Based on my (and your own admissions of lack of) knowledge of Chesterton, I can safely assure you that you are mistaken about Chesterton being patronizing. He saw himself as the simple child, or at least that that is much more the ideal to strive for in certain respects. Humility combined with humor and brilliant reasoning is a hallmark of his writings - consider how quickly words of his were taken the wrong way based on surface impressions and the soundbites that are all that you will permit/tolerate. (It is well-known that he committed errors in details, but this does not, generally speaking, impact his overarching points.) Again, the people he debated with noted his humility and humor and therefore did not find him condescending or offensive, and that is well-documented.rdhopeca wrote:Personally I find his tone condescending, for want of a better term. I know that if I were to ever get in a debate with him, respect for my opinions would be notably absent. He'd likely speak to me as if I were the simple child he references as opposed to someone with a fully thought opinion on the ways of things, most likely on the basis that I haven't read enough of his works to "fully understand" what he's saying. Which, of course, is meaningless in the extreme; perhaps I'll get to that after I've read enough L. Ron Hubbard to conclude that Scientology is / is not the truth of the universe.Lord Mhoram wrote:rusmeister,
With due to respect to you and Chesterton, what he was like on a personal level is frankly irrelevant to a discussion like this. I don't mean to speak for aliantha, Fist, Loremaster, etc., but it seems to me that what they are saying is that Chesterton is philosophically offensive. In other words, he does not respect opposing ideologies and thought. He appears intellectually condescending, seemingly without respect for ideologies different from his own and therefore incapable to convert those with whom he disagrees. He is, in a word, radically dogmatic. This is why Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins and GK Chesteron and other apologists and polemicists are repulsive to me. I think they can be fairly grouped together.
I, on the other hand, respect him enough to allow him to think he is right as much as he wants. I'm sure his truth suits him well.
Luckily, we live in a world where my truth suits me equally well, and is equally valid, whether Chesterton likes it or not, recognizes it or not, respects it or not. For that matter, your truth suits you well, and it seems L.Ron's suits Mr Cruise quite well.
The value of Lewis and Chesterton is primarily that they strike at the heart of fallacies of modern thought on which many arguments I see here are based - only they were arguments that had appeared and been defeated before, and raise their heads again generation after generation. That, for me, was powerful - that ideas I had thought quite recent turned out to be much older than I thought - from political correctness and civil rights to questions like abortion, birth control and euthanasia. I hadn't realized how far back they stretched.
I'm afraid that saying that "one's truth suits them" is a rather meaningless statement, except, perhaps, insofar as it may mean that there is no truth, so people make things up to suit themselves - something that any rational person who believes in an objective universe ought to deny (that truth can only be subjective).