As
much as his theory brings a refreshing look toward pedagogy, I can’t help but
critiquing his anthropology. For me his
concept fails on three accounts. The
first is that whereas his theory is a correction to the western idea of what a
human being is, his theory fails to correct the eastern idea of what a human
being is. The eastern philosophy of man
is quite different than the western philosophy of man. When the west defines man the way it is, the
east can’t find a comfortable agreement on the definition. The point is, the correction Smith makes
might not be applicable to all humans, but only to the conception of man in the
west. So, on cultural level, Smith’s
theory falls short. In my Asian background,
I have seen and experienced firsthand the shortcomings of looking at human
being as primarily desiring. When I was
growing up in Asia, human desire/love/passion/feeling is what defines a
man. The way we speak shows how much we
emphasize the affective part. In contrast to the west that always starts with “I think”, we in the east always starts with “I feel” and many times “we feel” due to the communal bonding culture. If a human being is first and foremost a desiring being, then the west must be cautious that they are importing an old idea from the east. I need to caution the west to study the east and how the east falls miserably due to putting desire as the primary.
emphasize the affective part. In contrast to the west that always starts with “I think”, we in the east always starts with “I feel” and many times “we feel” due to the communal bonding culture. If a human being is first and foremost a desiring being, then the west must be cautious that they are importing an old idea from the east. I need to caution the west to study the east and how the east falls miserably due to putting desire as the primary.
Chinese
philosopher like Confucius was trying very hard to teach the world how to
govern one’s life through governing our desire by our mind. His “Way of Humanity – Ren Dao” puts a heavy emphasis on the “Ritual - Li”.
Li is not a disorder ritual
that sparks out of human desire, but Li
is more of a rule of appropriate conduct/ethics/morality, which must follow the
Law of Heaven. Confucius knew the
destruction that would come if humans were to be allowed to freely use their
desire. The proof of the destruction can
be found easily in the history books about Asia in general or China in
particular or even the world as a whole.
So Confucius had to teach people how to govern the “wild” desire within
us in order to fulfill our duty as man under heaven. And the way to govern our desire is by the
transformation of our mind through following the ritual. Confucius knew that thinking alone, or
desiring alone, or feeling alone, if left without the guidance of the ritual,
will be extremely dangerous. All of them
together put into the highest level possible without following the ritual will
only prove devastating. Take for example
Chin Shi Huang Di, the first emperor of China.
He was a brilliant man, excellent politician, instinctively sharp, and
extremely ambitious. But his “way” is
not governed by the ritual, so he brought destruction to China. His empire crumbled as soon as he died. For during his lifetime he ruled with
cruelty. With his brilliance he
supported his desire with reasonable cause.
His contention was to unite China and his ultimate desire is peace on
earth “he ping tien xia”, but his way was by demolishing all other kingdoms so
that China would only have one kingdom under heaven. He started his first step to fulfill his
desire of peace on earth by first murdering his own father. Then he began his journey by warring other
states tirelessly. One story about his
cruelty was that in order to smooth his way and win fast, he had an entire city
submerged underwater killing all the inhabitants of the city. He showed no compassion at all while his
advisor disagreed strongly against his strategy. After Chin Shi Huang Di destroyed the city
using water, his most valued advisor resigned and left him. Confucius knew the danger of desire. So, in his philosophy, human desire can’t be
primary. It must be made secondary,
secondary to the ritual, and ritual is learned through the transformation of
the mind. Thus the mind must govern the
desire.
The
second failure is right at the heart of anthropology. For me Smith fails to see man as a united
being, a holistic being. Our mind
affects our behavior, the same way our behavior affects our mind. Our feeling affects our thinking, and our
thinking affects our feeling as well.
Our desire affects our thinking and modifies our behavior, but doesn’t
our thinking also affect our desire and modify our behavior as well? So which one comes first? We can’t really be certain. And I don’t believe we can confidently say,
100% without any doubt whatsoever, that our desire is the primary drive that
guides our thinking and our action.
Aren’t we at the same time thinking when we desire? Aren’t we also at the same time desiring when
we think? I believe so. Let us ponder further: How can we love what
we don’t believe to be real? How can we
love our spouse if our spouse isn’t real?
Can we desire something that we don’t think would fulfill our desire?
Would we think hard for something that does not relate to our desire
whatsoever? So in our loving there
stands our believing and in our desiring there stands our thinking, all present
at the same time. We are a holistic
being.
If
humans primarily are desiring being, then thinking becomes just as a tool to be
used at liberty for the purpose of gratifying our desire. This condition is utilitarian in nature,
which allows our desire to use our thinking for the fulfillment of our
desire. The problem is that we need to
understand the nature of our desire.
Human desire is somehow in contrast with our constraint in space and
time. Human desire wants immediate or
instant result or fulfillment. In our
constraint in space and time we can never get the instant fulfillment. There is always a delay here and there. The delay is what often gives us problems. The longer the delay, the greater the
problem, since our desire will force harder.
Thinking, on the other hand, is more in line with our constraint in
space in time. Thinking by nature
requires process. Process requires
time. So in thinking, delay is not an
enemy, but instead delay is a good friend.
Time is an essential element to complete thinking. Now, by nature humans think because it is in
line with their being in space and time.
The two together, both thinking and desiring, make a good combination,
only if we know how to harmonize them.
Giving the primary to thinking will shut down the desire. Giving the primary to desiring will destroy
many things. The thing is, for me, Smith
is missing the point. It is not about
which comes first, but more about whether our thinking tends toward good or
evil, and in the same way whether our desiring tends toward good or evil. Here I agree more with Nicholas
Wolterstorff’s idea of education that we need to educate human tendency. Our tendency resides in all parts of us, be
it in our thinking, desiring, loving, believing, etc. Our tendency is in our core being. It is a question of position – of place.
One
theologian from Indonesia, Stephen Tong, once mentioned that humans turned
their position upside down in the Fall.
The proper position that they had are now in chaos. The move causes an anthropological breakdown
which leads to the cosmological problem ever since. The tendency of the heart of man is no longer
toward God, but toward self. Therefore,
contending which comes first, desiring or thinking or believing, does not solve
the problem. Pedagogy of desire as
proposed by Smith does not even come close to the solution of human
problem. The liturgy that follows human
desire will only enhance the destruction of the world. This phenomenon is actually hinted in Smith’s
book when he talks about the liturgy of the mall. The liturgy of the world in fact is to
gratify the tendency toward self. The
problem is that the position of man is not in the right place. Asian is particularly keen in understanding
place. Through the teaching of
Confucius, we are striving to find our proper place in every sector of our
life, be it at home, in the community, in the nation, and in the world. A son is always a son to the father, even
though he will be a father one day, he will always be a son to his father. He must know his place as a son. A king is a king under the mandate of heaven
and placed on earth to serve the people.
A tyrant king is a king out of place.
The people must honor the king for it is proper under the law of
heaven. But if people dishonor the king,
then they are violating the law of heaven.
Everything must be in its proper place.
Only then we can function accordingly as man under heaven. So again, the problem is not which comes
first. The problem is the tendency of
human heart. The problem is where the
human heart is placed. Human is
simultaneously thinking and desiring and believing and loving at the same time. We only ask which comes first because we are
constrained in space and time. So we try
to apply our linear concept of time into something that doesn’t move in linear
path. We are a holistic being after all.
The
third failure is when seen from the theological perspective. Smith’s observation that man is primarily a
desiring being is based on the everyday life that we all go through. The problem with the conclusion is that “what
it is” is not “what it ought to be.” While
it might be the case that man operates their day to day life more on following
the drive of their desire primarily, that doesn’t mean that the phenomenon is
what man ought to be. The Fall has
caused a massive destruction to the being of man. The confusion of what is true, what is good,
what is wrong, what is evil, has been continuously bringing troubles in our
life. Even the apparent drive by human
desire as the primary might as well be the consequence of sin or what allows
sin to breach in. I would suggest that
when Eve decided to pick up the forbidden fruit, it was because she gave in to
her desire. Instead of governing her
desire to abide to God’s command, she was lured by her own desire to be as wise
as God. The battle of words within her
thought was confusing for her because of the contradicting information
regarding the eating of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil. On the one hand God said that the day they
eat they will surely die. On the other
hand the serpent said that when they eat they will not die, but their eyes will
be opened and they will be like God knowing good and evil. Eve couldn’t resolve the tension. But instead of resorting to her faith in God,
she retreated to her desire as the basis of her decision. In any case her mind becomes the key. The mind is the entrance of words, good or
evil, true or false, and thus the reorganization of the order of words that
govern her behavior is determined by what kind of words that enter into the
mind.
The
problem is Eve knew that she made the wrong decision by following her own
desire too late. She couldn’t come back
to the way she was. The depravity has
set in, and sin and death reigned over man ever since. If desire is again be given a throne to
govern human life, the world will be in a complete disaster. Again and again we have witnessed that great
people fell because they followed their desire.
We cannot be naive to assume that our desire is not contaminated by sin. The fact of the matter is that human desire
is badly corrupted. Human desire is wild
that it always attempts to break away from human thinking. Thinking is an important part of us that can
govern our desire so that we won’t roam the earth like the beasts of the
field. But, by this I don’t mean that
thinking is the primary. I still think
that man is a holistic being that we think and desire at the same time. The nature of desire, however, is different
from the nature of thinking. The
government of our desire naturally comes from our thinking, and not just
thinking but thinking through the right words.
Paul said in Romans 12:2: “Do not
conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of
your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his
good, pleasing and perfect will.”
Thus it is important not to follow the pattern of the world, which is
driven by the unbridled desire, but be transformed by the renewing of our
mind. The mind is key in Paul’s
theology, for through our mind the true words of God may come in. Once our mind is renewed by the word of God
and be reformatted according to the true pattern of the LOGOS/WORD of God (cf.
John 1:1-3), then our life can be transformed accordingly. So giving desire the driver’s seat in our
being is not what the word of God suggests.
Tong
argues that after the Fall, man no longer knows their proper position. Throughout history we have found that man
tends to consider God their servant and the world their master. So every day they would wake in the morning
in order to enslave themselves for the gaining of material wealth. And every day they would pray to their god(s)
to bring them success in being the slave of material wealth. So they “bribe” their god(s) by many rituals,
gifts, offerings, so their god(s) would do their bidding. Humans have abandoned their original
position: serving God and ruling the world.
The only way they can make God their servant and the world their master
is by turning their selves upside down.
So according to their perspectives, God is now under their feet to be
ruled and the world is above them to be worshipped. Since the Fall, their desire is bonded
together wildly with their upside down position, and thus their desire create
all the problems in the world. Only
through wise reasoning human may “tame” the desire and bring it into
order. The wise reasoning that resides
in many wise people in the world, Christians and non-Christians alike, is what Reformed
theology calls as the Common Grace. God
gives wisdom through words to bring order into the world. His special words and grace remains to be
found in the Scripture, but his common grace can be found outside of the
Scripture. For thousands of years God
has granted understanding of the mysteries of the universe and of the spiritual
realm to many religious leaders and philosophers, so they may “tame” human
desire and guide them into order. So,
for me desire is not primary in man, but more accurately, desire only appears
primary because desire is wild and would force its way whenever wherever
possible to get what it wants. It might
be possible to educate desire to follow the proper order, but focusing merely
to it and giving the highest seat in human self to desire is a grave mistake in
my estimation. The education of man must
be done thoroughly, for man is a holistic being. Moreover, if we observe human development we
will find out right away that children or immature persons are more driven by
desire than their understanding. Kids
would force their desire to their parents and if they don’t get it they would
cry and start kicking and screaming.
They are unable to tame their own desire yet. It is because their mind is still in the
process of learning everything they need to learn in order to be mature. But desire wants instant gratification. The
problem is that since birth we are all already under sin, so even our desire is
sinful. Giving in to desire is not the
way to go. For like a child is going
wild if given to their desire, giving our primary seat to desire is like
“educating” ourselves to become immature children one more time. This is not going forward. This is going backward.
God
wants us to follow His will, or His desire if I may, and not our own
desire. Contrary to our desire that has
been contaminated by sin, God’s desire is pure and holy. We can only understand this matter by
wrestling with God’s true words. We need
to purge our being from the false words the world throws at us and truly fill
our hearts with God’s words. And God’s
words enter into us through our mind. Now,
faith is important in this case. The
word of God can’t come in no matter how hard it is thrown at us if faith is not
within us. We are still a believing
being, but the direction of our belief is what often the problem. In this case, we become what we believe. We believe in the false gods, we become false
man. We believe in money, we become
money machine. We believe in God we
become the image of God. But I agree with
Smith that we are not primarily a believing being. But we are also not primarily a desiring
being either. The same way we are not
primarily a thinking being, and thus correcting the rationalism philosophy set
by Rene Descartes. We are primarily a
holistic being. We think when we desire
and believe and love at the same time.
We are all of that at once.
Nothing comes first, for they are all there at the same time. In order for our desire to be in line with
God’s desire, we need to learn through all those parts, the mind, the heart,
the desire, and all of them altogether learn at the same time in the word of
God. Jesus says: “It is written: Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word
that comes out from the mouth of God.” (Matthew 4:4).
Therefore,
instead of over focusing on the education of our desire, pedagogy of desire, we
need to educate the entire being holistically.
The education of the mind is as important as the education of the heart,
and in the same way the education of our faith is as important as the education
of our behavior. When we think pedagogy,
consequently, we cannot and must not think only a part of what human being is
and just focus on that, but we must consider the entire being as a whole. Our being is unique that our desire cannot be
separated from our thinking and from our faith and from our love. Hope this critique can give an important
perspective on what has been published and accepted in the world of education,
and also present an inherent problem with the thesis proposed by the idea of
the pedagogy of desire, and thus get us to rethink what ought to be and not just
basing our theory in education on what is.
Honestly, I am greatly concerned with where the direction of our formal
education is moving. Formal education
affects the way we do informal education indirectly – and therefore the entire
realm of education will somehow be formalized.
And if education is conducted in such a way that is fragmented in
nature, then I am worried that humans who undergo such kind of education will
become fragmented beings. Integrating
the fragmented pieces are not easy, in fact it is almost an impossible
work. So, we better start thinking of
bringing the understanding of integration and holistic education into the
discussion of good education.
Here
I rest my case. For now… Shalom.
2 comments:
Hi Ko Ferry,
I just read your new blog. Interesting. But, I don't agree with your interpretation to Smith as I also interpret his book.
Let us have an online discussion later. Maybe, I will write something about your critique to Smith. A consideration and a critique to a critique :)
Thanks for keep blogging!
Hi Niko,
Thanks for your comments. Keep it coming :).
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