Postby bigsleepj » Fri Apr 13, 2007 12:20 pm
No offense, Joshua, but the White Star Line's boss did not wake up one morning and say "Let's build a ship that God himself could not sink". I'm not sure what the origin was of the famous line, but it was probably dreamed up by a newspaper man and many just repeated this over and over until it became the unofficial slogan. It may even have been the captain. The designers of the Titanic just wanted to create the safest boat they could, and the shipbuilders were paid to build the ship. They did not want it to be an affront to God (heck, it was build in Ireland, a very religious country). Maybe even the owners of the Titanic went along with this suddenly repeated slogan because such an over-repeated phrase was good word-of-mouth publicity. It was not their intention to defy God in the realistic theological and philosophical ideas. Maybe in the back of their minds, when that saying and similar phrases has been repeated over and over they believed that they have defied nature and this wrapped their common sense in a delusional bubble of protection. It did breed a startling amount of hubris that sealed the fate of the ship, but I don't think they wanted to make any statements about man (though I'm sure at times they dressed it up as that). Even science had nothing to do with it. At the very simplist they just wanted to one-up the competition in the luxury department and make oodles of cash.
The arrogance lies I think in the 1910's society (sometimes referred to as the Gilded Age) which projected so many features onto the Titanic. It got caught up in something larger, a society of classes (both racial and status-driven) and facades that was coming to an end but thought it had reached it's peak and from there on it can only go higher faster. Motorcars and airplanes were appearing, electricity was encroaching in much of the Western world, a new thing called movies and radio began rearing it's head. It looked as if the human race could do nothing wrong. Did they expect two world wars, a cold war and something like the atomic bomb? The owners of the Titanic were reckless and to a degree arrogant, but it was caught up in the zeitgeist of the time. It's easy to judge them harshly and to interpret their folly in several ways with almost 95 years of hindsight. But each age is as arrogant as the one before and the early 1910s is no exception.
Hmmm. I think what I said wasn't particularly consistant. It's just my thoughts.