4.4 • 921 Ratings
🗓️ 5 October 2021
⏱️ 109 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this conversation on two of the hottest social and cultural issues of our day — the decline of religion and the rise of identity politics, Mary Eberstadt presents her alternative theory for the “secularization thesis” (that religious decline was followed by the decline of the family), arguing instead that the undermining of the family has undermined Christianity itself. Drawing on sociology, history, demography, theology, literature, and many other sources, Eberstadt shows that family decline and religious decline have gone hand in hand in the Western world in a way that has not been understood before — that they are “the double helix of society, each dependent on the strength of the other for successful reproduction.” Eberstadt argues that there are enormous social, economic, civic, and other costs attendant on declines of both family and faith, and Dr. Shermer presents counter examples to show that America’s extreme religiosity has been a burden on its social health and that the decline of religion is a good thing.
In the second part of the conversation Eberstadt and Shermer discuss her previous book on identity politics and how identitarians track and expose the ideologically impure, as people face the consequences of their rancor: a litany of “isms” run amok across all levels of cultural life; the free marketplace of ideas muted by agendas shouted through megaphones; and a spirit of general goodwill warped into a state of perpetual outrage. This rise of identity politics, she argues, is a direct result of the fallout of the sexual revolution, especially the collapse and shrinkage of the family. Eberstadt argues that from time immemorial humans have forged their identities within the structure of kinship. The extended family, in a real sense, is the first tribe and first teacher. But with its unprecedented decline across a variety of measures, generations of people have been set adrift and can no longer answer the question Who am I? with reference to primordial ties. Desperate for solidarity and connection, they claim membership in politicized groups whose displays of frantic irrationalism amount to primal screams for familial and communal loss.
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0:00.0 | You're listening to the Michael Sherman Show |
0:16.9 | My guest today is Mary Eversstadt |
0:21.4 | For two bucks we'll be discussing are how the West really lost God and |
0:30.0 | Primal Screams really lost God, and primal screams how the Sexual Revolution created identity politics. Mary Eberstad is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. |
0:35.0 | She has written widely for magazines and newspapers, |
0:38.0 | among them First Things, Policy Review, The Weekly Standard, The Wall Street Journal, and commentary. |
0:44.0 | For previous books to these two include Home Alone America, Adam and Eve after the pill, and the satire the loser letters. |
0:53.0 | Okay, so this conversation was very interesting in as much as that she's kind of an old school |
0:59.4 | conservative. |
1:00.4 | I'm not sure what label she would actually use I didn't ask her that but you know and as you know I'm not so we had |
1:08.0 | Basically most of the conversation was us disagreeing about a lot of different things although we did find some common |
1:13.4 | ground so we cover the decline of religion which she sees is a bad thing and I |
1:19.2 | see is a good thing her reversal causal thesis is that it's the breakdown of the family that led to the decline of religion, not the secularization thesis that most sociologists of religion try to attest, in any case. So we go through all those arguments and |
1:36.7 | then what is a nuclear family? What's a natural family? What about extended |
1:41.1 | families and communities and clans and tribes and so we get into a little bit of history there? |
1:47.2 | We talk about Joe Henrich's weird, although she hadn't read his book, |
1:51.5 | the weirdest people on on Earth the Western Educated |
1:54.5 | industrialized rich Democratic and how the Catholic Church launched this |
1:58.5 | whole nuclear family idea in its prohibition of marrying of cousins marrying each other and that kind of broke the family down from these |
2:06.1 | larger communal structures to more of what we think of as the nuclear family, which I think |
2:11.0 | she agrees is the problem. It is to say we need a larger community of social support. |
2:18.5 | Anyway then we get into policy issues and we spend a lot of time on abortion. |
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