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A seemingly solid and secure world hangs by a rotten and frayed thread |
This is a printed version of a a 13 minute radio talk I gave on 'Ockham's Razor', under the title 'Profile of a Post-Modern Outsider', which was broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Commission on August 13th 2006 by Christopher Nagle (Introduction by Robyn Williams) And now for something completely different, as John Cleese used to say in Monty Python. What would an Asperger’s Ockham’s Razor sound like? Many brilliantly talented artists, from the pianist Glenn Gould to perhaps the writer J D Salinger, have been put in this category. Christopher Nagle puts himself there—and he does so to give a blast against consumerism writ large, the postmodern society as a gigantic supermarket selling 24/7 and filling every space there is. Hold on to your sofa, here comes Christopher Nagle. Post-Modernity is not just an aesthetic of fragmentation or intellectual deconstruction. It is an emerging transitional period in which modern institutions and ways of life become damaged, dysfunctional, defensive and eventually defeated. In such a time, as it becomes more turbulent and insecure, individuals and eventually entire populations must move on into uncertain and probably hazardous journeys into the future. Post-Moderns would assert that much of the platform for this is already in place and that we are now living in the latter days of modern times. To have such a bleakly divergent view in the face of a culture of overwhelmingly sunny optimism and marketed enthusiasm requires more than an ordinary sense of disgruntlement and eccentricity. It really helps to have a lifetime of outsidership under your belt: the earlier the start, the better the chances of escaping the immense gravitational pull of the dominant consciousness. My career as an outsider started early in life. By the time I was five, I was already showing signs of not being quite as others are. My social behavior was often inappropriate and this had a way of both annoying my peers and worrying my parents. As family and acquaintances got to know me better, they recognized this as incompetence rather than willful selfishness or malice. At school I became adept at absorbing the punishment of my peers and then gratefully accepting their eventual forgiveness. Over fifty years later my wife noticed an internet site that discussed Asperger’s Syndrome, which is a distant relative of autism. Suffers are poor listeners and empathizes. They are worse readers of communicative subtext and body language. They can tend to verbosity and lecturing, are a bit mono and spend a lot of time in their own heads. At last I could put a name to my disease; a syndrome no less! What is more, this syndrome isn’t all bad news. Some of the world’s greatest philosophers, scientists, inventors, entrepreneurs, poets, artists and spiritual pilgrims have been fellow suffers. Whilst one could speculate that many of the not-so-Great-Ones veered unhappily from loose cannon to ineffectual introvert, at least there was hope for me still. As a first cohort baby-boomer in the England of the 1950s, I experienced what was to turn out to be the twilight of the Judaic-Christian society. Its loosening grip still left vivid and indelible marks upon me. It was as different from the later consumerist culture as could be possible in a Westernized society. It was a densely ritualized, strictly disciplined and hierarchical world. It was certain about what it stood for, was possessed of a stern moral toughness and didn’t accept excuses or give second chances to those who crossed it. No one questioned its authority or its right to be severe if it thought it necessary. The boarding primary school I went to ran much as it would have done in my grandfathers’ day. By the middle 1960s that world was all but swept away. When the headmaster of my Australian secondary grammar school rather foolishly tried to assert this institution was dedicated to turning out Young Christian Gentlemen, there was an embarrassing round of titters and guffaws. For a great many of my generation, not only had the notion of being a gentleman become quaintly old fashioned, but so had our religious beliefs. I went to considerable lengths to try and resurrect mine, but to no avail. They no longer seemed either emotionally compelling or intellectually plausible. This was not a problem in my later teens, as I was far too bent on bathing in an exuberant mixture of study, sex, popular culture and the politics of the Vietnam War. However, as a character I was now rootless in the same way as a cut flower sitting in water. The bad news took a while to arrive. In early 1966 I headed off to Melbourne University to enroll in the Law Faculty. On the tram going there I met a just-finished fourth year law student who was about to start his Articles. We got to talking. By the time I had stepped off at Tin Pan Alley, I was convinced that if my tram acquaintance was anything to go by, four years in the Melbourne Law School would turn me into as much of a pompous anachronism as he was. I fled. Instead, I trained to be a historian because I wanted to understand the frames and fabrics that assembled and unfolded our future out of our past. This made it a more hazardous adventure than the law, whose parameters were much more safely defined. What I later realized I was really looking for were spiritual roots fertilized by visions not of a familiar and comfortable past that was irretrievably gone, but a future that would have to be created. Despite having a serious go at trying to make Marxism do the job, I found it couldn’t paper over the seeping sense of existential vacuum. It was as if I lived in a world that kept itself frenetically busy by overproducing and consuming mainly junk, so that it would never have to look into itself. In so doing we were subjecting ourselves to forces that were so voracious, it was as if we were riding an industrial tiger that we could neither afford to get off nor stay on for much longer, except at a terrible price, either way. The corollary of that was that the production and consumption treadmill was accelerating well beyond the safety parameters of biological systems, in ways that would suggest severe obesity or cancer rather than healthy growth. And while the physical infrastructure of the First World states was in reasonable shape, it seemed to me that its consumerist culture, the city of its imagination and existential heartland, was being trashed and looted into a software version of a Third World shanty town. However, the world didn’t crash and burn: I did. It was only decades later that I realized that I had become clinically depressed. I didn’t go to doctors. Instead I worked for a couple of years as a laborer on seismic firing lines, railway construction projects and oil platforms. One day I crashed an explosives truck with 200–300 kilograms of gelignite and a box of detonators on board. They didn’t explode. This remarkable piece of dumb luck gave rise to the absurd conceit that I had been spared for something, which was to find revelation and redemption, even if it took the rest of my life. And while this worthy intention did nothing to save me from the consequences of my later errors and foolishness, it never dimmed. As my life went by, I fitted in as best I could to meet my responsibilities and get what satisfactions I could. I never completely embraced the world I found myself in, partly because I couldn’t and partly because I didn’t want to. However, what I continued to do was meditate on that world to create an overview of what I was going through and how it and I had got there. I assembled both a personal and potentially collective ‘ride out’ strategy for what I felt that overview was pointing to. After a hiatus that lasted into the 1950s, war production that had been geared for struggle between military machines transformed itself into a production war fought between marketing machines. These were able to replicate wartime ordinance attrition and labor mobilization rates on a now protracted basis and portray this as exciting, inevitable, progressive and overwhelmingly normal. Unlike the much more dramatic and bellicose Cultural Revolution in the China of the later 1960s, the politics of Production Warfare quietly disappeared into the structure, volume, density and character of an unprecedented surge in the supply of products and services. It left hardly any disturbance on the surface of public consciousness to give away just how virulent, radical and totalitarian it was. And while Mao’s crudely old-fashioned version quite quickly ran out of steam, in the West the juggernaut rolled on. I had a vision of production warfare whereby the traditionally differentiated forces of peacetime production and wartime destruction were fused into one unprecedentedly brutal force. Whether it destroyed by deliberate attack, unintended collateral damage, or dreadfully unfortunate friendly fire didn’t matter. Whether the sites of damage were in the economic and biological hardware or psychological and cultural software didn’t matter either. As with Tolkien’s rings of power, what mattered was that the machinery of our productivity was so powerful, aggressive and absolutist in its claims upon the world, anyone, anything, anywhere near it was corrupted and/or damaged by it. Protracted Production Warfare means cross generational assaults on population by an exploding armamentarium of increasingly sophisticated, more rapidly expendable and elaborately targeted ordinance. Up to a third generation of ‘Consumerbabe’ veterans of this warfare is now in the lines and routinely soaking up its punishing firepower. As each successive generation of these troops becomes more rigorously trained than the last, they are ever more hardened to rapid and convulsive change. The discomfort, pain and wounds it causes are anesthetized in product and service solutions. For the troops, memories of civilian life fade, for warfare is all there is. Their vision of life narrows to a vanishing point. They simply live and die to have their buttons pressed. Just because their command system is private rather than state-sponsored does not mean they are not as totalitarian as their fascist and communist forebears. Just because they do not display the same obvious in-your-face belligerence doesn’t mean they are any less destroyers of themselves and everything they touch. As in the great wars of the past, ‘non-essential’ domestic and community construction and maintenance are suspended for the war effort. In the short run, pre-war traditions could carry on until the war was over. With protracted war, as this mechanism is used up, asset stripping starts. The fat and sinew of domestic and community life are thrown into the furnaces of the war effort. The delivery of the intimacy and discipline that constructs us as high net worth characters is inhibited, degraded and finally removed in favor of the blandishments of marketing; a regime as impersonal, narrow and inadequate as any of the totalitarian systems it has replaced. The unkindest cut of all is that the philosophy of The Enlightenment, which really was benign and promised much, has been colonized to both streamline and mask this process. As a young man and teacher, I invested much energy and hope in the possibility of liberation. What I learned, the hard way, as is my wont, is that without knowledge, maturity of judgment, a secure character and a steady sense of restraint, liberty becomes a cruel joke; an icon for a dis-empowering loss of control and vulnerability to consciousness manipulation. Rights, which are the fulcrum of our democratic and humanist culture, cannot exist in a vacuum. They are underpinned by obligations which can be complex and onerous. In the absence of this essential discipline, rights turn into indulgences. Indulgence corrupts honest moral dialogue into excuse making and rationalizing. In the context of a marketing structure that systematically indulges its customers, the culture of rights becomes a travesty that stalls the reproduction of responsible adult behavior. Thus, over time, adolescence replaces adulthood as a cultural norm. This has delivered unprecedented opportunity to leverage and prey upon mass populations of permanently immature, unstable and under-constructed people. Escape from this is nearly impossible, for all the roads out have been turned into consumerist dreams that loop straight back into the mouth of the tiger. More, our children, the newest model ‘Consumerbabelets’, have already been taken from us by the Pied Pipers of Cool. They are far too entranced by the music to have any interest in eluding the Piper’s cloying grasp. The new totalitarians have won beyond the wildest dreams of their predecessors. Protest is just another niche market. Nothing less than similar absolutism can stand up to it, which is why Muslim fanatics are the only real opposition left standing. This thesis is so at odds with conventional ‘common sense’ and so dark in its sentiments, many listeners might be forgiven for thinking that it is more a reflection on the writer than his subject. I am not immune to this and suffer doubt. Am I an Asperger lost in the seductive poetry of his thoughts? Could the cultural displacement that I experienced with the loss of my religious roots prejudice my judgment? Can depression at an impressionable period of one’s life keep inspiring negative behavior for the rest of it? All of the above are possibilities, but they are the ones that make me an outsider and enable me to articulate the perhaps otherwise un-sayable. The world is already very amply supplied by insiders whose reasonable, balanced and orthodox judgments reinforce the overwhelming status quo. Negativity is not necessarily a vice just because the dominant culture repels it in favor of institutionalized megalomania and hubris. I recovered from my bout of depression several decades ago, but the analysis that contributed to it steadily became more damning as it became clearer and more comprehensive. And yes, I lost my religious roots, but they taught me enough to know just how impoverishing the worship of goods and services is. Islamic fundamentalism, self-doubt and intellectual defiance aside, in all likelihood the beast will just keep bloating and metastasizing until its host tissues turn feral and/or collapse. However, out of the wreckage of a Post-Modern era is the possibility of a reconstruction project that might recapitalize ecological, cultural and existential infrastructure. Its aim would be to sustain us through perilous times by building solid communities of resilient, resourceful and fully developed adult human beings. It would involve broadening our understanding of how we create and build wealth, run industry and envision enterprise. The great teacher who suggested that we do not live by bread alone was trying to redefine wealth and our understanding of what a good life is. As the Western Roman Empire declined, this message increasingly appealed to a people being progressively stripped of their institutionally ordered affluence and security. As they embraced it, they gave to it their imperial organizational genius, which propelled an obscure Jewish cult onto the world stage. I believe something analogous will happen in our world not too far down the track. It will bring us a very modern kind of revelation and redemption that will be as overwhelming for us as Christianity was for the Roman world. Christopher Nagle is a writer who lives in Grantville, Victoria; lucky he escaped doing law The author gave a second talk in February 2007 that is stored here as 'Ideological Lifeboats 2'. |