Wes Cecil is a philosophy professor with a big following on YouTube. His lectures are at an undergraduate level but they are clear and often amusing, so if there is some philosopher or topic you want an introduction to, he is a good option. Two of my sons are big fans.
I was moved to write about Cecil by this lecture, The Accursed Share. The topic here is desire. As Cecil notes, all traditional societies are intensely suspicious of desire. The Buddhists have taken this the farthest, arguing that the supreme goal of human life is to completely extinguish desire. But skepticism about desire runs in different ways through Stoicism, Confucianism, Christianity, and so on. When nineteenth-century romantic rebels tried to come up with the most radical slogan they could imagine, they hit on "Do what thou wilt."
Cecil says that most cultures practiced arranged marriage because they absolutely did not trust young people to choose mates rationally, since the young are blinded by desire. We've all seen this happen, he says, people hooking up because of intense sexual attraction even though everyone around them can see disaster looming: "pain coming in 5, 4, 3, 2 . . ."
But we celebrate desire. Cecil says he is fascinated by the lies cultures tell their children. In our society, the big lie is, "You can be anything you want." That is, our big lie foregrounds desire. The most important thing you can do is figure out what you want, so you can get it.
Cecil spends much of this lecture asking where our desires come from, especially our desires for material things. These cannot, he says, really come from inside us, because we evolved in societies where none of the thing we covet even existed. You can't have a natural desire for a flashy car. These desires must come from outside us, from our society.
All of which is basically true. It is true that all the old philosophical traditions are suspicious of desire, and that many of the things we covet are recent inventions of dubious value. But note the anti-freedom agenda here; traditional cultures are especially dubious of any desire to be other than what you are. If you are born a peasant, you should strive to be a good peasant, by imitating the ways of your forebears. If you are born an aristocrat, you should strive to be a good aristocrat, by imitating your aristocratic ancestors. And if you happen to be an outsider or newcomer, well, then you had better hide that as best you can by imitating the old families around you.
Which raises questions for me about the extent to which frowning on desire is at base a mechanism of control. I have long wondered if the evolutionary point of our sometimes outrageous sexuality is to shake things up, to break up these mechanisms of control and spread genes around in a more random way.
I certainly acknowledge that from a historical perspective it is bizarre that we use up so much breath telling young people to pursue their dreams. But what is the alternative? We don't have ancestral plots of land that we can tend, or ancestral houses we can preserve. We can't work in the same factories our fathers worked in. Not only can we choose our own careers, we must; there is nobody else to do it for us. I work in a field that did not even exist when my father was young.
I am not sure there is much value in thinking too much about the strangeness of our obsession with desire, because I think we are stuck with it.
Nor do I see much point in wondering which desires are somehow our own and which come from outside us. We all live in societies and take our notions of the good life from what we see around us. On the other hand I don't think there is anything more deeply rooted in our evolutionary selves than the desire for respect. So if you want a vacation house because all your colleagues have vacation houses, is that internal or external? An absurd concoction of consumer capitalism, or a deep-seated desire to be thought worthy by your peers? I think this is a meaningless question.
I would sum up the situation in wealthy western countries like this: we are wealthier than anyone in the past, and have more freedom than anyone in the past, but instead of filling us with joy this makes us anxious. No matter how much we have, we always want more; no matter how safe and secure our homes, we lie awake worrying. So far as we can tell we are not any happier than our ancestors. For every person who is thriving in our rapidly changing world, seizing opportunities that never before existed, another is floundering in indecision at the array of choices and outcomes before us.
Philosophy lectures will not solve any of this. What good would it do us to be suspicious of our desires? What could we rely on instead? Part of me cringes at song lyrics like, "How will I know? Trust your feelings. . . ." But what else could we trust? Many of the people who complain about our consumerism and general cult of desire also mock our advice industry, the explosion of self-help books and happiness gurus and so on. Of course the problem with advice gurus is that they disagree about everything, so you still have to pick the advice that best suits your own desires.
I think we have proved by now that neither freedom nor material abundance will make us happy. But neither will hewing to tradition. We need to find new paths, because history's storm surge has washed away the old ones. By all means, interrogate your desires; try to figure out which ones are reasonable, and which ones point toward shipwreck. But don't give up on them, because in the end they are all we have to guide us.
You're basically just describing the eternal struggle - and the entire purpose - of philosophy: people trying to figure out what makes for a "Good Life".
ReplyDeleteThere are countless answers. None of them are "The Correct Answer". Simultaneously, none of them are "wrong". It is all subjective, based on what a culture or even an individual values.
If you value human happiness, then clearly modern Capitalism isn't a great answer, because it is a system that inherently leads to a society in which people generate human misery so that immense profits can then be made selling people supposed palliatives for the same - massive amounts of resources are dedicated to manufacturing desires to be "filled", and great effort is put into ensuring the "solutions" to those desires never actually solve anything (at least long term).
If you value wealth at all costs, even your own happiness, then Capitalism can be fantastic - at least, assuming you're ruthless and lucky enough to climb to a position of privilege, unlike the overwhelming majority of individuals who will live their entire lives as exploited hopefuls chasing riches they'll never be allowed to obtain.
If you value the idea of a chosen eternal afterlife over other concerns, then you'll spend your life following the tenets and rules you think will gain you entry. If you want to enter Heaven, you'll likely pray and go to church, even if you don't actually live your life in a very Christ-like way. If you want to enter Valhalla, you'll obsess over managing to die gloriously in armed combat, even if there's not any good reason to fight anyone. If you want to achieve Nirvana, you'll try to detach yourself from all earthly desires and concerns, even if that means turning a blind eye to worldly evils you could prevent in life. Etc.
If you value freedom, there are many different ways to live your life, depending on what you actually mean by "freedom".
If you value individual freedom above all, you'll perhaps lean toward Libertarian ideals of not being beholden to anyone or anything, least of all states and governments. If you value societal freedom, you'll perhaps lean towards classically Progressive ideals, working toward a system where everyone is equal under the law and the government operates for the good of everyone, no matter who they are or what they believe. If you value "freedom" as a nebulous marker of - and shibboleth for - American patriotism, you'll perhaps lean toward Conservative ideals of upholding the traditions and values of the historically privileged majority of the population, and forcibly impose conformity to those values in others (denying them the freedom to differ or dissent).
If you value "The Aryan People" over all, you lean toward Nazism, et cetera. If you value "Unity" and "Order" over all, you lean toward Authoritarianism of various stripes.
If you value war, you lean toward militancy. If you value peace, you lean toward diplomacy. If you value technology, you lean toward technocracy. If you value nature, you lean toward environmentalism. Etc, etc, etc.
It's all a question of what outcomes you prefer over others. Naturally, we all more or less disagree with each other, even within the same nations, cultures, religions; even among our closest friends and family members.
---
,"Hao! Dai ye! We won again! This is good - but what is best in life?"
"The open steppe. Fleet horse. Falcons at your wrist. And the wind in your hair."
"Wrong! Conan, what is best in life?"
"To crush your enemies! See them driven before you! And to hear the lamentations of their women!"
I've tried twice to post a response to this, and both times it failed. I'm not going to write it again a third time, but I'm trying to post this to see if it even works.
ReplyDeleteWhoa, it worked!
ReplyDeleteOkay, here's the second part: also not impressed with the idea that our desires can't "really come from inside us, because we evolved in societies where none of the things we covet even existed." No one pretends that humans have had a deep desire for central air conditioning for millions of years. But the desire for comfort is deep and ancient. Most other modern inventions seem to me to be attempts to address ancient longings. That includes the scold's favorite target, the shiny new car.
Perhaps one should say, by way of a half-baked gnomic utterance, that people discontented with humanity always begin rationalizing their disapproval by attacking desire. As I said, half-baked, but maybe it hits a certain mark?
Anyway, who said that humans were designed for deep, lasting happiness? Evolution is a series of rickety hacks. Fish had the whole keep-breathing-separate-from-eating thing brilliantly solved, and then some of them had to go and move to the land and start doing both through the same tube, thus introducing us to the delights of choking. And then humans had to add talking, and make it a three-function tube, prone to all sorts of trouble. On top of that, we added consciousness, thought, and the self--none of which, whether illusions or not, are particularly designed for happiness.
But if this posts, I'll be happy. For a while.
Oh, now, I see, it posts, and then gets removed.
ReplyDeleteHmmm, after several attempts to post my first paragraph, I see that it keeps getting removed. Something, or someone, doesn't like something about it.
ReplyDeleteLet's see if this paragraph-portion sticks.
ReplyDeleteAs described here, I'm distinctly unimpressed with Wes Cecil. His points strike me as glib, superficial, and half-baked. "All traditional societies are intensely suspicious of desire"--except that all the movements cited as examples started as rebellions marked by criticism of the surrounding society, and assumed that most people would remain trapped in desire's trammels. And one can find plenty of ancient positive statements about desire.