Muddling through Books with Dreher, Bateson, and Sontag
Over at The American Conservative Rod Dreher writes:
The older I get, the more appreciation I have for Just Muddling Through as the only realistic solution to anything. It’s not a “solution†at all, but in the absence of a solution, it’s usually the best we can do. Every solution comes with a new set of problems.
I think this is what anthropologist Gregory Bateson was getting at when he said that explorations are self-validating, and therefore, nearly always successful. Or in Bateson’s words, explanation is “the mapping of description onto tautology‖and this is probably also what Thoreau was getting at when he remarked, “whether we travel fast or slow, the track is laid for us.â€[1]
But while explorations may be self-validating, our biases, whether in life or art, protect us. As Susan Sontag reminds us:
It will be seen that stylistic decisions, by focusing our attention on some things, are also a narrowing of our attention, a refusal to allow us to see others. But the greater interestingness of one work of art over another does not rest on the greater number of things the stylistic decisions in that work allow us to attend to, but rather on the intensity and authority and wisdom of that attention, however narrow its focus.[2]
[1] Bateson, Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity. NY: Bantam. 1980. p. 139; Bateson, Don D. Jackson, Jay Haley, and John Weakland. “Toward a Theory of Schizophrenia.†Theories of Schizophrenia. Edited by Arnold H. Buss and Edith H. Buss. NY: Atherton Press. 1969. p. 82; Thoreau, Henry David. Walden: Or Life in the Woods. Boston: Ticknor & Fields. 1854. “Chapter I: On Economy.â€
[2] Sontag, “On Style†(1965) in Against Interpretation. NY: Dell. 1969. p. 36; see also Tuan, Yi-Fu. “Place/Space, Ethnicity/Cosmos: How to Be More Fully Human.†Why Place Matters: Geography, Identity, and Civic Life in Modern America. Edited by Wilfred M. McClay and Ted V. McAllister. NY: New Atlantis Books. 2014. pp. 102–19 at 111.