Mahatma Gandhi is a revolutionary thinker. Underneath the simple words and phrases that appear almost as platitudes, there is a meaning, a philosophy that challenges modern western thought at its core. This book is written as an attempt to uncover the meanings hidden in those simple words and phrases.
Gandhi used the term satygraha to name the strategy and philosophy he was using. The word satygraha literally translated means ‘truth-force’. On September 11, 1906, in South Africa, Gandhi explained his use of the term. “None of us knew what name to give to our movement. I then used the term passive resistance in describing it. I did not quite understand the implications of passive resistance as I called it. I only knew that some new principle had come into being. As the struggle advanced, the phrase passive resistance gave rise to confusion and it appeared shameful to permit this great struggle to be known only by an English name. Again, that foreign phrase could hardly pass as current coin among the community. A small prize was therefore announced in Indian Opinion to be awarded to the reader who invented the best designation for our struggle. We thus received a number of suggestions. The meaning of the struggle had been then fully discussed in Indian Opinion and the competitors for the prize had fairly sufficient material to serve as a basis for their exploration. Shri Maganlal Gandhi was one of the competitors and he suggested the word Sadagraha, meaning firmness in a good cause. I liked the word, but it did not fully represent the whole idea I wished it to connote. I therefore corrected it to Satyagraha. Truth (Satya) implies love, and firmness (agraha) engenders and therefore serves as a synonym for force. I thus began to call the Indian movement Satyagraha, that is to say, the Force which is born of Truth.”
The question is why did he use this term. Was there, in Gandhi’s mind, a power associated with truth, a power that could bring down the British Empire? What is the relationship of truth to power? Nietzsche, arguably one of modern Europe’s most influential philosophers, has examined this relationship quite rigorously. Gandhi, therefore, may be compared with Nietzsche who is perhaps the most radical of modern western thinkers. They are, however, on opposite sides of the fence. Gandhi champions the “moral order” of the universe; Nietzsche dismisses it. Indeed the gist of this book is that Gandhi presupposes a cosmic spiritual struggle between good and evil, a struggle that takes place in the minds of human beings. It is a struggle between two opposing philosophies, two ideas, two world-views – a struggle between light and darkness, truth and untruth.
Nietzsche thinks that truth is merely the intellectualization of the ‘will to power’; he has been considered the foremost ‘philosopher of suspicion’. In comparing these two thinkers, it can be claimed that Gandhi turns the ‘hermeneutic of suspicion’ unleashed by Nietzsche on morality, on its head. This is the key to understanding Gandhi and this is what makes him probably the most revolutionary of thinkers. Whereas Nietzsche excludes himself from the probing light of the ‘hermeneutic of suspicion’, Gandhi subjects every modern position to this suspicion.
Nietzsche’s ‘hermeneutic of suspicion’ had subjected every post-Socratic philosophical position, every philosophical foundation, and all morality, to skepsis. His historical genealogy sought the genesis of morality in the ‘will to power’. All ascetic ideals were attempts to weaken and to destroy the affirmation of life. Nietzsche points to a struggle between life affirming forces and life denying forces, a struggle that occurs throughout history and in the history of thought.
For Nietzsche what is life affirming is all that enhances the ‘will to power’. For Gandhi, life affirmation is the discovery of the self as distinct from the ego. The self is the source of power; this is, of course, the classical Indian philosophical position. Nietzsche and Gandhi thus stand on opposite sides of what constitutes power. For Nietzsche, the ‘will to power’ is constrained and negated by conventional morality. What passes for morality, from this point of view, is a means of weakening the strong. For Gandhi, on the other hand, finding the true self means mastering the ego, and this is the source of power. These opposing viewpoints stem from different ideas about what is real and about what is true, and about the relationship of truth to power.
It is necessary to understand the differing ideas of how truth is related to power in both thinkers. For Nietzsche truth is related to power in the sense that every truth is an attempt of the ‘will to power’ to assert itself. For Gandhi, the self, the atman, is the source of power and of truth. What distinguishes these positions is the position of the will in the search for truth. Nietzsche locates the will prior to knowledge and in a sense directing knowledge, Gandhi thinks that the ego must be “reduced to a cipher” (i.e., the will must be ‘bracketed’, to use a phenomenological term) and truth is found only when the will is removed from the act of knowing, that is, when the self is found. The relationship of truth to power is crucial, therefore in understanding Gandhi’s philosophy.
Michel Foucault, who has been influenced by Nietzsche, has commented extensively on the relationship between truth and power. In his essay “The Subject and Power”, Foucault speaking about the effect of a ‘form of power’ says, “This form of power applies itself to immediate everyday life which categorizes the individual, marks him by his own individuality, attaches him to his own identity: imposes a law of truth on him which he must recognize and which others have to recognize in him.”1 Truth is intimately connected with power; it gives power its unique intentionality. Power relations “…are imbued, through and through, with calculation…”2Every truth has as its objective – power. In this, Foucault is deeply influenced by Nietzsche. “Nietzsche’s genealogy of the way power uses the illusion of meaning to further self gave him good reason to be critical of hermeneutics both in its form of commentary on everyday life, and in its related form of deep exegesis of what everyday practices cover up.”3
In opposing hermeneutics then, specifically Heideggerian hermeneutics (for Heideggerian hermeneutics results in a critique of the will to power and its relation to truth), Foucault returns to Nietzsche. Heidegger’s philosophy, his attempt to place ‘Being’ beyond the ‘will to power’, is itself subject to Nietzschean hermeneutic suspicion. Has Nietzsche then triumphed over Heidegger, and what does such an overcoming mean? Does it mean that Nietzsche is truly the end point of Western philosophy and that the connection between ‘truth’ and the ‘will to power’ is the final word? Is every ‘truth’ connected to a ‘will to power’, and what is the relationship of all of this to Gandhi’s thought? Does it mean that Gandhi was a naïve premodern thinker unacquainted with the thrust of Nietzsche’s critique?
The author proposes that in fact Gandhi’s thought is a fundamental critique of Nietzsche’s position, in so far as Nietzsche’s thought permeates all postmodern western philosophy. Gandhi’s philosophy is in fact a critique of modern and post-modern western philosophy, in so far as it critiques the fundamental relationship between ‘truth’ and the ‘will to power’ made by Nietzsche. Such an interpretation of Gandhi’s thought attempts to make explicit what is implicit in Gandhi’s philosophy.
In the author’s view, Gandhi had grasped the essence of modern western philosophy. He realized that modern western philosophy denied that there was any objective truth, and instead held that all views about reality originated from particular perspectives (every truth is related to the will to power). To this perspectivism he proposed that there is truth; that truth is being and being is truth. What Gandhi realized was that the view that there was no objective truth was a view that ultimately legitimized and rationalized the western ideology of imperialism and exploitation and was an effective method to silence its conscience. If objective reality, the thing-in-itself, either did not exist or was unknowable, then reality could be subjectively interpreted according to one’s agenda. To Gandhi therefore the view that ‘truth’ was linked to the “will to power” was itself a view created by the ‘will to power’, so whereas Nietzsche would insist that the link between any ‘truth’ and the ‘will to power’ was a fact, itself the only truth, Gandhi would insist that this view linking any ‘truth’ to the ‘will to power’ was itself generated by the ‘will to power’ and would fall victim to its own logic.
This is the inexorable logic of Gandhi’s implicit critique of perspectivism and Nietzsche’s philosophy. Nietzsche himself, considered a ruthless seeker of the truth, is found to be the greatest camoflager of the truth. Nietzsche, of course, wore many masks, he pointed this out himself, so that the problem becomes which is the real Nietzsche, this is part of his strategy, to playfully put on masks and speak sometimes without a mask, so that only the discerning would understand. However, which is the real Nietzsche, and did he not deceive most of all, the “discerning”, was this not also his strategy? Gandhi would hold that all of Nietzsche was masked, particularly his ideal of the connection between ‘truth’ and the ‘will to power’.
This, to Gandhi, would be the greatest mask of all. For in putting this relationship forward, Nietzsche covers up what makes this relationship so necessary – guilt. Nietzsche, who presents himself as this most uncompromising seeker after truth, covers up the motivating source of his ideas – namely guilt. It is the guilt of Europe caused by the conflict between its Christian values and the violence of its actual history, its merciless exploitation and oppression of the non-western world that motivates Nietzsche’s ideas. Guilt, in this sense, would be the awareness of what one has done – the consciousness of one’s actions and the implications of one’s actions. It is a sense of having done wrong and the sense of impending doom or punishment. Nietzsche considered a great psychologist, disguised the psychology of his thought, for in order to remove guilt, Nietzsche has to overthrow a whole system of thought.
For Gandhi, there is truth, and truth is precisely this kind of self-awareness – a consciousness of what one has done. Untruth arises through the covering up of this awareness, through the rationalization that suppresses this awareness. Gandhi acts therefore as a psychotherapist who aims to uncover this awareness. Once awareness of this truth is uncovered, then one has to confront one’s actions without the justifications, rationalizations, etc. This is how truth acquires its power and this is the basis of satygraha or truth-force.
It is this satygraha, this truth-force, which Nietzsche, in a sense, sets out to combat. The truth appearing within man as the ‘good’, the conscience, announces itself as a force, a power that demands a response from man. Nietzsche combats this by labeling this power as a ‘fiction’, a pious fraud. This is his grand strategy. By presenting the ‘good’ as a fiction, and all fictions as generated by the ‘will to power’ Nietzsche can now create a genealogy of this ‘fiction’ and in doing so explain it and further disempower the ‘good’. Nietzsche thus reverses the cause and effect: firstly the cause, the ‘will to power’ then the effect, the fiction of the ‘good’. It is not now the ‘good’ and its effect, the power of the ‘good’, or of the conscience. The inversion of the relationship between the truth, the ‘good’ and the ‘will to power’ enables Nietzsche to disempower the conscience.
However, what is there to exclude Nietzsche from being subjected to a ‘hermeneutic of suspicion’? The only reason is that Nietzsche presents himself as a ruthless seeker after truth whose uncompromising pursuit of truth leads him to reveal its insubstantiality. It is his mask of integrity that puts him above suspicion, but can this be allowed? Nietzsche cannot be above suspicion – can this be why Foucault, in speaking about the hermeneutics of suspicion, claims that it “… dooms us to an endless task …?” 4
This suspicion directed towards Nietzsche would be fatal to Nietzsche’s thought since if we question the idea that all ‘truths’ are generated by the ‘will to power’ and claim that this idea is itself generated by the ‘will to power’, then Nietzsche appears as the great deceiver, one whose greatest truth is itself a deception. He appears as one who attempts to cover truth itself. Thus, when Gandhi insists that there is truth, he claims all of this. Nietzsche’s thought and Gandhi’s thought cannot coexist. Nietzsche has a genealogy of morals wherein he examines the psychology that lies behind the adoption of particular moralities. Gandhi can be said, on the other hand, to have a genealogy of immorality and this understanding of Gandhi’s genealogy can be used to critique Nietzsche’s thought.
At the basis of Western ‘materialism’, Gandhi’s term for the western rejection of the idea of ‘the good’, Gandhi sees desire – desire in particular for wealth and power. Gandhi sees this desire for wealth and power as coming in conflict with Christian values, the value system that had shaped medieval western civilization. Beneath the dialectical jousting between modern western thought and Christian thought, Gandhi sees the real motive as the desire for wealth and power. The entire system of modern western ‘materialism’ is therefore driven by the desire for wealth and power. The claim of being objective, of being motivated by the desire for truth, Gandhi would deny as being merely the façade behind which stood the desire for wealth and power.
Gandhi is not claiming here that every stated intention is a façade, behind which lies a hidden deeper motivation, he is not subscribing to a universal hermeneutics of suspicion. Rather he examines each case as a particular instance. It could be that a stated intention is not a façade but describes things as they are. Each instance is particular and must be judged by ‘the fruit that it bears.’
In the case of the West, Gandhi finds that the fruit of western materialism is western exploitation of the rest of the world. Modern western philosophy, its denial of ‘the good’, its rejection of Christianity, is a consequence of the ulterior desire for wealth and power. Gandhi sees this motive behind the entire history of modern western thought. This is what modern western civilization really is – a desire for wealth and power that results in the rejection of true Christianity.
Gandhi would consider Nietzsche thought as the culmination of this whole process – as an attempt to justify and legitimize modern European civilization in the face of the critique that arises essentially from Christianity. This critique sets up the ‘good’ as that which determines the validity of any action. A sense of guilt is the consequence of transgressing the moral order. Even though the whole idea of the ‘good’ and of a moral order had been challenged (sometimes implicitly, sometimes covertly) since Descartes, its power – to paralyze action, to infuse action with doubt, to infuse life with death – still lingered on. Nietzsche attempts to exorcise this power of the lingering idea of the ‘good’.
‘God is dead’ he intones. The ghost of the ‘good’ must be laid to rest; it must be buried so that no reminder may linger on. The effect of this lingering sense of the ‘good’ is nothing other than a sense of guilt. Nietzsche philosophy can be seen there as an attempt to exorcise this sense of guilt: guilt occasioned by the idea of the ‘good’, manifested internally by the conscience. Nietzsche attempts to exorcise this sense of guilt by explaining it away, by tracing the genealogy of morality. What Gandhi does is to analyze the attempt to explain away the sense of guilt. Gandhi attempts to trace the genealogy of immorality so that Nietzsche’s hermeneutic of suspicion is turned against itself.
In doing so, Gandhi is saying that the conscience exists, it is an existential fact and the attempt to explain it away is itself generated by ulterior motives. The conscience, the moral order manifested within man, acts as an obstacle to the actualization of one’s desires, of one’s instinct to the ‘will to power’.
There is a link between this attempt to disempower the conscience and modern civilization – this is Gandhi’s thesis. Modern civilization has disempowered the voice of conscience in order to accomplish its ends. The means of this disempowerment is to connect all morality to the ‘will to power’ so that the hermeneutic of suspicion is turned against morality, ethics, spirituality and the conscience. The way is made clear, in this manner, for a philosophy of ‘hardness’5,of elitism, where the man of integrity is he who denies this ‘falsity’ of moral pretension, this claim of acting on behalf of compassionate motives. The truthful man is thus he who acts without this moral pretension, he who acts with ‘hardness’.
This philosophy justifies and legitimizes imperialism, colonialism, and the exploitation of the ‘weaker races’ by modern western civilization. It is a justification of the imperial, of pre-Christian Roman imperialism. It is a philosophy that allowed modern civilization to reject its Christian aspects of love, compassion, and to return to its older imperial and elitist nature, a tendency initiated by Machiavelli in modern times.
Gandhi says therefore, there is truth; truth is the bedrock of his worldview. Man’s relationship to truth is one of responsiveness, one of being responsive to truth as revelation. The subjectivism toward reality is checked, man does not create truth, he must be responsive to it; he must allow it to be revealed through him. Yet at the same time, the danger of distorting truth to serve one’s own purpose is not overlooked. This awareness produces the very criterion for truth – ‘one must reduce oneself to a cypher’6, one must be continually aware of one’s motives; one must be continually self-conscious and self-examining.
‘Hardness’ for Nietzsche becomes the mark, the sign, of nobility and integrity. ‘Hardness’ means, within the Nietzschean perspective, the attitude of overcoming the temptation to act with moral deception; indeed, for Nietzsche, all acts of compassion arise out of self-deception, that is, out of a sense of moral righteousness that is merely a cover for the ‘will to power’. The ‘will to power’ disguised appears as compassion, etc., whilst the ‘will to power’, uncamouflaged and true to itself, appears as ‘hardness’. Since all actions, all moral positions are ultimately linked to the ‘will to power’, then the ‘will to power’ undisguised, uncamouflaged is truth. ‘Hardness’ from this Nietschean perspective is linked to truth. Thus, modern civilization justifies itself.
Gandhi by claiming, implicitly though it may be, that this connection between all positions and the ‘will to power’ is itself a product of the ‘will to power’, cuts the ground from below the entire Nietzschean perspective. Truth, therefore, becomes the central point of Gandhi’s philosophy – there is truth, and there is a power associated with truth. Such an idea delinks the statement, or idea proposed, from the motive behind that idea. The whole problem of doubt, introduced by Descartes into modern philosophy in its most radical form, de-links and disconnects man from any reality out there, and thus makes any statement about such a reality ultimately a matter of motives. Nietzsche’s’ philosophy is a direct consequence of the Cartesian epistemology. Gandhi’s challenges it by a more fundamental hermeneutic of suspicion and, having done this, clears the way for the idea of the existence of objective truth.
Gandhi challenges therefore the whole tradition of the subjectivism of truth, which began with Descartes. He does this by unleashing a hermeneutic of suspicion directed against western philosophy, wherein the supposedly unbiased objective search for truth is linked to an attempt to overthrow the conscience and justify actions that are exploitatitive. He is the anti-Nietzsche. Thus, Gandhi enables Christianity, Platonism and philosophies of the ‘good’, to counterattack the Nietzschean offensive; he provides a powerful defense of the legitimacy of non-violence, ahimsa and ethical values.
At the same time, he seems to be saying that the classical values of the West, its Christian values, and what Gandhi calls ‘ethical religion’ (meaning the essential aspects of all religions), have been rejected by the West and have found a new home in the oppressed Third World. What is ironic about Gandhi’s position is that in rejecting ‘modern civilization’, he is in fact championing classical western values and the idea of universal ethical values, for these find resonance in the ancient way. The modern West, according to Gandhi, has rejected these values.
This, therefore, is the dynamic that we must become aware of in understanding Gandhi’s ideas. One the one hand the West, after thousands of years of being the propagator of classical western values, Christian values and universal ethical values (the essential aspects of which Gandhi claims underlie all religion), appeared to have rejected them, whilst the oppressed Third World has become a home to these values. These values coincide with those of the ancient traditions by their emphasis on the ethical, the moral and the spiritual. The torch of civilization itself is being passed on to the oppressed peoples of the world. Gandhi sees his role as reconciling the ancient traditions to the coming of classical western and Christian values and the advent of what he calls ‘ethical religion’.
To accomplish this, Gandhi must reinterpret and reform the ancient tradition; he must uncover its pure form from the slag of centuries of deterioration and decay. In doing so, Gandhi prepares the tradition for its encounter with the West. Gandhi reforms through reinterpretation, one that Gandhi considers to be closer to the original interpretation.
