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Charles Taylor. Modern Social Imaginaries.
Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004. 215p.
John Rothfork
Northern Arizona University
Charles Taylor now teaches at Northwestern University. A decade ago the Catholic thinker
Michael Novak recognized that Taylor was "gaining status as the world's premier philosopher
of modernity, the most judicious, the one who makes the most apt and discerning distinctions."
Novak went too far in writing that Taylor "has a deeper and richer philosophical mind
than [Richard] Rorty's," but the comparison suggests the stature of Charles Taylor's work.
Modern Social Imaginaries makes it clear that Novak was even further from the mark
in writing that Taylor "is subverting modernity from within" (see
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9305/novak.html). Taylor offers no hope of an
alternative to modernity or a return to what he calls an "enchanted world" view. Instead,
he explains how modernity is itself a religious expression. Perhaps the most attractive
feature of his new book is that it continues Taylor's pragmatist explanation of why facets
of American culture cannot be as stark and clear-cut as demagogues and cultural
conservatives insist they should be. Readers who know Taylor's work will be interested
in what this new work reveals about how Taylor balances or reconciles his Catholic faith
with the outlook provided by pragmatism. One of Taylor's famous works is devoted to Hegel
and we see the influence in Taylor's explanation of how the secular and profane dimensions
of modernity are, Taylor says, manifestations of the opposite. Paradoxically, he explains
how they are moral and even religious expressions.
How can this be? Isn't it obvious that religious and secular outlooks are fundamentally
opposed? Taylor does not allude to Kierkegaard, but his notion of how a militant atheist
continues a dialogue with God and is therefore more religious than a complacent and
unconcerned churchgoer provides part of the answer. Another part of the answer is provided
by the pragmatist recognition that process (experience) precedes and produces theory
(theology). The charismatic tradition dedicated to the indiscernible Paraclete, the
mystical tradition going back to Meister Eckhart, and the Society of Friends (Quakers)
are features of the Christian tradition that endorse the Hindu notion of Shakti
or divine energy. A third part of the answer relies on Reformation thinking, especially
that of Calvin, apparent in this explanation: "Modernity is secular, not in the frequent,
rather loose sense of the word, where it designates the absence of religion, but rather
in the fact that religion occupies a different place, compatible with the sense that all
social action takes place in profane time" and everyday life (194). Taylor's thesis
might be described as how we can be religious (or moral) in a world no longer invested
with ritual magic.
Taylor says his "thesis tries to link the undoubted primacy of the individual," as
individual, in 18th-century Enlightenment theory "to the earlier radical attempts to
transform society along the principles of axial spirituality" that relied on revelation,
prophecy, and the efficacy of ritual (64). Taylor's view is scientific or modern --
without the possibility of recourse to magic -- in explaining how the post-Enlightenment
secular view is moral and even religious. Science "disembeds us from the social sacred,"
the world of medieval magic and ritual, to offer "a new relation to God as designer" in
Newton's cosmology (65). This view accords with Einstein's famous pronouncement that "in
this materialistic age of ours the serious scientific workers are the only profoundly
religious people," apparently because they continue physically to investigate the Other
or the logos rather than simply express their Romantic feelings.
In a review of another of Taylor's books, Edward Oakes identifies the dialectic at work in
Taylor's outlook. Oakes says, "the Enlightenment view of human nature stresses the inherent,
and thus abstract, equality of every human person," which means that no one, in essence,
can be distinguished above others. "What muddies the picture is the Romantic gloss on the
Enlightenment view of human nature: that each human being is not just equal but also unique"
(
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9304/oakes.html). In Jean Jacques Rousseau's
famous words, "If I am not better, at least I am different." Taylor elaborates a philosophic
rather than literary "thick description" of the Romantic view located within the context
of abstract Enlightenment social theory. As Rousseau's Confessions illustrates,
this usually involves autobiography, biography, or fiction; personal narrative about how
"I feel" rather than social philosophy. Taylor says, "The mistake of moderns is to take"
their Enlightenment understanding of the free individual "so much for granted that it is
taken to be our first-off self-understanding 'naturally'" (64). As a pragmatist, Taylor
recognizes that "On the first level, we are always socially embedded" by the operations
of the very language we use to elaborate theories of origin and by the discourse
community contexts that govern who we speak to, about what topics, and in what tone.
"We learn our identities in dialogue" and "by being inducted into a certain language"
(65). Einstein's scientist is not beyond culture. Quite the opposite: having received a
PhD, a research scientist is profoundly cultured. Imagining radically free individuals
who can choose, for example, their religion is a historically recent and highly
theoretical possibility that seems plausible only in the experience of contemporary Westerners.
Taylor defines "social imaginaries" as discourse community technique or paradigm
methods for associating data to form a gestalt image or pattern; "it is what enables
[narrative or discourse], through making sense of, the practices of a society" (2). Foucault
simply calls this technique. Taylor's imaginaries refer to "the ways people imagine their
social existence, how they fit together with others, how things go on between them and their
fellows" (23). Taylor is specifically interested in the social imaginaries that provide
the context to unify us as Americans in spite of the many beliefs that divide us. He begins
with Enlightenment era beliefs about human nature: "Human beings are rational, sociable
agents who are meant to collaborate in peace to their mutual benefit." This may seem
innocuous or even self-evident, but in the 18th century and in the context of the
unfolding Renaissance program against medieval magic, this secular definition of human
nature militated for a paradigm shift so that moral conversation becomes "about us
humans" and this world "rather than one touching God or the cosmos" (11). Morality
came to be seen as an agenda we discuss in the agora instead of an ontic recognition
of the way things are and what God wants.
Unfortunately, Taylor does not specifically write about ritual in ways that Joseph
Campbell's great work illustrates. More concrete illustrations of orthopraxical lifestyles
(following injunctions of the Hadith, for example) and ritual acts that religious
communities believe invoke and produce spiritual effects would help us recognize that
the enchanted outlook no longer informs or characterizes Western, day-to-day, secular
life. "The modern order gives no ontological status to hierarchy or any particular
structure of differentiation" to invest some people -- such as priests or kings -- with
magical powers and to expect some rituals -- such as the Catholic Mass or absolution --
to have supernatural effects. Secular society allows us to "serve each other's needs,"
even though "the particular functional differentiation" needed to perform a job or offer
a service "is endowed with no essential worth" as such (12). Modern professions have no
ritual agency. Their value is secular and measured in terms of enhancing security and
prosperity (13). Taylor's account relies on the largely English Enlightenment informed
by Newton, Locke, Calvin, and Adam Smith who did not, like Voltaire and Cervantes,
directly attack religious ritual as gross superstition. The English model -- more thoroughly
worked out in America than in Britain -- simply made prayer and ritual private and hence
irrelevant to planning for secular security and prosperity. Science redefined ritual as
subjective, as poetry and myth that have only an aesthetic place in public.
Taylor helps us recognize that, except on Sundays -- which is to say, except for a special
discourse community that no longer constructs or sets the terms for our day-to-day ordinary
life -- we live in a different world from that of the enchanted outlook, which recognized
"spirits or forces or powers" (51) and elaborated rituals to invoke and control these
powers. When Ben Franklin and others left the church, they literally contracted with one
another to construct new social forms. But Taylor's account is philosophic rather than
historic. If we are no longer embedded in an enchanted worldview and no longer guided by
ritual, what are the terms of our social imaginary? Taylor mentions three "forms of social
self-understanding which are crucial to modernity": the capitalist economy, the public
sphere of knowledge and civility, and the techniques of democratic self-rule (69).
Taylor offers Reformation glosses on the economy from John Calvin and Max Weber. First
we rejected the enchanted view that recognized the supernatural power of priests and the
ritually holy life of monastic celibacy. Then we redefined secular life as involving
vocation and stewardship. Instead of offering ritual adoration, we do God's work in the
world by helping others. Taylor says this Reformation shift "has two facets: it promotes
ordinary life as a site for the highest forms of Christian life, and it also has an
anti-elitist" and democratic thrust (74). There are other implications. For example,
the Great Chain of Being hierarchy is ignored by the model of an economy that supplies
"resources we collectively need in household or state" and that "defines a way we are
linked together" in mutual dependence (76). The new model also imparts a spirit of
entrepreneurship and exploration, a sense that the economy is somewhat arbitrarily
constructed and always in development rather than "deducible from a telos at work in
human society" (80).
The public sphere offers a model for the conversation held "outside of the polity, as it
were, from which to judge its performance." In the Enlightenment model, reason controls
power. Only modern states "must win the consent of the governed -- not just originally,
but as ongoing condition of legitimacy" (87). To be moral, Rousseau's social contractual
state must enact "what has already been emerging out of enlightened debate among the
people" (88) in the public sphere where individuals engage in a kind of discourse
"emanating from reason and not from power or traditional authority" (90). But the voice
of reason in this model remains disturbingly idealized. There are no actual or literary
conversations about colonialism, racism, sexism, and the like. There is only European
philosophical talk including an Enlightenment claim for "a discourse of reason outside
power, which nevertheless is normative for power" (91). Do we still believe this after
reading Nietzsche and Foucault? Taylor says we do not merely believe in it, we expect
the public sphere to operate in this way.
The point here is a somewhat tortured product of Rousseau's theory that is crucial for
the theory of democracy. Bentham's Utilitarianism was descriptive in claiming that human
nature is an instinct to avoid pain and consume pleasure. Consequently, Utilitarianism
can claim only a qualified morality centering on the freedom of the individual to make
choices about what appears to be pleasurable or painful. If democracy is simply a battle
to get as much and give as little as possible, it forfeits any claim to virtue. Rousseau's
model of the state requires us to legislate on behalf of all citizens according to the
dictates of reason. This ideally creates "a politics of virtue, as the fusion of
individual and general will" (125). It is not simply that "the people are sovereign" in
essence. The general will must be worked out in "conversations" held in the public sphere.
"In projecting a public sphere, our eighteenth-century forebears were placing themselves
in an association, this common space of discussion, which owed nothing to political
structures but was seen as existing independently of them" (92). We expect such idealism
to be deconstructed, but Taylor's interest is confined to noticing the paradigm shift
from the enchanted world view to the secular world of social construction; how Rousseau's
thinking liberated us from the traditional view in which "People could see themselves only
as constituted into" a social group or state "by something action-transcendent, be it a
foundation by God or a Chain of Being" (96) that stretched back to "a 'time of origins,'
as [Mircea] Eliade calls it" (97). Taylor is interested in the authority of "modern
secularization" that, as Rorty also notes, rejects the supposition that mythic "time"
is more real than our profane temporal experience (98). Paradoxically, the public sphere
as "an extrapolitical, secular, metatopical space" (99) creates a moral dimension for
modernity.
In the postmodern view, traditional religion is irreligion and "the ordinary is sanctified,
or put in other terms, the claims to special sanctity of certain types of life (the monastic)
or special places (churches) or special acts (the Mass) were rejected as part of false and
impious belief that humans could in some way control the action of grace" through ritual
(102). Having forgotten the enchanted world and the rituals that gave access to it, "we
live our ordinary lives, work in our callings, sustain our families in profane time. In
the new perspective, this is what God demands of us, and not an attempt on our part to
connect with eternity," to help sustain being or virtue by making blood sacrifices or by
engaging in more abstract rituals of the Atonement. Language no longer conjures a public
mystery.
The techniques of democratic self-rule are familiar to us as praxis but strangely
formulated by Taylor's concern to see these as post-Reformation expressions of moral
concern. Morality does not have to ritually repeat a divine script or pattern. "The
modern social imaginary no longer sees the greater translocal entities as grounded in
something other, something higher, than common action in secular time" (155). The general
will does not need to be validated or confirmed by a power greater than reason. It does
not need to be mimetic in the sense of supposing that an "ordinary sequence of events
touches" or repeats events grounded in something eternal or holy. We no longer need
"privileged persons or agencies, such as kings or priests, who stand and mediate at such
alleged points" of ritual (157). Instead of going to church to hear a Latin Mass, we talk
to each other in the public sphere. Rousseau told us that a dedication to citizenship must
be greater than any allegiance to a special group based on gender, race, religion, politics,
or other factors, but it is strange for a pragmatist to endorse this idealization as more
real than our actual experience based in gender, race, etc. That is not quite right; Taylor
explains that we do have actual experience of the public sphere, but it is more tacit and
recognizable in retrospect than evident in specific, intentional experiences. Ultimately,
Taylor's sense of authentication in the public sphere relies on the linguistic dimension,
on our involvement with each other to talk about our experience and to care about meaning
in Heidegger's sense, rather than to rely on mimesis or the repetition of a holy pattern,
which in orthopraxy and ritual performance seem to more resemble training than dialogue.
The public sphere is not simply a place where we speak. It is also a place where we listen.
The rhetorical situation of addressing an audience is an important part of the public sphere.
The moral dimension becomes obvious when we recognize that we speak to others assuming that
they care about what we say. Taylor illustrates this in the model of fashion, of being seen,
of noticing that we are being noticed. Who do we hope to impress with stylish clothes or cars
or prose? Probably not anyone specific, but "It matters to each of us as we act that others
are there, as witnesses of what we are doing and thus as codeterminers of the meaning of our
action" (168). We speak to others to literally make sense of our experience. If there were
no others, language and meaning could not exist. Transcendence offers the illusion of a
single speaker, of someone speaking without care or speaking without addressing an
audience of fellow speakers. We may pray to God, but we talk to each other. "The meaning
of our participation" in discourse community events "is shaped by the whole vast dispersed
audience we share it with" (169).
"The sacred is no longer encountered as an object among other objects, in a special place,
time, or person": an object we might possess or a power we might ritually control. Meaning
and depth are not magic; they are socially created by the process of language. Identity is
conferred by narrative. Taylor says, "God's will can still be very present to us in the
design of things, in cosmos, state, and personal life" but "the design of things" is not
found or revealed. It is socially constructed. "God can seem the inescapable source for
our power to impart order to our lives, both individually and socially" (193). If so, this
power is not an object of worship. It is better rendered or remarked on as a verb, as
Shakti, as a temporal and secular, if not Hegelian process.
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