Ideas of the 20th Century Part 1
In Ideas of the 20th Century Part 1, an eight-hour course, Dr. Daniel Bonevac explores how the Scientific, Agricultural, and Industrial Revolutions created a lasting tension between human agency and scientific determinism. We examine how this crisis of belief contributed to the erosion of traditional values and upheavals like World War I and the Russian Revolution. By examining key thinkers including Nietzsche, Marx, Freud, and modernist writers like Eliot and Fitzgerald, the course traces the search for meaning in a fractured world and shows how this struggle still shapes modern culture and politics.
Lectures
In our introductory lecture, Dr. Bonevac reveals the interdisciplinary roots of 20th-century thought, tracing how the Scientific, Agricultural, and Industrial Revolutions reshaped society and human life. He shows that as progress brought prosperity, it also sparked a lasting philosophical tension between the “manifest image” of free, rational agency and the “scientific image” of a physically-governed world. We see how this unresolved clash—between reason, morality, and determinism—remains a defining challenge of modernity.
In lecture two, we encounter the crisis of belief in the 20th century, examining how tensions between scientific and manifest worldviews led to abandoning traditional values. We discuss Hume's is-ought problem and responses from Wittgenstein's transcendental ethics, Nietzsche's relativism and "death of God," to Dostoevsky's Grand Inquisitor. The lecture concludes by examining constrained versus unconstrained visions, highlighting the dangers of abandoning absolute values and the slide toward narcissism without external moral anchors.
In lecture three, we analyze how early 20th-century intellectual movements like Shaw's cynicism about moral values and Italian Futurism's violent rejection of the past helped create conditions for World War I. We explore Shaw's dismissal of traditional ethics and embrace of Stalin's violence, alongside the Futurists' glorification of war and destruction as progress. The discussion concludes with WWI's catastrophic toll and its shattering of civilization's faith in progress, creating a generation that lost innocence and trust in institutions.
In lecture four, we examine the rise of conservatism and progressivism in the 1910s and 1920s and their lasting impact on American politics. Focusing on Woodrow Wilson’s top-down, state-centered vision of freedom, we contrast it with the laissez-faire policies of Harding and Coolidge that fueled the economic boom and cultural dynamism of the Roaring Twenties. Dr. Bonevac concludes by highlighting both the era’s remarkable achievements and a growing intellectual elite increasingly at odds with the society it was meant to serve.
In lecture five, we study the Russian Revolution's roots in Marxist philosophy, examining how Marx's materialism reduced ethics to tactics serving class interests and identified human essence with production. We trace Lenin's radical departure from Marx's economic determinism, implementing totalitarian rule through systematic terror that killed hundreds of thousands. The discussion highlights fundamental problems with communist theory including problems of motivation, the emergence of new ruling elites, and economic collapse that forced Lenin to partially restore private property before his death.
In lecture six, we explore the profound impact of World War I on Western intellectual thought through the poetry of W. B. Yeats and T. S. Eliot, examining how both poets grappled with the collapse of traditional values and the search for meaning in a fractured civilization. We analyze Yeats's cyclical view of history in "The Second Coming" and his quest for spiritual permanence in "Sailing to Byzantium," alongside Eliot's fragmented vision in "The Waste Land," which depicts a spiritually barren modern world. The lecture concludes by highlighting how both poets, despite their different approaches, ultimately argue that life requires connection to something eternal or larger than oneself to have meaning.
In lecture seven, we explore the contrasting perspectives of Rudyard Kipling and F. Scott Fitzgerald as voices of the 1920s, examining their different responses to the post-World War I era. We examine Kipling's "ethics of civilization," emphasizing traditional wisdom, social institutions, and long-term survival over abstract ideals, illustrated through poems like "If" and "The Gods of the Copybook Headings." We then analyze Fitzgerald's "This Side of Paradise," depicting the lost generation's moral drift after WWI, torn between external values and internal meaning, ultimately finding only self-knowledge amid disillusionment.
In our eighth and final lecture, we investigate how World War I trauma created "unfathomable reservoirs of the absurd" that veterans couldn't express, leading to Freud's psychoanalytic theories gaining cultural prominence. We explore Freud's dream interpretation, his id-ego-superego model, and his controversial death drive theory. We then analyze how Freudian ideas influenced cultural movements, particularly Luigi Pirandello's theatrical exploration of multiple, contradictory selves, and the Surrealist movement's attempt to access and express this hidden psychological truth through art that suspends rational consciousness.
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