Sunday, December 23, 2018




Restoring Civilization

American Thinker

December 23, 2018


They can sense it. They can feel it. Something is seriously wrong in our civilization, and many people know it. This is why despite the relatively good economic times, most Americans polled say our country is on the “wrong track.” Yet many are like a gravely ill man who knows he’s not well but can’t precisely identify his ailment. Most often, Americans have only a vague sense of cultural malaise, or they “self-diagnose” wrongly.

Years ago I had a brief “state of the nation” discussion with a very fine, older country gentleman. While no philosopher, he did offer the following diagnosis. Struggling for words and gesticulating a bit, he said, “There’s…there’s no morality.”

Most believe morality is important both personally and nationally. We generally agree that an immoral man treads a dangerous path; of course, it’s likewise for two immoral men, five, 53 or 1,053 — or a whole nation-full.

Echoing many Founders, George Washington noted that “morality is a necessary spring of popular government.” The famous apocryphal saying goes, “America is great because America is good, and if she ever ceases to be good, she will cease to be great.” For sure, we can’t MAGA unless we MAMA — Make America Moral Again.

“The New Morality” (James Gillray, 1798; source)

Yet if immorality is the diagnosis and restoring morality the cure, we must know what this thing called “morality” is. Ah, that’s where agreement can end.

Talk to most people today — especially the people who study people, sociologists and anthropologists — and they’ll “identify morality with social code,” as Sociology Guide puts it. They’ll essentially say what sociologists Durkheim and Sumner did, “that things are good or bad if they are so considered by society or public opinion,” the site continues. 

“Durkheim stated that we do not disapprove of an action because it is a crime but it is a crime because we disapprove of it.” Yet true or not, would the majority really view an action as a crime, in the all-important moral sense, if they came to believe it was true?

Consider a man I knew who once proclaimed, “Murder isn’t wrong; it’s just that society says it is.” Clearly, “public opinion” isn’t swaying him much.

Yet how do you argue with him? Barring reference to something outside of man (i.e., God) dictating murder’s “immorality,” you’re left with a striking reality:

If society is all there is to anything, then, as 
Greek philosopher Protagoras put it. 
“Man is the measure of all things,”

Yet acceptance of the “society says” thesis presents a problem: Now you must convince others to equate “public opinion” with credible, binding “morality.” This is mostly fruitless because, frankly, it’s stupid.

Man’s opinion is just that — opinion. If the term “morality” is essentially synonymous, it’s a risible redundancy. If we’re acting as slick marketers, trying to elevate “opinion” via assignment of an impressive-sounding title, it’s false advertising.  So, if that is all we’re really talking about — “opinion” or “societal considerations” — let’s drop the pretense and just say what we mean:

We sentient organic robots (soulless entities comprising chemicals and water) have preferences for how others should behave (subject to change with or without notice). No, we can’t call these tastes “morality” — but, hey, we can punish the heck out of you for defying our collective will (see North Korea et al.).

To cement the point, consider my patent explanation. Who or what determines what this thing we call morality is?

Only two possibilities exist: Either man or something outside of him does. If the latter, something vastly superior and inerrant (i.e., God), then we really can say morality exists, apart from man. It’s real. Yet what are the man-as-measure implications?
  
Well, imagine the vast majority of the world loved chocolate but hated vanilla. Would this make vanilla “wrong” or “evil”? It’s just a matter of preference, of whatever flavor works for you.

Okay, but is it any more logical saying murder is “bad” or “wrong” if we only do so because the vast majority of the world prefers we not kill others in a manner the vast majority considers “unjust”? If it’s all just consensus “opinion,” it then occupies the same category as flavors: preference.

This is the matter’s stark reality, boiled down. It’s why serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer’s darkness-enabling attitude was, as his father related in a 1996 interview (video below), “If it [life] all happens naturalistically, what’s the need for a God? Can’t I set my own rules?”

It’s why occultist Aleister Crowley, branded “the wickedest man in the world,” succinctly stated, “Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the law” (Preference Über Alles 101).

This perspective engenders what’s often called “moral relativism,” the notion that “Truth” (absolute by definition) is illusion and what’s called “morality” changes with the time and people. But saying all is preference is actually moral nihilism, the belief that “morality” (properly understood) doesn’t actually exist — because, again, “opinion” isn’t morality.

Of course, few think matters through as thoroughly as a Dahmer or Crowley. (In fact, a possible reason sociopaths may possess above-average intelligence is that they’re smart enough to grasp the “morality” question’s two possibilities — either morality exists as something divinely-authored, something transcendent, or there is no morality — but draw the wrong conclusion.) Yet moral relativism/nihilism has swept Western civilization. And hell has followed with it.

How relativistic/nihilistic are we? A Barna Group study found that in 2002 already, most Americans did not believe in (absolute) Truth, in morality; in fact, only six percent of teens did. Thus are they most likely to base what once were called “moral decisions” on … wait for it … feelings. Surprise, surprise.

Such prevailing philosophical/moral rot collapses civilization. For anything can be justified. Rape, kill, steal, violate the Constitution as a judge, commit vote fraud? Why not? Who’s to say it’s wrong? Don’t impose values on me, dude.

To analogize it, imagine we fell victim to “dietary relativism/nihilism” and fancied the rules of nutrition nonexistent. With only taste left to govern dietary choices, most would indulge junk food; nutritional disorder would reign and health deteriorate. Moreover, considering one man’s poison another’s pleasure, we might sample those pretty red berries the birds gobble down. Hey, if it tastes good, eat it.

This reflects what’s befalling our “If it feels good, do it” Western civilization. Considering the rules of any system non-existent or irrelevant brings movement toward disorder — and a point where those who can impose their preferences restore order, a tyrannical one.
  
Having said this, discussing “Truth” and God evokes complaints, as the morally relativistic/nihilistic world view influences even many conservatives, and secularists find faith-oriented talk unsettling.

So, let’s focus here on not faith but fact. As to this and the world’s Dahmers, Crowleys and the murder-skeptic man I knew, call them names, but don’t call them illogical. Within their universe of “data”— that “God doesn’t exist” and thus only organic robots can be the measure — they’re right: Murder’s status isn’t “wrong,” just “unpreferred.”

Note that moral principles cannot be proven scientifically any more than God’s existence; you can’t see a moral under a microscope or a principle in a Petri dish. Science only tells us what we can do, not what we should. Finding guidance on “should” necessitates transcending the physical and venturing into the metaphysical. It requires, pure logic informs, taking a leap of faith.

Something else not a matter of faith but fact is man’s psychology: People operate by certain principles. Like it or not, believing as Dahmer did (when young) about God leads to believing as he did about morality. “If man is all there is to make up rules, why can’t I just make up my own?”

As I put it in 2013:

“Just as people wouldn’t abide by the ‘laws’ of physics if they didn’t believe they existed (the idea of jumping off a building and flying sounds like fun), and there weren’t obvious and immediate consequences for their violation (splat!), they won’t be likely to abide by morality if they believe its laws don’t exist.”

Of course, this rarely leads to serial killing. But it always — at population level — leads to serial immorality. This is an immutable rule of man.

So how should we combat our time’s moral relativism/nihilism? First, realize that from the Greek philosophers to the early/medieval Christians to the Founding Fathers, Western civilization was not forged by relativists/nihilists. It won’t be maintained by them, either. “If it feels good, do it” yields a healthy society even less than “If it tastes good, eat it” does a healthy body.

Thus, one needn’t have faith to understand that belief in Truth is utilitarian. As George Washington warned, “[R]eason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.”

Second, know that moral relativism/nihilism’s appeal is that it’s the ultimate get-out-of-sin free card. After all, my sins can’t be sins if there are no such things as sins, only “lifestyle choices.” Yet also know that we can have this seemingly eternal but illusory absolution — or we can have civilization. We can’t have both.

So, act as if Truth exists; seek it, speak it, love it, for it will set you free. Realize also that relativism is juvenile pseudo-philosophy. For if everything were relative, what you believed would be relative, too, and thus meaningless. So let’s talk about what’s meaningful.

The alternative? Well, it was expressed nicely by an old New Yorker cartoon. It featured the Devil addressing a large group of arrivals in Hell and saying, reassuringly, “You’ll find there’s no right or wrong here. Just what works for you.”

It’s an alluring idea — and a powerful one. It creates Hell on Earth, too.




Contact Selwyn Duke, follow him on Gab (preferably) or Twitter or log on to SelwynDuke.com

[Note: This article is the second in a series on exposing modern (liberal) lies, explaining the disordered leftist mind and restoring civilization. The first is here. The “American’t” essay, which illustrates our problems, is here.]

15 comments:

  1. When a society can no longer mostly agree on a moral code (values), there is no longer a viable society. America has reached that stage -- if we count the ethos of the two coasts (and the academia-media complex), which fundamentally disagree with the rest of America.

    How can this serious divide be remedied?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. MY answer is that we must find a way to rediscover the true meaning of Christmas and the gospels and expand our understanding of what God wanted us to learn in giving us His only begotten Son.

      We must remember that from GOD's perspective a thousand years in our terms are but a moment in His.

      We must "rest in the ord," and wait PATENTLY for him.

      I don't believe we have any other choice, unless we want to extinguish ourselves.

      Merry Christmas!

      Delete
    2. AOW, Not before the kids feel the pain of poor decision making. Will it be too late?

      Delete
    3. As long as we, as individuals, keep the faith, it will NEVER be too late, Kid.

      "Even if He SLAY me, yet will I trust in Him."

      That's another way of saying "Death is preferable to Dishonor."

      Faith never comes "naturally," it must be cultivated with daily doses of DETERMINATION (most call it PRAYER).

      As the featured article says, if we want good things to happen, we must ACT AS IF we KNEW POSItIVELY that GOOD THINGS are the INEVITABLE CONSEQUENCE of believing in the healing and redeeming Power of Almighty God, despite any and al appearaces to the contrary.

      Bt we must develop great PATIENE, because God's understanding of Time is not the same as Ours. We think in terms of HOURS,, but He thinks in ters of MILLENNIA.

      Delete
  2. I hapened to run across this article Franco. Surely this is what many of us are thinking as we observe the deteriorating human condition in America and around the world.

    Have a great Christmas.

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    Replies
    1. Yes, Kid. The article may seem an odd choice for a Christmas Eve presentation, but from my perspective it couldn't mpre cleary indicate our desperate need to return to First Principles (GOD) if it spelled out that message in big red letters.

      I don't belleve God is easily found through literal interpreation of the Scriptures, but more by continually searching for ways we as individuals may increase ur understanding of how we may best express Truth and Love in every deed and transaction we make however trival it may seem.

      None of us has the power to save the world, but we DO have the power to decide how we CHOOSE to RESPOND to the world –– and therein lies our Salvation.

      Giving way to cynicism, disgust and fear –– always a temptation –– is NOT an option, if we hope to serve God, as I believe He would like us to do

      A very Merry Chrstmas to you and yours, Kid.

      Delete
  3. THIS WAS WRITTEN IN RESPONSE to a POSTED ARTICLE at AOW'S BLOG WHICH PRESENTED, I THOUGHT, A TOO NEGATIVE INTERPRETATION of WHY WE CELEBRATE CHRISTMAS. I THANK Cbkitys, WHOEVER HE or SHE MAY BE for PROVIDING MUCH NEEDED INSPBIRATION for the FOLLOWING

    Cbkitys [emended and extended by Franco]

    I'm sorry but God did not send His Son inti the world, because humanity had committed any crimes.

    When a child disobeys a parent you don't call it a crime. Jesus came to rescue us from the consequences of the sins we commit constantly, but largely out of ignorance,fear., and lack of faith in the SUPREMACY of GOODNESS.

    God did this out of LOVE to show us the Way to free ourselves, as individuals, from our worst instincts.

    God warned Adam and Eve that if they ate fruit from the forbidden tree they would suffer and die.

    We know Eve was tempted by the Serpent, and utimately Adam succumbed to her blandishments, and disobeyed. As a result Death and Decay came into the world. Consequently, Corruption, Compulsion, and all things undesirable causing misery through Avarice, Dissension, Dishonesty and excessive Self-Indulgence entered the world.

    These things are the consequences of humanity's stubborn determination to have its own way. They are not a punishment.

    Innocence was lost, and that forcd the First Couple to leave Paradise. God then told Adam he would have to till the soil while Eve would bring forth children in pain.

    However, out of Love, He also told them he would send a Savior

    We know Jesus is that Savior whose perfect Example has the power to rescue us from our self-destructive proclivities, and brings us back, as enlightened individuals to unity with the Father, Son and Holy Ghost.

    All of us will ultimately choose the judgment we deserve by how we live our lives. If we do our best to live in the Spirit of Love –– and never count the cost –– as Jesus taught by Example, we have the best chance of achieving Eternal Life and Perpetual Bliss wth Our Father who art in Heaven.

    Yes God is our judge but he also is merciful. Jesus came into the world not to condemn the world to demonstrate that LOVE is all powerful, –– more powerful even than Death ––, and that LOVE and ONLY LOVE is the FULFILLING of GOD's LAW.

    God gave us Free Will, because He knows that no virtuous act has any value –– or any meaning ––, unless it is performed willingly, wholeheartedly and with no thought of how it may effect our fortunes, and our personal preferences.

    God wants us to be GOOD, but only because WE, ourselves, have each decided we sincerely WANT to be GOOD.

    MERRY ..*.. CHRISTMAS!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Franco,
      I'm sorry but God did not send His Son inti the world, because humanity had committed any crimes.

      Crimes? I go with "sins." But sins can be considered crimes against God, I suppose.

      While I believe good works are the evidence of faith, I hold the more orthodox belief that salvation comes by faith alone -- because we cannot do enough good works to be able to stand before God on the basis of our own righteousness. Instead, we will be able to stand before God on the basis of His Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, the perfect sacrifice for our sins. Jesus is both the perfect Example and the propitiation for our sins.

      Yes, we should WANT to be GOOD, but we can never be good enough.

      Matters related to the spiritual world, the world of God the Three in One, inhabits is complicated and will remain a mystery until we cross over to that side.

      Thus I believe and have believed for about 1/2 century -- and none of what I believe takes away from the idea of a Merry Christmas.

      Delete
    2. I certainly respect your right to believe as you see fit. That freedom is one of THE foundng principles on which this country was built.

      I DO NOT BELIEVE IT EVER DESIRABLE –– OR EVEN POSSBLE ––– to FORCE OTHERS to BELIEVE ANYTHING. Conversion on pain of death is about as ungodly as anythng could get.

      The Mediaeval Church of Rome was frankly EVIL in many of the ways it chose to brong about "social control" through rigid conformity to dogma brought about by torture and murder –– or the ever-present threat thereof..

      We must teach by EXAMPLE if we're to have any hope of converting another to our point of view.

      Frankly I think many of our differences may be largely semantical.

      Delete
    3. Franco,
      The Mediaeval Church of Rome was frankly EVIL in many of the ways it chose....

      No doubt! Perfectly illustrates the dangers of the union of church and state.

      Delete
    4. A THOUGHT:

      If SIN were synonymous with CRIME, wouldn't every one of us be at risk of ending up in PRISON?

      <];^}>

      Delete
    5. Yes!

      And that's why we need a Savior as a substitute sacrifice for us.

      Delete
  4. THIS FOUND THIS MORNING at the DRUDGE REPORT SEEMS MUCH IN ACCORD WITH WHAT WE ARE TRYING to CONVEY. I CALL IT "GOOD NEWS!"

    Joy From Giving Lasts Much Longer Than Joy From Getting, Study Shows

    by Terra Marquette

    CHICAGO — In this season of giving and getting, the findings are in. It is more blessed to give than to receive.

    According to two new studies conducted by researchers with the University of Chicago and Northwestern University, giving to others rather than to ourselves makes us happier.

    Have you ever noticed that your enjoyment in a repeated activity or event decreases over time no matter how wonderful it is? When this happens, you are experiencing what researchers call hedonic adaptation. The joy of having our own desires met is always fleeting. Perhaps surprisingly, however, giving to others creates a more lasting happiness.

    “If you want to sustain happiness over time, past research tells us that we need to take a break from what we’re currently consuming and experience something new,” says study co-author Ed O’Brien, of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, in a release from the Association for Psychological Science. “Our research reveals that the kind of thing may matter more than assumed: Repeated giving, even in identical ways to identical others, may continue to feel relatively fresh and relatively pleasurable the more that we do it.”

    In the first experiment, 96 college student participants were given $5 each day for five days. The students were told to spend the money on exactly the same thing each day. Some of the participants were randomly assigned to spend the money on themselves, while some were assigned to spend the money on others — maybe an online donation to the same charity each day or even cash placed in a tip jar at the same café.

    Participants self-reported at the end of each day how they felt about the money they had spent, and how they rated their overall happiness. ...

    (Concluded at the Drudge Report)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Merry Christmas Franco. May the Spirit of this most Glorious Season fill you and your readership with Wonder and Contentment.

    Also here's to a healthy and prosperous New Year.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, and the same to you. We work toward those ends most of the time, ATP.

      Success, however, comes slowly –– often over decades, if at all.

      The important thing is to KEEP TRYING –– no matter what.

      Delete

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