Read Modern Mind: An Intellectual History of the 20th Century Online
Authors: Peter Watson
Tags: #World History, #20th Century, #Retail, #Intellectual History, #History
41.
Jacoby, Op.
cit.,
pages 27ff.
42.
Ibid.,
pages 72ff.
43.
Ibid.,
pages 54ff.
44.
V. S. Naipaul,
Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey,
New York: Knopf, 1981; Vintage paperback, 1982.
45.
Ibid.,
page 82.
46.
Ibid.,
page 85.
47.
Ibid.,
page 88.
48.
Ibid.,
page 167.
49.
Ibid.,
page 337.
50.
Ibid.,
page 224.
51.
V. S. Naipaul,
An Area of Darkness,
London: Deutsch, 1967;
India: A Wounded Civilisation,
London: Deutsch, 1977; Penguin 1979;
India: A Million Mutinies Now,
London: Heinemann, 1990.
52.
Naipaul, An Area of Darkness, Op. cit., page 18.
53.
Ibid.,
page 53. I could go on. Instead, let us turn to Nirad Chaudhuri, another Indian writer but this time born and educated in the sub-continent. Here is a man who loved his own country but thought it ‘torpid,’ ‘incapable of a vital civilisation of its own unless it is subjected to foreign influence.’ (Quoted in Edward Shils,
Portraits,
University of Chicago Press, 1997, page 83.) Chaudhuri was felt to be ‘anti-Indian’ by many of his compatriots and in old age he went to live in England. But his gaze was unflinching. Chaudhuri thought that Indian spirituality did not exist. ‘It is a figment of the Western imagination … there is no creative power left in India.’
(Ibid.).
‘Indian colleges and universities have never been congenial places for research, outside of Indological studies.’
(Ibid.,
page 103.)
54.
Octavio Paz,
In Light of India,
London: Harvill, 1997. Originally published as:
Vislumbras de la India,
Barcelona: Editorial Seix Barrai SA, 1995.
55.
Ibid.,
page 37.
56.
Ibid.,
page 89.
57.
Ibid.,
page 90.
58.
V. S. Naipaul, India: A Million Mutinies Now, Op. cit., page 518.
59.
This later view was echoed by Prasenjit Basu. Writing in the
International Herald Tribune
in August 1999, he reminded readers that despite the fact that that week India’s population had reached 1 billion, which most people took as anything but good news, the country was doing well. Growth was strong, the export of software was flourishing, agricultural production was outstripping population growth, there had been no serious famine since independence from Britain, and Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs and Christians were collaborating to produce both nuclear power and humane laws. So maybe ‘Inner-directed India’ was at last changing. In
Islams and Modernities
(Verso, 1993) Aziz Al-Azmeh was likewise more optimistic about Islam. He argued that until, roughly speaking, the Yom Kippur war and the oil crisis, Islam
was
modernising, coming to terms with Darwin, among other ideas. Since then, however, he said Islam had been dominated by a right-wing version that replaced Communism ‘as the main threat to Western civilisation and values.’
60.
Landes, Op.
cit.,
pages 491ff.
61.
Irving Louis Horowitz,
The Decomposition of Sociology,
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1993; paperback edition, 1994.
62.
Ibid.,
page 4.
63.
Ibid.,
page 12.
64.
Ibid.
65.
Ibid.,
page 13.
66.
Ibid.,
page 16.
67.
Ibid.,
pages 242ff.
68.
Barrow, Impossibility, Op. cit.
69.
I
bid.,
page 248.
70.
Ibid.,
page 251.
71.
Roger Scruton, An Intelligent Person’s Guide to Modem Culture, Op. cit., page 69.
72.
John Polkinghorne,
Beyond Science,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996; Canto paperback 1998, page 64.
73.
Polkinghorne, Op.
cit.,
page 88.
74.
Some of these issues are considered in an original way by Harvard’s Gerald Holton in
The Scientific Imagination
(Cambridge University Press, 1978, re-issued Harvard University Press, 1998). Based on studies of such scientific innovations as Enrico Fermi’s discoveries, and high-temperature super-conductivity, Holton concluded that scientists are by and large introverts, shy as children, very conscious as adults of peer pressure and that imagination in this context is a ‘smaller’ entity than in the arts, in that science is generally governed by ‘themata’, presuppositions which mean that ideas move ahead step-by-step and that these steps eventually lead to paradigm shifts. Holton’s study raises the possibility that such small imaginative leaps are in fact more fruitful than the larger, more revolutionary turns of the wheel that Lewis Mumford and Lionel Trilling called for in the arts. According to Holton’s evidence, the smaller imaginative steps of science are what account for its success. Another response is to find enchantment in science, as many – if not all – scientists clearly do. In his 1998 book,
Unweaving the Rainbow
(London: Allen Lane, The Penguin Press), Richard Dawkins went out of his way to make this point. His title was taken from Keats’s poem about Newton, that in showing how a rainbow worked, in terms of physics, he had removed the mystery and magic, somehow taken away the poetry. On the contrary, said Dawkins, Keats – and Chaucer and Shakespeare and Sitwell and a host of other writers – would have been even better poets had they been more knowledgeable about science; he spent some time correcting the science in the poetry of Chaucer, Shakespeare and Wordsworth. He mounted a ferocious attack on mysticism, spiritualism and astrology as tawdry forms of enchantment, sang the praises of the wonders of the brain, and natural history, including a detail about a species of worm ‘which lives exclusively under the eyelids of the hippopotamus and feeds upon its tears’ (page 241). This book was the first that Dawkins had written in response to events rather than setting the agenda himself, and it had a defensive quality his others lacked and was in my view unnecessary. But his tactic of correcting great poets, though it might perhaps be seen as arrogance, did have a point. The critics of science must be ready to have their heroes criticised too.
75.
Bryan Magee, Confessions of a Philosopher, Op. cit., page 564.
76.
Ibid.,
page 536.
77.
Ibid.,
pages 546–548.
78.
One man who has considered this issue, at least in part, is Francis Fukuyama, in
The Great Disruption
(The Free Press, 1999). In his view a Great Disruption took place in the developed countries in the 1960s, with a jump in levels of crime and social disorder, and the decline of families and kinship as a source of social cohesion. He put this down to the change from an industrial to a post-industrial society, which brought about a change in hierarchical society, to the baby boom (with a large number of young men, prone to violent crime), and to such technological developments as the contraceptive pill. But Fukuyama also considered that there has been a major intellectual achievement by what he called ‘the new biology’ in the last quarter century. By this he meant, essentially, sociobiology, which he considered has shown us that there is such a thing as human nature, that man is a social animal who will always develop moral rules, creating social cohesion after any disruption. This, he points out, is essentially what culture wars
are:
moral battlegrounds, and here he was putting a modern, scientific gloss on Nietzsche and Hayek. Fukuyama therefore argued that the Great Disruption is now over, and we are living at a time when there is a return to cohesion, and even to family life.
79.
Samuel Huntington, The Clash of Civilisations and the Remaking of World Order, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996.
80.
Also cited in: Neil Postman,
The End of Education,
New York: Knopf, 1995; Vintage paperback, 1996, page 113.
81.
Edward O. Wilson,
Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge,
New York: Little, Brown, 1998.
82.
Ibid.,
page 220.
83.
Ibid.,
page 221.
84.
Ibid.,
page 225.
85.
Ibid.,
page 297.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was created. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature of your e-book reader.
Aalto, Alvar, 332
Abba, Marta, 191
Abel, John, 103
Abel, Wolfgang, 310
Abetz, Otto, 409
Abraham, David: The Collapse of the Weimar Republic,
737
Abraham, Karl, 274, 505
Achebe, Chinua, 51, 706, 713;
Things Fall Apart,
460–2, 470
Adams, Franklin P., 217
Adamson, George, 608, 609?
Adamson, Joy, 608, 609?
Addison, Thomas, 103
Adler, Alfred, 15, 138, 142
Adler, Dankmar, 81
Adorno, Theodor, 225–6, 306, 308, 357, 376, 435, 502;
The Authoritarian Personality,
434–5
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), 737–8
Afar Triangle, Ethiopia, 612
Africa: archaeology of, 726–9; chimpanzees studied in, 609–10; Conrad on, 49–50; elephants studied in, 611–12; gorillas studied in, 610–11; lions studied in, 608; as supposed origin of classical civilisation, 727–8; universities in, 73;
see also
Laetoli; Negro peoples; Olduvai Gorge; Rift Valley; individual countries
Agadir crisis (1911), 172
Agnew, Spiro, 644–5
Agostinelli, Alfred, 199
Ahlquist, Raymond, 659
Akhmatova, Anna, 323
al-Azhar college-mosque, Cairo, 73
Albers, Josef, 305, 355
Aldrin, Edward (‘Buzz’), 568
Alexander, Franz, 223, 274, 505
Algonquin Hotel, New York, 217
Algren, Nelson, 421–3
Allen, Paul, 605
Althusser, Louis, 626–7, 632
Alvarez, Lucy and Walter, 687
Amis, Kingsley, 464, 469
Anand, Mulk Raj, 709
Anders, Bill, 573
Anderson, Philip, 748
Angelou, Maya, 528–9, 705
Anka, Paul, 457
Anna O
see
Pappenheim, Bertha
Annalen der Physik
(periodical), 93
Annales d’histoire économique et social
(journal): ‘Annales’ school of historians, 467, 557–8, 560, 735
Anouilh, Jean, 412–13, 640
Apollinaire, Guillaume, 24, 128–9, 131, 142, 145, 203
‘Apu, trilogy (films), 712
Aquinas, St Thomas, 678
Aragon, Louis, 163, 203, 334, 409
Arden, John, 464
Ardrey, Robert, 607, 616
Arendt, Hannah, 6, 307–9, 354, 435–6, 441, 447, 552, 592;
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
435, 504–5
Ariès, Philippe:
Centuries of Childhood, 557
Armstrong, Neil, 566, 568
Arnold, Matthew, 74, 234
Aron, Raymond, 306, 408, 412, 447, 626;
Progress and Disillusion,
545
Arp, Hans, 161–2
Arrow, Kenneth, 649
Artaud, Antonin, 640
Arteaga, Melchor, 119
Artists in Exile exhibition, New York (1942), 355
Arup, Ove & Partners, 622
Ashbery, John, 512
Ash worth, Dawn, 682–3
Astor, Nancy, 128
Asturias, Miguel Angel, 706–7
Ataturk, Kemal Mustafa, 351
Athens Charter (1933), 331
Atlan, Jean, 414
Atomic Energy Commission, 507
Attlee, Clement, 384
Auden, Wystan Hugh, 239, 328, 332–4, 346, 386, 592, 761; ‘Spain’, 334
Audry, Colette, 422
Auschwitz, 311
Austen, Jane, 276
Australia: universities, 73
Austria: annexed by Germany, 306, 380; refugees in USA, 350
Austro-Hungarian Empire, 26, 36; consequences of 1919 peace, 180
Authoritarian Personality, The
(report), 435
Averbakh, Leopold, 324
Avery, Oswald Thomas, 374
Ayer, A. J., 235, 306
Baader, Johannes, 163
Babbage, Charles, 252
Babbitt, George F. (fictional character), 208–10, 212, 280
Babbitt, Milton, 623–4
Babel, Isaac, 324
Bacon, Commander R. H., 50
Baekeland, Leo Hendrik, 96–8, 107, 343
Baez, Joan, 523
Bahr, Hermann, 28–9
Bak, Per, 747–8
Baker, Josephine, 523
Bakst, Leon, 130
Balanchine, George, 130, 358–9
Balázs, Béla, 181–3
Baldwin, James, 459–60, 462, 470, 523, 526–8, 762;
The Fire Next Time,
459
Ball, Hugo, 161–2
Ballets Russes, 130
Balzac, Honoré de, 234
Bamberger, Louis, 303
Banes, Sally, 514
Banham, Reyner, 622
Barbusse, Henri, 157
Bardeen, John, 476–8, 615n
Barlach, Ernst, 300–1, 313
Barnacle, Nora, 193
Barnard, Dr Christian, 660
Barnes, Albert, 216
Barnes, Ernest William, Bishop of
Birmingham:
Scientific Theory and Religion,
289–91
Barr, Alfred, 353, 510, 622
Barraqué, Jean, 623
Barrett, William, 233
Barrow, John, 758;
Impossibility: The Limits of Science and the Science of Limits,
766–7
Barth, Karl, 576
Barthes, Roland, 624, 627, 634–8, 679
Bartók, Béla, 181, 356, 376;
Bluebeard’s Castle
, 182
Bataille, Georges, 408
Bateson, Gregory, 277, 502
Bateson, William, 318
Baudelaire, Charles, 43, 52, 162
Bauhaus, 223–4, 300, 304, 332
Baumeister, Willi, 351
Bayreuth, 56
Beach, Sylvia, 193–4, 215, 409
Beardsley, Aubrey, 35
Beaubourg Centre
see
Pompidou Centre
Beauvoir, Simone de, 409–11, 413–15, 421–2, 425, 429, 529;
The Second Sex,
423
Bechet, Sidney, 413
Beckett, Samuel, 286, 346, 412, 414, 416–17, 640, 718;
Waiting for Godot,
416–18
Beckmann, Max, 157, 300, 302, 313, 350, 355
Becquerel, Henri, 91
Beecham, Sir Thomas, 53
Behrens, Peter, 223, 332
Behrensmeyer, Kay, 613
Behrman, David, 514
Beijing University (Beida), 178–9
Belafonte, Harry, 523, 599
Bell, Clive, 127, 201, 340
Bell, Daniel, 439, 447. 454. 599, 605, 620, 761;
The Coming of Post-Industrial Society,
592–3;
The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism,
593–4;
The End of Ideology,
437–9, 537, 592;
The Public Interest
(as editor, with
Irving Kristol), 704
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Murray
Hill, New Jersey, 476–7, 569
Belloc, Hilaire, 339
Bellow, Saul:
Dangling Man
and other titles, 719–20, 721
Bellows, George, 86
Belmondo, Jean-Paul, 639
Beloff, Max, 447
Benchley, Robert, 217
Benda, Julien, 66
Benedict, Ruth, 118, 142, 277, 280–1, 390, 432, 462;
The Chrysanthemum and the Sword,
402–4;
Patterns of Culture,
280–1
Ben-Gurion, David, 504
Benin (West Africa), 49–50
Benjamin, Walter, 235, 330–1, 513,
515; The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,
330–1
Benn, Gottfried:
The New State and the Intellectuals,
301–2
Benois, Alexandre, 164
Bentham, Jeremy, 678
Berg, Alban, 37, 180, 222, 229–30;
Wozzeck,
230
Bergonzi, Bernard, 152, 156
Bergson, Henri: Inge and, 290; life and ideas, 65–8, 90, 617; Magritte and, 205; notion of time, 87; offers post to
Horkheimer, 305; in Paris, 24, 78; Picasso and, 61; rift with analytical school, 75; Sartre influenced by, 407–8;
L’Evolution aéatrice,
65, 67
Beria, Lavrenti, 482
Berlin, 229–33, 237; blockade (1948), 473; Wall, 516–17
Berlin, Sir Isaiah, 1–2, 416, 644–5; Four
Essays on Liberty,
544–5, 548
Bernal, J. D., 726, 757
Bernal, Martin:
Black Athena,
726–9, 731
Berners-Lee, Tim, 739
Bernhardt, Sarah, 24
Bernstein, Leonard, 599
Bertalanffy, Ludwig von, 183, 629
Bethe, Hans, 507
Betjeman, Sir John, 332
Bettelheim, Bruno, 306, 506
Beveridge, William, Baron, 186, 306, 351, 384; Report (
Social Insurance and Allied Services),
383–6
Bible, Holy: and scientific research, 574–6
Binet, Alfred, 147–9, 500
Bingham, Hiram, 118–21
Bion, Wilfrid, 416
Birmingham, Alabama, 523
Birmingham, England, 392–3
Black, Davidson, 577
Black, James, 659
Black Mountain College, North Carolina, 354, 513
Black Panthers, 524–5, 528
Blackboard Jungle, The
(film), 457
Blackett, P. M. S., 365
Blanshard, Paul, 580
Blavatsky, Helena Petrovna, 64
Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire, 361, 364–5
Bleuler, Eugen, 500
Bliss, Lillie P., 127
Bloch, Felix, 507
Bloch, Marc, 557–9
Bloom, Allan, 754, 770;
The Closing of the American Mind,
721–3, 724, 729, 753
Bloom, Harold, 770;
Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human,
734;
The Western Canon,
723–5
Bloom, Leopold (fictional character), 194–5, 197
Blunden, Edmund, 155
Boas, Franz, 112, 116–17, 121, 142, 277–81, 390, 432, 665;
The Mind of Primitive Man,
116–18, 277