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Confronting the Contemporary Babel


Article # : 15008 

Section : EDITORIAL
Issue Date : 9 / 1988  788 Words
Author : Morton A. Kaplan
Editor and Publisher

       From approximately the beginning of the century to World War II, there was an intellectual interregnum that was extremely interesting less because of the lasting worth of its intellectual productions than because of the issues with which it grappled. Darwin, Einstein, Freud, and Marx had revolutionized the consciousness of modern man. If Darwin was correct, we had evolved by change from monkeys, as William Jennings Bryan had put it during the Scopes trial. The theory of relativity had destroyed the concept of absolute space and time, psychoanalysis had stressed the irrational sources of human behavior, and Marx had challenged the economic and political order of the age. At the same time, we were moving from an aristocratic era to one in which mass man came to the fore, a change so poignantly staged in Renoir's Grand Illusion in the exchanges between von Stroheim and the French officer.
       
        Thus, all our beliefs were being relativized. Anthropology argued that value systems were simply different and that there was no sense to the argument that one was better than another. In philosophy, the positivists "proved" that values were merely subjective preferences without any factual or natural foundation. In art, Dada attempted to destroy all existing aesthetic concepts. One of the most famous paintings of that school was that of a fur-lined urinal. Kafka introduced us to the novel of the absurd; individual fate was detached not merely from works but from grace as well.
       
        These were among the varied circumstances that produced syndicalism, Leninism, fascism, and national socialisms--all of which were attempts to impose order and meaning through force. These new and noxious doctrines were rushing in to fill the vacuum produced by the breakdown ... (1998 of 4861 Characters)
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