Born to be Dumb: Why Liberalism Would Have Us Ignorant


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Born to be Dumb: Why Liberalism Would Have Us Ignorant
04.20.05 (3:12 pm)   [edit]
Since I have been writing on this subject, [about 10 yrs] I have never come across, until now, a better treatise on my favorite topic.  Stupid Ignorant Liberals, and the Dumbing Down of Humanity.

http://lifeissues.net/writers/cho/cho_15ign orance.html" title="http://lifeissues.net/writers/cho/cho_15ign orance.html" target="_blank"http://lifeissues.net/writers...


by Peter Chojnowski

As we watch the popping of the dot.com bubble on the Nasdaq (at last check,
a loss of 64% of tech stock values from their high last year), we are
confronted with a financial disillusionment, which could mark the beginnings
of a progressive social, political, and economic movement back to the
cognitive and existential fundamentals of human existence. After two years
of inflated hopes about the profitability of the virtual economy generated
by the Internet, investors, all of whom are serious about their money, have
made the judgment that the virtual world of virtual goods bought by virtual
money was only virtually reliable as a source of real financial profit. This
very real hesitation, to the tune of some $3.7 trillion dollars in losses in
the past year, could very well indicate that the utopian and surreal world
of techno-liberalism, best expressed by the Internet, has reached its outer
most limits and is, now, due for a potentially catastrophic contraction.

That a hesitation on the part of investors concerning the long-term
profitability of Internet facilitated "businesses," could signal a
contraction of Liberalism's illusory world of unlimited and unhindered
"choice," is very fitting. Surely, the Internet expresses in a very
immediate and powerful way the fundamental thesis of Liberalism itself. That
man, alone as a choosing agent, can fashion for himself a network of
associations, ideas, and interests which are unrestricted by any limitations
of religious or moral authority or, even, by the limitations imposed upon
man by nature herself. An autonomous, hidden, ubiquitous, choosing and
willing agent. With a credit card at hand, I can get a mortgage for a log
cabin in Montana, book a trip to Cancun, join a "traditionalist" Gnostic
sect, and buy 20 cases of Emergen CCC liquid power drink to make sure I am
up to the tasks presented to me by the abovementioned "choices." I can
fashion an e-profile that is "unbounded" by my ancestral history, my job
situation, my status and obligations in society, my religion, or even my
real monetary resources.

The Internet, of course, has not only facilitated investment in limited
liability stock corporations. It has, also, brought us to the point where
our communication and access to information is almost instantaneous (I
believe the angels will always have a monopoly on instantaneous knowledge
and communication!) and, certainly, voluminous. Since "knowledge, " or,
rather, information is available to us wherever we are, in airports,
internet cafes, or wherever the cell phone is, we, as a people, are becoming
habituated to the idea that comprehensive and pertinent knowledge is easily
accessible. No longer does the heavy burden of books, research,
time-consuming correspondence, or even, patient empirical investigation
hinder attainment of "facts" which further my life plans or my assessment of
any given situation. The two main acts of the intelligence, as these are
given to us by the ancient philosophers and the Catholic Scholastics,
rationalization (i.e., the ability to draw fitting conclusions from pairs of
premises) and contemplation (i.e., the intellectual "seeing" into the heart
of a thing's essence), have become superfluous, a waste of time, and, even,
boring. It is truly a significant juncture in human existence when the
primary acts of the mind, those that have been the engines of human science,
have been rendered, by technological advancement, practically inoperable.

My thesis concerning the contemporary inoperability of the primary acts of
the human mind should not be surprising. Our entire liberal society, since
the advent of the French Revolution, has presupposed the inoperability of at
least one of these primary functions of the human intellect. It is very
difficult to assert, without looks of complete inapprehension, that the
human mind is not at least meant for truth. What else is the very organ of
the brain for if not for some identification of that which, in some way,
affects the sustainability of human life? What liberalism has denied, in an
official and public way, is the possibility of attaining that truth for
which the human mind was made. The primary manifestations of post-French
revolutionary liberalism are capitalism in the economic order, democracy in
the political order, and egalitarianism in the social, intellectual, and
religious order. Ignorance has, for over 200 years, been enshrined as a
prerequisite for the functioning of the society dominated by these
ideologies. If we could and, actually, did know some political, social, or
religious "fact" for certain, than pure "liberty of choice" in these spheres
would be superfluous and, even, counter productive. If we really knew that
the child in the womb of its mother is a human being and that the taking of
an innocent human life is murder and that murder is always a grave injustice
that should be absolutely outlawed by the State, how could we even allow of
the possibility of the populace voting for two presidential candidates, say
Ralph Nadar and Al Gore, who make the continued legality of abortion their
most adamantly held to position. Likewise, in the economic realm, if a
simple judgment were made, based upon millennia of human experience and
natural and supernatural wisdom, as to which basic way of life provided for
the primary and fundamental good of mankind, why would there be the
slightest need to manufacture and offer for sale an infinite variety of
goods that are completely superfluous to true human development and
happiness? If, with regard to religion, it were universally acknowledged
that the structure and intelligibility of the universe necessitates that
there be but one God, Who is both intellectual and free, what sense would
there be in allowing the spread of ideas that divinized non-rational animals
or impersonal "forces"? Should not human life be ordered by such basic
truths once certainly discovered?

If we use our intelligences to penetrate through the artificial veneer of
incessant information and "communication," we see that our post-Christian
indifferentist civilization has as its fundament, upon which everything
rests, ignorance. Not the ignorance of those who seek diligently and have
not yet found. No, rather it is a tenacious ignorance. Liberalism is a
question that refuses to be answered. Liberalism in the 20th and 21st
centuries has moved beyond the "gentlemanly" skepticism of the 18th and 19th
centuries. No longer is liberalism, as a system, rationalized, as it was by
the quintessential Anglo-agnostic John Stuart Mill, by identifying the
purpose of unfettered discussion as the movement from "quarter-truths" to
"half-truths." Liberalism no longer allows mankind anyway out of the
never-ending tunnel of state-sponsored ignorance. If liberal society even
suspects that you think that you know, you will be socially marginalized. If
you say you know and act in any decisive way to implement that knowledge,
your words and actions cannot but be looked upon as "seditious" by the
convinced liberal. The ultimate reason for this is that "truth," whether it
is actually true or merely erroneous opinion held to be "truth," makes
demands upon both the autonomous individuals that populate liberal society
and upon that liberal realm itself. In one way or another, any "truth" makes
an implicit or explicit demand that an individual or the society in which
they live be one way rather than another. Such a claim is a perceived
infringement on their autonomy. In this situation, more intense now than
ever in the Western world, it is not surprising that one illiberal
truth-claim, made publicly and accessible to the media, must be immediately
discredited and marginalized lest, for even one moment, a stubborn truth
claim threatens the "peace" of mandated liberal ignorance and relativism.
One thinks of the statement, made last year, by Cardinal Biffi of Bologna in
which he speculated as to the character of the Antichrist and was, almost
immediately, attacked by the media and by a chorus of apostate Italian
"theologians." Even if the Antichrist were walking amongst us, one would
have to be officially ignorant of the fact if one wanted to continue to be
heard and respected within the context of liberal civil society.

A) Truth as Actuality

It is difficult to speak of the importance of "mandated" ignorance, as this
serves as the philosophical foundation of the Liberal System, since
ignorance itself is purely a negative state. It is a privation of a due
good. The due good, which ignorance is a privation of, is knowledge or
understanding. To understand what knowledge is and, therefore, to ultimately
understand the nature of ignorance, we must consider the two "poles" of the
knowing process, the knowing subject and the known object. We must, also,
understand an aspect of Thomistic epistemology (i.e., the science of human
knowing) which most, even the sympathetic few, would find surprising.
Possession of knowledge involves a relationship of identity between the
knowing subject and the thing known. As the Angelic Doctor states, "The
intellect receives its measure from objects; that is, human knowledge is
true not of itself, but it is true because and insofar as it conforms to
reality. To be "one" with the external thing known is the end of the act of
knowing. St. Thomas is explicit concerning the oneness, between knower and
thing known, which characterizes a true act of understanding. The centrality
of this idea in his epistemology is demonstrated by the ubiquity of the
references to this in his various works. As he states, "the intellect is
wholly that is, in a perfect manner, the known object"; "the soul becomes,
so to speak, transformed into the real object"; "the act of knowledge brings
about identity between the mind and reality."

It is in this oneness between the knowing, personal mind and the objective
reality which has "attracted the attention" of this same mind, which brings
about the actualization and fulfillment of the knowing power. This knowing
power, this intellectual expression of spiritual identity, cannot become
what it is unless it goes out of itself to the reality of the external
world. To be is to be actualized by another. To be real, we must realize,
within ourselves, the reality of the created order. This fundamental fact of
human existence and human intentionality (i.e., the extension of the mind to
that which is other than itself) is the ultimate reason why Rationalism is
an erroneous philosophical stance. By trying to be self-sufficient, the
human mind is hollowed out and desiccated of all vital content. By turning
only to itself, it becomes both doctrinaire and abstract. This hollowing out
and, yet, at the same time, this onset of intellectual sclerosis provides
the "convinced" liberal and rationalist with a mind which cannot truly
argue. This is ironic, since the liberal has, as one of his doctrinaire
positions that argument, in itself, will move a society towards the good and
that nothing must be allowed to hinder the "progress" of the ongoing
societal "argument." Actually, the rationalist Liberal cannot and does not
argue. He cannot. To argue honestly and thoroughly and not merely to repeat
18th century Enlightenment "truism," while at the same time having one's
finger on the intellectual 9-1-1 speed dial ready to inform the authorities
about a thought crime, would require the rationalistic Liberal to scour the
reality of concrete experience of the world of nature and of men in order to
find justifications for his positions. That is, no doubt, the reason why the
Liberal State has generated the category of "hate crime." Liberalism does
not want to argue. It cannot argue. It can simply repeat, as if the ideas
were self-evident, what is contained within the "intellectual package" which
they have received from society. If a Liberal should ask me, "Why don't you
believe in Family Planning," I would think to myself "Where do I begin?" If
I should ask a Liberal, "Why should a decision be based upon the judgment of
the majority of voters," or "Why will a maximum of real wealth be produced
if the government simply "stays out of it." Why? They cannot give me a real
answer. They no longer really try. They simply make it illegal to think
otherwise.

B) Knowledge as Identity

It is very important, when thinking about the vapidity of the contemporary
liberal mind, to remember the abovementioned identity that produces true
knowledge in a human mind. This identity, this mutual actualization, this
extension of the self to what stands before it as object, is precisely the
character and direction which the ignorant mind lacks. Man is unique in the
realm of creatures in this regard. Whereas, those creatures that are below
him and above him in the created and uncreated order have a natural and
immediate oneness or continuity with the whole, man, through knowledge, must
establish a relationship that does not habitually or immediately exist. A
cow "finds" her place in the natural order of things by simply being what
she is. She need not wonder. She need not reach out. In fact, along with
rubbing up against, she simply takes in what is other than herself. But, by
chewing her cud, Old Bessie destroys the otherness of the grass and
incorporates its substance into the living, actualized, delimited structure
of her bovine being. To "take in," means to annihilate. For Old Bessie,
there is really no "other." We can understand this when we see her bovine
eyes gazing, but not really "looking." To "look" would mean relating to
another as "other," as something distinct and, in a very real way, foreign.
This is why Old Bess is never "disturbed," except by that which physically
disturbs her. The very being of another cannot disturb her, since she does
not entertain the other, within her being, as other. Man, however, is
different. It is Man's nature to be "nothing," until he is made into
something.

The human intellect achieves self-realization, insofar as it realizes an
identity with the objective world of being. This "world dependence" of the
human mind is the most distinctive characteristic of St. Thomas' teaching on
the question of the nature of knowledge itself. That both mind and its
object are in potentiality to each other and are only actualized when there
is a "meeting" in the act of sensation indicates that mind and its object
are ontologically distinct (i.e., they possess a distinct "act of existence"
or, rather, are not dependent upon each other for their respective
substantial existence). This understanding of the mind and its object,
contrasts with the current mainline phenomenological approach to reality,
which fails to distinguish the mind or "consciousness" from its "field" or
"that which is presented to consciousness." In fact, Martin Heidegger's
entire neo-pagan existentialist position was based on the identity of
consciousness and its object. The critical difference between Heidegger's
postulated identity between mind and its object and that of St. Thomas is
that Heidegger fails to identify the obvious, that mind and object have a
distinct act of existence. That they are different things, which only
achieve a spiritual union once the mind has received the form of the known
thing into itself, is the basis of the philosophical position referred to as
Moderate Realism.

Heidegger's phenomenology, which very much influenced Karl Rahner and
inspired the currently dominant Neo-Marxist Frankfurt School, would have man
identical with his "field" of consciousness. This is why Heidegger's most
famous designation of man was as Dasein, from the German words for "being
there." Man loses himself by becoming one with his world. But what is
important here is that the "world" becomes "his world." In a very distinct
way, the "world" is nothing other than "him." The world is a projection of
the self's own "project" for itself. The self's "discovery" of the world is,
simply, a discovery that the external world is not objective at all, but
rather, merely a projection of the self's own desires, wishes, and plans. It
is a revelation of the self's own encasement within itself. This view is the
basis of the overarching subjectivism that has permeated the Catholic Church
since the 1960s. Surely, in the revolution that has taken place since then,
we can see the progressive attempt to reshape the Church by making that
which stood out as "other" and sacred, into that which is capable of being
assimilated into the tawdry, shallow, and historically rootless modern self.
Instead of the self becoming liturgically divinized by contact with the
sacred, the divine and the sacred become vulgarized by submersion in our own
contemporary McSein.

St. Thomas would have it otherwise. That the human mind is in potentiality
to the intellectual reception of all being is indicative of the mutual
dependency which exists between the human mind, which is in potentiality
(and, therefore, actually "nothing") to the intelligible object which exists
in the world irrespective of the human will's desire and the understood
object, which is only potentially intelligible until it is actually known by
a mind in act. That which can actualize a human mind, a mind which goes out
of itself, which searches out the true and combs the true for the good, is
only that which has itself a form to contribute to the searching mind. Those
forms, which nature provides in a veritable avalanche of intelligibility,
are of a substantial nature and convey to the mind the essential structure
of the created order. To be in contact with the formal structure of a
natural object is, also, to be in intelligible contact with the underlying
orientation and dynamism of that substance. Nothing in nature stays still.
All is moving towards a goal, which has been designated by the Creator.
Through the creative knowledge of God all real things are what they are; the
divine knowledge is their exterior formal cause; all created things have
their pre-form, their model, in the intellect of God; the interior forms of
all reality exist as "ideas," as "preceding images" in God. The Divine
Ideas, insofar as they designate the natural movements and orientations of
all created things, are referred to as the Eternal Law.

By penetrating the essential content of a natural substantial reality, we
are integrating ourselves into an entire telic system, which is, simply, a
natural mirror of the Divine Plan for all things, as this plan exists in the
Providential Mind of God. By "telic system" (from telos, the Greek word for
"end" or "goal") we must understand a web of mutually interacting
substantial beings, all created and, yet, part of a hierarchical structure,
which realizes the divine perfections to various degrees and at various
moments. Everything is, at once, related to everything else and, also,
related to God the Creator. It is the "mission" of the human mind to mirror
within itself this rational "dance" of created being. This "mission" of the
mind, was more evident to our forefathers in Catholic civilization, than it
is to us. It was a divine love that was understood to move the heavenly
spheres in their celestial rotations, the same love that fired every pure
human heart in its upward advance towards the Divine Beauty itself.

C) Ignorance as Willful Dislocation

"The good of man lies in being according to reason, his evil in being
against reason." In other articles (Cf. The Angelus, April 1999), I have
raised the question as to why it is the case that many of the prima
principia or "first principles" of both practical and speculative reason
seem to have slipped out of the contemporary techno-liberal mind. These
principia per se nota or self-evident principles are of several types. All
of them are per se nota secundum se, that is, the predicate of each is
contained within the notion of the subject. Therefore, the proposition "man
is rational," is a self-evident proposition because the quality of
"rationality" is necessarily contained in the notion of the subject, that is
the notion of what "man" is. Man cannot be man without being a rational
being, with, at least, the potential for rational activity. However, just
because a proposition is self-evident in-itself, that does not mean that the
proposition is self-evident (meaning "immediately understood") in "relation
to us" or quo ad nos. Some of these self-evident propositions, both of the
speculative and the practical orders, are self-evident to the "wise," solis
sapientibus, while others are immediately recognizable to "almost everyone,"
communiter omnibus.

Why has it become the case, that in our own day, so many of the
"self-evident" truths, which form the basis of rational action in the
practical and the speculative realms, such as the principle of
non-contradiction (i.e., something cannot be and not be at the same time and
in the same manner), the principle of identity (i.e., something is what it
is and is not something else), or a first principle of practical reason,
such as "the truth about God should be sought after," are, in practice and
in theory, denied or rendered inconsequential by the liberal and
relativistic demands of Society and State. This rejection of the first
operative principles of cognition has both psychological and legal aspects.
The legal implications of this liberal denial of what is self-evident, has
reached, surely, its height in our own day when we have a U.S. Supreme Court
ruling, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, in which
it was stated that, in order for a woman to have true liberty, as guaranteed
by the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, she must have the ability to
determine, for herself, the nature and value of life, the universe, and even
existence itself. If such is the case legally, neither the first principles
of speculative nor practical reason apply. Their force and their certainty
must be denied if Liberal Society is to continue.

But, some may object, certainly the Liberal Constitutional Order is only
mandating, for its own purposes (perhaps, for the sake of "business"), what
everyone accepts implicitly. Surely, the "DOS software" in man could not
have come down with a virus rendering it inoperative? Even though St. Thomas
insists that these first principles of both practical and speculative reason
are per se nota communiter omnibus (i.e., self-evident to almost everyone),
he still says that we cannot know that a predicate is necessarily contained
in the concept of a subject, if the essence of the subject itself is not
known. If man were to lose a real epistemological grip on what the essence
and nature of "man" is, then the proposition, "man is a rational being,"
would not be self-evident to him. And if such were not self-evident, how
would the proposition "the procreation and education of children is good"
mean anything? How can human beings be satisfied with an indifferentist
society and State that is indifferent to everything but indifferentism? What
happened to the natural human desire and tendency to know the true and
desire to see the true turned into the good?

Although these questions can only be broached, I would venture that there is
an aspect of officially mandated Liberal ignorance that does not involve
culpability and there exists an aspect of the situation that does involve
culpability. First, how can we expect contemporary minds, especially those
of the young, to grasp the substantial essences of things (i.e., what things
actually are), if they only encounter with their eyes, ears, and hands
artifacts, which only possess artificial and not substantial being. In a
very real way, artificial constructs, of which our society and economic
system are chockfull, have not an essence in themselves or their essence is
"hidden" by their, more apparent and glamorous, artificial configuration.
Also, if Liberal Society keeps men from being men and women from being
women, how can the young grasp the essence of man through his characteristic
actions? Are not most of the actions of man, which the young observe,
primarily of a mechanical nature, the manipulation machines, which share no
"connaturality" with natural human functions? How would Henry David
Thoreau's "Within the circuit of this plodding life there enter moments of
an azure hue" from his Winter Memories, indicate the slightest thing
concerning the nature of human existence to most of the youth of our day?
Unfortunately, our life today never "plods." And, no, this is not a
reference to the meteorological conditions of North Idaho!

The second aspect of Liberal mandated ignorance does have an aspect of
culpability that attaches to it. It is the interference of the will with the
intellectual act by which I judge that what I have conceived with my
intelligence must have a real bearing on the world that I relate to and
interact with. All acts of judgment are, in some way, an application of what
is known, even vaguely, to concretely experienced reality. However, if I
should conceive the nature of man and seek to apply that concept to the
community of men which I find are around me, I, also, apply to those men the
truths concerning man which are "carried along" with the concept; for
example, that man has a spiritual soul and that his existence depends upon
the creative Will of God. It is here that we find Liberalism, and the
Liberal Mind, intervening in a culpable way. In order to prevent the known
truths from interfering and threatening the autonomy of the self, Liberalism
has fashioned defensive weapons to keep the truth from being brought to bear
on the situations in which we all find ourselves.

Normally, the concept that is jammed in the spiritual "clockwork," which
turns the true into the good and the just, is that of "liberty." I cannot
assert the nearly self-evident reality that "A God who rewards the good and
punishes the wicked" exists in a public place frequented to by the young
(e.g., a public high school), because their "freedom of religious belief"
may be infringed on by hearing something that they have not consented to
themselves. I cannot necessarily do what I am commanded to do by nature,
educate my children in the knowledge and love of God the Creator in an
academic setting of my choice (i.e., home schooling), because I might be
interfering with the future "potential choices" of my children with regard
to religious faith and career choice. In all of this "liberty," do we not
see a mandated ignorance that will not allow known truths to be applied to
real circumstances? If we refuse to "play" ignorant concerning the good and
true, we become "uncooperative" and, potentially, "criminal."

Let us learn and teach what is true. Let us challenge the officially
mandated ignorance with every word and action of our lives. In this way, we
will regain our own footing in the real and entice all men to stand with us.
Copyright © 2000-2002 Lifeissues.net Kochi, Japan

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