David Garcia on Wed, 1 Dec 2004 17:42:25 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Amsterdam: Berlin |
Everything is what it is and not another thing Bishop Joseph Butler Everything is what it is and not another thing. Two concepts of Liberty: Isaiah Berlin. It is a dark inscrutable workmanship that harmonizes discordant elements makes them hang together in one society The Prelude: Wordsworth Amsterdam: Berlin *Amsterdam* On the day on which Theo van Gogh was slain, Job Cohen the mayor of Amsterdam, moved with speed. He proposed and personally led a demonstration, a noisy vigil in which demonstrators were encouraged to bring drums and whistles etc. Cohen aimed to draw together the different strands of Amsterdam society in a collective shout of rage against those who would smash the freedoms and way of life Holland has long taken for granted. Above all the freedom to speak your mind without fearing for your life. One of the banners I saw on TV, (I chose not to march) simply read "pas op. Ik heb een mening" (watch out I've got an opinion). Theo van Gogh and Pim Fortuyn may have been murdered by very different men and for very different reasons but what they held in common was a widely shared libertarian understanding of what liberal society stands for. A society in which freedom, particularly free speech trumps other values. I believe, this version of liberalism could be described as liberal fundamentalism.. Job Cohen is one of the few Dutch politicians of any stature, who also commands a degree of cross party respect rare in these times. But his current cautious use of language has lead to him being accused of being soft on Islamic fundamentalism, which must be a novel experience for such a tough politician. *Berlin* Rather than go on a march and a bang a drum I found myself foraging (sad case that I am) through a series of late lectures by Isaiah Berlin, published posthumously as The Roots of Romanticism. These talks were transcribed more or less verbatim, so they have a sketchy vitality, vivid urgent sometimes rambling and scatological. Understandably he did not wish them published in his lifetime as they were also working notes towards a book he had started too late in life to be able to complete. But still (on that day) the words jumped off the page seeming to offer, a different kind of language and a deeper analysis of the origins of our version of liberalism. Something that might clarify (as oppose to simplify or resolve) some of the contradictions of actually living the reality of pluralism, in the era of globalisation. In the first of these lectures Berlin proposes that the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century introduced a new understanding of the notion of tragedy into western culture. His proposition was that from Oedipus to Othello the view of tragedy is consistently one in which the tragic events are the inevitable result of some human weakness or error, some avoidable or perhaps inevitable lack of something in men: knowledge, skill moral courage, ability to live, to do the right thing when you see it. But for the Romantics of the early nineteenth century this is not so, argues Berlin. Taking examples which range from Schiller's The Robbers to Buchner"s Death of Danton, tragedy in this iteration is not the result of any fault, error or weakness in the protagonists but a collision between heroic individuals sincerely and uncompromisingly perusing incompatible values. There is a collision here with what Hegel called the *good with the good*. It is not due to error (or weakness or even fate) but to some kind of conflict of an unavoidable kind. Here we see the moment in cultural history when we start to treat difference not simply as a fact of life but as a value with special moral significance. It is in Berlin's particular interpretation of the German artists and thinkers of the Romantic movement that we find the seeds of his own pessimistic version of the liberalism. In the Netherlands right now nearly everyone is desperately seeking solutions. But Berlin's political philosophy implies that outside of >authoritarian regimes (a road down which the Netherlands might just conceivably be slipping), quite often there are no solutions. Just choices all of which will be bad combined with the law of unintended consequences. Ours is the era always in search of win win solutions. We have grown unfamiliar with the notion that serious political choice frequently involves loss and sacrifice not merely trade offs or compromises but genuine sacrifice of desirable ends: so much liberty sacrificed for so much equality or justice sacrificed for the sake of mercy. and so on.. The value of Isaiah Berlin's perspective is not that it offers solutions; rather it frees us from the illusion that there is something wrong, unnatural or illiberal about a society made up of extreme antagonisms. Lack of harmony does not always represent political failure; indeed it is the complacent refusal to confront the presence of these antagonisms that has been a contributing factor to the current spiral of violence and tragedy. But the opposite is also implicit in Berlin's approach. A suggestion of the need for vigilance, circumspection (even courtesy) in our use of language. It is interesting how in the current climate the term "political correctness" is frequently used to ridicule anyone who seeks to use language respectful of the sensitivities of particular groups or cultures. Since Fortuyn blew the roof of Holland's cozy and paternalistic consensus politics, unedited expressions of prejudice if they reflect our "feelings" have become positively fashionable. Feelings have become big political business in Holland these days. Open expressions of saloon bar bigotry, is taken, if not always for native folk wisdom, then at least as a healthy antidote to the pieties of old style politics. And those who dare to criticize the current rise of Islamophobia are likely to find themselves denounced as the mind police of political correctness. Berlin reminds us that pluralism will necessarily generate a complex landscape of potentially conflicting values and antagonisms. They will not need to be sought out; they will be all too present. Antagonisms should be neither suppressed (the Dutch mistake in the past) but neither do they need to be deliberately inflamed (the Dutch mistake in the present). Only liberal fundamentalists such as Geert Wilders, Theo van Gogh and Fortuyin, who interpret free speech as a free for all. For Berlin. "Loss was inevitable, because values were in conflict and because human reason was incorrigibly imperfect" Berlin's ideas are important for us because he helps us resist our addiction to quick fixes and the organized optimism that inform the party political democracy of a consumer society (as the recent US elections showed us pessimistic realists rarely win elections). Living in a pluralistic society will never be a soft option. It is simply the kind of society, which most openly expresses the intrinsically divided nature of human psychology. In proposing a human nature this is an essentialist creed, but not in the manner of cynical and simplistic Darwinian neo-liberals who sees the market economy as an expression of our essential nature as competitive predators, or even Karl Popper's technocratic and critically rational "open society". Berlin's contribution was a darker liberalism that laid the emphasis squarely on the fact that values are frequently incompatible; justice and mercy, equality and liberty often find themselves irreconcilably at odds in daily life, in principle and (most happily) in art. Reason could clarify facts, but choice itself was an act of will, instinct and emotion and as such was a gamble made in the dark=EE. It is the incompatibility of values that gives rise to the tragic dimension of liberal choice. In his various and numerous reiterations of this perspective Berlin is a useful corrective to the happy clappy third way social democrats who promise a world full of choice but without loss or sacrifice (we are promised low taxes AND social justice for all). But it also makes him the enemy of utopian politics, which often seek to elide different values into a harmonious and seamless unity. He saw this tendency as the main reason why utopian political movements tend to morph into authoritarian regimes. The quote he used most often was Bishop Butler's "Everything is what it is and not another thing " for Berlin "liberty is liberty, not equality or fairness or justice or culture, or human happiness or a quiet conscience.. The truth has never made men free, and freedom did not always make men better" David Garcia # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net