Monday, December 23, 2024

The Distinction

 

I watched a video online which was a conversation between Patrick Flynn (Owner of some sort of Roman Catholic podcast called Philosophy For The People), entitled The Moral Consequences of the Fact-Value Distinction—Soylent Green Is People. I took notes on the conversation which I edited slightly, and then will comment on:

 

Madden: “Marcuse emphasizes, as he did in the prior chapter and in this chapter, that multidimensional thinking was lost in the transition of modernity, and this thinking was tried to be resurrected in Hegel, and was the idea that there is not fact-value distinction.”

 

My response: Madden is arguing apparently that old-time, multidimensional thinking, that was Pre-20th century, was big-tent thinking allowing both scientific and descriptive propositions to be discussed as intellectually fruitful, and alongside with and in addition, they could be mingled with or at least coexist with prevailing prescriptive, metaphysical or even theological propositions.

 

 Madden, as one would expect from a Roman Catholic and Benedictine professor, seems to be arguing that there is no unbridgeable gap between facts and values, that there is no naturalistic fallacy, that what is, can be used to predict factually what ought to be, and that what ought to be can inform us about the facts that govern the world. Multidimensional thinking would seem to refer to Pre-20th century metaphysical outlook that values are real, true, and objective.

 

Let me quote a full paragraph out of Wikipedia, an article on the fact-value distinction, which I copied and pasted for this blog entry today (12/23/24): ‘Prior to Hume, Aristotelian philosophy maintained that all actions and causes were to be interpreted teleologically. This rendered all facts about human action examinable under a normative framework defined by cardinal virtues and capital vices. "Fact" in this sense was not value-free, and the fact-value distinction was an alien concept. The decline of Aristotelianism in the 16th century set the framework in which those theories of knowledge could be revised.[6]

If this article is accurate and applicable, and I think it is, then it seems likely that Professor Madden, with a religious and traditional training and outlook that grows out of some version of Aristotelian/Scholastic metaphysics, would deny the fact-value distinction out of hand. If all actions and causes are interpreted teleologically, then all human action is examinable under a normative framework defined by cardinal virtues and capital vices.

Flynn and Madden as Christians, would easily conclude that no fact thus is value-free, and the bright line of demarcation between natural observable facts versus normative observable/unobservable facts, the gap insisted upon as epistemologically and ontologically existent, mutually exhaustive, mutually exclusive and  absolutely final and in force, an insurmountable demarcation averred by Hume and modern Humeans and logical positivists, the gap is bridgeable, and likely never ontologically even existed, being just a popular, but empty scientific theory.

As an epistemological and ontological moderate, I side with the Roman Catholics that the distinction is bridgeable. I do not deny that natural facts and normative facts are different from each other, and the distinction about them being different each other and what one can differentiate about them is true, but, at bottom, the lack of distinction between natural facts and normative facts might just be another one of those true contradictions that is the world.

If I and Madden are right about the distinction being bridgeable, then neither naturalistic fallacy nor moralistic fallacy would hold, at least not in every instance where the distinction arose.


 

Madden: “Nature is suffused with the notion of final causes; therefore, nature is inherently of itself, normative. Marcuse, I would say rightly, notes that you cannot separate the notion of finality, intention, and purpose from normativity. If nature has any kind of intentional structure that is the same as natural normativity. Interestingly, this came up yesterday.”

 

My response: If nature is suffused with final causes, then Madden sees the principle of teleology at work everywhere in nature. I tend, as a moderate, to see the world of facts and values blurring and blending, so I largely accept what Madden said above. If one accepts that one can infer an ought from an is, then one is a metaphysical realist, and that likely God exists, and God as Logos is the author of the laws that govern nature, that God created nature, and God’s guidance and direction are at work everywhere in nature.

 

Madden: “The notion, that value is written into nature in and of itself, has been destroyed, and we are left with a nature with no values in and of itself.  We should respect nature of course but nature provides us with no norms. Nature gives us no valuing at all.

 

Heidegger sees normativity in nature, and we need that, or we are untethered from normativity of any kind.”

 

My response: Madden is referring to Heidegger, so to some degree, he is arguing that Subjectivists/Irrationalists/Existentialist like Heidegger see normativity as operating in nature; note, that their metaphysical realist opponents, Objectivists/Rationalists/Essentialists like Sam Harris and Ayn Rand, also regard nature as normative, from a purely naturalistic, realistic outlook.

 

What these Roman Catholic podcasters and thinkers are alluding to here is that the logical positivist view that nature is without metaphysical, guiding axioms, and is missing normative implications are clearly mistaken. The positivist views deprive humans of objective moral guidelines to help them know how to act, and perhaps severs their connection from God, and even being able to humanize themselves and each other beyond the existence lived hellishly as bitterly contesting jungle beasts.

 

Madden: “We took value out of nature so we objectify, cannibalize nature and eventually ourselves.”

 

Flynn: “Normless nature just becomes a chunk of prime matter, and humans have no determinate structure.”

 

My response: I know the modern, Humeans insist that the natural world is all that there is, but though these Catholic believers are warning that nature without values (God exists they claim, and is absolutely morally and spiritually good, so to conceive of the natural world as just a chunk of prime matter without teleological, determinate structure, is to leave life in nature and in society reduced to degraded, immoral existants as human beings.) will lead to hell on earth, and, I agree with them, I have two comments to add.

 

First, to take value out of nature is to objectify, cannibalize nature and eventually ourselves, but, more so, to take the value out of nature is to subjectify ourselves, and that is the main epistemological and moral approach to nature which leads us to cannibalize nature and ourselves.

 

Second, humans—positivists, scientists, atheists, secular humanists and philosophers—can declare that God is dead or never existed, so they feel justified in declaring that there is no normativity in nature, but, saying something is so, and believing it is so, does not mean that it is so beyond the realms of human convention. Nature is replete with normativity and Logos-driven guidance from the Creator and creators.

 

I would argue, and I think these Roman Catholic podcasters would side with me, if they thought deeper about it, that nature never is or was but a chunk of prime matter, that it and human nature always have determinate structure (Caused by deities, both good and evil, caused by nature itself, caused by social mores, and caused by human free will--self-causing individual will to choose and act as one will, whether one’s will is evil or good.).

 

If humans abandon God or deny that God exists, then their attitude towards nature could then become vicious, wicked, and cannibalistic, but it—nature--would still be spiritually driven, though its practitioners would deny that demons exist. If humans drive the good deities and angels of light out from nature and society, this does not lead to nature and society being indeterminate or void of spiritual inputs. It only means and reveals the terrifying result: demons then are the determinate structure at work in nature, and humans will suffer terribly for their foolish rejection of the Good Spirits and good deities as at work in nature and society.

 

Madden: “Interestingly, this came up yesterday.”

 

Flynn: “That is exactly what came up yesterday.”

 

Madden: “It is interesting. Marcuse recognizes this: that if you think nature has any kind of intentional structure whatsoever, you’ve got a natural normativity, here, okay. He thinks what has happened and what is most important for modernity is that the notion of there being value written into nature in and of itself, has been destroyed.

 

And now we are left with a nature that has no value in and of itself. And we don’t mean value in that we should not respect it. We do mean that. An also it provides us with no norms.”

 

Flynn: “Yeah.”

 

Madden: “And it provides us with no norms. This is a very important theme. It is one that I have been obsessed with.”

 

Flynn: “Yeah, I want to spend some time on it.”

 

Madden: “It is this notion—you see this notion in Max Weber. Hegel is seeing this—even Nietzsche is seeing this. We have totally disenchanted nature. We do not see nature as having any kind of normativity whatsoever. Right. So, this is central to understanding Heidegger’s thought.

 

What that does is it then provides us with the sense that we are untethered from any kind of normativity. Whatsoever, right? And nature is there for our consumption and control, period, full stop.”

 

Flynn: “Right.”

 

Madden: “This is Heidegger’s point. And you saw this in C.S. Lewis, right. Every smart person in the early 20th century, in the late 19th century had an ‘Oh Shit,’ moment, like what have I done? Now we look at nature with no normativity that is something for our consumption and control, and, by the way, we are part of nature, too.

 

So, inevitably, humans will become grist for that same machine. Literally, like in gas chambers and abortion clinics. And in more subtle ways in our lives, ourselves, our self-conception, will be managed and manipulated like any other piece of indifferent, normless nature.”

 

Flynn: “Like a chunk of prime matter.”

 

Madden: “Like a chunk of prime matter. I encourage people to watch the Charlton Heston movie, Soylent Green. Where it is this dystopian, this environmentalist, like bleak future, futuristic film, where it turns out like everybody is being fed this very cheap, hyper-palatable food called Soylent Green.”

 

Flynn: “Right.”

 

Madden: “Spoiler alert. It turns out to be human beings.”

 

Flynn: “Right.”

 

Madden: “Now the metaphor of the movie is like look where we’re going is to see human beings as just one more thing that exists as just kind of a prime matter that has no natural  normativity or teleological structure.”

 

My response: When we debase, degrade, dehumanize humans, or animals or nature itself, we are treating them without respect, and that may seem normless, but it is normative in that it is wicked degradation of any being or entity’s natural dignity and worth, and that is an act of hatred and malevolence, and that is evil incarnate.

 

Flynn” “No determinate structure.”

 

Madden: “With no determinate structure of its own, that we do violence to by reconfifuring it according to our whims.”

 

Flynn: “Yeah, so let’s unpack this a little bit because this is absolutely critical, and I agree with you that we should agree with Marcuse here. This is what happened. This is the problem.”

 

Madden: “What Marcuse is doing here he is reporting what is being said in very high academic circles. Husserl is saying it, what Heidegger is saying. Right, and . . .”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, December 22, 2024

Trumpian Excess

I am tickled that Donald Trump will be our President in 2025, but he is starting off doing a few things that I disapprove of. First, he mocked Canada as our 51st state: they are sovereign nation and a democratic neighbor, so what good does it do to mock a friend? This is imprudent in the long run. It makes Trump look like a bully, and he is not (He likely will not be a Fascistic President.), but he gives the impression of being a bully, and that does not win over hearts and minds at home or abroad.

 

Second, he likely will force Ukraine to settle with vicious, imperialistic Russia and its immoral killer leader, Putin. Maybe that is okay, but the new Republicans like Charlie Kirk and Trump, are too anti-neoconservative (I am a neoconservative.), reluctant to put troops in Ukraine to stop Putin in his tracks.

 

Kirk and Trump are correct that we neocons, in the last 70 years, started endless, stupid wars, that drained America of blood and treasure, and robbed us of good will at home and abroad. Still, we do not want to turn inward, and as cowards become so desperate for peace at any price, that we have Trump play Neville Chamber the new killer/Hitler, Putin.

 

Maybe, we don’t put boots on the ground in Ukraine, but we push NATO to put 100,000 troops there to prevent Putin from, in 5 years, being emboldened enough to gobble up more countries, as Hitler did when the Allies showed cowardice and appeasement.

 

Third, Trump apparently has cut some deal with that corrupt, Swamp-Dwelling Uni-Party led by RINO Mike Johnson to waive the debt ceiling limit, and 38 Republican members of the House of Representatives are being excoriated this morning (12/22/24) for opposing Trump, Johnson, and the Democrats for spending so recklessly that they will bankrupt the nation.

 

Rather than Trump hating heroic Chip Roy and threatening to primary him out of political existence, Trump needs to side with Roy and other fiscal conservative hawks, to get a grip on this exploding federal budget or America is doomed.

 

Trump cannot just yell orders at Congress and get furious when they do not all immediately jump in line and obey: we will have our dictator and no more constitutional republic, if that is allowed to occur.

 

I see some worrying signs with Trump, and I hope and pray that this good man will come to his senses, and self-correct his course.

Friday, December 20, 2024

Evil Is Real

 

Yesterday, (12/19/24) I found a clip from online, which was a snippet of a video on Jordan Peterson, and I copied it out with light editing, and then will comment on it: “The only reason that I ever got convinced that good and evil were real, more real than anything else, wasn’t because I learned that good was real. That’s hard. It’s hard to learn that you have to find examples of transcendental good. They’re rare.

 

Evil: all you have to do is look, read history a bit.”

 

My response: If one was an ideal optimist, and a certain type of uninformed, naïve liberal, one would assume that people are born good, and that goodness and good will are the norm. If one such person reviewed the Peterson clip above, he may reflexively reject it out of hand, averring that that is now how the world operates; that is not the human condition.

 

Peterson the therapist and keen reader of history encountered evil in human nature, the Jungian shadow that both he and Jung knew was the norm for human thinking and acting. Because Peterson was shocked by what he encountered, he likely has been a little gloomy and depressive ever since, though his outlook is fundamentally realistic.

 

 

In his clip above, he is declaring that his reading of history, his observation of and treatment of patients, made his encounter with evil in these people so detectable, that he knew evil was real. Then by the principle of logical enclosure, he knew that if evil was real (Does Peterson believe the devil exists?), then its opposite force, goodness had to exist too, and that conclusion seems realistic to me also.

 

Though he did not specify here, I believe he is suggesting that evil in people—and good too—are spiritual forces at work in the consciousness and choices made by each person. I go farther, and regard good and evil as objectively factual and real: their characteristics are ontological, psychological, social, biological, ethical, natural, emotional, and rational facts.

 

Peterson is suggesting that human nature is basically and mostly, innately wicked from birth, but that there is a weak but present residual goodness in people any person can elect to make the learned, habituated, adopted good nature belonging to a good-willed self that acts morally most of the time.

 

Evil is everywhere, prevalent, and easy to detect. Goodness is rare and transcendental. This is Peterson’s take and again I believe he is correct.

 

I think good is rare in this world only because we are born evil, we live by altruistic-collectivist morality (Satan’s moral system), we live in groups, values group identity and pride, practice low self-esteeming which grows hatred (evil) in one’s soul, we do not self-realize, and the Evil Spirits rule this world right now.

 

The miracle is not that evil exists, and is discernible for the awake, or that Satan and Lera rule this earth currently, but that things are as peaceful, orderly and ethical as they are—at least in most of the West.

 

Goodness need not be rare or just transcendent, as has been the historical norm that Peterson has brilliantly identified.

 

If enough of children, in the future, learn to love themselves, to serve the good deities as individuators and living angels, then evil will recede in society from its historic position of prominence and dominance, as spiritual and moral goodness spread and increase, making the detectability of goodness at work among people in society more common an obvious to any alert perceiver.

 

Goodness will be present and real as soon as people dedicated their lives to God as rational egoists, and invite the Good Spirits, and even to good deities to visibly walk among us.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

To Become A Great Soul

 

 

It is newsworthy to state, and have it become commonly heard and acknowledged that the Father, the Mother, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, the good deities and the Good Spirits exist and would be our friends and protectors should we accept this covenant, that we love them, worship them, remain faithful to them and obey them in return.

 

It is my understanding that these good deities are individuators and individualists more than they are nonindiviudators and collectivists—though they are both. They are more motivated by rational egoism than by semi-rational altruism, but they are motivated by both set of ethics, as they command each human to abide by (both sets of ethics, but in the proper proportion) morally, in their personal lives, decisions and actions undertaken.

 

When the young person is trained to live as an individuator, she develops herself, her self-love, and her self-esteem by searching down deep into her core, to hear that quiet, murmuring, beckoning call from within, that conscience-delivered and conscience-mediated invitation to her from the individuated Great Spirits.

 

They invite her to begin her singular, customized journey to grow and develop the self as a living angel, a great soul in the making, able at life’s end to join the divine individuators in heaven, and it does not get better than that for after-live prospects.

 

As she actualizes her wondrous and plentiful talents, she each day at doing such takes her one day closer to becoming one of the Good Spirits in this world and in the next.

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Hoffer By Jeanine Harlick

 

Hoffer By Jeanene Harlick

 

Journalist Jeanene Harlick in 2003 wrote an article on Eric Hoffer, which the prose part is pasted by me completely below and which I will comment on.

 

STANFORD magazine logo

Harlick (H after this): “Out of the Ordinary

For one longshoreman, ideas were everything.

January/February 2003

By Jeanene Harlick

In November 1969, 15-year-old Bobbie Kavanaugh pulled out her best penmanship and wrote a fan letter. Not to some Hollywood heartthrob, but to a social philosopher. On lined binder paper in the most careful script, she told Eric Hoffer about her father.

“He reads and loves every word you write,” she began. “He calls The True Believer his bible and he carries a pocket-book-type version in his hip pocket. He has worn out several books. . . . One day at supper Dad said he dreamt that one day he talked with you, he said it was his life’s ambition. I believe it! So I started thinking—it would cost too much to talk with you on the phone, my dad’s a working stiff—but I thought, if it wouldn’t be asking too much, if you could write to my dad, sort of a Christmas present, and he could write back. Sort of a ‘correspondence.’ (I guess that’s the word!) I wouldn’t ask this of you, if it didn’t mean so much. . . .”

There are almost 50 boxes of letters to Hoffer in the campus-based Hoover Archives, which acquired the commonsense author’s papers in 2000. His fan mail confirms the extraordinary impact of a man who insisted he was ordinary. If he’d ever had a résumé, it would have listed 10 years of odd jobs on L.A.’s Skid Row, another decade doing migratory farm work and panning for gold, and a quarter-century as a dockhand on the San Francisco waterfront.”

 

My response: What is so special about this article is that it reveals what a good man Hoffer was, that he was modest, and who insisted that he was ordinary, most proud of his longshoreman work, rather than his writing prowess.

This great soul was out of the ordinary, but he was also a most ordinary man, and that is how he stayed grounded, and was did not become vain and swelled up by regarding himself as a prophet above to the masses to be revered by them and obeyed by them.

The moral point that he tried to convey to intellectuals by living his advice was that any artist, intellectual or genius inventor, would require working with his hands a bit, or running a business in the world a bit, just to keep perspective and not lose that precious modesty which keeps one from becoming corrupt with mendacious pride as one develops.

H: “But Hoffer also read and soaked up knowledge endlessly, wrote pithy books about society and politics, held Wednesday seminars at UC-Berkeley and served on Lyndon Johnson’s Presidential Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence. In Hoffer, people from all walks of life found an original thinker who bemoaned intellectualism and championed the common man.

He never attended school. Hoffer was born in the Bronx in 1902 to working-class German immigrants. He learned to read German and English before age 5, but his mother died when he was 7, and shortly afterward he went blind—presumably for psychological reasons. Unaccountably, he regained vision eight years later. From then on, Hoffer devoured every book he could get his hands on, starting with Dostoyevsky’s The Idiot. After his father died in 1920, he moved to California.

Wherever he went as a migrant worker, he would take a room “halfway between the books (library) and the girls (brothels),” as James T. Baker reports in Eric Hoffer (Twayne, 1982). Hoffer called his library cards his “credit cards” and accumulated dozens up and down the state. He would copy favorite book passages on index cards, storing many of them in an old card-catalog drawer that now sits in the archives.

Hoffer’s sources reveal the breadth of his literary explorations: Seneca, Churchill, Chomsky, Spinoza, Stendhal, Swift, Aristotle, Bacon, Einstein, Confucius, Euripides, the Bible, Tennyson, Chekhov, Tertullian, Thucydides, to name just a few. And the headings he devised to organize his notes— “virility and decadence,” “the idea of a chosen people,” “asceticism,” “ennui as a motive of activity,” “discovery of mind,” “hope”—show the range of his interests. He also mastered science textbooks and once amazed Berkeley researchers by discovering a remedy for chlorosis in lemon trees.

In the late 1930s, Hoffer started keeping diaries. At Hoover, the transcriptions of Notebooks 1 through 52 fill 1,200 typewritten pages and offer a window on his preoccupations. From Notebook 2: “Is there a specific situation which stimulates an interest in politics and another situation which stirs interest in economic problems? The question is: Given a person who has neither political nor economic rights, what would he crave first?”

Rejected from service in World War II for medical reasons, Hoffer settled permanently in San Francisco in 1941 and became a longshoreman. In his tiny McAllister Street apartment, on a board laid across two chairs, he wrote his best-known book, The True Believer (Harper & Row, 1951), a study of mass movements and the psychology of those who join them. The Hoover collection includes his first penciled outline as well as the full text handwritten in ink.

Some of Hoffer’s thoughts seem eerily apt these days. “A mass movement attracts and holds a following not because it can satisfy the desire for self-advancement, but because it can satisfy the passion for self-renunciation,” he wrote. “Faith in a holy cause is to a considerable extent a substitute for the lost faith in ourselves. . . . When our individual interests and prospects do not seem worth living for, we are in desperate need of something apart from us to live for.” Quoting Pascal, he adds that for a doctrine to attract the true believer, it must be “contrary to nature, to common sense and to pleasure.”

Before his death in 1983, Hoffer published 10 more books covering topics from crime to automation, including The Ordeal of Change (1963), widely considered his best, and The Temper of Our Time (1967). But it wasn’t until his CBS-TV interview with Eric Sevareid in 1967 that he became a pop icon. Airing in September, the broadcast drew such high ratings it was rerun in November to an even bigger audience.

Fan mail poured in by the truckload; much of the correspondence in the archives relates to this one interview. Letter-writers confided their personal struggles, believing they had finally found a leading American thinker with a sympathetic ear. One young man said he had dropped out of graduate school at Yale to write a mythic adventure novel with Hoffer as the protagonist.

Sevareid explained his guest’s impact this way: “Hoffer had made millions of confused and troubled Americans feel very much better about their country. He had pulled aside the veils of supposed sophistication and, in new ways, showed them again the old truisms about America and why they remain alive and valid."

Not long after, Hoffer signed a lucrative contract to write a nationally syndicated newspaper column called “Reflections.” He was now welcome in San Francisco restaurants that used to refuse him because he wouldn’t wear a tie. In 1973, President Ronald Reagan awarded Hoffer the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

But fame never really turned Hoffer’s head. He once said of his life, “It is not important. It is not even interesting. Ideas are all that’s important.”

 

My response: The individuators should be proud of what he has achieved and confident too, all the while never taking himself too seriously. He must see himself as he is, warts and all. He must never brag or strut or show off in public, nor in private, nor in his own mind, or when talking to good deities and angels (Good Spirits).

 

He should thank others for their praise, but not put in on a pedestal. He must not overreact to censor and criticism from others, but grant them their due, and then make up his own mind.

If he boasts, or puts himself down, he is attacking the self, and this is emblematic of low self-esteeming and that is neither the moral nor beneficial way for an individualist to conduct himself.

H: “Had it been up to him, in fact, there would be no Hoffer collection. Lili Osborne, his companion for the last 30 years of his life, secretly saved his papers despite his insistence that no one would have any use for them. “I knew that he was unique. I knew that it was important. But he didn’t look upon himself as anything special,” Osborne says.

“It is very hard to write a biography about Eric,” she adds, since Hoffer was tight-lipped about his personal history. The material now at Hoover can only help.


Jeanene Harlick is a reporter at the Santa Cruz (Calif.) Sentinel.”

Penn Kemble On Eric Hoffer

 

Penn Kemble was a political activist and Social Democrat that wrote an article for Commentary Magazine, November, 1969 on Eric Hoff. I pasted the article below and will comment on it.

 

Commentary Magazine

Kemble (K after this): “The monthly magazine of opinion.

November 1969 Law, Government & Society

On Eric Hoffer

To judge by a recent flurry of articles in important magazines, and the echoes of Marxist-Leninist slogans coming out of…

by Penn Kemble

To judge by a recent flurry of articles in important magazines, and the echoes of Marxist-Leninist slogans coming out of the New Left, the working-class white American may be in for a good deal of attention in the next few years. And although one may have misgivings about some of the things that are being said, the attention itself is. long overdue. Ever since the mid-1950's, American intellectuals have been virtually uniform in their aloofness from—if not down-right hostility to—that sector of the population which lies between the dramatically poor and the neurotically affluent. Part of the price of this hauteur has been paid in the national and municipal elections of the past year.”

 

My response: Now, in 2024, we once again see that Leftist intellectuals are aloof from, and down-right hostile to working class white workers, and have paid the price in the election. It seems that blacks and Hispanics too, turned against Democratic elitists.

 

K: “Perhaps this new concern for the “common man” or the “man-in-the-middle” as he is called—there is a lingering squeamishness about the use of the Marxian terms “worker” and “working class”—will make possible a new appraisal of the writings of Eric Hoffer.1

 

During the past few years Hoffer has emerged as a singular exception to the cultural blackout of the lower-income white. Although he is often rather glibly classified as a cold-war liberal, a backlasher, or a plain crank, his work deserves to be read seriously, even if only as a case study.2 For all his undeniable uniqueness, he is a rich example of some typical working-class attitudes—especially those which have been so perplexing to the American Left.”

 

My response: Hoffer was dismissed as not a professional thinker, as a crank, a backlasher and cold-war liberal, if not a blatant racist who insisted upon referring to blacks as Negroes not blacks. If one easily dismisses a deep-thinker like Hoffer, then one does not have to heed his insights and warnings.

 

K: “Calvin Tompkins, whose perceptive profile of Hoffer originally appeared in the New Yorker, quotes him as saying, “My train of thought grew out of my life just the way a leaf or a branch grows out of a tree.” No doubt this is true of most writers. But because Hoffer had little contact with professional intellectuals (except for radicals in the labor movement) until he was in his fifties and had published his first book, his personal experience must have been an unusually strong influence on his work.

_____________

Hoffer was born in New York of German immigrant parents and spent his childhood in relative poverty. He was afflicted by blindness when he was five, and when he recovered his sight at fifteen he became an avid and wide-ranging reader. The habit never left him—he discovered Montaigne, who had a great influence on him, simply by picking the fattest book off a shelf in a second-hand book store to take with him on a winter mining trip. Both of Hoffer's parents were dead by the time he was eighteen. “When my father died,” he says, “I realized that I would have to fend for myself. I knew several things; one, that I didn't want to work in a factory; two, that I couldn't stand being dependent on the good graces of a boss; three, that I was going to stay poor; four, that I had to get out of New York. Logic told me that California was the poor man's country.”

 

In the 1920's, California was still open country. Going west, Hoffer joined a great popular migration, made up for the most part of people of his own social class. These were the people who became the miners, longshoremen, railroad workers, sailors, and field-hands of the exploding, rough-and-ready capitalism of the Pacific coast. Their own adventurous natures combined with the relative freedom of western society to create in these workers a rambunctious individualism. The American West was one of the few places in the world where capitalist society really did rely to a great extent on “free labor.” There were, at least for a time, enough jobs to go around, so that if a worker got fed up at one he could pack up and find another. In contrast to the middle-class individualist who strained after business success, the working-class individualist sought mainly to preserve his mobility and independence (and bargaining power) against the onset of stable, large-scale economic organization, and the tightly structured society that came with it. These western workers, rather because of than in spite of their individualism, contributed a great deal to the rise of a native working-class radicalism in America. Those who had sought escape from the confines of Europe or the industrial East fought back bitterly when capitalism caught up with them in its inexorable westward march. Out of the disillusionment of these last seekers of the promised land come some of the epic names of American labor and radical history: Coeur D'Alene, Ludlow, Bill Haywood, the Western Federation of Miners, the IWW.”

 

My response: One can be a blue-collar laborer, a union member, and still an individualist or even a great soul, like Hoffer was. Labor radicals often are absolutists in their thinking: there have always been loyal, union-loving, individualist union members that are pro-American, pro-capitalist and pro-worker at the same time. American laborers in the trades may be liberal, even socialist in their political values, but their cultural values are much more traditional than the values of professional intellectuals and the Progressive Left.

 

K” “When Hoffer reached California in the early 20's the great working-class rebellion that had produced the Wobblies was very much in decline. Yet heavy traces of the Wobbly spirit must still have lingered in the air. Hoffer's experiences brought him into close association with many workers who, whether or not they shared the political program of the IWW, must have shared some of the basic social attitudes that marked its membership. He drifted from job to job, often living on skid row or in the hobo jungles. He has not written much about his personal experiences in this period—a regrettable compunction—but when he does, it is usually to illustrate a favorite theme: the great resourcefulness and natural decency of the people with whom he worked and traveled. For example:

 

Once, during the Great Depression, a construction company that had to build a road in the San Bernardino Mountains sent down two trucks to the Los Angeles skid row, and anyone who could climb onto the trucks was hired. When the trucks were full the drivers put in the tailgates and drove off. They dumped us on the side of a hill in the San Bernardino Mountains, where we found bundles of supplies and equipment. The company had only one man on the spot. We began to sort ourselves out; there were so many carpenters, electricians, mechanics, cooks, men who could handle bulldozers and jackhammers, and even foremen. We put up the tents and the cook shack, fixed latrines and a shower bath, cooked supper and the next morning went out to build the road. If we had to write a constitution we probably would have had someone who knew all the whereases and wherefores. We were a shovelful of slime scooped off the pavement of skid row, yet we could have built America on the side of a hill in the San Bernardino Mountains.

 

It seems a long way from Eric Hoffer to the IWW; any comparison must sound sacrilegious to those campus radicals who are trying to establish their own paternity in the Wobblies' struggles for free speech and the eight-hour day. And indeed, the differences between the Wobblies and Hoffer are unmistakable: they were revolutionaries, he certainly is not. Yet there are intriguing likenesses as well. Hoffer's vision of building America in the San Bernardino Mountains has much in common with the syndicalism of Big Bill Haywood, the IWW leader, who called for the reorganization of society into “One Big Union.” Both evoke a world without bosses, professors, hippies, or welfare cases, a world in which honest workers build and produce.

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In this syndicalist vision workers not only manage basic production, they create a total civilization. “Every longshoreman thinks he could write a book if he tried—and it is true, he probably could,” Hoffer told Calvin Tomkins. “Every intellectual thinks that talent, that genius is a rare exception. Talent and genius have been wasted on an enormous scale throughout our history; this is all I know for sure.”

 

Hoffer's disdain for intellectuals, another of his pet themes, echoes a familiar prejudice. Yet he is in no sense an anti-intellectual of the Know-Nothing, Ku-Kluxer variety, for his own work shows scholarship and a great enthusiasm for ideas. He does not mind intellectuality; he resents professional intellectuals. His reasons, put very simply, are that intellectuals don't work, and that they have a great urge to dominate those who do. The two objections are actually related, since in Hoffer's view it is the intellectual's lack of a “sense of social usefulness” which goads him into grandiose dreams of power.”

 

My response: Hoffer was anti-professional intellectuals who were group creatures and addicted to amassing power to rule the masses. Hoffer the individuators and amateur intellectual of great originality, had no desire to rule anyone, or be rule by anyone.

 

K: “A belief in the moral and social healthfulness of work is probably the major premise of Hoffer's outlook.”

 

My response: This Hofferian emphasis on the moral and social healthfulness of work out in the world is implicitly what he felt professional intellectuals needed to remain centered and sensible, abandoning their ultraist conclusions, and their obsession with gaining power over others.

 

 K; “It colors not only his attitude toward intellectuals, but his views on the race issue and the problems of the Third World. In the case of the intellectuals he abandons any pretense of Montaigne's detachment, and strikes out with polemical ardor:

 

One of the greatest surprises of the 20th century was sprung by the educated when they came to power. Gandhi once said that what worried him most was “the hardness of heart of the educated,” and it staggers the mind that education rather than educating the heart often makes it more savage. . . . We have yet to assimilate the fact that it took a nation of philosophers to produce Hitler and Nazism, and that in Stalin's Russia professors, writers, artists, and scientists were a pampered and petted aristocracy.

 

No honest democrat can deny that this statement hits on an important fact of 20th-century political life. It certainly should give a moment's pause to those who see the growing size and influence of our intelligentsia as a prelude to an inevitable movement toward greater democracy and social justice. Whatever its progressive accomplishments, the new intelligentsia has also shown a second, unmistakably ominous face. Alongside the democratic and nonviolent idealism (which has by no means fully vanished), there have now appeared a familiar elitism, an exaltation of militant totalitarianism, and a juvenile but no less dangerous mystique of violence.

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Yet it is not hard to believe that, had other things been different, the restlessness of the intellectual might have led—it might still lead—to far different results in the politics of America and the world. Intellectuals have given themselves both to despotism and to democracy, depending on the character of the larger social forces around them. They helped create the American Republic, and figured largely in the overthrow of European absolutism during the 18th and 19th centuries. It was the intellectuals of the Petofi circle who gave leadership to the Hungarian people in the first major popular uprising against modern totalitarianism. And this year we have seen a constant stream of reports of protests by Czech and Russian intellectuals against the growing chill of Soviet despotism. Hoffer's history is unbalanced; it would be fairer to say that in the intellectuals, to borrow the words of the anti-Stalinist writer Victor Serge, “the best and worst live side by side, and sometimes mingle—and that which is worst comes through the corruption of what is best.”

 

But it should come as no surprise that someone like Hoffer feels as he does about intellectuals. Like most American workers, he probably has rarely sensed that the intellectual community has been on his side. Those intellectuals whom he has encountered in the labor movement have for the most part only confirmed this impression. He describes some, of benign intention, whose obsession with the social millennium has led them to scoff at the practical, day-to-day needs of workers—those banalities which often mean the difference between human degradation and a semblance of dignity to a working-class family. And there have been those who have simply used the labor movement to advance a totalitarian design—the Communists, whom Hoffer knows well from his years on the San Francisco waterfront.

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Hoffer's views on the race problem are similarly rooted in his ethics of work:

The simple fact is that the people I have lived and worked with all my life, and who make up about 60 per cent of the population outside the South, have not the least feeling of guilt toward the Negro. The majority of us started to work for a living in our teens, and we have been poor all our lives. Most of us had only a rudimentary education. Our white skin brought us no privileges and no favors. For more than twenty years I worked in the fields of California with Negroes, and now and then for Negro contractors. On the San Francisco waterfront, where I spent the next twenty years, there are as many black longshoremen as white. My kind of people does not feel that the world owes us anything, or that we owe anybody—white, black, or yellow—a damn thing. We believe that the Negro should have every right we have: the right to vote, the right to join any union open to us, the right to live, work, study, and play anywhere he pleases. But he can have no special claims on us, and no valid grievances against us. He has certainly not done our work for us.

 

When the essay from which the preceding statement is taken first appeared in the New York Times Magazine, supporters of the civil-rights movement were generally offended. That was in 1964, when integration was still fashionable. It is a fascinating irony that while Hoffer's tone and analysis would still in some circles be considered “racist,” his program for solving the race problem would today be endorsed by many black militants and their white supporters. Hoffer believes simply that the Negro must solve his own problems: “Anything done to and for the Negro must be done by Negroes.” Rhetorical packaging aside, this is the same rationale as that behind CORE's Black Capitalism and Stokely Carmichael's Black Power.

 

Of course, what all the bootstrap strategists, Hoffer included, overlook is that the American economy has eliminated the opportunities which once made it possible for so many unskilled, “culturally disadvantaged” whites to achieve a half-decent way of life.”

 

My response: If American blacks had it rough, and they did, in America, if one stays at it, one can build wealth and prosperity for oneself, one’s family and one’s people, so Hoffer’s recommendation that self-help and self-bootstrapping were the only techniuqes which would uplift blacks permanently.

 

K: “ When an unskilled Southern black follows Hoffer's footsteps to the West Coast today, he finds the fields and the building sites tended by tractors and bulldozers, the canneries humming with fabulous new machinery. Few summonses await him in the help-wanted listings.

 

Hoffer is partly aware of this. He acknowledges that “the European immigrants not only had an almost virgin continent at their disposal and unlimited opportunities for individual advancement, but were automatically processed on their arrival into new men.” But he neglects to follow through the implications this momentous difference has for his do-it-yourself solution to the stagnation and fury of the black ghetto.

One suspects that there is more at work here than simple oversight. For all his testiness, Hoffer is a subtle and logical thinker, and the problems of Negro unemployment are more or less common knowledge. Possibly he senses, if only subconsciously, that once it is acknowledged that the Negro has few opportunities available to him, Hoffer and “his kind” will be asked to pay the price of creating new ones. Given the drift of liberal opinion over the last few years, this is by no means an imaginary threat to a working man. Comfortable liberals have shown astonishing generosity in heaping social responsibilities on the shoulders of low-income whites. If there are too few jobs for blacks, the answer has often been to try to squeeze out a few white workers. If ghetto schools are bad, teachers are asked to sacrifice their own hard-won gains. If welfare funds are short, the taxes of working people show the first and proportionately greatest rise. And, to make it worse, if those who carry the burden of this “progress” show any ill feeling, they are promptly branded as reactionaries.

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The ethic of work can become a rationale which working people will use to justify complacency and conservatism. Thus, they may vote against anti-poverty measures by telling themselves, “Let them work for a living like I do.” They can dismiss intellectuals, as Hoffer does, as a bunch of labor-fakers: “To me, they haven't raised a blade of grass, they haven't laid a brick, they don't know a god-damned thing, and here they sit in judgment.” Yet these opinions spring from a simple insight which is in a sense very radical: society is to a very great extent built on the labor of working people. It is out of the sweat of their brows or the tedium of their days that Americans draw welfare benefits, go to college, finance the Ford Foundation, and shop on Fifth Avenue. The worker sometimes senses that he is paying for most of this, and he may resent it. If he occasionally turns on those most vulnerable and near-at-hand—the welfare client, or the black—he is also capable of turning against the most powerful: his corporate bosses. It is no coincidence that the backlash voting of the past year was preceded by a period of bitter industrial strife. The number of man-hours lost in strikes in 1967-68 was higher than that of any comparable period since the end of World War II. It was only after this struggle to keep pace with rising profits and prices failed—without ever arousing a flicker of sympathy from the liberal intellectuals—that a significant number of workers turned away from their unions to seek relief by voting against the taxes and social programs of the Great Society.

 

It should be noted that Hoffer is a good union member. He never ran for office in the International Longshore Workers' Union, but his diary indicates that he participated actively as a rank-and-filer. He does not see the unions as agencies of social reconstruction; he is a classic “pure-and-simple” trade unionist. But on the other hand he knows from his own experience that unions cannot be brushed aside in the Galbraithian manner as unimportant vestiges of the first industrial revolution:

 

To the eternal workingman management is substantially the same whether it is made up of profit seekers, idealists, technicians, or bureaucrats. The allegiance of the manager is to the tasks and the results. However noble his motives, he cannot help viewing the workers as a means to an end. He will always try to get the most out of them; and it matters not whether he does it for the sake of profit, for a holy cause, or for the sheer principle of efficiency. . . . Our sole protection lies in keeping the division between management and labor obvious and matter-of-fact. We want management to manage the best it can, and the workers to protect their interests the best they can. No social order will seem to us free if it makes it difficult for the worker to maintain a considerable degree of independence from management. The things which bolster this independence are not utopian. Effective labor unions free movement over a relatively large area, a savings account, a tradition of individual self-respect—these are some of them.

In his acceptance of a strong role for private management Hoffer is not necessarily expressing enthusiasm for free enterprise. He is, at least in part, reacting to the state-controlled economies of the totalitarian countries. “The elimination of the conventional employer gives rise to a general monstrosity that bosses not only our working hours but invades our homes and dictates our thoughts and dreams.” As so often happens, Hoffer here confuses the regimentation imposed by a totalitarian party with the democratic economic planning and the libertarian political order which is the authentic socialist vision. He does remark on “the promising communal settlements in the small state of Israel and the successful programs of socialization in the small Scandinavian states.” But he attributes these advances to the smallness of the countries and the heterogeneity of their populations, not recognizing that these are forms of democratic control over economic life which differ radically from the Communists' bleak experiments in bureaucratic monopoly. (One might even argue that the smallness of these countries has made successful socialization more, not less, difficult.)

_____________

Democratic individualism, a reluctance to sacrifice in the present for the promise of a new world deep hostility to totalitarianism, suspiciousness and resentment toward intellectuals, and the ethic of work—these qualities of the American working class have all been factors in the conservatism which has dominated American politics for much of this century, and which is now making an alarming recovery. Put another way, these are factors which have helped frustrate the rise of a broadly based radical Left in the United States.

 

The recognition of these characteristics has usually led radical intellectuals to the opinion that something is peculiarly “wrong” with the American working class. It is not often suggested that something may be basically wrong with American radicalism. Yet after a near century of radical failure—heroic though that failure may sometimes have been—this proposition deserves frank consideration. Central to any reappraisal of the radical Left should be the record of snubs and betrayals committed by radical intellectuals against ordinary working people and their often glamorless efforts to better their lot in the face of an immensely powerful corporate elite. This record is made easier to grasp by the words and actions of those in the New Left who are pedantically repeating all the mistakes of the past. The campaign against the UFT in New York, the dual unionism being promoted by black separatists and their campus allies in the auto industry, the contemptuous attitudes toward low-income whites held by many in the New Politics movement, the opinion that working-class anti-Communism is merely ignorant and reactionary—all these are part of a sorry drama which is reenacted in almost every generation. There are many among the intellectuals to voice dissatisfactions with the American worker and few, such as Hoffer, among the workers to answer back. Votes not words, too often tell the final story.

 

But what is saddest about the current swing to the Right by numbers of lower-income whites is the realization that the frustrations which created it could—even now—produce a turn toward the democratic Left. It may seem quixotic to suggest this today, when leaders of the New Left are prophesying repression and even some who consider themselves part of the democratic Left are in a pessimistic droop. But the same failing that caused the Left to overlook the danger of a conservative backlash can also cause a blindness to the possibilities for a resurgence of the movements for change. Paradoxically, the backlash itself has proved that the average white American is not an inert atom in a mass society—a favorite theory of the disillusioned 50's which the New Left took more or less for granted. He has shown that he can respond effectively to fear and anger. It is not impossible that, were a thoughtful appeal made to his own democratic traditions and radical impulses, he could also be won to a new politics of hope.

 

1 Hoffer's books are available in paperback in the Perennial Library series published by Harper & Row. They include: The True Believer (1966), 160 pp. $.60; The Ordeal of Change (1967), 120 pp., $.60; The Passionate State of Mind (1968), 143 pp., $.75; and The Temper of Our Time (1969), 138 pp., $.75. His latest book, also published by Harper & Row, is Working and Thinking on the Waterfront, 180 pp., $4.95. See also Eric Hoffer: An American Odyssey, by Calvin Tompkins, photographs by George Knight, aphorisms by Eric Hoffer. Dutton, 115 pp., $4.95.

 

2 Hoffer's books have little of the impetuosity and vehemence that frequently color his television appearances and other public pronouncements. In a widely publicized statement before the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, he blurted that the problem of campus disorders might be solved if Grayson Kirk and other college presidents had only gotten guns and shot down a few disrupters. Rhetorical overstatement that this was, it was nevertheless extreme, even for Hoffer. A number of liberal writers seized on the remark as long-awaited evidence that Hoffer is a dangerous reactionary. A good many of these same people have spent the last few years explaining irresponsible speeches and acts of black separatists in terms of the Negro's condition, and the wild behavior of the New Left in terms of the Vietnam war. Hoffer deserves at least as much sympathetic understanding as the black and student extremists who, after all, have often acted out their foolishness.”

 

Let Me Go

 

I will below copy, with some light editing, out a short video snippet from Logos University, presenting Jordan Peterson; it was seen by me online on 12/7/24, and here it is: “I watched people who were enmired in bitterness say they are no longer enmired in bitterness. I remember the Nietzschean dictum which goes something like this: ‘You may think you are done with the past, but that doesn’t mean the past is done with you.”

 

And if you have gone down a dark road and remained there for a long time, there are traces of that that last a long time. And they will come and get you if you think you have escaped them. But your response that you are grateful—that’s a good response. Gratitude is the opposite of bitterness.”

 

I sometimes am amazed at how wise and apt Jordan’s words are, and, sometimes, he is way off base, but this time his take is poignant. When one long immersed oneself in wicked ways, though one repents, atones and adopts the life of love, virtue, holiness and communion with a  a good deity, the old ways can sneak up and recapture one, causing one to backslide into complete darkness and nastiness.

 

Evil people are bitter, and bitterness transmutes into hatred for the self, for others, towards the Good Spirits, towards Being itself.

 

Good people can be depressed, bitter and resentful to suffering and misfortune, but they do not allow these negative emotions to get a grip on their minds and outlooks for very long.

 

They love God, themselves, and the world itself, and are profoundly grateful for life itself, with all its problems, and ups and downs.

 

Being grateful, they are loving, and that transmutes all hurt into wisdom gained in the school of hard knocks.

 

As a former major league sinner, being grateful goes a long way to keeping the self-good and optimistic, and this is what the wise Peterson is advising.