Liar!
We currently live in the throes of what I call a hermeneutic of paranoia or what a friend of mine has referred to as ‘malignant skepticism’. As educators, of course, we want to teach people to be skeptical, but it seems that something has gone seriously awry in this project. The skepticism we have sought to engender has, seemingly, consumed all standards of discourse and allowed conspiratorial, dangerous nonsense to proliferate. Skepticism has, seemingly, fulfilled the worst fears of critics of relativism and dissolved the very reason and public order on which a culture of intelligent critique rests. Worse, any return to older forms of dogmatism, whether religious or scientific, seems clumsy and forced, hopelessly compromised or even cringingly naïve. We can all see the effects of saying God, reason, or science in a louder voice to be null and, indeed, apt to breed their own kind of extremism. The result of all this is a world where greats swathes of people have lost any sense of trust in great swathes of other people. Especially, they have lost trust in public institutions. The further result is that many people assume we are living in the big lie and that the only problem is figuring out which lie it is and who is telling it. Of course, the people in conflict over this will turn on each other: YOUR big lie is lying about what the big lie is! I am not here to judge people over this however much I want to convince them that the big lie is, actually, believing there is a big lie. This is because I think there is a much bigger problem than simply a lack of critical thinking skills or judgment or a mere incapacity for faith and trust in others. Something else is going on and here I will try to put my finger on what this something else might be.
People increasingly
seem to live in a world governed by profound anxiety. One form this anxiety
takes is the conviction that we are living in a web of universal deceit.
EVERYONE is lying ALL THE TIME. Only a chosen few have seen through the
universal lie and glimpsed the world outside the matrix. Sometimes this comes from
a traditional place: the ongoing battle in the US between scientistic ideology
and religious fundamentalism. There are people who think that the big lie is
religion (in general) or that the big lie is Darwinism or secularism (those two
notions seem fused in the minds of both parties). Pop atheists, for instance,
hold to the notion of religion as a form of priest-craft. This means that
anyone pushing back against their claims is practicing priest-craft and deceit
on THEM. The enemy have been determined to be liars in advance and we must be
on guard against ALL their wiles. This is so especially if one encounters a
religious intellectual who is a PAID liar out to entwine me in a web of subtle
sophistries. This is exactly what their Bible College Fundie counterparts think.
The Devil rules this world and the devil is the father of lies. The intellectual,
especially, is out to con you out of heaven presumably to feather his own nest.
Integral to each position is the belief that the opposite position cannot be held
sincerely. Either scientific or religious institutions, to the extent that they
have a public face, are built on lies. This is coupled with the belief that
whichever side of this binary I oppose controls everything and is an all pervasive, threatening
presence. I, alas, am neither an atheist nor a U.S. protestant and thus a
significant number of people in North America will have concluded I am a liar
and prevaricator even before I say anything. They have framed me in advance as
a liar and thus will interpret everything I say in that framing. Even if I say
something plausible or true that will indicate nothing but the subtilty and
depth of my will to deceive. This makes me perhaps the worst person to try and
moderate what people say in such discussions. To either side I am not ME but
one of THEM! The other, by the way, is always a token of a type and this type is an object of sectarian arrogance and contempt mingled with fear. At any rate, I have come to conclude that people in polarized groups would rather 'talk' to (or at) each other than to people outside their polarization.
So it goes a for
a raft of other people as well. If I fail to hate migrants in the right way
then I am working, consciously and knowingly, for the global cabal that is
using them to invade and subvert WASP countries that have earned their
prosperity. If I say the wrong thing about fossil fuels I am an agent of the
Chinese or perhaps a witch or warlock. Don’t get me started on what happens
when I say I am fully vaccinated (hint hint I’m a Nazi). Add all these 'lies' together
and we may well conclude that we live in a world of lying liars and the lies they
tell. We swim in lies as in our native element. Culture, the world, runs on lies,
often on ONE big lie. We are immersed in falsehood, and we scarcely know how
far down this falsehood goes. Maybe it is lies all the way down! Of course,
governments and churches do lie. Scientists do sometimes cheat and
corporations really don’t have our best interests at heart. There is plenty of
reason to take a skeptical attitude to institutions. Institutions fail
constantly. Scandal is the most banal fact of human existence. Malignant skepticism
though is a doctrine of total depravity (ALL errors are at bottom theological ones
or, to put it another way, people make the same mistakes outside theology as in
because there are only a small number of basic errors). Institutions don’t FALL
into evil they ARE evil in their very conception and constitution. They exist
over and against individuals in their immediate freedom and as such are an
omnipresent threat.
All of the above
may in part be grounded in a certain egalitarian bias. Truth cannot be
esoteric. What ever it is it must be open and available to all. Truth must be
accessible to ‘common sense’ for instance. This means, surely, that there can
be no real disagreements. If we disagree on vaccines, the Liberal Party
or the existence of God this CANNOT be a function of the question being
difficult or the truth being hard to access. If we disagree ONE OF US must be
lying. Plus, whoever is lying it is not ME. It must be YOU unless, of course,
YOU are a blithering idiot. This, I am told, is how paranoid schizophrenics think.
Their ideas are the same to them as observations and so everyone who disputes
or challenges them MUST be crazy themselves or part of a malign conspiracy. How
can they not see the self-evident reality of tin hats and space lizards? This,
however, may only be an extreme example of a common cognitive bias. We tend to
think that all things being equal, the other should perceive things as we do.
Disagreement entails a cognitive problem in one of the parties to the
disagreement for truth is one, universal and objective. We see this when a
group has to deal with a conversion of one of its members to a rival group.
When a Christian becomes an atheist, the response is that he or she was never a
real Christian. Just today I was reading that progressives who take right wing
turns were never really progressives! A change from truth to falsehood must be
explained away by some incentive or bias or by moral or cognitive decline. It
can’t simply result from normal thought processes of differently situated
individuals. Thus, a perfectly natural bias towards our own perceptions may lie
behind a tendency to attribute some kind of moral blind-spot or dishonesty to
those who do not see things as we do. That, or, like Mr. Woodhouse in Emma,
we simply decline to think that others could see the health benefits of gruel
or the deadly peril of drafts in any different light than we do.
However, in our
current environment I think we are dealing with something more than a natural
and comparatively innocent bias to our own thoughts as to our own children. The
lies of the other are a projection of our fear of the other. The other is a
threat as the ‘meme-sphere’ is Hobbesian and the stakes of the game power and
status. Thoughts, ideas, perceptions generated from the other are a threat to the
authenticity of the self. They are a threat to my personal narrative which is
my own free self-creation. I am the author of my facts and my truth. If my
truth is my authentic selfhood then it is treason to myself to admit its
contrary. The other has failed to achieve the authentic self-existence I have
otherwise he would be me! The very self-hood of the other is a big lie. The
other is a liar in the very act of being the other. The narrative self is a self under constant threat from various alterities. This, of course, is
exacerbated by all kinds of external factors. Selfhood is a precarious
achievement under our current economic and political institutions which involve
insane competition to meet increasingly abstract and arbitrary quantitative
metrics. A great many people, for instance, are reduced daily to a unit of
potential labor output or a ‘human resource’. This means that narratives of the
self will be clung to all the more fiercely and asserted all the more
violently. Further, we are at the mercy of institutions that determine all
aspect of our lives with little accountability. The narrative self is a little
island of freedom and a precious space that must be defended at all costs for
the world is out to crush it. I was told of a certain student who, on being
forbidden to use the first-person pronoun in an essay, concluded that education
was a conspiracy to destroy his individuality. This is silly yet oddly
revealing. The ‘I’ of this student perceived itself as threatened under any
conditions of institutional life (which always, as Hegel teaches us, has some
element of the impersonal). This impersonality was here perceived as
‘depersonalization’ and our flat earthers and anti-vaxxers and religious
fanatics are, surely, asserting themselves against the forces that erase the
self in the most direct way: stubborn, baffling, irrational resistance.
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