Few acknowledged scientists flourishing
in the twentieth century were openly Christian in their inspiration. Fewer
still were those for whom, like for our thinkers, this inspiration was decisive
for their thought, constituting one of the bases, if not that crucial one, of
their projects—with Christ, principle of universal vitality, being the Omega Point
of the universe’s evolution (the paleontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin), or
Jesus the embodied Suffering Servant, the waist of the universe’s apocalyptic
hourglass (the anthropologist Rene Girard). And thus, even though for both of
them Jesus Christ apparently also formed the center of their personal beings, the
general outlooks of their respective thoughts are diametrically different.
xxx
Rene Girard’s mimetic theory is a
rigorously generalizing anthropology that is condemned to be pessimistic as
long as it remains within the bounds of social science. Its pessimism pivots on
the posited constitutive mechanism of man’s identity if not nature, one that fully
governs his behavior: desire that is strictly mimetic and overpowering, and
thus perforce competitive and eventually conflictual. Any social cohesion has
to be purchased in this situation at the expense of a victimized scapegoat or else
the social group is bound to annihilate itself. Culture and social progress in
general can only happen against this background, while its inherent violence is
taken to be, at least initially if not throughout man’s phylogenesis, as a
necessary, propelling element of his hominization and continued advancement.
Any human union, even familial but
especially broader, societal, is seen as fraught with a danger of violence and
collapse, because this competitively mediated desire makes humans abhor (any
insinuating realization of) their similarity if not basic identity, propelling
them to seek means, including those violent, of reasserting difference.
Girard’s exhortations to imitate Christ through what he calls innermost
mediation of desire, thus effecting man’s renewal able to contribute to a human
unity in Christ that would not be predicated on otherization and scapegoating,
appear as vague and insufficient, possibly because they are in fact totally out
of place in a theory predicated on the randomness of mimetic desire. Moreover, Girard
himself does not seem to believe that the growing realization of the scapegoat
mechanism in our age of (post)modernity and the rational man is able to keep
pace with, let alone outstrip, stronger and stronger rivalry-based destructive impulses
in man.
It seems that having mimetic theory as a
starting point and trying to regain optimism, including Christian-like, its student
would have to plunge into mysticism or venture into mystical theology, a step
that the theory does not take, even though it is thoroughly Christian in
inspiration. The outcome of human evolution that has led man to advanced
cerebralization and later to creation of complex societies is thus hanging in
the balance, man is left teetering on the verge of apocalypse. And it is none
other than modern man who is both the creator and hapless victim of this state
of affairs that is coeval with the mass advancement of the rational man and a globalizing
modernity less and less able to sustain itself.
xxx
Now one of the important concepts in the
thought of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin is his notion, elaborated in The
Phenomenon of Man, that “union differentiates.” This union, in
contradistinction to that of mimetic theory, is not only creative (unity
complexifies, diversifies, individuates and perfects) and evolutionarily collaborative,
but also necessary for man’s assent to a final union in Christ. The creativity
takes over from any possible preoccupation with similarity, especially since
the latter could only signify stagnation in the long run. At the present stage
of human evolution it is mind that is evolving, or rather the noosphere, the outwardly
collective yet inwardly personalized, globe-enveloping Mind of humanity—on its ascent
to the Omega Point, the eternal Christ Consciousness.
If Teilhard’s thought may be
characterized as both panentheistic and supra-modern
when weaving its scientifically-backed tale of an orthogenetic evolution, ever
since its appearance spearheaded by man’s reflective consciousness, born of
matter concentration and complexification, via a convergent noogenesis in a
personalizing universe, it might be worthwhile to ask at this point whether or
to what extent Girard’s mimetic man is at least “modern.” He certainly
does not resemble the man of modernity that
aspires to be autonomous and rational. Against the backdrop of Teilhard’s
thought (where man’s autonomy becomes his personalization, made consummate in
the final, differentiating, union) he not only seems lacking in evolutionary
potential but also seems denied, or denies himself, creative diversity, that
hallmark of an advanced human stage, being in fact reduced (or eventually
resigning himself) to conflictual forms of mediated desire and attendant
psychological states. He closes in on himself as a rivalrous, resentment-driven
creature, instead of being actuated by a sense of vitality and hopes of finally
outstripping the entropy of the matter, when in a distant future, in one universal
ecstatic gasp of humanity, the noosphere escapes the limitations of the
universe’s material matrix. That will also be the day when evil, if any trace
of it still lingers or even if it remains up until then a serious threat to an
advancing humanity (Teilhard leaves that undecided), is dealt its final blow.
Teihard’s is one possible vision of
humanity, albeit rather abstruse and controversial to some tastes, that is able
to underpin fundamental Christian values and virtues, the capacity that mimetic
theory (and Rene Girard himself) can rightly be accused of being deficient at,
not only when examined against virtues such as sustainable hope but arguably also
for universalistic values that go beyond its opposition to purchasing societal
peace at the expanse of a scapegoat. Human brotherhood or even fellowship on a
global scale seem in fact to be viewed by mimetic theory, for all practical
purposes, with suspicion, due to inherent dangers of the attendant rivalry,
that seems to prevail over, and to effectively nullify the validity of, its—Christian
through and through—universalistic appeal.
That last appeal is also that of
modernity, and forms a crucial part of the spiritual makeup of the rational
man, regardless of his actual provenience, but whose universalistic values ostensibly
coincide with those of a progressive, non-tribal Christianity that is not
preoccupied with asserting itself over and above other religions, but instead
first and foremost seeks to practice and promote them in a true spirit of
humility.
xxx
Only in efforts such as Jean-Michel Oughourlian’s
enlargement/reformulation of mimetic theory does the mimetic man of Rene Girard—the
one that is our contemporary, to be precise—arguably cease to be a specimen
pertaining more to pre-modernity, to the pre-rational times of yore, than to
the modern era. There he becomes a multihued creature that he actually is,
albeit his many shades of psychological makeup seem depicted mostly as breeding
grounds for so many psychological disorders, rather than as regular
psychological types that can be seen as associated with or evincing different
mimetic patterns. He actually becomes postmodern.
Yet Oughourlian’s formulation of the
concept seems a bit unfortunate, namely when he posits as entirely mimetic one of
the three layers of man’s brain, while the two other—the emotional and the
rational—seem to be mostly performing the task of filtering and distorting pure
mimetic impulses, with mimesis of desire obviously being their chief preoccupation.
Yet human mimesis is best seen as functionally enveloping the whole of man, grounded
as it seems first and foremost in his empathic capacity. The filtering and
distorting should rather be related more broadly to his empathetic impulses, which
seem phylogenetically more basic and earlier so as to justify describing them
as instinctual (clearly so for unimpaired brains). And so instead of positing a
mimetic “brain,” its first layer should rather be seen—much more broadly—as
instinctual (inclusive of man’s enteric nervous system, or the gut brain, which
supplements the central nervous system that includes the cephalic brain, and is
known to produce “gut feelings”). It best be regarded as including parts of
man’s empathic endowment but also his dominance drive, as well as his natural,
non-mimetic appetites, conforming to his animal brain. Alternatively, the
brain’s instinctual layer could be seen as that where the play of human mimesis
is at its most basic and natural, whereas at the higher layers it gets more and
more complicated and eventually distorted, potentially leading to psychological
problems that may be purely functional or characterological, and that may be or
may turn pathological.
xxx
The relevance of the above observations
becomes clear when one turns one’s attention to Marx, Freud and Nietzsche,
those Paul Ricoeur’s masters of suspicion, when they are viewed as stressing various and distinct aspects of
man’s identity that have evolved in the course of his phylogenesis, amenable as
they are to being grouped under the same or equivalent threefold rubrics. Moreover,
Girard’s engagement with their thought and critique thereof from the standpoint
of mimetic theory was instrumental in his deconstruction of modern man as an
autonomous individual.
It might be worthwhile to add at this
point that some of Theilhard’s detractors see him as a Nietzschean. Of course
he is not: whereas Nietzsche’s overman heroically falls back on amor fati in
the face of the eternal recurrence of all things, Teilhard’s supra-rational man
boldly forges onwards, in the avant-garde of an evolution that is seen as
reflectively rational (albeit also mystical), and able to imbue man with
optimism.
Out of the three arguably it is only
Marx that stands tangentially to modernity (although he envisions himself and
his thought in a climactic—Hegelian, rationally dialectical—position), his is a
reaction that aims to make the best possible use of it, whereas the two others’
work is actually that of its deconstruction, Nietzsche’s will-to-power man
especially being a wholesale throwback to pre-modernity.
Now this is what Teilhard has to say
about Marxism:
“When we listen to the disciples of
Marx, we might think it was enough for mankind (for its growth and to justify
the sacrifices imposed on us) to gather together the successive acquisitions we
bequeath to it in dying—our ideas, our discoveries, our works of art, our
example. Surely this imperishable treasure is the best part of our being. Let
us reflect a moment, and we shall soon see that for a universe which, by hypothesis,
we admitted to be a “collector and custodian of consciousness,” the mere
hoarding of these remains would be nothing but a colossal wastage. What passes
from each of us into the mass of humanity by means of invention, education and
diffusion of all sorts is admittedly of vital importance. I have sufficiently
tried to stress its phyletic value and no one can accuse me of belittling it.
But with that accepted, I am bound to admit that, in these contributions to the
collectivity, far from transmitting the most precious, we are bequeathing, at
the utmost, only the shadow of ourselves. Our works ? But even in the interest
of life in general, what is the work of works for man if not to establish, in
and by each one of us, an absolutely original center in which the universe
reflects itself in a unique and inimitable way ? And those centers are our very
selves and personalities. The very center of our consciousness, deeper than all
its radii; that is the essence which Omega, if it is to be truly Omega, must
reclaim.”
Teilhard obviously envisions a very
different climax than that seen, and actively worked towards, by Marx and his
disciples. But though their outlooks on evolution and progress differ (one seeing
human collectivity, allegedly rational, as its culmination, the other
personalized humanity, each individual a supremely rational being), he is able
to look into the future from a vantage point not all that different from that
of Marx, which is more than can be said when juxtaposing Teilhard with Freud
and Nietzsche—that of a rational man assured of progress. Moreover, in his
not-too-charitable characterization of Marxism Teilhard stresses something
that is very familiar to Girardians: acquisitiveness, though as a mere shadow
of creativity.
xxx
Acquisitiveness is the very thing around which pivots the
very project of modern man. The Enneagram and the contemporary contemplative thinker
Thomas Keating see it as a means used by the rational man (the plain
contemporary “man of the head,” not a philosopher) to assuage the biggest
existential problem of this type of man, namely—and paradoxically—fear, including
fear of death and suffering, with fear of a premature or violent death looming
large in his mind. And that is how his (false) programs for happiness are
structured: to gain a sense of security he is so desperately in need of—before
he can move on in search of understanding and meaning (or the latter could be
employed in shedding light on the former). In its present form and, arguably, in
its security role acquisitiveness is contemporaneous with the project itself,
whose beginnings could be traced back to Descartes and Hobbes, on the
individual and the societal plane, respectively—and even Pascal, with his
security-minded wager. Historically, its particularities and intensity reflect
closely the latter’s vicissitudes. Incidentally, Oughourlian sees this type as
given to paranoia when finding himself in a mimetically-instigated rivalry.
Moreover, the hoarding tendency makes
this type less inclined to fall back on other forms of internal mediation of
desire, such as could be seen as filtered or molded by “premodern” propensities
of man. As such the latter arguably are not forward looking—they are not on the
cutting edge of man’s evolution. In fact some of them threaten man’s very
survival. The animal-instinct-to-dominance-derived will to power, shaped and still
foregrounded today by the instinctual brain, well known to the psychological
typologies mentioned above, from the standpoint of a fear-actuated rational man
could no longer be seen as the ultimate or even suitable instrument capable of
providing security. The instinctual man thrives in hierarchical, premodern
societies, where strong individuals seek and gain power and control—after the
fashion of alpha males in animal societies—in the process taking care also of
their most basic existential needs, such as security, in the best possible
manner to boot. But those not endowed with a strong enough power drive to
propel them to positions of control can also benefit in terms of their safety
needs, provided they submit and comply.
Yet for his projected society of
theoretically equal and autonomous individuals to be sustainable, the rational
man of modernity had to leave all of that largely behind, plunging instead all
the more into unabashed acquisitiveness, something that was so abhorrent to
Nietzsche. Also, since the needs of the rational man are those of an
individual, for them not to be narrowly egoistic they had to be based on
universalistic values and tolerance, which stipulation for him, however, only
stood to reason. It might be added that from this perspective the project started
unraveling—before our very eyes, actually—when the ostensibly rational man found
himself increasingly intolerant—of… intolerance, as he understood it, his “dignity”
culture giving way in the process to a victimhood culture of postmodernity: the
need to gain recognition as being in the (moral) right swamping a rational
sense of tolerance. From a Girardian perspective this development might be viewed
as a degeneration into the ultimate acquisitiveness, one that aims to acquire
the being of the rival.
xxx
According to Girard, the mimetic man, whether
initially rational or not, is bound to abandon simple acquisitiveness, his mimetic
desire, mirroring that of his rival, degenerating into a metaphysical desire
for that rival’s (now-become-obstacle) being. That is the mechanism that evinces
yet another facet or degree of mimesis—and another psychological type, whose
capital sin is amour propre or philautia. Short of desiring to acquire the
obstacle’s being, the game pivots now around recognition, and touches more
broadly on vying for appreciation, esteem and affection, which shape programs
for happiness for the emotional or “heart” man, and which are crucial to the
narcissist. In its various manifestations it was studied and described by many
thinkers, from Plato through Rousseau to Freud, and given its specifically mimetic
visage by Girard in the context of the most virulent forms of the internal
mediation of desire, by virtue of its intensity and insatiability nowadays ineluctably
trending towards violence.
The pre-rational “emotional” man, living in an honor culture of yore, seems to have had his sense of security as an existential problem under control by its being submerged in him by layers of those other needs mentioned above, in fact those of the true Girardian interdividual. The energy invested in caring for those needs was thus not available for fueling the fear behind his security concerns, even though violence was writ large for him. His Western counterparts of our time, the “feeling” personality types, might not be all that dissimilar from him, even though they operate in a different cultural environment, while many non-Western peoples still live in cultural milieus that foster such attitudes.
The pre-rational “emotional” man, living in an honor culture of yore, seems to have had his sense of security as an existential problem under control by its being submerged in him by layers of those other needs mentioned above, in fact those of the true Girardian interdividual. The energy invested in caring for those needs was thus not available for fueling the fear behind his security concerns, even though violence was writ large for him. His Western counterparts of our time, the “feeling” personality types, might not be all that dissimilar from him, even though they operate in a different cultural environment, while many non-Western peoples still live in cultural milieus that foster such attitudes.
Now the power- and recognition- driven, (overly)
instinctual and emotional people, those who are apt to forsake the purely
acquisitive mimesis (that is also basic for human learning and even creativity)
only to find themselves plunging into its other, conflictual and eventually
violent forms, could not possibly be, per Teilhard de Chardin, on the cutting
edge of evolution, though of course the developments sketched above are
anachronistic as far as he is concerned. More modestly speaking, they seemingly
are also the undoing of modernity, and their persistence in fact is what
mimetic theory is all about. Girard seems reconciled to it, but pays for it
with increasing pessimism. For him man’s evolutionary horizon closes in on
itself: man’s consciousness is still laboring—but is still unable—to fully adopt
the central message of the innocence of the scapegoated victim, whoever that
victim might be. Instead, “victims” and “scapegoats” multiply, reciprocally and
hatefully thrown in the face of the opposing group. Girardians can be found on
both sides of any human divide there is.
Teilhard and those buoyed by his vision,
underlain by a desire for knowledge (“nothing on earth will ever saturate our
desire for knowledge”), on the other hand, rest assured that the noosphere will
outpace the self-destructiveness of the material world, the entropy of the
matter. The radiant center of the universe, its conscious eternal pole, will
have gathered around it the personalized minds of a united humanity. Teilhard is
actuated by a desire that is not at all mimetic, but rather mystical, its inexhaustible
source being God—and his unfolding creation, whereas Girard as a thinker
clearly shrinks from that direct inspiration, relying as he does on mimesis (though
it be Christ’s innermost mediation of desire) and its ramifications. As a
result he can’t seem to be able to tap that preeminent source of human hope on
a sustainable basis.
xxx
“Mankind: the idea of mankind was the
first image in terms of which, at the very moment that he awoke to the idea of
progress, modern man must have tried to reconcile the hopes of an unlimited
future with which he could no longer dispense with the perspective of the
inevitability of his own unavoidable individual death. Mankind was at first a
vague entity, felt rather than thought out, in which an obscure feeling of
perpetual growth was allied to a need for universal fraternity.”
In this passage from The Phenomenon of
Man describing early stages of the project of modernity and those of the
rational man, Teilhard, writing into the first years of World War II, on the
eve of the German invasion of his native country of France, and yet still
feeling part of this endangered project, points to yet another means of dealing
with an emerging solitary fear of individual mortality, increasingly haunting
the rational man ever since his religious moorings had been weakened—the reassuring
idea of progress, giving some sense of security and hope, especially when capped
(as it is with Teilhard) with a crowning
idea of fraternity—that reconciling ideal of the French Revolution’s standard
triad that, arguably (though not necessarily obviously), pertains to man’s
rational realm—if it is to have any chance of taking hold and not devolving
into its opposite, the fate certain to befall it if it were allowed to be
nurtured exclusively by man’s emotional (and/or instinctual) side—the latter
well explained by mimetic theory, dealing as it does with the vicissitudes of equality
and liberty, those other vertices of the triad.
In fact the rational man per Teilhard is
an integral man, under the aegis of reason harmoniously reconciling also his
other sides, something that was not evident or required of him at his early
stages. Man’s phylogenesis, reflected and easily discernable for an educated
observer in his ontogenesis that includes his cultural environment, has finally
taken him from the stage of the elemental through the psychic to the spiritual,
or from the geosphere through the biosphere to an emergent noosphere, or complexified
global consciousness. That is the reassuring vision actuating Teilhard and his
followers.
xxx
One important realization from collating
those bodies of thought: when availing oneself of both thinkers’ valuable
insights in order to interweave them into, or to craft, one’s own life
narrative one had better bear in mind that their precise mix may sway that
narrative’s relative degree of optimism and pessimism. Since both are liable to
be mimetically contagious, it is especially incumbent upon the rational man, be
he Christian or not, to cultivate optimism; it is a rational undertaking, one decisively
influencing his determination to persist as a rational human being. And some
thinkers are better suited than others to helping him in this task.
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