How Reason Inherited Godās Metaphysics.
The Enlightenment, we are told, was the age of Reason. A radiant exorcism of superstition. Out went God. Out went angels, miracles, saints, indulgences. All that frothy medieval sentiment was swept aside by a brave new world of logic, science, and progress. Or so the story goes.
But look closer, and youāll find that Reason didnāt kill Godāit absorbed Him. The Enlightenment didnāt abandon metaphysics. It merely privatised it.
From Confessional to Courtroom
We like to imagine that the Enlightenment was a clean break from theology. But really, it was a semantic shell game. The soul was rebranded as the self. Sin became crime. Divine judgement was outsourced to the state.
We stopped praying for salvation and started pleading not guilty.
The entire judicial apparatusāmens rea, culpability, desert, retributionāis built on theological scaffolding. The only thing missing is a sermon and a psalm.
Where theology had the guilty soul, Enlightenment law invented the guilty mindāmens reaāa notion so nebulous it requires clairvoyant jurors to divine intention from action. And where the Church offered Hell, the state offers prison. It’s the same moral ritual, just better lit.
Galen Strawson and the Death of Moral Responsibility
Enter Galen Strawson, that glowering spectre at the feast of moral philosophy. His Basic Argument is elegantly devastating:
- You do what you do because of the way you are.
- You can’t be ultimately responsible for the way you are.
- Therefore, you can’t be ultimately responsible for what you do.
Unless you are causa suiāthe cause of yourself, an unmoved mover in Calvin Kleināyou cannot be held truly responsible. Free will collapses, moral responsibility evaporates, and retributive justice is exposed as epistemological theatre.
In this light, our whole legal structure is little more than rebranded divine vengeance. A vestigial organ from our theocratic past, now enforced by cops instead of clerics.
The Modern State: A Haunted House
What we have, then, is a society that has denied the gods but kept their moral logic. We tossed out theology, but we held onto metaphysical concepts like intent, desert, and blameāconcepts that do not survive contact with determinism.
We are living in the afterglow of divine judgement, pretending itās sunlight.
Nietzsche saw it coming, of course. He warned that killing God would plunge us into existential darkness unless we had the courage to also kill the values propped up by His corpse. We did the first bit. Weāre still bottling it on the second.
If Not Retribution, Then What?
Letās be clear: no oneās suggesting we stop responding to harm. But responses should be grounded in outcomes, not outrage.
Containment, not condemnation.
Prevention, not penance.
Recalibration, not revenge.
We donāt need ājusticeā in the retributive sense. We need functional ethics, rooted in compassion and consequence, not in Bronze Age morality clumsily duct-taped to Enlightenment reason.
The Risk of Letting Go
Of course, this is terrifying. The current system gives us moral closure. A verdict. A villain. A vanishing point for our collective discomfort.
Abandoning retribution means giving that up. It means accepting that there are no true villainsāonly configurations of causes. That punishment is often revenge in drag. That morality itself might be a control mechanism, not a universal truth.
But if weāre serious about living in a post-theological age, we must stop playing dress-up with divine concepts. The Enlightenment didnāt finish the job. It changed the costumes, kept the plot, and called it civilisation.
Itās time we staged a rewrite.