Nassim Nicholas Taleb
We Don’t Know What We Are Talking About When We talk about Religion
No, Salafism is not a religion — Fooled by the label — IYIs should bathe in Saudi Arabia
Background
The problem of the verbalistic (and the journalistic) is expressed in an aphorism in the Incerto: mathematicians
think in (well precisely defined and mapped) objects, philosophers in
concepts, jurists in constructs, logicians in operators (…), and fools
in words. Two people can be using the same word, meaning different
things, yet continue the conversation, which is fine for coffee, but not
when making decisions, particularly policy decisions affecting others.
But it is easy to trip them, as Socrates did, simply by asking them what they mean
by what they said –hence philosophy was born as rigor in discourse and
disentanglement of mixed up notions, in precise opposition to the
sophist’s promotion of rhetoric. Since Socrates we have had a long
tradition of mathematical science and contract law driven by precision
in mapping terms. But we also have had many pronouncements by idiots
using labels.
People
rarely mean the same thing when they say “religion”, nor do they
realize that they don’t mean the same thing. For early Jews and Muslims,
religion was law. Din means law in Hebrew and religion in Arabic. For early Jews, religion was also tribal; for early Muslims, it was universal[i]. For the Romans, religion was social events, rituals, and festivals –the word religio was a counter to superstitio, and while present in the Roman zeitgeist had no equivalent concept in the Greek-Byzantine East[ii].
Law was procedurally and mechanically its own thing, and early
Christianity, thanks to Saint Augustine, stayed relatively away from the
law, and, later, remembering its foundations, had an uneasy relation
with it. For instance, even during the Inquisition, a lay court handled
the sentencing.
The difference is marked in that Christian Aramaic uses a different word: din for religion and nomous
(from the Greek) for law. Jesus, with his imperative “give to Caesar
what belongs to Caesar”, separated the holy and the profane:
Christianity was for another domain, “the kingdom to come”, only merged
with this one in the eschaton. Neither Islam nor Judaism have a marked
separation between holy and profane. And of course Christianity moved
away from the solely-spiritual domain to embrace the ceremonial and
ritualistic, integrating much of the pagan rites of the Levant and Asia
Minor.
For
Jews today, religion became ethnocultural, without the law — and for
many, a nation. Same for Syriacs, Chaldeans, Armenians, Copts, and
Maronites. For Orthodox and Catholic Christians religion is aesthetics,
pomp and rituals, plus or minus some beliefs, often decorative. For most
Protestants, religion is belief with neither aesthetics, pomp nor law.
Further East, for Buddhists, Shintoists and Hindus, religion is
practical and spiritual philosophy, with a code of ethics (and for some,
cosmogony). So when Hindu talk about the Hindu “religion” they don’t
mean the same thing to a Pakistani as it would to a Hindu, and certainly
something different for a Persian.
When
the nation-state idea came about, things got much, much more
complicated. When an Arab now says “Jew” he largely means something
about a creed; to Arabs, a converted Jew is no longer a Jew. But for a
Jew, a Jew is someone whose mother is a Jew. (This has not always been
the case: Jews were quite proselytic during the early Roman empire). But
Judaism, thanks to modernism, somewhat merged into nation-state, and
now can also mean a nation.
In Serbia-Croatia and Lebanon, religion means something at times of peace, and something quite different at times of war.
When
someone discusses the interests of the “Christian minority” in the
Levant, it doesn’t mean (as Arabs tend to think) promoting a Christian
theocracy (as I said earlier, the church has always been uneasy in its
relationship with the profane; full theocracies were very few in
Christian history, just Byzantium, a short attempt by Calvin and few
other episodes). He just means “secular” or wants a marked separation of
church and state. Same for the gnostics (Druids, Druze, Mandeans,
Alawis).
No, for Baal’s sake, stop calling Salafism a “Religion”
The
problem with the European Union is that the naive I.Y.I. (intellectuals
yet idiots) bureaucrats and representatives of the talking “elites”
(these fools who can’t find a coconut on Coconut island) are fooled by
the label. They treat Salafism as just a religion –with its houses of
“worship” — when in fact it is just an intolerant political system,
which promotes (or allows) violence and refuses the institutions of the
West –those that allow them to operate. Unlike Shiite Islam and Ottoman
Sunnis, Salafis refuse to accept the very notion of minorities: infidels
pollute their landscape. As we saw with the minority rule, the
intolerant will run over the tolerant; cancer requires being stopped
before it becomes metastatic.
IYIs,
being naive and label driven, would have a different attitude towards
Salafis if theirs was labelled as a political movement, similar to
Nazism, with their dress code an expression of such beliefs. Banning
burkinis may become palatable for them if it were made similar to
banning swastikas: these people you are defending, young IYI, will
deprive you of all the rights you are giving them, should they ascend to
power and would force your spouse to wear a burkini.
We
will see in the next chapter that “belief” can be epistemic, or simply
procedural (pisteic) –leading to confusions about what sort of beliefs,
are religious beliefs and which ones are not, disentangled through
signaling. For, on top of the “religion” problem, there is a problem
with belief. Some beliefs are
largely decorative, some are functional (they help in survival); others
are literal. And to revert to our metastatic Salafi problem: when one of
these fundamentalists talks to a Christian, he is convinced that the
Christian is literal, while the Christian is convinced that the Salafi
has the same oft-metaphorical concepts to be taken seriously but not
literally –and, often, not very seriously. Religions, such as
Christianity, Judaism, and Shiite Islam, evolved (or let their members
evolve in developing a sophisticated society) precisely by moving away
from the literal –for, in addition to the functional aspect of the
metaphorical, the literal doesn’t leave any room for adaptation .
So
not only Salafism is not a religion, but it is not even a workable
political system; just something someone came up with to emprison people
in the seventh century Arabian Peninsula.
Note:
Islam, ironically, has not always been purely law. The Ottoman Empire
managed to do a separation between Islam as law and the state as Qanun, with a body of laws imported from the Byzantines. So did the Umayads relying on Christian diwan (the
subjects in the educated class were Greek-speaking Syrians), importing
notions from Roman law, particularly those concerned with commercial
matters.
— — — — —
[i] Ibn Tamiyya
“As
for the previous nations, none of them enjoined all people with all
that is right, nor did they prohibit all that is wrong to all people.
Furthermore, they did not make jihad (struggle) in this cause. Some of
them did not take up armed struggle at all, and those who did, such as
the Jews, their struggle was generally for the purpose of driving their
enemy from their land, or as any oppressed people struggles against
their oppressor, and not for sake of calling the people of the world to
guidance and right, nor to enjoin on them right and to prohibit to them
wrong.”
[ii] Robin Lane Fox.
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