Posted on 05/31/2007 12:35:16 PM PDT by GMMAC
Al Gore's Vulcan Utopia
David Brooks, National Post, page A21
Published: Thursday, May 31, 2007
If you're going to read Al Gore's book, you're going to have to steel yourself for a parade of sentences like the following:
"The remedy for what ails our democracy is not simply better education (as important as that is) or civic education (as important as that can be), but the re-establishment of a genuine democratic discourse in which individuals can participate in a meaningful way - a conversation of democracy in which meritorious ideas and opinions from individuals do, in fact, evoke a meaningful response."
But, hey, nobody ever died from contact with pomposity, and Al Gore's "The Assault on Reason" is well worth reading. It reminds us that whatever the effects of our homogenizing mass culture, it is still possible for exceedingly strange individuals to rise to the top.
Gore is, for example, a radical technological determinist. While most politicians react to people, Gore reacts to machines, and in this book he lays out a theory of history entirely driven by them.
He writes that "the idea of self-government became feasible after the printing press." With this machine, people suddenly had the ability to use the printed word to debate ideas and proceed logically to democratic conclusions. As Gore writes in his best graduate school manner, "The eighteenth century witnessed more and more ordinary citizens able to use knowledge as a source of power to mediate between wealth and privilege."
This Age of Reason produced the American Revolution. But in the 20th-century, television threatened it all. In Gore's view, TV immobilizes the reasoning centers in the brain and stimulates the primitive, instinctive parts. TV creates a "visceral vividness" that is not "modulated by logic, reason and reflective thought."
TV allows political demagogues to exaggerate dangers and stoke up fear. Furthermore, "conglomerates can dominate the expressions of opinion that flood the mind of the citizenry" and "the result is a de facto coup d'état overthrowing the rule of reason."
Fortunately, another technology is here to save us. "The Internet is perhaps the greatest source of hope for re-establishing an open communications environment in which the conversation of democracy can flourish," he writes. The Internet will restore reason, logic and the pursuit of truth.
The first response to this argument is, Has Al Gore ever actually looked at the Internet? He spends much of this book praising cold, dispassionate logic, but is that really what he finds on most political blogs or in his e-mail folder?
But Gore's imperviousness to reality is not the most striking feature of the book. It's the chilliness and sterility of his worldview. Gore is laying out a comprehensive theory of social development, but it allows almost no role for family, friendship, neighborhood or just face-to-face contact. He sees society the way you might see it from a speaking podium - as a public mass exercise with little allowance for intimacy or private life. He envisions a sort of Vulcan Utopia, in which dispassionate individuals exchange facts and arrive at logical conclusions.
This in turn grows out of a bizarre view of human nature. Gore seems to have come up with a theory that the upper, logical mind sits on top of, and should master, the primitive and more emotional mind below. He thinks this can be done through a technical process that minimizes information flow to the lower brain and maximizes information flow to the higher brain.
The reality, of course, is there is no neat distinction between the "higher" and "lower" parts of the brain. There are no neat distinctions between the "rational" mind and the "visceral" body. The mind is a much more complex network of feedback loops than accounted for in Gore's simplistic pseudoscience.
Without emotions like fear, the "logical" mind can't reach conclusions. On the other hand, many of the most vicious, genocidal acts are committed by people who are emotionally numb, not passionately out of control.
Some great philosopher should write a book about people - and there are many of them - who flee from discussions of substance and try to turn them into discussions of process. Utterly at a loss when asked to talk about virtue and justice, they try to shift attention to technology and methods of communication. They imagine that by altering machines they can alter the fundamentals of behavior, or at least avoid the dark thickets of human nature.
If a philosopher did write such a book, it would help us understand Al Gore, and it would, as he would say, in fact, evoke a meaningful response.
Originally appeared in the New York Times, May 29, 2007
A good description of today's Democratic Party.....
He is very well known to exaggerate things. All his life.
I think there is no limit to it as time goes by. Even elevating himself to Godhood certainly would not surprise me. He speaks of “spiritual issues” now when he talks about blaming humans for global warming.
"...mediate between wealth and privilege"?
I didn't know that wealth and privilege were in conflict in the 18th century. In fact I thought they were synonymous in the 18th century. Why would there be a need to mediate between them?
"Burn, burn, burn...a ball of fire, ball of fire..."
All I think of is that song they play on Rush Limbaugh when I hear or read about this joke of a politician.
Is that photo an excerpt from Gore’s movie, and does he actually say that?
Algore would love Vulcan. Talk about your global warming!
I thought my run-on sentences were bad...
Can anyone fix that sentence? I gave up. Sometimes I have to wonder if Gore didn't have a nervous breakdown after the 2000 election.
Like declaring the debate over before it started?
“Hey Al, that’s the worst jack ‘o lantern I’ve ever seen. Have your kids help you next year”!
it’s parallel to his “every vote must count” rant in Fla 2000. I seem to remember him uttering these words while he had a gaggle of lawyers running around to throw out the absentee ballots of the military.
Al Gore’s book will be mandatory reading in most college poli sci classes. Too wordy for most high schools; polysyllabic words like “truckdriver” and “carpeting” are beyond the comprehension of most public school students. They best respond to visual fluff like “An Inconvenient Truth.”
But this garbage? Perfect pseudo-intellectual sewage for poli sci courses.
On another note, I’ve never read “Mein Kampf” but hear it’s a pretty dull read, too. Hmmmm.....
No, I made it up from this that some FReeper did from a concert promo and a photo of a nucked Earth.
And the quote is from the Paul Shanklin song "Ball of fire" that Rush Limbaugh plays nearly every day on his show.
Al Gore’s Vulcan book? What is this guy vulcan thinking? Gore is out of his vulcan mind. How could Hollywood give him a vulcan Oscar. That vulcan dude has a vulcan problem...
Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus
Hey Gore, here’s a meritorious idea:
MAN-MADE GLOBAL WARMING IS BULL$&it!!!!
Exactly. The leftists see it as a failure of democracy and discourse whenever people are free to discuss and critique their views. The only legitimate "democratic discourse" is when people are spoon-fed leftist conclusions and alternative ideas are restricted.
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