LEOSTRAUSS
ON A FORGOTTENKIND OF WRITING Recently, a suggestion
a student which
at the
University I have made both
...
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LEOSTRAUSS
ON A FORGOTTENKIND OF WRITING Recently, a suggestion
a student which
at the
University I have made both
told me that Chicago in the classroom and in
of
print has proved to be of interest to some of his friends but that it is not
sufficiently it would be helpful the Chicago Review.
written
to them. This
if I were In order
a note
to write not
student
merely
mentioned
on
that
the matter
to repeat what
for
I have
elsewhere, I believe itwill be best if I discuss here those
objections I suspect to those
clear
to my which have suggestion arose out that these objections that various students have felt.
been of
made
difficulties
I should begin by briefly summarizing my certain earlier thinkers, studying of conceiving the relation between
I became the quest
publicly. similar
In
suggestion.
aware
of
for
truth
this way (philos
ophy or science) and society: Philosophy or science, the highest activity
of man,
is the
attempt
to
replace
opinion
about
"all
things" by knowledge of "all things"; but opinion is the element or science to dis of society; is therefore the attempt philosophy solve the element inwhich and thus it society breathes, endangers or science must Hence remain the preserve philosophy society. or scientists must of a small and respect minority, philosophers on which rests. To is the respect society opinions opinions as true. them different from accepting something entirely or scientists who hold this view about the relation Philosophers or science are driven a to and of society philosophy employ manner to of which would enable them reveal writing peculiar as the truth to the few, without what they regard endangering to the on of the many commitment the opinions unqualified rests. true will between the which distinguish society They as the esoteric the and teaching socially useful teaching teaching as the exoteric the exoteric whereas is meant teaching; teaching
64
Chicago Review, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Winter - Spring, 1954), pp. 64-75
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to be closes
easily itself
accessible to
to every reader, the esoteric and well-trained very careful
only and concentrated long The crucial premise
study. of this argument of society. This
dis
teaching readers
after
is the
that proposition is opinion premise accepted by social scientists. teach that every many contemporary They on in the last values or on society rests, analysis, specific specific on are not or which i.e., myths, assumptions evidently superior to alternative there any preferable assumptions. imply, They reveals and stresses the char fore, that social science arbitrary acter of the basic any given assumptions underlying society; social science desires to be and "objective" "undogmatic." They a tension fail to see, however, creates that this state of things is the
between truth
the
of social science requirements (knowledge and of the truth) and the of teaching requirements
(whole-hearted know
element
of
the
society
acceptance of the principles of society):
if I
are not intrin of liberal the principles democracy to the or fascism, of communism I am sically superior principles to liberal of whole-hearted commitment incapable democracy. of two consists, then, fundamentally My suggestion questions: as to whether the historical there ever were question any great thinkers who held the view about the relation of and philosophy which I have on it; and sketched and who acted society just the whether that view is false or philosophic question simply or true if is the element true, simply qualified (e.g., "opinion that
two are The societies"). questions obviously are not trivial in the sense that of and importance; they they are discussed in every textbook. One further and go say might that it is a considerable time since have been discussed at they
of
all nonliberal
all.
friends therefore, young My expected, arouse some interest mentioned would in
the
that scholarly
suggestion circles. But
young people are bad judges inmatters of this kind. Only or five
scholars
of my
generation
did
become
interested.
four One
of them is aman of high reputation in his field who understands the contemporary
dangers
to
intellectual
freedom
well
enough
65
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to realize Senator
that
these
McCarthy "liberals"
academic
or
"scientific"
is
social
not
only
by
men of
dogmatism scientists
like
certain
as well.
He
I had tried to convey by the words,
expressed the lesson which "there
are caused, the absurd
dangers but by
hope."
Professor
H.
George
has reviewed
Sabine
tion and the Art of Writing,
in the April,
my
book,
Persecu
1953, issue of Ethics.
certain the canon for reading begins by wondering a rule for I workable great books which "provides suggested or an invitation to perverse historical ingenuity." interpretation whether
He
This doubt is perfectly gation: misused.
grounds to perverse
be misunderstood
or
the
of not
cannot
which
to understand the that one ought principle terms social in of back their the great thinkers
Did
teachings
to any investi justified, especially prior
is no method
there
than one
in more
also become,
case,
"an
invitation
"the argument Sabine says that I make ingenuity"? a case of the art too easy when of 'master the [I put] as would shame an such blunders who 'commits
somewhat of writing'
intelligent high-school boy,' because that kind of writing would not
even
deceive
Sabine's
manner
a careless
reader." I merely
of
I shall not note
about complain is the quotation are to meant which
that
quoting. one sentence out of seven sentences of part runs as sentence some rules of indicate reading. The complete such blunders commits "If a master of the art of writing follows:
a
it is reasonable boy, high-school intelligent are intentional, if the author dis to assume that especially they blun of intentional the however cusses, possibility incidentally, on the remark As Sabine's ders in writing." passage regards more to than one I know of that I regret he which say quoted, are not careless commentators who case where exceptionally do not who Readers of this kind. did not even notice blunders as would
notice deceived
shame
blunders are
an
of this kind those who
Also the only ones deceived. as them but take them simply
are not
notice
from time to time. commits everyone I had mentioned. are one of the blunders Contradictions species or in an author contradiction "The limits of permissible probable blunders
of
the sort
that
66
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are
really very difficult to determine because
Things which
to determine." the meaning
of
"an author"
Sabine
cannot
in
case of authors who
say that explicitly a in order to indicate
contradict themselves they intentionally secret to an elite among their readers, teaching nor ent from that of authors who neither say of the kind.
impossible is so vague.
are true of the highest intellects are wholly
to others. The
applicable
limits are
Those
but
admit
is
entirely indicate
it is sometimes
that
differ anything neces
the lines, but he trivializes this admission sary to read between by to consider In its he evades the refusing implications. particular, of the criteria which would allow us to be question distinguish tween at and an author indicates between guessing knowing what "Is the lines. He raises the question, the lines between reading of an elaborate the unraveling system of con characteristically suffers lack of again from objection of whom? If a present rejoin: characteristic of American and average economist, average day intelligence of would indicate between the Unes of an power expression, trived
deceptions?" Iwould definiteness.
This
a
for in the lines evad economy while planned preference vs. the free issue the I economy ing "planned enterprise system," to assume that he is "an elaborate would hesitate system of using contrived but of writers another caliber might well deceptions"; article
such a "system." Still, unconscious the lines makes
use
even
the most
casual
or half-conscious
between writing use of those very use of which presup
of expression the principles fully conscious "an elaborate Sabine is poses system of contrived deceptions." to say that "at least in doubtful whether I mean political philos a distinction an esoteric between and an exoteric ophy, meaning is the form of I never committed this typical interpretation." absurdity. does not
He
put circumstances
asserts
can be that society hardly imagined on what an author or on the restrictions may say, or on the choice under which he may of say it, that "a
to whom he may persons suitably which men can attack in writings
in say it." I assert that societies to all both the estab accessible
lished social or political order and the beliefs on which can not
only
be imagined
but have
existed,
e.g.,
the Third
it is based Repub 67
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lie in France and post-Bismarckian Wilhelminian not
know
what
Sabine
thinks
the wisdom
of
Germany. such
of
I do
extreme
I admit of course that there were and this as it may, are societies which were issue and are not liberal. The extremely concerns must the conclusions which draw from the the historian Be
liberalism.
fact
that not
all literate
writers
societies
and are liberal.
were
If a one
its
from
society is en
prevents freely discussing principles, as to whether a writer who to titled to raise the question belongs of its such a and who makes himself the princi society mouthpiece because is convinced of their these he expresses ples principles or because
soundness
he cedes
to
force. The superior question in is a great mind who question one to teach doctrines which
takes on some urgency if the writer not wrong that is it says expressly as erroneous. if his still more urgent It becomes writings regards one abound in which overlooks if one features enigmatic easily not attentive. After
stating
his
general
Sabine
criticism,
on
turns
to
my
He
Treatise.
Theologico-Political grants Spinoza's to the use of Strauss's method" work "is well adapted I say about I am not in what Spinoza's entirely wrong If I understand him toward revealed correctly, religion. to say that while is a of revealed the religion rejection was of Spinoza's Ethics, consequence Spinoza perhaps aware fully more
of this consequence, whereas aware of it. I cannot discuss
I had maintained this
criticism,
is
chapter that that and
that
attitude he means
necessary not fully that he was
which
is not
an
assertion that my detailed argument, unsupported on the Theologico-Political is almost based Treatise, entirely the does not leave it at expressing Sabine opinion faulty. perhaps are uncertain. He tries to show conclusions that my perhaps . . . I had that they are "in one respect paradoxical." Spinoza, to in order conceal devices his certain used contended, literary held views from the vulgar; but, Sabine says, "the vul seriously to fear, occasion the Calvinist whom he had most gar namely, were not deluded." I "were the ones who theologians" just than
no doubt about this point: I had spoken of thought I had left Spinoza's
extraordinary
boldness.
His
whole
enterprise
68
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consists
one
of what
call
might
He theology. count, within
Biblical could believers
or, more
an
on all forms of orthodox open attack could dare to make he this attack because
certain
precisely,
of liberal limits, on the sympathy on the re of those who sympathy
garded the moral teaching, as distinguished from the teaching about
dogma
as the chief
and ritual,
of divine
teaching
revelation
as accessible in the Bible. The explicit theses of the Theologico an extreme to of version may be said express reasons for the "liberal" view. But there are strong doubting of the with that extreme version that Spinoza himself agreed to not "liberal" view. orthodox any appease attempted Spinoza or less inclined a but those who were more toward theologians Treatise
Political
im
liberal Christianity. He concealed his partial, but decisively portant, disagreement with liberal believers In
of
speaking
that I regard This vulgar.
not with of various
the
orthodox
but
theologians
shades.
another
"paradox" as even the commentators
of mine,
Sabine
less
suggests than the
penetrating I entirely wrong: regard many as less than the present-day penetrating vulgar a much the had of the seventeenth latter because century, greater awareness of the serious character of the and theological problem is not
suggestion commentators
even of its details than do men brought up in the belief that a form of reli for science and progress constitutes a frontal at When Sabine knew that "that says gion. Spinoza was I can tack on Calvinist theology impossible," only ask him a frontal attack on the belief does not make whether in Spinoza a doctrine and whether of a certain miracle (the any miracles enthusiasm
of
miracle theology Sabine
resurrection) as knew Spinoza "should
have
quite honest when to advocate 'to refute tion
is not
the
very
center
of Calvinist
it.
preferred
to believe
that
Spinoza
was
he said that the chief aim of his book was
freedom
of speech and of rather than investigation, the claims which have been raised on behalf of revela
throughout
the
ages'
as Strauss
says." The
chief
according to the full title of the Theologico-Political the sole aim of that work
is to advocate
freedom
of
aim,
or,
Treatise,
philosophiz 69
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as ing. But, Spinoza defend that freedom chief
the
he cannot says in the preface, successfully to without the reader's attention drawing to the i.e. religion, regarding especially
prejudices
prejudice that philosophy must be the handmaid of theology: he must
ogy. if theology He
truth.
the radical
advocate
But
a radical
such or
therefore has no
Biblical to
teaching try to refute
pelled half of revelation
having for his other
on
to teach
to
to
try value whatever:
cognitive the claims which
have
theoretical
show
that
he was
been
raised
the com
on be
in a very his large part of the book, provided that aim is the necessary and sufficient condition was aim or aims "If defensible. becoming Spinoza
pursues attained
sciously
fully knew
compelled
and theol philosophy to him unreasonable
to the ages. It is throughout legitimate desig aim of a book that aim which the author con
as the chief
nate
separation appeared could be assumed
the Bible
was
of
separation
convinced
that revelation
that if toleration
that
point
waited
it would
argued exoterically has revealed God
wait
on
to be refuted, he ought certainly was until there agreement general forever." I concluded, he Hence,
the
the Bible, that, through assumption not indeed of knowledge things of action, the and that right principles toleration.
to man,
or natural, but spiritual these demand principles Sabine notes that my
the
about
"argument
esoteric
interpre and compli with, philosophical writings . . . 'historicism' cated by, another ", but he argument against does not see a "close relation the two argu between logical The ments." is this. Esotericism strict connection necessarily tation
of
is combined
follows from the original meaning of philosophy, provided that it is assumed
that opinion
is the element
cism is incompatible with philosophy
of
society;
but
histori
in the original meaning of
cannot can and historicism be the word, One ignored today. as follows: illustrate the connection the two arguments between be said to be the view, may accepted by Sabine, that "there are in what Carl Becker called presumptions implicit ever of an age that no contemporary the 'climate of opinion'
Historicism
fully grasps, precisely because they are so deeply ingrained in 70
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the
texture
of his
minds
cannot
which
rule
In other words, thinking." from themselves the liberate
even
the greatest
opinions specific This view can be established society. particular more statements of all great if all thinkers must easily explicit to be taken than if this express their private assumption thoughts is questioned. if As regards my argument Sabine doubts against historicism, he follows
their
to say was that if one does not take the inten of the great thinkers, intention namely, one cannot understand the truth about the whole, I meant
it.What
the seriously tion to know
is based on the that this intention them; but historicism premise to know it is is unreasonable because the simply impossible I never said, as Sabine believes I did, that truth about the whole. old books can support the truth of the statement "that, reading no account of the whole, unless there is a single true account of can be true." I in said that anything particular merely reading as an antidote to the is old books indispensable ruling today a final and true account of that the notion the of very dogma on whole said that "a historian must is absurd. I never proceed even the that and supposition philosophers, original important and consequences the of all ones, always know presuppositions said that the historian must merely the that the great thinkers understood supposition proceed not better what than the historian who is they thought likely to be a great thinker. believes that "there are Sabine however in . . . 'the climate of of an age presumptions implicit opinion' no ever seems to that contemporary fully grasps." He imply that the statements
they
I
make."
on
the historian 'climate
may
grasp
fully say, of
of
the
presuppositions, fourth century
in the implicit Athens which
early opinion', did not those presuppositions, If accepting fully grasp. Sabine had given an example he would have enabled his readers to consider whether he is I do not know of any historian right. a fundamental who of a great grasped presupposition fully Plato,
thinker which the great thinker himself did not fully grasp. The
attitude
characteristic
of of M.
Sabine Yvon
contrasts BelavaPs
with review
the
open-mindedness in the October, 1953, 71
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of
issue
if Beiaval
Even
Critique.
my
rejecting
suggestion and force
suggestion gives unity tered remarks which serious not
could
is not
He
help making.
a
lirmne. He
only
realizes
Renan's
that
to some
fragmentary earlier of certain
students realizes
incompatible with
known
he would have been prevented
Averro?s and the Encyclop?die, from
had
above
all that my
and
that scat
thinkers suggestion
the demands of
compliance with
exactness.
historical
Belaval begins his criticism with the remark that my sugges tion is based on the anti-positivist view "that the philosophic truth of
or on "a classical
is
untemporal" truth." He raises
the question this view and my
tion between
and rationalist
whether
is no
there concern
apparent
conception contradic
with
making
historical inquiries independent of every philosophic postulate. I did not
of philosophy
one
that
suggest
can make
the
study
of
the history
independent of every philosophic postulate. His
of the persistence presupposes tory necessarily philosophy and this alone, is the the same fundamental This, problems. must there which if be admitted, is to be truth trans-temporal of On the other hand, history of philosophy history philosophy. starts from of any the if the historian is acceptance endangered if he knows in advance of the fundamental solution problems: of
that a given philosophic doctrine which he lacks or
the
for
incentive
care. What
studying does imply
I said
he is studying is false,
that doctrine the
with of
rejection
sympathy positivism:
to the fundamental problems, and therefore posivitism is blind cannot be a historian of philosophy; as the positivist positivist a man who
to be a
happens
positivist
can become
a historian
of
extent to which he develops the capacity philosophy only to the of questioning positivism. Belaval raises the further question whether every philosophy finds itself in conflict with politics or only dogmatic philosophies. I can
only
repeat
that
there
is a necessary
conflict
between
philosophy and politics if the element of society necessarily opinion,
i.e. assent
sceptics as well
to
opinion;
this condition
can be admitted
as by dogmatists; if this condition
72
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is by
is rejected,
can
there
only conflicts
be
between
and philosophy some that philosophers are at variance results which
conflicts
accidental from
the fact
arising or negative positive notes of a Belaval that non with the given society. principles of re sometimes the opposition official dogmatisms provoked do not authorities. We authorities rather than of political ligious is not in the have to consider whether proper every authority men to It suffices fre last say that political analysis political. re of able unbelievers the support welcomed against quently fanatics who the statesmanlike hand seemed to endanger ligious in of But other affairs. this fact?the that fact, words, ling philos the rule of have ophers generally preferred speaking non-priests to the rule of does not prove that there is no priests?obviously tension between of fundamental the requirements and philosophy of Belaval the requirements wonders whether political society. politics, times reach
of
in
speaking tize a partial roistic" view
a fundamental
such
i.e. view," is no more
the
"Averroistic"
partial
than
one
more
to be much
is if I had been
to "Averroism." cannot
Belaval an
infer
ignorant unaware of
essential
is
quite
than
view.
right
"systema "Aver
both
and politics.
I am and
the existence
antinomy
The
its contrary:
views about the relation of philosophy have
I did not
tension
when
in fact
I would that
any the alternative
of he
between
are total
says
that
one and
philosophy
politics from the factual persecution of philosophers by political authorities. But tween
I may
I am add
certain that I did not make quite infer an essential that one cannot
this mistake. harmony
be
and
from the factual of politics recognition or even of all certain socie given philosophy, philosophies, by on errors. Belaval ties: that recognition be based may capital is also right when he says that one cannot the "Aver accept if one believes roistic" view that M. the truth. Koj ?ve teaches philosophy
a
Turning issue with
to the my
of methods question "axiom" that one writes
of
takes reading, Belaval as one reads. He asserts
that very careful philosophers like Leibniz and Kant have not I had not readers. very careful but of careful writers. Belaval ophers
been
spoken of has not
careful proved
philos that the 73
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and
Essais
Nouveaux
in the sense inwhich
written
are
of Pure Reason
the Critique
carefully
the Discorsi sopra la prima deca di
are
to say of certain written, pre nothing carefully In the same context, he expresses modern books. the suspicion the scholar for the for that I might have mistaken philosopher, T.
Livio
he
believes
that
were
rather
commentators
and
Jewish
in
the writers than philosophers: on Plato and Aristotle rather
than
in the
sense
I doubt
Islamic
ages, I studied in fact scholars and
philosophers of the middle commentators
certain
from
starting
by
whether
question original of dis
originality philosophers. or invention to do with of has anything covery philos "systems" or true was much more originality. Spinoza original ophic depth sense of the term than was Maimonides; but in the present day was
Maimonides Belaval
questions the one that
statements
is the more
author of
a certain
assume more that
that
kind the
is the more
secret.
I had
contradictory is more thesis which
more
that
students
important subject only or asserts its contrary of the author invariably
presenting
the
author's
as is disregarded unintelligible the carefulness and estimates prove his contention, like Maimonides of men
they even
prove
Belaval
believes
in all other
or
on
silent the
ignore doctrine:
the
of
suspect immediately was that that suspicion
began
the
I
places
subject, statement
unique statement unique over Belaval
unimportant. of most
Spinoza
disagree. a statement
readers.
To
that
the persecution after immediately
fact proves merely heterodoxy. well-founded; men. It does
It does there not
that not are
of innocent prove persecution how heterodox those their persecutors recognized men men were. Besides, or causes their these had defenders great examples at all that
of
i.e. which
at all. I must
remains
to
occurs
view.
once, while
of the
in writings
are entitled
if an author makes
they had published certain books. This became
secret,
perspicacity he refers to the fact and
find
theses, we
serious
be concealed
than once
if we
said that
two
rarely, expresses such a secret cannot
on a very he either
in the time
subversive
the author's
have noticed
when
a thinker than Spinoza. deeper two of the "axiom" that, contradictory
nevertheless
also
74
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who
not have
would
been
acter of their heterodoxy to refer to the relatively the two cases mentioned
or the if the char degree precise It is also not irrelevant had been known. allies
mild
character
and
in other
of
the
similar
in persecution cases. It is not
to say, as Belaval does, that the sufficient of security philosophers less on the cautious of their character than depended writings on the a com from which support they benefited: political
imprudent philosopher
pletely not have The of
reading
He
fortune
the good
main
is beyond
support if he does
to be as insane. regarded is to the effect that the method
of Belaval
objection I suggest which
can never
lead to absolute
certainty.
isright in questioning my comparison of the deciphering of texts with
texts: of cuneiform that deciphering was in what occurred I rather comparison thought obviously an argument to a counter I shall limit ad hominem. here myself to Belaval's main Do the alternative methods objection objection: esoteric
the
not the alternative lead to absolute Are reading certainty? based on the of methods false reading demonstratively premises a one book that in what may interpreting disregard completely or of its author the about and caution, says secrecy necessity or rare statements that one may disregard the completely unique on in favor of what the author important subjects says most of
or in all cases but
frequently
to
method
my comparing there is this difference: of
confession cases where made would now
sure be there
the very sooner or claim
the the
that
one? As that
that my criminal. My
criminal the
of
method answer
confessed
detective
Belaval the
would
notes,
detective, cannot is twofold:
later
to know
lead up to the I know of
posthumously not condemn
if there were been
to abandon what
certain
the
complacency thinkers great
after
him; crime where
of suspicion faith in only implicit perfect least the observations I have made will happy has
M. Koj?ve, asserted that
having and I
innocence. force
with
to
up
At
historians
which
thought,
they to admit
of the past is much more than it is thought enigmatic to wonder held to be, and to whether the his generally begin not as torical truth is of access as the difficult truth. philosophic that
the
75
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