GABRIEL MARCEL ON THE FAMILY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

GABRIEL MARCEL ON THE FAMILY

Description:

Decadent man: yields to immediacy of egoism, does not economize. ... This is related to cynical egoism, which measures value of life by pleasures and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1619
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: drman2
Category:
Tags: family | gabriel | marcel | the | egoism

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: GABRIEL MARCEL ON THE FAMILY


1
GABRIEL MARCEL ON THE FAMILY
2
LIFE
  • Born in Paris, Dec. 7, 1889, the son of French
    ambassador to Stockholm
  • Mother died when he was 4 yrs. Old
  • Rich cultural upbringing, extensive travel
  • Wide reading in German and Anglo-American
    philophies
  • At 18, took diplome with thesis on The
    Metaphysical Ideas of Coleridge and their
    relation to the Philosophy of Schelling.
  • 1910, Ph.D. at Sorbonne, passed agregation

3
  • Early readings on Bradley (immediate experience),
    Royce (loyalty) and Hocking (Absolute)
  • March 23, 1929, conversion from no religion to
    Catholicism. While reviewing Francois Mauriacs
    work, was asked, Why are you not one of us?
  • Still anti-scholasticism
  • Died October 8, 1973.

4
Gabriel Marcel, The Mystery of the Family,
Homo Viator
  • Outline
  • The Family as Mystery
  • The Family as Value Presence
  • The Family as Mystery of the Incarnation of the
    Pact Between Man and Life
  • The Family as Mystery of Fidelity
  • The Family as Mystery of Hope

5
The Family as Mystery
  • .Why Mystery and not Problem?
  • Family, not just one problem but infinity of
    problems
  • Family belongs to reality of presences.
  • Problems facts exterior to me
  • Mystery realities bound up with my existence
  • e.g. union of body soul less a given than
    giving, root of presences presence to myself and
    presence of others to me.

6
  • Similarity between union of body and soul and
    mystery of family incarnation.
  • Mystery of the family too close and too far to
    be found in objective knowledge.
  • Too close a constellation of which, as a child,
    I spontaneously take for granted I am the center.
  • I am the reply to reciprocal appeal of two
    beings who flung to each other.
  • I am also the judgment upon those who called me
    into being, and thusnew relationships will be
    established between them and me.
  • Too far I am also the link to an indefinite
    network, stretching back beyond my life.
  • origins simply cannot be spoken of as causes of
    which I am the product.

7
  • Thus, to evoke mystery of the family is less to
    attempt to solve a problem than to recapture a
    reality and to awaken the soul to its presence.

8
  • Evocation difficult because of contemporary
    sceneproblems of divorce, birth control, choice
    of lover, etc. Social crisis linked to certain
    blindness of value of family.
  • Philosopher has to discover roots of this social
    crisis.

9
  • Digression university talk on divorce to
    students, some of whom are children of divorced
    parents. Marcel did not avoid talking sincerely
    of the problem.

10
  • Needed is reflection on tragic situation today,
    which is linked to weakening or denial of sense
    of holiness, reverence for life deathgiving
    way to pressures of pride, pretentiousness,
    boredom, despair. It is in the family that dire
    consequences of this giving way first becomes
    apparent.
  • We cannot refuse to face the danger by saying the
    family still exists. The family exists only if
    it is apprehended as a value and a presence.

11
The Family as a Value and Presence
  • Relive our experience as children, the
    experience of a certain pride of belonging
  • Pride is a certain response made from depths of
    my being to an investiture of which it behooves
    me to prove myself worthy.
  • Pride experienced on my own account, not aim at
    impressing another.
  • Pride (vs. vanity) constructive, helps to give me
    foundation on which to establish my conduct.
  • Vanity turned outwards the rest of the world,
    sterile and disintegrating.

12
  • Through pride, we can trace in what way family is
    a value.
  • Family is a recognized hierarchy, authority,
    which I do not have to integrate myself into it
    because I have been caught up in it from the
    origin, involved in it, rooted in it.

13
Family as Presence
  • As Presence, family is a protective skin between
    me and foreign, threatening, hostile world.
  • Painful experience of tearing away from this
    tissue, cradle, cocoon (by sudden or slow
    process, e.g. death, separation, nameless power).
  • Awareness of this primitive privileged us in
    the family inseparable from a home of our own.
  • Home connected with permanent habit-ation
    familiar objects which gives a sense of
    perpetual life, an always.

14
  • Traumatic house move.
  • One chief cause of disappearance of family
    consciousness nomadic lifestyle of workers in
    industrial centers
  • Objection these are only outward and temporary
    conditions. Marcels answer in the family, the
    outward is also the inward gt in growth of being,
    the two are inseparable.
  • Disappearance of settled habitation inseparable
    from fading away of traditions. Traditions are
    to the inner man what family setting is to the
    visible.
  • Home is not just environment, but settings also
    form the human being.
  • Without setting, development of the human person
    exposed to dangers of incoherence.
  • Traditions bear upon the continuity of the
    family, secure the bond between generations.
  • Every family produces a certain ritual to secure
    solid foundations.

15
  • Why the disintegration of the familys
    architecture? Reasons varied and deep.

16
  • Certainly, extraordinary acceleration of rhythm
    of life prevents slow sedimentation of habitus
    necessary for family.
  • Still such acceleration could not take place
    without reckless waste of reserve accumulated by
    living.
  • Gustav Thibon on tragic aspect of contemporary
    life denouncing squandering of reserves, he
    makes the distinction between improvidence of the
    saint and the improvidence of the decadent man.
  • Saint does not worry future because he has laid
    up treasure, source of eternal life, within him.
    Decadent man yields to immediacy of egoism, does
    not economize.
  • To economize to keep in order to give more
    effectively.

17
  • Technological progress, not in itself, but as
    incorporated in the daily life of individuals,
    has also effected a loss of human substance.
  • seen clearly in craftsmanship
  • in human relationships, standardization of
    individuals, little respect for individuals and
    local customs and peculiarities.
  • Close relationship between acceleration of rhythm
    of life and impoverishment.

18
  • Analogy in traveling across Brittany empty when
    you travel fast, mystery rediscovered at
    leisurely travel.
  • Mystery of places conceals human presence. From
    philosophy of duration, the two are inseparable.
  • So also in the family depopulation of the
    country linked to dissolution of the family.
  • Existence in towns makes pretension of triumph
    over laws of change, strives to inaugurate a
    certain order of life.

19
  • American cities, prototypes of preservative
    processes to escape from cosmic rhythm and to
    substitute caricatures of eternity. But this
    human rhythm tends to become the machines and
    automatons, which are not super-organic but
    sub-organic.
  • Thus, inexpressible dismal sadness in great
    cities, belonging to everything that is
    devitalised, is bound up with decay of the
    family.
  • This sadness is sterility, a disavowal felt by
    the heart, which concerns the very conditions of
    life.
  • Think of those changes which weaken the ties
    between us and our loved ones loss of
    transparency in the intimacy of couples,
    separation, collision, hurtsa dislocation of man
    and life, related to the misunderstandings of
    married couples.
  • Thus, family attacked in the double spring from
    whence it derives its special vitality fidelity
    and hope.

20
  • Example of woman in depopulated village,
    complaining of monotony and
  • lack of amusements.
  • Need for amusement, need for diversion, is bound
    up with ebbing of lifes tide. Ebbing of lifes
    tide human being imagines he regains life by
    seizing every occasion of experiencing violent
    sensations (stimulants)
  • These stimulants supposedly protect one from
    boredom. But what is boredom is not an escape
    from what? From oneself.

21
  • Ego faced with dilemma to fulfill oneself or to
    escape. Without fulfillment, ego experiences a
    gaping void.
  • Anyone who is absorbed does not experience this
    void he is caught up in plenitude, life envelops
    him and protects him.
  • Countryside woman suffers more of boredom than
    man because she has more time to think of such
    things unless she is occupied with motherhood
    which is not a burden but a support for her.
  • Gabriel Seailles One is borne along only by
    ones responsibilities.
  • Ebbing of life or consciousness repudiation of
    ones fundamental commitments. What are these
    commitments?

22
.The Family as Mystery of the Incarnation of the
Pact between Man and Life
  • Pact (nuptial bond) between man and life, within
    mans power to untie but when he does so, he
    loses the notion of existence.
  • Man, the only being capable of adopting an
    attitude towards not only his life but life
    itself.
  • It is through this faculty of adopting an
    attitude that he is spirit. Another way of
    speaking of mans transcendence over life and
    death.
  • Pact of man and life confidence which man
    promises life and the response of life to this
    confidence.
  • It is precisely in the family that this pact is
    worked out..

23
  • Example in Marriage Marital Act, not a pure and
    simple mating, not a satisfaction of instincts,
    impulse, caprice, but one which is to last.
  • Many false marriages legal union but nothing
    in the depths of character or will that
    corresponds to this socially binding form or the
    sacramental character of union entered into.
  • Neither is marriage a simple contract
    (exclusively rational idea of marriage), which
    can be renounced by common accord. Thus, divorce
    can readily be admitted.

24
  • Society can argue that for the sake of
    convention, individuals must be sacrificed, so no
    divorce. But individual can claim to be an
    exception.
  • The only condemnation of divorce that can be
    justified is the condemnation which they must
    recognize as being pronounced in the name of
    their own will, a will so deep that they could
    not disown it without denying their own natures.

25
  • If conjugal union finds its consummation and
    sanction in the appearance of a new being, it is
    absurd to think that the same couple should
    become free again whenever their sentiments
    change.
  • They are no longer united by a reciprocal common
    accord which they can annul but by the existence
    of a being for whom they are responsible and who
    has rights over them which cannot be set aside,
    unless we are to argue that in the animal species
    there comes a moment when male and female lose
    all interest in their offspring because it no
    longer needs them.
  • Here, formalism easily slides to animalism or
    naturalism.
  • Common element of formalism (rationalism) and
    animalism (naturalism) lack of generosity.

26
  • From both extremes, we lose sight of the unity of
    the family, without which we lose sight of the
    mystery of the family.
  • Unity of the family not possible without
    generosity of the heads of the family.
  • Family not created by man who generates by
    chance, produces offspring like animals without
    accepting consequences of his acts he produces a
    brood, not a family.
  • If family is a reality, neither should marriage
    simply be a mere association of individual
    interests but should regulate itself in some way
    to the offspring.

27
  • But marriage concluded only in view of
    procreation is in danger of degeneration, is a
    violation of the dignity of the person the union
    of two persons is just a means of reproduction.
  • Not true that procreation is the end of marriage.
  • Marital act and procreation are two complementary
    phases of our history as creative being.
  • Creative denotes contribution of each to the
    universal work in our world, like that of an
    artist who is the bearer of some message he must
    communicate and pass on.

28
  • On the human level, the operation of the flesh
    ought to be the hallowing of a certain inward
    fulfillment, an out-flowing not forced but
    springing from experience of plenitude.
  • Operation of the flesh loses its dignity and
    degenerates if it is not an act of thanksgiving,
    a creative testimony.
  • From this point of view, difference between
    husbands and wives who secure themselves an heir
    to succeed them and husbands and wives who sow
    the seed of life without ulterior motive by
    radiating the life flame permeating them.

29
  • These observations shed light on the meaning of
    the sacred bond which is mans lot to form with
    life.
  • U this renderalm, all generalizations are
    deceptive, because each soul constitutes a
    microcosm. Thus we have no right to judge
    individual cases, like childless couples.
  • But we have right to judge social order, such as
    increase of divorce, contraception, abortion, etc.

30
  • But question not of proclaiming the immoral or
    anti-social of any conduct or action but of
    discussing the symptoms in such action of a
    disaffection of beings from Being.
  • Disaffection of beings from Being, not the denial
    of an explicit promise but the drawing back by
    which a spiritual organism dwindles shrivels,
    cuts itself off from the universal communion
    which is its nourishing principle of life and
    growth.

31
The Family as a Mystery of Fidelity
  • The crisis in family institutions can be traced
    to deeper misunderstanding of the virtues through
    which the unification of our destiny is
    consummated.
  • Wrong fidelity a safeguard to preserve existing
    order.
  • True fidelity creative

32
  • Example bond between child and parents, open to
    double risk of deterioration
  • a) Narrow traditionalismchild, entirely in debt
    of those who gave it life.
  • b) Child as creditor because they view life
    as
  • crushing burden.
  • Applied to birth control practitioners out
    of pity for possible descendants (not yet living!)

33
  • This is related to cynical egoism, which measures
    value of life by pleasures and comforts.
  • For both, life transmitted in procreation, is
    really neither a blessing nor a curse in itself
    but possibilities for good and evil because the
    being is a subject.
  • As subject, the being is able to enjoy and
    suffer and capable of attaining someday the
    consciousness of what he has at first only felt,

34
  • Of course, children should share this generosity.
    Unfortunately, they do not always do, because of
    individualism that is prevalent in society.
  • It boils down to the spirit which is to be
    incarnated, established and maintained, the
    spirit spreading beyond the self, the spirit of
    creative fidelity.
  • The more our hearts and intellects keep before
    them the idea of our lineage, of the forbears to
    whom we are responsible, the more this spirit
    will succeed in freeing itself from selfishness
    and cowardice.
  • Inversely, the more we lose this sense of
    lineage, the less we discern our ultimate
    responsibilities, the more the family will tend
    to be just an association with common interests.

35
  • Creative Fidelity here does not depend on any
    particular religious belief.
  • There exists a form of Christianity,
    overemphasizing eschatological, that undermines
    the souls love of life.
  • On the other hand, a certain religio exists among
    pagans themselves reverence for dead, for gods
    residing at home, which gives evidence to this
    pact between man and life-force.
  • Unfortunately, this religio has given way to
    pressures of the progress of technics that we
    lose sight of the natural morality and order
    recognized by our forefathers.
  • Need to restore this religio.

36
The Family as Mystery of Hope
  • Deafness to call of creative fidelity due to loss
    of sense of hope.
  • Hope linked to sense of communion I hope in
    Thee for us.
  • The more this for us confines itself to the
    self, in the domain of the family, to ways of
    safeguarding a certain Having, the more hope
    deteriorates.
  • It is only by breaking through Having, manifested
    in anxiety, that hope can effect an entrance into
    our soul.

37
  • Anxiety seen in decadence of our youth today.
  • Renewal can only spring from a religious
    principle, but not the work of Christians alone.
  • State must not paralyze initiatives of people of
    all complexions as they unite to revivify
    society.
  • Life Incarnation, and the family is the meeting
    point of the vital and spiritual.
  • Creature condition acknowledgement of Divine
    Fatherhood

38
  • Vs. naturalismregards man as link of endless
    chain of causes, he arrogates to himself an
    absolute sovereignty.
  • Vs. Materialismman humiliated, no special
    identity, the more he develops pride which impels
    him to deny any human order to which he might owe
    obedience.
  • Family choked between these two systems
  • Family relationships afford no guarantee of
    solidity unless referred to superhuman order.
  • Humanity is only truly human when it is upheld by
    foundation of consecration.
  • To recover reverence for life, we must start not
    from below (biology, eugenics) but from above.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com