It
is foolish, generally speaking, for a philosopher to set fire to another
philosopher in Smithfield Market because they do not agree in their theory of
the universe. This was done very frequently in the last decadence of the Middle
Ages, and it failed altogether in its object.
But
there is one thing that is infinitely more absurd and unpractical than burning
a man for his philosophy. This is the habit of saying that his philosophy does
not matter, and this is done universally in the twentieth century, in the
decadence of the great revolutionary period…
When
the old Liberals removed the gags from all the heresies, their idea was that
religious and philosophical discoveries might thus be made. Their view was that
cosmic truth was so important that everyone ought to bear independent
testimony. The modern idea is that cosmic truth is so unimportant that it
cannot matter what anyone would say.
The
former freed inquiry as men loose a noble hound; the latter frees inquiry as
men fling back into the sea a fish unfit for eating… The old restriction meant
that only the orthodox were allowed to discuss religion. Modern liberty means
that nobody is allowed to discuss it. Good taste, the last and vilest of human
superstitions, has succeeded in silencing us where all the rest have failed...
Emancipation
has only locked the saint in the same tower of silence as the heresiarch. Then
we talk about Lord Anglesey and the weather and call it the complete liberty of
the creeds.
GK
Chesterton, Heretics
Reflection – Time
for a new series on the blog! I thought it would be fun (well, for me, anyhow)
to go through this book of Chesterton’s and do short excerpts from each
chapter. He wrote the book as a young man, not yet Catholic, and in each
chapter he examines the typical thought of the great popular writers of his
day: some whose names are still known to us like Kipling, Shaw, and Wells,
others who have fallen into obscurity.
It’s the ideas, though, not the men,
who are of interest to GKC and to us. Whether the individual in question has
risen or fallen in celebrity since 1925, the ideas each espoused have each had
their effect in the world, each taken on a life of its own and had the
consequences it has had.
And this is the crucial thing, of
course: ideas have consequences. Truth matters, and when false ideas about
reality are let loose in the land, bad things happen to people. This is the
conviction underlying GKC’s book, and its follow-up the great classic Orthodoxy.
The ideas we allow to rattle around in our heads are not inconsequential
and impotent. From our ideas flows our actions, and from our actions flows not
just the shape of our own lives, but the whole life of the world. Good ideas
produce a world of peace, joy, light; bad ideas produce a world of chaos,
confusion, darkness.
In this first chapter (and I only give
a short excerpt of it here) he tackles the original bad idea, which is that
ideas don’t matter, or that there is no truth or falsity in ideas, only
personal preference. Of course this is, in itself, a logical contradiction—an
idea being asserted as true that ideas don’t matter and are not true—and it is
important to note what its consequence is.
The consequence is to stifle real
discussion about essential truths. Since ‘de gustibus non disputandem’ (in
matters of taste there is nothing to discuss), and whether or not one holds
this philosophy or that is simply a matter of taste, it is rude and socially
inappropriate to discuss these matters. And so, as Chesterton points out, we
discuss ‘Lord Anglesey and the weather’ and call it the liberty of the creeds.
We discuss the Kardashians and the
Walking Dead (but I repeat myself), Obama and the Sochi Olympics, but very
little real conversation happens about essential matters, real discussion of
real ideas, their consequences, their truth, their falsity. The Internet, I
would argue, gives an illusion that all these things are discussed, and in some
quarters they are, but it seems to me a great deal of Internet discussion
devolves quickly into personal abuse and ad hominem attacks, reciting of banal
slogans, preaching to various choirs, and storming off in a huff when the
discussion gets too heated or pointed.
So, for the next little while, I want
to look at Chesterton’s Heretics, a great book where a great man takes
the ideas of other great men seriously enough to disagree with them and has
enough respect for his fellows to say openly why he disagrees with them and
where he thinks they go wrong.
Chesterton had a great gift for
disagreeing without being disagreeable, for having arguments that didn’t devolve
into mere quarrels, and for engaging in vigorous debate with the ideas of a
person without ever, for a moment, attacking or insulting the person. In other
words, he was able to discuss ideas freely and even fiercely without violating
the law of charity. So I offer this little series of GKC, mostly because it’s great
fun (for me, anyhow) but also because he has something to teach us, not just
about this or that idea, but about how to talk about ideas with freedom and
grace. And nobody gets burned in Smithfield Market, which is the main thing.
Because that’s a baaaaad idea.
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