One
of the challenges in talking about the Dutch philosopher Herman
Dooyeweerd (1894-1977) is the pronunciation of his name. If you've seen The Sound of Music
you can pronounce "Dooyeweerd." Sing: "Doe, a deer, a female deer."
Yeah, that's great … if a little weird. "Doe-yeah-weird." Close enough!
"Doo-ye-weerd."
In Herman Dooyeweerd: Christian Philosopher of State and Civil Society,
Jonathan Chaplin shows how Dooyeweerd's subtle yet powerful analysis of
the architecture of society critically illumines contemporary
controversies concerning the state and civil society. Dooyeweerd offers a
rich, insightful account of deep forces that shape how we human
creatures make our life together.
Chaplin's book is not intended for a
popular audience—he writes for "English-language social and political
theorists"—but we may hope that many of these theorists, and certainly
those who are professing evangelical Christians, will read this book and
so benefit from it that they will be inspired to explore the
implications of Dooyeweerd's thought in ways that will enrich the many
conversations now going on among Christians in every field of cultural
endeavor.
With this book Chaplin also contributes to
the revival of interest in the thought of Abraham Kuyper. I can attest
to this revival—for example, as I started writing this review I was
visiting New York City's Redeemer Presbyterian Church to study two
chapters of Kuyper's famous 1898 Stone Lectures at Princeton Seminary
(available in various editions as the Lectures on Calvinism)
with a highly diverse group of 24 young professionals in that church's
Gotham Fellows program. The Gotham Fellows were glowing with enthusiasm
for what they had been learning from Kuyper—an enthusiasm that I have
encountered among young adults all over North America, including
businesspeople in Phoenix, Arizona, and seminary students in Pasadena,
California, citizens serious about political engagement in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, and Chicago, Illinois, and people in fashion and finance
and philosophy in Boston, New York City, and Washington, D.C.
Dooyeweerd's
social and political thought is a "sophisticated elaboration," argues
Chaplin, of Kuyper's ideas—in particular of Kuyper's idea of "sphere
sovereignty." Kuyper argues that God is sovereign over all things, and
as a result, human authority and responsibility are always limited. One
of the ways in which human authority is limited, according to Kuyper, is
that the different "spheres" of human life—for example, the sphere of
the family, the sphere of business, the sphere of politics—are intended
to enjoy a delegated freedom from one another. Each of these spheres is
"sovereign" in relation to the others. And within each sphere, human
beings have authority delegated from God, to provide leadership subject
to the patterns God ordained for that sphere of human life in creation.
Wisdom, according to Kuyper, consists of living life in each of these
spheres subject to God's creation ordinances.
Chaplin
shows how Dooyeweerd takes these ideas and seeks to clarify what they
may mean for understanding all the complexities of human life. While
Dooyeweerd's theory of the structure of reality stretches far wider than
social and political life, Chaplin shows, in particular, how
Dooyeweerd's social and political thought can be helpful—a contribution,
according to Chaplin, "comparable in range and depth" to that of a
Catholic social thinker like Jacques Maritain. (Chaplin not only
presents Dooyeweerd's thought, he also offers significant criticisms and
proposes several innovations. Given that most readers of this review
will not be familiar with Dooyeweerd, I will limit myself mostly to
Chaplin's presentation of the contours of Dooyeweerd's social and
political thought, giving less attention to Chaplin's criticisms and
innovations, valuable though these are.)
Chaplin's
central concern is to show how Dooyeweerd's ideas bear on the
"perplexing and ever-shifting question" of the relationship between what
we today call "the state" and "civil society." He argues that
Dooyeweerd (following in the footsteps of Kuyper) exemplifies what
Chaplin calls "normative institutional pluralism." Normative
institutional pluralists are convinced that "a vital feature of any just
and well-ordered society is the presence of multiple kinds of mutually
distinct social institutions [or associations] whose integrity and
autonomy it is a primary role of the state to safeguard and support."
Hence Kuyper and Dooyeweerd warn against both the totalitarian impulse
on the part of the state and the socially corrosive power of
individualism.
Through the course of the book,
Chaplin shows how Dooyeweerd's institutional pluralism helps clarify
three pressing problems: "the definition and scope of the concept of
civil society"; "the relationship between the state and civil society";
and "the utility of civil society for social critique"—or, as Chaplin
also summarizes them: "What is civil society?" "What is civil society
for?" "Can the concept of civil society generate robust social
critique?"
The deepest philosophical convictions that
orient Dooyeweerd's social ontology are that all of created reality
stands in a relationship of complete and persistent dependence on a God
whose creation-sustaining goodness and power are thoroughly trustworthy
(and that created reality is therefore meaningful); that created reality
is characterized by a patterned dynamism in its every facet (and
therefore thoroughly temporal); and that the dynamic shape of created
reality is ordered and sustained by perduring patterns given by God in
creation (and must therefore be understood as being subject to divine
law).
Because of these convictions, Dooyeweerd is
deeply convinced that the social order is given—in potential—for human
flourishing, and that human responsibility includes the unfolding or
disclosure of social possibilities given in divine law but requiring
dynamic realization in history by human agents. As a result, Dooyeweerd
affirms (in opposition to both nostalgic reactionaries and utopian
revolutionaries) the emergence in recent centuries of highly complicated
and relatively fast-changing societies, especially under the impetus,
jointly but in mutual contention, of the Protestant Reformation and the
modern Enlightenment. He acknowledges that such societies bustle with a
great variety of proper and improper claims from individuals and their
various associations, and that it is difficult to properly integrate and
harmonize all of these claims without society degenerating into either
an atomistic individualism or a suffocating totalitarianism. But this
difficult harmonization—the task of establishing and maintaining public
justice, or as Chaplin also writes, "the adjudication of public
interdependencies"—is exactly the institutional vocation of the state.
"The state's task," then, Chaplin writes,
is to protect and adjudicate among these legitimate claimants and not to usurp or thwart them for its own political ends. In order to do this it must, in the first instance, correctly discern the structural identities of many social institutions (as well as honor the rights of individuals). In defining the state … as a "public-legal community," Dooyeweerd's larger intention is that the state (whose members are both government and citizens) discharge effective justice to persons, institutions, and … the larger public interest.
Dooyeweerd
is a representative of a view of society that Chaplin calls "covenantal
voluntarism"—that is, Dooyeweerd and others like him hold that human
society is formed as "free and responsible persons voluntarily
associate, but pursuant to a particular human purpose or need arising
from the normative design of human nature, not spun out of the arbitrary
wills of the associates. Associational initiative is not an expression
of radical moral autonomy but the fulfilling of a social vocation."
Thus,
with the help of Dooyeweerd's social ontology, Chaplin answers the
question "What is civil society?" with this definition: "Civil society
[is the] realm of social interactions embracing the dense network of
[interdependencies] characteristic of a modern society."
How does such a definition contribute to the ongoing conversation about
civil society? There are currently three overlapping models of civil
society: a protective model, an integrative model, and a transformative
model. The protective model, exemplified by the work of
neo-Tocquevillians like Don Eberly, Perter Berger, and Richard John
Neuhaus, understands civil society to exist for the purpose of
protecting social bonds, values, and virtues. The integrative model,
exemplified by the work of Christopher Beem and Charles Taylor, sees the
purpose of civil society as being that of the weaving together of
society (including government) into a cohesive, harmonious unity. The
transformative model, represented by the work of Jean Cohen and Andrew
Arato, understands civil society to be the realm of action of social
movements that seek to make more room for freedom, equality, and
solidarity in society.
Dooyeweerd's social ontology
resonates with much of the protective model, in that it offers "an
affirmation of the importance of protecting the many vulnerable social
ecologies" needed to sustain families, churches, voluntary associations
and neighborhoods—"indispensable" as they are, according to Chaplin, "as
arenas of social cooperation, schools of civic virtue, and bulwarks
against government intrusion." Dooyeweerd's work demands that we
recognize that these kinds of communities depend for their health on
more than just the protection of their internal activities: together
they constitute "society" as "an extremely complex … network of [social]
interdependencies," and these demand an "adjudication of public
interdependencies" which can only be accomplished by the state. The
merely protective model is inadequate, however, in terms of Dooyweerd's
approach, in that it fails to give adequate attention to what
Christopher Beem has termed "the necessity of politics."
The
necessity of politics is given greater attention in the integrative
model, which argues that civil society in tandem with the state serves
to unify and harmonize society in service of the public or national
interest. Dooyeweerd's understanding of the purpose of the state as
being "the creation and maintenance of a public order of just laws,"
guided by the norm of public justice, so as to accomplish a
"public-legal" or "political integration" among citizens, resonates with
this concern for integration.
But at the same time,
Dooyeweerd's social ontology and political philosophy appropriately warn
against the kind of corporatism toward which the integrative model of
civil society trends. As Chaplin summarizes, "The political community
establishes an indispensible, substantial, yet specific and limited kind
of relationship among its members. It does not embrace the entirety of
their lives, even their social or public lives, for citizens are always
more than their citizenship: human beings simultaneously occupy multiple
individual roles, each of which serves to delimit the scope of the
others." In Kuyper's terms, while the state has a unique compulsory
authority, and an encompassing responsibility for the public good, it is
by the very ordinances of Creation constrained from trespassing onto
the sphere sovereignty of other kinds of communities. While Dooyeweerd
stands in the tradition of Calvin and Kuyper in recognizing politics to
be a high and noble calling, and the authority of the state to be a
great and necessary good, he is at the same time, like Kuyper, indeed a
"normative institutional pluralist," refusing to allow the integrating
authority of the state a totalizing scope.
Among
Chaplin's criticisms of Dooyeweerd—as I've warned, this review does not
adequately show the extent to which Chaplin's book is not merely
laudatory but also seriously critical of aspects of Dooyeweerd's
theoretical work—the one most closely connected to Chaplin's central
concern with the relationship between the state and civil society is a
complaint that Dooyeweerd's social ontology inadequately addresses the
kinds of concerns identified in the transformative model of civil
society. Civil society theorists like Cohen and Arato respond to the
question, "Can the concept of civil society generate robust social
critique?" by arguing that, independently of the state, civil society
can be a site for the development of transformative initiatives that
bring about greater freedom, equality, and solidarity. They also argue
that a vibrant civil society can serve as an effective barricade against
the overweening efforts of the state to exercise its power. And at the
same time they recognize that the state may at times exercise its power
to bring about transformation when faced with "bad civil society."
While
Chaplin believes that Dooyeweerd's normative institutional pluralist
insights resonate with patterns in the Creation order to an extent not
achieved in rival theories, he complains that there is "a lack of
Augustinian bite" in Dooyeweerd's social analysis. Dooyeweerd, argues
Chaplin, assumes to too great an extent "the historical effectivity of
creational norms" and underestimates "the pervasiveness and depth of
human distortions of such norms." As a result, Dooyeweerd's social
analysis can seem complacent in its reformism and excessively optimistic
in its anticipation of the smooth and harmonious disclosure of social
possibilities and public justice; it lacks the necessary critical heft
to support a robust social critique.
There is some
warrant for Chaplin's critique of Dooyeweerd's social analysis, but I
want to encourage readers of this book to first acquaint themselves with
the contours of Dooyeweerd's thought as presented here before being
caught up in Chaplin's criticisms and innovations, valuable as these
are. After reading Dooyeweerd with a handful of graduate students at
Fuller Theological Seminary, I asked them what they thought of his work
once they had become somewhat familiar with it. Their responses were
enthusiastic.
One student working on a dissertation
in philosophical aesthetics said to me that "Dooyeweerd helps me to
understand the proper place of aesthetics in God's creation. [He] keeps
us from avoiding extreme views: philistinism (art/aesthetics is
insignificant) and aestheticism (art/aesthetics as all-important and
self-existent). Dooyeweerd's view helps me to think of aesthetics as an
important yet one of many aspects of reality." Another student, a fan of
both Søren Kierkegaard and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, said that "Dooyeweerd
rocks," because there is no "more comprehensive, intricate, and
persuasive Christian ontology and philosophy of life." And a third
student, working in fashion theory, said that "Dooyeweerd is worth every
ounce of effort! To be honest, upon beginning the New Critique I was
afraid I'd be buried in an obtuse and wooden 'law-based' metaphysic.
Instead I have found a compelling and original paradigm for re-thinking …
well … everything."
I cannot recommend Jonathan Chaplin's Herman Dooyeweerd
to every reader of Books & Culture. But if you are working in
social theory or political philosophy—actually, if you have any personal
or professional interest in reading philosophy—or if you are intrigued
by ways in which the ideas of Abraham Kuyper can be nuanced and brought
to bear on the social and political questions of the 21st century, I
recommend this book to you with unbridled enthusiasm. My hope is not
only that you will find this book as thought-provoking and helpful on
the question of state and civil society as I have found it, but also
that you will be enticed to explore further the largely undiscovered
riches in the thought of Herman Dooyeweerd.
Gideon
Strauss is the executive director of the Max De Pree Center for
Leadership at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California,
editor of its Fieldnotes magazine, and a member of the faculty of Fuller's School for Intercultural Studies.
Copyright © 2013 by the author or Christianity Today/Books & Culture magazine.
Click here for reprint information on Books & Culture.
Click here for reprint information on Books & Culture.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário