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Thinkers Behind the Culture of Death (Part 1 or 3)
Catholic Online ^ | 11/12/2004 - 6:00 AM PST | www,Catholic.org

Posted on 08/20/2005 8:41:27 PM PDT by Murtyo

KITCHENER, Ontario, NOV. 12, 2004 (Zenit) - Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ayn Rand and Wilhelm Reich may have had therapeutic aims to cure the world of its ills.

But instead they contributed immensely to the modern sickness that John Paul II has identified as the "culture of death."

So says Donald DeMarco, who co-authored a book investigating the dysfunctional lives and theories of the "Architects of the Culture of Death" (Ignatius) with Benjamin Wiker.

DeMarco is an adjunct philosophy professor at Holy Apostles College and Seminary, in Connecticut, and professor emeritus at St. Jerome's University, in Ontario.

In this three-part interview, he shared with US how a few individuals' highly influential thought has fueled the formation of the present culture of death.

Q: Why did you decide to compile this book on the lives of the "Architects of the Culture of Death"?

DeMarco: The title is the brainchild of Benjamin Wiker, my co-author. When I first came across his engaging title in an article that he wrote for the National Catholic Register, I had the very strong sense that I could write a series of pieces on this theme and that Ben and I could collaborate to write a book bearing the title, "Architects of the Culture of Death."

I think that we had something in common that allowed us to share this vision, namely, a deeply felt conviction that something terribly wrong has occurred in the modern world, that people need to know how it has come about and that there is an answer to our present dilemma.

I had been teaching moral philosophy and the history of modern philosophy at St. Jerome's University in Waterloo, Ontario, for many, many years. Therefore, it was an easy task for me to assemble 15 of these architects and explain how their highly influential thought has contributed mightily to the formation of the present culture of death.

I have written five books on the subject of virtue. People commonly talk about the importance of love, but without virtue, there is no conduit through which love can be expressed in any effective or satisfactory way.

It was inevitable, I suppose, that my thoughts would turn from something positive to its antithesis. One defends the truth only half way if one does not expose the lies that assail and conceal it.

I had no difficulty, as I mentioned, coming up with 15 "architects," and though there are more that I could present, I am satisfied with those whom I have chosen. Moreover, they fall into nice categories: the will worshipers, the atheistic existentialists, the secular utopianists, the pleasure seekers and the death peddlers. Ben, my co-author, covered the eight other thinkers spotlighted in our book.

Q: What is it about the lives of these individuals that is so telling?

DeMarco: Being a philosopher by trade, naturally I wrote about my architects in such a way that what would be most "telling" about them is that their thought is demonstrably untenable. Their view of life and the world simply does not stand up against any reasonable form of analysis. In no instance do any of the architects indicate that they have a balanced notion of what constitutes a human being.

Arthur Schopenhauer, Friedrich Nietzsche and Ayn Rand give so much prominence to the will that there was little left over for reason. Historians have referred to this triad as "irrational vitalists."

Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir and Elisabeth Badinter absolutize freedom to the point where there is nothing left over for responsibility, especially communal responsibility.

The utopianism of Karl Marx, Auguste Comte and Judith Jarvis Thomson is an escape into fantasy.

Sigmund Freud, Wilhelm Reich and Helen Gurley Brown make pleasure, and not love, central in the lives of human beings.

Finally, Jack Kevorkian, Derek Humphry and Peter Singer completely lose sight of human dignity and the sanctity of life.

Another "telling" feature of these individuals is that their lives were in such disarray. At least three of them -- Auguste Comte, Wilhelm Reich and Friedrich Nietzsche -- according to various historians of philosophy, were mad. Several of the others exhibited clear signs of neuroses. In many cases, and this is also true for the architects that my colleague treats, they involved themselves in activities that are truly shocking.

St. Augustine once stated that the only real justification for philosophy is that, if followed, it can make a person happy. There should be a harmony between a person's philosophy of life and the life satisfactions that its implementation brings about. Ideas have consequences. Realistic thoughts should be a blueprint for a happy life. Unrealistic thoughts cannot lead to happiness. Philosophy is supposed to be a love of wisdom, not a bromide for misery.

Q: What do you think will most surprise readers about the thinkers outlined in your book?

DeMarco: This is a difficult question to answer inasmuch as it is difficult to anticipate how readers will respond.

But it may be that many readers will be surprised at the absolute discrepancy that exists between the therapeutic aims of the architects and the fact that they have contributed immensely to a culture of death.

Wilhelm Reich thought of himself as a secular Messiah who would cure the world of both its social as well as personal neuroses. He saw himself as the world's first Freudo-Marxist. He earned, more than anyone else, the appellation, "Father of the Sexual Revolution."

Yet he died in a federal penitentiary, serving time there because he had defrauded the American public by selling them empty boxes that were allegedly constructed to capture a precious form of energy called "orgone." One critic of Reich said that it was hard to take any man seriously who said, "I realized that I could no longer live without a brothel."

Friedrich Nietzsche, a few years before his death at age 56, was found assaulting a piano with his elbows before he was taken away to an asylum. He had said of his masterpiece, "Zarathustra," that, "This work stands alone. If all the spirit and goodness of every great soul were collected together, the whole could not create a single one of Zarathustra's discourses." Freud imagined himself to be a new Moses.

Karl Marx believed himself to be a new Prometheus.

Ayn Rand counted herself the greatest philosopher in all history, after Aristotle. She argued that, "Altruism is the root of all evil." She arranged that a 6-foot dollar sign adorn her casket. When she died, she had hardly a friend in the world.

These architects had large egos, but it could hardly be said that they had practical strategies for healing society of its ills.

All of the architects claimed to be humanists and liberators in one way or another. Yet, what they preached was a false humanism because it saw human beings in an entirely one-sided way.

It may be surprising to many, then, that powerful and influential thinkers nonetheless find the nature of the human person to be elusive. We are still trying, often with disastrous results, to answer the eternal question, "What is man?"


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: abortion; aynrand; benjaminwiker; catholic; culture; cultureofdeath; death; donalddemarco; friedrichnietzsche; johnpaulii; pope; wilhelmreich
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To: Murtyo

bookmk ping


21 posted on 08/20/2005 9:50:07 PM PDT by Dad yer funny
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To: giotto
Rand promoted Abortion, which puts her on the side of death.

Rand may have had a good grasp of economics but her ideas were identical to those of the communists when it concerned religion.

22 posted on 08/20/2005 9:51:56 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Nateman

Plenty of "Kill Terri" Nazis also think of themselves as "champions of reason."


23 posted on 08/20/2005 9:53:29 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Plenty of "Kill Terri" Nazis also think of themselves as "champions of reason."

Ayn Rand was an advocate of abortion. That would have made more sense for them to criticize her about that. Terri was murder plain and simple. Her parents were willing to take care of her. I think Ayn would have found armed guards refusing water to an innocent person as horrible as most of us have.

24 posted on 08/20/2005 10:05:32 PM PDT by Nateman (Don't hit a RAT when he's down. Kick em instead!)
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To: Murtyo

Ayn Rand was wrong about much. Nevertheless, during my youth (and before) Rand was carrying the water in the fight for freedom, whilst the Church of my youth (pre-JPII) was playing footsie with every radical socialist cause out there. Liberation theology? Bishop Thomas Gumbleton? Ring a bell? I'd rather have a beer with Rand (if it were possible) than with DeMarco anytime.


25 posted on 08/20/2005 10:15:08 PM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: Murtyo; 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; afraidfortherepublic; Alas; al_c; american colleen; ...


26 posted on 08/20/2005 10:16:17 PM PDT by Coleus (Roe v. Wade and Endangered Species Act both passed in 1973, Murder Babies/save trees, birds, algae)
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To: Murtyo

Yes, Rand attempted to secularize "virtue." Always leads to trouble.


27 posted on 08/20/2005 10:16:52 PM PDT by the invisib1e hand (see my FR page for a link to the tribute to Terri Schaivo, a short video presentation.)
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To: Murtyo
John Paul II has identified as the "culture of death"

There's a great void now that JPII is gone.

28 posted on 08/20/2005 10:32:18 PM PDT by my_pointy_head_is_sharp (We're living in the Dark Ages.)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
From the link you posted:

I cannot project the degree of hatred required to make those women run around in crusades against abortion. Hatred is what they certainly project, not love for the embryos, which is a piece of nonsense no one could experience, but hatred, a virulent hatred for an unnamed object...Their hatred is directed against human beings as such, against the mind, against reason, against ambition, against success, against love, against any value that brings happiness to human life. In compliance with the dishonesty that dominates today's intellectual field, they call themselves 'pro-life.'

— Ayn Rand

Spoken like a woman who has never known the joy and mystery of childbirth. I admire Ayn Rand for her brilliant clarity and her anti-Communist stand. But on this issue she contradicts herself. If man is the highest form of life, then isn't every single aspect and every moment of that life equally precious? The very idea that the human potential embodied in an embryo could be snuffed out by the thoughtless act of a selfish woman should be anathema to Ayn Rand.

29 posted on 08/20/2005 10:34:17 PM PDT by giotto
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To: Nateman
"Either this guy is lying or just ignorant about Any Rand. She was a champion of reason."

Well there goes any possibility that he may know about Ayn Rand than you do, or that he may be smarter than you.

As a highly successful author of 20 books and hundreds of articles written for scholarly journals, and as professor of philosophy and professor emeritus, DeMarco would hardly be 'ignorant'. The fact that he is a devout, practicing Catholic and is on the Advisory Board of The Catholic Educator's Resource Center means that he has a love for the truth and a great fear of lying. In fact, he believes his Judgement and eternity would be at stake if he lied to calumniate another person.

On the other hand Ayn Rand believed that selfishness is a virtue, and altruism is evil. As a militant atheist and firm believer that depravity was inherent in human nature, Ayn Rand had absolutely nothing but her self professed 'genius' to hold herself back from contradictions and lying. As we all learned from Bill Clinton and his lovely wife, 'genius' is no insurance against fraud.

I choose to believe Donald DeMarco.

30 posted on 08/20/2005 10:36:44 PM PDT by TheCrusader ("The frenzy of the Mohammedans has devastated the churches of God" -Pope Urban II, 1097AD)
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To: giotto
"The author undermines his own argument by including Ayn Rand in his list. Her philosophy was the very antithesis of Marx's."

In economics only. Rand and Marx both were firm believers that only a few people are capable of leading all the other riffraff. (Rand believed that depravity was inherent in human beings). This is the concept of the 'proletariat', the epitome of communist philosophy.

Also, they both viewed people as bundles of various psychological attributes, and not as human beings with spirits and souls.

31 posted on 08/20/2005 10:59:00 PM PDT by TheCrusader ("The frenzy of the Mohammedans has devastated the churches of God" -Pope Urban II, 1097AD)
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To: Murtyo
Most excellent post. A review of Modern philosophers (1650-1850) will lead a person to agree with DeMarco.

Rene Descartes: "It is absolutely true that we must believe that there is a God" (Meditations, Introduction).

Thomas Hobbes: "Culture" comes "from two sorts of men. One sort" orders culture "to their own invention. The other have done it by God's commandment and direction" and by "our blessed Savior" (Leviathan, c. 12).

Blaise Pascal: "All who seek God without Jesus Christ either find no light to satify them (atheism) or come to form for themselves a means of knowing God (deism; Ayn Rand exactly)" (Pensees, no. 555).

John Locke (who greatly influenced Thomas Jefferson): All "men are the workmanship of one omnipotent and infintely wise Maker" (An Essay Concerning Government, c. 2).

Gottfried Leibniz: "God is considered the architect of the machine of the universe" (Monadology, n. 87).

If you look again at the 15 architects listed by DeMarco, you will see 15 brilliant people who lacked the warmth, hope and logic of Descartes, Hobbes, Pascal, Liebniz, Locke as well as Spinoza, Berkeley (yes, the university town was named after Bishop Berkeley), and Kant - philosophers who greatly influenced the Founding Fathers of the United States
32 posted on 08/20/2005 11:12:20 PM PDT by Falconspeed (Keep your fears to yourself, but share your courage with others. R.L.Stevenson)
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To: TheCrusader
depravity was inherent in human nature

You got the wrong Ayn . She thought that all men are ends in and of themselves. You don't start being depraved in her view unless you start thinking that other people must live for you or you for them. As for the Author being so wise and noble, perhaps he could stick to the facts instead of making things up about people or smearing them with undefined words.

33 posted on 08/20/2005 11:14:00 PM PDT by Nateman (Don't hit a RAT when he's down. Kick em instead!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
Rand may have had a good grasp of economics but her ideas were identical to those of the communists when it concerned religion.

And when you look at the direction taken by many modern "secular" religions such as reform Judaism, Methodists, Etc who carry the water for the liberal causes and the democratic party it is clear that Ayn has a point about religion. The more fundamentalist religions seem to have a grasp of conservative thought, so Ayn would have less disdain for them. She simply put the mind above the contemporary idea of religion and decided she would rather think for herself than follow a faith. If that is her conclusion, its OK with me. I do not believe she belongs at the same level as the others named on this list, and would not believe she would support turning the civilization of Aristotle over to the Islamic forces today.

34 posted on 08/20/2005 11:19:07 PM PDT by KC_for_Freedom (Sailing the highways of America, and loving it.)
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To: Murtyo

This would be an extremely educational read. I would have included at least one more person though, Margaret Sanger, but perhaps she wasn't influential enough for the author.


35 posted on 08/20/2005 11:21:58 PM PDT by TAdams8591 (Member since December 1998)
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To: TheCrusader
 only a few people are capable of leading all the other riffraff

She no doubt placed people of high ability on a pedestal but she in no way thought they should be able to force other people into doing their bidding. They only "lead" by virtue of their competence and your willingness to accept their paycheck. There is a world of difference between your boss at work telling you to do something and a dictator of a nation giving you orders. (Your boss can't have you shot for example)

36 posted on 08/20/2005 11:25:43 PM PDT by Nateman (Use truth in the attack: it works better!)
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To: Nateman

I am rather surprised at the inclusion of Rand on the list. But before criticizing the author for this choice, it might be a good idea to read the book.


37 posted on 08/20/2005 11:28:09 PM PDT by TAdams8591 (Member since December 1998)
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To: TAdams8591
it might be a good idea to read the book.
 
If I was looking at some elaborate mathematical proof  and noticed in a particular step that 1+1=3 I would have no need to read the whole thing to know something was wrong with it
38 posted on 08/20/2005 11:38:03 PM PDT by Nateman (Use truth in the attack: it works better!)
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To: TAdams8591
it might be a good idea to read the book.
 
If I was looking at some elaborate mathematical proof  and noticed in a particular step that 1+1=3 I would have no need to read the whole thing to know something was wrong with it.
39 posted on 08/20/2005 11:39:04 PM PDT by Nateman (Use truth in the attack: it works better!)
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To: Nateman

Read the section in which he discusses Rand. I for one, am curious to find out what he has to say about it and why he believes she fits in with the rest of the people he listed. But then, that's me.


40 posted on 08/20/2005 11:41:41 PM PDT by TAdams8591 (Member since December 1998)
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