Every
now and then we get something from one of our readers that starts a train of
thought, or forces us to clarify either our thoughts on something, or how we
expressed those thoughts. This is
understandable. When you’re dealing with
something that is “so old it’s new” as the Just Third Way, sometimes you need
some kind of shock (in a nice way, of course) to try and get not only your
critics, but yourself, out of a rut you may be in.
Anyway,
recently we got a somewhat lengthy essay from one of our readers. We’ll call her (or him), oh, . . . Sammy. The essay clearly wasn’t meant for
publication, or we would have considered doing so, if only to save us the labor
of having to come up with the daily posting for this blog. Instead, we’re posting our reaction to a
brief extract from the essay:
“ ‘To Hell with the news! I am
no longer interested in news. I am interested in causes. We don’t
print the truth. We don’t pretend to print the truth. We print what
people tell us. It’s up to the public to decide what’s true.’ — Ben
Bradlee, editor of the Washington Post
in 1989 — He is speaking for all the liberal press AND media.
“Somehow, the Founders put communicators in the First Amendment: speech, press, assembly, religion — and they certainly had TRUTHFUL information in mind fantasizing about the people being able to make good decisions with all the facts...which should be basic professionalism and humanity anyway. And Americans ARE prevented from publishing whatever is on their minds...editors censor all . . . there should be two pages if every issue of REALLY ‘free’ press printing all received from ‘the people’ giving ‘the free press’ TO THE PEOPLE as the First Amendment actually does . . .”
“Somehow, the Founders put communicators in the First Amendment: speech, press, assembly, religion — and they certainly had TRUTHFUL information in mind fantasizing about the people being able to make good decisions with all the facts...which should be basic professionalism and humanity anyway. And Americans ARE prevented from publishing whatever is on their minds...editors censor all . . . there should be two pages if every issue of REALLY ‘free’ press printing all received from ‘the people’ giving ‘the free press’ TO THE PEOPLE as the First Amendment actually does . . .”
Here
is our response.
Dear
Sammy:
In a
sense, Ben Bradlee was correct. Today’s
media are not in the business of telling the truth or reporting the news. They are in the business of selling a
product.
It
is only coincidence that the product they are selling appears to come under the
First Amendment. The news media are not
a free press, any more than capitalism is a free market.
The
fact is that you don’t usually make good sales in a non-essential item (or,
more accurately, in something perceived as non-essential) by giving the
customer unpleasant or unpalatable reality.
You make good sales by giving customers what they want.
The
issue of who decides what is true, however, is a bit more involved than simply
saying that truth is subject to the democratic process and that “[i]t’s up to
the public to decide what’s true.”
The Problem of
Truth
“‘What
is truth?’ said jesting Pilate, and would not stay for an answer.” Or so
Francis Bacon put it in his essay, “Of Truth.”
I’m not sure Pilate was “jesting,” but he was expressing succinctly
today’s confusion between absolutes, and the application of absolutes.
As
Mortimer Adler noted in his book, Ten
Philosophical Mistakes (1985), there is massive confusion today over the
difference between knowledge and opinion.
Knowledge is based on reason, verified by empirical evidence and logical
argument, and is always manifestly true.
Opinion,
however, is based on faith, not necessarily religious faith, but faith in
something. Faith, which applies to that
which is not manifestly true, should
(but does not always have) a foundation on reason. (Æterni
Patris, § 2.)
Opinion
is therefore not necessarily true. It
may be true, but if opinion contradicts knowledge, just as when faith
contradicts reason, then there exists an error that must be resolved.
There
is therefore objective, absolute Truth (knowledge), that is, fundamental
principles that cannot be changed. No
one, whether politicians, academics, religious leaders, “the people,” or even
the news media, can change absolute truth, any more than they can decree that 2
+ 2 now equals 10.
What
can and must change to meet current conditions, however, are the applications of absolutes. Any and all changes not only can be made by
politicians, academics, religious leaders, “the people,” and even the news
media, they must be made to conform
our behavior and institutions to changing conditions — as long as the changes
do not contradict the underlying absolute truth or principle. Adding two dollars to two dollars can never
get us ten dollars, for that violates the absolute truth of the fact that 2 + 2
= 4. As Pope Benedict XV explained the
relationship between absolute principles, and the relative application of
principles,
“Nor do We merely desire that Catholics should shrink
from the errors of Modernism, but also from the tendencies or what is called
the spirit of Modernism. Those who are infected by that spirit develop a keen
dislike for all that savors of antiquity and become eager searchers after
novelties in everything: in the way in which they carry out religious
functions, in the ruling of Catholic institutions, and even in private
exercises of piety. Therefore it is Our will that the law of our forefathers
should still be held sacred: ‘Let there be no innovation; keep to what has been
handed down.’ In matters of faith that must be inviolably adhered to as the
law; it may however also serve as a guide even in matters subject to change,
but even in such cases the rule would hold: ‘Old things, but in a new way.’” (Ad Beatissimi Apostolorum, § 25.)
Thus,
just because we believe something doesn’t make it true. Even Catholics don’t believe that. The doctrine of “papal infallibility” isn’t
that something is true because the pope says it, it’s that the popes say something
because they believe it is true.
We’ll
start to address the implications of this in the next posting in this series.