Delight Springs

Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Hobbes

LISTEN. I noted in class yesterday that one of my baseball heroes provides a strong riposte to Thomas Hobbes's implicitly unflattering portrayal of human nature. Pre-civilized life in a state of nature, Hobbes said, would be a war of all against all. Without the brake and censure of lawful civic authority, he was sure, we'd be mutually hostile and viciously competitive in the struggle for survival.

Well, Hobbes never met Buck O'Neil. “It’s much easier to love than it is to hate! Hate eats you up on the inside!”

An old post.

"Hobbes (the English social contract philosopher, not the tiger) was fond of his dram," sang the Pythons. But he was fonder of his stick-his walking stick. He used it not only to perambulate but also to record his thoughts as they came to him, on his daily rambles. Like an iPhone recorder, without need of a battery.

He was also a Royalist, a materialist, a determinist, and a pessimist about human nature. He was "difficult to classify" (Russell). I had an undergrad prof at UMSL, back in the day, who spoke weirdly of "mainlining on utopia with Tommy Hobbes." The Hobbesian utopia is no place I want to live.

But still I like much of what I know about him, particularly his daily morning ramble habit.

I was amused when my old friend said he'd just spent five weeks in Britain and came away with nothing more philosophical than a visit to a castle where Hobbes had tutored. My colleague answered rightly by noting that an ancient English castle's more likely to stimulate the philosophical imagination than is a dusty library in Tennessee. But in any event, Hobbes is a fascinating and over-maligned figure whose steps I look forward to tracking with our Study Abroad course in Britain.

Thomas Hobbes is one of my favorite “authoritarians”: a walker who kept an inkwell in his walking stick, he lived to 91 in the 17th century and believed humans could be saved from themselves with the right kind of contract. Contrary to a student essay I once graded, he did not say pre-social contract humans were “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” Just that their lives would've been.

Hobbes did say that’s what it would be like to live in a “state of nature,” without civil authority or police or government to keep the peace and impose order. It would be a “war of all against all.” If you don’t agree, asks Nigel Warburton in his Little History, why do you lock your doors?

Not, surely, because you think everyone’s out to get you. But it only takes a few miscreants, doesn’t it, to create an atmosphere of paranoia and mistrust?

I’d like to think Hobbes might reconsider the extremity of his position, were he transported to our time. On the other hand, we might reconsider the benignity of ours, were we transported to his. Those were tough times: civil war, a king executed, murderous politics, etc. How much freedom would you trade for peace and safety, if there were no other way to secure it? How much have you? How secure do you feel? Still relevant questions in our time, and Hobbes's answers were extreme indeed. But he was no monster, he was a peace-seeker and a civilizer. Most walkers are.

But, would life in a state of nature really be as bad as Hobbes thought? Most of us find most people less than totally distrustful, hostile, aggressive, and vicious, most of the time. On the other hand, we're most of us hardly "noble savages" either. Civilization and its discontent-engendering institutions account for a percentage of everyday bad behavior, but surely not all of it. So Hobbes may have been onto something, with his claim that we're wired for trouble and must be subdued by something bigger than us all, something leviathan-like.

The Hobbesian threat of insecurity and fear of violent death, in our time, may be great enough to override everyone's desire for personal freedom. Is safety more important than liberty? "Better red (or whatever) than dead?" Better to have government snoops monitoring your calls, emails, etc., than... than what, exactly?

Even if you agree with Hobbes that humans left to themselves would revert to base, aggressive, instinctive behavior, you may yet hesitate to agree that the only corrective for this condition is an all-powerful and authoritative central state. You may prefer not to concede the mechanistic, physicalistic, materialist model of humans as incapable of changing, of choosing to become more kind and compassionate, less fearful and selfish. You may hold out for a species capable of rewriting its default programming.

Speculations about human nature as inherently good or bad have always slighted the individuality of persons, absorbing them in abstractions about universal nature. We should seek instead to grasp the particularity of our separate natures. Our separate plural natures. Our plurality, subjectivity, uniqueness.

"Common sense" gets things wrong often enough and egregiously enough, doesn't it? - the flatness of earth, the rectitude of slavery, etc. - to give serious pause. Uncommon sense is in shorter supply, and greater demand. Just like decency, honesty, and humility. We need the Buck O'Neils of the world, now more than ever.

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