A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 22, 2018
Lenin: The incarnation of Kant’s categorical imperative
Lenin and Rosa: Conflicting imperatives on the National Question
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apodictic » morally and indisputably true
Personification of the Categorical Imperative
Kumar David-April 21, 2018, 6:24 pm
They were both born today (22 April); Kant in 1724, Lenin in 1870. Kant
lived 80 productive years, Lenin died at the comparatively young age of
54. There are interesting themes relating Kant to Lenin, and to Rosa
Luxemburg (1871-1919) of Polish nationality and in the judgement of most
the true intellectual heir of Marx. Lenin and Rosa had enormous regard
for each other but were conflicted on some issues; the one most relevant
to Lanka’s misery is the national question. The latter part of this
essay will turn to this.
Since Kant is a birthday boy a simplified account of the highlights of
what he was up to is appropriate. It has been said: "You can
philosophise with Kant or you can philosophise against him, but you
can’t philosophise without Kant". This is an exaggeration, which is true
only of Aristotle, but shows the regard in which he is held. The big
deal is that Kant rescued philosophy from the battering inflicted by the
British Empiricists whose savage assaults came to the brink of emptying
classical philosophy of all content. I don’t know why they are called
empiricists because their thinking was absolutely opposed to what we
scientists call empirical. Locke was a reasonable chap and did not go
all the way to solipsism (nothing exists except me and my mind;
knowledge is no more than my own consciousness; the external world is
unknowable), but Bishop Berkeley and David Hume denounced materialism
and advocated ‘myself and me alone’ philosophies which brought Western
Philosophy to a standstill and seemed to vanquish materialism and the
external world.
Kant’s great breakthrough was to substantiate the thesis that matter and
mind both existed and interleaved in certain ways. Mind was not a
tabula rasa (a blank sheet) on which experience and the outside world
wrote. Mind was a creative and independent agent which organised and
ordered the stuff of experience into knowledge. Certain things belonged
exclusively to mind – Kant called them a priori – the concept of number,
the rules of pure mathematics, geometry, logical ordering. He even said
that space and time, through which we ordered experiences, belonged to
mind but this claim has been controversial. He postulated ‘categories’
which belong exclusively to mind and play a role in collating knowledge.
Examples of categories are Quantity, Quality, Relation (e.g. the
concept of cause and effect) and Modality (e.g. possibility, necessity).
These were the processes through which mind ordered experience and
built knowledge. Kant never doubted the importance of the material world
and to that extent he was a materialist, despite which, he is called
the founder of German idealism.
(Young people familiar with computers can think of it like this. The
interface Inputs data to the Processor, which runs the Algorithms, and
Outputs the findings. Now compare Input to human experience, Processor
and Algorithm to brain and mind, and Output to knowledge).
Kant abolished Cartesian Dualism: ‘Which comes first, mind or matter?’
He also deflated Descartes’ cogito ergo sum (I think therefore I am)
which asserts the primacy of mind over matter. A modern materialist
neuroscientist would, of course, respond to Descartes "You have a gangly
blob of soft tissue in your skull, that’s why you can think".
Book-learned philosophers will be hopping mad at the way I am
simplifying things; forget these coots; what have they done for you all
these years?
Categorical Imperative
All this is in Kant’s hugely influential Critique of Pure Reason (Kritik
der reinen Vernunft – 1781). He wrote a second boring book (he wrote
many) which was not as influential. This was about morals not
philosophy, but it is my tongue in cheek transition to Lenin. In
Critique of Practical Reason (Kritik der praktischen Vernunft – 1788),
he developed the concept Categorical Imperative (CI). He said there are
two types of motivation that may make us do good things; the lesser
motivation he confusingly called Hypothetical Imperative (HI). This is
when you do something good because it makes you feel good or it makes
someone else happy.
On a dark night you find a satchel with lots of money and return it to
the owner whose phone number you find in the satchel because it makes
the owner happy and pleases you to be a fine chap – that’s HI. On the
other hand, CI is if you return it because it is morally right to do so;
maybe you don’t even meet the owner, or just leave it at the police
station for collection. The reason for your action is moral law, your
inner character, righteousness. It depends on your inner metal, your
upbringing, the values you learnt at your mother’s knee, etc. For Kant
CI is morally superior to HI.
On a hike though the nature trails and hills of Hong Kong an
environmentalist explained why we should preserve the ecosystem and
endangered species. Forests and species may contain plants and creatures
which may one day be found to have medicinal or useful properties he
explained. I objected: "So if useful properties were absent, is it ok to
destroy the environment? No, we must protect nature because we have to
do so; we are driven by something inside us". The chap said,
approvingly, that I was influenced by a categorical, not a hypothetical
imperative. I got the point very well that day.
Lenin’s imperative
If you caught Lenin off guard and asked: "Comrade why do you want to
make revolution?" I bet he would blurt out, "But I have to!" On
reflection he will add practical reasons to this categorical imperative –
peace, bread, land to the peasants, ending oppression and tyranny, and
all that. That’s fine but the cat is out of the bag; the categorical
imperative defines Lenin’s psychology. His "iron will" about the
revolutionary party and about political power are two examples of what
one might call his categorical imperative. The physiognomy of the
Bolsheviks was organisation, discipline, ideology, democratic-centralism
and a no-free-lunch commitment to action.
This was validated in the maelstrom of 1917, however the post-script is
that it is no longer relevant in most of the world; autocratic and
repressive police states are found only in Middle Eastern monarchies and
a few African and other dictatorships. The Leninist party was a perfect
model – but for its day.
Lenin’s obsession with power has been the subject of libraries of books,
but I intend to touch only on the national question and his dispute
with Rosa. The kernel of ‘The Right of Nations to Self-Determination’
(RSD) is that minorities, if they are of size and geographic focus to be
able to survive as a state, have the right to choose. Lenin does not
offer blanket advice for or against separation; that depends case by
case, one size does not fit all. Ceylon Tamils, Catalans, the Scots and
the Taiwanese, need to be discussed individually. But RSD does say: "In
the end, let them choose themselves".
Rosa wrote off all this as tosh. For heaven’s sake the party of world
socialism, the beacon of the future, could not hark back to a
pre-capitalist cave! We have to look forward to a world in which
humanity pools its social and productive abilities (cultural and
linguistic identities must be protected); socialism means global accord.
She would have campaigned against Brexit and stood for a Socialist
United States of Europe to replace the EU.
Lenin was a strategist, Rosa a visionary. Though the difference seems
philosophical there was a tactical side. In vast Russia the proletariat
was a minority, the huge peasant mass plus small nations a majority. For
revolution – ending Tsarist oppression of workers, peasants and
minorities - an alliance with the peasantry and the small nations
(national minorities) was imperative. Hence land to the peasant, RSD for
the nations. It worked; unsurprisingly not a single minority nation
(Finland was a special case) chose to leave the union; all joined the
USSR.
Tactical imperatives in Germany and occupied Poland were opposite to
Russia. National unification, especially in Germany, was long complete.
The task in the eyes of the German and Polish Social Democratic Parties
and their famed leaders, Bebel, William Liebknecht and Rosa, was to go
forward to a socialist order. Rosa in particular was adamant that
Germany and her Poland are better off united. This crystal-clear vision
was half a century before the European Union.
Political circumstances in Lanka pose both issues; national unification,
that is reconciling all communities, and the challenges of development
in a modern world. However, Lanka is at the stage where economic
advancement to meet the needs of all peoples cannot advance without
national unification – that is the lesson of a 30-year civil war.
"Solving the national question" (to put in formula terms), the Leninist
ring of fire, is what we must of necessity pass through before we can
sight Rosa’s promised land.
We have an obstacle to surmount; the racism and atavism of Mahinda
Rajapaksa’s bid for power; frontally, or from behind a facade. Feb 10
showed that about 60% of Sinhala-Buddhists (SB) identified electorally
with MR and his double-agent Sirisena; the minorities rejected them tout
court. On the other side were, say 35% of SB voters (more if you count
UNPers who abstained ‘to teach Ranil a lesson’) and nearly 100% of all
minority peoples. To cobble together an alliance to defeat an MR
front-man at a presidential poll and secure an (at least) hung
parliament is doable as all political actors are now alert. But this
entails a conundrum; all the minorities plus a minority of the majority,
defeating a majority of the majority. There is time enough to change
this and secure a more even split of the majority community, but even
otherwise the resulting state will be constitutionally lawful. It will
also be politically stable if the government of the day is determined,
committed to the categorical imperative of a plural nation and does not
shrink. It will not work if it lacks an iron-will and pussy-foots, as it
did in the last three years, trapping itself in the double-bind of
playing both sides. Wonder whether Ranil, rid of the Sirisena
pestilence, can show nerve on this last chance?

