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II. Talk on the Common Course (1952)
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Who is man? Man as a transcendent being is undetermined and therefore
entirely incalculable, unpredictable and unreliable. Since men live
together with their equals, since they must cooperate with their
fellow-men, if they want to survive at all, they must learn how
to become calculable, predictable and reliable, at least to a certain
extent. In other words, man must develop character. Character can
be developed by others who determine and then proceed to form certain
desired character types. It can also be achieved through self-determination.
Abraham has designed a procedure of self-determination which is
identical with free ethical creativity. All formation of character
by others is possible only because of self-determination; those
who determine others and form character types must be capable of
self-determination themselves. Man has a strong longing for character
and if he is not given the opportunity for self-determination, he
will easily submit to being determined by others rather than not
to be formed and determined at all. The individual is born formless
and longs for form and character. Modern mass-individuals are often
quite willing to submit to the most brutal methods of character
formation in order to escape the terrible boredom of their own formlessness.
Longing for an identity, such as only character can ultimately give
to human beings, they may submit to being branded with almost any
mask in order to have a face. Morals are one of the more human forms
of forceful character formation; as such, they are the falsification
of free ethics, which consists of self-determination.
Abraham, to whom God said: "Get thee out of thy country," started
out into free space, one man alone with his family and his belongings.
A great self-reliance was required for this first decision, with
which the story begins. From then on, he gradually learned to trust
himself, to have faith in one human being: himself. This is the
beginning of self-determination. Instead of trusting only himself
and distrusting everybody else, he tried to trust other people as
well and to have faith in them. This means that he did not think
of himself only as a self but as a person; and therefore could meet
other people not only as (selfish) selves, but deal with them as
persons. In other words, he did not simply "consume" and live on
the quality of self-reliance, such as nature or God had given to
him; he transformed this self-reliance into a productive capacity.
His procedure consisted in making covenants (giving and receiving
promises) first with his wife, his son, his other wives and their
children, then with the kings and people whom he met, and finally
with God. (And Abraham's God, it should be remembered, was a God
of faith and a maker of covenants himself, who had created man in
order to establish faith and make covenants.
There are a few incidents in the Abraham stories which throw some
light on the difficulties involved and Abraham's methods to overcome
them. There is the story of Abimelech (Gen. ch. 21, 22 ff.), which
tells how Abimelech saw that God was with Abraham and that he wanted
to make a covenant with him. During the negotiations, Abraham tells
Abimelech that a well of water has been "violently taken away" from
him, in other words, that a previous agreement between the two tribes
has been broken. The same story is told at some greater length of
Isaac in Genesis 26, 1-3l. There we see clearly what actually happened:
Abimelech was frightened by the growing prosperity of the Abrahamitic
tribes, he therefore broke the first covenant and sent them away.
They departed peacefully and without breaking any of their own promises.
Then Abimelech called them back, probably very surprised, and said
to them: "We saw certainly that the Lord was with thee; and we said,
let there be now an oath betwixt us, even betwixt us and thee, and
let us make a covenant with thee." Now the initiative was with Abimelech;
by not breaking his own promise despite the provocation, Abraham
had not only taught his neighbor the value of covenants and promises,
but how to enter into then freely and voluntarily.
This was Abraham's way of convincing people of his own faith and
of establishing trust on earth. Like his God, he brings consistency
and continuity into the dealings of people and their living together;
he makes it possible for everybody he meets to join him voluntarily
because he does it freely and respects the freedom of the others.
His thoughts design a continuous and consistent line of projects,
all of which aim to establish and develop faith as a value- creating
capacity of man. This free ethical thinking, like all other kinds
of creative thinking, is projective and planned; it is reflective
only to the extent that some reflection is needed for the formation
of a properly designed project.
The various kinds of creative thinking with which we are concerned
here are established by a decision through which man makes up his
mind that this is what he wants on earth. But they are not isolated
capacities, although they are clearly distinct from each other.
Between them exist definite interrelations and interdependencies.
If a man decides in favor of one of them, he needs the assistance
of all the others in order to form them into a certain constellation.
Each of them, however, has its own conditions according to which
it can move and its own specific terms in which it can proceed.
These different terms have one common denominator: none of them
is purely theoretical in the sense that it can be used to contemplate
and explain things that exist; on the contrary, each of them sets
forth a proposition which is, so to speak, offered for consideration
and contains a project. Each of these powers of thought creates
according to its own proposition and its creations can only be properly
understood in its own terms; terms pertaining to another form of
creativity can be used only if the fundamental constellation grouped
around the chief creative power in question is properly grasped.
A work of art, for instance, cannot be understood in terms of science;
aesthetics can be called upon to help understand art only if we
know what the relationship between artistic and scientific creativity
is.
The thinking will of Zarathustra is free and intentional; it proceeds
in terms of decision, that is, it lives in the alternative of either
- or. It thinks by projecting situations which require that man
take a position and make a decision. The ethical thinking of Abraham
proceeds in terms of repeated tests; it also projects situations,
but the position which man should take in these situations is decided
upon by the character of the person; the situation is projected
in order to test character, to see if man can live up to his own
character under extreme circumstances.
Let us once again remember that we do not know whether Abraham
is an historical figure or whether he owes his existence to the
imagination of a great poet, and let us ask ourselves once more
which is the more probable hypothesis. If we assume that the story
was invented by an ethical thinker, we see that it proceeds the
same way actual ethical thinking would have proceeded: it is the
story of repeated tests and describes test-situations. (Indicate
and enumerate such situations.). The greatest of them is the supreme
test when God tempts Abraham by requiring the sacrifice of Isaac.
All these stories, culminating in the story of the sacrifice of
Isaac, make one constant whole. However, if we look a little closer
into this, we become aware of one serious inconsistency: Abraham,
who is so much in the habit of arguing and reasoning with his God
and who is so persistent in his arguments to save the righteous
people from the fate of Sodom, never raises one single argument
about the fate of Isaac. Abraham had never accepted blind faith,
his faith always was absolutely reasonable, in spite of all his
daring. Why does he suddenly have blind faith?
It is improbable that any author who invented the figure of Abraham
would have committed such an inconsistency. The seemingly strong
inconsistency indicates a living historical figure whose stories
and experiences were written down and who was much too revered to
be tampered with.
Let us try to understand this inconsistency of Abraham. Kierkegaard,in
his great interpretation of the Abraham story in Fear and Trembling,
says that he does not understand Abraham, that he cannot understand
the quiet and certainty with which Abraham started on the dreadful
journey and made his preparation for the sacrifice. He therefore
concludes that Abraham's faith in God was so great that it was a
blind faith, as though Abraham who had argued with God so often
had given up arguing and became a believer. This is improbable.
Moreover, if man is created in God's own image, a creative creature
himself and master of all Being, how could God accept a human being
as a sacrifice unto Him? We saw how much Abraham resembles his God
and how much Abraham's God resembles Abraham; it is this God that
Abraham deals with here and does not argue with because he had reasoned
it out beforehand. In this greatest test in which God tempts Abraham,
reasonable faith becomes a faith which keeps reason. Abraham does
not "believe" and does not argue, because now he knows. He
now knows his God, knows that this God cannot accept human sacrifices
and therefore he does not lie to Isaac when he tells him: "My son,
God will provide himself a lamb for the burnt offering." (Gen. 22,
8); he knows that lambs and rams roam the countryside in this land
of shepherds and one will be there. The situation, therefore, is
this: God tempts Abraham and Abraham tests his God, and Abraham
knows beforehand that both will stand the test. Thus, he lets a
"miracle" happen, gives a sign to his son and the other members
of his tribe to show them who God is, the living God, the Creator
of free creative creatures. This is a miracle of reasonable faith
and the ever repeated miracle of free reason.
We now have the elements of Abraham's answer to the threefold ultimate
question: What is the meaning of Being? - What is the value of life?
- Who is man? - Being is there for man who can use it reasonably;
it sets certain conditions for man in such a way as to enable him
always to recondition it and himself. The existence of man contains
the proposition for the possibility of a creative life. Its value
is the establishment of faith by which the continuity and consistency
of mankind is assured on earth in freedom.
12. Homer was called by the Greeks the Father of Poetry. Why did
Western culture, even after the discovery of a rich pre-Homeric
poetry, accept the first great Greek poet as the father of all poetry?
Pre-Homeric poetry is bound by myth and religious ritual. Homer
liberated art, not only poetry, from all bondage and servitude;
only in him does artistic activity become entirely free and creative
in its own rights. The world which Homer created is the first free
imaginary "fiction" in which all generations who came after him
could participate and experience a possible transcendence of the
given world of Being into a man-made meaningful world of imagination.
Parts of the Odyssey and the Iliad are ascribed by some scholars
to a pre-Homeric tradition and there is no doubt that bards used
to entertain kings and provide pleasure for the great ones prior
to Homer. No work like the Odyssey was needed for such social purposes.
The poetic qualities of myths had been expressed before Homer; Homer
was the man who discovered the possibility of treating myths in
an entirely free fashion; he was no longer bound by them.
The Greeks said that Homer (and Hesiod) gave them their gods. This
sounds strange to us. We can hardly understand how a people would
accept gods that have been fashioned or even re-fashioned by artists
for art's sake, and still recognize them as a living mythological
reality. This miracle of an artistic and mythological unity is what
enabled the Greeks to lead an artistic imaginative life within their
mythology and, at the same time, to develop this mythology freely
into its great artistic forms (Greek drama). The pre-platonic philosophers
(with the exception of Heraclitus and Socrates) and especially Plato
himself, mistrusted this development. The metaphysicians always
maintained that the ideas contained in myths must retain their authority
even though they first have to be purified and cleared of all mythical
metaphors. The main opposition of the metaphysician to poetry (see
Plato's criticism of Homer) is the poets' treatment of myth, which
seemed to them irresponsible and playful: The first introduction
of mankind to the eternal realm of ideas was through myth; it had
to be overcome, not by Homer, who created his own free artistic
myth, but through metaphysics, which was a kind of purified and
spiritualized mythology. Metaphysics, not art, should be the successor
to mythology.
Every myth, however, is a work of (unfree) art, and every work
of art is a (free and not binding) myth. This fundamental relationship
between myth and art is personified in Homer and manifest in his
work; Homer handles myth as an artist would, he is no longer a mythographer
who uses art in telling mythological stories. Yet, while he thus
reversed the former relationship between art and myth, he maintained
the relationship itself so pure that the Greeks could accept his
work of art as a binding myth. This is the greatest triumph any
artist ever achieved. It may also account for the strange fact that
no artist ever dreamt of surpassing Homer, and artists always dream
of excelling each other and all former models. Homer has not only
remained the father of art, the originator of the free artistic
capability of man; he is still its uncontested master. That is the
reason why we have chosen him to tell us what free artistic creativity
is and how it comes about. For this inquiry we first need a better
understanding of the relationship between myth and art.
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