Registered user login:

TheFaithColumn

The Faith Column

Every week a different believer gives the inside track on their religion or philosophy.

The Faith Column Homepage

Kant and friends

  • Posted by Dan Harkin
  • 29 February 2008

In his final posting, our Kantian reflects on outstanding riddles...

Epicurus died due to a problem with his bladder and so would have done so in great pain. Oddly he didn’t try to find a real point or purpose to his existence. Rather, he thought that humans should be ready to die at any time and consider their lives complete. Kant, however, had a different view. Consider, he said, a man in a repressive society who is forced to take part in a show trial to condemn an innocent man to death. He could either lie and have happiness or he could lie and end up being tortured and properly killed. Morality – doing the right thing – couldn’t consist in people’s individual happiness.

What was his solution to this? He thought the only way we could deal with these problems was for our reason to postulate our endurance and unending existence beyond death. We need this postulate in order to maintain our “moral faith” in a life-long endeavour. Kant is now in a problematic area because he obviously still wants to prioritise reason. So, he squares the circle by saying that traditional beliefs in God coerce individuals to behave morally. His idea of God is simply something that free individuals rationally assent to, so as to sustain their moral efforts throughout their lives.

I appreciate the motivation, but I’m not all that convinced. I do, however, believe that there is something in what Kant is saying. We do need a particular perspective through which we can view our lives and help us in our life-long moral project, giving us succour during the dark times. To close these articles I would like to explain where my thoughts have travelled over the past couple of years, but in order to do so I shall have to leap between two different ideas: Kant’s approach to the sublime and Nietzsche. I do not pretend that everyone with find these ideas satisfactory or easy. None of my sixth formers did. But here goes.

Kant pulls a similar trick with the aesthetic experience of "the sublime" as we’ve just seen him do with God and the soul. For those of you who did more important and useful things at university than some arts degree I will quickly outline: the sublime is the experience of awe and terror humans experience when they encounter things that sublimate them or remind them how tiny they are. Think of huge cliff faces or stormy oceans; think of big and scary things. (Not always big however, I experience the sublime when I think of the genetic tangle that makes a gnat a gnat, because it reminds me of our tininess.) Kant appreciated the sublime but was uncomfortable with the implication that humans lose their sense of reason when confronted with it.

So he argued there were two types of “sublime” experience. There were those where we lose all sense of reason because we’ve just been physically reminded of our own insignificance. And there was another kind of sublime, a rationally induced experience where we deliberately make ourselves experience the sublime to pursue certain goals (namely, morality and beauty). This type of sublime was fine because we have already rationally decided to live a moral life and we have rationally decided to experience something that we help sustain our moral existence.

I’m going to take a sideways hop now, to Nietzsche. Just as a quick disclaimer, I once made a badge that said, ‘I Don’t Agree with Nietzsche.’ However, he does put forward an idea for why humans still have responsibility in a Godless universe, called "the eternal recurrence". The most useful way of thinking about the eternal recurrence is to consider whether or not you’d be happy to live your life over again. If you could freely affirm that the shape of your life is one that you would have eternally repeated then you should be ready to die at any moment.

There are many complexities to this interpretation of the eternal recurrence. In a sense it is a metaphorical “eternal life” because you consider yourself as an ontological construct that exists forever. Because in a sense you are. There will always have been a Daniel Harkin who will have done the things that he did. Am I happy to accept that Daniel Harkin will be so written across eternity? And what I feel when contemplating my existence in this way is an example of the sublime and, futher, the type of sublime Kant thought more than acceptable to rational person.

Drawing together these two ideas, although I haven’t anywhere near solved these riddles yet, I would suggest that you do not need God to provide existential sustenance for the moral project of your life. If God-talk or contemplation of God is any use, then I accept Kant’s basic argument: it cannot be the case that you act morally out of the “fear of God”, rather God-talk and contemplation is useful to provide you with sublime support on your moral journey. But if that is the only use of God-talk and contemplation, why not replace it with something more rationally acceptable. In Nietzsche’s eternal recurrence I see the possibility for a genuine replacement of God.

Contemplating my life in this way has begun to help me take a firm hold of my life-long moral endeavour. And, like Epicurus, I think I am not afraid to die. I consider my life as always complete and yet I do not find its continuation pointless or without meaning. Like Nietzsche, perhaps, I’m happy to consider that I am the poet of my life and the author of my existence; I can affirm my past and look towards my future with joy.

I would like to thank the (simply sublime) Jon Barfield for his significant contribution to these thoughts and for providing me with continuing intellectual sustenance day in and day out.

Post this article to

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • newsvine
  • NowPublic
  • Reddit

2 comments from readers

Mr Fnortner
09 March 2008 at 22:15

Why does one even need a god in the first place? If control and the purpose does not originate within oneself, then one is a fairly pathetic individual. If you or I need another to tell us our meaning, what is right or wrong, what makes beauty, truth, or honor, or why life is to be lived, then we might as well be dogs.

euanthes
21 March 2008 at 05:28

Whether God or ER all people need "directives" on their path of common successes - "power" over others, themselves, their environment. Perhaps it comes natural to Mr Fnortner, but i should think that Nietzsche's point was also epistemologically radical though framed above only metaphysically: ie, that knowledge and speech are lie - are simply means for the world of Appearance, especially poetically resituating yourself such that you are ..."innoculated with the frenzy", or what have you. could it be that we would need neither a metaphysic for motivation, nor an effacement of our own "World Representation" if the conditions were right? if you find yourself truly in need of neither then perhaps we have found the "truly healthy body, perpendicular" - that is to say, IS its *own reason*, and has a life which WILLS vibrantly without anything but the vitality of impulse, the thirst of a great imagination of the world. Perhaps Mr Fnortner is one such person! (Really children are the only one's like this. Now that my 4month old is bouncing off the walls all the time I see how clearly organic reasons needn't any reasons. Perhaps by the time his imagination is wrested from him he will find a need for God, ER, poetry, ...)

Malebranche would go further and say that the quality of willing itself might be very radically effected by what idea the world is seen through first before willing. If this be the case, then it is neither merely a Metaphysical carrot dangling before our weakness, nor a complex mode of intelligence which tricks itself into willing: it really makes a dramatic Ontological difference what one believes and creates as one's maxim, inspiration, God, etc because it not only conditions your motivations, as it were - but it creates the very possibility and availability for that Realization of success - precisely where it would not have existed had you been blind to that availing idea! Here the creative act and "the lie" go hand-in-hand - emergence requires lightning, but one must be thoroughly whipped up into wildly artificial and duplicitous states to be struck by this.

so much for the godless and the godly. hopefully more will read Nietzsche less that he bids us into just another of what all other metaphysical weaknesses offer - but that his soul really taps into what Miracles require: utter devotion to the highest hope and highest end without expectation of reward, and naked laughter of one's inability to do this in any other way than the fateful means you have power for.

scary.

Post your comment

Please note: you will need to login or register before your comment is displayed on the website

We want to encourage people to comment on our content and to exchange views with other readers and hope this will be done on a courteous basis. However, if you encounter posts which are offensive please let us know by emailing comments@newstatesman.co.uk and we will take swift action where necessary.

About the writer

Daniel Harkin is a philosophy teacher in south London. He runs the blog, Regno del Fines, which aims to give a Kantian view of current affairs. He lives in Peckham, which is very nice, and drinks a lot of coffee. Most of his ambitions involve libraries.

Recent Posts

A chaplain in Iraq

  • By Marcus Hodges
  • 08 July 2008

Heaven in Hell

  • By Padre Paul Wright
  • 07 July 2008

Working to educate the youth

  • By Doug Harris
  • 03 July 2008

The social impact of cult groups

  • By Allen Tate Wood
  • 02 July 2008

Saving your family from the Manson Family

  • By Allen Tate Wood
  • 01 July 2008

Inside the head of a new cult member

  • By Allen Tate Wood
  • 30 June 2008

A spirituality to suit the times

  • By Paul Harrison
  • 26 June 2008