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Monday, May 09, 2022

War rhetoric

Peace Palais in The Hague, Netherlands, the seat of one of the
international courts of justice in this town that tries to combat
 war and its excrescences. 

Gradually the words of the politicians of the parties involved in the Russia-Ukraine War become harder. For instance, some time ago the American president Biden called the Russian president Putin a killer and recently he called him a war criminal. Now it is so that pres. Biden is a free citizen and like any citizen of the USA he is free to express his opinion. However, pres. Biden is not just a citizen of his country, but he is a political leader who has responsibilities towards his country, especially bringing welfare and peace there. Is it therefore right to call his political opponent a war criminal, even though and even if there are good reason to think so?
Let me first say something about the term “war criminal”. “War criminal”, or rather “war crime”, is a legal term. I’ll not go into detail here, but what a war crime is, has been determined by international treaties and law, like the Geneva Conventions. In short, it is a superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering inflicted upon an enemy like wilful killing, extensive destruction and appropriation of property not justified by military necessity, deliberately targeting civilians, deliberately killing innocent civilians, etc. If there is a suspicion that a war crime has been committed, the International Criminal Court in The Hague can start an investigation and prosecute the suspected offender. Recently, the Court has started such an investigation in Ukraine in order to find out whether war crimes have been committed there (by both sides). So, at the moment the case is, what we call, sub judice. However, judicially it still has to be proven that war crimes have been committed in Ukraine and who the offenders are. When a case is sub judice, it is common practice that politicians refrain from making statements about it in order not to influence the investigation and the verdict. Therefore, politicians like pres. Biden should not say whether pres. Putin is a war criminal or isn’t.
So far the juridical side. However, there are also practical reasons not to call pres. Putin a war criminal. Some people may not think so, but we need politicians for many reasons. Restricting myself to the present Russia-Ukraine War, it is their task to bring this war to a decent end. As president Zelensky of Ukraine stresses again and again, this war can end only with negotiations. But who wants to negotiate with a war criminal? Can you make it to negotiate with a war criminal? Of course not. You talk only with a war criminal, if it is the easiest way to get the person in prison. In other words, calling Putin a war criminal makes negotiations to end this war impossible. That’s why you shouldn’t do so, even if you think he is. That’s why, for example, neither pres. Zelensky nor pres. Macron of France does so.
In addition, calling Putin a war criminal can also backfire on the war and even prolong fighting and atrocities. There is a psychological effect that people accused of bad behaviour may shield themselves off from the accusations instead of getting the insight that they are on the wrong way. They can even become proud of what they are doing. Accusations of bad behaviour can also make that they are just supported in their behaviour by their inner circles (who often also are implicated in the crimes). This can make that war criminals not only continue their crimes but even increase them, because they don’t give a damn about what others say. So, war crime accusations can lead to more war crimes.
Calling Putin a war criminal, and, sadly enough, also the investigations, whether war crimes have been committed by the Russian army, can also backfire in another way. As Joseph Wright and Abel Escribà-Folch write in The Conversation: “Leaders who face the prospect of punishment once a conflict ends have an incentive to prolong the fighting. And a leader who presides over atrocities has a strong incentive to avoid leaving office, even if that means using increasingly brutal methods – and committing more atrocities – to remain in power. When losing power is costly, leaders may be more likely to fight to the death”, like when they risk to be prosecuted for war crimes.
In view of all this, it is important that politicians should moderate their words when involved in a war, certainly in a war like the Russia-Ukraine War that will be difficult to end, as it seems now. Hard words, like calling Putin a war criminal, will make this war last longer and will make it difficult to solve the conflict. But what we see is that the rhetoric becomes harsher and harsher. Now pres. Biden and others say that Russia must be weakened, but an analysis like the one just given will make clear that also this statement probably will make that the war will last longer. Do I want to say then that Western politicians must keep their mouth shut? Of course not. They must say what their limits are, and I think they have said so already clear enough: Western democracy, for short, and the internationally accepted borders, like the borders of Ukraine and the other European countries with Russia. This plus real support to Ukraine is a clear sign. To my mind, by starting this war, Russia has weakened itself already so much that it will need a long time to recover. Why then spend words on it that only will make the problem bigger? Politicians must solve problems, not make them. They must bring problems to a good end and find decent solutions, once problems are there.

Thursday, May 05, 2022

Random quote
The fame of great men ought always to be estimated by the means used to acquire it.
François Duc De La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680)

Monday, May 02, 2022

Killing in war


Malinowski on Trobiand Isles, 1917/1918 (Source)

Hundred years ago the First World War (1914-1918) had just ended. Then it was called the Great War. It was one of the cruellest wars ever in number of victims. How many people died because of this war is not known and figures vary from about 10 till 20 million people dead. Let’s say that 15 million people died because of this war, half of them being soldiers, half of them being civilians. In those days – it was in 1917 or 1918 – the anthropologist Bronislaw Malinowski had a conversation with a cannibal on the Trobriand Islands. This is what Malinowski tell us about it:

“I remember talking to an old cannibal who from missionary and administrator had heard news of the Great War raging then in Europe. What he was most curious to know was how we Europeans managed to eat such enormous quantities of human flesh, as the casualties of a battle seemed to imply. When I told him indignantly that Europeans do not eat their slain foes, he looked at me with real horror and asked me what sort of barbarians we were to kill without any real object.” (Source)

I think that the cannibal was right.


Thursday, April 28, 2022

Random quote
Socratic wisdom can be best reached by sympathetic insight into the lives and viewpoints of others.

Bronislaw Malinowski (1884-1942)

Monday, April 25, 2022

Terror in war

Hiroshima, Japan, Atomic Bomb Dome

Terror is an often-happening phenomenon both in daily life and in war, but what actually is terror? I’ll try to explain this with the help of Peter Sloterdijk’s Luftbeben (especially pp. 7-28) plus my own ideas (without separating which ideas are his and which are mine).
The word “terror” goes back to the France Revolution. It’s used to indicate the period of extreme violence and massacres of the first years of the revolution, between 1789 and 1794. The attempts and murders by anarchists at the end of the 19th century and during the first years of the 20th were a second period of terror in Europe. The best-known case is the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria on 28 June 1914. However, following Sloterdijk, the present idea of terror goes back to an event in the First World War (WW1) on 22 April 1915. On that day, near Ypres in Belgium, the German army launched the first large-scale gas attack in war against the French and Canadian troops on the other side of the front line. The front line broke, but the Germans didn’t succeed to take advantage of this local victory. However, by this attack the Germans introduced a new phenomenon in war: terror; a phenomenon that would not be limited to acts of war against enemy soldiers, but soon it would be directed also against civilians, and soon it would be practiced also by those who were no regular soldiers.
The new gas weapon was not a new weapon as any other new weapon, such as, for instance, the tank, which appeared in 1916 in WW1 on the battlefield. No, it was substantially different, for while till then (see note 1) fighting in war was directed against the person of the enemy soldier, now a weapon had been developed that attacked the environment of the soldier. Killing the enemy became indirect. Moreover, there was another effect: fear. Often, a gas weapon didn’t kill the soldier, but it made him suffer for a long time (some soldiers died many years after the war from a gas attack during WW1); or it could make him blind. Moreover, you often didn’t know whether the gas was there; it could be invisible or you could hardly smell it, if you could. It was quite abstract compared with a gun. You never knew where it was and whether it was there. The fear of the fear became bigger than the fear of the weapon itself, so to speak. Also the French and British forces developed gas weapons during WW1 and also Hitler became a gas victim and he was blind for some time. Was it why he refused to use chemical weapons in World War 2, fearing that he, too, could be hit again, if the enemy would use them, too? Was it why he used gas to murder the Jews?
So the essence of terror is not so much that it kills people but that it kills their environment; literally, as chemical weapons do, or psychologically, in the sense that people become afraid of places where an invisible enemy or weapon might kill you. The weapon is invisible for you, and you cannot notice that it is there. You have no idea from which direction an attack can come and in extreme cases you even don’t know whether there is a weapon or whether there isn’t. Terror is invisible like a ghost: it’s not there and it’s there.
Since 22 April 1915 the weapon of terror has been further developed and increasingly used. It has been used against soldiers but even more against civilians. During WW1, the Germans bombed London and other cities in England and the French and English bombed German towns. The same happened during the Second World War. Also legal military objects like weapon factories were then attacked, but not only. Rather the civilian population was the target of the bombardments. A main idea behind these bombardments was: Surrender, for if you don’t, we’ll destroy your life world. Even if you survive, we’ll make life for you impossible. Also the A-bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki were of that kind. Modern attacks by Islamic extremists on the Twin Towers, on cartoonists and so on are also terrorist attacks in the sense just described. They are not only meant as “punishments” of the persons killed or of the USA or of whoever else, but these attacks contain a message: We are everywhere, but you don’t know where we are or where we are not and we’ll kill you if you don’t stop to draw those cartoons that we don’t like or when you don’t accept our interpretation of the Islam. We’ll make your life impossible if you don’t accept our world view.
And that’s what we see now also in the Russian-Ukrainian war. Often civilian objects like houses, flats and residential quarters are hit by Russian missiles, bombs and grenades. There can be all kinds of reasons for that. The Russian army may think that there are military objects at the site targeted; the missile missed the target; it was a case of collateral damage; it was a mistake; etc. But often in this war hitting a civilian target is intentional. The message sent is: Surrender, for nowhere you are safe. Give in to our demands, for if you don’t, we’ll make your life impossible. When this happens, it’s pure terror. 

Note
(1) Also before WW1, even in Antiquity, sometimes it has been tried to contaminate the environment, for instance by means of dead animal bodies, which was also a kind of terrorism. But the modern idea of terror goes back to WW1.

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Random quote
When a scheme simplifies a situation to better explain it, a slogan gives a certainty that stops the thought.

Boris Cyrulnik (1937-)

Monday, April 18, 2022

Preventing war crimes

Oradour-sur-Glane (F)

At the moment there is much to do about mass killings of civilians by Russian soldiers in the Russian-Ukrainian war. Soldiers who had retreated from the Kyiv region apparently have killed many innocent civilians during the weeks that they occupied the area. In other regions the Russian army has attacked apparently intentionally places where civilians live or where these had gathered in order to leave the war zone. Also this has made that many innocent civilians have been killed. In future, Bucha will be named in one line with Oradour-sur-Glane and Lidice. Also the Ukrainian army is not free from atrocities (see here), albeit it on a much smaller scale and albeit it that in this case the persons intentionally wounded or killed are not civilians but prisoners of war, so soldiers (which doesn’t make it less objectionable). There is great indignation at these facts (supposing that they are facts, and most likely they are), especially at the killing of civilians. Rightly, for intentionally killing innocent civilians and prisoners of war is a war crime. Now it is so that much can be said about why soldiers perform war crimes, but in the end soldiers have mortal weapons at their disposal, which they can or are ordered to use in certain circumstances, and this makes that they must be very aware of when and why to kill. In other words, maybe more than any other person a soldier must be a “moral agent”, so a person who is able “to refrain from behaving inhumanely [and who has] the pro-active power to behave humanly.” (Bandura) Following Aristotle in his Ethica Nicomachea, we can also say that a soldier must be a virtuous person who has the professional skilfulness to apply his virtues. A soldier must know what acting morally is and how to act morally. Which moral virtues then must a soldier possess? That’s what Plato tells us, who distinguishes four so-called cardinal virtues: Prudence (the ability to do the appropriate thing at the right time in the right situation), justice, temperance (moderation or self-restraint), and courage.
Now you may think that this is quite abstract and typically comes from the brain of a philosopher in his ivory tower. Then I can tell you that I found the idea that a soldier is a moral agent and the reference to Aristotle and Plato in this context in a textbook on military ethics written for classes of the Dutch Royal Military Academy. Apparently, also for soldiers nothing is more practical than a good theory. One practical problem is, however, that many soldiers don’t realize that they are moral agents and don’t behave that way, with the result of the possibility of war crimes, when soldiers are in situations that easily make them behave immorally. Even then many do behave morally but too many do not, with terrible consequences as we see now in the Russian-Ukrainian war. Nevertheless, war crimes can be prevented. To my mind, the essence of the methods to prevent war crimes and immoral behaviour is making soldiers aware of the problem during their training plus good leadership. The latter means that commanders at all levels must not be only aware of the problem, but they must also be attentive to the problem before, during and after an action. So education and awareness are the essence of preventing war crimes. But let’s look what the textbook on military ethics says about it, which is in fact an elaboration of what I just said. The book mentions four ways to prevent war crimes:
1) Application of national and international wartime offences acts. However, in war situations it is difficult to arrest war criminals; war crimes done by own soldiers are seen as less important; war criminals are often arrested only long after the act; and war criminals usually don’t think of the possibility of being arrested when committing their crimes. So the preventive effect of wartime criminal acts is often insufficient.
2) Education, training, learning skills and doing practical exercises how to apply what you have learned. So soldiers and commanders must be taught and trained to behave morally in difficult situations.
3) Soldiers must learn that it is something special to wear a uniform; that it’s an honour to wear a uniform; and that the crime of one soldier is seen by others outside the army as a crime done by the whole army.
4) Moral character building. Soldiers must learn which values are important to defend and which values the army stands for and he or she must be aware why s/he wants to defend them. The soldier must learn that there are situations in which “there is something worth living for that is more important than one’s own skin”.
Maybe war crimes can never be completely prevented, but they are not natural phenomena. Human beings must learn to behave morally, and they can. 

Source
A.H.M. van Iersel, Th. A. van Baarda (red.), Militaire ethiek. Morele dilemma’s van militairen in theorie en praktijk. Budel: Damon; chapter 2. Quotes are from this chapter.

Thursday, April 14, 2022

Random quote
Change never comes from the top down. It always comes from the bottom up.

Bernie Sanders (1941-)

Monday, April 11, 2022

How dictatorship works. “We” by Zamyatin


Everybody will have heard of Orwell’s novel 1984, published in 1949. Not many people will know Yevgeny Zamyatin’s We. Zamyatin (1884-1937) was a Russian engineer and author. He wrote We probably in 1920-21. It was an implicit critique of the Soviet Union. Although the novel circulated for many years there in literary and other circles, it was not published in Russian before 1988. Its first publication in English was already in 1924.
We can be seen as the first dystopian novel, so a novel that describes a society we don’t want to live in. It had a big influence on later writers of such novels, like George Orwell and Aldous Huxley. It criticized the developments in the Soviet Union in the early 1920s and actually foresaw what would happen in this state, but I think that, just as Orwell’s 1984, it is still relevant and helps us understand what is currently happening in many countries and especially in dictatorships like Putin’s Russia. In this blog, I’ll not summarize the story of the book but I’ll focus on what is nowadays most interesting in the book, namely the way Zamyatin’s society, named the One State, is organized.
The events in the novel take place a few centuries after now. After a two hundred years lasting war the One State is the winner. It is a city state surrounded by a Green Wall, which closes the town off from the wild world, a savage world with wild animals, birds and a lush nature where man is thought to have become extinct (which is not true, as later becomes clear in the novel). Life in the One State is strictly organised according to mathematical principles. Its inhabitants don’t have names but numbers. Also buildings have numbers. The daily schedules of the inhabitants are exactly determined by the state: How late to wake up and go to work; when to take lunch (in a common restaurant at your workplace); when to make a walk outdoors; etc. Only two hours a day can be used at will. People live in apartments made of glass and so everyone, including your neighbours, can see what you are doing. There are curtains, but you must have permission to close them. You get it when you want to have sex with a partner. Then you ask for a pink ticket to meet your partner at home. You can choose your partner yourself, but the state must accept your choice; or the state pairs two people off (but a person can have more partners, for meeting a partner is only for the sex; babies are brought up by the state).
It can happen, of course, that an individual breaks the law. To keep people under control, there is a secret police force, named Bureau of Guardians. For only minor offences citizens can be arrested by the guardians and be punished. Not too serious violations can be punished with the death penalty. The execution of the death penalty is public and then the perpetrator is completely annihilated and nothing of the body remains. A citizen can also report someone to the Bureau of Guardians for breaking the law. Need I add yet that all information is state-controlled?
The head of the state is the Benefactor. He cares for the people and does what is best for them. He is elected once a year at a public meeting. Of course, there are no opposition candidates. You are just supposed to vote for him, and everybody can see that you do (or could see it if you did not). However, once it happens that many people vote against the re-election of the Benefactor. Of course, this is seen as a kind of rebellion, and “[it]t is clear to everybody that to take into consideration their votes would mean to consider as a part of a magnificent, heroic symphony the accidental cough of a sick person who happened to be in a concert hall.” (report 26 in We). These votes are simply not counted. However, this misbehaviour appears to be part of a real rebellion that is going on. The Benefactor and the Bureau of Guardians have already noticed that for some time that there is unrest in the One State. Happily, medical researchers have discovered that the imagination of human beings can be found in “a miserable little nervous knot in the lower region of the frontal lobe of the brain.” (report 31) Once it has been removed, people will become docile and will do everything the Benefactor asks them to do. Removing the imagination of all citizens of the One State will prevent future unrest, and the operation can be simply done by targeting the knot in the brain with X-rays. Therefore, everybody must be treated. And why wouldn’t you agree with being operated? In fact, imagination is a kind of illness and removing it will make you happy. For with your imagination also your desires are gone: “... Desires are tortures, are they not? It is clear therefore, that happiness is where there are no longer any desires, not a single desire any more. What an error, what an absurd prejudice it was, that formerly we would mark happiness with the sign ‘plus’! No, absolute happiness must be marked ‘minus,’—divine minus!” Happiness is where there is nothing, where there are no own thoughts. Then you behave like a machine and execute the orders of the Benefactor obediently and you feel good by doing so. Then you follow Reason.
With his novel We, Zamyatin has foreseen what would happen in Stalin’s Soviet Union, but didn’t he also foresee what happens in all dictatorships, and especially what happens now in his own country one hundred year later?

Thursday, April 07, 2022

Random quote
Putting myself in the other person's shoes will be difficult if the other person doesn't own a pair of shoes.
Shaun Gallagher

Monday, April 04, 2022

Power and Violence. Hannah Arendt


One of the most interesting books by Hannah Arendt is her On Violence. It’s a little book but it gives you many insights that apply to the political developments in the world and especially now to the Russia-Ukraine War. Most important is part II, where Arendt analyses the concepts of power, strength, force, authority and violence. These concepts are often used as synonyms, so Arendt, but then one ignores their subtle distinctions in meaning, which can make you blind to the realities they correspond to. (p. 45) Once you have become aware of these distinctions, they are very helpful to understand complex political events, like the Russia-Ukraine War. Before I’ll give you Arendt’s interpretation of the concepts just mentioned, first a quote: “The extreme form of power is All against One, the extreme form of violence is One against All.” (p. 42) Keep this in mind, when you go on now.
Power”, so Arendt, “corresponds to the human ability not just to act but to act in concert. Power is never the property of an individual; it belongs to a group and remains in existence only so long as the group keeps together. When we say of somebody that he is ‘in power’ we actually refer to his being empowered by a certain number of people to act in their name. The moment the group, from which the power originated to begin with … disappears, ‘his power’ also vanishes.” Power needs legitimacy in order to be accepted. This can be by legal institutions or, for example, because a majority silently stands behind the person in power.
While power refers to the many, strength is an individual capacity. “[I]t is the property inherent in an object or person and belongs to its character, which may prove itself in relation to other things or persons, but is essentially independent of them. The strength of even the strongest individual can always be overpowered by the many, who often will combine for no other purpose than to ruin strength precisely because of its peculiar independence.” So, a boxer is strong by his training, but he can be overpowered by ten persons who individually are less strong but together they are.
Force is often seen as a synonym for violence but Arendt reserves it for “the force of nature” or “the force of circumstances”, so “to indicate the energy released by physical or social movements.” I think that you can also say that force refers to the intensity of violence.
Authority can be invested in persons and in offices. “Its hallmark is unquestioning recognition by those who are asked to obey; neither coercion nor persuasion is needed.” Authority requires respect and “[t]he greatest enemy of authority, therefore, is contempt, and the surest way to undermine it is laughter.”
Violence, finally,” so Arendt, “is distinguished by its instrumental character. … [I]t is close to strength, since the implements of violence, like all other tools, are designed and used for the purpose of multiplying natural strength.”
Arendt stresses, however, that in practice these distinctions are rarely sharp and that the borders between the concepts can be vague.
Although power and violence are different phenomena, they often go together, so Arendt. Power can be destroyed by violence (massive use of artefacts, like killing and mass murder) but violence can never turn into power. Also this remark by Arendt is interesting: “To substitute violence for power can bring victory, but the price is very high; for it is not only paid by the vanquished, it is also paid by the victor in terms of his own power.” For instance, too much violence can undermine its (alleged) justification and by this the power of the user of violence, because people turn against him. (see for the quotes, etc. pp. 43-54)
Arendt’s concepts and ideas, as just expounded, can be used to understand philosophically what is going in Ukraine, and why Putin’s invasion has failed to a large extent and why Ukraine has held out so far. Here are some hints for your analysis:
- Putin and his generals apparently thought that Zelensky and his government didn’t have power; i.e. that the Ukrainian people or too many of them didn’t stand behind them and that especially the Russian speaking population was on the side of the Russians. However, the Ukrainians just massively supported their government: Zelensky and his government had by far more power than Putin & co. expected.
- The Ukrainian army was stronger than its adversary expected. It had better weapons than expected and got even better weapons during the war; its unity and morality were better; its strategy and tactics were better than expected and also better than the Russian unity, morality, etc.
- The Russian army is prepared to use very forceful arms during this war, leading to the destruction of cities and villages and to many civilian victims.
- The authority of Zelensky and his government was not only recognized by the Ukrainians but also by almost all countries in the world and especially by the western democratic countries. This led to a massive international support for the Ukrainians, resulting in the massive sending of weapons and humanitarian aid.
- Although the Ukrainian government had power (and authority), Putin & co. expected to be able to destroy it by the use of violence, which didn’t come true by such factors as just mentioned and by other factors as well. Russia reacted by using more violence, but just this can undermine its “justification” of this war, and by this Putin’s power, if not the power of the whole regime.
This first tentative analysis alone shows how powerful Arendt’s concepts are. I leave it to you to use them for a thorough analysis of what’s going on, in the southeast of Europe and in politics in general.

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Random quote
All wars have been begun for stupid reasons, but the ruins are not stupid.
Boris Cyrulnik (1937-)

Monday, March 28, 2022

Hannah Arendt on War


Statue on the Mort Homme Hill near Verdun remembering the
 fallenFrench soldiers there in the Battle of Verdun (1916).
"They didn't pass", as the text on the monument says.

“The first essential step on the road to total domination is to kill the juridical person in man. This was done, on the one hand, by putting certain categories of people outside the protection of the law and forcing at the same time, through the instrument of denationalization, the nontotalitarian world into recognition of lawlessness; it was done, on the other hand, by placing the concentration camp outside the normal penal system, and by selecting its inmates outside the juridical procedure in which a definite crime entails a predictable penalty.”
(Hannah Arendt The origins of totalitarianism. San Diego, etc.: Harvest Book, Harcourt, 1976; p.447).                                                                          

Currently we live in turbulent times. An already two years lasting world-wide pandemic still makes victims. It seems gradually to fade away (but maybe it will return; you never know), but now we are startled by a sudden war between Russia and Ukraine. This war is not just a local or regional conflict as they happen to take place, then here and then there (which is already bad enough), but the possibility exists that it will lead to a world war that even can result in a nuclear war, with all its devastating consequences. In these turbulent times, especially because it happened so suddenly (for who had expected that a war would break out in Europe?), people are looking for explanations. Then it is only one step to ask: What does Hannah Arendt tell us? Didn’t she live in a time that in many respects was not too different from what we experience today? For then we saw a dictator who attacked his neighbours looking for Lebensraum (“space to live”), now we see a dictatorship that has invaded a neighbouring country pretending to look for “security” (and both strove or strive for power, of course). And this dictatorship will certainly stretch its arms to other neighbours as well, if it will be successful in the present war (happily, it is not). Although we don’t find in Arendt’s work a real explanation of what it is going on now (for times have changed), nonetheless it can help us understand the present situation and draw our attention to important aspects.
Take, for example, the quotation at the top of this blog. Arendt refers there to the concentration camps in Nazi-Germany and the former Soviet Union. The quotation is not only striking because it seems to describe what has been happening in Russia during the past twenty years, but also because it refers to the same geographical place: Then the Soviet Union, now Russia. It is as if history is repeating itself, ten years after the dissolution of the USSR. In order to make an end of the chaos in Russia during the first years after this event, Putin came to power. Gradually he tightened his grip on the country until he had become the dictator he is today. One way to do so was “killing the juridical person in man” as Arendt calls it: Opponents were put aside by false accusations and sent to prisons or concentration camps, or they were murdered. Boris Nemtsov and Alexei Navalny are clear examples of such victims. But listen, Putin, Arendt warns you: “Nothing is more characteristic of the totalitarian movements … than the startling swiftness with which [their leaders] are forgotten and the startling ease with which they can be replaced.” (ibid. p. 305)
Or take this quotation from Arendt’s The human condition (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1958/1998), which I changed a little for editorial reasons: In modern warfare men go into action and use means of violence in order to achieve certain objectives for their own side and against the enemy. In these instances, speech becomes “mere talk”, simply one more means to the end, whether it serves to deceive the enemy or to dazzle everybody with propaganda; here words reveal nothing, so Arendt, p. 180. Don’t we see this also in the present war? The “truth” about the war in the Ukraine in the “official” media in Russia is a case in point. Here facts have become fake, or “alternative facts”, as some call it. For instance, just a little point, the war is called a “special operation” (which is a striking case of Orwellian newspeak). But we see this fear of what is real in a sense also in the Western countries, for why else has a TV sender like Russia Today been forbidden? Because they tell too much fake news, of course, but isn’t it an essential point in a liberal democracy that fake can be checked against facts by everybody and not only by an authority? In war, there is a fear of truth.
Hannah Arendt did not directly write about war (although she did write about violence), but her works are still relevant when we want to understand how wars come about and what is happening then. Arendt developed her ideas in a time that democratic and dictatorial systems clashed, first Nazi-Germany and the western democracies in the Second World War and then the latter and the Soviet Union in the Cold War. Such clashes still happen, unfortunately.

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Random quote
I cannot tolerate the fact that a man should be judged not for what he is but because of the group to which he happens to belong.
Primo Levi (1919-1987)

Monday, March 21, 2022

Enemy Images


When there is a war there are enemies. When there are enemies there are enemy images. An enemy image is “a negative perception, usually of a person or group of people, used either consciously or unconsciously to justify or promote discrimination, punishment, and/or violence”, as for instance yourdictionary defines the idea. Implicitly the idea involves that there are good guys and bad guys (and nothing in between). There are we (the good guys) and the others (the bad guys). Or, as sociologists and psychologists say, there is an ingroup (“we”) and an outgroup (“they”, the enemy). Moreover, “the enemy may be seen as stupid, selfish, deceitful, aggressive, hostile, or even evil. This perception remains, even if members of the out-group do nothing more selfish, deceitful, aggressive, or evil than do members of one's own group. However, when they are engaged in a serious conflict, people will normally project their own negative traits onto the other side, ignoring their own shortcomings or misdeeds, while emphasizing the same in the other.” (source) In short, the enemy is stereotyped as evil, or even as the devil. Often enemy images are developed by political leaders and by government-controlled media to prepare the people for a new war and to gain support for this war.
My next observations concern only the western view on the current Ukrainian-Russian War, so the EU and USA. As in all wars, also now enemy images are important. However, the present enemy image of Russia is atypical in some way. Usually, war leads to the development of opposite stereotypes in the heads of the people on both sides (we, the good guys vs. they, the bad guys). This stereotyping is promoted by the political leaders and the media they control, as said, and it is part of the war propaganda. However, in the western countries today political leaders and media just try to prevent such stereotyping. It’s not “the others” as a block who are seen as bad; it’s not Russia as a whole, so the Russian people, who are the culprits of this war; but it is their leaders who are, so those who wage this war, and especially the Russian president Putin and his circle. The Russian people are presented as their victims. So, on TV we see images of anti-war demonstrations in Russia and even images of a state security council whose members are intimidated by Putin.
Nevertheless, enemy images are not absent in this conflict. They are not made by government and media, which, as said, try to prevent that a traditional enemy image of Russia is created. As the Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said: Not the Russian people are our enemies, but Putin is. Even Vitali Klitschko, the major of Kyiv, said: I have nothing against Russia. My mother is Russian. We see this distinction between Russian leaders and people also in the sanctions imposed by the western countries on Russia: They are meant to hit the political leadership, so Putin and his circle as well as the country as a whole but not the individual citizens (but, as it happens, in reality it is hardly possible to put this distinction into practice). The western sanctions try to avoid demonizing Russia and the Russian people as a whole. However, in this war, the enemy image is not created “at the top” but “at the bottom”, by individual citizens. For instance, in the Netherlands customers avoid “Russian” shops and restaurants, although in most cases the products and food sold there are from Eastern Europe, including Ukraine, plus Russia. “Russian” is merely a label. Moreover, many of these shops and restaurants are owned by Armenians, Ukrainians, etc., and not by Russians. Another case is that the Russian Orthodox Church in Amsterdam has been plastered by opponents of the war, although the religious leaders of this church have distanced themselves from the war and want to break with the patriarch of the Orthodox Church in Moscow. I have penfriends in Russia (and also in Ukraine) and some complain that penfriends have broken with them merely because they are Russian. To my knowledge, all my Russian penfriends are against this war and some have even expressed it openly on the Internet. Nevertheless, as some told me, they receive threats from foreigners and are cursed by them. Isn’t it stupid to blame individual citizens for what political leaders do, even without asking what the individual opinions of these citizens are? Isn’t it a clear case of making an enemy image? But also some Russian speaking Ukrainians begin to hate their mother tongue and switch to using the Ukrainian language instead (although Russian is spoken in many countries; not only in Russia and Ukraine).
Enemy images make the world neatly arranged and surveyable. They are practical to guide our actions and they make decisions simple. But do enemy images help us? They make the world simple, indeed, but they do it in the wrong way. In the end, the world is complicated and cannot be compartmentalized, and false views will lead to false decisions. Moreover, enemy images often hit the wrong people; in the case of the Ukrainian-Russian War, for instance, those who are against Putin and the war. Then, they make it more difficult that power and leadership in Russia are transferred to the right people (from Putin to Navalny, for example) and they make overtures to the enemy in a conflict more difficult. Enemy images lead only to inflexible stereotypes on both sides. We must just strengthen the ties with the right people who can undermine dictatorship and support democracy, for, as I concluded my last blog, democracy enhances the prospects for peace. 

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Random quote
Never can an authority admit that the intellectually courageous, i.e. those who dare to defy his authority, may be the most valuable type.

Karl Popper (1902-1994)

Monday, March 14, 2022

Democracy and War


Breukelen, Netherlands: Memorial to those who died
for peace, freedom and democracy

Democracies don’t fight with each other. It’s a thesis that politicians in democratic countries often put forward. It’s one reason for them to stimulate the development of democracies in the world. Nevertheless, it is not difficult to find exceptions to this rule, for instance:
- the Sicilian Expedition: Athens vs. Sicily (415-413 BC).
- the War of 1812: USA vs. Britain.
- the US Civil War (1861-1865).
- the Fashoda Crisis: Britain vs. France (1898).
- Ecuador vs. Peru, a long-lasting conflict that several times led to war and violent incidents in the 20th century.
- the Cod Wars, more or less violent incidents between the UK and Iceland about fishing rights.
- the Spanish-American War (1898).
- the Kargil War: India vs. Pakistan (1999).
There have been more such wars and incidents, but it is striking that during the last hundred years military conflicts between democracies have become exceptional. Moreover, if they took place, in most cases there are good reasons to maintain that they are not contrary to the thesis (more about this below). Therefore, it is generally accepted that the thesis is true, especially formulated this way: Mature democracies do not fight each other. This is seen “as close as an empirical law” in political science. (source, p. 79) But then the political conclusion of this thesis simply follows: Do everything you can to promote the development of democracies, if you want peace.
I’ll pass over why democracies don’t wage war against other democracies (see Mintz and Geva, 1993). However, though I think that we absolutely must promote democracy (and not only because it is a way to prevent war), it’s not simply so that the more democracies there are, the less war there is. “Mature” democracies avoid war against each other, indeed, but wars are not only fought either between democracies themselves or between authoritarian states themselves, but also between democracies and authoritarian states against each other. Democratic states do wage war, but usually only against authoritarian states, although they still tend to be less warlike than authoritarian states. However, not without reason I talked about “mature” democracies, for the thesis doesn’t apply to democratic states in general. As Manfield and Snyder have shown in their article “Democratization and War”, young democracies that are in the process of becoming full democracies tend to be more bellicose than full or “mature” democracies. Young immature democracies often still have authoritarian traits and nationalism is often an important element in the political debate in these countries. Semi-authoritarian leadership usually represents more the interests of the economic and political elite than the interests of the people as a whole. Nationalism (which often just was a reason that such states became democratic; cf Eastern Europe) can also make that a country opposes to other countries in case of a conflict, instead of looking for ways to settle the conflict, especially when such countries are led by semi-authoritarian leaders. Then there is always the chance of a fallback on the road to democracy. For such reasons, young democracies can be more prone to wage war than mature democracies. The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is a case in point. The Serbia-Croatia conflict is another example. Here we can also mention the Kargil War and the later wars or violent conflicts between Ecuador and Peru. Young democracies are often not able to solve and absorb interior and exterior conflicts and tend to choose violent nationalist solutions. Or as Manfield and Snyder say (p.89): “In principle, mature democratic institutions can integrate even the widest spectrum of interests through competition for the favor of the average voter. But where political parties and representative institutions are still in their infancy, the diversity of interests may make political coalitions difficult to maintain. Often the solution is a belligerent nationalist coalition.” Then, an emergent democracy can even develop into a belligerent dictatorship, as we see in Russia today.
Nevertheless, it often happens that young democracies take the road to mature democracy without falling back into belligerent nationalism. After the Second World War, Germany and Japan smoothly developed into full democracies, “due to occupation by liberal democracies and the favorable international setting provided by the Marshall Plan, the Bretton Woods economic system, and the democratic military alliance against the Soviet threat”, so Manfield and Snyder (p.95). In recent years, the Latin American countries have democratized without nationalism and war. (ibid.) Therefore, there is no reason to be afraid of democratizing authoritarian states, thinking that it will increase the risk of war. As Manfield and Snyder conclude their article (p. 97): “In the long run, the enlargement of the zone of stable democracy will probably enhance prospects for peace. In the short run, much work remains to be done to minimize the dangers of the turbulent transition.”

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Random quote
"This is a war where children and women are not near the frontline. They are the frontline".
Lyse Doucet, BBC correspondent in Ukraine.

Monday, March 07, 2022

Putin and the planning fallacy


Tower of the Oldehove, Leeuwarden, NL, built about 1530. Failed planning
 is of all times and we never  learn. During the construction of this tower so
much went wrong that it never has been finished.

Now, almost a week after the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, it is already clear that the war doesn’t develop as Putin and his military staff had foreseen. They didn’t achieve the targets they had set, like a quick fall of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, beating the Ukrainian army and installing a puppet government. The invasion stagnates and the political resistance outside Ukraine is growing that fast that it is doubtful whether Russia (Putin) will achieve its targets anyway, even if Kyiv will be taken. Russia (Putin) has miscalculated what it could attain, and even if it will realize its plans as yet, it will have taken more time against much higher costs than foreseen. In other words, Russia (Putin) has become “victim” of the planning fallacy.
The planning fallacy (PF for short) has first been described by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky (1979, see also their 1982). They also coined the term. Here I follow Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow and some internet articles. The planning fallacy is usually defined “as an erroneous prediction of future task duration, despite the knowledge of how many hours were used to accomplish similar tasks in the past.” (source) However, as discussions about the PF make clear, it’s not only the planned time for a project that is underestimated but usually also the costs. There are several reasons why planners often trap into the PF fall, such as:
- Planners tend to overestimate their skills and capabilities, leading to an underestimation of the time and costs needed for the project concerned. So, they are often too optimistic.
- Disregard of historical cases, like how you executed your plans in the past, and how others executed comparable plans.
- Ignoring possible risks and uncertainties.
- Pressure to present too optimistic plans, for example because you must execute them within a certain time or against certain costs; or because someone else might get the order.
In short, so Kahneman, we depend too much on the inside view: Planners focus too much on their own specific circumstances and search for evidence in their own experiences, when making plans. Information from the outside that doesn’t directly relate to the project concerned is usually ignored. A project is too often seen as a unique individual case with its own dynamics.
However, there is more, and maybe this is the essence of the planning fallacy: We fail to allow for what former US secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld called the “unknown unknowns”. There are factors that we know to exist but cannot fill in or make concrete: the unknowns. However, there are also factors, the unknown unknowns, that we don’t know to exist and that only appear during the project execution. Planners seldom try to allow for them in some way.
The planning fallacy is not unescapable, though. We can do something about it or at least we can mitigate it, namely by taking the outside view. It involves that you must look for objective ways to judge your plans, especially:
- Look for reference cases and objective criteria to judge whether your plan is realistic. No plan is unique, and there are past cases (the so-called reference class of cases) you can learn from and that help improve your planning.
- Make several scenarios, both optimistic and pessimistic, how your project may develop. Usually a pessimistic scenario is more realistic than an optimistic scenario.
- Divide your project into parts and calculate the time and costs to execute them. Then add the time and costs necessary for the parts, and probably the sum will be higher (and more realistic) than the time and costs estimated for the project as a whole.
- Use reliable objective estimation techniques for your project and ask the opinion of outsiders.
If you take the outside view, certainly the effects of the planning fallacy will be mitigated if not avoided.
And how about Russia (Putin)? It’s clear that Russia (Putin) was overoptimistic about his military and political plans and trapped into the planning fallacy fall by leaning too much on the inside view, disregarding facts known to outsiders and ignoring warnings from third parties who felt themselves threatened by the invasion of Ukraine. Here are some planning mistakes that Russia (Putin) made, to my mind:
- Ignoring that often the defender is stronger than the attacker, as the military theorist Carl von Clausewitz wrote already 200 years ago.
- Ignoring that invading and occupying a country is not enough to win a war, so Clausewitz, but that you win only by breaking the will to resist. In 2014, when Russia (Putin) annexed Crimea, the Ukrainian will and power to resist was weak. However, since then and because of the annexation both have very much increased. Moreover, not only the will to resist of the Ukrainian people and the strength of its army have grown a lot since 2014, but this has been ignored or belittled by Russia (Putin).
- Russia (Putin) didn’t take seriously the warnings by third parties like the EU and the USA that they would feel themselves threatened by an invasion of Ukraine and that they would take serious countermeasures and would support Ukraine.
Briefly, although many see Putin as a very rationally calculating person who knows what he does, his calculations were based on the inside view. Putin disregarded the outside view and that’s why he trapped into the planning fallacy fall. 

Source
Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow. London: Penguin Books, 2012; pp. 245-252.

Friday, March 04, 2022

Random quote
The Lord said, “What have you done? Listen! Your brother’s blood cries out to me from the ground.”

Genesis 4:10

Thursday, March 03, 2022

Rondom Montaigne

Is mijn laatste blog over Macht en Poetin je bevallen? Je vindt meer van dergelijke essays in mijn boek Rondom Montaigne. Over Montaigne en zijn vriend La Boétie, maar niet alleen. Montaigne en ook La Boétie laten ons denken en zijn vandaag de dag nog steeds relevant.

Meer informatie en hoe te bestellen vind je hier:

http://www.bijdeweg.nl/RondomMontaigne.html

Monday, February 28, 2022

At the top of the pyramid. Étienne de La Boétie on power

Glory to the dictator

A war for power is casting its shadow over Europe. It made me think of the theory of power by Étienne de La Boétie. Power is a complex phenomenon with many aspects. One aspect concerns the interaction between political systems and countries, and a power theory can try to explain how it works. In the present situation in Europe, such a theory is interesting, for it can help understand the struggle for power around Ukraine and Russia’s war purposes. This is not what La Boétie’s theory is about. However, political systems and countries are not abstract entities. They are led by persons of flesh and blood, which must build up their positions before they are leaders and then maintain them: Leaders apply power to get and keep their positions. It would be nice to have a universal theory that describes how this happens. However, countries are very diverse. Some are democracies; other countries have an authoritarian structure or are even full dictatorships; again other countries have political systems somewhere between these extremes. Although La Boétie’s theory is about how a leader gets and especially maintains his position, it’s not a universal theory of leadership power. It explains only how leadership in authoritarian systems and dictatorships works. But with this theory, at least we can understand the doings of some actors in the present European conflict. Especially we can understand a bit of Putin’s leadership.
 

Étienne de La Boétie (1530-1562) was a French judge, Renaissance writer and political theorist. He laid his political views down in his Discourse of Voluntary Servitude. In this treatise, La Boétie raises the question “how it happens that so many men, so many villages, so many cities, so many nations, sometimes suffer under a single tyrant who has no other power than the power they give him; who is able to harm them only to the extent to which they have the willingness to bear with him; who could do them absolutely no injury unless they preferred to put up with him rather than contradict him.” They should only have to renounce their obedience without fighting. “For [the tyrant] is automatically defeated if the country refuses consent to its own enslavement: it is not necessary to deprive him of anything, but simply to give him nothing.” So, people agree to their own subjugation. They don’t want freedom, though it’s so easy to get it. La Boétie cites three reasons for voluntarily serving a tyrant. Two are less important and I only mention them here: habit and spinelessness. The third reason for obedience is by far the most important. It is the foundation of tyranny.
“Whoever thinks,” so La Boétie, “that [body guards] serve to protect and shield tyrants is … completely mistaken. These are used … more for ceremony and a show of force than for any reliance placed in them.” These guards are in fact only there for the daily order and often a tyrant is killed or driven out by his own guards. The real power rests on a certain social structure that allows a small number of people to control an entire country: “[T]here are only four or five who maintain the dictator, four or five who keep the country in bondage to him. Five or six have always had access to his ear, and have either gone to him of their own accord, or else have been summoned by him, to be accomplices in his [oppression and excesses]. The six have six hundred who profit under them, and with the six hundred they do what they have accomplished with their tyrant. The six hundred maintain under them six thousand, whom they promote in rank, upon whom they confer the government of provinces or the direction of finances, in order that they may serve as instruments of avarice and cruelty, executing orders at the proper time and working such havoc all around that they could not last except under the shadow of the six hundred, nor be exempt from law and punishment except through their influence. The consequence of all this is fatal indeed. And whoever is pleased to unwind the skein will observe that not the six thousand but a hundred thousand, and even millions, cling to the tyrant by this cord to which they are tied. [Just as] according to Homer, Jupiter boasts of being able to draw to himself all the gods when he pulls a chain.”
“In short, when the point is reached, through big or small favours, that large profits or small are obtained under a tyrant, there are found almost as many people to whom tyranny seems advantageous as those to whom liberty would seem desirable.” The whole network is based on ruling, controlling, playing off against each other and profiting from others, but in the end everybody is connected to the tyrant. He pulls the strings and the so structured society is like a puppet theatre, where the one at the top plays the subjects with favours and benefits like the puppeteer makes his puppets dance. Actually, La Boétie feels a little sorry for the people at the top of the network, “[f]or, in all honesty, can it be in any way except in folly that you approach a tyrant, withdrawing further from your liberty and, so to speak, embracing with both hands your servitude?” The people at the bottom who have no one under them do what they are asked and, after they have fulfilled their tasks, they are free to do what they like. However, those who directly serve the dictator “must anticipate his wishes; to satisfy him, they must foresee his desires; they must wear themselves out, torment themselves, kill themselves with work in his interest, and accept his pleasure as their own, neglecting their preference for his, distorting their character and corrupting their nature; they must pay heed to his words, to his intonation, to his gestures, and to his glance.”
This is how leadership power works, so La Boétie. A power structure is built like a pyramid and the top keeps down the lower layers. Some call La Boétie’s theory naïve, but to my mind it gives the basics of how authoritarian leadership works. Anyway, the Discourse of Voluntary Servitude has withstood the ages and has become one of the most reprinted and most influential books in history. Gandhi has even founded his theory of nonviolence on La Boétie’s idea. And look around: with La Boétie’s idea in your mind, you get already a first view on how authoritarian leadership works.

Note
The translations from Étienne de La Boétie, Discours de la servitude volontaire, are from a download in my computer. I couldn’t find it again on the internet. Here is another translation.

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Random quote
What more foolish than to undertake a war for I know what trifles, especially when both parties are sure to lose more than they get by the bargain?

Erasmus (1466-1536)

Monday, February 21, 2022

Descartes and Utrecht

Behind this gate on Maliebaan 36, Utrecht, NL, once was the house
 of prof. Reneri, where Descartes stayed when he lived in Utrecht.
 A plaquette on the door remembers this fact.

Although René Descartes (1596-1650) was a Frenchman, he lived many years in the Netherlands, for in the Low Countries he could more or less freely express his ideas, while in France he risked to be persecuted. For some time he lived in Utrecht, and just his stay there led to such intellectual conflicts with some professors of the newly founded university that he didn’t feel himself safe any longer in the Netherlands and that he left for Sweden.
Before Descartes lived in Utrecht, he had lived in Deventer for some time (he stayed there in 1632 and 1633), where he had deep discussions with Henricus Reneri (1593-1639), which would result in his Discourse on Method. Then Reneri left for Utrecht, where he would become one of the five founders of the University of Utrecht (established in 1636) and the first “Cartesian” professor in the Netherlands. Descartes followed him and lived there in Reneri’s house. Until his arrival in Utrecht some main ideas of Descartes had not yet appeared in print but had been spread mainly verbally. In order to avoid that they would be misinterpreted, Reneri asked him to write them down, which resulted in the Discourse (published in 1637). The effect of the book was contrary to what Reneri and Descartes may have expected. Of course, the book clarified Descartes’ ideas, but it also led to a heavy clash with orthodox Christian theologians and especially with Gisbert Voetius, another founder of the University of Utrecht and professor in theology and also soon rector of the university. Reneri died in 1639 and when, in his funeral oration, Anton Aemilius, a friend of Reneri, praised Reneri’s advocacy of Descartes’ philosophy and described Descartes himself as “the Archimedes of our century”, the conflict exploded. Moreover, now Henry Regius, recently appointed professor of medicine at Utrecht, began to lecture on Descartes’ views. Regius had become close with Descartes and helped him prepare the manuscript of the Meditations. Regius was the type of person who didn’t avoid controversy. He published a set of Cartesian theses for debate at the university and Voetius accepted the challenge. He had decided not only to demolish Cartesian philosophy but also Descartes himself. Voetius strongly rejected Descartes’ (and Regius’) Copernican view of the universe and some theological implications of Regius’ (and Descartes’) view on the relationship between body and soul. The consequence was not only a heavy philosophical and theological debate but also student riots.
One thing led to another. The Senate of the university ordered Regius to restrict himself to teaching medicine and banned the teaching of Cartesian philosophy completely. Descartes was furious. He called Voetius “quarrelsome, envious, foolish, a stupid pendant, a hypocrite, an enemy of the truth”, and charged him with slander “sometimes public and sometimes surreptitious”. Moreover, Descartes stated that his ideas were in line with the orthodox religious ideas. However, via a proxy of Voetius, Descartes was charged with atheism “on the ground that he had set aside the traditional proofs of God’s existence”. Descartes replied with a public Letter to Voetius. In this Letter, Descartes accused Voetius of “atrocious insults”, of being “base and commonplace, stupid, absurd, coarse, and impudent.” He talked of “criminal lies”, “scurrilous insults”, “atrocious slander” against him; etc. It was clear that Descartes was enraged and that he felt hurt as a person and in everything he stood for, his philosophical views in the first place. However, since the accusation of atheism was the most dangerous for Descartes, in the Letter he especially rejected the idea that his views conflicted with the traditional religious ideas.
According to the authorities in Utrecht, Descartes had gone too far, and they decided to sue him for libelling Voetius. Descartes could have ignored this for he had left already the province of Utrecht and now lived in the province of Holland. It was unlikely that Holland would extradite him to Utrecht. Nevertheless, Descartes approached Christiaan Huygens, whom he knew, and the French ambassador to The Hague, with the result that the Prince of Orange himself intervened and made that the authorities in Utrecht withdrew the accusation of libel. Some skirmishes followed yet, but gradually the row came to an end.
Would all this have been necessary? Not if Descartes had followed Huygens’ advice to let the matter rest. “Theologians are like pigs. When you pull one by the tail, they all squeal”, so Huygens. But Descartes had too big an ego to drop the matter. Nonetheless, in the end, Descartes would be the loser of the case. He didn’t feel at ease in the Netherlands any longer. In 1649, he accepted an invitation of Queen Christina of Sweden to become her teacher. However, he wouldn’t feel happy there, also because he couldn’t get along well with the Queen, who didn’t really like his lessons. After having contracted pneumonia, Descartes died on 11 February 1650 in Stockholm. And so, in a sense, Voetius had become the winner of the debate with Descartes. He didn’t succeed to demolish his philosophical ideas. Far from that, for Descartes became the founding father of modern Western philosophy. However, Voetius had indirectly a part in demolishing Descartes as a person chasing him away from the Netherlands to Sweden, where he became unhappy and died. 

Sources
- Eskens, Erno, Filosofische reisgids voor Nederland en Vlaanderen. Amsterdam and Antwerp: Contact, 2009.
- Grayling, A.C., Descartes. The life of René Descartes and its place in his times. London: Simon & Schuster, 2006; esp. pp. 207-218.
- Klomp, Henk, “Descartes verjaagd uit Utrecht vanwege zijn ‘ketterse’ ideeën”, op website https://www.dub.uu.nl/nl/nieuws/descartes-verjaagd-uit-utrecht-vanwege-zijn-ketterse-idee%C3%ABn

Thursday, February 17, 2022

Random quote
For the heroism of a few, the misery of millions is too expensive.
Erich Maria Remarque (1898-1970)

Monday, February 14, 2022

The Montaigne Dogma


Légal Trap

The shortest essay in Montaigne’s Essays is “That the profit of one man is the damage of another” (Book I-22; in some editions, like the Gutenberg translation that I use here, I-21). It’s only 232 words long and it states that everybody’s gains are based on the misery of others. It’s not only the shortest essay in Montaigne’s book but maybe also the most criticized one. I don’t want to say that it is brilliant, but is the critique right? Since most criticisms go back to and follow what the Austrian economist and philosopher Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973) has written about it, in this blog I’ll discuss his view.
Von Mises formulated his criticism of Montaigne’s essay especially in his book Human Action, chapter 24 (first section) (HA, for short). Since I don’t have an English version of this book at my disposal, I follow the Dutch text, and von Mises’s words quoted here may not be what he literally has written. But, of course, the essence is right. In HA, von Mises says that an old economic idea is that “the gain of one is the loss of the other; one makes profit only through the loss of others”. It’s an old dogma, so von Mises, and since Montaigne was the first modern author to reformulate it, he calls it the “Montaigne dogma”. And he continues: “It was the centrepiece of the doctrines of mercantilism, old and new. It underlies all modern doctrines that teach that within the framework of the market economy there is an irreconcilable conflict between the interests of different social classes within a country and, moreover, between the interests of several countries.” There are circumstances, so von Mises, that the Montaigne dogma is right, but generally it isn’t: “What causes the profit of a few in the course of a free market community is not the misfortune of his fellow man, but the fact that he alleviates or completely removes that which gives his fellow man a feeling of unease.” And then von Mises gives some counterexamples that apparently are meant as rejections of what Montaigne says in essay I-22, since they are based on and sometimes literally follow what Montaigne says there. “What causes the profit of a few in the course of a free market community”, so von Mises, “is not the misfortune of his fellow man, but the fact that he alleviates or completely removes that which gives his fellow man a feeling of unease. What harms the sick is the plague, not the doctor who treats the disease. The doctor’s profit is not the result of epidemics, but of the help he offers to those affected.” (my italics) Leaving aside that Montaigne doesn’t talk about a free market community, of course, but about human behaviour and how man gains a profit, does Montaigne really say that the doctor harms the patient so that he can treat the patient? Does Montaigne really say that the one who gains does so by harming the other? So, is it right to talk here of a Montaigne dogma?
Let’s look at Montaigne’s essay I-22. Its original title is  “Le Profit de l’Un Est Dommage de l’Autre” (see here), translated in the Gutenberg version of the Essays as “That the profit of one man is the damage of another”. This title is neutral in its meaning: If one person has damage, another profits by it. But let’s quote Montaigne’s examples:
“The merchant only thrives by the debauchery of youth, the husband man by the dearness of grain, the architect by the ruin of buildings, lawyers and officers of justice by the suits and contentions of men: nay, even the honour and office of divines are derived from our death and vices. A physician takes no pleasure in the health even of his friends, says the ancient Greek comic writer, nor a soldier in the peace of his country, and so of the rest.” (Essays I-22)
The examples used here by Montaigne only say that making profit by one person goes together with the damage of another person and that the former takes advantage of the latter’s damage. Montaigne doesn’t say that the one who makes profit caused the damage of the other. So, Montaigne doesn’t say, for instance, that the doctor makes the patient sick, but only that the doctor gets his income because the patient is sick. However, von Mises apparently has read the quoted passage as a kind of “post hoc propter hoc”, so as a kind of “after it so because of it”: The gains come because who gains does so by causing a damage to another. I must admit that the next sentence after the quotation from I-22, might suggest this: “[L]et every one but dive into his own bosom, and he will find his private wishes spring and his secret hopes grow up at another’s expense.” But the title and the tenor of this essay make clear that Montaigne wants to say only that everyone hopes to profit from another’s misery, not that he causes this misery. Maybe there is a dogma that says that “the gain of one is the loss of the other; one makes profit only through the loss of others” but it is not Montaigne’s dogma, anyway not in the way the statement is interpreted by von Mises.
But even if there is no Montaigne dogma in von Mises’s sense, one can ask whether Montaigne is right in saying that the profit of one man is the damage of another. Although it may happen, I think that, generally speaking, it’s not true. There are many ways a man can make a profit. Profiting from the damage or misery of others is only one way.

Thursday, February 10, 2022

Random quote
The more violence, the less revolution

Bart de Ligt (1883-1938)

Monday, February 07, 2022

Erasmus in Deventer

The former Latin School in Deventer

Recently I was in Deventer, an old Hanseatic town in the east of the Netherlands. I stayed the night there in a hotel in the centre of the town. Once this hotel was a Latin School. From the 15th century till 1848 boys were educated in the building for religious or worldly functions or for a study at the university. It was not just a school, one among many in Europe, but at the end of the Middle Ages the Latin School in Deventer was one of the most famous schools in Europe north of the Alps and it attracted students from everywhere. One of them was Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536), who lived then in Gouda. His father wanted the best education for him and so he sent his son to Deventer. Erasmus was eight years old, when he arrived there, and since he was yet a little boy, his mother went with him.
Not long before Erasmus went to Deventer, the Latin School had got a new headmaster: Alexander Hegius (1439/40-1498). Traditionally, at schools like the Latin School in Deventer, students were taught medieval Latin: Latin as it was used in the religious books of the time and as it was spoken by the clergymen. The method to learn it was memorizing. The students had to learn rhymes with the rules of the language by heart; especially the Doctrinal, a long didactic poem in Latin describing the Latin grammar.
Once a student knew the Doctrinal by heart he was supposed to know Latin. But did he understand Latin? He didn’t, so Hegius. Therefore, Hegius started to make his own teaching material. He began to criticize the Doctrinal and he introduced modern teaching methods that were already used in Italy. But he did more. He replaced the corrupt medieval Latin till then learned at school by the Latin of the classical writers, such as Cicero and Vergil. The students learned also to practically use this Latin, and they learned about the classical culture. Moreover, Hegius introduced a new subject: Old Greek. He was the first to do so in northern Europe. And last but not least: Hegius learned his students to think. Texts could contain mistakes for all kinds of reasons, so Hegius. To find out whether this was the case, you had to compare a text with other versions of the same text and with other sources, in order to analyse what was true and what wasn’t.
The new educational approach made the Deventer Latin School famous in Europe north of the Alps and it attracted students from everywhere. And so it happened that also Erasmus’s father decided that his son had to be educated at this school. Nevertheless, Erasmus was educated in the old way; only the two highest classes were taught by Hegius himself. The lower classes still basically followed the old teaching method, but this didn’t make that Erasmus was cut off from the new development. Erasmus was a curious boy, so once he knew that the highest classes of his school were taught with different methods and were taught different stuff, he asked the older students what it was. This must not have been difficult, for students in the higher classes often had to teach the lower classes, so contact was easily made. In addition, on certain occasions Hegius held free lectures that everybody could attend. These lectures made a deep impression on Erasmus, as we know from his letters and notes.
Erasmus must have been looking forward to be taught by Hegius himself in the highest classes of the Latin School. It didn’t happen. When Erasmus was in the third class (in those days the first class was the highest class in a school), there was an epidemic of plague in Deventer, which killed his mother. Soon thereafter his father died of grief. Erasmus’s guardians were more interested in his inheritance (which must have been quite big) than in the well-being of the boy. Erasmus was sent to a monastery. Even so, thanks to his education in Deventer, Erasmus became one of the most important exponents of the Renaissance, if not the most important. Once he had escaped the monastic life, he further developed Hegius’s teaching methods, he translated classical authors in order to make them known to modern man, and he became a prominent philologist and Bible critic and made a new, critical translation of the New Testament. Would Erasmus ever have reached that level and ever have become that famous, if he hadn’t had his education at the Latin School in Deventer? 

Source
Sandra Langereis, Erasmus dwarsdenker. Een biografie. Amsterdam, De Bezìge Bij, 2021.

Thursday, February 03, 2022

Random quote
People have an almost ineradicable tendency to replace reality with constructions of a self-manufactured cloud existence.
Theo de Boer (1932-2021)