Based on its analytical, deduction-based approach and narrow views on the complexities of nature and history, the West lost its view on the holistic, long-term future relationships, consciously or unconsciously indulging itself with the uncertainties and often banalities of a postmodern, utterly deconstructed and individualist world. This post-modern insecurity the East itself has not yet encountered, and, as I will argue, it does not necessarily have to.
After Modernism (c. 1880-1950), which is understood as the age of totalities, essentialisms and meta-narratives, Western societies had deconstructed all those past meta-narratives and entered the age of Postmodernism (c. 1950-2000) (Hutcheon, 1989). For some Eastern observers it seemed that in certain areas of analytical enquiry the West was approaching its limits. Could there be anything smaller than Heisenberg’s smallest possible particles ‘quarks’? What is the meaning of anything once they deconstructed everything?
西方的自然科学走的是一条分析的道路,越分越细…而对这些细节之间的联系则缺乏宏观的概括。
Western science has walked down the analytical path; the more it deduced the smaller became the deducible…and (they) lost the macroscopic general perspective about how those details were related to each other. (Ji Xianlin, 2006 [5])
Man faces a serious problem in the modern world because science has pursued the objective method of cognition and has analyzed and classified phenomena until we are left with only the pieces. (Makiguchi, in Brannen [1964])
Heisenberg’s ‘Uncertainty Principle’ (1926), Goedel’s ‘Incompleteness Theorems’ (1931), Wittgenstein’s ‘Language Games’ (1926), Hussel’s ‘Distress in meaning’ (1970), which he crowned with his Crisis of European Sciences, Derrida’s ‘Deconstructionism’ (1960), Lévi-Strauss’ ‘Bricolage’ (1962), Lorenz’s Chaos Theory (1792), famous for his ‘butterfly-effect’, the whole idea of Boa’s ‘cultural relativism’ (1942), meaning that all beliefs are valid and truth relative itself, etc., all of those end-of-meaningful-analysis theories contributed to undermine our beliefs in a society’s certainty, consistency and continuity. If you put yourself into little things, after a hundred years it gets to you: secular Western societies therefore left it all to the individuals and their individual experiences to decide how to make sense of the world, and what to do with their minuscule lives.
The spiritual East however is different:
Ganga ca yamuna caiva godavari sarasvati; narmada simdhu kaveri
stranar-atham prati-grhyatam.
I am taking a bath with all these rivers Ganga, Yamuna, Godavari, Narmada,
同一个世界,同一个梦想
One world – One Dream
The ‘bath sutra’ – it exists in various forms all across the Indian subcontinent – is a harmless spiritual song about the perceived unity of
In contrast, Western societies, after a long history of assertiveness and expansion, so it seems, do not conquer anymore, they converge. While in the analytical-based West today it is inevitably the minuscule individual in multiculturalism (EU, USA, AUS, CDN, NZ), in the integration-based East it is still the collective nation in numbers (China, Indian, but also Russia, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand, Korea, and the Middle East).
It is the old matter of seeing the trees or seeing the forest, reflected in the following two statements:
From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.
(Karl Marx, 1875)
and
有的国家占的篇幅多一点,有的少一点。这只事实求足。
Some countries take up more space, others less. That is simply how things
are. (Ji Xianlin, 2006 [6])
The former quote suggests a philosophy for the individual (each tree) and hence implies the notion of self-interest and limitation, the latter suggests a philosophy for the masses (the whole forest) and hence implies public-spiritedness and certainty.
Long-term vision and constancy, as we have seen, are intrinsic values of integration-based Eastern societies:
世上本没有路,走的人多了,便也成了路.
As more people are walking all the time, in the same spot, a path appears.
(Lu Xun, 1981)
In 2050
We [
Although some Europeans have analyzed the problem of declining native populations and accepted their ethnic ‘Niedergang’, India, Pakistan, Turkey, Iran, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Arab League (22 member states), Vietnam and Bangladesh etc. have no inclination towards state birth control, and China (facing a demographic aging problem) is re-considering its one-child-policy, since it could always export more diasporas to Siberia, Africa, the Middle East and Australia in order to extend its cause. The birth-rates in European countries in 2005 were merely 1.3 (
If there is going to be a ‘world democracy’ today, with each world citizen having exactly one vote, the declining Europeans would have better united with the neighboring Muslim world or else simply become irrelevant - if not to say impotent - in international politics. Anger, awe, fear, and the strange feeling of intimidation are relative new experiences to European intellectuals, but now suggested by the facts.
The last time European culture had been similar “seriously slackened to its bones was when the Romans assimilated the Greeks around 300 BC” (Sisci, 2008): The rise of the East is now real and inevitable.
Having established that, after only 50 years since 1950, there is now plenty of East everywhere, the question is: “Who is the West?”
Some say it is the Northern hemisphere, others say it is the White man’s thing, still others claim it is the
As geography betrays us, on any Asian map of the world, the