A nice post over at Granite Studio, riffing off some ideas from New Kid on the Hallway, about how we moderns might think people of the past were somehow less intelligent than us. Both historians bemoan the tendency among their students, and many people out there all over, to think that people living 500 or 1000 or more years ago were just not as smart or wise as we are. Jeremiah sets up the problem as a tension between "modern" and "traditional," how the construction of the idea of the modern, and modern progress, pretty much a Enlightenment idea with a specific historical context, tends to venerate the new against the old. And then he brings the Tao Te Ching in! He writes:
With this notion of historical progress so ingrained in our psyches.
however, comes a dangerous slippery slope upon which we trod at our own
peril.In some ways it reminds me of a line from the Daodejing 道德经:
When everyone in the world knows beauty as beauty, ugliness appears.
When everyone knows good as good, not good arrives.
Therefore being and non-being give birth to one another;In
historiographical terms, until there was a need to describe that which
was "modern," there was no need to describe something as "traditional."
Along with this division came an implicit value judgement, based in
large part on western ideas of linear history and notions of material
progress that traditional was bad and modern was good. This division
gave birth to other–a perhaps even more awkward divide–between
"civilized" and "backwards."
The beauty here is that he is using an ancient reference to elucidate a modern/postmodern condition, showing just how smart those ancients could be, anticipating our problems centuries ago.
I agree with Jeremiah that we should not romanticize the past:
Say it with me: people in the past were not somehow slower on the
uptake, it’s because we–in the present–get A LOT of help from the
smart people who came before. And here I reveal my own slightly
progressivist take on history. To borrow from P.J. O’Rourke, for those
who feel that there was some magical time in the past when all was
better, I give you one word: "dentistry."
Technology and science are cumulative and progressive (but also horrifying and repressive when one thinks of the sad history of the 20th century) and that does make life better and easier for many – but certainly not all – moderns. But in terms of understanding of the human condition, appreciation of beauty, philosophic capacity, and the like, there are ancients that are clearly much smarter than moderns.
Take Chuang Tzu, for example. He clearly understood the "problem of language," its inability to fully capture the complexities of reality. For all of the emphasis on historical progress in the 18th and 19th centuries, it was not until the 20th, following Wittgenstein, that Western philosophers stopped and contemplated this problem, and took the linguistic turn. Damn smart that Chuang Tzu…
Of course, not all ancients were smarter than us moderns, but some of them obviously were, and many of them, most of them I would argue, were just as smart as us.
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