Peter Lawler. Solzhenitsyn and the One True Progress
Peter Lawler Judging from their mid-term essays, I would say
that among the many and diverse books and essays we've read so far in
my course in technology, the one that has impressed the students the most is
the Russian anti-communist dissident and writer Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's “We
Have Ceaser to See the Purpose,” an address given to the International Academy
of Philosophy in Liechtenstein in 1993. I have not been able to find the
text conveniently linkable online. It can be found in The Solzhenitsyn
Reader, edited by Mahoney and Ericson (ISI Books). Let me give you some especially provocative
quotes: 1. “It is up to us to stop seeing
[technological] Progress (which cannot be stopped by anyone or anything) as a
stream of unlimited blessings, and rather view it as a gift from on high, sent
down for an extremely intricate trial of free will.” Quick takeaway:
Technological progress is a gift, one made possible by capabilities for
freedom members of our species alone have been given. It's not a
gift for a life full of unlimited freedom and enjoyment. It's
a tough and complicated moral challenge. Can we use our “free will” to
subordinate our unprecedented techno-freedom to properly human purposes and
concerns? We won't be able to feel good without being good. More
than ever, we'll have to be good—to practice virtuous “self-limitation”—to
live well, to be happy. Those who believe that techno-progress can be
stopped, that we can simply choose to avoid this new trial, are wrong. 2. “And nothing so bespeaks the current
helplessness of our spirit, our intellectual disarray, as the loss of a clear
and calm attitude toward death....”
Although we don't talk much about death, we're more death-haunted
than ever. Solzhenitsyn hears “the howl of existentialism” rising; “life
has become a harrowing prospect indeed.” Nothing makes us more dazed
and confused—more in the thrall of diversion and self-denial—than being unable
to live well with death. 3. “Man...began to deem himself the center of
his surroundings, adapting not himself to the world but the world to
himself. And, then, of course, the thought of death becomes unbearable:
It is the extinction of an entire universe at a stroke.” The end of ME is
the end of being itself. No Darwinian, of course, could think that, and
no Christian either. That all of being centers around me is the purely
techno-view; making my surroundings more all about me is the only change
I can believe in. If “the thought of death is unberaable,” then we really
can't think much at all about who we are and what we're supposed to do. 4. “The gift of heightened life expectancy has,
as one of its consequences, made the elder generation into a burden for its
children, while dooming the former to a lingering loneliness, to abandonment in
old age by loved ones, and to an irreparable rift from the joy of passing on
their experience to the young.” Living longer is a good for which we
should be grateful. But it has its costs, especially for the old.
Being a lonely, relatively joyless, abandoned burden is better than be
being dead. It really is, though, a huge trial for free will. And
the rest of us (well, the rest of you) must find the virtue to do what you
can to repair relational virtue enough not to abandon—to, in fact, love—those
who really do tend to be most deprived of purpose in the techno-world
filled with preferential options for the young. If you think about it,
more than ever you need the experience of the old to be passed on to you. 5. “There can be only one true Progress: the
sum total of the spiritual progresses of individuals; the degree of
self-perfection in the course of their lives.” The only real Progress is
personal, and the only really Progressive society is full of individuals who
have devoted themselves to the pursuit of self-perfection through
self-limitation in the service of a spiritual purpose higher than comfort
and material enjoyment. The truly Progressive focus should always be the predicament
of the free but limited being born to love and die. There's a lot more, of course.Solzhenitsyn and the One True Progress
URL: http://bigthink.com/rightly-understood/solzhenitsyn-and-the-one-true-progress)