B. "The Counter-Revolution Is Negativistic"
According to another slogan of the Revolution, the Counter-Revolution, by its
very name, defines itself as something negative and therefore sterile. This is
a mere play on words, for, based on the fact that the negation of a negation
corresponds to an affirmation, the human spirit expresses many of its most
positive concepts in a negative form: infallibility, independence, innocence,
and others. Would it be negativism to fight for any of these values just
because of their negative formulation? Did the First Vatican Council perform a
negativistic work when it defined papal infallibility? Is the Immaculate
Conception a negativistic prerogative of the Mother of God?
If
insistence on negating, attacking, and continuously watching the adversary is
termed "negativistic" in current speech, then perforce the
Counter-Revolution, without being merely a negation, has in its essence
something fundamentally and wholesomely negativistic. It is, as we
have said, a movement directed against another movement, and it is
unthinkable for one adversary in a fight not to have his eyes fixed on the
other, maintaining an attitude of polemics, attack, and counterattack.
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