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Voltaire's Bastards: The Dictatorship of Reason in the West Paperback – November 30, 1993

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 73 ratings

The Washington Post: "Voltaire's Bastards is a hand grenade disguised as a book. The pages explode with insight, style, and intellectual rigor... [This book] will leave you challenged, intrigued, and at times troubled." A phosphorescently intelligent search-and-destroy mission against the foundations of contemporary civilization. The result is a learned and devastating critique of our political, economic and cultural establishments.
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4.4 out of 5 stars
73 global ratings

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Customers find the book insightful and engaging, drawing truth from diverse topics. They praise the premise and analysis as exceptional. However, opinions differ on readability - some find it an easy and enjoyable read, while others find the writing style opaque and difficult to understand.

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5 customers mention "Enlightenedness"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful and engaging. They appreciate the author's ability to draw truth from diverse topics and make his points without needing excessive explanation. The premise is exceptional, and the text provides an insightful analysis of contemporary society. Readers appreciate the author's adherence to reason and scientific method. Additionally, they mention the book casually recalls historical events and figures, making them feel educated.

"...These pages are filled with aphorism and information on the widest variety of topics: national defense, economics, television, the Supreme Court,..." Read more

"...Saul traces with both scathing sarcasm and incredible acumen the ways in which this insidious set of precepts and notions surrounding our rational..." Read more

"...I have seen it pretty straightforwardly stated that exclusive adherence to reason and what we currently call scientific method is just as shackling..." Read more

"I'll be honest -- this book is pretty deep. And it recalls historic events and figures so casually that it made me, a college-educated man, feel..." Read more

12 customers mention "Readability"8 positive4 negative

Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it an engaging and important read, while others find the writing difficult and opaque.

"...He has constructed a book that reads like a great speech, an enthralling lecture...." Read more

"Saul's remarkable book tracks the journey from the ideals of the Age of Reason to their corruption in today's vastly compromised fragile Democracy...." Read more

"...Saul is a truly rare and precious mind when it comes to of a thinker along the lines of Noam Chomsky when it comes to finding and unraveling the..." Read more

"Must read." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2002
    It takes tremendous courage to open a book with such a subtitle. It is human nature to construct an ideology based on our favorite thoughts, and then live cozily inside as master of the realm. For then we can use that ideology as shield and weapon.
    But then John Ralston Saul comes face to face with you, removes his glove, and with a gentleman's flourish, whips the leather across your face. Saul is the master of gauntlet-throwing, and after one read of this hefty tome, you will be begging for more.
    "The undoubted sign of a society well under control or in decline is that language has ceased to be a means of communication and has become instead a shield for those who master it."
    Does this remind you of your country's political process? Or possibly of those ivory-tower publications that you so treasure? How is it that our species has been able to use words to cloak double and triple meanings within the most seemingly innocuous sentences? Is this what we truly want?
    "The structures of argument have been co-opted so completely by those who work the system that when an individual reaches for the words and phrases which he senses will express his case, he finds that they are already in active use in the service of power. This now amounts to a virtual dictatorship of vocabulary."
    The Inquisition, Machiavellian belief, the Napoleonic Wars, and the Holocaust can be rationally justified, says Saul. The tools of rationality provide the means to any desired end. Men participated in these events of their own free will, and even added their input to make said processes more `efficient'.
    "The Inquisitors were the first to formalize the idea that to every question there is a right answer. The answer is known, but the question must be asked and correctly answered. Relativism, humanism, common sense, and moral beliefs were all irrelevant to this process because they assume doubt. Since the Inquisitors knew the answer, doubt was impossible. Process, however, was essential, for efficient governance and process required that questions be asked in order to produce the correct answer."
    Is it worth having the tools of reason if they can be manipulated to cause the deaths of 200 million human beings? We all know the answer, as gut-wrenching as it may be... regardless, we can't disassociate our minds from reason any more than we can live without lungs.
    So how do we move forward? How do we evolve with such a legacy behind and such uncertainty ahead? First, says Saul, we must remember:
    "Memory is always the enemy of structure. The latter flourishes upon method and is frustrated by content. Our need to deny the amorality of reason ensured that memory would be the first victim of the new structures."
    Secondly, we open our eyes. Who is it that truly controls our society and its governance? Saul has correctly identified the "men behind the men", the counselors and courtiers whom our leaders turn to for advice, and the bureaucrats, none of whom are elected or held to accountability by our constitution. These puppeteers, say Saul, are the "technocrats" who co-opt reason for limited ends:
    "In the context of the technocratic mind, truth, like history and events, is what suits the interests of the system or the game plan of the man in charge."
    Thirdly, we do not allow rationality to freeze our minds and our humanity in the cement of process. We employ skepticism (not cynicism) to constantly keep our eyes fresh. When skepticism reveals doubt, we employ common sense and morality, neither of which can or should be defined by, you guessed it, rationality.
    Saul is not an enemy of reason. Quite the opposite, his purpose here is to rescue reason from those who fly its banner upon high while secretly using it to shine their shoes.
    And how does Saul go about making his argument without using... argument? His method is brilliant. He has constructed a book that reads like a great speech, an enthralling lecture. Saul is discursive... he introduces literally dozens of seemingly unrelated subjects, draws truth from each, and makes his points without needing to build upon the pages before. Saul doesn't lead you from point A to point Q, as his enemies would; he simply enlightens you on many topics and allows your mind to form the connections... a truly satisfying experience.
    This book is a fine wine, with the strong tang of truth. These pages are filled with aphorism and information on the widest variety of topics: national defense, economics, television, the Supreme Court, warfare, Congress, science, and celebrity; all of these cloths are woven with the same fundamental threads. Saul unmasks many clandestine operations, most of which are still being played out today.
    Your hunger for knowledge will be greatly satisfied (almost satiated) here. Page one will be distinguished as an important point in your life, and we all know how precious such eye-opening works are.
    80 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2000
    This intellectual tour-de-force by author John Ralston Saul comes quite close to mirroring my own beliefs regarding the massive, corrosive effects of the increasing domination of so-called rational thought in post-modern culture. Saul traces with both scathing sarcasm and incredible acumen the ways in which this insidious set of precepts and notions surrounding our rational word view informs our every action, behavior and disposition, and acts to rob us of a much wider and deeper set of understandings, interpretations, and recognitions regarding the world around us and our place in it. He engages in a wide-ranging analysis of contemporary society, turning all our closely-held ideals on their heads by critically examining the contexts in which these notions arose in the first place.
    He shows that although we describe ourselves in terms of individual freedom, we in fact live (quite unnecessarily) in a stringently conformist culture. While everyone from industrialists to government leaders to software gurus describe themselves as capitalist entrepreneurs, relatively few individuals have the power or latitude to act with any independence outside the limited confines of their highly structured organizational hierarchies. Indeed, while we debate passionately about the intrinsic power of Adam Smith's invisible hand of the market and the corollary power of market competition, in actuality there is little true competition found in the market place. We studiously ignore, for example, the many ways in which modern commerce is aided, abetted, and subsidized by federal, state, and local governments, such that these hardy entrepreneurs are given advantages as corporate entities that no individual citizen shares. Around us institutions traditionally key to past success and growth are now each stumbling and progressively failing even in this time of great prosperity and corporate wealth.
    Most interesting is the way in which Saul traces the blind faith we have come to place in the intrinsic value of reason as a guiding force, and in the corallary importance of what we have come to call "progress', which is usually defined in material terms,; more bread, more clothing, better shelter. etc. The author argues persuasively that this poorly constructed edifice of reason has no moral force, and in fact is no more than an administrative method designed to promote effectiveness and efficiency. In this way, tied to the rigors of math and science, we have come to view that which is both effective and efficient and somehow signifying a higher order of truth rather than recognizing it is simply a very useful operational approach toward accomplishing quite complex tasks. In this sense, we have come confuse effectiveness and efficiency on the one hand with the good and the true on the other, and Saul illustrates just how grievous such an intellectual and philosophical error this is. According to the author, this confusion had transformed western civilization into a vast, incomprehensible, directionless machine, run by what he terms to be process-oriented experts, or as he names them, "Voltaire's bastards".
    Anyone doubting the veracity of this view is invited to try to argue any truth about any subject without recourse to the exclusive use of rational proof or scientific protocols, but first take fair warning; you will laughed off the stage. Trying to use any other sort of argument will be summarily dismissed as nothing more than subjective nonsense. Our culture has come to the point where rational discourse is now seen as the only legitimate discourse allowed or taken seriously. Recourse to arguments regarding tradition, values, or "common sense" have no currency. More to the point, non-rational (as opposed to irrational) modes of understanding are simply no longer tolerated; no longer do we even pay lip service to the idea of moral responsibility to the poor or the unfortunate. We may be good scientists, but in the fact of being so singularly bound to the characteristic rational perspective associated with rational thought, we are much less worldly, experienced, tolerant, or understanding human beings as a result. Indeed, the inevitable result of all this is that we have a much less comprehensive and much more constrained reality paradigm to use to perceive, interpret, and understand the world outside us with. As Saul remarks, we may have immense technological power, yet we dwell increasingly in an unimaginative and illusory world whose dimensions are restricted to all things rational. Welcome to our brave new world!
    41 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • D.C.Sage
    5.0 out of 5 stars modern thinking
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 29, 2020
    Interesting critique of failures in modern thinking
  • gussy
    5.0 out of 5 stars Voltaire's Bastards
    Reviewed in Canada on April 20, 2013
    Did not read this book as all the John Saul books wee ordered for my husband and he enjoyed them all very much, saying Mr Saul is a great author and really knows his stuff..
  • merlin
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 22, 2016
    Excellent product at an excellent price with an excellent service.
  • Leslie Champ
    4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
    Reviewed in Canada on April 7, 2017
    Good serious reading!!
  • KLR
    4.0 out of 5 stars Satisfied
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 8, 2013
    good quality book, arrived in at my address in good time it will make a great addition to my library