Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label desires

Desires Stronger Than the Desire for Truth

 We often have difficulty discerning truth not because we have no desire for truth, but because there are desires other than the desire to know. These include the desires for prestige, power, material possessions, and material comfort. Such desires can prevent us from discerning that truth which lies behind and beyond individual and collective interest. —Charles McKelvey, Beyond Ethnocentrism, 1991

Conscripts of Western Civilization

The West has become a vast moral project, an intimidating claim to write and speak for the world, and an unending politicisation of power. Becoming Western has meant becoming transformed according to these things, albeit in a variety of historical circumstances and with varying degrees of thoroughness. For conscripts of Western civilization this transformation implies that some desires have been forcibly eliminated—even violently—and others put in their place. The modern state, invented in Europe, is the universal condition of that transformation—and of its 'higher truth'. — Talal Asad, Conscripts of Western Civilization , 1992, quoted in Joseph Massad's Islam in Liberalism, 2015, pp. 251-2