Vous voulez voir cette page en français ? Cliquez ici.

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Voltaire's bastards: The dictatorship of reason in the West
 
 

Voltaire's bastards: The dictatorship of reason in the West [Hardcover]

J. R. Saul
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)

Available from these sellers.


Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover --  
Paperback CDN $17.33  
Unknown Binding --  

Customers Who Viewed This Item Also Viewed


Product Details


Product Description

Books in Canada

JOHN RALSTON SAUL likes Voltaire, dislikes his alleged bastards. He holds that Voltaire and other Enlighteners tried to use reason in the service of humanism, but that they were mistaken, and reason took over. The bastards are the technocrats of today, in business, government - in all elites. By "reason," he means applied logic, or method set free from common sense, moral instinct, memory - even from reasonableness.

This at least is the ostensible topic, but Voltaire's Bastards is really John Ralston Saul on almost everything human, mostly in the last four centuries: a creditably humanistic undertaking.

Saul is well versed in military history and the contemporary arms trade. One of his best examples of technocracy is the triumph of staff officers over field officers. On such matters he is at his fullest and most convincing.

But there's a risk of earning Saul's condemnation if one praises him where he has special knowledge. He is a great denouncer of specialization. He complains about specialists' dismissal of the common-sense opinions of other people (such as Saul), and about the reluctance of many of us to form opinions when we think that we don't have enough information.

His numerous topics include: official secrets, trade secrets, speculators, comic books, overuse of law, the rise of managers as against owners, scientific secrecy at the expense of the environment, use of cheap and unprotected labour abroad, the mistaken esteem for the "service sector" of the economy, the Jesuits, celebrities, Cardinal Richelieu, television, art history (denunciation of the profession, with Saul's own outline of the history of art), the novel, the unjust depreciation of "category fiction" (he's written a few thrillers himself), MBA schools, the history of Corsica (well told), public opinion, the drowning of public parliamentary debate in administrative detail (a particularly worthwhile point), the beginnings of public garbage collection in Paris, all of religion (by no means confined to the last four centuries), Jefferson (a favourite of his), Napoleon (not), debt crises (from Solon the Athenian to the present), French vignerons, Robert McNamara (a villain and fool on several fronts).

His international range is admirable. Most people's generalizations about the modern age draw primarily on one country for examples, whereas Saul has a lot of information about Britain, Canada, France, and the United States, and quite a bit about several other countries.

Saul is hard to please. For all his objections to what he calls "structure," he characteristically presents as common sense his disapproval of floating exchange rates and his approval of the previous Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates: a structure if there ever was one, and the work of technocrats.

His own language is touched by technocracy: for example, "driven" (meaning caused), "ongoing," "parameters," "nonresponsible" (meaning unaccountable), "positive" (meaning good), and that vague verb "involve."

Some of his rhetoric is feeble: there's a lot of "simply" and "quite simply" and phrases like "ever larger." His sometimes strained images and metaphors suggest a certain cruelty or at least a taste for the grotesque, though he is always trying to make serious points: courtesans, courtiers, eunuchs, and technocrats are essentially the same, he says, and so are inflation and flatulence.

Often this book induces despair, as if any participation in power would be a surrender to "structure." Interestingly, it is dedicated to Maurice Strong, "who taught me that a sensible relationship between ideas and action is possible." We could have benefited from an elaboration of this. The only fairly recent politician who gets much praise from Saul is de Gaulle. But he also shows how de Gaulle was a leader in the government-instigated arms trade, in the French nuclear structure, and in confirming the position of the ENA, the school for high civil servants that is as much a nest of technocrats as the equally hated Harvard Business School. He might have discussed the interesting mixture of success and failure in the life of this brilliant military thinker, who had imagination, historical memory, and other qualities Saul admires.

Voltaire's Bastards makes me think of a Biblical sentence: "Therefore it became a proverb, Is Saul also among the prophets?" No one is quite sure what this meant. Did it invite the answer "No" or "Yes"? King Saul had happened upon a "company of prophets" and began to rave prophetically with the rest of them. He had previously been known as a regular guy.

King Saul is not remembered as a prophet, but still, "the spirit" had touched him in some measure. The right answer to the proverb's question seems to be the same the notorious technocrat Giscard d'Estaing gave to the Gaullist regime: "Oui, mais...."

What then of this long rant in praise of "common sense"? Is John Ralston Saul also among the prophets? As an anti-technocrat, he is not the equal of Jacques Ellul, Martin Heidegger, or George Grant, but this is a rich and versatile book. Gerald Owen(Books in Canada)

From Publishers Weekly

Known for his novels of international intrigue, Saul in his first work of nonfiction delivers a passionate jeremiad on the follies of our age. Reason, he argues, has run amok; instead of the enlightened utopia envisaged by Voltaire, the modern West is a soulless machine run by technocratic elites that promise efficiency but create disasters. The author targets the insane waste of our "permanent war economy," the perils of nuclear power, the co-optation of democracy by vested interests, the news media's focus on false events and manufactured celebrities, the "personality politics" of presidential campaigns. He critiques the Harvard Business School's management teachings, profiles such figures as Thomas Jefferson, Robert McNamara and Charles de Gaulle, flunks our colleges for failure to reward creativity and imagination. He blames novelists from James Joyce onward for "rendering literature inaccessible" and divorcing fiction from social concerns. He roams freely through history, politics, theology, art and film, challenging his audience on every page. This wonderfully provocative inquiry, a work of bold sweep and originality, may nonetheless leave some readers wondering whether misplaced faith in reason underlies all the ills discussed.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product)
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


 

Customer Reviews

42 Reviews
5 star:
 (23)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (8)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (42 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Analyzes the total effect of the bastardization of reason, Mar 19 2002
By 
Christopher (Denver, Colorado, USA) - See all my reviews
It takes tremendous courage to open a book with such a subtitle. It is human nature to construct an ideology based on our favorite thoughts, and then live cozily inside as master of the realm. For then we can use that ideology as shield and weapon.

But then John Ralston Saul comes face to face with you, removes his glove, and with a gentleman's flourish, whips the leather across your face. Saul is the master of gauntlet-throwing, and after one read of this hefty tome, you will be begging for more.

"The undoubted sign of a society well under control or in decline is that language has ceased to be a means of communication and has become instead a shield for those who master it."

Does this remind you of your country's political process? Or possibly of those ivory-tower publications that you so treasure? How is it that our species has been able to use words to cloak double and triple meanings within the most seemingly innocuous sentences? Is this what we truly want?

"The structures of argument have been co-opted so completely by those who work the system that when an individual reaches for the words and phrases which he senses will express his case, he finds that they are already in active use in the service of power. This now amounts to a virtual dictatorship of vocabulary."

The Inquisition, Machiavellian belief, the Napoleonic Wars, and the Holocaust can be rationally justified, says Saul. The tools of rationality provide the means to any desired end. Men participated in these events of their own free will, and even added their input to make said processes more 'efficient'.

"The Inquisitors were the first to formalize the idea that to every question there is a right answer. The answer is known, but the question must be asked and correctly answered. Relativism, humanism, common sense, and moral beliefs were all irrelevant to this process because they assume doubt. Since the Inquisitors knew the answer, doubt was impossible. Process, however, was essential, for efficient governance and process required that questions be asked in order to produce the correct answer."

Is it worth having the tools of reason if they can be manipulated to cause the deaths of 200 million human beings? We all know the answer, as gut-wrenching as it may be... regardless, we can't disassociate our minds from reason any more than we can live without lungs.

So how do we move forward? How do we evolve with such a legacy behind and such uncertainty ahead? First, says Saul, we must remember:

"Memory is always the enemy of structure. The latter flourishes upon method and is frustrated by content. Our need to deny the amorality of reason ensured that memory would be the first victim of the new structures."

Secondly, we open our eyes. Who is it that truly controls our society and its governance? Saul has correctly identified the "men behind the men", the counselors and courtiers whom our leaders turn to for advice, and the bureaucrats, none of whom are elected or held to accountability by our constitution. These puppeteers, say Saul, are the "technocrats" who co-opt reason for limited ends:

"In the context of the technocratic mind, truth, like history and events, is what suits the interests of the system or the game plan of the man in charge."

Thirdly, we do not allow rationality to freeze our minds and our humanity in the cement of process. We employ skepticism (not cynicism) to constantly keep our eyes fresh. When skepticism reveals doubt, we employ common sense and morality, neither of which can or should be defined by, you guessed it, rationality.

Saul is not an enemy of reason. Quite the opposite, his purpose here is to rescue reason from those who fly its banner upon high while secretly using it to shine their shoes.

And how does Saul go about making his argument without using... argument? His method is brilliant. He has constructed a book that reads like a great speech, an enthralling lecture. Saul is discursive... he introduces literally dozens of seemingly unrelated subjects, draws truth from each, and makes his points without needing to build upon the pages before. Saul doesn't lead you from point A to point Q, as his enemies would; he simply enlightens you on many topics and allows your mind to form the connections... a truly satisfying experience.

This book is a fine wine, with the strong tang of truth. These pages are filled with aphorism and information on the widest variety of topics: national defense, economics, television, the Supreme Court, warfare, Congress, science, and celebrity; all of these cloths are woven with the same fundamental threads. Saul unmasks many clandestine operations, most of which are still being played out today.

Your hunger for knowledge will be greatly satisfied (almost satiated) here. Page one will be distinguished as an important point in your life, and we all know how precious such eye-opening works are.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought Changing, Mar 14 2005
By 
This book opened a window for me finally explaining what was wrong with all the large disfunctional companies and organizations that I have seen over the years. I would equate this book with Adam Smith's in that it will probably be the forerunner to a new branch of study. The only warning that I would give is that this book took ten years to write and contains so much information to digest per page that it is not a quick read. You have to put it down every time your brain is full and for me this was quite frequently. If you work or deal with large organizations and are perpetually confused as to why they do the things they do then this book is exactly what you need. My only question about this book is directed at Mr. Saul himself and that is "Why are you living the life you seem to eviscerate in your book?"
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars badly written, badly argued, badly edited, Jun 27 2001
By 
Justus Pendleton (Colorado Springs, CO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It is hard to fit all of my complaints into a 1,000 words.

The first thing you notice is that Saul never defines "reason". Quite an accomplishment given the size of the book. Indeed, at times Saul seems to speak approvingly of reason, for instance when referring to Thomas Jefferson. One is left with the inescapable conclusion that Saul is using "reason" in a non-standard sense. This is all the more ironic for the fact that early in the book Saul claims that the enemies of "good" never speak clearly and always try to obfuscate their point. Saul apparently doesn't think he fits that definition.

Saul continually states claims that a casual reader can't help but think are false. Then he doesn't even attempt to argue or justify his claim. Apparently if you don't believe him apriori, he's not going to be bothered to try to convince you. For instance, his claim that civilizations that cannot distinguish between reality and fantasy are near their end. Apparently he is unaware of the long life of aboriginal societies depite their belief in mythic fantasy.

Saul seems to have a tenuous grasp on both the history of philosophy and contemporary history. His main argument doesn't seem to be with Voltaire, but rather with Hume. Which is entirely unforgiveable as Hume addresses what seems to be Saul's main argument. Yet Saul has no response for Hume. Through out the volume Saul's apparent ignorance of philosophy is profound.

His analysis of history is equally bankrupt. Most egregious is his section on McNamara. First he claims that McNamara is responsible for the proliferation of nuclear arms. Saul fails to mention that by the time McNamara was in office, the Soviet Union, China, Great Britain, France, and Israel all had nuclear weapons. India was only a few years away from similar developments, and the basis of their development was Canadian nuclear technology. But McNamara gets the blame because he tried to minimize the possibility of total nuclear war and because he didn't want the US to be the world's policeman. Another criticism of McNamara is that he "corporatized" the military making it unable to win wars. Saul seems unaware that 1) Vietnam was a military victory but a political defeat, 2) that the bureaucratization of the military began long before McNamara -- during WW2 both Eisenhower and Marshall led the Allied forced to victory despite being managers rather than soldiers, 3) that the army's purpose isn't to get soldiers to die but rather to kill other armies' soldiers. Saul makes the common mistake of civilians in assuming that the military is a purely pragmatic institution with a "singularity of purpose" that involves killing. Even a cursory examination of the roles played by the military today would show how foolish this belief is.

Finally, Saul's biggest failing is that he offers no alternative. Even IF you accept his argument that a "rational" system doesn't produce perfect answers it may very well be the case that it produces better outcomes than any other system. Much like Churchill's contention that "democracy is a horrible form of government, but it is better than any other we have tried."

I couldn't help but feel that this book only preaches to the choir. If you already agree with Saul then save yourself the time and don't bother reading this. If you don't agree with Saul then don't bother reading this because he's not especially interested in convincing people who aren't already in agreement.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 61 reviews  3.8 out of 5 stars 
 
 
Most recent customer reviews











Only search this product's reviews



Listmania!


Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject


Feedback