Section 1: Hegel and BlakeA critical figure in philosophy, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel is often misattributed the “Hegelian Dialectic” – thesis, antithesis, synthesis – which is a dramatic oversimplification to the point of failing to reflect Hegel's ideas. Hegel’s more nuanced view is more related to the trajectory and course of history in a human world, rather than argumentation on specific topics. If I have my understanding of him correct (always contestable!), Hegel’s claim requires a bit of specific analysis. Bear with me as we discuss his premises in summary:
- The world is “that which is the case” – when Hegel discusses the world, he means more than just “reality” as a concrete, physical, materialist truth. He also means socio-political structures, systems, products of human endeavor, etc. that are all very human and not always physical.
- All worlds (world-structures) have internal contradictions. Because humanity is intimately entwined (inseparably so) with the world, then natural human tendencies – everything from cognitive dissonance at the individual level to societal clashes about meaning at the planetary level – have real existence in some sense (the geist). This means that contradictions are an inevitable fact in a Hegelian world. (There's also more to be said about structured systems and the Second Incompleteness Theorem but that is not worth pursuing here).
- Contradictions eventually destroy the world. The contradictions inherent to a Hegelian world build up as problems are solved; the more problems that are solved in the world (apparent contradictions resolving via human action and effort) the more stark the real, unsolvable contradictions become. Eventually, they grow to such magnitude that the world decays. This decay is typically fairly catastrophic – more like the decay of a radioactive atom. Some examples from human history are the Great Depression, the Bronze Age Collapse, the violence of the post-enlightenment revolutionary period, etc.
A key Hegelian corollary (though I confess I do not remember if he himself said so) is that the definition of
good (as in, ethical) is the preservation, through these world-decay events, of the good things of the world that came before (even as the bad is discarded).
If, by now, you don’t understand how the Blakists have radicalized this view, then let me dissect it further. The overall philosophy Jerome Blake espoused is, essentially, that Hegelian corollary:
it is an ethical good to preserve the positive parts of what came before, through catastrophe or decay – and furthermore, it is necessary that the bad be forgotten or discarded. This, originally, was simply a product of Jerome’s secular views, and did not have a religious connotation. However, (if Toyama is to be believed) Blake came to realize that the best way to preserve this view is through religion-ifying it. Thusly, the first stages of C* as we know it, and the Religion without a God emerged.
Section 2: Secularization and the WordViewed through this lens, it is no mystery to see how C* arrived at the policies that defined its shadow-tyranny over the Inner Sphere throughout the Succession Wars.
The world has collapsed, they reasoned.
The Star League is gone, riven with contradiction, and we alone are left to continue its tradition. We must take all things that are good and preserve them, and dispense with all things that are bad. We will find the Star League in Exile, and we will see what they, themselves have preserved. The Inner Sphere must remain dark, until we become the only light of Mankind.It is also easy to see why Operation SCORPION made so much sense.
The World is riven again, the Clans delivering to us the cataclysm that marked the end of that world. Now, let us ignite our Light, and set about remaking the world by purging the bad and retaining the good. Of course, Primus Waterly’s vision, while naturally emergent from the philosophy of C* as radicalized over the centuries since Blake enshrined radical Hegelianism, was incompatible with the truth: the cataclysm had not arrived, and the world was not yet broken. The tragedy of C* at Tukayyid was that it, ironically, became the stalwart defender of the World-As-Is, and failed to usher in the World-To-Come.
This misstep by Blake’s followers caused a schism – Focht perceived the flaws in the radical Hegelian religious doctrine of C*, and so secularization seemed natural. But one may be able now to see why others did not see the flaws of radicalized Hegelian extremism – however true they might be. So they broke away, and became the Word of Blake.
Section 3: From Lightbringers to DoombringersThe Word of Blake heralded the reconstructed Star League as the arrival of the World-To-Come - whatever Primus Waterly's failure. To them, the reborn Star League that emerged from the wreckage of the Old was greeted with fervor, even if they did not have the leadership role as the sole light as Waterly sought. Their hatred of the Clans in this context is obvious – Clans are emblematic of the evils of the Old World, and their very existence provided a contradiction in the New World that emerged. The only question the Word needed answered was whether it was an
inherent contradiction they presented, or a
resolvable one.
Operations BULLDOG and SERPENT decided that question rather decisively. The Clans, with application of sufficient unity and force, became a
resolvable contradiction in the new World.
For a time, while C*’s secular half warred with the Word of Blake and the Allied Mercenary Command was assembled to try to prevent their rise, there was an air of hope. From the Word's radicalized Hegelian perspective, these “small” conflicts and oppositions were the natural process of an emerging world resolving its resolvable contradictions, and were simply to be expected.
Then, however, their new world, barely formed, shattered. The “No Confidence” vote and the dissolution of the Star League (revision 2.0) may have just been “business as usual” for most Inner Sphere folk at the time, but to the Word, it was the end of a stillborn era, a World killed before its time. And worse… there was no cataclysm; it died with a whimper. So, of course, they had to make one.
Section 4: Neo-Blakism and “The Promise”According to
Ghosts of Obeedah, the Word of Blake preserved some of the complexity of Hegel’s philosophy. They were radical, but they did not forget the core tenets of it. The Master, and some of the higher echelons of the Word of Blake, seemed to view themselves as a ‘necessary evil’ – the natural endstate of this philosophy, it would seem. If world-ending was to be cataclysmic, and if the new world was to be reborn from the ashes, then the Word needed to provide a cataclysm and make those ashes – and fight hard and long enough to ensure that a Non-Old-World entity was the entity that emerged from the chaos to rebuild the world. Neither the Clans nor the Houses could be trusted.
ConclusionIn some ways, Neo-Blakism is both a supreme hypocrisy and an inevitable worldview. Hegel’s characterization of the way worlds exist, decay, reconstitute, and exist again is not necessarily wrong, even with the fall and flight of the Word of Blake. But Neo-Blakism is also clinging fervently to something many would consider a great evil of the World Before, and in that way, Neo-Blakists violate the very word they claim to follow.
Certainly
they disagree – they are a ‘good’, even if others don’t see them that way… and thus we reach the most inherent contradiction of all: the apparent subjectivity of morality. Still, it remains to be seen if the Inner Sphere can throw off the ilClan’s ascendancy – and none would be more suited (nor more willing to do so) than the Word of Blake’s cybernetic monstrosities, equal in measure and capability to the Clanner gene-modified warriors.
Of course, they’ve fled the Inner Sphere, taking their advanced technology with them to parts unknown. It is unlikely we will ever see them again – after all, history never repeats itself, and worlds aren’t just cycles…. right?