The Cult of Sincerity"
Feb 13, 2005 20:26:28 GMT -5
Post by Toronthab on Feb 13, 2005 20:26:28 GMT -5
The cult of `sincerity'
The very root of the madness we live within. Enjoy. From today's Star (Toronto) and much better than their usual cant (pun intended).
OLIVIA WARD
FEATURE WRITER
I think, therefore I am."
Thus, the 17th-century father of modern philosophy, René Descartes, laid down his bedrock principle: Whatever else is true or untrue, if man thinks, he must exist. So thinking is the very essence of human existence.
Or is it?
Four centuries later, in a post-modern world of gesture politics, fetishized individualism, bottom-feeding pop culture and dumbed-down mass media, the age of reason appears to be tottering to a close.
Religious radicalism is the order of the day. Evolution is under fire from creationists who dismiss centuries of scientific evidence as mere opinion; political leaders and terrorists can get away with massive mayhem if their actions have a pious face; stupidity is a virtuous defence against complexity; and philosophy, well, get over it.
"To be philosophical is to accept that there's nothing you can do," sighs British cultural theory professor Terry Eagleton in the Guardian. "Ideas have no effect on reality, even if that itself is an idea. Those who trade in theories are ludicrous but also faintly sinister."
What Eagleton refers to is the suspicion, if not outright hostility, that greets any effort to apply reason and logic, let alone the lessons of the past, to modern politics, science, economics and culture. Decision-making is no longer the product of consideration and cogitation but "only what is under your nose," he says.
Or, as the band U2 once put it, "You miss too much these days if you stop to think."
Are there weapons of mass destruction in Iraq? Never mind, Charles is marrying Camilla, and the tabloids are battling for coverage. Jean Chrétien is waving golf balls around at a government corruption inquiry. How he makes us laugh! Coffee is good for you — or was that bad? The Atkins diet doesn't work. Oops, yes it does. Voting irregularities in Ohio? Why slow down for a recount? Jen wants Brad. Brad wants Angelina: read and weep. Feeling unloved? Viagra will make you dance in the street.
Coping with life's brutality and a steady stream of contradictory information is exhausting, so people switch off their minds and coast. They seek an escape from helplessness and despair. There is a benefit to being ill-informed, even if we've turned 180 degrees from the time when Greek philosopher Socrates pronounced, "The unexamined life is not worth living."
"There's definitely a chronic resistance to intelligence," agrees Toronto filmmaker Albert Nerenberg. "Stupidity has now become an advantage."
Nerenberg's recent documentary, Stupidity, is a catalogue of people on the very front line of resistance to reason. "They don't merely resist; they actively fight intelligence," he says.
Caught on camera, well known and ordinary people scream, riot, bare their backsides and throw up onstage with the same cheery abandon with which President George W. Bush decided to invade a WMD-less Iraq.
They get away with it not because it makes sense, Nerenberg implies, but because it's done with either a fabricated sincerity or a false sense of urgency designed to impress a public that would rather not think; a public that applauds but doesn't question.
"You don't have to be stupid to enjoy doing stupid things," says Nerenberg. "Advocates of deliberate stupidity believe that it makes you happier."
Happiness is news and entertainment that has merged into snappy docu-dramas, courtroom circuses and blanket coverage of the lives of celebrities.
Films rely on special effects rather than plot and character, and complex scripts discourage backers from funding them. "The hype around movies imitates the passion of ideas, but it isn't the real thing," says Nerenberg. "What's sad about that is that movies have become a substitute for intelligence."
In the same way, beliefs have become a substitute for complex ideas. Citizens are fed a diet of urgent issues — from foreign affairs to same-sex marriage — that they are told must be addressed or their very way of life could be affected.
"It's a bullSaperlipopette pandemic," says Laura Penny, the Halifax-based author of a book to be released in April, Your Call is Important to Us: The Truth About BullSaperlipopette (McClelland & Stewart). "And while bullSaperlipopette is nothing new, all the money and modern technology that's going into producing it these days makes it simply enormous."
Both the depth and variety of bovine excrement heaped on the public mind is staggering. In the realm of public life, says New York Times writer Christopher Caldwell, "gesture politics" has triumphed, demanding nothing more than a desirable image of those who govern countries.
Bush's picture in natty flying gear, announcing the end of the Iraq war, superceded any questions about what he planned to do next.
And how many Canadians remember anything of Jean Chrétien's appearance last week at the Gomery inquiry into the federal sponsorship scandal, other than the golf balls he cheekily pulled from his briefcase?
"The essence of leadership has changed into something that is less and less about significant undertakings and more and more about dramatic stunts," says Caldwell.
What stunt politics depends on for success, Caldwell says, is "a citizenry that is either easily bamboozled or disengaged. It appeals to citizens on the grounds of what their leader does as a person — probably because citizens lack the attention span to follow the things he does as head of state."
The victory of credibility over competence was demonstrated in the recent American election, says Brookings Institution scholar Michael O'Hanlon.
"By rights Bush shouldn't have won," he says. "Everything was going wrong in Iraq and the economy was doing badly. Yet Bush even convinced voters he was better on military matters than (Democratic candidate John) Kerry, when he had no record to stand on, and Kerry's real record of heroism was denigrated."
Part of the explanation lies in the public's feeling of trust in someone who appears to be "on the level," that is, the level of the ordinary guy. Bush did not challenge anyone's intellect or expose people to painful facts they would rather not ponder. Instead, he let them relax in a bubble bath of believability, confident that someone worthy was at the helm.
Even Bush's legendary malapropisms and ill ease during debates became, in the eyes of his supporters, a sign of his sincerity — his "realness."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
`BullSaperlipopette is more insidious than lying, because lying arouses people's anger while bullSaperlipopette is simply accepted as a fact of life. It's such a benign phenomenon that respectable people indulge in it. And now it's the norm rather than the exception'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
`There's definitely a chronic resistance to intelligence. Stupidity has become an advantage'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The idea that, if there is no reality, you can substitute sincerity is prevalent today," says Harry Frankfurt, an emeritus professor of philosophy at Princeton University. "It's difficult to say whether it's getting worse, or whether it has always been this way. But the big difference is that in earlier times there was much less communication."
The very root of the madness we live within. Enjoy. From today's Star (Toronto) and much better than their usual cant (pun intended).
OLIVIA WARD
FEATURE WRITER
I think, therefore I am."
Thus, the 17th-century father of modern philosophy, René Descartes, laid down his bedrock principle: Whatever else is true or untrue, if man thinks, he must exist. So thinking is the very essence of human existence.
Or is it?
Four centuries later, in a post-modern world of gesture politics, fetishized individualism, bottom-feeding pop culture and dumbed-down mass media, the age of reason appears to be tottering to a close.
Religious radicalism is the order of the day. Evolution is under fire from creationists who dismiss centuries of scientific evidence as mere opinion; political leaders and terrorists can get away with massive mayhem if their actions have a pious face; stupidity is a virtuous defence against complexity; and philosophy, well, get over it.
"To be philosophical is to accept that there's nothing you can do," sighs British cultural theory professor Terry Eagleton in the Guardian. "Ideas have no effect on reality, even if that itself is an idea. Those who trade in theories are ludicrous but also faintly sinister."
What Eagleton refers to is the suspicion, if not outright hostility, that greets any effort to apply reason and logic, let alone the lessons of the past, to modern politics, science, economics and culture. Decision-making is no longer the product of consideration and cogitation but "only what is under your nose," he says.
Or, as the band U2 once put it, "You miss too much these days if you stop to think."
Are there weapons of mass destruction in Iraq? Never mind, Charles is marrying Camilla, and the tabloids are battling for coverage. Jean Chrétien is waving golf balls around at a government corruption inquiry. How he makes us laugh! Coffee is good for you — or was that bad? The Atkins diet doesn't work. Oops, yes it does. Voting irregularities in Ohio? Why slow down for a recount? Jen wants Brad. Brad wants Angelina: read and weep. Feeling unloved? Viagra will make you dance in the street.
Coping with life's brutality and a steady stream of contradictory information is exhausting, so people switch off their minds and coast. They seek an escape from helplessness and despair. There is a benefit to being ill-informed, even if we've turned 180 degrees from the time when Greek philosopher Socrates pronounced, "The unexamined life is not worth living."
"There's definitely a chronic resistance to intelligence," agrees Toronto filmmaker Albert Nerenberg. "Stupidity has now become an advantage."
Nerenberg's recent documentary, Stupidity, is a catalogue of people on the very front line of resistance to reason. "They don't merely resist; they actively fight intelligence," he says.
Caught on camera, well known and ordinary people scream, riot, bare their backsides and throw up onstage with the same cheery abandon with which President George W. Bush decided to invade a WMD-less Iraq.
They get away with it not because it makes sense, Nerenberg implies, but because it's done with either a fabricated sincerity or a false sense of urgency designed to impress a public that would rather not think; a public that applauds but doesn't question.
"You don't have to be stupid to enjoy doing stupid things," says Nerenberg. "Advocates of deliberate stupidity believe that it makes you happier."
Happiness is news and entertainment that has merged into snappy docu-dramas, courtroom circuses and blanket coverage of the lives of celebrities.
Films rely on special effects rather than plot and character, and complex scripts discourage backers from funding them. "The hype around movies imitates the passion of ideas, but it isn't the real thing," says Nerenberg. "What's sad about that is that movies have become a substitute for intelligence."
In the same way, beliefs have become a substitute for complex ideas. Citizens are fed a diet of urgent issues — from foreign affairs to same-sex marriage — that they are told must be addressed or their very way of life could be affected.
"It's a bullSaperlipopette pandemic," says Laura Penny, the Halifax-based author of a book to be released in April, Your Call is Important to Us: The Truth About BullSaperlipopette (McClelland & Stewart). "And while bullSaperlipopette is nothing new, all the money and modern technology that's going into producing it these days makes it simply enormous."
Both the depth and variety of bovine excrement heaped on the public mind is staggering. In the realm of public life, says New York Times writer Christopher Caldwell, "gesture politics" has triumphed, demanding nothing more than a desirable image of those who govern countries.
Bush's picture in natty flying gear, announcing the end of the Iraq war, superceded any questions about what he planned to do next.
And how many Canadians remember anything of Jean Chrétien's appearance last week at the Gomery inquiry into the federal sponsorship scandal, other than the golf balls he cheekily pulled from his briefcase?
"The essence of leadership has changed into something that is less and less about significant undertakings and more and more about dramatic stunts," says Caldwell.
What stunt politics depends on for success, Caldwell says, is "a citizenry that is either easily bamboozled or disengaged. It appeals to citizens on the grounds of what their leader does as a person — probably because citizens lack the attention span to follow the things he does as head of state."
The victory of credibility over competence was demonstrated in the recent American election, says Brookings Institution scholar Michael O'Hanlon.
"By rights Bush shouldn't have won," he says. "Everything was going wrong in Iraq and the economy was doing badly. Yet Bush even convinced voters he was better on military matters than (Democratic candidate John) Kerry, when he had no record to stand on, and Kerry's real record of heroism was denigrated."
Part of the explanation lies in the public's feeling of trust in someone who appears to be "on the level," that is, the level of the ordinary guy. Bush did not challenge anyone's intellect or expose people to painful facts they would rather not ponder. Instead, he let them relax in a bubble bath of believability, confident that someone worthy was at the helm.
Even Bush's legendary malapropisms and ill ease during debates became, in the eyes of his supporters, a sign of his sincerity — his "realness."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
`BullSaperlipopette is more insidious than lying, because lying arouses people's anger while bullSaperlipopette is simply accepted as a fact of life. It's such a benign phenomenon that respectable people indulge in it. And now it's the norm rather than the exception'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
`There's definitely a chronic resistance to intelligence. Stupidity has become an advantage'
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The idea that, if there is no reality, you can substitute sincerity is prevalent today," says Harry Frankfurt, an emeritus professor of philosophy at Princeton University. "It's difficult to say whether it's getting worse, or whether it has always been this way. But the big difference is that in earlier times there was much less communication."