The special link between pessimistic thought and utopian thought comes
to light in various aspects and ways, as in both traditions a special place
is saved for "the hope Principe".(1) The hope principle is manifested in
every aspect of the world and at the same time is also the impetus to creation
of conditions of thought and life. It is the immanent characteristic of
transcendence from the reality of a given system. In Western cultural
history, human life was traditionally conceived as looking for its erotic
realization in true knowledge as creative desire. The dialectic of desire
and creativity, of totality and nothingness is the Western maxim of maxims.
In this article, I will present three moments that constitute these
dialectics in Western culture, moments that in each historical stage have
different specific formations.
Being that is concretized through human Spirit is
manifesting itself as co-existence between any question and all possible
answers in all discourses. Spirit constitutes different realms of common
self-evidence of different speech communities that are empowered and at
the same time manipulated by systems which dwell in every realm of common
self-evidence. Each realm of common self-evidence is able to produce more
than one system and its related ideologies. It is possible for man to replace
one ideology with another: aggressive symbolic exchange is part of their
coexistence.
At the same time a struggle is also taking
place, with its social, economic and military representations. The polemos
is immanent to the ideological struggle. Admissions and changes of heart
are possible and do occur daily in between the orisons of the system where
this symbolic exchange is taking place. But it is impossible to depart
from one realm of common self-evidence to another.
This is so since realms of common self-evidence
are closed and totally strange to each other. And yet all realms of self-evidence
and their systems are nothing but manifestations and servants of (alienated
human) Spirit. Like the Greek Moira or Schopenhauer's Will, Being as human
Spirit has no aim, meaning or ground, other than the ones manufactured
by the powers that govern the ideological systems and through which
the people are also manipulated. Yet human Spirit is no absolute reason,
omnipotence, goodness and beauty, as in traditional metaphysics, nor in
Schopenhauer's "will" as substance: Spirit and its attached systems are
materialized and advanced by human desire and creativity and are being
reproduced in concrete cultural and social conditions. At the same time
it is being objectivized, alienated and transcended from human consciousness,
and it becomes the womb of the absolute.
Human beings are creations of their systems.
But they are the ones who reproduce systems that govern them, empower them,
restrain them and enrich their potentials of self-realization. As prisoners
of his constitutive systems, man acts that way in this magic circle while
fighting the representatives of rival ideological systems, developing and
consuming his present system and replacing it with another system that
will master him. In modernity this textual process is called progress.
But yet, sometimes the system suffers
a sudden invasion of something totally different and alien to man's realm
of common self-evidence. Once in a while it ruins the realm of common self-evidence
and leaves nothing of it but wreckage and forgotten desires and creations.
That power is an abandoned part of Spirit and yet is antagonistic to its
permanent realization in the realms of common self-evidence and their ever
reproduction. This power is called hope, and it is an anti-power.
Hope is an activity that turns its look to
what is bound by the present realm of common self-evidence that constitutes
the given reality and strives to transcendence from the given orisons of
reality. On the one hand, these orisons (and what they incorporate) are
enabling the constitution of any question. On the other hand, the present
orisons are incubating the germ of possibility of transcending the question
and of its annihilation through its collision with the perfect answer.
This is the hope for a perfect answer. This is the hope for a perfect answer
for all questions, for the end. The erotic hope for a total different tanatos
is carried on the shoulders of possibility, while turning to an un-realized
world outside the realm of determined vain.
The question that strives for its answer is
reflecting man's eternal home-seeking back to harmonious totality,
to nothingness; it is one of the manifestations of hope. There it
carries the question away. Hope is actualizing itself that way as
a concrete negation, an (anti-) political power.
Any question - including the questions of
those Philosophers that declared themselves as "pessimists" - is symbolizing
the hope for the constitution of true meaning, knowledge that is folded
in the supreme answer to all possible questions, even if it is extremely
remote and its topos is surrounded by thick walls made of skepticism and
self-evidence. Symbols of its existence are reflected not so much in the
maximalistic utopias as in the pessimistic tradition: here the way to what
hope is seeking goes through the walls of the realm of common self-evidence,
breaking the consensus, and is a cord through which man can hope to pull
himself out of the place where he is situated.
One should note that hope is not synonymous
with optimism, and sometimes it is its diametrical opposite. That is, optimism
is emphasizing the confidence and belief in the final victory of the good
as part of its tendency to emphasize that the good is already present in
the present reality. Hope, on the contrary, is relieved of this trend;
it steers beyond reality. Through it, it seeks "home", seeking the Eden
orison, seeking for the being that strives to its eternal infinite
folded : only there will hope find its supreme existence, by its
complete annihilation.
Western utopian tradition is rich in structures
where optimism is very much emphasized. But there are structures where
optimism is completely absent, where hope alone is present and is enclosed
in a utopian setting. Such a utopia goes beyond the good-Evil dichotomy
into the Evil-vain dialectic. In this tradition the utopia does not look
for Eden as her home, since she remembers that the language of Eden contained
seeds of contradictions between human will and Godly imperatives: It was
a defected realm that carried with it the birth strain of a creation constituting
the dialectic of vain and Evil.
In Western culture, man is represented
as if he is framed in a world of suffering and never satisfying knowledge;
Faustian man is desperate between the hope for total knowledge/happiness
- even at the expense of pleasure - and the hope of being transcended back
"home". In many utopias "home" is a restoration of Eden or its secular
parallel. In others the quest back home is transformed to optimism as to
the possibility of reasonable reforms. To still other utopias, back "home"
will constitute a retreat from the public sphere to the individual one,
where meaning, if not happiness, can be hoped for, striven for. But to
our mind, all Western utopias are united in their quest for what is beyond
the Edenic infinity, and being optimistic to the possibility of progress
in the project of re-building the "Babylon tower" alternative, a "tower"
whose infinite peak is reaching "heaven.
Optimism, as is reflected in the religious
quest for the self-evidence realm (redemption) or its secular version (realization
of utopia), is looking for something that is in the opposite direction
to its presence in the pattern of linear time: the nothingness. As Metaphysical
Pessimism has shown, only total nothingness is able to constitute the un-pre-sent
harmony for which Utopia is starring with no reservations.
For the "prisoners of hope" (Zachary 9, 12), until this meeting the
world (as an unsolved riddle) is looked upon as a jail, but also a ladder
on which man can strive to climb, step by step. Traditionally, in Western
culture, the "steps" were made of corpses of equations that were slotted
by deadly answers.
Utopia is felt in the philosophical longing
for the end of this entire problematic. This problematic has two manifestations:
real knowledge and the form of the human desire for power. Power enables
the desire to organize knowledge and constitute proper social possibilities
and structures that will be synonymous with human essence as transcendence
of good and Evil. True knowledge (which to our mind, is impossible outside
the context of social and symbolic power) is a pre-condition of a revolution
that will realize the utopic hope. At the same time, the realization of
utopia is the pre-condition of true knowledge. Therefore, inevitable, a
pessimistic dimension dwells in the heart of any utopia.
From one side, Pessimism is manifesting that
every progress is a vain progress, and many will never reach the essence
of being nor real knowledge and happiness. On the other hand, man already
knows (from the wrong arguments) that the way to real nothingness is blocked,
and so, pessimism is enabling and expressing the hope, the longing for
confiscating the lost totality, and he finds it in the world he negates
as part of defining a proper Philosophical Anthropology.
The dialectic of pessimism and utopia is incubating
hope. Both are enlightened by the totality that dwells beyond the (present)
orisons, and both are bound to transcend the present by its total negation.
Pessimism is directed towards the complete annihilation of life as a problematic
in the infinity of the un-ending that knows its impossibility. Utopia is
directed towards the total pacification of all contradictions in an un-ending
compoundness. The moral fire is shared by the two traditions and, in principle,
both traditions can share a common ethic and criticize the same moral alternatives
in a present that both share its negation. Both pessimists and utopists
will argue that the present reality is a foul existence, an unreal
one, and they will strive to overcome actuality or at least they will struggle
to transcend themselves out of its vain.
In this article, we will try to show that
since Heinrich Heine and his speech community and until the Philosophy
of Max Horkheimer, Pessimism is constituted as an autonomous positive concept,
a concept that does not pinpoint the absence of "the good". While challenging
optimism and being in conflict with the concept of utopia, pessimism is
not the negation of utopia, but the adversary of optimism. This is true
not only for the concept of pessimism, but also for the concept of utopia.
Utopia, we will argue, is not tied exclusively to optimism, as we will
show through the reconstruction of the history of this idea.
The first modern appearing of the word optimism
was in 1737, and just after the approval by the French academy in 1762,
the common meaning of the word optimism was used regularly, extrapolating
the meaning that Condorcet and the rationalists have given the concept,
namely: a belief in an un-ending progress. The word optimism occurred already
in the 16th century in the frame of a linear concept of time and the concept
of progress. In this article we will try to show that today, in the
face of postmodernism, it is the reconstruction of the dialectic of pessimism
and utopism that might constitute a locus for the continuous battle on
the possibility of criticizing reality, transcending it and holding on
to the utopian project of the Enlightenment.
The concept of pessimism(2) is almost completely
absent from current Philosophical discourse. Practically, an entire Philosophical
tradition was expelled from the history of Culture, a tradition that was
for a while, in the center of European Philosophical discourse. We
will emphasize to what extent the problematic of the pessimist tradition
is relevant not only to Western ongoing dialogue, but also to our present
day reflections.
With the assimilation of the word pessimism
in the conventional usage, it eroded that special Philosophical discourse
that declared itself as pessimistic. To the best of our knowledge, while
considering the tremendous effort in the dissertation industry, a Doctorate
reconstructing the history of pessimism has not been written in the last
hundred years, nor have any other monographs on the subject. The most up-to-date
general work on the subject of the history of pessimism was written in
the 1880s.(3) Naturally, these writings lacked the proper perspective for
their evaluation and were unable to analyze later stages in the history
of pessimism. Our reconstruction is equipped with the perspective they
lacked. We live in an age where traditional philosophical concepts and
orientations have lost their strength. The dominating discourses of our
culture have other interests and hopes while we take part in this tradition,
unable to challenge its philosophical problematic. And yet, in accordance
with our theoretical interest, we will try to re-construct the pessimist
tradition. We will try to fulfill this task by denoting the richness and
the actuality of pessimism to the problems and obligations we are facing
at the present time.
The current attitude is typically exemplified
by L. Loemeker who wrote on the issue of pessimism in the American Philosophical
Encyclopedia: "Pessimism and its opposite, optimism, are only secondarily
philosophical theories or convictions; primarily they are personal
opinions or attitudes, often widely prevalent, about the relative Evil
or goodness of the world or men's experience of the world. As such they
vary with the temperaments and value experiences of individuals, and with
cultural situations far more than with philosophical traditions".(4) Even
among those few who have bothered themselves with the issue, it has been
common to think that since the beginning of the century, there has been
no life in the pessimistic tradition. This is the case of Ludwig Marcuse(5)
and Beata Szymanska who wrote that "The modernist dispute over pessimism
is now a historical sand antiquated discussion".(5)
The dominant attitude of the resent generations
to the problematic of the concept of pessimism is already manifested in
the view according to which pessimism denotes the Evil essence of this
world and claims that it would have been better if it would not exist.(7)
This definition suits the Philosophy of Schopenahauer, but it does not
fit and even contradicts other pessimistic philosophies, like that of Nietzsche.
The quintessence of Nietsche's project is the affirmation of life and saying
yes and accepting the sufferings of this world.
We will offer some central innovations; the
first, by the very re-construction of the history of pessimism, the second
in our emphasizing the special role that utopia plays in the history of
pessimism, and the third by opening to discussion the main problems that
were discussed in the history of (Western) pessimism in light of its last
stage, in the center of the postmodern discourse.
We will try to re-construct the history of
pessimism while using two criteria: those thinkers who saw themselves
as pessimists and declared their philosophy as such, and those whose thought
was claimed to be pessimistic by declared pessimists, even if they themselves
did not see their philosophy as a pessimistic one. Such a re-construction
of the issue should have synchronic and diachronic dimensions. This is
so because of the specific historical dressing the pessimist discourse
wears on itself in each speech community.
In contrast to the standard reservation, according
to which pessimism is the negation of optimism,(8) we will present it here
as a fruitful positive, autonomous concept. In contrast to the arguments
declaring that the tradition of modern Pessimism has entered its grave,(9)
already in the beginning of the 20th century we will show its permanency
and denote its relevancy to our current philosophical discussion, especially
in light of present declarations of "the end of history" and "the end of
Philosophy".
In this article we will present six chapters
in the development of modern pessimism:
1. "Lyrical Pessimism"' that saw the world as "Evil" by its substance.
2. "Philosophical Pessimism", or as it is sometimes called, "metaphysical
Pessimism", where the discourse is a Philosophical one by its nature and
by its rhetoric.
3. "Dyionisic Pessimism"' that Nietzsche has presented as an alternative
to traditional "Philosophical Pessimism".
4. "Cultural Pessimism" (Kulturpessimismus) that, in contrast to Nietzsche's
project, did not see itself as the big corrector of Metaphysical Pessimism,
and concentrated itself on the psychological, historical and artistic dimensions
of human existence. Here reality was conceived as what was called "Evil"
in the traditional jargon. The common assumption was that there is no crack
through which human society can transcend itself from the present
worldly reality.
5. The "Metaphysical Pessimism" of Critical Theory that turned back
to the tradition of Metaphysical Pessimism trough the utopian project.
6. The Indifferent Pessimism that characterizes the era that is sometimes
called postmodern. We will try to show to what extent this discourse is
loaded with pessimistic assumptions and conclusions, while trying to formulate
a tranquil, liberated and good-natured easygoing attitude. Against their
public relations produced image, the projects of Foucault, Derrida, Lyotard,
Rorty and their epigons are but a continuation of Leopardi, Heine and Schopenhauer,
not to mention Anaximander, Hegesias and the other pessimists of antiquity.
The first usage of the word "pessimism" can
be attributed to Christoph Lichtenberg in 1776. In the first volume of
Schopenhauer, The World as an will and as an Idea (1819), the concept
did not yet appear, and even in the second volume that was published in
1844, the word appears only three times. Nevertheless, in that time were
shaped the basic formulations of what was called afterward "Metaphysical
Pessimism" or "Philosophical Pessimism".
The constitution of a Philosophy that declared
itself as pessimist in late Schopenhauer gave new life to some of the ideas
that were held before by the Lyrical pessimists. Before opening the
main problematic of the philosophers who declared themselves as pessimists,
we should present some characteristics of the composition of Lyrical Pessimism,
that constituted the first stage in the development of modern pessimism.
Until today the big confusion towards
the typology of pessimism continues, and it comes to light very clearly
in the current reception of Lyrical Pessimism, which is described as anchored
in the mental constitution of poets and not in their conception of the
world and the word.(9) As others, Paul Siveck presents the Lyrical
Pessimism of Leopardi, Byron, Baudelaire and Heine as "nothing but the
pathetic confirmation of the Evil of this world, a desperate cry of anguish
of the tortured soul".(10)
The Lyrical Pessimism of Heine, as that of
Byron, Baudelaire, Leopardi, Tolstoy and Kafka, has close ties to the weltschmerz
of early romantics. This moment in his thought caused many problems to
those evaluating him as a pessimist. The weaknesses of the traditional
categorization in the history of pessimism and the urgent need to start
this work from its very beginning is obvious even here: not just that from
those texts dealing with pessimism, the utopic dimension is completely
absent, even the categorization of the thinkers that inhabit these categories
is totally unacceptable to our mind. Heine's case can demonstrate it clearly.
On three levels the utopic dimension
presents itself in Heinrich Heine's work.
A. Heine, as other melancholic thinkers of Lyrical Pessimism, was extremely
occupied by the search for private salvation. These pessimists were
poeting the demand for total transcendence from the bourgeoisie reality
to undisturbed freedom and liberated creation, that in the given reality
are impossible. Pessimism opened for them a crack for this transcendence,
or, at least, gave them the opportunity of struggling for transcendence
that is ultra utopic, on the one hand, and constitutes the conceptual conditions
for Lyrical Pessimism, on the other hand. After all, utopism too is nothing
less than a struggle for transcendence from repressive reality through
its radical re-construction, an effort that is constituted through a total
pessimism as to the possibilities of essential change in the frame of the
present conditions.
B. The second level on which the utopic dimension in Heine's thought
is presenting itself is in the assimilation of the kernel of the Jewish
redemptive tradition in his secularized utopianism in which the Germans
were supposed to become its supreme manifestation. According to Heine,
the German denotation of the spirit crystallizes "the great intimacy that
dwells between these two nations, the Jews and the Germans," as if they
were chosen together for the mission of building the new Jerusalem - in
Germany. This locus was supposed to turn into "the homeland of Philosophy,
the fort of prophesy and the castle of pure spirit".(11)
C. The third level manifests itself through Heine's work as the partner
to the young Marx's way. His utopianism realized itself by the demand for
social justice, freedom and equality and in the belief that the proletarian
revolution might realize these ideals. His Pessimism, in contrast, was
manifested in his conviction that the revolution, any revolution, is determined
to be reduced by the cancellation and negation of the supreme human
value: the beauty that the great artistic works are containing. He identified
with the communist utopia but could not believe in the social possibility
of its realization by the proletariat that caused the poets fear for the
future of bourgeoisie culture while dooming the bourgeoisie social reality.
As a pessimist he stood still in his quest for ideal general redemption
or concrete private salvation, and for it he needed the rhetoric of the
general positive utopia.
The research literacy that categorized Heine
as a Lyrical Pessimist, exposing in his work an emotion that protests against
the supremacy of Evil in the world, did unjustly ignore the centrality
of Heine's utopian dimension in his thought. The traditional evaluations
of Heine as a Lyrical Pessimist ignore two main trends that distinguish
him from this tradition or that show to what a degree this labeling is
helpless: first, these evaluations treat Heine as "a poet" and ignore him
as a social critic. Disenchanting Evil's presence in the world in this
case cannot exhaust itself in describing his mental condition, but should
be developed into a re-construction of the concrete and real components
and tendencies in the society and culture against which and from which
the thinker is struggling. Heine preceded many social critics and even
Marx - who some take into account as a pessimist(12) and some see
as a typical Kulturpessimist thinker(13) - in exposing and evaluating Bourgeoisie
Society and culture and in denoting the centrality of issues like
the fetish of merchandise.(14)
Secondly, for Heine, as for Nietzsche, life
stands beyond everything else - pure life, sensual life, worldly life.
He sanctified life in a Godless world and preceded Nietzsche in declaring
that God is dead. From Heine's view, the recognition of the death of God
does not leave man with no purpose - he has a purpose: to be his own master.
However, unlike Nietzsche, in Heine's work, by being liberated from God's
tyranny, man is also deprived of his strength. In Heine we can identify
a special coexistence between a Pessimist dimension and a utopian dimension,
like in his poem A Winter's Tale in which the world as "this earthly vale
of tears" meets "a newer song, a better song, my friends, let's to birth
now! we shall proceed right here to build the kingdom of heaven on earth
now".(15)
The manifestations of Heine's utopism in his
work does not negate his pessimism; on the contrary, it exposes his original
pessimism and shows him as a pessimist. His point of departure was the
longing for the lost totality, and all of his work is but an outpouring
of a quest for a total merger with the beloved other, nature or God. As
for Heine, Evil's substratum was in the very individuation Principe. Evil
is conceived as based in the essence of being and time, for a person that
is being deprived of the realm of the self understood that governs innocence.
His affirmation of life in "pictures from a journey" is saying "yes" to
life and is an affirmation of it just as "a shadow of a dream". Just as
such and as a poetic battle, life is seen by Heine as preferable to death.
Heine's religious concept of revolution is
to be understood only within the framework of his pessimism. Taking part
in the other's sufferings is Heine's thought as the highest level of love,
and from here he demands the revolution and he wants to be her herald
and her son - and not from an optimistic conception as for the possibilities
open to progress: history does not hold for humanity any essential
transformation. Self- humor and utopism were for him an instrument to overcome
"the sameness" that was created as a determined by-product of the total
erosion into fragmented beings, individual things. From this concept he
was driven to different ways of "retiring back home", between yearning
for madness and death through a longing for re-merging in harmonious infinity
and eternity. There is ground for the claim according to which Heine should
be seen as Schopenhauer's predecessor who had an important influence on
poets and writers in the second half of the 19th century that are not regularly
counted as part and parcel of Lyrical Pessimism.
Seven years before the publication of Schopenhauer's
the world as a will and as an idea, Giacomo Leopardi died, a thinker whose
pessimism is far more radical than that of Schopenhauer. Leopardi's pessimism
is grounded in a deep philosophy that was forgotten. Leopardi, who today
is famous primarily as a poet, did not occupy himself mainly with
prose. He occupied himself for quite a long time with the philosophical
pessimism and Philosophy in general as his main field of interest, work
that was forgotten with the expulsion of the pessimistic tradition as a
living memory that challenges the conventions of our present realm of self-evidence.
Leopardi's pessimism is important also for
the understanding of the history of utopism in the sense that, counter
to the utopism of Babiff, Bouneroti and Marx on the one side, and that
of Turgot, Condorcet, Pain, Fristly, Franklin and Jefferson, on the other
side, there are standing conservatives like Edmund Burk, but also conservative
pessimists and radical anti-conservatives who do not negate only the traditional
religion and current social structure: they negate with no reservation
whatsoever even metaphysical and political optimism of "right" and
"left".
According to Leopardi, "everything is vain"
and "it was better for the world not to exist," and the religions, philosophies
and theories are all determined to be no more then illusions, illusions
that at their best are potent enough to cause temporal pleasure. Indeed
his Philosophy has no special status for that matter. In contrast to Schopenhauer,
who tried to present in his philosophy "the thing in itself", Leopardi
knew that it is impossible to transcend from the existing orisons of the
present realm of common self-evidence. Leopardi knew that it is possible
to avoid illusions just by replacing them with other illusions, and "the
thing in itself" always stays as an unsolved "misterium" constituting the
human salvation as an unbeatable illusion. The utmost the wise can make
out of himself is heroic tragedy. And yet, he avoids smashing the
prejudices of those who still walk confidently in the total darkness. That
is so because illusions ("truth" and "love" included) provide them at least
missions and (vain) pleasures. Leopaldi avoids choosing an egoistic escape
by committing suicide, and he chooses to continue suffering the tragic
burden in which his wisdom is translated to a moral practice that is based
in extreme relativism and explosive skepticism. Paradoxically, this awareness
is providing the ungrounded substratum which creates the sense for this
philosophical discourse that provides for life purpose in the midst of
vain existence.
In 1844 Philosophical Pessimism appeared for
the first time in Schopenhauer's texts, and the second chapter in the history
of the tradition that we are re-constructing was clearly opened. According
to Leibniz, this world is the best of all possible worlds, and Evil is
totally absent in such a world. Leibniz grounded his concept of optimism
in his theodizea. Schopenhauer orchestrated his thought through the total
negation of this Leibnizian idea.
According to Schopenhauer, our world is a
place where the good is absent.(16) The world is but a manifestation of
the aimless and meaningless "will" that can only ensure suffering.
That is so because happiness, that stemming from a temporal satisfying
of the will, is nothing but an illusion: an introduction to an additional
dissatisfaction or untenable boredom. The essence of existence constitutes
being as Evil, "Valley of tears".(17) The negation of the will and
an uncompromising demand for self-nullification were for him the way for
re-claiming man's place in this world, the salvation of the pessimist's
soul.(18) The crack in the cosmic closure through which Schopenhauer managed
to re-claim solidarity in a "terrible" world is not positive love, like
in the Christian tradition. On the contrary, the disgrace to the world
(Weltverachtung) is similar to the tragic heroism that afterwards characterized
Spengler's thought.
While claiming that all the arguments against
suicide are very weak, Schopenhauer denounced suicide, even if life was
conceived by him as "vain in its nature" and "a comedy". After all, he
tried to save Christian morals with its center: "the cross is the
real aim and the true purpose of life". In suicide he saw a manifestation
of egoism, a manifestation of the will over which he was not aiming in
this project for its upper hand, but on the contrary, its distraction.
Schopenhauer changed the course of the tradition of conceiving "the thing
in itself" and "essence" in the West from a category that presented the
reality of the perfect and the eternal (and therefore also "the good")
to its diametrical opposite: he showed that the highest being, the most
real, the metaphysical essence on which the philosophical tradition in
the West based itself was its desire for truth (the absolute) which is
not also "the good".
The absolute, he argued, is the Will, and
the Will to life is Evil since existence is his incarnation and can't constitute
anything but suffering. This will, argued Schopenhauer, is a blind will,
with no aim, mission or meaning. No wonder that Nietzsche and Freud
saw in Schopenhauer the starting point of their projects. What Marx looked
for in man, who has an authentic will and potential for spontaneous creation
in the future solidarity society, Schopenhauer identified as present in
the endless struggle of the overcoming of the will. Then, and only then,
claimed Schopenhauer, will solidarity between people be real: it will not
be valid just for man, it will be directed to nothing less then the entire
cosmos, for sharing the other's sufferings also includes animals, plants
and other manifestations of the will to life.
The struggle for transcendence from repressive
reality/illusion of reality is common to both thinkers. Marx departs from
loyalty to the concept of progress and the ideas of Enlightenment, and
Schopenhauer from the total negation of these conceptions. The Utopia of
the maximal pacification of the will and emphasis on the surplus
of suffering over pleasure in this world by Schopenhauer before the utopia
of "human suffering" in the society that liberated itself in Marx's vision
of a possible future society denotes the common characteristics between
these two radical philosophers. At the same time, it crystallizes the immanent
link between pessimism and utopia in general.
Marx, like Schopenhauer, did not cancel the
possibility of transcendence from the ruling of sufferings: "The appropriation
of human reality"(19)... "is human effectiveness and suffering, understood
in the human sense, is enjoyment of the self for man".(20) Marx continued
the utopist tradition that strives for the conclusion of Man's riddle within
the framework of the good society that can be developed in the future,
when society will mature and will be rational. Schopenhauer presented a
different utopian structure, that is independent of confidence in rationality
and is not evaluating the individual through social structures and categories.
Both projects are ontologically-centered, and in both projects hope is
central. For Schopenhauer, the suffering of the individual is what constitutes
the yardstick for Evil, and this is equally valid for the Marxist utopia.
And yet, Schopenhauer thought that an opportunity for transcendence to
total appeasement is open. The avoidance of the will is identified by him
as the open possibility of avoiding devotion to the will and to life in
general, and is first of all the overcoming of the will that is constituting
the individual.
This overcoming of the will by the individual
is problematic in Schopenhauer's Philosophy, since he conceives the self
not as an essence, but as an illusion. How could an illusion overcome the
essence that constitutes it? Is it not another manifestation of the strange
ways the will plays by constituting man's illusions? Schopenhauer based
his hope Principe on the strength of illusions.
The evasion from the will's hold is possible,
according to Schopenhauer, in authentic art that constitutes an objective
dimension, free of the presence of the self. Still, this evasion is not
given: it is an object for striving. Schopenhauer did not see that through
this crack the self is triumphing; the individual signifies himself
through it by and for his consciousness which is nothing but another mask
of the will. Beings cannot overcome being itself. For us it is of special
importance to denote this link between pessimism and utopia in his thought.
The one is not canceling the other. While acknowledging that consistent
utopism which is free of the pessimistic dimension is free of this problematic
that we reconstruct in Schopenhauer's thought in his Philosophy, there
is a special contribution to the history of pessimism. His individualistic
utopism is more radical than that of the social utopism of Marx. While
being individualistic and idealistic, his utopism contains a cosmic mission,
a true partnership in the course of compassion with the other and with
the entire nature.
The history of pessimism since Schopenhauer
till Nietzsche developed in accordance with two programs: the one pole
was a scientific one, the other an existentialist pole. Both tendencies
were unsuccessful in being liberated from the category of suffering as
the essential characteristic of life. For thinkers of the first pole, we
will show the utopian dimension in its positive social side. As for thinkers
of the second pole, we will show how the utopian dimension is prominent
in the individual context, an individual that strives for total transcendence
from the sufferings that characterize this world. Eduard von Hartman can
be their representative.
As a counter-reaction to the historicist crisis(21)
and from within it, von Hartman tried to combine the Philosophical Pessimism
with the Hegelian tradition and with the conquering conviction on the supremacy
of science as for the right to speak on behalf of the conceivable truth.
In contrast to the metaphysical discussion of Schopenhauer, von Hartman
pretended to justify and ground pessimism on a scientific substratum through
a psychological analysis of pessimism.(22)
In Kant he saw "the father of pessimism",
since Kant provided a solid base for morality and enlightened religion,
in contrast to the fragile aedemonological pessimism of Schopenhauer that,
according to von Hartman, did not have an ontological and even an epistemological
ground to his pessimism that streamed out of his private character and
personal sufferings. According to von Hartman, by constituting an autonomous
moral Philosophy, Kant practically negated any aedemonologism and pseudo-moral
egoism. By refusing any legitimacy from self-centered egoism, Kant included
(implicitly) in his Philosophy the conception of a possible positive happiness
in this world, since the quest for happiness and morality contradict each
other. Von Hartman argued that even God is a defected and suffering being.
Only the imperfection of God can explain the creation of such a world as
that we are suffering. This imperfection of God is the cause of human sufferings
and God's unhappiness, a God that is in no way the Omnipotent being described
by Christian tradition. Christianity tries to present God as an eternal,
self-sufficient and Omnipotent being, but, argued von Hartman, the eternity
of God's deed to realize the ideas makes transparent his essential vulnerability,
his immanent imperfection.(23)
The religiosity that von Hartman presents
is based on the tranquillity of a suffering God who is not Omnipotent,
all-powerful and all-knowing. Pessimism presents itself in von Hartman's
Philosophy as a new religion, as a perfection of Christianity, and from
that locus he demanded from Man the participation with God's suffering,(24)
in contrast to the concept of pietas and the participation with the other's
sufferings in Schopenhauer's Philosophy. The Philosophical Pessimism, von
Hartman claimed, teaches us that along human progress it is possible to
overcome suffering, external suffering, but it is impossible to overcome
internal suffering that is caused by being itself, like the Hegelian concept
of ontological entfremdung.
In contrast to Schopenhauer's pessimism, the
pessimism of von Hartman does not exclude and negate the concept of progress,
a concept that was so vital to the modern utopism. According to von Hartman,
suffering can transform its forms and bring Humanity to higher moral levels
of suffering, and this is the only possible redemption of Humanity that
Philosophical Pessimism can offer.
Philipp Mainlaender and Julius Bhansen, Schopenhauer's
students, can serve as representatives of Existentialist pessimism.
While Mainlaender, like Keirkegaard, denoted the centrality of suffering
not just in a historical, religious and Philosophical context, but first
of all in an existential context, his conclusions differ.(25)
Mainlaender manifested that in the absence
of suffering, thought is impossible. The condition for an answer is the
traumatic existence of a troubling question, the world as a problematic,
existence as suffering. Those drowned in self-satisfaction and life in
cosmic happiness are unable to bear any new question nor any new answer,
and they are particularly incapable of creation and self-consciousness.
Self-creation through the struggle of self-consciousness is constituted
through suffering in the face of the estrangement of the world: the brutal
fact of its being not myself, or me not being God. Suffering, in such a
case, is constituting the world for man-- and enables human
consciousness. Life, according to Mainlaender, is nothing but a constant
struggle to minimize human suffering and its distraction as, for example,
in the effort to trace the perfect answers to questions. The quest for
knowledge, which is a reminder of an unsolved world of questions, will
remain, that life would not continue to unfold as unending suffering.
As a modernist, Mainlaender acknowledged that
the way for the traditional Western and especially Enlightenment's utopia
is closed. It was an illusion toward which Western cultural history already
lost its innocence. It is impossible to retreat to innocent belief in the
religious redemption through God; there is no way back to the platonic
philosophical project of climbing the dialectical hill to the eternal ideas,
to knowledge and other utopias that practically promised transcendence
from this world. But Mainlander did not abandon their goal: death, that
they called real life. All unfolding of the will signifies, according to
Mainlaender, the quest for self-distraction, for nullification. This thesis
is ontologized through the thesis according to which the first and the
last deed of God was creating the dying world. (26a) By following Schopenhauer,
he explained this trend through the idea of nirvana: not as
a self overcoming suffering through Kirkegaardian humor, but through self-conscious
nullification, his consistent conclusion from the analysis of the concept
of "life".
For Schopenhauer the blind will to life is
suffering's substratum. For Mainlaender it is the will to die. The will,
in Mainlaender Philosophy, needs the strain between being and not being
in the world of illusion that strives to total nothingness. The omnipotence
that was traditionally attached to God is here attributed to the will,
that its only mission is nullification of life. But because the omnipotent
will is not omnipotent for itself, the transference from existence
to un-existence is full of antinomies and self-refutations. Presumably,
Mainlaender switches the religious idea of redemption through God with
the idea of the redemption of the will through its nullification.
For, in contrast to his master's Philosophy, not all the cosmos is the
manifestation of the will. God, or Karma, receives the form of buddy in
the entire cosmos, including its individual representations and contradictions,
and Mainlander himself is included. There is no way to decide in this matter,
since, according to Mainlaender, no Man can transcend himself from the
origins of solipsism, from his bare individuality. For him, the only reality
in his life is he himself, and his "self" is nothing but a locus of suffering.(26)
The consistent conclusion of his was
suicide, and Mainlaender realized his Philosophy a day after the publication
of his main book. He did not see himself as much of a prophet, and explicitly
he was not obliged to convince of the truth of his Philosophical Pessimism.
It was an existential decision that is un-communicable and is not reducible
to education in principle. But Mainlaender could not bear the suffering
of not writing. He could not overcome the need to stamp, to eternalize
his alternative, as he could not draw the features of the utopian
society where there is no suffering whatsoever and reality is completely
rational.
A more consistent pessimist was Julius Bahnsen.
He understood that there is no place, no hope for personal salvation, as
in Schopenhauer's version, or a universal one, like in von Hartman's version.
Even the consciousness to the impasse and the alternative of suicide that
Mainlaender suggested is irrelevant for him: there is no salvation from
actuality, and within being there is no open door for any hope(27), no
meaning to Utopia. Bahnsen's conclusion is paralyzing and is close to the
problematic facing the consistent skeptic.
Consistent skepticism, doubting everything
understood that if doubting all that is formulable is a must - and skepticism
included - then silence is the only possibility still open. But, unavoidable,
this too is a doubtful conclusion, and the skeptic can not avoid doubting
it as long as he continues to be a consistent skeptic. The conclusion must
be that it is impossible to be satisfied by silence in life; only the total
dumbness, death, is powerful enough to save the consistent skeptic from
the inconsistency of his system. Regardless of his desire to avoid any
system or dogma, his position is no less problematic since it too is nothing
but a dogma. Self-murder is looked at as the only consistent conclusion.
But even here we see the dogmatic chains which even the total skeptic is
unable to liberate himself from their Philosophical deadly grihicap.
That is so since he, more than any other Philosopher, is dogmatic in his
presupposition as to the reality of the metaphors in the present realm
of common self-evidence: the laws of logic, the permanency of the concepts
that re-present reality, that are loaded with clear meaning, that the skeptic
cannot help but accepting, as long as he is a septic.
It is the peak of his skepticism that the
consistent skeptic receives suicide as an unavoidable conclusion of skepticism
and turns out to be a dogmatist: he accepts self- murder as a conclusion
of his skepticism towards possibilities of justification of life. This
is skepticism towards concepts and conclusions that are regular citizens
of rational discourse, from cracking the very possibility of concluding
a discourse with conclusions that he is willing to pay the highest price
for what follows them. But in order to think - and the skeptic can not
avoid thinking - he must use these metaphors, he can not escape presupposing
what his conclusions nullify. What, if so, should the skeptic do if even
the silence he ordered himself, not even self-murder, are able to save
him from this aporia?
Mainlaender showed that as a skeptic turns
to become a pessimist, the suffering embodied in the skeptics will show
that the skeptics struggle, and wondering is nothing but a moment of the
grand manifestation of the ontology of existence in itself and for itself:
that Evil is immanent to life. He raises the question whether self-murder
will be the suitable answer to the skeptic's problem. This turns out to
be the only possible way of escaping the realm of repression of existing
symbols and metaphors, as if an outlet to Mainlaender's challenge to man's
sufferings and self-nullification was his answer to this challenge. By
doing it, Mainlaender showed to what extent he was a dogmatist, since a
more skeptical attitude would have opened for him the possibility of acknowledging
that in this track, it is impossible to prefer death over life, not even
the conclusion that one should commit suicide in a world where there is
no rational way to prove that life is better than death. Bahnsen found
in this pessimism the quintessence for a new morality. The master
of egoism and nullification of the private will to life as a ladder to
run away from the monad in which the individual is imprisoned is conditioned
in his Philosophy in the struggle of the moral deed in a world that can't
reward him for it, beside the very possibility of struggle. Friedrich Nietzsche,
who wondered about these questions, found the justification of the struggle
not by nullifying life, but by sanctifying life and adoring the will's
might.
Nietzsche's Philosophy is a turning point in the history of pessimism
and it opens the third stage of its development. As one who was "prompted
by some enigmatical desire, has long endeavored to go to the bottom of
the question of pessimism and free it from the half-Christian, half-German
narrowness and stupidity in which it has finally presented itself to this
century, namely, in the form of Schopenhauer's Philosophy"(28). He
turned the pessimist tradition from questions of suffering and Evil to
the values problematic. His contribution to pessimism - in comparison to
Schopenhauer - he defined as a crucial step forward. He presents
himself as Schopenhauer's preserver and de-constructor.(29) To our mind,
all his thought has to be re-evaluated according to this perspective.
In Schopenhauer's Philosophy, Nietzsche discovered
a substitute for the vision of a utopian alternative of "tragic culture",
of "the victory of wisdom on science" which is a victory over "Optimism"
in which he saw the substitute of the modern culture.(30) In Schopenhauer,
Nietzsche found the symbol of Tragic Utopianism: "We look in vain for one
single vigorous root, for one spot of fruitful healthy soil: Everywhere
dust, sand, torpidity, languor! Under such circumstances a cheerless solitary
wanderer could choose for himself no better symbol than the Knight with
Death and the Devil , as Duerer has sketched him to us - the mail-clad
knight, grim and stern of visage, who undisturbed by his gruesome companions,
yet without hope, pursues his terrible path with horse and hound, alone.
Our Schopenhauer was such a Duererian knight: he was destitute of all hope,
but he sought the truth. We have not his equal to-day".(31)
After a while Nietzsche detached himself from Schopenhauer's Philosophy,
but he did not deny his debt to Schopenhauer, the Philosopher in whose
Philosophy he believed to find "the earthquake by means of which a primeval
force that had been imprisoned for ages was finding vent".(32)
According to our reading of Nietzsche, one
should not accept Nietzsche's criticism of the pessimistic tradition(33)
as a retreat from Philosophical Pessimism, but on the contrary, a Nietzscheian
way of re-evaluating and developing pessimism.
According to our thesis, it is more fruitful to understand
Nietzsche through his position in the pessimistic tradition. One should
try understand Nietzsche's Philosophy as a reaction to the kind of pessimism
he annulled in the history of Western culture and as an alternative to
it. "Dyonisian pessimism", pessimism of power" he called his utopian alternative
to Schopenhauer's pessimism: "the last great event in the destiny of our
civilization".(34)
He himself describes the dyonisian dimension
in his thought as one that comes out of his challenging the Schopenhauerian
riddle: "At the same time I grasped that my instinct went into the opposite
direction from Schopenhauer's: toward a justification of life, even at
its most terrible , ambiguous, and mendacious; for this I had the formula
'Dionysian'. Against the theory that an 'in-itself of things' must necessarily
be good, blessed, true, and one, Schopenhauer's interpretation of the 'in-itself'
as will was an essential step; but he did not understand how to defy this
will: he remained entangled in the moral-Christian ideal. Schopenhauer
was still so much subject to the domination of Christian values that, as
soon as the thing-in-itself was no longer 'God' for him, he had to see
it as bad, stupid, and absolutely reprehensible. He failed to grasp that
there can be an infinite variety of ways of being different, even of being
god".(35)
In contrast to the "powerless values", like
"life negation", Nietzsche ordered the nullification of everything that
is "Spirit" and humbles and is affirmation of the desire for "strong sensations"
(36). This, as an alternative for compassion, pity and concern for the
other that Schopenhauer called for, was represented by Nietzsche as more
dangerous and Evil than any malice.
In contrast to traditional moral values
and ways of evaluating values that after all Schopenhauer accepted and
became "a world-denier"(37), Nietzsche called for affirmation of "strong
sensations"(38) and mighty experiences.
Like many other German thinkers, Nietzsche
saw in classic Greek the exemplary model. But the Greece to which Nietzsche
referred was not the Periclesian Greek, the amiable Greece of Socrates,
Plato and Aristotle's, but the Homeric Greece "when mankind was not yet
ashamed of its cruelty, life in the world was brighter than it is nowadays
when there are pessimists".(39) "Nowadays, when suffering is always trotted
out as the first argument against existence, as its most sinister query,
it is well to remember the times when men judged on converse principles
because they could not dispense with the infliction of suffering, and saw
therein a magic of the first order, a veritable bait of seduction to life".(40)
Nietzsche longed for the returning of tragic life from that kind, but longed
for it as a modernist and as a philosopher with no positive-restorative
Utopia, where the ideal human model is supposed to be reproduced. Therefore,
in the returning of real life, he conceived of the idea of life as an artistic
creation. Again, in contrast to Schopenhauer, that in tragedy he detected
the giving up, the leniency of life, Nietzsche found in tragic life a grand
affirmation of life, the will for life as creation.(41) His entire utopia
is based on his Philosophical Pessimism: "I call that pessimism of the
future, - for it is coming ! I see it coming ! - Dionysian pessimism".(42)
The affirmation of life, despite suffering,
was not constituted just against the background of the brute happiness
they can offer; despite and through the pleasure they promise via authentic
suffering. It was none other then Marx who called it "human suffering"
- as against inhuman suffering in the "pre-history" of human society, namely,
before the Marxist revolution. Nietzsche called it "heroic" life: "The
nose for what we could still barely deal with if it confronted us in the
flesh - as danger, problem, temptation - this determines even our aesthetic
Yes. ('That is 'beautiful' is an affirmation). From this it appears that,
broadly speaking, a preference for questionable and terrifying things is
a symptom of strength... Pleasure in tragedy characterizes strong ages
and natures: their non plus ultra is perhaps the divina commedia. It is
the heroic spirits who say Yes to themselves in tragic cruelty: they are
hard enough to experience suffering as a pleasure".(43)
In life as living art, said Nietzsche, man
becomes master of the truth, and he creates the only power that is of any
match to the will to give in to life. "Art as the redemption of the sufferer
- as the way to states in which suffering is willed, transfigured, deified,
where suffering is a form of great delight".(44) And here we are facing
the utopian dimension in Nietzsche's Philosophy: in life as living art,
man tastes the taste of himself as power, as an artist. He creates himself
and his metaphoric world. Nihilism is revealed as a moment of pessimism.
The deconstruction of values enables liberation from the subordination
of grand goals that enslave man and constitute him while debasing him.
Nietzsche annulled these interrelations as an important moment of his pessimism.
But the rescue from (traditional) values in Nietzsche's Philosophy, or
the "gay" lack of goals, may also be a terrible and paralyzing discovery
for others. His Philosophy is a renunciation of the will to values and
transcendental goals that flames the creative energy of man and enables
the self-creation of the great man and his constitution of his world through
the distribution of metaphors that draws to them the autonomy of the other.
By the acceptance of his metaphors and symbols by the other, he turns him
to a moment of his own enlarged ego, and he heads on in his development
towards being a real God.
This is a life or death struggle: the authenticity
of one's life is conditioned by his ability to destroy the other as a person
in himself and for himself. In certain aspects, this project is close to
the Kirkegaardian concept of the "aesthetic" man and to the egoistic project
of Max Stirner, both of them students of Hegel. The main idea here is that
as long as man can not struggle in an entirely free way toward fulfilling
his mission, his life is not yet real. Here the concept of pessimism is
very relevant in his regular use and meaning of pessimism towards the possibility
that man will not fail in his grand obligation and mission. One should
emphasize here that the success is not the central point, but rather the
very possibility of this struggle should be counted as "success".
In Nietsche's concept of pessimism, it turns
out that from the one side, the liberation of the pessimist is a condition
to the entire project, and from the other side, the pessimist is tied to
this mission not less and probably even more than the believer is tied
to the obligation of loving and serving his God, or the nationalist devotee
is obliged to serve the national "interests" and goals. The Nietzscheian
pessimist is unable to give up his struggle of being God as a manifestation
of his self-overcoming as a man. Indifference to God, not his power, is
his endless aim. From one side, without aiming for the "real" human (eternal
and endless) mission, he feels he should not consider himself human, and
from the other hand, he will never realize his aim and will not fulfill
his mission as one who is grounded in the vain eternity and the immanent
impotency while confronting his endless goal. The fulfillment of his mission
is immanently beyond the present orisons and beyond his possibilities while
being obliged to transcend and destroy himself. His goal immanently is
eternal and endless, and until he fulfills his mission, he can not be himself,
not to mention to transcend himself into a super-human condition. He is
overpowered by the moira of the word. Nietzsche calls us to be in love
with our (tragic) faith and to struggle in overcoming ourselves, namely
to struggle with our fate to be governed by the aimless moira.
As God created the world in a word, so as
for the metaphors, they are in fact nothing less then the unfolding and
realization of the will to power.(45) Nietzsche's pessimism is an
ultra-individual Utopianism that is not targeting at a total solution of
the problematic of the public sphere, but aims at challenging the problematic
of the grand individual that suffers the brutal fact of being an (almost)
autonomous individual. Today we are suffering the historical disappearance
of this ideal which contrasts his affirmation of life as a stage in the
final solution of the human riddle as part of the subject-object dichotomy.
His affirmation of life was part of the constitution of the pessimist and
his value-full world. Today, as we advance in destroying the subject while
developing the individual and his world, we are not tackling the Philosophical
Pessimism's problematic. We are, rather, entering a new stage in the history
of pessimism in which there are no more utopias. Nietzsche's utopia was
not one of the final solutions to the human absurd, but a utopia that concerned
the possibility of saving the eternal life or death struggle for the suitable
existence of life as an artistic creation. This is Nietzsche's answer to
Mainlaender's challenge. Thus, the third part in the history of pessimism
came to its conclusion.
In the end of the 19th century, Philosophical Pessimism had a fascinating
career: dozens of intellectuals declared themselves as philosophical pessimists,
and hundreds of books and articles were published out of common partnership
and mutual articulation of this sort.
In the first years of the 20th century, the
wave was dying, and scientific work in several disciplines like sociology
and psychology inherited the jargon of Philosophical Pessimism while proving
Philosophical Pessimism as groundless and irrelevant romantic jargon that
should be overcome by a "mature", "objective" scientific work. Although
there was no continuation to the Philosophical Pessimism as a declared
and self-conscious tradition, its problematic was very noticeable in the
work of a significant sector of the thinkers of the generation. In their
work there is an important dimension we can call "pessimistic", since their
problematic was the same and was inherited from Philosophical Pessimism.
One should distinguish between texts that
exposed the spirit of the Fin de Siecle and the pessimist tradition of
which Schopenhauer, Mainlaender, Bahnsen, von Hartman and Nietzsche are
its grand heralds. Between these texts of writers who did not declare themselves
as pessimists were many that were included in the so-called Kulturpessimismus.
Here one can find much earlier thinkers like Rousseau and Marx. A special
place was held here for thinkers like Ferdinand Toenis, Max Nordau, Georg
Simmel, Spengler and Freud, if to mention just some of the better known
figures included in the Cultural Pessimism tradition.
It looks as if the pessimist tradition
came to its conclusion with the transformation of the metaphysical discourse
into concrete, separate scientific research plans through the Cultural
Pessimism of the time. Parallel to the wide fragmentation and implementation
in the ordinary language, pessimism as a concept was washed out of all
its Philosophical content. Herewith we will try to show the transformation
of the Philosophical discourse into specific scientific research plans
that implicitly are inherent and develop the pessimist tradition. While
conscious of their liberation from the metaphysical jaws in general
and the pessimist tradition in particular, these research plans had Philosophical
foundations and where confronted with Philosophical problematic that expose
them as the fourth stage in the development of the pessimist tradition.
Ferdinand Toenis articulated two basic socioeconomic
structures that are characterized by different socio-cultural relations:
Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft. According to Toenis, the modern form of
the German reality is that of Gesellschaft, which is constructed by the
economic development and the ever-increase in state power. To our thesis,
the important component here is that the historical transformation from
Gemeinschaft to Gesellschaft is in Toenis's Philosophy an inevitable product
of a determinist and fatal development of human society in Europe. The
Gesellschaft is unique, according to Toenis, by the special role the private
egoist sphere takes in it. The development of modern Gesellschaft is represented
as an overthrow of the previous space of common understanding, and
destruction of Man and his interrelations while ever developing technology.
The kind of liberty that is developing parallel to this trend and as part
of it and one of its causes is nothing but the freedom to mutual destruction
within the frame of personal and class confrontation and exploitation in
modern mechanistic society that constitutes itself by manipulating both
aggressor and victim to its own interests.
Toenis exposes the mechanisms of the sociological
game and shows modern society as an organism that is mobilized by speculation,
calculation, and will to profits. The personal gains and egoism are composing
here a sole motive for work in this social game that atomizes the individual.
His preference of passing Gemeinschaft and "organic life, where the participants
are taking part in a natural way in the totality".(46) He understood that
this trend is unavoidable and unstoppable, a development that had its start
in Renaissance times and got a special boost in the first industrial revolution.
As for Toenis, this is a manifestation of unstoppable destiny. Toenis conceived
this reality as Evil. We think that until the last stage in the history
of pessimism, the conception, like that shared by Toenis, that Evil
is immanent to reality is the yardstick to evaluate Toenis as a genuine
pessimist. That is so even though explicitly there is no Philosophical
stand in his sociological work. It is also the meta-scientific program
of Georg Zimmel that deciphered the rationalization and standardization
processes and the aparatization and foundationalization of the social dependencies.
Parallel to the wide fragmentation and implementation in the ordinary language,
pessimism as a concept was washed out of all its Philosophical content.
Herewith we will try to show the transformation of the Philosophical discourse
into specific scientific research plans that implicitly are inherent and
develop the pessimist tradition. While conscious of their liberation from
the metaphysical jaws in general and the pessimist tradition in particular,
these research plans had Philosophical foundations and were confronted
with Philosophical problematic that expose them as the fourth stage in
the development of the pessimist tradition.
Spengler is usually considered to be one of
the representatives of "Historical pessimism"(47) and Cultural Pessimism.
Today the regular use of these categories is naive, with no sensibility
to the special stand they had in their time, when they were constructed
as an alternative to Metaphysical Pessimism and were articulated
out of a stormy debate that was aimed against Metaphysical Pessimism.
When we use categories like "pessimism" and "Utopia" after
Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Heidegger, we are aware of the danger of being
attacked with the same weapon and accused of a romantic and naive conceptualization
when using conceptions that are already overused. The de-construction of
these old concepts will help us to re-construct a lost narrative that is
lacking a voice but also a historical context in which its unfolding is
possible. By using overused concepts in light of the new context, we are
re-constructing a lost history and challenging the present reality and
its legitimate and forbidden histories. Today the forbidden histories are
kept deserted not so much by the power of direct sanction as by the
omnipotence of indifference and a loss of historical sensibility that protect
the one-dimensional realm of common self-evidence in the modern Gesellschaft.
In contrast to thinkers who try to develop new key words and symbols in
order to challenge new reality, we are obliged to oppose our de-construction
of the old concepts with their newly made symbols and keywords and reconstruct
from the material of their remaining traces the lost history of pessimism
as part of defending the remaining possibilities of today's critical spirit
and its history.
In Spengler's main work Der Untergang des
Abendlandes, every Civilization is the inevitable destination of
every Kultur that matures and comes to its peak: "Zivilisation is the inevitable
destiny of a Kultur".(48) Into this situation enters Europe, concluded
Spengler.
Like other representatives of Kulturpessimismus,
Spengler's work too is dwelling in the Pessimist tradition. Again and again
he declared himself as a non- pessimist; nevertheless, the basic assumptions
of his research plan as well as his polemics that follow it show us to
what degree he is a part of the self-conscious pessimist tradition.(49)
Spengler and Simel could not avoid a direct dialogue with Philosophical
Pessimism. Both wrote books concerning Philosophical Pessimism, while in
the background stands their scientific work as an alternative. We include
them in the pessimist tradition not only because of their basic implicit
assumptions and explicit conclusions, but also because of their part in
the developing of the pessimist discourse. They reformulated old Philosophical
problematic, but essentially were bothered with the same problematic.
The challenges that Spengler denoted were
not part of the struggle against the present reality nor did he give them
a theoretical shape. He did not believe in the existence of an open possibility
to transcend or restructure reality. The challenges that he saw as still
relevant were in the artistic realm and in cultural research. As a Pessimist,
Nietzsche too saw endless missions and challenges ahead of man. The goals
that Spengler pinpointed did not exclude him from the pessimist tradition
amidst his denial of being a Pessimist; Spengler saw that the challenges
do exist, but that the "Man" to fulfill his destiny and confront his challenges
is not to be found any more.(50)
According to Spengler, the Evil reality is
not an unfortunate historical mistake that one can challenge. This is an
outcome of the circular course of time that entangles an empty Spirit,
a "cesarean" era. He understood that there is no place for Utopia, not
even in its individualistic version. Heroic Fatalism seemed to him to be
the only gate still open.
Here we do not mean a concept that concerns
the possibility of constituting an aim for an individual, since according
to Spengler there is no grand plan or value that for it or through it the
subject can struggle for what really deserves fighting for. At the same
token, for Spengler the possibility of struggling is still open, even in
a hopeless, closed world: it is the mission of the real hero, who struggles
with no hope in an aimless world. The obligation that one takes on himself
in a capricious manner does not liberate him, but it confronts him face
to face with reality, with no illusions and without surrendering himself
to it. Salvation was traditionally considered as transcendence. Now it
turned out that transcendence is impossible, and the only strife still
possible is the fight of the struggle's consciousness conditioned by brutal
reality.
Tragic Heroism is speculating as to the possibility
of winning the battle. On the contrary, it denotes the importance
of sticking to the duty, a mission that no one and nothing forces man to
take on himself, an obligation with no spark of hope. Tragic Heroism is
manifesting that especially before the omnipotence of all the Evil that
constitutes reality, there is nothing that can break the hero, especially
since he recognizes that he will never have the upper hand in his struggle.
As an Yyov that matured, he understands that
there is no way to understand God and stop the struggle against him since
there is no God. Living in a Godless world means for him no way to murder
God, no way to compose meaning, no way to constitute meaning for self-murder
or refusing it. "In the face of this fate, there is only one view of the
world which is worthy of us, that of Achilles mentioned: rather a short
life full of deeds and glory than one without meaning. The peril has come
so great, for every individual, every class, every people, that it is pitiful
to deceive oneself... Optimism is cowardice. We are born into this time
and must courageously follow the path to the end, as it is laid down for
us. There is no other. To endure to the end like the Roman soldier whose
remains have been found before a gate in Pompeii, who died because when
Vesuvius erupted no one remembered to relieve him. That is greatness, that
is what it means to have breeding. This honorable end is the only thing
which no one can take from us".(51) At the same time he published "revolutionary"
articles, like "Prussianism and socialism", where he introduces the
Prusian socialist utopia, in which technological progress plays a central
role in the service of the new, manly man.
In the Theory of the Novel (1914) and in other
works of Georg Lukacs, we can identify the same tendency to transcend the
pessimist tradition. Tragedy is presented by him as a component of lofty
life in a community where a living link attaches the fate of the individual
and human vocation. Lukacs understood that it is impossible to re-construct
and utilize this forgotten reality of ideals that found its peak in its
very beginning, in classical Greece. The freedom of the Greek subject,
if he was allowed to be considered as a subject, was an anti-individual
freedom. By contrast, we claim, and we think Lukacs included this intuition
(implicitly) in his early works, in modern society the freedom is always
an alienated freedom which is allowed to dwell just in the private realm
of the individual who is being deprived of his subjectivity. Modern society,
Lukacs conceived, is forcing on the individual a confrontation with a cosmic
realm of "objective facts" that is totally bare of any private and
individual meaning.(52) According to Lukacs' conception, the writer of
the roman is a creator, like the hero in Spengler's Philosophy of history.
This creator is not conceived by Lukacs as a product of the realm of "facts"
and developments in society, but rather as an ontic stand of an authentic
ego who can give "form" to life surrounding him. In his creative richness,
the authentic writer is revealed by Lukacs as the one who installs order
in a chaotic realm of formless "facts". The Utopia here is an Individual
Utopia: according to it an authentic artist is a real man; he can transcend
himself from the existing order and shape an aesthetic order that, although
it would not constitute a revolution and open new social possibilities
for man, will enable the artist to protect his subjectivity, manifest his
freedom and orchestrate it in an artistic way. The artistic work of an
authentic artist is "the grand work of art" that can resist reality and
overcome it.
The pessimistic dimension here is that the
artist's possibility of an authentic work of art is represented as a creation
of meaning in a meaningless world. Ironically, the artist creates meaning
in fiction, and only in fiction can meaning be preserved, while he manifests
in his writing the senselessness of life in the modern world. This is the
only justification Lukacs can provide for life and its sufferings.
In this Individualistic Utopia, the artist
is presented as an old Greek hero: he can not and he is not expected "to
be successful" in life. In contrast, he is expected to transcend, for a
moment, from the bourgeois everyday life where "everything is the same".
The redemption he can await is nothing but a moment of ataraxia, a tragic
flash in which art hints of the dreadful alienation immanent in the bourgeois
life. This tension governs many other pessimist thinkers of the first half
of the 20th century. In the Frankfurt School, we can reconstruct two types
of the Pessimist-utopia relations. The one is represented by Herbert Marcuse,
the other by Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer. In the
first, we will emphasize the pessimist dimension of an positive utopia.
In the second, we will reveal the attempt to save utopia from an autonomous
subject and real Philosophical work through a critical returning to Metaphysical
Pessimism. Here we will meet Pessimistic Utopianism, namely, the fifth
stage in the history of pessimism.
Marcuse's utopianism was already composed on the barricades of resurrected
Berlin at the end of the first world war. The young Marcuse was strongly
influenced by the young Lukacs, and traces of it are very noticeable already
in Marcuse's Dissertation. (1922). In the maximalistic horizontal of his
utopia, we can reconstruct the vision of "erotic reconciliation (union)
of man and nature in the aesthetic attitude, where order is beauty and
work is play".(53) Marcuse orchestrated a utopia of life as play
in a liberated world; "The play impulse is the vehicle of this liberation.
The impulse does not aim at playing `with` something ; rather it is the
play of life itself, beyond want and external compulsion"(54). The conception
of life as play included the idea of overcoming work and the conclusion
of the history of life as struggle.(55) Also in the pessimism of Nietzsche,
we identified the conception of life as artistic play, as a never-ending
play in human possibilities, but in Nietzsche's thought, as we shall see
later in the pessimism of Heidegger, there is no positive utopia of life
as the happy and free play of man with his possibilities and within his
potentials. In Heidegger's pessimism, life will be revealed as the free
play of being that uses man, his fears, hopes and potentials to manifest
beings and human struggle of authenticity.
Marcuse, in contrast, while finding support
in the young Marx's work and Freud's project, constituted a positive Utopia
that included nothing less then the overcoming of the eternal clash between
the Freudian "pleasure principle" and the "reality principle", which was
supposed to create a new reality principle that will include the merger
of sensuality and reason in a completely new order of reality. This liberation
was supposed to include conquering death by realizing a cyclical concept
of time in the new reality.(56) But aside and against these positive and
maximalistic utopian visions, we find in Marcuse's thought the central
element of pessimism.
The first element of the Pessimist dimension
of Marcuse's thought is the category of Progress. Marcuse, to the last
days of his life, was pious to the linear perception of time and believed
that there is real social progress in history. Since the sixties he believed
in the supremacy of Evil progress. However, here we have to be very specific:
Marcuse has two concepts of progress, a "real" one and an Evil one,(57)
and the reconstruction of Evil progress did not demolish his other linear
time perception, the utopic one. He did not cancel the principle possibility
of real historical progress and even retained optimism as a possibility
for the future to come. But as for the present society, his reconstruction
shows that progress, in the meaning that the enlightenment gave it, is
impossible in our world. The present "progress" is nothing but the triumph
of "the logic of repression".(58) In his unpublished texts, Marcuse
even sometimes comes to the conclusion that Evil progress has the upper
hand and that there is no way to retreat from the present (in)human situation.(59)
In another unpublished text he concludes that "Western industrial society
has no future".(60)
The most interesting of the texts that represent
the Pessimist dimension in Marcuse's thought is another unpublished text,
"Marx, Freud and Monotheism". Here one can see to what extent the orthodox
Marxism is replaced by a pessimist conception of history. The Telos of
reason's progress and the emancipation of humanity is replaced by the concept
of "Man's fatalistic disintegration to a unity of production and destruction,
that reveals itself in technological progress".(61) According to Marcuse,
this historical trend has shaped present nature and possibilities of reason:
"this fatalism has constituted itself in the social rationality... in this
dress rationality itself has become an instrument of repression".(62) The
Marcusian pessimism manifests itself here by refusing the traditional enlightenment's
optimism as for the social future of rationality. According to this tradition,
justice and freedom are identified as omological with the possibilities
opened by realizing rationality (technological rationality included). This
Marcusian text, as some of his other unpublished texts, grounds his pessimism
on the exposure of the real nature of rationality today: According to the
unofficial Marcuse, one should re-evaluate the idea of reason on which
Kant, Hegel, Marx and Freud relied so heavily, on the optimism that
was supposed to be a by-product of its progress. Even Freud had faith in
reason and so in it - in its association with science - a suitable substitute
for religious fantasies. This "reason", according to the unofficial Marcuse,
"has itself become an illusion, much the same as the illusions it was supposed
to overcome".(63) And Marcuse concludes that today "cultural progress becomes
less and less rational, or that the unreasonable reality makes itself reasonable
and the revolt to unreasonable. This position of his is opposed to the
Marxian and the entire humanist tradition, according to which humanity
marches forward to its maturity, when it would not have to use or be exposed
to religions and superstitions.
Max Horkheimer began his intellectual odyssey
by presenting an anti-utopian position, while being a Marxian utopist in
the orthodox sense. In the thirties he constructed the Critical Theory
of society in which the aim of the critique of ideologies is to arm the
proletariat with an appropriate theoretical weapon. In the forties,
the positive utopia of Horkheimer dissolved and was replaced with a totally
new type of utopia, a negative utopia of which pessimism was its departure
point.
In the introduction to The Dialectic of Enlightenment,
the conjoint project of Adorno and Horkheimer, the two wrote that their
aim is to "discover why mankind, instead of entering into a truly human
condition, is sinking into a new kind of barbarism".(64) We see in it an
example to the tension between pessimism and Utopia in their thought. The
new barbarism, according to Adorno and Horkheimer, is not the Nazi one,
but the technological society in general. Here, as in other unexpected
philosophical conceptions, we see much in common between the pessimism
of Horkheimer/Adorno and the Heideggerian pessimism. From one side, Adorno
and Horkheimer understood that every culture is immanently repressive,
and at the same time they refused to abandon their utopian claim for "real
human conditions". The Pessimist problematic is central to the critical
project: the constitution of the individual self is based on suffering
the manifest of the Evil principium individuationis. Here is revealed the
immanent temptation to self-annihilation that is manifested in illusions,
such as utopian illusions, concerning "happiness" that are nothing but
fleeting attempts.(65)
By deconstructing the Odysseus myth, Adorno
and Horkheimer reconstructed the foundation of the emancipatory project.
The enchanting siren's song that summons the sailors traveling in the area
to fragmentation in the deep waters represents the basic tension between
Eros and Tanatus, between nature and culture, between being and beings.
Odysseus is faithful to his mission, to culture, and in order to save his
crew and his task, he closes the ears of his men in order to prevent them
from being tested ,to see what call they obey - the call of nature or the
call of culture - since he knew they would not resist the power of
beauty, real beauty, that of harmonious nature presented to them by the
sirens. This beauty is not involved, like that promised by the cultural
project, with suffering and the trouble of being constituted amidst the
individuality/alienation dialectic. But Odysseus himself, like each of
us, is attracted to the truth of being in its purity. And so, Odysseus
commands his men to tie him to the mast. In this way he sticks to his mission
while facing beauty out of this world and at the same time manipulating
the sirens and himself by sticking to the mast and the principle of reality.
The conquering, the repression of the striving,
promises "practical" results, "success". Yet compliance to the striving
brings nothing but sweet annihilation, "disaster" from the repression
principle point of view. Repression has been successfully internalized.
By this deconstruction, Adorno and Horkheimer tried to show the origins
of instrumental reason that is governed by the repression principle. "The
history of civilization is the history of the introversion of sacrifice.
In other words: the history of renunciation. Everyone who practices renunciation
gives away more of his life than is given back to him and more than the
life he vindicates".(66) Their pessimism is revealed here by their tracing
the fundament of instrumental reason and technological progress as Evil.
Here they also manifest their evaluation of the principium individuazionis
as pre-condition and bearer of Evil.
According to Horkheimer, man's ontological
position forces him to choose between being enslaved by nature or subordinating
nature - and paying the price for it.(67) Humanity's liberation from nature
and magic is revealed as an element in his pessimism. Magic's importance
is denoted by him, as symbols in magic were not mere signs but rather they
were conceived as tied to being. He denotes the vanity of convergence from
magic to Enlightenment: overcoming the world, externalization of the self
to nature.(68) He develops Schopenhauer's position according to which man
is constituted as self-consciousness by his intellect, while understanding
intellect as demolishing the connection between nature and man who strives
to take advantage of it and pays the price not only for departing from
nature, but for departing from his "essence".(69) Man is caught in a magic
circle: the very constitution of the individual, the self, is a substance
to dissolve the harmonic nature, which the individual struggles to establish
through knowledge and sacrifices himself for this cause. Man's exploitation
of nature becomes the abuse of nature in man. This is, as it were, the
retaliation of nature for the atrocities of the progress of techne and
its transformation into technology. This is, according to Horkheimer, the
base of the liberation ideals that manifest the utopic quest(70) and of
instrumental reason. In its peak, technological efficiency dissolves Spirit.(71)
Horkheimer even speaks on the desolation of language and its retreat into
its magic origin.(72)
His critique revealed the degeneration of
all dimensions of Reason into one: power. Totally conquered by power, the
individual is deprived of his subjectivity and is driven to function as
a producer-consumer and is part and parcel of the standardization tendency
in which mass media that has no "target" or "orientation" plays a rolling
part.(73) On this point, Horkheimer, Adorno and Benjamin precede many of
the more interesting arguments of Postmodernism. The price of life is its
transformation into repression.(74)
The philosophical struggle turns into an existential
battle for a dialogue, which is a political praxis concerning way of life
and the very possibility of authentic decision making between different
possible ways of life. In the new social condition, there is no open way
for such a decision, according to Horkheimer. In such a situation, the
philosophy becomes a struggle over "the totally different". Horkheimer,
as Adorno, was obliged to preserve the quest for the "totally other". Following
De Sad, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, he devoted himself to struggle for
"the totally different" through negative utopia, a new destination that
he introduced to Philosophy in our era. According to Horkheimer, the reception
of Philosophy's calling that is still possible in our era must pass the
basic problematic of Schopenhauer and Philosophical Pessimism. Today, in
the God-absent system, morality is relevant only within the framework of
Philosophical Pessimism, especially in light of disbelief in omnipotent,
eternal and rightful essence, on the one hand, and with no total surrender
to the "facts" on the other hand.(75)
Horkheimer understood that the only critical
dimension in which the individual can challenge the impossibility of self-assertion
is about to become part of one-dimensional instrumental reason, to turn
into a child's toy.(76) Today, in retrospective of thirty years, we can
say that this apocalyptic situation is already our everyday reality. But
since its beginnings, Philosophy was on the edge of extinction, and ever
since, Philosophers have been unmatured, arrogant children who refused
to mature, insisting on transcendence into truth while declaring reality
as unreal, denouncing success, and the authority of the "facts".
Horkheimer, in studying the metaphysical and social reasons for the demolishing
of reason and the melting of the cultural relevance of Philosophies is
not fearful of this reality, she is, on the contrary, anxious to challenge
this reality; while acknowledging its impotence. The narrowing of self-constituting
possibilities, the becoming of un-functional critique irrational in the
new reality, the end of academic preservation of Western culture
- all these are re-emphasizing the importance of philosophical discourse
and especially its pessimist tradition. But it does not mean necessarily
that Philosophy today is still possible, in light of the triumph of the
individual and the disappearance of the subject as a cultural and social
agent.
Horkheimer and Adorno understood that a person
who is unwilling and unable to evaluate and judge the present reality is
incapable of self-reflection and is enslaved by mythical powers of the
system in which he dwells, like the situation in which pre-historical man
was enslaved to myths that constituted his consciousness. In the absence
of a true autonomous subject, or even one who struggles for his autonomy
as a (social and solidarian) subject, there is no place for a dialogue.
The struggle over the philosophical possibilities of a dialogue is nothing
but a cultural and social battle about a concrete way of life, a political
struggle. Horkheimer brings Socrates and Jesus as examples for such a struggle.(77)
So, what is the historical difference ? The difference is not grounded
in the necessity of the struggle, but in the impossibility of such a struggle
in our era. So, who is the ideal partner for such a dialogue if Horkheimer
and Adorno's pessimism is grounded ? "Imaginary witness" is their only
true partner for philosophizing: "If there is anyone today to whom we can
pass the responsibility for the message, we bequeath it not to the `masses`,
and not to the individual (who is powerless), but to an imaginary witness
- lest it perish with us".(78)
Our historical situation is, according to
Horkheimer and Adorno, no historical "mistake". This is an immanent realization
of the maxim that the price of life is the transformation into repression.
Nevertheless, they refused to give up and insisted on their Utopia. The
only acceptable aim left for Philosophy is "to translate....". This mission
of Philosophy can be understood as an extreme minimization, but also
as the only true rational end still possible for the subject. In other
words, Philosophy becomes not a tool and a therapeutic practice, but a
realm, the only realm where the struggle for preserving subjectivity is
still open.
But, according to Adorno and Horkheimer, as
for Plato, this utopic mission of Philosophy can realize itself just as
a social praxis, as a concrete way of life. According to Horkheimer and
Adorno, there are no social and cultural conditions for the subject and
for an open, free and public rational dialogue, as Habermas still believes.
Their pessimism reflects this historic situation as a manifestation of
human ontology. And yet, their negation is not a total and formal negation,
but a dialectical one: their pessimism transforms and distributes the philosophical
Eros and the condition for hope that is incubated in the preservation of
Western culture while criticizing it and negating the present "facts".
They are trying to negate the present totality and yet avoid a foundationalist
stand, on the one hand, and relativism, on the other hand.
Pessimism allows them this project by introducing
late Critical Theory as Negative Theology. This Pessimistic utopianism
of Adorno and Horkheimer is the opposite of Marcuse's utopian pessimism,
first of all by (implicitly) recognizing the omnipotence of what we call
the realm of common self-evidence which education distributes as common
understanding in each speech community. They too, as Marcuse, are
obliged to negate the present "facts", but without Marcuse's foundationalism.
Marcuse thought that he could trace an objective parameter for human "authentic
needs" by the power of his art critique, using Marx and Freud for the sake
of basing on real substance his negative Eros and critical power. Therefore,
he had a positive utopian alternative, in which art is realized and becomes
"a form of life", while Adorno and Horkheimer were faithful to their anti-foundationalistic
critique and Negative Utopia.
They understood that justice can manifest
itself only negatively, by Evil, and that Utopia can never realize itself
without paying the price of transforming itself to its opposite. Their
negation of the "facts" of the present reality was kept alive by "the hope
principle", by their religiosity that negated any form of religion, Marxism
included. They acknowledged their baseless quest, rejected relativism and
subjectivism while refusing any positive alternative; in other words, they
were consistent Philosophical Pessimists. They could not touch Spirit,
but they could struggle for the formulation of their negation of the ideological
system, which is governed by the present Western realm of common self-evidence
that manipulated their generation. A similar Negative Theology was shared
by another member of the Frankfurt school, Walter Benjamin, who understood
that in secular history, there is no place for the messianic. The just
and therefore positive Utopia can manifest the victory of sheer power.
In Benjamin's text concerning "the theses
on history", the negation of the present system reveals the omnipotence
of the symbolic aggression of the present realm of common self-evidence.
However, his Utopia is a negative one: no leap is possible from present
reality and its "facts" but an interpretive one. In contrast to Marcuse's
basic optimism, in Benjamin's project the philosopher does not rely on
the revolutionary praxis of the exploited class or classless minorities,
but on saving the (lost) memories of the defeated by jumping into the past.
With religious devotion he conducts his struggle for the redemption of
the defeated from both oblivion and the manipulation by the current order
and its agents. Redemption(79) turns out to be the interpreter's aesthetic
institution of the "now-time". He fights for the salvation of his soul
against the pressure of being absorbed into vagueness and into the void
of what we call the realm of common self-evidence, which results from the
deterministic surrendering to the interpretive consensus of the system.
Negative Utopia does not mean giving up Utopia:
"the messianic time"(80) bursts into the "now-time"(81) which penetrates,
even if only for a moment, the continuity of the vain progress of catastrophic
time, and creates a special point - extra-temporal - in which time
ceases to flow and a redeemed space of time is constituted, and through
which the attempt is made possible to call things by their true name and
to fight the "Evil" celebrating its victory.
Benjamin's pessimism discloses the presence
of violence within the continuity of "the whole time everything being the
same" as a cosmic fate, a fate grounded in mystic necessity. Reality is
revealed as essentially tragic, not as a certain historical stage nor as
an accident, but as normality itself. "The tradition of the oppressed teaches
us that the 'state of emergency' in which we live is not an exception,
but the rule".(82) His pessimism manifests itself in "These on the Philosophy
of history": "There is a picture by Klee, which is called Angelus Novus.
An angel is represented in it, who looks as if he was about to move away
from something at which he is staring. His eyes are widely open, his mouth
is open and his wings are relaxed. Thus the angel of history should appear.
He has turned his eyes towards the past. Where to us a chain of events
seems to appear, he sees a single catastrophe, piling up continuously ruins
upon ruins, and casting them in front of his feet. He might want to remain,
to awaken the dead and to re-assemble what was shattered. But a storm moves
in from paradise, which has entangled itself into his wings, and which
is so strong that the angel cannot close them anymore. Unrestrained, this
storm pushes him into the future to which he turns his back, while the
piles of ruins in front of him grow up to the heaven. What we call progress
is this storm".(83)
We have to evaluate the Philosophical pessimism
of Benjamin, Adorno and Horkheimer by evaluating their negative utopianism
from the realm of common understanding problematic. In Benjamin's terms,
this interpretive critique as the only unrepressive (anti-positive utopianism)
praxis is taking place within the limits of history, of "now-time". In
our terms, this practice is immanently ruled by the realm of common self-evidence
in which they dwell, even as refusers and rebels. And how can they know
when "the totally different", or "messianic time" enters, like in Plato's
cave, "suddenly" and enlightens them and when they are re-distributing
one of the realms of common self-evidence's manipulations ? What is their
foundation to evaluate contrasting concepts, histories and memories ?
Horkheimer and Adorno do have an answer, according
to which Western tradition and its unfulfilled ideals are the ground from
which they can raise their hopes and rational criteria. But they themselves
came to the conclusion that in light of technological progress and the
triumph of instrumental rationality over objective reason, rationality
has become irrational, and their critique is therefore irrational from
the point of view of present reality. Furthermore, how can they ground
their devotion to Western tradition and explicate the principle supremacy
of it over other cultural traditions that Western culture oppressed ? Spirit
could have laughed, like God addressing Jove's concluding speech when retreating
to total subversiveness to God's meaningless play with Satan in Jove's
fate and his life's mission.
But Spirit does not have a face, nor purpose
or meaning. These are products of its realms of common understanding that
their productivity is controlled by different systems which Benjamin, Adorno
and Horkheimer were so wise to deconstruct, before what is called today
the postmodern thinkers. Postmodernism is here represented as the last
stage in the history of pessimism.
Postmodernism is a manifestation of a reality in which a place for a
new consciousness is constituted. It concerns human beings as living today
in a present with no foundation for its epistemology and its present
and future manipulation apparatus. At the same time and for the same reason,
it refuses to concern itself with being itself and its possible metaphysical
ways of contemplation. In the Western past, we could have called this Philosophy
a pessimist one, but postmodern thinkers will probably refuse to be included
in this category or be regarded as part of the history of pessimism, mainly
because they would not like to see themselves as part of any "tradition",
especially not part of a modern one.
Postmodernism, as Nietzsche already did, would
ill like to see itself as head of "good" and "Evil". However, at the same,
it turns back to the dichotomies of "nice" and "ugly", while preferring
in art not just the ugly and the spoiled, but also the "Evil" that rules
as the sole prince of reality.(84) Postmodern decadence does not see the
present "lost of passion and meaning" as a dramatic event( 85) not even
"the end of man".
In The Order of Things (1971) Mitchell Foucault
is representing the end of modern man, since Kant till Marx and Marcuse
- and the end of the Nietzscheian man as well. But while Foucault's pessimism
is a serious one, Derrida's pessimism is an ironical-serious one.
Derrida presents a similar position to that
of Foucault's, if we are allowed by him to continue utilizing categories
as a theoretical "position". In contrast to the pessimist tradition's characteristics
we have found so far, Derrida's negation can not treat as serious even
itself, and can not afford to present itself as having a superior status
than its negated position. When we found similar views in the philosophy
of Leopardi, Mainlaender and Bhansen, it was from a serious, dramatic and
even tragic orientation, in contrast to the postmodern attitude as presented
by Derrida's philosophy. His deconstruction is not targeted toward traditional
utopian orisons, like repressive revolutionary theory or practice, but
rather toward the very ideal of an autonomous subject that is able to use
a "correct" or "preferable" critique. This kind of pessimism is pure of
any erotic belief in man, truth, the mission of criticism or solidarity.
Yet, after all, he has a utopia of his own; explicitly it is a negative,
subjective utopia that is very different from other (universal) negative
utopias we have evaluated, but it is not so. His utopia is not a negative
utopia; it is a pessimist one.
From the depths of the lack of a Cartesian
center, like "ego", his pessimism turns towards a new stage in the
history of pessimism, the stage of open and empty orisons of the will to
total pleasure of de-construction - without being devoted/obliged/enslaved
to any target, mission or meaning(86) and freed from the quest to a center
or a transcendental dimension that exists, as it were, beyond the orison.
What Foucault calls "the end of man"
is realized by Roland Barth's conception of the subject as a locus of passions
and impulses, strivings and symbols. For Barth there is no place for human
autonomy, not even as an ideal, since texts constitute the subjects that
are aiming at an interpretation, while de-constructing texts exist, since
we live in a Heraclitian world, where "everything flaws".(87) For Lakan
the subject retains a certain meaning, just as a language structure, and
"it is always something that is eroding, that is created by what is signifiers".
Here, there is no more "man" or "humanity" who constitutes signifiers that
signify in an act of mimesis the world, but rather the opposite. We are
facing the annihilation of the "subject", what Eastern culture called for
the last two centuries "humanity", "class" or "man".
For Barth is "this something", that for a
brief historical moment was conceived as an "autonomic subject"', if not
in practice, at least as an ideal. So where does the subject dwell today
? From postmodernist’s point of view this is an invalid question,
since there is no more one, total, universal "present", nor "nerative or
meaning and identity. This view deconstructs even the subject as having
one or a certain "identity".
For Lakan "the subject", as an autonomous
subject, exists only in its repressive formation and is the conclusion
of first order repression, the conscious-linguistic repression. The
signifier rules as the only cause and source of "meaning". That what we
bear in us and is turned to be accepted in postmodernism as the absent
center, the source of personal experience is revealed here as something
foreign to us which constitutes the ego, its strivings, quests, fears and
conceptualizations. Lakan and the postmodernists who follow him at this
point are very close to our conception about the triad of meanings and
passions that produce the "I", which will manifest them even while negating
them. Heraclitus manifests this relevancy.
The Heraclitic anti-philosophy formulated
the "total flax" on the supremacy of the logos. There are no borders for
the logos, no beginning, no end, and it looks as if it also creates Heraclitus's
own rhetoric.
The Heraclitian logos departs from the universality
of individual things. However, as wisdom manifests itself as a subjective
human quality, it is deciphered as logos that is manipulating the wise
by its very presence in him, like the Platonic Eros. And Heraclitus says
in the first fragment: "But of this account, which holds forever, people
forever prove uncomprehending, both before and after they have heard it
and when once they have heard it. For, although all things happen in accordance
with this account, they are like people without experience when they experience
words and deeds such as I set forth, distinguishing (as I do) each thing
according to its real constitution, i.e., pointing out how it is.
The rest of mankind, however, fail to be aware of what they do after
they wake up just as they forget what they do while asleep."(88)
Nietzsche is quick to represent this conception in its other side, identifying
it as "an identification between the ego and the truth".(89)
The "total flax" in the Heraclitus's and Nietzscheian utopia is demanding
the act of deciphering the self-creation, life
as living art as the only possible way of challenging living death (meaningless
life), if nothing more than re-manifesting the omnipotence of meaningless
logos. In their pessimism, this project is presenting their Dyonisian anti-Philosophy.
This challenge presents itself as logos' dimension in a world order and
a rhetoric that gives birth to the philosopher as a tragic erotic who is
in love with his destiny. But, if Heraclitus, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche,
Benjamin, Adorno and Horkheimer claimed the individual's lost subjectivity,
Barth, Derrida, Lacan and de Man are declaring in the open their affirmation
of de-construction not only of heroism, but also of the erotic striving
and the revolutionary and the tragic heroism as well.
One can claim that pessimists, like Mainlaender, have already given up
the (individual-subjective) utopia, when he demands self-murder as the
extraction of the central conclusion of Western metaphysics. However, in
the postmodern discourse, there is no place for tragic annihilation, and
it does not strive consciously to self- murder, but to the indispensable
destruction of the will to know (the "truth") and the erotic striving for
meaning, yardsticks for judgment between conflicting claims and passions
and the ability to constitute a connection to a point of reference as a
way to the transcendence from the world of beings to being.
The ironic postmodern identification with the present as unreal and its
deconstruction from the quest for the absolute and the subjective are nothing
but a new form of self-murder, that sets the new stage for the development
of Western culture and its triumphing instrumental reason. At the same
time, the new system that postmodernism is symbolizing its constitution,
is potentially a gate for a new realm of common self-evidence. meanwhile,
postmodernism represents itself, its missing "self", the absent totality
that will collide the present dying Western systems.
Postmodernism can represent itself just as a game, that as liberating from
repressive modernist conceptions as it is, can not justify itself as having
a preferable stand in relation to everything it deconstructs. This game
is possible only after paying the price (or gaining the victory) of giving
up "total refusal" to the present reality. It is not just a negation of
the imperative that demands the autonomous subject's self-constitution.
It is also a positive political praxis: seduction to merge in the local
pragmatic orisons, with no love and no utopic obligation for justice or
meaning.
The postmodernist's pride is on his easy going pessimism, on being tentative,
with no theory or philosophy, on having nothing meaningful to say. And
yet, there is here a utopic dimension, against his will: like the Herculean
Philosopher, he is not afraid of the unknown places, where his total deconstructive
myths is carrying him. Not only is this freedom that is based on the absolute
nothingness not enlightened by a telos, a yardstick, it is even without
passion, like the Nietzscheian Zaratustra had. This free wondering is regarded
even in the postmodern rhetoric itself as a construct of "power", metaphorical
power that in the end postmodernism, as what it deconstructs, is constituted
by it and is working on "power's" service. Not the social reality alone,
but even its critical evaluation and deconstruction are understood as part
of the "system's" self-regulation and its critics. Eros is nothing but
a fruitful part of its self-regulation and re-production.(90)
Baudrillard is giving up purpose, any purpose, along lofty purposes. In
the current stage of the pessimist tradition, we are left only with de-constructions
as reflexive responses of those who are composed by present myths to feel
they are ironical rebels in Western heritage. In our world "there is no
point of reference at all, and value radiates in all directions, occupying
all interstices, without reference to any thing whatsoever, by virtue of
pure contingency... there is no longer any equivalence, whether natural
or general. Properly speaking there is now no law of value".(92)
The de-construction of pessimism and utopianism in Western metaphysical
tradition becomes re-production of pessimism and utopia, an old-new building
of a Babylonian linguistic tower whose head is finally reaching heaven,
after being failed by God in the previous attempt. But this time heaven
does not bear any God, no punishment in the form of the destruction of
heavenly language or the egoistic and nationalistic kind. In all its strength
just one punishment is remaining: the very building of the renewed Babylonian
tower in the center of Babylon of the "Babylonian Evil's sort. The de-constructivist
utopia and praxis are the present revelation of the primordial sin that
is the impetus of Spirits' creativity when constructing common understanding
realms that produce the cultural and social possibilities for the creation
of ideologies that govern and create men and women.
Bibliography
1. Ernst Bloch, Das Prinzip Hoffnung, Frankfurt a.M, 1959
On the fertility of utopia in Bloch's project see:
Ernst Bloch, "Schopenhauers Pessimismus und die Potentialitaeten der
Kategorie 'Moeglichkeit'", in Hans Ebeling und luedger Lukehaus, (Hg.),
Schopenhauer und Marx, Hain 1980, p. 129-131
Bloch's view in the pessimism issue see:
Ernst Bloch, "Das Unrecht des Pessimismus", in Ernst Bloch, Politische
Messungen, Gesamtausgabe, Band XI, Frankfurt a.M, 1977, p. 222-225
2. In Latin: pessimum - the most Evil, in French: pessimisme, in Italian:
pessimismo, in Hebrew: Hara.
3. See: James Sully, Pessimism,
1877
Olga Pluemacher, Pessimismus in vergangenheit und Gegenwart, Muenchen
1884
Eduard von Hartmann, Zur Geschichte und Begrundung des Pessimismus,
Leipzig 1892
4. L. Loemeker, "Pessimism", in Encyclopedia of Philosophy, New York
1967, p. 114
It is worthy to mention that in the German Philosophical Encyclopedia
pessimism is introduced as a Philosophical concept. See: V. Gerhardt, "Pessimismus",
Historisches Woerterbuch der Philosophie, J. Ritter und K. Gruender (Hg.),
Band VII, 1990, p. 385
5. Ludwig Marcuse, Meine Geschichte der Philosophie, Zuerich 1953,
pp. 37-38
6. Beata Szymanska, "Dispute ower Pessimism", Reports on Philosophy,
IV, 1980, p. 24
7. V. Gerhardt, "Pessimismus", p. 383
8. Paul Siwek, "Pessimism in Philosophy", The New Scholasticism, Vol.
XXXII, (July 1948), p. 252
9. Paul Siwek, Ibid. Ibid,
10. Ibid. Ibid.
11. Friedrich Grinsfeld, Neviim Bibeli Kavod, Tel-Aviv 1988, p. 11
(In Hebrew).
12. A. Betz, Aesthetik und Politik Heines Prose, Muenchen 1971, p.
36
13. Olga Petraschek, Die Rechtphilosophie des Pessimismus, Muenchen
1929, p. 34
14. A. Sicinski, "Optimism versus pessimism", The Polish Sociological
Bulletin, Vol. 1-2, (1972), pp. 50-51
15. Heinrich Heine, The Complete Poems of Henrich Heine, Translated
by Hal Draper, Oxford 1982, p. 484
16. Arthur Schopenhauer, Saemtliche Werke, IV, Lepzig 1922, p.
51
17. Ibid.Ibid.
18. Olga Plumacher, Ibid., pp. 131-132
19. Karl Marx, Early Texts, Translated by David McLellan, Oxford 1971,
p. 150
20. Ibid. Ibid.
21. Herbert Schnaedelbach, Philosophy in Germany 1831-1933, translated
by Eric Matthew, Cambridge1984, pp. 33-64
22. Eduard von Hartmann, Zur Geschichte und Begrundung des Pessimismus,
Leipzig 1882, p. 239
23. Phiulipp Mainlaender, Philosophie der Erloesung, Berlin 1879, p.
10
24. Ibid. p. 326
25. Here we can not introduce Kierkegaard. He did not see himself as
a pessimist, but we think one should include him in the history of pessimism.
26a. Mainlaender, Ibid., p. 575
26. Johann Joachim Gestering, German Pessimism and Indian Philosophy,
New Delhi 1986, p. 85
27. Olga Pluemacher, Der Pessimismus in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart,
Heidelberg 1884, p. 249
28. Friedrich Nietzsche, "Beyond Good and Evil, in The Works of Friedrich
Nietzsche, New York 1931, p. 62
29. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power, Translated by Walter Kaufmann,
London 1968, p. 56
30. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy, Translated by Francis
Golffing, New York 1956, p. 101
31. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Works of Friedrich Nietzsche, New York
1931, p. 308
32. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Joyful Wisdom, The Complete Works of Friedreich
Nietzsche, X, Translated by Thomas Common, New York 1964, p. 332
33. On Nietzsche's Bhaqnsen, Mainlaender and von Hartmann's critique
see Ibid., pp. 320-321
34. Friedrich Nietzsche Op. Cit., p. 335
35. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Works of Friedrich Nietzsche, p. 521
36. Friedrich Nietzsche, Ibid., p. 73
37. Friedrich Nietzsche, Ibid., p. 224
38. Friedrich Nietzsche, Ibid., p. 73
39. Friedrich Nietzsche, "The Genealogy of Morals", in The Works of
Friedrich Nietzsche, New York 1931, p. 54
40. Ibid. Ibid.
41. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power, p. 450
42. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Joyful Wisdom, p. 335
43. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Will to Power, p. 450
44. Friedrich Nietzsche, Ibid., p. 452
45. Friedrich Nietzsche, Ibid.,
46. Ferdinand Toennis, Fundamental Concepts of Sociology, Translated
by C. Loomis, New York 1940, p. 38
47. K. O. Petraschek, Ibid., p. 39
48. Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West, Vol. I, Translated by
F. Atkinson, New York 1961, p. 31
49. Oswald Spengler, Pessimismus ?, Berlin 1922, p. 15
Like Spengler and Toennis, also Simmel is yet on a direct confrontation
with the pessimist tradition. See:
Georg Simmel, Schopenhauer und Nietzsche, Leipzig 1920
Georg Simmel, "Ueber die Grundfragen des Pessimismus", Zeitschrift
fuer Philosophie und Philosophische Kritik, 90, (1887)
50. Oswald Spengler, Pessimismus ?, p. 18
51. Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West, p. 61
52. Georg Lukacs, The Theory of the Novel, Cambridge 1971, p. 95
53. Herbert Marcuse, Eros and Civilization - A Philosophical Inquiry
into Frreud, Boston 1955, p. 176
54. Herbert Marcuse, Ibid., p, 187
55. Herbert Marcuse, "Liberation from the Affluent Society",
in David Cooper, (ed.) Dialectic of Liberation, London 1979, p. 184
56. Herbert Marcuse, Five Lectures, Translated by J. Shapiro, Boston
1970, p. 41
57. Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man, Boston 1971, pp. 30-31
58. Herbert Marcuse, Ibid., p. 20
59. Herbert Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse Harchiv 564.02
60. Herbert Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse Archiv 569.00
61. Herbert Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse Archiv 241.10
62. Herbert Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse Archiv 241.01
63. Herbert Marcuse, Herbert Marcuse Archiv 241.12
64. Max Horkheimer-Theodor Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment, Translsated
by John Cumming, New York 1969. p. XI
65. Max Horkheimer-Theodor Adorno, Ibid., p. 33
66. Max Horkheimer-Theodor Adforno, Ibid., p. 55
67. Max Horkheimer-Theodor Adorno, Ibid., pp. 54, 59
68. Max Horkheimer,-Theodor Adorno, Ibid., pp. 17-18
69. Max Horkheimer, "Die Aktualitaet Schopenhauers", Gesammelte Schriften,
VII, Frankfurt a.M 1985, s. 131
70. Max Horkheimer, Aclipse of Reason, New York 1974, p. 182
71. Max Horkheimer, Ibid., pp. 23-24
72. Max Horkheimer, Ibid, p. 22
73. Max Horkheimer-Theoddor Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment, pp.
164, 166, 222
74. Max Horkheimer-Theodor Adorno, Ibid., p. 215
75. Max Horkheimer, "Schopenhauers Denken in Verhaeltnis zu Religion
und Wissenschaft", Gesammelte Schriften, VII, Frankfurt a.M 1985, s. 251
76. Max Horkheimer, "Die Sehnsucht nach dem ganz Anderen", Gesammelte
Schriften VII, Frankfurt a.M 1985, s. 404
77. Max Horkheimer, "Dialog ueber Dialog", p. 305
78. Max Horkheimer-Theodor Adorno, Ibid., p. 256
79. Walter Benjamin, "Ueber den Begriff der Geschichte", Gesammelte
Schriften, 1.2, Frankfurt a.M, s. 695-697
80. Walter Benjamin, Ibid., s. 703
81. Walter Benjamin, Ibid., s. 701
82. Walter Benjamin, "Ueber den Begriff der Geschichte, s. 697
83. Walter Benjamin, Ibid., s. 697-698
84. Jean Baudrillard, The Transparency of Evil, Translated by James
Benedict, London-New York 1993, p. 81
85. Jean Baudrillard, Symbolic Exchange and Death, Translated by Iain
Hamilton Grant, London 1986
86. Jacques Derrida, Acts of Literature, edited by Derek Atridge, New
York 1992, p. 277-278
87. Roland Barth, Text, Discourse, Ideology, New York 1981, p. 44
88. Heraclitus, Fragments, Translated by T.M . Robinson, Toronto 1987,
p. 11
89. Friedrich Nietzsche, Nietzsche Werke, IV. Leipzig 1921, p. 393
90. Jean-Francois Lyotard, The Inhuman - Reflections on Time, Translated
by Geoff Bennington and Rachel Bowlby, Oxford 1991, p. 13
91. Jean Baudrillard, The Transparency of Evil, Translated by James
Benedict, London 1993, p. 5