29 October 2009

Objectivist Round Up #120

Check out the latest Objectivist Round Up at 3 Ring Binder!


28 October 2009

Too Big to Fail?

The federal government’s blitz on private property continues with the latest move out of the Obama playbook. The headline: “U.S. Considers Reigning In ‘Too Big to Fail’ Institutions.”

Congress and the Obama administration are about to take up one of the most fundamental issues stemming from the near collapse of the financial system last year – how to deal with institutions that are so big that the government has no choice but to rescue them when they get into trouble.[Note 1, emphasis mine.]


Notice that the Times article did not state that the government believes it has no choice; it states as if it were a matter of fact that the government has no choice. Such is the mentality of the left; it cannot even conceive of a civilization in which people stand on their own feet.


Even the term “too big to fail,” which has become all too common in this bailout era, is deliberately deceptive. The concept really means “too big to allow to fail.” Discounting the very idea that failure could be allowed makes it seem like government intervention is a necessity, a metaphysical fact of nature, as opposed to a set of choices (and bad ones at that) made by politicians. “Too big to fail” bypasses the necessity to think; there is no question of whether a company should be left to reap the consequences of its own actions or be artificially propped up with taxpayer money. The modern politician does not pause to consider his self-appointed role as meddler. Ham-handed interference comes so naturally, it would not occur to him to think about the rights he tramples and the destruction he wreaks.


We have already seen the Bush-Obama federal government shower taxpayer money upon private companies as an alleged “rescue” from a crisis the government itself created, in some cases forcing the companies to accept the loot against their wishes. This “gift” was used as a means of exerting pressure on them days or weeks later. Now, the Obama administration claims the prerogative not only to decide which companies are “too big to fail” and what constitutes “being in trouble,” but seizes the power to “throw out management, wipe out the shareholders and change the terms of existing loans held by the institution.”


This power-grabbing strategy is simple in the extreme, and is as ancient and common as gullibility, fear, and hatred itself. The government exerts force upon its citizens, which invariably creates a problem; this problem is blamed on a resented group (foreigners, Jews, corporate executives), which is used by the government as the pretext to grab more power, creating more problems, etc. This vicious cycle is precisely the means by which the protection of individual rights has been whittled away in the United States for more than a century. It is not hard to see that the technique is self-perpetuating, if the public is willing – or forced – to fall in line.


This trend must be checked and reversed now, before it is too late. We are not yet in the thrall of dictatorship; we are not yet at the point of being fully silenced by force. True, there are ominous threats to free speech (to name just a couple, the White House snitch line and the FTC threat against bloggers), but I can still publish this blog post without fear of direct punishment by the government. The time to hide typewriters and printing presses under the floorboards has not yet come. Nevertheless, the acceleration of the federal government’s grasp of power under George Bush and Barack Obama is frightening. Mr. Obama’s “shock and awe” campaign against American citizens is intended to numb and inure us to complete government control.


The federal government (with the nearly full cooperation of the mainstream media) obtains the consent of the public by obscuring the nature of their increasing grip on us. Private businesses are demonized as predatory and compulsory, while government activities are characterized as “offering more choices” and “protecting the consumer.” Politicians and journalists count on Americans either not understanding what freedom is, or simply going along with the pretense that this is just business as usual. For instance, in the Times article I quoted, assistant Treasury secretary Michael S. Barr characterized the takeover as “market discipline”; the difference between private citizens judging how to handle their own affairs voluntarily and the government forcing citizens to act against their own judgment is supposed to be disregarded by the public as a superficial technicality.


Americans must not let the government pull this legerdemain without naming its nature. Government actions are not “market mechanisms,” but are anathema to free markets. Governments are institutions not of free trade but of force, and as such, must be strictly limited to their only appropriate role: safeguarding the rights of its citizens to deal with each other peaceably and voluntarily as each sees fit. Contrary to his own opinion, President Obama is not in charge of every company in America; in fact, he should have far less say in the operations of businesses than any floor-sweeper or hamburger-flipper. Not only should the president not preside in board rooms, but he ought to be respectfully thrown out. Capitalism requires the complete separation of the economy and the state.


The fact that the president and his team of czars think they can fire executives, defy shareholder contracts, and set wages to what they deem fit, is shocking and outrageous. It is not merely un-American but anti-American. Mr. Obama has demonstrated conduct befitting South American dictators and Chicago gangsters, not the President of the United States - and it deserves every bit of indignant protest from the Americans who are still alert enough to cry foul amid the masses dazzled under the president’s spell.


Despite the endless insistence by the media and politicians, it is plainly not true that any company is “too big to fail,” or that “the government has no choice but to rescue them.” In fact, when any company, big or small, goes out of business in a free market, it constitutes justice; it indicates that the company judged something wrong and the failure sends accurate signals to the rest of the market. People who did not make mistakes are not forced to pay for those who did.


It is only the unfree market - government meddling, such as we have under Bush and Obama - that causes distortions that destroy wealth and trample upon justice.



NOTES


1. “U.S. Considers Reining In ‘Too Big to Fail’ Institutions,” The New York Times, 25 Oct 2009.


11 October 2009

Dennis Prager: If There Is No God, Part 10

(Note: This is Part 10 in the series started here. The previous installment is here. In each post, I comment on one of the fourteen points made by Dennis Prager in his article, “If There Is No God.”)


Dennis Prager’s Point #10:


Without God, there is little to inspire people to create inspiring art. That is why contemporary art galleries and museums are filled with "art" that celebrates the scatological, the ugly and the shocking. Compare this art to Michelangelo's art in the Sistine chapel. The latter elevates the viewer -- because Michelangelo believed in something higher than himself and higher than all men. [Note 1.]


I do not dispute Mr. Prager’s denigration of modern art as “the scatological, the ugly and the shocking,” but he misidentifies the root of this cultural phenomenon. The disgraceful procession of trash that has passed for art in the last century or so is not a symptom of the rejection of God but of the rejection of values, which itself has a deeper cause: the rejection of reason. In this, paradoxically enough, the religious have a philosophical root in common with the modern artists who not only generally reject the mind in favor of primal emotions, but spit upon the specific symbols and icons held sacred by the faithful.

This is not to equate the religious with the nihilistic, of course. There is no comparison between civilized, respectful, and thoughtful religious people (like Dennis Prager himself) and the “artists” who see the urinal, with or without a crucifix immersed in it, as a suitable means of expressing their view of mankind. My point is that the antidote for the disgusting bile that is vomited forth from the unfocused minds of modern artists is not faith but reason. Faith unfastens the human mind from the moorings of reality. This is relatively harmless, to be sure, in the average modern citizen, who at most fingers the rosary for an hour on Sundays but otherwise leads a civilized, productive life. But faith also gives rise to other manifestations, including purportedly secular ones, that are destructive. The irrationality that leads some to the Bible or the Zodiac leads others to Dada and the shock-value of sacrilege.

Mr. Prager invokes a popular formulation to indicate the requirements of the great artist - that he “elevates the viewer” because he believes in “something higher than himself.” I am sympathetic to this idea and there is a certain plausibility to it; after all, great art must somehow escape from the trivial, the day-to-day. It should expand to epic scale; it should endure through the ages. The naturalistic banality embodied by modern works like Duane Hanson’s Tourists, for example, sneer at greatness. The random smears of Mark Rothko and drips of Jackson Pollock are so empty of content, they elevate the viewer only in the contortions of logic that they require of him to pretend they belong on a gallery wall.

However, the phrase “something higher than oneself” carries with it two connotations that miss the mark as a proper requirement for works of art. First, there is a suggestion of sacrifice, the idea that men owe their lives and efforts to “something higher”: a god, the state, or one’s fellow men. The phrase also contains a hint of Platonic duality, a severing of the mind and body. The physical, in this view, holds an inferior status to the contemplative. It suggests a disdain for the material needs of man, for his efficacy, for the pursuit of practical values. Both connotations are perfectly consistent with Prager’s religious viewpoint - specifically, the altruist morality and the philosophic intrinsicism of religion, respectively - but are not properly held as prerequisites for great art.

In contrast to Mr. Prager’s formulation, I hold that an artist's works can be great when he is able to express something universal about men. This is not the same thing as “something greater than oneself.” Universals are not “transcendent” in the supernatural sense; properly conceived, they are objectively real abstractions. The pages and canvases of great works of art depict particular characters, events, and images that represent high-level concepts and universal truths. They depict men’s actions and capabilities, his victories and follies.

For religionists, the realm of universal truth is some supernatural dimension; for modern artists, there is no universal truth (with the exception, perhaps, of man’s depravity, misery, and helplessness). Neither perspective is correct. Great art should convey man’s rationality, not his superstitions; it should present his suitability for living in this world, not his dismissal of reality for a mystical paradise.





Figure A - Christ Washing the Feet of St. Peter; (top) from Gospel book of Otto III, ca. 1000 AD, (bottom) from Sadao Watanabe, 1992. Does either of these “elevate the viewer”?


Dennis Prager’s choice of example actually serves to subvert his point. He cites Michelangelo’s work in the Sistine Chapel as being great art - which, of course, it is. But does Michelangelo represent a truly Christian viewpoint or the opposite?

My claim is that from a broad historical perspective, the effect of Christianity on art is the same as its effect on all cultural matters, and for the same reasons: namely, it was detrimental and corrupting. “More than any other form of human expression,” wrote Leonard Peikoff, “art is the barometer that lays bare a period’s view of reality, of life, of man.”[Note 2.] The rise of Christianity signaled the turn of men away from reason to faith, from rationality to mysticism, from earth to heaven... and European art reflects this.

In Greece of the 5th-century BC (with particular emphasis on before Christ), man was a virtuous, noble, thinking hero. It is here that great art was born, along with philosophy, history, and science. Christianity interrupted and reversed this development, consigning man to his divine status as a puny, groveling slave. Then, in the Renaissance, man was reborn as a rational, efficacious hero once more. The Renaissance was, in philosophic terms, a throwing off of the chains of feudal Christendom and a restoration of the pre-Christian Greek ideals. Sure, the exemplary figures of the Renaissance had the superficial vestiges of Christianity - how could it be otherwise after a thousand years of Christian domination? - but the essence of the Renaissance was a rediscovery of reason.

If Mr. Prager wanted to demonstrate art inspired by God, why did he choose a Renaissance artist - arguably, the greatest Renaissance artist - and not choose art from a period that was informed uniformly by religious devotion? There are countless examples of great historical and artistic significance to be found from medieval architecture, sculptures, mosaics, tapestries, and paintings. Why choose the Adam of the Sistene Chapel (Figure B) instead of the Adam of the Hildesheim Cathedral (Figure C)? Surely the latter conveys the cringing humility that is expected of the pious. Mr. Prager ought to regard Michelangelo’s Adam as demonstrating a blasphemous equality with God, bursting with the Promethean qualities that Prager condemns in point #12 as “hubris.”



Figure B. Michelangelo, The Creation of Adam. (Image credit below.)



Figure C. Adam and Eve Reproached by the Lord. (Image credit below.)


Of course, my questions are rhetorical. Mr. Prager chose Michelangelo precisely in order to artificially prop up his religious argument with the creations of a reasoning genius. The ambiguity of who created whom in The Creation of Adam is a product not of Christian devotion but of the rebirth of reason. The figure of Michelangelo’s David (Figure D) cannot be squared with a religious viewpoint; deference, humility, and obedience are utterly absent from its aspect. It is impossible to imagine this figure with a bowed head or bent knee. This titan could serve neither man nor god; he is his own master. We see in David independence, competence, thoughtfulness - a profound and serene confidence. If there were ever a phrase that David would not accept it would be this: that something is "greater than himself" or "higher than all men."





Figure D. Michelangelo,
David. (Image credit below.)


It is plainly not true that without God, there is “little to inspire people to create inspiring art.” The subject and inspiration of great art is properly man and his reasoning mind. True, God - or more specifically, man’s relationship to his gods - has been the subject of many great works of art. But many more great works have nothing to do with God. Revolution, war, leadership, industry, productivity, justice, and revenge have inspired great works of art. And let us not forget romantic love, filial love, fraternal love, and maternal love (not to mention hatred).

If faith is the inspiration for great art, we should expect the greatest art to have emerged from the periods and locations in which faith or anti-reason dominated: the Dark and Middle Ages in Europe, the Orient, the Weimar Republic, and today, from Iran and Afghanistan. If, on the other hand, reason is the inspiration for great art, we should expect the greatest art to have emerged from those places and times in which reason was valued: ancient Greece, and Europe of the Renaissance and Enlightenment.

History has given us the answer.


(Note: The next installment in the series is here.)



NOTES


1. Dennis Prager, “If There Is No God,” http://townhall.com/columnists/DennisPrager/2008/08/19/if_there_is_no_god.


2. Leonard Peikoff, The Ominous Parallels, Penguin Putnam, Inc., New York, 1982, p.161.


IMAGE CREDITS


Figure A. (top) Christ Washing the Feet of St. Peter, from the Society of Clerks Secular of Saint Basil, http://www.reu.org/public/Iconholy/Jesus/ChPeterFeetOtto.jpg.

(bottom) Sadao Watanabe, Christ Washing the Feet of St. Peter, from the Scriptum Modern Japanese Prints, http://www.japaneseprintart.com/images/prints/watanabe%5Fchrist%5Fwashing%5Fpeters%5Ffeet%2Ejpg


Figure B. from Wikipedia entry for “The Creation of Adam,” Michelangelo, The Creation of Adam, Sistine Chapel, http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/God2-Sistine_Chapel.png


Figure C. from Encyclopaedia Britannica, Adam and Eve Reproached by the Lord, http://media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/91/3991-004-E18BF0E9.jpg


Figure D. from Wikipedia entry for “Michelangelo,” http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/63/Michelangelos_David.jpg