"IN PRAISE OF FOLLY"-THE
PALLIATIVE TO GLOOM
Excerpt from
Ten Creative Stages to Confident Thinking
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© June 19, 2017
It is healthy to have a
sense of humor about ourselves and what is needed in troubling times. Folly
touches every aspect of our lives. We tend to take ourselves too seriously and
matters of urgency not seriously enough.
President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in his inaugural address in 1933 at the height
of the Great Depression, "The only
thing we have to fear is fear itself." But Plato counters, "Men are afraid of the light."
It is
doubtful many Athenians applauded Plato in his day, or FDR in his. Gloom is a
subtle deception that simmers rather than burns but ultimately exhausts courage
leaving only capricious hope. Folly as
palliative restores dignity and confidence.
Erasmus
(1466-1536) wrote "In Praise of
Folly" (1511) in a chaotic period in Western civilization. The Roman
Catholic Church was corrupt from the papacy to the clergy, while clinging to
its vanities. "Folly" was
published just six years before Martin Luther (1483-1546) nailed his 95 theses
to the Wittenberg Church door in 1517, which ignited the Protestant Reformation.
Today,
500 years later, man’s excesses and vanities are on a collision course. Folly provides the modern reader with
inescapable evidence of what happens when conventional mores and bureaucratic
institutions no longer work, but still hold on desperately to dysfunctional
authority.
Neither
king nor prince, pope nor priest, aristocrat nor workingman escaped the sweep
of the Erasmus “Folly” as it put the
masters of society on notice. At the beginning of Folly’s oration, she declares
that she is giving a eulogy of herself, and she justifies the impertinence by
saying that she knows herself better than anyone else.
The
postmodern man has much in common with Folly in the Age of the Reformation. Sixteenth century man was not interested
in leaving Plato's cave of darkness for fear the light might blind him. He
preferred to wait until things returned to normal or the way they had always
been. This was especially true of the Roman Catholic Church. The clergy and
laity continued to ignore the handwriting on the wall, waiting for a miracle.
Erasmus knew the folly of this and so constructed his oration.
If you
can imagine, Catholicism was no longer synonymous with Christianity; nation
states were replacing church dominated kingdoms; and capitalism was replacing
church controlled feudalism. The lowly merchant class was emerging from the
docks to change the character of society from a feudalistic system to a performance
driven economy.
Erasmus's
"Folly" was penned in a
time of waning morality and scattering loyalties. Folly represented a many-sided
symbol that stood for all that was natural in man however misdirected his
attempts to get wrong things right.
Folly
revealed the character of man's wisdom and how it could be united with man's
action to gain success despite a world dominated by folly. Folly was concerned
with reason and how it could be presented as simple moral advice. She wondered
what secular humanists would make of the supernatural once it was replaced by
individual dignity, self-worth and self-satisfaction.
Parody,
irony, and satire are used by Folly to show what man does and what he has
harvested in the doing. She was obsessed with a passion for Youth with a
list of her followers, including Drunkenness, Ignorance, Self-love, Flattery,
Forgetfulness, Laziness, Pleasure, Madness, Sensuality, Intemperance, and Sound
Sleep, which aided her in gaining complete control of all things in society.
As the
source of all that was pleasurable in life, she declared that man being ruled
by passion and not reason would never be free.
The two most important aspects of this passion were anger and lust, which
had shrunken man to his present status.
Folly
praised herself under the guise of Prudence because she had allowed man to have
first-hand experience with the world. She had freed him from shame and fear,
which had clouded his mind and inhibited his actions to prevent him from having
real experience.
Thanks
to Prudence, man had gone along with the crowd, which was folly, at the
sacrifice of his individuality. Folly had caused all the great achievements of
mankind, yet wisdom and learning had not freed man of his anxiety.
Self-love,
self-importance, and flattery had been the motivation for everything that man
had done. Alas, to lead a life of folly, error, and ignorance showed man to be
only too human. Folly was the expression of man's nature. All other forms of
life around man were content with their limitations but man was vainly
ambitious. Folly concluded that the most ignorant men were the happiest and the
most deluded men delighted in telling lies.
Erasmus,
who was a priest, chided priests, who Folly saw as relying on magic, charms,
relics, prayers, saints and particular rites to create the illusion of
happiness. Priests were conjurers of deception, Folly chortled, but man had a
need for this deception because emotions belonged to Folly and man could not
find happiness without them.
The
most foolish men, Folly insisted, were those who denied their true nature
through religion. Folly proved that religion had more to do with her own nature
than with wisdom by showing that children, women, old people and fools took more delight in
religion than anyone else. You could tell because they were always nearest the
altar.
In the
way religion was taught and practiced, man must deny his true nature by
disdaining life and preferring death. He must overlook injuries, avoid
pleasure, and feast on hunger, vigils, tears, and labors. He must give up and
score all physical pleasures, or at the very least take them more lightly than
spiritual pleasures.
Folly
insisted this was the most foolish way, but also the only sure way to true
happiness. Only by forgetting his body and everything physical could man
approach this goal. He must give himself up completely to the spiritual aspects
of life in order to achieve bliss.
Only a
very few men were able to accomplish this task completely, Folly admitted, for
in order to approach this detachment one must be very close to madness; a kind of madness
similar to the heavenly joys that one would expect after death when the
spirit had completely left the body.
Erasmus
had sympathy for The Protestant
Reformation, but decided to stay in the Church and lead the Counter Reformation. Historians are
divided as to whether this was a courageous or cowardly decision.
In this
dichotomy, Erasmus is not unlike many of our current opinion makers: a man of
reflection rather than action. He wanted to preserve things as they were and to
deny intellectually as much as possible things as they were becoming. Unlike
Martin Luther, he was unwilling to put his life, reputation and mind on the
line. Instead, he retreated into parody. He remained committed to inevitable
change but didn't feel obliged to be actively involved.
Luther
changed the world. Erasmus put a bite into it with sarcasm, but little else. “Folly” was composed in seven days five
hundred years ago (1509), and is still read. It was written while he was recovering
from an illness in the home of his English friend, Sir Thomas More (1478-1535),
author of "Utopia" (1516). More would be
beheaded in 1535 for his refusal to support his friend, King Henry VIII's
(1491-1547) Church of England in defiance of the Roman Catholic Church and the
See of Rome, while Erasmus waited two years after completing "In Praise of Folly" to
publish it secretly in France, and then anonymously.
The fact that there were at least seven
editions within months of this first printing provides a measure of its
immediate success and popularity. Because of this work, Erasmus became one of
the most popular men of letters of his time, and consequently, one of the most
influential.
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