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What Spinoza, for example, calls ‘blessedness’ is simply the state of non-attachment; his ‘human bondage,’ the condition of one who identifies himself with his desires, emotions and thought-processes, or with their objects in the external world.
Aldous Huxley – Ends and Means
We all know that lying in all its many forms is a common
aspect of human life. From exaggeration to evasion, from the sins of omission
to barefaced lying we all assent to at least a few dubious narratives because we
must and because this is how societies work.
To survive daily life we cannot be wholly non-attached in
Huxley’s sense, so we must endure human bondage in Spinoza’s. We must identify
ourselves with our desires, emotions and
thought-processes, or with their objects in the external world. Hence the lies, hence the
bondage.
Not so long ago, visitors to Grandson’s school told the
children that God made the harvest. Was that a lie? In my book it was at best misleading. However
those visitors saw their words as advocating a genuine truth, and would no
doubt be mightily offended at my implication.
Worthy advocacy of noble causes is a particular problem when
so few causes are really noble and so much advocacy is unworthy. It all
goes to create an unhealthy culture of false virtue, armour-plated against any
criticism, securely located on a mountain of furtive dishonesty.
Yet how does anyone advocate anything without so much as a
hint of bias in all its many tangled forms? It is possible perhaps, but neither
easy nor common. Advocacy is inherently biased because it is incompatible with
non-attachment.
A few decades ago, Secretary of State for War John Profumo resigned from the government and from Parliament when he had to
admit he had lied to Parliament over the Christine Keeler affair. Only a few
years later, Prime Minister Edward Heath lied to voters about
the nature of the Common Market as the EU then was.
“There are some in this country who fear that in going into Europe we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears, I need hardly say, are completely unjustified.”
Prime Minister Edward Heath, television broadcast on Britain’s entry into the Common Market, January 1973.
“There are some in this country who fear that in going into Europe we shall in some way sacrifice independence and sovereignty. These fears, I need hardly say, are completely unjustified.”
Prime Minister Edward Heath, television broadcast on Britain’s entry into the Common Market, January 1973.
Perhaps Heath saw this lie as worthy advocacy but he must have known he was lying and unlike Profumo he never resigned. Far from it – he appears to have seen his lying as an act of statesmanship.
The perennial problem is that we must advocate to live, to form
stable societies and economies, to hold political debates, invest in the
future, build civilisations and even cultures. So who doesn’t lie through advocacy, whether worthy or not?
As usual, the ethical folk are those who remain non-attached,
people without causes, the non-campaigners who prefer not to campaign and the
non-advocates who prefer to advocate as little as possible because advocacy is
so intimately linked with lying.
The question of whether or not anything can be achieved without advocacy is yet another problem. Possibly not.
The question of whether or not anything can be achieved without advocacy is yet another problem. Possibly not.
2 comments:
Heath was a person who had no concept of truth. I have met a few like this and reckon that politics is a sphere that attracts them. They are a nightmare to deal with and invariably leave a long trail of damage behind them.
Demetrius - yes, attracting the wrong people seems to be a problem in a number of areas, especially politics.
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