The culture war has been something entangled with my attention since about 2011 or 2012. I don’t want to claim that I understand absolutely everything about it; however, earlier this week, between bicep curls of Surveillance Capitalism, Means of Control, and The Foucault Reader and meditating on what my mostly social science and liberal arts undergraduate education was actually about, I came to a rather sobering conclusion. I even started sleeping better.
For some time, out there in the history department, there has been increasing consensus about a shadow of the Enlightenment - that there is a historical precedent that scientific progress can backfire and hurt people, even in situations of good intention, such as better governance. My current shorthand for this is “Sometimes, fire burns.”
Historians might be in the oldest club in the world. Something I’ve joked with myself a lot this week is I wonder what sort of hazing goes into getting a PhD in history. That said, even if there is major consensus among historians, my impression is that they are the most careful of any scholars to introduce radical ideas to young people. In an introduction to modern world history, while we were assigned a singular “big” textbook that every historian agrees on, we had a number of primary and secondary sources assigned - the most pungent effect of contemporary education is the necessity of “more than one book.”
My professor nor TA had no lecture nor commentary regarding this idea of the shadow of the Enlightenment. I can’t remember it coming up in any discussion hours. But as I thought about this concept coming out clearly in my readings this week and I remembered this class, I realized that our most important supplementary primary source was Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.
This is my offered solution to what might be a more sobering conclusion we can take from the "softer" disciplines. Am I right? I have no clue. But I wonder about the standards of historians; I wonder if the discipline is as honorable as my mind figures it to be, and I wonder what we could learn about the culture war and how things are playing out with Big Tech1 and Big Pharma if we take the historians seriously.
Footnotes
-
Does anyone else consider how easily history could be rewritten if we had no paper books and only communicated through electronic means? ↩