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Title: Theory: Max Weber


1
TheoryMax Weber
  • Senseless death has seemed only to put the stamp
    upon the senselessness of life itself.
  • (Sociology 156)

2
Psychological Experience of Religion
  • Religious virtuosos and the unmusical
  • Virtuosos Prophets, saints, founders, reformers
  • Unmusical everyone else
  • Tension between religious institutions and
    virtuosos
  • Apocalypse Island
  • The church, being the holder of
    institutionalized grace, seeks to organize the
    religiosity of the masses and to put its own
    officially monopolized and mediated sacred values
    in the place of the autonomous and religious
    status qualifications of the religious virtuosos.
    By its nature, that is, according to the
    interest-situation of its officeholders, the
    church must be democratic in the sense of
    making the sacred values generally accessible.
    (288)
  • Routinization (297)

3
Types of Religious
  • Intellectuals
  • The rationalism of hierocracy grew out of the
    professional preoccupation with cult and myth
    orto a far higher degreeout of the cure of
    souls, that is, the confession of sin and counsel
    to sinners. Everywhere hierocracy has sought to
    monopolize the administration of religious
    values. They have sought to bring and to temper
    the bestowal of religious goods into the form of
    sacramental or corporate grace, which could
    be ritually bestowed only by the priesthood and
    could not be attained by the individual. (283)
  • Monopolizing the means of the production of
    salvation

4
Types of Religious
  • Rulers
  • Political officials have distrusted the
    competing priestly corporation of grace and,
    above all, at bottom they have despised the very
    quest for these impractical values lying beyond
    utilitarian and worldly ends. (286)
  • Chivalrous warriors
  • Characteristic of them to pursue absolutely
    worldly ends and to be remote from all
    mysticism. Such strata, however, have
    lackedand this is characteristic of heroism in
    generalthe desire as well as the capacity for a
    rational mastery of reality. (283)
  • Subject to the whims fate or the service of
    destiny

5
Types of Religious
  • Peasants
  • inclined toward magic. Their whole economic
    existence has been specifically bound to nature
    and has made them dependent upon elemental
    forces. They readily believe in a compelling
    sorcery directed against spirits who rule over or
    through natural forces, or they believe in simply
    buying divine benevolence. (283)
  • However, they can be swept up in rationalized
    religious movements
  • The civic classes
  • A tendency towards a practical rationalism in
    conduct ... conditioned by the nature of their
    way of life, which is greatly detached from
    economic bonds to nature. Their whole existence
    has been based upon technological or economic
    calculations and upon the mastery of nature and
    of man
  • Thus, precisely for these, there has always
    existed the possibilityeven though in greatly
    varying measureof letting an ethical and
    rational regulation of life arise. (284)
  • Active asceticism and God-willed action

6
Rationalism
  • Rationalism may mean very different things.
    (293)
  • Systematic thought world picture
  • Theology, philosophy, science
  • Methodical and calculated attainment of a
    practical end
  • Politics economy
  • Systematic arrangement
  • Ritual

7
Rationalism
  • Not ideas, but material and ideal interests,
    directly govern mens conduct. Yet very
    frequently the world images that have been
    created by ideas have, like switchmen,
    determined the tracks along which action has been
    pushed by the dynamic of interest. From what
    and for what one wished to be redeemed and, let
    us not forget, could be redeemed, depended upon
    ones image of the world. (280)
  • Defilement ? Purity
  • Flesh ? Spirit
  • Being ? Peace
  • Sin ? Benevolence
  • Fate ? Freedom
  • Finitude ? Infinity
  • Cycle of rebirth ? Peace
  • Toil ? Sleep

8
Rationalism
  • Behind them always lies a stand towards
    something in the actual world which is
    experienced as specifically senseless. Thus,
    the demand has been implied that the world order
    in its entirety is, could, and should somehow be
    a meaningful cosmos. (281)
  • Meaning
  • Rationalization
  • The task of a religions intellectuals (281)

9
Rationalism
  • Modern rationalization (science) has so
    disenchanted the world that religion has moved
    increasingly into the space of the irrational
    (281)
  • Mystic experiences the limits of language (282)
  • Even so, as practical life has been rationalized,
    there remains the negative space where the
    irrationality of religion once was (281)
  • Wherever the direction of whole way of life has
    been methodically rationalized, it has been
    profoundly determined by the ultimate values
    toward which this rationalization has been
    directed. These values and positions were thus
    religiously determined. (287)

10
Two Forms of Rejection of the World
  • Active asceticism
  • God-willed action of the devout who are Gods
    tools (325)
  • Operates within the world rationally active
    asceticism, in mastering the world, seeks to tame
    what is creatural and wicked through work in a
    worldly vocation (inner-worldly asceticism).
    (325)
  • Proves itself through action, rejects
    contemplative flight as indolent enjoyment of
    self (326)
  • Mysticism (passive asceticism)
  • Intends a state of possession, not action, and
    the individual is not a tool but a vessel of
    the divine. Action in the world must thus appear
    as endangering the absolutely irrational and
    other-worldly religious state. (325)
  • contemplative flight from the world (325)
  • He proves himself against the world, against his
    action in the world (326)
  • Views active asceticism as an entanglement in
    the godless ways of the world combined with
    complacent self-righteousness (326)

11
Religion vs. the Natural Community
  • Organic communal family ethic
  • In-group morality vs. out-group morality
  • Example no haggling with insiders right to
    expect assistance from insiders, but no
    obligation to provide it to outsiders
  • Reciprocity
  • Religious ethic
  • Extends in-group ethic into universality
  • Neighborliness and brotherhood
  • It is taken for granted that the faithful should
    ultimately stand closer to the savior, the
    prophet, the priest, the father confessor, the
    brother confessor, the brother in the faith than
    to natural relations and to the matrimonial
    community. (329-330)
  • Example Luke 1426 If anyone comes to me and
    does not hate his own father and mother and wife
    and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and
    even his own life, he cannot be my disciple."

12
The Economic Sphere
  • Money is the most abstract and impersonal
    element that exists in human life. The more the
    world of the modern capitalist economy follows
    its own immanent laws, the less accessible it is
    to any imaginable relationship with a religious
    ethic of brotherliness. (331)
  • Active ascetic response Puritan ethic of
    vocation, rejecting universalism of love and
    accepting the routinization of the economic
    cosmos, which, with the whole world, it devalued
    as creatural and depraved. This state of affairs
    appeared as God-willed, and as material and given
    for fulfilling ones duty.
  • Mystic response rejection of the importance of
    economic goods. However, the ethic of universal
    love is impersonal the benevolent mystic gives
    his shirt when he is asked for his coat, by
    anybody who accidentally happens to come his way
  • Mysticism is a unique escape from this world in
    the form of an objectless devotion to anybody,
    not for mans sake but purely for devotions
    sake, or, in Baudelaires words, for the sake of
    the souls sacred prostitution. (333)

13
The Political Sphere
  • A tension between universalist religion,
    (especially under a god of love) and the
    necessities of the political order
  • The state is an association that claims the
    monopoly on the legitimate use of violence, and
    it cannot be conceived in any other manner.
    (334)
  • The mutual strangeness of religion and politics,
    when they are both completely rationalized, is
    all the more the case because, in contrast to
    economics, politics may come into direct
    competition with a religious ethics at decisive
    points. (335)
  • Resist no evil vs. You shall help right to
    triumph by the use of force (334)
  • Identity, meaning, death (335)

14
The Political Sphere
  • Active asceticism It interprets Gods
    incomprehensible will to mean that these
    commandments should be imposed upon the creatural
    world by the means of this world, namely,
    violencefor the world is subject to violence and
    ethical barbarism. (336)
  • Crusading orientation toward the world,
    sacrificing universal brotherhood (340)
  • Mysticism a radically anti-political attitude,
    his quest for redemption with its acosmic
    benevolence and brotherliness. With its resist
    no evil and its maxim then turn the other
    cheek, mysticism is necessarily vulgar and
    lacking in dignity in the eyes of every
    self-assured worldly ethic of heroism. (336)
  • It withdraws from the pragma of violence which
    no political action can escape. Otherworldly
    orientation.

15
The Political Sphere
  • Absolutism or pragmatism?
  • To what degree do consequences matter?
  • The Christian does right and leaves success to
    God. (339)
  • Rational in principle, but irrational in effects

16
The Aesthetic Sphere
  • Since its beginnings, religion has been an
    inexhaustible fountain of opportunities for
    artistic creation, on the one hand, and of
    stylizing through traditionalization, on the
    other. (341)
  • The relationship between art religion will
    remain harmonious for so long as the creative
    artist experiences his ability as resulting
    either from a charisma of ability (originally
    magic) or from spontaneous play. (341)
  • But the development of intellectualism and
    rationalization means that art becomes a sphere
    of life separate from religion, as art takes
    over the function of a this-worldly salvation
    from the routines of everyday life, and
    especially from the increasing pressures of
    theoretical and practical rationalization. (342)
  • From the point of view of religion, art becomes
    an idolatry, a competing power
  • Iconoclasm
  • But historically, the psychological affinity
    between art and religion has led to ever-renewed
    alliances (343)

17
The Erotic Sphere
  • The extraordinary quality of eroticism has
    consisted precisely in a gradual turning away
    from the naive naturalism of sex. The reason and
    significance of this evolution, however, involve
    the rationalization and intellectualization of
    culture.
  • Eroticism was raised into the sphere of
    conscious enjoyment (in the most sublime sense of
    the term). Nevertheless, and indeed because of
    this elevation, eroticism appeared to be like a
    gate into the most irrational and thereby real
    kernel of life, as compared with the mechanisms
    of rationalization. (344-345)
  • The more rationalization has progressed, the
    greater tension between the erotic and religious
    spheres

18
The Erotic Sphere
  • A tremendous value emphasis on the specific
    sensation of an inner-worldly salvation from
    rationalization thus resulted. A joyous triumph
    over rationality corresponded in its radicalism
    with the unavoidable and equal rejection by an
    ethics of any kind of other- or supra-worldly
    salvation. (346-347)
  • But it is exactly this rejection that makes the
    sexual sphere systematically prepared for a
    highly valued erotic sensation.
  • Under these conditions, the erotic relation
    seems to offer the unsurpassable peak of the
    fulfillment of the request for love in the direct
    fusion of the souls of one to the other.
  • This rests upon the possibility of a communion
    which is felt as a direct unification, as a
    fading of the thou. ... The lover realizes
    himself to be rooted in the kernel of the truly
    living, which is eternally inaccessible to any
    rational endeavor. (347)

19
The Erotic Sphere
  • This experience is by no means communicable and
    is in this respect it is equivalent to the
    having of the mystic. (347)
  • A principled ethic of religious brotherhood is
    radically and antagonistically opposed to all
    this.
  • From the religious perspective, the inner,
    earthly sensation of salvation by mature love
    competes in the sharpest possible way with the
    devotion of a supra-mundane God, with the
    devotion of an ethically rational order of God,
    or with the devotion of a mystical bursting of
    individuation, which alone appear genuine to
    the ethic of brotherhood. (348)
  • Active asceticism is felt by eroticism to be a
    powerful and deadly enemy
  • Mysticism sees erotic union as a substitute for
    the mystics union with God (348)

20
The Erotic Sphere
  • From the religious perspective, eroticism is the
    counter-pole of all religiously oriented
    brotherliness, in these aspects it must be
    exclusive in its inner core it must be
    subjective in the highest imaginable sense and
    it must be absolutely incommunicable. (349)
  • Thus, ceremonies of marriage to transform the
    erotic only the linkage of marriage with the
    thought of ethical responsibility for one
    anotherhence a category heterogeneous to the
    purely erotic spherecan carry the sentiment that
    something unique and supreme might be embodied in
    marriage ... a mutual granting of oneself to
    another. ... Rarely does life grant such value
    in pure form. He to whom it is given may speak
    of fates fortune and gracenot to his own
    merit. (350)

21
The Intellectual Sphere
  • The tension between religion and intellectual
    knowledge definitely comes to the fore wherever
    rational, empirical knowledge has consistently
    worked through the disenchantment of the world
    and its transformation into a causal mechanism.
    (350)
  • Every increase of rationalism in empirical
    science increasingly pushes religion from the
    rational into the irrational realm but only
    today does religion become the irrational or
    anti-rational supra-human power. (351)
  • Yet, the less magic or merely contemplative
    mysticism and the more doctrine a religion
    contains, the greater its need of rational
    apologetics. (351)

22
The Intellectual Sphere
  • There is absolutely no unbroken religion
    working as a vital force which is not compelled
    at some point to demand the credo non quod, sed
    quia absurdumthe sacrifice of the intellect.
  • Redemptory religion defends itself against the
    attack of the self-sufficient intellect. It does
    so, of course, in the most principles fashion, by
    raising the claim that religious knowledge moves
    in a different sphere and that the nature and
    meaning of religious knowledge is entirely
    different from the accomplishments of the
    intellect.
  • Religion claims to offer an ultimate stand
    toward the world by virtue of a direct grasp of
    the worlds meaning. It does not claim to
    offer intellectual knowledge concerning what it
    is or what should be. It claims to unlock the
    meaning of the world not by means of the
    intellect but by virtue of a charisma of
    illumination. (352)

23
The Intellectual Sphere
  • At all times and in all places, the need for
    salvationconsciously cultivated as the
    substance of religiosityhas resulted from the
    endeavor of a systematic and practical
    rationalization of lifes realities.
  • All religions have demanded as a specific
    presupposition that the course of the world be
    somehow meaningful, at least in so far as it
    touches upon the interests of men. As we have
    seen, this claim naturally emerged first as the
    customary problem of unjust suffering, and hence
    as the postulate of a just compensation for the
    unequal distribution of individual happiness in
    the world. (353)

24
The Intellectual Sphere
  • The absolute imperfection of this world had been
    firmly established as an ethical postulate. And
    the futility of worldly things has seemed to be
    meaningful and justified only in terms of this
    imperfection.
  • For it was not only, or even primarily, the
    worthless which proved to be transitory. The
    fact that death and ruin, with their leveling
    effects, overtake good men and good works, as
    well as evil ones, could appear to be a
    depreciation of precisely the supreme values of
    this worldonce the idea of a perpetual duration
    of time, of an eternal God and an eternal order
    had been conceived. (354)

25
The Intellectual Sphere
  • The more intensely rational thought has seized
    upon the problem of a just and retributive
    compensation, the less an entirely inner-worldly
    solution could seem possible, and the less an
    other-worldly solution could appear probable or
    even meaningful. (353)
  • Rational knowledge has had to reject the claim
    of a meaningful cosmos in principle. The cosmos
    of natural causality and the postulated cosmos of
    ethical, compensatory causality have stood in
    irreconcilable opposition. (355)
  • Religious ideals have been replaced by
    cultural ideals (354)

26
The Intellectual Sphere
  • The peasant, like Abraham, could die satiated
    with life. The feudal landlord and the warrior
    hero could do likewise. For both fulfilled the
    cycle of their existence beyond which they did
    not reach. Each in his way could attain an
    inner-worldly perfection as a result of the naive
    unambiguity of the substance of his life.
  • But the cultivated man who strives for
    self-perfection, in the sense of acquiring or
    creating cultural values, cannot do this. He
    can become weary of life, but he cannot become
    satiated with life in the sense of completing a
    cycle. For the perfectibility of the man of
    culture in principle progresses infinitely, as do
    the cultural values.
  • Senseless death has seemed only to put the stamp
    upon the senselessness of life itself. (356)
  • Life seems to become a senseless hustle in the
    service of worthless, moreover self-contradictory,
    and mutually antagonistic ends. (357)

27
Rationalization
  • The devaluation of the world results from the
    conflict between the rational claim and the
    reality, between the rational ethic and the
    partly rational, and partly irrational values.
  • The need for salvation responds to this
    devaluation by becoming ever more other-worldly,
    more alienated from all structured forms of life,
    and, in exact parallel, by confining itself to
    the specific religious essence.
  • This reaction is the stronger the more
    systematic the thinking about the meaning of
    the universe becomes, the more the external
    organization of the world is rationalized, and
    the more the conscious experience of the worlds
    irrational content is sublimated.
  • And not only theoretical thought, disenchanting
    the world, led to this course, but also the very
    attempt of religious ethics practically and
    ethically to rationalize the world. (357)
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