, right? The angel could say it, but I'm struggling, but I can't do it. And then the climax of the seventh is absolutely superb. Heosinist Helvetish. To be here is glorious. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:39 Yeah. There's something just ploying. away to me in that. What do you believe is the most important consequence of disenchantment today? Oh, most important. Just concatenation of consequences. One of them is what we're doing to the planet. We aren't even noticing it.
Starting point is 00:47:04 I mean, it's really consequence of the relation to the planet of instrumental use. taking over for lots of people as the most important, and for lots of people, it's really serious stuff, don't give me all this touchy-feely stuff, and this is the really important relationship. That, all the consequences that we see today come from that, including the good stuff, which is the science, which can tell us how to get out of this. It's astonishing, though, that people are ignoring that to an incredible degree. Charles Taylor says it's a symptom of disenchantment when we collectively treat the world as something to be used. This industrial attitude emerges from the science of Isaac Newton and company,
Starting point is 00:47:56 and now we find ourselves with runaway carbon emissions. In our disenchanted society, when push comes to shove, we spurn Wordsworth and his communion with nature, his sense of a magical spirit running through all things. that's seen as mere touchy-feely stuff, as Taylor says. But it would be wrong to blame all this on the scientists, especially because in recent decades, it's been the voice of science pushing hardest for change in how we treat our planet.
Starting point is 00:48:28 And meanwhile, there are plenty of people who view the world in a mystical light, but who are far from being environmentalists. One of very important demographic, which is voting for Trump, his people who are Christians of a certain kind. So they have a very narrow view that those particular doctrines and particular rules of behavior are what I'm talking about matters, right?
Starting point is 00:48:54 So he's going to make sure that they're put into legislation. That's all that matters to them. And he started off saying it's a climate change as a hoax, right? Can anybody believe that for a minute? But exactly the same people who are being swept away by hurricanes are going to vote for him. Now, part of that is that it's so scary if you let yourself be alarmed that you'd rather bury your head in the sand, yeah. But there are people who, supposedly religious grounds, not just like an oil executive, you know, we're going to stop now. I mean, all this money is just about to be made, and you want us to stop.
Starting point is 00:49:42 What do you think you're doing, right? Taylor's call to us is certainly not to restore religion to the place it held in pre-Scientific Europe. He hopes we collectively find our way back to enchantment, but the leap of faith he proposes is the same one his old philosophical colleagues at Oxford refused to take, regardless of their religious beliefs. It's the faith that unanswerable questions can be worth asking, and that the vaguest of notions, the meaning of life, is worth reaching for. That mission that you set for yourself after you finished your PhD,
Starting point is 00:50:20 I wonder if you could describe how much progress you think you made in actually accomplishing that mission. Well, progress is maybe the wrong. I mean, you know, what I would consider really helped. here is finding languages to talk about that. And I still haven't, and maybe you can't, made a lot of headway. I mean, it's clear that one way is through works of art. I mean, but it in a sense only moves the problem another space, right? Because if If somebody says, yes, I find this word by Beethoven, it gives the sense of what I'm talking
Starting point is 00:51:14 about, and you use something like the notion of resonance, it resonates, right? The interlocutor would me come back and say, well, try to explain to me, I don't get that. Tell me why. And then you're just as inarticulous, invasive that, as you were at the beginning. And so you try to be helpful and move this poem or this. quartet by Beethoven, you know, up in the front. And you're faced with the same question. What is it that makes it so hard to articulate? Well, all the things we use to articulate are susceptible to being read differently, felt differently by different people. So there are
Starting point is 00:51:56 obviously some people who, with poetry, for instance, are going to read this and say, yeah, that. It says that to me and I can see why. But then there are obviously going to be people that are left unmoved by this. They don't, you know. How can that tell you? So they want declarative sentences, subject or predicate, making assertions, which can be verified. And all they're getting is they're being moved from medium to medium. This is a philosophical medium on this page, but then they're being referred on to the poem or they're being referred on to the music or, you know. And this is not useless because a lot of people do get it, so it's very important, but it's possible that other people are just as perplexed after you've given them
Starting point is 00:52:55 this resonant work, just as perplexed as they were when you started. What is at stake, I guess, and how well we can articulate what's most important in a human life? Well, I mean, you've given the answer, you know. Some people are going to get it, some people are going to have woken in them the sense of the real importance of this. They're going to look on the drama of our present age
Starting point is 00:53:23 and global warming us on it in a new light. Because, I mean, there's nobody in half a brain can fail to see that. we're risking our lives. Or at least we're risking the lives of lots of people. Not everybody's going to be unlucky, but the islands that are going to be flooded off the sea, if they're ignited by reading some of this poetry, for instance, then it not only becomes a wearisome obligation that you stop this, but you actually feel it's rewarding in itself. If these are very deeply meaningful
Starting point is 00:54:01 or paths into something very deeply meaningful for human beings, you have a fuller and more enriched life. So I mean that's a primary justification. Though the other one is some people, I can see
Starting point is 00:54:18 the point, is more important mobilizing people. It's not a disadvantage that it also can help mobilizing people to save the planet. Charles Taylor, thank you very much. Thank you. You were listening to This Way to Reenchantment with Charles Taylor.
Starting point is 00:54:39 The producer was Tom Howell. Thanks to Megan Thurston, Frank Rup, and Elena Petrovich at McGill University. Taylor's recent book is Cosmic Connections, Poetry in an Age of Disenchantment. Our technical producer is Danielle Duval. Our web producer is Lisa Ayuso. Senior producer Nikola Lukshic. Greg Kelly is the executive producer of ideas, and I'm Nala Ayyed. For more CBC podcasts, go to CBC.ca.ca slash podcasts.

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