A summary of Nikolai Berdyaev’s "The Philosophy of Inequality"
Automatic translate
The Russian thinker’s treatise was written in 1918, hot on the heels of social upheaval, and is presented as a collection of letters to ideological enemies. The text is imbued with a spirit of religious opposition to materialism and is directed against the ideologists of radical leftist movements. Later, in 1923, the author added an afterword from his exile in Berlin. This book is a passionate confession by a Christian philosopher, attempting to understand the catastrophe through the prism of eternal ontological categories rather than temporary political interests.
The spiritual origins of the revolution and the nature of society
The Russian Revolution is anti-religious in nature. It arose from the decline of spiritual life and the loss of an organizing center. Revolutionaries mistakenly imagine themselves as free creators of a new world. They remain passive mediums of dark, chaotic forces. Revolutions are always preceded by the decay of the old regime. The blame for the fall of the state falls on the ruling classes of old Russia, who failed to shine a light and prevent catastrophe. The tragedy of the Russian people lies in the false balance between masculine and feminine. Russia’s passive, feminine soul long relied on the external, masculine idea of the Tsar. The disappearance of this idea led to the disintegration of social discipline.
For centuries, the Russian intelligentsia was infected with materialism and left-wing populism. Idolatry of the masses killed the national idea. Radicals replaced the religion of God with a sociological religion. The teachings of Karl Marx and Auguste Comte broke down living organic bonds into atoms and economic interests. Human society is linked to the great cosmos by invisible threads. The construction of a blissful earthly paradise by the forces of reason is doomed to inevitable failure. Any emergence of light from primordial darkness gives rise to inequality. Absolute equality is identical to primordial chaos and nothingness. Cosmic inequality is justified by the individual destiny of the human soul in eternity.
State, Nation and Conservatism
The state is born from mystical roots. It cannot be reduced to the rational social contract of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Authority has a divine source, described by the Apostle Paul. It restrains the bestial chaos of sinful nature. State coercion prevents earthly existence from becoming hellish. The nature of authority is always hierarchical. Great states inevitably transcend their national borders. The imperialism of the ancient Persians, Alexander the Great, and the British carries the historical significance of uniting spaces. Christianity places limits on state omnipotence. The Church defends the infinite nature of the spirit from the encroachments of an earthly Caesar.
A nation transcends the arithmetic sum of its living individuals. It is a mystical organism uniting generations past and future descendants. Leftist internationalism brings death to historical memory. It erases individual personalities for the sake of economic abstractions. The fate of the Jewish people proves the existence of a single, mystical national destiny beyond territory. Conservatism preserves the organic connection of time, not inertia. It resists the destructive force of the flow of time. True conservatism is united with creativity. Nikolai Fyodorov’s teaching on the resurrection of fathers profoundly reflects the essence of a respectful attitude toward the past, as opposed to destructive futurism.
Aristocracy versus democracy
The highest principle of social life remains aristocracy — rule by the best. Democratic ideology lacks ontological depth. It submits divine truth to the judgment of an arithmetic majority. The triumph of consistent democracy is always short-lived. In reality, history is dominated by either aristocracy or ochlocracy — rule by the worst. In times of crisis, a false aristocracy of demagogues seizes power. The spiritual foundation of true aristocracy rests on the nobility of race and the consciousness of divine sonship. Plebeian psychology is nourished by an underlying sense of resentment, constant malice, and envy of the greatness of others.
Equality and freedom are antagonistic. Freedom demands qualitative differences and distances; it is deeply aristocratic. Equality destroys individual qualities for the sake of quantity. Democratic rule gives rise to the leveling tyranny of public opinion. Autocracy by the people is more terrifying than the dictatorship of a monarch, as it intrudes into private life and ignores spiritual boundaries. Liberalism rightly defends formal human freedoms. The liberal idea quickly degenerates due to its separation from Christian roots. Political democracy is incapable of generating lofty creative values.
Illusions of socialism and anarchism
Socialism is born of the capitalist system. Both systems enslave the free spirit with a rigid economy. Socialist ideology is based on the consumer ideal and the thirst for material distribution. Comparing socialism with Christianity is blasphemous. Christianity preaches a free, blessed brotherhood in Christ. Socialism imposes forced, mechanical camaraderie through hatred of the propertied classes. Marx’s teachings deprived man of his spirit. Extreme collectivism socializes the tools of production and the human soul itself. It deprives the individual of the independent choice between good and evil.
The anarchism of Max Stirner or Leo Tolstoy reduces the demand for freedom to the point of semantic emptiness. The denial of the state, law, and hierarchy plunges the individual into impersonal chaos. Anarchic freedom destroys the ontological foundations of the universe. Man is left alone with empty nothingness. The protection of the individual demands cosmic order and strict form. Anarchy unleashes the lower Dionysian elements, sweeping away the Apollonian image of man. Blind faith in the innate goodness of human nature leads to orgies of violence.
War, economy and the crisis of culture
Struggle stems from the sinful disunity of the world. War is profoundly antinomic. It sows physical death while simultaneously cultivating the spirit. The great virtues of sacrifice were born in the crucible of battle. Bourgeois pacifism fears physical death due to its disbelief in the immortality of the soul. Peacetime is often filled with invisible spiritual murders. The army is held together by an irrational sanctity. Rationalizing the goals of war leads to the instant disintegration of troops. Historical clashes between states are nobler than class civil strife, where man ultimately loses his ethical integrity and turns into a beast.
Economism suppressed humanity’s spiritual aspirations. The advent of machine technology disrupted the organic rhythm of nature. Machines mercilessly destroy organic matter, but they free up spiritual energy for new tasks. Economy is rigidly subordinated to the laws of material need. The development of productive forces requires social inequality and labor discipline. Private property strengthens the human connection to the land and the memory of ancestors. It overcomes the fluidity of time. Socialism views the world as an object for consumer plunder. The true goal of economy is a magical victory over deadly forces.
Every genuine culture is noble and inextricably linked to religious worship. It strives for eternity and resists decay. A utilitarian civilization thrives on present-day comfort. Culture is created by a select few. Democratization inevitably lowers its quality. At the heights of creative development, a profound crisis arises. Friedrich Nietzsche, Konstantin Leontiev, and Fyodor Dostoevsky acutely sensed the incommensurability of cultural products with the thirst for a new ontological existence. Scythian ideology mistakenly calls for a return to a primordial state. The path of humanity lies through the exhaustion of culture to a supracultural transformation.
The Kingdom of God and post-historical existence
The meaning of history is hidden in the search for the Kingdom of God. This absolute goal lies beyond earthly coordinates. The expectation of a sensory paradise on earth echoes ancient Jewish chiliasm. Earthly social utopias reject the mystery of Golgotha. Radicals hope to bypass suffering and redemption. Christian eschatology speaks of the coming transformation of the cosmos, not of materialistic prosperity. History in time merely projects processes originating in eternity. The final overcoming of deadly time occurs in another dimension.
The Apocalypse foretells the inevitable growth of evil and the battle with the Antichrist. Socialist promises of satiety without God precisely echo the temptations rejected by the Savior in the desert. The coming Antichrist tempts humanity with doubles of truth. The individual loses clear boundaries in the turbid spiritual atmosphere of modern times. The solution requires strengthening inner discipline and chivalrous courage. It is impossible to build a perfect society through external political acts. Nations must experience profound inner repentance. True salvation is found solely in striving for divine reality.
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