RISKING BELIEF

Taylor, Charles

RISKING BELIEF Why William James still matters Charles Taylor It is almost a hundred years since William James delivered his celebrated Gifford Lectures in Edinburgh on The Varieties of Religious...

...Your whole subconscious life, your impulses, your faiths, your needs, your divinations, have prepared the premises, of which your consciousness now feels the weight of the result...
...It probably also needed someone who had ultimately come down, with whatever inner tremors, on the faith side...
...Clifford assumes that there is only one road to truth: We put the hypotheses that appeal to us under severe tests, and those that survive are worthy of adoption- the kind of procedure whose spirit was recaptured in our time by Karl Popper's method of conjectures and refutation...
...Agnosticism "is not intellect against all passions, then...
...But this is not how it has worked out, not even perhaps how it could work out...
...From this standpoint, the agnostic's closure is self-inflicted, the claim that there is nothing here which ought to interest us a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy...
...James evokes this early in Varieties and treats it rather caustically...
...I cannot do so for the plain reason, that a rule of thinking which would absolutely prevent me from acknowledging certain kinds of truth if those kinds of truth were really there, would be an irrational rule...
...Taking the agnostic stance could here be taxed as the less rational one...
...But as you stand on the cusp, all you have to go on is a (very likely poorly articulated) gut feeling...
...Even if we think that it no longer applies to us, we see it as drawing others...
...But at the same time, the sense of dignity, control, adulthood, autonomy, connected to unbelief go on attracting people, and seem set to do so into an indefinite future...
...James quotes Clifford: "It is wrong always, and everywhere, and for anyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence...
...A fuller discussion of these "agnostic vetoes," and the answer to them, occurs in James's essay "The Will to Believe...
...But this minimal form easily flips into a stronger variant, which is captured by the italicized clause I have just quoted...
...RISKING BELIEF Why William James still matters Charles Taylor It is almost a hundred years since William James delivered his celebrated Gifford Lectures in Edinburgh on The Varieties of Religious Experience...
...The underlying picture of our condition, according to Clifford, is that we find certain hypotheses more pleasing, more flattering, more comforting, and are thus tempted to believe them...
...So the faith of believers is fragilized, not just by the fact that other people, equally intelligent, often equally good and dedicated, disagree with them, but also by the fact that they can still see themselves as reflected in the other perspective, that is, as drawn by a too-indulgent view of things...
...further, it needed someone who could feel and articulate the continuing ambivalence in himself...
...This essay is excerpted from Varieties of Religion Today: William James Revisited by Charles Taylor, published this month by Harvard University Press...
...James thinks it can...
...Part of the great continuing interest of James's century-old work is that it lays out the dynamics of this battle so well and clearly...
...You can't really sit on the fence, because you need some reading of these features to get on with life...
...The single-risk view of the agnostics seems more plausible than James's double-risk thesis because they take for granted that our desires can only be an obstacle to our finding the truth...
...Secularists once hoped that with the advance of science and enlightenment, and the articulation of a new, humanist ethic, the illusory nature of religion would be more and more apparent, and its attractions would fade, indeed, give way to repulsion...
...There are also those who feel that the God of theism has utterly failed the challenge of theodicy: how we can believe in a good and omnipotent God, given the state of the world...
...But from another standpoint, neither side is really doing this...
...He describes a crucial site of modernity and articulates the decisive drama enacted there...
...Like any sensitive intellectual of his time and place, James had to argue against the voices, within and without, that held that religion was a thing of the past, that one could no longer in conscience believe in this kind of thing in an age of science...
...And this allows us to see the second way in which James focuses the debate...
...If you have intuitions at all, they come from a deeper level of your nature than the loquacious level which rationalism inhabits...
...The various facets of each stance support each other, so that there seems nowhere you can justifiably stand outside...
...but this may be a bit of believers' chauvinism that I am adding to the equation...
...A similar accusation of circularity is hurled in the other direction...
...And yet both these stances remain possible to many peopie in our world...
...And that very much for the reasons which James explores, namely that this attraction is the hint that there is something important here which we need to explore further, that this exploration can lead us to something of vital significance, which would otherwise remain closed to us...
...It can even look from the inside as though this was all you need to say...
...It is astonishing how little dated it is...
...James is our great philosopher of the cusp...
...To put it dramatically, we can win the right to believe a hypothesis only by first treating it with maximum suspicion and hostility...
...The very idea that things will go better in the search for truth if you keep out passion, desire, and willing seems utterly implausible to James-not just for the reason he thinks he has demonstrated, that certain truths only open to us as a result of our commitment, but also because it seems so clear to him that we never operate this way...
...Of course, the objections to belief are not only on epistemological grounds...
...for to say, under such circumstances, "Do not decide, but leave the question open," is itself a passional decision-just like deciding yes or no-and is attended with the same risk of losing the truth...
...A passage in Varieties gives a sense of what is at stake in this inner debate...
...But on reflection, this may be because the Pascalian form is specially directed to converting the interlocutor to Catholicism, to "Masses and holy water...
...I want to look again at this remarkable book, reflecting on what it has to say to us at the turn of a new century...
...The agnostic view propounds some picture (or range of pictures) of the universe and human nature...
...The crucial issue is thus the place of "our volitional nature" in the theoretical realm...
...The position holds firm because it locks together a sci-entific-epistemological view and a moral one...
...James is speaking of those who are for one reason or another incapable of religious conversion...
...It then promotes this into a moral precept for life in general...
...Epistemology and ethics (in the sense of intuitions about what is of crucial importance) combine here...
...Here it is plain that the main source of the vetoes is a kind of ethics of belief illustrated, James contends, in the work of English mathematician and philosopher William Clifford (1845-79...
...Backing this principle is James's own view of the human predicament...
...From the outside, this looks like a classical petitio principii...
...As James notes, I, therefore, cannot see my way to accepting the agnostic rules for truth-seeking, or willfully agree to keep my willing nature out of the game...
...But on the other there is the hope of opening out what are now inaccessible truths through the prior step of faith...
...It is after all to do with religious experience, albeit in a sense somewhat more generic than James's...
...And yet (3) we cannot seem to function at all unless we relate to one or the other...
...But if we keep to the epistemological-moral issue of the ethics of belief, James clarifies why it always seems to end in a standoff...
...It gives a stripped-down version of the debate...
...Do you like me or not...
...Many believers thought that unbelief was so clearly a willed blindness that people would one day wake up and see through it once and for all...
...This has going for it that it can claim to result from "science," with all the prestige that this carries with it...
...Now whether, granted you take the faith branch, this remains "religious experience" in James's special sense, steering clear of collective connections and overtheorization, is a question yet to be determined...
...it is only intellect with one passion laying down its law...
...So one way he frames the issue is that the agnostic veto-ers are asking that he "willfully agree to keep my willing nature out of the game...
...We can see it, after a fashion, from both sides of the fence: even though James has himself come down on one side, we can still feel the force of the other side...
...He tells us more than anyone else about what it's like to stand in that open space and feel the winds pulling you now here, now there...
...On one side is the fear of believing something false if he follows his instincts here...
...doubt it root and branch, and you will destroy it...
...To put it in the harsh language of a later politics, those who claim to be keeping passion out are suffering from false consciousness...
...From the other side, the same basic phenomena show up, but in an entirely different shape...
...In fact it turns out to have a lot to say...
...These are the ones that James laid bare: It is wrong, uncourageous, unmanly, a kind of self-indulgent cheating, to have recourse to this kind of interpretation, which we know appeals to something in us, offers comfort, or meaning, and which we therefore should fend off, unless absolutely driven to them by the evidence, which is manifestly not the case...
...the right to follow one's own gut instinct in this domain, free of an intimidation grounded in invalid arguments...
...But if one takes the general form of Pascal's argument here- that you should weight two risks not only by their probabilities but also by their prospective "payoffs"-then James himself seems to entertain something of the sort...
...James opposes to this his own counterprinciple: Our passional nature not only lawfully may, but must, decide an option between propositions, whenever it is a genuine option that cannot by its nature be decided on intellectual grounds...
...The articulations given to this unease are very varied, but it persists, and they recur in ever more ramified forms...
...On the other side, the call to faith is still there as an understood temptation...
...Religion is not only a "forced option," that is, one in which there is no third way, no way of avoiding choice, but it is also a "momentous option...
...He, too, holds the Augustinian view that in matters divine we need to love before we know...
...James is, in a sense, building on the Augus-tinian insight that in certain domains love and self-opening enable us to understand what we would never grasp otherwise...
...What was James's take on religion...
...Rationalism gives an account of only a part of our mental life, and one that is "relatively superficial...
...It took very exceptional qualities to do this...
...An analogous phenomenon on the scale of the whole society is social trust...
...As Edward Madden puts it in his introduction to The Will to Believe, James might be seen as arguing really for a "right to believe...
...What is more, a close attention to the debate seems to indicate that most people feel both pulls...
...Copyright © 2002 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College...
...and this in two ways, both of which connect centrally to James's take on religion as experience...
...This totality forces a choice...
...What does that tell us about what the path of rationality consists in for someone who stands on the threshold, deciding whether he should permit himself to believe in God...
...This is similar grounds to those laid out in Pascal's famous wager...
...But from the outside it isn't at all clear that what everyone could agree are the undoubted findings of modern natural science quite add up to a proof of, say, materialism, or whatever the religion-excluding view is...
...and something in you absolutely knows that that result must be truer than any logic-chopping rationalistic talk, however clever, that may contradict it...
...Very likely it needed someone who had been through a searing experience of "morbidity" as James had been, and had come out the other side...
...All rights reserved...
...As one stands on the cusp between the two great options, it is all a matter of the sense you have that there is something more, bigger, outside you...
...But the issue could be put in other terms again...
...People go on feeling a sense of unease at the world of unbelief: some sense that something big, something important has been left out, some level of profound desire has been ignored, some greater reality outside us has been closed off...
...The minimal form of James's argument is, then, that the supposed superior rationality of the "agnostic veto" on belief- don't believe in God until you have overwhelming evidence- disappears once you see that there is an option between two risks of loss of truth...
...Everybody should be free to choose his own kind of risk...
...or the agnostic vetoes upon faith as something weak and shameful, under which so many of us today lie cowering, afraid to use our instincts...
...First, precisely because he abandons so much of the traditional ground of religion, because he has no use for collective connections through sacraments or ways of life, because the intellectual articulations are made secondary, the key point-what to make of the gut instinct that there is something more?- stands out very clearly...
...But from the inside the move seems unavoidable, because it is powered by certain ethical views...
...Clifford's The Ethics of Belief starts from a notion of what proper scientific procedure is: Never turn your hypotheses into accepted theories until the evidence is adequate...
...1) Each side is drawing on very different sources, and (2) our culture as a whole cannot seem to get to a point where one of these no longer speaks to us...
...He is on one side, but he helps you imagine what it's like to be on either...
...We all lie to some extent "cowering" under "the agnostic vetoes upon faith as something weak and shameful...
...It is the path of manliness, courage, and integrity to turn our backs on these facile comforts, and face the universe as it really is...
...What was the wider agenda of which it was part...
...In one way, we might interpret him as having wanted to show that you ought to come down on one side, the stronger thesis I offered above...
...But so strong are the temptations to deviate from this path that we must make it an unbreakable precept never to give our assent unless the evidence compels it...
...You can even find yourself forgetting that these lectures were delivered a hundred years ago...
...The reason the argument is so difficult, and so hard to join, is that each side stands within its own view of the human moral predicament...
...What is especially striking about this account is that it brings out the bare issue so starkly, uncomplicated by further questions...
...We are supposed to gain, even now, by our belief, and to lose by our nonbelief, a certain vital good...
...They have to go one way, but they never fully shake off the call of the other...
...One of the crucial features that justifes aversion to certain interpretations from the agnostic standpoint, namely that they in some way attract us, shows up from the believer's standpoint as what justifies our interest...
...This is not the way the mind works at all...
...but the weaker reading is just that he wanted to rebut the idea that reason forces you to the agnostic choice...
...But can the same kind of logic apply to religion, that is, to a belief in something that by hypothesis is way beyond our power to create...
...one cannot accord the two rival meanings to these crucial features at the same time...
...If I am determined to test this by adopting a stance of maximum distance and suspicion, the chances are that I will forfeit the chance of a positive answer...
...He refers to some whose "inaptitude" is intellectual in origin: Their religious faculties may be checked in their natural tendency to expand, by beliefs about the world that are inhibitive, the pessimistic and materialistic beliefs, for example, within which so many good souls, who in former times would have freely indulged their religious propensities, find themselves nowadays, as it were, frozen...
...It is the part which has the prestige undoubtedly, for it has the loquacity, it can challenge you for proofs, and chop logic, and put you down with words...
...James holds, on the contrary, that there are some domains in which truths will be hidden from us unless we go at least halfway toward them...
...But it will fail to convince or convert you all the same, if your dumb intuitions are opposed to its conclusions...
...Used by permission...
...For what believer doesn't have the sense that her view of God is too simple, too anthropocentric, too indulgent...
...From the inside the "proof" seems solid, because certain interpretations are ruled out on the grounds that they seem "speculative" or "metaphysical...
...In any event, it is because James stands so nakedly and so volubly in this exposed spot that his work has resonated for a hundred years, and will go on doing so for many years to come.n doing so for many years to come...
...The believer is thought to have invented the delusion that beguiles him...
...As we saw, the attraction of certain feelings and intuitions has a totally different significance in the two stances...
...Faced with this double possibility it is no longer so clear that Clifford's ethic is the appropriate one, because it was taking account of only the first possibility...
...What is created is not God or the eternal, but there is a certain grasp of these, and a certain succor from these that can never be ours unless we open ourselves to them in faith...
...James has in a sense opened up to view an important part of the struggle between belief and unbelief in modern culture...
...But it also needed someone of wide sympathy and extraordinary powers of phenomenological description...
...The likeness increases when we reflect that Pascal never thought of his wager argument as standing alone, appealing as it were purely to the betting side of our nature, to the instincts that take over when we enter the casinos at Las Vegas...
...Charles Taylor is professor emeritus of philosophy at McGill University and author of Sources of the Self, The Ethics of Authenticity, and Philosophical Arguments...

Vol. 129 • March 2002 • No. 5


 
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