Intellectual Heroes of Our Time
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
How
intellectuals come to sell their soul to the state is one of the
great mysteries of history.
If
one didn't know better, one might suppose that this class of people
is dedicated to the life of the mind, that they enjoy the discovering
of truth and the freedom of inquiry implied by the very process.
This class must surely value the need to tell the truth, and would
even take some risks to do so. It would surely never allow itself
to be enlisted into cheerleading for despotism or otherwise propagandizing
for the crude, preset, regimented mode of thought that political
propaganda requires.
History
shows otherwise. Intellectuals are very valuable to the state and
the state is constantly recruiting them. But it takes two to two-step,
and many intellectuals have been all-too-willing dance partners.
Reading the gibberish about the glories of Bush's global hegemon
in conservative/Republican publications, one is reminded of this
sad truth. Nobody is threatening these people with jail if they
refuse to say that Bush is godlike, yet they jump at the chance
to say it.
On
the topic of why some intellectuals give in and others do not, let
me first offer the thoughts of Mises:
It
is a matter of temperament how we shape our lives in the knowledge
of an inescapable catastrophe. In high school I had chosen a verse
by Virgil as my motto: Tu ne cede malis sed contra audentior
ito. "Do not give in to evil but proceed ever more boldly
against it." In the darkest hours of the war, I recalled this
dictum. Again and again I faced situations from which rational
deliberations could find no escape. But then something unexpected
occurred that brought deliverance. I would not lose courage even
now. I would do everything an economist could do. I would not
tire in professing what I knew to be right. Notes
and Recollections, p. 70
And
here is Rothbard commenting on Mises's life and work: In
the ultimate sense, of course, no outside person, no historian,
no psychologist, can fully explain the mystery of each individual's
free choice of values and actions. There is no way that we can
fully comprehend why one man trims his sails to the prevailing
winds, why he "goes along to get along" in the infamous phrase,
while another will pursue and champion the truth regardless
of cost. We can only regard the nobility of the life and actions
of Ludwig von Mises as an exemplar, as an inspiration and a
guide for us all. "The
Role of the Economist in Public Policy" Just
as we are surrounded by astonishing examples of intellectuals who
sell their souls, our own times offer inspirational examples of
intellectuals who have not and will not. These are men and women
who can be counted on to tell the truth regardless of the political
moment, people who will not allow their talents to be used in the
service of the party in power, people who have paid something of
a professional price for refusing to go along. They have contributed
immensely to our understanding of the world, and they have done
so without official boosting or sponsorship. They are models for
us, and they deserve recognition, now, while they are living and
working and writing.
Thus,
inspired by Walter
Block’s archive, does LRC inaugurate a new series: Intellectual
Heroes of Our Times. I have written the first one below, drawn from
a speech I gave at Grove City College in honor of Hans Sennholz.
I am willing to consider submissions from anyone on your own living
intellectual heroes. It is the time to give these great men and
women the plaudits they deserve, and that the state will never give
them.
Hans
Sennholz: Misesian for Life
By
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
February
5, 2003
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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