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  • Dialogue or Monologue of Civilizations? (Rational Paradigms and Irra

    DIALOGUE OR MONOLOGUE OF CIVILIZATIONS? (RATIONAL PARADIGMS AND IRRATIONAL CHALLENGES)

    http://wpfdc.org/politics/1043-dialogue-or-monologue-of-civilizations-rational-paradigms-and-irrational-challenges
    Published on November 20, 2012 Written by WPF Dialogue of Civilizations

    Davit Mosinyan Davit Mosinyan A Paper by Davit Mosinyan, Associate
    Professor, Armenian State University of Economics, delivered at the
    10th Rhodes Forum

    Peace and safety have become the most important normative criteria
    for life in the contemporary world. If one tries to mention some
    universal human values, probably, first of all, he would remember
    these two. After the Cold War mankind has concentrated large portions
    of intellectual potential and practical efforts for realizations of
    these two values. As a result, some terms, including "dialogue",
    have become buzzwords. By the way, taking into consideration the
    social-historical fact that the times of the dialogue between two kings
    or two leaders have already passed, in geopolitical sense nowadays
    "dialogue" is interpreted as "dialogue of civilizations". Despite the
    way how understand the term "civilization" (though in case of the
    dialogue of civilizations it seems the huntingtonean understanding
    is supposed), a question arises: when can one assert that dialogue
    has already taken place?

    >From the falsificationist point of view (i.e. when our goal is the
    dialogue, and the clash of civilizations is in the focus of attention)
    technical productivity of research may be increase: for instance,
    one can argue that the wars in Iraq, Kosovo, the Armenian-Azerbaijani
    war are not dialogues, correspondingly, between the USA and Iraq,
    Serbia and Albania, Armenia and Azerbaijan. For the problems,
    concerning the dialogue among civilizations, are not puzzles,
    which need rational solutions: they are rather questions connected
    closely with the destiny of humankind. Meanwhile much more effort is
    necessary to adopt the verificationist point of view, because here
    one is obliged to answer at least the following two questions: 1)
    How to distinguish the dialogue from its imitations? 2) What does
    constitute the normative basis for the dialogue of civilizations?

    Professor Hans Kochler has in detail presented necessary
    conditions and principles of dialogue: equality of civilisational
    (cultural) 'lifeworlds', awareness of the 'dialectics of cultural
    self-comprehension', acknowledgement of meta-norms of dialogue,
    ability to transcend the hermeneutical circle of civilisational
    self-affirmation, etc. . But there is one more significant aspect
    of the issue: how to distinguish the dialogue from a complex
    of monologues (from a dualogue)? The first main indication of an
    established dialogue is the understanding, which, by the way, being
    an existential property, each time manifests itself differently. The
    civilization always carries some definite sense. By the way, some
    finiteness, a definite level of organization is peculiar civilization
    (though, indeed, the development of civilization is possible). From
    this point of view, each civilization is a verbalization of a certain
    sense. It means that the civilization in its unalloyed state is an
    original monologue, which may meet another monologue-civilization. In
    fact, if the dialogue is realized, then the sense of the one side
    is distorted and stops to exist in its previous form. For instance,
    as Huntington notes, the modernization (which is the same thing as
    westernization in this case) in Turkey since Mustafa Kemal is an
    example of the dialogue with Europe, as a result of which Turkey
    stopped to exist in its previous condition. By the way, Orhan Pamuk
    has criticized the authorities of that state for such a strategy.

    This criticism impels to remember an old anti-socialist joke, as
    Wallerstein illustrates:

    Orator: Comes the revolution, everyone will eat strawberries and cream.

    Worker in audience: But I don't like strawberries and cream.

    Orator: Comes the revolution, you will have to like strawberries
    and cream.

    Of course, it doesn't mean a rejection of the idea of dialogue.

    Nowadays we have no other way for co-existence besides the dialogue.

    But we should take into account the mechanisms of organization of
    the dialogue.

    According to Habermas, "the issue is no longer whether 'justice among
    nations' is possible at all, but whether law is the right medium for
    realizing that kind of justice". International law is not established
    once and for all. It may change under the influence of superpower
    and yield to some moral arguments. A danger of the endless monologue
    arises in the case of domination of such rules of game.

    Another scenario of the dialogue of civilizations, which is presented
    by Huntington, is the following: the civilizations become much closer
    or fight each other mainly on religious grounds. According to one
    of the rational previsions by Huntington, Russia and Georgia will
    gradually become closer, because they are parts of the same Orthodox
    civilization. However, in spite of this important factor, as we see,
    these two nations still can't find common language for dialogue.

    Probably, one can invent some ad hoc theory to explain this
    'irrational' fact. It is possible to apply to ad hoc theories for a
    long time, but our life does not get better from this.

    Civilization is a multilevel phenomenon. Some irrational facts always
    slip out from the rational conceptions of dialogues of civilizations,
    as well as from that of life. From a certain point of view, the
    'dialogue of civilizations' is an absolute and abstract concept, for
    what we mean, when we speak about: political, economical, cultural,
    or social dialogue? For instance, Japan is in dialogue with Europe
    on the economical level so far (which is perhaps the most primitive
    level), but it is very closed and autonomous in the cultural respect.

    One of the irrational challenges of our days is intensification
    of socio-cultural life, which is connected with the development of
    mass communicative means and promotion of the internet. Professor
    Kochler bases his analysis of new social media and internet on
    Gustav Le Bon's idea of 'psychology of crowd' (see, Hans Kochler,
    "The New Social Media and The Changing Nature of Communication:
    Anthropological and Political Implications", 2012, pp. 6-7).

    Internet is like a crowd, as each person there has opportunity to
    participate in the 'dialogue' with his own rules of game. Despite
    the political efforts of the Republic of Armenia and the Republic
    of Azerbaijan for peace, one can find mutual insults of Armenians
    and Azerbaijani in the commentaries to the YouTube videos about
    Nagorno-Karabakh. In this case, internet is an original area for
    mutual aggression.

    There are various means for regulation of 'internet behavior'.

    Thus, Iran has limited its internet-space; Singapore executes
    censorship on the internet by law, etc. Without disputing these
    approaches, however, it is necessary to mention that thus they
    refrained from a real universal dialogue. Being impersonal,
    dialogue on the internet is the most global, the most sincere
    and at the same time the most chaotic. The problem is that it is
    impossible to control the world wide internet by law. Besides, with
    the extension of opportunities for social virtual communication, the
    forms of expression of human subconscious have also multiplied. So the
    artificially created picture of convergence of the civilizations (what
    was the case, for example, with the Soviet Union) becomes meaningless.

    Those relations of civilizations are stronger, which are expressed
    not only on horizontal level (here and now, for instance, political
    relations), but also on that of perpendicular, i.e. over the time.

    And in time the most resistant are cultural relations, which influence
    both on individuals, and on the crowd. Philosophical principles lie at
    the core of our identity of any kind. In this sense, it is difficult
    to distinguish civilizations which are fertilized by each other in
    philosophical sense. Remembering Nietzsche's note on fertilizing and
    fertilized nations, we can observe the following: Russia and Germany
    belong to the different civilizations; in addition to it, because of
    the World War II hostile feelings arose between them. But now these
    two countries have reached quite serious level of dialogue. And this
    is partially due to the philosophical relations, existing between
    Hegel and Solovyov, Schelling and Berdyaev, Goethe and Tolstoy, etc.,
    relations which one still may deep into. The same may be said also
    about Germany and Armenia.

    Internet is a space where horizontal and perpendicular levels of
    culture meet. Due to the internet, humankind has become a real subject
    of communication; as to national collectivity, it has become a fact,
    as the will of population now can manifest itself just via pressing the
    button 'Like', etc. It means that cultural and socio-cultural relations
    can become a sustained basis for the organization of dialogue on the
    state level.

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