The Idea of Moral Progress
Richard John Neuhaus
Copyright
(c) 1999 First Things 95 (August/September 1999):
21-27.
Almost everybody agrees that progress is a good thing. But
most self–evidently good things, when examined more closely,
have a way of generating disagreements. And so it is with the
idea of progress, of which the idea of moral progress is
part.
Thinkers arguing from the most diverse perspectives have
agreed that no one thing is so characteristic, indeed
constitutive, of modernity as the idea of progress. To be
modern is to believe that history is "getting somewhere" in
overcoming the problems and limitations of the human
condition. Although muted among the secular–minded, there is
also the implicit belief that getting somewhere means that
history is going somewhere. Progress is more than change; it
is change with a purpose. Change is the undeniable experience;
the idea of progress is a way of explaining that experience.
Change, it is observed, is the only thing that doesn’t change.
It might almost be said that change is the component of
continuity that makes it possible to speak of "history" at
all, and to speak of it as one thing. Without this happening
and then that happening and then the other thing happening—in
other words, without change—there would be no history. At the
same time, it is said that history is necessarily contingent,
which means that what happens does not happen necessarily.
Such are among the conceptual oddities caught up in the idea
of progress.
We are routinely told that ours is an age of unprecedented
rapidity of change. In ethics and almost every other field, it
is said that new questions require new answers. The same was
likely said at the time about every age. One imagines Adam
remarking to Eve as they are leaving the garden, "My dear, we
are living in an age of transition." The modern assumption is
that the transition is to something better. The modern
sensibility unbounded is that of the neophiliac, the lover of
the new. I noticed on a New York City bus an advertisement for
a telecommunications company that bluntly proclaims the
neophiliac creed: "Change is Good!" The unarticulated, and
perhaps unconscious, assumption is that change is going
somewhere; it has an end or what the Greeks called a
telos. In the language of philosophers, change is
teleological. Change is good because it is a move to the
better on the way of history toward some unspecified, and
perhaps unspecifiable, good. Such is the faith of
modernity.
While sensible people have problems with the simplistic
proposition that change is good, they have equal difficulty
with the counter–proposition that change is bad. Leaning
toward one proposition or the other marks the difference
between dispositions usually called conservative and
liberal—or, as some prefer, progressive. Even the most
progressive, however, allow that there are setbacks in
history, that time is not the vehicle of smoothly incremental
progress. And the most determined conservative, while
suspicious of change, will nonetheless allow that there are
instances of undoubted progress. To the question of whether
there is progress in history, a conservative friend, a
distinguished social scientist, responds with what he thinks
is a decisive answer: Up until about a hundred years ago, most
people went through at least half of their lives with a
toothache. In our society today, few people born after 1960
know what a toothache is.
Progress in medical care, while often exaggerated, is
frequently cited as the most irrefutable evidence for faith in
progress itself. Also cited, with considerable justice, is
economic improvement. It is no little thing that the thirty
million Americans who are today officially counted as living
in "poverty" have, with relatively few exceptions, a standard
of living that was considered "average" only twenty–five years
ago. Moreover, there is hardly a product that we buy—from cars
to razor blades to a bed mattress—that, controlling for
inflation, is not cheaper and better today than twenty–five
years ago. And that is not to mention the many products that
were not available then. I was in Cuba a while back, and
walking down one of the decaying streets of Havana I tried to
place this puzzling sound—a persistent clacking noise coming
from a government office. It was the sound of someone using a
manual typewriter, an apt symbol of what progress has left
behind.
Nor need we content ourselves with medical, economic, and
technological evidence of historical advance. Is there not
also a phenomenon that is rightly called moral progress? In
the history of our own country, we have put slavery and
legally imposed racial segregation behind us, and almost
nobody doubts that this counts as moral progress. More
ambiguously, there are the recent decades of changing sex
roles and redefinitions of the family. The proponents of such
changes express confidence that their recognition as progress
is only a matter of time. Also in the realm of what we might
call political morality, it would seem that we have learned
from the catastrophes of the past. Outside the weekend
militias, very few people today advocate a regime based upon
the superiority of Aryan blood; and outside our universities,
very few propose the state collectivization of private
property. Moreover, it is surely great progress that, at least
in the West, we do not kill one another in wars of religion.
Whether this is because of a decline in religious commitment
or because we have come to recognize that it is the will of
God that we not kill one another over our disagreements about
the will of God, it is undoubtedly a very good thing. I will
be returning to the claim that all such instances of moral
progress are a development or unfolding of received moral
wisdom—wisdom that counts as knowledge.
But the immediate point is that those who adhere to the
gospel of progress are not without considerable evidence to
support their faith. Yet there is no denying that faith in
progress is not so robust as it once was. Apart from corporate
advertisers declaring that they are in various ways "making
things better," full–throated boosterism of the gospel of
progress is rare today. Perhaps the most quoted poem of our
time is W. B. Yeats’ 1921 reflection on "The Second Coming,"
in which he observes that "Things fall apart; the center
cannot hold." The real or imagined prospect of impending
ecological collapse and the all too real proliferation of
nuclear, chemical, and biological weaponry, among other
things, cast a pall over the future, suggesting that, to
paraphrase Eliot, the world may end with both a bang
and a whimper.
The casting of the pall, in one telling of the story, goes
back to the guns of August 1914, when it was said that the
lights were going out all over the world. As a college student
reading the memoirs of British philosopher Bertrand Russell, I
recall being deeply impressed by his assertion that nobody who
was not a child before 1914 could know what real happiness is.
In his privileged and enlightened world, all good things then
seemed possible, indeed inevitable. It was only a matter of
time. Of the French Revolution, more than a century earlier,
Wordsworth could exclaim, "Bliss was it in that dawn to be
alive, / But to be young was very heaven!" Humankind seems
much older now.
To be sure, in recent decades we witnessed a counterculture
that, in a spasm of historical amnesia, had flower children
announcing the Age of Aquarius to the tune of "the times they
are a–changing." Grownups knew better, even if many felt
obliged to indulge the youthful trashing of the world that
they had made and that their children held in contempt. Yet
those same children, now the middle–aged establishment in
charge of almost everything, seem not to believe that the
doctrine of historical progress has been vindicated. The
Woodstock Nation was a youthful high, but it is now
nostalgically remembered as a "time out" from the real
world.
How can one seriously believe in progress at the end of
what is undeniably the bloodiest century in history—the
century of the Battle of the Somme, of Auschwitz, of the Gulag
Archipelago, of Maoism, of obliteration bombing, and of mass
starvation as government policy? In this century, so many
people have been deliberately killed by other people that the
estimates of historians vary by the tens of millions, and they
end up by agreeing to split the difference or to round off the
victim count at the nearest ten million. One might conclude
that it has not been a good century for the idea of progress
in general, and of moral progress in particular.
Shortly after World War I turned out the lights all over
the world, Oswald Spengler published his two–volume Der
Untergang des Abendlandes, known in English as The
Decline of the West. Professional historians pilloried his
scholarship, but many of the brightest and best of a
generation suspected he was telling the truth, as they also
succumbed to the mood of Eliot’s The Waste Land,
published in the same year as Spengler’s second volume. A
great depression and another world war later, after Henry
Luce’s "American Century" had been proclaimed and then
debunked by Vietnam and all that, Robert Nisbet published, in
1980, his History of the Idea of Progress. Nisbet
believed that, despite spasmodic eruptions of an ever more
desperate optimism, the idea of progress was moribund or
dead.
The idea of progress, Nisbet wrote, began with classical
Greece and its fascination with knowledge, a fascination that
was appropriated and put to intellectual and practical use by
Christianity. From the early church fathers through the high
Middle Ages and into the Puritan seventeenth century of Isaac
Newton and Robert Boyle, there was a confidence that
ever–expanding knowledge held the promise of something like a
golden age. Although often in militantly secular form, this
confidence drove also the Enlightenment, which was living off
the capital of Christian faith in historical purpose. The
assumed link between knowledge and progress explains what
Nisbet describes as the liberal belief in "education" as the
panacea for human problems, paving the road to utopia. But by
the 1970s, said Nisbet, all the talk was about the limits of
knowledge, the end of scientific inquiry, the unreliability of
claims to objective truth. The curtain was falling on the
long–running show of modernity and progress. What would come
to be called "postmodernity" was waiting in the wings.
For many centuries, the argument was that knowledge equals
progress, and now—or at least many were saying—advances in
real knowledge were coming to an end. In 1978 an entire issue
of the journal Daedalus was devoted to articles by
scientists on "The Limits of Scientific Inquiry." Not only
does science no longer have the cultural and even moral
authority that it once enjoyed, the contributors noted, but
many scientists are filled with doubts about their own
enterprise. Some went so far as to suggest that we may be
witnessing a reversal of roles between science and religion,
with the ascendancy of the latter in providing a stable
definition of our historical circumstance.
Some years earlier, the distinguished molecular biologist
Gunther Stent published under the auspices of the American
Museum of Natural History a widely read little book, The
Coming of the Golden Age: A View of the End of Progress.
There is irony in his reference to a "golden age," for what he
discerned was a decline or stasis in almost every
aspect of scientific, social, and artistic life. His critique
is much more subtle than just another lament about growing
license and decadence. He noted, for instance, that the
progress of art in modernity has been accompanied by a freedom
from accepted canons and limits, and that this freedom is
undoing art itself. "The artist’s accession to near–total
freedom of expression now presents very great cognitive
difficulties for the appreciation of his work. The absence of
recognizable canons reduces his act of creation to
near–randomness for the perceiver. In other words, artistic
evolution along the one–way street to freedom embodies an
element of self–limitation."
Stent noted that a similar sense of limits, of an end of
progress, is evident in the so–called hard sciences, and in
his own field of molecular biology. We may view such claims
with a certain skepticism. When the Sumerians invented the
wheel, there were perhaps those who observed that that was the
end of progress. The French historian Charles Perrault wrote
in 1687: "Our age is . . . arrived at the very summit of
perfection. And since for some years the rate of progress has
been much slower and appears almost insensible—as the days
seem to cease lengthening when the summer solstice draws
near—it is pleasant to think that there are probably not many
things for which we need envy future generations." History’s
destination had been reached, he concluded, or was close at
hand.
Gunther Stent, however, spoke not from such smug
complacency but from a keen appreciation of scientific facts.
He traces the various stages of the ascendancy of scientific
progress in understanding ever more complex phenomena. We have
now, he says, arrived at "the end of progress" because we have
come up against the "mind–matter paradox." Stent asks, "Is it
in fact likely that consciousness, the unique attribute of the
brain that appears to endow its ensemble of atoms with
self–awareness, will ever be explained?" He answers that
question in the negative. He suggests that the search for a
"molecular" explanation of consciousness is "a waste of time."
"Thus, as far as consciousness is concerned, it is possible
that the quest for its physical nature is bringing us to the
limits of human understanding, in that the brain may not be
capable, in the last analysis, of providing [an] explanation
of itself."
Today, the connections between brain, mind, and
consciousness is the subject of heated debate among
scientists, philosophers, and theologians. One elementary
problem may be put this way: The human brain would have to be
a great deal more simple than it is in order for us to
understand it; but if our brain were simple enough for us to
understand it, our brain would be too simple to understand it.
It is something of a quandary, and that quandary hardly begins
to touch on the deeper questions about the relationship
between brain, mind, and consciousness.
Similar limits are becoming evident in other sciences. To
cite but one obvious instance, cosmologists who study the
structure of space–time relationships in the universe note
that the billions of light years between ourselves and the
reception of the data that we can examine means that we never
know what is happening now billions of light years away
(or even what "now" means in this context). And the very logic
of the circumstance means that it will not, it cannot, change
in the future. Scientists a billion years from now, if we can
imagine such a thing, will still be billions of light years
away from the data accessible to their scrutiny. Even if, in
ways that are not now imagined, we were able to leapfrog, so
to speak, over vast spaces of time, there would always be
beyond any point reached an infinity of points not reached. In
other words, there is no end, and it is that realization that
is at the heart of the idea of the end of progress.
I am not an astronomer or physicist or molecular biologist,
but one cannot help but follow these discussions with great
interest. Of most particular interest to the theologian and
philosopher is the discussion of the mind–matter connection
that, especially in light of what physicists call the
"anthropic principle," is richly suggestive for the biblical
understanding of humanity created in the image and likeness of
God—we are participants, if you will, in the consciousness of
God. But exploring these questions here would take us too far
afield. The question at hand is the idea of progress, and how
that idea is now challenged not only by events in politics,
society, and culture, but also by science, which, following
its own rigorous methodology, discovers that there are many
things we do not know and can never know. One may object that
these limits are at the margins, that there are still vast
fields of discovery open to future generations. But that is
the way it is with limits; they are, by definition, always at
the margin. They define the margins. The crucial point is that
the link between knowledge and progress that was forged in
classical Greece and that, in the form we call scientific, has
been both the motor and the guarantor of the modernity project
has now been broken. Or so we are told by some of the more
impressive thinkers of our time.
But there was something else driving the idea of progress
as well. Returning to Nisbet’s rather melancholic book on the
subject, his epilogue asks the question, "What is the future
of the idea of progress in the West?" He continues, "Any
answer to that question requires answer to a prior question:
What is the future of Judeo–Christianity in the West?" He
notes that the great thinkers of the Enlightenment—for
instance, Lessing, Kant, Herder, and Priestley—all recognized
that the idea of progress is "closely and deeply united with
Christianity." The same is true of the enormously influential
prophets of progress. "The mature writings of Saint–Simon and
Comte, both preeminent in the history of the idea of progress,
bear this out. Even Mill, apparent atheist through much of his
life, came in his final years to declare the indispensability
of Christianity to both progress and order." As for Karl Marx,
it is by now a commonplace to observe that his grand
ideological structure of the dialectic of history was but a
heretical variation on Christian themes.
Although Nisbet’s melancholy goes deep, he expresses the
hope, perhaps a wan hope, that something like a religious
awakening might yet rescue the idea of progress. He saw signs
of such an awakening, and twenty years later many think those
signs are stronger. Nisbet quotes Yeats: "Surely some
revelation is at hand?" Maybe. Maybe not. He concludes the
book with this: "Only, it seems evident from the historical
record, in the context of a true culture in which the core is
a deep and wide sense of the sacred are we likely to
regain the vital conditions of progress itself and of faith in
progress—past, present, and future."
Progress as dogma. Progress as faith. It sounds very much
like a religion—the Religion of Progress. That progress has
become a false religion, indeed an idol, has been the worry of
a number of Christian and Jewish thinkers in the modern era.
Few have expressed that concern with such incisiveness and
prophetic passion as Reinhold Niebuhr. No American theologian
since Niebuhr, who died in 1971, has had such a wide influence
in our intellectual culture. A champion of what was called
"neoorthodoxy," Niebuhr attacked precisely the link between
Judeo–Christian religion and the idea of progress that Nisbet
and many others have wanted to revive. In his 1939 Gifford
Lectures, The Nature and Destiny of Man, Niebuhr noted:
"The idea of progress is possible only upon the ground of a
Christian culture. It is a secularized version of biblical
apocalypse and of the Hebraic sense of a meaningful history,
in contrast to the meaningless history of the Greeks."
Niebuhr did not intend that as a compliment to Christian
culture. His point is that the idea of progress is a cultural
distortion of authentic Christianity. A staunch Protestant
writing in an era before the full flowering of ecumenical
etiquette, Niebuhr blamed this distortion on what he called
the "Catholic synthesis" of nature and grace as that synthesis
was secularized in the Renaissance and then in subsequent
modernity. The secularized idea of progress emerged from the
biblical understanding of purpose in history, said Niebuhr,
but it broke away from the biblical truth that the fulfillment
of history transcends history itself, as it also jettisoned
any notion of divine judgment. The secularized story of
history therefore ended up with "no consciousness of the
ambiguous and tragic elements in history." It is true, said
Niebuhr, that human history is filled with endless
possibilities, but the idea of progress forgets that they are
endless possibilities for both good and evil. "History,
therefore, has no solution of its own problem."
Niebuhr was accused of offering a bleak or pessimistic view
of history. He called his view "Christian realism." If,
without the idea of progress, people might despair of the
tasks of personal, social, and scientific advance, that too,
said Niebuhr, might be to the good. There is such a thing as
"creative despair" that induces faith, he said, and such faith
"becomes the wisdom which makes ‘sense’ out of a life and
history which would otherwise remain senseless." What we
should have learned from the last two hundred years, and
especially from the tragedies of this century, is that history
is not the answer to the question that is history. Niebuhr
puts the point nicely: "We have learned, in other words, that
history is not its own redeemer."
One may be unpersuaded by some of Niebuhr’s conclusions,
but a Niebuhrian sensibility is an invaluable safeguard
against the shallow sentimentalisms and utopian fantasies that
have all too often afflicted thinking about history and its
possibilities. Niebuhr rightly reminds us that history is not
the uninterrupted triumphal march of progress. In the
Christian view of things, experience both personal and social
is cruciform; it is the way of the cross. At the same time,
the cross is not the final word. There is resurrection, and it
is both resurrection in history and resurrection of history.
It is first the resurrection of the history of Jesus—and that
is the foretaste, or preview, or promise of the resurrection
of all things. That is surely the import of St. Paul’s great
cosmic hymns in, for instance, the first chapters of Ephesians
and Colossians. To the Ephesians Paul writes, "For [God] has
made known to us in all wisdom and insight the mystery of his
will, according to his purpose which he set forth in Christ as
a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him,
things in heaven and things on earth" (Ephesians 1:9–10).
This vision is inseparable from an emphatically Jewish
understanding of the Messianic Age. The chief difference
between Jews and Christians is over if, or in what way, that
Messianic Age is anticipated in the person of Jesus whom
Christians call the Christ. For both Christians and Jews, past
and present time participate in what Paul calls "the fullness
of time." In the call of Abraham, the election of Israel, the
promises given through the prophets, and (for Christians) the
coming of the Christ, the plan of history is being fulfilled.
Jews disagree with Jews and Christians disagree with
Christians over the eschatological scenarios and apocalyptic
details by which "the fullness of time" will be achieved, but
all are agreed that history is not, in the words of the cynic,
just one damn thing after another; history will be fulfilled
in the Kingdom of God. Niebuhr is undoubtedly right to say
that "history is not its own redeemer." But the biblical
view—a view that is utterly formative for Western culture in
both its religious and secular expressions—is that history
does have a Redeemer, and that the Redeemer is, however veiled
and sometimes hidden, present and active in history
itself.
And, ecumenical etiquette notwithstanding, it must be
admitted that Niebuhr’s very Protestant reading of history is
in tension, if not in conflict, with the "Catholic synthesis."
In our own time, that synthesis is energetically set forth by
the pontificate of John Paul II. In October 1998, the Pope
issued his thirteenth encyclical, Fides et Ratio (Faith
and Reason), in which he powerfully affirms that there can be
no conflict between faith and reason, between science and
religion, between philosophy and revelation; all truths are
one because God, the source and end of all truth, is one.
Human beings are by nature seekers after truth, and revelation
provides the ultimate "horizon" of that search. The Word of
God, or the logos that is the ordering reason of all
things, is incarnate in history and is the guarantee that the
search for truth is not in vain. Not until the final End Time
will we know the truth perfectly, but along the way both
believers and unbelievers who honestly seek for the truth
according to the rules of science and reason will be
vindicated.
This is surely an audacious vision, but is it a doctrine of
progress? The answer is no and yes. If by progress we mean a
smooth, incremental, and almost automatic movement in time
from worse to better, from ignorance to enlightenment, the
answer is certainly no. If, however, by progress we mean that
human beings are free agents who are capable of participating
in the transcendent purpose that is immanent in history and
holds the certain promise of vindicating all that is true,
good, and beautiful, then the answer is certainly yes.
Moral progress may be a quite different matter, however. We
have already noted the events of this century that have so
brutally battered the idea of moral progress. We should at
least be open to the possibility that we are today witnessing
not moral progress but a dramatic moral regression. While, as
we have seen, practitioners in the hard sciences express a new
humility about the limits of their knowledge and control, many
who work in the field of ethical theory and practice exhibit
an unbounded hubris. For instance, Princeton University
recently gave a distinguished chair in ethics to the
Australian ethicist Peter Singer. Singer is famous, or
infamous, for his championing of animal rights as equal or
superior to human rights, and for his proposal, among other
things, that there should be a trial period of one month after
the birth of human babies in which those who are defective may
be legally killed. Because of his advocacy of infanticide and
eugenics, Singer has been denied platforms in German
universities, where there is a more vivid historical memory of
such arguments and their consequences.
As the decision of Princeton suggests, Singer is no
marginal figure in our intellectual culture. He is also author
of the main article on ethics, a full twenty pages, in the
fifteenth edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica. From
Confucius and Aristotle, to Maimonides and Aquinas, through
Hume and Kant to Peter Singer, the article traces the
liberation of moral theory and practice from any truths that
pose an obstacle to our will to power and control. The gist of
it is caught in the title of Singer’s 1995 book, Rethinking
Life and Death: The Collapse of Our Traditional Ethics
(St. Martin’s). That Singer does not regret the collapse of
what he dismissively refers to as traditional ethics is
evident in the chilling conclusion of his Britannica
article: "The culmination of such advances in human
reproduction will be the mastery of genetic engineering. . . .
Perhaps this will be the most challenging issue for
twenty–first–century ethics." Singer leaves no doubt that he
welcomes the challenge and the brave new world it portends.
The cosmologists and molecular biologists—those who are bound
by the disciplines of scientific method—reach the end of
knowledge, at which point they fall silent in what might be
viewed as a recognition of human creatureliness. Ethical
theorists—bound by no such disciplines—reach the end of
knowledge, at which point anything can be said, and anything
can be done.
For a dramatically different account of the history of
ethics and its progress or regress, we have Alasdair
MacIntyre’s much discussed and eminently readable little book,
After Virtue—in my judgment, one of the most important
books on moral philosophy published in this century. For
MacIntyre, the account of moral theory and practice offered by
people such as Singer, which is the dominant account in the
academy today, results in a rationalized ethics that has
broken loose from any tradition of virtue or truth—from our
knowledge of virtue and truth. The stark choice facing
us, MacIntyre says, is a choice between Aristotle or
Nietzsche, between a tradition of virtue, on the one hand, and
moral nihilism, on the other. The various intellectual
dispositions that today run under the banner of
"postmodernism" have quite consciously opted for nihilism. The
hubris of Enlightenment rationalism that Niebuhr rightly
criticized has given way to the hubris of postmodernity’s
irrationalism. Secular rationalism tried to do too much, but
can rationally recognize when it fails. Irrationalism has no
access to such humility.
In the view of MacIntyre and others, the Enlightenment
project has failed on its own terms. Despite monumental
efforts, perhaps the greatest of which is that of Immanuel
Kant, it failed to produce an ethics to which any rational
person, acting rationally, must give assent. Society was for a
time able to live off the capital of earlier traditions of
virtue, but now that capital has been depleted, the failure of
the Enlightenment project has been widely advertised, and the
time has come round at last for the triumph of nihilism. In
this reading, postmodernity is the product of failed
modernity, and the nihilistic avant garde is a regression to
the rule of the barbarians. Barbarians today, as in classical
Greece, are defined as those who are outside the
civilizational circle of conversation about how we ought to
order our life together, about the meaning of right and wrong,
good and evil. They are those who know nothing, and insist
that nothing can be known, about such matters.
Recall the concluding passage of After Virtue.
MacIntyre draws the parallel between our time and the collapse
of the Roman Empire when St. Benedict’s monastic movement
provided a refuge for civilization. "What matters [now] is the
construction of local forms of community within which civility
and the intellectual and moral life can be sustained through
the new dark ages which are already upon us. And if the
tradition of the virtues was able to survive the horrors of
the last dark ages, we are not entirely without grounds for
hope. This time, however, the barbarians are not waiting
beyond the frontiers; they have already been governing us for
quite some time. And it is our lack of consciousness of this
that constitutes part of our predicament. We are waiting not
for a Godot, but for another—doubtless very different—St.
Benedict."
We may think that picture somewhat overdrawn. After all,
those who are called barbarians are not primitives, they are
not neanderthals; they are frequently those thought to be the
"brightest and best" among us. But that is to miss the point.
The new barbarians are barbarians not because they are
unsophisticated but precisely because of the
hyper–sophistication with which they have removed themselves
from what I have called the civilizational circle of moral
conversation. In simpler terms, that is called "traditional
values." The barbarians refuse to be limited by what we know,
by the wisdom we have received, about good and evil, right and
wrong. For them, the past is merely prelude.
What, then, can we say about the future of moral progress?
Within the civilizational circle, there is moral progress (and
regress!) in how we live, but there is no progress in the
sense of moving beyond the moral truths that constitute the
circle itself. We can develop the further implications of
those truths, or we can step outside the circle by denying
that there is such a thing as moral truth. It has become the
mark of hyper–sophistication in our time to echo the question
of Pontius Pilate, "What is truth?" Pontius Pilate, an urbane
Roman ever so much more sophisticated by worldly standards
than the prisoner who stood before him, was a forerunner of
the barbarians now in power.
Those permanent truths are sometimes called natural law. In
the Declaration of Independence they are called the laws of
nature and nature’s God. Or they are called the first
principles of ethics. First principles are, by definition,
always first. Moral analysis cannot go beyond or behind them
any more than human consciousness can go beyond or behind
human consciousness. Fifty years ago, C. S. Lewis, borrowing
from Confucianism, called these first principles the Tao. In
The Abolition of Man, he anticipated with great
prescience today’s debates in biomedical ethics about
reproductive technologies, genetic engineering, and eugenic
progress. The Tao, Lewis said, draws support from all
religious and moral traditions in inculcating certain rules
such as: general beneficence toward others, special
beneficence toward one’s own community, duties to parents and
ancestors, duties to children and posterity, the laws of
justice, honesty, mercy, and magnanimity. Whether drawn from
the Torah, the Sermon on the Mount, Chinese Analects,
Cicero, or the Bhagavad Gita, these are the truths that
constitute the civilizational circle.
Like all tradition, the Tao is vulnerable. Those who want
to violate it ask, "Why not?", and it is not always possible
to give a rationally convincing answer, or an answer that is
convincing to everybody. In response to the assertion of rules
that set limits, the avant garde offers the challenge, "Sez
who?", and the invoking of authority, even of the most
venerable authority, carries little weight in our time. Most
corrosive is what is called the hermeneutics of suspicion, in
which every rule or law or custom is perceived to have behind
it some hidden purpose, some power protecting its own
interests. Thus the Tao is debunked, we "see through" its
supposed authority, and the force of its commands and limits
is "explained away." The result is what Peter Singer
approvingly calls the collapse of traditional ethics. Lewis
had a keen appreciation of what was happening in our
intellectual culture. Recall again that remarkable passage
from The Abolition of Man:
But you cannot go on "explaining away" forever: you will
find that you have explained explanation itself away. You
cannot go on "seeing through" things forever. The whole point
of seeing through something is to see something through it. It
is good that the window should be transparent, because the
street or garden beyond it is opaque. How if you saw through
the garden too? It is no use trying to "see through" first
principles. If you see through everything, then everything is
transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible
world. To "see through" all things is the same as not to
see.
To which many of our contemporaries say, "Precisely. To see
through the first principles of ethics is to see nothing,
which means to see that there is nothing except what we
will to do; and, if there is nothing, all things are
permitted." So speak the barbarians among us. Whether they
rule us to the degree that MacIntyre suggests, I do not know.
Whether they will rule us in the future depends upon our
ability to argue—and to give public effect to the
argument—that there is such a thing as moral knowledge.
It is in the nature of knowledge that we can argue endlessly
about what we know and how we know it. Or at least we can
argue until, in the happy phrase of 1 Corinthians 13, we
finally know even as we are known. Lewis’ Tao provides one
minimal foundation for such argument. My suspicion is that,
while it is useful, it is too minimal; that a firmer and
publicly effective understanding of natural law and first
principles requires the specific acknowledgment of the God of
Israel and the achievement of the Greeks, as these find
expression in what is rightly called the Judeo–Christian moral
tradition. That particularist tradition provides the most
solid foundation for a truly universal ethic. But that is a
discussion for another time.
The answer to the question of whether the barbarians will
rule us in the future depends upon parents, religious leaders,
educators, scientists, politicians, artists, and writers who
are not embarrassed to give public expression to what they
know about right and wrong, good and evil. The first
proponents of the idea of progress, including moral progress,
were right to believe that knowledge and progress are
inseparable. There can be no progress beyond but only
within the civilizational circle of the moral truths
into which we were born, by which we are tested, and to which
we are duty bound, in the hope of sustaining the circle for
those who come after us. The alternative is the willed
ignorance of nihilism.
Richard John Neuhaus is Editor–in–Chief of First
Things. This article is adapted from an address given to
the annual convention of the American College of Surgeons in
Orlando, Florida.

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