Is Donald Trump the end of the Enlightenment? Plenty of people think so. “The Trump team has shown contempt for Enlightenment values shared by liberals and conservatives alike,” wrote former senior State department official Suzanne Nossel recently. “The principles that Trump aims to defeat include the bedrock tenets of the Enlightenment and of American democracy.”
The Financial Review’s Andrew Clark devoted a column to discussing whether “Trump’s arrival signals the end of the Enlightenment”.
A piece in Salon claimed Trump’s inauguration “announces the beginning of the end of the Enlightenment itself”.
“Today’s cry of protest … is a rejection of the Enlightenment,” a Boston Globe columnist wrote in a piece in December entitled “The Enlightenment had a good run”.
However, time has been called on the Enlightenment before. That Platonic Ideal of Guardian commentators, George Monbiot, called “The End of the Enlightenment” in 2001 when he juxtaposed the US “victory” in Afghanistan (hmmm) with the loss of basic civil liberties in the US. A New Scientist discussion focused on the end of the Enlightenment at the hands of religious fundamentalism in 2005. The growing attacks on climate science in 2012 moved another writer to declare the end of the Enlightenment (sorry 2012, but you ain’t seen nothin’ yet). Neoliberal cuts to education budgets were the end of the Enlightenment in 2013. The Enlightenment was been a long time dying, and the murderers are manifold; Trump is only the latest.
As the constant cries of its death suggest, it seems everyone loves the Enlightenment, even if they don’t know a whole lot about the eruption of rationalist, anti-religious and reformist thought across the 18th century.
When prime minister, John Howard declared, with his usual casual indifference to Australia’s first peoples, that Australia’s “dominant pattern comprises Judeo-Christian ethics, the progressive spirit of the Enlightenment and the institutions and values of British political culture”. Tony Abbott — who, with his aggressive Catholicism and bloodlust for the culture wars, would surely, had he been born in 18th century France, have been among the most aggressive royal persecutors of the philosophes — complained in 2015 that Islam had failed to undergo a reformation and an enlightenment.
This is profoundly ironic, given both Abbott’s ideology and the fact that he made the statement on Sky News, the most demonstrably anti-Enlightenment form of media in Australia, but also profoundly ignorant; it was only via Islamic scholarship that many of the West’s classical texts survived the medieval period, quite apart from the crucial Arab scientific and mathematical advances that the West benefits from to this day.
But not everyone does love the Enlightenment. The Catholic Church, certainly, still regards the Enlightenment with hostility; given it only “forgave” Galileo in the 1980s, it will probably come around in a century or so. And post-modernists saw it as perniciously offensive, fundamentally linked to capitalism, its assertion of universal values an arrogant, Eurocentric form of cultural imperialism. Some saw in its exultation of reason the ushering in of a new tyranny that stripped humanity of our innate value as living beings and led the way to the Holocaust and other 20th century genocides.
Marxists took a different view. While intellectual history is subordinate in Marxist theory to economics — the ideas of the Enlightenment mere superstructure to the core historical forces at work — and the Enlightenment was understood as a primarily bourgeois phenomenon (indeed, the actions of a revolutionary bourgeoisie) the crucial role of the Enlightenment in the development of Marxist thought was recognised from the outset as providing the tool of rationality that, once employed by bourgeois intellectuals, would now be employed by anti-capitalist forces. The Enlightenment was thus a crucial stage in the development of Marxism itself, even if that tool was to be used against the bourgeoisie.
Well … so what?
The Marxists make a fair point. The Enlightenment was, necessarily, an elite phenomenon; the people being enlightened were wealthy European men, and a few women, but who tended to be outside the existing ruling class of monarchs and aristocrats (England, at this stage, was essentially the same, with a tiny franchise and corrupt electoral system). The label “bourgeois” is perfectly apt. But the issue of structure and superstructure is more fundamental. If the Enlightenment occupies such a central role in our self-conception as modern societies, what was the origin of the Enlightenment and its most powerful ideas of reason and universal rights?
This argument has long been fought over by historians in the context of the causes of the French Revolution — which came hot on the heels of the French Enlightenment — and the key influences on the American revolutionaries and founding fathers. Were these ideas the “mere” product of economic forces? Were they simply the musings of certain Great Men Of History that sprang forth without precedent and took hold? What is the origin of this most crucial component of the Western self-conception?
The Marxist explanation is pretty sound for at least part of the Enlightenment. One important angle is that capitalism made the spread of Enlightenment ideas easier — the seminal intellectual text of the Enlightenment, the Encyclopedie, was funded by subscriptions (although there were few “capitalists” and people of business buying them); the whole venture relied on there being a reading public in France large enough to support the publication of what became a decades-long publishing venture.
There are also clear philosophical links between capitalism and strands of Enlightenment thought. One of the two key 17th-century philosophers who heavily influenced the Enlightenment, John Locke, established the contractarian basis for England’s limited monarchy model after 1688. Locke’s key works had been written before then, but the Glorious Revolution of 1688-89, in which the last Stuart monarch was forced out and replaced by the Dutch invader William of Orange, was a revolution of vested interests — the English landed class — against a monarch threatening to replace the country’s informal constitution with absolutism.
Locke’s justification for private property and the right of a people to remove a monarch if the latter was no longer serving their interests was perfect for post-Stuart England, which would become the economically dominant imperial power of Europe in coming decades. It would be nearly a century later that Adam Smith would provide a still-clearer link between Enlightenment thought and capitalism.
But a regular theme of much of the historiography of the Enlightenment is that there was more than one — there were different national Enlightenments, there was a high/low Enlightenment. Enter historian Jonathan Israel, who has pursued what he argues is the most profound distinction of all, between the moderate and radical Enlightenments. The moderate Enlightenment was that of Locke, and of Voltaire — probably the only Enlightenment “philosopher” most people could name — who was open about his contempt for the great mass of people and who believed only the middle class could be “enlightened”.
Indeed, Voltaire, the great enemy of the clergy, believed religion was necessary in order to keep the masses in line. This “moderate” Enlightenment — the Enlightenment you could safely market to “enlightened despots” like Frederick of Prussia and Catherine the Great — was very much the Enlightenment that Marxists would expect from a rising bourgeoisie, and the Enlightenment of the American Revolution, which produced high-flying rhetoric about all men being created equal while maintaining a system of slavery.
But Israel argues that the truly enduring Enlightenment ideas came from a radical Enlightenment that followed reason and universal rights to their logical conclusions. Why have any social orders — why shouldn’t all have basic rights, including women, including Africans, including native Americans, including slaves, including homosexuals? That was where Denis Diderot, the editor of the Encyclopedie, ended up, along with other key figures of the radical Enlightenment such as Baron d’Holbach and Jean d’Alembert. These were the ideas that emerged during the French Revolution and which were to be the most profoundly influential in the 20th century, not the hierarchical, conservative Enlightenment of Voltaire.
This radical Enlightenment owed much to the other crucial 17th-century thinker, the Dutch philosopher Spinoza, whose ideas about religion, toleration and constitutional government derived from his metaphysics: monism (Spinoza believed there was only one substance, and God was that universal substance; there was no deity in a personal sense, therefore no divine law or sanctified order of things).
The radical Enlightenment didn’t meet with unalloyed success, nor was the French Revolution a kind of fulfilment of the radical philosophe‘s dreams. In fact, the radical philosophes were demonised by the Jacobins during the Terror; Diderot, d’Holbach and d’Alembert had all died by the outbreak of the Revolution but surviving radicals like Tom Paine and Condorcet were in hiding or had been jailed by the Jacobins; one, Cloots, had been executed. Robespierre and the Jacobins particularly despised the radical philosophes not merely for their support for free speech and democracy but because they were seen as enemies of the 18th-century philosopher prized above all by the Jacobins, Rousseau.
Wasn’t Rousseau himself an Enlightenment thinker? He did contribute, significantly, to the Encyclopedie but he fell out with Diderot, as he fell out with pretty much everyone he ever met. His own philosophy was fundamentally anti-Enlightenment: he believed reason was the entire problem for humankind and that we’d all been better off in a blissful pre-civilisation when we hadn’t used reason at all. He was a democrat, but hated the idea of any sort of representative democracy — he believed in an authoritarian democracy in which representatives would be constantly monitored for any deviation from the popular will and any disruptive ideas (like those of Diderot) would be shut down as quickly as possible, not by debate and argument, but by censorship.
Rousseau was also profoundly misogynistic, even by the standards of the 18th century. Women, who “are the sex that ought to obey”, could not be citizens, for Rousseau; instead, their place was in the domestic sphere. Rousseau was a very long way from Diderot and d’Holbach, who argued that the alleged inferiority of women reflected their lack of education and lower legal status in European countries, rather than any biological inferiority.
A loathing of reason, a heavily censored political environment, a hatred of women — which modern political figure does Rousseau remind you of? In an insightful article in The New Yorker last year, writer Pankaj Mishra identified Rousseau’s thinking with Trump and the political climate exploited by him, particularly around the importance of fear, and his resentment of what we now call “elites”.
“… because Rousseau derived his ideas from intimate experiences of fear, confusion, loneliness, and loss, he connected easily with people who felt excluded. Periwigged men in Paris salons, Tocqueville once lamented, were ‘almost totally removed from practical life’ and worked ‘by the light of reason alone’. Rousseau, on the other hand, found a responsive echo among people making the traumatic transition from traditional to modern society — from rural to urban life.”
Similarly, Trump appeals to those making the transition from a traditional industrial economy to a globalised, information-based economy.
The Jacobins loved Rousseau: they, too, saw reason as a corruption of the simple wisdom of the labouring classes — wisdom as interpreted, of course, by the Jacobins and their supporters, the sans-culottes of Paris. The sans-culottes were the workers and smaller businesspeople of Paris, ultra-aggressive and politically radical, who relied on the yellow press and rumour for their news, and who were quick to act on the basis of any conspiracy theory that circulated in the city.
Sound familiar?
Trump’s not the end of the Enlightenment, any more than Rousseau, who bitterly railed against not just the radical but the moderate Enlightenment writers, was. But the rich vein of irrationality and fear Trump exploits has intellectual as well as popular roots. Human rights aren’t the only thing that’s universal: stupidity, ignorance and irrationality can be found around the world and across the ages too — as can their defenders.
Thanks Bernard for this timely piece of intellectual history. It’s too easy to trash the Enlightenment, liberalism or centrist politics, or to blame them for the rise of authoritarianism. I think you’re a little harsh on Rousseau (as was Popper), although a case could be made for seeing him as a precursor to some of the current ideas of the populist left (direct democracy, etc) which have their own authoritarian tendencies. Conversely, I think you’re little generous in attributing the intellectual lineage of Trump’s ‘ideas’ to Rousseau. Trump doesn’t have ideas. He is a pathological narcissist who acts on (and appeals to) emotions and impulses like fear, hated, aggression, rage, envy, resentment, insatiable greed and the lust for power. In contrast, the Enlightenment is, as Habermas put it (and even Foucault later recognised), an unfinished project. As a historical epoch (like the Renaissance) it may be ‘over’, but ideas themselves do not ‘die’, unlike the conditions from which they spring, or even the individuals who give voice to them. Best, Humphrey
thanks for the thoughtful response Humphrey
Thank you Bernard, what a wonderful read. But it wont stop here for me.
Thanks Dennis
Loved your article Bernard. Am new to Crikey and your quality journalism is the hallmark of Crikey, I shall be a consumer for a little longer. Well done.
Cheers Bruce and thanks for giving Crikey a good look. B
Dear Bernard’s problem seems to be that Bernard has no sense of history notwithstanding an implicit claim to the contrary. Consider for example
> But not everyone does love the Enlightenment. The Catholic Church, certainly,
> still regards the Enlightenment with hostility; given it only “forgave” Galileo’
> in the 1980s,
The Papacy, at the time, deemed itself infallible (asserted officially some centuries later); a hundred and fifty years prior to Galileo the Papacy could remove monarchies and reinstate others; such was the humility of the Vicar of Christ Nowadyas the Papacy could not dispose a dictatorship in the content of Africa. It required, roughly, a hundred years (qua Newton) for observation to succeed “pure” Rationalism.
> it will probably come around in a century or so.
maybe; maybe not. The attraction of the Catholic Church is its adherence to orthodoxy (although celibacy of the priesthood did not exist 1000 (or so) years ago. It became “vougey” about the time of the 1st Crusade (for many – quite complicated – reasons). The resistance to abortion (indeed infanticide) is very much more recent. Having made those points the attraction to Anglicans (for example) to Catholicism is the repugnance to (1) their female vicars blessing (2) future acts of sodomy. Is such a manifestation of “Trumpism”? No : I think the bow snaps well prior to this point.
> The Enlightenment was, necessarily, an elite phenomenon
Not so. Let’s consider Galileo (again – who did have a solid understanding of how “gov. funding ‘worked'” given the 17Cent.). Mere observation decided the point as to the superiority of the Polemic or Copernican celestial system. Ditto for the Enlightenment (in general), Yes, agreed, the essays of Rousseau (mid 18Cent – keep in mind), particularly on what we would now refer to as “individualism”, were influential There was also the English Civil War. As Macquarie put it “men in the 17th century did not wish to be governed as they had in the 16th century.” As an aside, MacArthur said of Bligh (the current Governor of NSW) that he had put “every man’s property, liberty and life in danger”. Such was not a phrase one encountered during the Catholic/Protestant “wars” or of any conflict in the 15th & 16th centuries. The history buffs will recall that Bligh was arrested by the King’s (military) Officers on Australian Day 1808.
Most of the “great”, including Newton, were quite misogynistic; Given the declaration that “all men are created equal” and have a right to life, liberty and to PURSUIT (i.e. not necessarily have) happiness only an idiot, at the time, would have assumed coloured people – or for that matter women – to have been included in the declaration. Ditto for the Abolitionists. The crime was that the niggers were God’s creatures and that any of God’s creatures had no right to make a slave of another creature. However, emancipation was never considered synonymous with equality.
Lastly, on the rather confused assessment of Trump and the Enlightenment, what passes for “democracy” in 2017 is utterly different to what passed for “democracy” in 1800; much less 1700. If the history is to be discussed it is to be discussed from the ethos of the times and economic conditions of the times; in this case the mid 18th century.
The forgoing claim could only be partially true if “elite” is to be associated with “educated” – otherwise the criticism prevails.
> Trump’s not the end of the Enlightenment,
{ought to expressed as : Trump is not .. : the apostrophe could not and does not reflect possession {but we’ll leave the matter of the standard of grammar in the articles of Crikey to another time}
.mmmm
Let’s consider the, so called, “Womens’ March” (most newspapers misplaced the apostrophe) but a quick review of discourse analysis is appropriate. An extract from from a well-known text on the subject
|| There are some criteria most discourse analysts will recognise, so that
|| they can distinguish discourse analysis from other forms of analysis
|| (like content analysis, or social analysis, or indeed from no analysis at all).
|| One such criterion is the special attention paid to STRUCTURES; expressed in
|| terms of some THEORY. Analysis may focus on –for instance– structures of
|| expression (sounds, image, movement, etc., including those of words, word
|| order or sentence structure), on the one hand, and structures of meaning
|| and (inter)action, on the other.
The paragraph may seem or appear reasonable but in fact the paragraph amounts to Orwellian nonsense. Academic papers have been regularly rejected by the more boorish Journals because the editors to not think the papers contain “sufficient” analysis of
discourse. As to “structures” one has to be rather familiar with the sociological theories of Levi Strauss. The “some theory” usually meant “eco feminism” that was voguey for about twenty years (amazingly) from about 1990.
Depending upon one’s perspective it can be said (on the one hand) that we are living in apparent freedom but in point of fact we are living in tyranny and the extent of the tyranny increases year by year. It could be said that the world (or at least the 1st world) has many more freedoms than previously. Examples include social freedoms and a recognition of discrimination. On the other hand, so called Political Correctness is in fact a tyranny – in addition to its capacity to jettison logic.
One view is that the propertied interests of the world (i.e. the 500 or so people that own about 92% of the wealth of the world) have a very real interest in ensuring that 7.x billion people do not (ever) become too analytic in their thinking. If the language
becomes corrupted then the inhabitants will not be able to present articulate arguments. One only has to read the drivel on the ABC website to learn just how this objective is being achieved. A second method (or strategy) is to introduce themes such as Political
Correctness along with other “reforms” to do not with education (or anything associated with analysis) but with side issues as the sexual preferences of the inhabitants of a community.
Zamyatin, Huxley and Orwell (in that order) perceived the “current situation” with the
utmost clarity – more or less 80 years ago. However, by now, you are probably wondering how the forgoing is germane to the Womens’ Marches. Well the answer is straight forward and is explained by a comparison with Trump and the Obama/Clinton duo.
Recall that Obama received the Nobel Peace Prize just piror to becoming President (over Morgan Tsvangirai and other considerably more deserving candidates) for the purpose of “locating” Obama in the “right” camp. From then on he ignored 8 of his 12 objectives
and “embraced” Israel of which he was highly critical during his election campaign. The criticism only represented itself in the last months of his Office. Only those whose toes are on the “yellow line” get a Nobel. Any number of highly deserving researchers
have been utterly ignored over very average researchers. It is generally acknowledged that to obtain a Nobel (along the millions in prize money) is tantamount to being judged as second-rate by those who are actually at the coal face – and, of course, the
mavericks.
Now we have Trump. There are similarities with Reagan despite the efforts of almost every newspaper in the 1st world to argue that there are no similarities. The major similarity is that Trump has has no government or military or political-party experience. Reagan less so but, as I say, similarities exist. To this extent the “prevailing” sentiments of the real governing elite are not going to continue
to be met as they would have been under Hillary. It is hoped, under Trump, that the irrational drivel that is compromising social life, education, immigration, climate change research etc. is going to come to an end yet there will be a very ugly fight where a lot of people are going to get hurt (all over the world)
You may well think that Trump has an interest in supporting the faceless elite of 500 but the competition is very great because the likes of Obama and Hillary along with most of the Republicans are also vying for influence as to be stewards for the faceless 500.
Donald, after a bit of reflection identified disaffected white people and disaffected black (and any other colour) people and also disaffected females. Trump did NOT win merely on the white male vote. Hillary won in the more (but numerically fewer) populated
and up-market states which, frankly, supports the point.
The marchers (to give them a title) ARE [generally]
(1) white,
(2) have completed high school and the equivalent of TAFE (for a business diploma or whatever)
(3) live in a “good” house and
(4) are on birth control and
(5) have access to uncontaminated drugs along with
(6) their own car and very likely
(7) TV/Home Entertainment Suite (i.e. hubby has one too) and
(8) do have regular holidays and are
(9) paid nowhere near the minimum wage.
Does the above look like Hillary Clinton or a Hilary Clinton supporter or perhpas the Pope is a Protestant.
The last thing the marchers want is a (political) vehicle to flick them off their shelves. Most of their office/gov jobs that are not at all demanding and they can play the game of “office politics” to their own advantage. With a Trump – Marine Le Pen – Geert Wilders ménage à trois along with a similarly disposed Russian, Middle East and Asian contribution the “forces” of Hillary et al(along with a good number of Republicans) are not so much in a state of disarray but of outright terror.
However, the “picture” is bigger than what is occurring in the USA. Alt-right is becoming a real force and the name is something of a misnomer because alt-right combines (ironically) both traditional left and right wing ideology. As for the so called “left” their ideology is nothing like that of the Communist Manifesto or (for example) Lenin’s “What is to be Done”?. Nowadays it is all about trees, wind-farms (an utter disaster) and sodomy. Having made that point the “new Greens” are a LOT closer to Hillary (and Wall St) than they are to the Libs (Oz or UK). They think (hence the marches) that Trumpism will destroy them : and they would be correct.
Ok – a summary (of sorts) is in order.
The world, from about Reagan (c. 1980) (include Thatcher) has been governed by a “divide and conquer” mentality which has had the appearance of uniformity but, in fact, has been very decisive. Examples include “discourse analysis” not for its own sake but to
ensure that research is “acceptable” and politically correct. So called gender issues are replete with generalisations and argument from the “particular circumstance” to attempting a general point on a sample of one or two or three instances.
The fat cats have got fatter and EVERY educational initiative from about the same period has been an absolute disaster (e.g. Bush’s “No Child Left Behind” and whatever; same in Australia). Stephen Jay Gould stated on ABC (Oz) in the mid 80s (I heard the interview) “nowadays it is smart to be dumb”. People get to express an opinion or vote on issues they know absolutely nothing about and such is a very great tyranny for those who are informed. So much for an endorsement of the Enlightenment (and, by corollary, it is Tumpism [and not the other way about] that is responsible for the problem.
Trump (I suspect) does not comprehend the theoretical imperatives of his actions but they are VERY different to the “traditional” Clinton/Bush/Obama Blair/Cameron/May Howard/Rudd/Abbott/Turnbull brigade where the differences, for the multi-nationals are not that great or significant; all (of the above – except Trump) are fundamentally in agreement with the system.
Given Trump there are very real alternatives (i.e. similarities) in Europe (as pointed out above) and the faceless 500 are not going to like it. The main institutions of the world (e.g. the decision-makers of the Nobel prizes), Word Trade Org, IMF, etc are in existence at the forbearance of the faceless 500. Alt-right could well turn this happy arrangement on its head.
The “anti-Trump” forces are just that; pro-faceless 500 forces. But those who turn up are, by and large, characteristically reflective of the nine attributes above. Had Hillary won the Trump brigade would be marching. This is just the start and not the end. The difference is that the Trump brigade has the gonads to start shooting if it needs to – which is in stark difference to the Obama/Hillary brigade.
The latter do perceive the Trump brigade as “putting the place back decades”. An alternative assessment is that Trump will restore a sense of civilisation by jettisoning the accumulated crap of about 40 years. As a side effect Trump just might make “America great again”.
We live in a world where any person can take umbrage at being offended irrespective of their knowledge-base or contribution to the country’s GDP. Quite some time ago (perhaps c. 1985) philosophy as a subject ceased (in the main) to be taught at universities. The current (rat-bag?) of parliamentarians around the world were teenagers at the time (or younger). They, except for a few percent, have undertaken no formal reading in philosophical topics concerning, morality, empiricism, ethics or rationalism or indeed in anything of significance.
Nowadays, on account of this deficiency of a liberal education [yes : the meaning has changed over time], there is a tendency to begin with “me” qua “how do I feel” etc. What are “my” rights etc. Well, with a rigorous connection to formal philosophy etc. rights are preserved and equitable behaviour will prevail subject to the political will at the time. However, with reference to the first sentence in this paragraph it becomes (self) evident that when “everyone” has “rights” in point of fact no one has rights – or looses them in rather short order