We get so used to some paradigms that we forget to ever question them. Perhaps the one I find the most troublesome is the idea we have in the West of “progress”—or is that Progress with a capital P?
Progress has the underlying assumption that we can only get better, that things are constantly improving, and this particular false assumption riddles our political landscape. The very word “progress” gives rise to “progressive” parties with “progressive policies,” and these typically arrogate to themselves a certain virtue and self-righteousness, as if they—and they alone—represent that tide of history which is helping and advancing humanity. They are not like stuffy “conservatives” and such-like, with their antiquated, iniquitous, backward-looking, and selfish ideologies.
It would seem that no amount of history or actual experience can ever shift devotees of progress from this chronic mindset or belief paradigm.
The idea that we are making “progress” took a significant and fateful turn with the advent of the Enlightenment of the 18th century. The French soldier and science fiction author Michel Corday, though, let the cat out of the bag when he commented on World War I: “Every thought and event caused by the outbreak of war came as a bitter and mortal blow struck against the great conviction that was in my heart: the concept of permanent progress, of movement towards ever greater happiness. I had never believed that something like this [WWI] could happen.” Wow! The concept of “permanent progress”!
An Ancient Way of Seeing
One of the most striking things about the ancients is their near-universal testimony that things were better or superior at the beginning and that history reveals one long, slow decline. The ancient Egyptians, for example, believed in a time called “Zep Tepi” (or the “First Time” or Golden Era), a time of perfect harmony and planetary alignment.So too, the ancient Greeks believed in a Golden Age when humans and gods did not conflict, and life was extraordinarily long and healthy. Sadly, the Golden Age gave way to the Silver and then the Bronze, till finally we reached their Iron Age where war, violence, and treachery are endemic: Life is nasty, brutish, and short.
We could produce many more examples, but finally, coming closer to home, Judaism and Christianity also share the story of human degeneration. It is not such a neat story as the “four ages” story, although levels of degeneration are very apparent in the Genesis narrative: The Fall in the Garden of Eden is quickly followed by the violence of Cain, but exceptional human longevity is retained more or less up until the Flood, which is evidently a considerable time after the Fall.
But if I were to characterize one of the primary differences between Golden Age humans and humans now—aside from the obvious violence—it would be their speech. Hindus specifically talk about truth, a way of speaking in which one says what one means (or otherwise, not lying, or what Jonathan Swift called “saying the thing that is not”). In a way, violence is not primary, or causal of our afflictions; it is symptomatic.
Let’s look at Cain’s story. But first remember that the Devil is the “father of lies” and that speaking falsely results from thinking falsely. False thinking—the kind that distorts moral choices—is often a thinking entirely divorced from the feelings of the heart.
If we think of the violence of Cain, we recall that God warned him that sin was crouching at the door and was a desire he had to master. Following that warning, Cain told his brother—and then killed him. We do not know what Cain told his brother, but the disconnect between telling his brother—as if wanting to share or to clarify—and then killing him when Cain failed to gain some kind of satisfaction from Abel is palpable. Whatever Cain told his brother, I think we can assume it was not true. He was lying to himself as he lied to his brother, and the murder was his coverup.
The Root of Progressive Thought: Lying
We are all too familiar with this kind of false language since we have always been exposed to it. History is littered with famous examples of false, misleading, and lying speech. Sometimes we feel we have to tell “white lies” ourselves if we wish to preserve our relationships with those we deem important not to upset—a family member, for example. This is the opposite of what Confucian scholar Chu Hsi said: “Sincerity is the principle of reality. It is to be the same whether before men’s faces or behind their backs.”This is why George Orwell, despite being a socialist, was a kind of hero in that he relentlessly pursued truth and insisted on language doing so. He documented as well as foresaw what would happen once language strayed from truthfully reflecting the reality surrounding us. His essay “Politics and the English Language” is a forensic analysis of the problem; and his two great works of fiction, “Animal Farm” and “1984,” despite being fiction, demonstrate with uncanny precision the consequences of false language. His works are a supreme example of where fiction is more truthful than any political document of his time.
Before returning to the issue of the language of the Golden Age, we might note that we have this problem in the West now. We call it “fake news,” but it is, in its way, no different from the dissemination of propaganda under the Nazis and the Soviets of the 20th century. Fake news is propaganda, and it is designed to sow discord, uncertainty, and fear.
In this way, moderate opinion and democracy itself is unnerved, undermined, and ultimately defeated unless democratic and legitimate authorities act decisively to counter this onslaught on thought and thinking.
Of particular interest now is the resurgence of Marxist ideology that is disguised under “progressive” headings. Perhaps the most revealing comment on Marxism, communism, or Bolshevism that was ever made—certainly relevant to our topic of language and progress—was said by philosopher Leszek Kolakowski in his “The Main Currents of Marxism: Its Origins, Growth, and Dissolution.” He said, “Mendacity is the soul of Bolshevism.”
Mendacity—lying—is its soul! It’s the heart of it; and this is the exact opposite of the Golden Age, The Eightfold Path, Adam before the Fall, and more besides. Thus, the language of this ideology constantly stresses progress, but in reality it means the opposite. And this is why historians often agree with Professor Norman Davies, who says in his book “Europe: A History,” that “on the moral front, one has to note the extreme contrast between the material advancement of European civilization and the terrible regression in political and intellectual values.”