This is a great overview of the existentialist philosophers. However, like most academic writings of this nature, the author tends to be most effective in the earliest half of the book and diminishes somewhat thereafter. Instead of the conclusive crescendo I expected, Barrett ends with two relatively boring appendices that are not at all indicative of the wonderful writing and organization that characterizes the earlier parts of his book.
American Anti-intellectualism
Barrett gives exhaustive and well related explanations for the rise of existentialism; and from time-to-time laments the general anti-intellectualism of most of the U.S. population, whom he characterizes as inheritors of Platonian, Aristotelian, and Enlightenment indoctrinations. Barrett sees existentialism in the West as the inchoate attempt to see beyond these traditional points of view; he writes: “The desire for meaning still slumbers, though submerged, beneath the extroversion of American life.”
And indeed, life in the United States is, for the most part, and for the greatest majority, extroverted. Outside of academia, it is not at all easy to find others willing and capable of discussing philosophy, sociology, or even religion. Our mothers have told us that we should avoid speaking of religion or politics in polite society, for fear of offending another. Our goal of being a “good fellow” overrides the more profound goal of dialect and synthesis.
Few Americans have honed the art of listening. We seem to feel most comfortable with conversations characterized by incessant banter and meaningless chit-chat that centers around nothing very substantiative. For most Americans, the introspective Existentialist would be looked upon as an oddball, loner, or weirdo. And that which Americans categorize as “social skills”, the existentialist would most likely find quite frivolous.
Learning to See the Dark Side
Existentialism has been rejected by many Americans as merely psychology or nihilism because they prefer to ignore matters such as anxiety, death and conflict, as too sensitive for discussion. Regardless, these are factual themes of life. People do indeed die. So many times, I’ve heard the dying who wish to discuss what will happen when they die told by their consolers: “Oh, don’t speak of it, you’re not going to die!”. We’re all caught up in a giant conspiracy of denying or ignoring the things that are most difficult.
Barrett speaks a lot about the problems of Positivism in American life, something we have obviously seen with the Progressive party; and Barrett defines “Positivist Man” as one: “who dwells in the tiny island of light composed of what he finds scientifically meaningful, while the whole surrounding area in which ordinary men live from day to day, and have their dealings with other men, is consigned to the outer darkness of meaningless.” Here, one can’t help but think of the Progressive, FBI agent, Peter Strzok, who recently vented his disgust of ordinary men in his texts to Lisa Page about the occupants of a Southern Virginia Walmart. This kind of personal disengagement from the broader population segregates an elite class, which sees the masses as mere objects, no different from crops or trees, from which they simply exploit the resources they need. Existential philosophy is a revolt against such oversimplification and attempts to grasp the image of the whole man, even where this involves bringing into consciousness all that is dark and questionable, including the blubberous and unbathed visitors to the local Walmart.
Peeking Out From Behind Religion
Historically, we have cloaked the dark side of existence with ostentatious religion, which we tend to return to anytime the ugly specter of darkness rears before us. But, since medieval times, this cloak has been slowly dissipating amidst the progress of intellect and science. Protestantism has assisted in this endeavor by stripping away many of the images and symbols from medieval Christianity. The advent of Protestantism initiated a long struggle toward existentialism.
Protestantism succeeded in raising the religious consciousness to a higher level of individual sincerity, personal soul-searching, and generally more strenuous inwardness. But, once stripped of the mediating rites and dogmas, the Protestant man confronted the abyss face-to-face, without the security-blanket of the sacraments. Eventually, Protestant man acquiesced that he can do nothing of himself, but function only as a result of God working within him. This resulted in a squelching of the conscious mind as a mere instrument of a much greater unconscious force that possessed it.
With the sacraments now discarded, like the fig leaf, man can no longer hide his nakedness by the old disguises. Existentialism emerges from this alienation and estrangement, this sense of humanity’s basic fragility, and, in particular, the impotence of reason when it confronts the depths of existence and death. We attempt to muster some sort of valid resistance against the throes of time by creating cultural artifacts such as writing, art, or other evidence of our being, as some sort of testament to our lives. And yet, the more we accomplish, the more data we compile, the more our ignorance looms out at us from the darkness.
Information overload confirms our finiteness, because we can only know certain things at the cost of not-knowing something else; and we are acutely aware that we cannot choose to know everything at once. We cannot escape our essential finitude. Uncertainty invariably attaches to every endeavor we undertake. Barrett quotes Hermann Weyl in saying: “We have tried to storm Heaven, and we have only succeeded in piling up the tower of Babel.”
Where to From Here?
We are perhaps now coming to the point in time where humanity can cast away ready-made presuppositions and begin to study existence in the same way that we study other things scientifically. Like Job, in existentialism, we come face-to-face with our finiteness. By seeking our justifications without mythology, we gain a clarified essence of ourselves, and one that accrues without creeds, systems, or superstitions.
Hebraic religion no longer retains unconditional validity for the mass of mankind. We must embrace change, learning, conversion, exploration, and, quite simply, evolution itself. We must focus our studies on things yet undiscovered. Historically, we must ask ourselves, where have myth, religion and ritual taken us? Into the crusades, the inquisitions, the holocaust, the burnings, the World Wars, nuclear proliferation, even destruction of the earthly environment! What historically valid evidence can we offer that any one religion ever proliferated on the face of this earth is exclusively sacrosanct?
If we take a moment to realize that consciousness itself is something that has evolved through long centuries and that even today it is still evolving, then we must cast aside those things which are clearly false, so that our awareness can grow unimpeded by anachronistic concepts. Our faith has traditionally manifested beyond our reason; but also, too often, against our reason! Let us explore more deeply the sense of love that overtakes people and causes them to reach beyond themselves, not the rigors of dogma, ritual, and archaic theology.
St. Thomas Aquinas asserts that the speculative, theoretical, intellect is the highest function of man, through which he is subordinated to the supernatural through intellectual vision. St. Augustine saw faith and reason – the vital and the rational – as coming together in eventual harmony. When dogma contradicts reason, this harmony is broken.
Our journey must ultimately involve the primacy of the thinker over his thoughts, i.e. the ability to purposefully turn from thoughts that violate reason. This is the process of becoming aware and ascending to the responsibility associated with the gift of freewill. This is the process of grasping the reins of oneself so as to become a factor in the evolutionary struggle confronting all humanity.
Facing the abyss, instead of hiding from it is key. Just ask Job.
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