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The
Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash
Yeshivat Har Etzion
INTRODUCTION TO THE PHILOSOPHY OF RAV SOLOVEITCHIK
by Rav Ronnie Ziegler
LECTURE #20a: "The Lonely Man of Faith" (Continuation)
Part 6a - The Autonomy of Faith
Why is the contemporary man of faith "lonely in a special way"
(p.6)? Let us briefly recapitulate the Rav's argument thus far. Although
faith (Adam II) and culture (Adam I) represent two independent sides of
a dialectic eternally implanted within man, modern man identifies only
with the latter. Intoxicated by his success in the scientific-technological
realm, he has constricted his inner world to include only those values
and emotional responses which reflect and enhance his majesty. The humility
and the gnawing sense of incompleteness which characterize Adam II are
completely foreign to him. However, this does not mean that modern man
discards religion entirely. He adopts some of its outer forms, but empties
them of their covenantal-redemptive content, substituting majestic values
instead.
Thus, the contemporary man of faith confronts a bold and assertive secularity
which has infiltrated even into the religious realm. Speaking the "foreign"
language of redemption, which frequently entails sacrifice and surrender,
the man of faith seems to have lost the ability to communicate with his
surrounding society. He experiences not an invigorating sense of uniqueness
and a fruitful dialogue between the disparate forces within himself, but
rather social isolation and agonizing loneliness. He is misunderstood and
ridiculed, regarded by society as "superfluous and obsolete."
In lecture #19, we explored one aspect of this problem: the religious
posture adopted by Adam I. Today, we shall deal with the second component:
the autonomy of Adam II's faith. After setting forth the theoretical foundations
of this issue in the first half of today's lecture (#20a), we will examine
some of its consequences, both in the intellectual realm (#20b) and in
the practical realm (#21). Thus, the second half of today's lecture will
analyze Rav Soloveitchik's response to various intellectual attacks on
Orthodoxy, and the following lecture will consider, in light of ideas presented
today, a number of the Rav's influential halakhic responsa and public policy
decisions.
COLD CALCULATION OR PASSIONATE COMMITMENT
What is the process by which religion becomes secularized? In the previous
lecture, we saw that although Adam I and Adam II speak different languages
and hold different values, Adam I needs to borrow numerous concepts from
Adam II in order to support his own cultural edifice. This translation
of some of Adam II's redemptive categories into Adam I's cultural terms
is entirely legitimate. However, modern man is not satisfied with PARTIAL
translation; rather, he evaluates religion ENTIRELY in terms of its compatibility
with his majestic goals. He thereby makes religion subservient to his own
majestic-cultural ends, not acknowledging that the religious domain of
Adam II has its own independent demands of man. In truth, the faith experience
issues a call to man which far exceeds his limited comprehension and his
pragmatic goals. It is, as cited previously, "meta-logical and non-hedonic"
(p.98), i.e. beyond reason and not designed to bring about simple pleasure.
Why is this so? Faith is rooted not just in reason but in one's whole
personality, affecting every level of his being (such as the aesthetic,
emotional and moral dimensions, as we saw in the essay "Catharsis").
Therefore, the faith commitment cannot ultimately have a pragmatic or utilitarian
basis, since these are only functional categories, stemming from one narrow
(albeit significant) component of man's being, namely, the intellectual.
In Rav Soloveitchik's powerful words:
"There are simply no cognitive categories in which the total commitment
of the man of faith could be spelled out. This commitment is rooted not
in one dimension, such as the rational one, but in the whole personality
of the man of faith. The whole of the human being, the rational as well
as the non-rational aspects, is committed to God. Hence, the magnitude
of the commitment is beyond the comprehension of the logos and the ethos.
The act of faith is aboriginal, exploding with elemental force... The intellect
does not chart the course of the man of faith; its role is an a posteriori
one. It attempts, ex post facto, to retrace the footsteps of the man of
faith, and even in this modest attempt the intellect is not completely
successful... The man of faith animated by his great experience is able
to reach the point at which not only his logic of the mind but even his
logic of the heart ... has to give in to an 'absurd' commitment. The man
of faith is 'insanely' committed to and 'madly' in love with God."
(pp.99-100)
When applied to the man of faith's commitment, the epithets "absurd,"
"insane" and "mad" denote merely that it is not based
on considerations of cold logic or practical benefit. His commitment is
non-rational or meta-rational, but not irrational; in other words, it is
unrelated to reason or above reason, but it is not opposed to reason. (For
elaboration of this important point, see the footnote on pp.107-108.)
Here we encounter in full force the Rav's radical break with the medieval
rationalist tradition of Jewish philosophy (which we shall examine further
when studying "U-vikkashtem Mi-sham," especially chapter 2).
According to the Rav, the man of faith's God-awareness, or his God-experience,
lies at the core of his perception of the world and his sense of self.
This means that he cannot conceive of either himself or the world without
sensing the presence of God. For him, faith is a basic awareness, an a
priori axiom, and not a conclusion which can be explained on the basis
of certain premises. This leads precisely to the problem of communicating
faith to others, which we shall explore in lecture #21. What is crucial
for us at this stage of the argument is to recognize that faith is not
a function or an outgrowth of man's other pursuits, but rather an "aboriginal"
force, a basic calling in its own right. Therefore, it is not subservient
to other goals or values, and, in the modern era especially, it must fiercely
guard its independence.
AUTONOMY OF HALAKHA
The Rav's assertion of the autonomy of the religious realm, and of Halakha
in particular, is central to his thought. Before examining
its ramifications as regards "The Lonely Man of Faith," let us
explore some other contexts in which this issue arises. (In future lectures,
we will examine all the works mentioned below; therefore I will treat them
here only briefly.)
Halakhic Man (e.g. pp.17-29) and "Ma Dodekh Mi-Dod" (pp.70-85)
deal specifically with the autonomy of the halakhic system. Rav Soloveitchik
asserts that Halakha constitutes an independent cognitive realm, and should
be studied and applied according to the tenets of its own internal logic,
not according to the foreign categories of historical, economic, or sociological
causation. For the Rav, of course, the Brisker method best reveals the
"internal logic" of Halakha. In his sharp and succinct formulation:
"Kant, in his day, proclaimed the autonomy of pure reason, of scientific-mathematic
cognition. [Similarly, my grandfather] Rav Chayyim fought a war of independence
on behalf of halakhic reason and demanded for it complete autonomy. Any
psychologization or sociologization of the Halakha strangles its soul,
as such an attempt must also destroy mathematical thinking. If halakhic
thought is dependent on emotional factors, it loses all its objectivity
and degenerates to the level of subjectivity with no substance..."
("Ma Dodekh Mi-dod," p.78)
While Rav Chayyim and the Rav had their own reasons for developing this
"a priori" and autonomous conception of Halakha, it can also
serve as a response to the relativizing historicist orientation espoused
by both non-Orthodox moveand the academe. [See also Reference #1 below.]
AUTONOMY OF THE RREALM
Rav Soloveitchik's book, The Halakhic Mind, establishes the philosophical
basis for his assertion of the cognitive and methodological autonomy of
Halakha. Actually, like "The Lonely Man of Faith," The Halakhic
Mind focuses not just on Halakha, but more broadly, on the religious realm
in general. (The Rav did not choose the book's misleadingly particularistic
title.) In this very technical work, the Rav claims that the "epistemological
pluralism" of twentieth-century science allows us for the first time
to develop a genuine and autonomous philosophy of religion. (Epistemology
is the science of knowledge, dealing with the question of how we know things.)
Just as contemporary science, especially quantum physics (as opposed to
Aristotelian and Newtonian physics), admits a variety of ways of viewing
the world and a variety of sources of knowledge, so too must philosophy.
Therefore, the elements of religion - in our terms, the details of Halakha
- can serve as the basis for formulating a worldview which is no less valid
(but also no more valid!) than any other. Since science and philosophy
no longer claim to describe everything knowable, there is now room to turn
to religion as a source of knowledge - and religion is now free to explain
itself in its own terms. [For more on the idea of epistemological pluralism,
see Reference #2 below.]
"The Lonely Man of Faith" is based upon the same assumption
of a plurality of worldviews (Adam I and Adam II), and upon the same assertion
of the autonomy of religion. However, instead of treating the cognitive
facet of this issue - religion as a source of knowledge - it addresses
instead the existential and experiential dimensions. While recognition
of the autonomy of religion opens up exciting theoretical possibilities,
it can also lead to a sense of alienation from those who do not share this
recognition (treating religion instead as just another facet of culture).
Thus, in place of the optimism characterizing The Halakhic Mind, which
looks forward to a new era in religious philosophy, our essay adopts a
more sober and ultimately tragic tone in depicting the man of faith's isolation
and his frustrating inability to break through the communication barrier
separating him from his contemporaries. In an eloquent analysis, Rav Jonathan
Sacks draws a connection between the two essays, written twenty years apart
(Halakhic Mind in 1945 and "Lonely Man" in 1965):
"The pluralism of contemporary culture, which [Rav Soloveitchik]
was the first to recognize, was both a liberation and a privation. It liberated
tradition from having to vindicate itself in alien terms. But it prised
tradition from its moorings in the collective order and made it seem as
just one system among many, either consciously chosen (the ba'al teshuva
phenomenon) or validated by an act of faith which is 'aboriginal, exploding
with elemental force' and eluding cognitive analysis. Soloveitchik's genius
and the poignancy of his intellectual development are both evidenced in
this: that he was the first to explore the positive possibilities of the
liberation [in The Halakhic Mind], and the first to chart the tragic dimensions
of the privation [in 'The Lonely Man of Faith']." (Tradition in an
Untraditional Age, p.299)
(Continued in Lecture #20b.)
FOR FURTHER REFERENCE
1) INNER LOGIC OF HALAKHA: See also Rav Abraham Besdin's adaptation
of a lecture by the Rav, "The Common-Sense Rebellion Against Torah
Authority," in Reflections of the Rav, vol. 1 (Ktav, 1993), pp.139-149.
2) THE HALAKHIC MIND: For centuries, science and philosophy had walked
hand-in-hand, with philosophy following science's lead in adopting a single
way of viewing the world. Medieval and early modern philosophy had been
beholden to Aristotelian and Newtonian science, respectively, in determining
the questions to be asked and the methods of answering them. This forced
religious philosophy either to justify religion in rationalist-instrumentalist
terms or to reject rationality altogether.
However, twentieth-century science (particularly quantum physics) no
longer posits a unified or intuitive view of the world. For example, light
is regarded as both a wave and a particle, which would seem to countervene
the tenets of Aristotelian logic. Since science has adopted a stance of
epistemological pluralism, admitting a multiplicity of models and sources
of knowledge, philosophy must follow suit. The quantitative scientific
model must no longer be regarded as the sole cognitive method of viewing
the universe. This opens the way for establishing religion as an autonomous
domain of knowledge and truth. Because the philosophy of religion has now
been liberated from naturalistic presuppositions, Rav Soloveitchik opens
his book with the bold and optimistic claim, "It would be difficult
to distinguish any epoch in the history of philosophy more amenable to
the meditating homo religiosus than that of today."
For clarification of the major arguments of The Halakhic Mind, see Rabbi
Jonathan Sacks, "Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik's Early Epistemology,"
in his book Tradition in an Untraditional Age (London, 1990), pp.287-301,
and William Kolbrener, "Towards a Genuine Jewish Philosophy,"
Tradition 30:3 (Spring 1996), pp.21-43. Both of these essays also appear
in the collection, Exploring the Thought of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik,
ed. Rabbi Marc Angel (Ktav, 1997).
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