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Fundamentalist and theocratic Islam is commonly recognized as opposed to secularism and to the separation of political life from religion. Modern liberal democracies, on the other hand, are founded upon this separation. For a long time, the illusion prevailed that secularism was being assailed only from without the western world, and that the attacks on it, of which terrorism was but the extreme form, were in fact directed to western civilization as a whole. But Islam is no longer alone in defying the notion that politics should remain secular.
Pope Ratzinger has turned on its head the historical basis of secularism formulated by Grotius, according to which, within the political sphere, one should behave “etsi Deus non daretur”: Benedetto XVI believes that for a democracy to protect itself against nihilism, each citizen, however agnostic, sceptical, or atheist, must behave “sicuti Deus daretur”, and must thus ensure that the law should adhere to the precepts of “natural morality”, precepts that coincide with those given by the Roman Catholic Church.
In the United States, moreover, many reformed congregations - often recently established, but nonetheless growing rapidly and aggressively - advance the same principle as that put forward by the Pope: that what they consider to be a sin should be a legally punishable crime. The President of the United States himself declares that guidance for his political decisions comes to him through religious enlightenment, directly from Jesus.
One may wonder whether this subversion of the secular tradition, this repudiation of the “etsi Deus non daretur”, is not due to the very ambiguity and confusion with which the principle of secularism has been asserted, both in political and in cultural terms.
In fact, France and Holland are the only two countries that have followed this principle coherently and rigorously. And even in those countries, its foundations are now being questioned.
In the United States - that is, in the world’s most powerful democracy - to hold on to secularism has never meant to keep God out of the public sphere or of political discourse. On the contrary. Politicians of all stripes have always claimed a relation to God. But there prevailed the illusory belief that the very multiplicity of competing and individualistic churches was a bulwark against confessional dogmatism, even as it fed a diffuse and pervasive religiosity that was also present in political argument.
And yet, secularism consists in the strict neutrality of the State with regard to each citizen (regardless of creed - or of the absence of it), in all aspects of public life. How is it possible to maintain such a neutrality if political decisions include references to God? Such an inclusion, in fact, not only leads to the usual problems (and consequent antinomies): which God? who is the authorized interpreter? how can one resolve the conflict between various and incompatible notions of “God’s will”? Even if these problems were resolvable, there would remain the issue of discrimination against those who do not believe in God and who become second-class citizens.
And so it is perhaps not surprising that, once one accepts the presence of the God-argument within the public sphere, the encroachment of religious confessions upon worldly matters is no longer self-limited; instead there is a new wave of confessional moralisms and dogmatisms that profess to be the unbreakable rule erga omnes (with citizens as believers or non-believers), that is, State law.
If one gives up the «etsi Deus non daretur», if the intrusion of “God’s will” in public argument becomes legitimate, then the notion that a God is against abortion can become an argument too, just as does the notion that a God is for polygamy, that a God demands genital mutilation of girls, or that a God forbids blood transfusions… Or indeed that a God imposes the stoning of female adulterers. By giving up the «etsi Deus non daretur» in the public sphere, the only alternative is a “sharia”, whether Christian or Islamist or Jewish or of any other religion. More or less soft, but, in principle, legitimate.
And so, the “French” coherence in forbidding the veil and religious symbols in schools and public spaces, rather than a form of secular extremism (or secular fundamentalism, as some have called it), may well be a justifiable call not to set one’s religious identity against citizens’ collective identity.
But objections against the strict, uncompromising notion of secularism do not only come from the clerical milieu and from the religious right. They are also coming from those who uphold a self-declaredly progressist multiculturalism. Yet how “progressist” is a multiculturalism invoked, in the name of one’s “belonging” to a tradition, to justify practices and beliefs detrimental to the shared dignity of individuals? Paraphrasing Marx, one might reiterate that “a culture can be free even where those who belong to it are not”. In the name of a culture’s freedom, one can negate the rights and freedom of the invididuals who “belong” to that culture. How can one call free a child educated in a madrassa, or in a fundamentalist “ghetto” in Jerusalem, or in self-referential Christian homeschooling?
Multiculturalism, in short, privileges the group’s hierarchy and conformity to its rules, rather than individual dissent. The notion of belonging it advances is the opposite of autonomy and critical outlook.
Moreover, condemnations by the Prophet’s faithful of cultural or journalistic endeavours con-sidered “offensive”, such as the film of Theo van Gogh or the cartoons in Denmark (and in the past, the christian Church, catholic and otherwise, behaved in a similar way when it branded works as “blasphemous”), gave rise to an understanding response on the part of many, including on the “left”, rather than to the assertion that all attempts to censorship should be radically condemned.
In the purely cultural sphere too the secular outlook is increasingly weak, defensive and even submissive. The assertion of the cognitive superiority of atheism is now viewed as redolent of nineteenth-century positivism. It almost seems as if it is now the atheist who has to prove his or her innocence before the accusation of dogmatism! Of course rationality cannot be reduced to the claims advanced by the experimental sciences. But whatever contradicts these claims or the propositions that one can logically extrapolate from them, cannot be taken to partake of rationality. Nor can be considered rational any hypothesis that fails before “Ockham’s razor”, in other words one that is a superfluous account of phenomena that have already been explained. Everyone is free to believe anything beyond and even against that which can be asserted rationally (science + logic), but not to claim that this faith is also reason.
But the constantly renewed attempt, by people who partake of the most diverse philosophical trends, to “demonstrate” that values are inscribed in scientific facts or in “nature” (this in the face of modern philosophy’s greatest achievement, “Hume’s Law”, for which an “ought” can never be derived from an “is”), opens the road to an infinite number of substitutes to traditional religions. It does not encourage anti-metaphysical, secular thought, or lead to the recognition that, as the lords of norms (that do not exist in nature), we are absolutely responsible for the values we choose.
Is it not then necessary (even if not sufficient: the material problems of citizens remain) for a coherent and uncompromising secularism to effect a political and cultural counter-attack in response to the current crisis of our democracies? |
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Some conclusions by the moderators
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Gloria Origgi, Nov 20, 2007 13:17 UT
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Last remarks and further questions 
Paolo Flores D'Arcais
Nov 20, 2007 13:12 UT
Euthanasia is understood to mean assisting in the act of suicide terminally ill patient who demands explicitly, repeatedly, clearly and constantly to die. Assistance can consist in giving medications the patient can take on his or her own, or in administering substances to a patient unable to do so alone. In any case, the patient is the one to decide, want, and often implores. During the polemical discussions around euthanasia, however, high representatives of the Catholic Church keep on invoking the specter of Nazism. But Nazi “euthanasia” was homicide, pure and simple, of people (handicapped and others) who had no desire whatsoever to die. Isn’t there something profoundly indecent about the Catholics’ use to polemical ends of the confusion around the word “euthanasia”?
Today, thanks in part to the development of medical technologies, questions of bioethics are of increasing importance in public debates. The Catholic Church has taken an entirely intransigent position with regard to euthanasia (or “soft death”). Yet many of those who declare themselves in favor of euthanasia do so either in the light of the “liberal” principle of protecting the freedom of choice and rights of the individual, either out of “human pity”, all but alien to Christian tradition. Isn’t it a gesture of pity to be available to put an end to the atrocious and unbearable suffering of another person? Isn’t it out of pity that a soldier accepts to shoot his companion in a state of immeasurable pain from an incurable wound?
Has the position of the Catholic Church always been thus? Are there any testimonies of the great Church Fathers or of figures venerated as saints today who have adopted an entirely opposite position or even who were themselves involved in cases of “euthanasia”?
The Catholic Church bases its opposition to euthanasia on the claim that life is a gift of God, of which cannot dispose of freely. Isn’t this a clear contradiction? How can one talk of “gift” if its beneficiary is entirely constrained by the “will” of the donor?
At times it seems as if this defense “at all costs” of physical survival depends on an entirely clinical and materialistic conception of “life”, devoid of relational and spiritual dimensions. Cardinal Martini himself has declared: “It is important to recognize that the continuation of physical human life is not itself a primary and absolute principle. Above it stands that of human dignity, which in the view of Christian and other religions, involves access to the eternal life that God promises mankind.” (“Dialogo sulla vita” Card. Martini - Ignazio Marino, l’Espresso 21/4/2007). Isn’t it radically "antichristian” to defend life "to the end”, regardless of circumstance?
The Gospels tell of the miracles performed by Jesus, for the most part involving healing, the lifting of physical suffering and liberation from the body’s pains. Today’s Church seems instead to venerate pain: as if it were the best means of knowing the divine, of approaching transcendence. It speaks of the physical torture a terminal patient undergoes almost as a “purification”, of the patient’s gift to God. Here too: isn’t this radically opposed to the Gospels?
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0 replies to Last remarks and further questions:
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Quelques remarques et observations en vrac
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Marcel Gauchet, Nov 13, 2007 15:52 UT
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The rights of children
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Dan Sperber, Nov 6, 2007 17:51 UT
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What do believers believe in?
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Fernando Savater, Nov 3, 2007 20:39 UT
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Really a different issue?
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Roberta Monticelli, Oct 31, 2007 23:55 UT
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Comments on the debate
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Paolo Flores D'Arcais, Oct 31, 2007 15:05 UT
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Is religious freedom special?
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Dan Sperber, Oct 24, 2007 23:25 UT
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The Party of Reason
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Thomas Nagel, Oct 21, 2007 10:10 UT
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On secularism
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Fernando Savater, Oct 20, 2007 22:34 UT
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God-talk and God-argument
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Avishai Margalit, Oct 20, 2007 2:21 UT
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What religion?
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Roberta Monticelli, Oct 19, 2007 9:20 UT
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Distinguer les questions
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Marcel Gauchet, Oct 17, 2007 16:32 UT
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Secularism and the Power of Conversation
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Sam Harris, Oct 17, 2007 9:20 UT
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But aren't we philosophers after all? Some new questions
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Roberta Monticelli, Oct 14, 2007 10:29 UT
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A mandatory curriculum on religious education
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Daniel Dennett, Oct 13, 2007 10:25 UT
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matters of fact
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Dan Sperber, Oct 12, 2007 18:38 UT
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Religious Nonalignment
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Thomas Nagel, Oct 11, 2007 5:17 UT
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