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diff --git a/books/history/death-of-nature.md b/books/history/death-of-nature.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..47f94ab --- /dev/null +++ b/books/history/death-of-nature.md @@ -0,0 +1,310 @@ +[[!meta title="The Death of Nature"]] + +## Topics + +* Bohm's process physics. +* Ilya Prigogine new thermodynamics. + +## Excerpts + +    Between the sixteenth andseventeenth cerfturies the image of an or- +    ganic cosmos with a living female earth at its ceriter gave way to a +    mechanistic world view in which nature was reconstructed as dead and +    passive, to be dominated and controlled by hufuans. The Death efNature +    deals with the economic, cultural, and scientific changes through which +    this vast transformation came about. In seeking to understand how people +    conceptualized nature in the Scientific Revolution, I am asking not about +    unchanging essences, but about connections between social change and +    changing constructions of nattlre". Similarly. when women today attempt +    to change society's domination of nature, 1:\1~¥.,~e acting to overturn +    moder_n constructions of nature and women as culturally passive and +    subordinate. + +    [...] + +    Today's feminist and ecological consciousness can be used to examine the +    historical interconnections between women and nature that devel- +    oped as the modern scientific and economic world took form in the +    sixteenth and seventeenth centuries-a transformation that shaped +    and pervades today's mainstream values and perceptions. +    Feminist history in the broadest sense requires that we look at + +    [...] + +    My intent is instead to examine the +    values associated with the images of women and nature as they re- +    late to the formation of our modern world and their implications for +    'our lives today. + +    In investigating the roots of our current environmental dilemma +    and its connections to science, technology, and the economy, we +    must reexamine the formation of a world view and a science that, +    by reconceptualizing reality as a machine rather than a living or- +    ganism, sanctioned the domination of both nature and women. The +    contributions of such founding "fathers" of modern science as +    Francis Bacon, William Harvey, Rene Descartes, Thomas Hobbes, +    and Isaac Newton must be reevaluated. The fate of other options, +    alternative philosophies, and social groups shaped by the organic +    world view and resistant to the growing exploitative mentality needs +    reappraisal. To understand why one road rather than the other was +    taken requires a broad synthesis of both the natural and cultural +    environments of Western society at the historical turning point. +    This book elaborates an ecological perspective that includes both + +### Terminology + +Nature, art, organic and mechanical: + +    A distinction was commonly made +    between natura naturans, or nature creating, and natura naturata, +    the natural creation. + +    Nature was contrasted with art (techne) and with artificially cre- +    ated things. It was personified as a female-being, e.g., Dame Na- +    ture; she was alternately a prudent lady, an empress, a mother, etc. +    The course of nature and the laws of nature were the actualization +    of her force. The state of nature was the state of mankind prior to +    social organization and prior to the state of grace. Nature spirits, +    nature deities, virgin nymphs, and elementals were thought to re- +    side in or be associated with natural objects. + +    In both Western and non-Western cultures, nature was tradition- +    ally feminine. + +    [...] + +    In the early modern period, the term organic usually referred to +    the bodily organs, structures, and organization of living beings, +    while organicism was the doctrine that organic structure was the +    result of an inherent, adaptive property in matter. The word organi- +    cal, however, was also sometimes used to refer to a machine or an +    instrument. Thus a clock was sometimes called an "organical +    body," while som~ machines were said to operate by organical, +    rather than mechanical, action if the touch of a person was in- +    volved. + +    Mechanical referred to the machine and tool trades; the manual +    operations of the handicrafts; inanimate machines that lacked spon- +    taneity, volition, and thought; and the mechanical sciences. 1 + +### Nature that nurtures and thats also uncontrollable, replaced by "the machine" + +    NATURE AS NURTURE: CONTROLLING IMAGERY. Central to +    the organic theory was the identification of nature, especially the +    earth, with a nurturing mother: a kindly beneficent female who pro- +    vided for the needs of mankind in an ordered, planned universe. But +    another opposing image of nature as female was also prevalent: +    wild and uncontrollable nature that could render violence, storms, +    droughts, and general chaos. Both were identified with the female +    sex and were projections of human perceptions onto the external +    world. The metaphor of the earth as a nurturing mother was gradu- +    ally to vanish as a dominant image as the Scientific Revolution pro- +    ceeded to mechanize and to rationalize the world view. The second +    image, nature as disorder, called forth an important modern idea, +    that of power over nature. Two new ideas, those of mechanism and +    of the domination and mastery of nature, became core concepts of +    the modern world. An organically oriented mentality in which fe- +    male principles played an important role was undermined and re- +    placed by a mechanically oriented mentality that either eliminated +    or used female principles in an exploitative manner. As Western +    culture became increasingly mechanized in the 1600s, the female +    earth and virgin earth spirit were subdued by the machine. 1 + +### Mining and the female body + +    The image of the earth as a living organism and nurturing +    mother had served as a cultural constraint restricting the actions of +    human beings. One does not readily slay a mother, dig into her en- +    trails for gold or mutilate her body, although commercial mining +    would soon require that. As long as the earth was considered to be +    alive and sensitive, it could be considered a breach of human ethical +    behavior to carry out destructive acts against it. For most tradition- +    al cultures, minerals and metals ripened in the uterus of the Earth +    Mother, mines were compared to her vagina, and metallurgy was +    the human hastening of the birth of the living metal in the artificial +    womb of the furnace-an abortion of the metal's natural growth +    cycle before its time. Miners offered propitiation to the deities of +    the soil and subterranean world, performed ceremonial sacrifices, +    · and observed strict cleanliness, sexual abstinence, and fasting be- +    fore violating the sacredness of the living earth by sinking a mine. +    Smiths assumed an awesome responsibility in precipitating the met- +    al's birth through smeltin,.g, fusing, and beating it with hammer and +    anvil; they were often accorded the status of shaman in tribal rit- +    uals and their tools were thought to hold special powers. + +Is there a relation between torture (basanos), extraction of "truth" and +mining gold out of a mine? See discussions both on "The Counterrevolution" +and "Torture and Truth". + +### Hidden norms: controlling images + +    Controlling images operate as ethical restraints or as ethical sanc- +    tions-as subtle "oughts" or "ought-nots." Thus as the descriptive +    metaphors and images of nature change, a behavioral restraint can +    be changed into a sanction. Such a change in the image and de'- +    scription of nature was occurring during the course of the Scientific +    Revolution. + +    It is important to recognize the normative import of descriptive +    statements about nature. Contemporary philosophers of language +    have critically reassessed the earlier positivist distinction between +    the "is" of science and the "ought" of society, arguing that descrip- +    tions and norms are not opposed to one another by linguistic sepa- +    ration into separate "is" and "ought" statements, but are contained +    within each other. Descriptive statements about the world can pre- +    suppose the normative; they are then ethic-laden. + +    [...] + +    The writer +    or culture may not be conscious of the ethical import yet may act in +    accordance with its dictates. The hidden norms may become con- +    scious or explicit when an alternative or contradiction presents it- +    self. Because language contains a culture within itself, when lan- +    guage changes, a culture is also changing in important way~~ By +    examining changes in descriptions of nature, we can then perceive +    something of the changes in cultural values. To be aware of the in-. + +### Renaissance: hierarchical order + +    The Renaissance view of nature and society was based on the or- +    ganic analogy between the human body, or microcosm, and the +    larger world, or macrocosm. + +    [...] + +    But while the pastoral tradition symbolized nature as a benevo- +    lent female, it contained the implication that nature when plowed +    and cultivated could be used as a commodity and manipulated as a +    resource. Nature, tamed and subdued, could be transformed into a +    garden to provide both material and spiritual food to enhance the +    comfort and soothe the anxieties of men distraught by the demands +    of the urban world and the stresses of the marketplace. It depended +    on a masculine perception of nature as a mother and bride whose +    primary function was to comfort; nurture, and provide for the well- +    being of the male. In pastoral imagery, both nature and women are +    subordinate and essentially passive. They nurture but do not control +    or exhibit disruptive passion. The pastoral mode, although it viewed +    nature as benevolent, was a model created as an antidote to the +    pressures of urbanization and mechanization. It represented a ful- +    fillment of human needs for nurture, but by conceiving of nature as +    passive, it nevertheless allowed for the possibility of its use and ma- +    nipulation. Unlike the dialectical image of nature as the active uni- +    ty of opposites in tension, the Arcadian image rendered nature pas- +    sive and manageable. + +### Undressing + +    An allegory (1160) by Alain of Lille, of the School of Chartres, +    portrays Natura, God's powerful but humble servant, as stricken +    with grief at the failure of man (in contrast to other species) to +    obey her laws. Owing to faulty supervision by Venus, human beings +    engage in adulterous sensual love. In aggressively penetrating the +    secrets of heaven, they tear Natura's undergarments, exposing her +    to the view of the vulgar. She complains that "by the unlawful as- +    saults of man alone the garments of my modesty suffer disgrace +    and division." + +    [...] + +    Such basic attitudes +    toward ·male-female roles in biological generation where the female +    and the earth are both passive receptors could easily become sanc- +    tions for exploitation as the organic context was transformed by the +    rise of commercial capitalism. + +    [...] + +    The macrocosm theory, as we have seen, likened the cosmos to +    the human body, soul, and spirit with male and female reproductive +    components. Similarly, the geocosm theory compared the earth to +    the living human body, with breath, blood, sweat, and elimination +    systems. + +    [...] + +    The earth's springs were akin to the human blood system; its oth- +    er various fluids were likened to the mucus, saliva, sweat, and other +    forins of lubrication in the human body, the earth being organized +    "'. .. much after the plan of our bodies, in which there are both +    veins and arteries, the former blood vessels, the latter air vessels .... +    So exactly alike is the resemblance to our bodies in nature's forma- +    tion of the earth, that our ancestors have spoken of veins [springs] +    of water." Just as the human body contained blood, marrow, mu- +    cus, saliva, tears, and lubricating fluids, so in the earth there were +    various fluids. Liquids that turned hard became metals, such as +    gold and silver; other fluids turned into stones, bitumens, and veins +    of sulfur. Like the human body, the earth gave forth sweat: "There +    is often a gathering of thin, scattered moisture like dew, which from +    many points flows into one spot. The dowsers call it sweat, because +    a kind of drop is either squeezed out by the pressure of the ground +    or raised by the heat." + +    Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) enlarged the Greek analogy be- +    tween the waters of the earth and the ebb and flow of human blood +    through the veins and heart + +    [...] + +    A widely held alchemical belief was the growth of the baser met- +    als into gold in womblike matrices in the earth. The appearance of +    silver in lead ores or gold in silvery assays was evidence that this +    transformation was under way. Just as the child grew in the +    warmth of the female womb, so the growth of metals was fostered + +### Matrix + +    The earth in the Paracelsian philosophy was the mother or matrix +    giving birth to plants, animals, and men. + +### Renaissance was diverse + +    In general, the Renaissance view was that all things were permeat- +    ed by life, there being no adequate method by which to designate +    the inanimate from the animate. +    [...] but criteria by which to differentiate the living from +    the nonliving could not successfully be formulated. This was due +    not only to the vitalistic framework of the period but to striking +    similarities between them. + +    [...] + +    Popular Renaissance literature was filled with hundreds of im- +    ages associating nature, matter, and the earth with the female sex. + +    [...] + +    In the 1960s, the Native-American became a symbol in the ecol- +    ogy movement's search for alternatives to Western exploitative atti- +    tudes. The Indian animistic belief-system and reverence for the +    earth as a · mother were contrasted with the Judeo-Christian heri- +    tage of dominion over nature and with capitalist practices resulting +    in the "tragedy of the commons" (exploitation of resources avail- +    able for any person's or nation's use). But as will be seen, European +    culture was more complex and varied than this judgment allows. It +    ignores the Renaissance philosophy of the nurturing earth as well +    as those philosophies and social movements resistant to mainstream +    economic change. + +### Mining as revealing the hidden secrets + +    In his defense, the miner argued that the earth was not a real moth- +    er, but a wicked stepmother who hides and conceals the metals in +    her inner parts instead of making them available for human use. + +    [...] + +    In the old hermit's tale, we have a fascina,ting example·of the re:· +    lationship between images and values. The older view of nature as a +    kindly mother is challenged by the growing interests of the mining +    industry in Saxony, Bohemia, and the Harz Mountains, regions of +    newly found prosperity (Fig. 6). The miner, representing these +    newer commercial activities, transforms the irnage of the nurturing +    mother into that of a stepmother who wickedly conceals her bounty +    from the deserving and needy children. In the seventeenth century, +    the image will be seen to undergo yet another transformation, as +    natural philosopher Francis Bacon (1561-1626) sets forth the need +    for prying into nature's nooks and crannies in searching out her se- +    crets for human improvement. + +    -- 33 diff --git a/books/philosophy/torture-and-truth.md b/books/philosophy/torture-and-truth.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4dcb3a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/books/philosophy/torture-and-truth.md @@ -0,0 +1,956 @@ +[[!meta title="Torture and Truth"]] + +* [Torture and Truth](https://www.worldcat.org/title/torture-and-truth/oclc/20823386). +* By Page duBois. + +## About + +    First published in 1991, this book — through the examination of ancient +    Greek literary, philosophical and legal texts — analyses how the Athenian +    torture of slaves emerged from and reinforced the concept of truth as something +    hidden in the human body. It discusses the tradition of understanding truth as +    something that is generally concealed and the ideas of ‘secret space’ in both +    the female body and the Greek temple. This philosophy and practice is related +    to Greek views of the ‘Other’ (women and outsiders) and considers the role of +    torture in distinguishing slave and free in ancient Athens. A wide range of +    perspectives — from Plato to Sartre — are employed to examine the subject. + +## Topics + +* Example of actual tortures that took place: see defense of Andokides. Footnote 6. + +## Excerpts + +### Machine atroci + +    Inside sat other devices. The iron maiden of Frankfurt, a +    larger-than-life-size female body, cast in iron, strangely reminiscent of one +    of those Russian dolls, a rounded maternal peasant body that opens horizontally +    to reveal another identical doll inside, that opens again and again until one +    reaches a baby, perhaps, I can’t recall, in its deepest inside. This body, +    propped open, had been cast with a vertical split, its interior consisting of +    two sets of sharp iron spikes that, when the maiden was closed on a captive +    human body, penetrated that body, trapping it upright as it killed in a +    grotesque parody of pregnancy made a coffin. + +    [...] + +    For me, the pear was not the most compelling “machine” on display. There +    sat, on one of the tables inside the Quirinale Palace, a simple modern device, +    looking something like a microphone, with electrodes dangling from it. The +    catalogue acknowledged that critics had objected to the inclusion of this +    instrument in the exhibit. + +    [...] + +    As I recognized what it must be, pieced together an idea of its functions from +    recently read accounts of refugees from the Argentinian junta and from Central +    America, recalled films of the Algerian war, news stories of the reign of the +    colonels in Greece, this instrument composed of the only too familiar elements +    of modern technology defamiliarized the devices on exhibit; removing them from +    the universe of the museum, it identified them with the calculated infliction +    of human agony. It recontextualized all the other objects, prevented them from +    being an aesthetic series, snatched them from the realm of the commodified +    antique, recalled suffering. + +    The ancient Greeks and Romans routinely tortured slaves as part of their legal +    systems. So what? Is the recollection of this fact merely a curiosity, a memory +    of the “antique” which allows us to marvel at our progress from the past of +    Western culture, our abolition of slavery? Some of us congratulate ourselves on +    our evolution from a barbaric pagan past, from the world of slave galleys and +    crucifixions, of vomitoria and gladiatorial contests, of pederasty and +    polytheism. But there is another, supplementary or contestatory narrative told +    about ancient Greek culture—a narrative about the noble origins of Western +    civilization. This narrative has analogies with the Quirinale exhibit—it +    represents the past as a set of detached objects, redolent with antique +    atmosphere. This alternate and prejudicially selective gaze at the high culture +    of antiquity, the achievement of those ancient Greeks and Romans to whom we +    point when we discuss our golden age, produces an ideological text for the +    whole world now, mythologies about democracy versus communist totalitarianism, +    about progress, civilized values, human rights. Because we are descended from +    this noble ancient culture, from the inventors of philosophy and democracy, we +    see ourselves as privileged, as nobly obliged to guide the whole benighted +    world toward Western culture’s version of democracy and enlightenment. But even +    as we gaze at high culture, at its origins in antiquity, at its present +    manifestations in the developed nations, the “base” practices of torturers +    throughout the world, many of them trained by North Americans, support this +    narrative by forcing it on others, by making it the hegemonic discourse about +    history. So-called high culture—philosophical, forensic, civic discourses and +    practices—is of a piece from the very beginning, from classical antiquity, with +    the deliberate infliction of human suffering. It is my argument in this book +    that more is at stake in our recognition of this history than antiquarianism, +    than complacency about our advances from barbarism to civilization. That truth +    is unitary, that truth may finally be extracted by torture, is part of our +    legacy from the Greeks and, therefore, part of our idea of “truth.” + +### Sartre + +    "Torture is senseless violence, born in fear. The purpose of it is to force +    from one tongue, amid its screams and its vomiting up of blood, the secret of +    everything. Senseless violence: whether the victim talks or whether he dies +    under his agony, the secret that he cannot tell is always somewhere else and +    out of reach. It is the executioner who becomes Sisyphus. If he puts the +    question at all, he will have to continue forever." + +### Tradition, secrets, truth and torture + +    The Gestapo taught the French, who taught the Americans in Indo-China, and +    they passed on some of their expertise to the Argentinian, Chilean, El +    Salvadoran torturers. But this essay is not meant to be a genealogy of modern +    torture. Rather I am concerned with what Sartre calls “the secret of +    everything” with the relationship between torture and the truth, which “is +    always somewhere else and out of reach.” + +A crucial point (an "crucial" also in the sense of the crucified, tortured body): + +    I want to show how the logic of our philosophical tradition, of some of our +    inherited beliefs about truth, leads almost inevitably to conceiving of the +    body of the other as the site from which truth can be produced, and to using +    violence if necessary to extract that truth. + +    [...] + +    I want to work out how the Greek philosophical idea of truth was produced +    in history and what role the social practice of judicial torture played in its +    production. + +    I don’t want to suggest that the ancient Greeks invented torture, or that it +    belongs exclusively to the Western philosophical tradition, or that abhorrence +    of torture is not also part of that tradition. But I also refuse to adopt the +    moral stance of those who pretend that torture is the work of “others,” that it +    belongs to the third world, that we can condemn it from afar. To stand thus is +    to eradicate history, to participate both in the exportation of torture as a +    product of Western civilization, and in the concealment of its ancient and +    perhaps necessary coexistence with much that we hold dear. The very idea of +    truth we receive from the Greeks, those ancestors whom Allan Bloom names for +    us,3 is inextricably linked with the practice of torture, which has almost +    always been the ultimate attempt to discover a secret “always out of reach.” + +    [...] + +    The ancient Greek word for torture is basanos. It means first of all the +    touchstone used to test gold for purity; the Greeks extended its meaning to +    denote a test or trial to determine whether something or someone is real or +    genuine. It then comes to mean also inquiry by torture, “the question,” +    torture.4 In the following pages I will discuss the semantic field of the word +    basanos, its uses in various contexts, both literal and metaphorical. [...] +    This analysis will lead me to consideration of the idea of truth as secret in +    ancient Greek thought, in literary, ritual, and philosophical practices + +    [...] + +    The desire for a reliable test to determine the fidelity of a suspect +    intimate recurs in Greek poetry, and later poets often employ the metaphor of +    the testing of metal to describe the necessity and unreliability of testing for +    the fidelity of friends. + +    The Lydians of Asia Minor had invented the use of metal currency, of money, in +    the seventh century B.C.E. The polis or city-state of Aegina was reputed to be +    the first Greek city to establish a silver coinage; in the classical period +    several different coinages circulated. By the fifth century B.C.E. coins of +    small enough denominations existed to enter into the economic transactions of +    daily life. In Euripides’ Hippolytus the Athenian king Theseus, bewildered by +    contradictory accounts of an alleged seduction attempt by his son against his +    wife, uses monetary language to convey his confusion about the mysteries of +    domestic intimacy: + +    [...] + +    Theseus employs the language of the banker, of the money-lender, to suggest +    that one of his friends, that is, of those dear to him, either his son or his +    wife, is false and counterfeit. + +    [...] + +    pollution is a religious term, connected with the impurity of blood shed, +    of unclean sacrificial practices or murder.10 +    In the archaic period, the state of freedom from pollution is sometimes +    connected with notions of inherited purity, of uncontaminated descent from the +    generations of heroes, from the gods, ideas of inherited excellence through +    which the aristocrats justified their dominance in the archaic cities. + +### Governing, the steering of a ship in the hands of the aristocracy + +    The very last lines of the poem echo the concerns of Theognis, a recognition of +    the political disturbances of the ancient city, and the desire of the +    aristocratic poet for a steady hand, sanctioned by blood and tradition, at the +    city’s helm:  + +        Let us praise +        his brave brothers too, because +        they bear on high the ways of Thessaly +        and bring them glory. +        In their hands +        belongs the piloting of cities, their fathers’ heritage. +        (68-72) [poet Pindar, in Pythian 10] + +    This last phrase might be rendered: “in the care of the good men [Theognis’s +    agathoi, a political term] lie the inherited, paternal pilotings, governings +    [following the metaphor of the ship of state] of cities.” The city is a ship +    that must be guided by those who are capable by birth of piloting it, that is +    to say, the agathoi, the good, the aristocrats. The basanos reveals the good, +    separates base metal from pure gold, aristocrat from commoner. + +### A change of meaning + +    The Sophoclean language, and its ambiguity, reveal the gradual transition of +    the meaning of the word basanos from “test” to “torture.” The literal meaning, +    “touchstone,” gives way to a figurative meaning, “test,” then over time changes +    to “torture,” as the analogy is extended to the testing of human bodies in +    juridical procedures for the Athenian courts. Is the history of basanos itself +    in ancient Athens a process of refiguration, the alienation of the test from a +    metal to the slave, the other? Such a transfer is literally catachresis, the +    improper use of words, the application of a term to a thing which it does not +    properly denote, abuse or perversion of a trope or metaphor (OED); George +    Puttenham, the Elizabethan rhetorician, calls catachresis “the figure of +    abuse.” The modern English word touchstone is similarly employed by people who +    have no idea of the archaic reference to the lapis Lydius, also called in +    English basanite . The figurative use of the word touchstone has taken the +    place of the literal meaning. + +    [...] + +    The forensic language of Oedipus Rex fuses heroic legend with the poetic +    representation of the city’s institutions. The mythic narrative of Oedipus’s +    encounter with the Sphinx, set in the most remote past, and the struggle +    between Kreon and Oedipus over the investigation of an ancient and mythic +    homicide, here meet the daily life of the democratic polis. The language of +    Sophokles’ tragedy might be said to exemplify not only the contradictions +    between the tyranny of the fictional past and the “secret ballots,” alluded to +    disparagingly by Pindar, of the audience’s present, but also to represent +    dramatically, in an almost Utopian manner, a synthesis of the Greeks’ legendary +    origins and their political processes. The chorus’s attempt to judge Oedipus +    resembles the aristocratic reveler’s testing of his fellow symposiasts, using +    as it does archaic, lyric language; it is also like the democratic jury’s +    testing of a citizen on trial, alluding obliquely at the same time to the +    juridical torture of slaves in the Athenian legal system, a process which by +    this time was referred to as the basanos. +     +    Some of the semantic processes that transformed basanos as touchstone into the +    term for legal torture can be seen in the use of the term in the Oedipus +    Coloneus. This tragedy is only obliquely concerned with the process of +    democracy, with the new institutions of the mid-fifth century which mediated +    between the city’s aristocratic past and its democratic present. It speaks +    instead of the exhaustion of the political, of disillusionment with parties and +    with war, of metaphysical solutions to problems too bitter to be resolved in +    mortal agones.  + +    [...] + +    The basanos, no longer an autonomous, inert, inanimate tool for assaying +    metal, has become a struggle between two forces, a contest that assumes +    physical violence, a reconcretizing of the “touchstone,” which is neither the +    literal stone nor a metaphorical ordeal. Hands, pitted one against the other, +    rematerialize the test. The touchstone sets stone against metal; the test of +    friends sets one against another; here the agon, the contest implicit in the +    notion of basanos, takes on a new connotation, one of combat between enemies. +     +    Some historians of the ancient city believe that the word basanos refers not to +    physical torture, but to a legal interrogation that does not involve violence. +    Others claim that the threat of torture may have been present in the word, but +    that there is no evidence that torture was actually ever practiced.16 It seems +    to me very unlikely , even though the ancient evidence does not describe +    directly any single case of torture, that the frequent mentions of basanos in +    contexts of physical intimidation can refer to anything but the practice of +    torture. The accidents of survival of ancient material may mean that we have no +    single documented instance of torture having been applied, but the many uses of +    the term, not only in the context of the law court, suggest a cultural +    acceptance of the meaning “torture” for basanos, and an assumption that torture +    occurred. For example, the historian Herodotos, in recounting an incident that +    took place during the Persian Wars, in the early years of the fifth century +    B.C.E., describes the Athenian hero Themistokles’ secret negotiations with the +    Persian emperor Xerxes after the battle of Salamis:  +     +    Themistocles lost no time in getting a message through to Xerxes. The men he +    chose for this purpose were all people he could trust to keep his instructions +    secret [sigan], even under torture [es pasan basanon]. + +    [...] + +    This passage suggests not only that basanos was not merely interrogation, but +    that with the meaning torture it formed part of the vocabulary of daily life, +    and that torture figured in the relations between ancient states as well as in +    the legal processes of the democratic city. Themistokles had to take into +    account the ability of his emissaries to resist physical torture, pasan +    basanon, “any, all torture,” when deciding whom to send to the Persian emperor. +    He required silence under extreme interrogation, since he was claiming falsely +    to have protected Xerxes from the pursuit of the Greeks after the Persians’ +    defeat. And Herodotos uses the word basanos as if the meaning “torture” were +    common currency. +     +    As do Sophokles’ Oedipus plays, Herodotos’s text offers a double vision, +    providing further evidence about the place of torture in the democracy and in +    its prehis-tory. Sophokles writes from within the democracy about episodes from +    the archaic, legendary past of the city. Herodotos writes from the world of the +    mid-fifth century, the time of Sophokles and the great imperial age of Athens, +    looking back half a century. The victories of Athens in the Persian Wars had +    enabled and produced the great flowering of Athenian culture and ambition in +    the middle of the fifth century. Herodotos’s retrospective gaze at the origins +    of the democracy and its empire paints the portrait of Themistokles, one of the +    great aristocrats whose power and vision shaped the evolution of the democratic +    city. His encouragement, for example, of the policy of spending the city’s +    mining wealth on its fleet, rather than distributing of monies to the citizens, +    meant that the poorest citizens in Athens, who manned the fleet, participated +    actively and powerfully in the political and military decisions of the +    following years. In the incident Herodotos describes, Themistokles takes care +    to ensure that his self-interested machinations not be known by the Athenians +    he led. Themistokles, like Oedipus, has become a creature of legend. + +    [...] + +    Silence under torture may be coded as an aristocratic virtue. [...] it +    indicates the degree to which silence under pain is ideologically associated +    with nobility. The slave has no resources through which to resist submitting to +    pain and telling all. In contrast the aristocratic soldier, noble by both birth +    and training, maintains laconic silence in the face of physical abuse. + +### Comedy and inversion + +    We find a comic parody of the use of basanos for the courtroom in Aristophanes’ +    Frogs.20 The comedy is devoted to themes of judgment, discrimination, and +    evaluation . Dionysos and his slave Xanthias have set off on a journey to Hades +    to retrieve the tragic poet Euripides, but end by choosing Aeschylus to bring +    back with them, claiming him over Euripides as the superior poet. Dionysos had +    dressed for the trip as Herakles, who had once successfully entered and, more +    importantly, departed the realm of the dead, but when he learns that Herakles +    is persona non grata in Hades, he forces his slave to trade costumes with him. +    When Xanthias is mistaken for Herakles and about to be arrested as a +    dog-napper, for the stealing of Kerberos, the slave offers to give up his own +    supposed slave, really the god Dionysos, to torture + +    [...] + +    The result is a beating contest in which Xanthias seems sure to win, accustomed +    as he, a real slave, is to such beatings. The beatings constitute not +    punishment but torture, and the language of the comedy reflects this fact. The +    torture will reveal the truth, show which of the two is a god, which a slave. +    The comedy works on the reversal of slave and god; Xanthias claims a god would +    not be hurt by a beating, but the slave, the lowest of mortal beings, might in +    fact be thought, because of experience, most easily to endure a whipping. +    Dionysos begins to weep under the beating, but claims it’s due to onions. +    Aiakos is finally unable to decide which of the two is divine. +     +    In the parabasis, the address to the audience, that follows, the theme of noble +    and base currency emerges once again, as if connected by free association with +    this scene of torture, of the basanos or touchstone. The chorus appeals to the +    Athenian populace, complaining that Athenians who had committed one fault in a +    battle at sea were to be put to death, while slaves who had fought alongside +    their masters had been given their freedom. This seems to the chorus to be a +    perversion of traditional hierarchical thinking: + +    [...] + +    The comic beating is quite hilarious, of course. But it does not put into +    question the reality of torture. The exchange has a carnival quality, Dionysos +    masquerading as slave, slave masquerading as Dionysos masquerading as Herakles, +    the god beaten like a common slave. The slave remains uppity and insolent, the +    god cowardly and ridiculous. Comedy permits this representation of the +    quotidian reality of the polis, the exposure of what cannot be alluded to +    directly in tragedy, the violence and domination implicit in the situation of +    bondage. Comedy allows the fictional depiction of the unspeakable, the +    representation of the lowly slave, the allusion to ordinary cruelty, a +    commentary on the difficulty of perceiving the essential difference between +    divine and enslaved beings. +    [...] If Aristophanes is so iconoclastic as to mock the gods, and to treat +    the slave as if he were a human character, he does not go so far as to question +    the institution of the basanos.  + +### Testing + +    The slave on the rack waits like the metal, pure or alloyed, to be tested. +    [...] The test assumes that its result will be truth; [...] The truth is +    generated by torture from the speech of the slave; the sounds of the slave on +    the rack must by definition contain truth, which the torture produces. And when +    set against other testimony in a court case, that necessary truth, like a +    touchstone itself, will show up the truth or falsity of the testimony. The +    process of testing has been spun out from the simple metallurgist’s experiment, +    to a new figuration of the work of interrogating matter. It is the slave’s +    body, not metal, which receives the test; but how can that body be demonstrated +    to be true or false, pure or alloyed, loyal or disloyal? The basanos assumes +    first that the slave always lies, then that torture makes him or her always +    tell the truth, then that the truth produced through torture will always expose +    the truth or falsehood of the free man’s evidence. + +### Athenian democracy and torture + +    Yet the Athenian democracy was at best a sort of oligarchy, one that denied +    legal and political rights to all women, even daughters of citizens, and to +    foreigners and slaves residing in Attica. The practice of slave torture is +    consistent with the democracy’s policies of exclusion, scapegoating, ostracism, +    and physical cruelty and violence; to overlook or justify torture is to +    misrecognize and idealize the Athenian state. + +    MacDowell describes the place of torture in the Athenian legal system:  + +        A special rule governed the testimony of slaves: they could not appear in +        court, but a statement which a slave, male or female, had made under torture +        (basanos) could be produced in court as evidence.3 + +        The party in a trial who wished a slave to be tortured would put his questions +        in writing, specifying which slaves he wished to have tortured and the +        questions they were to be asked, and also agreeing to pay the slave’s owner for +        any permanent damage inflicted on the slave. Athenian citizens could not be +        tortured. + +    MacDowell reasons as follows about the rule that slave’s testimony could +    be received in the courtroom only if the slave had been tortured:  + +        The reason for this rule must have been that a slave who knew anything material +        would frequently belong to one of the litigants, and so would be afraid to say +        anything contrary to his owner’s interests, unless the pressure put on him to +        reveal the truth was even greater than the punishment for revealing it which he +        could expect from his master.4 + +    A. R. W. Harrison believes that the right to testify freely in court may have +    been seen as a privilege, perhaps because witnesses who appeared in court were +    once thought of as “compurgators,” witnesses who swore to the credibility of a +    party in a law suit. “Torture must therefore be applied to the slave as a mark +    of the fact that he was not in himself a free agent entitled to support one +    side or the other.”5 Since the slave was a valuable piece of property, liable +    to damage from torture, she or he could not be tortured without permission of +    the owner.6 If that permission were denied, the opponent often claimed that the +    evidence which would have been obtained under torture would of certainty have +    been damning to the slave’s owner. + +### Slavery and freedom + +    Jean-Paul Sartre’s [...] says: “Algeria cannot contain two human species, but +    requires a choice between them”.1 The soldiers who practiced torture on +    Algerian revolutionaries attempted to reduce their opponents to pure +    materiality, to the status of animals. + +    [...] + +    Free men and women could be enslaved at any time, although in Athens the +    Solonian reforms of the sixth century B.C.E. + +    [...] + +    In the Politics Aristotle claims that some people are slaves “by nature” + +    [...] + +    The discourse on the use of torture in ancient Athenian law forms part of an +    attempt to manage the opposition between slave and free, and it betrays both +    need and anxiety: need to have a clear boundary between servile and free, +    anxiety about the impossibility of maintaining this difference. + +### Tendency of suspend democracy protections (coup) during crisis + +    [The] incident of the mutilation of the herms shook the stability of the +    Athenian state, but also points to the future tendencies among the aristocratic +    and oligarchic parties to suspend democratic protections in a moment of crisis. +    The logical tendency would seem to be either to extend torture to all who could +    give evidence, or to forbid torture of any human being. The instability of the +    distinctions between slave and free, citizen and noncitizen, Greek and +    foreigner, becomes apparent in these debates on the possibility of state +    torture of citizens. Athenian citizens treasured the freedom from torture as a +    privilege of their elevated status; Peisander’s eagerness to abrogate this +    right is a premonition of the violence and illegality of the oligarchic coup of +    411 and of the bloody rule of the Thirty after the defeat of the Athenians by +    the Spartans in 404.5 + +### Truth-making and the secret of everything + +    Another kind of truth, what Sartre calls “the secret of everything,” is named +    by many Greek writers as the explicit aim of judicial torture. [,,,]  +    In the Greek legal system, the torture of slaves figured as a guarantor of +    truth, as a process of truth-making. + +### Secret ballots and lawyers + +    Jurors received pay for their service in the courts [...] A case was required +    to be completed within a day at most; several private cases would be tried +    within a single day. The time alloted for arguments by the opponents in a trial +    was measured by a water-clock; the amount of water allowed for each side was +    determined by the seriousness of the charges. After each of the litigants +    spoke, brought forward witnesses, and had evidence read, the jurors placed +    disks or pebbles into urns to determine the winner of the suit.  +    [...] At the end of the fifth century it became customary to employ professional +    writers to compose one’s speech for the court. + +    Thus the scene in the court resembled the great assemblies of the democratic +    city, with up to six thousand men adjudicating disputes. [...] +    In this context, the evidence from the torture of slaves is evidence from +    elsewhere, from another place, another body. It is evidence from outside the +    community of citizens, of free men. Produced by the basanistês, the torturer, +    or by the litigant in another scene, at the time of torture, such evidence +    differs radically from the testimony of free witnesses in the court. It is +    temporally estranged, institutionally, conventionally marked as evidence of +    another order; what is curious is that speakers again and again privilege it as +    belonging to a higher order of truth than that evidence freely offered in the +    presence of the jurors by present witnesses. + +    [...] + +    There are many such passages. The slave body has become, in the democratic +    city, the site of torture and of the production of truth. + +    The argument concerning the greater value of slave evidence frequently occurs +    in accusations against an opponent who has refused to allow his slaves to be +    tortured. The speaker claims then that this failure to produce slave witnesses +    proves indirectly that their testimony would condemn their owner. + +### Slaves are bodies; citizens possess logos + +    Lykourgos argues against Leokrates [...]: + +        Every one of you knows that in matters of dispute it is considered by far the +        just and most democratic [dêmotikôtatori] course, when there are male or female +        slaves, who possess the necessary information, to examine these by torture and +        so have facts to go upon instead of hearsay, particularly when the case +        concerns the public and is of vital interest to the state. + +    He argues that by nature the tortured slaves would have told the truth; does +    this mean that any human being, when tortured, will produce the truth, or that +    it is the nature of slaves to tell the truth under torture? Free citizen men +    will be deceived by clever arguments; slaves by nature will not be misled +    because they think with their bodies. Slaves are bodies; citizens possess +    logos, reason. [...] This appeal to the practice of torture as an integral +    and valued part of the legal machinery of the democracy points up the +    contradictory nature of Athenian democracy, and the ways in which the +    application of the democratic reforms of Athens were carefully limited to the +    lives of male citizens, and intrinsic to the production and justification of +    this notion of male citizenship. + +### Notions of truth and the real of the untorturable, the dead + +    In another speech attributed to Antiphon, this one part of a case presumably +    actually tried, torture again plays an important role in the defense of a man +    accused of murder, Euxitheos [...] + +        Probably both of these considerations induced him to make the false charges +        against me which he did; he hoped to gain his freedom, and his one immediate +        wish was to end the torture. I need not remind you, I think, that witnesses +        under torture are biased in favour of those who do most of the torturing; they +        will say anything likely to gratify them. It is their one chance of salvation, +        especially when the victims of their lies happen not to be present. Had I +        myself proceeded to give orders that the slave should be racked [strebloun] for +        not telling the truth, that step in itself would doubtless have been enough to +        make him stop incriminating me falsely. (5.31-32) + +    The speaker, because for once forced to confront the evidence of a tortured +    slave, rather than bemoaning the lack of slave evidence, here points out the +    absolute unreliability of slave evidence, based as it is on the will of the +    torturer. Bizarrely, however, he ends by claiming that the true truth would +    have emerged, another truth truer than the first, if he himself had been the +    torturer. If so, it is interesting that the defendant distinguishes between +    an essentialist notion of truth and a pragmatic notion of truth in the case of +    the slave, but not in the case of the free foreigner, where a reversion to the +    essentialist notion appears to occur. And the logic he exposes, that the slave +    will say anything to gratify his torturer, is dropped as soon as he himself +    becomes the torturer. We can imagine the body of the slave ripped apart in a +    tug-of-war between two litigants, in a law case in which he was implicated only +    by proximity. + +    This very slave, who had been purchased by the prosecution, in fact later +    changed his testimony, according to the speaker because he recognized his +    imminent doom. Nonetheless the prosecution put him to death. The defendant +    continues:  +     +        Clearly, it was not his person, but his evidence, which they required; had the +        man remained alive, he would have been tortured by me in the same way, and the +        prosecution would be confronted with their plot: but once he was dead, not only +        did the loss of his person mean that I was deprived of my opportunity of +        establishing the truth, but his false statements are assumed to be true. +        (5.35) +     +    All of the prosecution’s case rests on the testimony of the tortured and now +    dead slave; the defendant claims to be completely frustrated, since now the +    truth lies in a realm inaccessible to him. He cannot torture the dead man and +    discover the “real” truth. Even though the slave had at first insisted on the +    defendant’s innocence, he had under torture called him guilty:  +     +        At the start, before being placed on the wheel [trokhon], in fact, until +        extreme pressure was brought to bear, the man adhered to the truth [alêtheia] +        and declared me innocent. It was only when on the wheel, and when driven to it, +        that he falsely incriminated me, in order to put an end to the torture. +        (5.40-41) +     +    The persistence of the defendant’s desire himself to torture this slave claims +    our attention; even after the inevitability of false testimony under torture +    stands exposed, he bemoans the retreat of the slave into the realm of the +    untorturable, of the dead. + +        I repeat, let no one cause you to forget that the prosecution put the informer +        to death, that they used every effort to prevent his appearance in court and to +        make it impossible for me to take him and examine him under torture on my +        return.… Instead, they bought the slave and put him to death, entirely on their +        own initiative [idia], (5.46-47) + +### Reasoning attributed to a free man, but foreigner + +    The free man knew that the torture would end; he also could not be bribed by +    promises of freedom for giving the answers the torturers desired to hear. In +    this case, the defendant gives priority to the free man’s unfree testimony; +    unlike the free testimony of an Athenian in a courtroom, this evidence was +    derived from torture, but the defendant seeks to give it the added authority of +    the free man in spite of its origin in this procedure tainted with unfreedom, +    because it supports his view of the case. + +### Truth even if it cost lives + +        You do not need to be reminded, gentlemen, that the one occasion when +        compulsion [anagkai] is as absolute and as effective as is humanly possible, +        and when the rights of a case are ascertained thereby most surely and most +        certainly, arises when there is an abundance of witnesses, both slave and free, +        and it is possible to put pressure [anagkazein] upon the free men by exacting +        an oath or word of honour, the most solemn and the most awful form of +        compulsion known to free men, and upon the slaves by other devices [heterais +        anagkais], which will force them to tell the truth even if their revelations +        are bound to cost them their lives, as the compulsion of the moment [he gar +        parousa anagkê] has a stronger influence over each than the fate which he will +        suffer by compulsion afterwards. (6.25) + +    That is, the free man is compelled by oaths; he might lose his rights as a +    citizen if he lied under oath. The slave, even though he will certainly be put +    to death as a consequence of what he reveals under torture, will nonetheless, +    under torture, reveal the truth. The two kinds of compulsion are equated, one +    appropriate for the free man, one for the slave. + +### Torturability + +    Torture serves not only to exact a truth, some truth or other, which will +    benefit one side of the case or the other. It also functions as a gambit in the +    exchange between defendant and prosecution; if for any reason one of them +    refuses to give up slaves to torture, the other can claim that the missing +    testimony would of a certainty support his view of things. And as I argued +    earlier, torture also serves to mark the boundary between slave and free +    beings. Torture can be enacted against free, non-Greek beings as well as +    slaves; all “barbarians” are assimilated to slaves. Slaves are barbarians, +    barbarians are slaves; all are susceptible to torture. Torturability creates a +    difference which is naturalized. And even the sophistry of the First Tetralogy, +    which wants to create a category of virtually free in the case of the slave who +    would have been freed had he lived, seeks to support this division of human +    beings into free, truth-telling creatures, and torturable slave/barbarians, who +    will only produce truth on the wheel. + +### The Slave's Truth + +    Torture performs at least two functions in the Athenian state. As an instrument +    of demarcation, it delineates the boundary between slave and free, between the +    untouchable bodies of free citizens and the torturable bodies of slaves. The +    ambiguity of slave status, the difficulty of sustaining an absolute sense of +    differences, is addressed through this practice of the state, which carves the +    line between slave and free on the bodies of the unfree. In the work of the +    wheel, the rack, and the whip, the torturer carries out the work of the polis; +    citizen is made distinct from noncitizen, Greek from barbarian, slave from +    free. The practice of basanos administers to the anxiety about enslavement, +    hauntingly evoked in the texts of Athenian tragedy that recall the fall of +    cities, particularly the fall of Troy, evoked as well in the histories that +    recount Athenian destruction of subject allies. + +    [...] + +    But the desire to clarify the respective status of slave and free is not the +    motive, never the explicit motive, of torture. Rather, again and again, even in +    the face of arguments discounting evidence derived from torture, speakers in +    the courts describe the basanos as a search for truth. How is this possible? +    And how are the two desires related? The claim is made that truth resides in +    the slave body. + +    [...] + +    That is, the master possesses reason, logos. When giving evidence in court, he +    knows the difference between truth and falsehood, he can reason and produce +    true speech, logos, and he can reason about the consequences of falsehood , the +    deprivation of his rights as a citizen. The slave, on the other hand, +    possessing not reason, but rather a body strong for service (iskhura pros ten +    anagkaian khrêsin), must be forced to utter the truth, which he can apprehend, +    although not possessing reason as such. Unlike an animal, a being that +    possesses only feelings, and therefore can neither apprehend reason, logos, nor +    speak, legein, the slave can testify when his body is tortured because he +    recognizes reason without possessing it himself. + +    [...] + +    Thus, according to Aristotle’s logic, representative or not, the slave’s truth +    is the master’s truth; it is in the body of the slave that the master’s truth +    lies, and it is in torture that his truth is revealed. The torturer reaches +    through the master to the slave’s body, and extracts the truth from it. The +    master can conceal the truth, since he possesses reason and can choose between +    truth and lie, can choose the penalty associated with false testimony. His own +    point of vulnerability is the body of his slave, which can be compelled not to +    lie, can be forced to produce the truth. If he decides to deny the body of his +    slave to the torturer, assumptions Will be made that condemn him. + +    [...] + +    Aristotle advocates the pragmatic approach; one can argue either side concerning +    the truth of torture. + +    [...] + +    As Gernet says, “Proof is institutional.” Proof, and therefore truth, are +    constituted by the Greeks as best found in the evidence derived from torture. +    Truth, alêtheia, comes from elsewhere, from another place, from the place of +    the other. + +### Torture and Writing + +    The tortured body retains scars, marks that recall the violence inflicted upon +    it by the torturer. In part because slaves were often tattooed in the ancient +    world, such marks of torture resonate in the Greek mind with tattoos, and with +    other forms of metaphorical inscription, in Greek thinking considered analogous +    to writing on the body.1 I have discussed the topos of corporeal inscription +    elsewhere. The woman’s body was in ancient Greece sometimes likened to a +    writing tablet, a surface to be ”ploughed,” inscribed by the hand, the plough, +    the penis of her husband and master.2 + +The famous case of the tatooed head: +     +    One especially intriguing mention of slave tattooing occurs in Herodotos’s +    Histories, in a narrative in which the possibility of torture remains implicit. +    Although I have discussed this episode elsewhere, I want here to draw out its +    implications for a consideration of the relationship between torture and truth. +    Histiaios of Miletus sends a message urging revolt to a distant ally by shaving +    the head of his most trusted slave, tattooing the message on the slave’s head, +    then waiting for the slave’s hair to grow back. He sends the slave on his +    journey, ordering him to say at the journey’s end only that the “destinataire,” +    the receiver of the message, should shave off his hair and look at his head. +    The message reaches its goal, and Aristagoras the receiver revolts (Herodotos, +    Histories 5.35). +     +    The tattooed head is a protection against torture. If the slave were captured +    and tortured, he would not himself know the message of revolt. He could not +    betray his master if questioned and interrogated specifically about his +    master’s intentions to rise up against those who have enslaved him. He did not +    know the content of Histiaios’ communication with Aristagoras. But he did know +    the instructions he bore to Aristagoras, to shave his head and read the message +    inscribed there. The ruse only displaces the discovery of the message’s truth +    by a single step, but in this case it succeeds in protecting the message. Here +    the tattooing, the inscription on the slave’s body, subverts the intention of +    torture to expose the truth. + +"Branding": + +    In other contexts in ancient Greece, slave tattooing serves as a sort of label. +    It is as if writing on the slave body indicated the contents of that body. Such +    a function of writing recalls the work of Denise Schmandt-Besserat, who argues +    that writing originates in the markings on the outside of packages recording +    their contents.3 Aristotle points out in the Politics, as we have seen, that +    the slave body ought to reveal its truth, ought to be immediately perceptible +    as a servile body to the eye, but in fact sometimes it is not. A tattoo on a +    slave reveals his or her true status. In Aristophanes’ Babylonians, of which +    only fragments remain, we learn that prisoners of war were sometimes branded or +    inscribed with a mark indicating the city they served.4 + +    [...] + +        though he is a human being, he does not know himself, soon he will know, having +        this inscription on his forehead. (74_79)6 + +    Herodes invokes the inscription at Delphi, also cited by Plato: gnôthi seauton, +    “Know yourself.”7 + +    [...] + +    This placement of the “epigram,” whatever it is, if it is that, on the metope, +    the forehead of the slave, makes the inscription a sign. The message of +    Herodotos’s slave was concealed by his hair, directed to a specified other, the +    recipient who received the slave as a vehicle for his master’s words. The +    communication was not directed to the slave himself. In the case of Herodes’ +    slave, the man named “Belly” would bear a sign meant to remind him of his +    humble status. + +### Buried Truth + +    If torture helped to manage the troublesome differentiation between slave and +    free in the ancient city, it also served as a redundant practice reinforcing +    the dominant notion of the Greeks that truth was an inaccessible, buried +    secret. In his valuable book Les maîtres de vérité dans la Grèce archaïque, +    Marcel Detienne describes a historical shift in the Greeks’ ideas about truth +    that corresponds to the historical shift from mythic to rational thought.1 +    According to Detienne, Alêtheia is at first conceived of by the Greeks in an +    ambiguous relationship with Lethe, forgetting; truth is the possession of the +    poet and the just king, who has access to this truth through memory. Alêtheia +    is caught up in a relationship of ambiguity with Lêthê because, for example, +    the poet who speaks truth by using memory also confers truth’s other, +    forgetfulness, oblivion of pain and sorrow, on his listeners. His +    “magico-religious” speech, as Detienne calls it, which exists in an ambiguous +    relationship with truth, persists as the dominant form in the Greek world until +    the speech of warriors, the citizens who form the city’s phalanxes, a speech of +    dialogue, comes to dominate the social world in the time of the polis. Detienne +    associates a resultant secularization of poetic Alêtheia with the name of the +    poet Simonides. Doxa, seeming, becomes the rival province of sophistic and +    rhetorical speech, while Alêtheia comes to belong to an unambiguously +    “philosophico-religious” domain. In this field of discourse the logic of +    ambiguity typical of the Alêtheia-Lêthê relationship is replaced by a logic of +    contradiction, in which Alêtheia is opposed to Apatê, deception, as its other. +    The common use of memory provides a link between these two stages of thinking +    truth; the secularization of speech marks a break between a mythic and a +    rationalist semantic field in which the term Alêtheia persists. + +### The modern word Tortura + +    A word used in addition to alêthês in the Odyssey is atrekês, real, genuine, +    with a connotation perhaps of that which does not distort or deviate. The Latin +    word torqueo means “to twist tightly, to wind or wrap, to subject to torture, +    especially by the use of the rack.” This word may come from the root trek-, +    also occurring in Greek, which may give us atraktos, “spindle,” and also +    “arrow.”6 (Tortor is used as a cult title of Apollo, “perhaps”, according to +    the Oxford Latin Dictionary, “from the quarter at Rome occupied by the +    torturers.”)7 Our English word “torture” is taken from this Latin root. The +    Oxford English Dictionary defines “torture,” an adaptation of the Latin +    tortura, in the following way:  +     +        The infliction of excruciating pain, as practised by cruel tyrants, savages, +        brigands, etc., from the delight in watching the agony of a victim, in hatred +        or revenge, or as a means of extortion; spec. judicial torture, inflicted by a +        judicial or quasi-judicial authority, for the purpose of forcing an accused or +        suspected person to confess, or an unwilling witness to give evidence or +        information.8 Although the writers of the dictionary list first tyrants, +        savages, and brigands as the agents of torture, the first entry in their +        citations of the use of the word in English refers to the Acts of the Privy +        Council of 1551. This set of connotations, to return to the point, links the +        English word torture with the twisted, the distorted, and suggests that the +        truth gained as a confession is in English not conceived of as a straight line, +        but is rather bent, extorted from time on the rack. +     +    In Greek, however, not passing through Latin into English for our etymology +    (etumos is another word used for “true” in Greek), we have, parallel to +    atrekês, the word alêtheia with its suggestion of hiddenness and forgetting. +    The connotations of the alternative words nêmertês and atrekês are respectively +    “not missing the mark”, and “not deviating from an existing model”; the weight +    of alêthês rests instead on the trace of something not forgotten, not slipping +    by unnoticed.9 + +    [...] + +    Even in the texts of the Hippocratic tradition, the body is seen to contain +    secrets that must be interpreted, elicited by signs that emerge onto the body’s +    surface, as the emanation from the earth arises to possess the Pythia. + +    [...] + +    Each of these sites of meaning in ancient culture—the epic, oracles, sacred +    buildings, the medicalized body—lay out a pattern of obscure, hidden truth that +    must be interpreted. + +### Heraclitian truth differs + +    The works of the pre-Socratic philosophers (even to presume to call them +    philosophers may be to presume too much) present problems of reading for the +    historian of philosophy, for the literary and cultural critic. Even the problem +    of who is disciplinarily responsible for these texts is insoluble. And the +    incompleteness of many pre-Socratic texts causes unease. How can one speak of +    philosophical development when only one line, one metaphor, one aphorism +    remains, torn out of context, lines repeated to illustrate a well-known point? +    The ellipses in the published pre-Socratic fragments recall stopped mouths, +    messages gone astray, the utter failure of communication across a distance of +    centuries. + +    [...] + +    The very search for integrity and indivisibility in all things has been called +    into question by the heirs of Nietzsche, among them those feminists who see the +    emphasis on wholeness and integrity, on the full body, as a strategy of +    scholarship that has traditionally excluded the female, who has been identified +    as different, heterogeneous, disturbing the integrity of the scholarly body, +    incomplete in herself. Aristotle describes the female as a “deformed” +    (pepêrômenon) male (Generation of Animals 737a), and argues further that her +    contribution to reproduction lacks a crucial ingredient, the principle of soul +    (psukhe). The project of scientific textual studies has been to supply the +    text’s lack, to reduce the fragmented, partial quality of embodied, material +    texts, to reject the defective text as it rejects the defective female. Like +    the slave body that needs the supplement of the basanos to produce truth, the +    female body and the fragmentary text are both constructed as lacking. + +    [...] + +    Elsewhere Herakleitos seems to argue against an innate hierarchy of mortal +    beings: “War is father of all, and king of all. He renders some gods, others +    men; he makes some slaves, others free” (fr. 53). Mortal and immortal status +    depends on human history, on events. There is no essence, no absolute truth in +    the differences among beings. Circumstances, history, time affect relations of +    difference and power.2 This relativism establishes a ground for the vision of +    equality among citizens in ancient democratic ideology, and even further, a +    point from which to examine the commonly held view that some human beings are +    slaves by nature. +     +    Herakleitos represents an alternative to the essentializing concept of truth as +    a buried, hidden substance; he offers a temporal notion of truth, that the +    basanos of the physician is good at one time, at another time bad, that war +    creates slaves and free, a relative notion of truth. [...] +    Herakleitos’s relationship to time, change and process prefigures values of the +    democracy and of the pre-Socratic sophists whom the aristocratic philosophical +    tradition despised: “As they step into the same rivers, different and (still) +    different waters flow upon them” (fr. 12); “we step and do not step into the +    same rivers; we are and are not” (fr. 49a). His is not a doctrine of +    superficial appearance and deep truth, but rather a celebration of the +    mutability and interdependence of all things. The Heraclitean truth, read +    within his words, fragmentary as they are, celebrating flux, time, difference, +    allows for an alternative model to a hidden truth. [...] +    for him truth is process and becoming, obtained through +    observation, rather than a fixed, divine and immutable truth of eternity. + +### Truth and memory + +    The word anagkê, “constraint,” is associated with the yoke of slavery.10 All of +    human experience suffers from its subjection to necessity; the slave offers an +    extreme example of the general human condition. In one of her many forms the +    goddess who instructs the youth, the Kouros, is mistress of “brute force,” or +    of the bonds associated with enslavement, and is therefore binding the +    “what-is,” the “true,” in captivity. Like the slave who yields the truth to the +    torturer, the “what-is” is bound in domination, and delivers up its truth under +    necessity. + +    [...] + +    Does truth as eternally located elsewhere, either hidden in the body, or hidden +    in the earth, or hidden inside or beyond human existence, in some realm +    inaccessible to ordinary consciousness, lead by some tortuous path to the +    necessity for torture? Can we posit a truth of process and becoming, and +    another truth of eternity? If so, the word a-lêtheia seems to carry buried +    within it support for the view of hidden truth, of truth brought up from the +    depths. The possibility of forgetting leads to the imagination of a buried +    realm, the realm of forgetting, of Lethe, which can be represented either +    positively or negatively. It is good to forget suffering and pain, regrettable +    to forget a message, to forget crucial information that must be transmitted to +    a listener; in either case Lethe—or, to coin a word, “letheia”—remains a domain +    beyond consciousness. + +    [...] + +    The dominance of a notion of truth as alêtheia, not forgetting, he attributes +    in part to the gradual shift to literacy taking place in the fifth and fourth +    centuries.14 The legal corpus reflects the state of the problem of truth in the +    fifth and fourth centuries B.C.E. Charles Segal has discussed eloquently the +    ways in which growing literacy affects concepts of the self and truth in Greek +    tragedy.15 + +    [...] + +    In the dominant literary and philosophical paradigm, the truth is seen to be +    forgettable, slipping away from notice, buried, inaccessible, then retrieved +    through an effort of memory, through the invocation of divine possession, +    through the interrogation by a privileged seeker of some enlightened source; +    seeking the truth may involve a journey, a passage through a spatial narrative +    of some sort, a request, a sinking down into the past, into the interiority of +    memory. This model of truth seeking is consistent with other such paradigms +    already suggested earlier, in the law courts, where, as we saw, the violence of +    the torturer is thought to be necessary to enforce the production of truth from +    the slave, either to force him or her to recall the truth, or to force him or +    her to speak the truth for the benefit of the court. +     +    The slave’s body is thus construed as one of these sites of truth, like the +    adyton, the underworld, the interiority of the woman’s body, the elsewhere +    toward which truth is always slipping, a Utopian space allowing a less +    mediated, more direct access to truth, where the truth is no longer forgotten, +    slipping away. The basanos gives the torturer the power to exact from the +    other, seen as like an oracular space, like the woman’s hystera, like the +    inside of the earth, the realm of Hades, as other and as therefore in +    possession of the truth. The truth is thus always elsewhere, always outside the +    realm of ordinary human experience, of everyday life, secreted in the earth, in +    the gods, in the woman, in the slave. To recall it from this other place +    sometimes requires patience, sometimes payment of gifts, sometimes seduction, +    sometimes violence. + +### Torture and commodification + +    Does it have to do with the invention of coinage, with the idea of abstract +    exchange value, and the slave as an exchangeable body, a thing to be tested +    like a coin, like a marker for exchange? In the Laws the Athenian says men are +    like puppets with strings, and that they should follow the soft, golden string, +    the “golden and hallowed drawing of judgment which goes by the name of the +    public law of the city” (644-45).  | 
