A Voice in the Wilderness In Defense of "Mere Conservatism"

29Dec/10Off

Mayor Bloomberg’s Snow Troubles

POLITICS-US-USA-POLITICS-BLOOMBERGNew York City is under siege right now.  By that I mean that there is a lot of snow and the city hasn't done a good job of clearing it.  Mayor Bloomberg (pictured right) is hearing it from all corners, but has nothing to say other than, "...the system broke."

National Review columnist and Ricochet.com founder/contributor Rob Long, who lives in L.A. but happens to be in NYC right now, had this to report from The Big Apple yesterday:

Mayor Bloomberg has made it his mission to rid his city of junk food, smokers, and bad vending machines.  But right now -- and I just slogged my way from Penn Station to Soho, so I'm an eyewitness with two very wet shoes -- what New Yorkers really want is for the snowplows to get moving.

And they're letting him know.  From the NYObserver:

As snow drifts remain piled high in most of the city, Mayor Michael Bloomberg is receiving harsh criticism from one time allies who are dismayed at the city's clean-up efforts after the blizzard.

Yesterday, Brooklyn City Councilman David Greenfield, who Bloomberg endorsed in his election bid last year, even sending some of his political troops to help with get-out-the-vote efforts, appeared on a Jewish radio show and blasted the snow-removal.

"This could easily be the beginning of the end of Mayor Bloomberg's political career. It's such a big deal. And I am telling this as somebody who has always had a good relationship with the mayor and who has always worked well with him," Greenfield said. "This is a mayor who prides himself on saying the buck stops by him. And at the end of the day the buck does stop by him. We are going to hold him responsible. He is on notice. He better fix this or we are going to hold him personally accountable."

Queens councilman Eric Ulrich, who helped the mayor secure the backing of the Queens Republican Party and who was sworn in by Bloomberg when he won his seat in 2009, said the Mayor telling New Yorkers to go see a Broadway show was "like Marie Antoinette saying, 'Let the people eat cake.'

"I supported the mayor for a third term because I thought he was the best choice. I thought he was a good manager. Now I am starting to have doubts. You can't manage a  snowstorm after Christmas? I think people are starting to question his leadership ability," Ulrich added.

There's a lesson in this, isn't there, for all of those politicians who just can't stop themselves from getting all up in our business?  Make sure you fill the potholes and clear the streets first.  Make sure the borders are secure and the post office delivers letters on time and kids know how to spell English words.  When you've accomplished all of that, then maybe we can talk about French fries and smoking and free health care and every other crackpot, invasive, nanny-state scheme you've been cooking up.

I could not agree more with Mr. Long's assessment.  One wishes that Mayor Bloomberg, and busy-body liberals everywhere, would put half the amount of time they spend trying  to socially engineer our lives into performing the basic duties they have been elected to discharge.


27Dec/10Off

Review of Tron:Legacy

Here's my review of the new Tron movie over at the K&R Blog.  I started K&R this fall to be a place where things are a little lighter than the mostly-serious topics discussed here at AVITW.  Coming this Spring, expect to see both more movie reviews and a bevvy of light-hearted, satirical content.


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24Dec/10Off

George Washington and a Christmas Miracle

Most of us have seen the famous painting of General Washington and his troops crossing the Delaware River.  america-kill-you-in-your-sleep-500x375

But what many of us do not appreciate is the story surrounding that fateful day in 1776.  Editor of National Review, Rich Lowry, has in his latest column succinctly (and powerfully) recapped Washington's crossing and the miracle that kept a revolution alive at its dimmest moment.

British strategy depended on shattering American faith in the Continental Army and reconciling the rebellious colonies to the Crown. As the Americans fled to the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River, the British occupied New Jersey and offered an amnesty to anyone declaring his loyalty. They had thousands of takers, including one signer of the Declaration of Independence.

As David Hackett Fischer emphasizes in his classic Washington’s Crossing, the American revival began spontaneously. Low on supplies, occupying troops had to forage for food. The forage turned to plunder. That fueled a grassroots rising among “the rascal peasants,” in the words of a Hessian officer.

With New Jersey boiling and expiring enlistments about to reduce his army further, Washington decided on a scheme to cross the Delaware on Christmas and surprise the Hessian garrison in Trenton. “If the raid backfired,” Chernow writes, “the war was likely over and he would be captured and killed.”

Behind schedule, Washington’s main force of 2,400 started crossing the river that night. Yes, most of them were standing up in flat-bottomed boats. Yes, there were ice floes. It wasn’t until 4 a.m. that all the men were across the river. They had nine miles still to march to Trenton in a driving storm and no chance of making it before daybreak. Washington considered calling it off, but he had already come too far.

The story continues:

Arriving at Trenton at 8 a.m., his spirited troops seemed “to vie with the other in pressing forward,” he wrote afterward. They surprised the Hessians, not because they were sleeping off a Christmas bender. Harried in hostile New Jersey, the Hessians had exhausted themselves on constant alert. They didn’t expect an attack in such weather, though. The battle ended quickly — 22 Hessians killed, 83 seriously wounded, and 900 captured, to two American combat deaths.

“It may be doubted whether so small a number of men ever employed so short a space of time with greater and more lasting effects upon the history of the world,” British historian George Trevelyan wrote.

The American troops found 40 hogshead of rum in the town, which temporarily blunted their effectiveness. Washington followed up soon enough with another victory at Princeton. In the space of a few weeks, the Americans killed or captured as many as 3,000 of the enemy and irreversibly changed the dynamic of the war.

David Hackett Fischer sees in that resurgence after our fortunes were at their lowest a reassuring aspect of our national character in this season of discontent: We respond when pressed. Dr. Benjamin Rush, a great supporter of the American cause, wrote: “Our republics cannot exist long in prosperity. We require adversity and appear to possess most of the republican spirit when most depressed.”

May it still be so.

Merry Christmas.  God bless America.


23Dec/10Off

Will, Camp, and Tax

willGeorge Will's latest column is a fantastic explanation of the larger problems in our current tax code system.  Will introduces most Americans to Rep. Dave Camp, the incoming chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee (a position previously held by my main man Charlie Rangel).

Many parents have heard FICA Screams. Indignant children, holding in trembling hands their first paychecks, demand to know what FICA is and why it is feasting on their pay.

FICA (the Federal Insurance Contributions Act tax) is government compassion, expressed numerically: It is the welfare state; it funds Social Security and Medicare. Sometimes it makes young people into conservatives.

Dave Camp was 14, working for his father's garage in central Michigan, when he made the acquaintance of FICA. Now 57 and about to begin his 11th term in Congress, he will chair the House Ways and Means Committee, where he will try to implement the implications of his complaint that "the tax code is 10 times longer than the Bible, without the good news."

His aim is "fundamental" tax reform, understood the usual way - broadening the base (eliminating loopholes) to make lower rates possible. He would like a top rate of 25 percent - three points lower than Ronald Reagan achieved in 1986, with what proved to be perishable simplification.

Will continues:

Many conservatives, including Camp, believe that although most Americans should be paying lower taxes, more Americans should be paying taxes. The fact that 46.7 million earners pay no income tax creates moral hazard - incentives for perverse behavior: Free-riding people have scant incentive to restrain the growth of government they are not paying for with income taxes.

"I believe," Camp says, "you've got to have some responsibility for the government you have." People have co-payments under Medicare, and everyone should similarly have some "skin in the game" under the income tax system.

In addition to the one-third of the 143 million tax returns filed by individual earners for 2007 that showed no tax liability, additional millions of households have incomes low enough to exempt them from filing tax returns. The bottom two quintiles of earners have negative income tax liabilities - they receive cash payments from the government via refundable tax credits.

This is why elections matter: to get people like Rep. Camp (and his philosophy on taxation and size of government) not only in office, but in charge of important committees.  Tax-cuts are important - very important, in fact - but spending must be reigned in.  I'm not breaking any new ground by pointing that out, but many people don't fully recognize why it is that spending must be cut.  More than anything else, spending grows the size and scope of government.  This means more centralized power in Washington D.C.  This means less freedom/liberty for the people of a nation founded on the notion that too much power in the hands of the few is not only a bad idea, but immoral and intolerable.

Smaller government (and the corresponding lower taxes that should accompany it) is not some "conservative" or "libertarian" talking point.  It is an idea at the very heart of our "little experiment" in republican democracy.

If Barack Obama is accurately reported to be considering serious tax simplification and lower rates, he will have an ally in Camp - up to a point. Serious arguments about taxes are never just about taxes. They are about government's proper size and purposes. Concerning that, Obama differs with Camp, who says: "Washington doesn't have a revenue problem. It has a spending problem."


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22Dec/10Off

Girls Just Wanna Have Fun (and break NCAA records)

The University of Connecticut's women's basketball team won their 89th game in a row this week.  That number is significant because the longest previous winning steak was 88, set by the UCLA's men's team in the 1970's.  UCONN's accomplishment is more than impressive: it is epic.  They have absolutely demolished the competition for roughly 2.5 years.  They have won back-to-back National Championships.  They boast loyal fans and a packed stadium each time they play on their home floor.

But the coverage of the UCONN women's team noteworthy feat has been absolutely ridiculous and, ironically, undermining to the advancement of women's sports in our culture.  First there was the coach of this historic team, Geno Auriemma, who said this after his team tied UCLA's record the other night:

"I just know there wouldn't be this many people in the room if we were chasing a woman's record," the Connecticut coach said Sunday near the end of his postgame news conference. "The reason everybody is having a heart attack the last four or five days is a bunch of women are threatening to break a men's record, and everybody is all up in arms about it."

First of all, the "We don't get no respect" routine that athletes and coaches in every sport (and at every level) perform all of the time is getting so old.  No one hates these girls that you've coached to a legendary win-steak, Coach A.  What I do have a problem with is the subtle implication of your remarks over the past few months as you've inched closer to the 89 number.

The subtle implication here is that Auriemma is directly comparing what his team has done against women's teams to what John Wooden and his UCLA Bruins did against men's teams.  This is non-sense on stilts.  The important number here isn't that UCONN has won one more game in a row than did UCLA, it is that should the ladies of UCONN ever play one game against any men's team, let alone the Bill Walton-led UCLA teams of the late 1970's, they would lose by 50 points.  And that's being kind.

Our culture, even our sports culture (or at least much of the emasculated sports media culture), has bought the Left's preposterous notion that because women can be CEO's and teachers and bankers like men (and in many cases, better than men), that they are equal in every single solitary way.  Even physically.

You'd have to turn off your brain to come to this conclusion, and apparently millions of Americans have.  Men are on average taller, faster, and stronger than women.  It is a difference on the genetic level.  Whether it was Natural Selection or the God of the Bible who made us, we are who we are.  I cannot for the life of me see why this is so offensive to some people's sensibilities that they have to lie to themselves and others (especially young students in public school).

Please hear me: women are the best thing God ever created.  I love women.  I love that women in this country are free to pursue their interests and free to walk down the street without being draped in head-to-foot linens.  I love that women can play sports and enjoy the camaraderie that comes with being a part of a team.  I respect the women who play on the UCONN basketball squad that decimated their competition for almost 3 years.  It's awesome and I wish them nothing but the best.

But men are different than women, and the refusal to embrace that unalterable reality is the subtext of the coverage of this win-streak.  Some might say this doesn't matter.  Some might say I'm over-blowing this and that I'm the typical chauvinist pig.  Maybe.

Maybe not.


20Dec/10Off

Ricky Gervais and A Very Atheistic Christmas

Ricky Gervais, the creator of both the British and American versions of The Office, is an outspoken and articulate (and funny) atheist.  He lets his feelings be known in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal yesterday.

Why don’t you believe in God? I get that question all the time. I always try to give a sensitive, reasoned answer. This is usually awkward, time consuming and pointless. People who believe in God don’t need proof of his existence, and they certainly don’t want evidence to the contrary. They are happy with their belief. They even say things like “it’s true to me” and “it’s faith.” I still give my logical answer because I feel that not being honest would be patronizing and impolite. It is ironic therefore that “I don’t believe in God because there is absolutely no scientific evidence for his existence and from what I’ve heard the very definition is a logical impossibility in this known universe,” comes across as both patronizing and impolite.

Arrogance is another accusation. Which seems particularly unfair. Science seeks the truth. And it does not discriminate. For better or worse it finds things out. Science is humble. It knows what it knows and it knows what it doesn’t know. It bases its conclusions and beliefs on hard evidence -­- evidence that is constantly updated and upgraded. It doesn’t get offended when new facts come along. It embraces the body of knowledge. It doesn’t hold on to medieval practices because they are tradition. If it did, you wouldn’t get a shot of penicillin, you’d pop a leach down your trousers and pray. Whatever you “believe,” this is not as effective as medicine. Again you can say, “It works for me,” but so do placebos. My point being, I’m saying God doesn’t exist. I’m not saying faith doesn’t exist. I know faith exists. I see it all the time. But believing in something doesn’t make it true. Hoping that something is true doesn’t make it true. The existence of God is not subjective. He either exists or he doesn’t. It’s not a matter of opinion. You can have your own opinions. But you can’t have your own facts.

While Gervais breaks very little new ground in terms of arguments against the existence of God in his piece, there are a few points that I think are worth responding to.ricky-gervais_china

He is spot-on when he says that the existence of God is "not subjective."  It is either true or it is false.  But when he wraps his claims in the deceptively warm blanket of "science" he walks on to a very rickety plank.  The small sliver of explanations that science can give us for how the laws of the universe (i.e. gravity) work is, to my mind, greatly over-shadowed by the fact that scientists will never be able to answer the all-important "Why?" question. And eventually we come to realize that the "Why?" question is everything.  Someone who is simply satisfied to learn how wildebeests migrate, or stalactites form in a cave, or when to hit the cut-off man in a play in the outfield is the kind of un-thinking, dispassionate person I don't want to ever be.  I want to know why I am here.  Science has no answers in this regard and, therefore, is helpful only up to a certain (and definitive) point.

And let me quickly (and forcefully) state here that science is in no way contradictory to a belief in God.  Was Newton being a hypocrite when his passion to learn and study God's creation led him to the "discovery" of physics?  What about all of these guys?  No good, because they believed in an Intelligent Designer?

He pits the two against one another purposefully, as most secularists do, so that younger people will be intimidated away from challenging science/scientists or coming up with new ideas on how the natural world points to a Creator for a new generation.  If you can silence the voice in someone's head that has questions about science, while at the same time discouraging young people from thoughtfully investigating faith, the ruminations of a stand-up comedian (as well-read as he may be) sound much more official and intellectual.

Belief in science alone is a belief too.  To say that there was nothingness in the non-universe, and that something came from nothing and made everything is a belief.  I don't care who you are, or how funny your sit-com's have been.  It is a belief, plain and simple.  And even when you look at basic scientific facts - take the human cell, for example - we see a complexity and creativity that points directly to a complex and creative mind/purpose/being.  Please understand that I'm not jumping to the Christian God of the Bible here: just defending the existence of a Higher Power.

Why don’t I believe in God? No, no no, why do YOU believe in God? Surely the burden of proof is on the believer. You started all this. If I came up to you and said, “Why don’t you believe I can fly?” You’d say, “Why would I?” I’d reply, “Because it’s a matter of faith.” If I then said, “Prove I can’t fly. Prove I can’t fly see, see, you can’t prove it can you?” You’d probably either walk away, call security or throw me out of the window and shout, ‘’F—ing fly then you lunatic.”

The "burden of proof" Gervais is really alluding to is the concept that is known as "the problem of evil."  And it is an entirely fair thing to bring up.  How could a good God allow such pain and suffering to exist?  When atheists talk about proof for God, they almost always are inferring this deeper question.

This is neither the time nor the place to tackle that immense and heavy issue, but for the purposes of this brief response to Gervais, allow me to fully embrace that the Believer does (in a sense) have a burden of proof in the "Does God exist?" debate.  We must give an account for suffering and why bad things happen.  But the atheist and non-believer must give an account for why all good things happen.  Where does love come from?  Why are we happy?  Why do people willingly sacrifice their lives for their nation?  Why do we weep when when our child gets married?  How could the power and complexity of emotions, emotions that lead us to make choices that harm ourselves for the sake of those we love, be said to be nothing more than "natural selection" doing "its thing"?

As an atheist, I see nothing “wrong” in believing in a god. I don’t think there is a god, but belief in him does no harm. If it helps you in any way, then that’s fine with me. It’s when belief starts infringing on other people’s rights when it worries me. I would never deny your right to believe in a god...

You see, growing up where I did, mums didn’t hope as high as their kids growing up to be doctors; they just hoped their kids didn’t go to jail. So bring them up believing in God and they’ll be good and law abiding. It’s a perfect system. Well, nearly. 75 percent of Americans are God-­‐fearing Christians; 75 percent of prisoners are God-­‐fearing Christians. 10 percent of Americans are atheists; 0.2 percent of prisoners are atheists.

Atheism, in the cool, hip, trendy sense of the word, is a relatively new concept.  In the 20th, and now 21st, century people like Gervais love to retro-actively re-write history, and this history always makes the free-thinking atheist look progressive and the reason we have light-bulbs and sliced bread (while belief in a Higher Power would have, so the argument goes, kept us in the Dark Ages).  Religious people have been at the forefront of every great scientific, societal, legal, political, and cultural movement of the last 2,000 years.  Atheism brought us Marxism, Communism, Socialism (something a Brit like Gervais knows all about), and more than 100 million murdered human beings in the last century alone. Mao-Stalin

The God-less Soviets (from 1917 to 1987) murdered at least 62 million of their own people.  Between 1948 and 1987 the Communist leaders in China murdered more than 75 million of their own people.  You can find some other fairly staggering statistics at this site, run by University of Hawaii's Professor Rudolph J. Rummel.

So to throw around numbers of those incarcerated who claim to be religious seems silly.  If only 10% of people are atheists, and yet they managed to murder more people in a shorter amount of time than any other group in human history...I'd say a "I rest my case" is in order.

My point isn't that Believers are guiltless or are instantly better people or anything of the sort.  But to pin all crime and human suffering on the religious, while atheists get to wear really neat-looking scarves and drink lattes and condescendingly poo-poo the out-dated notions of Neanderthals like me because of incorrect or out-of-context "facts" isn't going to cut it in the world of serious discussion and discourse.  Not on my watch.

Gervais goes on to give the account of the day he stopped believing in God.  He was 9 years old, he claims, and sitting at the kitchen table drawing pictures of Jesus for a Bible-study lesson his mom had him do:

There I was happily drawing my hero (Jesus) when my big brother Bob asked, “Why do you believe in God?” Just a simple question. But my mum panicked. “Bob,” she said in a tone that I knew meant, “Shut up.” Why was that a bad thing to ask? If there was a God and my faith was strong it didn’t matter what people said.

Oh…hang on. There is no God. He knows it, and she knows it deep down. It was as simple as that. I started thinking about it and asking more questions, and within an hour, I was an atheist.

So much of who we are goes back to the experiences of our childhood.  Gervais was soured on religious faith early in life because no adults in his life could give him solid, thoughtful answers for why it was they believed in God.  So along comes his "cheeky" brother who lends some influential advice about God's existence and now, some 40 years later, we are treated to an editorial from the man whose brother, had he been a thoughtful Christian, might have inspired his sibling to be the next Charles Spurgeon instead.  I'm not trying to defeat Gervais' arguments by point to his childhood, but I do think it important to note that he even admits that the genesis for his skepticism (and eventual atheism) were the under-informed beliefs of his poor religious mother and the "witty" interjections of his equally under-informed (but much more influential) older brother.  Young boys want to be like their brothers or older guys they know, not like their mothers.

Wow. No God. If mum had lied to me about God, had she also lied to me about Santa? Yes, of course, but who cares? The gifts kept coming. And so did the gifts of my new found atheism. The gifts of truth, science, nature. The real beauty of this world. I learned of evolution -– a theory so simple that only England’s greatest genius could have come up with it. Evolution of plants, animals and us –- with imagination, free will, love, humor. I no longer needed a reason for my existence, just a reason to live. And imagination, free will, love, humor, fun, music, sports, beer and pizza are all good enough reasons for living.

Those are great things to be enjoyed in life, but they are also utterly meaningless if we are here by chance and turn into worm-food when we die.  Without a God, without a Higher Power, there is no purpose.  Plain and simple.  You can "create" your own purpose and live for that, but the intellectual honest atheists acknowledge that life is dead if there is no God.  Sure you can have fun and enjoy beer and pizza, no matter what you believe.  But again I ask: why should there be any good, enjoyable things in this world at all?  We know there is pain and suffering, and we know there is joy and love, but why?  To what end?  If nothing happens when I die, and this life is as fragile and relatively insignificant as the atheist makes it out to be, why waste my time on beer that will give me a headache, pizza that will give me a stomach ache, and love that will give me heartache?clooney_save_darfur

And what is more, atheists in modern times seem unwilling to "eat, drink, and be merry" and rather choose to be involved with the removal of God from our money, national anthem, court-houses, historical narrative, and national consciousness.  They are not content, as Gervais insists, to eat pizza and drink beer and listen to killer tunes.  They are all the time and actively attempting to undermine religion, push social and political causes, and lecture the rest of us on the morality of "going green" and "saving Darfur."

But why take care of a planet that houses empty souls?  Why save people from genocide when it would take troops and money and time that we shouldn't waste if we really believed all humans are collections of randomly gathered protoplasm?

The moment we begin to describe something as "good" or "bad", "right" or "wrong", we are now talking about something bigger (and beyond) man.

I think Gervais is sincere in his beliefs, but they are just as readily described as "beliefs" as anything I (an evangelical conservative) claim to be true.  The best defense is a good offense.  If you are religious, know what you are talking about.  Be ready to give an account for the things you believe.  Little kids like Gervais are listening and absorbing our conversations.  They are judging whether or not the things you teach actually mean anything to you in your personal life, and if you can explain (and defend) them in your public life.

Ricky Gervais doesn't believe in God, but God, who is good, still believes in him.


16Dec/10Off

Orthodoxy Revisited: The Maniac

We are proud to present you with the second installment of our "Orthodoxy Revisited" series here at A Voice in the Wilderness.  In this chapter, Chesterton seeks to explain why it is he believes atheism and secularism are not only spiritually bankrupt, but mentally as well.  Enjoy!

Chapter II--The Maniac

Thoroughly "worldly" people never understand even the world; they rely almost entirely on a few cynical maxims which are not actually true.

On a particular day last year I was walking with a friend (who happens to be a prosperous publisher), and he made a remark which I had heard many other people say before - it is, indeed, almost a motto of the modern, secular world.  Yet I had heard it once too often, and I saw suddenly that there was nothing of substance in it.

The publisher said of somebody we were talking about, "That man will get on; he believes in himself."  And I remember that as I lifted my head to listen, my eye caught a sign on a nearby building which read: “Hanwell Asylum."   I said to him, "Shall I tell you where the men are who believe most in themselves?  For I can tell you.  I know of men who believe in themselves more colossally than Napoleon or Caesar.  I know exactly where flames the fixed star of certainty and success.  I can guide you to the thrones of the Super-men.  The men who really believe in themselves are all in lunatic asylums."

My friend, the publisher, said mildly that there were a good many men after all who believed in themselves and who were not in lunatic asylums.

"Yes, there are," I retorted, "and you of all men ought to know them.  That drunken poet from whom you would not buy the manuscript of his uninteresting tragedy, he believed in himself.  That elderly minister with a boring novel from whom you were hiding in a back room when he came for a meeting, he believed in himself.  Joanna_SouthcottIf you consulted your business experience instead of your ugly individualistic philosophy, you would know that believing in himself is one of the commonest signs of a crazy and/or delusional person.  Actors who can't act believe in themselves; and gamblers who can’t pay their bills but keep on gambling.  It would be much truer to say that a man will certainly fail because he believes in himself.  Complete self-confidence is not merely a sin; complete self-confidence is a weakness.

Believing utterly in one's self is a hysterical and superstitious belief like believing in Joanna Southcote (pictured right): the man who has this disposition has `Hanwell Asylum' written on his face as plain as it is written on the sign on that building over there."

And to all this my friend made this very deep and effective reply, "Well, if a man is not to believe in himself, in what is he to believe?"

After a long pause I replied, "I will go home and write a book in answer to that question."

This is the book that I have written in answer to it.

But I think this book may well start where our argument started -- in the neighborhood of the mad-house.  Modern masters of Science are much impressed with the need of beginning all inquiry with a fact.  The ancient masters of religion were quite equally impressed with that necessity.  They began with the fact of sin -- a fact as practical as potatoes.

Whether or not one thought that a man could be washed in miraculous waters, there was no doubt at any rate that he wanted washing.  But certain religious leaders in London, not mere materialists, have begun in our day not to deny the highly disputable water, but to deny the indisputable dirt.  Certain new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Christian theology which can really be proved.220px-Reginald_John_Campbell

Some followers of the Reverend R. J. Campbell (pictured left), in their selective spirituality, preach that humans can obtain divine sinlessness here on earth, which they cannot see even in their dreams.  But they essentially deny human sin, which they can easily see in the street.  For much of the past 2,000 years, the strongest saints and the strongest skeptics alike took the existence of evil as the starting-point of their arguments.  If it be true that a man can feel genuine happiness in maliciously skinning a cat, then the religious philosopher can only draw one of two deductions.  He must either deny the existence of God, as all atheists do; or he must deny the present union between God and man (due to man’s fallen state and sin), as all Christians do.

The new theologians seem to think it a highly rationalistic solution to deny the cat.

In this remarkable (and tragic) state in our society it is obviously not possible (with any hope of having everyone on the same page) to start a discussion, as our fathers did, with the fact of sin.  This very fact, which was to them (and is to me) as plain as a telephone pole outside of one’s house, is the very fact that has been specifically diluted or denied.  But though modern intellectuals and prominent members of the media deny the existence of sin, I do not think that they have yet denied the existence of a lunatic asylum.  We should be able to all still agree that a person’s mental state (or intellect) can collapse, and that when this sad event happens, it is as clear to a sane person as it would be if their own house was falling down on top of them.

Men deny hell, but not, as yet, Hanwell.

And for the purposes of my primary argument the one (mental collapse) may very well stand where the other (moral and spiritual collapse) previously stood.  I mean that as all thoughts and theories were once judged by whether they tended to make a man lose his soul, so for our present purpose all modern thoughts and theories may be judged by whether they tend to make a man lose his mind.

It is true that some in our day speak lightly and recklessly of insanity as being in itself attractive.  But a moment's thought will show that if disease is beautiful, it is generally someone else's disease.  If poverty is enviable, it is someone else's poverty.  A blind man may be picturesque to a confused artist; but it requires two eyes to see the picture.  And similarly even the wildest poetry of insanity can only be enjoyed by the sane.  To the insane man his insanity is quite ordinary, because it is quite true.  A man who thinks himself a chicken is to himself as ordinary as a chicken.  A man who thinks he is a bit of glass is to himself as dull as a bit of glass.  It is the homogeneity of his mind which makes him dull, and which makes him mad.  It is only because we see the irony of his wrong idea that we even think him "amusing"; it is only because he does not see the irony of his idea that he is put in Hanwell at all.

In short, oddities only strike ordinary people.  Oddities do not strike odd people.  This is why ordinary people have a much more exciting time; while odd people are always complaining of the dullness of life.  This is also why the new novels die so quickly and why the old fairy tales endure forever.  The old fairy tale makes the hero a normal human boy; it is his adventures that are startling; they startle him because he is normal.  But in the modern psychological novel the hero is abnormal; the center is not central.  Hence the fiercest adventures fail to affect him adequately, and the book is monotonous.

You can make a story out of a hero among dragons; but not out of a dragon among dragons.  The fairy tale discusses what a sane man will do in a mad world.  The sober realistic novel of today discusses what a lunatic will do in a dull world.

Let us begin, then, with the mad-house; from this evil and fantastic inn let us set forth on our intellectual journey.

Now, if we are to consider what I call the “philosophy of sanity,” the first thing to do in the matter is to blot out one big and common mistake.  There is a notion adrift everywhere that imagination, especially mystical imagination, is dangerous to man's mental balance.  Poets are commonly spoken of as psychologically unreliable.  Facts and history utterly contradict this view.

Most of the very great poets have been not only sane, but extremely business-like; and if Shakespeare ever really held horses (note: this is referring to a job Shakespeare allegedly once had), it was because he was the most reliable man people knew to hold them.  Imagination does not breed insanity.  Exactly what does breed insanity is reason.

Poets do not go mad; but chess-players do.  Mathematicians go mad, and accountants; but creative artists very seldom.  I am not, as will be seen, in any sense attacking logic: I only say that this danger of going insane does lie in logic, not in imagination.  Giving birth to artistic creations is just as normal and wholesome as giving birth to physical, human creations.  Moreover, it is worthy of remark that when a poet really was morbid it was commonly because he had some weak spot of rationality on his brain.

Edgar Allen Poe, for instance, really was morbid; not because he was poetical, but because he was especially analytical.  Even chess was too poetical for him; he disliked chess because it was full of knights and castles, like a poem.  He openly preferred the black discs of draughts (checkers), because they were more like the mere black dots on a diagram.220px-Cowper

Perhaps the strongest case of all is this: only one great English poet ever went truly mad, William Cowper (pictured right).  And he was definitely driven mad by logic, by the disturbing and alien logic of predestination.  Poetry was not the disease, but the medicine; poetry partly kept him in health.  He could sometimes forget the red and thirsty hell to which his hideous necessitarianism dragged him.  He believed he was damned by John Calvin’s theology; he was almost saved by John Gilpin (a character in one of Cowper's own most famous poems).

Everywhere we see that men do not go mad by dreaming.  Critics are much madder than poets.  Homer is complete and calm enough; it is his critics who tear him into extravagant tatters.  Shakespeare is quite himself; it is only some of his critics who have allegedly discovered that he was somebody else.  And though St. John the Evangelist saw many strange monsters in his vision in the Book of Revelation, he saw no creature so wild as one of his own commentators.  The general fact is simple. Poetry is sane because it floats easily in an infinite sea; reason seeks to cross the infinite sea in order to make it finite.  The result is mental exhaustion, like the physical exhaustion of Mr. Holbein (who many times has unsuccessfully attempted to swim the English Channel).

To accept everything is an exercise, to understand everything a strain.  The poet only desires exaltation and expansion, a world to stretch himself in.  The poet only asks to get his head into the heavens. It is the logician who seeks to get the heavens into his head.  And it is his head that splits.

It is a small matter, but not irrelevant, that this common mistake is commonly supported by a common misquotation.  We have all heard people cite the celebrated line of John Dryden as being "Great genius is to madness near allied."  But Dryden did not say that great genius was to madness near allied.  Dryden was a great genius himself, and knew better.  It would have been hard to find a man more romantic than he, or more sensible.  What Dryden said was this: "Great wits are oft to madness near allied"; and this is very true.  It is the pure promptness of the intellect that is in peril of a breakdown.

Also, people might remember of what sort of man Dryden was talking.  He was not talking of any pious visionary like Henry Vaughan or George Herbert.  He was talking of a cynical man of the world, a skeptic, a corrupt diplomat, a great practical politician.  Such men are indeed to madness near allied.  Their incessant calculation of their own brains and other people's brains is a dangerous trade.  It is always perilous to the mind to try and calculate the mind.  A flippant person has asked why we say, "As mad as a hatter."  A more flippant person might answer that a hatter is mad because he has to measure the human head.

And if great reasoners are often maniacal, it is equally true that maniacs are commonly great reasoners.  When I was engaged in a controversy with the Clarion on the matter of free will, that able writer Mr. R. B. Suthers said that free will was lunacy, because it meant causeless actions, and the actions of a lunatic would be causeless.  I will not dwell here upon his disastrous lapse in his own determinist logic.  Obviously if any actions, even a lunatic's, can be causeless, determinism is done for.  If the chain of causation can be broken for a madman, it can be broken for a sane man.

But my purpose here is to point out something more practical.  It was natural, perhaps, that a modern Marxian Socialist (like Mr. Suthers) should not know anything about free will.  But it was certainly remarkable that a modern Marxian Socialist should not know anything about lunatics.  Mr. Suthers evidently does not know anything about lunatics.

The last thing that can be said of a lunatic is that his actions are causeless. If any human acts may loosely be called causeless, they are the minor acts of a healthy man; whistling as he walks; slashing the grass with a stick; kicking his heels or rubbing his hands.  It is the happy man who does the useless things; the sick man is not strong enough to be idle.  It is exactly such careless and causeless actions that the madman could never understand; for the madman (like the determinist) generally sees too much cause in everything.

The madman would read a conspiratorial significance into those empty activities.  He would think that the lopping of the grass was an attack on his private property.  He would think that the kicking of the heels was a signal to an accomplice waiting to rob him.  If the madman could for an instant become careless, he would become sane.  Everyone who has had the misfortune to talk with people in the heart or on the edge of mental disorder, knows that their most sinister quality is a horrible clarity of detail; a connecting of one thing with another in a map more elaborate than a maze.

If you argue with a madman, it is extremely probable that you will get the worst of it; for in many ways his mind moves all the quicker for not being delayed by the things that go with clear thinking and sound judgment.  He is not hampered by a sense of humor or by charity, or by the dumb certainties of experience.  He is the more logical for losing certain limitations sane people are aware of.  Indeed, the common phrase for insanity is in this respect a misleading one.  The madman is not the man who has lost his reason.  The madman is the man who has lost everything except his reason.

The madman's explanation of a thing is always complete, and often, in a purely rational sense, satisfactory.  Or, to be more precise, the insane explanation, if not conclusive, is at least unanswerable; this may be observed specially in the two or three of the most common kinds of madness.

If a man says that other men have a conspiracy against him, you cannot dispute it except by saying that all the men deny that they are conspirators; which is exactly what conspirators would do.  His explanation covers the facts as much as yours.  Or if a man says that he is the rightful King of England, it is no complete answer to say that the existing authorities call him mad; for if he were King of England that might be the wisest thing for the existing authorities to do.  Or if a man says that he is Jesus Christ, it is no answer to tell him that the world denies his divinity; for the world denied Christ's when he was here on earth.

Nevertheless the madman is wrong.  There is objective truth here, and it is that the madman is mad.

But if we attempt to trace his error in exact terms, we shall not find it quite so easy as we had supposed.  Perhaps the nearest we can get to expressing it is to say this: that his mind moves in a perfect but narrow circle.  A small circle is quite as infinite as a large circle; but, though it is quite as infinite, it is not so large.  In the same way the insane explanation is quite as complete as the sane one, but it is not so large.  A bullet is quite as round as the world, but it is not the world.  There is such a thing as a narrow universality; there is such a thing as a small and cramped eternity; you may see it in many modern religions.

Now, generally speaking, we may say that the strongest and most unmistakable mark of madness is this combination between a logical completeness and a spiritual contraction.  The lunatic's theory explains a large number of things, but it does not explain them in a large way.  I mean that if you or I were dealing with a mind that was growing morbid, we should be chiefly concerned not so much to give it arguments as to give it air, to convince it that there was something cleaner and cooler outside the suffocation of a single argument.  Suppose, for instance, you were actually dealing with the first example I gave; suppose it were the case of a man who accused everybody of conspiring against him. If we could express our deepest feelings of protest and appeal against this obsession, I suppose we should say something like this:

"Oh, I admit that you have your case and have it by heart, and that many things do fit into other things as you say.  I admit that your explanation explains a great deal; but what a great deal it leaves out!  Are there no other stories in the world except yours; and are all men busy with your business?  Suppose we grant the details; perhaps when the man in the street did not seem to see you it was only his cunning; perhaps when the policeman asked you your name it was only because he knew it already.  But how much happier you would be if you only knew that these people cared nothing about you!  How much larger your life would be if your self could become smaller in it; if you could really look at other men with common curiosity and pleasure; if you could see them walking as they are in their sunny selfishness and their healthy indifference!  You would begin to be interested in them, because they were not interested in you.  You would break out of this tiny and cheap theatre in which your own little plot is always being played, and you would find yourself under a freer sky, in a street full of splendid strangers."

Or suppose it were the second case of madness, that of a man who claims the crown, your impulse would be to answer: "All right! Perhaps you know that you are the King of England; but why do you care?  Make one magnificent effort and you will be a normal human being and be able to look down on all the kings of the earth."

Or it might be the third case, of the madman who called himself Christ.  If we said what we really felt, we should say:

"So you are the Creator and Redeemer of the world: but what a small world it must be!  What a little heaven you must inhabit, with angels no bigger than butterflies!  How sad it must be to be God; and an inadequate God!  Is there really no life fuller and no love more marvelous than yours; and is it really in your small and painful pity that all flesh must put its faith?  How much happier you would be, how much more of you there would be, if the hammer of a higher God could smash your small cosmos, scattering the stars like spangles, and leave you in the open, free like other men to look up as well as down!"

The truth of the matter is that secular believers in "science" and "progress" do, in fact, take this purely physical view of mental evil; they do not seek to argue with it like a heresy but simply to snap it like a spell.  To be fair (and accurate), neither modern science nor ancient religion believes in complete free thought.  Theology rebukes certain thoughts by calling them blasphemous or immoral.  Science rebukes certain thoughts by calling them gloomy.  For example, some religious societies discouraged men from thinking about sex.  The new scientific society definitely discourages men from thinking about death (and the fate of their souls); death is a fact, but it is considered a morbid fact.  And in dealing with those whose morbidity has a touch of mania, modern science cares far less for pure logic than a dancing Dervish.  In these cases it is not enough that the unhappy man should desire truth; he must desire health.  Nothing can save him but a blind hunger for normality, like that of a beast.  A man cannot think himself out of mental evil; for it is actually the organ of thought that has become diseased, ungovernable, and, as it were, independent.  He can only be saved by will or faith.  The moment his mere reason moves, it moves in the old circular rut; he will go round and round his logical circle, just as a man in a third-class car on the Inner Circle train will go round and round the Inner Circle unless he performs the voluntary, vigorous, and mystical act of getting out at the Gower Street stop.

Decision is the whole business here; a door must be shut forever.

Every remedy is a desperate remedy.  Every cure is a miraculous cure.  Curing a madman is not arguing with a philosopher; it is casting out a devil.  And however quietly doctors and psychologists may go to work in the matter, their attitude is profoundly intolerant -- as intolerant as Bloody Mary.  Their attitude is really this: that the man must stop thinking, if he is to go on living.  Their counsel is one of intellectual amputation.

If thy head offend thee, cut it off; for it is better, not merely to enter the Kingdom of Heaven as a child, but to enter it as an imbecile, rather than with your whole intellect to be cast into hell -- or into Hanwell.

Such is the madman of experience; he is commonly a reasoner, frequently a successful reasoner.  Doubtless he could be vanquished in mere reason, and the case against him put logically.  But it can be put much more precisely in more general and even visual terms.  He is in the clean and well-lit prison of one idea: he is sharpened to one painful point.  He is without healthy hesitation and healthy complexity.

Now, as I explained in the introduction, I have determined in these early chapters to give not so much a detailed diagram of a doctrine as some pictures of a point of view.  And I have described at length my vision of the mental maniac for this reason: that just as I am affected by the maniac, so I am affected by most modern thinkers.  That unmistakable mood or note that I can hear from crazy people in Hanwell I hear also from half the chairs of science and tenured seats of higher learning today; and most of the mad intellectuals are mad intellectuals in more senses than one. Simple_Triangle_Quilt_Pattern

They all have exactly that combination we have noted: the combination of an expansive and exhaustive reason with a contracted (and closed-off) common sense.  They are universal only in the sense that they take one thin explanation and carry it very far.  But a pattern can stretch for ever and still be a small pattern.  They see a chess-board white on black, and if the universe is paved with it, it is still white on black.  Like the lunatic, they cannot alter their standpoint; because they are stuck, they cannot make a mental effort and suddenly see it black on white.

Take first the more obvious case of materialism.  As an explanation of the world, materialism has a sort of insane simplicity.  It has just the quality of the madman's argument; we have at once the sense of it covering everything and the sense of it leaving everything out.  Contemplate some able and sincere materialist, as, for instance, Mr. Joseph McCabe, and you will have exactly this unique sensation.

He understands everything, and because there is no deeper meaning to life, everything does not seem worth understanding.  His cosmos may be complete in every rivet and cog-wheel, but still his cosmos is smaller than our actual world and day-to-day life experiences.  Somehow his scheme, like the lucid scheme of the madman, seems unconscious of the alien energies and the large indifference of the earth; it is not thinking of the real things of the earth, of fighting peoples or proud mothers, or first love or fear upon the sea.  The earth is so very large, and his cosmos is so very small.  His cosmos is about the smallest hole that a man can hide his head in.

It must be understood that I am not now discussing the relation of the secular worldview to objective truth; but, for the present, solely its relation to mental (and moral) health.  Later in the argument I hope to tackle the question of objective truth; here I speak only of a phenomenon of psychology.  I do not for the present attempt to prove to a committed materialist like Ernst Haeckel that materialism is untrue, any more than I attempted to prove to the man who thought he was Christ that he was laboring under an error.  I merely remark here on the fact that both cases have the same kind of completeness and the same kind of incompleteness.  You can explain about a man's detention at Hanwell by saying that it is the crucifixion of a god of whom the world is not worthy.  That explanation does, I guess, explain.  Similarly you may explain the order in the universe by saying that all things, even the souls of men, are leaves inevitably unfolding on an utterly unconscious tree -- the blind destiny of matter.  The explanation does explain, though not, of course, so completely as the madman's.

But the point here is that the normal human mind not only objects to both, but feels to both the same objection.  Essentially this objection goes as follows: if the man in Hanwell is the real God, he is not much of a god.  And, similarly, if the cosmos of the secular materialist is the real cosmos, it is not much of a cosmos.  The thing has shrunk.  The deity is less divine than many other men I know myself; and (if we are to believe an intellectual like Haeckel) the whole of life is something much more grey, narrow, and trivial than many separate aspects of it.

The parts seem greater than the whole.

For we must remember that the materialist philosophy (whether true or not) is certainly much more limiting than any religion.  In one sense, of course, all intelligent ideas are narrow.  They cannot be broader than themselves.  A Christian is only restricted in the same sense that an atheist is restricted.  He cannot think Christianity false and continue to be a Christian; and the atheist cannot think atheism false and continue to be an atheist.  But as it happens, there is a very special sense in which materialism has more restrictions than spiritualism.  Mr. McCabe thinks me a slave because I am not allowed to believe in determinism.  I think Mr. McCabe a slave because he is not allowed to believe in fairies (or fairy tales).

But if we examine the two vetoes we shall see that his is really much more of a pure veto than mine.

The Christian is quite free to believe that there is a considerable amount of settled order and inevitable development in the universe.  But the materialist is not allowed to admit into his spotless machine-of-a-worldview the slightest speck of spiritualism or miracle.  Poor Mr. McCabe is not allowed to retain even the tiniest fairy or angel, though it might be hiding in a small piece of toast.  The Christian admits that the universe is diverse and even varied, just as a sane man knows that he is complex.  The sane man knows that he has a touch of the beast, a touch of the devil, a touch of the saint, a touch of the honorable citizen.  To be perfectly honest, the really sane man knows that he has a touch of the madman.

But the materialist's world is quite simple and solid, just as the madman in the asylum is quite sure he is sane.  The materialist is sure that history has been simply and solely a chain of causation, just as the interesting person I mentioned earlier is quite sure that he is simply and solely a chicken.

Materialists and madmen never have doubts.

Spiritual doctrines do not actually limit the mind in the same way (or degree) as do materialistic denials.  Even if I believe in immortality I don’t have to think about it (and certainly not all of the time).  But if I disbelieve in immortality I must not think about it.  In the first case the road is open and I can go as far as I like; in the second the road is shut.

But the case is even stronger, and the parallel with madness is even stranger.  For it was our case against the exhaustive and logical theory of the lunatic that, right or wrong, it gradually destroyed his humanity.  Now it is our charge against the main conclusions of the materialist that, right or wrong, they gradually destroy his humanity; I do not mean only kindness, I mean hope, courage, poetry, initiative.  I mean all that is uniquely and wonderfully human.

For instance, when materialism leads men to complete fatalism (as it generally does), it is quite disingenuous to pretend that it is in any sense a liberating force.  It is absurd to say that you are specially advancing freedom when you are using free thought to destroy free will.

The determinists come to bind, not to loose.

They are right to call their law the "chain” of causation.  It is the worst chain that ever fettered a human being.  You may use the language of liberty, if you like, about materialistic teaching, but it is obvious to me that it is just as inapplicable a term as it would be in describing the state of a man locked up in a mad-house.  You may say, if you like, that the man is free to think himself a poached egg.  But it is surely a more massive and important fact that if he is a poached egg he is not free to eat, drink, sleep, walk, or smoke a cigarette.

Similarly you may say, if you like, that the bold determinist in society is free to disbelieve in the existence of any degree of free will.  But it is a much more massive and important fact that because of his philosophy he is not free to object, to curse, to thank, to justify, to urge, to punish, to resist temptations, to incite mobs, to make New Year resolutions, to pardon sinners, to rebuke tyrants, or even to say "thank you" for the mustard at lunch.

In passing from this subject I may note that there is a curiously misleading notion that some have which involves the idea that, between the two, materialistic fatalism is in some way favorable to Christian mercy.  Some claim that a kinder, gentler society will emerge from materialism than from one rooted in orthodoxy.  This is the reverse of the truth.  It is quite reasonable to say that the doctrine of necessity makes no difference at all; that when practiced it leaves both the executioner killing and the kind friend encouraging as before.  But obviously if fatalistic materialism stops either of those two things it stops the encouragement of a friend.  To say, as fatalists do, that the sins we commit are inevitable does not prevent a fatalist from handing down punishment; if it prevents anything it prevents persuasion and compassion.  Determinism is quite as likely to lead to cruelty as it is certain to lead to cowardice.  Determinism is not inconsistent with the cruel treatment of criminals.  What it is (perhaps) inconsistent with is the generous treatment of criminals; with any appeal to their better feelings or encouragement in their moral struggle.

The determinist does not believe in appealing to the will or soul, but he does believe in changing the environment.  According to his own life-philosophy he must not say to the sinner, "Go and sin no more," because the sinner cannot help it.  But he can put him in boiling oil; for boiling oil is an environment.

When comparing the materialist to something (or someone), therefore, the materialist has the fantastic outline of the figure of the madman.  Both take up a position that is at once un-answerable and intolerable.

Of course it is not only of the materialist that all this is true.  The same would apply to the other extreme of speculative logic.  There is a skeptic far more terrible than he who believes that everything began in matter.  It is possible to meet the skeptic who believes that everything began in himself.  He doubts not the existence of angels or devils, but the existence of men and cows.  For him his own friends are a mythology made up by himself.  He created his own father and his own mother.  This horrible existentialist concept has in it something decidedly attractive to the mystical egoism of our day.  That publisher who thought that men would get on if they believed in themselves, those seekers after the Superman who are always looking for him in the mirror, those writers who talk about impressing their personalities on their reader instead of creating life through their pen for the world to read, all these people have really only an inch between them and this awful emptiness.

And when our real and magnificent world that is all around such a man has been blackened out like a lie; when friends fade into ghosts, and the foundations of the world fail; then when the man, believing in nothing and in no man, is alone in his own nightmare, then the great individualistic motto shall be written over him in avenging irony.  The stars will be only dots in the blackness of his own brain; his mother's face will be only a sketch from his own insane pencil on the walls of his cell.

Over his cell shall be written, with dreadful truth, "He believes in himself."

All that concerns us here, however, is to note that this egoistic extreme of thought exhibits the same paradox as the other extreme of materialism.  It is equally complete in theory and equally crippling in practice.  For the sake of simplicity, it is easier to state the notion by saying that a man can believe that he is always in a dream.  Now, obviously there can be no positive proof given to him that he is not in a dream, for the simple reason that no proof can be offered that might not be offered in a dream.

But if the man began to burn down London and say that his housekeeper would soon call him to breakfast, we should take him and put him with other logicians in a place which has often been alluded to in the course of this chapter.  The man who cannot believe his senses, and the man who cannot believe anything else, are both insane, but their insanity is proved not by any error in their argument, but by the apparent mistake of their whole lives.  They have both locked themselves up in two boxes, painted inside with the sun and stars; they are both unable to get out, the one into the health and happiness of heaven, the other even into the health and happiness of the earth.  Their position is quite reasonable; nay, in a sense it is infinitely reasonable, just as a coin is infinitely circular.HOMM5_Inferno_Symbol_Ouroboros

But there is such a thing as a cruel infinity, an ignoble and slavish eternity.

It is amusing to notice that many of the modern writers and thinkers, whether skeptics or mystics, have taken as their sign a certain eastern symbol, which is the very symbol of this ultimate nonentity.  When they wish to represent eternity, they represent it by a serpent with his tail in his mouth.  There is a startling sarcasm in the image of that snake’s very unsatisfactory meal.  The eternity of the material fatalists, the eternity of the eastern pessimists, the eternity of the condescending theosophists and higher scientists of today is perfectly represented by a serpent eating his tail.

A degraded animal who destroys even himself.

This chapter is purely practical and is concerned with what actually is the chief mark and element of insanity; we may say in summary that it is reason used without root, reason in the void.  The man who begins to think without the proper first principles goes mad; he begins to think at the wrong end. And for the rest of these pages we have to try and discover what is the right end.

But we may ask in conclusion: If what I’ve detailed is what tends to drive men mad, what is it that keeps them sane?  By the end of this book I hope to give a definite, some will think a far too definite, answer.  But for the moment it is possible in the same solely practical manner to give a general answer touching what in actual human history keeps men sane.

Mysticism keeps men sane.

As long as you have mystery you have health; when you destroy mystery you create morbidity.  The ordinary man has always been sane because the ordinary man has always been a mystic.  He has permitted the twilight.  He has always had one foot in earth and the other in fairyland.  He has always left himself free to doubt his gods; but (unlike the agnostic and atheist of today) free also to believe in them.  He has always cared more for truth than for consistency.  If he saw two truths that seemed to contradict each other, he would take the two truths and the contradiction along with them.  His spiritual sight is stereoscopic, like his physical sight: he sees two different pictures at once and yet sees all the better for that.

Thus he has always believed that there was such a thing as fate, but such a thing as free will also.  Thus he believed that children were indeed the kingdom of heaven, but nevertheless ought to be obedient to the kingdom of earth.  He admired youth because it was young and age because it was not.  It is exactly this balance of apparent contradictions that has been the source of resilience of the healthy man.

The whole secret of mysticism is this: that man can understand everything by the help of what he does not understand.

The melancholic logician seeks to make everything logical, and succeeds in making everything mysterious.  The mystic allows one thing (the supernatural world) to be mysterious, and everything else becomes logical. The determinist makes the theory of causation quite clear, and then finds that he cannot say "If you like, you can have the day off” to the housemaid.

The Christian permits free will to remain a sacred mystery; but because of this his relations with the housemaid become of a sparkling and crystal clearness. He puts the seed of dogma in a central darkness; but it branches forth in all directions with abounding natural health.

As we have taken the circle as the symbol of reason and madness, we may very well take the cross as the symbol at once of mystery and of health.  Buddhism is centripetal, but Christianity is centrifugal: it breaks out.  For the circle is perfect and infinite in its nature; but it is fixed for ever in its size; it can never be larger or smaller.cross-of-christ

But the cross, though it has at its heart a collision and a contradiction, can extend its four arms forever without altering its shape.  Because it has a paradox in its center it can grow without changing.  The circle returns upon itself and is bound.  The cross opens its arms to the four winds; it is a signpost for free travelers.

Symbols alone are not entirely sufficient when speaking of this deep matter; but hopefully one other symbol from physical nature will express sufficiently well the real place of mysticism before mankind.

The one created thing which we cannot look at is the one thing in the light of which we look at everything.  Like the sun at noonday, mysticism explains everything else by the blaze of its own victorious invisibility.  Secular intellectualism is (in the exact sense of a popular phrase) all moonshine; for it is light without heat, and it is secondary light, reflected from a dead world.

But the Greeks were right when they made Apollo the god both of imagination and of sanity; for he was both the patron of poetry and the patron of healing.  Of the finer points of my own worldview I shall speak later, but that transcendentalism by which all men live has primarily much the position of the sun in the sky.  We are conscious of it as of a kind of splendid confusion; it is something both shining and shapeless, at once a blaze and a blur.  But the circle of the moon is as clear and unmistakable, as recurrent and inevitable, as the circle of Euclid on a blackboard in Geometry class.

For the moon is utterly reasonable; and the moon is the mother of lunatics and has given to them all her name.

Tune in soon for Chapter III: The Suicide of Thought


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15Dec/10Off

Dems to Taxpayer: Don’t forget to tip your waitress, folks…you’ve been great (unlike us)!

Before the one-party rule in congress ends in a few weeks, Democrats are attempting to do what Democrats do best: spit in the face of the American tax-payer.  It seems as if they realize the spend-happy show is almost over and so are looking to exit stage-left with one last shopping spree on our dime.

From today's National Review editorial:

The 1,924-page omnibus spending bill unveiled yesterday by Senate Democrats is the legislative equivalent of a middle finger, one that reminds us of how richly the Democrats deserved the shellacking visited upon them on Election Day. Rather than pass a simple “continuing resolution” to fund government operations through early 2011, Harry Reid & Co. decided to ignore the backlash against fiscal profligacy and let their pork barons run wild. The result is an orgy of earmarks, rolled out two weeks after most Senate Republicans and seven Senate Democrats voted for a temporary earmark moratorium.

Mind you, the only reason we need new legislation to keep the government financed beyond December 18 is that the feckless Democrats in Congress failed to enact even a single appropriations bill for the current fiscal year, which began in October. Considering the breadth of their lame-duck agenda — finalizing a tax-cut deal, ratifying the New START treaty, ending “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” approving the DREAM Act for illegal immigrants, launching a new health-care program for 9/11 workers, etc. — Democrats might have been expected to settle for a short-term continuing resolution instead of triggering yet another raucous, bare-knuckled spending fight. But earmark enthusiasts such as Hawaii Democrat Daniel Inouye (chairman of the mighty Senate Appropriations Committee) were apparently given carte blanche to pile on the bacon.

The scathing (and spot-on) editorial concludes:

Remember: This is a lame-duck Congress. Trying to enact such a bloated agenda — let alone a highly partisan one — within such a narrow post-election time frame insults the voters and shows utter disrespect for the democratic process. The omnibus is bad enough. The fact that Reid also wants to rush through debate on whether to ratify a deeply flawed arms-control pact and whether to change U.S. policy toward gay servicemen shows that he has no real interest in giving these issues their proper treatment. For reasons of timing and legitimacy, New START and “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” should be the business of the next Congress.

If the Democrats are dead set on embarrassing themselves by ending the year in a blaze of ignominy, that’s their choice. But Republicans should oppose this travesty with all their might.

Sing it, sister!  I am appalled at what the Democrats (and sadly, a few pathetic "Republicans") are attempting to do here.  It feels like many in congress did not hear the American people this November.  This is all the more reason why I have been saying that we cannot let up or relent on the grass-roots level.  The Tea Parties, the town-hall meetings, the calls, the emails, and all the rest cannot just be "for show" every once in a while.  We must remain vigilant of those we lend power to.

And a little prayer now-and-then for your country never hurt nobody...


13Dec/10Off

A Tradition Unlike Most Others

My alma mater, Taylor University in Upland, IN, has a unique sports tradition it practices every December.  It's so unique that ESPN.com took note and posted this article on their website about it.

Prepare to love Taylor University.

Why? Because Taylor University, an NAIA liberal arts Christian college in Upland, Ind., has perhaps the best hoops-slash-Christmas tradition in the whole wide world. That sounds like hyperbole, but it's not that far off.

What is this fabled tradition? It's called "Silent Night." Every year around Christmastime, Taylor students and fans pack the school's gym as they would any other game. Only on "Silent Night," the crowd dresses in pajamas and stays absolutely silent until Taylor scores its 10th point of the game. What happens then? Bedlam.

In fact, it's probably best you just watch the video for yourself:

One of the only sporting events I actually attended each year at TU was this "Silent Night" game and I have fond memories of raising the roof and letting the dogs out each time.  There's not a lot going on in the middle of cornfields and NASCAR fans down there in Grant County, IN, but I give my university credit for coming up with at least a handful of interesting events like this one.  It's about time we got some love from the national media for it, I say!

Oh, and if you ever happen to find yourself on Taylor's campus, refrain from mentioning my name to anyone in a position of power.  I still have outstanding parking tickets there.


12Dec/10Off

Superman, Status Quo, and Education

The guy (Davis Guggenheim) who made An Inconvenient Truth with my guy Al Gore has a new documentary that everyone is talking/blogging about: Waiting for Superman.

When I first heard about this film I was understandably skeptical, but by all accounts, including a glowing review from The Heritage Foundation, this documentary is well worth your time. If you could sit through Super-size Me, a film about getting fat from eating fatty food for a month (also known as "a month in R.J. Moeller's life"), you can sit through this - a film about the current (wretched) state of American education.

An excerpt from Heritage's review:

From Guggenheim's own admission that he's "betraying the ideals" he thought he espoused (driving his children past three public schools to a private school he's chosen) to deplorable facts (for example, six in 10 students in East Los Angeles do not graduate from high school), the film breeds skepticism about a popular national myth.

This is a myth of long standing. It was called the "myth of the common school" by Boston University professor Charles Glenn in a book by that title originally published in 1988. The myth was spread by progressive reformers like Horace Mann in the 19th century amid anxiety over immigration and social unrest. By requiring all children to attend "common" schools, the reformers proposed to enlighten students with values that would transcend sectarian and cultural differences. The myth has dominated the American imagination for more than 150 years, even as it has failed to fulfill its founders' promises.

As Glenn writes: "We have expected that our schools would banish crime and social divisions, that they would make our children better than we have ever been. Horace Mann and others promised us that, and we believed them. It is no wonder that suggestions . . . that our society's secular church be disestablished arouse the deepest anxiety and confusion today."

True to form, education unions are seething about promotion of charter schools in Waiting for Superman and its proposals to end tenure and link pay to performance. "The film demonizes public education," said National Education Association President Dennis Van Roekel. Local unions organized demonstrations outside some theaters.

Such protests reinforce what viewers witness in the theater: stories of a failed status quo, protected by powerful interests...

Read the full column here.


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