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Is GA Impossible?

chronicle · Saturday, May 25th, 1996 · 6 min read

People often ask why  GA  remains attached to the notion of an  originary event , a hypothesis they find so strong that it resembles an act of faith. I have given many defenses of the plausibility of the hypothesis in my books and in these columns. But since  GA  purports to trace all human phenomena to their originary roots, it cannot dismiss the intuition that makes skeptics turn away from this hypothesis as epiphenomenal. Unlike other theoretical modes,  GA  stands at the point of intersection of the  social sciences , which deal essentially with repetitive phenomena, and the  humanities , which deal with unique ones. This is a locus that until now only  religion  has occupied. This fact explains why the field of religious study is the one on which  GA  has thus far made its greatest impact. The principal organ of  Girardian  thought is the  Colloquium on Violence and Religion (COV&R) , and the place at  UCLA  where  GA  is the most welcome is in the  Center for the Study of Religion , which has just concluded its first year of operation with a colloquium on  Buddhism and Christianity . (Let me take this opportunity to express my appreciation and admiration to  David Rapoport  whose able and devoted direction has gotten the  Center  off to a flying start.) But to say that  GA  occupies the place of religion is to evoke a danger. Those whom the Gods would make mad, they inspire to become their rivals.  Rivalry with Gods , from  Lucifer  and  Adam  eating the apple to the  Tower of Babel  and the countless examples from Classical mythology, is the most critical religious theme. The distinction between  divine  and  human  is one that is continually challenged yet always preserved because it is the foundation of the human system of signification. To use the sign is to expel its object from our world, to defer its consumption long enough for it to be endowed with a  Being  that transcends its material incarnation. God is the sacred that remains after the sacrificial object has been divided up and assimilated. Without the separation between the transcendent world of meanings and the sublunar world of things, there can be no culture, no humanity. Is it possible then for a mode of thought to occupy the locus of religion without incurring the penalties of rivalry? In  Euripides’ Bacchae ,  Pentheus  is torn to pieces by the  Maenads  led by his own mother. As a character in the play,  Dionysos  is to blame for this violence, but this is only to say that Dionysos is a privileged projection of  human  violence. A challenge to the god is a challenge to his human followers, in this case the women of Thebes, whose Dionysian cult differs little from a rebellion. By claiming that its explanations of human phenomena neither ignore the cognitive value of religion nor defer to it, is  originary thinking  not making a equally hubristic challenge? Apprehension of this challenge explains the resistance to the  originary hypothesis  on the part of persons who have no difficulty with the  big bang  theory of the origin of the universe or with the concept of  punctuated evolution  that rejects the old idea that new species emerge by differentiating themselves imperceptibly from their predecessors. For it is one thing to claim that we are all descended from the same woman (the  “Eve”  hypothesis based on mitochondrial  RNA ), and another to speak of an  originary scene . Here we come uncomfortably close to the singularities on which religions are founded; we recoil from their implicit rivalry. It is not really a matter of deciding whether the originary scene took place only once or whether it happened ten times in ten different places. If ten, why not a hundred, or a thousand? The real point is to submerge the event in a cloud of other events so that it becomes a  non-event , deferring once more, in the manner of the social sciences, the  event-nature of human origin . Persons who think this way rarely claim they are doing so in deference to religion. The confidently atheistic scientist may well consider the  originary hypothesis  as  religion in disguise . But Voltairean protestations to the contrary, this stance implicitly acquiesces in a  division of labor  that leaves it to religion to provide a narrative account of the scene of our origin. The denial that such a scene ever took place does not explain the religious reconstruction of such scenes. Indeed, the “scientific” study of religion, taken up with such confidence by  Max Müller et al  in the previous century, seems to have been quietly dropped from the agenda of the social sciences. The claim might be made that this is done out of “sensitivity” to personal beliefs that cannot be tested by science. But  sensitivity  is just another way of referring to the same old reluctance. The fear of offending others and the fear of  offending the gods  are variants of the same  deferral of mimetic rivalry  that generated the  name-of-God  in the first place. Can one put  GA  in the place of religion without occupying the same place as the founders of religions? Can one conceive the  originary hypothesis without hubris ? Is not the inevitable result of its formulation to make of it, however impersonally expressed, a form of  personal witnessing ? (In a future column I will examine the problems of situating  GA  within the opposition between the intellectual asceticism of  Popper’s falsifiability-criterion  and the textual memory of the humanities.)  Nietzsche  was the first to face this modern problematic: the need to occupy the central locus of thought puts the thinker in rivalry with the gods. As a result, Nietzsche went mad. Is  GA  a similar example of  la folie des grandeurs ? But the very fact we can include such matters in rational dialogue is proof of  GA ‘s contribution to our self-understanding.  Originary thinking  is the only form of thought that can  think its own impossibility . A form of thought that recognizes the utopian nature of its ambitions–through a deepening of  Kant’s  conception of the  critical –can help to wean us from the brutally self-confident utopias that have wrought such havoc throughout this century. In the first issue of  Anthropoetics , I suggested that religion and ethics are founded on  Pascal ‘s wager: we are all  embarqués,  all in the  foxholes , all faced with  crisis .  GA , in contrast to these modes, discusses crisis from without, proposes no ethic other than the end of crisis, the deferral of violence. Its aim is to express the  objective truth  of the human, but by an analogy to  Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle ,  objective truth  and  ethical functionality  are mutually limiting: like the position and momentum of a particle, beyond a certain point the truth and ethical value of an idea become inversely dependent on each other. Yet this uncertainty diminishes over time, and cannot help but be diminished by the very fact of its formulation.  GA  is  impossible  because it is the first form of thought to recognize the  paradoxical  nature of thought. But paradox is stasis only within the  logic of identity . Paradox, the non-structural structure of the Heraclitean-Hegelian  dialectic , guarantees to human thought and history its eternal dynamism. To the extent that  GA  contributes to our understanding of this dynamism, it does not destroy it but drives it to a higher level. This is something that religion, bound as it is to narrative form, cannot do. The impossible rivalry of originary thinking with the sacred is the ultimate proof of its necessity as a  minimization  of the sacred. Indeed, it is so necessary that the present formulation of it need not be recognized in order for history to enact it. To take it as one person’s thought would be to situate it in the very realm of  mimetic rivalry  that declares its impossibility. It can only become accepted as  always already  obvious, when people come to realize that they have been engaged in originary thinking  sans le savoir.  As it’s unlikely I’ll be around by that time, perhaps my name can be remembered as the acronym jokingly devised by  Ken Mayers  in the first  GA  seminar:  G enerative  A nthropology, the  N ew  S cience. Enjoy this column? Yes No Δ

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