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Postmodernism, Reason and Religion

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Title: Postmodernism, Reason and Religion
by Ernest Gellner
ISBN: 0-415-08024-X
Publisher: Routledge
Pub. Date: September, 1992
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $24.95
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Average Customer Rating: 5 (1 review)

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Rating: 5
Summary: The triumph of the Enlightenment?
Comment: In this brief but scintillating essay, Ernest Gellner describes the current intellectual situation faced by humankind, lays out his own allegiances, and offers his hopes for the future.

Gellner argues that there are three basic options of belief available today: he describes these as "Religious fundamentalism," "Relativism, as exemplified by the recent fashion of 'postmodernism'," and "Enlightenment rationalism or rationalist fundamentalism."

As an example of fundamentalism, Gellner focuses not on the long-maligned Christian fundamentalism of the West but rather on the Islamic fundamentalism which has recently captured the world's attention (Gellner's essay was published in 1992, nearly a decade before the 9/11 catastrophe).

Gellner credibly argues, contrary to the views propagated by Muslim-haters in the West, that in many ways Islamic fundamentalism is a modernizing and rationalizing force. For example, he explains, "Contrary to what outsiders generally suppose, the typical Muslim woman in a Muslim city doesn't wear the veil because her grandmother did so, but because her grandmother did _not_: her grandmother was far too busy in the fields, and she frequented the shrine without a veil, and left the veil to her betters. The granddaughter is celebrating the fact that she has joined her grandmother's betters..."

Gellner further argues that "a certain kind of separation of powers was built into Muslim society from the very start...It subordinates the executive [i.e., the government] to the (divine) legislature and, in actual practice, turns the theologians/lawyers into the monitors of political rectitude..."

This may seem an odd point to make given the contempt and derision which Western media have heaped on, for example, the "mullahs" of Iran. And yet, for all its shortcomings, the Islamic Republic of Iran has shown more capacity for self-criticism, more actual democracy, than most secular regimes in the Islamic world (e.g., Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist regime in Iraq). And the atrocities committed by the mullahs are almost insignificant compared to the tens of millions of innocent persons murdered by the anti-religious socialist regimes which dominated Asia during the twentieth century (in the Soviet Union, Maoist China, Communist Cambodia, etc.).

While Gellner is not an uncritical admirer of fundamentalism, Islamic or otherwise, he turns his main guns on his fellow academics, especially those who espouse "postmodernism" and other allied forms of relativism.

Gellner explains that the universities are dominated by the research model provided by the natural sciences in which scholars are expected to constantly churn out genuinely new knowledge. But, he adds, "in fields such as the humanities, not only is it not clear that there is any cumulative development, any real 'progress', it is not always altogether clear what 'research' should or could aim it." So, in lieu of true scholarship, the humanities are seduced into "a setting up of artificial obsolescence and rotation of fashion, characteristic of the consumer goods industry..." Postmodernism, and its predecessors and successors, are academic fads.

Gellner demonstrates this in great detail in a case study of his own profession of anthropology.

He further argues that postmodernism and other forms of intellectual relativism are not merely harmless academic fads; they also distract us from understanding the most important historical development of the last thousand years.

That development, Gellner maintains, consists of the fact that, for the first time in human history, one civilization has discovered a method to reveal objective, practically indisputable, and culturally-independent knowledge about the natural world, knowledge that offers incomparable power in controlling nature and doing good or harm to our fellow humans.

That method is generally called the "scientific method" and every civilization on this planet is frantic to reap its fruits.

"Enlightenment Rationalist Fundamentalism" is the label Gellner uses for the belief system which underlies the natural sciences and which neither swears allegiance to any religious or ideological Revelation nor succumbs to the superficial tolerance of all-ideas-are-equal relativism as is preached by postmodernism.

Enlightenment rationalism preaches initial tolerance for any idea or hypothesis but only on condition that this hypothesis be subjected to the ruthlessly severe test of the scientific method. Of course, very few ideas survive the test.

In some ultimate sense, Enlightenment rationalism is the least tolerant belief system of all.

Coyly, Gellner offers as a model for the future an uneasy but mutually tolerant coexistence among these three competing belief systems. Yet, in his final two pages he makes clear whom he envisions as ultimately triumphing from such a system of mutual coexistence.

He scathingly dismisses postmodernists as historically irrelevant: "The relativists, in whatever guise -- the 'postmodernists' are but an extravagant, undisciplined and transient mode of this attitude -- seem to me to offer an accurate and acceptable account of how we do, and probably of how we should, order our gastronomy (at any rate on any one evening), our wallpaper, and even, for lack of a better alternative, our daily self-image. (Though most evenings, I'd prefer a traditional rather than postmodernist menu.) Their insights apply to the decorative rather than to the real structural and functional aspects of our life...As an account of the realities of our world and a guide to conduct, [their] position is laughable."

He also dismisses serious religious belief as, perhaps, once having served a historically necessary purpose but now supplanted by the true knowledge offered by science: "The fundamentalists deserve our respect, both as fellow recognizers of the uniqueness of truth, who avoid the facile self-deception of universal relativism, and as our intellectual ancestors. Without indulging in excessive ancestor-worship, we do owe them a measure of reverence. Without serious, not to say obsessional monotheism and unitarianism, the rationalist naturalism of the Enlightenment might well never have seen the light of day...It was a jealous Jehovah who really taught mankind the Law of the Excluded Middle."

In the end, the only belief system which can survive long-term is, Gellner believes, the empiricist rationalism created in the Western-European Enlightenment.

To put it bluntly, the future belongs to John Locke, Isaac Newton, and Thomas Jefferson.

I think, and hope, that Gellner is right.

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