Argument as cognitive violence

[image: argument]Published by Devdutt Pattanaik on 26th July, 2014, in
Mid-Day

Why do people argue? I believe the roots of argument can be located in
monotheism. That there is only one God. In modern rational atheist
mythology, this translates as there is, and can be, only one Truth. As soon
as we submit to this assumption, we fight. Physically it manifests as war.
Conversationally it manifests as argument.

In ancient times, in Mesopotamia, the idea of a ‘city god’ was used to
unite a city full of people belonging to various tribes and clans. When
cities fought, the ‘city god’ represented by the ‘city king’, would clash.

The victorious god would either smash the defeated god, or keep him/her as
a junior deity in his shrine. Thus the temples came to have multiple gods,
with one dominating god. Eventually these myriad Mesopotamian gods were
overpowered by one god, a god without form, revealed Zoraster of Persia,
Moses of Egypt, Jesus of Judea and Muhammad of Arabia. Eventually, with
rise of rationality, the idea of ‘nation state’ replaced the notion of the
‘city god’, evoking the same familiar passion and rage, replacing only
devotion with patriotism.

In ‘rational’ times, when wars are frowned upon, academicians have taken it
upon themselves to popularise a different kind of violence: cognitive
violence, which is essentially war of ideas in the quest for ‘the truth’.
It began with the notion that intellectual growth can only happen through
‘argument’. So old ideas were argued out cantankerously by new ideas. It
was called the philosopher’s way: where words are weapons.

A ‘discourse’ is just seen as a weapon to subjugate the mind. In
universities scholars are asked to ‘present their arguments’ and ‘defend
their thesis’ full of evidence and testimonies. Eventually, we create
cognitive territories such as patent and intellectual property rights, for
it fuels ego-orgasms on one hand and commerce on the other.

The scholar, his signature, his acknowledgment, becomes more important than
the scholarship. People argue passionately; it is morally right. But it
also fuels cult behaviour. Also many enjoy debating as it indulges the
animal need to dominate and the perverse human desire to violate, albeit
non-violently.

A good scientist knows that science must never be seen in religious terms:
science seeks facts, not truth. Quest for fact is to enable better
understanding of the world that is infinite and continuously expanding and
so never static.

Rationalists and liberal thinkers seeking, or arguing, one truth in
politics or economics are really no different from missionaries, or
salesmen. Memories are multiple, though history seeks to be only ‘one’. In
argument, we trample over other views because the other is ‘irrational’. We
have made irrationality akin to sin and pollution. Arguments leave the
defeated, who may not be articulate or forceful or determined enough, to
feel violated, stripped of all self-worth and self-esteem, akin to a kind
of ‘cognitive rape’, which many triumphant debaters gleefully enjoy and
seek.

In ancient times, people loved gladiator games. There is always an audience
for a bull fight or a rooster fight. But now that we frown upon violence,
but we entertain ourselves through argument on TV shows. We forget there is
a world of ideas beyond argument. There is sam-vaad or deliberations and
discussions of the Upanishads, very different from vi-vaad or debates of
later Vedanta scholars seeking triumph (dig-vijaya) over other schools of
thought. In debates, one truth prevails; the others are cast aside,
violated. In discussions, diverse truths prevail, and the wisdom and
wherewithal to accommodate them. Take your pick.

-- 

<http://groups.yahoo.com/subscribe/worldmalayaliclub/>


[image: Inline image 1]

*வாழிய செந்தமிழ்! வாழ்க நற்றமிழர்!*

*வாழிய பாரதமணித் திருநாடு!*



[image: RUGANZI D]   *v **a n a k k a m**  S u b b u*

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to