Friday, August 1, 2025
"the higher you rise in your craft, skill or profession, the more you will be removed from its performance in order to manage it"
Iain McGilchrist, "Preface to the new expanded edition," The master and his emissary: the divided brain and the making of the modern world, New expanded edition (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2019 [2010]), xxiii.
The unicorn and his lion, the anima and his animus
". . . reductionism has become a disease, a viewpoint lacking both intellectual sophistication and emotional depth, which is blighting our ability to understand what is happening and what we need to do about it. My current thoughts are directed towards illuminating what I see as a truer picture, a more helpful and, I believe, a more hopeful way of seeing our situation here on this planet, while we still have time.
". . . There are, it seems to me, four main pathways to the truth: science, reason, intuition and imagination. I also believe strongly that any world view that tries to get by without paying due respect to all four of these is bound to fail. Each on its own has its virtues and its vices, its gifts and its inherent dangers: only by respecting each and all together can we learn to act wisely. And each is a blend of elements contributed by either hemisphere.
"However, the same proviso applies in each case, namely that for each to be successful, what the left hemisphere can offer must be used in service of what the right hemisphere knows and sees, not the other way round. This is as important in the case of science as in that of imagination, in the case of reason as in that of intuition. The left hemisphere is a wonderful servant, but a very poor master.
"We also need to be aware of the sheer extent to which the left hemisphere is, in the most down-to-earth, empirically verifiable way, less reliable than the right – in matters of attention, perception, judgment, emotional understanding, and indeed intelligence as it is conventionally understood. And that means that we should be appropriately sceptical of the left hemisphere’s vision of a mechanistic world, an atomistic society, a world in which competition is more important than collaboration; a world in which nature is a heap of resource there for our exploitation, in which only humans count, and yet humans are only machines – not even very good ones, at that; a world curiously stripped of depth, colour and value. This is not the intelligent, if hard-nosed, view that its espousers comfort themselves by making it out to be; just a sterile fantasy, the product of a lack of imagination, which makes it easier for us to manipulate what we no longer understand. But it is a fantasy that displaces and renders inaccessible the vibrant, living, profoundly creative world that it was our fortune to inherit – until we squandered our inheritance.
Time is running out, and the way we think, which got us into this mess, will not be enough to get us out of it. . . . We need, I believe, to see the world with new eyes. . . ."
Iain McGilchrist, "Preface to the new expanded edition," The master and his emissary: the divided brain and the making of the modern world, New expanded edition (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2019 [2010]), xxiv-xxvi. Headline: Fr. M. C. D'Arcy, The mind and heart of love: Lion and unicorn: a study of eros and agape (1947), not cited by McGilchrist.
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Up with the binarchy
Iain McGilchrist, "Preface to the new expanded edition," The master and his emissary: the divided brain and the making of the modern world, New expanded edition (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2019 [2010]), xvi. Undoubtedly I'm misusing McGilchrist prematurely.
Tuesday, July 29, 2025
"The trees were passive to Orpheus; that's why they danced"
Bruce Lindley McCormack on Sergius Bulgakov, The humility of the eternal Son: Reformed kenoticism and the repair of Chalcedon (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021), 134. The headline is from Austin Farrer.
Doomed to mistake it
"Aussi bien cette solidarité des âges a-t-elle tant de force qu’entre eux les liens d’intelligibilité sont véritablement à double sens. L’incompréhension du présent naît fatalement de l’ignorance du passé. Mais il n’est peut-être pas moins vain de s’épuiser à comprendre le passé, si l’on ne sait rien du présent."
Marc Bloch, The historian's craft, trans. Peter Putnam (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2024 [1954]), 36; Apologie pour l'histoire; ou, Métier d'historiene, Cahiers des Annales [3] (Paris: Librairie Armand Colin, 1949), 13. I was put onto this by Richard Davenport-Hines, "A Stalinist chump at Oxford: the Civil War historian who misjudged his own times," Times literary supplement no. 6364 (March 21, 2025): 21.