Addressing Fascism: A New Politics of Experience?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Jaspers goes on to make several points about history. First, it is bounded, divided off from reality. Second, it is a unity of the universal and the individual as a unique structure, “[…] transitionality as the fulfilment of being.” Thirdly, it consists of the ongoing answer to the ongoing question, “In what does the unity of history consist?” [1]. The abysses Jaspers speaks of are the unconscious, uncommunicative aspects of reality. They are not part of history because they do not speak, do not communicate. The origin and goal of history, for Jaspers, consists of historical consciousness living and communicating through history with the right kind of intentionality. It is perceiving and creating unities, knowing that these unities are themselves historical manifestations. Indeed, Jaspers notes in The Origin and Goal of History that these unities are valid as signs (for Jaspers, signs are indexical functions of a rhetorical trope), which become “…fallacious if the particular sign is carried over onto the whole. It remains true as an indication and a sign” (p. 287). Further, signs become symbols for Jaspers when spoken, and as such, “Notions of unity delude us, if we take them to be more than symbols. Unity as a goal is an unending task…” (p. 291).History is at one and the same time happening and consciousness of this happening, history and knowledge of history. This history is, so to speak, encompassed by abysses. If it falls back into one of these, it ceases to be history [1].
How do we approach this topic in the best possible way, with Jaspers’ communicability and Frankl’s logotherapy (originally Noo therapy, for “noetic,” meaning the “spiritual” core of our Being) and its maxim in mind?“Live as if you were living already for the second time and as if you had acted the first time as wrongly as you are about to act now! It seems to me that there is nothing which would stimulate a man’s sense of responsibleness more than this maxim, which invites him to imagine first that the present is past and, second, that the past may yet be changed and amended” [2] (p. 114).
- Authoritarian governance values order and control over personal freedom, and true authoritarian orders have no established protocol for the peaceful transfer of executive power.
- Autocratic governance places absolute power in the hands of one individual.
- Totalitarian governance subordinates individual life to the authority of the state.
- Tyranny is a more general term describing any government or authority that exercises power without control or limits.
In other words, Hjelmslev is accounting for the symbolic function that exists in language where there is both an eidetic and an empirical representation of meaning moving from a connotative semiotics, to a denotative semiotics, and finally to a metasemiotic level of “real” reference, i.e., our usual notion of the reality or world to which we refer when we predicate a meaning [4].
2. Schadenfreude in the Home-World
Thus, Schadenfreude is an unforgiving mood leading to a norm as attitude, which, Lanigan notes, can have powerfully negative effects if it spreads to a group:This habit [Sitte: embodied custom] sequence of moral proof moves in stages from (1) mood [Stimmung] to (2) attitude [Haltung] to (3) a belief [Glauben]. Herein, belief is a reverence for creating the norms or mores of social preference (reasonableness) framed by an inference of cultural practice (rationality) that we claim to see in others as right, true, proper, normal comportment [Volkgeist: a belief as value judgment embodied in group behavior] (Tönnies 1908, p. 45). Concomitantly in the context of rhetorical theory applied to ethics, we have the sequence of polemical argument wherein purport (mood) leads to conduct (attitude) and then to comportment (belief)—an impulse toward action [5] (p. 163).
Where and when this judgment spreads beyond one person to a group of people, we observe the creation of a Discourse Cult stuck in the communal modality of Imagination that is inherently voiced as a polemic [5] (p. 163).
This sets up an intergenerational conflict (which Lanigan describes in Schutzian terms) between grandparents as Predecessors, who share an ideology of native identity of indigenous people; parents as Associates, who share an ideology of kin identity; and children as Successors, who share an ideology of diaspora identity borne by the immigrant. This third generation is “…always the end of ‘culture’ and the beginning of ‘civilization’” (Lanigan, p. 171). To quote Lanigan again:In general, three biological generations (forebearers, parents, children) make a family, and measure a decade. Ten social decades make a century of culture (the “body politic”) [5] (p. 170).
This is to say, the three generations are back at the start point, except that now the culture rules are ambiguous and contingent, variously being followed (assimilation), partially followed (diaspora), or ignored (resident alien). And this contingency is the moment of Schadenfreude [5] (p. 171).
3. The Question of Guilt
Further, Jaspers notes that if post-World War II Germany is to survive, the German people must talk to each other and engage in discourse about what happened.The answer is that this is the only way we can save our souls from a pariah existence […] It is a spiritual-political venture along the very edge of the precipice. What will result from it we shall have to see. It is a spiritual-political venture along the edge of the precipice. We are going to be distrusted for a long time to come. […] [6] (p. 10).
If Jaspers’ discussion of post-World War II German guilt provides any wisdom, it is that we cannot defeat the ever-present threat of fascism with silence, by dehumanizing ourselves or the other, or by breaking off communication with those we feel we have reason to distrust.Lastly, I characterize ways of remaining silent to which we incline, and which constitute our great danger […] We must guard against evasion. From such a bearing there arises a mood which is discharged in private, safe abuse, a mood of heartless frigidity, rabid indignation, and facial distortion, leading to a barren self-corrosion [6] (p. 11).
Type of Guilt and Description | Jurisdiction | Jaspers’ Methodology |
Criminal: Acts that objectively and unequivocally violate the law. | Formal proceedings in a court of law. | Research |
Political: Acts by citizens and politicians for the deeds of the state, such as allowing the National Socialist party to come to power and remain in power. | Power and will of the victor. | Illumination |
Moral: Acts committed by me, for which I am morally responsible. | My conscience and communication with my friends and intimates “lovingly concerned about my soul.” | Reflection |
Metaphysical: Acts of injustice observed or known about by me that I failed to risk my life unconditionally to prevent. For example, acting unconditionally to prevent injustice to those I love, but failing to do so for other citizens. | Rests with “God alone.” | Affirmation |
- Martin, 2024
- Jaspers’ methodological terms situate his terms of cypher, symbol, and sign as historical moments in the process of communication. Research consists of experiencing the world through empirical observations. Illumination brings the full potential of our consciousness to the phenomena of research. Reflection means exploring the phenomena through the categories of the sciences, applying philosophical logic to the discourse surrounding the phenomena, and perceiving the phenomena in every way available using imaginative free variation. Affirmation consists in the realization of the phenomena as a cypher of Being, a floating signifier or nonce sign that is pre-linguistic but yet exists prior to utterance. This cypher status reveals the phenomenon in its existential communion with Being, resulting in what Jaspers describes as the deepening of the cypher-script.
There are four modes of communication corresponding to these latter four modes of encompassing: (1) communication in empirical existence, (2) communication in consciousness as such, (3) communication in spirit (mind), and (4) communication in Existenz.For Jaspers, Being consists in Encompassing. There are two modes of Encompassing: (1) Being in itself (consisting of World and Other transcendence writ large) and (2) Being that we are (“Being-for-itself”), which he tends to specify as the immanence of Self (i.e., “the Encompassing which we are”) (1955, p. 57). At the level of Being-in-itself, Encompassing is neither the object nor the subject but the unity that contains both. Jaspers also describes this level of Encompassing as a horizon within which all horizons are contained (a field-in-a field, a border that indexes a boundary). In the existential modality of Being that we are, Encompassing consists in (1) empirical existence, (2) consciousness as such, (3) spirit (mind), and (4) Existenz [7] (p. 108).
4. Jaspers’ Concept of Evil
In communication I am revealed to myself, along with the other. This manifestation, however, is at the same time the realization of an I as a self. To think, for instance, that it is my inborn character that comes to light in communicative manifestation would be a departure from the possibility of Existenz, for which the process of becoming manifest is one of self-creation by self-elucidation. […] If I want to be manifest, I will risk myself completely in communication, which is my only way of self-realization [8] (pp. 58–59).
Jaspers further describes evil as uncommunicative and seclusive, that in this state the will “curbs its will- to-know, by breaking off communication” [8] (p. 152).Evil takes up the cause of mutinous empirical self-existence against the possible self-being of Existenz in subjectivity and objectivity. […] evil is an affirmative absolutizing of pure existence […] one that wills nothing but existence. […] If the will of “willing to will” is free Existenz, the evil one turns back upon itself: I will not will my self-being. […] my will is its own original freedom or anti-freedom [8] (p. 151).
Rather, Jaspers contends that doing what is morally good in this sense should be the foundation for our happiness.Nothing short of loving communication can put another on the way to the change that will make him transparent to himself. As long as we fail in this sort of communication, being insufficiently transparent to ourselves and unready for the communicative venture, this source of evil will keep flowing [8] (p. 213).
5. Colonialism
When you think about colonization, it is the strangest thing you can think about. Because conquering is one thing. You go to another country, you take what’s theirs. You want more, you take the land, you take the resources, you kill the people. That I understand. […] But colonization, it’s hard to understand, it’s strange, because you don’t just go there and take over, you then force the people to become you. That is such a stranger concept. When you think about where the British did it, they did it in Africa, they did it in Asia. And think about in India, those cultures could not be more diametrically opposed [9].
5.1. Fascism as Evil
5.2. The Guilt of American Colonialism
5.3. Ontological Insecurity
The technical version of the perspectives model by R. D. Laing (1966) consists of three hierarchal levels: (1) direct perspective of knowing, (2) meta-perspective of imagining, and (3) meta-meta-perspective of thinking. These three perspectives respectively correspond to Kant’s (1) persuasion, (2) pragmatic belief, and (3) conviction [13] (p. 7). See also Laing, R. D., Phillipson, H., and Lee, A. R. (1966) [14].
In Jaspers’ language, the individual vacillates between solitude and union, neither of which allow them to be an Existenz in existential communication. Further, this makes them alternatively lost in intrapersonal communication, therefore (1) having no basis for making objective self-judgements and (2) making them susceptible to manipulation by other individuals or groups. This manipulation is not just from the political right. One area through which both the political right and left become susceptible to manipulation is through wellness, much of which came from alternative medicine during the pandemic [16].Therefore, the polarity is between complete isolation or complete merging of identity rather than between separateness and relatedness. The individual oscillates perpetually, between the two extremes, each equally unfeasible. He comes to live rather like those mechanical toys which have a positive tropism that impels them towards a stimulus until they reach a specific point, whereupon a built-in negative tropism directs them away until the positive tropism takes over again, this oscillation being repeated ad infinitum [15] (p. 61).
6. Conclusions
Nothing short of loving communication can put another on the way to the change that will make him transparent to himself. As long as we fail in this sort of communication, being insufficiently transparent to ourselves and unready for the communicative venture, this source of evil will keep flowing [8] (p. 213).
Let no one suppose that we meet ‘true’ madness any more than we are truly sane. The madness we encounter in ‘patients’ is a gross travesty, a mockery, a grotesque caricature of what the natural healing of the estranged integration we call sanity might be. True sanity entails in one way or another the dissolution of the normal ego, that false self competently adjusted to our alienated social reality: the emergence of the ‘inner’ archetypal mediators of divine power, and through this death a rebirth, and the eventual re-establishment of a new kind of ego-functioning, the ego now being the servant of the divine, no longer its betrayer [18] (p. 119).
In this sense, Plessner’s perspective has much in common with Jaspers’. Utopia can remain an idealized goal that we can never fully manifest, a sign (in Jaspers’ sense), a symbol in the moment of communicability when spoken of, but not a fixed destination. Existenz assumes Jakobson’s Prague Prism, where vertical paradigmatic space is a possible event with the future on top and memory on the bottom, and horizontal syntagmatic space represents diachronic time as a chain or thought, with history behind us and utopia before us. It should come as no surprise that this is reflected in the structure of language, the primary semiotic system for culture. Communicability is homologous with the structure of Jakobson’s Prague Prism.Every utopia in which man believe to find a permanent home, will in time turn out to be an illusion. The human being can only stay faithful to himself, accepting the irreconcilability of possibility and reality [19] (p. 239).
Based on the referential context, an addresser seeking contact chooses a code for a message (sign) while acting as the first interpreter of what will be said. The addresser functions as the primary model for how messages may be coded. In this moment, addresser and addressee are embodied intrapersonally, in the same human being, as one who both perceives and expresses communication prior to utterance. Once an interpersonal utterance is made, information is created by the conative function of the addressee as the addressee strives to translate an empirical message (speech, or logos) back into the original eidetic code (what did the addresser mean?) by sorting out what is message and what is code.Only a code (semiotic) grounds the eidetic combination of “addresser” (speaker) and “interpreter” (thinker) as linked by empirical message (linguistic) [20] (p. 5).
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Martin, T.D. Addressing Fascism: A New Politics of Experience? Philosophies 2024, 9, 152. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050152
Martin TD. Addressing Fascism: A New Politics of Experience? Philosophies. 2024; 9(5):152. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050152
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartin, Thaddeus D. 2024. "Addressing Fascism: A New Politics of Experience?" Philosophies 9, no. 5: 152. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050152
APA StyleMartin, T. D. (2024). Addressing Fascism: A New Politics of Experience? Philosophies, 9(5), 152. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050152