Monday, June 24, 2024

GENERAL THOUGHTS ON THE FUTURE OF CRITICAL THEORY

 

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Zizek’s “Christian Atheism” and the Straw Man of Humanism



In his new book “Christian Atheism,” Zizek writes: “The question is: humanism presents itself as universal, all-encompassing, but this universality is already grounded in an exclusion. It is not just that humanism imposes a Western standard of being-human which reduces subaltern Others to a lower level of humanity; Humanism is based on the exclusion of a large group of humans… as non-Human…” p.27

Why Zizek feels the need to engage in this distortion of Humanism is… perhaps, because he wants to insinuate a contrast of superiority for Christianity? 

Here Zizek is thinking of Humanism as being synonymous with Christian fundamentalism as well as Westernism. This is a problem. None of this is reflected in any of the Humanist Manifestos. More importantly, it’s not even presupposed by them. To interpret Humanism thus is to erect a straw man of Humanism.

What then is Humanism? 

In short, it’s the axiom of the value of humans as central, of human life and dignity as central. This doesn’t mean that Humanism lacks an ecology, quite the opposite. Because Humanism is axiomatic, and proceeds by means of reason and evidence, it can be said to be foundational to progress/ because it’s not a superstitious system, its approach to the world is open and reflective, it doesn’t dogmatize, but is a continual process of open learning.

“Humanism is an ethical process through which we all can move, above and beyond the divisive particulars, heroic personalities, dogmatic creeds, and ritual customs of past religions or their mere negation.” Manifesto II

Zizek gives no citations to back up his negative and limited characterization of Humanism. He simply asserts that it’s a system of “exclusion,” when in fact, it’s just the opposite!

The religions of the world have failed, so much so that Zizek is now offering a negative version of Christianity/ why not the positive one? (In contrast, Humanism is not something that needs to be inverted!) 

So far from “reducing” people, Humanism embraces the hope of a world united. “We urge recognition of the common humanity of all people.” Ibid. It is an approach whose time has come. 

The historical religions of the world aren’t epistemologically or ontologically broad enough to cope with the increase of social complexity, but Humanism is, because its foundation is universal. Zizek wants to claim that this universalism contains an exclusion. Fair enough. What then is that exclusion? It’s not Humans as he wants us to believe! (He got it wrong because he doesn’t understand Humanism, or purposely tried to distort it): it’s the exclusion of the non-universal. This alone makes Humanism exceptional among the religions of the world. 

I suspect that Zizek is threatened by Humanism because, even as an Atheist, he’s still too much of a Christian!

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Sunday, June 16, 2024

THE RATIONAL CRISIS OF MODERN CRITICAL THEORY

 

Within the domain of modern critical theory, there’s a tremendous need for rational discourse. Modern critical theory presents a dilemma in this sense, because it has disintegrated into subjectivity, into irrationalism. So the dilemma is how to discourse productively within an environment that’s hostile to reason? 

Where critique strikes down the dogma of modern theory (and that’s what modern theory is and has become, dogmatic) subjectivity is asserted as a paramount authority. This was never (and is still not) the mode of discourse practiced by the original line of critical theory - but now the hope of discourse is set up against the conviction of the irrational. The more rational one tries to be the more one seems to provoke a kind of juvenile resentment. Rational procedure is not merely forgotten, it is resisted and despised, but one cannot make progress without it (strange that this is contested - because it implies a self-negation). 

What is most basic and fundamental to critique (reason) has been replaced by the desire of the subject. Modern critical theory is powerless, it amounts to insiders talking among themselves, a kind of esoteric and eccentric tribalism. And while this subjectivity feels powerful to the one wielding it, it lacks the power of universality; it cannot refute or convince (proceed authoritatively within the domain of the public sphere) and so it is in constant retreat from opposition, but opposition is what is most necessary (Zizek, Hegel, Marx, Marcuse, Habermas). 

This is a kind of rational heresy, insofar as it means that critical theory has abandoned dialectic. (In the modern case it’s more likely that it never comprehended it in the first place). What is left is the supremacy of the desire of the subject pursued against all social responsibility; to be productive then, from the vantage of this subjectivity, means to amuse oneself with theory. One must get beyond this subjectivity in order to have authority in the public sphere. (If this is rejected, then one admits that it’s all an insiders game, and if this is the case, then one’s critical theory is dead before it even begins). 

Having exchanged reason for subjectivity, is modern critical theory even capable of discourse?

If one strays from its orthodoxy through opposition, one is branded a heretic; truth now has to do with a kind of confessional agreement that falls in line with the tribe, reason has been removed from the equation. This is exemplified by the complaint of subjectivity offered as a refutation (one should not be fooled by its confidence). No one, in this sense, has more confidence than the irrationalist because he’s oblivious to the limits of his subjectivity.

In order for critical theory to be capable of productive discourse, it must be capable of absorbing opposition; it must be capable of communicating through reason, which is to say, it must overcome the egoism of its subjectivity. 

“The Rational Crisis” is the crisis of the revolt against the intellectual standards of reason. Once these standards are pushed aside in the name of freedom, freedom itself is lost, even though the practitioner of this emotivism is oblivious to the negation. This negation manifests itself at the point of praxis; the point where theory tries to manifest a functional authority within the domain of culture.

Having renounced the standards of reason, the irrationalist has nothing left to substantiate and establish his theory in society, it is an emotionalism void of the hope of any prospect of universalism. This emotivism isn’t aware that it can’t even generate its own objections or complaints. This doesn’t stop it from asserting its own opposition against premises it dislikes, but these are (and can only only be) emotive objections. 

The Rational Crisis means that theory must go back and rediscover its rational foundations before it can proceed into the future. Until it does this, it will fail in the public sphere, manifesting incompetence, unconvincing rational engagement, in both theory and praxis. 

At the root, the subject has to work out the resistance in his psychology, resistance that doesn’t want to adhere to rational standards and resents having to think. (I suspect this is a kind of automated impulse, motivated by a desire for conceptual authority). An identity response is so much easier, but it remains incompetent, both to refute and convince, the culture that it so desperately wants change.

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