The philosopher in one country sees not an enemy in the philosopher of another: he takes his seat in the temple of science, and asks not who sits beside him.”
At least insofar as Pinker’s endorsement of this little passage is concerned, in proving the noble transcendence of science that allows it to be free of partisanship, it is balderdash. This Iqbalian-like image of master and slave sitting side by side in the service of this higher ideal is crassly erroneous. While colonisation of the Americas had been underway for more than two centuries by the time Paine wrote this in his ‘Letter to the Abbe Raynal’, large parts of the Indian subcontinent, too, had come under the dominion of the British East India Company. Knowledge, that Pinker says has been used for the benefit of humanity, was deliberately applied for the subjugation of the vast majority of the world, through which the coffers of the ‘white man’ were filled, allowing him to maintain his status as hegemon.
Then there is the benevolent paternalism of the developed Western hemisphere that coaxes the developing world to ‘catch up’. This is either misguided at best — since The Economist in a Sept 2014 article titled ‘Hold the Catch-up’ has stated that emerging economies will take as many as 300 years to catch up with the United States — or a thinly veiled cover for neo-imperialist agendas at its most plausible worst. Now that gunboat diplomacy (whereby the British empire forced nations such as China to open their borders to their market, paving the way for globalisation) is no longer fashionable for the ‘civilised’ world, developed economies use this softer approach — along with other measures such as debt — in marketing modernity to the long-disenfranchised (even though a fair share of them belong to the developed world, giving the lie to such simplistic dichotomies as the West versus the rest). And the market must indeed spread, as Karl Marx pointed out, in search of cheap labour and natural resources to fuel growth and progress.
This is why the question posed by Dostoevsky, about how far you are willing to go to achieve your objective (that golden American dream rerun and rehashed over countless asinine Hollywood productions that glamourise gun violence and sex), is so important. The developed world is interested in pursuing instrumental reason, the kind of ‘reason’ that allows it to achieve, regardless of the means, the ultimate goal in Abraham Maslow’s hierarchy of needs: self-actualisation. It has long used the banner of free market economics to propagate its own self, to recreate the world in its own image, so that wherever it may look, it may see itself. It is precisely this narcissism that Pinker, perhaps without even knowing, is furthering under the guise of advancing liberal, enlightenment ideals. And therein lies the answer to his question about why ‘the world’ continues to be suspicious of ‘progress’ — that ever so vague and contentious concept — especially scholars in the social sciences, many of whom Pinker dismisses for being “morose cultural pessimists.”
After systematically destabilising entire continents, ousting democratically elected leaders and using funds to prop up puppet power, using countries as battlegrounds for its own proxy wars and colonising more than half the world — among other crimes against life for its own profit — what moral qualifications does the developed world have to sell humanism and enlightenment, unless by that they secretly mean ‘How to win friends and enslave others’? But regardless of what is being sold, not without a critical understanding of modernity can we develop a sense of the battle of ideologies being played out around us constantly on all fronts.
In summary, Pinker’s seemingly heavy Enlightenment Now is, in fact, a shallow reading of history that peddles a pseudo-intellectual white man’s burden to bring civilisation to the depraved multitudes that it believes are still locked in the tyranny of tradition and superstition. If the author is indeed an advocate for the specialisation of labour as he suggests, then perhaps he should stick to his own field of psychology and linguistics and leave social sciences to scholars and commentators such as Pankaj Mishra, who in his book, The Age of Anger: A History of the Present, offers a much more nuanced understanding of that same history and its consequences that we continue to see today. That said, however, we can give Pinker the benefit of our doubt and hope that, should he choose to write again on matters of economics, politics and philosophy, his next book will be less biased and more substantial in its assessment.
The reviewer is a lifelong learner and part-time teacher of the humanities
Enlightenment Now: The
Case for Reason, Science,
Humanism and Progress
By Steven Pinker
Viking, US
ISBN: 978-0525427575
576pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, July 8th, 2018