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C. S. Lewis
That
Hideous Strength
(1945)
Phillip E.
Johnson
Most futuristic novels seem out–of–date after a decade or two, but
That Hideous Strength is more timely today than when the book was
published in 1945. On the day I began to reread the book for this essay,
the press reported that a British government agency called the Human
Fertilization and Embryological Authority (HFEA) is sounding out public
opinion about the use of Pre–implanatation Genetic Diagnosis, which will
allow parents to screen their embryos for genetic defects. Critics
believe that the HFEA has already decided to go full steam ahead with
the procedure, and they don’t believe the Authority’s assurances that
this technique (and others to follow) will be used only to screen for
genetic diseases like cystic fibrosis and not to produce "designer
babies."
My suspicion that the
critics are right was bolstered by an article appearing on the Web the
same day from the Center for Bioethics at the University of
Pennsylvania, titled "What is Immoral About Eugenics?" The article’s
bottom line was that the use of genetic technology to produce the kind
of children parents want, up to and including "eyebrow shape or freckle
pattern," should be allowed if the parents are not coerced and the
children are not thereby disadvantaged. The role of ethics commissions
in these situations is mainly to legitimate what the technocrats want to
happen—namely, a reengineering of the human genome to improve the
breeding stock. And why not, if the existing genome is merely the
accidental product of mindless material forces? Since our ideas about
ethics or the sanctity of life are also assumed to be products of
genetic or brain chemistry, there is no reason to let them get in the
way of progress.
In C. S. Lewis’ novel,
the technological super–agency is the National Institute of Coordinated
Experiments (NICE), which is empowered to solve all sorts of social and
genetic problems without being bothered by "red tape." Mark and Jane
Studdock are a young childless academic couple at Bracton College, whose
faculty’s Progressive Element is willing to sell its woods and its soul
to entice the NICE. Mark and Jane’s marriage is unhappy because, like
most modern people, they see marriage as a contract for mutual advantage
rather than as a sacred union. Mark’s consuming desire doesn’t even
involve Jane. He wants to be a big shot, a member of the "inner ring"
first at his college and then at the NICE. He gets his chance because he
is good at writing propaganda.
The NICE turns out to
be demonic in inspiration, and intends to impose upon England a regime
of ruthless social engineering that Joseph Stalin would have admired.
The apparent "Head" at the NICE’s mansion at Belbury is the head of a
guillotined murderer, kept alive with advanced life support systems, but
this gruesome object is merely the conduit for orders from the dark
powers. Belbury’s human leaders recruit and flatter Mark, but the human
resource they really want is Jane. She is a seer, whose visions involve
the return to life of the magician Merlin, long entombed under Bracton
Wood. If Belbury can unite its materialist magic with Merlin’s
old–fashioned kind, it can achieve its dream of freeing the mind from
messy organic life. "In us organic life has produced Mind. It has done
its work. After that we want no more of it."
Does that sound
far–fetched? Artificial intelligence visionaries are keen to make it a
reality. While the biologists make plans to reprogram the human genome,
the cybergurus dream of uploading the human mind into advanced
computers. Freed of the limitations of biology and possessed of
superhuman intelligence, these "spiritual machines" might explore and
conquer the cosmos. Or they might not bother to do so, since they could
create a virtual reality for themselves that would be better than the
real thing. Then "we" would truly be like God. But who is "we"? In real
life, as in C. S. Lewis’ fiction, the dark side of the technological
utopia is that it implies a huge difference in power between the few who
do the programming and the many who are programmed. Belbury’s chief
scientist understands that "it is not Man who will be omnipotent, it is
some one man, some immortal man." Those who understand what is at stake
pursue a murderous rivalry to gain control of the power to program.
Belbury’s plot is
foiled and Mark’s soul is saved when the risen Merlin joins forces with
a small Christian enclave that is in communication with heavenly powers.
Although magic and miracles play their part, in the end it is more the
bravery of decent people and the self–destructive hatred of the wicked
that decides the outcome.
To me, That Hideous
Strength is a thrilling story that I enjoy more each time I reread
it, but I have heard others say that the action is contrived, the
characters one–dimensional, and the tone didactic. I suppose you could
say the same of Paradise Lost. My guess is that those of us who
love the book see it less as a fantasy and more as a realistic
description of what eventually happens when people make technology their
lord instead of putting their faith and love to the service of the true
Creator. Like our modern mind–scientists, Belbury employs materialist
philosophy to teach that the human mind and spirit are mere epiphenomena
of bodily chemistry. Like our government–funded artists, Belbury uses
art to mock the sacred and train the mind to see the perverse as normal.
That’s not fantasy. That’s how we got where we are.
Phillip E. Johnson
teaches law at the University of California at Berkeley.
Copyright © 2000 First Things 101 (March
2000): 48-49.
www.firstthings.com
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