Downey now approaches the question of whether or not humans are even capable of distinguishing good from evil. He questions how it could be possible for us to know the good if we are not even capable of knowing ourselves and what we want. We get confused between what we want in the private settings of our own mind, but get confused by what society tells us is the right thing to want. Even if we were not confused, the difference between what we desire and what is good seems to not be innately engrained into our hearts or minds.
Downey says in a depressive tone that maybe the philosopher’s were wrong. Maybe as much as someone might want true knowledge, we will always be stuck in the cave and have, “political bondage to the shadow world of erotic and thumotic desire.”
I for one did not need to read any further (although I did). This is what I have believed from the beginning. While Downey’s example alludes to the cave, my example is the cross.
There is no way that we could reach purity through our own flawed rationality. There was never anyway that we were going to reach Marx's utopian society. We are too corrupted and selfish to reach any of this on our own.
I believe that people genuinely want to be good. However, what we want to be and what we are are two very different things. We are not capable of reaching perfection. If we were, there would be no need for Christ and His sacrifice. We could all reach heaven on our own terms.
I would also use this argument to say that we are not capable of good on our own. I think that left to choice, like Downey says with the ring of invisibility, we would always choose the evil deed. It’s Luther’s “Bondage of Sin”. We have condemned ourselves to our bad decisions and desires, and need to Christ’s sacrifice to free us from our own depravity.
Although I disagree with Downey’s attempt to reinstate Freudian philosophy, I do agree with his conclusion that we are “Desperately Wicked” and are capable of things that we could never dream of, and that this fact causes several of our social and moral fears.
Thank God for Christ, literally.