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Investigations- The Tyrant Within and "Moral Carterism Towards Tyrants"
University of Chicago Magazine ^ | 06/22/02 | SAS

Posted on 12/02/2003 7:10:38 AM PST by Helms

Investigations The tyrant within

Most relevant passages have been boldened

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This February Mark Lilla sat on a New York University panel about 9/11 and was shocked to hear a fellow panelist, the French intellectual Jean Baudrillard, "offering his fanciful take on the attack as a [symbolic] suicide by the towers." Lilla recalled the moment recently while keynoting a U of C Women's Board luncheon. "An act of suicide by the towers-because of the evils of capitalism and globalism and despite the loss of life-was actually, according to this respected intellectual, a predictable thing."

Lilla, a professor in the Committee on Social Thought and the College, was shocked but not surprised. The author of The Reckless Mind: Intellectuals in Politics (New York Review Books, 2001), he has spent several years wondering, "What is it about the human mind that made the intellectual defense of tyranny possible in the 20th century? How," he writes, "did the Western tradition of political thought, which begins with Plato's critique of tyranny in the Republic..., reach the point where it became respectable to argue that tyranny was good, even beautiful?"

Intellectuals' defense of tyranny and acts of mass political violence such as 9/11 is, Lilla argues, a peculiarly recent phenomenon, arising with the past century's master ideologies such as fascism and Marxism. He has a name for it: philotyranny. His book sets out neither to finally separate nor inextricably bind a thinker's ideas with his or her political leanings, but rather to understand what about an intellectual might lead him or her to embrace despicable politics. Lilla believes it has to do with love-eros-that "demonic force that floats between the human and the divine, helping us to rise or transporting the soul into a life of baseness and suffering in which others suffer with us," he writes. "The philosopher and the tyrant, the highest and lowest of human types, are linked through some perverse trick of nature by the power of love."

One obvious example of a 20th-century intellectual with a predilection for tyranny is the philosopher Martin Heidegger, whose support of the Nazis repulsed his students and colleagues and continues to disturb those who study his powerful ideas. There are many other examples, and Lilla's book relates the fall of six philosophers: Heidegger, fellow Nazi sympathizer Carl Schmitt, the mystical Marxist Walter Benjamin, the Stalin enthusiast Alexandre Kojève, Michel Foucault with his bent for Maoism and Khomeinism, and the deconstructionist Jacques Derrida. Lilla also cites the "surprising number of pilgrims to Moscow, Berlin, Hanoi, and Havana," the "political voyeurs who made carefully choreographed tours of the tyrant's domains with return tickets in hand, admiring the collective farms, the tractor factories, the sugarcane groves, the schools, but somehow never visiting the prisons." Still other intellectuals never even left their desks, "developing interesting, sometimes brilliant ideas to explain away the sufferings of peoples whose eyes they would never meet."

The phenomenon, he points out, didn't die with the 20th century, as his fellow panelist's out-of-touch explanation for 9/11 shows. Nor is it restricted to European soil: even former president Jimmy Carter's recent visit to Cuba catches Lilla's critical eye. "Carter meeting with Fidel is not a bad thing," he says, "but what he thinks about Fidel probably is." With their "jejune hopefulness about regimes elsewhere," Americans often embrace a sort of "moral Carterism" toward tyrants.

Whatever it's called, the attraction to tyrannical ideas is, in Lilla's view, the product of an intellectual drunkenness, citing Plato's belief that eros is what draws certain men to tyranny and other men to philosophy. "For Plato, to be human is to be a striving creature," writes Lilla, "one who does not live simply to meet his most basic needs but is somehow driven to expand and sometimes elevate those needs, which then become new objects of striving.... This yearning, this eros, is to be found within all our good and healthy desires, those of the flesh and those of the soul." While some people satisfy their yearnings with their bodies, others become philosophers or poets or, he writes, "concern themselves with 'the right ordering of cities and households'-that is, with politics in the highest sense."

The problem is that love-whether its object is another human or an idea-induces a "blissful kind of madness" that's difficult to control, creating the danger of becoming "possessed by love madness" and the urge to contribute to the "right ordering" of society. Noblest is the philosopher who, like Socrates, is "supremely self-aware of [his life's] own tyrannical inclinations"-and stays out of politics.

That self-awareness, argues Lilla, is exactly what philotyrannical intellectuals lack. With eros, he argues, comes responsibilities-and although the age of master ideologies may be past, "so long as there are thinking men and women at all...the temptation will be there to succumb to the allure of an idea, to allow passion to blind us to its tyrannical potential, and to abdicate our first responsibility, which is to master the tyrant within." -S.A.S.

uchicago® ©2002 The University of Chicago® Magazine 1313 E. 60th St., Chicago, IL 60637 phone: 773/702-2163 fax: 773/702-2166 uchicago-magazine@uchicago.edu


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: dementia; driving; failure; geriatric; headphones; irandebacle; oilembargo; terrorism
Either get off the road or stay in the slow lane. Then again you are too old to drive (history and perhaps an automobile).

Nelson Mandela:Age-85

Jimmy Carter:Age-79

George Soros:Age-75

Yasser Arafat:74

Walter Chronkite:Age-87

1 posted on 12/02/2003 7:10:39 AM PST by Helms
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To: Helms
How odd that intellectuals possess so little intellect.
2 posted on 12/02/2003 7:13:36 AM PST by cookcounty
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To: Helms
>"An act of suicide by the towers-because of the evils of capitalism and globalism and despite the loss of life-was actually, according to this respected intellectual, a predictable thing."

Given the amount
of money and politics
the "Establishment"

has invested in
propping up the Saudi gang,
there's a twisted bit

of truth to this stuff.
The trouble is, how do we
separate ourselves

from the globalists
who are citizens of "Trade,"
not America?

3 posted on 12/02/2003 7:19:22 AM PST by theFIRMbss
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To: kattracks; Liz; Stultis
Philotyranicus ping!
4 posted on 12/02/2003 7:25:07 AM PST by Helms (Liberalism is a faux compassion that condescends at best and subjugates at worse)
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To: Helms
"Moral Carterism" - what a lovely phrase. This mentality is perfectly reflected in the National Council of Churches - it fits them to a "t". This piece is a keeper.
5 posted on 12/02/2003 7:26:49 AM PST by Steve_Seattle ("Above all, shake your bum at Burton.")
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To: Helms
I think the Russian religious thinker Berdyaev would agree with Lilla. He saw clearly how eros is perverted, and was an astute critic of the various forms of slavery to which the human race is eternally tempted.
6 posted on 12/02/2003 7:29:48 AM PST by Steve_Seattle ("Above all, shake your bum at Burton.")
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To: Helms
You've assembled a nice rogues gallery of persons afflicted with the philotyrannical complex.
7 posted on 12/02/2003 7:31:59 AM PST by Steve_Seattle ("Above all, shake your bum at Burton.")
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To: Helms
How," he writes, "did the Western tradition of political thought, which begins with Plato's critique of tyranny in the Republic..., reach the point where it became respectable to argue that tyranny was good, even beautiful?"

Maybe it's something akin to the women who send fan/love letters to serial killers in prison, some even on death-row, sometimes with proposals of marriage which might even be carried out. That sort of sickness.

8 posted on 12/02/2003 7:41:26 AM PST by hotpotato
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To: Steve_Seattle
http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/publications/digest/022/beichman.html
9 posted on 12/02/2003 7:51:25 AM PST by Helms (Liberalism is a faux compassion that condescends at best and subjugates at worse)
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To: Helms
Carterism? I like it. I hope this term gets greater currency.
10 posted on 12/02/2003 7:58:33 AM PST by Mr. Peabody
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To: cookcounty; Helms
<< How odd that intellectuals are in possession of so little intellect. >>

I'd suggest, rather, that it's odd that PSEUDO-intellectuals [AKA "academics" and as "lawyers" and as "judges" and as "DemocRAT" potty politicians and as "Mrs and Mr Clinton"] have such difficulty distinguishing themselves from the genuine article.

And that those to whom so many pseudos elect to lie for a living, [Often times called "students" and "DemocRATic" potty members and voters -- and "reporters"] do too!
11 posted on 12/02/2003 8:16:55 AM PST by Brian Allen ( Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God - Thomas Jefferson)
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