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Wednesday, December 31, 2003

Self-Deception At Any Price 

In The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), Matt Damon as the disadvantaged title character, steals the identity of a rich playboy and then proceeds to murder each person who comes close to exposing his ruse and ending his lavish lifestyle. With increasing urgency, the Ripley character fulfills the George Bernard Shaw observation, “Assassination is the extreme form of censorship.” Damon's Tom Ripley quickly evolves from a low-income piano player in New York to a well-to-do serial killer in Rome, confessing in the films narration, “I thought it would be better to be a fake somebody, than to be a real nobody.”

What a statement for our Darwinian culture! Our Darwinian philosophy persuades us that we are chance chemical entities (i.e., real nobodies), but we do anything and everything to maintain the illusion that our lives have meaning and purpose (i.e., we fake being somebodies). Whenever someone reminds us that we fake emperors "have no clothes," and that our pretense to meaning has absolutely no basis, we grab whatever argument comes to hand to censor that troublemaker, whatever the cost to reason or integrity!

Monday, December 01, 2003


Theodicies
Speaking of death as "philosophy's only problem," Camus was pointing, at least indirectly, to the enduring "Problem of Evil": If there is a Good and Almighty God, why is there evil in the world? Attempts to answer this problem are called theodicies, i.e., attempts to justify or exonerate God from guilt (or from weakness) for the evil He apparently allows.

Gnosticism was (and is) a theodicy that solves the problem of evil by positing demiurges, secondary gods who are responsible for creating the material world and its evils (the rascals!). Darwinism is also a theodicy, originally focusing on natural evil, i.e., the viciousness and waste perceived in nature. Darwinism solves the problem of natural evil by putting natural laws between God and nature. More Gnostic than atheistic, Darwinism nevertheless distances God far enough from creation to make Him irrelevant.

While American Christians may frown upon Darwinism, many have unconsciously adopted a similar theodicy, the one taught in one of Charles Darwin's favorite works, namely, John Milton's Paradise Lost. Milton popularized the theodicy that distances God from moral evil by positing a God who places a high premium on the autonomy of the creature. As in Darwinism where God creates the universe with its laws of physics and then backs off to let things run on their own, so in "Miltonism" God creates perfect humans, and then backs off to let them make their own choices, whether good or evil. The bottom line of a Miltonian theodicy is human autonomy. We Americans love that!

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