GOD
IN THE MIDDLE
Part Three
Part Three
“The Inner Self as
Legacy to the Enlightenment.”
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
February 8, 2019
The foundations of identity were laid with the perception of a disjunction between one’s inside and one’s outside. Individuals come to believe that they have a true or authentic identity hiding within themselves that is somehow at odds with the role they are assigned by their surrounding society.
Francis
Fukuyama, Identity:
The Demand for Dignity and The Politics of Resentment (2018)
INSIDE
AND OUTSIDE
It all started 500
years ago. In the West, the idea of
identity was born during the Protestant
Reformation. It was launched by a
bold and apocryphal move by Martin Luther in 1517 to post his protests to
Catholic Church indulgences on the Wittenberg church door. The quiet Augustinian friar had struggled for
ten years with his inner self while he read and taught and performed his duties
as a priest. Biographer Richard Marius
in “Martin Luther” (1999) saw the
monk as a Christian between God and Death:
He
found himself in a state of despair before God.
He wanted the assurance of being acceptable to God, but could discover
in himself only the certainty of sin and in God only an inexorable justice
which condemned to futility all his efforts at repentance and his search for
the divine mercy.”
Luther came to
understand that the Church acted only on the outer person through such rituals as confession, penance, tithing
and worship of the saints. None of which
could make a difference in one’s authentic existence because grace did not need
a church as grace was a free act of a loving God.
Thus
Luther was one of the first Western thinkers to validate the “inner self” over
the external social being. He
insisted that man had a twofold nature: an inner spiritual one and an outer
bodily being, but only the inner man
could be renewed.
This
placed the individual, paradoxically, in the center of the dialogue on the
nature of man.
By the single act of
making faith alone the central doctrine of Protestantism, it undercut the 1500
legitimacy of the Roman Catholic Church.
That
said the Church remained the intermediary between man and God, but it could
only shape the outer man through its rites and rituals, ceremonies and
works. It could not touch the inner man
by rationale and definition.
Luther was not the
disgruntled teenager brought back to obedience by society, but rather through
due diligence and initiative, he put on notice that society itself would now
have to adjust to the demands of the inner person. The
idea of democracy would have to gestate for more than 250 years.
Nothing again would be
the same in Christendom as this marked the beginning of the decline of the
Universal (Catholic) Church and the rise of scores of alternative churches with
God in the middle.
Whether the monumental
changes that led to modernity can be put at the door of Wittenberg and Luther
or not, a series of propitious changes occurred in rapid succession.
In 1439 Gutenberg had invented
the movable type printing press. Books
now flourished in the 1530s with Luther’s translation of the Bible into German
to create a sense of identity among the German people. Translations of the Bible in other languages had
the same affect.
New ideas on trade and
commerce sparked the creation of what would be eventually called capitalism. This gave rapid rise to industrialization
with new methods of producing goods and delivering services as material forces
were being driven by new technologies legitimized by the changes in the way
people thought about things.
On the plane of ideas,
the distinction between the inner and
outer, seeded by Luther, would occupy philosophers for generations to come as
modern man struggled with the new idea of personal identity as identity with
the Church faded.
[My own empirical work over the past fifty years has found me exploring
the deep layers of the “inner self” from the conscious to the subconscious to
the subtext level of confidence which ensures identity is axiomatic.]
Read the “Confessions of St. Augustine” and you
will see that this Christian of the 3rd and 4th century
took such a private introspective journey to uncover his “inner self,” although
he did not disparage the Church in this quest, or feel the necessity of a new
identity, but remained an institutional
Roman Catholic to the end.
In that same vein,
while rejecting the Universal Church,
Luther accepted completely the legitimacy and underlying truth of Christianity.
Marius in his Martin Luther biography (The Christian Between God and Death) documents
the monk’s painful quest for personal clarity, questioning Church authority and
the theology of penance.
Then there was the auspicious
timing of the “Reformation.” seeded as
it was by the failed “Peasant’s War” of
1525 in which 100,000 of the 300,000 German peasant farmers were slaughtered by
armies of the aristocracy of The Holy
Roman Empire.
In that climate, Luther
resolutely attacks the celebrated cleric, Desiderius Erasmus, who remained in
the Church to lead the Counter
Reformation, making the young monk a rebel with a cause in an intellectual
army of one.
German American philosopher Hannah
Arendt has an explanation for this while referencing her own disposition:
“One first has to think in dialogue with oneself and reach an agreement with oneself. The principle of agreement with oneself is very old. It was actually discovered by Socrates whose central tenet, as formulated by Plato, is contained in the sentence: ‘Since I am one, it is better for me to disagree with the whole world than to be in disagreement with myself.’”
“One first has to think in dialogue with oneself and reach an agreement with oneself. The principle of agreement with oneself is very old. It was actually discovered by Socrates whose central tenet, as formulated by Plato, is contained in the sentence: ‘Since I am one, it is better for me to disagree with the whole world than to be in disagreement with myself.’”
This is consistent with
the idea that one must conduct oneself in such a way that the principle of one’s
actions becomes a general law – Kant’s
categorical imperative – based upon
the necessity for rational thought to agree with itself.
[Those in modern times who agree with this rationale have likely been
influenced by David Riesman’s book, “The Lonely Crowd” (1950). Riesman came
up with the idea of the “inner-directed” and “outer-directed” person, with the
former personality self-directed and self-reliant, while the latter personality
tending to be a conformist and pleaser, or part of the herd mentality.]
THE
EUROPEAN ENLIGHTENMENT & SOME OF ITS PHILOSOPHICAL LIGHTS
By the end of the 18th
century, the “inner man” was the core of modern identity and had evolved into a
secular form. Philosopher Jean-Jacques
Rousseau played a central role in this identity. His thinking would lead to such modern trends
as democracy, human rights, communism, the discipline of anthropology, and
environmentalism. For Rousseau, the
natural goodness of the “inner self” was a theme tied to his political, social
and personal writing.
Luther believed in Original Sin and human beings as fallen
creatures redeemable by God’s love, alone.
Rousseau in Discourse on the
Origins of Inequality argued that the first human being as man in the state
of nature was not sinful. He
romanticizes early man for whom sex was natural but not the family; where sin
and evil – jealousy, greed, violence and hatred did not exist. There was no original society. For him, human unhappiness begins with the
discovery of society.
In Rousseau’s account,
man’s descent into society began by the mastering of animals. Man started to cooperate for his mutual
protection and with that surfaced the idea of pride and the perception of
relationships. This was given expression
in words: great, little, strong, weak, swift, slow, fearful, bold, and other
comparisons.
The
ability to compare and to evaluate other human beings was the fountainhead of
human unhappiness.
Rousseau denounces the
shift from “love of self” to “self-love” or vanity, seeing self-interest is
transmuted into feelings of pride and the desire for social recognition. From hunters and gatherers, human beings
became farmers with the necessity of accumulating property. He writes in the Discourse:
The
first person who having enclosed some land, took it upon himself to say “This
is mine,” and found people simpleminded enough to believe him, was the true
founder of civil society.
Rousseau argues crimes,
wars, murders, miseries and horrors followed.
He attempts to walk mankind back with the first lines of his famous The Social Contract:
“Man
was born free, and he is everywhere in chains.
These “chains” are the
constraints placed on the freedom of citizens in modern states.
Francis Fukuyama in
“Identity” (2018) traces Rousseau’s sentiments to morphing to what are called today, “identity
politics.” We see this in the United
States Congress where polarity and gridlock prevent consensus and cooperation,
and therefore effective governance.
What Rousseau asserts
is that a thing called “society,” exists outside the individual. Indeed, on the corporate organizational
level, a mass of rules, regulations, relationships, injunctions and customs
have become an obstacle to the realization of human potential, and therefore,
human happiness.
The reason for this French philosopher's continued relevance is that he saw a sharp distinction
between the “inner self” and the “outer society.” But unlike Luther, the freedom of the inner
individual does not lie only in his ability to accept the grace of God. But rather, it lies in the natural ability of the individual to experience
the sentiments of existence free of layers of accumulated social
convention. In this sense, it is similar to Isiah Berlin’s idea of “negative freedom” discussed elsewhere in these missives.
Fukuyama sees
Rousseau’s secularization of the “inner self” from social convention as the
stepping stone to the modern idea of identity and recognition.
In other words, the pressing dominance of social convention,
now more intense than ever before through social media, is the foundation of
human unhappiness manifested in a psychotherapy and drug dependent society. Fukuyama writes:
The
recovery of the inner self thus required divesting oneself of the need for
social recognition; the solitary dreamer does not need anyone’s approval.
Of course, we know
while much of what Rousseau espouses had merit he was wrong about man, early man
or otherwise, being one-dimensional.
We also know that feelings of pride and self-esteem can be effectively
manipulated by parents, teachers, preachers, bosses, advertisers, the media,
entertainers, politicians and friends to ends not necessarily in our own best
interests.
It is no accident that we are essentially a robotic society given to be mobilized by
special interests to their given ends. We see
this when asked to respond to why we think, believe, behave and feel about God,
religion, work, marriage, the government, education or the basis of
the choices we make. That is because all
the characteristics that make up the “inner self” are not fixed. The evidence?
We may run away from
the idea of God, for example, but be as resolute in our new belief system as we had been before. The same relates
to work and marriage and life in general. We
constantly run back into ourselves repeating the same errors in the new situation that we rebelled against in the old. We cannot lose ourselves.
German philosopher Immanuel
Kant, like Rousseau, wrestled with this in terms of reason and moral
choice. Kant asserts that we can point
to nothing as unconditionally good other than good will and the capacity for
moral choice. He did not see this as a
Christian concept or in religious terms, but as the ability to follow strict rules
of reason for their own sake.
The human capacity for moral choice means that we are not machines subject to the laws of physics, but can be moral agents independent of our material environment.
The human capacity for moral choice means that we are not machines subject to the laws of physics, but can be moral agents independent of our material environment.
Because we have the
capacity to reason, Kant insists, moral choice does not need to be treated as
ends to other means, but ends in themselves.
We manifest good will not because of what it will lead to but for its own sake. Human dignity revolves around the human will where we are genuine agents of uncaused causes.
We manifest good will not because of what it will lead to but for its own sake. Human dignity revolves around the human will where we are genuine agents of uncaused causes.
THE
“INNER SELF” & INDIVIDUALISM
German philosopher
Friedrich Hegel accepted the link between moral choice and human dignity with
the individual a morally free agent and not simply a rational machine seeking
maximum satisfaction. But unlike
Rousseau and Kant, he put recognition at the center of the human
condition. He advised:
From birth on human history is driven by a struggle for recognition.
From birth on human history is driven by a struggle for recognition.
This drives the soldier
to risk his life, not for territory, not for wealth, but for recognition itself
as a patriotic citizen. A worker doesn’t
simply work for wages and benefits but for the acquired dignity and recognition of what he is
doing.
We know who we are by what we do.
We know who we are by what we do.
For Hegel, however, it
is not primarily an individual journey into the self as with Rousseau, but politically motivated. The great conflict of his day was the
French Revolution and the “Rights of Man.”
By the early 19th
century, the elements of the modern concept of equal dignity for everyone under
the law was the mantra of the American Revolution (1776) and French Revolution
(1789) with the understanding that the dignity of the “inner self” rests on its
moral freedom.
The democratic upsurge
that would unfold in the two centuries after these revolutions was driven by
peoples demanding recognition of their political personhood.
Expressive
individualism would also be seeded by Scottish economist and philosopher Adam
Smith and then British philosophers John Locke and finally by John Stuart Mill. They put a pragmatic and empirical stamp on
the movement towards capitalism in economics and to democracy in
politics.
Smith’s laissez-faire philosophy was to minimize
the role of government intervention and taxation in free market economies with
the idea of an “invisible hand” guiding the supply and demand of commerce.
Locke focused on human motivation and behavior, believing human nature allowed people to be selfish with the natural tendency to follow their self-interests.
Mill was the most influential English language philosopher of the 19th century whose work explored the consequences of a thoroughgoing empiricist outlook.
Locke focused on human motivation and behavior, believing human nature allowed people to be selfish with the natural tendency to follow their self-interests.
Mill was the most influential English language philosopher of the 19th century whose work explored the consequences of a thoroughgoing empiricist outlook.
These “Enlightened Age”
thinkers believed that successful governance depends not on idealism but
balance between individual freedom and political equality; between the state
exercising legitimate power and institutional laws and accountability providing
the appropriate constrains. It was Mill,
however, who put temperance into his philosophy advocating population limits
and slowed economic growth. He believed this would be equally beneficial to the environment and the public good. He was a naturalist, a
utilitarian and a liberal who cautioned:
“Actions
are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness, wrong as they tend
to produce the reverse of happiness.”
THE
“INNER SELF” BECOMES OBSESSIVE INTRODUCING A NEW MODERN ERA
The expression of the
“inner self” soon became the key to dignity and recognition.
Christianity universalized people being capable of moral choice. This was secularized by Kant in the form of rational moral rules. Rousseau added the idea that the inner moral self was not just capable of binary moral choice, good or evil, but was filled with personal feelings suppressed by the surrounding society.
Dignity now centered on the recovery of that authentic “inner self” that society must recognize in every human being.
Christianity universalized people being capable of moral choice. This was secularized by Kant in the form of rational moral rules. Rousseau added the idea that the inner moral self was not just capable of binary moral choice, good or evil, but was filled with personal feelings suppressed by the surrounding society.
Dignity now centered on the recovery of that authentic “inner self” that society must recognize in every human being.
Rousseau’s powerful idea is that each individual has an “inner self” buried deep within; that
it is unique and a source of creativity; that this self has equal value to all
others; that this self is expressed through feelings and not through reason;
and that this “inner self” is the basis of human dignity, recognized in such
political documents as the American
Declaration of Independence.
Rousseau’s influence is obvious in Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young
Werther; in the paintings of
Vincent van Gogh; in the novels of Franz Kafka; and in the philosophy of Friedrich
Nietzsche who expanded the scope of human autonomy with the figure of Zarathustra
and individualism in Beyond
Good and Evil.
By the late 20th
century, the scope of the “inner self” and individual autonomy reached a fever
pitch with the clamor to define one’s own existence as well as the meaning of
life irrespective of what society, the government or the
church promoted.
In the Christian
tradition, the “inner self” was the source of Original Sin, but now it was simply moral choice.
A wave of promoters of self-esteem and personal improvement followed. There was Abraham Maslow “Hierarchy of Needs,” Robert Schuller’s “Hour of Power,” who also wrote a book, “Self-Esteem: The New Revolution,” and Robert Warren’s “Purpose Driven Life.”
More than 30 percent of the American upper middle class was in therapy complaining of lacking self-esteem and happiness, while being in the top 10 percent of the American economy in terms of income. Today, they are supporting more than a half million psychotherapists across the United States.
A wave of promoters of self-esteem and personal improvement followed. There was Abraham Maslow “Hierarchy of Needs,” Robert Schuller’s “Hour of Power,” who also wrote a book, “Self-Esteem: The New Revolution,” and Robert Warren’s “Purpose Driven Life.”
More than 30 percent of the American upper middle class was in therapy complaining of lacking self-esteem and happiness, while being in the top 10 percent of the American economy in terms of income. Today, they are supporting more than a half million psychotherapists across the United States.
Christopher Lasch
argued against this trend in "The Culture of Narcissism" (1979) insisting that the obsession with human potential and self-esteem would instead lead to crippling invasive cultural self-indulgence. This would in term lead to the depoliticizing of society in which social justice
would be reduced to personal angst and psychological problems. Lasch died more than a score of years before
Donald Trump, a nonpolitician, would become President of the United
States.
Lasch could envision the long decline of the United States accompanied by the rapid rise of a therapeutic society dependent on psychotherapy. Bernard Zilbergeld would confirm this prognosis four
years later in “The Shrinking of America:
Myths of Psychological Change” (1983).
Today, the question of
identity has become central to the life of many Americans.
We now have battles over ethnicity, sexual identity, sexual politics, sexual orientation, gay rights, racial equality (“Black Lives Matter!), gender politics, religion, God, the meaning of life, inequality, ecology, feminism, Native Americanism, capitalism, socialism, communism, social justice, human biology, education, liberalism, conservatism, self-esteem, dignity, recognition, freedom (negative & positive), happiness, social responsibility, moral responsibility, robotics, automation, good and evil, spiritualism, materialism, multiculturalism, war, peace, nuclear holocaust, environmentalism, global warming, civil war, national identity, ethno nationalism, radicalism, immigration, personhood, the common good, ethnic cleansing, hegemony, terrorism, civil religion, civil liberty, professionalism, work ethic, knowledge power, position power, politics of anger, polarization, gridlock, natural language, national language, citizenship, crime, wealth, poverty, celebrity worship, cyberspace, “Big Brother,” dystopia, and the beat goes on.
We now have battles over ethnicity, sexual identity, sexual politics, sexual orientation, gay rights, racial equality (“Black Lives Matter!), gender politics, religion, God, the meaning of life, inequality, ecology, feminism, Native Americanism, capitalism, socialism, communism, social justice, human biology, education, liberalism, conservatism, self-esteem, dignity, recognition, freedom (negative & positive), happiness, social responsibility, moral responsibility, robotics, automation, good and evil, spiritualism, materialism, multiculturalism, war, peace, nuclear holocaust, environmentalism, global warming, civil war, national identity, ethno nationalism, radicalism, immigration, personhood, the common good, ethnic cleansing, hegemony, terrorism, civil religion, civil liberty, professionalism, work ethic, knowledge power, position power, politics of anger, polarization, gridlock, natural language, national language, citizenship, crime, wealth, poverty, celebrity worship, cyberspace, “Big Brother,” dystopia, and the beat goes on.
Identity and the “inner
self” has come to underlie philosophy and the political climate today, yet
identity and this buried “inner self” in us all is neither fixed nor given to
us by the accident of birth. This sense of identity can be used to divide or unite us, or pragmatically integrate us. This will happen when we lose our fascination
to stand apart and complain about everything.
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