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I Am … Therefore I Think
The Universal Nature of the Human Being: A Program for Ending Discrimination
BY Donald DeMarco
June 14-20, 2009 Issue |
Posted 6/5/09 at 9:51 AM
John Paul II, in Crossing the Threshold of Hope, refers to “the great anthropocentric shift in philosophy,” in which Descartes redefines the human being in
terms of consciousness. Referring to St. Thomas Aquinas, John Paul reiterates
that “it is not thought
which determines existence, but existence, ‘esse,’ which
determines thought!” In other
words, it is man who thinks, not thinking that is man.
The
Cartesian shift away from man’s fundamental being to
an accident (consciousness) took place within philosophy. But this shift,
throughout history, has been commonly employed on a practical level. In our own
time, Peter Singer, for example, in his book Practical Ethics, rejects ontology and replaces it with the notion of quality of life. Thus, he divides humanity into those who do or who do not have what
he calls a “preferred state.”
The
practice of dividing the human race according to some accidental feature and
then discriminating against those who occupy the “wrong” side of the spectrum
is particularly evident with regard to abortion.
There
are those who are “unwanted,” an accidental feature by which they are arbitrarily
labeled as such, and those who are “wanted.”
People
who are “pro-choice” unwittingly accept this anthropocentric shift as if it
were an indication of enlightenment, not suspecting that it is a form of
discrimination. Contemporary Americans, however, would do well to familiarize
themselves with their own history of discrimination based on this
anthropocentric shift. In this regard, the history of social Darwinism in
America is most instructive, as well as disturbing.
In
The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin writes: “The advancement
of the welfare of mankind is a most intricate problem: All ought to refrain
from marriage who cannot avoid abject poverty for their children; for poverty
is not only a great evil, but tends to its own increase by leading to
recklessness in marriage.”
Darwin
is not concerned with universal human rights based on a common human nature
(nor in helping people to rise from poverty), but in dividing the human race
into the wealthy and the poor, or the more fit and the less fit, or the strong
and the weak. Such a division, of course, is the form that fuels
discrimination. Social Darwinism in America has been amply documented. Richard
Hofstadter’s Social
Darwinism in American Thought
(1992) and Edwin Black’s War
Against the Weak: Eugenics and America’s Campaign to Create a Master Race (2007) are well researched and highly
recommended.
Madison
Grant, in The
Passing of the Great Race
(1916), predicted “a rigid system of selection through the elimination of those
who are weak or unfit — in other words, social failures — would solve the
problem in a century.” Harvard-educated Lothrop Stoddard wrote an influential
work bearing the now rather disquieting title of The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy (2003). He urged widespread segregation and immigration
restrictions to combat the “unfit” races, which he compared to infectious
bacteria.
Perhaps
the most vigorous social Darwinist in America was a Yale University professor
by the name of William Graham Sumner. Hofstadter contends that Sumner
“converted his strategic post in New Haven into a kind of social-Darwinist pulpit.”
The following paragraph that flowed from his pen could hardly represent his
case more clearly:
“Let
it be understood that we cannot go outside of this alternative: liberty,
inequality, survival of the fittest; not liberty, equality, survival of the
unfittest. The former carries society forward and favors all its best members;
the latter carries society downwards and favors all its worst members.”
Social
Darwinism in America may have reached its apogee in 1927 in the notorious Buck v. Bell
Supreme Court decision. This court, by an 8-1 count, ruled in favour of
forcible sterilization. Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes’ words will reverberate
forever:
“It
is better for all the world, if instead of waiting to execute degenerate
offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can
prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind. The
principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is broad enough to cover cutting
the Fallopian tubes.
“Three
generations of imbeciles are enough.”
Neither
IQ nor economic factors go into determining the humanity of the human being.
Yet, we find Justice Blackmun making the following statement in the 1977 Beal v. Doe
Supreme Court case:
“But
the cost of a nontherapeutic abortion is far less than the cost of maternity
care and delivery and holds no comparison whatsoever with the welfare costs
that will burden the state for the new indigents and their support in the long
years ahead.”
By
this strictly economic calculus, one could argue in favor of aborting every
pregnant woman. In this case, ironically, the economically costly is
commensurate with all human beings.
A
contemporary philosopher by the name of Daniel Dennett appraises Darwin’s view
as the “universal acid” that has eroded the traditional Judeo-Christian concept
of the dignity of the human person. The peculiar feature of a “universal acid”
is that it is so strong that there is no matter to be found anywhere that can
contain it. In a certain sense, Dennett is right; by abandoning the ontological
reality of the human being, there is no philosophy or ideology that can protect
him from the corrosive acid of discrimination.
Catholic
teaching concerning the dignity of the human person, as grounded in his being,
provides a firm basis for equality and justice.
The
basis of discrimination against human beings is using an accident
rather than the ontological reality of a being to
define the human. This procedure inevitably divides the human being into two
groups, of which one is preferred over the other.
Catholic
education concerning the universal nature of the human being recognizes the
primary significance of the ontological.
What
this means, simply, is that it is the being of the human that defines him and is the
foundation of his rights. In this sense, all human beings are equal insofar as
they share the same specific being. Only by this ontological understanding of the
common nature of all human beings is it possible to render justice to all human
beings.
The
notion that “all men are created equal” is based on a common ontology, the
understanding that all human beings have the same nature. The notion that all
human beings are created in the image of God also affirms this common ontology
of all human beings. People are equal in their humanity, though each individual
is unique in his personal identity.
At
the same time, the ontological nature of the human being, which is a
metaphysical concept alluding to man’s concrete and fundamental reality, is not
something that the senses can perceive. The senses, in fact, perceive the accidents of
the human being, such as the binary tandems of rich/poor, powerful/weak,
healthy/unhealthy, white/black, born/unborn, and so on.
Without
this ontological (and hence, eminently realistic) starting point, it becomes
inevitable, as history has clearly shown, that the human being will be defined
by one or another of his accidents. The predictable result of this definition by
accident is inequality and discrimination.
This
also explains the urgency John Paul attached to what he referred to as
“anthropological realism”: We do not know how we should live until we know who
we are. This same anthropological realism is crucial if we are ever to realize
the discrimination that is currently leveled against the unborn.
Catholic
education embraces both philosophy and theology. The Church’s philosophy is a
search for truth, including the truth of man. This truth of man in its
ontological character is a universal. A universal, naturally, is a generality,
and, as such, though an object of the intellect, is not an object of love.
The
Church’s theology, however, because it is a theology of Christian love, urges
people to direct their love toward individual human beings. In this way,
philosophy and theology work hand in hand, one supplying the truth, the other,
the moral imperative. In this way, also, Catholic education honors both the
universal as well as the individual dimensions of the human being.
Cardinal
Godfried Danneels, in a collection of essays by various authors under the title
Handing on the Faith in an Age
of Disbelief, expresses great
sympathy for the many people in the world today who are bereft of both truth
and love. In this deprived state, he says, they experience both “darkness” and
“cold.”
Many
of them seek love, but they look for it apart from truth. “But what good is it
to be warm,” the archbishop of Malines-Brussels, Belgium, asks, “if you are in
the dark?
“Love
is not enough; we need also, and first of all, the truth, without which the
fire is but a straw fire.”
The
twin goals of authentic Catholic education are beautifully encapsulated in
Psalm 85:11: “Kindness and truth shall embrace.” The truth can make us free,
while love can make us whole.
Donald DeMarco is a professor emeritus at
St. Jerome’s University and an adjunct professor at Holy Apostles College and Seminary
and Mater
Ecclesiae College.
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