Louis G. Herman

Future Primal


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aware gradually that the threads of the truth quest were spun out of the basic ordering processes in the life of the hunting-gathering band. There was something in the push-pull of life in small, decentralized, democratic, and self-sufficient communities, living in a shamanic resonance with the natural world, that sustained and promoted the quest. My personal search in its own faltering and incomplete fashion had been following an archetypal dynamic embodied in a primal politics.

      * I discuss this particular painting in more detail in chapter 8, “If You Don’t Dance, You Die.”

      * Much credit goes to Dr. Ian Player for leading the efforts to create this wilderness reserve and initiating the “Save the Rhino” project. Rhinos are again critically endangered by poaching for the Asian market in rhino horn. In South Africa in 2011, over three hundred rhino were slaughtered by poachers.

       CHAPTER 2

       ABANDONMENT OF THE QUEST — A PATH WITH NO HEART

      With the seventeenth century begins the incredible spectaculum of modernity — both fascinating and nauseating, grandiose and vulgar, exhilarating and depressing, tragic and grotesque — with its apocalyptic enthusiasm for building new worlds that will be old tomorrow, at the expense of old worlds that were new yesterday; with its destructive wars and revolutions spaced by temporary stabilizations on ever lower levels of spiritual and intellectual order through natural law, enlightened self-interest, a balance of powers, a balance of profits, the survival of the fittest, and the fear of atomic annihilation in a fit of fitness; with its ideological dogmas piled on top of the ecclesiastic and sectarian ones and its resistant skepticism that throws them all equally on the garbage heap of opinion; with its great systems built upon untenable premises and its shrewd suspicions that the premises are indeed untenable and therefore must never be rationally discussed; with the result, in our time, of having unified mankind into a global madhouse bursting with stupendous vitality.

      — ERIC VOEGELIN, Published Essays, 1966–1985

      It has no doubt been worth the metaphysical barbarism of a few centuries to possess modern science.

      — E. A. BURTT, The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science

       The Western Revolutions

      The Liberal vision inspired a wave of democratic revolutions, including, most notably, the American Revolution, which culminated in the drafting of the Constitution of the United States. The founding fathers of the American republic represented the creative elite of the new revolutionary philosophy. The delegates from the colonies who met in Philadelphia in 1787 to draft the Constitution were exemplars of a triumphant middle class: predominantly successful businessmen, lawyers, and farmers; Protestant, property owning, and imbued with the promise of the new mechanistic science. The country was vast