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September 18, 2005
All definitions are equally valueless!
(But some definitions are more valueless than others . . . ) Islam does not teach killing people. Islam does not teach crime. Islam does not teach violence or terrorism. That is not Islam....So opines Philadelphia's Police Commissioner Sylvester Johnson, himself a Muslim. (Not only that, he's said to be the only Muslim police chief in the United States.) Well, at least he says he's a Muslim. And he attends a mosque. That apparently is not enough -- not for one Philadelphia police officer, nor for Muslim "leaders" in the area: "He's someone who says he's a Muslim. There's a difference between a Muslim and a practicing Muslim," said police officer Kenneth Wallace, a Muslim.To some, I guess, it's heresy to require officers to conform to police appearance standards or "not favor Muslims." What most bothers me about this flap is the idea that Johnson is not a Muslim. If he's not a Muslim, then what is he? We've reached a point where we cannot communicate, because so many words mean so many different things to so many different people that conversations are impossible except between those who either agree with each other, or are at least openminded enough to discuss terminology. I mean, what can be said to someone who thinks that a Muslim is not a Muslim because he disagrees on beard length? How could I or anyone else hope to have an intelligent discussion with such a person? For that matter, no matter how logical I try to be, how am I to evaluate these conflicting claims? I am not a Muslim, but I'll try. There are two men, both claiming to be Muslims. Let's call them Muslim A, and Muslim B. Muslim A claims that both he and Muslim B are Muslims, but Muslim B claims that he is a Muslim but Muslim A is not. Obviously, they do not define the word the same way, which makes it doubly difficult for me, an outsider, to make any determination. Much as I'd like to believe that human beings should be free to select their own religion, how I am to weigh the fact that often these religions are defined by others? But who is in charge? There is no Caliphate or Pope, and no official registry of who belongs to the religion called Islam. If someone claims to be a Catholic, that status is at least possible to determine by certain objective criteria (baptism, confirmation, communion). Murkier, though, would be the claim of being, simply, a "Christian." While I'd prefer to let people call themselves whatever they want and take their religious descriptions of themselves at face value, there's a growing chorus of people who will not. Frankly, I cannot imagine why I would dispute anyone's claim to be a Christian, Muslim, Jew, Buddhist, Pagan, Hindu or whatever. It seems that for the most part, the people who would dispute such things belong to certain cults or sects which desire to take over the larger body to which their cult or sect belongs. In particular, fundamentalists would often decry non-fundamentalists as not "real." There's also the troublesome question of whether someone must "practice" a religion in order to be allowed to avail himself of the label he chooses to bestow on himself. What is "practice" and how often must it occur? It would seem to vary according to the religion. Christians believe in the teachings of Jesus, and many varieties of Christianity require at least baptism, while in general, Judaism requires only birth to a Jewish mother regardless of any religious practice (except in cases of conversion, of course). Islam requires at least the claim to be a follower of Muhammad and adherence to five basic beliefs: * Belief that there is only one god, namely Allah.(I have no reason to doubt that Commissioner Johnson believes the above.) There's of course the Sunni/Shia split, which affects the practices, and there are cultural aspects which vary from country to country. As shown above, some Muslims do not consider those who don't practice their version of Islam to be Muslims at all, but in logic I don't see how sectarianism can be allowed to dictate terms, because the specific shouldn't define the general. A similar phenomenon can be found in politics. One can become a Republican or a Democrat by joining either party, but both parties contain partisan ideologues who will argue that those who disagree with their views are not "real" Republicans or Democrats. It's tougher where it comes to generalized political terms like "liberal" and "conservative" because the meanings change over time, and there aren't any Papal of Caliphate-style guardians over meaning. When I was a kid, Barry Goldwater was a conservative, and John F. Kennedy was a liberal. Today Goldwater would be a libertarian, and the anti-Communist, tax-lowering Kennedy would be a conservative. Then there's liberalism of the classical variety. Sigh. Don't even get me started on "values." I'd rather return to the problem at hand. For the sake of my sanity, and for ease of argument, I must treat Police Commissioner Johnson's claim to be a Muslim as true. I may wish there were more Muslims as moderate as he apparently is, but that does not mean that the louder, less moderate Muslims should have the right to define his Muslim status out of existence. I'm taking Johnson at his word. Besides, if we assume that others have the right to define or redefine him -- each with their own, differing definitions, such definitions eventually render themselves as imaginary as the definition in each definer's imagination. (Which means there's no duty to take any of them more seriously than any of the others.)
Unfortunately, there don't seem to be answers -- at least not in the absolute sense -- on which all can agree. (And the problem is, I find relativism to be emotionally unsatisfying! Damn! Where does that leave me?) MORE: Jeff Goldstein argues that tyrannical control over definitions is being achieved by those who have "proprietary control over their culture’s representation": —a maneuver that allows them to argue that outside critiques of said culture are somehow inauthentic. This idea, which allows for a kind of critical immunization and for linguistic provincialism, is the lasting legacy of politico-linguistic thinkers like Edward Said.Communication is meaningless enough as it is, but refusing to allow intent to govern an utterance is nonsensical. So is ceding control of language based on the deconstructionist idea that language has no meaning -- only to allow others to assume control of language! As to the idea that "outside critiques" are "inauthentic," this obviously means that only Nazis should be allowed to criticize Nazis. If all nonsense is equal, then I'll just stick with my own. MORE: The problem Jeff identifies is typified by the fallout over Jesse Jackson's inane remark about Katrina flood victims: "It is racist to call American citizens refugees."Almost immediately, the MSM began referring to the refugees as "evacuees," even though the term refugee has nothing whatsoever to do with race. Why give Jesse Jackson power over the meaning of words, when he has demonstrated how clueless he is? posted by Eric on 09.18.05 at 11:34 AM
Comments
I must also add that I believe that the Second Vatican Council was a very grave departure from the historic Catholic faith. The Catholic Church must go back to the Latin Mass -- ad orientem, not ad populem!* -- and fish on Friday. I myself always make a practice of eating fish on Friday. *i.e., facing the altar, not the congregation, thus upholding the transcendence of the Divine. Steven Malcolm Anderson the Lesbian-worshipping man's-man-admiring myth-based egoist · September 18, 2005 04:25 PM For some reason, this calls to mind an image of Ayn Rand pulling out her hair in frustration while screaming "A is A". Clint · September 20, 2005 03:12 AM |
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Hmmm.... Extremely interesting questions. I must note at the outset that the fact that these Muslims bear names like Sylvester Johnson and Kenneth Wallace proves once again that Islam is not a "race" but a religion or a religio-political ideology. I'll leave it to Muslims to define who is a Muslim. I'm certainly not one, obviously.
Anyway!....
Extremely interesting questions. I must confess that, as I become more and ever more conservative and/or reactionary, I find myself increasingly siding with certain orthodoxies, orthodoxies of the Right, not what Orwell called the "smelly little orthodoxies" of the Left (Political Correctness).
The Republican Party is historically the party of Northern abolitionist capitalists who believed in strong but limited government to protect individual rights, balanced budgets, and the gold standard.
But ever since McGovern and then Carter turned the Democratic Party into a party of appeasement, many old New Deal Democrats and also many Southern Democrats moved into the Republican Party and began to take it over and make it over in their image, a party of "social conservatism" (moral collectivism) and fiscal liberalism, unlimited deficit spending. President Bush is one of these Democrats-in-Republican's-clothing. I say they should go back to their old Democratic Party, take it back, and return the GOP to real Republicans of the old McKinley-Coolidge-Goldwater stamp.
Judicially, I increasingly side with a strict and/or originalist construction of the Constitution as opposed to a so-called "living Constitution" that can be stretched, cut, and twisted to fit any contemporary agenda.
I increasingly side with the Peikovian Objectivists like Don Watkins, Diana Mertz Hsieh, and the Ayn Rand Institute against David Kelley and his what I call "Tepid Objections Center" and the Peikoff-bashing crowd at SOLO (which Don Watkins calls "SO-LOW" -- ha! ha!). I admire the style of Reginald Firehammer. I find Nathaniel Branden increasingly questionable. James Valliant has raised excellent questions about both of the Brandens in his The Passion of Ayn Rand's Critics. I agree very strongly now with Peter Schwartz's scathing critique of libertarianism.
I pray that Pope Benedict XVI continues to uphold such absolutely essential dogmas of the historic Catholic faith as Transubstantiation, the Holy Trinity, the Incarnation and the Virgin Birth of the Christ, the Immaculate Conception of His Holy Virgin Mother, the Passion, Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension of the Christ, the Assumption and the Coronation of His Holy Virgin Mother as the Queen of Heaven and the Christ's Co-Redemptrix. Anyone who denies or questions any of these holy dogmas -- let him be anathema!
On the Protestant side, I increasingly side with admire fundamental and evangelical Christians who adhere to a literal, strict, originalist construction of the Bible and the Pauline soteriology, as opposed to those who water down the Bible to mean nothing at all more than a vapid "Socialist Gospel". I am opposed to the Broad Church within the Angican Church. I prefer the quasi-Catholic High Church. I prefer even the Calvinistic Low Church. I admire the style of Jack T. Chick even while I oppose much of what he advocates. A most worthy adversary.
As to "Pagans" (Polytheists) today, I know not who or where they are. The only ones I see today who qualify for that title are Asatruars like Stephen A. McNallen and also Alain de Benoist and his Nouvelle Droite (New Right) in Europe. "New Age" dabblers are obviously not Pagans in any sense of the term. In the original etymological sense, "Pagan" or "Heathen" means rustic, country-dweller, the contemporary equivalent of which would obviously be today's "rednecks" or "Red Staters", traditional old-fashioned God-Family-Country folk, nearly all of whom are fundamental Protestants or orthodox Catholics, the least likely to call themselves "Pagans" today. If we are to restore real Polytheist Paganism, we must have nothing to do with any "New Age" nonsense, for the ancient Polytheism is, by definition, precisely the opposite of that in every sense, it is instead quintessentially the Old Time Religion, Old Time Power.