His thesis has broad and deep implications in areas ranging from medical ethics to political ideologies... there is a thought-provoking critique of "Utopianism" and its expressions both in political ideologies and our relationship to technological praxis. This critique alone is worth purchasing and reading the book. He even enters into interesting discussions such as the metaphysics of the "mind-body" problem and its ethical implications.
Highly recommended reading, with a wonderful (and rare) combination of Germanic thoroughness and the clarity and elegance more typical of what comes out of English and American philosophical traditions.
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threaded through with anti-worldly bias...a
feeling that the soul (the divine soul) is
trapped in exile in the body's decaying matter...
that the real realm of Reality and Truth exists
in another realm...away from the earth...that
the soul longs after the other realm...that
the soul brims with mystic love and yearning
to return to the Light of True Reality...and you
have the beginnings of Gnosticism...
...add deep grief over the loss of a beloved...
either through actual death...or through
enforced separation which brings on deepest
depression, melancholy, and a kind of
emotional death...in the deepest pit...slow
recovery...and a completely new perspective on
value and meaning...the world is a hell hole
filled with demonic forces and values, using
unwitting humans as their dupes and puppets...
The world -- which others accept as their reality
each time they "wake up" (which is actually their
sleep-walking...their death-in-life illusion, from
the Gnostic perspective) -- becomes, for the Gnostic,
only an illusion...a deceptive illusion...and not
the true Reality at all...but a lure...and a trap...
for the senses...for pleasure...for sensuality...
for materialism...for consumerism...for mediocrity...
for crassness and mass-mind values and mass-mind "thinking"...
The Gnostic can actually, with focused thinking
and control, transcend the worldly programming and
illusion...can "opt out" of the rat race and the
mutual delusion generated and perpetuated by the
day-by-day slavish obedience to the values and
lures of the world's messages about money, success,
status, ambition, security, and the world's opiates
of sex, violence, celebrity, gossip, lies, hypocrisy,
and pleasure-seeking as the number one priority for
establishing value and interest...
All of this is not stated directly in this
excellent study by Han Jonas...but these are some
of the fall-out understandings when the person
truly "wakes up"...of course, they are completely
antithetical to the world's desires and the world's
view of reality...so the Gnostic seems deluded...
"out of it"...cracked...whereas the Gnostic sees
the world and its yay-sayers in the very same way...
so it becomes a metaphysical battle over True
Reality...is it in the world?...or way away from
the world...beyond the cosmos of created, and
thus fallen, matter? Reality...Reality...who's got
the True Reality?
The World System becomes the enemy to the Gnostic
Mind...the world system and the instituions which
uphold and buttress and enforce and program the
furtherance and perpetuation of that system...and
man, more often than not, becomes the victim (either
willing...or unwilling) of that system...when he
becomes "hooked" on its lures and narcotic propaganda
and programming...man loses his soul...
his trapped divine spirit...if he dies without
release...perhaps he has to come around again and
again, until he finally truly wakes up, makes
the right choice or renunciation (is "born again"...
or "born renewed") of the world, its system, and its
values...and resists the temptation to fall back
under the world's soporific spell...
When such ideas and themes have been secretly used
by authors, the modernists have all too often been
prone to think that those authors are prescient "Existentialists"...
but as Jonas, a student of Heidegger and Bultmann,
came to realize...this alienation and nihilism
and view of the absurdity of worldly existence
has a more antique origin...extending far back...
perhaps as far back as Pythagoras...and if there
was a real Orpheus who taught and "preached"...then
back to him...I think it is instructive, too,
that the idea of the necessity of SECRECY
(to avoid detection by the demonic forces --
"The Matrix;" "Dark City") is a large part of
Gnosticism and Hermeticism (the *Corpus Hermeticum*
-- which has a dual element of Gnosticism in tandem with
Neo-Platonic theosophy...a "natural" enough yoking...
though Gnosticism denies the affirmation of the
positive aspect of the created world which the
Neo-Platonists sometimes preach)...thus you get
the Neo-Platonist Plotinus denouncing the Gnostics,
rather than embracing them as mirror-reversal
"brothers"...who certainly share some basic
Platonic biases, but have carried them further
in a very determined and no-compromise-with-the-
world alienation than the Neo-Platonists envision...
Most Gnostics of this "classic" variety are
determined Truth Tellers...and determined true
value seekers...not glitzy glitter grabbers...most
are "aristocratic" and elitist in their view of
value...but also "democratic" in their understanding
that everyone has the divinity in them...IF they
will ONLY FIND IT...TAP INTO IT...and BE GUIDED BY
IT...rather than continuing to follow in the world's
pathways...
These are the ideas Jonas examines through his
exegesis of the various sects, writings, and
"systems" of ancient Gnostic groups...
Many Gnostics, especially the Transcendental ones,
opted for a classical Pagan perspective...rather
than embracing any sort of Christian Gnosticism...
though many of them had had a grounding in Christianity,
something about Christianity's doctrinal rigidity
and exclusion of certain aspects of love and longing
alienated them from Christianity...drew them to
Platonism...and with their own initiation to alienation
towards the world...and their ironic if not sarcastic
defiance back towards it...set themselves on the
path towards Pagan Gnosticism and Hermeticism...
* * * * * * * * *
P.S. There are NO perfect or "pure" Gnostics in
the world...alas, they too fall victim to the
desire for books, and CDs, and DVDs...aieee...
the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak...
but we are trying to wean ourselves down...
and pay off our outstanding bills...but
I did choose philosophy...and insight...
wonder if this is for the third time?...
* * *
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His first essay considers the development or rather alteration in the philosophy of being extending from ancient Greek times into the modern era: animism, and the remarkable instance of thinking of life as at one time the natural mode of being followed by the idea that death is the natural mode instead or that life is a preparation for it. Dualism is considered as the fundamental barrier underlying the comprehension of life although idealism leads to problems no less troubling than say materialism or mechanism.
In the second essay he looks at the fundamental aspects of philosophical Darwinism with its final application of mechanism to the biological realm which for so long eluded the mechanists. Descartes started the trend with his machine-like approach to animals. The third essay considers the meaning of metabolism using James Jeans's, God as a mathematician quote to initiate the discussion. He notes that a living being is one that is never the same from one moment to the next "perpetual self-renewal through process". As the other reviewer mentioned his fourth essay "To Move and to Feel: on the animal soul" is probably the most illuminating in the book. he considers what differs from animal to plant ie motility, perception and emotion. the ability to move using the evidence of perception leads to the idea of freedom, however how emotion is related to the above is less obvious althgough Jonas makes it so by simply stating that movement in pursuit or flight must necessarily lead to emotion because of its satisfaction or lack thereof. Plants possess immediacy in life between environment and the organism; animals are more separated than this being required to treat the environment as different from them to some degree at least.
Next he analyses the ideas of cybernetics and some differences between machines and organisms noting that machines act by feedback mechanisms whereas organism is "concerned in existing", this applies also to society where the cybernetic idea of information is empty. In the sixth essay he looks at perception through the senses sight, hearing and touch in the main and how and why they vary in importance to man. He alludes as to why and how concepts such as space and time arise through the function of the senses themselves rather than being free construction of the mind. This leads directly into the seventh essay on the difference between man and animal ie through the concept of image making rather than language or symbols. Again as the previous reviewer notes the later essays lack in depth, once he enters the realm of theology Jonas tends to outline his own beliefs rather than analysing them in depth as his earlier essays, again the relationship between Gnosticism and modern thought bears fruit in contrast to the writing on Heidegger and theology.
All together a brilliant style with difficult writing. In contrast to the usual length of time needed to read a book this took considerably longer just to comprehend. Well worth getting, superb at times, original at others.
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he needs to learn how to write. Herky jerky style and skewed syntax make this one an almost impossible read. Sorry folks, but
I have to rate this one as unintelligable garble.
Wolin also attributes to Heidegger an antimodernism that his philosophy itself dismantles. The real story of Heidegger's Nazism is not how much his philosophy accomodated Nazism but how little mind the opportunistic philosopher paid his own philosophy when the party called. Wolin gives Heidegger more credit for being principled than he deserves. Wolin also pays too much attention to deciphering Heidegger's opinions from his biography and too little time actually reading Heidegger. In fact, at no point in the book does Wolin betray ever having read Being and Time.
Let us take one example of Wolin's woeful prosecutorial method. He refers to some pamphlets that Heidegger wrote as a student for a Catholic, antimodern publisher. In the pamphlets, Wolin reports, Heidegger valorizes reason and strict rationality above the modern devotion to the self, an unsurprising argument coming from a seminary student. Wolin then draws a straight line from that antimodern Catholic upbringing to Heidegger's later devotion for the Fuhrer. This is perhaps the first time that Thomas Aquinas has ever being accused of encouraging Nazism.
One of the most interesting things about Heidegger's students is that they reached such a broad audience in America. Marcuse and friends were the stars of a worldwide youth movement despite having thick German accents. The commanded such a large audience in part because they were so much more impressive than their colleagues. Wolin does not give sufficient weight to the possibility that Heidegger's students may have learned something worthwhile from their teacher. Wolin is too busy contorting himself into fits of indignant censure.
It is interesting to note that none of the above were practising Jews; rather they saw themselves as assimilated and cosmopolitan in outlook. Ironically it would be their teacher, one of the greatest existentialist philosophers, who drove home to them the inauthenticity of their position when he dedicated himself to National Socialism. By abandoning them he turned his back on them and forced them to face their Jewishness, no longer as a metaphysical question, but in the harsh light of ontological reality, as an important component of their social being. Despite religious assimilation, they were still outcasts, only this time by basis of their racial identity - their very being.
Though abandoned by their mentor, each of Heidegger's students would go on to make a mark in the field of philosophy. In the chapters concerning their careers Wolin takes the time to carefully not their contribution to phliosophy and their attachments to their former teacher. Each discourse is concise and to the point, often giving the reader important insights into the relationship between student and teacher in ways not directly observable. With Arendt, this is easy due to the mass of scholarship, some excellent, some on the level of a supermarket tabloid. With a thinker such as Jonas, whose public career is not so well known, such insights are most welcome. I remember Jonas as a teacher and remember quite well his relationship with Heidegger. Although he would criticize his mentor in the strongest possible terms, when traveling to Europe he would still be careful to make the pilgrimage to the Black Forest to pay homage to the old man. Jonas made his mark both as an expert on Gnostic philosophy and as a philosopher of the environment, his works helping to build the basis of Germany's Green Party.
Lowith developed a love-hate relationship with his former teacher, becoming one of Heidegger's most insightful critics, and yet refusing to pull the trigger. One should not stop reading Heidegger; but one should refrain from reading him so naively. Perheps it was Heidegger's own latent, and naive, romanticism that led him from a critique of nihilism into the arms of totalitarian philosophy.
Marcuse is the strrangest case yet, if we view he and his teacher merely from the outside. It would appear Marcuse made the strongest reaction of all to his former teacher, by Msarcuse incorporated more of his teacher's thought into his own than any of the others. Compare Marcuse's "One Dimensional Man" with Heidegger's "Letter on Technology." Marcuse's retreat into the pseudo-rationalism of Marx to escape the demons of nihilism strangely mirrors Heidegger's own retreat into National Socialism for the same reason. Taking Spengler at his word, Marcuse accepted the decline and retreated into a new world order of sorts while Heidegger fought Spengler's prognosis by adopting the standards of what he saw as the defence of civilization in the Swatstika.
Wolin wraps all this into 269 tightly constructed pages. Not a wasted word or thought. In other words, an excellent and entertaining introduction into a world of thought not usually considered. Highly recommended.