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Chris Hedges
Truthdig / Truthdig Op-Ed
Published: Tuesday 10 July 2012
“Human societies see what they want to see.”

How to Think

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Cultures that endure carve out a protected space for those who question and challenge national myths. Artists, writers, poets, activists, journalists, philosophers, dancers, musicians, actors, directors and renegades must be tolerated if a culture is to be pulled back from disaster. Members of this intellectual and artistic class, who are usually not welcome in the stultifying halls of academia where mediocrity is triumphant, serve as prophets. They are dismissed, or labeled by the power elites as subversive, because they do not embrace collective self-worship. They force us to confront unexamined assumptions, ones that, if not challenged, lead to destruction. They expose the ruling elites as hollow and corrupt. They articulate the senselessness of a system built on the ideology of endless growth, ceaseless exploitation and constant expansion. They warn us about the poison of careerism and the futility of the search for happiness in the accumulation of wealth. They make us face ourselves, from the bitter reality of slavery and Jim Crow to the genocidal slaughter of Native Americans to the repression of working-class movements to the atrocities carried out in imperial wars to the assault on the ecosystem. They make us unsure of our virtue. They challenge the easy clichés we use to describe the nation—the land of the free, the greatest country on earth, the beacon of liberty—to expose our darkness, crimes and ignorance. They offer the possibility of a life of meaning and the capacity for transformation.

Human societies see what they want to see. They create national myths of identity out of a composite of historical events and fantasy. They ignore unpleasant facts that intrude on self-glorification. They trust naively in the notion of linear progress and in assured national dominance. This is what nationalism is about—lies. And if a culture loses its ability for thought and expression, if it effectively silences dissident voices, if it retreats into what Sigmund Freud called “screen memories,” those reassuring mixtures of fact and fiction, it dies. It surrenders its internal mechanism for puncturing self-delusion. It makes war on beauty and truth. It abolishes the sacred. It turns education into vocational training. It leaves us blind. And this is what has occurred. We are lost at sea in a great tempest. We do not know where we are. We do not know where we are going. And we do not know what is about to happen to us.

The psychoanalyst John Steiner calls this phenomenon “turning a blind eye.” He notes that often we have access to adequate knowledge but because it is unpleasant and disconcerting we choose unconsciously, and sometimes consciously, to ignore it. He uses the Oedipus story to make his point. He argued that Oedipus, Jocasta, Creon and the “blind” Tiresias grasped the truth, that Oedipus had killed his father and married his mother as prophesized, but they colluded to ignore it. We too, Steiner wrote, turn a blind eye to the dangers that confront us, despite the plethora of evidence that if we do not radically reconfigure our relationships to each other and the natural world, catastrophe is assured. Steiner describes a psychological truth that is deeply frightening.

I saw this collective capacity for self-delusion among the urban elites in Sarajevo and later Pristina during the wars in Bosnia and Kosovo. These educated elites steadfastly refused to believe that war was possible although acts of violence by competing armed bands had already begun to tear at the social fabric. At night you could hear gunfire. But they were the last to “know.” And we are equally self-deluded. The physical evidence of national decay—the crumbling infrastructures, the abandoned factories and other workplaces, the rows of gutted warehouses, the closure of libraries, schools, fire stations and post offices—that we physically see, is, in fact, unseen. The rapid and terrifying deterioration of the ecosystem, evidenced in soaring temperatures, droughts, floods, crop destruction, freak storms, melting ice caps and rising sea levels, are met blankly with Steiner’s “blind eye.”

Oedipus, at the end of Sophocles’ play, cuts out his eyes and with his daughter Antigone as a guide wanders the countryside. Once king, he becomes a stranger in a strange country. He dies, in Antigone’s words, “in a foreign land, but one he yearned for.”

William Shakespeare in “King Lear” plays on the same theme of sight and sightlessness. Those with eyes in “King Lear” are unable to see. Gloucester, whose eyes are gouged out, finds in his blindness a revealed truth. “I have no way, and therefore want no eyes,” Gloucester says after he is blinded. “I stumbled when I saw.” When Lear banishes his only loyal daughter, Cordelia, whom he accuses of not loving him enough, he shouts: “Out of my sight!” To which Kent replies:

“ See better, Lear, and let me remain the ture blank of thine eye." 

The story of Lear, like the story of Oedipus, is about the attainment of this inner vision. It is about morality and intellect that are blinded by empiricism and sight. It is about understanding that the human imagination is, as William Blake saw, our manifestation of Eternity. “Love without imagination is eternal death.”

The Shakespearean scholar Harold Goddard wrote: “The imagination is not a faculty for the creation of illusion; it is the faculty by which alone man apprehends reality. The ‘illusion’ turns out to be truth.” “Let faith oust fact,” Starbuck says in “Moby-Dick.”

“It is only our absurd ‘scientific’ prejudice that reality must be physical and rational that blinds us to the truth,” Goddard warned. There are, as Shakespeare wrote, “things invisible to mortal sight.” But these things are not vocational or factual or empirical. They are not found in national myths of glory and power. They are not attained by force. They do not come through cognition or logical reasoning. They are intangible. They are the realities of beauty, grief, love, the search for meaning, the struggle to face our own mortality and the ability to face truth. And cultures that disregard these forces of imagination commit suicide. They cannot see.

“How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea,” Shakespeare wrote, “Whose action is no stronger than a flower?” Human imagination, the capacity to have vision, to build a life of meaning rather than utilitarianism, is as delicate as a flower. And if it is crushed, if a Shakespeare or a Sophocles is no longer deemed useful in the empirical world of business, careerism and corporate power, if universities think a Milton Friedman or a Friedrich Hayek is more important to their students than a Virginia Woolf or an Anton Chekhov, then we become barbarians. We assure our own extinction. Students who are denied the wisdom of the great oracles of human civilization—visionaries who urge us not to worship ourselves, not to kneel before the base human emotion of greed—cannot be educated. They cannot think.

To think, we must, as Epicurus understood, “live in hiding.” We must build walls to keep out the cant and noise of the crowd. We must retreat into a print-based culture where ideas are not deformed into sound bites and thought-terminating clichés. Thinking is, as Hannah Arendt wrote, “a soundless dialogue between me and myself.” But thinking, she wrote, always presupposes the human condition of plurality. It has no utilitarian function. It is not an end or an aim outside of itself. It is different from logical reasoning, which is focused on a finite and identifiable goal. Logical reason, acts of cognition, serve the efficiency of a system, including corporate power, which is usually morally neutral at best, and often evil. The inability to think, Arendt wrote, “is not a failing of the many who lack brain power but an ever-present possibility for everybody—scientists, scholars, and other specialists in mental enterprises not excluded.”

Our corporate culture has effectively severed us from human imagination. Our electronic devices intrude deeper and deeper into spaces that were once reserved for solitude, reflection and privacy. Our airwaves are filled with the tawdry and the absurd. Our systems of education and communication scorn the disciplines that allow us to see. We celebrate prosaic vocational skills and the ridiculous requirements of standardized tests. We have tossed those who think, including many teachers of the humanities, into a wilderness where they cannot find employment, remuneration or a voice. We follow the blind over the cliff. We make war on ourselves.

The vital importance of thought, Arendt wrote, is apparent only “in times of transition when men no longer rely on the stability of the world and their role in it, and when the question concerning the general conditions of human life, which as such are properly coeval with the appearance of man on earth, gain an uncommon poignancy.” We never need our thinkers and artists more than in times of crisis, as Arendt reminds us, for they provide the subversive narratives that allow us to chart a new course, one that can assure our survival.

“What must I do to win salvation?” Dimitri asks Starov in “The Brothers Karamazov,” to which Starov answers: “Above all else, never lie to yourself.”

And here is the dilemma we face as a civilization. We march collectively toward self-annihilation. Corporate capitalism, if left unchecked, will kill us. Yet we refuse, because we cannot think and no longer listen to those who do think, to see what is about to happen to us. We have created entertaining mechanisms to obscure and silence the harsh truths, from climate change to the collapse of globalization to our enslavement to corporate power, that will mean our self-destruction. If we can do nothing else we must, even as individuals, nurture the private dialogue and the solitude that make thought possible. It is better to be an outcast, a stranger in one’s own country, than an outcast from one’s self. It is better to see what is about to befall us and to resist than to retreat into the fantasies embraced by a nation of the blind.

This article was originally posted on Truthdig.



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ABOUT Chris Hedges
Chris Hedges is a weekly Truthdig columnist and a fellow at The Nation Institute. His newest book is “The World As It Is: Dispatches on the Myth of Human Progress.”

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14 comments on "How to Think"

Andrea Couture

July 15, 2012 5:51am

So well spoken...congratulations! I put your piece in my journal where I try to center myself & face the truth. Thank you for the inspiration.

Christopher Miller

July 11, 2012 6:39pm

GREGHILBERT, refreshingly open-minded thoughts. Like you, my instincts are at odds with my intellect. Maybe we need to rethink our role not just as a nation or a class, but as a species. Our organized abuse of other species, a mass torture and slaughter we almost all turn a blind eye to to stay in meat, would surely horrify a benevolent alien intelligence. Our own petty inter-human squabbles and abuses pale in comparison.

wildthang

July 10, 2012 5:47pm

A culture build on the foundation of the CIA has a big problem... it is an immoral world of lies and deception and creates self-deception by compartmentalizing the dirty work from the clean workd so they don't evern realize how dirty they are. Disinformation in all our institutions is the companion to the paradigm of war built into them... we believe our disinformation for the clean version of its activities...after the dirty work we are told the cleanup crew comes in and swepts away the dirt and the trails kind of like invading Iraq to grab all the files while leaving all the ordinance open to be looted. The record of our work with Iraq gone...

and the Presidential libraries gradually massage the stories to meet the myths years later....

and better yet to read between the lines of the collective consciousness and intuit the truths...

flaquito

July 10, 2012 5:19pm

Reality sucks!! But we can still think, even though we might not be able to get it together. Excellent posts and article. We can still live our lives in a way that is less destructive to other, and we know that we are not alone. We must stay awake and have fun with our lives

frigate

July 10, 2012 4:58pm

“It is only our absurd ‘scientific’ prejudice that reality must be physical and rational that blinds us to the truth,”

Beautifully written but flawed thinking.  Rev. Hedges hints that his list of thinkers and visionaries includes the religious superstitionists that cause so much more harm than good.  And he blames all of science for atrocities caused by willful ignorance and misuse of scientific knowledge.  (i.e. "fossil is destroying the biosphere but we need it for economic growth").  Improper technology like nukes comes from misuse of scientific research by the conservative business world that ignores known dangers for profit and empire.

"They do not come through cognition or logical reasoning. They are intangible. They are the realities of beauty, grief, love, the search for meaning, the struggle to face our own mortality and the ability to face truth. And cultures that disregard these forces of imagination commit suicide. They cannot see."

Hedges chooses to be awed by things he and other theocrats can't seem to explain scientifically.   The realities of beauty, grief, love all exist in lower animals and can be explained scientifically in terms of species survival.

Intangibles like the search for meaning, the struggle to face our own mortality and the ability to face truth formerly belonging to the realm of philosophy and theology, all have a scientific basis. This is now being researched and seen in Science publications.

Great inventions come from people that know science, not often from those with a religionist, poetic , artistic or literary background. Beauty and truth comes from nature and those who study it know it best. Fairies, witches, goblins, angels and ghosts have never produced anything but voyeuristic entertainment and a means to manipulate the public mind.

How can Hedges condemn the scientific method because of its misuse by conservatives for perpetuating evil?

flaquito

July 10, 2012 5:22pm

That is why I have problem with Hedges from time to time, his "religious" tendencies. But it is an article that asks questions.

C. S. Herrman

July 10, 2012 1:35pm

I applaud, as usual, Mr. Hedges for a directness that cuts through the mediocrity demanded of political correctness. I must, however, admonish readers to add material by which to more fully capture the full merit of his remarks, material that actually exposes much of what he said for the very thoughtlessness he complains of. The visions and imagination of prophets, those especially whom he quotes, allow figures of speech that outwardly deny reality, somewhat as a parable, including thought. Christ asked that we bring experience first through the heart, another way of saying the same thing.

But, absent thought, it is highly questionable whether we could make sense of our feelings and experiences, whether we could interpret them aright and turn them to account. The prophet wishes to compel us, cajole us, egg us, beyond the habituated laziness of conscious mentality to a plane where thought sees ‘beyond’, a thought we might equate with a brand of spiritual vision. In other words, we do not want to disenfranchise the concept of thought from its common moorings, but rather to demonstrate the importance of thinking well and wisely, of examining the facts not so much in themselves as in relation to contexts both internal and external.

Thought is precisely what we all suppose it to be. What we want is that it not be lazy, that it not self-justify without also having weighed the relevant contexts, that it rather reflect intellectual integrity, a manner and mode of thought that properly examines reality however conceived. It is, metaphorically, but not less truthfully, the spirituality to seek and accept, if not always to agree with, truth.

My admonishment is, in short, that we not do injustice to a word simply because it is misused or abused. The problem, of course, lies not with ‘thought’, but with the way we apply it. We should rather rescue, than deny, our thought – after the fashion in which St. Augustine presumed to rescue philosophy from the same regress, the same dependence upon the immediate and empirical facts the over-attendance on which denies entrance beyond the staid and static confines of self-assurance and comfort. As Mr. Hedges says up front, the issue is, How to think right, not how to avoid it.

greghilbert

July 10, 2012 1:09pm

I appreciate Mr Hedges' perspective, above all his encouragement of those who challenge prevailing assumptions. Foremost among these for me is the mythology casting life itself as essentially or wholly beautiful. When I consider the largely predatory nature of species in the food chain, merciless competition for survival, and life-cycles characteristically punctuated with fear, suffering, and death, the instinct to survive and reproduce can seem inherently cruel, whether a random by-product of physics or the design of a God whose purpose I cannot fathom. Unable to reconcile this with other of my perceptions, I shove it to the recesses of my mind, and resume the struggle to intervene. I WANT life as beautiful and purposeful as we can make it, for as many as possible.

Paradoxically, as to the course of our own species in the USA, I am coming to the belief it is time to openly call for war against the upper class. Yes, class war.
We have been blinded to the justification and need for it by the taboo the upper class and its surrogate elites have attached to the term "class war", even as they wage it by commission and omission, and mercilessly so.

What I would hope to see achieved is a substantial reversal of the increasingly extreme concentration of wealth and power, a depopularization of the class, and with it a degree of depopularization of the greed-based and consumer values to which we have been enslaved. I suffer no illusion of Utopia. I'd just like our children to have a CHANCE to escape the hell on earth into which we are now spiraling.

Sageman69

July 10, 2012 12:45pm

Insidious and filled with artifice is our history and vision.
Progress and Manifest Destiny our guiding myths from the past,
Fueled by technological marvels only once dreamed of,
they held a promise of a better and more civilized world......

Yet we suffocate in our illusions and bloat with consumer goods while the rest of the world starves. Once there were prairies and forests, and unpolluted rivers and oceans. Now there are gas wars, Nascar races, and excess abounds.
We seek a true vision and path, yet few of us spend our time reflecting. We are caught in the struggle for survival while unimagined wealth is hoarded by a scant few. History repeats itself and a cataclysm yawns before us. How many of us will awaken before it is too late?

Thank you, Chris Hedges, for your voice against the grain and your insight into our blindness.

Trish House's picture
Trish House

July 10, 2012 2:27pm

You said, "How many of us will awaken before it is too late?" And once awakened will we make it to survival against the stream of walking sleepers that cannot change anything at all, but merely react as the dream plays out in their minds?

Bibliocentric

July 10, 2012 11:43am

When philosophy paints it's grey on grey
A form of life is near ended.
And with grey on grey, it can't be revived
But only comprehended.
The Owl of Minerva spreads it's wings
While the shades of night are gathering.

(Hegel; preface to Philosophy of Right)

Patricia Dixon

July 10, 2012 11:28am

Thank you for your inspiring article. As an artist I know what you mean, I am living it. Waldo Emerson said: “Imagination is a very high way of seeing, which does not come by study, but by the intellect being where and what it sees”.
The problem with our society and the pursuit of individualism is the we cannot get out of ourselves, enter into the other and be transformed by the other. We do not know how to create and nurture community unless tragedy strikes, soon after we forget.......and continue to deceive ourselves to forget what we have learned.

Alexa Fleckenst...

July 10, 2012 10:44am

You certainly bring bad tidings. But there is one light: We are allowed to communicate these thoughts on the Internet. So there is hope.

Alexa Fleckenstein M.D., physician, author.

Jeffrey Hill

July 10, 2012 10:37am

Many people can't be honest with themselves so they certainly can't be honest with others. It's an Owellian world. EOE-l/i/e.