2022/09/02

Discrimination & Disparities — On My Walk

Discrimination & Disparities — On My Walk

DISCRIMINATION & DISPARITIES

BY THOMAS SOWELL

In a world of superheroes, perhaps none is more potent than the Invincible Fallacy. This is the heart-felt, emotionally driven, fact-devoid, un-caped crusader standing vigilant over political and ideological visions that take as axiomatic "only human biases create inequalities." Sowell is going to expose this "hero" as enemy.

Warning: If you do not want to think, DO NOT read this book. Thomas Sowell is not out to soothe emotional anger or promote a social vision. He is not interested in entering a shouting match, nor is he out to take the moral high ground over those who hold opposing views. He does not deny real discrimination occurs. He does, however, want you to look deeper. Open the pages of Discrimination and Disparities only if you are willing to take that look.

Sowell believes the Invincible Fallacy and non sequiturs are propping up a prevailing social view of our times, namely that "statistical disparities in socioeconomic outcomes imply either biased treatment of the less fortunate or genetic deficiencies in the less fortunate." p. vii He notes:

"Such searching, re-examinations of opposing views have become all to rare in politics, in the media and even in academia, where the proud claim was once made that 'We are here to teach you how to think, not what to think.'" p. vii

I love this book. My appreciation runs deep because Sowell's thinking runs deep. His propositions and arguments are backed by fifty pages of sourced reference notes. This is important in a day of sound bites, emotional-driven outrage, and the stampede of rhetoric.

Sowell is going to push us. He will eschew one-factor explanations for the inequities that confront us daily, especially with respect to cries of discrimination that are regularly trumpeted across airwaves, in classrooms, and in protests. Treating hypothesis as "sacred dogma" is dangerous, especially when the improved conditions do not materialize, but actually re-enforce the inequities they seek to alter.

Here is a brief chapter-by-chapter summary . . .

Chapter 1: "Disparities and Prerequisites" -- As economic historian David S. Landes said, "The world has never been a level playing field." (p18) Despite that, many who cry "Discrimination!" act or make discriminatory charges as if it were. Discrimination is viewed as the "one-factor" explanation for the seeming inequity, which often comes with heated emotions and the tenor of "moral high ground." Putting one's hypothesis forward as just that rather than sacred dogma would provide opportunities to examine observable factors that contribute to the disparities: IQ, family background, birth order, parent-child interactions, effort, etc... Sowell notes, "Here, as in other very different contexts, changes in the extent to which prerequisites are met completely can have dramatic effects on outcomes in a relatively short time, as history is measured." (p. 12)

Chapter 2: "Discrimination: Meanings and Costs" -- We appreciate those with discriminating tastes and we abhor those who indiscriminately dismiss others based on group identities and apart from individual merit. The great contribution of chapter two is Sowell's distinction between "Discrimination I" and "Discrimination II" (see below). Sowell, an economist, shows the costs of each type of Discrimination and, in the process, dispels the common myth that "the poor pay more." These matters are consequential. Sowell writes,

The difference between understanding the source of the higher prices and mistakenly blaming those who charged those prices is the difference between doing things to lessen the problem and doing things likely to make the problem worse by driving more much-needed business out of the neighborhood. The difference between Discrimination IB and Discrimination II is not just an academic distinction. (p. 36)

In the second portion of this chapter, Sowell will examine costs associated with discrimination, addressing matters such as disparities between men and women in engineering, Apartheid, minimum wage laws, and housing in Harlem.

Chapter 3: "Sorting and Unsorting People" -- The homogeneous principle impacts apparent social inequities. Sowell notes that people do tend to sort themselves with others who are like themselves (the homogeneous principle). He argues, "when people spontaneously sort themselves, the results are seldom even or random, and are often quite skewed." p. 58 Birds of a feather do flock together. 2016 data "showed that, while the top ten percent of white income earners had incomes nearly eight times that of the bottom ten percent of white income earners, the top ten percent of black income earners had incomes nearly ten times the income of the bottom ten percent of black income earners." p. 61 The disparities were not always or even normally based on Discrimination II, but on the similarities and disparities among groups. Such sorting has significant consequences for highlighting racial disparities and the type of discrimination underlying those disparities. His discussion of Southern black migration to the North and attitudes toward them by both blacks and whites is interesting and informative for understanding the power of sorting as it relates to discrimination . . . or not. See his interesting analysis of Dunbar High School on pages 73ff.

Chapter 4: "The World of Numbers" -- As Mark Twain famously quipped, "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lied, and statistics." Sowell will demonstrate how even accurate numbers (statistics), are hijacked and misused when the words that describe what the numbers are measuring are incorrect or misleading. The author's economic pedigree is helpful here as he breaks down matters such as household income (what it is and why it drops or rises); the effect of time and turnover on "the rich" and "the poor"; crime and arrest statistics; capital gains, minimum wage and more. Sterling A Brown said, "Kindness can kill as well as cruelty, and it can never take the place of genuine respect." Sowell helps the reader move toward respectful kindness. Sowell wants to help us move from simple good intentions to empirically-based change. In other words, the "kind" shapers of today's social vision need this.

Chapter 5: "The World of Words" -- The author's opening line provides sufficient summary here: "Numbers may deceive more comprehensively because of their apparent objectivity, but words can deceive more comprehensively because of their emotional appeals that numbers seldom have." (p 115) When words like "war," "racism," or "murder" override careful thought; when they become tools of manipulation to achieve a social vision and are not supported with evidence that substantiates connections of cause and effect, the result is well-intended people actually doing more harm than good. In Chapter 5, the author discusses "Emotions and Causation," the changing meaning of words such as "diversity,"and Ex Ante Words and Ex PostMeanings. Sowell writes, "The crucial point for us today is understanding the continuing ability of many intellectuals to ignore blatant realities which threaten their cherished vision. It has been an on-going triumph of words over demonstrable realities." (p. 136) This chapter is particularly relevant to our current political climate.

Chapter 6: "Social Visions and Human Consequences" -- Is causation always external? No! Here, Sowell demonstrates the attitudinal shift from a sense of duty to "do something for me." He writes, "Productivity is not the only concept that seems to have faded into the background among those with the prevailing social vision. While 'rights' have proliferated, creating a sense of 'entitlement' to what others have produced, duties have shrunk." (p. 184-5) This is an interesting chapter as Sowell attacks what he terms "verbal malpractice." As with other chapters, his counterpoint is thoughtful and level-headed. While the following serves only as an illustration, it highlights other disparities:

Even in a narrowly defined endeavor like professional football, where blacks are greatly 'over-represented,' especially among the star players, blacks have for decades been almost non-existent among football players who kick punts and field goals. Only the fact that the same people who hire running backs and quarterbacks also hire kickers keeps racial discrimination lawsuits from being filed and won, as they could be if these different categories of football players were hired by different people. But there is no reason whatever to arbitrarily exclude the possibility that blacks themselves may prefer doing one thing rather than another--or that any number of other groups are simply better at doing particular things." p. 156

Statistical disparities do not necessitate external causation. Multiple factors influence statistical disparities. For example, in education: the value of education, the value of education by ones peers, hours spent on homework, quality on instruction, and home life. In this case and others, disparities do not necessarily necessitate Discrimination II.

Chapter 7: "Fats, Assumptions and Goals" -- Sowell writes, "Determining particular reasons for particular differences at particular times and places requires the hard word of examination and analysis, rather than heady rhetoric and sweeping presuppositions." (p. 198) In Chapter seven he highlights the danger to an entire society of depicting "outcome differences as evidence or proof of malevolent actions that need to be counter-attacked or avenged." (p. 199) He will ask us to consider the meaning and prospects of equality, show us how other countries, such as Singapore, excel in a global market, not by highlighting its disparity with respect to language, but rather its acknowledgement of and willingness to assume that difference and work to overcome it; a feat noticeably absent in some residents of the U.S.

More on the distinction between Discrimination I and Discrimination II:

Sowell differentiates two kinds of discrimination. "Discrimination I" (the broad meaning of the word) refers to "an ability to discern differences in the qualities of people and things, and choosing accordingly." We don't' think ill of a person with discriminating tastes for cars or wine. In this case, like the word, "judgment," everyone "discriminates" or practices Discrimination I. As Sowell writes, "Ideally, Discrimination I, applied to people, would mean judging each person as an individual as a person, regardless of what group that person is a part of." "Discrimination II" is the more narrow use of the word to refer to "treating people negatively, based on arbitrary aversions or animosities to individuals of a particular race or sex." This is the kind that leads to anti-discrimination laws.

Sowell helps us see that discrimination is a nuanced term. Hence, he will sub-divide Discrimination I into Discrimination IA (judging each individual as an individual regardless) and Discrimination IB (judging by the empirical evidence on the group they are a part of). His discrimination ranking seems cumbersome, but as he notes the difference matters:

People who would never walk through a particular neighborhood at night, or perhaps even in broad daylight [Discrimination IB], may nevertheless be indignant at banks that engage in "redlining"--that is, putting a whole neighborhood off-limits as a place to invest their depositors' money. p. 31

As with all his work, Sowell clarifies the theoretical with practical examples, demonstrating how Discrimination IBdrives up prices in inner-city neighborhoods, causing some shop owners to be viewed as "greedy" when in reality they are not; and, in fact, may be barely hanging on. It is important to consider the differences between Discrimination IB and the more overt and arbitrary Discrimination II.

Good words to remember:

1. Equality: "In no society have all regions and all parts of the population developed equally." Fernand Braudel, French Historian (1902-1985), p. 22.

2. "We fight for and against not men and things as they are, but for and against the caricatures we make of them." J.A. Schumpeter, page 137.

3. "Taxation may be so high as to defeat its object." John Maynard Keynes, p. 138.

4. "Think things instead of words." Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, p. 152.

5. "You are entitled to your own opinion, but you're not entitled to your own facts." Daniel Patrick Moynihan

6. "A systemic analysis of markets cannot proceed as if there were no other factors involved besides what individual decision-makers happen to prefer." Thomas Sowell, p. 42.

7. "Intentions, whether good or bad, do not predestine outcomes." Thomas Sowell, p. 86.

8. "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics." Mark Twain

9. "Kindness can kill as well as cruelty, and it can never take the place of genuine respect." Sterling A. Brown, p. 96.

10. "There is no necessary correlation between what people say and what they do." Thomas Sowell, p. 102.

11. "We fight not for and against not men and things as they are, but for and against the caricatures we make of them." J.A. Schumpeter, p. 137.

12. "If students do not acquire systematic methods and standards for testing conflicting beliefs, this can be a major deficiency in their education, for nothing is more certain than that they will encounter conflicting beliefs on many subjects in the years after they have left the politically correct monoculture on many academic campuses." Thomas Sowell, p. 144.

13. The implications of a pervasive social vision can affect economic, educational and other social outcomes--including the shared norms that hold a society together." Thomas Sowell p 165.

14. "There has never been a shortage of people eager to draw up blueprints for running other people's lives." Thomas Sowell, p. 186.

15. When asked what would happen if all white people were to lose their racial prejudices overnight, W.E.B. Du Bois said with respect to the economic impact on most blacks, "some few would be promoted, some few would get new places" as a result of an end of racial discrimination, nevertheless, "the mass would remain as they are" until the younger generation began to "try harder" and the race "lost the omnipresent excuse for failure: prejudice." p. 198.

Sowell's recommendations to other books I'll be reading:
1. Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations
2. Clearance Thomas, My Grandfather's Son
3. Walter Williams, Race and Economics
4. Thernstrom, America in Black and White
5. Pinker, The Better Angels Of Our Nature

The Rise And Triumph Of The Modern Self — On My Walk

The Rise And Triumph Of The Modern Self — On My Walk



THE RISE AND TRIUMPH OF THE MODERN SELF



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BY CARL R. TRUEMAN

Dear Dr. Trueman, would you make this book required reading for every member of Congress?

G.K. Chesterton said, "Thinking means connecting things." In The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to Sexual Revolution, Carl Trueman connects today's SOGI politics to its philosophical roots, from the works of "Rousseau through the Romantics to Freud and then to the New Left." 384

Grab a cup of coffee. Get comfortable. This book is going to take awhile to read. And it is worth it!

Trueman contends the rise of identity politics "are a symptom or manifestation of the deeper revolution in selfhood that the rise and triumph of expressive individualism represents." p. 355 He writes:


Transgenderism is a symptom, not a cause. It is not the reason why gender categories are now so confused; it is rather a function of a world in which the collapse of metaphysics and of stable discourse has created such chaos that not even the most basic of binaries, that between male and female, can any longer lay claim to meaningful objective status. And the roots of this pathology lie deep within the intellectual traditions of the West. 376

As Richard Weaver told us in his 1948 work by the same title, ideas have consequences. And it is those ideas that Trueman wants us to see.


My purpose throughout has been to show how ideas that today permeate both the conscious philosophies and the intuitions that dominate the social imaginary have deep historical roots. p. 339

What I realized in reading Trueman is that the deep-seated emotivism that drives the sexual revolution makes discussions about philosophical differences nearly impossible. For example, oppositional appeals to my congressmen about the Equality Act based a historical heterosexual norm, classic definitions of marriage, or law rooted in a Judeo-Christian tradition are likely to fall on deaf ears when the basis for right and wrong shift from the permanence of law to the psychology of self. That is not to say, "Don't make the appeal," but to recognize the challenge of civil discussion when the cultural norms change.

Trueman introduces the reader to the philosopher Charles Taylor. Taylor shows us two ways people think about the world: mimesis and poiesis.


A mimetic view regards the world as having a given order and a given meaning and thus sees human beings as required to discover that meaning and conform themselves to it. Poiesis, by way of contrast, sees the world as so much raw material out of which meaning and purpose can be created by the individual. p. 39

The reason it is increasingly difficult to carry on an ideological conversation is that the social imaginary of our day is poietic. Feelings trump objective truth. In fact, feelings are fact. Appeals to reason are dismissed as a part of a history of societal oppression. The maltreatment? Traditional views of binary gender distinction (male and female) and normative views of heterosexual relationship. The modern mind sees these ideas as oppressive. They must be condemned and cast off.

"Deathwork" is the name Philip Rieff gives to the way a group seeks to undermine and destroy established cultural norms and tear down the traditional moral structure of society. The LGBT+ community is engaged in facilitating that deathwork, an effort certainly made more likely with the passage of the Equality Act. Hence, as Trueman notes:


The LGBT+ alliance represents the latest and most powerful example of an anticulture, a deathwork, and a rejection of nature, underpinned by the aesthetic and emotive ethics that are so typical of a therapeutic age. p. 340

LGBTQ+ while representing differing perspectives relative to gender identity (and even disagreeing and contradicting one another) connect as victims of society's oppressive heterosexual norms (p. 355). As a group they wield significant influence.

As Trueman repeatedly points out, transgenderism (the "T" of the LGBTQ+ equation) is not so much the problem today as it is a symptom of a cultural ethic that has made the jump from mimesis to poiesis. That said, not every normative-defying group is on board with the transgender movement. Many feminists are not signing on. To them, simply declaring, "I am a woman trapped in a man's body" diminishes the place of women in history. As Germain Greer notes, "The pain, the struggle, and the history of oppression that shape what it means to be a woman in society are thus trivialized" (p. 360). Greer adds, "If uterus-and-ovaries transplants were made mandatory of wannabe women they would disappear overnight." p. 361 Holdouts notwithstanding, as Trueman's title suggests, the self-affirming sexualized modern self is on the ascendancy.

How Trueman divides his work:

The Rise And Triumph of the Modern Self is divided into four parts. In Part 1, Trueman examines the architecture of this sexual revolution. He shows us the reimagined self and culture. Part 2 is a deep dive into the ideological forces that have shaped what we are now experiencing. Trueman expertly traces the works of Rousseau, Wordsworth, Shelley, and Blake, as well as the impact of Nietzsche, Marx, and Darwin. Remember Chesterton? He said, "Thinking is connecting things." Trueman's connections are interesting and compelling. In Part 3, Trueman discusses Freud and the sexualization of the revolution. While Freud's theories are dismissed, culture has latched on to his fixation with all things erotic. Part 4, "Triumphs of the Revolution" points out how society's love affair with the erotic in art and culture is "symptomatic part of a larger cultural whole" (p. 380). Individualism, the psychologized view of reality, therapeutic ideals, cultural amnesia, and the pansexuality of our day must be understood -- and can only be understood -- in the broader context. His "Concluding Unscientific Prologue" is a fitting end to his work.

I gleaned a lot from The Rise And Triumph of the Modern Self. Here are a few items:

1. From mimesis to poiesis: Charles Taylor's construct is helpful as a broad ontological overview.
2. Psychology trumps biology: The reality of the body is not as real as the convictions of the mind. p. 369
3.Feelings trump reason: Trueman's subtitle includes the words "expressive individualism." This is a note he plays throughout the book while also demonstrating the historical basis for this shift.
4. Goodbye nuclear family: "What nature declares impossible--two people of the same sex can conceive a child--technology has made possible, and "the sexual revolution has then made imperative." p. 372
5. LGBTQ+ is a disparate and conflicting group united against "ideological and political enemies":The groups are disparate in that "T" denies the male-female binary the "L" and "G" embrace. The oppressors are a hetrological society whose biggest proponent has been religious groups, the most notorious "evil" being Christians.
6. It's not all bad: I appreciate how Trueman shows how all of us (yes, even Christians who oppose transgenderism) are expressive individualists. Consider your denominational choice, or social media account. He also acknowledges how the modern self's emphasis on human dignity is a perspective with which Christians agree.
7. But it's pretty bad: The reason for gloomy look is the basis for dignity is polar opposite. Christians base human dignity in that all humans are made in the image of God. This, he notes, was the driving force of the civil rights movement in the 50s and 60s. The premise of human dignity of expressive individualism, however, rests on human dignity detatched from any human or divine order. As Trueman notes, what we are left with is "a kind of totalitarian anarchy." p. 287
8. The Founding Fathers ideas of religious freedom and freedom of speech are out of step with the current social imaginary. When one's religious beliefs or patterns of speech "oppress" those whose identity is based in a selfhood void of a metaphysical construct, and that is the pervading view, it can only be a matter of time before such "rights" become wrongs.
9. Christian inconsistency: Christians cannot decry Obergefell and simply wink at no-fault divorce. It's inconsistent. The two are related.
10. Philip Rieff's "The Modern West as a Third-World Culture": See pages 74ff. So good and helpful for understanding why it is difficult to enter civil discourse today.

A Sobering Conclusion:
Trueman notes, "The long-term implications of this revolution are significant, for no culture or society that has had to justify itself by itself has every maintained itself for any length of time. Such always involves cultural entropy..." p. 381 The triumph of the modern self is a triumph of psychology over theology, of "I feel" over "thus saith the LORD." It is Judges 21:25, "Everyone did what was right in his own eyes." The result was chaos and captivity. Should we expect a different outcome?

Reason For Hope:
Trueman points Christians to the Christian community and to the second-century where he see parallels to the challenges of our day. The church's existence as a close-knit, doctrinally bounded community provides a foundation to live consistently with faithfulness to Christ and as a light that makes a difference today and prepares for a better tomorrow.

The Rise And Triumph Of The Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to Sexual Revolution is not an easy read, but it is an exceptionally good read. Carl Trueman is helping me make sense of these volatile times and chart a way through them. I highly recommend this book.
_____
Notes:
"Thinking means connecting things" from Twelve Types(Norfolk, VA.: IHS Press, 2003), 28)

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The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to Sexual Revolution Hardcover – November 10, 2020
by Carl R. Trueman (Author), Rod Dreher (Foreword)
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“Carl Trueman explains modernity to the church, with depth, clarity, and force. The significance of The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self . . . is hard to overstate.”


—Rod Dreher, from the Foreword


Modern culture is obsessed with identity. Since the landmark Obergefell v. Hodges Supreme Court decision in 2015, sexual identity has dominated both public discourse and cultural trends—yet no historical phenomenon is its own cause. From Augustine to Marx, various views and perspectives have contributed to the modern understanding of the self.


In this timely book, Carl Trueman analyzes the development of the sexual revolution as a symptom—rather than the cause—of the human search for identity. Trueman surveys the past, brings clarity to the present, and gives guidance for the future as Christians navigate the culture in humanity’s ever-changing quest for identity.


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The task of the Christian is not to whine about the moment in which he or she lives but to understand its problems and respond appropriately to them.
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While sex may be presented today as little more than a recreational activity, sexuality is presented as that which lies at the very heart of what it means to be an authentic person.
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For me to be a self in the sense I am using the term here involves an understanding of what the purpose of my life is, of what constitutes the good life, of how I understand myself—my self—in relation to others and to the world around me.
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From the Publisher




Trueman
The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self

Carl Trueman traces the historical roots of many hot-button issues such as transgenderism and homosexuality, offering thoughtful biblical analysis.


Reviews
Rod Dreher


Ben Shapiro


Bruce Riley Ashford


"This is without question one of the most important religious books of the decade."


—Rod Dreher, senior editor at The American Conservative; author of The Benedict Option


Excerpt from review in The Wall Street Journal


"This is the most important book of our moment."


—Ben Shapiro, editor emeritus for The Daily Wire; host of The Ben Shapiro Show


"The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self is perhaps the most significant analysis and evaluation of Western culture written by a Protestant during the past fifty years."


—Bruce Riley Ashford, Professor of Theology and Culture, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; coauthor, The Gospel of Our King

======                             
Editorial Reviews
Review
“The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self is perhaps the most significant analysis and evaluation of Western culture written by a Protestant during the past fifty years. If you want to understand the social, cultural, and political convulsions we are now experiencing, buy this book, and read it for all it is worth. Highly recommended.”
―Bruce Riley Ashford, Professor of Theology and Culture, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; coauthor, The Gospel of Our King


“Carl Trueman has a rare gift for fusing the deep social insights of a Philip Rieff, a Christopher Lasch, or an Augusto Del Noce with a vital Christian faith and marvelously engaging style. Psalm 8 names the central question of every age, including our own: ‘What is man?’ In explaining the development of the modern self and the challenges it poses to human identity and happiness, Trueman makes sense of a fragmenting world. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned for sustaining the Christian faith in a rapidly changing culture.”
―Charles J. Chaput, Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia


“This is a characteristically brilliant book by Carl Trueman, helping the church understand why people believe that sexual difference is a matter of psychological choice. Indeed, Trueman shows how the story we tell ourselves about normalized LGBTQ+ values is false and foolish. With wisdom and clarity, Trueman guides readers through the work of Charles Taylor, Philip Rieff, British Romantic poets, and Continental philosophers to trace the history of expressive individualism from the eighteenth century to the present. The rejection of mimesis (finding excellence by imitating something greater than yourself) for poiesis (finding authenticity by inventing yourself on your own terms), in addition to the Romantic movement’s welding of sexual expression as a building block of political liberation, ushers in the modern LGBTQ+ movement as if on cue. This book reveals how important it is for thinking Christians to distinguish virtue from virtue signaling. The former makes you brave; the latter renders you a man pleaser, which is a hard line to toe in a world where there are so few real men left to please.”
―Rosaria Butterfield, Former Professor of English, Syracuse University; author, The Gospel Comes with a House Key


“Moderns, especially Christian moderns, wonder how our society arrived at this strange moment when nearly everything about the self and sexuality that our grandparents believed is ridiculed. This genealogy of culture, clearly and elegantly written, will help all of us understand how we got to where we are, so that we can plot our own futures with more clarity and confidence. This book is a must-read for Christians and all others who are disturbed by the dictatorship of relativism that surrounds us.”
―Gerald R. McDermott, Former Anglican Chair of Divinity, Beeson Divinity School


“Carl Trueman is a superb teacher. Sharp, perceptive, and lucid, this book is the worthy fruit of learnedness and insight. But more than a teacher, Trueman also has the voice of a prophet. He speaks truth masterfully, with power. In bringing clarity on how we got to our present desert wilderness as a culture, Trueman helps us understand our crooked ways―and situates us to make straight the way of the Lord.”
―Adeline A. Allen, Associate Professor of Law, Trinity Law School


“This is an amazing piece of work. Blending social commentary with an insightful history of ideas as well as keen philosophical and theological analyses, Carl Trueman has given us what is undoubtedly the most accessible and informed account of the modern self and how it has shaped and informed the cultural battles of the first quarter of the twenty-first century. It is a fair-minded, carefully wrought diagnosis of what ails our present age. This book is essential reading for all serious religious believers who rightly sense that the ground is shifting underneath their feet, that the missionaries for the modern self are not content with simply allowing believers to practice their faith in peace but see these believers and their institutions as targets for colonization and involuntary assimilation. For this reason, every president of a faith-based college or university should read The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self more than once.”
―Francis J. Beckwith, Professor of Philosophy and Church-State Studies and Associate Director of the Graduate Program in Philosophy, Baylor University


“Those looking for a light read that provides escape from the cares of the world will not find The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self their book of choice. But this volume will richly reward readers who don’t mind thinking hard about important (though sometimes unpleasant) topics. Christians have been taken off guard by how rapidly cultural mores have changed around them, but Carl Trueman demonstrates that radical thinkers have long been laying a foundation for these developments. Readers should press on to the end―the final paragraphs are among the best.”
―David VanDrunen, Robert B. Strimple Professor of Systematic Theology and Christian Ethics, Westminster Seminary California


“Carl Trueman’s gifts as an intellectual historian shine in this profound and lucid book. The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self needs to be read by anyone who wants to understand our current cultural distempers.”
―R. R. Reno, Editor, First Things


“Carl Trueman has written an excellent book: ambitious in its scope yet circumspect in its claims and temperate, even gentlemanly, in its tone. The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self will prove indispensable in moving beyond the superficiality of moralistic and liberationist interpretations to a deeper understanding and should be required reading for all who truly wish to understand the times we live in or are concerned about the human future. I very much hope it receives the wide readership it deserves.”
―Michael Hanby, Associate Professor of Religion and Philosophy of Science, Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family at the Catholic University of America


“Our culture did not simply wake up one morning and decide to reject sexual mores that have held civilization together for millennia. The sexual revolution that has overthrown basic human and teleological assumptions over the past sixty years has a history. With the adroit skill of an intellectual historian, the patience and humility of a master teacher, and the charity and conviction of a Christian pastor, Carl Trueman offers us this necessary book. We cannot respond appropriately to our times unless we understand how and why our times are defined such as they are. Trueman’s work is a great gift to us in our continuing struggle to live in the world but be not of the world.”
―John D. Wilsey, Associate Professor of Church History and Philosophy, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; author, God’s Cold Warrior and American Exceptionalism and Civil Religion


“I don’t think there will be a better-researched or more fascinating book in all of 2020.”
―Tim Challies, blogger, Challies.com


About the Author
Carl R. Trueman (PhD, University of Aberdeen) is professor of biblical and religious studies at Grove City College. He is a contributing editor at First Things, an esteemed church historian, and a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Trueman has authored or edited more than a dozen books, including The Creedal Imperative; Luther on the Christian Life; and Histories and Fallacies. He is a member of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.


Publisher ‏ : ‎ Crossway (November 10, 2020)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 432 pages
==
The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to Sexual Revolution 
Hardcover – November 10, 2020
by Carl R. Trueman  (Author), Rod Dreher  (Foreword)
4.8 out of 5 stars    1,682 ratings
See all formats and editions
Kindle
from $24.99
Read with Our Free App
 
Hardcover
$27.90 
25 Used from $23.15
31 New from $23.46
“Carl Trueman explains modernity to the church, with depth, clarity, and force. The significance of The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self . . . is hard to overstate.”

—Rod Dreher, from the Foreword

Modern culture is obsessed with identity. Since the landmark Obergefell v. Hodges Supreme Court decision in 2015, sexual identity has dominated both public discourse and cultural trends—yet no historical phenomenon is its own cause. From Augustine to Marx, various views and perspectives have contributed to the modern understanding of the self.

In this timely book, Carl Trueman analyzes the development of the sexual revolution as a symptom—rather than the cause—of the human search for identity. Trueman surveys the past, brings clarity to the present, and gives guidance for the future as Christians navigate the culture in humanity’s ever-changing quest for identity.

Read less
 Report incorrect product information.
Print length
432 pages
The task of the Christian is not to whine about the moment in which he or she lives but to understand its problems and respond appropriately to them.
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While sex may be presented today as little more than a recreational activity, sexuality is presented as that which lies at the very heart of what it means to be an authentic person.
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For me to be a self in the sense I am using the term here involves an understanding of what the purpose of my life is, of what constitutes the good life, of how I understand myself—my self—in relation to others and to the world around me.
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From the Publisher
Trueman
The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self
Carl Trueman traces the historical roots of many hot-button issues such as transgenderism and homosexuality, offering thoughtful biblical analysis.

Reviews
Rod Dreher

Ben Shapiro

Bruce Riley Ashford

"This is without question one of the most important religious books of the decade."

—Rod Dreher, senior editor at The American Conservative; author of The Benedict Option

Excerpt from review in The Wall Street Journal

"This is the most important book of our moment."

—Ben Shapiro, editor emeritus for The Daily Wire; host of The Ben Shapiro Show

"The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self is perhaps the most significant analysis and evaluation of Western culture written by a Protestant during the past fifty years."

—Bruce Riley Ashford, Professor of Theology and Culture, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; coauthor, The Gospel of Our King

Editorial Reviews
Review
“The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self is perhaps the most significant analysis and evaluation of Western culture written by a Protestant during the past fifty years. If you want to understand the social, cultural, and political convulsions we are now experiencing, buy this book, and read it for all it is worth. Highly recommended.”
―Bruce Riley Ashford, Professor of Theology and Culture, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; coauthor, The Gospel of Our King

“Carl Trueman has a rare gift for fusing the deep social insights of a Philip Rieff, a Christopher Lasch, or an Augusto Del Noce with a vital Christian faith and marvelously engaging style. Psalm 8 names the central question of every age, including our own: ‘What is man?’ In explaining the development of the modern self and the challenges it poses to human identity and happiness, Trueman makes sense of a fragmenting world. This book is essential reading for anyone concerned for sustaining the Christian faith in a rapidly changing culture.”
―Charles J. Chaput, Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia

“This is a characteristically brilliant book by Carl Trueman, helping the church understand why people believe that sexual difference is a matter of psychological choice. Indeed, Trueman shows how the story we tell ourselves about normalized LGBTQ+ values is false and foolish. With wisdom and clarity, Trueman guides readers through the work of Charles Taylor, Philip Rieff, British Romantic poets, and Continental philosophers to trace the history of expressive individualism from the eighteenth century to the present. The rejection of mimesis (finding excellence by imitating something greater than yourself) for poiesis (finding authenticity by inventing yourself on your own terms), in addition to the Romantic movement’s welding of sexual expression as a building block of political liberation, ushers in the modern LGBTQ+ movement as if on cue. This book reveals how important it is for thinking Christians to distinguish virtue from virtue signaling. The former makes you brave; the latter renders you a man pleaser, which is a hard line to toe in a world where there are so few real men left to please.”
―Rosaria Butterfield, Former Professor of English, Syracuse University; author, The Gospel Comes with a House Key

“Moderns, especially Christian moderns, wonder how our society arrived at this strange moment when nearly everything about the self and sexuality that our grandparents believed is ridiculed. This genealogy of culture, clearly and elegantly written, will help all of us understand how we got to where we are, so that we can plot our own futures with more clarity and confidence. This book is a must-read for Christians and all others who are disturbed by the dictatorship of relativism that surrounds us.”
―Gerald R. McDermott, Former Anglican Chair of Divinity, Beeson Divinity School

“Carl Trueman is a superb teacher. Sharp, perceptive, and lucid, this book is the worthy fruit of learnedness and insight. But more than a teacher, Trueman also has the voice of a prophet. He speaks truth masterfully, with power. In bringing clarity on how we got to our present desert wilderness as a culture, Trueman helps us understand our crooked ways―and situates us to make straight the way of the Lord.”
―Adeline A. Allen, Associate Professor of Law, Trinity Law School

“This is an amazing piece of work. Blending social commentary with an insightful history of ideas as well as keen philosophical and theological analyses, Carl Trueman has given us what is undoubtedly the most accessible and informed account of the modern self and how it has shaped and informed the cultural battles of the first quarter of the twenty-first century. It is a fair-minded, carefully wrought diagnosis of what ails our present age. This book is essential reading for all serious religious believers who rightly sense that the ground is shifting underneath their feet, that the missionaries for the modern self are not content with simply allowing believers to practice their faith in peace but see these believers and their institutions as targets for colonization and involuntary assimilation. For this reason, every president of a faith-based college or university should read The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self more than once.”
―Francis J. Beckwith, Professor of Philosophy and Church-State Studies and Associate Director of the Graduate Program in Philosophy, Baylor University

“Those looking for a light read that provides escape from the cares of the world will not find The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self their book of choice. But this volume will richly reward readers who don’t mind thinking hard about important (though sometimes unpleasant) topics. Christians have been taken off guard by how rapidly cultural mores have changed around them, but Carl Trueman demonstrates that radical thinkers have long been laying a foundation for these developments. Readers should press on to the end―the final paragraphs are among the best.”
―David VanDrunen, Robert B. Strimple Professor of Systematic Theology and Christian Ethics, Westminster Seminary California

“Carl Trueman’s gifts as an intellectual historian shine in this profound and lucid book. The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self needs to be read by anyone who wants to understand our current cultural distempers.”
―R. R. Reno, Editor, First Things

“Carl Trueman has written an excellent book: ambitious in its scope yet circumspect in its claims and temperate, even gentlemanly, in its tone. The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self will prove indispensable in moving beyond the superficiality of moralistic and liberationist interpretations to a deeper understanding and should be required reading for all who truly wish to understand the times we live in or are concerned about the human future. I very much hope it receives the wide readership it deserves.”
―Michael Hanby, Associate Professor of Religion and Philosophy of Science, Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family at the Catholic University of America

“Our culture did not simply wake up one morning and decide to reject sexual mores that have held civilization together for millennia. The sexual revolution that has overthrown basic human and teleological assumptions over the past sixty years has a history. With the adroit skill of an intellectual historian, the patience and humility of a master teacher, and the charity and conviction of a Christian pastor, Carl Trueman offers us this necessary book. We cannot respond appropriately to our times unless we understand how and why our times are defined such as they are. Trueman’s work is a great gift to us in our continuing struggle to live in the world but be not of the world.”
―John D. Wilsey, Associate Professor of Church History and Philosophy, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary; author, God’s Cold Warrior and American Exceptionalism and Civil Religion

“I don’t think there will be a better-researched or more fascinating book in all of 2020.”
―Tim Challies, blogger, Challies.com

About the Author
Carl R. Trueman (PhD, University of Aberdeen) is professor of biblical and religious studies at Grove City College. He is a contributing editor at First Things, an esteemed church historian, and a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. Trueman has authored or edited more than a dozen books, including The Creedal Imperative; Luther on the Christian Life; and Histories and Fallacies. He is a member of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.



author, The Benedict Option and Live Not by Lies

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Crossway (November 10, 2020)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 432 pages
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jgp
5.0 out of 5 stars A masterly history of the developments in thought that have led to today's concept of self
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 31, 2021
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Cjbevan
5.0 out of 5 stars the history of thought and assumption to the present construct
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 15, 2021
21 07 15 the rise and triumph of the modern self
The phrase ‘I am a woman trapped in a man’s body’ epitomises our arrival at a point in time where public discourse seems to have changed out of all semblance, not only to our past, recent and distant, but even out from a firm anchor in reality itself. This phrase previously would have been considered nonsensical, or as symptom of mental disorder, but now has credence in public life and even controversially in medicine. This has not happened overnight, nor even particularly quickly, but is the most recent manifestation of trends that have been going on for centuries. Trueman in this book describes how we have come to this point, the world of emotivism and the world of deathworks.
He traces the history of thought and assumption to the present construct of the Psychological Man of Phillip Reiff , living out the Expressive Individualism of Charles Taylor, from the Reformation, via Rousseau ; then the Romantics Wordsworth, Shelley and Blake ; and then the overtly political and iconoclastic Nietzsche, Marx, and Darwin ; and finally the politicisation of sex, of Freud being appropriated into Marxism by the Gramsci, and then the Frankfurt School firstly by such as Horkheimer and Fromm, and then Reich, Del Noce, and Marcuse . We have arrived to an anti-culture.
What emerges is a history of thought about human nature; a genealogy of the contemporary worldview which currently appears to dominate in so many ways. The present cultural conflicts are in origin presenting issues based upon conflicting world views, each with deep emotional and philosophical roots.
One thing I noticed particularly when reading out loud is that Trueman actually writes well. He shapes sentences carefully, with economy and imagination. There is not spare word in the book. There is no waffle or ambiguity. That also means that much is said, thus requiring careful thought and reflection, making this a demanding but rewarding book to read.
One recurring theme is the agreement, repeatedly, throughout the history of these ideas, of the hatred for family life. Thinkers such as Godwin considered marriage the most odious of all monopolies . The Romantics, such as Shelley, disliked the family as being confining and thus inauthentic . Marx opposed the family as bourgeois and oppressive. The New Left, such as Reich, sees the family as part of the authoritarian state, inculcating the values of the thus embedded status quo . Del Noce sees a problem in parents overseeing the sexual education of their children, since for him this is part of growing political awareness, and thus the province of the state, so the family should be dismantled . Feminists such as Simone de Beauvoir, with her loathing of motherhood, and Shulamith Firestone’s desire for universal pansexuality, the polymorphous perversity of Freud , all agree with their predecessors that the tyranny of the family must be abolished. This chimes chillingly with avowed intention of the Black Lives Matter movement to destroy hetero-normativity, and the oppressive patriarchal family.
A salutary warning at the end is that we are all living in conversation with our times and places, as much as fish live in the sea. Our churches become shaped by appeals to emotive personal stories, not historical precedent, nor rigorous theology, nor solid metaphysical foundations for decisions (hence the booing when the Bible was quoted in Synod ); a process very much part of therapeutic culture. But those in theory attempting to avoid such pitfalls can fall into therapeutic and aesthetic ways of thinking all too easily. Churches can reflect such things, even when in theory upholding a mostly orthodox faith.
This is most easily demonstrated by the elements of choice ; we choose to be Christians, then we choose to which church we go; we choose whether to attend locally, or go further afield; we choose by denomination, worship style, preaching, theology, company, or times of events; we can choose a church as if choosing a cat or a meal. Choice is the essence of the world in which we have to live and of which we are a part . We live in a world where the un-tethering of what it means to be human from any kind of metaphysical framework has rendered the notion of universal human dignity something that threatens to push the West into a kind of totalitarian anarchy .
The church must not simply imitate the world in its zero-sum confrontations, its sarcasm, and ad hominem polemics. Moral and ethical decisions must be soundly founded upon solid thought, not emotive appeals, nor attractive personas. Christianity that is authentic is dogmatic, doctrinal, and assertive, as well as compassionate . The church must function as authentic community . That community must be united in compassion, as well as in dogma, doctrine, and assertion.
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 7, 2020
9 people found this helpful
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crannog
5.0 out of 5 stars Solving a problem requires understanding how one got there in the first place?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 15, 2021
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jerome
2.0 out of 5 stars Book arrived dusty
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 20, 2021
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NIV Foundation Study Bible — On My Walk

NIV Foundation Study Bible — On My Walk



NIV FOUNDATION STUDY BIBLE



NO EPISODES TO DATE
NO KINDLE
NO PAPERBACK
LEATHER-BOUND
NO AUDIOBOOK

THE BIBLE

For the past several years I have read the Bible using a different translation. In 2022 I am using The NIV Foundation Study Bible. The readability is fantastic, it’s easy to navigate (I am reading on my iPad and on my phone), and I appreciate the brief introductory work at the front of each book. The study notes have been helpful, though I don’t find them as robust as The ESV Study Bible. They also seem to be more devotional in nature, but not in anyway exclusively written with life-application in mind.

This from the Introduction to the NIV Foundation Study Bible:

Purpose: As its name implies, the NIV Foundation Study Bible is designed to provide a foundation for Bible study. It is intended for both beginning and experienced students of the Scriptures who want a Bible that contains the key features of a study Bible in a convenient, compact, and concise form (22).


History: The NIV as a translation was born in 1978 as a completely new translation “made by over a hundred scholars working from the best available Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek texts” (24). The group was international in composition and from a diverse group of denominational backgrounds. Knowing language changes, the original group of translators established the Committee on Bible Translation (CBT), charged with periodic updates in keeping with the translators original purpose and driven by the conviction that the Bible is inspired to the very words. Revisions came in 1984, 2005 (resulting in the separately published TNIV.


Translation Philosophy: Three principles undergrid the translation philosophy: (1) WORDS MATTER: “The meaning of words is determined by the way that users of the language actually use them at any given time.” To translate effectively, a translator needs to know the source and the target audience. The CBT has given meticulous care to this principle. (2) CONTEXT MATTERS: Words stand alone, but they find their meaning within the historical context in which they were written. Clusters, phrases, clauses, sentences, discourses all shape the meaning of the word. Consequently, how the translated word functions “in combination with others words determines meaning” more than a “simple” word-for-word approach (28). (3) WORDS HAVE A SPECTRUM OF MEANING: “The Committee therefore studies each original word of Scripture in its context to identify its meaning in a particular verse and then chooses an appropriate English word (or phrase) to represent it (29). In this sense clear meaning trumps the consistent use of the same word rendered in the receiving language.


Textual basis: The translators utilize the Masoretic Text as published in the latest edition of Biblica Hebraica. Occasionally, earlier “versions, the Dead Sea Scrolls and the scribal traditions were … followed where the Masoretic Text seemed doubtful and where accepted principles of textual criticism show that one or more of these textual witnesses appeared to provide the correct reading” (30). Greeks texts vary (see page 30 in the introduction for more). Also, since Old Testament writers often quote from the Septuagint, at times some Old Testament quotations (LXX) do not match the corresponding passages in the NIV translation.

One will find a concordance and full color maps to help in their study. And while all these tools are helpful, there is no substitute for “diving in" and with Jeremiah be able to say:

“When your words came, I ate them; they were my joy and my heart’s delight.” Jeremiah 15:16 NIV


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