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How did 'The West' - shorthand for the societies fringing the North
Atlantic - arrive at global cultural, political and economic
dominance in the modern era? Challenged to answer this question in
as few words as possible, the average historically literate product
of a western university might well produce something like the
following:
"Modernity is essentially based upon a preference for reason before
religious faith, and the journey towards the dominance of reason
began in ancient Greece. Laying the foundations of modern science
and of personal and political freedom, this Greek achievement was
buried for over a thousand years by the rise of Catholic Christendom
in the first Christian millennium. Although these 'Dark Ages' were
not as dark as was once thought, they were nevertheless a period of
relative inertia, characterised by religious faith and political
tyranny."
"The recovery of the wisdom of the ancient Greeks in the 1400s led
to a cultural Renaissance in western Europe, a period of global
exploration by European powers, a Scientific Revolution and a
renewed interest in democracy. The Protestant Reformation in the
West assisted the victory of science and democracy by weakening the
obscurantist power of the Catholic church and enabling the rise of
capitalism through the 'Protestant work ethic'. The Enlightenment of
the 1700s prioritised reason above faith and led to the emergence of
modern secular democracies, in which capitalism, science, technology
and individual freedom finally triumphed."
The questions raised by such a narrative have so far been eclipsed
by its simplicity and rhetorical convenience. Weren't even the most
enlightened of the ancient Greeks defenders of slavery and owners of
slaves? How did western modernity recover the ancient Greek legacy
if it had been so thoroughly buried by Catholic obscurantism in the
'Dark Ages'? And weren't the Catholic republics of Genoa and Venice
pioneers of capitalism long before the Reformation? Such questions
have been asked but have not yet weakened the essential thread of
the narrative: Reason, science and freedom - the foundation of all
progress - began in ancient Greece, were obscured by Catholic
orthodoxy, and could only re-emerge when the Catholic monopoly was
overthrown. (The story of Galileo was, of course, the 'proof text'
of this narrative.)
Rodney Stark's robust assault upon that essential narrative is all
the more intriguing because it comes not from a Catholic apologist
but from an agnostic sociologist. In Victory of Reason he
insists that, on the contrary, freedom, reason, science and
capitalism - and even the very idea of progress - owed most to the
very phenomenon that secular orthodoxy tends to regard as the
darkest historical force: the theology of the early Church fathers
and the scholastics.
To begin with, he insists, the greatest of the ancient Greeks didn't
even believe in progress. Although Aristotle thought he was living
in a 'Golden Age', he, and all ancient Greeks, saw history as
essentially cyclical, with periods of decay inevitably following
every period of advance. He believed, for example, that the
technical achievements of his own era would not be bettered in any
future era.
And for this very reason, coupled with their lack of belief in a
rational unitary deity who had created a rational cosmos, the
ancient Greeks did not originate the linkage essential for true
science - between theory and research. Aristotle, the 'great
empiricist', contradicted Alcmaeon's theory that goats breathed
through their ears but does not record any experimental troubling of
any goat to prove his point. He believed also that stones of
different weights would fall at speeds proportionate to their
weights but never tested this by experiment either - for example by
dropping stones of two different weights but the same volume from
the same high cliff to see if the heavier would indeed reach the
ground below before the lighter. It simply never occurred to him to
devise repeatable experiments or systematic observations, so he, the
most scientific of the ancient Greeks, was never a true scientist.
Rodney Stark contrasts this Greek intellectual pessimism with the
attitudes of some of the early Christian fathers, most notably
Augustine. From the beginning Christians, like Jews, believed that
history was not cyclical but moving forward inexorably in linear
fashion towards a future end point. And the fact that Jesus never
left a single definitive text like the Quran meant that theologians
were free to attempt to discern answers to all the questions he did
not resolve, using reason (i.e. logic) as their method.
Of all the great religions, Stark insists, Christianity was alone in
believing that reason ruled all things, since they had been created
by a reasonable God. "Heaven forbid," declared Augustine, "that God
should hate in us that by which he made us superior to the animals.
Heaven forbid that we should believe in such a way as not to accept
or seek reasons, since we could not even believe if we did not
possess rational souls." Furthermore Augustine believed that such a
search would be fruitful, declaring that although 'certain matters
pertaining to the doctrine of salvation' could not yet be
understood, 'one day we shall be able to do so'.
If reason could discover more about God, it followed that the
natural world, created by the same God, should also be rational,
full of secrets waiting to be discovered by reason. Far from
rejecting theology, the great scientists of the early modern era,
such as Newton, saw science as the handmaiden of theology. It was
this that led Alfred North Whitehead to declare in 1925 that "The
greatest contribution of medievalism to the formation of the
scientific movement [was] the inexpugnable belief that there is a
secret, a secret that can be unveiled. ... It must come from the
medieval insistence on the rationality of God."
Even Bertrand Russell was mystified by the failure of the Chinese to
develop science, since the intelligentsia of ancient China had
rejected popular religion and theism. The reason, Stark insists, was
that for that very reason they never developed a rational theology
either. Mystical works like the Tao stressed not a caring creator
God of reason but an ineffable essence wrapped in mystery, lacking
all personality, desire and intention. The Chinese view of history
was also therefore non-progressive. How could there be an attempt to
discover what could not exist, since the ancients had known all that
was to be known?
And if Greek thought would lead of its own accord to science, why
didn't that happen within Islamic culture, which had also inherited
the Greek legacy? The reason again was the lack of systematic
theological inquiry within Islam, the conviction that all that
needed to be known had already been revealed in the Quran.
It was, uniquely, Christian theology also that led to the western
understanding of individual freedom. Whereas Greek tragedy held
individuals (Oedipus, for example) to be the necessary victims of
circumstances outside their control, Shakespeare's Hamlet chooses
his own fate. Stark traces this shift to the Christian emphasis upon
individual responsibility by Jesus himself, an emphasis that
continued throughout the Middle Ages.
This also marked a shift in the dignity to be accorded to every
individual, without exception. There is simply no equivalent in
classical thought to Paul's insistence that for God there are no
distinctions between 'male and female, slave and free'. On the
contrary Plato believed, with Hitler, that there was indeed such a
thing as a 'slavish people', and both he and Aristotle kept slaves.
This theological emphasis upon the moral equality of individuals,
without distinction of gender, class or race, meant that there was
always an ambiguity and tension in the continuation of slavery in
the late Roman imperial and then the medieval period under baptised
Christian rulers. Contrary to some authorities, serfs were not
slaves as they were free to marry and their children could not be
taken from them, and it was in Christian Europe alone that the
institution of slavery gradually became odious. Stark declares
emphatically: "Slavery ended in medieval Europe [only] because the
church extended its sacraments to all slaves and then managed to
impose a ban on the enslavement of Christians (and of Jews)."
The later enslavement of non-Europeans by Christian Europe was, of
course, especially odious, but here again the main early impetus for
an end to the practice globally came from Christianity alone. Islam
could not be in the vanguard of liberty for the simple reason that
Muhammad, totally unlike Jesus of Nazareth, was also a slave owner.
(And Voltaire, high priest of the Enlightenment, invested the
unprecedented profits from his writings in the French slave trade
based at Nantes.)
Turning to economic and technological advance, Stark summarises a
lot of recent research to explode the myth of the Middle Ages as a
period of even relative stagnation. First, it was during this period
after the fall of Rome that Europe advanced ahead of the rest of the
world in the use of water power. By the thirteenth century paper was
being manufactured using overshot water wheels - something that had
happened nowhere else until then. Similar innovation occurred in
wind power, the shoeing and harnessing of horses, fish-farming, crop
rotation, shipbuilding, and, more lamentably, the use of gunpowder
in warfare.
In Education the medieval church universities were an advance on
anything existing in the ancient world because, far from simply
recycling ancient lore, they gained fame by innovation. Moreover
they educated far more students, who were taught not simply to study
ancient sources but to critique and improve on them. Without them
there could not have been a Copernicus, who drew on medieval
authorities also for his heliocentric theory. Kepler's discernment
of the elliptical orbits of the planets rested upon centuries of
planetary observation. Newton's reference to the 'giants' upon whose
shoulders he had stood should no longer be thought to exclude the
products of medieval Catholic universities. It was in the late
Christian Middle Ages that the systematic linkage of theory and
research, the foundation for true science, first occurred.
Turning then to capitalism Stark explodes the notion that Europe had
to wait for the 'Protestant ethic' to produce the essential
characteristic of capitalism - the systematic reinvestment of
profits to produce further income. It was Augustine who first taught
that the price of an article could legitimately relate to the desire
of a potential buyer, and that therefore wickedness was not inherent
in commerce. Later theologians further undermined, and eventually
overthrew, the ban on usury - the lending of money at interest. It
was large medieval monastic institutions that became the first
stable capitalist institutions in history - reinvesting in, for
example, overshot water power for a variety of enterprises.
Subsequently, the Mediterranean Catholic republics of Venice and
Genoa developed a more advanced capitalism than had existed anywhere
in the world until then.
Essential to this historical process was the Christian concept of
moral equality - the true source of the notion of inalienable human
rights. It was this, not classical philosophy, that first drew
limits to the legitimate power of governments. Whereas China had
developed a thriving iron industry at one point in its history, this
was undermined by a government and ruling class that had the power
to strangle it. Medieval capitalist institutions in Europe usually
escaped such a fate because Christian theology protected them - and
for no other reason.
'The Rights of Man', that cornerstone of modern secular ideology,
did not therefore spring new born from John Locke and the
Enlightenment, or from ancient Greece, but from a long tradition of
Christian theological emphasis upon the moral equality of all
humans, beginning with the the Sermon on the Mount.
On a negative note, although Stark takes pains to insist that he
uses the word 'capitalism' to describe an economic rather than a
political and social system, his entirely positive 'take' on
capitalism, without reference to current issues of global injustice
and the environmental crisis, is a little disconcerting. His facile
dismissal of liberation theology underestimates its continuing
positive impact in societies where a corrupt capitalism is still
wreaking havoc.
However, there are so many other good things in this reasonably
priced book that it can heartily be recommended to all who have
either a basic historical education, or an interest in acquiring
one. Every teacher of history in a Catholic institution should
acquire a copy. It is an important milestone in the overthrow of
that mistaken 'grand narrative' of western history that underpins
the rhetoric of a rampant and often daftly anti-Catholic secularism.
Indeed 'The Victory of Reason' suggests an entirely new historical
apologetics founded not upon defending Christendom, or a Christendom
model of church, but upon discerning the thread of progressive and
optimistic faith in reason that links the best of modernity with the
early and medieval church. Voltaire's 18th century historical schema
was a self-regarding story of ancient classical enlightenment
obscured by blind Biblical and Catholic faith, but then recovered by
his own heroic movement - the modern Enlightenment. It was based
upon an entirely ignorant perception of the Middle Ages, but has
cast a fog of intellectual odium over the Judeo-Christian tradition
for more than two-and-a-half centuries. That fog is, thankfully,
beginning to lift - allowing us to see clearly, and to counter, the
absurd hubris of an anti-Catholic secularism that is still too often
wrapped in the darkest Voltairean self-delusion.
So in due time will, doubtless, the pall that now hovers over the
history of the Catholic church in modern Ireland. Catholicism has
been, for over fifteen centuries, the essential source of the
cultural vitality and distinct identity of most Irish people. Now
that we know that Catholic theology is the most important source of
all that is best in modernity, we can surely be joyfully modern and
Catholic as well. The great tradition of Catholic theologians and
philosophers who had more faith in reason than most contemporary
philosophers is a far more secure and hopeful foundation than that
self-declared and morbid cul-de-sac, postmodernism.
"The Victory of Reason", by Rodney Stark, Random House, New
York, 2005.
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