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The Ethical Mission of GA

chronicle · Saturday, April 13th, 1996 · 4 min read

From the beginning, our use of representations has been  anthropological . We seek the truth about ourselves in order to defer the violence through which we risk destroying ourselves. Natural science  has advanced by expelling ethical considerations from its intellectual operations. But in  anthropology , the ethical is intrinsic to these operations; the hypotheses we create about ourselves are the instruments of our quest for  the good . I have called  generative anthropology  a  new way of thinking . But a  way of thinking  is nothing more than a  hypothesis  for solving our crucial problem of living together in peace–in a word, an ethic . The ethic implicit in an intellectual activity is not always clear from the start. After twenty years or so of originary thinking I am now beginning to understand the ethic of  generative anthropology . That this discovery coincides with the access of  GA  to a wider audience through the  WWW  is surely not fortuitous. All ethics promote love over resentment, but we judge them by the sacrifices they entail in order to expel this resentment. National Socialism  sought to promote love among Germans and other so-called  Aryans , as  Fascism  had done for Italians. Not long ago these ethics seduced many, but we remember them rather for the horrors they perpetrated on those they excluded. The  Communist  rhetoric of inclusion was yet more seductive:  “the International Soviet will be the human race.”  But this was taken to mean that those even implicitly inimical to the Soviet are  no longer part of the human race : whence  Stalin’s  and  Mao’s  massacres and purges, and the killing fields of  Cambodia . These ethics that preach brotherhood but encourage resentment exemplify the phenomenon of  sacrificiality  that is far from having been exorcised with them. The  victimary discourse  of today is less virulent than Hitler’s anti-Semitic tirades, but it unreflectively inverts their sacrificial structure. This phenomenon of  sacrificial inversion  has become so common that it is invisible even to  deconstructionists  whose very careers are built on the concept of deferral. To reveal the sacrificial in today’s victimary discourse requires  originary thinking. The word  sacrifice  contains within itself the paradox of culture. Etymologically  to make sacred  ( sacer + facio ), it means both  to renounce  and  to kill . Culture is about renouncing and making sacred, but it is also about killing in the service of these ends. In the  originary scene , the central object of  mimetic desire  is  renounced-as-sacred  through being  named-as-sacred  by the sign that is the  name-of-God ; only once this mediating structure has been established can it be torn apart and eaten in the  sparagmos . Sacrificial thinking  is designed to justify the necessary evil of this discharge of  resentment  toward the central being that can never fully incarnate the divinity and put an end to conflict rather than merely  defer  it. Sacrificial thinking is a necessity of  ritual society , all the more so in its often repressive hierarchical forms. But in  market society ,  political structures  come to supplant ritual structures in deferring the violent expression of resentment. Sacrificial thinking becomes counterproductive within the framework of democratic politics, as witness the results of fascist and communist contempt for the  parliamentary democracy  of the  bourgeois market system . In today’s  victimary thinking , the object of this contempt has been extended from the market system, from which we can conceive no transcendence, to  humanity itself . The  ethical mission  of  originary thinking  is to provide us with a  post-sacrificial anthropology . Victimary rhetoric  derives its power from the dynamic of the  originary scene . What we resent in the other is his real or fancied proximity to the center. Because we are in principle equal exchangers of signs, we find it unjust that others surpass us in the exchange of things. Where victimary thinking goes wrong is not in denouncing injustice, but in assimilating it to  sacrificial victimage . Reducing human relationships to that between  sacrificer  and  victim  denies the common humanity of both sides. Where  tragedy  suggests that life is never as the language of human desire wants it to be,  victimary discourse  affirms as life’s sole value the  struggle against oppression , which  mirabile dictu  has begun to bear fruit only today. All real social orders are weighed and found wanting against the absolute standard of our  originary moral model of reciprocity . Although the distant ancestor of victimary discourse is the oppositional view of the social order forged in the  French Revolution , its specific rhetoric was born in the postwar reaction to the  Holocaust . Between  Nazis  and  Jews , there was no reciprocity; one side was innocent, the other guilty of unspeakable crime. The lesson of the  Holocaust  is to assimilate all collective resentments to this unambiguous model. The resulting faith in resentment generated the powerful social movements that achieved the abolition of  colonialism  and  racial segregation , as well as  equal rights for women . But in the new world these movements have created, victimary discourse is no longer productive. The objectivizing jargon of  Foucault  can no longer hide the  scapegoating rhetoric of sacrifice  denounced by  Girard . The denunciation of victimage has become a ritual gesture meant to absolve us–and this refers to all of us–of the guilt of our originary inheritance. Originary thinking  allows us to situate our drive toward  reciprocal equality  in the context of our supreme need to  defer mimetic conflict  and to trace the historical evolution of the social structures that realize reciprocity while insuring against violence. Humanity has been able to survive and prosper only because, whatever its lapses, its history has been guided more by  love  than by  resentment . The ethical mission of our new mode of self-understanding is to help extend this guidance into the future. Enjoy this column? Yes No Δ

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