[F]actual
truth is no more self-evident than opinion, and this may be among the reasons
that opinion-holders find it relatively easy to discredit factual truth as just
another opinion. Factual evidence, moreover, is established through testimony
by eyewitnesses – notoriously unreliable – and by records, documents, and
monuments, all of which can be suspected as forgeries. In the event of a
dispute, only other witnesses but no third and higher instance can be invoked,
and settlement is usually arrived at by way of a majority; that is, in the same
way as the settlement of opinion disputes – a wholly unsatisfactory procedure,
since there is nothing to prevent a majority of witnesses from being false
witnesses. --Hannah Arendt[1]
In totalitarian regimes, which twisted facts to
suit their “truth”, majorities of witnesses could be “encouraged” to bear false
witness. In democracies majorities can be convinced that an opinion is a
factual truth. In both cases, though a citizen armed with facts could hold
power to account. Yet, for the citizen to hold power to account facts have to be
embedded in the truth or political knowledge, which is why totalitarian regimes
rewrite their history books. The totalitarian rulers know that the nature of
political things cannot be changed or made otherwise by fiat, so they do the
next best thing, they change the opinion about those facts.
In a democracy, political things are confused
with everyday things. Even though buying a shirt would never be confused with
casting a vote, they are often equated as a similar choice. What differentiates
them though is that political things exist within a context that shows their
political nature. To cast a vote, a citizen requires a ballot and an election.
The ballot, the ballot box, and the election are political facts that create
the context for political things to be revealed. Decent politics exists where people
replace opinions of political things with knowledge of political things. The knowledge
comes from the study of political things that are anchored in reality by facts.
A political fact torn from such context is easily spotted as a falsehood such
as claiming Abraham Lincoln died in 1965 or Donald Trump won the 2016 Iowa
Republican Caucus. However, political knowledge is often confused with
political opinions that reflect prejudices or guesses about political things
rather than knowledge of the political things. Unlike a totalitarian regime
which often relies on violence to enforce its rule, the democracy becomes
distorted as political opinions begin to replace facts.
In a democracy, those who want to control the
public domain, who resist the effort to obtain political knowledge, will seek
to reduce facts to opinions. The goal is to reach a state where any “fact” can
be shaped to fit the “truth” the speaker wants to claim. A prominent example of
this trend is Donald Trump's doubts about Barack Obama's birth certificate. He
wants his opinion, that the President’s birth certificate is fraudulent, to
replace the fact. He asserts his opinion to create a doubt about the facts so
that they can be dismissed. Were he to achieve this, he could have greater
power in the public domain for it would reflect his opinion and no the facts.
However, to do this he has to pull apart the context within which the political
fact exists, which is what makes the birth certificate valid. He has to dismiss
the birth registration process, the bureaucratic context, and the integrity of
all the people involved.
Democracies have always been susceptible to
demagogues. They want their opinion to be the basis by which the community acts
and to do this they have to discredit political knowledge and political facts.
When “truthers” seek to discredit political facts as a common standard for
behaviour within the public domain their opinions take root. Such opinions
flourish when they begin to replace the common standard of truth. Without
a common standard of truth, based on political facts, the common good that
binds the country begins to fray. To destroy this common good, a liar that is
one who wants to replace facts with opinions, will shape his “facts” to fit
what his audience expects. Through this method, he undermines those who have
political knowledge or political facts, a truth teller as unpersuasive.
If it be true
that all governments rest on opinion, it is no less true that the strength of
opinion in each individual, and its practical influence on his conduct, depend
much on the number which he supposes to have entertained the same opinion. The
reason of man, like man himself, is timid and cautious when left alone, and
acquires firmness and confidence in proportion to the number with which it is
associated. --James Madison Federalist #49
With truth tellers discredited, the “truthers”
can impose their opinions as the truth without concern for verifiable political
facts. Moreover, the “truther” will insist that any facts they disagree with
are simply opinions. (It is your opinion that Obama’s birth certificate is
valid. It is your opinion that steel will soften and melt under intense heat of
burning jet fuel). The political is defended as a constitutional right. The
“truther” wants to claim that it even if his political opinion is not true or
factual he is entitled to speak it as constitutional right. He will assert that
he has a right to be wrong. The danger is that no one has a right to be wrong
about facts; Germany did invade Belgium, the Declaration of Independence was
signed in 1776, Trump did lose in Iowa. Without the insistence on facts and the
truth derived from them, decent politics begins to wither. The belief that that
opinions replace facts means that a shared understanding of political things
begins to fray. When opinions replace facts as the basis for political truth, when
the difference between right and wrong is reduced to an opinion, then freedom based
on the common good becomes doubtful.
[1]
TRUTH AND POLITICS by Hannah
Arendt Originally published in The New Yorker, February 25, 1967, and reprinted
with minor changes in Between Past and Future (1968) and The Portable Hannah
Arendt edited by Peter Baier (2000) and Truth: Engagements Across Philosophical
Traditions edited by Medina and Wood (2005) p. 304
Very nice. Hannah Arendt, James Madison, what's not to like?
ReplyDeleteWhat is even more frightening is when opinion is stated as fact, for instance that you have a "right" to x, and it supersedes my right to y. This is what the Supreme Court has been doing of late.