The
Crowd Is "Untruth"
From
Soren Kierkegaard's "That Individual": Two "Notes"
Concerning My Work as an Author, published posthumously in 1859.
"There
is a view of life which conceives that where the crowd is, there also is the
truth, and that in truth itself there is need of having the crowd on its side.
There is another view of life which conceives that wherever there is a crowd
there is untruth, so that (to consider for a moment the extreme case), even if
every individual, each for himself in private, were to be in possession of the
truth, yet in case they were all to get together in a crowd -- a crowd to which
any sort of decisive significance is attributed, a voting, noisy, audible
crowd -- untruth would at once be in evidence...
"[A]
crowd in its very concept is the untruth, by reason of the fact that it
renders the individual completely impenitent and irresponsible, or at
least weakens his sense of responsibility by reducing it to a fraction.
Observe that there was not one single soldier that dared lay hands upon
Caius Marius -- this was an instance of truth. But given merely three or
four women with the consciousness or the impression that they were a
crowd, and with hope of a sort in the possibility that no one could say
definitely who was doing it or who began it -- then they had courage for
it. What a falsehood! The falsehood first of all is the notion that the
crowd does what in fact only the individual in the crowd does,
though it be every individual. For 'crowd' is an abstraction and
has no hands: but each individual has ordinarily two hands, and so when an
individual lays his two hands upon Caius Marius they are the two hands of
the individual, certainly not those of his neighbor, and still less those
of the crowd which has no hands...For every individual who flees for
refuge into the crowd, and so flees in cowardice from being an individual
(who had not the courage to lay his hands upon Caius Marius, nor even to
admit that he had it not), such a man contributes his share of
cowardliness to the cowardliness which we know as the 'crowd.'
Take
the highest example, think of Christ -- and the whole human race, all the men
that ever were born or are to be born. But let the situation be one that
challenges the individual, requiring each one for himself to be alone with Him
in a solitary place and as an individual to step up to Him and spit upon Him --
the man never was born and never will be born with courage or insolence enough
to do such a thing...
The
crowd is untruth. Therefore was Christ crucified, because, although He addressed
himself to all, He would have no dealings with the crowd, because He would not
permit the crowd to aid him in any way, because in this regard He repelled
people absolutely, would not found a party, did not permit balloting, but would
be what He is, the Truth, which relates itself to the individual...it is not so
great a trick to win the crowd. All that is needed is some talent, a certain
dose of falsehood, and a little acquaintance with human passions..."
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https://www.philosophicalsociety.com/Archives/The%20Crowd%20Is%20Untruth.htm
https://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl201/modules/Philosophers/Kierkegaard/kierkegaard_the_crowd_is_untruth.html
Run Your Race to Win
ReplyDeleteI do all this for the sake of the gospel, so that I may share in its blessings. Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one receives the prize? Run in such a way as to take the prize. Everyone who competes in the games trains with strict discipline. They do it for a crown that is perishable, but we do it for a crown that is imperishable.…1 COR 9:23-25.
Do you see how this philosophical truth supports the communist ideology... remove the individual replacing it with the group! "Do not put your trust in mortal man who cannot save" ~ Psalm 146:3.
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