Sauron and Saruman - The Tragedy of Good Intentions

Aldarion

Neoreactionary Monarchist
Unlike Morgoth and his nihilism, Sauron and Saruman are both a case study of how good intentions lead to evil.

Both Sauron and Saruman are the Maiar of Aule. This may in fact be the root origin of their mistake: the tendency to look at the world, society and even individuals as nothing but machinery that operates according to strict and easily understandable laws. By this logic, anything that causes disruption or chaos, anything unpredictable at all, is by its very nature a mistake. Because chaos causes harm, pain, and even destruction. It can lead to creation of many things, but also to their destruction; it can lead to progress, but also to regression. In order to remove the pain, inefficiencies and "mistakes", to create safe and productive life, chaos must be replaced by order.

Natural conclusion of this logic is that the free will itself is a mistake. Free will creates chaos, inefficiencies and mistakes, because people are not the same. Thus, in order to create this perfectly functioning machine, free will itself has to be removed and subdued - and this is what both Sauron and then Saruman set out to do.

The ultimate failure in their belief is that, despite their good intentions, Sauron and Saruman had both rejected God. They rejected the role God had envisioned for them .

But even for an atheist, this should still hold an abject lesson: good intentions alone are not enough. It is not enough to be good and to want good: that can still, all too easily, lead to evil. Belief in utopia is dangerous: this world is by its nature imperfect, and therefore creating a perfect society, a utopia, heaven on Earth, is a fool's errand. More than just being foolish, it is dangerous as well: belief in perfection always breeds extremism, because what isn't allowed in pursuit of a perfect world? Wouldn't all of Sauron's evil be justified if only he could solve all the world's problems? Sauron and Saruman certainly believed so. For them, the ends always justified the means, the utopia always justified whatever was done along the way. And if free will got in the way of the paradise, then the free will had to go.

Yet refutation of free will is in and by itself evil. And evil can never bring about good. No matter how good intentions and the goal may be, the path that we walk to that goal still matters. Stable house cannot be built on quicksand, nor can good world be built upon evil works. Therefore, denying the free will in order to achieve a perfect world or some sort of utopia can never manage to do so, because evil cannot bring about good.

Power is not the path to happiness, nor is the ultimate power something able to solve the world's problems. Tolkien's ideal king has little responsibility or impact on the lives of his subjects. He is a caretaker, not a manager, much less a dictator. Freedom, not power, is what should be strived for - but responsible freedom, one in accordance with human role in God's design, rather than the destructive freedom of the Hippie crowd. Humans are fallible, and there are no heroes who will rise up to solve the world's problems. Aragorn becomes a king of Gondor, but all he can do to win the war is offer himself and his men up as a bait in a Hail Mary move to draw Sauron's attention away from the real threat. Frodo may be the protagonist of the Lord of the Rings, but he ultimately fails in his quest to destroy the One Ring - fails at the very end. It is only through divine providence that the quest succeeds. The One Ring, as a representation of sin, is so powerful that no creature can overcome it. Only one who is resistant to Ring's call is Tom Bombadil - an impersonation of nature itself. Yet neither Sauron nor Saruman understood this, and attempted to work alone and against God's design. No matter how good their intent may have been in the beginning, their pride ultimately doomed them to fall.

Tolkien's heroes are people who act out of love and duty and place themselves in service of things greater than themselves. Aragorn and Faramir both do what they can to protect Gondor. Denethor too starts out as a hero - but his pride and belief in his own power ultimately dooms him, as he fails to realize that he cannot fix everything, or even just defeat Sauron, on his own. Yet Denethor can never be called a villain, for even those prideful actions were ultimately taken from love for his family and his people. Sauron and Saruman by contrast have no such love. For them, country is merely a system of domination, and their people are merely slaves, extensions of their own will. They became so convinced of their own goodness and calling to order the things the way they believe they should be, that both have forgotten the importance of very things they were claiming to be trying to perfect.

In this, both Sauron and Saruman are representatives of modernism, where man is the measure of all things. Both of them abandoned wisdom of the past in pursuit of the ideal future. They - and this is especially obvious with Saruman - abandoned tradition in favor of modernism, abandoned what has worked for centuries in favor of new solutions that promised ideal future. Saruman at first wanted to help the people, but in studying the One Ring he began to desire it. Even if Ring itself had not been evil, desiring Ring to reshape the Middle Earth represented hubris of wanting to be like God, or even, be the God. They may have started with good intentions, but humans are imperfect beings, and imperfect beings can never create perfection. If one attempts to create in anyway, the outcome will be far worse than if no attempt had been made at all. Both Sauron and Saruman, embodying Nietzche's modernist philosophy, decided to try and achieve perfection (that is, Godhood) on their own. But in trying to become gods, they created Hell on earth. And this result was unavoidable - perfection after all is the domain of the divine, and can never be achieved in the physical reality of Middle Earth. Attempting to recreate Eden will always result in Hel.
 
Quite so. And wasn't it the Soviet Union itself that started writing "good guy Sauron" books?
Postsoviets,but yes.I remember at least two translated to polish after 1991 which i once read,unfortunatelly forget both authors and titles.
 
And now,i undarstandt why postsoviets hate Tolkien and wrote books about good Mordor.Becouse they are Mordor.
Quite so. And wasn't it the Soviet Union itself that started writing "good guy Sauron" books?
I've seen two types of "deconstruction" of "good guy Sauron". First are the race-based ones, where writers see the orcs as a reference to minorities and Sauron's whole world domination plot as the haitian revolution writ large. Second, the technologists who see Sauron's original job as a demigod of craftsmanship, forging and industry and approve because they agree with the notion of technological progress as an inherent good. Of these, the second are much easier to sympathize with. A gondorian peasant won't consider orcs killing them and taking their stuff justified because the ancestors of their kingdom's nobility once invaded mordor in counterattack against mordor's invasion of them, etc, but would probably agree with "I wish I had some better tools so I didn't have to work so hard." Which inevitably backfires because "people should have more power" in the abstract inevitably becomes a matter of which people.
And even then, can't honestly disagree with the methods, just the people using them. In better hands, IE, ours, in a better world, the very same technologies fueling the whole technocratic cyberpunk nightmare N.I.C.E. LARP could be drastically improving our lives.
Unfortunately they're owned by a bunch of wannabe bond villains not us.
 
Sauron and Saruman were unwilling to trust and obey God. They saw a fallen world and wished for it to be better and had the power to effect change (that's the sucky part about living in our fallen world, waiting for Lord's Return for things to get better), but were forbidden from intervening, but chose to do so anyway. There is a little bit of pride creeping there as in "I know better, I can save these people and make things better".

By the time they were defeated, they had become very priedful and refused the grace of the Maia. Gandalf forgave Sauron and did not pursue any form of punishment against Saruman, even though he had killed many, but Saruman stubbornly refused to submit. After the War of Wrath, Sauron was likewise defeated but not punished and was told to go back and face Manwe. It is unlikely he would have been punished like being whipped or incarcerated or anything, but Sauron refused. Sauron and Saruman didn't want to admit that they were wrong and submit to a higher authority.

Another issue is that they don't have anyone to confide in, no wives or friends. They keep secrets from their personnel and even have spies among them, or resort to using magic to demand absolute obedience from their minions. Their trapped in their fallen minds. Well I guess Saruman was a part of the White Council but he seemed to think Radagast was beneath him, and hated Gandalf.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ATP
Sauron and Saruman were unwilling to trust and obey God. They saw a fallen world and wished for it to be better and had the power to effect change (that's the sucky part about living in our fallen world, waiting for Lord's Return for things to get better), but were forbidden from intervening, but chose to do so anyway. There is a little bit of pride creeping there as in "I know better, I can save these people and make things better".

By the time they were defeated, they had become very priedful and refused the grace of the Maia. Gandalf forgave Sauron and did not pursue any form of punishment against Saruman, even though he had killed many, but Saruman stubbornly refused to submit. After the War of Wrath, Sauron was likewise defeated but not punished and was told to go back and face Manwe. It is unlikely he would have been punished like being whipped or incarcerated or anything, but Sauron refused. Sauron and Saruman didn't want to admit that they were wrong and submit to a higher authority.

Another issue is that they don't have anyone to confide in, no wives or friends. They keep secrets from their personnel and even have spies among them, or resort to using magic to demand absolute obedience from their minions. Their trapped in their fallen minds. Well I guess Saruman was a part of the White Council but he seemed to think Radagast was beneath him, and hated Gandalf.
They also severely lacked empathy, and were more doing it for their own ego's sake than to actually make things better for anyone else. That's why Saruman hated Gandalf; because he was the first chosen to be the leader of the Maiar sent to Middle Earth, though he refused and the position instead passed to Saruman. Being the second choice rankled his pride, and stoked the resentment that ultimately caused his fall to evil.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top