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Traitors to the Enlightenment - Europe turns its back on Socrates, Locke, et al.
National Review Online ^ | October 02, 2006 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 10/02/2006 6:28:07 PM PDT by neverdem







Traitors to the Enlightenment
Europe turns its back on Socrates, Locke, et al.

By Victor Davis Hanson

The first Western Enlightenment of the Greek fifth-century B.C. sought to explain natural phenomena through reason rather than superstition alone. Ethics were to be discussed in the realm of logic as well as religion. Much of what Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, and the Sophists thought may today seem self-evident, if not at times nonsensical. But that century was the beginning of the uniquely Western attempt to bring to the human experience empiricism, self-criticism, irony, and tolerance in thinking.

The second European Enlightenment of the late 18th century followed from the earlier spirit of the Renaissance. For all the excesses and arrogance in its thinking that pure reason might itself dethrone religion — as if science could explain all the mysteries of the human condition — the Enlightenment nevertheless established the Western blueprint for a humane and ordered society.

But now all that hard-won effort of some 2,500 years is at risk. The new enemies of Reason are not the enraged democrats who executed Socrates, the Christian zealots who persecuted philosophers of heliocentricity, or the Nazis who burned books. No, they are a pampered and scared Western public that caves to barbarism — dwarves who sit on the shoulders of dead giants, and believe that their present exalted position is somehow related to their own cowardly sense of accommodation.

What would a Socrates, Galileo, Descartes, or Locke believe of the present decay in Europe — that all their bold and courageous thinking, won at such a great cost, would have devolved into such cheap surrender to fanaticism?

Just think: Put on an opera in today’s Germany, and have it shut down, not by Nazis, Communists, or kings, but by the simple fear of Islamic fanatics.

Write a novel deemed critical of the Prophet Mohammed, as did Salman Rushdie, and face years of ostracism and death threats — in the heart of Europe no less.

Compose a film, as did Theo Van Gogh, and find your throat cut in “liberal” Holland.

Or better yet, sketch a cartoon in postmodern Denmark, and then go into hiding.

Quote an ancient treatise, as did the pope, and learn your entire Church may come under assault, and the magnificent stones of the Vatican offer no refuge.

There are three lessons to be drawn from these examples. In almost every case, the criticism of the artist or intellectual was based either on his supposed lack of sensitivity or of artistic excellence. Van Gogh was, of course, obnoxious and his films puerile. The pope was woefully ignorant of public relations. The cartoons in Denmark were amateurish and unnecessary. Rushdie was an overrated novelist, whose chickens of trashing the West he sought refuge in finally came home to roost. The latest Hans Neuenfels adaptation of Mozart’s Idomeneo was silly.

But isn’t that precisely the point? It is easy to defend artists when they produce works of genius that do not offend popular sensibilities — Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa or Montesquieu’s Spirit of the Laws — but not so when an artist offends with neither taste nor talent. Yes, Pope Benedict is old and scholastic; he lacks both the smile and tact of the late Pope John Paul II, who surely would not have turned for elucidation to the rigidity of Byzantine scholarship. But isn’t that why we must come to the present Pope’s defense — if for no reason other than because he has the courage to speak his convictions when others might not?

Note also the constant subtext in this new self-censorship: fear of radical Islam and its gruesome appendages of beheadings, suicide bombings, improvised explosive devices, barbaric fatwas, riotous youth, petrodollar-acquired nuclear weapons, oil boycotts and price hikes, and fist-chanting mobs.

In contrast, almost daily in Europe, “brave” artists caricature Christians and Americans with impunity. Why?

For a long list of reasons, among them most surely the assurance that they can do this without being killed. Such cowards puff out their chests when trashing an ill Oriana Fallaci or Ariel Sharon or beleaguered George W. Bush in the most demonic of tones, but prove sunken and sullen when threatened by a Dr Zawahri or a grand mufti of some obscure mosque.

Second, almost every genre of artistic and intellectual expression has come under assault: music, satire, the novel, films, academic exegesis. Somehow Europeans have ever-so-insidiously given up the promise of the Enlightenment that welcomed free thought of all kinds, the more provocative the better.

So the present generation of Europeans really is heretical, made up of traitors of a sort, since they themselves, not just their consensual governments or some invader across the Mediterranean, have nearly destroyed their won freedoms of expression — out of worries over oil, or appearing as illiberal apostates of the new secular religion of multiculturalism, or another London or Madrid bombing.

Europe boldly produces films about assassinating an American president, and routinely disparages the Church that gave the world the Sermon of the Mount, but it simply won’t stand up for an artist, a well-meaning Pope, or a ranting filmmaker when the mob closes in. The Europe that believes in everything turns out to believe in nothing.

Third, examine why all these incidents took place in Europe. Since 2000 it has been the habit of blue-state politicians to rebuke the yokels of America, in part by showing us a supposedly more humane Western future unfolding in Europe. It was the European Union that was at the forefront of mass transit; the EU that advanced Kyoto and the International Criminal Court. And it was the heralded EU that sought “soft” power rather than the Neanderthal resort to arms.

And what have we learned in the last five years from its boutique socialism, utopian pacifism, moral equivalence, and cultural relativism? That it was logical that Europe most readily would abandon the artist and give up the renegade in fear of religious extremists.

Those in an auto parts store in Fresno, or at a NASCAR race in southern Ohio, might appear to Europeans as primordials with their guns, “fundamentalist” religion, and flag-waving chauvinism. But it is they, and increasingly their kind alone, who prove the bulwarks of the West. Ultimately what keeps even the pope safe and the continent confident in its vain dialogues with Iranian lunatics is the United States military and the very un-Europeans who fight in it.

We may be only 30 years behind Europe, but we are not quite there yet. And so Europe has done us a great favor in showing us not the way of the future, but the old cowardice of our pre-Enlightenment past.

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author, most recently, of A War Like No Other. How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: atheism; culturewars; deism; enlightenment; eurabia; europe; humanism; islam; islamicfascism; multiculturalism; postmodernism; secular; secularism; vdh; victordavishanson; waronterror
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To: neverdem

The regnant philosphy is deconstructionism, which embrazons Pilates's question on the wall: What is truth?


41 posted on 10/02/2006 9:38:36 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: Cicero

Socrates and Platon launched the scholastic enterprise. The abandoment of it by our educational establish explains the failures of our schools. The Sophists have taken over.


42 posted on 10/02/2006 9:41:38 PM PDT by RobbyS ( CHIRHO)
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To: what's up

Yes, that , too.


43 posted on 10/02/2006 10:04:06 PM PDT by ClaireSolt (Have you have gotten mixed up in a mish-masher?)
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To: neverdem
European Christianity is dead. The craven surrender to Islam reveals Europeans have no real beliefs except immediate self-preservation and enjoying their pampered lifestyle. In short, Europe is really Eurarabia. And the more Europe shows its weakness and its contempt for the values that gave it birth, the bolder its enemy grows along with its assault upon Europe itself. As Europeans have learned in the past five years, their servility to Islam has won them no immunity.

"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

44 posted on 10/02/2006 11:59:27 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: B.O. Plenty
Love your Freeper name.

Say hello to Gravel Gertie for me; and little Sparkle.

Cheers!

45 posted on 10/03/2006 12:02:02 AM PDT by grey_whiskers
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To: tpaine
Perhaps VDH reads and understands the FR 'type' too much for you?

Not in the slightest.

He is a Democrat, and is painting the Democrat's stereotypical version of conservatives.

Cheers!

46 posted on 10/03/2006 12:04:10 AM PDT by grey_whiskers
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To: goldstategop
European Christianity is dead.

While it's not a large country, I'm hesitant to ignore the effect of the Ould Sod, i.e. Ireland. Its scholarship helped to carry Europe through the Dark Ages, and the physical courage of its descendents helped to make the Anglosphere.

47 posted on 10/03/2006 1:32:48 AM PDT by neverdem (May you be in heaven a half hour before the devil knows that you're dead.)
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To: neverdem


48 posted on 10/03/2006 4:28:18 AM PDT by Earthdweller (All reality is based on faith in something.)
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To: neverdem; Lando Lincoln; quidnunc; .cnI redruM; yonif; SJackson; dennisw; monkeyshine; Alouette; ...


    Victor Davis Hanson Ping ! 

       Let me know if you want in or out.

Links:    FR Index of his articles:  http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=victordavishanson 
            His website: http://victorhanson.com/    
                NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp

New Link!   
http://victordavishanson.pajamasmedia.com/

49 posted on 10/03/2006 6:10:52 AM PDT by Tolik
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To: neverdem
We may be only 30 years behind Europe, but we are not quite there yet. And so Europe has done us a great favor in showing us not the way of the future, but the old cowardice of our pre-Enlightenment past.

Beautifully put. [Of course.]

50 posted on 10/03/2006 7:28:16 AM PDT by SquirrelKing
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To: Cicero

I really don't think Victor Davis Hanson understands the Pope, or what his initiative has already achieved.

Could you expand please. Thanks.


51 posted on 10/03/2006 7:29:20 AM PDT by Valin (http://www.irey.com/)
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To: Earthdweller

Ain't it the truth.


52 posted on 10/03/2006 7:30:14 AM PDT by Valin (http://www.irey.com/)
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To: Cicero
[Hanson is a bright guy, but Pope Benedict can think circles around him.]

I am not so sure, but I can see by this article why offense can be taken. I don't think Hanson intentions were to belittle the Pope or his intent. I believe our Pope, for years now, has been surrounded with bad advisers. The Church's tepid political approach has weakened the foundation of the house built by Peter. Jesus did not equivocate on morals and values. There was right and wrong, righteous and evil. The Pope's follow up to the uprising is easily perceived as pandering, appeasement, apology and/or equivocating by the media and the faithful alike. I don't think Hanson is picking on the Pope but rather using the incident to reinforce his argument about the cultural weakness in Europe and to highlight what America's future holds if we don't take notice.

I think the Pope and our church would have been better served had Pope Bededict come out and stated unequivocally,

"My words were not offensive. I quoted an ancient leader. My point was obviously missed by the followers of Islam. Let me restate my point and try to be more clear. There is no God that wishes his faithful followers to murder innocent women, children, fathers, brothers and sons. Those that kill innocent women and children in the name of Allah are guilty of a mortal sin, need to repent and change their ways. Or else be condemned to hell by our most forgiving and gracious Lord."
53 posted on 10/03/2006 7:38:57 AM PDT by Tenacious 1 (War Monger...In the name of liberty, let's go to war!!!!)
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To: Tenacious 1

[I believe our Pope, for years now, has been surrounded with bad advisers.[

To be clear, I include Pope John Paul in that, "...for years now." Following the end of the cold war, even Pope John Paul seemed to soften (IMO).


54 posted on 10/03/2006 7:59:14 AM PDT by Tenacious 1 (War Monger...In the name of liberty, let's go to war!!!!)
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To: Cicero; neverdem
Hanson is an intelligent man whom I respect (and could get into a helluva dispute with) --- for instance, over this:

"And so Europe has done us a great favor in showing us not the way of the future, but the old cowardice of our pre-Enlightenment past."

Cowardice? Pre-Enlighenment?

It wasn't Locke or Voltaire who had the intellectual courage to bring the thought of Aristotle and Averroes into the University and dared to defend the ultimate compatibility of faith and reason by argument alone --- the equivalent of a Unified Field Theory of the Universe. It wasn't David Hume or Jean-Jacques Rousseau who mounted the barricades, crimson with gore, and saved Europe from the scimatars of Islam.

If it hadn't been for courageous intellectuals like Aquinas, and rough men of valor like Don John of Austria and King Jan Sobieski, there's be no West to save.

I'm glad to give the "Enightenment" its due (though I think it's misnamed and overrated), but Victor Davis Hanson himself --- the author of Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power --- knows darn well tht it wasn't the Enlightenment, its men, its values, or its EU successors --- which has the power or the courage save us now.

55 posted on 10/03/2006 8:07:56 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("It is Richard, it is Raymond, it is Godfrey at the gate!" --- Chesterton, "Lepanto")
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To: grey_whiskers
Thanks...

Gert is mean as ever and Sparkle has grown up and is a big time M.D.....she made us proud.

56 posted on 10/03/2006 8:39:13 AM PDT by B.O. Plenty (liberalism, abortions and islam are terminal)
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To: Tolik

Thanks for the ping.


57 posted on 10/03/2006 8:43:36 AM PDT by GOPJ ("Everyone is somebody's else's weirdo." -- Scott Adams (author of Dilbert))
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To: neverdem

Well, this is sure to ruffle some feathers, but over all, I like it just the same.

This should be read by every American once, and every European twice.


58 posted on 10/03/2006 9:02:33 AM PDT by alarm rider (Those that vote for RINOS knowingly, have already admitted defeat.)
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To: neverdem
Europe became much more flattering towards Islam during the Enlightenment because brave "fanatical" Christian soldiers had defended the continent against Islam. Gibbon and Voltaire, among others, often preferred Islam to Christianity and are responsible for much of the pro-Muslim, anti-Christian romanticized gobbledegook in discussion today.

Somehow Europeans have ever-so-insidiously given up the promise of the Enlightenment that welcomed free thought of all kinds, the more provocative the better.

"No God but Allah and Mohammed is his prophet" is just the kind of provocative statement that would tick off Hanson, but Leftist captiulations before Islam are driven precisely by this "free thinking." Conversion to Islam is the current form of the juvenile "shock the bourgeois!" mentality that Hansen, for some bizzare reason, has kind words for.

59 posted on 10/03/2006 9:39:27 AM PDT by Dumb_Ox (http://kevinjjones.blogspot.com)
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To: Tench_Coxe
"The French went down the wrong path, and (with the help of others) dragged a lot of continental Europe with them."

I agree, especially with the help of Jean Jacques Rousseau.
60 posted on 10/03/2006 9:47:21 AM PDT by Blind Eye Jones
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