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How to Survive the Apocalypse

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“Robert Joustra and Alissa Wilkinson insist the end is not near; it’s already here, in the zeitgeist, even if the zombies and robot overlords are still at bay. With philosopher Charles Taylor as their guide, they cast a keen eye on how apocalyptic visions in recent popular culture reflect our rootless search for ‘authentic’ selves in a secular age. But they also leave us with a compelling alternative to defeatism in the face of the end times — a clear-eyed pluralism rooted in the building of faithful institutions.” — Kevin R. den Dulk director of the Henry Institute, Calvin College

“With style and skill, Wilkinson and Joustra demonstrate that popular entertainment tells us something deeply important about ourselves. As our guides on a wide-ranging tour with an itinerary that includes Charles Taylor, Parks and Recreation, and modern political philosophy among many other stops, they lead us to a place where our participation as citizens is wholeheartedly encouraged and affirmed.”

— Stephanie Summers CEO of the Center for Public Justice

“All too often, books on pop culture by Christian scholars, pastors, and theologians lapse into the ‘what to think’ category. What’s different about reading How to Survive the Apocalypse is that we understand better why we’re seeing what we’re seeing. That’s because a political philosopher (Joustra) and a cultural critic (Wilkinson) are probably in better position to guide us as to how our secular age has become perennially obsessed with the fantasy of ‘the end of the world.’ ”

— Gregory Alan Thornbury president of The King’s College



H ow to S u rv i ve the Apocalypse Zombies, Cylons, Faith, and Politics at the End of the World

Robert Joustra & Alissa Wilkinson

William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company Grand Rapids, Michigan


© 2016 Robert Joustra and Alissa Wilkinson All rights reserved Published 2016 by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. 2140 Oak Industrial Drive N.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan 49505 Printed in the United States of America 22  21  20  19  18  17  16    7  6  5  4  3  2  1

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Joustra, Robert, author. | Wilkinson, Alissa, author. Title: How to survive the Apocalypse: zombies, cylons, faith, and politics at the end of the world / Robert Joustra & Alissa Wilkinson. Description: Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2016. | Includes bibliographical references. Identifiers: LCCN 2016002487 | ISBN 9780802872715 (pbk.: alk. paper) Subjects: LCSH: End of the world. Classification: LCC BT877 .J68 2016 | DDC 236 — dc23 LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2016002487

www.eerdmans.com


Contents

Foreword, by Andy Crouch

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1. The World Is Going to Hell

1

2. A Short History of the Secular Age

10

3. A Short History of the Apocalypse

34

4. Keep Calm and Fight the Cylons: New Ways to Be Human

62

5. Remember My Name: Antiheroes and Inescapable Horizons

77

6. A Lonely Man, His Computer, and the Politics of Recognition

97

7. Winter Is Coming: The Slide to Subjectivism

119

8. How to Survive the Zombie Apocalypse

136

9. The Scandal of Subtler Languages

151

10. May the Odds Be Ever in Your Favor: Learning to Love Faithful Institutions

162

11. On Babylon’s Side

179

Acknowledgments

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Foreword

To begin, a confession: Of the many artifacts of popular visual culture discussed in this marvelously wide-ranging and provocative book, I have seen hardly a single one. No Game of Thrones. No House of Cards. No Mad Men or The Walking Dead or Breaking Bad either. My nearly complete ignorance, at least firsthand, of these works is first of all a matter of time. TV requires a lot of it, which I never seem to have. One of the many things that astonishes me about Alissa Wilkinson and Rob Joustra is that they manage to maintain lives as professors, family members, friends, and writers — and also actually watch all these hours of television, with critical attention and intelligence to boot! And I have to admit that another reason I have not engaged with these dystopian, apocalyptic series that so define our cultural moment is that, well, my imagination is dystopian and apocalyptic enough on its own, thank you very much. But after reading this book, I have a far deeper appreciation for all these works of popular art, and a sense that I’ve been missing out. Does that mean I’m going to binge-watch Mad Men this weekend, or ever? Probably not. But it does heighten my awareness of just how much is happening, of real significance, in popular culture — I’d venture to say, more than at any other point in my adult life. As our political and educational institutions have waned in their vi


Foreword ability to address the question of how we human beings live together in spite of all our differences — the question, that is, of politics — and what this world all really means, our storytellers have taken up the slack. And they’ve done so using media that require a lot of time and attention — multi-volume works of fantasy and fiction, multi-season television shows, feature films. We’ve come a long way from the sitcom’s 22 minutes of easy-watching trivia. The artists who produce the most widely influential works of our time can count on audiences willing to invest hours, even days, of their lives in stories that probe our present condition and our probable futures. If this book merely introduced laggards like me to the excellences available in this golden age of TV, it would be worthwhile. But it is also an extended critical meditation on the work, above all, of the philosopher Charles Taylor (along with his theologically minded interpreter James K. A. Smith and the incomparable political theologian Oliver O’Donovan). And so I might as well offer another confession: For all Taylor’s importance, and for all my eager reading of Smith and O’Donovan, I’ve never managed to actually finish either of Taylor’s magna opera — Sources of the Self and A Secular Age. Like a past presidential candidate in the U.S. who said, in an unintentional double entendre, that he “tried to read Plato’s Republic every year,” I have many times started each of these books and many times found myself distracted by something easier. Like, say, learning Sanskrit, mastering the Japanese game of Go, or building a 1/100-scale replica of the city of Amsterdam in my basement. So you could say I’m the least qualified person you could imagine to commend this book to you. Or maybe it makes this endorsement more compelling: few books have made me think as carefully about the question of what it means to be a citizen — someone who takes seriously their responsibility as a member of a political community — and what it means to be a Christian at the same time. I might offer one observation of my own by way of ushering you into this book. It is truly striking how enduring the idea of apocalypse remains, just when you’d think our age would have put such notions to rest — a reminder of the “cross pressures,” as Taylor would say, vii


Andy Crouch that buffet even the most seemingly secure secularist. But I’ve noticed something about many of these works of serial drama, whether they are set after a grand reversal of history or seem teetering on the edge of one: it seems like their creators have a very hard time coming up with truly satisfying endings. Some of this is due, to be sure, to the economics of serial television, which has every incentive to keep its viewers on the hook and to keep its producers uncertain of whether they will get funds for another season. But it also seems — judging from the tepid reactions to the finales of any number of recent series, from Lost to The Sopranos to Breaking Bad — that writing truly satisfying endings is an elusive goal, even when your central theme is the end of the world. We don’t actually just want an end — we want a judgment. We don’t just want things to collapse — we want them to be set right. The human heart is not satisfied with final indifference — the prospect that neither damnation nor redemption awaits us or any other member of our haunted species. We want them in our stories, even if the world seems to offer neither one. Andy Crouch

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Chapter 1 The World Is Going to Hell

Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds. J. Robert Oppenheimer, quoting the Bhagavad Gita

In order to engage effectively in this many-faceted debate, one has to see what is great in the culture of modernity, as well as what is shallow and dangerous. Charles Taylor, The Malaise of Modernity

The world is going to hell. Just turn on the television — no, not the news. Flip over to the prestige dramas and sci-fi epics and political dramas. Look at how we entertain ourselves. Undead hordes are stalking and devouring, alien invasions are crippling and enslaving, politicians ignore governance in favor of sex and power, and sentient robots wreak terrible revenge upon us. Today, apocalypse sells like mad. Not just the threat of it, but its reality. And especially its aftermath. This is objectively weird when you think about it. So we go to work all day and then come home, reheat some pizza, flop down on the couch . . . and watch our own destruction for fun? What’s going on here? Why would we do such a thing? 1


How to Survive the Apocalypse One easy answer — too easy — is that our fixation on the end of the world (and us) is itself a sort of sign of the end of civilization. As the narrative goes, we’re a bunch of lazy, privileged Westerners with no real wars to fight, no real struggles, and we have to watch this stuff to get our adrenaline fix. Only people with the luxury of comfort and relative stability could afford to entertain themselves with their own destruction, right? Well. Yes and no. As long as we humans have been telling the story of our beginning, we’ve also been telling the story of our end — for every Asgard and Midgard, a Ragnarok; for every Garden of Eden, an Armageddon. These stories of “apocalypse” are about the end of the world and the destruction of civilization. This is how it all ends. But apocalyptic literature is not really just about the end of the world. The Greek word apokalypsis means not only destruction, not only the disruption of reality, but the dismantling of perceived realities — an ending of endings, a shocking tremor of revelation that remade creation in its wake. It renews as it destroys; with its destruction it brings an epiphany about the universe, the gods, or God. Apocalyptic literature has always said a great deal more about who we are now — the makers and the receivers — than who we might be in the future. It reveals more than predicts. And that’s why our stories have changed over time: when the way we think about ourselves as individuals and societies changes, our apocalypses change too. In other words, there’s more to our obsessions with zombies and Cylons and robots and presidents behaving badly than meets the eye.

It’s All Our Fault Our forefathers conceived of Ragnarok or Armageddon as a judgment visited from on high upon mankind, a Day of Reckoning chosen and enacted by a God or gods. But today, we imagine the apocalypse differently: we’ve swapped ourselves into the position of apocalypse-enactor. 2


The World Is Going to Hell We have science, and scholarship, and technology, all of which let us understand and manipulate our environment with previously unthinkable powers: we can cure disease, beam a message around the globe in seconds, walk on the moon, see the invisible. Our destinies are in our hands, and that control is so broad, so unprecedented, that apocalypse is within our grasp. You and I have become gods. But that has come with a price: now we can bring about the end. We are the authors of our own destruction. Since the early Cold War, the doctrine of mutually assured destruction — launch the missile, we’ll launch one back — has constantly reminded us that we teeter on the edge.1 One diplomatic misstep or inadvertent bump of the button, and our thin veneer of civilization will crack. Our godlike powers are as much a product of our power to destroy as to create. Our novels and stories and movies and TV shows have shifted from a dominantly utopian imagination to one marked by the apocalyptic — and the dystopian. We once had the Cold War utopianism of Captain Kirk; now we have J. J. Abrams’ Star Trek into Darkness, with its none-too-metaphorical annihilation of logic — an inversion of the Trek universe — through the destruction of the planet Vulcan. We’ve gone from the idealist psycho-history of Isaac Asimov to the fatalist siren call of the Cylons in Battlestar Galactica. We went from the sacrificial valor of Hobbits to the purging of innocence in Westeros. What happened? What scorched our fantasy landscape? Why this extraordinary dystopian shift in popular imagination? An answer lurks in something the philosopher Charles Taylor calls the “malaise of modernity,” by which he means the things we obsess about and the tensions endemic to our modern moral order — an order Taylor calls “secular” (though he means something different by that than you might expect). Our dystopias are different from the apocalypses we saw in the past — in the history 1. This is not just a metaphor. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in fact keeps a “Doomsday Clock” (http://thebulletin.org/timeline), which in 2015 was placed at three minutes to midnight.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse of the Christians, Jews, Hindus, and others — because they take a secular form. Exploring this is useful and interesting, but in this book we don’t just intend to perform some thoughtful cultural analysis, as valuable as that may be. Our project is bigger: we want to peer through the lens of apocalypse at ourselves, looking at these dystopias to see how we conceive of our life together — our politics. Then, having seen ourselves more clearly, we want to offer a few modest proposals for getting from dystopia back to apocalypse. We want to see what is good and what is broken in our culture, so we can then have more meaningful discussions about how to maximize one and heal the other.

What We Talk about When We Talk about “Secular” When we say that today’s dystopias are different because they are “secular,” we mean something different from what most people mean when they use the word today, something quite complex and nuanced.2 We frequently talk about “secularity” as a kind of marginalization or eclipse of the religious — religion being blocked out or removed from particular societal spheres. But that isn’t sufficient for really understanding our times. To say we are “secular,” Taylor says, is to say that all of us think differently and live differently than we did in the past. We haven’t just eliminated or emasculated God or the gods; we’ve also gotten rid of traditions, times, places, and anything that tries to resist or claim itself higher than the immanent will of the person. And even those of us who still believe in these things live in a world marked by the ability to choose not to believe in them; I 2. Here we draw on Taylor’s book The Malaise of Modernity (Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 1991), and where necessary we’ll consult his larger work A Secular Age (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2007), in which Malaise forms much of the eighth chapter. You could pair our book with A Secular Age and The Malaise of Modernity as an accessible, applied introduction, along with James K. A. Smith’s How (Not) to Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2014), or just take it as a proxy for Taylor’s admittedly dense and ranging tome.

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The World Is Going to Hell can plausibly convert to, or de-convert from, most any belief system, regardless of my heritage or ethnicity. This is quite a change. It required an anthropocentric shift: a turn toward putting the human person at the center of the universe as the creator of meaning. No longer do we find our reasons for existence out in the cosmos or in some metaphysical dimension. Instead, humans have radical power to make and decide their own meaning. Ironically, of course, though we live in a universe where we are in charge, all we see on the horizon is our end. This is dystopia. We have the power to make our own futures that the Enlightenment promised, but it isn’t all it’s cracked up to be — we were promised parachutes, and what we got were knapsacks. You might be tempted to think this is all bad. Shouldn’t we decry this shift as some kind of self-devolution? But hold your fire for now. Taylor, at least, isn’t going to characterize this as either a good or a bad thing. With the secular age, some things have certainly been lost, but others have been gained. The reactionary alarmism of culture warriors is unmerited. As Taylor sees it, we ought to understand the relation between loss and gain in the modern moral order because we are always at a point where we could slide into being the worst sort of moderns — and recognizing that can help us avoid it. The truth is this: every age has its own peculiar pathologies, its own dark sides, its own sicknesses. Modernity is no different from any other age in that respect. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth addressing our own pathologies. We think of our attempt here — diagnosis and a move toward restoration — as a fundamentally optimistic act. The modern moral order, with its gifts, is worth restoring and renovating. It’s maybe a bit idealistic, but it’s worth doing. Certain wounds may be healed. When we talk about “what’s wrong,” we’re trying to demonstrate and practice filial commitment to our common life — not cacklingly shove our culture over the precipice. To use Taylor’s language: this book is about steering developments toward greater promise rather than toward their more debased forms. It is a work of loyal opposition. 5


How to Survive the Apocalypse

Charles Taylor Meets TV So how do we explain our shift in our apocalyptic literature toward the dark side and start to move back toward understanding? Why do we switch on the TV or buy a movie ticket and see the inversion of the once dizzying utopian heights of mankind for its dark, haunted dystopian depths? To do this, we’ll first spend time with Taylor’s argument from The Malaise of Modernity, introducing Taylor’s framework and trying to make sense of some of his more breathtaking phrases, like “the bulwarks of disbelief” and “time-purged consciousness.” Here’s some of what’s to come: • Part of being modern, Taylor says, is discovering what it means for me to realize my own unique way of being human. This drive for “authenticity” is a moral imperative today and practically the lodestar of popular culture. (Watch literally any Disney movie for proof.) And that drops us right down into the Cylon-human (civil) war, so we’ll delve into Battlestar Galactica at length, with its characters’ search for definition and recognition against the backdrop of a generational fatalism: all this has happened before, and all this will happen again. • The search for authenticity and self-definition that so occupies us today is also rife with apocalyptic paradox, because “finding ourselves” requires not navel-gazing, but being part of a community in which others can help us. Dystopian tales aimed at teens (like The Hunger Games, for instance) are especially powerful. • Man meets computer. Man falls in love. Man finds himself. In Spike Jonze’s near-future dystopian Her, we get both an unsettling expression of authenticity and an illustration of how finding our identities requires others. And the relationship between Theodore (man) and Samantha (operating system) eventually shatters the bonds of monogamy, sprouting a whole civilization of operating systems. The politics of recognition are more than interpersonal; they are systemic and social. • In his apocalyptic and addictive Song of Ice and Fire novels, George 6


The World Is Going to Hell R. R. Martin paints an unparalleled picture of instrumentalism that few could hope to match. Stalking the corpse-filled fields of Westeros is the ghost of ends versus means, of human and material reality as raw material to reach our desired, even sometimes moral (in and of themselves) ends. Its instrumentalist logic and moral apathy tell a very real and very powerful story in the canon of popular culture. • Katniss Everdeen of The Hunger Games inhabits a world that, on the surface, seems to consist of those who are not free (District 12) ruled by those who are (the Capital). But the books are clear: everyone in Panem has lost their freedom, whether through tyrannical suppression in the outer districts or the bondage of novelty and hedonism in the Capital. The same regime causes both, and this is what Taylor calls the “double loss of freedom.” It’s two sides of the same coin, foretold by both Orwell (1984) and Huxley (Brave New World). We read these popular forms as stories that tell us about the deep tensions nestled in our modern psyches, tensions that are reaching something like crescendo if our hard dystopian turn is any evidence. Taylor is an interpretive guide, a hermeneutic guide, to answer our basic questions: Why this dystopian shift? How will it work itself out in our modern life? Can we escape the doom that seems inevitable? Are we all fated, ultimately, to turn into zombies? Are we on the way to breaking bad? Nobody knows yet. We could end up in the soft-edged, candy-­ colored world of Her, or we may end up fighting for our lives in the arena. Or maybe we’re headed for epic, unceasing, morally bankrupt battles. We care about this, as enthusiastic consumers of, participants in, and scholars of popular culture whose serious engagement with these stories dates from the early days of the twenty-first century. Both of us also teach college students and know keenly the ways that their imaginations, and ours, have been molded by the shows and movies we watch and the conversations we have with others about them. We’d venture to guess that not a single class session goes by when one of us 7


How to Survive the Apocalypse doesn’t reference something we’ve been watching as it illustrates the ideas we’re grappling with in the lecture hall. Popular culture both reflects us back to ourselves and shapes the way we think about the world we see around us. This playful populist product is serious business. For those of us who believe in the project of modernity, popular culture is a matter of life and death. And it deserves our careful attention.

Now Our Watch Begins Taylor says that “in order to engage effectively in this many-faceted debate, one has to see what is great in the culture of modernity, as well as what is shallow or dangerous.”3 It’s tempting to think that we can talk about modernity or postmodernity as uniformly good or bad. (Just walk into a church and ask people about postmodernism.) But we can’t. An examination of the “politics of apocalypse” — while not denying the good — does show that there’s plenty of bad. We’ve exhausted the moral horizons and solidarity of recognition that characterize a better path for modern society. Our pop culture experiments in post-apocalyptic fantasy imagine the logical conclusions of these malaises, but so far, none offer a fix. We’d like to suggest there might be a fix, but it’s not easy, or obvious. Call it the “banality of goodness”4 — something religious people are in a particularly good position to model. Religious traditions have a built-in sense of moral horizons and of the politics of recognition, one that is badly needed in modern societies. Certainly no person (religious or otherwise) can save the world, but being embedded in these practices makes people more aware of their importance and better suited to bring them into the public square. But a great power for good — for public justice and cultural flourishing — also resides in the cultural and social institutions that come 3. Taylor, The Malaise of Modernity, pp. 120-21. 4. We borrow this term from Michael Gerson (who inverts it from Hannah Arendt), among others.

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The World Is Going to Hell along with the modern moral order, many of which arose from a concern for human dignity and the person. Our pop culture apocalypses “game out” possible futures and current tensions: we’ve exhausted our resources and are at an end; we’re authors of our own destruction. But we beg to differ. These aren’t necessarily prophetic. Through embedding our struggle for authenticity within a larger order, through loving faithful institutions, we can work toward a less dystopian future. The politics of apocalypse is about endings, definitely. But what comes after this “creative destruction” is a cultural choice that remains to be made. We’re not here to give an exhaustive account of either Taylor or apocalypse in popular culture; we’d just like to help you get started with your own novel, aesthetic, and productive readings of cultural forms that tell us something true about each other, about the world, and about God. We want you to turn on the TV and believe it can prod you and your community into making our culture a better place. Or at least a place, and a people, worth saving from the apocalypse.

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Chapter 2 A Short History of the Secular Age

You cannot play God, then wash your hands of the things that you’ve created. Sooner or later, the day comes when you can’t hide from the things that you’ve done anymore. William Adama, Battlestar Gallactica

I hate to break it to you, but there is no big lie, there is no system. The universe is indifferent. Don Draper, Mad Men

When we talk about the “secular apocalypse,” there’s a problem: defining secular is perverse and often baffling. Often people use the word to mean non-religious or anti-religious, but if we’re about to argue that even pessimistic, neo-apocalyptic popular culture is “religious,” in one sense, then we need to make the meaning of “secular” more clear. “Non-religious” is only one meaning of secular, and at last count, for instance, the political scientist Daniel Philpott gave about nine meanings for the word.1 In this book, when we use the word secular (with a lowercase s), 1. Daniel Philpott, “Has the Study of Global Politics Found Religion?” Annual Review of Political Science 12 (December 2009): 185.

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A Short History of the Secular Age we intend this more common usage. But when we use Secular (capital S), we mean it the way Charles Taylor means it,2 which is definitely not the same thing as non-religious. One of Taylor’s most striking, basic ideas is that we all exist inside of what he calls a social imaginary, a series of pre-theoretical understandings and practices we acquire from the families, communities, and countries into which we’re born that help us navigate the world. It is the “road map” we get from the stories and mythologies of communities in which we grow and live our lives, something that can’t ­really be explained easily by us. It’s not just “big ideas” about the world; it involves practices, a kind of embedded way we situate ourselves in the culture around us. Taylor says that our understandings make our practices possible, and that, furthermore, the practices largely carry our understandings in their DNA. Most of the time, we get those understandings and practices not from lessons but from the cultural “soup” in which we swim. We absorb more than learn: a compelling argument, among others, for the persuasive power of popular culture. In A Secular Age, Taylor writes about the “modern” social imaginary. He argues that the transformations that have taken place in the modern moral order are not neutral; that they are often under-­ theorized, misunderstood, or simply assumed; and that fundamental to those transformations is a shift in the meaning of religion and secularity. Taylor writes, The coming of modern secularity . . . has been coterminous with the rise of a society in which for the first time in history a purely self-sufficient humanism came to be a widely available option. I 2. Taylor himself uses the word in about three different ways, which James K. A. Smith differentiates using Secular1, Secular2, and Secular3. For our purposes here we’ve removed Secular1, which Smith defines as the “classical meaning” in the medieval world (as distinguished from sacred — the earthly plane or domestic life), and used secular (lower-case) to refer to the “modern definition” as neutral, unbiased, objective, non-religious, and Secular (upper-case) to refer to Taylor’s notion as an age of contested belief, where religious belief is no longer axiomatic. See James K. A. Smith, How (Not) to Be Secular (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2014), p. 142.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse mean by this a humanism accepting no final goals beyond human flourishing, nor any allegiance to anything else beyond this flourishing. Of no previous society was this true.3

What he calls the modern social imaginary enables practices and understandings of the world that leave as optional questions of transcendent or cosmic purpose. Today, those questions are left to the theologians and the philosophers. A Secular (big S) age, he argues, is “one in which the eclipse of all goals beyond human flourishing becomes conceivable; or better, it falls within the range of an imaginable life for masses of people.”4 In other words, most people in the West can easily choose to live primarily for their own flourishing, rather than for something beyond it — the kingdom of God on earth, for instance. It’s not that nobody could choose that in the past; it’s just that the things that structured society (what Taylor calls “plausibility structures”), like religion, tended to reinforce aims other than the individual’s happiness. Furthermore, the ability to “choose” a particular organized religion, or no religion at all, is now freely available to persons. We pick our religion or church (or stop going) according to what makes us feel like we’re living our best life. And while within particular communities someone might be ostracized or punished for choosing a path different from those around them, society on the whole applauds that move as a brave choice. Religion is just another thing we can choose, along with where we live and whom we vote for and how we take our coffee. Okay, so: how did we get here? Taylor points to a few conditions as key elements making possible this freedom of choice, this Secular age. They have to do with how we moderns imagine the world, ourselves, and the gods/God. And these are things that make it possible for us to think of religion as one more choice, another distinct phenomenon of human existence — rather than the enabling framework that defines all our other choices. 3. Charles Taylor, A Secular Age (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2007), p. 18. 4. Taylor, A Secular Age, pp. 19-20.

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A Short History of the Secular Age Taylor calls these the conditions of secularity. Let’s explore them, in his terms.

How We Learned to Stand Alone: The Buffered Self versus the Porous Self We’re used to hearing the “subtraction” story,5 which goes something like this: As science advanced and gave us increasingly more naturalistic explanations of the world, people grew disenchanted. No longer did we have to rely on the gods to explain why it rained or didn’t, why women grew fertile or barren; now, we knew. And so, over time, this “enlightened” consciousness spread from individuals to whole societies, pushing spiritualistic and superstitious rationale out of society itself. First, the subtraction story goes, human beings uncovered scientific explanations; then they began looking for alternatives to God. But this is only part of the story. The development of science doesn’t automatically invalidate transcendent images of the cosmos. It might have invalidated an enchanted universe — one where magic and spiritual power were the explanation for every material reality, one in which fairies were just around every corner — but it wasn’t necessarily a problem for God. Rebelling against certain forms of enchantment became possible (for instance, in the Reformation’s eschewal of some of the medieval church’s excesses) — but this did not necessarily invalidate a divine, cosmic hierarchy.6 Nor, importantly, does science or disenchantment naturally demand a focus on the individual or secularity. Science and disenchantment were part of what got us to a Secular age, but we also needed to 5. Taylor, A Secular Age, pp. 26-27. 6. James R. Payton Jr., Getting the Reformation Wrong: Correcting Some Misunderstandings (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2010). Payton argues in fact that the Reformation was understood by its leaders — including Luther and Calvin — to be an internal correction of abusive and heretical teachings of the church and the papacy, not a revolution, and certainly not a political or secularizing effort.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse conceive of ourselves in a different way. Taylor writes that this “was a new sense of the self and its place in the cosmos: not open and porous and vulnerable to a world of spirits and powers, but what I want to call ‘buffered.’ ”7 This was more than disenchantment. This was a new confidence in the human power of moral ordering. The easiest way to understand the “buffered” self is to contrast it with what came before the Reformation and the Enlightenment — what Taylor calls the “pre-modern,” a time during which human persons were imagined as “porous.” People in the pre-modern era had existential options, of course. But for the most part, they largely chose between placating this power or that power (various gods, for instance), not between whether to believe they did not exist or to defy them altogether. Some cosmic orders that lacked God or the gods existed — but not in the same way as a modern atheist might think of such an order. Neither Platonism nor Stoicism, for instance, has much room for magic and spirits, but neither were they disenchanted orders or exclusive humanisms, devoted to no end beyond human flourishing. In these conceptions, a grand cosmic hierarchy still ordered the universe, and it had its own internal meanings. Even in the Platonic and Stoic world, the line between personal agency and impersonal force was blurry at best. The pre-modern world was filled with these impersonal forces, whether the Forms or demons, relics or Satan. A complex hierarchy of invisible forces competed to bring either good or ill. Some powers, like those of the gods and goddesses of Olympus, could even conjure human love, hate, or war. The cosmos itself conspired to baffle and compromise what today we call human agency and responsibility. (In a sense, this is the view that people are falling back on when, after spilling coffee on themselves and losing their keys, they say, “The universe is just out to get me today” — though there’s a healthy dose of postmodern narcissism in imagining the universe has any real interest in thwarting our banal everyday endeavors.) The pre-modern world 7. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 27.

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A Short History of the Secular Age was an enchanted world, one that showed “a perplexing absence of certain boundaries which seem to us essential.”8 In the pre-modern world, people did not create meaning; they uncovered it. Meaning was already there, latent, in the cosmos, and resided in things themselves. Constellations were put there to direct and guide you — not just directionally, but existentially. Humans weren’t the only beings who had agency to act on the world: a whole range of things did. Things seen and unseen could impose meaning on people. And humans were not only possibly but also consistently penetrated by these objects. Evil spirits, for example, were more than simply malevolent powers that could affect things around us. They were more invasive. Spirits could sap your very will to live, and you couldn’t do anything about it. You were largely helpless at their hand. Your purpose and intent could be transformed against your will. That is what it means to be a porous self: being radically open and vulnerable to the meanings and enchantment of the cosmos and the forces within it. In the enchanted world, the most powerful location of meaning is outside of you. The very idea that there is some “clear boundary, allowing us to define an inner base area, grounded in which we can disengage from the rest,” is totally absent.9 There isn’t an essential you-ness of you; you’re just a thread woven into a bigger fabric. On the other hand, modern people — you and I — tend to think of ourselves as “buffered.” We are contained beings, individual agents living in a world populated by other individual agents. We have an “essential” self that is specific to us and remains us, invulnerable to outside forces (unless we let them in). I can talk about being “a born artist,” or “an introvert,” and though forces outside of me might conspire to suppress that self (economic realities, expectations from family, and so on), I am still me.10 And I 8. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 33. 9. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 38. 10. It’s interesting to note how popular personality quizzes (from more formal psychological personality profiles all the way to BuzzFeed-style “what kind of sandwich are you?” quizzes) have become in this time. In taking the quiz, we are

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How to Survive the Apocalypse can still recover or rediscover that self. In fact, that’s what it means to be human.11 The buffered self, according to Taylor, is “essentially the self which is aware of the possibility of disengagement.”12 Disengaging from what is “outside” means that ultimate purpose is only that which arises from within the self. So the meanings of things are only defined by our response to them. These purposes may well be manipulated in a variety of ways, but in principle these can be met with counter-­ manipulation and resistance. The emphasis, then, is on keeping a rational and measured interior life, one that can avoid or dissect and respond with the appropriate meaning to externalities of distress or temptation.13 For the pre-modern, porous self, disbelief was remarkably difficult. To disbelieve in God didn’t mean you retreated into your (buffered) self to consider what other existential options might seem practical — rather, it was an act of radical, terrifying, defiant autonomy in the face of powerful, invisible, and penetrating forces. Disbelief was dangerous. That’s not to say it was never done — but it was unlikely to happen on a mass scale. And if one brave individual did break rank with collective devotions or rituals, the response was often violent and decisive. Tolerance was rarely a prominent virtue for societies of porous selves. To blaspheme or desecrate the sacred was not just offensive — it was dangerous to everyone, because it activated forces (probably angry ones) that existed beyond human control. This was not merely a matter of the blasphemer’s salvation; it was a threat to the eternal seeking definition, a shock of recognition: “Yes! That’s me!” We’re looking for our (individual) borders and contours. 11. Jean-Paul Sartre and his breed of post-Christian existentialism took this one step further. Consider his famous statement from his seminal 1946 lecture, published as Existentialism and Humanism: “Man first of all exists, encounters himself, surges up in the world — and defines himself afterwards.” In other words, humans aren’t born with an essence, but neither are they subject to forces beyond their control. Humans themselves get to define their own essences by exercising their agency in the world. This is the ultimate act of the buffered self. 12. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 42. 13. Taylor, A Secular Age, pp. 37-38.

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A Short History of the Secular Age welfare of the entire community, in ways we have difficulty understanding today. The porous self demands “venger à toute rigueur afin de faire cesser l’ire de Dieu”14 (exact rigorous vengeance in order to stay the anger of God). By contrast, today the dissenter or disbeliever may be ostracized or rejected by a particular community, but it is understood that this is the individual’s prerogative to choose. Salvation is not a matter of entire communities threatened by one wayward individual. It is something that people choose or reject for themselves. In general, Taylor says, the modern self relates to the world as “more disembodied beings than our ancestors. The person stands outside, in the agent of disengaged discipline, capable of dispassionate control.”15

Unplugged: The Impersonal, Flattened Order The second key to understanding how we reached today’s Secular age is what Taylor calls the impersonal order. If we’ve changed how we conceive of ourselves from porous to buffered selves, then we imagine the workings of the grander order in which we live in the same way: a movement from a porous “cosmos” to a buffered “universe.” We are beings who are not embedded in the universe and subject to outside forces; rather, we’re rational, individual agents. And so the social order is not imposed on us from a power on high, nor is it a standard form that some societies enact more or less skillfully than others. Instead, society is something we consent to — more like a “game we play together.”16 Its order is increasingly rational and, therefore, assumed to be stable. The hierarchies of the pre-­modern society into which we are somewhat inexplicably ordered and sorted by the cosmos independent of our wills — king and peasant, monk and parishioner — are replaced by a coherent, horizontal order whose singular goal is to protect and benefit each of its members, who are equal in 14. As quoted in Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 43. 15. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 141. 16. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 142.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse the eyes of the law. “Disenchantment,” Taylor says, “brought a new uniformity of purpose and principle.”17 This impersonal order — a society that purports to see all humans as equal, no matter their particularities — requires the buffered self. A porous society implies hierarchy, but a society of discrete, rational individuals might, in a providential order, build a common life for mutual flourishing. This emphasis on the individual provides an important backdrop for the shifted definition of “religion” that emerges in modernity — that is, religion as a cultural artifact that contains within itself options (you can choose to believe in God or Allah or the sun or nobody at all). In pre-modern times, religion was something different. In fact, some argue18 that the concept of “religion” being a distinct category within our experience didn’t really even exist in the past; in pre-­modern times, what we call religion was an embedded activity, in several important social ways. First, in pre-modern times, religious life was inseparably linked to social life. This was not particular to religious life, of course; political obligations are part of this as well, and political obligations were almost inextricable from social obligations. Porous experiences had profound effects on societies — portentous dreams, for example, or divine signs, possessions, or cures. All were common experiences embedded in everyday life that might be called religious. Second, the primary ways people practiced religion — things like praying, sacrificing, healing, protecting, and more — were for the social group as a whole, or some mediator (a priest, for instance) standing vicariously for the group. In early religion, writes Taylor, “we primarily relate to God as a society.”19 Religion wasn’t something practiced primarily by the individual, or even a collection of individuals, but by a cohesive whole. The society together called on powers of protection, of life, and of sustenance. Third, therefore, the social order itself (including structures of 17. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 146. 18. See, for example, William T. Cavanaugh, The Myth of Religious Violence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009). 19. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 148.

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A Short History of the Secular Age governance) was sacrosanct. Functionaries, shamans, priests, chiefs, and so on were conscripted to perform important religious actions on behalf of the community. Not all pre-modern cultures were theocracies in the modern understanding — but they existed in an embedded hierarchy with congruent beliefs about the cosmos. Fourth, if everything important is done by the whole group, then there is less conception of the self apart from that society. The individual who separates from the group loses not just order but also a sense of meaning and purpose as part of the whole. This can only lead to the individual seeing herself as the end of existence, or to barbarism.20 Taylor likens this kind of deep social embeddedness to how the modern imaginary might think of gender. Who would you be if you, as a man, had instead been born a woman, or vice versa? Who can answer coherently? To even ask this question is getting “too deep into the very formative horizon of my identity to be able to make sense of the question.”21 Not only does it not often occur to us to ask, but we have very little to offer of ourselves apart from it. Similarly, the pre-modern would likely have had difficulty conceiving of herself apart from the order that structured her existence. This embeddedness makes it unlikely that individuals could imagine themselves outside a certain social context — and not only, of course, in a society but also in a whole cosmos, of which the society is itself hierarchically situated. Taylor writes, “Human agents are embedded in society, society in the cosmos, and the cosmos incorporates the divine.”22 So to talk about “religion” in any kind of retrospective sense may border on anachronism. It becomes difficult to decipher which elements in a previous culture are “religious,” as opposed to, say, political or economic. It’s neither necessary nor natural for the concept of religion to exist as a thing apart from how it’s embedded in everyday life. So what we see is that the buffered identity brings on a great disembedding. Embeddedness is both a matter of identity — we imagine 20. Recall Aristotle’s famous phrasing in the Politics that “outside the polis man is either beast or god.” 21. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 149. 22. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 152.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse our selves within a particular context — and of the social imaginary — the ways we are able to think of or imagine society.23 But a buffered self, which resists being tied to collective forms and values personal discipline and autonomy, rejects much of this. To the buffered person, society is an impersonal order — a mutual project of consent and exchange, made up of individuals who authorize its very existence. This is huge. It is a major revolution in the way we understand not only our social lives but also the contents and practices of our sacred lives. We’re no longer tied to a “social sacred,” and our relationship to God is different — if we think of him, it is as designer rather than immanent sustainer; architect, rather than incarnate. And maybe he designed it and walked away, or at least we can imagine it that way — separating God further and further from the design and sustenance of a sacred order. Eventually, his task becomes little more than setting the pieces of the great clockwork of human civilization in order. In such an order, it is probably only a matter of time until some other force may simply take God’s place, striking the clock.

God Is a Watcher: Providential Deism and the Anthropocentric Shift So the idea grew that we related to God as humans primarily by relating to the order of things, an order that has a moral shape that we can discern if we’re not misled by superstitious or ideological notions. We follow God by following the patterns of things he has laid out. A rational God is the architect of a rational world, endowing his creatures with everything we need to activate the latent laws designed into its fabric. And so Deism is a kind of “natural” religion, belief that spontaneously arises when the corruptions of the superstitious mind are removed. God’s own goals settle into a kind of human-centered groove: a single end mostly concerned with human flourishing and mutual benefit within his designed order.24 That’s not new to the Jewish or 23. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 156. 24. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 221.

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A Short History of the Secular Age Christian tradition. But we generally thought that in addition to this divine providence, God also had greater purposes for creation, presumably love and worship of him. There was a demand that superseded human flourishing: the ultimate glorification of an Almighty God. This demand can remain in the modern social imaginary, but only if people experience and act on it in private. To drag this higher command into the public square or the political arena would risk instability, and possibly even repress human flourishing — especially since your individual conception of what glorifies God might differ from mine. And so, to the modern self, there is no greater good than human flourishing. This is what Taylor calls the anthropocentric shift, a change that has four parts.25 First, we adopted the idea that all we owe God is the realization of his providential plan. That is, our duty to God is that we achieve our own good. Faith is less about transcendence and more about fulfilling our own potentials and helping one another. Second, as buffered selves living in a disembedded order, we no longer need constant grace. The original grace — the gift of a rational mind capable of understanding the world — is enough for us to achieve human good. Humans order, discover, and discipline themselves, but they don’t need an active, sustaining grace to do so; it’s part of them from birth. So there’s a first grace (reason), but that is all we need to carry out God’s final plan. If people are unfaithful or ungrateful, then God stands at the end of history to judge, with joy or punishment, how well we used those faculties. Third, the sense of mystery fades when the world is disenchanted — any anomaly we encounter in nature, anything unexpected we experience, can be isolated, studied, and explained through scientific inquiry. Taylor writes, “If God’s purposes for us encompass only our own good, and this can be read from the design of our nature, then no further mystery can hide there.”26 Certainly, we still love to explore and discover the world, and there’s much left to explore and discover. 25. See “Providential Deism” in Taylor, A Secular Age, pp. 221-69. 26. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 223.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse But we have the tools and means of discovery at our fingertips, and we know it. God’s providence is therefore emptied of mystery. In a stable, impersonal order, God does not routinely reach down and do miracles. In fact, if he were to do that, we’d think it irrational and irresponsible of him. Even within many corners of the Western Christian church, saying that “God spoke to me” or “God told me to do this” is seriously suspect (possibly unstable). The idea, argues Taylor, “is scarcely conceivable that the Author of such an order would stoop to such personalized communication as a short cut, if virtuous reason alone can suffice to tell us all we need to know.”27 That claim has become a serious clash in contemporary philosophical and theological conversations.28 The fourth and final element of Taylor’s anthropocentric shift is perhaps the most important: whereas we once took it for granted as a centerpiece of faith that God was planning to transform human beings into something beyond the limitations of their present condition, now we see the practices of religion — devotion, prayer, and so on — primarily as a means for bringing about human flourishing. A sort of “theistic rationality” prevailed during the Enlightenment (and still does, particularly in some branches of mainstream Protestantism) that barely invoked the saving action of Christ and spared little time for devotion and prayer. It was more interested in God as creator and designer, which meant it was more interested in the things of this world and their horizontal sacredness than it was in a restorative afterlife. In that kind of afterlife, should it exist, we’d be a lot like we are now, but without some of the more painful and awkward bits. Humans do not so much transform as simply evolve. In this picture, religion is a private discipline, a moral code of conduct that cultivates an ordered, rational interior life. It is about fulfilling your purpose 27. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 292. 28. Nicholas Wolterstorff writes at length on this problem in Divine Discourse: Philosophical Reflections on the Claim That God Speaks (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).

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A Short History of the Secular Age more than changing you. It’s about looking within rather than contemplating without. It counsels you rather than calling you to repent. These shifts are what makes it possible for “religion” to emerge in the modern age as one among many categories of human experience, something that exists apart from us and our society. (It’s what makes the idea of “separation of church and state” even possible.) Religion is fine in the public arena, as long as it contributes to social flourishing. Which makes it tricky to understand what (if any) legacy pre-modern saints like Saint Francis might have for us, as Taylor points out: If God’s purpose for us really is simply that we flourish, and we flourish by judicious use of industry and instrumental reason, then what possible use could he have for a Saint Francis, who in a great élan of love calls on his followers to dedicate themselves to a life of poverty? At best, this must lower GNP, by withdrawing these mendicants from the workforce; but worse, it can lower the morale of the productive. Better to accept the limitations of our nature as self-loving creatures, and make the best of it.29

To put this all simply: the ideas of “religious” and “secular” were invented in the modern social imaginary in order to serve new political and social orders. In this framework, we assume markedly different things about ourselves and our world than the pre-moderns did. This is a Secular age: not one in which religion is erased, but one in which belief and unbelief are contestable. In our world, we think that “religion” is separate from — and optional to — our social and political life.

The Malaise of Modernity This all has its benefits as well as its pathologies. Taylor suggests — worries about, really — three malaises, or tensions, which he says are also common to expressions of modernity: individualism, instrumen29. Taylor, A Secular Age, p. 230.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse talism, and the double-loss of freedom.30 These are the “bad sides” of modernity, the things that threaten to undo us both spiritually and socially. But in many ways, the move to a modern social imaginary has resulted in some great triumphs for human rights and social orders that generally trend toward a more comfortable living standard and safer life for large groups of people. Modernity, like all ages, has its upsides. So the question is not whether we ought to get rid of modernity. That’s like a nutritionist suggesting we ought to stop eating strawberries and spinach altogether because overindulging can result in kidney stones. Rather, we should be considering which forms of modernity foster the greatest potential while provoking the fewest pathological or dystopian dilemmas. But before we can find a cure, we must diagnose the pathologies.

The First Pathology: Adrift in the Cosmos The first pathology is what Taylor calls individualism. In the Secular age, people think of themselves primarily as individuals — not only, of course, as individuals, but primarily as makers of their own meanings and identities, buffered from things outside themselves. Today, individualism can be used as a scapegoat for a host of perils and ills, everything from the breakdown of the family to economic disintegration and problems in the food supply. That can bring up a nostalgia for a mythical golden age in which we felt ourselves part of “the great chain of being.” Back in those days, the story goes, “everybody knew their place,” and everyone was content to play their own role. Communities functioned in harmony and peace. Fairies danced and children sang and the sun rose and set. Of course, this tends to lose sight of the more unsavory historical realities: widespread poverty, political suppression, and outright 30. Charles Taylor, The Malaise of Modernity (Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 1991). Parts of Taylor’s argument in this book can also be found in A Secular Age, chap. 8, “The Malaises of Modernity.”

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A Short History of the Secular Age slavery. Few people today would actually elect to turn back the clock to those times. Indeed, for the most part, the protection and dignity of individual persons is something worth celebrating. Taylor isn’t looking to eradicate these strides. Rather, he’s pointing out that with this shifted focus comes a break with older forms of organic hierarchy: the loss of being embedded in a place, a time, a society which readily provides us with our identity and significance. Because while those older structures placed restrictions on individuals, they also handed us a sense of meaning, not only to persons — which is his first concern — but also to political societies. We each knew what we were doing here, or at least we thought we did. You can see how this could lead us to become fragmented, no longer living with our neighbors in solidarity, since each of us seeks mainly to advance our own happiness. I will work together with you so long as it’s good for me, too. This isn’t a necessary product of the focus on the individual, but it’s certainly more possible than it ever has been before, when it was the rare person (famously a “beast” or a “god”) who unplugged himself from society. Embedded hierarchies may have restricted human choices and powers, but they also provided meaning and orientation to people. In the pre-modern world, our social lives had intrinsic meaning as part of a bigger, more cosmic order (however unfair or disrespectful of human dignity this seems to us today). When we lost those pre-modern orientations, we gained a certain type of freedom to make up our own minds about how we would find meaning and purpose in life. But this can leave us feeling isolated and alone, and acting accordingly, as we see — for instance — in many of those we call sociopaths.31 Self-government, while still good, is not an uncomplicated political good. Some have celebrated this loss of meaning, claiming it gives us freedom to be or do whatever we want, and that this is an unmitigated good. But that no longer seems clear. It leaves us as people with no higher aims, no greater social goal, than what Tocqueville described 31. See, for example, Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001).

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How to Survive the Apocalypse as the petits et vulgaires plaisirs (petty and vulgar pleasures) — or the final aspiration of Nietzsche’s last man: pitiable comfort.32 The fruit of this is what we call narcissism, or self-absorption, endemic in whole generations, carefully fertilized and cultivated by the Boomers in the years after the Second World War. In a very real sense, individual lives are narrowed and disconnected from one another. Our meaning is reduced to just us, which means we determine our own identity instead of finding it in relation to others and a grander order. And that isolates us and fragments society. Today, in our politics — which are designed to govern a collective of individuals — we often resolve the legal and political problems of individualism by balancing individual rights and preferences with collective priorities. How possible is this? How practical is it? Our views on this issue (and how we act upon them) can mean different political consequences. That isolation, as though to prove Aristotle’s famous dictum (that outside “the city” [polis] man is either “beast” or “god”), makes sociopathic rationale and morals increasingly common: if my primary good is also the highest good — for me — then there’s nobody who can tell me to set aside what I want for a greater good.

The Second Pathology: Efficiency Is King A second source of worry is instrumentalism (or instrumental reason): the mind-set in which we measure success through maximum efficiency, the best cost-output ratio.33 Think of it this way: if we live in a disenchanted universe that doesn’t have a higher moral or meaning, one in which each person acts according to whatever is best for him or her, then how do we make decisions, laws, and pronouncements about what we ought to do? What logic, rationale, or rule can give us a guideline for how to live as people and groups of people? 32. Taylor’s double-anxiety over individualism is, unsurprisingly, the same neat division of Tocqueville’s first and second volume of Democracy in America. See especially Lucien Jaume, Tocqueville: The Aristocratic Sources of Liberty, trans. Arthur Goldhammer (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2013). 33. Taylor, The Malaise of Modernity, p. 5.

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A Short History of the Secular Age The answer today — which we see enacted around us — is a sort of economic rationality. In this framework, the best thing is whatever is most efficient: the most output for the least input. A society made up of individuals is, to those in power, more or less a collection of raw materials out of which can be made objects or conditions of our design. Without a guiding framework derived from beyond the person — from God, or gods, or something — there is nobody and nothing to tell us what “means” we should restrict ourselves to as we move toward a given end — or why. Only the pooled sovereignty of individual persons (democracy) is in theory capable of overriding this logic of efficiency, a prospect that becomes dimmer and dimmer as material efficiency becomes preponderant. People who are put on earth (by God, or the universe, or whatever) to pursue their own flourishing can risk making that flourishing an exclusivist goal — which is to say, they can end up believing that nothing else actually matters in their decision-making. Everything is there to serve that end. Everything can be treated as raw materials or instruments for the projects of self-desire. This reductive logic is at the heart of heated political debates in North America today, where we appeal to economics and efficiency when making decisions in spheres that ought not to be guided fundamentally by those norms — like medicine, education, and other human services. Even our arguments over how to treat the environment tend to be made in terms of long-range cost-benefit scenarios: we ought to protect the planet not because it’s our duty but because pillaging nature too much will make us uncomfortable in the long term — won’t it be hard to live when it’s hard to get clean water or gasoline? So while instrumentalism can seem liberating, it also leaves us feeling disquieted. It tells us the universe is here to serve us, but it also threatens to dominate us, because we may wind up being raw material in someone else’s hunt for profit. Taylor writes, “The fear is that things that ought to be determined by other criteria will be decided in terms of ‘cost-benefit’ analysis, that the independent ends that ought to be guiding our lives will be eclipsed by the demand to maximize output.”34 34. Taylor, The Malaise of Modernity, p. 5.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse And especially today, technology can sharpen this concern. Jacques Ellul lamented the “essential tragedy of a civilization increasingly dominated by technique.”35 What Ellul called technique was largely instrumental reason applied through technology, which we persistently believe is a morally neutral and ultimately efficient method for solving our problems. This has had important implications for the field of medicine, in particular, where ethical calculus rooted in efficiency is most controversial.36 Ethicist Margaret Somerville argues that specialized and technical knowledge is preeminent in the medical establishment, resulting in an undervaluation of the skills and means of nurses, the human face of social caring, over more highly trained technical specialists. It’s not just individual people who think and talk this way. It’s also been absorbed in profound and important ways by our institutions and systems, like government, health-care systems, education, markets, and more. Taylor argues that instrumental reason is not just an unconscious social orientation; it is also structured into political and social institutions. The “mechanisms of social life press us in this direction.”37 When human lives become the grist for the mill of dollar-value assessments — when we tend to think about what is expedient rather than what promotes the greatest good (even if it doesn’t produce a maximized profit) — then we have socialized instrumentalism, systems from which we may not easily escape, which the sociologist Max Weber evocatively called the “iron cage.” This is important to remember: these problems that plague modernity are not simply things that live in the “hearts and minds” of individual people. Rooting them out or addressing them is not merely accomplished by helping people change the way they think. That’s all important work, of course — but it is not sufficient, because these 35. Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society, trans. John Wilkinson (New York: Random House, 1964), p. v. 36. For examples of this, see the ethicist Margaret Somerville in The Ethical Imagination: Journeys of the Human Spirit (Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 1996). 37. Taylor, The Malaise of Modernity, p. 7.

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A Short History of the Secular Age viruses within us have also infected our societal structures and institutions. This is just as much about practice as about understanding, and just as much about what we do together as what we do alone.

The Third Pathology: Freedom’s Double-Bind Somewhat bizarrely, because of individualism and instrumentalism, we’re stuck with the third modern pathology: a strange, surprising double-loss of freedom. On the one hand, we have the power to make our own meaning in life. We can choose our futures. We don’t have to be a barrel-maker because Dad was — we get to go to college and pick a major. We don’t have to marry someone to whom we were betrothed as an infant for the family — we get on eHarmony and choose whom to message. If we don’t like the church we grew up in, we pick another, or stop going altogether. So individuals, acting in their own interest, might choose to disconnect from civic participation — say, voting or serving on the local school board. Private citizens increasingly pursue private lives apart from the institutions, processes, and values that constitute the common good, or the public sphere, in favor of what is meaningful for them. But those other ways of making meaning, which are so much more within our grasp than they have been throughout most of human history, have a darker side. The meaning we create for ourselves can turn into a trap. Sociologists and psychologists have written about how our endless choices can induce a sort of paralysis, in which we’re unable to commit to a choice because so many are available to us. When we know the grass will always be greener on the other side, how do we choose which grass to munch? It is an irony, though a sad one, that the systems and structures that were designed to maximize our freedoms and our choices as individuals have actually come to suppress and suffocate those choices. And there’s a politically oppressive result to this as well. Tocque­ ville warned that a society too focused on individuals can leave people “enclosed in their own hearts” so that few will participate in self-­ 29


How to Survive the Apocalypse government, uninterested in participating in governance as citizens. Plummeting voter registries and turnouts seem to tip toward Tocque­ ville’s prediction — but, perhaps more importantly, Tocqueville warned that these can lead to a kind of “soft despotism,” in which a few wind up governing the many, instead of a truly participatory system. In other words, a kind of unintended tyranny may ensue simply because self-absorbed individuals cannot be bothered. This is a real concern in modern democracies like Canada and America: the more detached the public becomes from its own governance, the greater the risk that those same powers may serve minority interests — or fall into tyranny. So one might well argue that the modern person is no different from his or her medieval ancestor — that people are the same as they’ve always been. And they are. But these particular tensions are, Taylor argues, unique to the modern social imaginary. That’s not to judge it as “good” or “bad” — every age has its problems, and the pre-modern age had some that the modern age sought to address and solve. But it is to mark out what makes us modern, and what the problems can be.

The Politics of Apocalypse in a Secular Age All of these tensions sit in the background of today’s “secular apocalypse” — in fact, if those stories reveal anything, it’s how deeply rooted these things are, and how much they terrify us. Frequently, our dystopian stories are about these tensions when they’re taken to their extreme. They show us what we think about ourselves, and particularly what we think our society would look like after a catastrophe of apocalyptic proportions. When modernity breaks down, what’s left? That’s what we could call the “politics of apocalypse”: what the (often conflicting) revelations that accompany our apocalypse, our endings, tell us about who we are as a people, and how we conceive of our common life together. Those politics, first of all, are Secular (big S). Whether they involve 30


A Short History of the Secular Age an actual apocalypse (Walking Dead–style) or more of an existential one, they’re in a universe where there is nothing up there beyond ourselves, and therefore no moral order that transcends whatever we decide on. That’s not to say there’s no love, or hope, or moments of tenderness in these stories; it’s just that that love is part of the “indomitable (buffered) human spirit,” something that comes from us — not from grace. It’s our attempt to say that we can survive the apocalypse: that there’s some shred of humanity worth saving. But only we can make meaning out of suffering. There’s no God or universal cosmos that will do so for us. This gets repeated in apocalyptic popular culture all the time: does the instrumentalist logic that we need to save us during apocalyptic times — the decision to sacrifice the few to save the many, for instance — invalidate us, making us unworthy of existence? (Remember the dilemma of the boats in Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight, set in a near-apocalyptic Gotham?) William Adama puts it pointedly during the decommissioning of the Battlestar Galactica that opens the TV series Battlestar Galactica: The Cylon War is long over, yet we must not forget the reasons why so many sacrificed so much in the cause of freedom. The cost of wearing the uniform can be high . . . [after looking at crowd] but sometimes it’s too high. You know, when we fought the Cylons, we did it to save ourselves from extinction. But we never answered the question [of] why? Why are we as a people worth saving? We still commit murder because of greed, spite, jealousy. And we still visit all of our sins upon our children. We refuse to accept the responsibility for anything that we’ve done. Like we did with the Cylons. We decided to play God, create life. When that life turned against us, we comforted ourselves in the knowledge that it really wasn’t our fault, not really. You cannot play God then wash your hands of the things that you’ve created. Sooner or later, the day comes when you can’t hide from the things that you’ve done anymore.38 38. Battlestar Galactica, miniseries no. 1, first broadcast December 8, 2003, by Syfy; directed by Michael Rymer, written by Glen A. Larson and Ronald D. Moore.

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How to Survive the Apocalypse Our view of politics post-apocalypse, then, is about whether there is anything about humans worth saving in a Secular universe. But is this not, some might say, a contradiction in terms? Who does the saving? Admiral Adama isn’t sure. A Secular apocalypse, in sharp contrast to the usual apocalypse, is one in which people have to face a global catastrophe in which meaning is optional, and often relative, and therefore essentially determined by people. Not only is it an apocalypse in which we have been stripped of higher orders and higher times; it is also one in which persons are buffered, order is impersonal, and God (if he exists) just watches — and not just that, but the things that ordered our lives before are gone. The systems and institutions of civilization have also been irrevocably annihilated. But second, even though the modern social order has collapsed in these stories, the way we conceive of politics during and after the apocalypse retains a fascinating series of civilized tropes about the human condition. That is, our apocalypses don’t seem to destroy our modern order; we assume it will continue, in some fashion, even after the worst has happened. The barbarians at the gates aren’t even human anymore: they’re machines, or psychopaths, or zombies. We explore our age, but often we don’t get beyond it. However, the most successful narratives do break the iron cage. They recognize that in order to steer us and our societies toward the things that are good about the modern moral order, we need more — other sources, other “horizons” of morality that come from outside ourselves. They’re not merely pessimistic. A Secular apocalypse winds up pushing back on its own age. Apocalypse demands meaning. Apocalypse demands horizon. Apocalypse demands . . . religion. We might say we’re heading into a post-Secular moment — because religion never left. Religion, of one kind or another, is actually not optional. It’s fundamental. It’s not so much about why religion is back, but why we ever thought it went away.39 In the end, these

39. Philpott, “Has the Study of Global Politics Found Religion?” p. 199.

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A Short History of the Secular Age narratives push us to offer something — shallow, fantastic, disturbing, as it may be. So. Strap on your sturdiest shoes and grab your knapsack (and don’t forget to pack your towel). Get ready. It’s all about to begin.

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