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S**F
Facing Up to Others, the World, & God
I suspect that the late Sir Roger Scruton is best known for his conservative political views, understanding, of course, that his conservatism is rooted in Burke and pre-Boris Johnson Toryism. But such a perception, whatever the merits of his political beliefs—which are, in my view, quite defensible if not fully persuasive—should not detract from his philosophical bona fides in any degree. Scruton has published works on modern philosophy, Spinoza, Kant, aesthetics, architecture, music, Wagner, and sex, among other topics. And, as he demonstrates in this book, he’s given very careful thought to God (including impressive acquaintance with the Islamic tradition), faith, community, religion, Christianity and Judaism, and other related topics and themes. His erudition and skillful arguments are fully on display in this book based on his lectures.If the book could be boiled down to some key points, it would certainly include the four words that underpin this entire enterprise and a great deal of Scruton’s thought: “I,” “you,” “why”, and “face.” In our world, “I, you, and why” emanate from and are most on display in the face. Indeed, each chapter references the face. In the first chapter, Scruton draws a distinction between the world of the natural sciences (of which our species is a part), and the world of human persons, with our expressive faces, words, and symbols. One is a world of explanations via the concept of causation, and the other is a world of meaning, intentions, reasons, plans, goals—and love. We humans live in both worlds.As I alluded to earlier, Scruton builds this work around what I label his theory of the face, human, natural, and that of God. As to humans, Scruton works from the fact that we humans, for all our reason and thought, are embodied creatures. We are also individuals, with differences and with shared traits. We are immensely social and have developed language, as has no other creature that we’re aware of. Each of us has our own perspective, our self, which, like the horizon, always moves with us. We are both a subject and an object, but we only really know ourselves as subjects. And, as Scruton quotes Kant, we are “both bound and free.”As subject, we are an “I” that can inquire of another, a “You,” about the “why?” of any action. (Scruton, as one would expect, cites Martin Buber on the importance of “I” and “You” (“Thou”)). This ability to converse with and inquire about one another allows us to make judgments and to hold persons accountable for their actions or failure to act. These factors allow for morals and laws. Our failures to provide adequate accounts of ourselves can (and perhaps should) lead to instances of guilt, shame, remorse, and regret. Recognition, conflict, and cooperation all arise from our encounters with others, the interpersonal. And within this interpersonal realm, we have the potential for dialogue.Out of interpersonal relations and encounters arise I and You, promises, covenants, and plans. All of these traits and practices are made possible because our “I” is also a self that has continuity over time and that can look forward to the future via imagination and back into the past via memory. These uniquely human traits allow us to act outside of Nature. Scruton notes instances of altruism both in Nature and in humans. He argues that an act such as falling on a live grenade to save one’s fellows isn’t a matter of genetic programming, such as found in ants, but a human choice, based on values and foresight.Scruton notes that the human face can both reveal and conceal, inform and deceive, according—sometimes—to the will of the individual. And we look to faces, not knees or elbows, for crucial information about the disposition of another. When we see a smile (unique to humans), we may see it as warm and welcoming, or ghoulish and cynical, which can prove crucial to governing our interactions with a person. And the eyes—the eyes are the windows of the soul, as any person in love can attest. Scruton quotes C.S. Lewis that friends stand side-by-side, while lovers are face-to-face. How true.Scruton entitles one chapter as “The Face of the Earth,” wherein Scruton discusses sacred places and events. Indeed, the applies not just to sacred groves and temples, but to the earth as a whole. (Scruton addresses our treatment of our Earth in spiritual, philosophical, and practical terms in his book from 2012, How to Think Seriously About the Planet: The case for an Environmental Conservatism.) Scruton’s final chapter is entitled “The Face of God.” Scruton addresses the attributes of God and God’s relation to the human world. It’s much too rich for me to recount faithfully here, but suffice it to say that piety, obedience, love, freedom, and sacrifice, are all a part of the discussion, along with the figures such as Richard Wagner and Rene Girard. In this chapter, Scruton notes that only mortals can realize the love that requires sacrifice. So it is.I always find it hard to write a book such as this one that is written by someone so far above my pay grade in intelligence, learning, and wisdom. But I read challenging books such as this one* because it presses me on vital concerns, such as the meaning and consequence of such vital concepts as love, freedom, persons, subjects, and God, among others. Even if only a little of the author’s wisdom and insight rubs off on me, I’m the better for it—and all of those whom I encounter. And, I expect, anyone else inclined to encounter this book will come away the better for it. Thus, I highly recommend it. And, I hope to continue my encounter with Scruton by examining two more books published by him that arise from two later lectures he gave. We’ll find that they both embellish and expand upon themes raised here: The Soul of the World (2014) and On Human Nature (2017).*By referring to this book as “challenging” I am referring only to the weightiness of the topics discussed and not to the felicity of the prose nor the clarity of the arguments, both of which are exemplary.
C**A
The Face of God and the Absence of God
In this book, the many themes of Roger Scruton's work are put together. He was a rare man who while not ompletely agreeing with another saw the value of the other's opinion. One may not agree with all he says, but still be richly rewarded from reading this book. A world that runs from God is taking its direction from what it seeks to deface.
P**E
Rediscovering Subjectivity and the Sacred
The Face of God, the book form of Roger Scruton’s Gifford Lectures, is the first of a two-part collection of lectures turned into books that tie together the English philosopher’s assessment and challenge of the modern world (the other being "The Soul of the World").“Lord Gifford was not an orthodox adherent of any religion, but someone who nevertheless believed that our relation to God is the most important relation we have.” So opens Scruton’s work. Although he opens with a statement about God, in relationship to our lives, the book is not so much about God but about personal relationships and the issues of subjectivity and beauty which are interlinked in Scruton’s mind and how the worldview of subjectivity and beauty is tied to belief, or a relation, to God.Roger Scruton is a heterodox Christian, but probably an orthodox Anglican given that, as a prima facie rule, no one knows what Anglicans believe and, as David Bentley Hart has said of Anglicans in a joking but serious manner when giving a talk to Anglicans, “Anglicans are slippery folk.” But Scruton’s cultural Christianity cannot be denied. Indeed, his entire book hinges on the cultural and psychological reality of the Christian God to make sense of subjectivity and wonder in the world.In orthodox Christianity (Catholicism, Orthodoxy, confessional Anglicanism and Protestantism), God is not an object; not a “flying spaghetti monster” as illiterate comic critics like to rhetorically bemuse; not just a distant and faraway prime-mover. God is a subject, he is the great “I am”, the ground and source of all being and knowledge in the cosmos. God is Truth, God is Wisdom, and God is Love. That humans are made in the image of God, which Scruton recontextualizes to mean “face”, means that humans are capable of intimate relations with one another and that these relations create beauty from them. Indeed, the seat of true beauty is one of subjectivity according to Scruton. This is a common ancient Christian view; one found most declaratively in St. Thomas Aquinas. Interior beauty, the beauty of subjectivity—the beauty of faces—magnifies the beauty and avoids material objectifying or objectophilia.The emphasis on the face, which includes the eyes—and if the eyes are the window to the soul then the face is the highway to the subject—is the key feature that screams out against the reductionist mentality of reducing humans to mere hunks of matter in a world of other hunks of matter. “The face shines in the world of objects with a light that is not of this world – the light of subjectivity. You can look for freedom in the world of objects and you will not find it: not because it is not there, but because it is bound up with the first person perspective, and with the view from somewhere of the creature who can say ‘I’.” The face, precisely because it is the seat of the eyes, the softness of the human condition—the seat of our most visible emotions—and the seat of language, is that which marks us differently from the rest of the world.Scruton’s elaboration on human subjectivity as a defining feature of our humanness vis-à-vis the world is also a unique defense of humanism. Humanism is not the petty secular doctrine that we have today. Traditionally, humanism was grounded in the ancient belief—shared by the classical philosophers and Christianity (and Judaism and Islam)—that humans were set apart from the rest of creation. There is, in other words, something special about us. Traditionally, this was conceived of as our ability to reason and know the supreme good (Greeks and Romans) and also our ability to love, caress one another, and form intimate bonds of relations moved by that implanted seed of love deep in the human soul (Christianity). In a different language, Scruton is attempting to articulate the same defense of traditional humanism by honing in on human subjectivity as the third person of the triad reality of the human condition: That is, reason and love come together in subjectivity and this union of reason and love in subjectivity is something deeply beautiful.When trying to understand ourselves we must also understand where we are. This is one of the gifts of subjectivity. Just as Moses encounters the great “I Am” in the Burning Bush, in which he can have a dialogue with the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, so too do humans find themselves constantly encounter little “I am’s” in this intimate human world of relationships and encounters. This world of human-to-human, I-You, encounters is one of rational and loving unveiling to each other. We seek to know the “other” through stripping off the veils that hide their face. Why? Because the face is the seat of interpersonal subjectivity. The face is that which contains the transcendent-self. The body is merely the empirical self. The false self. The false self propagated to us by the denizens of reductionist science who destroy subjectivity or have no good explanation for the phenomenon of subjectivity other than to say it magically evolved from that lump of meat called the brain.Situating ourselves in the world of subjectivity and personal relationships lands us in the middle-ground—how Platonic!—between the “view from nowhere” and the “view from somewhere.” Scruton’s “view from nowhere” is the reductionist consciousness, which is no consciousness at all, which reduces humans to mere bodies in motion with subjectivity to them—no soul, as it were. The “view from somewhere,” which is what Scruton endorses in the book, is the view of faces; that humanistic anthropology that asserts something mystical, indeed, special, about humans and the world they find themselves in.These two competing views impact our culture and the landscape of the earth. “Botticelli’s Venus is not a sex-object, but a sex-subject. The intrusion of the sex-object into art can be already witnessed in the salon art of nineteenth-century France. Witness Bouguereau’s brilliantly accomplished, Ingres-inspired and entirely saccharine Birth of Venus, in which vapid sensual faces stare vacantly at the goddess, as she turns her face from the spectator in order to sniff her freshly shaven armpit and to toy narcisistically with her hair.” In art, Scruton highlights with selected examples, we see two competing ideas of beauty influenced by these two competitive worldviews. One, exemplified by Botticelli’s Venus, emphasizes the face and presents beauty as a subject. The other, exemplified by Bouguereau’s Venus, emphasizes the body and presents beauty as an object. Subtle, too be sure—triumphs both paintings are—but with major consequences to culture and human consciousness.This battle between objectophilia and subjectivity plays out in our towns, streets, and cities. Beautifully ordered cities which invite participation, like Botticelli’s Venus, or disorderly messes of protruding objects blotting the skyline that are a sore to the eyes. The view from somewhere is a world that invites participation. The view from nowhere is a world that allows us to pursue our meaningless bodily lives with no concern for future generations. Indeed, Scruton—also a noted conservationist but not environmentalist—implies that the battles over how to treat the earth break down between these two camps: The conservationists seeking intimate participation with their local environ while the environmentalists, who see the world as an object, seek to control (“save”) the world through the power of their might. One view, then, leads to a world of intimacy and sacred relationships. The other view, inevitably, leads to a world of fatalism, despair, and the eventual collapse into the lust to dominate.With God, or rather, with human subjects, we are called to a higher plane of existence, consciousness, and relationships. Without God, or rather, without human subjects—i.e. a world of “human” objects—we devolve into a lower sphere of competition, bodily objectification, and the depersonalization of relationships which exhausts itself in no relationships at all. At the end of the day, Scruton sees no room for middle-ground compromising. We either go all in from our situated position to the world of subjects which implies certain things moderns are not willing to accept, or we go all in from our situated position to the world of pure objects which is where we’re already heading. In this respect, Scruton’s cry is like the weeping prophet in the wilderness or desert. One world is clearly superior to the other; but woe unto us who have hardened hearts and not the eyes to see or the ears to here.
E**R
Another excellent book by Sir Roger Scruton
These are writings from a Gifford Lecture and perhaps this is why they were easier to understand than some of his other writings. He explains the importance of first person (singular and plural) relationships and how this affects society. He discusses nuances I never thought about in regards to the 'I' in me and the 'I' in you. From sex to death to transcendental experiences, Scruton makes a case for why the face (and speech) is so significant.
B**N
Important Insight into Our Moral Identity
The scientific worldview that reduces subjectivity to mere brain waves is convincingly disputed. Our true nature as moral agents shines in our faces as we look upon one another with sympathy, compassion and accountability. We can see the face of God and we start by looking with humility and wonder into the faces of one another and seeing there the image of God.
C**A
Scruton is Always Worth Reading
All of of Scruton's books are worth reading and pondering. Even his very curious study of the Church of England is interesting if eccentric in ways (but we benefit from reading a church book not written by a church official or spokesman). One of the finest books I've read in a decade is Scruton's "On Hunting." Naturally, it is not by any means merely a book about fox hunting and horses; it is at once an assessment and philosophy of life in the post-postmodern North Atlantic world.
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