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The American Principles Project is a 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to preserving and propagating the fundamental principles on which our country was founded - universal principles, embracing the notion that we are all, "created equal, endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights, and among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."

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Mar 23
2010

The Narcissism Epidemic

Posted by: Aaron Kheriaty in APP Blog

Tagged in: history , essays , commentary

Aaron Kheriaty

First Things online recently published my review of The Narcissism Epidemic.  The full article, The Era of the Narcissist, can be found here.  The following is an excerpt...

Of all the astonishing features of the medieval cathedrals, one feature must stand out as particularly surprising to the modern mind: We know virtually nothing about who designed and built them. In a fashion quite foreign to contemporary practice, the architects and builders did not bother to sign their names on the cornerstones. The anonymity of the great souls responsible surely seems strange to our age. Why build the cathedral of Notre-Dame de Chartres if you can’t take credit for it? No lasting fame? No immortalized human glory? We are, if not scandalized, at the very least perplexed by the humility of these forgotten artists who labored in obscurity. Do and disappear? This is not how we roll in the America of the twenty-first century.

The artistic and cultural norm of the anonymous artist or craftsman began to change during the so-called Enlightenment. Witness Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Confessions, a book he dedicated “to me, with the admiration I owe myself.” The book opens with these lines: “I have entered upon a performance which is without example, whose accomplishment will have no imitator. I mean to present my fellow-mortals with a man in all the integrity of nature; and this man shall be myself.” Rousseau deliberately chose his title as a response to Augustine’s work by the same name. In contrast to Rousseau’s vain self-aggrandizement, Augustine gives all glory to God, as in his opening quotation from the Book of Psalms: “Great thou art, and greatly to be praised.” One has to add, however, that even if we admire Augustine’s humility, Rousseau’s language strikes us as more familiar. “To me, with the admiration I owe myself” is a dedication that would look right at home today on a Facebook or MySpace page.

In the eighteenth century, Rousseau’s narcissism, although fashionable among the philosophes, was still something of an anomaly in the wider culture. Indeed, if you believe the statistics in the book under review, such self-conscious narcissism remained an anomaly until roughly forty years ago. Not so today, argue authors Jean Twenge and Keith Campbell. The Narcissism Epidemic opens with this claim: “We didn’t have to look very hard to find it. It was everywhere.” Indeed. As the reader sifts through the evidence the authors have gathered, it becomes apparent that this is a book that could have written itself. And yet this is the first popular book on the topic since Christopher Lasch’s 1979 bestseller, The Culture of Narcissism (a book still very much worth reading, in spite of its somewhat anachronistic theoretical framework, which draws heavily on Freudian psychoanalysis). We should be grateful to Twenge and Campbell for bringing us up to date, carefully collecting and collating the evidence at hand...

Dr. Kheriarty is an Assistant Clinical Professor at UC Irvine's Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior. He is also the Director of Residency Training and Medical Education and a Director of their Psychiatry and Spirituality Forum. He regularly lectures to professional audiences and the general public on mental health, medical ethics, religion, and spirituality.

Jul 06
2009

Farewell to the President's Council on Bioethics

Posted by: Aaron Kheriaty in APP Blog

Tagged in: bioethics , barack obama

Aaron Kheriaty

President Obama recently announced that he will disband the President’s Council on Bioethics.  He plans to replace the Council with a new bioethics commission, whose members he will appoint.  The current Council, appointed by President Bush in 2001, was led initially by Leon Kass of the University of Chicago, and later by Edmund Pellegrino of Georgetown University.  Trained as physicians, both men later became eminent philosophers and leading bioethicists.  They are two of the most thoughtful voices in contemporary bioethics debates. 

Bush was unfairly accused of stacking the Council with social or religious conservatives.  In truth, the membership was remarkably diverse philosophically and politically.  The result was a government sponsored group of serious thinkers who debated issues of great consequence – a rarity indeed.  The documents that issued from the Council were consistently balanced and circumspect.  Some, such as the lengthy document on the topic of so-called “human enhancement”, anticipated social problems and ethical questions that were only just appearing on the horizon.  The value of these reflections will likely only become apparent in coming years, as technology advances and the temptation to use medical means (such as psychopharmacology) to make humans “better than well” becomes more routine.  Other Council documents, such as the one on caring for the elderly, address major social problems that are already upon us.  These writings rank among the best of contemporary bioethics literature.

Rather than setting aside thorny issues or complex questions in favor of simplistic policy recommendations, the old Council chose to allow sustained and serious reflection, debate, and dialogue among its diverse membership.  The President’s Council on Bioethics never became a rubber-stamp machine for Bush’s social policies.

All that is about to change.  Obama wants to waste no time with dialogue, debate, or indecision.  He plans to ask the new commission for “practical policy options”.  Don’t think too hard, don’t debate too long … just give us the green light.  There will be few, if any, dissenting voices: Obama is about to appoint a collective “yes man”.  The old days of the President commissioning a group of serious ethical thinkers, led by the likes of Kass and Pellegrino, will be missed.

Dr. Kheriarty is an Assistant Clinical Professor at UC Irvine's Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior. He is also the Director of Residency Training and Medical Education and a Director of their Psychiatry and Spirituality Forum. He regularly lectures to professional audiences and the general public on mental health, medical ethics, religion, and spirituality.

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