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http://www.ldb.org/adorno.htm

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THESES AGAINST OCCULTISM
by Theodor Adorno

I. The tendency to occultism is a symptom of regression in consciousness.
This has lost the power to think the unconditional and to endure the
conditional. Instead of defining both, in their unity and difference, by
conceptual labour, it mixes them indiscriminately. The unconditional becomes
fact, the conditional an immediate essence. Monotheism is decomposing into a
second mythology. "I believe in astrology because I do not believe in God",
one participant in an American socio-psychological investigation answered.
Judicious reason, that had elevated itself to the notion of one God, seems
ensnared in his fall. Spirit is dissociated into spirits and thereby
forfeits the power to recognize that they do not exist. The veiled tendency
of society towards disaster lulls its victims in a false revelation, with a
hallucinated phenomenon. In vain they hope in its fragmented blatancy to
look their total doom in the eye and withstand it. Panic breaks once again,
after millennia of enlightenment, over a humanity whose control of nature as
control of men far exceeds in horror anything men ever had to fear from
nature.

II. The second mythology is more untrue than the first. The latter was the
precipitate of the state of knowledge of successive epochs, each of which
showed its consciousness to be some degrees more free of blind subservience
to nature than had the previous. The former, deranged and bemused, throws
away the hard-won knowledge of itself in the midst of a society which, by
the all-encompassing exchange-relationship, eliminates precisely the
elemental power the occultists claim to command. The helmsman looking to the
Dioscuri, the attribution of animation to tree and spring, in all their
deluded bafflement before the unexplained, were historically appropriate to
the subject's experience of the objects of his actions. As a rationally
exploited reaction to rationalized society, however, in the booths and
consulting rooms of seers of all gradations, reborn animism denies the
alienation of which it is itself proof and product, and concocts surrogates
for non-existent experience. The occultist draws the ultimate conclusion
from the fetish-character of commodities: menacingly objectified labour
assails him on all sides from demonically grimacing objects. What has been
forgotten in a world congealed into products, the fact that it has been
produced by men, is split off and misremembered as a being-in-itself added
to that of the objects and equivalent to them. Because objects have frozen
in the cold light of reason, lost their illusory animation, the social
quality that now animates them is given an independent existence both
natural and supernatural, a thing among things.

III. By its regression to magic under late capitalism, thought is
assimilated to late capitalist forms. The asocial twilight phenomena in the
margins of the system, the pathetic attempts to squint through the chinks in
its walls, while revealing nothing of what is outside, illuminate all the
more clearly the forces of decay within. The bent little fortune-tellers
terrorizing their clients with crystal balls are toy models of the great
ones who hold the fate of mankind in their hands. Just as hostile and
conspiratorial as the obscurantists of psychic research is society itself.
The hypnotic power exerted by things occult resembles totalitarian terror:
in present-day processes the two are merged. The smiling of auguries is
amplified to society's sardonic laughter at itself; gloating over the direct
material exploitation of souls. The horoscope corresponds to the official
directives to the nations, and number-mysticism is preparation for
administrative statistics and cartel prices. Integration itself proves in
the end to be an ideology for disintegration into power groups which
exterminate each other. He who integrates is lost.

IV. Occultism is a reflex-action to the subjectification of all meaning, the
complement of reification. If; to the living, objective reality seems deaf
as never before, they try to elicit meaning from it by saying abracadabra.
Meaning is attributed indiscriminately to the next worst thing: the
rationality of the real, no longer quite convincing, is replaced by hopping
tables and rays from heaps of earth. The offal of the phenomenal world
becomes, to sick consciousness, the mundus intelligibilis. It might almost
be speculative truth, just as Kafka's Odradek might almost be an angel, and
yet it is, in a positivity that excludes the medium of thought, only
barbaric aberration alienated from itself, subjectivity mistaking itself for
its object. The more consummate the inanity of what is fobbed off as
"spirit" -- and in anything less spiritless the enlightened subject would at
once recognize itself, -- the more the meaning detected there, which in fact
is not there at all, becomes an unconscious, compulsive projection of a
subject decomposing historically if not clinically. It would like to make
the world resemble its own decay: therefore it has dealings with requisites
and evil wishes. "The third one reads out of my hand,/ She wants to read my
doom!" In occultism the mind groans under its own spell like someone in a
nightmare, whose torment grows with the feeling that he is dreaming yet
cannot wake up.

V. The power of occultism, as of Fascism, to which it is connected by
thought-patterns of the ilk of anti-semitism, is not only pathic. Rather it
lies in the fact that in the lesser panaceas, as in superimposed pictures,
consciousness famished for truth imagines it is grasping a dimly present
knowledge diligently denied to it by official progress in all its forms. It
is the knowledge that society, by virtually excluding the possibility of
spontaneous change, is gravitating towards total catastrophe. The real
absurdity is reproduced in the astrological hocus-pocus, which adduces the
impenetrable connections of alienated elements -- nothing more alien than
the stars -- as knowledge about the subject. The menace deciphered in the
constellations resembles the historical threat that propagates itself
precisely through unconsciousness, absence of subjects. That all are
prospective victims of a whole made up solely of themselves, they can only
make bearable by transferring that whole to something similar but external.
In the woeful idiocy they practice, their empty horror, they are able to
vent their impracticable woe, their crass fear of death, and yet continue to
repress it, as they must if they wish to go on living. The break in the line
of life that indicates a lurking cancer is a fraud only in the place where
it purports to be found, the individual's hand; where they refrain from
diagnosis, in the collective, it would be correct. Occultists rightly feel
drawn towards childishly monstrous scientific fantasies. The confusion they
sow between their emanations and the isotopes of uranium is ultimate
clarity. The mystical rays are modest anticipations of technical ones.
Superstition is knowledge, because it sees together the ciphers of
destruction scattered on the social surface; it is folly, because in all its
death-wish it still clings to illusions: expecting from the transfigured
shape of society misplaced in the skies an answer that only a study of real
society can give.

VI. Occultism is the metaphysic of dunces. The mediocrity of the mediums is
no more accidental than the apocryphal triviality of the revelations. Since
the early days of spiritualism the Beyond has communicated nothing more
significant than the dead grandmother's greetings and the prophecy of an
imminent journey. The excuse that the world of spirits can convey no more to
poor human reason than the latter can take in, is equally absurd, an
auxiliary hypothesis of the paranoiac system; the lumen naturale has, after
all, taken us somewhat further than the journey to grandmother, and if the
spirits do not wish to acknowledge this, they are ill-mannered hobgoblins
with whom it is better to break off all dealings. The platitudinously
natural content of the supernatural message betrays its untruth. In pursuing
yonder what they have lost, they encounter only the nothing they have. In
order not to lose touch with the everyday dreariness in which, as
irremediable realists, they are at home, they adapt the meaning they revel
in to the meaninglessness they flee. The worthless magic is nothing other
than the worthless existence it lights up. This is what makes the prosaic so
cosy. Facts which differ from what is the case only by not being facts are
trumped up as a fourth dimension. Their non-being alone is their qualitas
occulta. They supply simpletons with a world outlook. With their blunt,
drastic answers to every question, the astrologists and spiritualists do not
so much solve problems as remove them by crude premisses from all
possibility of solution. Their sublime realm, conceived as analogous to
space, no more needs to be thought than chairs and flower-vases. It thus
reinforces conformism. Nothing better pleases what is there than that being
there should, as such, be meaning.

VII. The great religions have either, like Judaism after the ban on graven
images, veiled the redemption of the dead in silence, or preached the
resurrection of the flesh. They take the inseparability of the spiritual and
physical seriously. For them there was no intention, nothing "spiritual",
that was not somehow founded in bodily perception and sought bodily
fulfilment. To the occultists, who consider the idea of resurrection beneath
them, and actually do not want to be saved, this is too coarse. Their
metaphysics, which even Huxley can no longer distinguish from metaphysics,
rest on the axiom: "The soul can soar to the heights, heigh-ho, / the body
stays put on the sofa below." The heartier the spirituality, the more
mechanistic: not even Descartes drew the line so cleanly. Division of labour
and reification are taken to the extreme: body and soul severed in a kind of
perennial vivisection. The soul is to shake the dust off its feet and in
brighter regions forthwith resume its fervent activity at the exact point
where it was interrupted. In this declaration of independence, however, the
soul becomes a cheap imitation of that from which it had achieved a false
emancipation. In place of the interaction that even the most rigid
philosophy admitted, the astral body is installed, ignominious concession of
hypostasized spirit to its opponent. Only in the metaphor of the body can
the concept of pure spirit be grasped at all, and is at the same time
cancelled. In their reification the spirits are already negated.

VIII. They inveigh against materialism. But they want to weigh the astral
body. The objects of their interest are supposed at once to transcend the
possibility of experience, and be experienced. Their procedure is to be
strictly scientific; the greater the humbug, the more meticulously the
experiment is prepared. The self-importance of scientific checks is taken ad
absurdum where there is nothing to check. The same rationalistic and
empiricist apparatus that threw the spirits out is being used to reimpose
them on those who no longer trust their own reason. As if any elemental
spirit would not turn tail before the traps that domination of nature sets
for such fleeting beings. But even this the occultists turn to advantage.
Because the spirits do not like controls, in the midst of all the safety
precautions a tiny door must be left open, through which they can make their
unimpeded entrance. For the occultists are practical folk. Not driven by
vain curiosity, they are looking for tips. From the stars to forward
transactions is but a nimble step. Usually the information amounts to no
more than that some poor acquaintance has had his dearest hopes dashed.

IX. The cardinal sin of occultism is the contamination of mind and
existence, the latter becoming itself an attribute of mind. Mind arose out
of existence, as an organ for keeping alive. In reflecting existence,
however, it becomes at the same time something else. The existent negates
itself as thought upon itself. Such negation is mind's element. To attribute
to it positive existence, even of a higher order, would be to deliver it up
to what it opposes. Late bourgeois ideology has again made it what it was
for pre-animism, a being-in-itself modelled on the social division of
labour, on the split between manual and intellectual labour, on the planned
domination over the former. In the concept of mind-in-itself consciousness
has ontologically justified and perpetuated privilege by making it
independent of the social principle by which it is constituted. Such
ideology explodes in occultism: it is Idealism come full circle. Just by
virtue of the rigid antithesis of being and mind, the latter becomes a
department of being. If Idealism demanded solely on behalf of the whole, the
Idea, that being be mind and that the latter exist, occultism draws the
absurd conclusion that existence is determinate being: "Existence, after it
has become, is always being with a non-being, so that this non-being is
taken up in simple unity with the being. Non-being taken up in being, the
fact that the concrete whole is in the form of being, of immediacy,
constitutes determinateness as such."1 The occultists take literally the
non-being in "simple unity with being", and their kind of concreteness is a
surreptitious short-cut from the whole to the determinate which can defend
itself by claiming that the whole, having once been determined, is no longer
the whole. They call to metaphysics: Hic Rhodus hic salta: if the
philosophic investment of spirit with existence is determinable, then
finally, they sense, any scattered piece of existence must be justifiable as
a particular spirit. The doctrine of the existence of the Spirit, the
ultimate exaltation of bourgeois consciousness, consequently bore
teleologically within it the belief in spirits, its ultimate degradation.
The shift to existence, always "positive" and justifying the world, implies
at the same time the thesis of the positivity of mind, pinning it down,
transposing the absolute into appearance. Whether the whole objective world,
as "product", is to be spirit, or a particular thing a particular spirit,
ceases to matter, and the world-spirit becomes the supreme Spirit, the
guardian angel of the established, despiritualized order. On this the
occultists live: their mysticism is the enfant terrible of the mystical
moment in Hegel. They take speculation to the point of fraudulent
bankruptcy. In passing off determinate being as mind, or spirit, they put
objectified mind to the test of existence, which must prove negative. No
spirit exists.

1 Hegel, Wissenschaft der Logik, Werke 5, p. 116 (Hegel's Science of Logic,
London 1969, p. 110).

Source: Minima Moralia by Theodor Adorno, trans. E.F.N. Jephcott (London:
Verso, 1978), section 151, pp. 238-244.

The translation of this section has been republished in a collection of
Adorno's essays, The Stars down to Earth and Other Essays on the Irrational
in Culture, ed. With an introduction by Stephen Cook (London; New York:
Routledge, 1994).


(Uploaded 2 September 2000)
Verso Books

Routledge (Publisher)



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