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Tuesday, November 18, 2008


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Provisional Truth  |  Essays  |  October 2005

  Summer Reading 2005

My “light” summer reading included one look backward and one look forward, equally instructive and equally chilling despite the season's heat. Edward Gibbons' original The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, was published in six epic volumes between 1776 and 1787 as the world's newest large-scale experiment in republican democracy, The United States of America, was being created. Gibbons' look back offers an historian's forthright assessment of the causes of the end of the Roman republic and empire over the course of five centuries.

In his late-2004 book, The End of Faith: Religion, Terror and the Future of Reason, Sam Harris, now completing a doctorate in neuroscience, offers a well-researched warning to the world of the ill-effects of religious fundamentalism – of any stripe – in an era of weapons of mass destruction. Harris' potentially bleak view of the future of the human race centers on how religious extremism sets the stage for a potential – yes - Armageddon-like disaster should unaccounted former Soviet Union atomic warheads, or other chemical and biological weapons, ever fall into the hands of those willing to use them in an effort to turn back the calendar a millennium or two.

First to Gibbon. Although the causes of the decline and fall of Rome were many, Gibbon more than once observes an apathy and degeneration of a sated citizenry, which abdicated its personal involvement in government in favor of a dictator – a “Caesar” - and which trusted for the defense of its well-to-do lifestyle an increasingly detached mercenary military which had no vested interest in the benefits - land, money and slaves - of that lifestyle.

Prior to the death of Julius Caesar in 44 BCE, the republic's military was reserved for Roman citizens who had a country to love, property to defend, and some role in enacting those laws which it was in their interest and duty to maintain. An honorable military leadership, albeit from a privileged class, commanding unyielding citizens, possessing “arms, (protective) of property, and collecting into constitutional assemblies, forms the only balance capable of preserving a free constitution,” Gibbon notes, and that “patriotism is derived from a strong sense of our own interest in the preservation and prosperity of a free government of which we are members.”

Such sentiment, which had rendered the legions of the Roman republic almost invincible, he writes, could make but a very feeble impression on the mercenary forces in the era of the emperors (27 BCE – 476 CE), during which “war was gradually improved into an art, and (then) degraded into a trade,” as the military became composed more of hired soldiers from throughout the empire in need of jobs than of Roman citizens defending a homeland.

Finally, it was during the so-called pax romana (peace of Rome), roughly between 20 BCE and 180 CE, within which “lay the latent causes of decay and corruption.” The uniform government of the Romans “introduced a slow and secret poison into the empire. The minds of men were gradually reduced to the same level, the fire of genius was extinguished, and even the military spirit evaporated. Their personal valor remained, but they no longer possessed that public courage which is nourished by the love of independence, the sense of national honor, the presence of danger, and the habit of command. They received their laws and governors from the will of the sovereign (the Caesar or “Augustus”), and trusted for their defense to a mercenary army...and sunk into the languid indifference of private life.”

Those descriptions of ancient Rome may seem like bygone days of the United States, especially with a war in Iraq that, although now becoming increasingly unpopular, many Americans treat with “languid indifference.” How ironic at the time Gibbons was writing, America was at its creation.

Now “back to the future” to Sam Harris and The End of Faith, a grim view of what could be the road ahead for the human race.

Our technical advances in the art of war have finally rendered our religious differences – and hence our religious beliefs – antithetical to our survival,” Harris writes. “We can no longer ignore the fact that billions of our neighbors believe in the metaphysics of martyrdom, or in the literal truth of the book of Revelation, or of any of the other fantastical notions that have lurked in the minds of the faithful for millennia – because our neighbors are now armed with chemical, biological and nuclear weapons.”

Harris argues that a growing worldwide ecumenical movement of religious toleration and moderation, far from soothing the fringe elements of extremism, actually exacerbates a tenuous global situation by providing religious fundamentalists with an excuse to use whatever means necessary to justify their goal of religious purity. And Harris is not referring here only to Islam as even Jesus spoke of spitting out the “lukewarm” as not being worthy of the Kingdom of God (Rev. 3:16, New American Standard version).

To Harris, it is horrifying that fringe groups of fundamentalist Islamists who increasingly resort to the “death-to-infidels” mentality that results in almost daily news footage of carnage and destruction may yet obtain and use weapons of mass destruction, but it should be equally horrifying that many fundamentalist Christians today live in expectation of the end of the world in their lifetimes, convinced that growing religious-based and economic conflicts, the rise of terrorism, and ecological and natural disasters portend the beginning of the end.

And when one of the hottest recent works of fiction is the “Left Behind” series authored by Tim La Haye and Jerry B. Jenkins, selling more than 62 million copies, apparently quite a few expectantly believe this will happen soon. Regrettably, according to Harris, as nearly all extremist religious dogmas each insist on being observed as the one true faith there is very little wiggle room when humankind possesses the ability to eradicate itself from the planet.

One look backward, and one look forward, equally instructive and equally chilling. Next summer I think I'll stick to really light reading.

 

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     Once we thought the
        earth was flat -
     What of that?

     It was just as globos then
     Under believing men

      As our later folks have
        found it,
     By success in running
        round it;

     What we think may
        guide our acts,
     But it does not alter facts.

   Charlotte Perkins Gilman
            (1860-1935)

 

 

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