Bias, 
      Liberation, and Cosmopolis
      
      Bernard J. F. Lonergan, S.J.
      
      8.6 Cosmopolis 
      
      Still, what is cosmopolis? 
      
      Like every other object of human intelligence, it is in the first 
      instance an X, what is to be known when one understands.  
      
      Like every other X, it possesses some known properties and aspects that 
      lead to its fuller determination.  
      
      For the present, we must be content to indicate a few of these aspects 
      and to leave until later the task of reaching conclusions.  
      
      
      First, cosmopolis is not a police force.  Before such a force can be 
      organized, equipped, and applied, there is needed a notable measure of 
      agreement among a preponderant group of men.  
      
      In other words, ideas have to come first and, at best, force is 
      instrumental.  In the practical order of the economy and polity, it is 
      possible, often enough, to perform the juggling act of using some ideas to 
      ground the use of force in favour of others and, then, using the other 
      ideas to ground the use of force in favour of the first.  
      
      The trouble with this procedure is that there is always another juggler 
      that believes himself expert enough to play the same game the other way by 
      using the malcontents, held down by the first use of force, to upset the 
      second set of ideas and, as well, using malcontents, held down by the 
      second use of force, to upset the first set of ideas.  
      
      Accordingly, if ideas are not to be merely a façade, if the reality is 
      not to be merely a balance of power, then the use of force can be no more 
      than residual and incidental.  
      
      But cosmopolis is not concerned with the residual and incidental.  It 
      is concerned with the fundamental issue of the historical process.  Its 
      business is to prevent practicality from being short-sightedly practical 
      and so destroying itself.  The notion that cosmopolis employs a police 
      force is just an instance of the short-sighted practicality that 
      cosmopolis has to correct.  
      
      However, I am not saying that there should not be a United Nations or a 
      World Government; I am not saying that such political entities should not 
      have a police force; I am saying that such political entities are not what 
      is meant by cosmopolis.  
      
      Cosmopolis is above all politics.  So far from being rendered 
      superfluous by a successful World Government, it would be all the more 
      obviously needed to offset the tendencies of that and any other government 
      to be short-sightedly practical.  
      
      Secondly, cosmopolis is concerned to make operative the timely and 
      fruitful ideas that otherwise are inoperative.  
      
      So far from employing power or pressure or force, it has to witness to 
      the possibility of ideas being operative without such backing.  Unless it 
      can provide that witness, then it is useless.  
      
      For at the root of the general bias of common sense and at the 
      permanent source of the longer cycle of decline, there stands the notion 
      that only ideas backed by some sort of force can be operative.  
      
      
      The business of cosmopolis is to make operative the ideas that, in the 
      light of the general bias of common sense, are inoperative.  
      
      
      In other words, its business is to break the vicious circle of an 
      illusion: men will not venture on ideas that they grant to be correct, 
      because they hold that such ideas will not work unless sustained by 
      desires or fears; and, inversely, men hold that such ideas will not work, 
      because they will not venture on them and so have no empirical evidence 
      that such ideas can work and would work.  
      
      Thirdly, cosmopolis is not a busybody.  
      
      It is supremely practical by ignoring what is thought to be really 
      practical.  
      
      It does not waste its time and energy condemning the individual egoism 
      that is in revolt against society and already condemned by society. 
      
      
      It is not excited by group egoism which, in the short run, generates 
      the principles that involve its reversal.  
      
      But it is very determined to prevent dominant groups from deluding 
      mankind by the rationalization of their sins; if the sins of dominant 
      groups are bad enough, still the erection of their sinning into universal 
      principles is indefinitely worse; it is the universalization of the sin by 
      rationalization that contributes to the longer cycle of decline; it is the 
      rationalization that cosmopolis has to ridicule, explode, destroy.  
      
      
      Again, cosmopolis is little interested in the shifts of power between 
      classes and nations; it is quite aware that the dialectic sooner or later 
      upsets the short-sighted calculations of dominant groups; and it is quite 
      free from the nonsense that the rising star of another class or nation is 
      going to put a different human nature in the saddle.  However, while 
      shifts of power in themselves are incidental, they commonly are 
      accompanied by another phenomenon of quite a different character.  There 
      is the creation of myths.  
      
      The old regime is depicted as monstrous; the new envisages itself as 
      the immaculate embodiment of ideal of human aspiration.  Catchwords that 
      carried the new group to power assume the status of unquestionable 
      verities.  On the band-wagon of the new vision of truth there ride the 
      adventurers in ideas that otherwise could not attain a hearing.  
      
      
      Inversely, ideas that merit attention are ignored unless they put on 
      the trappings of the current fashion, unless they pretend to result from 
      alien but commonly acceptable premises, unless they disclaim implications 
      that are true but unwanted.  
      
      It is the business of cosmopolis to prevent the formation of the 
      screening memories by which an ascent to power hides its nastiness; it is 
      its business to prevent the falsification of history with which the new 
      group overstates its case; it is its business to satirize the catchwords 
      and the claptrap and thereby to prevent the notions they express from 
      coalescing with passions and resentments to engender obsessive nonsense 
      for future generations; it is its business to encourage and support those 
      that would speak the simple truth though simple truth has gone out of 
      fashion.  
      
      Unless cosmopolis undertakes this essential task, it fails in its 
      mission.  One shift of power is followed by another, and if the myths of 
      the first survive, the myths of the second will take their stand on 
      earlier nonsense to bring forth worse nonsense still.  
      
      Fourthly, as cosmopolis has to protect the future against the 
      rationalization of abuses and the creation of myths, so it itself must be 
      purged of the rationalizations and myths that became part of the human 
      heritage before it came on the scene.  
      
      If the analyst suffers from a scotoma, he will communicate it to the 
      analysand; similarly, if cosmopolis itself suffers from the general bias 
      of common sense in any of its manifestations, then the blind will be 
      leading the blind and both will head for a ditch.  
      
      There is needed, then, a critique of history before there can be any 
      intelligent direction of history. 
      
      There is needed an exploration of the movements, the changes, the 
      epochs of a civilization’s genesis, development, and vicissitudes.  The 
      opinions and attitudes of the present have to be traced to their origins, 
      and the origins have to be criticized in the light of dialectic.  The 
      liberal believer in automatic progress could praise all that survives; the 
      Marxist could denounce all that was and praise all that would be; but 
      anyone that recognizes the existence both of intelligence and of bias, 
      both of progress and of decline, has to be critical and his criticism will 
      rest on the dialectic that simply affirms the presuppositions of possible 
      criticism.  
      
      Perhaps enough has been said on the properties and aspects of our X, 
      named cosmopolis, for a synthetic view to be attempted.  It is not a group 
      denouncing other groups; it is not a super-state ruling states; it is not 
      an organization that enrols members, nor an academy that endorses 
      opinions, nor a court that administers a legal code.  
      
      It is a withdrawal from practicality to save practicality.  
      
      
      It is a dimension of consciousness, a heightened grasp of historical 
      origins, a discovery of historical responsibilities.  
      
      It is not something altogether new, for the Marxist has been busy 
      activating the class-consciousness of the masses and, before him, the 
      liberal had succeeded in indoctrinating men with the notion of progress.  
      Still, it possesses its novelty, for it is not simpliste.  
      
      
      It does not leap from a fact of development to a belief in automatic 
      progress nor from a fact of abuse to an expectation of an apocalyptic 
      utopia reached through an accelerated decline.  
      
      It is the higher synthesis of the liberal thesis and the Marxist 
      antithesis.  
      
      It comes to minds prepared for it by these earlier views, for they have 
      taught man to think historically.  
      
      It comes at a time when the totalitarian fact and threat have refuted 
      the liberals and discredited the Marxists.  
      
      It stands on a basic analysis of the compound-in-tension that is man; 
      it confronts problems of which men are aware; it invites the vast 
      potentialities and pent-up energies of our time to contribute to their 
      solution by developing an art and a literature, a theatre and a 
      broadcasting, a journalism and a history, a school and a university, a 
      personal depth and a public opinion, that through appreciation and 
      criticism give men of common sense the opportunity and help they need and 
      desire to correct the general bias of their common sense.  
      
      Finally, it would 
      be unfair not to stress the chief characteristic of cosmopolis.  It is not 
      easy.  It is not a dissemination of sweetness and light, where sweetness 
      means sweet to me, and light means light to me.  Were that so, cosmopolis 
      would be superfluous.  
      
      Every scotosis 
      puts forth a plausible, ingenious, adaptive, untiring resistance.  The 
      general bias of common sense is no exception.  It is by moving with that 
      bias rather then against it, by differing from it slightly rather than 
      opposing it thoroughly, that one has the best prospect of selling books 
      and newspapers, entertainment and education.  
      
      Moreover, this is 
      only the superficial difficulty.  Beneath it lies the almost insoluble 
      problem of settling clearly and exactly what the general bias is.  
      
      
      It is not a 
      culture but only a compromise that results from taking the highest common 
      factor of an aggregate of cultures.  
      
      It is not a 
      compromise that will check and reverse the longer cycle of decline.  Nor 
      is it unbiased intelligence that yields a welter of conflicting opinions. 
      
      
      This is the 
      problem.  So far from solving it in this chapter, we do not hope to reach 
      a full solution in this volume.  But, at least, two allies can be 
      acknowledged.  
      
      On the one hand, 
      there is common sense and in its judgments, which as yet have not been 
      treated, common sense tends to be profoundly sane.  
      
      On the other 
      hand, there is dialectical analysis; the refusal of insight betrays 
      itself; the Babel of our day is the cumulative product of a series of 
      refusals to understand; and dialectical analysis can discover and expose 
      both the series of past refusals and the tactics of contemporary 
      resistance to enlightenment. 
      
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