Nathan Dinneen, Rochester Institute of Technology

It is hard to say if America has a distinctive identity. What would make the American identitydistinctivefrom other national identities while also being ٳsamefor all Americans? The possibility of glimpsing the American identity reminds of U.F.O. sightings—some people claim to have seen them but only the government seems to know if they truly exist. That is to say neither patriotism nor governmental claims on behalf of the national interest are in short supply. Patriotism, however, is variously defined. Some grasp a part of our identity claiming it is like an elephant, others that it is like a donkey. As for the national interest, does it mean the act of ensuring our security through underwriting global security? Or is the act of underwriting global security undermining our way of life? But what is our way of life? That question again!

ǷPatrick Deneen is onto something inWhy Liberalism Failedwhen he describes liberalism in America as a “political technology” that is inherently “anticulture,” then one has to wonder if we have yet to arrive atٳAmerican identity if cultures still remain within America. In a nostalgic manner, Deneen believes what is most needed today is a political culture “grounded in the experience of aDZ.”As such, he sets the “form” of ٳDZagainst the “identity” of America. Building on Tocqueville’s reflection that liberal democracy “tends to scorn ‘form’,” Deneen calls out the discourse of “identity” as an assault on “form.”Formis made manifest through the culture of what is potential or naturally latent. Nature is presupposed. The implication of Deneen’s argument is that “issues of identity” obscure, even forget, the “most elemental boundaries found in nature.”

To be sure, the grounding of liberalism in the ǻԲٳܰright teaching of self-preservation encourages an effort to transcend the state of nature through advancing the arts and sciences. The modern notion of art thus becomes mastering without a mind toward natural form, that is, imposing an artificiality on matter in service of comfortable self-preservation. Potentiality itself is liberated from an orientation toward the actualization of a natural form. Pure potentiality is presupposed. The limits we experience, then, are not understood as being natural per se but merely the limits to our present-day capabilities.

The premodern, or classical, notion of nature without a voice is thought in all of its silence to limit, even to forbid—we must but observe. The modern interpretation of nature’s silence is understood not as forbidding but permitting—we must but master. What we have to ask is whether this transformation in our understanding is in our true interests as human beings and citizens, regardless of it being identifiable as the prejudice of the Founding Fathers, who in their originality politically promoted the “Progress of Science and useful Arts” in the U.S. Constitution (Article I, Section 8, Clause 8) in hopes of advancingǻcivilization. Whether one, like Deneen, regards liberalism as a “politicaltechnology” or “cultureas a technology,” perhaps the real issue we face today is the problem oftechnology, not only in terms of the political implications of technological innovation but also, more importantly, for how it narrows thinking in general.

During a lecture in 1942, Leo Strauss attempted to counteract German nihilism in defense of civilization. His efforts could serve today as a model in challenging technological nihilism. He encourages a reconceptualization of civilization that rests not on the pillar of modern scientific-technological progress but rather on the two pillars of moral and intellectual virtue, which serve, among other things, to orient artful innovation. These pillars principally encourage an open mind. Strauss proclaims, “Civilization is inseparable from𲹰ԾԲ,from the desire to learn from anyone who can teach us something worthwhile.” In 1959 in his lecture “What is Liberal Education?”, he says, “The greatest minds to whom we ought to listen are by no means exclusively the greatest minds of the West.” His notion of civilization truly means “the desire to learn fromanyone.” Thus we need to drink more deeply from the well of wisdom, from Plato’s and Xenophon’s Socrates to Walter Mosley’s Socrates of South Central L.A., from theղto ٳPhilokalia.

Barring a natural or technological cataclysm that would make Deneen’s wish of renewing ٳDZa possibility,should workٴDzٳtoward sowing the seeds and establishing the roots of Strauss’s noble formulation of civilization—a civilization dedicated to human flourishing. Otherwise, American identity will remain deracinated and adrift like an unidentified flying object. That is, we will be alien to ourselves, as well as to others, no matter how much we claim to be an intelligent life form.