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FROM GARY C. MOORE'S
Perceptions on a Variety of Subjects |
Copyright © 2009 Gary C. Moore. Permission
granted to distribute in any medium, commercial
or non - commercial, provided
author attribution and copyright
notices remain intact.
(B.) Bakhtin grasps so well the meaning of
Rabelais' readiness to mingle discourses
because of the parallels between their two
periods. [296] Bakhtin claims that after
all these centuries of incomprehension his
own book finally explains Rabelais' book.
Bakhtin feels justified in making this extravagant
advertisement for the intertextuality of
the two books because they are both born
out of a similar uniqueness. [297] "[Rabelais]
uses the popular festive system of images
with its charter of freedom consecrated by
many centuries [re: Fran? ois Villon]; and
he uses them to inflict severe punishment
upon his foe, the Gothic age . . . In this
setting of consecrated rights, Rabelais attacks
the fundamental dogmas and sacraments, the
holy of holies of medieval theology"(RABELAIS
AND HIS WORLD, trans. Helen Iswolsky, Cambridge:
MIT Press, 1965, pg.
268).
This passage is one of the loopholes that
Bakhtin always leaves open in his own work.
In describing Rabelais's strategy, he reveals
his own. The relation of Rabelais to Villon
mirrors the relation of Bakhtin himself to
Rabelais. Bakhtin has written a book about
another book that constantly plays with the
categories and transgresses the limits set
by the forces of official ideology . . .
In treating the specific ways in which Rabelais
sought to find gaps in the walls between
what was punishable and what was unpunishable
in the 1530s, Bakhtin is looking for similar
loopholes at those borders in the 1930s.
His examination of Rabelaisian license is
a dialogic meditation on freedom. [298] .
. . Bakhtin knows there is much left unsaid
in his own text, and thus his major key for
opening up Gargantua is to seek the unsaid
in Rabelais' text. This approach assumes
that a text is recognizable as such, an entity
with distinct borders, because it is the
manifestation of a system [!].
A legal text is codified by the legal system,
a literary text by the literary. The systems
that texts manifest may also be thought of
as ideologies [!]. Ideology in this sense
is locatable in all that texts take for granted,
the preconditions held to be so certain by
their authors that they need not be stated.
The pillars supporting a text's assumptive
world are thus invisible insofar as they
need not be expressed. Ideology must be seen
in a text's holes, in what it has felt it
could leave unuttered . . . Great effort
is required even to see it, since so much
of its function is to ensure that it never
becomes an issue independent of the material
it organizes . . . [Bakhtin] charts the parameters
of the Renaissance social system which enabled
a more balanced ratio of permitted versus
unpermitted language than has since then
obtained. Bakhtin treats the spheres of permitted
and unpermitted language as texts in their
own right, each with its own characteristic
gaps and holes.
He identifies two subtexts: carnival, which
is a social institution, and grotesque realism,
which is a literary mode [But, as it is explained
above, this 'social institution,' an intentionally
dubious identification of carnival, and this
'literary mode' are both systems within unacknowledged
ideologies. In fact, just like in Heidegger,
absorbs and includes acknowledged ideologies
as Bakhtin will show below in his comparison
of the acknowledged ideology of Stalinism
with, of all things, Neo-platonism!].
Rabelais and His World is a study of how
the social and the literary interact. In
addition, it is a study of the semantics
of the body, the different meanings of the
body's limbs, apertures, and functions [But
this is the body as personal, or "psychic"
as Sartre calls it, not the scientific physiological
body, although Rabelais himself uses the
horizontality of science to battle the vertical
hierarchy of theological idealism.]. [298-299]
. . . The importance of carnival . . . lay
. . . in the unique sense of the world it
embodied. First of all, carnival was one
of the few areas that the hegemony of the
Roman Catholic Church did not reach. Carnivals
are ritually devoid of mysticism and piety.
They are without prayer and magic: "They
do not command nor do they asked for anything
. . . All these forms are systematically
placed outside the church and religiosity.
They belong to a completely different sphere.
Not only do such forms fail to belong to
official religiosity, but they also fail
to follow the rules of official aesthetic
forms: "The basic carnival nucleus of
this structure is a purely artistic form
. . . and does not, generally speaking, even
belong to the sphere of art at all . . .
In reality, it is life itself . . . shaped
according to a certain pattern of play"
(pg. 7). Unlike ritual, carnival is not organized
by a separate caste of specialists who create
it according to their exclusive dictates,
whether religious or aesthetic. Everybody
makes carnival, everybody is carnival: "Carnival
is not a spectacle seen by the people; they
live in it, and everyone participates because
its very idea embraces all the people."
Carnival extends a kind of general hegemony
not only over everyone but also everywhere:
"While carnival lasts, there is no other
life outside it. During carnival time life
is subject only to its laws . . . the laws
of its own freedom" (pg. 7).
Carnival is a minimally ritualized anti-ritual,
a festive celebration of the other, the gaps
and holes in all the mappings of the world
laid out in systematic theologies, legal
codes, normative poetics, and class hierarchies.
[300] Carnival must not be confused with
mere holiday play. The ability to revel in
the world's variety, to celebrate its openness
and its ever-renewed capacity to surprise,
is a "special form of life (osobaja
~iznennaja forma) ," a kind of existential
heteroglossia (pg. 8). Carnival is a gap
in the fabric of society. And since the dominant
ideology seeks to author the social order
as a unified text, fixed, complete, and forever,
carnival is a threat. [300-301] . . . Such
an emphasis on change and becoming is directly
opposed to the official emphasis on the past,
to a stasis so complete that it becomes eternity.
Through carnival, the folk are "freed
from the oppression of such gloomy categories
as 'eternal,' 'immovable,' 'absolute,' 'unchangeable,'
and instead are exposed to the gay and free
laughing aspect of the world, with its unfinished
and open character, with the joy of change
and renewal" (pg. 81, 83). . . . [T]he
feast is a carnivalesque form insofar as
it is a "temporary transfer to the utopian
world . . . It is rather a primary indestructible
ingredient in human civilization; it may
become sterile or even degenerate, but it
cannot vanish," because it is "a
liberation from all that is utilitarian,
practical" (pg. 276).
Like other aspects of carnival, the feast
is a victory over fear . . . The feast celebrates
the destruction of what was formerly threatening.
[301] . . . "It is the people as a whole,
but organized in their own way . . . it is
outside all socioeconomic and political organization,
which is suspended for the time of the festivity"
(pg. 255) . . . The kind of time peculiar
to carnival is the release from time . .
. But this freedom cannot be understood merely
as playing hooky from the norms of noncarnivalized
life at any particular point in history [302]
. . . The festive crowd ". . . is conscious
of its uninterrupted continuity in time,
of its relative historic immortality . .
. the people do not perceive a static image
of their unity (eine Gestalt) but instead
the uninterrupted continuity of their becoming
and the ceaseless metamorphosis of death
and renewal" (pg. 255-256). . . . "It
is a pregnant death, a death that gives birth
. . . Life is shown in its two fold contradictory
process: it is the epitome of incompleteness"
(pg. 25-26). If the body is to tell this
distinctive kind of timeless time, it must
be conceived as a special kind of clock .
. . The grotesque body is flesh as the site
of becoming . . . [I]t "outgrows itself
its own self, transgresses its own limits
. . . conceives a new, second body, the bowels
and the phallus . . . Next to the bowels
and the genital organs is the mouth through
which entered the world to be swallowed up
. . . the grotesque image ignores the closed,
smooth, and impenetrable surface of the body
and retains only its excrescences (sprouts,
buds) and orifices, only that which leads
beyond the body's limited space or into the
body's depths" (pg. 317-318). [303]
". . . [T]he inner movement of being
itself was expressed in the passing of one
form into the other, in the ever incompleted
character of being" (pg. 32).
Just as carnival enacts the intertextuality
of ideologies, official and unofficial, so
the grotesque body foregrounds the intertextuality
of nature . . . Carnival and the grotesque
both have the effect of plunging certainty
into ambivalence and uncertainty, as a result
of their emphasis on contradictions and the
relativity of all classificatory systems
. . . The mask, which is "the most complex
theme of folk culture . . . rejects conformity
to one's own self [!]. The mask is related
to transition, metamorphoses, the violation
of natural boundaries" (pg. 39-40) .
. . [304] . . . This is the essence of Rabelais'
novel, and thus the reason that it was violently
opposed by Calvin and contemporary churchmen,
who related the atheistic and materialistic
trends of the time directly to the banquet
atmosphere which they characterized as "prandial
[belonging to a meal] libertinism" (pg.
297). . . . When a work written in the Soviet
Union in the late 1930's and early 1940's
makes so much of freedom and the unofficial/official
distinction, it cannot fail to be in part
a comment on its times.
Although these concepts were previously invoked
by Bakhtin, in RABELAIS they are given their
most powerful airing. The book thus marks
a distinct shift in Bakhtin's writing. It
is more passionately argued, more visionary,
and more obviously ideological [This makes
it a work of philosophy hiding as literary
theory.]. Although on the surface it is less
Russocentric than his earlier writings, it
represents Bakhtin's most comprehensive critique
to date of Stalinist culture, that singular
system which had just reached its height
in the purges of 1936-1938. RABELAIS must
be seen in the context of its times. In the
original dissertation on which RABELAIS is
based Bakhtin, who peppered his earlier texts
with references to Russian writers such as
Pushkin, Lermontov, Dostoyevsky, and Tolstoy,
makes little mention of Russia or Russian
writers. But this near absence of Russia
in the texts makes it all the more present
as a referent. . . [305] . . . [One of the
references to things Russian], slipped into
the middle of the book, commends Peter the
Great and Ivan the Terrible ["Terrible,"
grozny also means "awesome."
The first part of Eisenstein's film IVAN
THE TERRIBLE pleased Stalin tremendously
with its implicit comparison of him with
Ivan (1944). The second part put the KGB
in an unfavorable light and was banned (1946).
The third part, which had started its filming
before the second part's release, was closed
down unfinished.] as czars who "carnivalized
Russia," although Peter's effort was
the lesser of the two because he introduced
Western rather than native rituals (pp. 270-271).
This reference seems to be a gesture towards
official thinking, since both Peter and Ivan
were used in 1930's rhetoric as symbols for
the model ruler whom Stalin was purported
to represent, and by the time Bakhtin began
his dissertation, Ivan had superseded Peter
as the chief model. Yet the reference is
also ambiguous . . . the very names of these
czars are synonymous with autocratic rule
and repression. [306] . . . RABELAIS presents,
inter alia, a critique of contemporary Soviet
ideology. It offers a counter ideology to
the values and practices that dominated public
life in the 1930's.
The counter-ideology itself is a particular
and somewhat singular articulation of ideas
commonly found among the intelligentsia of
the 1920's, primarily among the avant-garde
and Bakhtin's friends. Bakhtin presents his
counter ideology not through a frontal attack
on Stalinism but rather through a dialogue
with it. [307] . . . Stalinist epistemology
was a crude form of Neo-Platonism in which
only the elect, specifically the leaders,
had access to the higher order of reality.
Bakhtin's response to Stalinism is organized
around the dichotomy common to all of his
earlier writings, the distinction between
official culture and the culture of the folk
[Heidegger, CONTRIBUTIONS TO PHILOSOPHY:
From Enknowing***] . . . The function of
folk culture is not just to debunk authority
figures and received notions, as a healthy
antidote to the dullness and dryness of official
culture. Folk humor amounts to considerably
more than mere playful irreverence, for the
folk assume willy-nilly the role of a bulwark
against repression.
The peculiarity of carnival laughter is its
"indissoluble and essential relation
to freedom. The serious element in class
culture and the "monolithic seriousness
of the Christian cult and world view"
go hand in hand with fear and repression,
while "power, repression and authority
never speak in the language of laughter"
(pg. 265, 89, 84, 46, 107, 515, 94). . .
. Bakhtin's critique of Stalinism does not
stop at its repressiveness but tackles its
fundamental epistemological principle, the
vertical ordering of all reality . . . [T]he
carnival ethos undermined this epistemological
megalomania. It undermined or debunked absolute
ideas and introduced instead a spirit of
"joyful relativity," a phrase found
in all Bakhtin's work of this period. . .
. Bakhtin . . . postulates the carnival spirit
and carnival world as models for a superior
world order that is organized horizontally
rather than vertically (pg. 380-396) . .
. [The carnival's] essential qualities are
incompleteness, becoming, and ambiguity.
The question raised by Bakhtin's carnival
. . . is whether such a horizontally organized
world can be maintained for any length of
time . . . There is . . . a strong element
of idealization, even utopian visionariness,
in Bakhtin's analysis of carnival.
This is particularly apparent in his characterization
of the folk. At this very time, the official
platform, both literary and political, was
assigning the folk a major role in its own
scheme of things . . . Bakhtin decries the
narrow conception of the folk prevailing
at this time, which excludes the culture
of laughter and the marketplace with all
its subversiveness, blasphemy, and blatant
physically. The result of this exclusion
is a prettified, emasculated version of the
folk, with no bite. But while opposing one
idealized conception of the folk, Bakhtin's
own counter image is no less idealized, dripping
with urine and feces though it be . . . Bakhtin
attacks yet another unacknowledged idealism
that had crept into Stalinism, the underlying
assumption of all official rhetoric that
there is a higher order of reality to which
ordinary citizens do not have access.
This assumption is expressed, for instance,
in the main slogan of the decade, "Higher!
(Vyae!)". . . . . . Bakhtin's reaction
against the Soviet emphasis on transcending
the physical body is consistent with his
former rejection of Pauline ideas about the
need to cast off physicality as expressed
by theologians such as Florensky or the followers
of Saint Seraphim of Sarov.
Bakhtin's stress on the body is far from
his only affront to socialist realism in
RABELAIS. He goes far beyond his previous
attacks by positing a countervailing ideal,
which he calls "grotesque realism."
To Bakhtin, the grotesque is the expression
in literature of the carnival spirit. It
incorporates for him what are the primary
values: incompleteness, becoming, ambiguity,
indefinability, non-canonicalism - indeed,
all that jolts us out of our normal expectations
and epistemological complacency. . . . According
to Bakhtin, the novel is that genre which
executes its own intention by binding the
discourses the discourses of other ideologies.
RABELAIS is a scholarly variant on this appropriation
of other discourses for one's own purposes.
. . . The . . . major villain is the Roman
Catholic Church, which Bakhtin argues is
the enemy of all that Rabelais espoused .
. . [H]e uses the church, the self-proclaimed
"sole-possessor" of truth, to stand
for the party in his attacks against all
claims to the possession of an absolute truth
and against all forms of monologism.
Finally, he expresses a view of the Roman
Catholic Church that has long been popular
among the Russian intelligentsia . . . In
the circles that Bakhtin once moved, both
the Roman Church and the Orthodox Church
were felt by many to represent a travesty
of true spirituality because of their dogmatism,
obtuseness, and power mongering. For instance,
Blok distinguished between a "true clergy'
and that "caste of morally obtuse people
who claim the title priest." Thus, Bakhtin's
anticlerical remarks should not be regarded
entirely as Aesopean language but should
be taken in part at face value. . . . Bakhtin
remarks in MARXISM AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF
LANGUAGE, "Languages are philosophies
- not abstract but concrete social philosophies,
penetrated by a system of values inseparable
from living practice and class struggle"
("V. N. Voloainov," MARXISM AND
THE PHILOSOPHY OF LANGUAGE, trans. Matejka
& Titunik, Seminar Press, 1973, pg. 471[I
cannot find this in the Harvard edition]).
. . .
Rabelais' importance lies not in his own
particular ideology but in his awareness
of the limits, the incompleteness, of any
ideology. No matter how serious Rabelais
appears to be at any point in a text, he
makes sure to leave a gap, to provide what
Bakhtin calls a "merry loophole - a
loophole that opens onto the distant future
and that lends an aspect of ridicule to the
present or the immediate future. Rabelais
never exhausts his resources in direct statements,"
(pg. 454).
Rabelais is important not only because he
lets Bakhtin speak about language evolution
and the interrelation between the literary
language and the vernacular, but also because
he permits Bakhtin to return once again to
the major topic of his career, the dialogic
nature of language and its relation to the
dialogic nature of the world . . . "There
is an awakening of the ancient ambivalence
of all words and expressions, combining the
wish of life and death, of sowing and rebirth.
The unofficial aspect of the world of becoming
and of the grotesque body is disclosed"
(pg. 420).
COMMENTARY?
Let us stop and catch our breath. Clark and
Holquist ably grasp the main themes, but
do not emphasize the mass exterminations
going on around Bakhtin as he sits and writes
his so-called 'literary criticism.' Of course,
because he only is a nervous and timid professor
that only delves into harmless literary figures
of the past, this is precisely why he survived
the 'Yezhovchina,' that phony name Stalin
invented to palm off blame for the Great
Purge that murdered 20,000,000 people in
four years. The same was going on all around
Rabelais. One of the people he worked with
everyday, when he served Cardinal Jean du
Bllay, the Cardinal's secretary Jean Bribart
was burned at the stake. Only because he
had written an 'obscene' and 'comic' book
kept the good priest and monk Rabelais with
his 'wife' and three children (two legitimized
by the Pope) kept him from also suffering
for his sympathies with Martin Luther 9who
also had a love for filthy, peasant metaphors),
though never completely out of trouble.
First of all, Rabelais understood Luther's
true theological intent recently and finally
brought out by Richard Marius in his book
MARTIN LUTHER: The Christian Between God
and Death, Belknap-Harvard, 1999. The conflict
in Luther's mind is precisely "between
God and death," and Hell is only a cursing
metaphor one throws at one's enemies. People
forget that some of the same humanist teachers
that taught Fran? ois Rabelais also taught
John Calvin! And what were these humanists
teaching? The Greek and Roman classics. And
what did the Greek and Roman classics teach?
That death was forever and the gods unreliable
if not downright malevolent. At the same
time amongst the Jewish Kabbalists like Issac
Luria God was not only receding farther and
farther away from humanity in every possible
aspect, but the problem of the existence
of evil was becoming greater and greater
until Sabatai Sevi and Nathan of Gaza 'solved'
it by taking it in as a necessary part of
the Messiah's becoming truly related to that
receding God and bringing Him back to common,
sinful humanity.
The problem of evil for both Issac Luria
and Martin Luther was not the supposed state
of eternal damnation, but that after death
there was nothing. The problem that the Greek
and Roman classics presented was the same,
except, of course, no one took them seriously.
Bullshit. You know that could not be true
during late Medieval times and the Renaissance,
that all the teachers of the classics between
then and now essentially lied either by commission
or omission, and that that is the only problem
that really concerns most people now. Because
the logical corollary of Ivan Karamazov's,
"If God does not exist, then everything
is permitted" is "If death is forever,
then everything is permitted." If the
worst you can suffer is nothing, then you
can do anything. "Why do anything, anything
at all?" become problematic for Rabelais,
Bakhtin and especially Dostoyevsky and Heidegger.
One became a "born again" Christian,"
the most dangerous type, loosed from all
moral responsibility because he is now and
forever unchangeably "saved." The
other, through the methodical, philosophical
mysticism of Meister Eckhart, discovered
the beginning point of the authentic mind
where, as Shestov said often, "All things
are possible!" and nothing, nothing
at all is necessary. True freedom can only
mean there is no motivation or that you are
free to give into whimsy. This is one of
those common ideas talked about constantly
by common people and intellectuals pay no
attention to.
'If there is no God, you can do anything,'
'If you are an atheist, you have no ethics,'
'If there is no God, there is nothing to
live for,' "Eat, drink, and be merry
for tomorrow you die." Now, intellectuals
know better, that everyone is under constraints,
and like Jesus they take these meaningless
restraints and change them into the eatable
bread of morality that 'somehow' by divine
intervention, even for atheists, is shown
as a light into all souls equally, but that
some nasty and evil people like Heidegger
deliberately turn away from the light and
love the darkness. Bullshit. The common people
are right, and the carnival people amongst
the common people love the darkness - as
well as the light - fun is anywhere you can
get it - if it feels good do it. Now intellectuals
know these unthinking souls do not know any
better and wish to teach them the wonderful
benefits of social responsibility.
At least that way the world will die with
a bang instead of a whimper as it is now
slowly and drearily doing. For people like
Bush or Putin or Osama bin Ladin or Yasser
Arafat or Sharon there is always a "somewhere
over the rainbow," that if we work hard
enough and are real good people, we will
eventually get there. Now, strangely enough,
put in these terms, this is a basic part
of human character and demonstrates perfectly
the fundamental priority of the future in
the human scheme of time as amply demonstrated
by Heidegger in BEING AND TIME. A "fundamental
priority," yes, but this disciple of
Eckhart knew that the Augenblick, the Moment,
was much more important, the point of absolute
nothingness, where everything is possible
and absolutely nothing, including death,
is important.
That is what Bakhtin's carnival is all about,
a very earthy, even filthy Augenblick where
death and shit are the same and end up in
the same place. The chief Lubbavitcher was
right. The holocaust victims died because
they did not observe the dietary laws, but
in Rabelais' sense, not Moses. And it is
not that they died - Zyclon gas was the result
of a demented, mechanical, therefore inevitable
logic: 1) Hitler was getting too many Jews
from his Russian conquests; 2) the einsatzgruppen,
used as punishment duty for regular soldiers,
was demoralizing the army, becoming too expensive,
did not kill enough Jews, and left too many
hostile witnesses.
Menachim Begin was much closer to Rabelais
when he said, "I fight, therefore I
am!" Fighting, killing, and dying are
a strong part of the ideology and feast of
carnival. If you are going to die anyway,
and your wife and your parents and your children,
why hold back? At all? There is certainly
nothing to save from death. The hustler on
the street understands this, why can't intellectuals?
Death, despite all efforts, is not something
you can get around. And total, complete,
authentic anarchism must include joyful acceptance
of one's killing others, but, equally so,
one's being killed oneself. Death abounds
in Rabelais' GARGANTUA AND PANTAGRUEL just
like it did in Rabelais' and Bakhtin's and
Heidegger's lives. So why do we assume they
did not take it seriously? That those deaths
were cartoon or movie type deaths? Because
they did not say they were 'serious'? Because
they did not say they were 'sincere'?
It is because ya'll take those words 'seriously'
that this is still an age of na? ve and unexamined
faith and certainly not skepticism. Not only
do you have to examine your premises, as
Ayn Rand always insisted, but you have to
examine your premises for examining your
premises, and then examine your premises
for examining your premises for examining
your premises till you end up with just bare
words and just bare experience and reason
and judgment become words to be examined
just like any others and no word or experience
occupies a privileged place, i. e., you are
right back with Heidegger's authentic dasein
of the Augenblick where you have infinite
possibilities, but where any motivation to
act, by the eye of reason, can only be called
whimsical or nothing at all.
CONCLUSION
Bakhtin's book RABELAIS AND HIS WORLD is
one of the most important books ever written,
much less one of the most important books
written in the 20th century.
The question is *Why?*
Let me try to state it in a number of these
[?] theseses [?]. This is recalled and literally
related to Count Pico della Mirandola whom
you are probably familiar with from ORATION
ON THE DIGNITY OF MAN. That little book,
written around 1492, both charmed and alarmed
[initially, just 'titillated'] because [A]
in many ways he was the ?first' humanist,
and [B] he was the ?darling' - at twenty
years old - of all the courts of Italy, especially
the Papal court. There were other important
humanists before him, especially Francesco
Valla, who discovered the *DONATION OF CONSTANTINE*
was a forgery. But Mirandola both [A] made
Humanism a universal ideology, [B] made it
respectable as such and therefore relatively
stable regardless of the Reformation and
Counter-Reformation, and [C] political not
only because he was the actual ruler of a
state, though small - but this was Renaissance
Italy, strategic position was more important
than size [*Caesar or Nothing* Cesare Borgia,
Urbino] - and highly influential in both
Florence and Rome. THEN he wanted to debate
900 thesis's in the Papal court which, when
the Pope and Curia actually read them, blew
their minds [A] because, of course, they
were heretical - although they should have
suspected that from the ORATION - and [B]
he knew all the relevant languages, Greek,
Hebrew, Aramaic, Arabic [?], hardly anyone
in Rome knew [this was before Desiderius
Erasmus]. The debate was banned. Therefore
. . .
1. There is no such thing as *being*. On
the one hand, this is obvious. On the other
hand, highly troublesome because, if taken
literally as meant, abstraction per se is
invalidated as indicating ANY sort of reality
or experience. Everything becomes nominalized,
or better, individualized, or even better
yet, this . . . this . . . this . . . while
literally pointing. This is not very communicative
is it? But it is the TRUTH, the facts of
the matter. Period. It is doing what Wittgenstein
did at the end of the TRACTATUS. He climbed
the ladder into the attic above language,
pulled up the ladder, and shut the trap door.
Silence.
2. Heidegger re-asks Liebnitz's question,
*Why is there anything, anything at all,
rather than nothing?* as if this indicated
*something*. Maybe it does, maybe it does
not. Give him the benefit of the doubt. But
it is exactly the same kind of implication
as when Descartes says *I am* when he says
he has put everything in question. He has
not. He has not put the language he uses
is question. Not particularly, Not questioning
its axioms/premises. Not questioning its
history personally or philosophically.
3. Sartre essentially answers Heidegger's
question by saying there is the *there*,
the *out there* of perception*, *sensual
reality* which is not a highly convenient
and very co-operative communicator of information
to us but is *just there*, utterly indifferent
to us to the point that WE could exist or
not exist as we please. It does not care.
It has never cared. It will never care. We
are superfluous to it. In fact, as far as
we are concerned, it is superfluous to itself.
Sartre's answer to Heideggers question, *Why
is there being?* is simply *There is no being,
only nothingness.* None of this, life, the
earth, good and evil, are important in the
slightest. THERE IS NO IMPORTANCE.
4. Bakhtin's book was actually an important
and dangerous political statement made from
within one of the strictest totalitarian
states that have ever existed, Stalin's Russia.
It essentially says, *Who gives a fuck if
you and I die?* or anyone else? At a time
when millions were being literally murdered,
this is a highly AUTHENTIC statement. Just
as Bakhtin seemed not to care at all if the
commissar that was head of his thesis committee
did or did not accept his RABELAIS book for
his doctorate [she did not]. Within a truly
non-communist state, he showed what a logically
consistent communism really was - essentially
anarchism of the wildest sort - like Goethe's
description of the murderous carnival on
the streets of Rome. *Who gives a shit?*
is taken to its wildest philosophical extremes.
Why would anyone give a shit? What is the
value of human shit? Even as a fertilizer,
it is worthless. It conveys hepatitis. So
it is the most negative of negativities.
Sartre appreciated this. Luther said, *Die
Teufel ist schist!* To Luther, we only had
a choice between God and shit.
5. But that is no argument. Like many, maybe
all theological arguments, *You cannot show
atheism is of any solid benefit whatsoever,
therefore - and it is perfectly harmless
as well as ultimately logically unobjectionable
- believe in God and Jesus Christ, his son.
What can you possibly lose?* For one thing,
you are overthrowing everything that you
used to get to that ultimate point of despair
- TO INVALIDATE THAT DESPAIR, to forget faith
is the pure result and excretion of despair,
--- that is, to forget, in essence, IN ABSTRACTION,
it is not different. Being is nothingness.
*Ring the bell, close the book, blow out
the candle. This formula of excommunication
is over*.
P. S. Shortly after the 900 Theses scandal,
Count Pico della Mirandola died after a meal
in 1494. It was very convenient for Brother
Savaronola who seized all his unpublished
papers (and for his nephew who, I think,
got his throne) and rewrote his works - crudely.
However, the reformist Pope Alexander VI
Borgia burned Savaronala at the stake in
Florence after he had seized political power
and preached heresy like
*O woe to you sinners if you let your sons
get tonsured!*
Gary. C. Moore.
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