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How Consequential Can an Idea Be: The Dissolution of the West

In his 1948 work Ideas Have Consequences, Richard Weaver claims that all of our problems can be traced back to the consequences of a single doctrine: nominalism. This claim, developed in the medieval university system, holds that the concepts we form have no transcendent reality behind them beyond the names we give to things. Weaver believes that the explicit or tacit acceptance of this idea is primarily responsible for what he sees as the decline of the Western world. In this reading group, we will consider the arguments that Weaver makes for this specific view of history, while looking more broadly at the idea that any philosophical doctrine could be influential enough to have the kinds of effects that he claims.

On Thursday, April 4th, we will discuss Weaver's claim that Nominalism, a denial of a reality behind the names we give to objects, has caused the decline of Western society, and look the different relations between feeling and reality that he identifies as symptomatic of this change. We will be reading the introduction and first chapter of Ideas Have Consequences. Please find a link to the readings below.

This seminar is the first in our Spring 2024 series How Consequential Can an Idea Be?