"Agent Provocateur"



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "Dan Clore"
Date: 18 Dec 2006 03:16:44 AM
Object: "Agent Provocateur"
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
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http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1166310610304&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724
Agent provocateur
His ideas about organized religion's 'children's stories'
have earned him death threats, but France's best-selling
philosopher, Michel Onfray, remains defiant. In the new
year, those ideas will finally be translated into English.
Brace yourself
Dec. 17, 2006. 07:39 AM
by BRAD SPURGEON
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
CAEN, France
He is a self-described hedonist, atheist, libertarian, and
left-wing anarchist. He is also France's best-selling
philosopher.
At a time when a French high school teacher was forced into
hiding after death threats for writing an article in Le
Figaro in September calling Islam a violent, hateful
religion and Christianity and Judaism non-violent, loving
religions, Michel Onfray has already gone a step further: in
Atheist Manifesto he dismantles and condemns as dangerous
and archaic not only Islam, but Christianity and Judaism as
well.
And after more than 30 books, he is finally seeing his ideas
spread far beyond his native Normandy. His 2005 book, Traité
d'athéologie, became a best-seller not only in France, where
it has sold 230,000 copies, but also in Italy and Spain, and
has sold well in other Latin countries, and even in Germany
and Asia.
In the new year, it will become the first of his books to be
translated into English. Published under the title Atheist
Manifesto, it will arrive in Canada from Penguin in February.
Onfray has also received death threats, but far from going
into hiding, he not only conducts lectures but also appears
regularly on French television and radio and makes frequent
appearances at philosophical forums around France and Europe.
Although he says that believing in religion's "children's
stories for comfort" deflects from the real problems of
existence and thus exacerbates them, he does not despise the
believers. As a rebel against all manner of authority, he
aims his ire at those who impose and organize religion and
its ethics, morals and customs.
"Against the rabbis, the preachers, the imams, ayatollahs
and mullahs, I persist in preferring the philosopher," he
writes in the book.
"They are the ones that know there is only one world and
that any promotion of an otherworld makes us lose the use
and benefit of the only one that really exists. A truly
deadly sin. . . "
He accepts only about one in seven requests for television
or radio appearances, opting for those where he can express
his ideas. For this story, he at first refused a spoken
interview -- disliking a format where snippets are often
pulled from context and used inaccurately -- but suggested
that questions and answers be conveyed via email.
Yet he proved to be an engaging host at his home in Chambois
and in Caen, along with the professors of the Université
Populaire de Caen, after a presentation of the new academic
year of the institution he founded in 2002. And he later
even agreed to answer a few more questions for this story
over the phone.
It is a year charged with significance, coming as it does
before the French presidential election next spring, and
Onfray has been much in the French press over the past two
weeks, speaking out in an article in the left-wing newspaper
Libération on the state of the far-left parties.
Onfray founded the university as a reaction to the arrival
of Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National
Front party, into the second round of the 2002 presidential
elections against Jacques Chirac. The idea, he said, was to
fight against that happening again by "promoting and
publicizing intelligence," and to try to "analyze and
understand how the world functions in order to put forward
alternative solutions to the contemporary negativity."
Open to anyone, with free tuition and requiring no
registration, prior education, tests or other course work,
the concept, like his books, is also spreading beyond his
home. There are now five other Popular Universities in
France and one in Belgium, all of which acknowledge Caen as
their model.
Yet despite his stance on free education for all and his
anarchic political ideas, Onfray is not against private
property -- he owns homes in both Chambois and nearby
Argentan -- and has a pragmatic mind for business.
When asked if the timely subject matter of the Atheist
Manifesto -- the war in Iraq, Sept. 11 and the fight against
terrorism -- is what made this his first book to be
published in English, he says, "I think, frankly, it has
more to do with the publishers seeing the figure of 230,000
copies sold."
That figure refers only to the hardback in France, and not
the many thousands of copies sold elsewhere in the 17
foreign contracts signed by his French publisher, Grasset.
So is interest in Onfray's writing a sign that the world is
shifting left, libertarian, and hedonist? In fact, Onfray
defies the preconceived ideas about those very labels.
"I am a free man, even with the usual labels," he says.
"That is, I am a hedonist who is free, a person of the left
who is free, a libertarian who is free . . . someone who
does not enter into the classic, habitual definitions and
who simply invites that his books be read."
In the Winter 2006 issue of New Politics, Doug Ireland
welcomed the forthcoming English translation of Atheist
Manifesto, and called it a "scandal" that none of Onfray's
other books had yet been translated into English. He calls
the book "an acerbic, stylish, and erudite polemic against
received religions in general and Christianity in
particular," and "a powerful antidote to the tsunami of
religious fanaticism that is engulfing the Western world as
well as the Islamic countries."
In a selection of the year's best books in last December's
Times Literary Supplement, novelist William Boyd, who read
Atheist Manifesto in French, called the book "both a
passionate and coolly reasoned advocacy of atheism, setting
the positive values of secularity squarely against the three
great monotheisms and their multitude of hates." Boyd added
that it was, "a wonderful, invigorating blast of sanity
delivered against the fog of high-toned mumbo jumbo we have
to endure everywhere today."
Certainly, not everyone is enthralled with this approach.
"His work attacking hatred is sometimes full of hatred,"
wrote the philosopher and author Bertrand Vergely in the
French literary magazine Lire, in a mostly positive 18-page
cover story on Onfray last February. "His analysis against
religious fanaticism and for intelligence uses the same
methods as the fundamentalists."
Gérard Oberlé, another French writer, calls Onfray a
professor who has found a way to make a good living out of
recycling old tales by presenting them as new ways of
thinking. "And," Oberlé added, "for an atheist, I find he is
a little too much of a preacher."
If it were only the Atheist Manifesto, however, Onfray might
be seen as a provocateur, a one-book-wonder, or as
Publishers Weekly in July referred to his book in a preview
of upcoming titles, part of a "new subcategory: the
"anti-religion book."
'His analysis against religious fanaticism and for
intelligence uses the same methods as the fundamentalists'
-- Bertrand Vergely
In fact, for Onfray, 47, it is only one part of an
all-encompassing philosophical oeuvre, the foundation and
interconnectivity of which he outlines in his latest book,
La Puissance d'exister, or The Power to Exist, published in
France in October.
His is a utilitarian philosophy celebrating an ethical
hedonism that uses the brain and body as the focal point for
a philosophical approach to art and politics and daily life.
It breaks from the idealistic Platonic tradition that
relegates the body to a lower role than the mind, and which
Onfray believes has contaminated mainstream philosophy up to
today.
But he also breaks from leftist traditions that call for
world economic and political revolution, and aims instead
for "micro-revolutions," or revolutions of the individual
and small groups of like-minded people who live by his
hedonistic, libertarian values.
But again, with labels like that, it is easy to
misunderstand his ideas if the books are not read. His idea
of hedonism is not the one in popular use.
"It is not the caricature that is done of it," he says. "On
the contrary, it is even an ascetic, the hedonism that I
propose. It is a discipline. It is more a discipline than an
abandoning to animality."
Onfray calls for a post-Christian age when people not only
say they are not religious but also cease to live by the
Christian ethics.
In other words, many people who do not go to church still
marry there, or baptize their children; medical ethics
concerning euthanasia, for example, are governed not by
humanitarian issues but by Judeo-Christian ideas of letting
a god decide when we die.
The seeds of his philosophical choices, he says, were
planted in Chambois, a sleepy village of 475 people famous
mainly as the scene of a key battle after the Normandy
invasion in World War II, in which the German army was
defeated by the allies in August 1944. Its other main
feature is the small, 12th-century castle in its centre.
Onfray's father was a farm labourer, his mother a cleaning
woman. He shows in The Power to Exist, how the experience of
being sent away by his parents at 10 to live in an orphanage
run by Salesian priests shaped his thinking.
There he developed his hatred for authority and the church
that ran the institution. He stayed until he was 14, before
being sent to a boarding school until he was 17.
"My four years in a boarding home, a Salesian orphanage,
made me stubborn against discipline, or order, and accessory
to that, to religion," he says. "But first, against all
forms of order, every form of authority that comes from on
high, if you like. Against all authority that is not
legitimate."
He prefaces most of his books with a personal story on how
his philosophy came about, and objects to philosophers who
claim that their lives do not influence their thinking.
A heart attack at 28 led him to write his first book, Le
Ventre des philosophes, or The Stomach of the Philosophers,
about the eating habits of philosophers from Diogenes to
Sartre, and how it is reflected in their philosophy.
In a sudden revolt against a hospital dietician lecturing
him on how he must change his eating habits after the heart
attack, he sent her away, saying that he "preferred to die
eating butter than to economize my existence with margarine."
Yet for a man who has had both a heart attack and, in 2004,
a stroke -- which briefly left him unable to write or speak
properly -- he looks in remarkable condition. He is tall,
slim, handsome and vibrant ,and continues to eat and drink
what he wants.
Having taken a Ph.D. in philosophy, he taught philosophy in
a technical high school in Caen from 1983 to 2002, when he
quit to open the university.
Inspired by a university in France opened in 1896 as a
reaction to the Dreyfus affair to bring education to the
masses and partly to fight anti-Semitism, Onfray's
university now has a staff of 12 professors teaching
subjects ranging from philosophy -- including a course for
children -- to medical ethics, jazz, contemporary art and
the cinema, feminism, literature and architecture. The
administrative costs and travel fees for the professors, who
are all volunteers, are paid for by a handful of sponsors
and the lecture rooms are donated by the University of Caen,
a local museum, a café and a theatre.
A full house of more than 500 people attends Onfray's
Tuesday lectures, and 1,500 people attend the 122 classes in
12 subjects over the year. As there is no registration, it
is impossible to tell exactly how many different people
attend, but the yearly total is nearly 20,000 -- in a city
with a population of 114,000. Says Roger Le Goff, a retired
technology teacher who has attended the classes from the
beginning, "I am an atheist, and it is much easier to live
when you think of there being another life after death.
"It's not that it posed much of problem for me, but now it
poses less of a problem for me -- knowing that my end is
fairly near does not bother me at all, because the important
thing is the present moment."
But Onfray's business sense also means the university helps
his own process as a writer. The 35 hours he uses to prepare
each course are being turned into a six-volume work called
the Counter-History of Philosophy.
The first two volumes came out this year, and two more are
slated for 2007. They are also sold as CD recordings. The
series recounts the alternative, hedonistic, materialistic,
non-idealistic history of philosophy from the pre-Socratics
to the present.
In fact, for a hedonist, he always seems to be working. But
that fits snugly into his ideas of atheism and living in the
present moment:
"I have always been like that," he says. "I don't want to
take a rest in this life. We have all of eternity to take a
rest."
Brad Spurgeon is a Canadian journalist based in Paris. He
writes for the International Herald Tribune and is the
author of Colin Wilson: Philosopher of Optimism.
--
Dan Clore
Now available: _The Unspeakable and Others_
http://amazon.com/o/ASIN/1587154838/ref=nosim/thedanclorenecro
Lord Weÿrdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://www.geocities.com/clorebeast/
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
"Don't just question authority,
Don't forget to question me."
-- Jello Biafra
.

User: "Stan de SD"

Title: Re: "Agent Provocateur" 23 Dec 2006 11:04:43 AM
"Dan Clore" <clore@columbia-center.org> wrote in message
news:45865C7C.4040306@columbia-center.org...

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo


http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1166310610304&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724

Agent provocateur
His ideas about organized religion's 'children's stories'
have earned him death threats, but France's best-selling
philosopher, Michel Onfray, remains defiant. In the new
year, those ideas will finally be translated into English.
Brace yourself
Dec. 17, 2006. 07:39 AM
by BRAD SPURGEON
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
CAEN, France

He is a self-described hedonist, atheist, libertarian, and
left-wing anarchist. He is also France's best-selling
philosopher.

Coming from a nation that thinks Jerry Lewis is an artistic genius, that's
not saying much.
.
User: "Free Lunch"

Title: Re: "Agent Provocateur" 27 Dec 2006 11:12:42 PM
On Sat, 23 Dec 2006 09:04:43 -0800, in alt.atheism
"Stan de SD" <standesd_DIGA_NO_A_SPAM@covad.net> wrote in
<9806f$458d60fd$45035f0d$15650@msgid.meganewsservers.com>:


"Dan Clore" <clore@columbia-center.org> wrote in message
news:45865C7C.4040306@columbia-center.org...

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo


http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1166310610304&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724

Agent provocateur
His ideas about organized religion's 'children's stories'
have earned him death threats, but France's best-selling
philosopher, Michel Onfray, remains defiant. In the new
year, those ideas will finally be translated into English.
Brace yourself
Dec. 17, 2006. 07:39 AM
by BRAD SPURGEON
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
CAEN, France

He is a self-described hedonist, atheist, libertarian, and
left-wing anarchist. He is also France's best-selling
philosopher.


Coming from a nation that thinks Jerry Lewis is an artistic genius, that's
not saying much.

If we actually had best-selling or any other kind of famous philosopher,
we might be in position to criticize. I suspect that Carl Sagan would be
top of the list of "famous recent American philosophers".
.
User: "Stan de SD"

Title: Re: "Agent Provocateur" 29 Dec 2006 07:28:58 PM
"Free Lunch" <lunch@nofreelunch.us> wrote in message
news:2fk6p2thremhl1657pnnj6uffa93iq2aba@4ax.com...

On Sat, 23 Dec 2006 09:04:43 -0800, in alt.atheism
"Stan de SD" <standesd_DIGA_NO_A_SPAM@covad.net> wrote in
<9806f$458d60fd$45035f0d$15650@msgid.meganewsservers.com>:


"Dan Clore" <clore@columbia-center.org> wrote in message
news:45865C7C.4040306@columbia-center.org...

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo



http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Arti

cle_Type1&c=Article&cid=1166310610304&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060
724

Agent provocateur
His ideas about organized religion's 'children's stories'
have earned him death threats, but France's best-selling
philosopher, Michel Onfray, remains defiant. In the new
year, those ideas will finally be translated into English.
Brace yourself
Dec. 17, 2006. 07:39 AM
by BRAD SPURGEON
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
CAEN, France

He is a self-described hedonist, atheist, libertarian, and
left-wing anarchist. He is also France's best-selling
philosopher.


Coming from a nation that thinks Jerry Lewis is an artistic genius,

that's

not saying much.

If we actually had best-selling or any other kind of famous philosopher,
we might be in position to criticize.

Will Rogers, Martin Luther King, Thomas Jefferson aren't famous?
.



User: "Pangur Ban"

Title: Re: "Agent Provocateur" 18 Dec 2006 07:37:10 AM
After serious thinking Dan Clore wrote :

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1166310610304&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724
Agent provocateur
His ideas about organized religion's 'children's stories' have earned him
death threats, but France's best-selling philosopher, Michel Onfray, remains
defiant. In the new year, those ideas will finally be translated into
English. Brace yourself
Dec. 17, 2006. 07:39 AM
by BRAD SPURGEON
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
CAEN, France
He is a self-described hedonist, atheist, libertarian, and left-wing
anarchist. He is also France's best-selling philosopher.
At a time when a French high school teacher was forced into hiding after
death threats for writing an article in Le Figaro in September calling Islam
a violent, hateful religion and Christianity and Judaism non-violent, loving
religions, Michel Onfray has already gone a step further: in Atheist
Manifesto he dismantles and condemns as dangerous and archaic not only Islam,
but Christianity and Judaism as well.
And after more than 30 books, he is finally seeing his ideas spread far
beyond his native Normandy. His 2005 book, Traité d'athéologie, became a
best-seller not only in France, where it has sold 230,000 copies, but also in
Italy and Spain, and has sold well in other Latin countries, and even in
Germany and Asia.
In the new year, it will become the first of his books to be translated into
English. Published under the title Atheist Manifesto, it will arrive in
Canada from Penguin in February.
Onfray has also received death threats, but far from going into hiding, he
not only conducts lectures but also appears regularly on French television
and radio and makes frequent appearances at philosophical forums around
France and Europe.
Although he says that believing in religion's "children's stories for
comfort" deflects from the real problems of existence and thus exacerbates
them, he does not despise the believers. As a rebel against all manner of
authority, he aims his ire at those who impose and organize religion and its
ethics, morals and customs.
"Against the rabbis, the preachers, the imams, ayatollahs and mullahs, I
persist in preferring the philosopher," he writes in the book.

Although I am not a rebel against all authority, I do agree with him
about religious authorities.

"They are the ones that know there is only one world and that any promotion
of an otherworld makes us lose the use and benefit of the only one that
really exists. A truly deadly sin. . . "
He accepts only about one in seven requests for television or radio
appearances, opting for those where he can express his ideas. For this story,
he at first refused a spoken interview -- disliking a format where snippets
are often pulled from context and used inaccurately -- but suggested that
questions and answers be conveyed via email.
Yet he proved to be an engaging host at his home in Chambois and in Caen,
along with the professors of the Université Populaire de Caen, after a
presentation of the new academic year of the institution he founded in 2002.
And he later even agreed to answer a few more questions for this story over
the phone.
It is a year charged with significance, coming as it does before the French
presidential election next spring, and Onfray has been much in the French
press over the past two weeks, speaking out in an article in the left-wing
newspaper Libération on the state of the far-left parties.
Onfray founded the university as a reaction to the arrival of Jean-Marie Le
Pen, the leader of the far-right National Front party, into the second round
of the 2002 presidential elections against Jacques Chirac. The idea, he said,
was to fight against that happening again by "promoting and publicizing
intelligence," and to try to "analyze and understand how the world functions
in order to put forward alternative solutions to the contemporary
negativity."
Open to anyone, with free tuition and requiring no registration, prior
education, tests or other course work, the concept, like his books, is also
spreading beyond his home. There are now five other Popular Universities in
France and one in Belgium, all of which acknowledge Caen as their model.

Interesting.

Yet despite his stance on free education for all and his anarchic political
ideas, Onfray is not against private property -- he owns homes in both
Chambois and nearby Argentan -- and has a pragmatic mind for business.
When asked if the timely subject matter of the Atheist Manifesto -- the war
in Iraq, Sept. 11 and the fight against terrorism -- is what made this his
first book to be published in English, he says, "I think, frankly, it has
more to do with the publishers seeing the figure of 230,000 copies sold."
That figure refers only to the hardback in France, and not the many thousands
of copies sold elsewhere in the 17 foreign contracts signed by his French
publisher, Grasset.
So is interest in Onfray's writing a sign that the world is shifting left,
libertarian, and hedonist? In fact, Onfray defies the preconceived ideas
about those very labels.
"I am a free man, even with the usual labels," he says. "That is, I am a
hedonist who is free, a person of the left who is free, a libertarian who is
free . . . someone who does not enter into the classic, habitual definitions
and who simply invites that his books be read."
In the Winter 2006 issue of New Politics, Doug Ireland welcomed the
forthcoming English translation of Atheist Manifesto, and called it a
"scandal" that none of Onfray's other books had yet been translated into
English. He calls the book "an acerbic, stylish, and erudite polemic against
received religions in general and Christianity in particular," and "a
powerful antidote to the tsunami of religious fanaticism that is engulfing
the Western world as well as the Islamic countries."

Sounds like an interesting book ...

In a selection of the year's best books in last December's Times Literary
Supplement, novelist William Boyd, who read Atheist Manifesto in French,
called the book "both a passionate and coolly reasoned advocacy of atheism,
setting the positive values of secularity squarely against the three great
monotheisms and their multitude of hates." Boyd added that it was, "a
wonderful, invigorating blast of sanity delivered against the fog of
high-toned mumbo jumbo we have to endure everywhere today."
Certainly, not everyone is enthralled with this approach. "His work attacking
hatred is sometimes full of hatred," wrote the philosopher and author
Bertrand Vergely in the French literary magazine Lire, in a mostly positive
18-page cover story on Onfray last February. "His analysis against religious
fanaticism and for intelligence uses the same methods as the
fundamentalists."
Gérard Oberlé, another French writer, calls Onfray a professor who has found
a way to make a good living out of recycling old tales by presenting them as
new ways of thinking. "And," Oberlé added, "for an atheist, I find he is a
little too much of a preacher."
If it were only the Atheist Manifesto, however, Onfray might be seen as a
provocateur, a one-book-wonder, or as Publishers Weekly in July referred to
his book in a preview of upcoming titles, part of a "new subcategory: the
"anti-religion book."
'His analysis against religious fanaticism and for intelligence uses the same
methods as the fundamentalists'
-- Bertrand Vergely
In fact, for Onfray, 47, it is only one part of an all-encompassing
philosophical oeuvre, the foundation and interconnectivity of which he
outlines in his latest book, La Puissance d'exister, or The Power to Exist,
published in France in October.
His is a utilitarian philosophy celebrating an ethical hedonism that uses the
brain and body as the focal point for a philosophical approach to art and
politics and daily life. It breaks from the idealistic Platonic tradition
that relegates the body to a lower role than the mind, and which Onfray
believes has contaminated mainstream philosophy up to today.

Ethical hedonism? Raises all manner of questions hopefully answered, at
least in part, in the book.

But he also breaks from leftist traditions that call for world economic and
political revolution, and aims instead for "micro-revolutions," or
revolutions of the individual and small groups of like-minded people who live
by his hedonistic, libertarian values.
But again, with labels like that, it is easy to misunderstand his ideas if
the books are not read. His idea of hedonism is not the one in popular use.
"It is not the caricature that is done of it," he says. "On the contrary, it
is even an ascetic, the hedonism that I propose. It is a discipline. It is
more a discipline than an abandoning to animality."
Onfray calls for a post-Christian age when people not only say they are not
religious but also cease to live by the Christian ethics.
In other words, many people who do not go to church still marry there,

A social occasion? A chance to display wealth? A cultural tradition
followed just because it is a tradition?

or
baptize their children;

A ritual which seems to mark the child as a part of the extended family
- and less of a religious function.

medical ethics concerning euthanasia, for example,
are governed not by humanitarian issues but by Judeo-Christian ideas of
letting a god decide when we die.

Agree with Onfray on this.

The seeds of his philosophical choices, he says, were planted in Chambois, a
sleepy village of 475 people famous mainly as the scene of a key battle after
the Normandy invasion in World War II, in which the German army was defeated
by the allies in August 1944. Its other main feature is the small,
12th-century castle in its centre.
Onfray's father was a farm labourer, his mother a cleaning woman. He shows in
The Power to Exist, how the experience of being sent away by his parents at
10 to live in an orphanage run by Salesian priests shaped his thinking.
There he developed his hatred for authority and the church that ran the
institution. He stayed until he was 14, before being sent to a boarding
school until he was 17.
"My four years in a boarding home, a Salesian orphanage, made me stubborn
against discipline, or order, and accessory to that, to religion," he says.
"But first, against all forms of order, every form of authority that comes
from on high, if you like. Against all authority that is not legitimate."
He prefaces most of his books with a personal story on how his philosophy
came about, and objects to philosophers who claim that their lives do not
influence their thinking.
A heart attack at 28 led him to write his first book, Le Ventre des
philosophes, or The Stomach of the Philosophers, about the eating habits of
philosophers from Diogenes to Sartre, and how it is reflected in their
philosophy.
In a sudden revolt against a hospital dietician lecturing him on how he must
change his eating habits after the heart attack, he sent her away, saying
that he "preferred to die eating butter than to economize my existence with
margarine."
Yet for a man who has had both a heart attack and, in 2004, a stroke -- which
briefly left him unable to write or speak properly -- he looks in remarkable
condition. He is tall, slim, handsome and vibrant ,and continues to eat and
drink what he wants.
Having taken a Ph.D. in philosophy, he taught philosophy in a technical high
school in Caen from 1983 to 2002, when he quit to open the university.
Inspired by a university in France opened in 1896 as a reaction to the
Dreyfus affair to bring education to the masses and partly to fight
anti-Semitism, Onfray's university now has a staff of 12 professors teaching
subjects ranging from philosophy -- including a course for children -- to
medical ethics, jazz, contemporary art and the cinema, feminism, literature
and architecture. The administrative costs and travel fees for the
professors, who are all volunteers, are paid for by a handful of sponsors and
the lecture rooms are donated by the University of Caen, a local museum, a
café and a theatre.
A full house of more than 500 people attends Onfray's Tuesday lectures, and
1,500 people attend the 122 classes in 12 subjects over the year. As there is
no registration, it is impossible to tell exactly how many different people
attend, but the yearly total is nearly 20,000 -- in a city with a population
of 114,000. Says Roger Le Goff, a retired technology teacher who has attended
the classes from the beginning, "I am an atheist, and it is much easier to
live when you think of there being another life after death.
"It's not that it posed much of problem for me, but now it poses less of a
problem for me -- knowing that my end is fairly near does not bother me at
all, because the important thing is the present moment."
But Onfray's business sense also means the university helps his own process
as a writer. The 35 hours he uses to prepare each course are being turned
into a six-volume work called the Counter-History of Philosophy.
The first two volumes came out this year, and two more are slated for 2007.
They are also sold as CD recordings. The series recounts the alternative,
hedonistic, materialistic, non-idealistic history of philosophy from the
pre-Socratics to the present.
In fact, for a hedonist, he always seems to be working. But that fits snugly
into his ideas of atheism and living in the present moment:
"I have always been like that," he says. "I don't want to take a rest in this
life. We have all of eternity to take a rest."
Brad Spurgeon is a Canadian journalist based in Paris. He writes for the
International Herald Tribune and is the author of Colin Wilson: Philosopher
of Optimism.
--
Dan Clore
Now available: _The Unspeakable and Others_
http://amazon.com/o/ASIN/1587154838/ref=nosim/thedanclorenecro
Lord Weÿrdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://www.geocities.com/clorebeast/
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo
"Don't just question authority,
Don't forget to question me."
-- Jello Biafra

--
Pangur Ban - nonchristian theist
.

User: "Joseph K."

Title: Re: "Agent Provocateur" 18 Dec 2006 07:57:31 AM
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 01:16:44 -0800, Dan Clore
<clore@columbia-center.org> wrote:

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1166310610304&call_pageid=968332188854&col=968350060724
Agent provocateur
His ideas about organized religion's 'children's stories'
have earned him death threats, but France's best-selling
philosopher, Michel Onfray, remains defiant. In the new
year, those ideas will finally be translated into English.
Brace yourself
Dec. 17, 2006. 07:39 AM
by BRAD SPURGEON
SPECIAL TO THE STAR
CAEN, France

He is a self-described hedonist, atheist, libertarian, and
left-wing anarchist. He is also France's best-selling
philosopher.

At a time when a French high school teacher was forced into
hiding after death threats for writing an article in Le
Figaro in September calling Islam a violent, hateful
religion and Christianity and Judaism non-violent, loving
religions, Michel Onfray has already gone a step further: in
Atheist Manifesto he dismantles and condemns as dangerous
and archaic not only Islam, but Christianity and Judaism as
well.

And after more than 30 books, he is finally seeing his ideas
spread far beyond his native Normandy. His 2005 book, Traité
d'athéologie, became a best-seller not only in France, where
it has sold 230,000 copies, but also in Italy and Spain, and
has sold well in other Latin countries, and even in Germany
and Asia.

In the new year, it will become the first of his books to be
translated into English. Published under the title Atheist
Manifesto, it will arrive in Canada from Penguin in February.

Onfray has also received death threats, but far from going
into hiding, he not only conducts lectures but also appears
regularly on French television and radio and makes frequent
appearances at philosophical forums around France and Europe.

Although he says that believing in religion's "children's
stories for comfort" deflects from the real problems of
existence and thus exacerbates them, he does not despise the
believers. As a rebel against all manner of authority, he
aims his ire at those who impose and organize religion and
its ethics, morals and customs.

"Against the rabbis, the preachers, the imams, ayatollahs
and mullahs, I persist in preferring the philosopher," he
writes in the book.

"They are the ones that know there is only one world and
that any promotion of an otherworld makes us lose the use
and benefit of the only one that really exists. A truly
deadly sin. . . "

He accepts only about one in seven requests for television
or radio appearances, opting for those where he can express
his ideas. For this story, he at first refused a spoken
interview -- disliking a format where snippets are often
pulled from context and used inaccurately -- but suggested
that questions and answers be conveyed via email.

Yet he proved to be an engaging host at his home in Chambois
and in Caen, along with the professors of the Université
Populaire de Caen, after a presentation of the new academic
year of the institution he founded in 2002. And he later
even agreed to answer a few more questions for this story
over the phone.

It is a year charged with significance, coming as it does
before the French presidential election next spring, and
Onfray has been much in the French press over the past two
weeks, speaking out in an article in the left-wing newspaper
Libération on the state of the far-left parties.

Onfray founded the university as a reaction to the arrival
of Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the far-right National
Front party, into the second round of the 2002 presidential
elections against Jacques Chirac. The idea, he said, was to
fight against that happening again by "promoting and
publicizing intelligence," and to try to "analyze and
understand how the world functions in order to put forward
alternative solutions to the contemporary negativity."

Open to anyone, with free tuition and requiring no
registration, prior education, tests or other course work,
the concept, like his books, is also spreading beyond his
home. There are now five other Popular Universities in
France and one in Belgium, all of which acknowledge Caen as
their model.

Yet despite his stance on free education for all and his
anarchic political ideas, Onfray is not against private
property -- he owns homes in both Chambois and nearby
Argentan -- and has a pragmatic mind for business.

We'll we see more left-wing theorists advocating private property? I
hope so. It is undeniable that private property is one aspect of
individual freedom.

When asked if the timely subject matter of the Atheist
Manifesto -- the war in Iraq, Sept. 11 and the fight against
terrorism -- is what made this his first book to be
published in English, he says, "I think, frankly, it has
more to do with the publishers seeing the figure of 230,000
copies sold."

That figure refers only to the hardback in France, and not
the many thousands of copies sold elsewhere in the 17
foreign contracts signed by his French publisher, Grasset.

So is interest in Onfray's writing a sign that the world is
shifting left, libertarian, and hedonist? In fact, Onfray
defies the preconceived ideas about those very labels.

"I am a free man, even with the usual labels," he says.
"That is, I am a hedonist who is free, a person of the left
who is free, a libertarian who is free . . . someone who
does not enter into the classic, habitual definitions and
who simply invites that his books be read."

In the Winter 2006 issue of New Politics, Doug Ireland
welcomed the forthcoming English translation of Atheist
Manifesto, and called it a "scandal" that none of Onfray's
other books had yet been translated into English. He calls
the book "an acerbic, stylish, and erudite polemic against
received religions in general and Christianity in
particular," and "a powerful antidote to the tsunami of
religious fanaticism that is engulfing the Western world as
well as the Islamic countries."

In a selection of the year's best books in last December's
Times Literary Supplement, novelist William Boyd, who read
Atheist Manifesto in French, called the book "both a
passionate and coolly reasoned advocacy of atheism, setting
the positive values of secularity squarely against the three
great monotheisms and their multitude of hates." Boyd added
that it was, "a wonderful, invigorating blast of sanity
delivered against the fog of high-toned mumbo jumbo we have
to endure everywhere today."

Certainly, not everyone is enthralled with this approach.
"His work attacking hatred is sometimes full of hatred,"
wrote the philosopher and author Bertrand Vergely in the
French literary magazine Lire, in a mostly positive 18-page
cover story on Onfray last February. "His analysis against
religious fanaticism and for intelligence uses the same
methods as the fundamentalists."

Gérard Oberlé, another French writer, calls Onfray a
professor who has found a way to make a good living out of
recycling old tales by presenting them as new ways of
thinking. "And," Oberlé added, "for an atheist, I find he is
a little too much of a preacher."

If it were only the Atheist Manifesto, however, Onfray might
be seen as a provocateur, a one-book-wonder, or as
Publishers Weekly in July referred to his book in a preview
of upcoming titles, part of a "new subcategory: the
"anti-religion book."

'His analysis against religious fanaticism and for
intelligence uses the same methods as the fundamentalists'
-- Bertrand Vergely

In fact, for Onfray, 47, it is only one part of an
all-encompassing philosophical oeuvre, the foundation and
interconnectivity of which he outlines in his latest book,
La Puissance d'exister, or The Power to Exist, published in
France in October.

His is a utilitarian philosophy celebrating an ethical
hedonism that uses the brain and body as the focal point for
a philosophical approach to art and politics and daily life.
It breaks from the idealistic Platonic tradition that
relegates the body to a lower role than the mind, and which
Onfray believes has contaminated mainstream philosophy up to
today.

Quite Stirnerian.

But he also breaks from leftist traditions that call for
world economic and political revolution, and aims instead
for "micro-revolutions," or revolutions of the individual
and small groups of like-minded people who live by his
hedonistic, libertarian values.

But again, with labels like that, it is easy to
misunderstand his ideas if the books are not read. His idea
of hedonism is not the one in popular use.

Maybe Hedonism is a better word for Stirner's Egoism.

"It is not the caricature that is done of it," he says. "On
the contrary, it is even an ascetic, the hedonism that I
propose. It is a discipline. It is more a discipline than an
abandoning to animality."

Onfray calls for a post-Christian age when people not only
say they are not religious but also cease to live by the
Christian ethics.

Oh well, I have only seen this emphasis before in writers who have
been influenced by Stirner. The next step would be to specify that the
core of Christianist evil lies in its advocacy of self-sacrifice, of
putting the needs of the flesh, of the now and here, after the needs
of the 'spirit', the 'abstract', the 'general thing', what goes beyond
the individual. From that distorted foundation, the theory of the
State, of the Nation, of Right and Wrong, of the People, of War, of
Tax, is built.
(snip)
Thanks for this article. Michel Onfray is now on my list of authors to
read.
.


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