The apotheosis of American democracy.

AuthorMontanye, James A.

"Marxism is a religion," wrote the economist Joseph Schumpeter (1942, 5), who used the equation to explain the political ideology's seductive appeal. Schumpeter's insight and argument apply equally well to the ideology of democratic fundamentalism that is manifest in U.S. foreign policy. "To the believer," democratic fundamentalism, like Marxism, "presents, first, a system of ultimate ends that embody the meaning of life and are absolute standards by which to judge events and actions; and, secondly, a guide to those ends which implies a plan of salvation and the indication of the evil from which mankind, or a chosen section of mankind, is to be saved.... [It] belongs to that subgroup [of 'isms'] which promises paradise this side of the grave" (Schumpeter 1942, 5). It also is seen to inspire and legitimize terror, torture, and killing on a scale comparable to the mayhem that flowed from the religious fervors of old.

Religious and political fundamentalism are not discretely separate phenomena. Rather, they are of a piece, springing from a common biological process and coadapting across a broad margin. In this essay, I explore the nature and consequences of these two fundamentalist sentiments. I begin by discussing the god-state nexus in historical context and then describe its basis in evolutionary biology. I go on to consider some implications for American culture and republican government.

God and State

Soulcraft and statecraft have coexisted throughout history. Economists and political theorists view the two realms as partly complementary and partly substitutable forces whose balance at any juncture is determined by a society's aggregate needs, interests, and possibilities, as discovered and acted upon by competing entrepreneurial forces. Societies strike initial balances, which then evolve differently to accommodate changing local circumstances.

In antiquity, notes the historian Charles Freeman with reference to ancient Rome, "[r]eligious practice was closely tied to the public order of the state and with the psychological well-being that comes from the following of ancient rituals. Religious devotion was indistinguishable from one's loyalties to the state, one's city and one's family" (2003, 68). Kings and emperors were regarded as gods, evidently because of their seemingly miraculous (technically, "charismatic") ability to execute grand projects ranging from public works to wars. The advent of Western Christendom expanded the market for distinctly religious practices, bringing about a specialization of labor that transformed soulcraft into a large and profitable industry (Ekelund et al. 1996). Secular leaders lost their quasi-divinity during this era, but they retained public legitimacy through the auspices of presumptively divine blessing. They reciprocated occasionally by imposing stabilizing principles on religious doctrine (Freeman 2003, 178-79). The great, and greatly unfortunate, achievement of soulcraft during this period was to exalt faith above reason, fulfilling the Apostle Paul's commitment to "destroy the wisdom of the wise" (I Corinthians 19, alluding to Isaiah 29:14). The power of faith to inspire human action on a large scale faltered around the middle of the current era's second millennium as revelation succumbed to reason in the public realm. As the nineteenth century closed, many writers, most notably the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, described the West's all-too-human God as dead, and the Western mind reopened. Statecraft by then had displaced soulcraft as the principle coordinating force in public affairs, replacing the social covenants symbolized by the rainbow (trust) and the cross (faith) with a new covenant symbolized by the flag (obedience).

The personal God of religion listened to the private pleas of common individuals and responded (or not) to their prayers. A democratized and otherwise diminished personal God continued in this role following the resurrection of reason. American religion, however, diverged from literary Christianity as local religious practices adapted to the needs and interests of diverse factions within secular society (Bloom 1992). Statecraft moved concurrently into the partially vacated role of religion's personal God. Politicians now listened and responded to the prayers of ordinary constituents. Unlike the personal God of yore, however, they were obliged either to act on those prayers or to explain why they did not.

One consequence of this transformation is that America has become a "post-Christian" nation (Bloom 1992). Another is the apotheosis of American democracy itself. American democracy, in other words, has attained de facto religious status.

A small number of perspicacious thinkers have observed the apotheosis phenomenon over several decades. Among them, the sociologist Helmut Schoeck (1966) mildly characterized modern government as an egalitarian deity that acts in response to the petty envies of its citizens. The economist Ludwig von Mises offered a sharper characterization of the modern state, describing its officials as acting from a desire to emulate, if not to be, God: "The terms 'society' and 'state' as they are used by the contemporary advocates of socialism, planning, and social control of all the activities of individuals signify a deity. The priests of this new creed ascribe to their idol all those attributes which the theologians ascribe to God--omnipotence, omniscience, infinite goodness, and so on" ([1949] 1996, 151). The public-choice program in economics has refined and extended these insights. The gods described by public-choice do not resemble the benevolent, loving, and compassionate father of Christendom that Mises assumed. They appear instead as venal, petty, vain, and vengeful spirits, like those of the mythic Greek pantheon. Public-choice models characterize democracy as the conjunction of three self-interested factions: a proletariat of rent seekers; an elite decision-making class of panderers, pimps, and whores; and a priestly intermediating class of propitiating lawyers and lobbyists. The behaviors particular to each faction evolve as entrepreneurial individuals discover new combinations of activities that further their private interests.

The behavioral biologist Edward Wilson capsulizes the God-state nexus in a way that every political economist can appreciate: "Religions, like other human institutions, evolve so as to enhance the persistence and influence of their practitioners. Marxism and other secular religions offer little more than promises of material welfare and a legislated escape from the consequences of human nature. They, too, are energized by the goal of collective self- aggrandizement" (1978, 3).

Biology, Religion, and Apotheosized Democracy

Attributing the apotheosis of American democracy solely to economic and political destiny, however, would disregard new and compelling evidence from the emerging field of sociobiology, "the conjunction of biology and the various social sciences" (Wilson 1978, 7).

The Enlightenment philosopher Voltaire argued that mankind would invent God if He did not exist. Sociobiology shows how such acts of creation arise spontaneously from the human brain's evolved facility for signaling and orchestrating moral sentiments, in particular those entailing reciprocity, trust, and cooperative behavior. Economists interpret these behaviors as overt aspects of rationality. More precisely, however, they represent a few among many biologically based strategies that have evolved out of countless generations of survival and reproduction. Sociobiology shows that such conventional notions as "natural law," the "invisible hand," and the Golden Rule, long regarded by economists and philosophers as simplifying metaphors, have an objective basis in scientific fact. The instinctive human propensity toward cooperation and...

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