Charles Taylor's A Secular Age

Koppelman, Andrew

BOOKS Naked Strong Evaluation Andrew Koppelman A SECULAR AGE by Charles Taylor Harvard University Press, 2007 874 pp $39 .95 RELIGIOUS FAITH today lS One OptlOri among others . Many...

...From the beginning, Tay­lor argues, there was a tension in Christianity between salvation for all, promised by a tran­scendent God, and the pagan practices and habits of mind that persisted among the laity...
...How easily can we set these goals aside...
...On the contrary, it raises new prob­lems: How do we know, for example, that the bush that Moses saw was burning and not con­sumed...
...Moreover, the problem of theodicy becomes more acute in a world in which the purposes of the world are understood to center around human flourishing: "The idea of blaming God gets a clearer sense and becomes much more sa­lient in the modern era where people begin to think they know just what God was pur­posing in creating the world, and can check the results against the intention...
...BOOKS Naked Strong Evaluation Andrew Koppelman A SECULAR AGE by Charles Taylor Harvard University Press, 2007 874 pp $39 .95 RELIGIOUS FAITH today lS One OptlOri among others . Many people-call them secularists-live without any transcendent source of value . Some, but not all, are militant atheists...
...Since it's my worldview that he's anatomizing, I can offer some data as an anthropological I'm not prepared to argue, as Richard Rorty does, that there is no transcendent basis for my commitment to human rights and that it is a purely contingent historical formation . Rorty is mighty sure of himself . I just don't know...
...Some have...
...The question's implication is that moral obligations can't be justified in a godless universe...
...The news that secularists also live in glass houses has impli­cations for ongoing stone-throwing operations...
...We have moved from one shaky foundation to another...
...But to do that, he would have had to change in so many ways that it is hard to imagine what he would have looked like...
...Taylor raises an interesting psychologi­cal question about secularism and human rights...
...Religion is suspect be­cause it posits transcendent goals and is alien to human fulfillment...
...Kant thought that morality required, at a mini­mum, the belief that God and a future life are possible . The highest human good had to be a real possibility in order for a person intelligibly to take it as a practical end...
...The reforming emphasis on free faith inevitably decentralizes...
...Once "God's goals for us shrink to the single end of our encompassing this order of mutual benefit he has designed for us," it is easy for God to drop out of the picture com­pletely...
...DISSENT I Winter 2009 . 109...
...For many people, this hope takes a religious form, and probably could only take a religious form...
...Taylor doesn't claim this, but others have...
...2) Justificatory: In a materialist universe, how can there be any compelling warrant for moral statements...
...there is no gain in con­fidence . Taylor is right that "going one way or an­other requires what is often called a `leap of faith...
...The morality of compassion appears to exceed our emotional capabilities...
...Stand up for truth...
...In fact, it is probably less so, because it doesn't require belief in improbable events in historical time-golden plates borne by the Angel Moroni, a messiah resurrected from the dead . Religious people are divided about the importance of such claims...
...Naked Strong Evaluation works for me . T HE QUESTION about the relation between religion and human rights is chronically confused because it is really four differ­ent questions: (1) Epistemic: How do we know that there are human rights...
...Taylor's book does a wonderful job of elucidat­ing the predicament that is, at the deepest level, what unites us . ANDREW KOPPELMAN is the co-author (with Tobias Barrington Wolff) of A Right to Discrimi­nate...
...In a religious worldview, one can say that what grounds one's commitment to treating people decently is that the will of God makes everyone sacred...
...During the Montgom­ery bus boycott, a series of death threats, some of them directed at his family, had left him de­moralized...
...The sense of cosmic order pervaded everything...
...There are ancient and unresolved difficulties about whether morality is a divine command or whether it is also a constraint on God, whether evil deeds would become good if God did them, and so forth . If God is sub­ject to moral judgments, then God can't be the source of all moral judgments . Naked Strong Evaluation doesn't have these problems . There certainly is something mysterious about strong evaluation in a materialistic universe...
...In such circumstances, un­belief was unthinkable...
...It is true that "no previous civilization has accepted the obligation to help human be­ings, wherever and against all, as our contem­poraries have...
...But the secular worldview has its own dis­contents, manifest in repeated waves of Ro­mantic protest...
...Taylor thinks that the "this-worldly" hu­manitarian concern that Nussbaum advocates points beyond itself toward the transcendent . T AYLOR ENDORSES what Jonathan Lear calls (in a book with that title) "radical hope"-a hope that is, as Lear puts it, "directed toward a future goodness that tran­scends the current ability to understand what it is...
...There were repeated efforts by the church, first to reform its own practices and later to restrain as idolatrous the veneration of saints' relics, magic, miracle-mongering, and dancing around the maypole . The Reformation radicalized this move by abolishing this tension and inaugu­rating the "priesthood of all believers ." Ordi­nary life-work, play, sex-began to take on sacred meaning...
...Taylor writes, That I am left with human concerns doesn't tell me to take universal human welfare as my goal...
...This kind of tension, between the life of reli­gious ascetics and the inevitably less perfect lives of ordinary people, is present in all civili­zations organized around post-pagan religions, but Latin Christendom is distinguished by "the deep and growing dissatisfaction with it ." The movement that culminated in the Prot­estant Reformation began in the Middle Ages...
...Secularism and religious belief are each animated, for many of their adherents, by pic­tures of the world in which the other position is simply unimaginable...
...In a 1988 re­view of her book The Fragility of Goodness, Tay­lor pressed Nussbaum for a clearer articulation of her own evaluation of the aspiration to tran­scend ordinary human life-an aspiration that she explores in ancient Greek thought . Nussbaum responded to Taylor in a later essay, "Transcending Humanity," arguing that we should "reject as incoherent . . . the aspiration to leave behind altogether the constitutive con­ditions of our humanity, and to seek for a life that is really the life of another sort of being­as if it were a higher and better life for us ." If one aspires to "a more compassionate, subtler, more responsive, more richly human world" than the one we now inhabit, then "there is a great deal of room for transcendence of our or­dinary humanity-transcendence, we might say, of an internal and human sort...
...it is, in fact, the en­emy of human fulfillment...
...Secular language finds it difficult to articulate the force of ethi­cal demands or for that matter the power of artistic experience...
...Whatever posi­tion is held depends on its resonance for the individual...
...Taylor, for example, thinks that propositional beliefs, such as the existence of God, are not essential to religiosity, but are derivative from one's broader sense of what is important in life . Taylor has noted that a central element of ordinary moral reasoning is "strong evaluation": the "discriminations of right or wrong, better or worse, higher or lower, which are not ren­dered valid by our own desires, inclinations, or choices, but rather stand independent of these and offer standards by which they can be judged...
...And so I'm in a poor position to attack the hopes­hopes that to me (in most of my moods) are deeply implausible-that supported him in his confidence...
...Taylor is right that the secu­larist commitment to human rights is curiously ungrounded and that religious revelation is one answer...
...Martin Luther Kings don't turn up that often, so I'm not inclined to tinker with the ones we have...
...The Tran­scendent Something toward which all this points is, however, obscure . (3) Sociological/psychological: Can hu­man beings sustain their allegiance to human rights if they don't believe in God...
...It would be implausible, however, to suggest that it is the only answer...
...I was ready to give up," he recalled . Sitting in the kitchen, unable to sleep after a threatening phone call, he began to think of how he could pass the leadership of the de­segregation movement on to someone else...
...Rather, modern secularism is a re­ligious worldview, with its own narrative of test­ing and redemption, and shares the vulnerabilities of such views...
...In A Secular Age, Taylor observes that Nussbaum is making the familiar secularist ob­jection to religion: it pulls us away from the be­nevolent project that should be our real preoccupation ; it keeps us from taking human desire and neediness seriously...
...I'm confident that King was not a fool or a sucker...
...It can create a sense "that something central is missing, some great pur­pose, some élan, some fulfillment, without which life has lost its point" ; it has no good ac­count of its own commitment to universal be­nevolence, which it cannot disentangle fully 106 .DISSENT /Winter 2009 from its roots in Christian agape...
...Wherever you situate yourself in this land­scape, your view of the moral universe won't­and can't be-a neat, closed system with all the loose ends tidied up . Recognizing this can inoculate us against two related errors: One is to think that we have all the answers...
...But the whole operation depends on maudlin emotional appeals : "Spec­tacular events, affecting images, keep the money rolling in, but there are often more pressing needs elsewhere, and we have to ei­ther re-allocate the public's contributions else­where without telling them or inflect the priorities of action in order to follow public emotion...
...Not necessarily...
...Just being confined to human goods could just as well find expression in my concerning myself ex­clusively with my own material welfare, or that of my family and immediate milieu . The claim that universal benevolence is just part of human nature is not especially plau­sible...
...So there is what appears to be a permanent gap in my belief system...
...nor does it tell me that freedom is im­portant, or fulfillment, or equality...
...On the other hand, there are secularists for whom the rejection of what they regard as religion's superstitions and fanaticisms is as much a matter of strong evaluation as their commitment to human rights (a term I'll use to represent not just the right to be free from torture and indefinite detention without trial, but more generally the claim to decent treat­ment for all human beings) . Their commitment to human rights lacks any further grounding . It certainly doesn't follow from their secular­ism...
...In a review of Lear's book, Taylor is un­certain whether radical hope "can be sustained without some kind of formulated faith in some­thing, whether religious or secular-faith in God, or in History, or in our own resources, or in human resilience ." Any formulation, how­ever, wí11 be inadequate to that toward which it points...
...Around the middle of the first millennium B.C.E ., the great world faiths appeared...
...And 1o I wí11 be with you, even until the end of the world ." King's new courage resulted from direct, felt connection with Christ"I heard the voice of Jesus saying still to fight on . He promised never to leave me ."-and he persisted in his civil rights advocacy...
...But then what grounds one's belief in God...
...there were no clear boundaries between self and non-self, personal agency and impersonal force...
...It is some­times suggested that the answer to this ques­tion must be no...
...Confucius, Lao-tse, Siddhartha Gautama, the Hebrew prophets, Socrates, and Plato brought new visions of universal ethics and individual salvation...
...A millennium ago, this would have been unimaginable . Everyone be­lieved in God and oriented their lives in refer­ence to that belief...
...How the Case of Boy Scouts of America v. James Dale Warped the Law of Free Association, forthcoming from Yale University Press...
...The goal of order becomes simply a matter of human flourishing, and the power to pursue that goal is a purely human capacity, not something we receive from God . Thus a reforming movement in Christian­ity was in time transformed into militant secularism...
...Both secular and religious people seem to share a similar sus­taining hope, a vision of a world in which our benevolent aspirations can be realized . The Kantian nature of Taylor's argument for religion is apparent in a debate that he has been having over the past twenty years with fellow philosopher Martha Nussbaum...
...He concludes that modern Western secularism has its roots in Christian theology and that secularism and Christianity reveal a common ancestry in their shared commitment to human rights-a com­mitment that does not follow from atheism as such...
...I'm a specimen of what Taylor is study­ing, a modern secularist with a deep commitment to human rights...
...If I were a religious per­son, I guess I'd be entitled to call it a Mystery...
...People manage, through varying methods and with varying degrees of success, to accomplish this psychological trick within themselves . (4) Historical : Did the idea of human rights, at least in the West, emerge from Chris­tian doctrine...
...In this new vision, Christianity is a danger to the goods of the modern moral order...
...I don't think I have to...
...Our knowledge of the truth may be-often ís-rooted in previous errors . Modern astronomy is rooted in astrology, but astrology is not a good epistemic path to knowl­edge of astronomy, nor do the data of as­tronomy need a justificatory basis in astrology...
...It also got him killed...
...Charles Taylor's A SecularAge offers an in­valuable map of how the modern religious­secular divide came into being...
...Ethical demands and erotic love are both felt internally, but both may seem to be external from the standpoint of the other, each threatening to marginalize an important part of our lives . The same is true with the ad­miration for military heroism and the desire for perpetual peace...
...Possession by demons was a real and ter­rifying possibility...
...It is possible to feel some of the force of each opposing position-to stand "in that open space where you can feel the winds pulling you, now to belief, now to unbelief"­but this is relatively uncommon . What is more common is to occupy some specific intermediate point between the polar positions . For the past few centuries, there has been a growing proliferation of views that do this, first among the elite and then later gen­eralized to the whole society...
...Does not a great deal of our efforts at healing take as a goal the wholeness of the per­son...
...Here I can offer some pertinent introspec­tion...
...Taylor responds that the move toward transcendence is always internal in its basis, so the distinction between internal and external transcendences can't do the work thatNussbaumintends...
...But this claim is obviously silly . Taylor certainly isn't saying this ; one of his pri­mary data, needing explanation, is the existence of secularists like me who are firmly commit­ted to human rights . In a 2004 essay, "A Place for Transcen­dence...
...He began to pray out loud and, as King recalled, "ít seemed to me at that moment that I could hear an inner voice saying to me, `Martin Luther, stand up for righteousness . Stand up for justice...
...It also isn't consistent with "our sense that there is something higher, nobler, more fully human about universal sympathy...
...Human beings now had to inhabit the world, writes Taylor, "as agents of DISSENT I Winter 2009 . 105 instrumental reason, working the system effec­tively in order to bring about God's purposes ; because it is through these purposes, and not through signs, that God reveals himself in his world...
...Consider a crucial episode in the life of Martin Luther King, Jr...
...We don't want to renounce ei­ther, but it is not possible, in this world, to have both...
...A world that had been unified was now divided between the disordered lower realm and the higher aspirations toward which individuals were to strive . A Secular Age focuses on the evolution of the Christian world...
...This disengaged stance toward a disen­chanted world became the moral basis of the new scientific method...
...I can't tell you why I think that...
...Perhaps he could have arrived in the same place on the basis of Naked Strong Evaluation...
...Human aspi­rations don't all fit together...
...It made him into the closest thing to a secular saint that twentieth-century America produced...
...The other, perhaps even more malign, is to be too confident of what the other fellow's beliefs en­tail : that his or her "belief in God produces fa­naticism" or "atheism leads to immorality" Naked Strong Evaluation is very difficult, perhaps even unimaginable, for many people who can be reliable allies in the cause of hu­man rights . On the other hand, quite a lot of people seem to be able to pull it off . We're all stumbling around in the dark, grabbing as much of the elephant as we can . It is unseemly to mock one another's shortsightedness...
...Secularism has the advantage of parsi­mony in its leaps . In its most common modern form, it relies on a humanitarian impulse that has no articulable foundation . But this intel­lectual weakness isn't any more troubling than any of religion's...
...In the primitive world of nature rituals and tribal deities, there was no clear distinction between the immanent and the transcendent...
...what we are missing is a love for the human being as he/she is, with all its imperfections, weak­nesses, idiocy, ugliness ." Taylor thinks that only Christian agape or Buddhist mahakaruna can fill this gap...
...What pushes us one way or the other," writes Taylor, "ís what we might describe as our over-all take on human life, and its cosmic and (íf any) spiritual sur­roundings...
...As Friedrich Nietzsche showed, the rejec­tion of religion can easily be accompanied by the rejection of human rights . What secularists are committed to might be called "Naked Strong Evaluation" : the idea, unsupported by any particular metaphysical claims, that the commitment to decent treat­ment for all human beings is a mandatory cri­terion for judging our desires and actions . Does the nakedness of this commitment weaken ít...
...It is doubtless true that for many people strong evaluation is inseparable from religion...
...it is contradictory to seek "a Church tightly held together by a strong hierarchical authority, which will nev­ertheless be filled with practitioners of heart­felt devotion ." T wioR Is RIGHT that secularism is miss­ing something important...
...it risks fanaticism and estrangement from our own nature...
...This attempt to bring Christ into a world that had become desacralized inspired a new focus on the world...
...Taylor is Catholic, and he is clearly trying to make the case for theisms like his own . Taylor's history refutes what he calls the "sub­traction view" of the movement toward secu­larism, according to which the decline of religious belief is simply the result of the fall­ing away of superstition and the growth of knowledge...
...L ATE IN THIS BOOK, Taylor makes a Kantian argument: "Does not a great deal of our political activity take as its goal, if only as an idea of reason, a world order in which peoples live together in equality and justice...
...Technological control of the world became yet another way of doing God's work, benefiting the human race in ac­cordance with his plan . The highest goal was understood to be "a certain kind of human flourishing, in a context of mutuality, pursuing each his/her happiness on the basis of assured life and liberty, in a society of mutual benefit ." The "this-worldly ethos" eventually made it possible to cut loose from religiosity alto­gether...
...The extra­human transcendence that Taylor has in mind has its dangers . "If one thinks that the really important thing is to get over to a different sort of life altogether, then this may well make one work less hard on this one...
...The answer to this is yes, as Taylor has shown more thoroughly than any­ i0ó . DISSENT I Winter 2009 one before him...
...A secular worldview has notorious problems dealing with the facts of suffering and evil...
...There is a gap in the narrative . But this is not a com­parative disadvantage for secularism, because the precise area of weakness-a normative commitment to human rights that can't be ac­ counted for-is equally present in traditional religious worldviews...
...The Christian virtues were no longer those of ascetic monks ; an ethos of per­sonal responsibility and self-discipline became available to everyone...
...Some people (not Taylor) have taken 4 to be evidence of 1 or 2 . This is a je­june error in logic...
...they are in tension with one another...
...It is part of our nature that "we long for things that we do not yet fully understand...
...But this is pure speculation...
...Knowledge of God's existence has no more secure epistemic foundation than Naked Strong Evaluation...
...In or­der for this argument to be persuasive, it would DISSENT I Winter 2009 . 107 have to be shown how God helps-how war­ranted moral claims can be dependent on God's existence...
...This gap doesn't trouble me . All belief systems have Mysteries . My agnosticism is in many ways the functional equivalent of atheism : I don't rely on a belief in God to justify my hu­man rights commitments...
...This also is problematic...

Vol. 56 • January 2009 • No. 1


 
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