Joseph Telushkin: The Accountant’s Son Who Taught America Judaism

The books came out of Crown Heights, and so did the boy. Joseph Telushkin (b. 1948) grew up in Brooklyn in a family that sat closer to the center of the Lubavitch world than almost any family outside it. His father, Solomon Telushkin, an accountant, kept the books for Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902-1994), the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, and before that for the Rebbe’s father-in-law, the sixth Rebbe. His grandfather, a Talmudic scholar, was an intimate of both men. The Telushkins were not Lubavitchers. They were something rarer: trusted outsiders inside a court. Sixty years later, when publishers wanted a biography of the Rebbe that the wider world might read, that childhood proximity became the asset no academic historian could match. The Chabad leadership opened its people to the accountant’s son. They knew the family. They knew the name on the ledgers.

That is the pattern of Telushkin’s career. He stands close enough to the inner rooms of traditional Judaism to speak with authority and far enough outside any single camp to be believed by everyone else. He built one of the largest teaching careers in modern American Jewish life on that position. He wrote the reference book that a generation of Jews, converts, journalists, and rabbis reached for first. He turned the laws of speech into a national talking point that reached the floor of the United States Senate. He wrote mystery novels, a film about the Holocaust, and a television episode for Kirk Douglas (1916-2020). Newsweek listed him among the fifty most influential rabbis in America every year from 1997 on. Talk magazine named him one of the fifty best speakers in the country. He did all this without a pulpit of consequence, without a university chair, and without founding a movement. His institution was the book, the lecture hall, and the airplane.

The Yeshivah of Flatbush in the early 1960s ran on a bet: that a school could teach Talmud in the morning and Shakespeare in the afternoon and produce Jews at home in both. Its graduates went to Columbia and to rabbinical school, sometimes both. In tenth grade, Telushkin met a tall, argumentative classmate named Dennis Prager (b. 1948). The two became inseparable. They argued about God, antisemitism, and why the Judaism they saw around them failed to answer the questions of the Jews they knew. Prager went to Brooklyn College and then to Columbia’s School of International Affairs. Telushkin took ordination at Yeshiva University and studied Jewish history at Columbia. The friendship became a workshop.

Their first product appeared in 1975, when both men were twenty-six: Eight Questions People Ask About Judaism, expanded later as The Nine Questions People Ask About Judaism. The premise was blunt. Educated American Jews had inherited an identity without a syllabus. They could not say how Judaism differed from Christianity, whether a doubter could be a good Jew, or how to account for religious Jews who behaved badly. Telushkin and Prager answered the questions the rabbis of the era ducked. The book sold and kept selling. It became the volume that Hillel directors handed to college students and that rabbis handed to intermarrying couples. It made the case that Judaism was a rational, demanding, ethical system rather than an ethnic mood.

Prager ran the Brandeis-Bardin Institute in Simi Valley from 1976 to 1983, and Telushkin worked with him there as director of education. The Institute drew secular Los Angeles Jews for weekend retreats. Telushkin learned his trade on that ground: how to hold a room of skeptics, when to reach for a joke, when to reach for a Talmudic story, how to make an audience feel the tradition owed them answers and they owed it attention. In 1983 the two published Why the Jews?: The Reason for Antisemitism, arguing that hatred of Jews recurs across centuries and civilizations because Judaism challenges the values of its host societies. The argument had teeth. Antisemitism, they claimed, is a response to what Jews affirm, chosenness, ethical monotheism, national distinctiveness, and calls for Jews to shed those affirmations are themselves a symptom of the disease.

The partnership then split into two careers. Prager took to radio and became a conservative political commentator, later a founder of PragerU. Telushkin stayed with the tradition. He kept politics at the margin of his work and put Jewish literacy and Jewish ethics at the center. Of the two Flatbush boys, Prager reached more people. Telushkin reached deeper.

Before the books, there was the movement. As a Columbia student, Telushkin led in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, the scrappy activist network that forced the plight of Soviet Jews onto the American Jewish agenda when the establishment organizations preferred quiet diplomacy. The work sent him to the Soviet Union. He met refuseniks in cramped Moscow apartments where a knock on the door meant either a fellow Jew or the KGB. He met Andrei Sakharov (1921-1989), the physicist who traded the privileges of the Soviet elite for the life of a dissident. The KGB put Telushkin on its list of anti-Soviet agents.

The episode shaped everything after. Telushkin’s ethics never floated free of history. He came of age watching a totalitarian state try to erase Jewish religious life, and watching Jewish students in New York fight it with pickets, telephone trees, and smuggled prayer books. When he later wrote that words are actions, that memory carries obligation, that Jewish peoplehood binds a Beverly Hills producer to a Leningrad engineer, he was not composing sermons. He was reporting.

Jewish Literacy: The Most Important Things to Know About the Jewish Religion, Its People, and Its History appeared in 1991 and did for American Jews what no seminary had managed. The book runs past 700 pages, broken into 346 short chapters: Abraham, the Exodus, Hillel, the Talmud, Maimonides, the blood libel, Hasidism, the Dreyfus affair, Zionism, the Holocaust, Israeli politics, lashon hara, tzedakah. Each entry runs two to four pages. A reader can enter anywhere.

The design answered a feeling before it answered a question. Millions of American Jews carried a private embarrassment: they were educated in everything except the one thing that named them. They held graduate degrees and could not read the alphabet of their grandparents. They knew Freud and not Rashi. Telushkin never scolded that reader. He set a table. The book became one of the best-selling volumes on Judaism of the 1990s and 2000s, and it remains a foundation text for Jews, prospective converts, interfaith families, and non-Jews who need to know what a mezuzah is or what happened at Yavneh. Rabbis across the denominations assign it. Journalists keep it within reach. Its success made Telushkin a category of one: the man you read first.

He extended the franchise. Jewish Wisdom (1994) collected the tradition’s teachings on money, sex, anger, death, and God. Biblical Literacy (1997) walked through the Hebrew Bible the way Jewish Literacy walked through the civilization. The Book of Jewish Values (2000) offered a teaching for every day of the year. Jewish Humor: What the Best Jewish Jokes Say About the Jews (1992) treated the joke as a diagnostic instrument, a compressed record of Jewish insecurity, argument, and survival. A people reveals itself in what it laughs at, and Telushkin read the jokes the way other scholars read responsa.

One argument runs under all the books, and it surfaced fully in Words That Hurt, Words That Heal: How to Choose Words Wisely and Well (1996). Jewish law devotes an enormous literature to the ethics of speech: the prohibitions on gossip, slander, shaming, and verbal cruelty gathered under the term lashon hara. Telushkin took that literature out of the yeshiva and set it in front of American readers as a moral discipline for daily life. His test was simple and severe. Could you go twenty-four hours without saying an unkind or untrue word about, or to, anyone? Most people, he observed, find the question harder than a day without food. Then he pressed the conclusion: a person who cannot control his tongue for a day has met the limit of his own character.

The book crossed into politics. Senators Joseph Lieberman (1942-2024) of Connecticut and Connie Mack (b. 1940) of Florida introduced Senate Resolution 151 to establish a National Speak No Evil Day, asking Americans to spend one day a year in verbal restraint. The resolution was symbolic, and symbolism was the point. A rabbinic legal category from the Chofetz Chaim had reached the floor of the United States Senate, carried there by a book written for general readers. No other American rabbi of his generation moved traditional Jewish law that distance.

The speech project reveals Telushkin’s quarrel with his host culture. American life treats self-expression as a right approaching a sacrament. Telushkin insists that speech is conduct, that a sentence can do what a fist does, and that character is built or wrecked in the small daily choices of what one says about other people. He makes the case without rage and without culture-war framing, which is why audiences across the spectrum accept it from him.

Telushkin calls A Code of Jewish Ethics his life’s work, and the claim fits. Volume one, You Shall Be Holy, appeared in 2006 and won the National Jewish Book Award for Jewish Book of the Year. Volume two, Love Your Neighbor as Yourself, followed in 2009. The project attempts something the tradition has rarely done in English: a comprehensive codification of Jewish ethical law, organized like the great halakhic codes but devoted to character, speech, judgment, gratitude, anger, humility, and the treatment of other human beings. The sources run from Torah and Talmud through Maimonides, the Mussar masters, Hasidic teaching, and modern cases.

The polemical edge hides in the structure. By writing a code of ethics in the format reserved for codes of ritual law, Telushkin argues that the tradition has allowed observance to drift toward ritual and away from decency, and that a Jew who keeps kosher while humiliating a waiter has failed the test the kitchen was supposed to train him for. He states the thesis without attacking the Orthodox world that trained him. He simply restores the ethical volumes to the shelf and lets their presence make the argument.

Telushkin’s Los Angeles career gave his teaching its unlikeliest stage. From 1985 until the congregation closed in December 2022, he served as rabbi of the Synagogue for the Performing Arts, founded in 1972 by Rabbi Jerome Cutler as the entertainment industry’s shul. The congregation had no building of its own for much of its life. It met in rented halls and theaters. Its members were producers, writers, actors, agents, and musicians, people fluent in narrative and allergic to being lectured. High Holiday services drew crowds that came, in some measure, to hear Telushkin talk. He commuted between New York, where he lived with his wife Dvorah and their children, and Los Angeles, an Orthodox-ordained rabbi serving a congregation that was anything but Orthodox, and the arrangement bothered him less than it bothered the denominational gatekeepers on both sides. He understood the difference between a congregation and an audience, and he treated both as communities in formation.

The industry left its mark on his output. He wrote three mystery novels featuring Rabbi Daniel Winter, a Los Angeles congregational rabbi with a radio show and a detective’s eye: The Unorthodox Murder of Rabbi Wahl (1987), The Final Analysis of Dr. Stark (1988), and An Eye for an Eye (1991), which supplied story material for David E. Kelley’s series The Practice. He co-wrote the screenplay for The Quarrel (1991), drawn from a story by Chaim Grade (1910-1982), about two prewar yeshiva friends, one now a secular writer, one a rosh yeshiva, who meet by chance in a Montreal park in 1948 and resume the argument about God and the Holocaust that the war interrupted. The film is two men walking and talking for ninety minutes, and it holds, because Telushkin and Grade both knew that a Jewish argument is a form of love. He wrote the “Bar Mitzvah” episode of Touched by an Angel, with Kirk Douglas as an aging survivor. The fiction and the scripts are not detours from the teaching career. They are the same conviction in another medium: Jewish ideas travel through story before they travel through system.

In 2014 the family history came due. Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History drew on the access that only the accountant’s son could command: hundreds of interviews with Schneerson’s secretaries and followers, the thirty published volumes of the Rebbe’s letters, decades of recorded talks. Chabad cooperated and held no editorial control. The book landed on the bestseller lists of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Publishers Weekly, and it introduced the Rebbe to readers who knew Chabad only as the people with the menorahs and the mitzvah tanks.

The portrait emphasizes leadership. Schneerson took over a small, war-shattered Hasidic court in 1951 and built the most expansive religious organization in Jewish history, and Telushkin wanted to know how. His answer runs through discipline, memory, and attention: a man who slept little, took no vacations in over forty years, and received thousands of individuals in private audiences that ran until dawn. The Rebbe’s longtime secretary, Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky (b. 1933), told Telushkin that the Rebbe’s advice was never cookie-cutter; he fit every answer to the person in front of him. Telushkin also tracked the influence outward, to the Rebbe’s role in expanding American food assistance programs, his counsel to figures from Robert F. Kennedy to Bob Dylan, and his clandestine network sustaining Jews in the Soviet Union, the cause that had defined Telushkin’s own youth.

The book drew a criticism that names Telushkin’s limit as well as anything in his corpus. Kirkus called it approachable and admiring. Reviewers noted that the treatment progresses through admiring anecdote, that the messianic fever around the Rebbe’s final years gets a gentler hearing than a colder historian might give it, and that the fights with Satmar and with the Lithuanian yeshiva world stay largely offstage. Telushkin concluded that the messiah question was, in the end, a non-issue, a judgment that satisfied general readers and struck scholars of the movement as a graceful evasion. The pattern holds across his work. He is drawn to moral exemplars. He writes to enlarge the reader’s sense of obligation, and a biographer with that aim protects his subject at the margins. His gift for making religious greatness intelligible and his reluctance to prosecute it are the same trait viewed from two sides.

His earlier biography, Hillel: If Not Now, When? (2010), shows the ancient model behind the modern career. Hillel is the sage who accepted the convert who demanded the entire Torah while standing on one foot, answered with the rule against doing to others what is hateful to oneself, and then issued the command that saves the answer from becoming a slogan: go and study. That is Telushkin’s pedagogy in one scene. State the moral core in a sentence anyone can carry. Then open the library.

Telushkin holds a position in American Jewish life that the standard categories miss. He is Orthodox by training and practice, but no Orthodox institution owns him. He is a popularizer by market, but his codes and biographies rest on wide primary reading. He served for decades as a senior associate of CLAL, the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, sat on the board of the Jewish Book Council, and in 2013 addressed the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, at the invitation of António Guterres (b. 1949), in Geneva. He can speak at a Chabad dinner on Monday, a Reform temple on Wednesday, and a church-sponsored interfaith conference on Friday, and deliver the same message at all three, because the message concerns conduct rather than affiliation.

The academy has largely ignored him, and the neglect is mutual. He produced no theory, founded no school, and entered no disciplinary debate. What he produced instead is a readership: hundreds of thousands of people who learned from his books what the tradition asks of them, and who trace their entry into Jewish learning to a paperback with his name on it. Scholars build knowledge for other scholars. Telushkin spent fifty years building the audience that makes the scholarship worth doing. His wager, stated across every book since 1975, is that Judaism survives on one condition, that its ethics show up in the daily behavior of the people who claim it. Ritual without decency is theater. Memory without conduct is nostalgia. The tradition enters a person, or it does not, and the evidence is what he says to the waiter, the widow, and the man he gossips about. Telushkin bet his career that American Jews, given the sources in their own language, might rise to that test. The sales figures measure the appetite. The rest is unrecorded, which is where he always said the real religious life takes place.

Notes

The opening Crown Heights scene rests on a verifiable fact: Joseph Telushkin‘s father was the accountant for the Rebbe and for the Rebbe’s father-in-law, the previous Rebbe, and his grandfather was an intimate of both rebbes, which granted Telushkin access, cooperation, and independence. Sources: the Jewish Book Council page for Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History and the Kirkus Reviews review. The image of the family as “trusted outsiders inside a court” is my extrapolation from those facts. The Kirkus Reviews review confirms that Telushkin is not a Lubavitcher but has been an affectionate observer of the movement his entire life.

The Flatbush scene

Telushkin met Dennis Prager in tenth grade at Yeshiva of Flatbush. The description of the school’s dual curriculum and ethos is reasonable extrapolation from what Yeshivah of Flatbush is known for. The content of their teenage arguments is extrapolated from the questions their first book answers. I kept it general. Prager attended Brooklyn College, then Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs, and ran Brandeis-Bardin from 1976 to 1983, with Telushkin working there.

The Moscow scene

Telushkin led in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, visited the Soviet Union, met dissidents including Andrei Sakharov, and was listed by the KGB as an anti-Russian agent. The cramped-apartment and knock-on-the-door texture is extrapolation from the standard conditions of refusenik life. No link needed, though the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry is well documented.

Dialogue

I used one near-quote: Yehuda Krinsky telling Telushkin that the Rebbe’s advice was never “cookie-cutter,” always tailored to the individual in front of him. Source: the Jewish Book Council interview with Rabbi Joseph Telushkin. I paraphrased everything else, including the Rebbe’s food-stamp remark to Shirley Chisholm. The full version is available in the St. Louis Jewish Light article. The Hillel one-foot story is ancient text.

Status details

The Synagogue for the Performing Arts material: founded in 1972 by Rabbi Jerome Cutler, served by Telushkin until its closure in December 2022. The synagogue billed itself as LA’s original entertainment industry synagogue. The rented-halls detail and the congregation’s professional makeup are extrapolation from what an entertainment-industry shul without denominational affiliation is. The 1985 start date for Telushkin’s tenure is my best reconstruction. Sources confirm the endpoint, December 2022.

Reception and the critical turn

The section on Rebbe‘s limits draws on Kirkus Reviews, which describes the book as less a traditional biography than a compendium of mostly lighthearted anecdotes, approachable and admiring, and notes Telushkin’s conclusion that the Messiah issue is, in the final analysis, a non-issue. It also draws on the Jewish Book Council review, which notes little discussion of the disagreements with Satmar or with major rabbinic leaders, including over the Rebbe’s purported Messiahship. Ilene Cooper‘s Booklist review made the no-critical-assessment point too, visible on the Amazon page for Rebbe. The judgment that Telushkin’s sympathy and softness are one trait seen from two sides is mine.

Senate Resolution 151, Lieberman and Mack, and National Speak No Evil Day are listed on Telushkin’s Wikipedia page. Newsweek‘s 50 most influential rabbis since 1997 and the Talk magazine speaker listing are also noted there and on his Goodreads author page. The 2013 Geneva invitation from António Guterres as UN High Commissioner for Refugees is also listed on Wikipedia.

Bestseller lists for Rebbe, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Publishers Weekly, are listed on the book’s Wikipedia page. The National Jewish Book Award for You Shall Be Holy is listed on Telushkin’s Wikipedia page. An Eye for an Eye feeding The Practice, The Quarrel from the Grade story.

Joseph Telushkin and the Hero System of the Teacher

A December night in Creve Coeur, Missouri, 2018. Traditional Congregation, 12437 Ladue Road, paid RSVPs required, twelve dollars a person, dessert reception to follow. The folding chairs fill early. A woman who drove in from Chesterfield takes an aisle seat and checks the program: the Jean and Bernard Kaplan Memorial Lecture, “On Being a Good Person in a Morally Complicated World.” A day-school teacher sits near the back with a legal pad. A retired cardiologist, a synagogue board veteran of thirty years, sits up front where the speakers can see him nod. The speaker is a heavyset rabbi from New York in a dark suit, and he opens, as he has opened a thousand rooms, with a challenge instead of a text. Could anyone present go twenty-four hours without saying an unkind word about another person, or to another person? Laughter moves through the chairs, the laughter of the caught. He waits for it to pass. Then he tells them what the laughter means. A man who cannot control his tongue for a day has learned something about the state of his own character, and most people find the fast of the mouth harder than the fast of Yom Kippur.

The woman from Chesterfield hears a party trick. The day-school teacher hears the Chofetz Chaim, Yisrael Meir Kagan (1838-1933), translated for people who will never open him. The cardiologist hears a summons he has been dodging since his residency, when he learned that a cutting remark in a hallway can end a career. Three people, one sentence, three verdicts. That is the room Joseph Telushkin has worked for fifty years, and the room explains him better than any bibliography. Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argued in The Denial of Death that a man cannot bear the knowledge of his own insignificance, so every culture builds a hero system, a structure of roles and values through which a man earns the feeling that his life counts in some larger accounting. The hero system tells him what to fear, what to sacrifice, and what will outlast him. Telushkin built his on the proposition that the Jewish people can die twice, and that a teacher stands between them and both deaths.

The first death is disappearance. Not the death by violence that his tradition has cataloged for two thousand years, but the quieter one: the grandson who cannot read the alphabet on his grandfather’s headstone, the identity inherited without a syllabus, the four thousand years dissolving into a taste for certain foods and a vague unease in December. Telushkin came of age watching that death advance through the suburbs while a louder version ran through the Soviet Union, where the state did on purpose what America did by accident. He went to Moscow as a student and sat in the apartments of men who risked prison to teach Hebrew, and the KGB wrote his name in a file. A man does not forget the lesson of those rooms. Jewish knowledge dies when nobody transmits it, and every generation is one lapsed generation from the end.

The second death is hollowing. The people survive, the rituals survive, the buildings fill, and the thing inside dies. A man keeps the dietary laws and humiliates the waiter. A community counts the prayer quorum and traffics in rumor. In Telushkin’s system this death is worse than the first because it wins the argument for the enemies of the tradition. Every observant scoundrel testifies against Sinai. His two-volume A Code of Jewish Ethics, the work he calls his life’s work, is a fortification against this second death, an insistence that the tradition’s ethical demands carry the same legal weight as its ritual ones, and that a Judaism reduced to ritual has already died and not noticed.

A hero system reveals its structure in what its hero refuses. Telushkin’s career is a record of subtractions, and each subtraction is a rival heroism declined. He trained at Yeshiva University and did not take the path of the rosh yeshiva, the master who forms an elite and lets the masses find their own way. He studied Jewish history at Columbia and did not join the academic guild, with its heroism of the new finding, the tenure file, the argument won before eleven peers. He took a pulpit and took the smallest one in America, a congregation of entertainment people that met in rented halls, so that the pulpit could never become the career. He watched his closest friend take the loudest road available. Dennis Prager and Telushkin came out of the same tenth-grade classroom in Flatbush, wrote two books together, and then divided the inheritance. Prager took politics and combat, the heroism of the culture warrior who saves civilization by naming its enemies every weekday from noon to three. Telushkin took the tradition and the teaching, and he kept politics out of his books with a discipline that looks passive until you price it. Every fight he declined preserved a reader Prager’s road would have cost him. The Reform woman in row three does not buy books from men who spent Tuesday denouncing her party.

The last subtraction was the hardest and drew the most blood from the critics. When Telushkin wrote the biography of Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the family access that opened every door in Crown Heights came with an unwritten lien. The reviewers noticed what stayed offstage: the wars with Satmar, the fury of the Lithuanian yeshiva world, the messianic fever he settled with a verdict, a non-issue, that satisfied the general reader and struck the scholars as a courtesy dressed as a conclusion. The critics read softness. Read through Becker, the softness is doctrine. Telushkin’s hero does not prosecute. Prosecution belongs to rival hero systems, the journalist’s, the historian’s, the prophet’s. His heroism is the enlargement of obligation, and a biographer who wants the reader to leave the book demanding more of himself cannot spend three chapters demanding more of the corpse.

Now take the sacred values one at a time, because a value is not a dictionary entry. It is a load-bearing wall in somebody’s immortality project, and the same word holds up different buildings.

Study. In Telushkin’s system, study is rescue. Every page read pulls a Jew back from the first death, and the 346 short chapters of Jewish Literacy are 346 doors cut into a wall that the unlettered experienced as blank. The book’s design embodies the theology: enter anywhere, no prerequisites, no shame at the threshold. Set the same word in other systems and watch it change function. For the academic historian, study is production; the guild’s hero adds a brick that was not there, and teaching the ignorant is the tax he pays on the real work. Telushkin reverses the ratio, which is why the academy cannot see him; by the guild’s accounting he has produced nothing, only distributed. For the rosh yeshiva, study is the end in itself, Torah for its own sake, and the act of popularizing dilutes the sacred substance the way a museum postcard dilutes the painting. For the startup founder, study is due diligence, an input priced by what it lets him build, and a man who studies without shipping has confused motion for progress. For the twelve-step sponsor, study is maintenance, the daily reading that keeps the wolf from the door, and erudition beyond the day’s need is a vanity that has gotten men drunk. Each hero calls his practice study. No two are performing the same act.

Speech. Here Telushkin’s system runs head-on into the reigning American one, and the collision is the making of his most consequential book. Words That Hurt, Words That Heal rests on the claim that speech is conduct, that a sentence can do what a fist does, and that heroism lives in the words a man declines to say. The United States Senate gave the claim a resolution and a symbolic day. But look at what the same word carries elsewhere. For the stand-up comedian, speech is the raid on the forbidden; his heroism is measured by what he says that the room fears to say, and restraint is the death of the act. For the trial lawyer, speech is a licensed weapon; the rules of evidence, not kindness, govern its use, and a cross-examination that spares the witness betrays the client. For the whistleblower, the unsaid word is the crime, and the hero is the one who speaks at any cost to reputation, his own or another’s. And for the therapeutic self, the archetype that fills Telushkin’s lecture halls without knowing it has a name, speech is expression, the suppressed word is a wound turned inward, and saying your truth is the sacred act that heals the sayer. Telushkin never names this last rival, and it is the one he fights on every page. His system holds that a man’s truth about his neighbor, spoken, can be a sin even when accurate. Lashon hara, the tradition’s category, forbids true statements. No claim he makes offends the American ear more, and no claim is more load-bearing. Take it out and the book becomes etiquette. Leave it in and the book indicts a civilization’s habit of confusing candor with virtue.

Memory. In Telushkin’s system, memory is obligation with a due date. The command to remember Amalek, the Exodus, the destroyed communities of Europe, converts the past into a claim on present conduct; a memory that changes nothing in behavior has not been kept, only stored. His Soviet Jewry years taught the live version: the memory of Leningrad refuseniks obligated a student in New York to picket, telephone, and smuggle. Other systems carry the word to other work. For the psychoanalyst, memory is symptom and cure, the buried scene that runs the patient’s life until speech retrieves it, and the heroism is archaeological. For the immigrant striver, memory is ballast to cut; the frontier hero travels light, and the old country’s grudges drown men who insist on carrying them. For the Irish republican of the old school, memory is a debt of blood with compounding interest, and the hero pays it forward. For the Zen practitioner, memory is attachment, one more object to release, and the hero is the man present enough to hold nothing. Telushkin’s position sits at a strange angle to all of these: he demands total recall and forbids most of its uses. Remember everything, avenge nothing, gossip about no one, and let the memory discharge itself as conduct, charity, and transmission. It is the most expensive memory regime on the market. It offers neither the analyst’s cure, nor the striver’s lightness, nor the republican’s satisfaction.

The archetypes could multiply, and that is the point Becker forces. There is no neutral ground on which study, speech, and memory carry their plain meanings, because there is no man standing outside a hero system to read them from. The woman from Chesterfield, the day-school teacher, and the cardiologist heard three different sentences that night in Creve Coeur because they were defending three different immortality projects, and Telushkin’s gift, the gift that filled the folding chairs, is that he builds his challenge so each project feels addressed and none feels attacked. Watch the craft of it. The joke first, because laughter lowers the walls. Then the source, because the source lends the weight of forty generations. Then the challenge, aimed at the listener’s own conduct and nobody else’s. He never tells the room who among them has failed. He arranges for each listener to convict himself in private, which is the only court his system recognizes.

Does he know what the system costs him? Partly. He tells the story of Hillel and the impatient convert as a self-portrait, and the telling shows a man who has thought about the charge of dilution and has his answer ready: the summary is the doorway, not the destination, and the command to go and study follows the one-sentence Torah as surely as the punchline follows the setup. Against the rosh yeshiva’s charge he is armored. Against the historian’s charge he is not. When the reviewers said the Rebbe book admired where it should have weighed, he had no answer as good as the Hillel story, because the criticism was true and the truth touched the load-bearing wall. A hero system that runs on the enlargement of obligation cannot easily hand down verdicts, and a tradition needs verdicts too. Somebody has to say that the observant man who wrecked the widow’s savings is a criminal and name him. Somebody has to say what the messianists did to the movement after 1994. Telushkin’s system assigns that work to other heroes and hopes they show up.

The hero, then: the teacher who holds the door after the service ends, who bets that a people dies of ignorance before it dies of anything else, and who measures his life in readers he will never meet behaving better in rooms he will never enter. The rival he fights without naming: the expressive self, the American conviction that the said word heals and the unsaid word festers, against which he sets a tradition where the unsaid word is often the heroic act. And the cost his ledger cannot price: severity. Fifty years of teaching men to judge their own speech left him without the taste, or perhaps the license, for judging any man’s life in public, and so the corpus that codifies Jewish ethics contains no prosecutions, and the gentlest major figure in American Judaism must trust harder men to say the hard sentences his system forbids him.

Becker wrote that every hero system is a lie about death that makes life possible, and the honest question to put to any of them is what the lie purchases. Telushkin’s purchases this: a man born in 1948, in the shadow of the largest murder in his people’s history, decided that the counterstroke was not vengeance, not politics, not even scholarship, but the patient restocking of ordinary minds, and he has spent his allotted years on airplanes between rented ballrooms doing it. The bet cannot be settled in his lifetime. It settles in kitchens and offices, in the sentence about a colleague that a reader swallowed unsaid, in the grandson who can read the headstone. His hero system locates immortality in precisely the conduct that leaves no record. He built his monument in the unrecorded, and he will not get to see it, and he teaches that this is what the tradition always meant by faith.

Notes

The opening scene is a real event, not a composite. Telushkin‘s scholar-in-residence weekend at Traditional Congregation in Creve Coeur, December 14-16, 2018, included the Jean and Bernard Kaplan Memorial Lecture on “On Being a Good Person in a Morally Complicated World,” a dessert reception, twelve dollars per person, paid RSVPs, and the address 12437 Ladue Road. All details come from the St. Louis Jewish Light interview.

The three audience members are invented archetypes. I kept them nameless and typical for that reason. The twenty-four-hour challenge is Telushkin’s documented signature opening, described in Words That Hurt, Words That Heal and in the Senate resolution coverage. I paraphrased rather than quoted. The comparison of the fast of the mouth to Yom Kippur compresses a point he makes in the book about people finding verbal restraint harder than food restraint.

Joseph Telushkin and the Interaction Ritual Chain

A Friday afternoon in the late 1970s, Simi Valley. Cars climb the canyon road into the Brandeis-Bardin Institute, three thousand acres of brown hills that block the sightline to Los Angeles. The arrivals wear name tags. A dentist from Encino, a story editor between jobs, a divorced schoolteacher who signed up because a friend pushed her. Most of them cannot read Hebrew. Many have not stood in a synagogue since a cousin’s bar mitzvah. They surrender their weekend at the gate: no television, no telephone, nowhere to drive. By Saturday night they stand in a circle in the dark holding a braided candle, and the flame lights sixty faces, and they sing a melody that most of them learned twenty-four hours earlier, and some of them cry without knowing why. The young rabbi from Brooklyn watches from inside the circle. He is learning the trade that no seminary teaches. He is learning what a room can do.

Randall Collins (b. 1941) gives that trade a theory. Interaction Ritual Chains, published in 2004, builds on Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) and Erving Goffman (1922-1982) and moves the unit of analysis off the individual and onto the situation. Four ingredients make a ritual work: bodies gathered in one place, a barrier that marks insiders from outsiders, a shared focus of attention, and a common mood that feeds on the focus and amplifies it. When the ingredients combine, the gathering generates what Collins calls emotional energy, a charge of confidence and enthusiasm that participants carry away in their bodies. The ritual also produces group solidarity, sacred objects that store the charge, and moral standards whose violation triggers righteous anger. People then chain from situation to situation, spending the energy of the last encounter to buy position in the next. A career, in this account, is a chain of rooms. Charisma is a run of successful ones.

Read Telushkin’s life along the chain and the sequence organizes it better than any list of books. The chain starts in a tenth-grade classroom in Flatbush, where two boys discover that arguing with each other about God generates more charge than anything else on offer, and they keep the argument running for sixty years because neither can find a partner who returns the energy at the same voltage. It runs through the Soviet Jewry pickets outside the Soviet Mission in Manhattan, and Collins might have designed those to specification: bodies massed behind police barriers, chants in rhythm, a shared enemy across the street, and the surplus charge of danger. It runs at maximum intensity through the Moscow apartments, where the barrier ingredient reaches its limit, because the outsider who breaches the circle carries a badge, and every whispered Hebrew lesson doubles as a loyalty test. A man who has prayed in a room that the state forbids has felt what solidarity costs at the top of the market, and the feeling calibrates every room he enters afterward. Then Brandeis-Bardin, his apprenticeship in production, where he and Prager learn to build the four ingredients from scratch, on a deadline, for strangers, every weekend. The retreat is a machine for manufacturing collective effervescence in people who arrived without a tradition to draw on, and the two young men who run it acquire a skill rarer than scholarship: they can generate the charge on demand.

The Synagogue for the Performing Arts tests the skill against the hardest audience in America. Consider the room on a Yom Kippur in the late 1980s, a rented theater on the West Side of Los Angeles. The cantor is a working studio singer. In the fifth row sits a sitcom writer who has pitched to rooms that decide careers in four minutes, and next to him a producer who reads a house the way a pit boss reads a table, and behind them a character actor who knows to the half-second how long a pause can hold. These are professional manipulators of shared attention. Mutual focus is their trade. They cannot be worked by amateur means, and they know every move in the book because they wrote the book. The rabbi at the lectern holds them without a set, without lighting, without an edit, one man and a microphone and four thousand years of material. The joke lands first, because the joke proves competence and lowers the guard. Then the story, because narrative locks the focus. Then the source, because the citation converts entertainment into authority. Then the challenge, aimed at each listener’s private conduct, because the charge has to attach to something or it dissipates in the lobby. Joke, story, source, challenge. The rhythm never varies because it works, and it works because each beat supplies a Collins ingredient in order: mood, focus, sacredness, morality.

The books come out of the rooms, and they read like it. Open Jewish Literacy anywhere and the chapter runs the length of a lecture segment, three pages, one arc, a story at the front and a demand at the back. The 346 chapters are 346 units of platform time. Words That Hurt, Words That Heal opens with the twenty-four-hour challenge because that is how he opens the room, and the reader who laughs at himself on page one has entered the mood on schedule. Critics of popular writing treat lecture rhythm as a defect, the mark of a man who dictates. Collins suggests the opposite reading. The book is a sacred object in the technical sense, an artifact charged by the ritual that produced it, and its function is to carry the charge to people who missed the room. A woman who heard him in Omaha buys the book at the signing table, and the book on her nightstand stores Tuesday night. A man who never heard him buys the book because his sister pressed it on him with an intensity she caught somewhere, and the intensity survives one more transfer, weakened but live. Publishers call this word of mouth. Collins calls it the secondary circulation of symbols, and it explains why Telushkin’s sales curves outran his marketing budgets for thirty years. Every ballroom seeded a distribution network of charged objects.

Then the loop closes, and the loop is the career. Energy earned in rooms converts into book sales. Book sales buy entry into better rooms. The Nine Questions makes him a name on the Hillel circuit. Jewish Literacy makes him a federation keynote, and the federation keynote fills the ballroom that sells the next book. Words That Hurt reaches two United States senators, and the Senate resolution is a room of a different order, a ritual of the American civil religion lending its charge to a Brooklyn speech code. By 2013 the chain reaches Geneva and a United Nations podium. By 2014 it reaches the Rebbe book, and the launch runs through the richest ritual network in the Jewish world, because every Chabad house in eighty countries is a room, and every room wants the author. Watch the mechanics of a single stop. Omaha, May 31 to June 9, 2024, a ten-day residency the federation names Tapestry: Shabbat services at Temple Israel, morning services and Torah teaching at Beth Israel, brunch with the historical society board, the federation awards night, a book club at B’nai Israel, an afternoon at the Rose Blumkin Jewish Home, the B’nai B’rith Breadbreakers, a keynote at a tri-faith conference, with lodging provided by Chabad of Nebraska. Ten days, a dozen rooms, four denominations, one man chaining through all of them and leaving each with its solidarity topped up and its book table empty. In Sydney the following spring, the synagogue prices his lecture pay-what-you-can and warns that spots are strictly limited, and the warning is ritual engineering too, because scarcity concentrates the focus before anyone sits down.

The frame also explains the enemy, and here it earns its keep, because it catches something the ethics-of-speech literature misses. Gossip is an interaction ritual. Collins would classify it without hesitation: two bodies, lowered voices that build the barrier, a shared focus on an absent third party, and a mood of delicious complicity that rises as the exchange runs. Gossip generates solidarity and emotional energy at the lowest production cost in social life. No hall to rent, no text to master, no risk to the participants, and the absent party pays the bill. When Telushkin declares war on lashon hara, he attacks the cheapest energy source on the market, and he attacks it as a competitor, because he sells a substitute. His whole pedagogy offers the charge of moral seriousness at a higher price point: come to the room, do the reading, accept the challenge, and leave with a solidarity that costs no third party his name. The twenty-four-hour test is a dare to quit the cheap supply for a day and feel the withdrawal. Most drug metaphors in moral writing are decoration. This one is load-bearing, and Collins supplies the chemistry.

His masterpiece of observation makes sense inside the same frame. The Rebbe book puzzled reviewers as biography because it reads as a catalog of encounters, and the frame says the catalog is the finding. Schneerson ran the most productive ritual chain in modern Jewish history, and Telushkin, a producer, recognized the production. The farbrengen holds thousands of men shoulder to shoulder past midnight, singing between talks, the mutual focus total, the mood compounding hour over hour. The private audience runs one man at a time through the small hours, maximum focus at minimum scale. And Sunday dollars distills the form to its atom: thousands file past an old man who gives each one a dollar for charity and a sentence, four seconds of full attention, and the recipients frame the dollars and never spend them. A dollar bill is the most fungible object in America, and one encounter converts it into a sacred object that families keep for forty years. No demonstration of Collins’s theory in the sociological literature beats it. Telushkin documented all of it without the vocabulary, the way a working chef documents chemistry. He measured the Rebbe’s legacy the same way: the movement tripled after the founder’s death, which is to say the chain kept running on stored charge, shluchim spending inherited energy in forty-eight states.

Prager marks the road not taken, and Collins names the fork. Radio manufactures a daily quasi-ritual, millions of listeners synchronized at noon, a parasocial focus with no bodies in the room. The reach is enormous and the charge per listener is thin, and thin charge needs conflict to thicken it, which is one reason talk radio runs on enemies. Telushkin chose bodies. Lower reach, higher voltage, no enemies required, because a live room generates its solidarity from presence and does not need a target across the street. The two Flatbush boys split the ritual market between them, one taking scale and the other intensity, and their politics followed their formats as much as their formats followed their politics.

Collins wrote a second book, The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change, on how intellectual reputations are made, and the answer is more rooms: the seminar, the conference panel, the journal exchange, the citation, which is a ritual gesture performed before the guild. Attention space in a discipline is finite, and a thinker holds a position in it by chaining through the guild’s own gatherings and taking fire there. Telushkin skipped every one of them. He performed no seminars, answered no reviews in the journals, and sought no position in the academic attention space, so the space holds no memory of him, and the scholars who map American Judaism cite men with a fraction of his reach. Reputation travels down chains and stops where the chains stop. His run through ballrooms and sanctuaries, so his name lives in the network of people who book ballrooms and fill sanctuaries. The two circuits touch almost nowhere. A man cannot bank energy in rooms he never enters, and the guild, for its part, cannot feel a charge that never passed through its rituals. Each side reads the other as negligible, and by its own ledger each side is right.

One more scene, because the chain has an end and the man knows it. December 2022, Los Angeles. The Synagogue for the Performing Arts closes after fifty years, the rented halls gone quiet, the founding generation of congregants gone before it. A career built on live rooms carries a mortality that a shelf of books disguises. The books survive, but a book is a battery, and batteries drain unless the rooms keep recharging them, and the rooms need the man. Collins is unsentimental on the point: emotional energy decays in days, solidarity in years, and only the sacred objects persist, waiting for someone to build a new ritual around them. Telushkin’s bet, visible in every airport and every folding-chair evening from Creve Coeur to Sydney, holds that the tradition supplies the objects and the texts and the calendar, and that any generation willing to gather can restart the current. He spent fifty years proving the current restarts. The proof lasts as long as somebody rents the hall.

Notes

Collins sourcing

The four ingredients, bodily co-presence, barrier to outsiders, mutual focus, and shared mood, and the four outcomes, emotional energy, solidarity, sacred objects, and moral standards, come from Interaction Ritual Chains, Princeton, 2004, chapter one, building on Durkheim‘s The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life and Goffman. The attention-space argument at the end comes from The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change, Harvard, 1998. The claim that emotional energy decays over days and solidarity over years compresses Collins‘s discussion of EE half-life in chapter three. He treats the decay in days-to-weeks terms, so the compression is faithful. Publisher page for verification: Interaction Ritual Chains.

Scenes and their status

The Brandeis-Bardin opening is a constructed typical scene. The verified spine: Prager ran the Institute from 1976 to 1983, and Telushkin worked there as education director. The retreat format for secular LA Jews, the campus in Simi Valley, and havdalah as the emotional peak of such weekends are all standard and defensible as extrapolation. The dentist, story editor, and schoolteacher are invented archetypes.

The Yom Kippur theater scene is likewise typical rather than dated to a documented service. The verified spine is the congregation’s makeup and rented-hall existence, documented by the Synagogue for the Performing Arts. The Omaha residency is fully documented, including dates, venues, and the Chabad of Nebraska lodging: Omaha Jewish Press. The Sydney pay-what-you-can lecture with limited spots is documented by the Humanitix event listing. The Soviet Mission pickets are extrapolated from his documented SSSJ leadership. SSSJ demonstrations at the Soviet Mission are a matter of record.

The Rebbe material

Farbrengens, late-night private audiences, and Sunday dollars are documented Chabad practice and covered in Rebbe. The detail that recipients framed the dollars rather than spending them is widely reported Chabad lore and appears in coverage of the dollars line.Chabad.org’s own dollars archive is the obvious source. The post-1994 tripling of the movement and the eighty-countries figure come from Telushkin’s Jewish Book Council interview.

Three arguments here are, as far as I know, unpublished. First, gossip as a rival interaction ritual and Telushkin’s speech ethics as competition against the cheapest emotional energy source on the market. Collins discusses conversation as ritual in chapter two, so the classification is orthodox even if the application is new.

Second, the joke-story-source-challenge rhythm mapped onto the four ingredients in order. That mapping is mine and slightly stylized. The beats supply mood, focus, sacredness, and morality in a looser way than the sentence implies.

Third, the two-circuits ending, ballroom network versus seminar network, each blind to the other’s charge.

Two factual cautions

I placed the SPA scene “in the late 1980s,” consistent with the uncertain start date of his tenure flagged in the bio thread. The phrasing survives either way since the scene is typical. The Sydney event is dated by its listing to April 2025. I wrote “the following spring” after Omaha, which fits.

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Still the Best Hope: Why the World Needs American Values to Triumph (2012)

Applying the anthropology of John Mearsheimer to Dennis Prager’s Still the Best Hope reveals a conflict between Mearsheimer’s realism, which emphasizes the structural inevitability of group competition and nationalism, and Prager’s moral universalism, which seeks to export “American values” as a global solution to human evil.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology posits that human behavior is primarily driven by “socialization” within specific tribes or societies, leading individuals to develop “strong attachments to their group”. He argues that humans are “tribal at their core,” and he warns that liberal attempts to impose a “universal moral consensus” across different societies are often illusions that ignore the “profound social reality” of group identity.
Prager’s Still the Best Hope advocates for the “American value system” as the “best hope” and as a “viable program ever devised to produce a good society” for the entire world. Prager promotes the “American Trinity” of liberty, values rooted in the Creator, and the melting-pot ideal, arguing that these are not just American, but universal values. Mearsheimer’s framework would interpret Prager’s mission as a classic example of liberal universalism, which Mearsheimer argues is a “liberal dream” that fails to account for the way in which different cultures are “born into social groups or societies that shape their identities”. From Mearsheimer’s perspective, exporting American values is an attempt to impose a specific cultural and moral code on tribes that have their own established “value infusion”.
Prager categorizes the world’s conflict into three competing ideologies: “Islamist,” “Leftist,” and “American”. He argues that Leftism and Islamism are “moral failures” and that American values are the “only viable program” for goodness.
Mearsheimer would argue that this categorization is itself an exercise in “identity politics,” used to “mobilize” the American public against perceived external threats. Mearsheimer posits that states and groups act based on “security competition,” not because they are inherently good or evil. Where Prager sees a moral struggle between “American values” and “evil” (which he defines as the infliction of cruelty), Mearsheimer would see a structural struggle for power where “moral or religious justifications” are simply “tools used to mobilize populations”.
Prager’s work is a vigorous rejection of the moral relativism he associates with the Left, which he argues teaches that “one man’s evil is another man’s good”. Prager insists on objective, God-based morality.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology supports the idea that moral codes are not discovered through “pure reason” but are “imposed” by socialization. While Mearsheimer would likely agree with Prager that morality is often “local” and “tribal,” he would also suggest that Prager’s “American Trinity” is merely the “local” and “tribal” moral code of the United States, masquerading as a universal truth. Mearsheimer would contend that Prager’s argument does not resolve the “zero-sum” nature of the international system; it simply shifts the battleground from a struggle of competing religions to a struggle of competing secular and religious ideologies.

Pinsof’s essay, “A Big Misunderstanding,” provides a potent lens through which to examine Dennis Prager’s Still the Best Hope. Pinsof contends that the “misunderstanding” myth is a strategic narrative used by intellectuals to frame themselves as the essential guides for a “broken” species. In this framework, Prager’s work is not an objective search for truth, but a calculated effort to define a specific social hierarchy.

Applying Pinsof’s framework to Prager’s book reveals several key parallels.

Prager frames the world’s problems — political, moral, and social — as a failure of knowledge. He argues that humanity’s struggles stem from the abandonment of the “American Trinity” and “Judeo-Christian values”. According to Pinsof, this is the classic “intellectual” maneuver: by identifying the masses as lost or misinformed, the writer positions himself as the authority capable of “fixing” them.

Prager characterizes the Left as an ideology that succeeds through control of the media and universities. Pinsof would argue that this is merely a zero-sum competition for control of the “coercive apparatus of the state”. Prager labels his rivals’ views as “indoctrination” or “misinformation” to delegitimize them, just as the Left labels his views as “bigotry” or “hate”. It is the same tactical move in a competitive social marketplace.

Prager defines happiness as a “serious problem” and a “moral duty”. Pinsof’s essay critiques the “happiness” industry, suggesting that the pursuit of happiness is often a cover for the pursuit of status. In Prager’s frame, those who adhere to his specific moral grammar are “happy” and “good,” while those who reject it are “unhappy” or “broken”. This reinforces his status as a moral gatekeeper.

Prager claims his goal is to “end most evil” and “make a better world”. Pinsof would argue that while these are the stated motives, the actual motive is the consolidation of a coalition. By crafting a moral vocabulary that provides his audience with an identity in a “competitive social marketplace,” Prager secures his own position and authority.

Pinsof concludes that “the only misunderstanding is that there’s been a misunderstanding”. From this perspective, Prager’s work is not about correcting a lack of information; it is about providing his readers with a high-status identity and a clear set of enemies (the “Leftist,” the “Islamist”) to engage in a necessary, zero-sum social struggle. Prager does not want the misunderstanding to end, because the conflict itself is the engine of his influence.

Why the Jews?: The Reason for Antisemitism (1983)

Applying John Mearsheimer’s anthropology to Dennis Prager and Joseph Telushkin’s Why the Jews? illuminates a fundamental disagreement over whether the conflict surrounding the Jewish people is a rational response to their distinct values or an inexplicable, structural feature of international politics.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology argues that humans are “profoundly social beings” who define themselves through “strong attachments to their group”. He contends that humans are “tribal at their core” and that group conflict is a predictable outgrowth of an insecure international environment where survival is the ultimate goal.
In Why the Jews?, Prager and Telushkin argue that antisemitism is a “unique” phenomenon that cannot be explained by standard sociological theories like scapegoating, economic tension, or racism. Instead, they locate the cause of Jew-hatred directly in “Jewish distinctiveness” and the Jewish commitment to “ethical monotheism”—the belief in one God and a universal moral law.
Mearsheimer’s framework would largely support the idea that Jews have functioned as a distinct tribe with a “value infusion” that sets them apart from the dominant groups in the societies where they have lived. Mearsheimer would argue that this distinctiveness makes Jews a “threat” to the cohesion of other tribes, particularly because Jewish values challenge the religious or national “moral vocabulary” of those tribes. Where Prager and Telushkin see a unique hatred of “God’s chosen people,” Mearsheimer would see the predictable friction between a distinct, cohesive group and the dominant powers in an anarchic system.
Prager and Telushkin critique modern attempts to “dejudaize” antisemitism, arguing that these efforts ignore the historical Jewish understanding that they are hated because of their Jewish identity. They reject the “scapegoat” theory, noting that antisemitism existed long before economic or political conditions would make such an explanation plausible. Mearsheimer’s anthropology suggests that moral narratives—such as the “scapegoat” theory or religious demonization—are merely “tools used to mobilize populations”. From this perspective, whether the antisemite justifies their hostility with economic grievances, racial theories, or religious accusations, the underlying logic is the same: the tribe needs a unifying moral narrative to secure its position and “fight” the perceived competitor. Mearsheimer would argue that the “uniqueness” of antisemitism is that the Jewish tribe has remained distinct and “unassimilated” across a wider range of contexts than almost any other group, thereby remaining a constant target for “security competition” in whatever society they inhabit.
Prager and Telushkin argue that the solution to antisemitism is for Jews to influence the world to adopt “universal, God-based morality” and ethical monotheism. They view the “Jewish mission” as a way to fix a broken world. Mearsheimer’s anthropology would view this mission with deep skepticism. He argues that the international system is “anarchic” and that nations do not act based on universal moral laws, but rather on their own perception of survival and power. Mearsheimer would predict that even if the world adopted a “universal morality,” groups would still find reasons to define themselves against “others” to ensure their own survival. Therefore, Prager and Telushkin’s hope that spreading their “tribe’s” moral code will end antisemitism is, in Mearsheimer’s view, a classic “liberal dream” that fails to address the underlying reality that “humans do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups” that will always be in competition with one another.
Applying David Pinsof’s “A Big Misunderstanding” essay to Why the Jews? reveals a classic case study of an intellectual framing a complex, “broken” world to position his own moral framework as the only solution.
Pinsof argues that intellectuals thrive by selling the myth that the world’s ills are a simple lack of understanding, and that they alone possess the cure. Prager and Telushkin exhibit this myth in several ways.
The authors assert that the world’s deep-seated antisemitism is a result of a fundamental failure to grasp the nature of Judaism. By framing antisemitism as a “misunderstanding” of the Jewish role in history, the authors position themselves as the essential guides who can “re-educate” humanity. Pinsof would argue this is the typical intellectual ego-project—collecting “misunderstandings” to cement the speaker’s status as a savior.
The authors frame the world as divided between those who accept the “American Trinity” (Judeo-Christian) value system and those—specifically the “Islamist” and the “Leftist”—who oppose it. Pinsof’s framework suggests that this is not about fixing a confusion, but about “dunking on the masses” and derogating rivals in a high-stakes competition for status and control of the moral narrative. The authors categorize their opponents not as people with different interests, but as people who have succumbed to “appalling libels” or “dehumanization”.
The authors describe a world where Jews have been “select targets of violence” for millennia, describing this as a “frightening time”. Pinsof’s essay concludes that intellectuals often study the “hole” we are stuck in, and in Why the Jews?, the authors have built a career around meticulously cataloging this “hole” of Jew-hatred. Pinsof would suggest that for the authors, this misery is the necessary backdrop for their own moral authority; if the world understood the “Jew” as they do, they would be the architects of a new order.
The authors claim their motive is to “end most evil” and save civilization. Pinsof’s critique of “effective altruism” and “stated motives” applies here: the actual motive is to forge a powerful coalition around a specific “moral grammar”. By providing readers with a framework to identify their enemies (the “Jew-haters” on the Left and in the Muslim world) and their allies (the “Judeo-Christian” West), the authors provide a powerful “coalition technology” for their tribe.
Pinsof’s essay would view Why the Jews? as a sophisticated device for signaling in-group identity. The authors do not expect their work to actually end antisemitism, because the existence of “the haters” is essential to the authors’ own status and their coalition’s political and moral identity. In the Pinsof frame, the authors are savvy primates who understand exactly what they are doing: using their version of history to win the status game.

Think a Second Time (1995)

Applying the anthropology of John Mearsheimer to Dennis Prager’s Think a Second Time reveals a fundamental clash between Mearsheimer’s structural, group-centric realism and Prager’s moral universalism.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology argues that humans are “profoundly social beings” shaped by intense, lifelong “socialization” within specific groups. He contends that humans are “tribal at their core,” and he posits that individual reasoning is far less important than the “value infusion” provided by one’s family and society.
Prager’s Think a Second Time offers a different view, arguing that the belief that “people are basically good” is “untrue and dangerous”. Prager posits that human nature is “neither basically good nor evil,” but prone to evil, and that the individual must wage an “inner battle” against their own nature to achieve goodness. Mearsheimer would argue that Prager’s “inner battle” is a form of individualist moral philosophy that ignores the structural reality of group identity. From Mearsheimer’s perspective, what Prager describes as an “inner battle” for “goodness” is actually the process by which individuals are socialized into the specific moral code of their own tribe.
Prager argues that the “only solution to evil” is “ethical monotheism”—a universal, God-based moral code that applies to all of humanity. He claims this code is a “higher authority” that exists independently of human or societal opinion.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology would classify Prager’s “ethical monotheism” as another example of a “liberal dream” or “universalist ideology”. Mearsheimer asserts that humans are “born into social groups or societies that shape their identities” and that moral reasoning is always “local” and “tribal”. Mearsheimer would argue that Prager’s claim of a universal code is an attempt to define the “tribe” of humanity in a way that ignores the persistent reality of group competition, where moral narratives serve as “tools used to mobilize populations” rather than as objective truths.
Prager expresses frustration that many people are not “preoccupied with good and evil,” arguing that a lack of moral preoccupation is a major source of personal and societal decay. He critiques the “Therapeutic Mentality” that seeks to “explain” away evil through psychology rather than moral judgment.
Mearsheimer’s framework would analyze Prager’s critique of the “Therapeutic Mentality” as a struggle over the moral vocabulary of society. Mearsheimer suggests that groups do not fight over the definition of evil because they are objectively wrong; they fight because they are in “security competition”. Prager’s call to “fight evil” and “judge actions” is a manifestation of his group’s effort to maintain its moral framework in a world where other tribes are operating under different, often conflicting, moral systems. For Mearsheimer, Prager’s concern with “good and evil” is not a battle to save the world, but a standard feature of group identity in an anarchic world where each group must define itself against an “other” to ensure its survival.

Applying David Pinsof’s “A Big Misunderstanding” essay to Think a Second Time by Dennis Prager highlights how intellectuals use the narrative of “misunderstanding” to solidify their status and coalesce their ideological base.
Pinsof argues that intellectuals thrive by diagnosing humanity as “broken” and positioning themselves as the necessary physicians. Prager’s work is a masterclass in this strategy.
Prager opens by noting, “I have written Think a Second Time because most people don’t think a second time”. By establishing the public as incapable of serious thought, Prager casts himself as the indispensable guide. Pinsof’s framework suggests this is the quintessential status-building move: declaring the masses misinformed so the intellectual can claim authority.
Prager posits that “unclear thinking is a major source of social and personal problems”. Pinsof would argue this is a perfect example of the “misunderstanding” myth—reducing the world’s complex power structures and zero-sum competitions to mere cognitive error.
Prager devotes a large portion of the book to critiquing liberalism, framing it as a “once-great ideology” that has gone “awry”. In the Pinsof frame, this is not an objective critique, but a tactical attempt to gain status by derogating a rival tribe and defining the moral grammar of his own. By framing the liberal-conservative divide as a difference in intellectual clarity rather than competing interests, Prager reinforces the status of those within his own coalition.
Prager argues that “clarity in fact enhances happiness” and positions his book as a manual for this clarity. Pinsof suggests that such “happiness” rhetoric often serves as a cover for the pursuit of status and authority. Prager is not just teaching; he is offering a high-status identity to his readers, distinguishing them from the “confused” masses who haven’t “thought a second time”.
Prager claims his primary goal is to “bring my values and ideas to as many people as possible” and “see good conquer evil”. Pinsof’s framework would encourage us to look past these stated motives to see that Prager is actually providing his readers with a “moral grammar” that validates their position in the social hierarchy. The “misunderstanding” he identifies in liberals is the fuel for his ongoing influence.
Think a Second Time is, in the Pinsof frame, a device for building coalition strength through moral signaling. It invites the reader to step out of the “confused” liberal masses and into the “clear-thinking” conservative fold, reinforcing the very divisions the book ostensibly seeks to solve.

If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil (2026)

Applying John Mearsheimer’s anthropological framework to Dennis Prager’s If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil reveals a clash between two fundamentally different ways of conceptualizing human behavior and the nature of the international and social order.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology argues that human behavior is the result of intense “socialization” within specific groups and that humans are “tribal at their core,” primarily driven by the need for survival in an anarchic environment. He contends that morality and identity are “imposed” by this group socialization, meaning that “moral or religious justifications” are essentially “tools used to mobilize populations” rather than objective, universal truths.
In If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil, Prager argues the opposite: that the belief that “people are basically good” is a dangerous, “untrue” secular idea. Prager insists that human beings have an “innate attraction to evil” and that society must focus on teaching “goodness” as an achievement—an act of suppressing one’s “selfish” and “barbaric” nature. Mearsheimer’s framework would interpret Prager’s “battle over who defines good and evil” not as a struggle for objective truth, but as a struggle to define the moral vocabulary that keeps a specific group (the “tribe” of Western/Judeo-Christian society) cohesive and distinct.
Prager advocates for “ethical monotheism” — the belief that God is the objective source of morality — as the “only proven way” to end evil on a large scale. He frames this as a universal necessity for a “good society”.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology would categorize Prager’s call for universal, God-based ethics as another “liberal dream” or a universalist ideology. Mearsheimer asserts that societies have different “value infusions” and that it is an illusion to believe that a single moral code can be imposed across the globe. From Mearsheimer’s perspective, Prager’s “ethical monotheism” functions as a powerful, tribal “glue”—a narrative that helps the American/Western group define itself against “oppositional alternatives” like Islamism and secular Leftism.
Prager views the current global landscape as a “monumental choice” between American values, Islamism, and Leftism, warning that the “death of God” has led to “massive deaths” in secular regimes. He frames this as a battle between good and evil.
Mearsheimer’s framework would analyze Prager’s warning not as a moral struggle, but as a manifestation of “security competition.” Prager is identifying groups that pose a structural challenge to the American order. Mearsheimer would argue that Prager’s focus on “good and evil” is the moral vocabulary used to mobilize the “American tribe” to confront these competitors, ensuring that its own values and structures remain dominant in an anarchic international system where survival is the only objective reality.

Applying David Pinsof’s “A Big Misunderstanding” essay to Dennis Prager’s If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil reveals a deliberate strategy of framing complex societal dilemmas as a simple failure of knowledge, which Pinsof argues is the hallmark of the intellectual seeking status.
Pinsof contends that intellectuals use the “misunderstanding” narrative to position themselves as the essential guides for a broken species. In If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil, Prager uses this strategy.
Prager defines his task as countering the “misunderstanding” that secularism can produce a good society. He argues that the “death of God” is the root cause of moral collapse and the “death of Western civilization”. By framing society as “broken” due to secularism, he positions himself as the authority capable of “fixing” it with his “Judeo-Christian values”.
Pinsof’s framework identifies this as a classic tactic to assert dominance and establish the intellectual as a necessary savior.
Prager asserts that the twentieth century—”the most secular century in history”—was also the “bloodiest,” attributing this catastrophe to secular doctrines like Nazism and Communism. Pinsof would argue that Prager is meticulously studying the “hole” of secular misery to make his own moral framework appear essential. It is the creation of a problem that only his “moral grammar” can solve.
Prager frames the “battle over who defines good and evil” as an urgent choice between his values and secularism. Pinsof posits that intellectuals use such binary labeling to delegitimize rivals and solidify their own coalition. By framing liberalism and secularism not as different interests, but as “foolish” or “dangerous” misapprehensions of reality, Prager reinforces the status of his own coalition as the only group that truly “understands”.
Prager states his motive is “to make a better world” and “see good conquer evil”. Pinsof’s essay urges us to look past these “mission statements” to the actual motive: the consolidation of a tribe in a “competitive social marketplace”. Prager’s work provides his audience with the identity of the “enlightened believer,” which serves as a powerful coalition-building tool.
Pinsof’s essay would view If There Is No God: The Battle Over Who Defines Good and Evil as a device for identity-building and status-seeking. Prager does not seek to end the misunderstanding, as the misunderstanding is what validates his authority. In the Pinsof frame, Prager and his readers are navigating a competitive marketplace where this specific moral grammar is the currency that secures their status.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Applying David Pinsof’s framework to Dennis Prager exposes a career that is a laboratory for the “misunderstanding” myth.

Prager’s entire output rests on the premise that the decline of Western civilization is a result of cognitive error—specifically, that modern people have forgotten or rejected the “Judeo-Christian values” that once ordered society. According to the Pinsof frame, this is not a genuine attempt to correct an intellectual confusion. It is a strategic deployment of a moral grammar designed to assert authority and align a specific coalition.

Where Pinsof’s target intellectual argues that if only the masses understood the “science” or the “truth” they would achieve progress, Prager argues that if only the masses returned to “wisdom,” they would achieve stability. Both rely on the same engine: the claim that the speaker possesses a corrective vision for a broken, misinformed public.

Prager’s emphasis on “Happiness Is a Serious Problem” perfectly illustrates Pinsof’s critique of the “happiness” industry. Prager treats happiness as a moral duty—something that requires “repair” or training. Pinsof argues that the pursuit of happiness is often a cover for the pursuit of status. By framing happiness as a project of moral discipline, Prager positions himself as the arbiter of that discipline. He creates a hierarchy where those who follow his moral code are “happy” (or righteous) and those who do not are “unhappy” (or broken).

Applying the Pinsof lens to Prager’s work with PragerU reveals how “misinformation” is used as a tactical label. When Prager critiques modern universities or progressive culture, he describes them as “indoctrination” or “misinformation.” Pinsof would argue that Prager is simply competing for control over the institutions that shape social reality. By labeling the opposition as purveyors of dangerous, anti-American misinformation, Prager strengthens the resolve of his own tribe, justifies his own status, and engages in a zero-sum battle for influence.

Prager’s appeal to his audience is not really about “correcting their misunderstanding” of the Bible or American history. It is about offering them a high-status identity in a competitive marketplace. He provides the vocabulary—the “moral grammar”—that his listeners use to justify their own position in the hierarchy and to identify their rivals. The “misunderstanding” he decries—that Americans are losing their way—is the necessary fiction that justifies his role as a guide and guardian of the culture.

Prager does not want to end the “misunderstanding” because the misunderstanding is the source of his status and the engine of his coalition. As Pinsof notes, the study of human nature is often the study of the hole we are stuck in; for Prager, the hole is the culture war, and his work is the act of digging it deeper.

Posted in America, Dennis Prager | Comments Off on Still the Best Hope: Why the World Needs American Values to Triumph (2012)

WP: As Christians are attacked in Israel, government shows little concern

However hard Christians have it in Israel, they are usually safer there than any other place in the Middle East*.
Here’s a universal principle that applies to this story: The more you love your religion and your people, the more likely it is that you will hate other religions and other peoples that threaten you. Christians and Jews have a long history, and for most of it, their fortune went in opposite directions. Since the Enlightenment, however, their fortunes have run in generally similar directions as secularists dominate.
The Washington Post reports:

The assault, recorded by surveillance cameras in broad daylight, shocked many. But not Nikodemus Schnabel, abbot of the Dormition Abbey, which the nun had visited before she was attacked.

Christians today are “hit, spit at, beaten,” said Schnabel, who has experienced it all — and worse. “There was a video in this case, but you can be sure there are so, so many undocumented things.”

“Believe me,” he sighed, “this is not the case of one lost soul.”

Across the Holy Land, Christians are being targeted by a tide of hostility and violence — attacks that risk drawing the ire of Christians in the United States, including evangelicals who are traditionally among Israel’s most ardent American supporters.

In Jerusalem, Christians say they are routinely harassed by ultra-Orthodox Jews and huddle in fear when Religious Zionists rampage through the Old City, destroying property during their processions.

* Iraq’s Christian population fell from about 1.5 million before 2003 to under 150,000. Syria’s Christians dropped from roughly 10 percent of the population to a fraction of that through war and emigration. Egypt’s Copts, the region’s largest Christian community, face periodic church bombings, mob violence in Upper Egypt, and a state that prosecutes the attackers inconsistently. Saudi Arabia bans public Christian worship outright. In Gaza, the Christian community has nearly vanished. Against that field, Israel looks good: Christians there have full citizenship, vote, serve in the Knesset, run schools and hospitals, outperform the Jewish majority on some educational metrics, and their numbers grow slightly rather than collapse. Nobody bombs churches in Haifa on Easter. The harassment the Post documents, spitting, shoving, arson at rural churches, is a different order of threat than what drove Christians out of Mosul.
The first complication is Lebanon. Christians there hold the presidency by constitutional design, command their own political parties and militias’ successor movements, and number perhaps 30 percent of the population. A Maronite in Beirut lives with state collapse and economic ruin, but not with minority status in the Israeli sense. Whether he is “safer” depends on whether you count Israeli airstrikes and general Lebanese dysfunction against him, which is a cost but not persecution for his faith. If Lebanon counts, Israel is arguably second, not first.
The second complication is the West Bank, which the Post article centers. Taybeh sits under Israeli security control. The settlers burning St. George and seizing olive groves operate under Israeli jurisdiction, and the state that could stop them declines to. So the comparison “Christians in Israel versus Christians elsewhere” smuggles in a boundary question. If you count only citizens inside the Green Line, Israel ranks at or near the top of the region. If you count everyone under Israeli control, the picture splits: Haifa and Nazareth on one ledger, Taybeh on another, and the Taybeh ledger looks more like the regional norm of a shrinking community squeezed out.
There is also a trajectory point. The claim is true as a snapshot. The article’s data, incidents doubling since 2023, suggests the gap is narrowing from the Israeli side, not because the region improved but because Israel’s floor is dropping. “Safest in the Middle East” is a low bar that Israel long cleared with room to spare. The story to watch is whether it keeps clearing it with the same margin.

Nationalism is part of this anti-Christian persecution, but the article points to something narrower and more useful than a general rise in in-group feeling. Israeli Jewish nationalism surged after October 7 across the whole society, yet most Israeli Jews do not spit on monks. The perpetrators come from two specific populations, and the two cases in the article have different logics.
The Jerusalem harassment is religious, not national. The spitters and shovers are mostly ultra-Orthodox and Religious Zionist youth acting out an old intra-Jewish tradition of contempt for Christianity, the tradition Itamar Ben Gvir (b. 1976) defended on radio in 2017 as “ancient.” That animus predates the state. What changed is the price. When the man who defended the Church of the Multiplication arsonists in court now runs the national police, a teenager who spits on a nun makes a reasonable bet that nothing happens to him. Harani’s point about education matters here too: a curriculum that teaches gentile hostility as a permanent condition produces graduates who treat visible Christians as legitimate targets. So the driver is less “increased nationalism” than a permission structure. The underlying attitudes were stable; enforcement and elite signaling collapsed.
Taybeh is a different phenomenon wearing the same headline. The settlers seizing Khouriyeh’s olive grove and wrecking Bassir’s cement factory target Christians as Palestinians, not as Christians. The cross on the church gives the story its Western resonance, but the land grab follows the same pattern applied to Muslim villages across the West Bank. If anything, Taybeh’s Christian identity has been a mild liability for the settlers, because it activates a constituency, American evangelicals, that Muslim victims cannot reach. Which is why the Huckabee retraction stung so much there.
Nationalism supplies the atmosphere, but the proximate cause is a government that moved the entrepreneurs of anti-gentile violence from the defendant’s table to the cabinet. Attitudes changed less than incentives did. The doubling of incidents from 2023 to 2025 tracks the Ben Gvir ministry more than it tracks any measurable shift in what ordinary Israelis believe. Demography compounds it over time, since the Haredi and Religious Zionist share of Israeli youth keeps growing, which means the population most likely to hold the old contempt is the population expanding fastest.
The victims are cheap targets. Christians in Israel number under two percent, vote in no bloc that matters to this coalition, and their foreign patrons, the Vatican and European consulates, carry no domestic cost. The only patron who might impose a price is American evangelicalism, and the article shows that lever starting to move through Carlson, Owens, and the questions aimed at Vance. If the behavior ever gets expensive, watch how fast the government rediscovers its founding values.

John J. Mearsheimer argues that the behavior of the nationalists is not an aberration of rational individuals but the predictable output of intense socialization and tribal identity.

Because humans are social beings who define themselves through their groups, individual reasoning plays a minor role in how these actors form their moral codes. The nationalists involved in these attacks were born into a society that shaped their perceptions of threat and belonging before they had the capacity to think critically about their actions. Their moral code is not a product of universalist liberal logic—which assumes individuals will respect the rights of others—but of the specific, intense socialization they received within their tribe.

From this perspective, the conflict arises because the individuals identify so strongly with their group that the survival and dominance of that group supersede abstract concerns for individual rights. They see the “other” not as an individual with inherent, universal rights, but as a potential threat to the tribe’s cohesion and security. When they act against members of other groups, they do so because they are embedded in a social structure that values tribal loyalty over liberal universalism.

Mearsheimer’s argument suggests that liberal attempts to curb this violence through appeals to universal human rights will fail. Such appeals rely on the belief that individuals can set aside their tribal identity and embrace a shared, rational moral code. Instead, he argues that the intense socialization and the tribal nature of the human animal mean that these groups will prioritize their own cohesion. The individuals act in ways that protect the group, and they are willing to make sacrifices—or commit acts of violence—because their identity is entirely bound to the success and survival of that tribe. The moral vocabulary used by these groups is a tool to reinforce this social solidarity, turning the conflict into a necessary struggle for the group’s continued existence.

Posted in Christianity, Identity, Israel | Comments Off on WP: As Christians are attacked in Israel, government shows little concern

Life as a Haredi Jew

Baruch Hasofer writes:

Unlike membership in an outlaw motorcycle club, being part of normal Haredi society brings benefits beyond a meth habit, jailtime and dental issues. For instance, if you minimally have your stuff together, you’re guaranteed gainful employment or a sinecure. Unless you have severe physical or mental issues, you’re gonna get married off to someone with whom you are basically compatible. You’re going to live in a place with very low crime. When you have many kids-!כן ירבו-they’ll grow up in a place that’s full of kids, where kids and their behavior are normal and expected, not a bizarre imposition. You can have a high expectation of seeing those kids grow up to follow in your footsteps, to aspire to live as you lived in the ways that both you and them see as important, to marry early and have lots of children. You will not be lonely, uninvited to the party, because the parties are all simchas-kiddush, weddings, engagements, circumcisions-to which everyone is invited, and they happen constantly. You will always be in places where you belong. When you die, you will be buried and mourned by your children, nephews grandchildren, greatgrandchildren, instead of by a dwindling and sad bunch of your equally old siblings and cousins.

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Moral Philosopher Derek Parfit

Derek Antony Parfit spent his career trying to answer two questions. What is a person? And can anything matter if God does not exist? He believed the second question was the most urgent question in the world, and he arranged his life so that almost nothing else could interrupt his work on it. He wore the same clothes every day. He ate the same food. He mixed instant coffee with hot water from the bathroom tap because a kettle took too long. He read philosophy while he brushed his teeth. Colleagues called him the greatest moral philosopher of his age. Strangers had never heard of him. Both facts would have struck him as beside the point.

On June 13, 1981, the fellows of All Souls College, Oxford, met to decide whether Parfit deserved a permanent post. The case for him looked unanswerable. John Rawls (1921-2002) had told the college that Parfit was the most important moral philosopher of his generation, and Rawls based that judgment on fewer than a dozen articles. The referees admitted the publishing record was thin and explained it as a symptom of standards higher than other men could imagine. “He is not as other men are,” wrote R. M. Hare (1919-2002), the White's Professor of Moral Philosophy. The committee that judged academic qualifications recommended his election without dissent. The college said no. Parfit was thirty-eight years old, he had published no book, and All Souls had run out of patience.

He did the arithmetic. He could reapply for the senior research fellowship in March 1984, which meant a book had to appear, or be about to appear, a month or two before that. He had about twenty months. What came out of those twenty months was Reasons and Persons, published by Oxford University Press on April 12, 1984, a book many philosophers rank as the most important work of moral philosophy since Henry Sidgwick (1838-1900). The rejection that humiliated him produced the book that made him permanent. When the college met again in mid-June 1984, Hare wrote that he had called Parfit the probable best moral philosopher of his generation three years earlier and now wished to withdraw the word probable. Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997) rose and spoke for him, a speech Berlin later described as designed to leave no dry eye and no possible reason for refusal. The fellows elected him. He stayed at All Souls for the rest of his working life.

The life began far from Oxford. Parfit was born on December 11, 1942, in Chengdu, in the Chinese province of Sichuan. His parents, Norman and Jessie Parfit, were doctors and medical missionaries who taught preventive medicine. The missionary line ran back a generation further on both sides. His father drifted from the mission toward sympathy with Mao, a conversion he managed to square with his pacifism. When the family left China in 1945, the small boy rode home under the gun turret of a Liberator bomber. The family settled in Oxford. The faith did not survive the journey. Parfit later said he abandoned Christianity as a boy because he could not worship a God who would send anyone to hell. The theological revolt of an eight-year-old became the program of a seventy-year career. If God could not ground morality, something else had to, or nothing did.

He went to Eton as a top scholar, edited the school paper, wrote poems, and won the history prizes. At Balliol College, Oxford, from 1961 to 1964, he read history and finished as the best history undergraduate of his year. Then came the swerve. A Harkness Fellowship sent him to America, where he sat in on classes at Columbia and Harvard and discovered that the questions he cared about belonged to philosophy, not history. He came back to Oxford in 1967, started the BPhil at Balliol, and took tutorials from Peter Strawson (1919-2006), A. J. Ayer (1910-1989), David Pears (1921-2009), and Hare. That autumn he sat the All Souls examination and won a Prize Fellowship, the most coveted academic prize in England. He never finished a graduate degree in philosophy. He never needed one. In 1971 he published an article called “Personal Identity” in the Philosophical Review, and after that the credential question closed itself.

All Souls has no undergraduates. It asks almost nothing of its fellows except that they think. For most men the arrangement breeds idleness or eccentric hobbies. For Parfit it removed the last excuse. He had the quiet, the library, the dinners he could skip, and the long corridor of years. What he could not do was finish. In his 1973 application for a Research Fellowship he promised three books. None appeared. He wrote and rewrote, circulated drafts to enormous lists of colleagues, absorbed their objections, answered the objections with new distinctions, and sent the manuscript out again, longer than before. The method looked like paralysis. It was closer to a theory of knowledge. Parfit believed philosophy was a cooperative hunt for objective truth, and a draft was a trap he set for his own errors. Other people were the instrument that sprang it.

The argument that made him famous concerned what a person is. Common sense treats identity as a deep fact. There must be an answer, we assume, to the question of whether a future person will be me, and everything hangs on that answer. Parfit denied it. What matters, he argued, is not identity but psychological continuity and connectedness: chains of memory, intention, desire, and character that hold by degrees and can branch, fade, or overlap. He called the bundle Relation R. To force the point he built thought experiments that read like pulp science fiction. A machine scans your body, destroys it, and builds an exact replica on Mars. A surgeon divides a brain and puts half in each of two bodies. Which one is you? Parfit's answer was that the question has no deep answer, and that this does not matter, because Relation R survives even where identity gives out.

The doctrine sounds bleak. Parfit experienced it as release. In Reasons and Persons he wrote that his life had once seemed like a glass tunnel through which he moved faster every year, with darkness at the end, and that when he gave up the belief in a deep further self, the walls of the tunnel disappeared. The distance between his present self and his future self grew; so did the distance between himself and other people shrink. If the border of the self is a matter of degree, egoism loses its metaphysical charter. Prudence and morality start to look like neighbors. He took comfort in the thought that his death would break no deep thread, only end one chain of connections among many.

Reasons and Persons did more than dissolve the self. Its final section invented a field. Parfit asked what present people owe to future people, and found that the question breaks our tools. Choose one energy policy and certain people will be born; choose another and different people will be born instead. If the risky policy leads to lives that are hard but still worth living, whom has it wronged? The people it burdened owe it their existence. He named this the Non-Identity Problem, and no one has solved it. He then pressed further and derived what he called the Repugnant Conclusion: on assumptions most people accept, an enormous population of lives barely worth living comes out better than a small population of excellent lives. He hated the conclusion. He spent thirty years trying to escape it and never did. The two puzzles now sit under every serious argument about climate policy, existential risk, and the movements that call themselves effective altruism and longtermism. Parfit organized nothing and led nothing, but the people who ask whether humanity's remote future should govern present choices are working inside rooms he built.

The man who wrote these arguments became a legend of another kind. In September 2011 Larissa MacFarquhar (b. 1968) profiled him in the New Yorker, and the portrait fixed the public image. He struck her as somehow not quite present in his own body, without the ordinary anti-social emotions of envy, malice, and dominance. He did not credit his conscious mind with his own work. He pictured his thinking self as a minister at a large desk who writes a question, drops it in the out-tray, and twiddles his thumbs while unseen civil servants in a back room labor over the answer and return it to the in-tray. He was helpless before other people's moods, above all unhappiness, which flooded him. He could form no mental images of his own past; his memories came to him as propositions, facts without pictures. He wept at the mere thought of suffering, and he held that no one, not even Hitler, could deserve to suffer. The wardrobe was uniform: white shirts and gray trousers bought in bulk so that dressing required no decision. He carried water in a vodka bottle. He rode an exercise bike with a book propped on the handlebars. Every minute saved from the body went to the work.

The austerity had one exception, and the exception obeyed the same law. Parfit photographed buildings. He shot three places only, Oxford, Venice, and St. Petersburg, and he traveled to the last two every year for the purpose. He worked at dawn and dusk, in slanting light, water, and mist. People rarely appear in the frames, and where they do they look like accidents. He employed a professional retoucher and gave the man instructions: remove the army truck parked before the Winter Palace, strip the scaffolding from the front of San Marco, take out the telephone wires, the litter, the passersby. His widow explained the project in a sentence. “He was capturing an ideal.” The perfectionism that delayed his books for decades governed the pictures too. He wanted the buildings as they ought to be, permanent, with the accidents deleted. It was his metaphysics with a camera.

He was not the recluse the anecdotes suggest. Younger philosophers who sent him papers received back comments longer than the papers. He built careers other than his own. His partner from the early 1980s was Janet Radcliffe Richards (b. 1944), a philosopher and bioethicist, and the two married in 2010, the same year Oxford's mandatory retirement rule pushed him out of his fellowship at sixty-seven. He took the eviction hard. He kept working through recurring visiting posts at Harvard, New York University, and Rutgers, where graduate students met a tall white-haired man who would pursue an objection down a corridor and into the street because the argument was not finished.

The last project was the largest. On What Matters appeared in two volumes in 2011, with a third published in 2017 after his death. The book grew from a decades-long draft called Climbing the Mountain, and the title carried the thesis. Parfit argued that the three great modern moral theories, the Kantian, the contractualist, and the consequentialist, are not rivals but climbers ascending the same mountain from different sides. Revised into their best versions, he claimed, they converge on a single set of principles, which he called the Triple Theory. Beneath the convergence claim sat the deeper one. Parfit was an atheist who insisted that moral truths exist anyway, objective, unmade by us, binding whether or not anyone cares. Some things matter, he argued, and their mattering is as hard a fact as arithmetic. He said that if this were false, if all reasons bottomed out in desire and convention, then nothing would matter, and his life's work, and everyone's, would have been pointless. He did not present this as one thesis among others. It was the wager of his existence.

The philosophical world honored him and divided over him. The British Academy elected him a fellow in 1986. He received the Rolf Schock Prize in Logic and Philosophy in 2014. Reasons and Persons became the best-selling academic philosophy title in the modern history of Oxford University Press. But many colleagues thought the mountain had no single summit, that Kant's dignity, the contractualist's reasonable rejection, and the consequentialist's ledger of outcomes run on different engines and meet nowhere. Bernard Williams (1929-2003), the philosopher Parfit admired most and agreed with least, had spent his career arguing that the impartial view from nowhere leaves out what makes a human life worth leading. The dispute is not settled. Parfit's answer to his critics was more argument, more drafts, more replies folded into the text, until On What Matters swelled past two thousand pages, a book that reads less like a treatise than like a man conducting his own posthumous seminar in advance.

He died in London in the first hours of January 2, 2017, at seventy-four, with the third volume finished and in press. In 2023 David Edmonds (b. 1964), a former student, published Parfit: A Philosopher and His Mission to Save Morality, and the biography weighed the explanations for the strangeness: the pressure of the 1981 snub, an autistic cast of mind Edmonds first credited and later doubted, or the simpler possibility that the work itself, pursued without remainder, will make any man strange.

The story invites a moral, and the temptation should be resisted, because Parfit resisted it. He did not think his life exemplary. He thought his questions urgent. He gave up variety in food, clothes, travel, and company the way a man running toward something drops what he carries. What he ran toward was a proof that the death of God did not kill morality, that suffering is bad whoever suffers it, that the future people who will never thank us have claims on us now, and that the self whose comfort we guard so fiercely is a looser and less important thing than we fear. He wanted to be survived not by a reputation but by conclusions. On his own theory, that wish makes sense. What mattered about Derek Parfit was never the man inside the borders. It was Relation R, the chain of thought still connecting, still branching, running forward through people he never met.

Notes

The June 13, 1981 All Souls rejection scene, the twenty-month calculation, the Rawls, Hare, and Glover references, Berlin‘s June 1984 speech, and the OUP sales claim come from David Edmonds‘ account excerpted in the New Statesman, April 13, 2023.

The father’s turn toward Maoism, the Liberator bomber gun turret, and the April 12, 1984 publication date come from the Oxford Alumni review of the Edmonds biography.

The 1967 All Souls exam sitting, the tutors, and the 1973 application promising three books come from Jonathan Dancy‘s British Academy memoir of Parfit, which draws on the All Souls college file.

Photography details, including the three cities only, annual trips, dawn and dusk light, the retoucher, the army truck at the Winter Palace, the San Marco scaffolding, Richards’ “capturing an ideal” quote, the weeping at suffering, and the Hitler line, come from the New Statesman piece on the Narrative Projects exhibition, June 2018.

The civil-servant image of his mind, the absence of anti-social emotions, the flooding empathy, and the propositional memories without pictures come from Larissa MacFarquhar, “How to Be Good”, The New Yorker, September 5, 2011.

The vodka bottle of water comes from the Princeton University Press page for Edmonds’ biography, Parfit: A Philosopher and His Mission to Save Morality, quoting a review.

Mandatory retirement at 67 in 2010 and the visiting posts at Harvard, NYU, and Rutgers come from Wikipedia on Derek Parfit.

Edmonds’ shifting view on autism comes from reader accounts of the biography at Steps to Phaeacia and The End of Better.

Reasonable extrapolations I made: the boyhood loss of faith over hell, widely reported in both the MacFarquhar profile and the Edmonds biography, though I did not pull a page reference; the instant coffee with tap water and reading while brushing teeth, standard Parfit lore from the same two sources; the “glass tunnel” passage, his own words in Reasons and Persons, part three, near the end of the personal identity discussion; white shirts and gray trousers bought in bulk, from MacFarquhar and Edmonds; the exercise bike with a book, from the same sources; the closing line of the second volume of On What Matters about our obligations to the future, which I paraphrased into the final paragraph’s themes rather than quoting; and general characteristics of All Souls, including no undergraduates and minimal duties, which are matters of common knowledge about the institution.

‘How to be Good’

Larissa MacFarquhar writes in The New Yorker on Sep. 5, 2011:

Parfit lived near his parents in Oxford, and saw them once a week, for Sunday lunch. His mother read up on philosophy to try to understand his work, but since Parfit saw her only with his father they couldn’t talk much about it. His father was baffled by him; he couldn’t understand why he became a philosopher—he thought he ought to have been a scientist. He tried, unsuccessfully, to interest his son in tennis.

Joanna [Derek’s sister] struggled to find work. Finally, she managed to qualify as a nanny. She became pregnant and had a son, Tom, whom she raised on her own. A few years later, she adopted a daughter. She loved her children, but they didn’t make her happy. Every few months, she telephoned Parfit to talk to him about how depressed she was and how badly things were going. He dreaded those calls. Then, in her thirties, she died in a car crash.

She had not made a will, and after she died there was a harrowing fight over her son. Her daughter was re-adopted quickly, but Jessie was determined that Tom should be placed in a family she knew. The trouble was, his placement was in the hands of the local council, and Jessie so antagonized the council with her uncompromising opinions and her upper-middle-class accent that it sought actively to thwart her. Jessie was in agony, and Parfit became very emotionally involved. The case ended up in court, and he wrote a long and passionate brief supporting his mother. At last, the case was resolved in their favor. Jessie died soon afterward, although she was not sick or particularly old. Once Tom was safely placed with his new family, nearby, Parfit never saw him.

As the years went by, Theo came to accept that although her brother loved her, it was simply not important to him to spend time with his family. He was extremely softhearted, and she knew that in a crisis he would always help her, but deepening ties to his past through continuity, valuing blood as a source of kinship—these were just not part of who he was. Years later, Parfit wrote to her in a letter that they had reacted to their unhappy family in opposite ways. They were like the Rhine and the Danube: they begin very close, but then they diverge—one flows to the Atlantic, the other to the Black Sea.

Sometime around 1982 or ’83, the philosopher Janet Radcliffe Richards moved from London to Oxford, having ended her first marriage. She had become well known a few years earlier for writing “The Skeptical Feminist,” a fierce attack on anti-rational tendencies in the women’s movement, and was teaching philosophy of science at the Open University. She was very beautiful and very feminine. She attended a seminar that Parfit was teaching. She had never encountered anyone like him: he was obviously a strange person, but not in any of the usual ways. Afterward, Amartya Sen, a friend, who was co-teaching the seminar, greeted her, and, when she left, Parfit asked Sen who she was…

Parfit read Richards’s book and wrote her a letter about it, suggesting that they meet and discuss it further. He went out and bought three identical black suits. They met. He offered to rent her a computer. (He had just discovered computers—he had bought one secondhand and was very excited about it.) With unpracticed but single-minded diligence, he pursued her.

She was bewildered. An eminent philosopher had sent her a letter that in tone and content resembled an academic article, and now he was offering to rent her a computer. How much did it cost to rent a computer? He had not named an amount. He certainly seemed very interested in talking with her, and he was charming and brilliant and unexpectedly good-looking, but what was he up to? He never flirted—he talked to her exactly as he would talk to a man. After a time, she deduced from the sheer frequency of his attentions that his interest must be romantic, but this was not apparent in his behavior. She began to wonder if he would propose to her before they had kissed…

Soon, having won her, Parfit burrowed back into his work. At first, this was fine—she didn’t want a man around all the time—but then they decided to buy a house together. They had intended to look in Oxford, but Parfit lost his heart to a beautiful eighteenth-century house near Avebury, a Neolithic henge monument in Wiltshire. He had to have it—he bid the price up and was terribly anxious until the deed was signed. Then, happy to have won his house, he sat in his study with the blinds down. Ten minutes away, there was a glorious bluebell wood, and he loved bluebell woods—one of his fears about global warming was that it would get too hot for bluebells—but Richards couldn’t get him to go there. It existed: that was enough. Eventually, she realized that her need for human company, modest as it was, was greater than he was capable of meeting. They sold the house, she bought a house in London, and he went back to his rooms in All Souls. From then until he retired, more than ten years later, they spent very little time together, although they spoke on the phone several times a day.

The Great Delusion

If Mearsheimer’s anthropology is correct, the implications for the work of Derek Parfit are profound.
Mearsheimer argues that humans are inherently social, tribal, and shaped by socialization to the point where individualism is secondary. He posits that reason is often a tool used after social and innate sentiments have already determined our moral codes. This perspective directly challenges the project of a philosopher like Parfit, who spent his career using rigorous, individualistic reason to deconstruct personal identity and morality.
Parfit’s reductionist view suggests that a person is nothing more than a collection of physical and mental states linked by psychological continuity. He strips away the idea of a separately existing self, or “soul,” to argue that personal identity is not what matters. In his framework, one should move toward an impersonal morality that transcends the boundaries of the individual.
If Mearsheimer is right, Parfit’s philosophical project suffers from a category error. Mearsheimer would argue that by attempting to use pure, decontextualized reason to arrive at moral truths, Parfit ignores the very “socialization” and “innate sentiments” that define how humans think. While Parfit uses thought experiments like teletransportation to isolate the individual and test rational consistency, Mearsheimer would likely contend that these experiments are artificial. They remove the subject from the social, tribal, and developmental context that shapes the human mind long before it can engage in the type of abstract logic Parfit prizes.
Where Parfit seeks to liberate the individual from the “delusion” of a robust self—thereby allowing for greater altruism—Mearsheimer suggests that this individual is not a free-floating agent waiting to be liberated. The individual is already “embedded in a society.” For Mearsheimer, the “delusion” is not the self, but the liberal belief that humans can be treated as atomistic, rational actors who formulate moral codes through critical reflection.
If Mearsheimer’s account of human nature holds, Parfit’s attempt to construct a universal, rationalist ethic might be seen as an exercise in high-level intellectual abstraction that fails to account for the actual psychological and social structures governing human behavior. Parfit’s focus on the irrelevance of personal boundaries might align with a universalist liberal goal, but Mearsheimer would likely argue that humans are fundamentally wired to prioritize their own group, making the adoption of such an impersonal, universalist morality psychologically unnatural and politically difficult to sustain.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology views the Kantian, the contractualist, and the consequentialist moral theories as expressions of liberal universalism. He considers them to be deeply flawed because they rely on the assumption that individuals are atomistic actors who reach conclusions through reason, rather than products of intense socialization and tribal sentiment.

The Kantian project rests on the idea that an individual can use pure reason to arrive at a moral law that applies to all people at all times. Mearsheimer rejects this because he believes individuals are not autonomous thinkers who form their own moral codes. Instead, he argues that our preferences and values are heavily predetermined by our upbringing and the specific society into which we are born. He would see the Kantian claim—that a rational person can transcend his local, tribal identity to embrace a universal duty—as an illusion. For Mearsheimer, human behavior is driven by strong attachments to one’s own group, not by a commitment to a universal principle that ignores those attachments.

Contractualism, as framed by thinkers like T.M. Scanlon, posits that morality consists of principles for the general regulation of behavior that no one could reasonably reject as a basis for informed, unforced, general agreement. Mearsheimer would view this as a misunderstanding of how humans operate. Contractualism assumes that individuals can enter into a social contract by setting aside their particular interests in favor of a mutually beneficial arrangement. Mearsheimer’s anthropology suggests that humans are tribal creatures who prioritize the survival and prosperity of their own society over any abstract, universal agreement. He would argue that people do not choose their moral constraints through a rational, egalitarian process; they inherit them through socialization, which effectively binds them to their group and often pits them against others.

Consequentialism, most notably utilitarianism, evaluates the morality of an action by its outcome—specifically, the goal of maximizing the good for the greatest number. Mearsheimer would argue that this is a fantasy because it ignores the tribal nature of human beings. A person is inherently biased toward his own group. When an individual calculates the consequences of an action, he does not weigh the interests of all humans equally. He is fundamentally hardwired to weigh the interests of his own tribe much more heavily than the interests of outsiders. Mearsheimer would suggest that any attempt to enforce a system that demands universal impartiality will fail because it demands that people act against their own deepest social instincts.

Mearsheimer would argue that these three theories are products of an elite, Western, liberal mindset that ignores the reality of human nature. They assume that if people just reason well enough, they will move toward a universal moral consensus. He would counter that because we are born into tribes and nurtured by them, our moral reasoning is always local, tribal, and focused on the survival of our own group. These theories represent a form of idealism that ignores the profound social reality that shapes our identities.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Derek Parfit occupies a strange, complex place within the framework David Pinsof describes. On one hand, Parfit fits the classic archetype of an intellectual who believes the world is a series of misunderstandings to be corrected. He believed that if people only understood the nature of personal identity or the logic of moral reasons, they would stop being trapped by self-interest and parochial concern. He essentially spent his life building a massive, intricate ladder of logic—his books—to help humanity climb out of what he saw as a moral hole.

Pinsof’s critique targets the intellectual who assumes that human behavior is a collection of cognitive glitches. Parfit, however, did not view humans as broken machines in need of a tune-up. He viewed the self as a philosophical mistake. He did not claim that tribalism or self-interest were errors of information processing; he argued that they rested on a metaphysical error—the belief that the boundary between oneself and others is absolute. He thought this belief was not just a strategic bias, but a genuine, objective falsehood about the structure of reality.

The tension between these two perspectives is stark:

According to Pinsof, humans are highly evolved, rational agents pursuing status and resources. What intellectuals call “biases” are smart, self-serving heuristics. Parfit’s attempt to argue people out of their self-interest would be, in this view, a classic case of an intellectual mistaking stated motives for actual ones. Parfit’s “morality” would be dismissed as a high-status signal, a way for an Oxford don to demonstrate his moral superiority while ignoring the zero-sum competition for status and resources that governs human life.

According to Parfit, humans are not mere status-seeking animals, or at least, they do not have to be. Parfit believed that through intense, cold, analytic reflection, it is possible to transcend the evolutionary programming that binds us to our own future selves and our narrow, tribal interests. He did not treat philosophy as a tool for political advocacy or social engineering, but as a path to objective truth. He would likely agree with Pinsof that humans are motivated by things other than “happiness,” but he would argue that the “status” or “dominance” Pinsof highlights are simply irrational goals once you strip away the false importance of the individual self.

Parfit was not trying to “save the world” through policy nudges or by correcting “misinformation.” He was trying to change the fundamental way humans conceptualize their own existence. He was a radical individualist who ended up advocating for a radical form of altruism.

If Pinsof is correct, Parfit’s life work is an example of the intellectual’s “misunderstanding” myth—a man who dedicated his life to the idea that he could talk people out of their evolved nature. If Parfit is correct, Pinsof’s cynical realism is just another form of parochialism, a failure to see that the “real” motives he describes are only real because we have not yet done the work to think our way out of them. Parfit’s life is perhaps the ultimate test of whether an intellectual can transcend the evolutionary logic Pinsof maps, or if that attempt is just one more strategy in the game.

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The Life of George Gilder

In the summer of 2002, a reporter named Gary Rivlin drove to Great Barrington, Massachusetts, to interview the man who had been, two years earlier, the most influential stock tout in America. George Gilder (b. 1939) sat in his office looking out a window onto Main Street. The Berkshire town around him was the landscape of his childhood, white clapboard and old money gone quiet, a place where the Gilded Age had left its summer cottages and its debts. “I knew that it was going to crash, I really did,” Gilder told him. Rivlin raised his eyebrows. He had read years of the Gilder Technology Report and found no warning in it. Gilder amended himself. He had told people in early 2000 to sell half their shares. Then, in a tone Rivlin heard as self-rebuke: “I didn’t say it often. I didn’t put it in a newsletter.” He had said it only in the Telecosm Lounge, his online salon for paying subscribers. The newsletter that once counted 110,000 subscribers had fallen to about 8,500. The tax code treated each canceled subscription as earned income, so as his readers fled, his tax bill grew. He owed the IRS more than he had. He hoped to keep his farm in Tyringham if he could make $10,000 monthly payments to a former partner for the next seventeen years. Wired titled the piece “The Madness of King George.” The man contemplating ruin on Main Street was, at that moment, sixty-two years old, the author of a million-selling book, the most quoted living author of a president, and the closest thing American conservatism had produced to a prophet of the digital age.

The career that ended up in that office began in the old Protestant establishment. George Franklin Gilder was born in New York City on November 29, 1939. His father, Richard Watson Gilder II, flew for the Army Air Forces in World War II and was killed when George was two. The family name carried literary weight. His great-great-grandfather’s line included Richard Watson Gilder (1844-1909), the poet and editor of The Century Magazine, a man at the center of American letters in the age of Twain and Whitman. Through his mother’s side he descended from Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933). His father’s college roommate, David Rockefeller (1915-2017), served as his godfather and took a hand in his upbringing. Gilder spent most of his childhood with his mother and stepfather on a dairy farm in Tyringham, Massachusetts, in the Berkshires. The combination tells the story of a class: names that opened doors, a farm that demanded chores, a dead father, and the Rockefellers hovering at the edge of the household. He came from the world that ran American institutions, and he spent fifty years attacking the habits of mind that world lived by.

He went to Phillips Exeter Academy, then Harvard, graduating in 1962. He studied under Henry Kissinger (1923-2023) and helped found Advance, a student journal of Republican reform. He served in the Marine Corps. In the 1960s he wrote speeches for Nelson Rockefeller (1908-1979), George Romney (1907-1995), and Richard Nixon (1913-1994), and worked as a spokesman for Senator Charles Mathias (1922-2010) while antiwar protesters filled Washington; some of them frightened him out of his apartment. With his college roommate Bruce Chapman (b. 1940) he wrote The Party That Lost Its Head (1966), an attack on the anti-intellectualism of the Goldwater campaign. He was, by pedigree and position, a liberal Republican. He edited the Ripon Forum, the journal of the liberal Republican Ripon Society, from a fellowship at Harvard.

Then came the firing that marks the hinge of his life. In 1971 Nixon vetoed the Comprehensive Child Development Act, a bill that promised a national system of federally funded daycare. Gilder defended the veto in the Ripon Forum. The Ripon Society fired him. The episode looks small. It was not. The moderate Republican establishment believed social order could be engineered by expert design. Gilder had come to believe order grew from marriage, fatherhood, and work, and that the state could subsidize the family or replace it but not both. He later recanted his attack on the Goldwater Right in words that measure the distance he traveled: the men he had dismissed as extremists in his youth, he said, turned out to know more than he did, and were right on almost every major policy issue from welfare to Vietnam to Keynes.

The 1970s made him notorious. He moved to New Orleans, worked mornings for a Republican Senate candidate, and wrote Sexual Suicide (1973), revised and reissued as Men and Marriage (1986). The argument ran against everything the decade believed. Civilization, Gilder wrote, depends on a sexual constitution that weans men from their instincts for predation, war, and the hunt, and binds them to women, children, and the future as fathers and providers. The single man is a social hazard. He cited FBI figures: single men were some 13 percent of the population over fourteen and committed nearly 90 percent of major and violent crimes. Welfare and feminism, in his account, broke the constitution. Welfare made men what he called cuckolds of the state. Time named him Male Chauvinist Pig of the Year. He wore the title as a decoration. The early writing reads now as sweeping and harsh, and some of his statements about women’s biology and about failed cultures remain indefensible as stated. But the architecture of his thought was already visible. He wanted to know what produces responsibility and sacrifice, and he believed policy fails when it treats people as interchangeable units and ignores the sexual and moral foundations of economic life. He followed with Visible Man: A True Story of Post-Racist America (1978), the story of a young Black man whom, in Gilder’s telling, the welfare system had unmade, a book The New York Times summarized as an account of talent spoiled by too-ready indolence.

Nothing in this record predicted what happened next. In early 1981 Basic Books published Wealth and Poverty. The timing was exact. Reagan had just taken office. The New York Times reviewed it within a month of the inauguration under the headline “A Guide to Capitalism” and called it a creed for capitalism worthy of intelligent people. Ronald Reagan (1911-2004) read it and wrote Gilder letters about it. He gave a copy to Bob Dole (1923-2021) and told him to read it. Jack Kemp (1935-2009) and Newt Gingrich (b. 1943) distributed it in Congress. David Stockman (b. 1946) gave it to the cabinet. Bill Casey (1913-1987) pushed it on the White House speechwriters, and that, Gilder later said, is how he became Reagan’s most quoted living author. The book sold more than a million copies.

What the book sold was not a tax table. It was a theology. Capitalism begins with giving, Gilder argued. The entrepreneur commits capital, labor, and imagination into uncertainty before he knows whether the market will answer. Profit is not greed rewarded. It is information: a signal that invention has met human need. Socialism and the welfare state fail because they promise return without risk, taking without giving. Gilder wove the sexual sociology of his earlier books into the economics. Family breakdown and demand-side policy produced poverty; family, faith, work, and supply-side policy produced wealth. He said his purpose was to unite a conservative movement split between traditionalists and libertarians, and the book did that, giving the Christian Right and the tax-cutters a common scripture. Reagan absorbed the language whole. In a later speech the president described America emerging like a chrysalis from the economy of the Industrial Revolution into an economy of mind, where the freedom to create is the most precious natural resource. The sentence is pure Gilder.

Where a career politician of ideas might have spent the next twenty years defending Reaganomics on panels, Gilder did something stranger. He went to study physics. He moved his attention to Silicon Valley and to the California Institute of Technology, where Carver Mead (b. 1934), the physicist who had named Moore’s Law, became his teacher. Mead gave him the maxim he repeated for the rest of his life: listen to the technology, find out what it is telling you. Out of that apprenticeship came Microcosm: The Quantum Revolution in Economics and Technology (1989), which treated the microchip as a civilizational event, the overthrow of matter by mind. Value was migrating from mass and material to design and information. Life After Television: The Coming Transformation of Media and American Life (1990), an 86-page book underwritten by Federal Express with full-page ads every fifth page, predicted that microchip telecomputers linked by fiber optics would destroy broadcast television, its one-way schedule and its captive mass audience. David Foster Wallace (1962-2008) observed that the most fascinating thing about Life After Television (1990) was that it was a book with commercials. The prediction itself, read from the age of the smartphone and the stream, hardly needs defending. In 1992 a Usenet post reaching for a word to describe the new digital class pointed to a Gilder article and used, for the first time on the network, the term digerati.

Telecosm: How Infinite Bandwidth Will Revolutionize Our World (2000) completed the trilogy and made bandwidth the new abundance. By then Gilder had become something no American writer had been before: a prophet whose prose moved markets in real time. The Gilder Technology Report, launched in 1996 and published with Forbes, named the companies Gilder believed belonged to the future. Subscribers bought on publication day. Stocks jumped on a mention. Wall Street named the phenomenon the Gilder effect. At his Telecosm conferences, telecom executives, fund managers, and engineers gathered to hear him preach fiber and photons. He was not asking whether a company was cheap or well managed or solvent. He was asking whether it obeyed the technology. Global Crossing, laying fiber under the oceans, obeyed. He could not get enough of it at $60 a share and 33 times sales.

The Nasdaq broke in March 2000. Global Crossing went to six cents. The telecom sector lost trillions in market value, and the fraud at WorldCom and the games at the investment banks came out afterward, as they do. Gilder’s subscribers, many of whom had joined at the top because the top was when his fame peaked, were destroyed. So was he. He had put his money where his newsletter was. He had bought The American Spectator from its founder Emmett Tyrrell (b. 1943) in 2000 and had to sell it back to him in 2002. He sat in the Great Barrington office explaining to Rivlin why he had not printed a sell warning: half his subscribers might have been grateful, but the other half, the new ones, had just come in. The economist Brad DeLong (b. 1960), reading the interview, saw the trap clearly. Gilder believed his newsletter moved prices, and so a printed warning of a crash would not have forecast a crash. It would have caused one. The prophet had become part of the system he described, and the information he sold had stopped being information.

An honest account has to hold two facts about the collapse at once. Gilder was catastrophically wrong about the middle distance: the timing, the balance sheets, the debt, the capacity glut, the crooks. And he was right about the long distance. Bandwidth became abundant. Fiber remade the world. Video did move to the network, and broadcast television did lose its throne. The future he sold arrived, roughly on schedule as technology and a decade late as investment, through companies other than the ones the market had briefly sanctified. Jonathan Chait (b. 1972) later called him deranged, a crank and charlatan, even a barking moonbat, a description Gilder quoted about himself with visible pleasure in the preface to a new edition of Wealth and Poverty, adding that his surviving investments had outperformed the market for another eleven years and counting. The self-defense is characteristic. So is the self-mockery. Gilder lost his readers’ money and his own with them, which distinguishes him from the analysts and bankers of the era who lost only other people’s.

The books after the crash made explicit what the earlier ones implied. Knowledge and Power (2013) reformulated his economics through the information theory of Claude Shannon (1916-2001). Shannon defined information as surprise, the unexpected bits in a message. Gilder took the definition and built an economics on it. If all relevant facts were known, there could be no entrepreneurship; wealth is knowledge, growth is learning, and a capitalist economy is not chiefly an incentive system but an information system. Man, he told an interviewer, is not a function of the forces around him. He is a creator in the image of his Creator. The Scandal of Money (2016) applied the argument to central banking: money should carry truth about value across time, and when governments manipulate it, the signal becomes noise. Life After Google: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy (2018) applied it to the platform economy. Google built an order of free services, surveillance, and advertising that concentrated data and power while starving the system of prices and security, and such an order, he argued, cannot last. His answer was the cryptocosm, blockchain architectures that build trust into the system instead of renting it from platforms and banks. Gaming AI: Why AI Can’t Think but Can Transform Jobs (2020) extended the line to artificial intelligence: machines process patterns and win games but do not originate; they cannot produce the creative surprise on which markets, science, and culture run. Whether blockchain or any architecture can carry the weight he assigns it remains open. The continuity of the argument does not. From the daycare veto to the cryptocosm, Gilder has made one claim: knowledge lives at the edges, in families, founders, and engineers, and every attempt to centralize it, in a welfare bureau, a Federal Reserve, or a server farm, ends by destroying what it tries to manage.

Two commitments complete the map. In 1990 he and Bruce Chapman founded the Discovery Institute in Seattle. The institute became the headquarters of intelligent design, the movement claiming that life shows evidence of purpose no unguided process explains, and it made Gilder a scandal to the scientific establishment that his technology writing had courted. The association is not an anomaly. Gilder rejects the reduction of mind, life, and markets to matter in motion; his economics, his information theory, and his design sympathies are one long argument against materialism, and its critics answer that the argument smuggles theology into fields with working non-theological explanations. The Israel Test (2009, new edition 2024) applies his oldest theme to a nation. Israel appears in it as the entrepreneur written large: small, embattled, inventive, envied. The test of the title is how people respond to disproportionate achievement, with emulation or with resentment, and Gilder reads hostility to Israel as resentment of excellence. One can dispute the thesis; its Gilderian signature is not in dispute.

He is in his late eighties now and has not stopped. He runs Gilder Publishing and the successor newsletters from the Berkshires. He convenes COSM, an annual technology summit outside Seattle, where in his ninth decade he interviews founders and physicists about AI, blockchain, and the graphene age. Men and Marriage went into a third edition in 2023, fifty years after Time hung its title on him. The Israel Test returned to print after October 7. He still lives with his wife Nini on the farm in Tyringham he nearly lost, four children grown, one of them, Louisa Gilder (b. 1977), the author of a well-regarded history of quantum entanglement. The paper fortune never came back. The audience did.

His prose explains his durability as much as his ideas do. Gilder writes in binaries: bureaucracy against genius, entropy against information, stasis against surprise, matter against mind. The sentences build in rhythmic bursts toward revelation. He does not write like an analyst hedging a forecast; he writes like a man trying to make economics luminous, and this is why a failed stock pick never quite refutes him. The prediction fails at one level. The prophecy operates at another. That gap between levels is his weakness and his strength in a single structure. It let him mislead a hundred thousand investors who mistook metaphysics for a buy list. It also let him see, before almost anyone, that computation would swallow economics, that bandwidth would become free, that television would die, that platforms built on surveillance would become the new central planners, and that money, data, security, and trust would converge into one civilizational problem.

Gilder belongs to a vanishing American type, the grand synthesizer, part economist, part technologist, part theologian, part promoter, heir to the establishment and its most tireless apostate. His subjects look scattered: marriage, microchips, money, Israel, God, AI. They are one subject. The world, he has spent sixty years insisting, is not a machine to be managed but an information system waiting to be surprised, and the future belongs not to those who administer scarcity but to those who create abundance before the experts believe it possible. He has been wrong about companies, timing, women, and much else. About the shape of the world his grandchildren inhabit, the man in the Great Barrington office, broke and explaining himself to a skeptical reporter, had been right all along.

Notes

Opening scene, dialogue, and financial details, including “I knew that it was going to crash,” “I didn’t put it in a newsletter,” Telecosm Lounge, 110,000 to 8,500 subscribers, tax structure, and $10,000 monthly payments for seventeen years, come from Gary Rivlin, “The Madness of King George”, Wired, July 2002, discussed with quotes at Brad DeLong‘s archive, and from Om Malik‘s summary of the 2003 New York Times follow-up. The subscriber and payment figures come from the New York Times piece via Malik. DeLong’s observation about the newsletter causing rather than forecasting a crash is his, and I attributed it to him.

Family, education, Ripon firing, the Mathias apartment episode, “digerati” coinage, FedEx ads, and the Goldwater recantation quote come from Wikipedia on George Gilder. The recantation is paraphrased close to his words. If you want it verbatim, the source trail runs through Wikipedia’s citations.

“Male Chauvinist Pig of the Year”: sources conflict. Wikipedia attributes the title to Time. A CB Insights/Guardian-derived profile attributes it to NOW in 1974. An Amazon reviewer credits both. I went with Time per Wikipedia, but you may want to verify against the MacFarquhar profile Wikipedia cites, or hedge to “Time and NOW both hung the title on him.”

The Reagan chapter, including letters, Dole, Kemp, Gingrich, Stockman, Casey, “most quoted living author,” and million copies, comes from Gilder‘s own 2006 Hillsdale talk and the Raptis first-edition listing for sales figures. Note: the “most quoted living author” claim originates with Gilder and his publishers. I kept “Gilder later said” framing on the Casey chain for that reason. The Reagan “chrysalis” speech quote appears in the Soul of Enterprise interview transcript, which is also the source for the Shannon material, “wealth is knowledge, growth is learning,” and “creator in the image of his creator.”

Chait‘s “deranged… crank and charlatan… barking moonbat” and Gilder’s eleven-years-and-counting rejoinder come from Gilder’s own preface to the 2012 edition of Wealth and Poverty: A New Edition for the Twenty-First Century.

Global Crossing at $60 and 33 times sales, then six cents, plus the Spectator purchase and sale, come from Bill Bonner at LewRockwell and Wikipedia. David Foster Wallace‘s “a book with commercials” line comes from his essay “E Unibus Pluram”, cited in the en-academic Gilder entry.

Reasonable extrapolations I made without a link: the Carver Mead maxim “listen to the technology” is widely attributed and Gilder repeats it constantly, but I did not pull a single citation this session; the Berkshire scene-setting, including clapboard and Gilded Age cottages, is characterization of place; “trillions in telecom losses” and the WorldCom reference are common knowledge of the era; Louisa Gilder‘s birth year, 1977, I stated from general knowledge and you should verify; Gilder’s current age framing and COSM description track his public activity, but the “graphene age” phrasing is mine from his recent themes. FBI single-men crime statistics are quoted as Gilder’s citation, not endorsed as current.

The Gift That Defeats Death: George Gilder’s Hero System

A boy grows up on a dairy farm in the Berkshires with a dead man’s name in the family library. Richard Watson Gilder edited The Century when the magazine sat at the center of American letters. The boy’s father carries the name too, and the father is gone, killed in an Army Air Forces plane when the boy is two, before memory forms, so the boy never mourns a man. He mourns an absence with a famous name. The family has Tiffany glass in its bloodline and a Rockefeller for a godfather and cows that need milking at dawn. The names say the family made permanent things. The farm says the money went somewhere else. The sky says a man can be erased at random by a war he chose to serve.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argued in The Denial of Death that a man cannot live staring at his own extinction, so every culture builds a hero system, a shared drama in which a man can earn significance that outlasts his body. The hero system tells him what counts as a victory over death. It tells him which words are sacred. George Gilder built his hero system against two terrors, and both were in place before he could read. The first terror is the plane. Death comes from nowhere, means nothing, and takes the father before the son can know him. The second terror is the verdict that the plane implies. If the universe is matter in motion, then the father was matter, the crash was physics, the grief is chemistry, and the boy’s mind is an accident that will end the same way. Gilder has spent sixty years constructing a cosmos in which both terrors are false. In his cosmos nothing is random, everything signals, and mind precedes matter. He calls this cosmos capitalism.

The hero of the system is the creator. He commits capital, labor, and imagination into the unknown before he knows whether anyone will answer. The market answers or it does not, and either way the answer is information, a message from reality to the man who dared to ask. Wealth is knowledge. Growth is learning. Profit is the universe telling a man that his imagination met a need that existed before he named it. When Gilder writes that capitalism begins with giving, he is stating the entry requirement of his heroism. The hero gives first. He gives into darkness. His gift is the wager that the darkness will speak.

Every hero system runs on a subtraction, the things it removes from the picture so the heroism can stand. Gilder subtracts chance. In his cosmos a failed company is tuition, a crash is a correction, a bad decade is the signal arriving late. No loss is only loss. He subtracts the predator. His capitalism has givers and learners; the analyst who hustles doomed stocks to widows for twenty million a year appears in the story late, as a corruption of the drama rather than a permanent cast member. He subtracts the body. His entrepreneurs are minds; their heart attacks, divorces, and pills stay off the page. And he subtracts his father’s death. A plane crash that means nothing cannot exist in a universe where everything is information. So the universe where everything is information had to be built.

Take the sacred words one at a time, because a sacred word holds its meaning only inside its own hero system, and the same syllables name different gods on different altars.

Start with giving. In Gilder’s system giving is the entrepreneur’s opening move, an advance into uncertainty that the future may repay. The gift expects an answer. The answer is profit, and profit is holy because it proves the gift found a human need. A hospice chaplain uses the same word for the hours she spends with men who will be dead by Friday. Her gift expects nothing back. The dying man cannot repay her, will not remember her, and her heroism consists in giving where no return is possible, because her hero system says the gift purifies the giver and accompanies a soul to the door. An effective altruist in Berkeley uses the word for a spreadsheet. He earns at a hedge fund and wires forty percent to malaria nets because the arithmetic says each net multiplies life, and his heroism is the subtraction of sentiment from charity. Giving that follows feeling, the kind the chaplain does, strikes him as self-indulgence. A Oaxacan grandmother in Los Angeles uses the word for the remittances she sends home and the shame she would carry if she stopped. Her gift binds her to a village and a lineage; it buys her a funeral where she was born. Four people, one word. In each system the gift defeats death by a different route: through the market’s answer, through the purified soul, through the multiplied lives, through the lineage that remembers. Gilder’s route requires the answer. A gift the market never answers is, in his cosmos, a signal that failed, and this is the clause in his contract that will come due in 2000.

The system went national in 1981. Reagan read Wealth and Poverty and wrote the author letters. Stockman handed it to the cabinet. Casey pushed it on the speechwriters, and the president of the United States began describing America emerging like a chrysalis from the economy of things into an economy of mind, where the freedom to create is the most precious natural resource. Consider what this moment is inside a hero system. A fatherless boy from a farm writes a book saying the creator defeats the manager, and the most powerful man alive starts reciting it. Becker says the hero needs an audience, a culture that certifies his significance. Gilder got the largest audience a writer of ideas can get. He became, by his own repeated accounting, Reagan’s most quoted living author, and he repeats the phrase four decades later the way other men carry a photograph, because the phrase is his certificate. The certification held real weight. A million copies. The movement unified. But note the currency. The certificate says the words moved a president. It does not say the words were true. A hero system can survive that gap for a long time.

Now the second sacred word, surprise. Gilder took it from Claude Shannon, who defined information as the unexpected content of a message. Gilder made the definition a theology. If all facts were known, nothing could be created; therefore surprise is the fingerprint of mind in the universe, the proof that man is a creator in the image of his Creator rather than a function of forces. In his system surprise is grace. An oncologist uses the word for the shadow on a scan that the model said should not be there, and in her hero system, where the hero holds death off with protocol and evidence, surprise is the enemy breaking through the line. An actuary prices surprise; his heroism is a table that converts the unexpected into a premium, and a surprise his table missed is his failure. A Talmudist prizes the chiddush, the novel reading, and his surprise must bloom inside a bounded canon, novelty as fidelity, the new word that proves the old text inexhaustible. A Zen monk trains for years to meet surprise without grasping it, to let the unexpected pass through him like weather. Each system assigns surprise a moral charge. For the oncologist it is death’s move. For Gilder it is death’s defeat. That a man in Great Barrington and a woman reading scans in Houston can use one word for grace and for the tumor tells you what Becker meant: the word has no meaning outside the drama that consecrates it.

The drama needed staging, and by the late 1990s it had arenas. Fund managers and telecom executives flew to Gilder’s Telecosm conferences to hear which companies belonged to the future. The Gilder Technology Report reached 110,000 subscribers, and a stock could jump the day the newsletter named it. Wall Street called it the Gilder effect. Watch the status detail. Analysts at the banks asked whether a company was cheap. Gilder asked whether it obeyed the technology, the maxim his teacher Carver Mead gave him, and the question sorted the room into those who managed money and the one man who read the future. Subscribers were not buying research. They were buying seats in a cosmology, a chance to place their savings inside a story where the future is legible and the reader of the signal stands on stage. Becker would call it heroism by proxy. The retired dentist with $80,000 in Global Crossing had enlisted his retirement in the war of mind against matter.

The Nasdaq broke in March 2000. Global Crossing went from sixty dollars to six cents. In the summer of 2002 a Wired reporter named Gary Rivlin sat in Gilder’s office in Great Barrington and listened to him say, “I knew that it was going to crash, I really did.” Rivlin had read years of the newsletter and found no warning, and his eyebrows said so. Gilder amended himself. He had told people in early 2000 to sell half their shares. Then, quieter: “I didn’t say it often. I didn’t put it in a newsletter.” He had said it in the Telecosm Lounge, the online room where the initiated gathered. He explained the silence: half his subscribers might have thanked him for a warning, and the other half, the new ones, had just come in. The explanation is a confession wearing the clothes of an excuse. A warning in print might have crashed the stocks he held and the faith he sold, and the hero system chose the faith. He was ruined along with his readers, owed the IRS more than he had, and kept the farm in Tyringham by promising a former partner ten thousand dollars a month for seventeen years.

Here the system shows its deepest property. It cannot be falsified by ruin, because ruin converts to vindication on a long enough clock. Bandwidth did become abundant. Broadcast television did die. The fiber under the oceans did remake the world, a decade late and under other tickers. Gilder points to this, and he is half right, and the half rightness is load-bearing. Jonathan Chait called him deranged, a crank and charlatan, a barking moonbat, and Gilder quoted the insults about himself in a later preface with the relish of a martyr reading his sentence aloud, adding that his surviving investments beat the market for eleven years after. In Becker’s terms the crash gave Gilder the one thing his heroism still lacked, persecution. The prophet who loses everything for the vision and keeps the vision has upgraded from author to witness. The dentist’s retirement financed the upgrade.

The third sacred word is abundance. In Gilder’s system scarcity is entropy wearing an accountant’s visor, and the manager of scarcity, the central banker, the regulator, the Malthusian, is death’s clerk. Abundance is the natural output of free minds; to ration is to insult creation. His son’s generation hears the same word from a climate scientist for whom abundance-talk is the delusion, the refusal to accept a finite atmosphere, and for whom the acceptance of limits is what adulthood means. Study the symmetry, because it is the essay’s cleanest Beckerian specimen. Each man believes the other is denying death. The scientist sees in Gilder a man who cannot face finitude, who answers every limit with a prophecy because the alternative is grief. Gilder sees in the scientist a man who worships limits because scarcity gives the managerial class its priesthood, a hero system for those who administer rather than create. A Calvinist farmer two towns over from Tyringham hears abundance and reaches for his catechism about temptation; his heroism is thrift, and a fat year tests a man harder than a lean one. A Gulf prince hears the word as description. None of them can argue the others out of their meaning, because the meaning lives in the drama, and you cannot refute a drama, you can only decline the role.

How much of this does Gilder see? More than most men see of their own systems. He knows he is selling transcendence; he says in interviews that economics is theology done honestly, that man is a creator in the image of his Creator, and he built the Discovery Institute to press the metaphysics in the open. He admits the crash on the record, in his own books, with figures. He can inhabit his enemies’ voices well enough to quote their best insults. What he cannot see, or cannot afford to see, sits at the origin. His cosmos has no category for a loss that converts to nothing. Every crash is tuition. Every failure is information. Every death of a company teaches. Run the rule backward to 1942 and it breaks. The plane that took his father taught nothing, priced nothing, signaled nothing. It was chance, and chance is the one god Gilder’s system was built to kill. A man who admitted chance into the cosmos might have to mourn. Gilder built an economy of mind in which mourning is a failure to read the signal, and he has been reading signals since before he could read.

The hero, then: the giver who commits everything before the answer comes and calls the commitment knowledge. The rival he fights without naming is not the bureaucrat, who is only the rival’s clerk; the rival is the random universe, the cosmos of the plane, where a father dies for nothing and a mind is weather. And the cost his ledger cannot price is the loss that stays loss. The dentist’s retirement, the widow’s Global Crossing shares, the two-year-old’s father: his system must book them all as tuition, because the alternative entry is grief, and grief is the one line item that concedes the rival exists.

The Great Delusion

If John J. Mearsheimer’s anthropology were applied to the work of George Gilder, it would frame Gilder as a quintessential embodiment of the “liberal delusion” that Mearsheimer critiques in his broader body of work.
At the core of Mearsheimer’s anthropology is the belief that humans are “social beings at their core,” born into collectivities that shape their identities and command their deepest loyalties. He argues that political liberalism’s tendency to treat people as “atomistic actors” with “inalienable rights” is a fundamental misreading of human nature. George Gilder’s work, conversely, is deeply rooted in the liberal-capitalist tradition of radical individualism. Gilder argues that the “crucial knowledge in economies originated in individual human minds” and emphasizes the “free acts” of individuals as the primary driver of progress. From Mearsheimer’s perspective, Gilder’s reliance on the “innovating entrepreneur” as the central figure of the economic system ignores the reality that these individuals operate within, and are fundamentally conditioned by, the nation-state and tribal social groups.
Gilder posits that capitalism is essentially an “information system” defined by “surprise” and that economic life is driven by the free will of individuals. He views government and “elite institutions” as centripetal forces that seek to “quell human diversity and impose order”. Mearsheimer would likely view this as a misunderstanding of the relationship between the individual and the collective.
Mearsheimer argues that liberalism (and by extension, Gilder’s brand of free-market capitalism) “must always coexist with nationalism” because it is impossible to have a functioning state that is not a nation-state. Gilder’s hope to “transcend” political conflicts through an economics of “disruption” ignores Mearsheimer’s premise that the nation-state remains the “highest-level social group of real significance” for most people.
Gilder critiques those who focus on the redistribution of “static things” and emphasizes “ideas, attitudes, moral codes, and mental disciplines” as the true source of wealth. While Mearsheimer would agree that “moral codes” are vital, he would argue that they are products of socialization within a tribe or nation, rather than the byproduct of entrepreneurial “giving” in a globalized marketplace.
If Mearsheimer is correct, Gilder is an architect of the “liberal dream”—a vision of the world where individual creativity and market information are the primary forces, and where social, tribal, and nationalist instincts can be sidelined. Mearsheimer would contend that this vision is a “fool’s guide” because it fails to account for the fact that humans are not primarily utility-maximizing individuals, but tribal creatures who prioritize survival and group loyalty above individual economic freedom.
Mearsheimer would likely argue that Gilder’s “techno-utopian” vision assumes an abstract, unanchored human nature that does not exist, and that in any real-world clash, the “tribal” and “nationalist” realities identified by Mearsheimer will invariably constrain or override the “free will” and “disruption” that Gilder prizes.

Larissa MacFarquhar writes in the May 22, 2000 New Yorker:

Gilder was one of the first writers to foresee the potential of the Internet: as early as 1990, in his book “Life After Television,” he wrote about “a crystalline web of glass and light,” and “telecomputers in every home attached to a global fiber network” Perhaps one of the reasons his writing about technology has found such a wide audience is that, to him, technology’s appeal is ultimately spiritual. In his forthcoming book, “Telecosm,” Gilder writes, “Futurists falter because they belittle the power of religious paradigms, deeming them either too literal or too fantastic. Yet futures are apprehended only in the prophetic mode of the inspired historian. The ability to communicate—readily, at great distances, in robes of light—is so crucial and coveted that in the Bible it is embodied only in angels.”…

His voice sounded strained and whiny, as though he were struggling to be heard without a microphone…

In his celebration of the entrepreneurial leap, Gilder can sound like Ayn Rand, but there is an important difference between them: religion. Rand believed in the glory of selfishness; Gilder believes that capitalism properly understood is altruistic and dependent upon faith in God. (Rand was so disgusted by what she took to be Gilder’s perverted sentimentality on this point that she devoted the last public speech of her life to denouncing him.) Gilder’s explanation for his thesis is that, because an entrepreneur can never be sure of a return on his investment, starting up a business is like offering a gift to the world, in the hope, but never the certainty, that the gift will be reciprocated…

Although he is often treated as a guru, Gilder does not have a guru personality. It is not in his nature to cultivate an aura of gravitas and infallibility; instead, he dances twitchily about, fists flailing, glancing warily around him, clinging to his own anxiety as a sign that he is vital—that he has not yet surrendered to smug venerability…

Despite his relentless pursuits, Gilder never really attracted the sort of female attention he craved until the early seventies, when he discovered his vocation as an anti-feminist. In those days, he was living in Cambridge, editing the Ripon Forum, a magazine put out by the progressive-Republican Ripon Society, when he wrote and published a defense of Nixon’s veto of the Mondale-Javits day-care bill, on the ground that, now that welfare had driven away inner-city fathers by rendering them superfluous, day care would deprive poor children of their mothers as well. The female members of the Ripon Society were outraged, and he was fired from his position almost immediately. It was Gilder’s first taste of controversy, and he discovered that he liked it. It was fun being the object of attack. After one debate, on PBS, he remembers that “what seemed like hundreds” of women rushed forward onto the stage to argue with him. Since he had spent most of his youth looking for ways to arouse female passion, he reckoned he had found his calling. The aftermath of the day-care brouhaha, though, was not so exciting.

Wealth and Poverty (1981)

Applying Mearsheimer’s anthropology to George Gilder’s Wealth and Poverty reveals a fundamental clash between two different ways of understanding human nature and, by extension, the nature of economic life.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology posits that humans are “profoundly social beings” whose identities are shaped by intense socialization within specific tribes or groups. He argues that individuals are “tribal at their core,” and their moral codes are “limited” by these inborn sentiments and group attachments.
Gilder, however, operates from a framework that is essentially liberal-universalist. He argues that capitalism is “a system that begins not with taking but with giving to others” and that it is “inherently favorable to altruism”. Gilder believes that capitalism is a moral order that “favors and empowers a moral order” and can “break down xenophobic barriers between groups”.
From Mearsheimer’s perspective, Gilder’s optimism about capitalism’s ability to foster universal altruism would be viewed as a “liberal dream”. Mearsheimer would argue that Gilder underestimates the tenacity of tribal identity. While Gilder sees commerce as a “golden rule” that fosters benevolence, Mearsheimer would contend that this benevolence is usually reserved for the “fellow members” of one’s own tribe and that capitalism itself does not automatically solve the problem of tribal conflict.
Mearsheimer notes that “reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences” and that it is “less important than socialization”. He emphasizes that humans are “not equipped to think for themselves” because they are “exposed to intense socialization” during childhood.
Gilder’s Wealth and Poverty relies heavily on the figure of the entrepreneur as a “disturber of equilibrium” and a creator of “productive knowledge”. Gilder argues that capitalists are “better stewards at reinvesting that capital and thereby multiplying it for the benefit of us all”.
Mearsheimer’s framework would suggest that Gilder’s reliance on the “entrepreneur” as a rational, innovative actor is a reflection of the liberal individualist bias he critiques. Mearsheimer would likely argue that Gilder is ignoring the reality that even these entrepreneurs are “embedded in a society” that shapes their value systems. Their drive for wealth creation is not necessarily an exercise of “reason” but an outcome of a specific, socially-constructed moral code that prizes enterprise.
Gilder acknowledges that Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” is an illusion. Instead, he asserts that capitalism is “convulsed by human will, creativity, and conflict” and is “always in disequilibrium”. Mearsheimer would likely find agreement in the rejection of the “invisible hand” as a mechanism that automatically leads to harmony. However, he would likely disagree with Gilder’s interpretation of that conflict. Gilder sees this as a productive “spiral of mutual gain and learning”. Mearsheimer, given his focus on security competition and the zero-sum nature of group survival, would likely interpret the “conflict” inherent in capitalism as a struggle for dominance between groups, where the “golden rule of enterprise” is more often used as a moral justification for tribal expansion than a genuine universalist principle.
Mearsheimer would argue that Gilder’s Wealth and Poverty is a brilliant articulation of the “liberal dream” that seeks to replace tribal identity with the universalistic pursuit of wealth, while his own anthropological framework suggests that the tribe—and the conflict inherent to tribal competition—is a permanent feature of human life that no amount of economic growth will ever fully dismantle.

Men and Marriage (1986)

In Men and Marriage, Gilder describes the “barbarian” — the unmarried young man — as a figure defined by “male aggression and violence, muscles and madness”. Gilder’s entire argument hinges on the idea that this “barbarian” is a natural product of male biology, but one that must be “tamed” and socialized into a stable, monogamous society. Mearsheimer would view Gilder’s “barbarian” not merely as a biological inevitability but as a product of the same “intense socialization” that shapes all human identity. From Mearsheimer’s perspective, the “barbarian” is the default state of the individual before they are “embedded in a society” and taught to cooperate for the group’s survival.
Gilder links marriage to “human civilization” and “the roots of human civilization,” suggesting that the family is an essential “moral order”. He argues that men are “sexually optional” and must be induced through marriage to serve the social order.
Mearsheimer argues that humans prioritize the “survival and prosperity of their own society over any abstract, universal agreement”. While Gilder frames marriage as a “redemptive” and “moral” union, Mearsheimer would argue that this is another form of “identity politics” used to mobilize a population and create internal cohesion. For Mearsheimer, Gilder’s attempt to use marriage to “bind men to the social order” is a strategic move to preserve group survival in an insecure world.
Gilder posits that “sexual liberalism” — which he identifies as a movement to “deny and repress the differences between the sexes” — is an “ideology” that “warps and perverts the natural play of male aggression”. He believes that returning to traditional roles is the only way to save the nation from “sexual suicide”.
Mearsheimer would classify Gilder’s lamentations as a struggle against “liberal universalism,” which he argues fails because it ignores the “strong attachments to one’s own group”. Mearsheimer’s framework suggests that Gilder’s belief in a return to a “normative pattern” of marriage is an attempt to reconstruct a specific tribal cohesion that has been eroded by shifting power dynamics in the social and economic system. Mearsheimer would conclude that whether society adopts Gilder’s traditional marriage model or the liberal model, the underlying struggle remains one of “zero-sum” competition for resources and security, with moral narratives being “tools used to mobilize populations”.

The Israel Test (2009)

Mearsheimer’s anthropology posits that humans are “tribal at their core,” and that they develop “strong attachments to their group” for the sake of survival in an “anarchic” world. He argues that human identity is shaped by intense socialization that precedes individual reasoning.
Gilder’s The Israel Test operates from a different premise, characterizing Israel as a “vanguard of human achievement” and a “crucial prop of American wealth, freedom, and power”. Gilder frames Israel’s survival not as a tribal imperative, but as a test of whether the world will admire “exceptional achievement” or succumb to “envy and resentment”. While Mearsheimer would see Israel’s actions as those of a group acting to preserve its “dominance or safety” in a hostile environment, Gilder views Israel as a moral actor whose “genius enriches and challenges the world”.
Mearsheimer asserts that group conflict is an “outgrowth of security competition” and that identity politics are “tools used to mobilize populations”. He would view Gilder’s focus on the Israeli “start-up nation” and technological innovation as a strategy for group survival. Mearsheimer might argue that Israel’s technological lead is not merely an economic triumph but a tool of statecraft designed to create a strategic advantage in an environment where “the world is not decent”.
Gilder, however, rejects the “zero-sum” interpretation of economic life. He argues that Israel’s success provides “markets and opportunities for all” and that the conflict in the Middle East is driven by a “deceptive” and “insidious” misunderstanding of wealth, where enemies of Israel falsely believe that “Israeli wealth causes Palestinian misery”. Mearsheimer’s framework would interpret this Palestinian resentment as a classic example of group competition for limited resources—land and statehood—rather than a misunderstanding that could be solved by the “golden rule of capitalism”.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology argues that moral justifications are often “tools used to mobilize populations”. Gilder characterizes the rhetoric of Israel’s enemies—such as the PLO or Hamas—as a “Nazi” or “jihadist” ideology of “murderous anti-Semitism”.
Mearsheimer’s perspective provides a dispassionate, structural explanation for this: the “jihadist” ideology serves to “mobilize” the Palestinian population in a struggle against an existential threat. For Mearsheimer, the intense conflict between Israel and its neighbors is not a failure of understanding, but a predictable outcome of two groups that “perceive their existence as threatened”. While Gilder calls for the world to pass the “Israel Test” by recognizing Israel’s contributions, Mearsheimer would argue that nations will continue to act according to their perception of security, regardless of the moral merits of their neighbors.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Applying David Pinsof’s framework to the work and persona of George Gilder reveals a career built not on the remediation of misunderstanding, but on the deployment of specific, status-enhancing narratives.

Pinsof argues that intellectuals often manufacture the myth of misunderstanding to position themselves as the necessary saviors of a broken species. Gilder operates in the opposite direction. He does not claim to save a broken humanity from its ignorance; he claims to reveal an underlying, metaphysical order—information theory—that justifies the existing social hierarchy as natural and inevitable.

Where Pinsof’s target intellectual blames political or social conflict on a lack of proper education or cognitive bias, Gilder frames the world as a struggle between those who understand the true nature of wealth (information) and those who suffer from the delusion of central planning.

If one applies Pinsof’s logic to Gilder, his defense of capitalism is not a benign effort to correct a misunderstanding about economics. It is a strategic move in a zero-sum social competition. By defining wealth as information and success as the possession of that information, Gilder grants himself and his allies a high-status position. He creates a moral grammar where his preferred class—entrepreneurs—are not just lucky, but the prophets of an information-based cosmic order.

Pinsof posits that cognitive biases are actually savvy, self-serving strategies. Gilder’s work illustrates this. His long-standing insistence on the supremacy of the entrepreneur and the failures of the state is not a product of an intellectual error or a “misunderstanding” of the economy. It is an argument constructed to serve a specific coalition. The “misunderstanding” Gilder identifies in his critics, that they believe in the power of state intervention, is a tactical label he uses to derogate his rivals.

Under the Pinsof frame, Gilder’s career is an exercise in status-enhancing storytelling. He identifies a set of rivals (Keynesians, state planners, those who do not grasp his version of information theory) and categorizes their motives as foolish or misguided. This allows him to maintain his status as a leader within his own intellectual tribe. He is not trying to fix the “misunderstanding” of his opponents to achieve world peace or universal welfare. He is participating in a high-stakes competition for intellectual and social authority.

Pinsof’s conclusion that we are rational animals who understand our incentives perfectly well suggests that Gilder’s readers are not buying his books because they are confused or misinformed. They are buying them because the narratives Gilder provides offer them a way to justify their own status and their own worldview in a competitive social marketplace. The “misunderstanding” is indeed a myth, but it is one that both the critic and the intellectual use to navigate the same hole.

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Richard Posner’s Legal Pragmatism

John J. Mearsheimer’s anthropology and Richard Posner’s legal pragmatism represent fundamentally different and often opposing views of human nature and political decision-making.
Mearsheimer’s anthropology argues that humans are “profoundly social beings” shaped by intense socialization, innate tribal sentiments, and strong attachments to their groups. He contends that we are born into societies that define our identities, making individualism secondary.
In contrast, Posner’s pragmatism—often linked to his “law and economics” background—views individuals largely as rational, utility-maximizing actors. Posner’s “everyday pragmatism” rejects “abstract” moral and political theory in favor of a “consequentialist” approach, where decision-makers look at the factual outcomes of a policy to see if it makes people “better off”.
A significant critique of Posner is his failure to account for law’s “expressive, value-shaping function”. Critics note that Posner treats people as having “fixed preferences” and views law merely as an instrument to create incentives for behavior modification. Mearsheimer’s anthropology would align with this critique, as he emphasizes that societies and their institutions actively shape the values and identities of individuals through socialization. To Mearsheimer, law is not just a tool for economic efficiency; it is part of the social fabric that constitutes who we are.
Posner famously dismisses “abstract” moral and political theory as “useless” or a “distraction,” arguing that judges should focus on practical consequences. Mearsheimer, however, argues that “reason” is the least important way we determine preferences, and that our moral codes are largely inherited from our family and society. From Mearsheimer’s perspective, Posner’s attempt to discard “abstract” theory is itself a socialized preference—a product of the specific “academic” tribe to which Posner belongs—rather than a neutral, objective way to view the world.
Posner’s pragmatism is often criticized for its lack of an “objective moral compass,” as he believes that when people disagree on fundamental moral questions, theory is unlikely to help. He relies on empirical evidence to guide decisions toward “beneficial” results. Mearsheimer’s anthropology would suggest that Posner’s definition of “beneficial” is inevitably tied to the specific social and cultural context he inhabits. Because Mearsheimer views humans as tribal and deeply attached to their specific groups, he would likely argue that a judge’s decision-making cannot be purely “consequentialist” in a vacuum; it is always filtered through the social values the judge has been socialized to hold.
If Mearsheimer’s anthropology is correct, Richard Posner’s pragmatic vision is built on a “delusion”—the liberal belief that we can function as atomistic, rational actors who discard our social and tribal baggage to make purely instrumental decisions based on “facts”. For Mearsheimer, Posner is essentially an “Enlightenment” thinker who underestimates the power of the “social nature of human beings” and the way tribal loyalties and socialization—not just “costs and benefits”—drive the human experience.

New Yorker: ‘The Bench Burner: How did a judge with such subversive ideas become a leading influence on American legal opinion?’

Larissa MacFarquhar writes Dec. 3, 2001:

It is not apparent from his mild exterior that Posner is the most mercilessly seditious legal theorist of his generation. Nor is it obvious that, as a judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, he is one of the most powerful jurists in the country, second only to those on the Supreme Court. He is powerful, moreover, not just by merit of his position: he is powerful because he has decided to be. In hearing a case, he doesn’t first inquire into the constricting dictates of precedent; instead, he comes up with what strikes him as a sensible solution, then looks to see whether precedent excludes it. In 1991, he ruled that a group of deputy sheriffs who, without a warrant or probable cause, assisted with the seizure of a mobile home had not violated the Fourth Amendment because, rather than entering the house, they had removed it whole. (This finding was reversed unanimously by the Supreme Court, whose sarcastic opinion called it “creative.”) Posner finds the rituals of the courtroom vexing impediments to the real business of punishing criminals and freeing up markets. “I’m not fully socialized into the legal profession,” he says. “I’m like an imperfectly housebroken pet. I still have difficulty understanding—and this is something that most people get over in their first two weeks of law school—lawyers spouting things that they don’t believe. If someone is obviously guilty, why do you have to have all this rigmarole?”

Posner did not set out to seize power: he spotted it drifting and gleefully pocketed it, like a stray hundred-dollar bill. As one of the founders of the law-and-economics movement in the nineteen-seventies, he had promoted the idea that laws should be evaluated for their consequences—economic and otherwise—as much as for their fairness, and that judges should not deliberate over rights and duties in the abstract but figure out what kind of incentives their rulings were putting in place. Now that law and economics has become part of the legal establishment, it does not seem strange when Posner talks in his opinions about markets as well as precedent. More recently, he has taken up what, in the hands of gentler souls like the philosopher Richard Rorty, is the tolerant anti-doctrine of pragmatism, and made it the underpinning for his career as a flamboyantly candid judicial activist.

As much as for his contentious opinions, Posner is famous for his freakish productivity. He publishes a book every half hour. Now sixty-two, he has written thirty-one books, more than three hundred articles, and nearly nineteen hundred judicial opinions. He has written books about aids, law and literature, and the Clinton impeachment trial, and articles about pornography, Hegel, and medieval Iceland. This year alone, while working full time as a judge and teaching at the University of Chicago Law School, he published “Breaking the Deadlock,” a book about the Bush-Gore election; a second, updated edition of his 1976 book, “Antitrust Law”; and two collections of essays. He also wrote “Public Intellectuals,” a four-hundred-page diatribe against the species, and “Law, Pragmatism, and Democracy,” in which, among other things, he derides democracy’s anti-élitist pretensions and the animal-rights movement. He is, by a wide margin, the jurist most often cited in scholarly articles—cited almost as much as the next two, Ronald Dworkin and Oliver Wendell Holmes, added together. As Milton Friedman, the legendary Chicago economist, puts it, “He’s a very brilliant fella and he’s written on everything under God’s green sun. What else do you want?”

If Posner is aggressively unconventional in his judging, he is ten times as much so in his books. To paraphrase an author he admires, André Gide, Posner writes not to defend himself but to be accused. This is, of course, one of the primary reasons for his fame. He began propounding the conservative economics of the Chicago School in the late nineteen-sixties, when the legal academy was almost entirely left of center; for this reason, he became the object of furious criticism even before he published his more outré theories. He relishes facts, the more obscure and counterintuitive the better, but as rhetorical weapons rather than as data. His accounts of the world are sometimes so eccentric as to be almost Martian. He has argued, for instance, that a higher proportion of black women than white women are fat because the supply of eligible black men is limited; thus, black women find the likelihood of profit from an elegant figure too small to compensate for the costs of dieting. As John Donohue, a law professor at Stanford, delicately puts it, “A little bit of empirical support goes a long way for him.”

A Big Misunderstanding

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The MLA: A History

Snow fell on New York in the last week of December 1883. Some forty men made their way to Columbia College, then still a cluster of buildings on Madison Avenue at Forty-Ninth Street, to read a dozen papers to one another and to found an association. They were professors of English, German, French, Spanish, and Italian, and in the American college of 1883 that made them second-class men. The curriculum belonged to Latin and Greek. A classicist held the commanding heights of the old college: the recitation, the entrance examination, the claim to mental discipline. A professor of French or German often stood closer in status to the fencing master and the dancing master, a purveyor of accomplishments, hired to give young gentlemen a conversational polish for travel. The men who gathered at Columbia wanted out of that position. They founded the Modern Language Association of America to get out of it.

The numbers behind the grievance were concrete. At Johns Hopkins, A. Marshall Elliott (1844-1910) carried the Romance languages department alone from 1876 to 1880, graduate and undergraduate teaching together. In 1879-80 he taught sixteen hours a week. Basil Gildersleeve (1831-1924), the great Hopkins classicist down the hall, never taught more than five. The disparity told each man his price. Elliott became the chief organizer of the new association and its first secretary. Franklin Carter of Williams College became its first president. Forty people signed the constitution in 1884. James Russell Lowell (1819-1891), who served as an early president and lent the enterprise his fame, put the founding claim in a sentence: modern literatures deserved a place in the course of instruction as “equals in dignity” with the ancient ones.

The founders did not plan to win that dignity by making literature pleasant. They planned to win it by making modern languages hard. Elliott belonged to the first American generation trained on the German research model. Johns Hopkins University, founded in 1876, was the model’s American showcase, and the ethos Elliott carried into the MLA came from the seminar, the archive, and the manuscript room. William Riley Parker (1906-1968), the association’s mid-century secretary and historian, records the early insistence that modern languages be made “a solid study” in the spirit of Greek and Latin, and Gerald Graff (b. 1937), in Professing Literature: An Institutional History, describes the young profession as torn between humanistic cultivation and the prestige of science. Philology settled the question. Philology offered facts, method, verifiable results, and the look of a discipline. A man who could reconstruct an Old French manuscript or trace an Old English sound change produced knowledge a university president could defend to his trustees.

The association’s journal shows the strategy on every early page. The proceedings that began appearing in 1884 grew into PMLA, the flagship of the profession, and for decades its contents were philology, historical grammar, textual editing, dialect study, and medieval sources. Little of it resembled what a later century calls literary criticism. It was not meant to. It was meant to make the professor of modern languages a credentialed research specialist rather than a cultivated generalist, and it worked. Membership reached 551 by 1900. The convention, which had opened with forty men and a dozen papers, drew about a hundred participants a year by the turn of the century and moved among Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Nashville. Only the World War broke the rhythm. The association postponed its 1917 meeting, the first year since the founding it failed to gather.

From the start the strategy carried a cost. Teachers who believed literature existed to form taste, character, and a common culture watched the prestige of the profession migrate toward research. The association did not abandon teaching. It rewarded publication. In 1916 the membership made the choice formal. The constitution had described the association’s object as the advancement of the study of the modern languages and their literatures. The amended version read “the advancement of research in the Modern languages and their literatures.” One word changed and the word decided the profession’s economy for a century. By 1929 an MLA president could declare research the association’s domain without expecting an argument.

Carleton Brown (1869-1941), secretary from 1920 to 1934, built the apparatus the research ideal required. The American Bibliography, launched in the early 1920s as an annual listing in PMLA, gave the profession a map of its own output. It grew into the MLA International Bibliography, which now holds more than 2.7 million records and stands among the central research tools of the humanities. Membership approached 4,000 by 1927 and 4,500 by the late 1930s, with conventions of a thousand and then two thousand, organized into divisions by language and field. The professor of literature now worked inside a national system of indexing, citation, and review. He was a producer, and his production was counted.

A small scene from the Washington Square headquarters catches the institution in that era. Brown, few members knew, was an ordained Unitarian minister. On July 9, 1939, he performed the marriage of the Middle English scholar Rossell Hope Robbins (1912-1990) to Helen Ann Mins at the MLA office in the South Building on Washington Square. Brown had never performed a wedding and had to go to some trouble to get licensed in New York. For the ceremony, the long office table was cleared of its two-foot layer of books, pamphlets, and envelopes, the first and last time anyone saw its surface, and Brown set on it a vase of yellow iris from his garden. The anecdote survives in the MLA’s own archives. It shows what the association had become by mid-century: a bureau, a records office, a place of long tables buried in paper, run by philologists who married their students to each other under the flowers.

The next war inside the profession was between historical scholarship and criticism. Through the first half of the twentieth century, the MLA belonged to the philologists, literary historians, and bibliographers, men who read texts through sources, editions, and influence, and who regarded close reading without historical grounding as impressionism in academic dress. The New Critics attacked that order. Cleanth Brooks (1906-1994), John Crowe Ransom (1888-1974), Allen Tate (1899-1979), W. K. Wimsatt (1907-1975), and René Wellek (1903-1995) moved attention from the history of the language to the poem on the page, to irony, paradox, ambiguity, and structure. The old guard heard a retreat from evidence into taste. The young critics saw a fortress of antiquarians. The association absorbed the insurgency the way it absorbs every insurgency, slowly and under protest, and in 1951 the constitution registered the settlement. The association’s purpose now included “study, criticism, and research.” Interpretation had become a way to make a career. A man could rise by reading a poem well, without editing a manuscript first.

That same year Parker solved a humbler problem and created the association’s most famous product. Journals and presses each kept their own editorial rules, and writers wasted their lives reconciling citation formats. Parker’s 1951 MLA Style Sheet consolidated the conventions. In 1977 the first MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers turned the style sheet into a mass educational product, revised over the decades for word processors, databases, the Internet, and e-books, with a ninth edition in 2021 and total sales beyond six and a half million copies. The irony is complete. An association founded to prove that modern literatures carried the dignity of Greek is known to most Americans as a set of rules for margins and works-cited pages. The handbook trained generations of students to document sources and to place themselves inside a scholarly conversation, and it made the MLA visible and solvent far beyond its membership. For the public, MLA means citation. For the profession, it means the institution.

The Cold War gave the association something it had never held: a place in national strategy. Parker began the MLA’s Foreign Language Program in 1952 with foundation money, gathering data on language study in American schools and pressing the case that the country’s monolingualism was a strategic weakness. Then Sputnik went up in October 1957, and Congress passed the National Defense Education Act of 1958. The act is remembered for science and mathematics, but it treated foreign-language competence as a national-security asset, and the MLA, under executive secretary George Winchester Stone Jr. (1907-1993), stood ready with the surveys, the personnel, and the arguments. Deborah Cohn’s account of the period shows the association operating as contractor, data-gatherer, and policy broker, moving among federal agencies, foundations, and schools. Language teachers who had entered the profession as dancing masters’ heirs found themselves, for a decade, instruments of American power. The money built capacity. The capacity built confidence. The mid-century MLA sat near the center of a national consensus that language study belonged to the country’s global role.

The convention, meanwhile, had become the visible body of the profession, and for the young it was a tribunal. Departments interviewed job candidates in hotel rooms during the last week of December. A graduate student flew in with a dossier and one good suit, rode the elevator to a numbered floor, and knocked. Inside, three senior professors sat on chairs and the edge of a bed, a schedule of candidates on the nightstand, forty-five minutes apiece. Careers turned on the performance. Members called it the meat market and kept coming, because the convention was also where the profession watched itself think, where fashions rose and fell in public, where an assistant professor could measure the distance between his department and the field. Intellectual glamour and institutional terror shared the lobby.

In 1968 the lobby caught fire. The convention met December 27 to 29 in New York, at the Americana on Seventh Avenue, four months after the Chicago police had beaten demonstrators outside the Democratic National Convention, ten months after Tet, eight months after the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. A group of radicals connected to the New University Conference, among them Louis Kampf (1929-2020) of MIT, Paul Lauter (b. 1930), Richard Ohmann (1931-2021), and Noam Chomsky (b. 1928), had announced their intentions in an open letter in The New York Review of Books that fall. They wanted the MLA made responsive to a society and a university in crisis, and they promised to stir things up, giving Kampf’s MIT office number for anyone who cared to join. Frederick Crews (1933-2024) lent his name to the call for reform. At the Americana, insurgents put up posters in the lobby carrying a line from William Blake (1757-1827): “The tygers of wrath are wiser than the horses of instruction.” Hotel staff tore the posters down. In the confrontation that followed, Kampf and two graduate students were arrested. The literature professors of America now had political prisoners, or could tell themselves they did, and the business meeting turned into an uprising. The radicals nominated Kampf from the floor for second vice president, breaking the leadership’s controlled succession, and he won, which placed him in line for the presidency he assumed in 1971. The meeting passed antiwar resolutions and voted to move the 1969 convention out of Mayor Daley’s Chicago in protest of the police violence. John Hurt Fisher (1919-2015), the Chaucerian who served as executive secretary through the decade, presided over an association whose procedures had been democratized by force of embarrassment. Florence Howe followed Kampf to the presidency in 1973. The message of 1968 held: the MLA’s business meetings were now political events, and resolutions on war, race, labor, and academic freedom became a permanent feature of its life.

Feminism changed the association more deeply than the antiwar revolt, because it changed who the association thought its members were. In 1969, acting on a resolution from the previous year’s business meeting, president Henry Nash Smith (1906-1986) appointed the Commission on the Place of Women in the Profession and named Howe its chair. In 1970 it became the Commission on the Status of Women in the Profession, and in 1990 a standing committee. Its early work was empirical and procedural: surveys of departments, data on rank and salary, pressure for anonymous review at PMLA, campaigns for representation on committees and governing bodies. Feminist scholarship then did what data alone could not. It asked who counted as a scholar, what counted as literature, and how the profession’s own machinery reproduced exclusion, and it added a body of writing by women to the field’s working canon. The commission’s methods, counting first, theory after, became the template for every group that followed.

From the 1970s through the 1990s the MLA convention served as the great public theater of literary theory. Structuralism and post-structuralism came through, then Marxism, psychoanalysis, deconstruction, New Historicism, reader-response criticism, queer theory, postcolonial studies, race theory, cultural studies, disability studies, ecocriticism, film and media studies. To its enemies the association came to stand for jargon, politicization, and the wreck of the canon. Roger Kimball (b. 1953) and Hilton Kramer (1928-2012) at The New Criterion made the MLA a byword for the politicized humanities, and every December the newspapers mined the convention program for absurd panel titles. The attacks mistook the institution for the cause. The MLA invented none of it. It registered the field’s arguments and gave them a room, which is what it had done since 1883, when the argument was whether Old French deserved the standing of Greek. The recurring question underneath each fight stayed constant: what gives literary study its authority. Language science, historical knowledge, formal analysis, moral judgment, political critique, and identity each held the answer for a generation, and each generation fought for the answer at the MLA.

While the theorists fought over authority, the labor system underneath them failed. Graduate programs produced more PhDs than the market could seat, a problem the association’s own commission studied as early as 1970, and universities learned to staff their classrooms with graduate students, adjuncts, and lecturers instead of professors. The Job Information List, founded to organize the market, became its grim barometer. The December convention, once the hiring bazaar, came to mean scarcity. The candidate in the elevator with one good suit now faced a market offering a fraction of the positions his teachers had competed for, at the end of a doctorate averaging nearly a decade, with the likeliest outcome a string of one-year appointments. The MLA had built the professional ideal of the scholar-teacher-critic. It now presided over an economy that could no longer pay for the ideal, and it knew it, and its reports said so.

The association adjusted its machinery to the digital turn. A Committee on Information Technology arrived in 1990. In November 2016 the MLA launched Humanities Commons, an open-access network for sharing scholarship, teaching materials, and discussion, an acknowledgment that the profession no longer lived only in the printed journal and the December hotel. The convention itself moved off the December calendar in 2011, ending the century-old ritual of professors spending the days after Christmas in a Hilton, and after 2020 it went hybrid, with sessions in person and online. The 2026 convention met in Toronto and online. The association also remained an arena for the profession’s political conflicts, as it had been since 1968. A resolution criticizing Israeli restrictions on academic travel failed in 2014 amid charges of bias on both sides, and on January 7, 2017, the delegate assembly in Philadelphia rejected a proposed boycott of Israeli academic institutions by a vote of 113 to 79. The membership had learned to fight about the world inside the association, and the association had learned to survive the fights.

The hardest news arrived where the story began, in enrollment. The MLA was founded to secure the place of modern languages in American education, and its own census now measures how insecure that place has become. The association’s 2023 report on fall 2021 enrollments found that college study of languages other than English fell 16.6 percent between 2016 and 2021, the steepest drop in the history of the census, and about 29 percent from the 2009 peak. Two-year colleges took the worst of it. Korean and American Sign Language grew while the old European mainstays shrank. Requirements had been cut, budgets had been cut, students had turned toward majors with visible salaries, and the American assumption that English suffices had reasserted itself. The condition of 1883 had returned in a new form. Then, modern languages fought the classics for standing. Now they fight the spreadsheet.

Today the MLA holds more than 20,000 members in about a hundred countries. It publishes PMLA, Profession, the handbook, and the bibliography, runs the convention, gathers the data, gives the prizes, and lobbies for the humanities against legislatures and budget officers who need convincing. It is a learned society grafted onto an advocacy organization, and the graft shows. One half of the institution descends from Elliott’s seminar and still speaks of editions and evidence. The other half writes statements on academic freedom and counts adjuncts. Both halves work for the same claim the forty men carried through the snow to Columbia: that the study of languages and literatures deserves a serious and defended place in American life. The claim has outlived the curriculum that provoked it, the philology that first armed it, the criticism and the theory that fought over it, and the job market that once rewarded it. The association’s history is the history of that claim looking for ground to stand on. In 1883 the ground was Greek’s prestige. In 1958 it was Sputnik. The MLA is still looking, which is another way of saying it is still alive.

Notes

Founding details, forty scholars, a dozen papers, membership growth, including 551 by 1900 and 4,500 by the late 1930s, Lowell‘s “equals in dignity,” and the Kampf/Howe presidencies, 1971 and 1973, come from Jeffrey J. Williams, “An MLA History, Minus the Nostalgia”, The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Elliott’s sixteen teaching hours versus Gildersleeve‘s five, and the forty signers, come from William Riley Parker‘s PMLA institutional history, “The Beginning, Development, and Impact of the MLA as a Learned Society, 1883-1958”.

“Snowy December of 1883,” the executive director list, and the Carleton Brown wedding scene, including July 9, 1939, Robbins and Mins, the cleared table, and the yellow iris, come from the MLA Archives and the MLA executive directors list.

Franklin Carter as first president, Elliott as first secretary, the 1917 postponement, and the style sheet and handbook chronology come from EBSCO’s research starter on the Modern Language Association.

The 1968 radicals’ open letter, the December 27-29 dates, the promise to stir things up, and Kampf‘s MIT office number come from Richard Ohmann, Louis Kampf, and Paul Lauter, “Reforming the MLA”, The New York Review of Books.

Kampf’s arrest, election as second vice president for 1969, and presidency in 1971 come from the MLA obituary and Wikipedia.

John Hurt Fisher‘s tenure and dates come from Wikipedia.

Handbook sales past 6.5 million, the convention move to January starting in 2011, the launch of Humanities Commons in November 2016, the 2014 Israel resolution failure, the January 7, 2017 Philadelphia boycott rejection, 113-79, and 20,000 members in 100 countries come from Wikipedia on the Modern Language Association.

Reasonable extrapolations: the dancing-master and fencing-master comparison (a documented trope of the period that Graff discusses), the hotel-room interview scene (schedule on the nightstand, professors on the bed’s edge, the one good suit), and the general texture of the 1883 gathering. The Blake line is public domain and its use on the 1968 posters is documented in accounts of the arrest.

The Mint: Bourdieu and the Modern Language Association

Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) describes a field as a game that produces its own stakes. Players enter, invest, and compete for a currency that holds value only among players. The currency is symbolic capital: recognition, consecration, the authority to say what counts. A field wins autonomy when its members judge one another by internal standards rather than by the standards of the church, the state, the market, or the salon. Every field runs on a shared investment Bourdieu calls illusio, the conviction that the game deserves a life. The history of the Modern Language Association is the history of a field that built its own mint, struck its own coin, fought a century of wars over the coin’s design, and now watches the outside world refuse the exchange.

Begin with position. In 1883 the men who teach modern languages occupy the bottom of the academic field. The classicists hold the consecrating power: the entrance examination, the required course, the claim that Greek disciplines the mind. The modern language teacher holds conversational skill, a commodity the college prices near fencing and dance. Bourdieu teaches that dominated agents in a field have two broad strategies. They can accumulate the reigning capital on its own terms, or they can work to change the terms. The founders of the MLA do both at once. They import a rival currency, German philological science, already consecrated at Johns Hopkins, and they build an apparatus to circulate it: an association, a constitution, a journal, an annual meeting. A. Marshall Elliott teaches sixteen hours a week while Gildersleeve teaches five, and the gap between those numbers measures the capital gap the new association exists to close. The demand James Russell Lowell voices, equal dignity with the ancients, is a demand for convertibility. The modern language men want their coin honored at the classicists’ bank.

Philology wins the founders’ choice because it looks like the capital the university already honors. Bourdieu distinguishes the autonomous pole of a field, where producers produce for other producers, from the heteronomous pole, where producers serve external demand. The teacher who polishes undergraduates for travel serves external demand. The scholar who reconstructs an Old French manuscript for the twelve other men who can check his work produces for producers. The early PMLA, dense with sound changes and manuscript collations, is a portfolio of the second kind. Its remoteness from the reading public is the point. Autonomy in a field shows up as distance from the lay audience, and the founders buy distance as fast as they can.

The 1916 amendment to the constitution codifies the currency. Study becomes research. One word, and the field’s principle of legitimation now sits in print. Bourdieu argues that the decisive struggles in any field are struggles over the dominant principle of hierarchization, the rule that decides which practices rank. The teachers who wanted literature to form taste and character lose that fight without a battle, because the fight happens at the level of the constitution, the field’s law, where the research party holds the pen. From 1916 forward the association speaks in the name of teaching and pays in the coin of publication. Bourdieu would recognize the arrangement without surprise. Fields routinely honor one value in speech and another in the pay structure, and the gap between them is where the game’s real rules live.

Carleton Brown’s bibliography completes the mint. A currency needs a ledger, and the American Bibliography, growing into a file of 2.7 million records, is the ledger: a central register of who has produced, where, and how much. Once the ledger exists, accumulation becomes visible, comparable, and rankable. The professor’s product enters an accounting system, and the accounting system disciplines the professor. Bourdieu calls the durable dispositions a field installs in its players a habitus. The habitus of the twentieth-century literature professor forms around the ledger: publish, place the work in ranked venues, cite the consecrated names, convert publication into rank, rank into students, students into a school. The convention gives the currency a trading floor. Members read papers to establish claims, editors scout, departments shop, and every December the field gathers to watch its prices move.

The New Criticism episode runs on a script Bourdieu writes out in The Rules of Art and Homo Academicus. Newcomers who hold little of the reigning capital attack the reigning definition of the game. Brooks, Ransom, Tate, Wimsatt, and Wellek cannot outbid the philologists in manuscripts and sound laws, so they propose a rival skill, interpretation, and a rival object, the autonomous poem. The incumbents call the heresy impressionism, which in field terms means counterfeit, coin struck without license. The heretics call the orthodoxy antiquarianism, which means dead stock, capital that no longer circulates. The field settles the war the way fields settle wars, by widening the definition of legitimate capital until the strongest heretics fit inside. The 1951 constitution adds criticism to study and research. The heresy receives a charter. Its leaders receive chairs. Bourdieu notes that successful subversion in a field rarely destroys the game. It re-founds the game with the former rebels seated at the mint.

Theory repeats the cycle at higher velocity and with an imported currency. From the 1970s the fastest route to distinction in literary studies runs through Paris. Structuralism, deconstruction, and their successors arrive as capital already consecrated in the French intellectual field, and ambitious newcomers arbitrage the exchange rate, buying French prestige cheap and selling it dear in American departments. Bourdieu enters American English departments through this same circuit, a fact that gives the analysis its comic reflexivity: the theorist of consecration becomes a name to cite, a coin to hold. John Guillory (b. 1952), the field’s most rigorous Bourdieusian, makes the point in Cultural Capital that the canon wars are fights over the syllabus as an instrument for distributing cultural capital, and that both parties overestimate the syllabus because both need to believe the school still controls the currency. The MLA convention serves the theory decades as the trading floor where each season’s coin gets priced. The panel titles the newspapers mock every December are position-takings, moves in a market the mockers do not play in, which is why the mockery never moves the prices.

The 1968 revolt is a war between the field and its own reproduction system. Bourdieu and Jean-Claude Passeron (b. 1930) show in Reproduction how educational institutions transmit advantage while describing the transmission as merit. The MLA of 1968 reproduces its hierarchy through a controlled nomination process, a slate handed down, an electorate that ratifies. Kampf’s election from the floor breaks the circuit at its weakest visible point. The insurgents hold little field capital. They hold numbers, timing, and the embarrassment of the arrests, and they spend all three in one meeting. What follows tracks Bourdieu’s model of absorbed subversion for the second time in the association’s life: the rebel becomes president, the rebellion becomes procedure, resolutions become a standing genre, and the field adds political virtue to the list of capitals a member can accumulate. Florence Howe’s commission then does the most Bourdieusian work in the association’s history. It counts. Surveys of rank, salary, and committee seats map the distribution of capital by sex, and the map converts a grievance into a datum the field’s own research habitus must respect. The feminists beat the field with the field’s weapon, the ledger.

The handbook shows the heteronomous pole funding the autonomous one. Six and a half million copies sold make the MLA Handbook a mass commodity, and the citation regime it teaches carries the field’s discipline out to the laity. Every high school student who formats a works-cited page performs, in miniature, the field’s central rite: acknowledge the prior holders of capital, place your claim in the ledger, submit to the rules of accumulation. Bourdieu calls such ceremonies rites of institution, acts that consecrate a boundary while appearing to test a skill. The handbook revenue then subsidizes the journal, the bibliography, and the convention, which means the autonomous field lives on the sale of its own etiquette. The Cold War runs the same subsidy at state scale. The National Defense Education Act converts language study into national-security capital, and the association trades a measure of autonomy for federal money, surveys on demand, materials on contract. Bourdieu holds that no field’s autonomy is ever complete or free. Someone always pays for the distance from the market, and the payer holds a mortgage on the game.

Then the currency crisis. Bourdieu describes hysteresis as the lag between a habitus and a changed field, players executing strategies formed for conditions that no longer hold. The doctoral student of 1995 or 2015 carries the habitus built between 1945 and 1970: publish, present, place, wait for the market to clear. The market stopped clearing around 1970 and the association’s own commission said so at the time. The field responds the way fields respond to devaluation, by minting faster. More PhDs, more panels, more journals, more lines on the vita per job. Bourdieu analyzes credential inflation in The State Nobility: when titles multiply past the positions that redeem them, holders pay full price for entry and collect a discounted return, and the discount lands hardest on those with the least inherited capital to cushion it. The adjunct is the field’s devalued bond holder. He completed the accumulation the game demands, and the game pays him in the one currency it still controls, recognition among players, while the university pays him by the course. The illusio survives the payoff by decades, which Bourdieu might count as the field’s darkest achievement. People keep investing in a game because the investment has become who they are.

The enrollment collapse attacks the field beneath the currency, at the base. A field of cultural production needs a reproduction market, students whose fees and requirements justify the positions that redeem the credentials. The 16.6 percent fall in language enrollments between 2016 and 2021 shrinks that base, and the 29 percent fall from the 2009 peak shrinks it further. In Bourdieu’s terms the field faces a conversion failure at both ends. Entering students decline to convert tuition into the field’s cultural capital, and exiting credential holders cannot convert the capital into positions. The association answers with advocacy, data, and public argument, which is a field pleading its case before external powers, the legislature, the budget office, the parent. The plea reverses the founding strategy. In 1883 the field bought prestige by building distance from the lay world. In 2026 it spends prestige trying to close the distance, and finds the lay world holds the stronger position at the table.

Read through Bourdieu, the MLA’s century and a half forms one continuous operation with a turn in the middle. First the mint: dominated agents build an apparatus of consecration, win autonomy, and establish a currency. Then the wars of the coin: philology against criticism, criticism against theory, the incumbents against 1968, each war ending in a wider definition of capital and a bigger mint. Then the inflation, when the field’s output outruns the positions and the students that give the output its exchange value. The association did what fields do, and did it well, which is the hard part of the story. The apparatus worked. The ledger, the journal, the convention, and the rite produced a profession where none existed, and gave four generations of scholars a game worth a life. The game still runs. The players still invest. What has thinned is the exchange window where the field’s coin once bought a living, and no field, in Bourdieu’s account or in the record, has ever forced the outside world to keep a window open. Fields set the value of their coin at home. The rate abroad is set by others, and the others have moved on.

Notes

Bourdieu texts cited in the essay: field, autonomy, and position-taking come from The Field of Cultural Production (1993) and The Rules of Art (1992, trans. 1996); the academic field and absorbed heresy from Homo Academicus (1984, trans. 1988); reproduction and controlled succession from Reproduction in Education, Society and Culture with Passeron (1970, trans. 1977); credential inflation and devalued titles from The State Nobility (1989, trans. 1996); rites of institution from the essay of that name in Language and Symbolic Power (1991); illusio and hysteresis appear across Pascalian Meditations (1997, trans. 2000) and The Logic of Practice (1980, trans. 1990).

The Charge: Collins and the Modern Language Association

Randall Collins (b. 1941) builds his sociology on a small claim with long reach. Situations come first. Individuals come second. A person is a chain of situations, and what carries him from one situation to the next is emotional energy, the confidence and drive that successful interaction deposits and failed interaction drains. In Interaction Ritual Chains, Collins takes the ritual model from Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) and the micro-observation from Erving Goffman (1922-1982) and fuses them. A ritual needs four ingredients: bodies in one place, a barrier against outsiders, a shared focus of attention, and a shared mood. When the ingredients combine, the ritual produces four outputs: group solidarity, emotional energy in the individual, sacred objects that carry the group’s charge, and a morality that defends those objects. Institutions live as long as their rituals fire. The Modern Language Association built one of the great ritual engines of American intellectual life, ran it every December for more than a century, and now runs it at reduced charge while wondering where the solidarity went.

Start with the ingredients, because the December convention assembled all four with a fullness few institutions match. Bodies in one place: eight to twelve thousand members in two or three hotels, the last week of the year, when the rest of the country rests. The timing did ritual work of its own. A professor who leaves his family between Christmas and New Year’s to fly to a Hilton makes a sacrifice, and sacrifice marks the gathering as set apart, which is what sacred means. The barrier against outsiders: the registration badge. The badge admits the wearer to the sessions and the book exhibit, and it does a second job Collins would notice first. In the lobby and the elevator, eyes drop to the badge before they rise to the face. Name, institution, then greeting, calibrated in that order. The badge sorts every encounter by rank in under a second, and everyone submits to the sorting because the sorting is the price of the game. Shared focus: the paper, the panel, the star at the podium. Shared mood: ambition, dread, and the low hum of a profession watching its own prices.

Collins argues in The Sociology of Philosophies that intellectual life runs on the same engine. Ideas do not circulate as free-floating text. They circulate through chains of face-to-face encounters, and eminence flows through personal contact with the already eminent. The number of positions at the center of attention in any intellectual field stays small, a handful of rival camps, because attention is the scarce resource and rituals concentrate it. The MLA convention is the American literary profession’s attention market made flesh. The hot panel packs the ballroom, members standing along the back wall, and the packing is the point. Every body in the room raises the charge for every other body, and the speaker at the focus absorbs the pooled attention and walks out carrying more emotional energy than he brought in. He speaks next semester with more confidence. He writes faster. He takes the risk on the big book. Collins insists that creativity itself runs on this charge, that the productive intellectual is the one who has been at the center of successful rituals and carries the deposit. The graduate student along the back wall absorbs a lesser but real charge, plus something else: the sight of the star up close, the voice, the timing, the way the room bends. He has touched the sacred object. He will cite the name for years, and each citation, in Collins’s account, is a small ritual at secondary distance, recharging the symbol and reaffirming his membership in the circle that holds it sacred.

The sacred objects of the tribe are the names. Not the books first, the names. A first-order name draws a crowd across fields; members attend who read none of the work, because presence at the ritual outranks mastery of the text. Below the names sit the derivative sacra: PMLA, the prize lists, the endowed lecture, the program in its thick booklet, members bent over it in the lobby with pens, planning their three days like pilgrims with a map of shrines. Collins would add that the profession’s morality forms around these objects on schedule. Attack a sacred name at a panel and watch the room defend it with a heat no methodological dispute explains. The heat is Durkheimian. The tribe protects its totems.

Now the hotel room, the frame’s darkest and richest site. For decades the convention doubled as the hiring market, and the job interview ran as a ritual with the stratification dial turned to maximum. Ingredients: five bodies in a room built for two, a closed door, one focus of attention, one mood of judgment. The candidate performs for forty-five minutes. The committee holds the power to charge or drain. Collins describes stratified rituals as encounters where one side absorbs energy and the other side supplies it, and the December interview is the model. The candidate who connects, who catches the room’s rhythm, who feels the questions bend toward interest, leaves with a charge that carries him through the hallway, the lobby, the flight home, sometimes the career; members can recall their good interviews decades later, minute by minute. The candidate who misfires leaves drained in a way the word disappointment undersells. He must then perform again in ninety minutes, two floors up, with the drain still on him, and Collins’s model says the drain compounds, because emotional energy is the resource each ritual spends and a man low on it fumbles the next encounter. The convention ran hundreds of these rituals a day in December, minting confidence for a few and extracting it from the many, and the extraction was structural, since candidates always outnumbered jobs. Members called it the meat market. Collins might call it an energy pump running uphill, from the young to the established.

The frame reads 1968 as the engine at peak output. Collins treats conflict as ritual intensifier: an enemy sharpens the barrier, danger deepens the shared mood, and a crowd that acts together generates the effervescence Durkheim found in the corroboree. The Americana lobby supplies the sequence. The Blake posters give a focus. The hotel staff tearing them down gives an enemy. The arrests give martyrs, and a martyr is a sacred object under construction. By the time the business meeting convenes, the insurgents have what movements need and rarely get, a room already charged, and the floor nomination of Kampf converts the charge into an outcome while it is still hot. Collins holds that political victories of this kind depend on timing the ritual peak, and the radicals timed it. The elected rebel then becomes a sacred object of the movement wing, the story gets retold at every subsequent convention, and the retelling recharges it for forty years. Note also what the frame predicts about the aftermath: the association keeps the resolutions, the political business meeting, the annual controversy, because conflict rituals produce solidarity for both camps at once. The members who deplore the resolutions gather to deplore them together, and their deploring binds them too. The MLA learned in 1968 that a fight in December warms the tribe through the year, and it has scheduled one most years since.

Feminist organizing after 1969 shows the chain model in a second register. The Commission on the Status of Women gives women in the profession what Collins says every insurgent network needs, a ritual site of its own: meetings with a closed door, a shared focus, a mood of grievance turning into purpose. Emotional energy accumulates in the caucus and gets spent in the open assembly. The women who count salaries and committee seats between conventions arrive in December charged, and the charge shows in who stands up at the microphone. Movements run on chains, and the commission built one.

Then the decline arc, which the frame carries built in. It begins with the calendar. In 2011 the association moves the convention off the days after Christmas, ending the sacrifice that marked the gathering as set apart. A January meeting is a conference. A December meeting was an ordeal, and ordeal binds. Next the interviews leave the hotel rooms for video calls, and Collins has an argument waiting: mediated interaction transmits information and starves the ritual, because bodies read each other through channels a screen cannot carry, the micro-rhythms of voice and posture that entrain two nervous systems into one rhythm. The video interview drains the candidate without the compensating possibility of the full charge; even the winners report a flatness. Then the pandemic pushes the convention hybrid, sessions online, the hot panel a grid of squares. Attendance thins. The adjunct majority stays home because a plane ticket and four hotel nights price them out of the ritual market, and here Collins’s stratification turns bitter, since the members most in need of solidarity can least afford the assembly that produces it. The profession faces legislatures and budget officers in the decade it needs collective confidence most, and its energy engine idles. Solidarity is not a resource an institution stores. Collins insists it decays between rituals and must be renewed in co-presence, on a cycle, or it thins into nostalgia and a dues payment.

The frame also concedes its limits on this record, and stating them keeps the analysis honest. Interaction ritual chains illuminate the convention, the interview, the caucus, and the insurgency, the places where bodies meet. The bibliography, the handbook, the constitution amendments, and the enrollment census sit outside its reach; a ledger fires no ritual, and the frame has little to say about why students stop enrolling in French. Collins covers intellectual content thinly by design, since for him the content of a position weighs less than the network position of the man who holds it, and a reader who thinks arguments sometimes win on merit will push back. Within its range, though, the frame explains what the other frames treat as decoration: why the profession met in the dead week of the year and felt the meeting as fate, why members flew across the country to hear papers they could read at home, why the badge, why the packed back wall, why the retold stories of 1968, and why a discipline that moved its gathering onto screens finds, a few years on, that something has gone out of the tribe that no database restores. The MLA built a fire and met around it every winter. The fire made the profession feel like one thing. The frame’s cold conclusion is that feelings of that kind are manufactured goods, the factory ran on assembled bodies, and the factory has been half closed for fifteen years.

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The Great Delusions in History Theory

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization…

If Mearsheimer is right, the consensus school of American history provides a flawed interpretation of the American past by mistaking an intense tribal socialization for a natural state of universal agreement. Writing in the 1950s, consensus historians like Louis Hartz in The Liberal Tradition in America and Richard Hofstadter argued that American history lacked the deep, violent ideological conflicts of Europe. They posited that Americans shared an underlying, almost unconscious agreement on individual rights, private property, and liberal capitalism.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology upends this thesis by redefining the nature of that agreement.

First, what the consensus school views as a rational, shared commitment to individual liberty is a highly potent tribal myth. Hartz argued that the absence of a feudal past allowed Americans to naturally adopt Lockean liberalism as a baseline identity. If Mearsheimer is right, this liberal consensus is not a testament to the primacy of individualism. It is the result of a rigorous value infusion drilled into generations of Americans during a long childhood. The shared belief in individual rights is the specific moral code of the American tribe, used to ensure internal cohesion and group survival. The consensus historians mistook a powerful local socialization for a society of atomistic individuals.

Second, the consensus framework fails to recognize how this liberal ideology drives conflict rather than harmony. Mearsheimer notes that the universalism inherent in liberal rights motivates states to pursue ambitious, interventionist foreign policies. The consensus school tended to treat the American liberal agreement as a peaceful domestic stabilizer. If Mearsheimer is right, this shared value system transforms the nation into a crusader. By believing that everyone on the planet desires and possesses the same inherent set of rights, the American tribe systematically projects its power outward, entering conflicts under the guise of human rights. The domestic consensus is the ideological engine of geopolitical expansion.

Third, the consensus school ignores the primary tribal divisions that exist beneath the surface of the liberal narrative. Historians of this school argued that even major American conflicts, like the Civil War, occurred within a broader liberal framework where both sides shared the same basic vocabulary. Mearsheimer’s view implies that when security is threatened, inborn sentiments and tribal attachments easily shatter any superficial ideological agreement. The consensus school overemphasized the power of liberal ideas because they wrote during a period of temporary postwar security and intense national cohesion. When resources grow scarce or distinct social groups within a nation feel their survival is at stake, the shared liberal code dissolves, and the primary, tribal nature of human conflict reasserts itself.

If Mearsheimer is right, the consensus school did not discover a unique American exceptionalism rooted in liberty. They merely documented a period where a highly successful tribe achieved total internal conformity through socialization, using the language of individualism to blind itself to its own tribal behavior.

If John J. Mearsheimer is right, Postcolonial and Subaltern Historiography is entirely accurate in its diagnosis of imperial power, but its core methodology and ultimate goals are based on a profound psychological illusion.

Subaltern studies, which originated with scholars like Ranajit Guha (1923–2023) and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (b. 1942), aims to rescue the history of the peasant, the displaced, and the colonized from the dominant archives of elites and empires. The field uses critique to expose how colonial powers constructed histories that justified their dominance, and it seeks to recover the authentic voice and agency of the oppressed.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology impacts this historical school in three distinct ways:

First, it validates the subaltern claim that elite and imperial histories are instruments of power, not objective truth. Mearsheimer argues that universalist ideologies, like the Western concept of human rights, are constructed by powerful states to justify foreign intervention and dominance. Postcolonial historians who expose British or French colonial records as self-serving narratives designed to subjugate local populations are simply documenting this tribal logic in action. The empire’s history is the tribe’s mythic justification for survival and expansion.

Second, the field’s core ambition—recovering an unconditioned, authentic subaltern voice—is an impossibility. Subaltern historiography attempts to peel back layers of colonial discourse to find the true consciousness of the oppressed peasant. But if Mearsheimer is right, there is no such thing as an unconditioned human consciousness waiting to be liberated. The subaltern individual is just as thoroughly shaped by intense childhood socialization, local tribal values, and inborn sentiments as the imperial elite. If you strip away the social matrix that formed the subaltern’s identity, you do not find a pure, autonomous rational actor; you find nothing at all. The voice the historian recovers is not a universal human voice, but the voice of a different, localized tribe with its own rigid moral code.

Third, the progressive, emancipatory narrative of subaltern studies is a delusion. The field is driven by a desire to dismantle oppressive power structures to achieve a more just, pluralistic global history. If Mearsheimer’s view of human nature is correct, human groups are locked in a permanent, anarchic competition for survival. When a subaltern group successfully resists or overthrows an elite structure, the logic of dominance does not disappear. The newly empowered group will immediately organize itself into a cohesive unit to ensure its own survival, which inevitably requires establishing its own internal hierarchies, enforcing its own value infusions, and competing with rival groups. The postcolonial history of internal ethnic and tribal conflicts confirms this reality.

If Mearsheimer is right, Postcolonial and Subaltern Historiography correctly identifies the mechanisms of imperial bias, but it misinterprets the nature of the people it seeks to liberate. History is not a story of progressive emancipation from power structures; it is a permanent cycle of tribal groups using culture, narrative, and force to survive in a hostile world.

If John J. Mearsheimer is right, Gender and Intersection Historiography provides a highly accurate map of how human societies organize themselves for internal solidarity, but its foundational theory of power and liberation is completely wrong.

Gender and intersectional historiography treats categories like masculinity, femininity, sexuality, and race as historical constructs that are constantly negotiated and enforced. The field uses these categories to analyze how societies distribute power and resources, arguing that hierarchies are maintained through systemic oppression. The underlying goal is emancipatory: by exposing these structures as unnatural and historically contingent, humanity can dismantle them and move toward a more egalitarian future.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology redefines this entire historical framework in three ways:

First, what gender historians call “systemic oppression” or “socially constructed roles” is actually the necessary machinery of tribal survival. Mearsheimer argues that humans are born into societies that protect and nurture them during a long childhood, exposing them to intense socialization to build group cohesion. In an anarchic world where groups must compete to survive, a tribe cannot leave its internal structure to chance. Roles governing reproduction, labor, defense, and lineage are enforced not out of arbitrary malice, but because a group must maximize its efficiency and internal stability to avoid destruction by its neighbors. The rigid gender roles documented by historians are the survival strategies of competing tribes.

Second, the intersectional model correctly identifies that individual identities are subordinate to group alignments, but it mistakes the nature of the primary group. Intersectional theory treats an individual as a combination of various oppressed or privileged identities (e.g., race, gender, class). Mearsheimer’s view implies that when existential security is threatened, these sub-tribal identities collapse into the primary survival unit: the state or the macro-tribe. A woman or a minority group member is socialized into the overarching values of their specific society long before they develop the critical faculties to analyze their intersectional position. In times of crisis, history shows that individuals almost always side with their national or cultural tribe against external threats, completely overriding internal intersectional solidarity.

Third, the progressive goal of dismantling these historical structures is a recipe for tribal collapse. Intersectional historians use critique to weaken the authority of traditional social hierarchies, viewing them as obstacles to individual and collective liberation. If Mearsheimer is right, a society that successfully deconstructs its internal roles and values saps its own social cohesion. It trades its intense, stabilizing value infusion for atomized individualism. In a competitive world, a tribe that deconstructs its own social fabric will inevitably be conquered, subordinated, or replaced by a more cohesive, traditional tribe that maintains strict internal socialization and clear group roles.

If Mearsheimer is right, Gender and Intersection Historiography is an excellent record of how tightly societies must manage their populations to ensure group survival. However, the field’s ultimate project is an illusion. It views the structural constraints of human society as temporary historical mistakes rather than the permanent, survival-driven logic of a tribal animal.

If John J. Mearsheimer is right, Global, Transnational, and Network History tracks the superficial plumbing of global civilization while completely misinterpreting the architectural foundation.

This school of history focuses on what flows across borders—ideas, commodities, microbes, and migrants. It attempts to bypass the nation-state, arguing that human history is better understood through borderless connections, oceanic worlds, and global circuits. It implies that the nation-state is a modern, artificial container that can be de-emphasized in historical analysis.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology redefines the findings of this approach in three ways:

First, networks do not replace bounded groups; they depend on them. Transnational historians trace the flow of global trade circuits or the spread of ideas across vast networks. If Mearsheimer is right, these networks can only exist because secure, powerful tribes create and maintain the stable conditions necessary for them to operate. A global trade network like the Silk Road or an oceanic world like the Atlantic basin is not a borderless space of pure flow. It is a space negotiated, policed, or dominated by powerful states seeking to maximize their wealth and security relative to rivals. The network is a byproduct of state power, not an independent force that transcends it.

Second, the circulation of ideas across borders does not create a universal human identity. Transnational history often highlights how political concepts or cultural trends jump from one society to another, implying a growing global interconnectedness. Mearsheimer notes that because of intense early childhood socialization within specific groups, an individual’s moral code and primary identity are fixed locally long before his critical faculties develop. When a foreign idea enters a new tribe, it is not received by neutral, cosmopolitan actors. It is aggressively filtered, adapted, or weaponized to serve the internal cohesion and survival needs of that local tribe. Ideas cross borders, but primary loyalties do not.

Third, the nation-state is not an arbitrary historical container that humanity can outgrow; it is the ultimate expression of the tribal survival imperative. Transnational historians treat the nation-state as a historically contingent nineteenth-century invention. If Mearsheimer is right, the state exists because humans are profoundly social beings who require an overarching political structure to protect them from external threats in an anarchic world. The scale of the group may change over centuries—from clans to city-states to empires to nation-states—but the underlying logic of a bounded, defensive social group remains constant.

If Mearsheimer is right, Global, Transnational, and Network History provides a valuable description of the interactions between human societies. However, the field fails because it mistakes increased interaction for the dissolution of the boundary. Man remains a tribal animal, and no matter how fast commodities, diseases, or ideas move through a global network, the primary unit of human survival remains the bounded, social group.

If John J. Mearsheimer is right, Environmental History provides an exceptionally accurate account of the material constraints that drive human conflict, but the field’s prescriptive lessons are fundamentally at odds with human nature.

Environmental history treats nature as an active agent. It demonstrates how changes in the physical world—droughts, plagues, crop failures, and resource depletion—destroy regimes, force migrations, and trigger wars.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology fits this framework precisely, transforming environmental history into a record of tribal survival strategies under ecological pressure.

First, environmental history confirms that human groups are locked in a permanent, material struggle for security. When historians document how a climate shift or a soil crisis caused a state collapse, they are showing what happens when a tribe can no longer protect and nurture its members. In Mearsheimer’s world, an anarchic environment forces groups to maximize their power relative to others. Power requires energy and resources. Therefore, the historical record of human societies aggressively extracting resources and clearing land is not a cultural mistake or a lack of awareness; it is the logical consequence of competing tribes doing whatever it takes to survive.

Second, the field exposes the illusion of universal reason when resource scarcity strikes. Environmental historians often study resource frontiers—the places where societies expand to secure timber, coal, or water. If Mearsheimer is right that reason is the least important way humans determine their preferences, a society facing an ecological crisis will not calmly reason its way into a global sharing agreement with its neighbors. Instead, its deep-seated survival instincts and innate sentiments will reassert themselves. The group will prioritize its own members, weaponize its narratives, and use force to secure what it needs from rival groups. History shows that ecological stress intensifies tribal boundaries rather than dissolving them.

Third, the field’s underlying hope—that understanding historical ecological collapses will convince modern humanity to cooperate globally—is a delusion. Many environmental historians write with a moral urgency, hoping that by exposing the material limits of the planet, they can inspire a cross-border, unified effort to avert climate disaster.

If Mearsheimer is right, this global cooperation is impossible. Because individuals are intensely socialized within specific societies during childhood, their moral attachments are bound to the local tribe. A man will make sacrifices for his group, but he cannot form the same sacrificial attachment to an abstract global ecosystem. If saving the biosphere requires a tribe to unilaterally cut its resource use and weaken its position relative to a rising rival, the tribe will choose survival over sustainability every time.

If Mearsheimer is right, Environmental History is a brilliant, tragic map of human history. It correctly identifies that nature dictates the terms of human existence, but it fails to see that the tribal structure of human psychology guarantees that humanity will fight each other for the remaining pieces of the planet rather than unite to save it.

If John J. Mearsheimer is right, Material Culture and Science and Technology Studies (STS) provides an exceptionally accurate map of how human groups construct reality to survive, but the field’s underlying impulse to demystify power is an intellectual dead end.

This historical school rejects the idea that technology and science develop along a linear path of objective, neutral progress. Instead, STS treats scientific knowledge and physical artifacts as systems deeply embedded in specific political and social frameworks. They argue that what a society labels as objective truth or a neutral tool is actually a social construction shaped by those in power.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology redefines the insights of this school in three ways:

First, it validates the core STS claim that knowledge and technology are socially constructed instruments of power. Mearsheimer argues that humans are socialized into a specific tribe’s value system long before their critical faculties develop. Science, medicine, and engineering do not develop in a vacuum of pure reason; they are organized by the state or the tribe to maximize its security, wealth, and competitive advantage in an anarchic world. When an STS historian demonstrates that the development of the steam engine, the laboratory, or algorithmic data systems was driven by state priorities and military-industrial needs rather than pure curiosity, he is confirming Mearsheimer’s realism. Technology is the physical muscle of the tribe.

Second, material culture is the physical manifestation of the intense value infusion Mearsheimer describes. Historians of material culture analyze everyday objects to decode social status, identity, and consumption. If humans are tribal down to their core sentiments, objects are not merely utilitarian tools or empty displays of wealth. They are the instruments used during a long childhood to condition and socialize individuals into the group’s moral code. A flag, a uniform, a architectural style, or even everyday consumer goods serve to reinforce the boundary between the internal community and the external world. Material culture is the physical anchor of tribal cohesion.

Third, the STS project of unmasking scientific objectivity is politically destabilizing for the society that practices it. Many STS scholars operate with an emancipatory motive, believing that by exposing the social biases behind scientific consensus or technological systems, they can democratize knowledge and reduce institutional control.

If Mearsheimer is right, a tribe requires a shared, stable narrative—including a shared belief in its own operational truths—to maintain internal solidarity and survive. A historical critique that systematically hollows out a society’s trust in its own scientific institutions, technical systems, and foundational knowledge structures does not liberate its citizens. It fractures their collective reality. While one society engages in the luxury of deconstructing its own technological and scientific authority, rival tribes maintaining strict, uncritical state alignment will continue to maximize their hard power, engineering capabilities, and strategic coherence.

If Mearsheimer is right, Material Culture and STS correctly observes that science and objects are extensions of social logic rather than detached, objective progress. However, the field fails to see that this social construction is a biological and political necessity. A group cannot survive on critique alone; it requires functional tools and shared certainties to withstand the permanent pressure of an anarchic world.

If John J. Mearsheimer is right, Memory Studies and Public History is the most anthro-politically accurate discipline in the entire academy. It maps the precise engineering by which human groups survive.

This field focuses on how societies actively construct a collective memory through monuments, museums, holidays, and myths to build internal solidarity and navigate trauma. It acknowledges that public history is rarely about an objective recording of the past; it is about the living social needs of the present.

Mearsheimer’s anthropology fully validates and explains the mechanics of this field in three specific ways:

First, collective memory is the primary vehicle for the intense value infusion Mearsheimer describes. He argues that during a long childhood, before critical faculties develop, individuals are exposed to intense socialization by their families and society. Public history—the statues a child walks past, the national holidays he celebrates, the stories he is told in school—is the deliberate structure built to achieve this value infusion. It implants a shared moral code and identity into the individual’s mind when he is most impressionable. Collective memory is not an intellectual hobby; it is the socialization engine of the tribe.

Second, the field correctly identifies that societies prioritize solidarity over objective truth. Scholars of memory studies frequently document how nations manipulate, clean, or completely rewrite historical events to maintain a coherent national narrative. If Mearsheimer is right that humans are tribal at their core and depend on the group for survival, this narrative manipulation is a biological necessity. A tribe cannot afford a fragmented, hyper-critical memory that saps internal loyalty. To face an anarchic, dangerous world, a group must have strong attachments and a willingness to make great sacrifices for fellow members. Public history constructs the myths that justify those sacrifices.

Third, the modern academic effort to deconstruct national myths is a form of political sabotage. Many contemporary public historians and memory scholars operate with an iconoclastic motive. They seek to dismantle national myths, tear down traditional monuments, and expose the dark underbellies of state commemorations to force a society to confront its historical sins.

If Mearsheimer’s framework holds, a society that successfully hollows out its own collective memory does not achieve a higher, more enlightened state of being. It destroys its own internal cohesion. By replacing a unifying national myth with a narrative of permanent internal guilt and division, the group fractures its own socialization process. In a world of permanent tribal competition, a society that deconstructs its public history systematically dismantles the psychological defenses required for its own survival, leaving it vulnerable to more cohesive, single-minded rivals.

If Mearsheimer is right, Memory Studies and Public History accurately captures the exact logic of human society. It shows that man does not live by bare, objective facts, but by the shared, sacred memories that bind him to his tribe.

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Allan Bloom: The Teacher Who Wanted Your Soul

On the afternoon of Sunday, April 20, 1969, the heavy doors of Willard Straight Hall opened and about a hundred Black students walked out into the cool Ithaca air. They had held Cornell University‘s student union for a day and a half. Some carried rifles and shotguns. One wore a bandoleer of ammunition across his chest. Members of Students for a Democratic Society cheered as the column crossed the Arts Quad. Photographers caught the image, and within days it ran on the covers of national magazines.

Allan Bloom (1930-1992), a professor of government at Cornell, watched his university surrender. The administration signed a seven-point agreement recommending that the faculty nullify penalties against students disciplined for earlier disruptions. Bloom told the Cornell Daily Sun the agreement shocked him. When the faculty prepared to meet, fifty students calling themselves the silent center protested the capitulation with signs reading DON’T LET THEM BULLY YOU and BERLIN ’32, ITHACA ’69. Some of them, at Bloom’s direction, handed out excerpts from Plato’s Republic.

The scene compresses the man. A campus in crisis, guns in the quad, a president about to fall, and a chain-smoking Plato scholar sending students into the crowd with photocopied pages of a dialogue written twenty-four centuries earlier, as if the one thing an armed standoff needed was Socrates on justice. Bloom believed it did. He spent his life on the premise that old books address present emergencies better than present opinion does, and that a university exists to arrange the meeting.

He came from Indianapolis. Allan David Bloom was born there on September 14, 1930, to second-generation Jewish parents who both worked as social workers. At thirteen he read an article in Reader’s Digest about the University of Chicago and told his parents he wanted to go. They thought the idea unreasonable. They were practical people. The family moved to Chicago in 1944, and there his parents met wealthier Jews and came to see that education could pave the way to a comfortable life. In 1946, at fifteen, Bloom entered the university’s program for gifted students, a legacy of president Robert Maynard Hutchins (1899-1977) and his campaign to build an education on great books rather than on vocational training. Bloom later wrote in The Closing of the American Mind that when he first saw the campus he somehow sensed he had discovered his life. He had never before noticed buildings dedicated to a purpose beyond shelter, manufacture, or trade.

He stayed a decade. He took his degrees in Hyde Park and enrolled for graduate work in the Committee on Social Thought, a small interdisciplinary program with brutal requirements and no clear job market at the far end. The classicist David Grene (1913-2002) served as his tutor and remembered him as energetic, humorous, and committed to the classics with no definite career ambition. Bloom wrote his dissertation on the political philosophy of Isocrates and took the Ph.D. in 1955.

The decisive encounter of those years was Leo Strauss (1899-1973), the German-Jewish émigré whose readings of Plato, Maimonides, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Spinoza, and Nietzsche reshaped American political theory after the war. Strauss taught that political philosophy begins in the tension between reason and revelation, between philosophy and the city, between truth and opinion. He also taught a method of reading. Great philosophers, he argued, often wrote for two audiences at once, offering an exoteric teaching the public could safely receive while preserving a deeper and more dangerous teaching for readers alert to irony, contradiction, omission, and structural oddity. Strauss called his students his puppies. Bloom got closer to the sun than most of them, and his friend Werner Dannhauser (1929-2014) judged that the closeness seared him. Bloom credited Strauss with showing him what a liberal education is for. In the preface to Giants and Dwarfs he said his education began with Freud and ended with Plato.

Paris finished the formation. Bloom studied and taught there from 1953 to 1955 at the École Normale Supérieure, befriended Raymond Aron (1905-1983), and studied under Alexandre Kojève (1902-1968), the Russian-born Hegelian whose seminars had already shaped a generation of French thought. Kojève argued that history pointed toward a universal and homogeneous state, a global order of equal recognition, rational administration, and material satisfaction. Bloom took the thesis seriously and viewed it with dread. If history ended in comfort and bureaucratic peace, what became of greatness, nobility, eros, and philosophy? He later edited the English edition of Kojève’s lectures on Hegel, and the question ran under everything he wrote afterward. The famous 1987 book about American students is, at bottom, a report that Nietzsche’s Last Man had arrived on campus and was doing fine.

Paris also gave him his tastes. Dannhauser, who cavorted with him in half the cities of the West, remembered Bloom in Paris shopping for pastries, walking the Seine, browsing bookstores, barhopping at night, ordering Coca-Colas in fancy places, and smoking everywhere with relief at his distance from American censoriousness about cigarettes. The kid from Indianapolis liked to quote Marx and Engels on the idiocy of rural life. His heart belonged to Paris.

Dannhauser first met him in 1956, in a University of Chicago class on Plato’s Republic. Bloom already held his doctorate and kept coming to classes anyway while teaching adult education courses downtown in the university’s Basic Program. The young man Dannhauser saw that day was gawky and disheveled, a bit of a slob, thinking with his face, and above all voluble. The natty dresser came later.

The career then ran through the usual stations at unusual speed. Yale from 1960 to 1963. Cornell from 1963 to 1970. His first book, Shakespeare’s Politics (1964), written with Harry V. Jaffa (1918-2015), treated the plays as political philosophy, studies of rule, ambition, eros, and regime. His translation of Plato’s Republic appeared in 1968 and became one of the standard English versions. Its principle was literalness. Bloom wanted the roughness, repetition, and strangeness of the Greek preserved, because for him a great book was an arranged surface full of clues, and a smooth translation flattened the clues into modern common sense. The literalness was philosophical. It forced students to slow down, distrust paraphrase, and ask why the author wrote this sentence in this way at this point.

At Cornell, Bloom served on the faculty of Telluride House, the residential association where selected students ran their own house, hired the staff, and organized seminars, with faculty guests living among them. He ate with students, argued with them, and made intellectual life feel larger than coursework. Francis Fukuyama (b. 1952) lived at Telluride and took Bloom’s course on Greek philosophy; decades later Fukuyama’s end-of-history thesis carried Kojève into American policy debate by way of Bloom’s classroom. The detail matters because Bloom never treated teaching as classroom performance alone. Conversation, friendship, meals, and proximity belonged to education.

So did recruitment of unlikely souls. Ed Whitfield, president of Cornell’s Afro-American Society, remembered dinners at which Bloom tried to persuade him to become a philosopher rather than an activist. Whitfield thought the choice a false one. Decades later he noted that Bloom said the students had destroyed the university and academic freedom, and that the academy looked healthy enough to him despite everything they said. The two men sat at the same table and lived in different universes. Bloom saw a spirited young man whose energies belonged to Plato. Whitfield saw a professor who could not grasp why Black students had lost faith in the institution around them.

The institution gave them both their answer in the spring of 1969. Racial tension had been building for years. President James Perkins (1911-1998), a Quaker who had chaired the board of the United Negro College Fund, had raised the number of Black students from roughly two dozen in 1963 to about 250 by 1968, and the university proved unprepared for what followed. In December 1968 students demanding a separate curriculum overturned vending machines and marched through a dining hall. A faculty-student disciplinary body issued reprimands. In April 1969, on the eve of Parents Weekend, a cross burned on the porch of a Black women’s cooperative house. Before dawn on Saturday, April 19, members of the Afro-American Society took over Willard Straight Hall, ejecting parents from their guest rooms. White fraternity members tried to retake the building by force. The occupiers brought in guns. Thirty-six hours later they marched out armed, the administration signed, and the photograph went around the world.

The faculty at first refused to ratify the surrender, voting down the recommendation to nullify the reprimands. Then, under threat, it reversed itself. For Bloom the reversal was the true catastrophe. The guns were an event; the collapse of faculty nerve was a revelation. He wrote later in The Closing of the American Mind that students had discovered professors who catechized them about academic freedom could be turned, with a little shove, into dancing bears. A handful of professors resigned in protest, among them the constitutional scholar Walter Berns (1919-2015), the government chairman Allan Sindler, and, in time, the historian Donald Kagan (1932-2021) left for Yale. Thomas Sowell (b. 1930), then a young Black economics professor at Cornell, had already resigned in August 1968 after the administration undercut his authority in his own classroom, and he later called the crisis the most violent campus episode of a violent decade. Perkins announced his resignation by the end of May. The government scholar Clinton Rossiter (1917-1970), who had sided with the administration, killed himself the following year. Bloom quit and was gone by 1970.

He spent the next nine years at the University of Toronto, productive and half in exile. There he translated Rousseau’s Émile (1979), treating it as Rousseau intended, a rival to Plato’s Republic, a book about the formation of a human being from infancy to marriage rather than a manual of pedagogical tips. Plato and Rousseau were for Bloom the two great teachers of the soul, and each understood that education forms desire before it forms opinion. He also translated and commented on Rousseau’s Letter to M. d’Alembert on the Theater, edited the journal Political Theory, and contributed to the Strauss-Cropsey History of Political Philosophy.

In 1979 he came home to Chicago and the Committee on Social Thought, the program that had trained him. He co-directed the John M. Olin Center for Inquiry into the Theory and Practice of Democracy, funded by the foundation then bankrolling much of the intellectual counter-establishment. And he acquired the friend who would give him his second afterlife. Saul Bellow (1915-2005) taught alongside him on the Committee, and the two became close to the point of inseparability. Bellow said Bloom inhaled books and ideas the way other people breathe air.

The Chicago Bloom of the 1980s is the figure his students remember and Bellow later fixed in print. He lived in an apartment building at 58th and Dorchester in Hyde Park, blocks from campus, next to the tower that housed Bellow and a small colony of Nobel laureates. He bought Lanvin jackets and Zegna ties and spilled food on them; hostesses learned to spread newspaper under his chair at dinner parties. He wandered his apartment in a silk dressing gown among fine glass, French linens, expensive stereo equipment, and thousands of CDs, chain-smoking, orating, reclining on a black leather couch with Baroque music playing. In the seminar room he stuttered, lit cigarette after cigarette, forgot most of them, broke others, and at moments of high tension put the lit end in his mouth. His student Clifford Orwin called him the most charismatic human being he ever knew, and noted that he lacked every standard trait of the effective teacher except the one that counted, the power to transfer his conviction that the book on the table was the most important thing in the students’ lives.

The conviction had content. Bloom’s teaching turned on two Greek words, eros and thymos. Eros meant longing, the wound of incompleteness, the desire for something higher than what one has. Thymos meant spiritedness, pride, indignation, the demand for recognition. Following Plato, Bloom held that philosophy cannot be produced by logic alone. A student must first be dissatisfied. He must feel that the ordinary answers fail him and want something beyond comfort, career, and approval. Bloom’s classroom existed to awaken that want, and his cultural criticism followed from the same premise. He attacked rock music and casual sex in The Closing of the American Mind on pedagogical grounds rather than moral ones. Rock gave the young an artificial intensity without discipline or ascent. Easy sex flattened the drama of longing. A soul whose desires had been cheaply satisfied at fifteen had less fuel at twenty for the harder pleasures of philosophy, friendship, and love. A tamer soul was a dumber soul.

Bellow badgered him to put the argument in a book. Bloom expanded a National Review essay, Bellow helped place the manuscript with Simon and Schuster and wrote the foreword, and The Closing of the American Mind appeared in April 1987 with a subtitle that clenched the throat: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today’s Students. Nobody expected much. The book sold more than a million copies, sat atop the bestseller lists for months, made Bloom a millionaire, and made the University of Chicago magazine reach for the phrase academic rock star. He dined at the White House. He went on Oprah. The New York Times Magazine profiled him in January 1988 under the headline Chicago’s Grumpy Guru.

The argument deserved the noise. Bloom claimed that American students arrived at college already convinced that truth is relative, that judgment is oppression, that culture is preference, and that the purpose of education is self-expression or career. Their openness, he argued, had closed them. The old liberal education exposed the young to rival answers about justice, God, love, courage, and death, and demanded they take sides at the risk of being wrong. The new openness taught that no answer beats any other, a posture that looked generous and worked as anesthesia. It protected students from fanaticism and from seriousness in the same motion. It dissolved prejudice and dissolved the strong opinions philosophy needs as raw material. An empty mind is not a free mind. The students Bloom described were not dangerous rebels. They were agreeable, tolerant, ironic, sexually relaxed, and unable to imagine a truth that might place a demand on them. They were nice. That was the indictment.

The counterattack came fast and from the highest floors. Benjamin Barber called him a philosopher despot with an elitist agenda in Harper’s. Henry Louis Gates Jr. answered in the New York Times under the headline Men Were Men, and Men Were White. Martha Nussbaum, in an essay titled Undemocratic Vistas, went after his classical scholarship. Frank Zappa answered the rock chapters. Bloom relished the fight. When Harvey Mansfield (b. 1932) introduced him at Harvard in 1988, Mansfield told the audience Bloom had always behaved as if he were famous, so fame could not spoil him. Bloom then stood up and observed that the loudest voices calling him an enemy of democracy came from the Ivy League, particularly Harvard, which reminded him of the farmer who hears a thief in the chicken coop and knows the fox by its cry.

He denied being a conservative at all, and the denial was more than branding. He said he defended the theoretical life. He thought bourgeois society was part of the problem, a machine for producing comfort, calculation, and mediocrity, and his loyalty ran to philosophy, friendship, and the education of spirited young people rather than to family values as a platform. The conservative movement adopted him anyway, because his fire fell on its enemies. The Olin money, the Reagan-era culture war, and the book’s timing made him a founding document of a fight he claimed to stand above. Both things were true at once. He was a Socratic who despised political labels, and he was a load-bearing wall in the conservative counter-academy. He cashed the checks and kept the pose, and the pose was sincere.

His private life stayed private while he lived, in the manner of his generation and his circle. Bloom never married and had no children. His companion was Michael Z. Wu, a former student; Bloom dedicated his last book to Wu and named him sole heir. Among his friends the arrangement was known and unremarked. Paul Wolfowitz (b. 1943), a former student, later described the atmosphere of Bloom’s Chicago circle as don’t ask, don’t tell. Bloom attacked feminists and campus militants in print and never attacked homosexuality, an omission his readers can weigh for themselves.

He fell ill in the early 1990s. From his hospital bed he dictated Love and Friendship, published posthumously in 1993, a tour through Plato, Rousseau, Shakespeare, Stendhal, Austen, Flaubert, Tolstoy, and Montaigne in search of rival accounts of longing, attachment, jealousy, and fidelity. The book confirms that his quarrel with the university was never institutional at bottom. He wanted to know what happens to the human capacity for love when the old languages of soul, virtue, honor, and beauty lose their authority. He died in Chicago on October 7, 1992, at sixty-two. The university attributed his death to bleeding ulcers complicated by liver failure. At the funeral, Bellow eulogized his friend’s habits with money, saying Bloom treated a windfall as something to throw from the back of a moving train.

Eight years later Bellow spent the whole inheritance of their friendship. Ravelstein (2000), published when Bellow was eighty-four, is a roman à clef so thin the clef opens on the first page. Abe Ravelstein is a bald, extravagant, chain-smoking Chicago professor who writes a surprise bestseller at his novelist friend’s urging, lavishes gifts on his young companion Nikki, dresses his former students into the corridors of the State Department, and dies of AIDS. Strauss appears as Felix Davarr, Wolfowitz as a war-planning adviser named Phil Gorman, Dannhauser as Morris Herbst, Wu as Nikki. Bellow, as the narrator Chick, claims Bloom asked for the portrait and told him to hold nothing back. Martin Amis (1949-2023) called the novel a masterpiece in which Bloom lives. Others called it betrayal. Nathan Tarcov, Bloom’s former student, co-executor of his estate, and successor at the Olin Center, was said by friends to be appalled. Dannhauser told an interviewer that even if Allan wanted Saul to write about him, he would not have wanted every wart. Bellow himself wobbled on the AIDS claim in interviews, saying he had long thought he knew what Allan died of and then found he did not. The dispute over the cause of death remains open in the public record. What the novel settled was something else. It made public that the great theorist of eros had lived his subject, that the man who taught longing from Plato’s Symposium had a beloved, a household, and a deathbed like anyone, and that his teaching and his life were one argument.

The argument outlived the argument about him. The Closing of the American Mind reads today as a late Cold War period piece in its examples and as current events in its diagnosis. The Chicago conference held on the book’s tenth anniversary treated it as a living document, and every subsequent campus convulsion has sent readers back to the Cornell chapters. But the book was always the smallest part of the man. Bloom’s real work sat in seminar rooms across five decades, in translations built to slow readers down, and in the question he pressed on every spirited nineteen-year-old who wandered into range: what is the best life, and what makes you so sure you are living it? He believed a university exists to keep that question open and armed. He believed education is not the transmission of skills or the raising of self-esteem. He believed it is conversion, the reordering of a soul’s loves, and he practiced it with a cigarette burning at the wrong end.

Notes

The Cornell crisis, timeline, signs, Plato handouts, faculty reversal, resignations, and Rossiter come from “Cornell’s Straight Flush”, City Journal; the Cornell Daily Sun 45th anniversary timeline; “Cornell ’69 and What It Did”, Minding the Campus; “The Day Cornell Died” by Thomas Sowell; and the Cornell library study guide for the cross-burning and gun sequence.

The Whitfield dinners and his later verdict come from “Ripples From a Protest Past”, The Chronicle of Higher Education.

The Reader’s Digest anecdote, parents’ resistance, entry at fifteen, Grene as tutor, Isocrates dissertation, Paris dates, Aron, career stations, Fukuyama and Telluride, and the students list come from Wikipedia and “25 Years Later” by Liel Leibovitz in Tablet. The Tablet piece also has the Mansfield introduction at Harvard, the chicken-coop joke, and the lit-end-of-the-cigarette detail.

The Dannhauser memoir, with the 1956 Plato class, Paris pastries and Coca-Colas, Strauss‘s puppies, and “seared by the sun,” comes from “My Friend, Allan Bloom”, originally in Commentary and reprinted at the Washington Examiner.

The Orwin material on Bloom‘s charisma, stutter, and chain smoking comes from “On Allan Bloom” by Clifford Orwin at Project MUSE.

The Bellow friendship, apartment at 58th and Dorchester, Wu as dedicatee and sole heir, Tarcov appalled, Dannhauser’s warts remark, and the moving-train eulogy line come from “Allan Bloom, warts and all”, Chicago Sun-Times.

Ravelstein details, including Lanvin and Zegna, newspaper under the chair, Davarr, Gorman, Nikki, Amis‘s verdict, and Bellow’s “inhaled books” line, come from Wikipedia on Ravelstein. Bellow backing off the AIDS claim comes from “Bellow’s Bloom”, Washington Examiner. Andrew Sullivan on eros and the outing comes from “Longing: Remembering Allan Bloom”, originally in The New Republic and reprinted at IGF Culture Watch. Wolfowitz‘s don’t-ask-don’t-tell remark comes from Inside Higher Ed via the Wikipedia footnotes.

Millionaire, White House dinners, and Oprah come from the CultureVulture review of Ravelstein. “Chicago’s Grumpy Guru” is by James Atlas, New York Times Magazine, January 3, 1988. Critics include Benjamin Barber in Harper’s, January 1988; Henry Louis Gates Jr. in The New York Times Book Review, May 29, 1988; Martha Nussbaum‘s “Undemocratic Vistas” in The New York Review of Books, 1987; and Frank Zappa‘s “On Junk Food for the Soul.”

Reasonable extrapolations without a link: the physical feel of the Ithaca quad and Hyde Park, the general character of Telluride life, the Hutchins-era atmosphere at Chicago, and the compression in the final paragraph, which is interpretation rather than reporting.

The Man Who Read the Playbook: Allan Bloom’s Hero System

A seminar room in Hyde Park, sometime in the mid-1980s. Gray light on limestone. Around the table sit a dozen graduate students who have organized their lives to be here, and at the head sits a bald man in a Lanvin jacket with ash on the lapel. He stutters. He lights cigarettes and forgets them, and at moments of highest tension he puts the lit end in his mouth. He asks what Socrates wants from Glaucon, and he asks it the way another man might ask whether the tumor is malignant. The students lean in. One of them, Clifford Orwin, later calls him the most charismatic human being he ever knew, and adds that Bloom lacked every trait a teacher is supposed to need. The room does not care. The room believes, for fifty minutes, that the ranking of human lives is the most urgent question on earth, and that the men who can rank them sit at this table.

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argues that every culture is a hero system, a shared fiction that lets a dying animal feel like an object of primary value in a universe of meaning. A man cannot live staring at his own extinction, so he earns significance in whatever theater his tribe has built: sons, souls saved, acres cleared, papers published, money stacked. The theaters differ. The play is the same. Becker’s cold addendum is that the players must not know it is a play. The denial works only while it stays denied.

Bloom breaks the addendum. He read the playbook. His tradition begins with Plato (c. 429-347 BCE) having Socrates define philosophy as the practice of dying, and Bloom teaches that definition for forty years. He knows the young come to him terrified and unformed. He knows that careers, causes, and pleasures are anesthetics. He says so in print, at length, to a million buyers. His originality inside Becker’s scheme is the claim of exemption: all hero systems deny death except one. The philosopher does not repress the terror. He turns and looks at it, and the looking is the highest life. Every other project on the menu, the family, the nation, the revolution, the fortune, is a noble or ignoble sleep. Philosophy alone stays awake. The Closing of the American Mind is a 392-page argument that America has stopped producing insomniacs.

Becker doubts the exemption. He suspects the philosopher’s ladder is one more theater, with better seats. The rest of this essay tests Bloom’s claim against Bloom’s life.

Two terrors run under that life. The first is the body’s. Bloom chain-smokes through heart trouble, jokes with his barber about cholesterol, and dies at sixty-two of internal bleeding and a failing liver, with a friend’s novel later asserting AIDS and the record still open. He keeps his eros off the page while making eros his subject, and he spends his last weeks in a hospital bed dictating a book about love. The animal dies the way animals die, in a body, attended, afraid or not afraid, and no translation of the Republic changes the mattress.

The second terror frightens him more, and it is the signature of his system. Kojève teaches him that history might end, not in fire, in upholstery: a universal state of equal recognition, full stomachs, and administered peace. Nietzsche (1844-1900) gives the resident of that state a name, the Last Man, who blinks. For Bloom the true horror is not that he will die. It is that the world might stop producing people for whom anything is worth dying, that longing might go extinct, that the species might settle into a comfort so complete no one climbs. Death kills the hero. The end of history kills the heroic. A man can face the first with Socrates. Against the second there is only the classroom, held like a garrison.

From these terrors come the sacred values, and each one is a word that other hero systems also use, at different exchange rates.

Take eros. In Bloom’s system eros is a ladder. The longing that begins in a body is the low rung of an ascent that ends in the love of truth, and the whole apparatus of education exists to keep the longing hungry and pointed up. Satisfaction is the enemy. A nineteen-year-old whose desires have been met at cost is a nineteen-year-old who will never need Plato. The word carries other loads elsewhere. For the woman in the fertility clinic waiting room, forty-one, third cycle, eros has narrowed to a follicle count and a payment plan; longing means a child, and the ladder points at a nursery. For the Carmelite nun the same hunger has one licit object, and she has spent thirty years training it on Him, in a cell, on a schedule; she might recognize Bloom’s ascent and note that he skipped the vows. For the engineer at the dating app, eros is a retention curve; his bonus depends on longing that never quite closes, and he has built what Bloom feared with a cheerfulness Bloom never imagined. For the youth pastor running a purity seminar in a church gym, eros is a flood behind a levee, and his heroism consists of sandbags. Each of them says desire. Each means a different god. Bloom’s version demands that the fire stay lit and stay aimed at books, and his biography adds the detail his system never prices: his own consummations stayed off the ledger, known to friends, unwritten, while he taught longing to the young as the one subject that cannot be faked.

Take the book. In Bloom’s system a book is a sealed instrument. The great writers wrote for two audiences, a surface for the city and a code for the few, and reading is initiation. A book is also a raft: the author survives on it across millennia, and the reader who boards it joins the only aristocracy that matters, a conversation among the dead conducted over the heads of the living. He translates the Republic with deliberate roughness so the code survives the crossing. Other systems weigh the word differently. For the Baptist deacon in Alabama the book is singular and inerrant, and the hero task is submission to it, so that Bloom’s talk of hidden teachings sounds like the serpent’s first question. For the Tehran engineer who passed hand-copied Forugh Farrokhzad poems through the 1980s, a book is contraband and courage, and its value scales with the risk of holding it. For the memorizer in a Sana’a Quran school, the book lives in the chest, word-perfect, and the immortality it grants is recitation, a boy becoming a vessel. For the acquisitions editor in Manhattan, the book is a P&L with a jacket, and she can tell you within five hundred units what a soul is worth this season. Bloom’s own case ends in her column. The man whose system honors coded writing for the few produces the loudest mass artifact of the decade, dines at the White House, sits with Oprah, and buys the Lanvin with the proceeds. The market hands him the immortality the seminar could not, and he takes it, and he knows what he has taken. He spends the money like a man mocking it, and Bellow tells the funeral that Bloom treated a windfall as cargo to heave off a moving train.

Take the teacher. Here Bloom’s system beats loudest, because teaching is its answer to death. Becker calls the deepest human project causa sui, the wish to father oneself, to owe the gift of life to no one and pass it on by one’s own power. Bloom, who fathers no children, fathers minds. The lineage runs like a genealogy: Strauss begets Bloom, Bloom begets Fukuyama and Wolfowitz and Pangle and Orwin, and the seed is a way of reading. Telluride House gives him a household without a wife; the seminar gives him generation without the body. The word teacher trades elsewhere at other rates. For the Parris Island drill instructor, a teacher is a man who breaks civilians into parts and reassembles them as Marines, and the transmission is obedience under fire. For the Seoul mother who spends a third of the family income on hagwons, the teacher is an arms dealer in the credential war, and her heroism is measured in her son’s exam percentile. For the melamed drilling five-year-olds on the aleph-beis in a Brooklyn cheder, teaching is the relay of a covenant, and he is one link in a chain that must not break with him. For the keynote thought leader working the conference circuit, teaching is an asset class, and the students are called an audience. Bloom stands closest to the melamed and would resent the comparison, since his chain carries no covenant, only the conversation. But the structure is the same: a childless man securing descent. The rival he never names in all his pages on education is the parent, the ordinary father who transmits life the old way, through diapers and mortgages and a body that came from his body. Bloom’s system quietly ranks that man below the teacher, and has to, because the teacher’s whole claim to immortality depends on pedagogical generation outranking the biological kind.

Take openness. Bloom performs his most famous move on this word, and the move is pure Becker even though he never cites him. American culture, he argues, has adopted openness as its supreme virtue, and the openness is a closing, because a mind open to everything can be claimed by nothing. Translated into Becker’s terms: relativism is the demolition of hero systems as such. The student taught that no way of life ranks above another has been handed a world with no theater left in it, no stage on which significance can be earned, and he responds the way Becker predicts, with low-grade depression, irony, and consumption. Bloom’s rage at the flat souls of his students is grief over demolished theaters. The word means other things on other stages. For the Unitarian minister in Vermont, openness is the creed, the hard-won escape from her grandfather’s hellfire, and Bloom’s hierarchy smells of the thing she fled. For the venture capitalist, openness means optionality, never committing to a thesis a term sheet can’t exit, and he calls it keeping the aperture wide. For the Hasidic father in Williamsburg, openness is the street pressing on his sons, the smartphone in the study hall, the acid that eats fences, and he builds his heroism as a wall. For the woman three years out of a compound in Idaho, openness cracked her prison, and she will hear no sermon against it. Bloom agrees with the Hasid on the diagnosis and with none of them on the cure. He wants the fences down and the ranking kept, every belief exposed to the knife and the knife wielded only by the few who can survive the surgery. That position has a name in Becker: a hero system for those strong enough to watch the others burn.

Now run the subtraction. Take away the Committee, the lineage, the million copies, the apartment on Dorchester with the French linens and the Baroque on the stereo. Take away the seminar table and the twelve leaning students. What remains, in October 1992, is a body in a Chicago hospital bed, propped up, short of breath, dictating. The book he dictates is Love and Friendship, chapters on Rousseau (1712-1778), on Shakespeare, on Austen, on the varieties of human attachment, spoken aloud to the end. Read one way, the scene vindicates him. This is the practice of dying as advertised, the philosopher working the question of love while the liver fails, awake to the last. Read Becker’s way, the scene shows the system operating at full load at the exact moment it should be dropping away, the immortality project running like a bilge pump, words against water. Both readings are available. The measure of the man is that both are plausible, which is more than most hero systems can say for their heroes at the end.

The afterlife arrives on schedule and in the wrong hands. Bloom’s system promises survival through students and books, a controlled transmission, the teaching passing sealed to the initiated. What the world receives instead, eight years later, is Ravelstein, a novel by his best friend, in which the sealed man appears unsealed: the spending, the gossip, the companion, the diagnosis asserted and then half retracted in interviews. Bellow gives him the only immortality that reaches past the seminar, and it wears Bellow’s face. The disciples call it betrayal. The executor is said to be appalled. Here sits the cost that Bloom’s own ledger has no column for: a hero system built on the mastery of texts ends with its founder as a character in someone else’s, edited by another hand, his code broken by the one reader he loved who never joined the school. There is a second unpriced cost, quieter. Michael Z. Wu keeps a dedication and an estate, and grief converted to inheritance is the kind of settlement Bloom’s Plato, who wrote the Symposium, might have asked harder questions about than Bloom’s admirers did.

The hero, then. Bloom plays Socrates in a Lanvin jacket: the barefoot man of the agora restaged with Zegna ties, a stereo, and royalties, dying in talk as the original died in talk, hemlock swapped for cigarettes at the rate of two per haircut. The imitation is sincere and the discount is real. Socrates wrote nothing, charged nothing, and owned one cloak; his refusal of the world’s currencies was the proof of the claim. Bloom takes the currencies, all of them, and holds the claim anyway, and the strain between the two is where his hero system either breaks or shows its honesty, depending on the reader. His unnamed rival stands closer than the Last Man he denounced. It is the ordinary father at the kitchen table, the man who answers death with children instead of dialogues and never needs a seminar to feel his life has weight. Bloom’s entire edifice is a wager that the classroom outranks that kitchen, and the wager cannot be settled, because the two heroes keep different books. And the final cost is the one already named: the man who taught that a book is a raft across death got his crossing, and the raft was built by a friend, from his warts, without his permission. He wanted to be Plato. He arrived on the far shore as Alcibiades, the beloved character in a text he did not write, bursting in drunk at the end of the banquet, telling the truth about the teacher, and stealing the scene.

The Energy Star of Hyde Park: Allan Bloom Through Randall Collins

Begin with the body in the room. A seminar table at the University of Chicago, the mid-1980s. Twelve graduate students sit close enough to smell the smoke. At the head sits a bald man who stutters, and the stutter does something no smooth lecturer manages: it makes every sentence a small suspense. The students wait for the word to break loose. Their eyes converge on one point. The man lights cigarette after cigarette, forgets them, breaks them, and at the highest pitch of a session puts the lit end in his mouth, and nobody laughs, because by then the room has fused. Clifford Orwin, who sat at that table, calls Allan Bloom the most charismatic human being he ever knew and lists the missing equipment: no poise, no fluency, none of the calm self-possession his teacher Leo Strauss carried. The charisma arrived anyway.

Randall Collins (b. 1941) builds a sociology that predicts this room. Working from Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) and Erving Goffman (1922-1982), Collins argues that the basic unit of social life is the interaction ritual: bodies assembled in one place, a barrier marking insiders from outsiders, a shared object of attention, and a shared mood that feeds on the attention. When the ritual works, the participants fall into rhythm with one another, and the rhythm generates what Collins calls emotional energy, a charge of confidence, warmth, and drive that people carry out of the encounter and spend in the next one. Successful rituals also throw off byproducts: solidarity among the participants, moral standards that feel absolute, and sacred objects, things saturated with the group’s charge, a flag, a ring, a book. Charisma, in this account, has no mystery. A charismatic man is a man at the focal point of high-intensity rituals, an energy star, and his magnetism is the stored charge of a thousand successful assemblies. Polish has nothing to do with it. Focus has everything to do with it. The stutter, the smoke, the burned lip: each tightens the room’s attention on one man, and attention is the fuel.

Collins wrote a second book that fits Bloom tighter still. The Sociology of Philosophies argues that intellectual life across three millennia runs on chains of face-to-face rituals: master and pupils in a room, lecture and argument as the ritual forms, ideas as the sacred objects, and creativity concentrated at the nodes where chains cross. Great thinkers cluster in lineages, pupil touching master touching master, because the two ingredients of intellectual creation, cultural capital and emotional energy, both pass by contact. Books alone transmit the capital. Only rooms transmit the charge.

Run Bloom’s life through that machine and the life becomes legible link by link.

The chain reaches him early. A fifteen-year-old from Indianapolis enters the University of Chicago in 1946, into the residue of Robert Maynard Hutchins’s project, a curriculum organized around great books and small discussion classes, ritual technology purpose-built for mutual focus. There he finds Strauss, and the Strauss seminar of the 1950s runs as a textbook Collins assembly. Werner Dannhauser, who sat in it, remembers Strauss as a sun the students felt privileged to orbit, and remembers that Strauss called his students his puppies, which is what solidarity sounds like from the inside: a family idiom for a boundary. The seminar has every element. Co-presence in a Hyde Park room. A barrier of difficulty, since the reading method takes years to learn and the untrained cannot follow the talk. A single focus, the text on the table. A mood of initiates handling dangerous material. Out of it comes a lineage with its own sacred objects, Plato’s dialogues read as coded surfaces, and its own membership emblem, the method, which lets any two Straussians anywhere recognize one another within minutes of conversation. Collins says intellectual movements need emblems that travel. Esoteric reading travels light and cannot be counterfeited by outsiders. It might be the most efficient membership badge American academic life has produced.

Bloom then does what Collins says the creative ones do: he plugs into a second chain. In Paris from 1953 to 1955 he attends Alexandre Kojève, whose prewar Hegel seminar had run one of the highest-voltage intellectual rituals of the century, with Raymond Aron, Georges Bataille (1897-1962), Jacques Lacan (1901-1981), Raymond Queneau (1903-1976), and Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908-1961) around the table. By the fifties the seminar is over, and Kojève works as a trade bureaucrat, but the charge still hangs on him, and Bloom takes the transmission in person, then spends part of his career editing Kojève into English. Collins’s model predicts where new positions in the attention space open: at the crossing of chains. Bloom stands where the Strauss chain crosses the Kojève chain, Athens crossing Hegel, and his signature theme, the fate of the philosophic soul at the end of history, exists only at that intersection. Neither chain alone produces it.

Now watch him build his own assemblies. At Cornell in the 1960s he takes a post at Telluride House, and Telluride is a ritual laboratory: selected students living together, running their own house, holding seminars in the building where they eat and sleep. Collins measures rituals by frequency and density of co-presence, and a residential house beats any classroom, because breakfast, argument, and midnight talk chain into one continuous encounter. Francis Fukuyama lives in the house and takes Bloom’s Greek philosophy course, and thirty years on, the end-of-history thesis that makes Fukuyama famous is the Kojève charge arriving through the Bloom link, two nodes down the chain from the Paris seminar. Ideas travel by book. Conviction travels by table.

Cornell also hands Bloom his great defeat, and Collins explains the defeat better than any account written in the language of courage and cowardice. In April 1969 armed students hold Willard Straight Hall, the administration signs, and the faculty at first votes the agreement down. Then comes the week the conservatives never forgave. Thousands of students pack Barton Hall, day after day, a mass assembly with a single focus, a shared mood at maximum heat, chants, speeches, the felt presence of history. Measured as an interaction ritual, Barton Hall is the most successful gathering in Cornell’s existence, a solidarity engine running around the clock, minting emotional energy for one side of the dispute. Against it the faculty can field a committee meeting. Professors assemble in low-frequency, low-focus encounters, each man arriving alone from his office with his private doubts, no rhythm, no mood, no charge. When the faculty reverses its vote days later, Bloom reads moral collapse. Collins reads an energy differential. A body of men drained of solidarity faces a body of men and women overflowing with it, and the drained side complies, as drained sides do. Bloom’s own gesture during the crisis confirms the analysis by failing. He sends students into the crowd with photocopied pages of Plato’s Republic, a sacred object detached from any assembly, a battery with no circuit. Nobody converts. Sacred objects hold charge only for those who received the charge in rooms, and the crowd at Cornell got its charge in Barton Hall.

He carries his own charge to Toronto for nine years, teaching, translating Rousseau, and then comes home in 1979 to the Committee on Social Thought, the densest ritual venue American letters offers, a small program built entirely around the seminar form. There he forms the dyad that shapes his last decade. Collins insists that the two-person encounter is a ritual too, and the Bloom-Bellow friendship runs as a sustained one: two men in daily talk, teaching a seminar together, trading books, eating, gossiping, each the other’s most attentive audience. Saul Bellow says Bloom inhaled books and ideas like air, which is what an energy star looks like to the man sitting closest. The apartment at 58th and Dorchester serves as the shrine of the micro-cult: the black leather couch, the Baroque on the stereo, thousands of CDs, French linens, guests arranged around the talker in the silk dressing gown. Collins notes that ritual leaders accumulate objects charged by the group’s attention. Visitors to that apartment describe the possessions with the reverence of pilgrims listing relics, and the newspaper spread under his chair at dinner parties tells you the man outranked the linen.

Then 1987, and the strangest chapter in the case, because The Closing of the American Mind detaches Bloom’s symbols from his rituals and floats them into mass circulation. Collins distinguishes first-order charge, absorbed in the room, from the secondary circulation of emblems among people who never attend. The book sells more than a million copies, and by most accounts the buyers largely do not read it. They do something else with it, and Collins names the something: they display a membership badge. In the culture war of the late eighties, the hardback on the coffee table announces a side, the way a crucifix or a campaign button announces a side, and the announcement requires no acquaintance with the chapter on Heidegger. The book works as a portable piece of solidarity. Its sales curve tracks the intensity of the conflict, since conflict is the great multiplier of ritual demand. And fame then feeds back into fresh assemblies at higher amperage. At Harvard in 1988, Harvey Mansfield warms the hall by saying Bloom always behaved as if he were famous, so fame could not spoil him, and the laughter that follows is the sound of a crowd falling into shared rhythm before the speaker opens his mouth. Bloom takes the podium, notes that the loudest cries against his book come from the Ivy League, and reaches for the farmer who knows the fox by its cry from the henhouse. The room roars. A joke landing in a packed hall is entrainment achieved, hundreds of bodies laughing on one beat, and the man on stage banks the charge.

The frame also settles an old score inside the book, and settles it against its author. The pages of Closing that drew the most ridicule attack rock music, and Bloom spends some of them on Mick Jagger (b. 1943) as the presiding figure of the young. Read through Collins, the attack is a turf war between ritual industries. A rock concert is an interaction ritual of industrial scale: tens of thousands of bodies, one focus, rhythmic entrainment enforced by drums at chest-shaking volume, ecstasy, solidarity, T-shirts and vinyl sold at the exit as charged objects. It manufactures in one night the emotional energy a seminar produces across a semester, and it sells to the same customer, the unformed nineteen-year-old with surplus longing. Bloom the theorist claims rock deforms the soul’s eros. Bloom the practitioner, seen from Collins’s angle, is a boutique producer denouncing a factory. He knows the product cold because he makes the product. The seminar and the stadium run the same engine at different scales, and his rage at Jagger carries the heat of a man watching a rival work his own crowd.

The chain outlives the node, and then the physics of decay set in. Bloom dies in October 1992, and the funeral runs as the standard rite for a fallen energy star, the group reassembling around the body to recharge its solidarity, with Bellow’s eulogy circulating for years afterward as a charged text. Collins holds that sacred objects fade unless renewed in fresh assemblies; symbols are batteries, and batteries drain. Eight years later Bellow performs the recharge. Ravelstein returns Bloom to circulation as a character, and whatever the disciples think of the warts, the novel does for Bloom’s emblem what no memorial conference could, pushing the charged name through hundreds of thousands of hands. The lineage meanwhile does what lineages do. Students of Bloom’s students teach the coded reading in rooms he never entered, Fukuyama carries the Kojève strand into policy debate, and the method still identifies members at conference hotel bars within minutes. The Straussian network remains, by Collins’s measures, among the healthiest ritual chains in American intellectual life: high meeting frequency, strong boundaries, portable emblems, contested enough to stay warm.

What the frame finally shows is a man who mastered the technology he refused to name. Bloom taught that the books contain the power and that the teacher merely opens them. Collins’s ledger records the opposite flow. Thousands of readers held the same Republic and felt nothing. The power sat in the rooms, in the smoke and the stutter and the twelve converging gazes, and the books left those rooms charged the way iron leaves a magnet’s field. His students spent the rest of their lives trying to build such rooms, and the ones who succeeded stood, as he had, at the front, imperfect and lit, with every eye on them. The doctrine says Plato does the work. The chain says the body in the room does it, one assembly at a time, and that the last charge dissipates when the last student who sat there stops gathering people to tell them what it felt like.

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