767 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
767 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
Redemption and Utopia
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Introduction
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The following is an essay based upon Redemption and Utopia of
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Michael L|wy published originally under the title Redemption et
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Utopie in 1988 by Presses Universitaires de France. I read the
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book in Gustaf Gimdal's Swedish translation F|rlossning och Utopi
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published by Daidalos in 1990. I intend to use some of L|wy's
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themes as a springboard for a discussion of the concepts of time
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and victimhood as they apply to progressive thought at the end of
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the 20th century.
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L|wy's book is an examination of the thought of 15 German Jewish
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writers born between 1875 and 1900. Though many of them talked or
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corresponded with each other, what is most striking are the
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parallels in their lives and thinking, the similar ways in which
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the events of their times, their family background, and their
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Jewish heritage interacted to form their ideas. What emerged in
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these men in varying degrees was a breathtakingly radical analysis
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of history, contemporary society, and possibilities for the
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future. Quite simply they attempted a synthesis of the fundamental
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and apparently contradictory trends in contemporary political and
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social thought. Their incredible drive toward integration was
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epitomized by Walter Benjamin, whom L|wy describes in the
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following terms: "[His] thought progresses like the painting of an
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artist who never erases his brush strokes, but rather constantly
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covers them with new layers, which at times seem to follow the
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contours of the original sketch and at times seem to transcend
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them in an unexpected form." (p. 122) One senses in reading the
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book that many of the writers lived their lives with the same kind
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of intensity that their thought reflects: a number of them
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expected imminent transformation of the world and committed
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suicide in despair when their hopes failed to materialize. Others
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lived on to a ripe old age, moderated their views and became
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accepted within liberal or more traditionally radical circles, yet
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even at the end of their lives held on to the messianic dreams
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which had fired their thought as youths.
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L|wy's book operates on several levels. On the most basic level he
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traces the development of the thought of each of the 15 men and
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their relationship to their times and its contradictory
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ideological currents. On another level L|wy distinguishes among
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three groups of writers: those who had an essentially religious
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orientation with anarchistic and libertarian tendencies, those who
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were primarily anarchistic and libertarian but who drew on
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spiritual traditions, and those who stood at the crossroads of the
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first two groups. A third level is L|wy's application and
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development of the concept of "elective affinity" that sociologist
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Max Weber had first employed in his analysis of the relationship
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between Protestantism and the growth of capitalism. A fourth level
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is the way in which L|wy suggests that these men influenced
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history and ideology in the 20th century: "Thus we are talking
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about a generation of history's losers...in a paradox that is more
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apparent than real, it is just because they were losers, outsiders
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that swam against the currents of their time, stubborn romantics
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and incurable utopians, that their work becomes more and more
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relevant, more and more significant as we approach the end of the
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20th century." (p. 8) In particular the anti-nuclear and
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environmental movements reflect a great deal of their thinking.
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What is particularly fascinating in the "delayed effect" of their
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thought is its consonance with the tenor of the thought itself,
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its sympathy and faith in the victims of oppression and absolute
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belief in the power of human beings to transform history.
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A final level on which the book operates is in its suggestion that
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these men reflected a radically new consciousness of the nature of
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time. One cannot help noticing that their concept of time bears a
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striking resemblance to that of 20th century physics. I would
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argue that the sense of pregnancy that their work exudes and the
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disjointed way in which it has affected contemporary thought is a
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reflection of the gradual "seeping" of non-mechanistic reality
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into our consciousness in this century. These men stood on the
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threshold of a new reality, a position that helps to explain their
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ambivalent attitude toward science and the Enlightenment: they saw
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the limits of the mechanistic worldview, yet sensed that 20th
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century science could offer a "rational" basis for its
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transcendence.
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Section I of my essay will introduce the concept of elective
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affinity and the way in which L|wy employs it. Section II will
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highlight some of the social and political trends in 19th century
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Germany that constituted the basis for the ideological alchemy
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that L|wy describes. In this section I will also suggest that
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Enlightenment and rationalistic thinking was as significant an
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element in the alchemical reaction as the two traditions L|wy
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focuses on. In Section III I will discuss the substance of the
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thought of the writers L|wy treats. But instead of making
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distinctions between the primarily religious and primarily
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political writers, I will emphasize how different and apparently
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contradictory aspects of their ideas built upon each other to form
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a powerful whole. In particular, I will discuss Franz Kafka and
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Walter Benjamin as concrete illustrations of the complexity and
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richness of these men's thought. In Section IV I will take up the
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implications of the failure of their ideas to triumph during their
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lives and the revolutionary concept of time that their beliefs
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represented. I will suggest that in incorporating the
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contradictory elements of their age, they reached the limit of
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what was possible at that time. And finally I will argue that
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perhaps the most radical aspect of their vision is the sense that
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history is not predetermined by economic, theological, or
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political factors, but depends upon real and unpredictable choices
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that human beings make in concrete moments of time.
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I. L|wy and elective affinity
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Lowy's book deals with the interaction of two trends of thought in
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the work of the writers with whom he is concerned: 19th century
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libertarian Romantic anarchism and the Jewish messianic tradition.
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The concept he chooses in order to illumine the nature of this
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interaction is that of "elective affinity," the attraction and
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merging of distinct forces or phenomena. L|wy traces this idea
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back to Hippocrates, describes its relevance to medieval alchemy,
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its importance in the work of writers such as Swedenborg, and
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ascribes its first modern explicit formulation to Swedish chemist
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Tarbem Olof Bergman (1775). In Lowy's exposition there are four
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phases involved in the elective affinity relationship between two
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forces or objects: 1) a passive or potential correspondence; 2)
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election - the beginning of the interaction; 3) coming together,
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partial or total fusion (or symbiotic relationship); 4) the
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emergence of a new form that is greater than the sum of the parts.
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L|wy relates that sociologist Max Weber consciously used the
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concept of elective affinity, but that he neglected the fourth and
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vital aspect, the emergence of a new form. It is quite interesting
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that L|wy identifies both Weber's truncated formulation of the
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concept and its scarce application in modern sociology as part and
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parcel of the scientific, rational nature of the age. Lowy's aim
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is both to apply elective affinity to the thinkers with whom he
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deals and to vivify the concept within sociological analysis in
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general. In doing so he thus reveals his sympathy with the
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restitutional and transcendental of the very thought he is
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describing.
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II. The historical background
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Nineteenth century German society as L|wy describes it was
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characterized by the explosive growth of capitalism and a cultural
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reaction against it on one hand and the partial emancipation and
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assimilation of the Jews on the other hand. Industrialism spread
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at a particularly rapid rate from 1870 until the First World War.
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This period also represented the height of the influence of
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Romanticism, the cultural reaction to industrialization.
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Romanticism was characterized by a harsh critique of modern
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society as dominated by rationalism, mechanization, and
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secularism. By the end of the century it was the leading
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intellectual current and united cultural and political thinkers
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across ideological lines.
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At the same time 70% of Germany's Jews had left the ghettos that
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had been their home for so many centuries and had been granted
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formal political equality. However, except for a privileged few,
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cultural equality, acceptance into German society, remained as
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elusive as ever. This contradiction was especially marked at the
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universities, where Jews in 1885 constituted a whopping 10% of the
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student population but were denied access to most regular teaching
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positions. This partial assimilation made Jewish academics ripe
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for the intellectual currents of their time. Though a majority of
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them followed the liberal or respectable Marxist trends in German
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thought, a number, including the men L|wy treats, became more
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enamored of anti-modernist Romantic ideas.
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On the one hand, their identification with Romanticism was a
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result of their emancipation, their identification with German
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society and even the nationalistic elements of Romanticism (for
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many of them Zionism was a counterpart to German nationalism). On
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the other hand, the contradictory nature of their assimilation was
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the very precondition for their rejection of that assimilation,
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particularly those aspects that represented acceptance of a
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materialistic, secularized society. Thus, many of them identified
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early in their careers with those trends within Romanticism that
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looked to previous historical periods, in particular the guild
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structures in medieval Europe, as a model for a more
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spiritualized, participatory society. This tendency often included
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an admiration of Christian values and mystical tradition. But as
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they, often as a result of exposure to the works of Martin Buber
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concerning the Jewish mystical tradition, got in touch with their
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Jewish roots, they began to identify with their own messianic
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tradition.
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This tradition's outstanding feature can be encapsulated in the
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rich Kabbalistic concept of Tikkoun, the obligation of Jews to
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work for the restitution of society to a harmoniously functioning
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and just entity. The concept in itself is a radical one, among
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other reasons because it implies a "return" to a situation that is
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not first and foremost "good" or "merciful" as the Christian
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mission is often interpreted, but to something holistic, "beyond
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good and evil," something like the state of innocence in the
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Garden of Eden. It is true that the form in which Jewish
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messianism had been propagated through the rabbinical and
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Talumudic tradition was rather more reactionary than radical: the
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wished-for restitution was expected to occur outside of history in
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an indeterminate future through the miraculous intervention of a
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personal and charismatic Messiah.
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What the men whom L|wy treats accomplished was to re-instate the
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radical character of the Jewish messianic tradition through its
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integration with 19th century libertarian anarchist ideas: the
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restitution, though seen as a total transformation of human life
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and its relationship to nature, was expected to occur within
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history. Furthermore, its occurrence would be expedited, if not
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wholly determined, by the concrete actions of human beings within
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history. One of the common denominators of Jewish messianism and
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libertarian anarchism that made for such a felicitous match was
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the radically anti-authoritarian character of both traditions. The
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state and all the forms of domination and control that it
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represents were regarded as the chief enemy. Drawing on their
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messianic tradition, the anti-authoritarianism of L|wy's thinkers
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often took the form of an the belief in an apparently oxymoronic
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"theocratic anarchy," i.e. a society in which the very absence of
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power relationships among people and of the abuse of nature would
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be insured by their absolute obedience to God. This view dovetails
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nicely with the most radical elements in Judaism, namely that
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human beings through making proper choices can be God's co-workers
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and compel her/him to establish a just order on earth.
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Though L|wy focuses on the chemistry between Jewish messianism and
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libertarian anarchism, he implies that the Enlightenment
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influenced many of the thinkers he treats, and I would argue that
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rationalism was an important term in the equation as well. L|wy
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hints more than once that these men had a more ambivalent attitude
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toward the Enlightenment than many of their non-Jewish Romanticist
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or anarchist colleagues. One clearly historical reason for their
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tendency to be more favorably disposed toward the Enlightenment
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was that its ideas of human equality had led more or less directly
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to the emancipation of the Jews. But in my view the more
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fundamental relationship arose from the fact that the idea of a
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just social order that is so central to the Jewish tradition has
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strong rationalistic components. The concept of Jews as having a
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special mission on earth as God's co-workers has always implied a
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reasoned, educated knowledge of just what it is that God expects
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people to do and what will work in realizing her/his expectations.
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The Romantic rebellion against the Enlightenment, though
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satisfying to these Jewish intellectuals in its attempt to
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re-infuse spiritual and cooperative values into society,
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represented also a threat against significant elements of their
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Jewish identity.
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I would argue that they identified with the spirit of the
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Enlightenment, that free and open inquiry was essential to
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creating a just and free social order. But they realized, as did
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the Romantics, that the content of much of the thought that had
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developed from the Enlightenment was no longer valid, i.e. the
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model of a mechanistic, deterministic universe with all of its
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implications for the organization of society. At the same time,
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however, they sensed that the Enlightenment had unleashed a wave
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of scientific and philosophical inquiry that would eventually
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transcend the deterministic model and open the way for a new
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concept of time and causality.
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L|wy summarizes Martin Buber's introduction to his book Utopia and
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Socialism as follows: "...[he] distinguishes between two forms of
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the nostalgia for justice: messianic eschatology, whose paradigm
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is a perfected time, creation's consummation; and utopia, whose
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paradigm is a perfected space, a community based on justice. As
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far as utopia is concerned, everything is subservient to man's
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conscious will; as far as eschatology is concerned - to the extent
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that it is prophetic and not apocalyptic - human beings play an
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active role in the redemption." (p. 73) This view of time
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runs counter to the deterministic view that had followed from
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Enlightenment thought. But it also runs counter to the Romantic
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view that society should return to some previous historical
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condition, such as medieval social organization. In this regard it
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is tempting to argue that Communism in the Soviet Union was an
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attempt to implement the Enlightenment perspective, whereas Nazism
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in Germany was an attempt to implement the Romantic perspective.
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However, 20th century science and philosophy have come to posit a
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view of the world that is radically anti- mechanistic and thus
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lends support to messianic anarchist thought. As I will argue in
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the conclusion to this essay, it is highly credible that as human
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consciousness changes in response to this new worldview, the
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chances for the realization of utopian ideals will increase; at
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the same time the very nature of radical messianic thought leaves
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unresolved the question of the likelihood of this realization.
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III. Currents of thought in messianic anarchism (Kafka and
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Benjamin)
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If Martin Buber, particularly in his writings on the Jewish
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mystical tradition and his newspaper Der Jude (1916-24), was the
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Godfather to the group of men whom L|wy treats, Franz Kafka and
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Walter Benjamin can be said to be their guiding spirits. Kafka was
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marginally involved in political activity and only at a relatively
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early stage of his career. But his sympathy with and knowledge of
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both the Jewish tradition and radical political movements were
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much greater than is ordinarily assumed. In any case, his ideas
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were expressed powerfully in fictional form and had a profound
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influence on the more explicitly political and religious writers.
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Kafka's fiction painted a devastating, if often fantastic and
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ironic, picture of life in modern industrialized society. But, as
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L|wy suggests, Kafka's work was not primarily social criticism as
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such, but rather a kind of metaphysical portrayal of a "negative
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utopia," of a daily existence lacking all redeeming features and
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marked by a total absence of either spiritual awareness or of
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earthly justice and truth. It is, in other words, an
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uncompromisingly stark indictment of the present. L|wy summarizes
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the message of Kafka's two major novels The Trial and The Castle
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in the following way: "[they] describe a world in despair,
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abandoned to absurdity, to authoritarian injustice and to
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mendacity, a world without freedom where the messianic promise
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reveals itself only in a negative sense by means of its radical
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absence. Not only does is a positive message lacking, but the
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messianic promise exists only implicitly, in the religious sense
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of perceiving (and rejecting) the contemporary world as hellish."
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(p. 103)
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Particularly relevant to this essay is the way in which Kafka's
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fiction reflects an existence in which time has lost its
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dimensionality and potential, has become a kind of torture for
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human beings in their everyday lives, another tool for their
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oppression. In an interview Kafka once described modernity as a
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condition in which "the most sublime and least corruptible aspect
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of all creativity, time, is compressed and entangled in a net of
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obscene commercial interests. In this way not only creativity but
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above all man as its essential force is degraded and humiliated."
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(p. 95) Nevertheless, Kafka's work is written as if from the
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flipside of the darkness, as if the very absence of redemption
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suggests its possibility. Kafka's fiction implies that
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transcendence of the nightmare of history is possible just within
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and in recognition of that nightmare. The desperate and often
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comic struggles of human beings within an oppressive order reflect
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the suppressed desire to live in a wholly different way. And a
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concept of time as offering transcendence, as being by nature
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other than deterministic, empty, and endlessly cyclical, is
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essential to this "negative" vision. L|wy quotes Maurice Blanchot
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on Kafka: "All of [his] work is a search for an affirmation that
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can be achieved by means of negation...[and] transcendence is just
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that affirmation that cannot be achieved other than by negation."
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(p. 95)
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Kafka's view of the present was shared by all of the writers to
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whom L|wy devotes his book. Modernity was seen as bankrupt
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spiritually and unable to provide human beings with meaningful
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lives or to protect nature from human ravages. Though many of them
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looked favorably upon Soviet Communism (until it became clearly
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authoritarian and oppressive in the 1930's), their analysis was
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not primarily economic: they saw neither the causes nor the cure
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of the malaise in economic terms. Their hope for the Soviet
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experiment lay in its appearance of having radically broken the
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monotony of history and in its promise of creating a stateless
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cooperative society. For similar reasons many of these men
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supported, and were later disillusioned with, the Zionist
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experiment in Palestine. But though their analysis was not chiefly
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economic, it shared Marxism's perspective of history through the
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eyes of the exploited and oppressed. And they saw that oppression
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primarily in political and spiritual terms, in the nature of power
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and the way that it is intrinsically employed.
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This critique of power was bound up with their identities as Jews.
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They saw the Jews as the quintessential victims of political
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oppression throughout history (in this regard it is relevant to
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note that Jews had typically enjoyed greater economic than
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political rights). At the same time Jewish life in Europe, with
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its tightly-knit communities, statelessness and focus on obedience
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to God could be regarded as a kind of anarchistic model. The
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Jewish concept of the Sabbath, which was central to the culture
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and religion, could also be interpreted as a kind of revolutionary
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anarchistic idea. The Sabbath's proscription of work was seen to
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derive from the belief that labor in its current form is a
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reflection of man's fallen state, of his antagonistic relation to
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nature. The Sabbath, as well as the Jewish concept of a Jubilee
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every 50 years when all debts and obligations would be forgiven,
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represented an aspiration to break the monotonous and empty cycle
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of time. Thus, the Jewish messianic tradition in its radical, as
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opposed to rabbinic, interpretation, namely that human beings in
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their daily lives choose or prepare the way for a radical
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transformation of human life, was seen as exemplified in the
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particular way in which Jewish history and culture had developed.
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But it was also just their Jewish identities that made it
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impossible for L|wy's thinkers to fully embrace Romanticism,
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which, in its tendency to look to the past for social models,
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reminded them of the nightmare that history had been for Jews, and
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by extension all oppressed (the majority of) people. A concrete
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corollary of this proclivity was that, as opposed to the
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Romanticists in general, they saw technology as important to the
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realization of their vision, though they condemned its misuse in
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both capitalist states and the Soviet Union. L|wy says of Walter
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Benjamin: "The cardinal point in his criticism is not a denial of
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technology, but rather its radical re-definition, its mastery not
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over nature, but rather over the relationship between man and
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nature." (p. 131) If one remembers that the fundamental critique
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these men levelled was against power and authority in itself, it
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should come as no surprise that they could view technology as a
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positive element within a non-authoritarian social and political
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structure.
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Thus, although these men were heavily influenced both by German
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culture and by cultural Zionist ideas, they came to oppose either
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full Jewish assimilation into German society or the goals of
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political Zionism. Assimilation into German culture represented
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accepting a bankrupt social order, abandoning the special insight
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into the nature of political power that the Jews had garnered, and
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aligning with the reactionary tendencies within the Jewish
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tradition itself. Political Zionism represented the acceptance of
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the concept of the state, the abandonment of revolutionary
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struggle in Europe, becoming tools of Western imperialist
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aspirations, and taking on the role of oppressors over another
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people (the victimization of the Arabs was apparent to these men
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as early as the 1920's). Overarching all these considerations was
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a radical political interpretation of the essence of Jewish
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prayer, belief, and the concept of the "chosen people": that Jews
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could not be free from oppression without a transformation of
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society that would be carried out by and lead to the freedom of
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all oppressed people and in the liberation of nature from human
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exploitation.
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L|wy's entitles his chapter on Walter Benjamin, "Outside all
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currents, where the ways cross" to describe the rich complexity of
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Benjamin's thought and relationship to other writers. Throughout
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his long and prolific life Benjamin attempted a vast synthesis of
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the currents of thought of his time and held to a devastating
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criticize of modernity and of the withering role of the power
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principle in history. His work is also rich in its focus on the
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restitutional and transcendental elements that are central to the
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thinking of the men L|wy treats. It is noteworthy that of all the
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writers he deals with Benjamin is the one whom L|wy explicitly
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identifies as an admirer also of rationalist (particularly
|
|
Kantian) thought despite his base in the Romantic tradition. The
|
|
following is an attempt to summarize L|wy's treatment of the
|
|
various elements of Benjamin's thinking. In this way I intend to
|
|
more concretely convey the sense of the dynamism of the work of
|
|
these messianic anarchists.
|
|
|
|
Benjamin's early writings during the First World War were smack in
|
|
the middle of the Romantic tradition. Though he was to grown
|
|
beyond Romanticism, it always maintained a strong hold on him.
|
|
However, rationalism was also an early influence on his thought.
|
|
Kafka had once referred in an interview to a passage from Plato
|
|
concerning poets: "[They]... are enemies to the state, because
|
|
they advocate change." Benjamin believed that all free inquiry was
|
|
inimical to the state and the power principle. As early on as his
|
|
doctoral thesis, Benjamin emphasized that life is a striving for
|
|
perfection and transformation, not endless evolutionary progress.
|
|
He was also influenced early on by the Jewish Kabbalah, with whose
|
|
restitutional elements he strongly identified: he related utopia
|
|
to the perfection of speech which had been corrupted by the fall
|
|
from grace in the Garden of Eden and the Tower of Babel. Around
|
|
the same time he wrote of anarchistic elements in the Catholic
|
|
medieval cloisters.
|
|
|
|
At an early stage as well Benjamin levelled a blistering attack
|
|
not only against the concept of state power but also against its
|
|
oppressive and reactionary function in modern society: he saw
|
|
institutions such as the police as the most degenerate and
|
|
despicable representatives of power and, unlike many anarchists,
|
|
was favorably inclined to revolutionary violence as a means of
|
|
breaking the stranglehold of state institutions, the endless cycle
|
|
of oppression. On a more existential level, he regarded the futile
|
|
pursuit of pleasure in a degenerate social order as a kind of pale
|
|
reflection of the utopian ideal within each person. Thus he often
|
|
called himself a nihilist as opposed to an anarchist in order to
|
|
emphasize the need for a total break with reigning values in order
|
|
to forge a complete restitution.
|
|
|
|
Despite his scepticism of political movements in general, Benjamin
|
|
was drawn to Communism in the Soviet Union, where he perceived the
|
|
potential of blending Marxist theory and practice. L|wy coyly
|
|
paraphrases a 1926 letter from Benjamin to Gerlom Scholem: "The
|
|
anarchist methods [are] 'clearly inappropriate' and the Communist
|
|
goals 'pure nonsense'; but this doesn't detract a jot from the
|
|
Communist approach, because it is a corrective to its goals and
|
|
because there is no such thing as a sensible political goal...The
|
|
goals of anarchism are significant in that they are not political
|
|
goals, but the best method for achieving them is offered by the
|
|
Communist approach." (p. 129) Though Benjamin was later to
|
|
renounce the Soviet experiment, its very existence strongly
|
|
affected the direction of his thinking: his messianism took on a
|
|
more secular tone. In one telling example cited by L|wy, a phrase
|
|
in a text in which Benjamin had cited the role of prayer in
|
|
overthrowing oppression was changed two years later to focus on
|
|
the role of proletarian revolt. From the beginning Benjamin's
|
|
formulation of Marxist class-struggle theory was particularly
|
|
nuanced and conscious of contemporary realities: he saw the
|
|
seizure of power by the proletariat not as somehow historically
|
|
inevitable, but rather as urgent, not only in their own interests,
|
|
but in order to check the rampage of technology as it had
|
|
developed under bourgeois control before it could lead to
|
|
irreversible catastrophe.
|
|
|
|
Benjamin was also intrigued by the surrealistic movement in the
|
|
arts. He saw surrealism as a successful application of the Marxist
|
|
doctrine that all ideas and structures should motivate their own
|
|
transcendence. But the conscious application of Marxist theory in
|
|
the Soviet Union proved to be a source of great disillusionment
|
|
for him: not only the mass executions of the 1930's but also
|
|
Stalin's emphasis on industrialization to the exclusion of class
|
|
struggle and popular political awareness horrified him.
|
|
|
|
Benjamin would have perhaps abandoned the Soviet Union even
|
|
earlier had he not been so acutely conscious of the growth of
|
|
Fascism, which he saw as representative of modernity, and against
|
|
which he regarded Soviet Communism as a bulwark. His focus on
|
|
Fascism reflected not only his sensitivity to the political
|
|
realities of his time, but also his radical critique of modernity
|
|
in general; whereas liberals and even Marxists generally saw
|
|
Fascism as an isolated phenomenon in European history, Benjamin
|
|
regarded it as typical of modernity, a natural historical
|
|
development, and representative of the growing barbarity of the
|
|
industrialized world. Benjamin's critique of a liberal
|
|
"progressive" view of history included a reinterpretation of the
|
|
Marxist doctrine of "historical materialism": he saw the
|
|
attainment of a classless society not in deterministic or gradual
|
|
terms ("the withering away of the state"), but rather in the
|
|
"actualization" of a latent but by no means inevitable possibility
|
|
of social transformation.
|
|
|
|
One of the key distinctions Benjamin made was between conscious
|
|
experience (Erfahrung) and episodic experience (Erlebnis).
|
|
Conscious experience was conceived of as a kind of free-floating
|
|
culturally-integrating phenomenon shared by a group of people and
|
|
possessing the capacity to bind the present to the past. Episodic
|
|
experience involved the physical and psychological impressions of
|
|
isolated human beings. Benjamin argued that conscious experience
|
|
had been lost in modern society. Max Weber had remarked on a
|
|
similar phenomenon but had viewed it in a less negative light:
|
|
modernity had freed mankind from the "enchantment" of more
|
|
primitive cultures. Benjamin, on other hand, viewed just that
|
|
"enchantment" as a "liberating magic" capable of uniting human
|
|
beings with each other and with nature; its loss had led not to
|
|
clarity but to the greatest "myth" of all, that of the separation
|
|
of man from his origins. The parallel between Weber's and
|
|
Benjamin's radically different interpretations of modernity and
|
|
Weber's and L|wy's radically different use of the concept of
|
|
"elective affinity" is striking. Also striking is the prophetic
|
|
nature of Benjamin's explicit characterization of experience in
|
|
modern society as episodic and traumatic; such an analysis has
|
|
been incorporated into popular social thought and has been adopted
|
|
as the basis of "self-realization" movements (such as Werner
|
|
Erhardt's EST) in the late 20th century.
|
|
|
|
For Benjamin the restitution of a just, harmonious, and
|
|
non-exploitative society as encapsulated in the Kabbalistic
|
|
concept of Tikkoun involved an interplay between conscious
|
|
experience and social relationships. In a reflection of the Jewish
|
|
sabbatical tradition as noted above, he explored the concept of
|
|
play as opposed to exploited and exploitative labor as key to the
|
|
restitution. Similarly, he was fascinated by the research of
|
|
Bachofen and others concerning the more egalitarian and nurturing
|
|
nature of matriarchal societies. However, Benjamin's essential
|
|
differences with traditional Romanticism are evident. The concept
|
|
of restitution did not imply for him the return to an earlier
|
|
social structure but rather an integration of the past and present
|
|
to create an "actualized" as opposed to a deterministic future. He
|
|
was not interested in the "reproduction" of an historical model,
|
|
but rather in the "recovery" of the spirit of egalitarianism.
|
|
Technology was not in itself inimical to this project; on the
|
|
contrary it was an essential tool for the integration of ancient
|
|
spirit and contemporary reality.
|
|
|
|
Benjamin, like Kafka, points to the central paradox and the
|
|
central hope of modernity. To Benjamin, it is just those elements
|
|
of modernity that are the most ominous - Fascism and unbridled
|
|
industrialism - that are also the most characteristic. He is
|
|
Kafka's philosophical counterpart in his portrayal of the ravages
|
|
of authoritarianism and mechanization. But just as Kafka's fiction
|
|
was not primarily social criticism but rather a portrayal of man
|
|
caught in the nightmare of history, Benjamin focused on the
|
|
catastrophes of modernity for their capacity to illumine the
|
|
barbaric tendency of historical development. And in the same way
|
|
as the streets, corridors, and outposts of the nightmare
|
|
constitute the stage on which Kafka's dramas unfold, Benjamin is
|
|
not much drawn, as were the Romantics, to an idyllic, agrarian, or
|
|
medieval ideal. The very hopelessness and bleakness, as well as
|
|
the humor and irony, of Kafka's work suggest that only by a
|
|
transformation of consciousness within the nightmare can an escape
|
|
hatch be found. Utopia is not an ideal of perfection at the end of
|
|
the rainbow of historical progression, but the other side of the
|
|
coin of modernity: it is not the ideal or best way out of the
|
|
nightmare, it is the only way out. And as Kafka's fiction shows
|
|
modern man in a futile search for pleasure and meaning, so
|
|
Benjamin sees in the barbarity and mechanized soullessness of
|
|
modernity a kind of mirror image of the playfulness, trust and
|
|
simplicity that restitutional anarchism strives to achieve.
|
|
|
|
IV. Conclusion: on losing and time
|
|
|
|
The following examination of the interweaving of the concepts of
|
|
the role of the victim in history and the nature of the phenomenon
|
|
of time is intended to illustrate the richness, complexity and
|
|
compassion of the thought of the men L|wy treats in his book.
|
|
Hopefully, this discussion will contribute also to understanding
|
|
the fertility of the elective affinity between Romantic anarchism
|
|
and the Jewish messianic tradition. One might say that this
|
|
interplay of time and victimhood reflected a species of optimism
|
|
that is central to the Jewish historical experience, not the
|
|
optimism of eternal progress or of this as the "best of all
|
|
possible worlds" (the Enlightenment), or the optimism of "man's
|
|
essentially good nature" (Romanticism), but a more existential
|
|
view of man's ability to choose justice and fulfilment. According
|
|
to this view the "darkness" of modernity reflects man's lack of
|
|
awareness of that choice but at the same time is a kind of
|
|
negative evidence that the choice nevertheless exists.
|
|
|
|
The view of history as a never-ending progression toward greater
|
|
justice, freedom, prosperity, etc. was largely a product of the
|
|
ideals of the Enlightenment combined with a belief in the power of
|
|
science and reason to promote the unfoldment of the good in
|
|
history. L|wy's thinkers rejected this view on a number of counts.
|
|
First, it flew in the face of the evidence as they saw it. History
|
|
had consisted not only of continual war, brutality, and poverty,
|
|
but also of a successive consolidation of power by a smaller and
|
|
smaller minority over a greater and greater majority. This view
|
|
differed sharply from Marxist analysis in that its perspective was
|
|
chiefly non-economic and because it was anti-deterministic: it did
|
|
not see a kind of inevitable triumph over oppression. The
|
|
catastrophes of the 20th century - unbridled industrialism,
|
|
genocide, Nazism, environmental destruction - were for them not
|
|
historical exceptions, and not primarily the culmination or latest
|
|
stage in the development of barbarity, but a kind of microcosm of
|
|
history itself. In particular, for Kafka and Benjamin was 20th
|
|
century authoritarianism a logical expression of the dominance and
|
|
arbitrariness of the power principle in history.
|
|
|
|
The second reason that these men rejected the view of never-ending
|
|
progress was its relationship to the nature of everyday experience
|
|
within modern society. To them what modern man experiences is an
|
|
eternally repetitive, empty and impenetrable cycle of time.
|
|
Benjamin employs the myth of Sisyphus to describe contemporary
|
|
life, the man who rolls the boulder to the top of the hill only to
|
|
have to start all over again. Images from the modern assembly
|
|
line, wheels in our machines, factory gates (the entrance to Hell
|
|
according to Marx and Engel's imagery) conveyed contemporary
|
|
versions of the Sisyphus myth. But for the messianic anarchist
|
|
thinkers the power of the myth was not in its description of
|
|
economic conditions but rather in its portrayal of daily
|
|
experience, of time. Modern man experiences life as an endless
|
|
series of minutes, hours, days, weeks in which he has no power to
|
|
transform the nature of his life or to make any fundamental
|
|
choices. In Kafka's fiction the distortion and compression of time
|
|
represents the very way in which the possibility of choice is
|
|
seemingly intentionally - through the arbitrary exercise of power
|
|
- excluded from human awareness. It is ultimately the perceived
|
|
inability to transform experience, to choose to experience
|
|
something other than endless repetition, that lies at the heart of
|
|
the existential pain behind much of what Lowy's thinkers express.
|
|
L|wy quotes one of them, Gy|rgy Lukacs in his analysis of a
|
|
passage from Das Kapital on the effects of the machine on man: "As
|
|
a result time loses its qualitative, transformational, fluent
|
|
character. It solidifies into a continuum that is wholly limited,
|
|
quantitatively measurable and stuffed with quantifiable 'things'
|
|
(i.e. the worker's labor that is reified, mechanically objectified
|
|
and essentially cut off from the human personality as a whole).
|
|
Time solidifies into space." (p. 252)
|
|
|
|
But the messianic principle, at least in its alchemy with
|
|
anarchism and rationalism, finds hope in despair, presence in
|
|
absence, light in darkness. And this hope has little to do with
|
|
faith or belief but rather with its analysis of the nature of the
|
|
darkness. The absence, darkness, distortion represents a kind of
|
|
pregnancy or potential. The power principle has distorted or
|
|
veiled the potentialities of human beings and the richness of time
|
|
but has not aborted them. In other words, man's perceived ability
|
|
to choose has been suppressed but not his essential will. The
|
|
will, however, is expressed in distorted ways in modern life, i.e.
|
|
through the search for entertainment, fame, wealth, sexual
|
|
conquest etc., all of which proceed from time as empty and needing
|
|
to be filled rather than as a potentiality offering choice and
|
|
fulfilment.
|
|
|
|
The third reason these men rejected the concept of history as
|
|
never-ending progress was that it is a self-contradictory idea in
|
|
itself. To understand this, one must look at the concept of being
|
|
a sort of hybrid of two aspects of the Enlightenment, on one hand
|
|
the superiority of scientific and rational thinking, and on the
|
|
other hand the virtues of justice and equality. The contradiction
|
|
lies in the fact that the adulation of science carried with it the
|
|
view of the universe as deterministic. What a universe that
|
|
operates according to fixed laws (where the most that man could
|
|
hope for is to come closer and closer to an understanding of their
|
|
operation) has to do with justice and equality, or why in any case
|
|
one would feel empowered to strive for justice and equality within
|
|
this framework, is, to say the least, problematic. On the one
|
|
hand, there did not seem to be much evidence that 19th century
|
|
scientific progress had brought greater justice and equality -
|
|
quite the contrary. On the other hand, industrialization seemed to
|
|
provide the hope of a society in which human beings could escape
|
|
the harshness of bare existence. Similarly, the revolutions,
|
|
constitutions, nationalist movements and formal emancipations of
|
|
the 18th and 19th centuries seemed to testify to the fact that
|
|
rational ideas could inspire people to action. On a more
|
|
metaphysical level, human beings, despite the reigning model of a
|
|
deterministic universe, continued to experience at least
|
|
occasional impulses that they could or should be able to affect
|
|
the course of their lives and of history.
|
|
|
|
Despite the failure of the scientific revolution to reverse the
|
|
barbaric trend of history, for L|wy's thinkers the return to some
|
|
previous historical phase, as the Romantics were drawn to,
|
|
represented the nightmare from which the oppressed majority of
|
|
mankind, and Jews in particular, were striving to emerge. And it
|
|
was just the ideal of reason, justice, even mission (not in terms
|
|
of conversion but of bringing light to superstition and
|
|
injustice), not the power principle as in the case with popes and
|
|
emperors, that had sustained the Jewish community through
|
|
centuries of persecution. It was the reign of power that had
|
|
subverted reason and turned time and choice into meaningless
|
|
categories.
|
|
|
|
Thus it was the victims of history, not only the economic victims
|
|
but all those who had felt the brutality of power and who through
|
|
their desperate search for fulfilment as well as bare subsistence,
|
|
represented the longing for real experience and bore the hope for
|
|
transformation; one might call them the "consciousness
|
|
proletariat." What was needed was a transcendence of the reigning
|
|
sterile categories of existence, a restitution of time as a
|
|
vibrating possibility. And it was just in the moment, in the
|
|
apparent banality of everyday life, that this transcendence is
|
|
possible. This is messianism in its most radical and stark form,
|
|
the promise of the moment, the opportunity for human awareness and
|
|
choice. It is also the central meaning of the Jewish tenet that
|
|
the human project is to pave the way for the messiah, who can
|
|
arrive "at any moment," a paradoxical but fertile concept.
|
|
Benjamin said, "As is well-known it was forbidden for Jews to try
|
|
to read the future...But the future was not regarded in their eyes
|
|
as therefore homogeneous and empty. Every second of the future
|
|
represented a narrow gate through which the Messiah could enter."
|
|
(p. 252) But as usual it was Kafka who put it most felicitously
|
|
and engagingly: "The Messiah arrives at that moment when he is no
|
|
longer needed, he doesn't come until the day after his arrival, he
|
|
comes not on the last day but on the very last day." (p. 99)
|
|
|
|
Almost breathtaking is the fact that 20th century physics seems to
|
|
have borne out this view of time, choice and human action. Physics
|
|
no longer talks of pre-determined events according to fixed laws,
|
|
but rather of a range of probable events. Which of a number of
|
|
possible events actually "occurs" depends on one's perspective,
|
|
the instruments one uses to measure them, and what might be called
|
|
a central built-in unpredictability factor that one can, at least
|
|
on a metaphorical level, identify as the human will, man's
|
|
consciousness of his ability and willingness to make choices. In
|
|
modern physics time is not an empty vessel or a straight line
|
|
waiting to be filled by events; rather events are woven into the
|
|
texture of time itself - time and events create and shape each
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
One often hears that the principles of modern physics are too
|
|
difficult, abstract, or removed from everyday experience to be
|
|
understood by the "layman." But it is everyday experience as
|
|
shaped by a mechanistic worldview that is resistant to quantum
|
|
reality, not human consciousness itself. And it is reasonable to
|
|
postulate that it is just those people who have been history's
|
|
victims but who are at the same time closest to everyday
|
|
experience - in my words the "consciousness proletariat" - who
|
|
will be the most able to grasp the "new reality" that modern
|
|
science offers. And it is likely that they will understand the
|
|
"unpredictability factor" that science now sees as built into the
|
|
universe as just that human will that we, however confusedly,
|
|
experience as existing.
|
|
|
|
All this points to the possibility of transcendence, of acting
|
|
within discrete moments of time to transform the sense of
|
|
hopelessness and futility that characterizes modern consciousness.
|
|
The "nightmare of history," according to messianic anarchism, can
|
|
and must be ended within history itself. The transformation does
|
|
not occur at the end of history, nor does it occur in a kind of
|
|
personal, inward awareness of the "illusion" of time, but rather
|
|
in aware action that creates an opening for the messiah, that
|
|
activates time's potential. But what enriches, integrates and
|
|
distinguishes this thinking is that the transformation itself is
|
|
by no means destined to occur. Through cowardice, duress, malice
|
|
or whim people may fail to prepare the way for the messiah. The
|
|
catastrophe may quite simply continue. The outcome cannot be
|
|
predicted because its very nature is unpredictability - as is the
|
|
nature of the human will, whose triumph as well as it downfall
|
|
resides in its ultimate independence.
|
|
|